Stan Ridgway

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Aug 8, 2008

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Saturday, August 16, 2008

STAN RIDGWAY @ HOUSE OF BLUES OCTOBER 26th
Current mood: adventurous
Category: Music

House Of Blues / Sunset Sunday Oct. 26th - "Halloween Of Voodoo" + SPECIAL GUESTS: THE MAGIC OF ROB ZABRECKY, and THE JANKS


Stan Ridgway and his band perform classic numbers from his Wall Of Voodoo beginngs as well as dipping into his hauntingly deep catolog of solo work. A special Halloween Time Show. Expect a thoroughly entertaining evening of classic American music by one of the world's greatest songwriters and storytellers.


Tickets: http://www.hob.com/tickets/eventdetail.asp?eventid=54125

TOUR : http://www.stanridgway.com/tour


STAN RIDGWAY'S "HALLOWEEN OF VOODOO"
~ wov & solo hits ~


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"Stan Ridgway is equal parts Raymond Chandler and John Huston, Johnny Cash and Rod Serling." NME

Stan Ridgway is a true original. One of the most unique
singer/songwriters in American music, from his early days with L.A.'s Wall Of Voodoo, to his even more intriguing solo career, Ridgway has created an impressive body of work.

"Haunted by America's pulp serial past, Stan Ridgway has become his own wireless theater." THE FACE

Stan Ridgway's musical career began in the late seventies as part of a soundtrack company to create music for low-budget horror films. From the ashes, Wall Of Voodoo was born, and with Ridgway as lead voice, produced a debut EP (featuring the electronic reworking of Johnny Cash's "Ring Of Fire") and two albums, Dark Continent and Call of the West, (which contained the classic early MTV era hit song and video "Mexican Radio").

"It's been a little more than 25 years since L.A.'s Stan Ridgway and Wall of Voodoo released Call of the West, and that calls for a drink. The album's dusty, Barstow-to-Bakersfield, Ross Macdonald-meets-Edward G. Ulmer in a Death Valley Detour to nowheresville title track and grimly optimistic film noir narratives still reverberate across the musical Route 66 Voodoo frontman Stan Ridgway paved, roadkill and all. It's the closest musical approximation yet of that hardscrabble, postwar, westward wanderlust to rush headlong into the unknown, "And above all to get a fair shake, to get a piece of the rock, a slice of the pie, to spit out the window of your car and not have the wind blow it back in your face ... ." Ridgway's post-Wall of Voodoo output has, if anything, cemented his neo-noir rep as one of American music's great storytellers, the wild and wily Steinbeck of sad whiskey railroads and rusted, ramshackle American dreams.." - Austin Chronicle

Ridgway and his band perform classic numbers from his Wall Of Voodoo beginngs as well as dipping into his hauntingly deep catolog of solo work. A special Halloween Time Show. Expect a thoroughly entertaining evening of classic American music by one of the world's greatest songwriters and storytellers.

"If David Lynch were a musician, he would be Stan Ridgway. Both look at Leave It To Beaver America and see serial killers lurking beneath its porches. Both can infuse a simple everyday object with weirdness and dread, creating A world that;'s consistently disturbing, fascinating and cool. L.A. WEEKLY

Stan Ridgway's most recent release is "Snakebite: Blacktop Ballads and Fugitive Songs".

Stan Ridgway & Band:
Stan Ridgway: electric guitar, harmonica and vocals; Pietra Wexstun ..boards, electronics and vocals; Rick King on guitar, bass and vocals; and Joe Berardi on drums, electronics and percussion.

* * * *
Stan Ridgway at myspace.com:
http://www.myspace.com/officialstanridgway

Stan Ridgway's Official Website:
http://www.stanridgway.com

Stan Ridgway Bio
http://www.stanridgway.com/bio



Sample and purchase music from Stan Ridgway at ITUNES: Here's the DIrect Link
Stan Ridgway

Currently listening :
Snakebite:Blacktop Ballads and Fugitive Songs
By Stan Ridgway
Release date: 2004-04-09

5:14 AM - 3 Comments - 5 Kudos - Add Comment

Monday, May 19, 2008

Purchase Stan Ridgway's Newest CD "SNAKEBITE"
Current mood: artistic
Category: Music

The Wire (UK)
STAN RIDGWAY
SNAKEBITE: BLACKTOP BALLADS AND FUGITIVE SONGS:


