Jump to Content

Miked - Live Reviews from Issue #25 Jan-Feb 2000

Johnny Dowd

Tonic (New York City, NY), October 31, 1999

It’s a Sunday night Halloween in New York. The ritual candles are blown out, our black cats are left home to their own devices, most of the costumed weirdos on the Lower East Side have been parading their babies or nursing their hangovers publicly, and my wife and I are saddled up to connect with a damnably suitable darkside mechanism.

Problem is that we seem to be the only ones who appreciate seeing someone as twisted as Johnny Dowd on this particular occasion. Those gathered at Tonic, including a striking bevy of the New Downtown’s young beauties, have arrived in the evening’s apparel to plaud on the opening act, who regales us with a set of uncompromising banality. I can only figure he is working a joke we are not in on, a local favorite of a locality whose rock we have no need of lifting. My companion is fighting an impetus toward immediate violence involving broken glass, and I am individually imagining members of that bevy tied up in my imaginary basement. We are ready.

I remember an old interview with Patti Smith where she referred to her band’s rock ‘n’ roll competence as really being at something like 40%, making this ratio relevant by saying that the Stones were around 60%. I have to admit that after hearing Dowd’s Pictures From Life’s Other Side, I was expecting him and his band to be working that cool 40%. After all, Dowd bravadoes through his pleasantries of sexual purgatory in that unrepentant Okie accent that couldn’t hit the note if it were trussed by four friends and held up for him to punch. But this band had been on an intensive tour for a couple of weeks, and they hit like a well-greased flame-thrower.

The greatest surprise was Dowd’s own guitar playing; he attacked his Strat with barbaric accuracy, an oxymoron in the hands of most. He then rendered a truly disturbing subtlety to number such as “Vietnam” like Chet Atkins after smoking a good joint. Not too shabby for a cat who taught himself the thing far less than a decade ago.

That’s for starters. The whole accursed band pushed the Dowd circus bus through swamp marsh up to the next dry land, where Mike Edmonson set up his calliope for the freak-show presentation. The emotional midgets took turns on each others’ shoulders to look through the plastic tent window at the comatose woman, while Kim Sherwood-Caso stood there in her Viking helmet playing her ingenue of the trailer park ball contraindication to Dowd’s worried-minded misogynist.

The best part is that they can make every song swing with the creepy parts intact. But Dowd, of course, is not scary a person. At worst onstage he is like a serial killer wannabe with a hitchhiker in his pickup, who, when reaching for the lead pipe under his seat, finds only a crumpled pack of smokes and embarrassedly offers the last Winston through gritted teeth to his ride, hating her until he drops her off.

Mostly, he comes off as a smart man who has been bounced around for a few decades and is now standing on both feet onstage to tell those in the world who have had hands on the ball just what the effects of all that bouncing have had on the inside of his skull.

Enjoy the ND archives? Consider making a donation. Advertising helps defray our basic expenses, but doesn’t touch the over $150,000 invested to get this content online. Just $10 (or more!) from 15,000 of our fans and we will reach our goal. Thanks for your support.

Or send a check to: No Depression, PO Box 31332, Seattle, WA 98103

Discuss

Did you enjoy this article? Start a discussion about it, or find out what others are saying in the No Depression Community forum.

Join the Discussion »

Find out what's going on in roots music. Share concert photos and videos, learn about new artists, blog about the music you love.

Join the No Depression Community »

Originally Featured in Issue #25 Jan-Feb 2000

Buy our history before it’s gone!

Each issue is artfully designed and packed full of great photos that you don‘t get online. Visit the No Depression store to own a piece of history.

Visit the No Depression Store »


From the Blogs

  • Banjo picker Doug Dillard dies at 75
    Just a few days after I featured one of their appearances on the
Andy Griffith Show, comes this sad news from the
… […]
  • Keb’ Mo’ on Tour: Behind the Scenes with Musician Michael B. Hicks
    Newly arrived in Singapore, the band headed straight from the airport for the familiar Golden Arches and a welcome taste of home.   Half a world and half a day away, it can be a challenge to stay connected to everyday places and to the people that matter.  As tour dates have stretched across time and continents, the newest and youngest member of the Keb’ Mo’ […]
  • How To Take Your Children To a Music Festival and Enjoy It
    Going to a music festival and taking a family weekend excursion usually are not the same, but they can be--and it can be fun.  Taking your children to a music festival can also be one of the worst parenting decisions you will make.  Whether your jaunt to the festival becomes the story your children tell their children about their favorite childhood memories […]
  • I Would Do It Again! An Interview With Dallas Moore
    Since the age of 16, Dallas Moore has mastered the art of performing. With several albums under his belt and the experience of sharing the stage with almost all of his heroes, Dallas and his band have brought hangovers and excitement to Outlaw Country fans everywhere. On the evening of April 12. Before The Dallas Moore Band took the stage, Dallas and I sat d […]
  • A Summer Music Festival Prayer for Non-Attendees
    Two years ago the family went to the Clearwater Festival in the Hudson Valley, a long way from our digs here in So Cali. I must admit to you right up front: I hadn't been to a music festival for decades, unless you count some small, local bluegrass weekends in Old Town Temecula. I won't bore… […]
  • The Honey Dewdrops: Silver Lining
    Silver Lining, the third album from the  Honey Dewdrops, will be released on June 1st. It’s a record that Fiddlefreak alluded to in this previous post — and we are the lucky ones with an advance copy! As we hoped, Silver Lining has emerged as a silky-smooth collection of original songs that take the listener on a pleasant ramble through the Blue Ridge Mounta […]

Shop Amazon by clicking through this logo to support NoDepression.com. We get a percentage of every purchase you make!


Subscribe To the No Depression Newsletter

Subscribe to the No Depression Newsletter