Nightshark
Taylor Texas Corrugators
For some reason, I was under the impression that this Greg Ginn project was going to be a jam band like the kind you often see playing somewhere in Denver or Boulder on any given night. Perish the thought. I also thought Ginn would be playing guitar. Instead, this was an improvisational, instrumental rock band that was definitely not the sort of thing you'll see at Sancho's or The Other Side or wherever. Yes, it was more or less a blues jam thing with jazz flourishes and noisy passages that sounded like it was taking blues and jazz into their most experimental reaches. Absolutely Ginn grooved on the bass while Gary Piazza pulled off some Hendrix-esque guitar riffing and Dominick Feedam laid out some surprisingly straightforward drumming. But Ginn's bass tone was gritty and his lines were driving even when they flowed into sinuous grooves. Normally this sort of music bores me to death but somehow Ginn and the guys made otherwise conventional music interesting for the hour they played through their songs. I'd heard about how great a bass player Ginn was from having read accounts of his prowess but seeing it in person left no doubt. Maybe the whole show seemed a little long in parts but it was varied enough to not bore.
Anyone who expected a Black Flag song to be thrown in probably doesn't understand that Greg Ginn isn't someone who wants to revisit the past but, instead, wants to move forward according to his own compass even if no one else understands it or appreciates what he's doing. And isn't that why some of us found his work with Black Flag wortwhile in the first place?