Former Wall Of Voodoo singer/songwriter Stan Ridgway's eighth solo album is a glorious hard-boiled Hollywood road movie for the ears (complete with suitable sound effects) which takes the listener on a tumbleweed journey in three acts through his dark imagination. Ridgway's lyrical talent for detail, combined with a cactus spiked humor and sense of melancholy, is what gives Snakebite its fang, and his songs ripple with observation and atmosphere. The best of these are "King For A Day". a wild ride in a stolen car that ends up crashing into the side of a house. A chance meeting with Andy Warhol that develops into "Our Manhattan Moment ", and "Talkin' Wall Of Voodoo Blues Pt. 1" where Ridgway scathingly relates the rise and fall of his old band and the various record company and managerial rip offs that eventually tore them apart. If you are only familiar with Ridgway's work through, what he refers to here as "that radio song", then Snakebite is an invitation to get better acquainted. Long may he run. - Edwin Pouncey



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STAN RIDGWAY BIOGRAPHY 2008


"Music is more than just chords and notes to me, it has the ability to make pictures in the mind," says noir troubadour and sound alchemist Stan Ridgway. "My records are designed to be seen as well as heard."


A mad scientist of sound and vision, Ridgway possesses a style unparalleled, at least in our known universe. Making his musical pictures for 30 years now, the singer-songwriter and guitarist has emerged as a singular voice in contemporary song.


"It's a hybrid of all the music I've loved and admired," he says. "There are no boundaries on art and no rules to follow in music. A song is really just a strong point of view."


Ridgway works in his own unique form of aural tradition, chronicling all that lies beneath the safe and sane surface. He craftily sets his dark materials to off-kilter and eerie melodies that echo the uneasy action of a cast of characters on the brink. His tales often take place in the microcosmic miasma of L.A. and its outer desert, where his creations try to wrest meaning from the beautiful catastrophe of their lives. The combination makes for a stunning stew of universal provocations.


"Mystery and irony are attractive to me but that said, I have no problem with entertainment," he says. "Orson Welles was a magician as well as a Shakespearean actor. There's a certain brilliance to that."


Ridgway has soaked himself in European soundtrack music, American folk tradition, primitive rock 'n' roll, blues, psychedelia, free jazz and all that is avant-garde. All of it has seeped into his musical vocabulary.


"Life is absurd. But that doesn't mean it has to be meaningless," he says. "From an early age music centered me in a chaotic world that didn't make sense."


Ridgway's uncanny ability for brushing Old World charm against contemporary disturbances and oddities just might define the disjointed landscape of 21st century life. In a further stunning feat of beatnik burlesque, Ridgway's inimitable vocal style carries listeners to the edge of their seats, while perfectly balancing his sometimes-untrustworthy narrator's voice from the twilight zone.


"I've always liked tall tales, urban myths and ghost stories," he says. "I like a strong protagonist, as well as a story that unfolds with drama, color and detail. A song should take you away for awhile and into another world." Sounds like the definition of a Stan Ridgway song…


Raised in L.A., Ridgway began his love affair with Southwestern gothic 30 years ago as front man of vanguard electro-art punks Wall of Voodoo, who originally formed with the intention of scoring low-budget horror films. Ridgway sang on the band's debut EP and first two albums, Dark Continent and Call of the West (which included the accidental MTV hit "Mexican Radio").


It's been 25 years since Ridgway first told his stories of the numb and narcoleptic workingman in "Factory" and the suburban couple of "Lost Weekend" (adrift in a loser's Las Vegas). These early snapshots left an indelible impression on a decade more often remembered for its musical frivolity than for its depth: As it happens, "Mexican Radio" is enjoying a hit run once again with a version cut by Mexican super-rockers Kinky.


As he takes to the road, Ridgway is staging a series of retrospective shows in honor of over 25 years of musical mystery from the House of Ridgway. He'll be screening his vivid stories starring his classic cast of anti-heroes, dreamers and schemers lost in the darkened drive-in theater of America. The jungle-bound soldier from "Camouflage" (a surprise Top 5 Hit in Europe from Ridgway's 1986 solo debut The Big Heat), the runaway driver of "King for a Day" (from his most recent offering Snakebite: Blacktop Ballads and Fugitive Songs), and the frustrated outsider in "Don't Box Me In" (written with Stewart Copeland of the Police for the Francis Ford Coppola film Rumblefish) are but three of Ridgway's creations that persist, long after the song is over and the curtain has dropped.


