Cadillac Flambe

Cadillac Flambe

CD Name: 
Old American Law
Music Link: 
http://www.reverbnation.com/cadillacflambe
Album Cover URL: 
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<p><span>Some bands have the ability to create music that reaches into a chasm of sorrow and affliction, exposing the deepest of wounds. With its latest release&nbsp;<span>Old American Law</span>,&nbsp;<a href="https://www.facebook.com/pages/Cadillac-Flambe/274257025472">Cadillac Flambe</a>&nbsp;boasts nine heavily weighted tracks that escort the listener through calamitous musical compositions, and</span><span>&nbsp;tragic tales</span><span>&nbsp;told by the mesmerizing vocals of husband and wife Kris and Havilah Bruders.</span></p> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div><span>Since its previous release,&nbsp;<span>Eli&rsquo;s Porch</span>, Cadillac Flambe has had to adjust its sound. The band&rsquo;s harmonica player James &ldquo;Pappy&rdquo; Garrett, who was an integral component to its dark Americana blues approach, died in a car accident during the making of the 2011 EP. Shrinking down to a four-piece, the band has shifted in a decidedly more rock &lsquo;n roll direction, still retaining its rootsy nature but packing a more substantial punch.</span></div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div><span>Ushered in by Kris Bruders&rsquo; signature gritty blues guitar sound, &ldquo;Shakin&rsquo; Baby&rdquo; sets the album in motion, highlighted additionally by Michael Payne&rsquo;s massive but calculated drum work and Dave Duly&rsquo;s perfectly in-the-pocket bass playing. On this album, Payne and Duly add a collective rhythmic wallop unheard in previous recordings, pervading the tunes with a rock and R&amp;B heartbeat.</span></div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div><span>After the first track, you&rsquo;re likely in for the ride, which allows Cadillac Flambe to pull you in to its turbulent descent.</span></div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div><span>This emotional tailspin&nbsp;</span><span>careens to its greatest depths</span><span>&nbsp;in &ldquo;3 Bullets,&rdquo; the album&rsquo;s longest and most powerful track&mdash;one split into two distinct acts. In Act I, Havilah Bruders tells the story of a desperate mother trying to feed her child, reaching out to the church, the government, and the bank, and is turned away by each. Act II arrives in the middle of the song, which slows from a steady 4/4 to a haunting 6/8 groove, as she discloses the news of her child&rsquo;s death. A chilling anguish is felt as Bruders&rsquo; voice rages, a deliriousness is experienced as she transitions from a quiet whimper to a grief-stricken roar,&nbsp;</span>also revealing the song's final crux: the woman has murdered the three entities that indirectly caused her child's death. Her soul and gospel background is most noticeable here, as she carries us through each scene and makes us feel her misery and despair, measure by measure. It&rsquo;s also apparent in &ldquo;Sweet Chariot,&rdquo; where she takes us through a woman&rsquo;s frenzied fear of impending death, into her answered prayers of serenity and light.</div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div><span>Most of the songs on&nbsp;<span>Old American Law&nbsp;</span>were penned by Kris Bruders, whose own vocals have a mystic, commanding, but sincere quality to them. Take &ldquo;Father to Son&rdquo; for instance, a narrative about a father&rsquo;s beliefs and pressures onto his son. Bruders&rsquo; vocal delivery at once contains the father&rsquo;s threatening tone and the son&rsquo;s subsequent harsh, casual defiance. In the album&rsquo;s title track, his voice characterizes the overall personality of the album. His words and the dusty Delta blues sound of his hollow-body custom magnesium guitar convey the voice of an uncompromising outlaw. Bruders&rsquo; authoritative, booming vocals&mdash;often coupled with his wife&rsquo;s harmonies, sometimes impassioned, sometimes a simple adornment to his own&mdash;and the unique gravel of his guitar dig into the meat of each song.</span></div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div><span>Plenty of bands write songs about death, family strife, social issues, and religious conviction, yet few are able to execute it as effectively as Cadillac Flambe does in&nbsp;<span>Old American Law</span>. The throttle of the rhythm section, the bedraggled, melancholy guitar tones, the dissonant piano chords, and the soulful vocals push the message of each song to the forefront. The LP, which was tracked, mixed, and mastered at&nbsp;<a href="https://www.facebook.com/LittleClassRecords">Little Class Records</a>&nbsp;by Keegan Smith, is the strongest manifestation of anything the band has released to date.&nbsp;</span></div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div><span>--<b>Michelle Bacon</b></span></div> <p>&nbsp;</p>
   

Album review: Cadillac Flambe - Old American Law

(Photo by Todd Zimmer)
 
Some bands have the ability to create music that reaches into a chasm of sorrow and affliction, exposing the deepest of wounds. With its latest release Old American Law, Cadillac Flambe boasts nine heavily weighted tracks that escort the listener through calamitous musical compositions, and tragic tales told by the mesmerizing vocals of husband and wife Kris and Havilah Bruders.
 
