Page 14 - SPIRE Digital Version JAN-APR 2024 8th Issue
P. 14

WINTER 2024





                                INDIEFERM BREWING PRESENTS
                                SUNDAY FUNDAY WITH THE
                                SHADY ROOSTERS
                                SUN, JAN 14  @ 2:00PM-5:00PM

                            *****TICKETS SOLD AT DOOR, cash only*****
                                    [General Admission seating]
                        The Shady Roosters are a South Shore-based roots rock band
                        that have been together for about twenty-five years, mostly
                        under the name Lonesome Jukebox. But they changed the
                        name to the Shady Roosters recently as the lineup had
                        changed somewhat. Their song list includes a mix of
                        rockabilly, blues, roots, and country with some original tunes
                        that wouldn’t have sounded out of place on jukeboxes of the
                        ‘50s and ‘60s. The most important ingredient is fun. They
                        wouldn’t still be doing it if it wasn’t fun and that always
                        carries over to the crowd.

                                                                          THE BUSTED JUG BAND
                                                                                    SAT, JAN 20  @ 8PM
                                                                                                      $25
                                                                           The Busted Jug Band’s show is an hilarious romp
                                                                             through time featuring group vocals, swinging
                                                                         rhythms and novel instrumentation. Played by five
                                                                       men in top hats, derbies and garish suits; inspired by
                                                                       Black American music of the early 20th Century; the
                                                                                group features novel instruments — often
                                                                            homemade, such as washboard, washtub bass,
                                                                              rhythm bones, banjo-ukuleles, bicycle horns,
                                                                          modified kazoos and – yes – rubber chickens. The
                                                                        BJB plays music of classic jugsters like the Memphis
                                                                           Jug Band, plus a mix of obscure swing, blues and
                                                                                         novelty music. The Busted Jug
                                Band have produced entertaining “silent music videos” for songs featured on their debut, eponymous
                              album. They even have their own comic book (!) featuring band members “Smiling Pee-Wee Hernando,”
                             “Early Bird,” “Kayola O’La,” “Lefty Boom-Boom” and “Rude Boy,” as well the anthropomorphized “Phil the
                                     Jug.” (In this way, the band stayed active during the pandemic, if only in the second dimension!)
                             During the Jazz Age of the early 20th Century, musicians who couldn’t afford trumpets, tubas and drums
                             replaced them with homemade instruments, such as kazoo, washboard and jug. Thus the Jug Band sound,
                                   sometimes called “poor man’s Jazz”, was born. This was revived in the 1960s with groups like Jim
                            Kweskin’s Jug Band. The Busted Jug Band pushes the Jug idiom beyond its historical confines. Homemade
                               instruments are modified with modern techniques for maximum impact. Inspiration has come from the
                              likes of Spike Jones & His City Slickers and Hoosier Hotshots. Vaudevillian sight gags, jokes and colorful
                                                                    stage attire round out the show and fun reigns supreme.
                              What started as a weekly session at a local pub turned into a costumed, vaudevillian-style act when the
                               band was invited to perform at a nearby Steampunk festival. Along the way, the band has performed at
                                area performing arts centers, schools, municipal festivals and nursing homes (for which they received
                                                                                           Club Passim’s Iguana Grant).










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