Pulling numbers from Wall of Voodoo's revolutionary past and moving into his own honed, sardonic style of present, Ridgway will be accompanied at the shows by Pietra Wexstun ..boards, electronics and vocals; Rick King on guitar, bass and vocals; and Joe Berardi on drums and percussion. Wexstun and Ridgway have lived and worked in tandem for more than 30 years; her keyboard and vocal sounds are perfectly in tune with his not-so-typical stories of proverbial American tragedy and triumph.


Ridgway's flair for concise character portraits was first noted by uber critic Greil Marcus, who called The Big Heat "probably the most compelling portrait of American social life to appear on a rock 'n' roll record since Bruce Springsteen's Nebraska." Author Mikal Gilmore said it was "the best L.A.-founded record of that year." Ridgway followed with the existential-humanist Mosquitoes (featuring the anthemic "Mission in Life," and the Euro-hit, "Calling Out to Carol"). Partyball (1991) explored the outer-limits of Ridgway's unique world, while 2002's Black Diamond was a more Spartan and personal statement on love and loss.


"I sometimes use songs as a way to figure out the puzzle of how things fit or don't. When the balance is right, what the listener brings to it is just as important as what I bring to it," he says.


"I've always thought of songs like films in the mind really, except I'm the actor and the director, the lighting and prop person and DP too. When it's working, you should be able to see the song as well as hear it."


Ridgway is often compared to his cinematic counterparts David Lynch and Quentin Tarantino and hard-boiled literary types like Raymond Chandler and Jim Thompson. The San Francisco Chronicle said, "He conjures "Burroughs, Bukowski and Brecht," while his hometown LA Weekly called him "the Nathaniel West of rock."


His sonic innovations and explosive performances have made Ridgway a favorite repeat collaborator among his fellow visionaries. His diverse credits include shaping soundtracks as well as writing and orchestrating music for the surrealist paintings of Mark Ryden (along with co-composer Wexstun). He's an occasional contributor to Wexstun's group Hecate's Angels; the pair collaborated most recently with guitarist Rick King for Barbeque Babylon, the third excursion by their electro-experimental-noise combo Drywall. And he is frequently called on to collaborate with celebrated producer Hal Willner, contributing to Lost in the Stars: The Songs of Kurt Weil, the live performance piece Shock and Awe: The Songs of Randy Newman, and, most recently, the Johnny Depp-commissioned Rogues Gallery, Pirate Ballads, Sea Songs and Chanteys.


Whether it's confronting the cruelty of the sea or contradictions on land, Ridgway is a rare performer and songmaker whose enduring sketches nail the human condition down cold while his characterizations of life remain absolutely fresh and alive. The primal urges that drive his creations--whether they're searching for a home in "Underneath the Big Green Tree," or acknowledging our collective heritage in his electronic reworking of Johnny Cash's "Ring of Fire"-- see Ridgway finding humanity in all stripes, as he celebrates the circus of our lives.


"At the end of the day I really consider myself just an inventor, or like a link in a chain," the artist says. Music and songs and recording are an obsession for me — sound. It's all in there, the art, ideas and things that influenced me. To see it and tell it your own way is the challenge. That's the last true, honest place to be. It might even be the new frontier right now."


http://www.stanridgway.com


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Currently listening :
Snakebite:Blacktop Ballads and Fugitive Songs
By Stan Ridgway
Release date: 09 April, 2004

11:22 PM - 5 Comments - 14 Kudos - Add Comment

Saturday, June 09, 2007

"Lost America: The Abandoned Roadside West" by Troy Pavia - fwd by Stan Ridgway
Current mood: satisfied

"Lost America: The Abandoned Roadside West"
A great book of photos and stories by Troy Pavia
Forward by Stan Ridgway

GHOSTS, OBSESSIONS and Synestisia

Some people can be obssevive. Artists usually are and great ones are excessively so.
In the films of Martin Scorcese, there seems to be a primary interest in examining a certain violent sub-culture in America. Does this mean the artist condones this behavior or gets a kick out of it? Not when you see the whole picture. There are always consequences for characters in Scorcess's work.