Since its previous release, Eli’s Porch, Cadillac Flambe has had to adjust its sound. The band’s harmonica player James “Pappy” Garrett, who was an integral component to its dark Americana blues approach, died in a car accident during the making of the 2011 EP. Shrinking down to a four-piece, the band has shifted in a decidedly more rock ‘n roll direction, still retaining its rootsy nature but packing a more substantial punch.
 
Ushered in by Kris Bruders’ signature gritty blues guitar sound, “Shakin’ Baby” sets the album in motion, highlighted additionally by Michael Payne’s massive but calculated drum work and Dave Duly’s perfectly in-the-pocket bass playing. On this album, Payne and Duly add a collective rhythmic wallop unheard in previous recordings, pervading the tunes with a rock and R&B heartbeat.
 
After the first track, you’re likely in for the ride, which allows Cadillac Flambe to pull you in to its turbulent descent.
 
This emotional tailspin careens to its greatest depths in “3 Bullets,” the album’s longest and most powerful track—one split into two distinct acts. In Act I, Havilah Bruders tells the story of a desperate mother trying to feed her child, reaching out to the church, the government, and the bank, and is turned away by each. Act II arrives in the middle of the song, which slows from a steady 4/4 to a haunting 6/8 groove, as she discloses the news of her child’s death. A chilling anguish is felt as Bruders’ voice rages, a deliriousness is experienced as she transitions from a quiet whimper to a grief-stricken roar, also revealing the song's final crux: the woman has murdered the three entities that indirectly caused her child's death. Her soul and gospel background is most noticeable here, as she carries us through each scene and makes us feel her misery and despair, measure by measure. It’s also apparent in “Sweet Chariot,” where she takes us through a woman’s frenzied fear of impending death, into her answered prayers of serenity and light.
 
Most of the songs on Old American Law were penned by Kris Bruders, whose own vocals have a mystic, commanding, but sincere quality to them. Take “Father to Son” for instance, a narrative about a father’s beliefs and pressures onto his son. Bruders’ vocal delivery at once contains the father’s threatening tone and the son’s subsequent harsh, casual defiance. In the album’s title track, his voice characterizes the overall personality of the album. His words and the dusty Delta blues sound of his hollow-body custom magnesium guitar convey the voice of an uncompromising outlaw. Bruders’ authoritative, booming vocals—often coupled with his wife’s harmonies, sometimes impassioned, sometimes a simple adornment to his own—and the unique growl of his guitar dig into the meat of each song.
 
Plenty of bands write songs about death, family strife, social issues, and religious conviction, yet few are able to execute it as effectively as Cadillac Flambe does in Old American Law. The throttle of the rhythm section, the bedraggled, melancholy guitar tones, the dissonant piano chords, and the soulful vocals push the message of each song to the forefront. The LP, which was tracked, mixed, and mastered at Little Class Records by Keegan Smith, is the strongest manifestation of anything the band has released to date. 
 
--Michelle Bacon
 
Michelle is the editor of The Deli KC and is in bands. Believe it or not, this is the first full album review she’s written all year.
 

On Saturday, July 26, Cadillac Flambe will be performing at Czar Bar with Thunderclaps and Deco Auto. Be sure to check them out. You can also download the new album at the link.

 

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Show recap: Murder Ballad Ball 5 - The Verdict

(Photo by Sondra Freeman)
 
Another Murder Ballad Ball has come and gone, leaving a ghostly smile playing about the lips of those who attended that will be a source of puzzlement well in the coming week to those we come in contact who didn't attend.
 
Saturday night, The Verdict, was seven hours of music by some of Kansas City's best musicians performing at The Living Room Theater. The music got started at 6:00 with A.J. Gaither doing a one-man set playing his homemade cigar box guitars and a kick bass, doing mostly original material, except that gospel number he snuck in there because hey, the crucifixion is the most famous murder of 'em all, right?
 
Next up was perennial KC bluegrass favorite Loaded Goat, romping through a five-song set that had the crowd that was starting to trickle in and fill up the place on their feet and dancing from the first notes of “John Hardy” to the final notes of “Six Feet Down.”
 
Next up was David George and cellist Christine Gross doing a stripped-down six-song set of Crooked Mile tunes that had the crowd that was ready to ride off and rob the Glendale Train with Loaded Goat a few minutes before paying rapt attention so as not to miss any of his subtle turns of songwriting phrase.
 
The fourth act of the night was Damon Parker who did a solo-set—just him and his electric piano—reminiscent of Dr. John and New Orleans. His rendition of “Seven Spanish Angels” gave me goosebumps, and the strains of “Night Train” hung in the room long after he had left the stage and the next act was setting up.
 