My first exposure to Troy Pavia's work was on the internet at his website LostAmerica.com. To see his photography for the first time is a shock and a revelation to the eye. I can't say I'd seen anything like it at all and the compositions of the photographs struck me immediately that these photographs were not made with an ironic wink of the eye, or a smug "look at this junk" approach. There was love in them. Lot's of love and most of all compassion. Can one be compassionate to a broken down abandoned hotel, or a rotting rusty trailer? Meet Troy Pavia.

And the colors. The painstaking approach of his "night photography". Strikingly saturated and mysteriously sensuous. The objects. All abandoned or waiting in what feels like another dimension or another time. Pavia's work gives them voice and you can hear them talk. The decay and entropy, all rendered and captured by the camera with a true romantic's vision . An obsession. And make no mistake about that. Obsessed is what artists usually are and great ones are excessively so. They simply are taken away by what they are encountering and become one with it. The more you delve into Troy Pavia's work you will see that Troy's work is like tunneling to some vast, underground cavern, filled with expansive and arcane history, objects and information on lost and ancient things, discarded, thrown away or simply abandoned by an American culture that throws away, replaces, let's rot and ignores. Things that seem to have no use anymore for its relentless march to things " brand new". To be old in America is to be soon replaced, moved out of the way to make room. Where do they go? Out to pasture so to speak. Or in front of Troy Pavia's lens, as if at a wake or a casket viewing. Or maybe just one last look before the dust takes it all back.

And If every picture tells a story, than Troy is a master storyteller with his work. And he's also an explorer. He's like A Dr. Leaky or a Joke Cousteau, a Vasco De Gama or some kind of acheologist uncovering an ancient civilsation. Our own. He goes places and takes you with him. The more you uncover, the more there is. This is not simply "trash or junk" Troy is showing us. These are objects with a life all they're own. You can hear them tell their stories from the pictures. People and events, history and death, ghosts and lingering spirits all attached and palatable.

Writing this forward I'm also struck with just how multi- layered Troy's art is. His writings here put you ridding shot gun with him across long desert stretches and roads, to lonely places filled with these ghosts. He'll takes you on a journey to explore, uncover, and ultimately discover and see with fresh eyes a "Lost America". You won't be disappointed in what you find, and you'll never look at a junkyard or even a rusty tin can along the road in quite the same way again. Ever.

Stan Ridgway / Los Angeles, CA.

Currently reading :
Lost America: The Abandoned Roadside West
By Troy Paiva
Release date: 13 July, 2003

1:35 AM - 4 Comments - 8 Kudos - Add Comment

Tuesday, February 20, 2007

Mark Ryden's "Blood"
Category: Music

New Special Jewelbox Release of 1000


PURCHASE: http://www.cdbaby.com/bloodshowmusic


Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting


All Music Guide: Stan Ridgway and Pietra Wexstun: Soundtrack for Mark Ryden's "Blood - Miniature Paintings of Sorrow and Fear"

The latest release by Stan Ridgway (Wall Of Voodoo) pairs him with vocalist Pietra Wexstun (Hecate's Angels). Together they have composed a soundtrack for artist Mark Ryden's latest series of paintings, entitled Blood, and the music accompanied the paintings as an installation at the Earl McGrath Gallery in New York in 2003. For those unfamiliar with Ryden, he is the now notorious painter whose work is an obsessed amalgam of pop culture kitsch, surreal darkness, and what appears to be variations on the face of Christina Ricci painted over and over again. From bunnies carving meat, to little girls in repose waiting for something bad to happen with a look of cool, dead reserve, to pictures of longing where sorrow, hipster detachment, and dread all commingle, Ryden's work isn't for everyone. Musically, Ridgway and Wexstun's work is spooky, striking, and deeply atmospheric but lush and melodic, all at the same time. Don't look for grimacing ambiences influenced by Brian Eno here; this is music that broods, sings, whispers, and slithers. There are lush moments of physical beauty followed always by deeper, more sinister emotions. Vocalist / co - composer Wexstun's wordless voices and melodies add so much to the compositional method that they layer another dimension on to the tracks and give them a more melancholy or alternately ecstatic feel. For fans of Ridgway's Western noir songwriting, this will be a stretch, but it ought not to be; this is a soundtrack that is cohesive, compelling, and more than a little unsettling. Thom Jurek

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1:21 PM - 3 Comments - 4 Kudos - Add Comment


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