Mikal Shapiro put together an all-star ensemble for her set, with the one-and-only Betse Ellis on bass, Amy Farrand on drums, and Chad Brothers on lead guitar. Her set opened with a version of “You Are My Sunshine” that my Nana never sang to me, moved into her original song “Technicolor,” followed by “Dublin Reds,”(her interpretation of Townes Van Zant's “Dublin Blues”) and they finished their set with the timeless Leonard Cohen classic “The Future.” Here's hoping we see more of this project in the new year—these musicians just jell when they come together. Each and every one of them is absolutely fabulous in their own right, but never has the phrase “the whole is greater than the sum of its parts” been more fitting.
 
 
Anthony Ladesich—Kansas City's answer to Steve Earle—was up next, and he played seven original songs, each one a narrative, and each one a true murder ballad. His set started with “To Vanish and Fade,” a haunting tale of a man who kills the banker who comes to foreclose on his home, then segued into the even more haunting “Down Bellfontaine,” about a serial killer stalking and murdering his first victim. The tune that stuck in my head was “In the Cut”: “we'll get in quick and get out quicker, we'll get high when we get done” about two guys who rob a liquor store, but it's a double cross, and one of them kills the other one—but he got high when he got done.
 
Kasey Rausch, who never disappoints, delivered a knock-out set with alternating supporting musicians. Her first song was “I Used to Love Her,” sang with her sister Kim Rausch McLaws; the sisters delivered some of the tightest harmonies you'll ever hear this side of the Ryman. She finished her set with the Rural Grit All-Stars doing another superb rendition of “Seven Spanish Angels.”
 
The Rural Grit All-Stars have been holding the fans of roots music in thrall for years. I worked for Roger Naber at the Grand Emporium when the Rural Grit Happy Hour got started, and when the news spread through the music community that he had sold the bar, the most common question I got was, “What's going to happen to Rural Grit?” (It has had a couple of homes since then, but it's still going strong, Monday nights from 6:00-9:00 at The Brick, and the cover is still only three bucks.) The All Stars performed their own set, and its various members performed with other acts throughout the night, especially Betse Ellis. She was, without a doubt, on the stage more than anyone else. It seemed like she played with more acts than she didn't; this is not a complaint, it is simply an observation, smug and self-satisfied in a my-town-is-better-than-your-town-for-live-music sort of way.
 
 
The Silver Maggies are always great, and always loud, and Saturday night was no exception. They brought their “A” game to the Ball and crushed it with a wall of sound.
 
 
The Philistines were the penultimate act, kicking their set off with the original number “Stygia,” then following it with a few covers, the first one ‘80s college-rock classic by Adam & The Ants, “Killer in the Home.” That was followed by Neil Young's “Revolution Blues. Cody Wyoming and Kimberly Queen, the couple that makes up the beating heart of The Philistines, are huge fans of ‘80s college rock, and they went back to that well for “Killing and Arab” by The Cure, and finished the set with “Para” by Calexico.
 
 
Since Murder Ballad Ball is the brainchild of Cadillac Flambe (pictured above) frontman Kristopher Bruders, they took the stage last and played until closing time, holding the rapt attention of the die-hards who were still hanging in there at 12:30. Once they got the technical issues with the piano resolved, they blew the roof off the joint. Havilah Bruders has a voice so powerful it can make the hair on the back of your neck stand up when she belts out a murder ballad, and no drummer has ever had more fun with a kit than Michael Payne, but bassist Dave Duly gives him a run for his money. For all intents and purposes, when they're playing, the Cadillac Flambe rhythm section is like kids at recess.
  
Much appreciation to The Living Room Theater for the use of the space and to their staff for putting up with a bunch of rowdy music fans, to the tireless efforts of both Rhonda Lyne and Sondra Freeman who work non-stop to make sure every Midwest Music Foundation event comes together seamlessly, to all the vendors who donated items for the raffles and silent auction, and to the talent for showing up and entertaining us and bringing us together for such a good cause...the health and well being of Kansas City musicians. As I like to say, before the country had Obamacare, KC's musicians had Abby Care.
 
--Tammy Booth
  
Tammy (AKA Blue Girl) also blogs for They Gave Us A Republic and Show Me Progress.
 

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Show preview: Winfield Hangover at The Riot Room, 10.26.13

 
Missed the Walnut Valley Festival (or Winfield, as you may know it) last month? Went and still can’t get enough? Never fear, Kansas City: twelve local bands will be performing at The Riot Room this Saturday night as a part of The Winfield Hangover.
 
The concert has been organized by Eddie Crane (of Loaded Goat, pictured below), who has been a large proponent of the roots/Americana scene for years. “Every year when the Walnut Valley Festival in Winfield ends, I feel like I can hear 15,000 hearts breaking, knowing that it's another 360 days until it rolls around again. I just wanted to give everyone another taste and put together a show for some of the folks that couldn't make or just can't let it go,” said Crane.
 

(Photo by Todd Zimmer)
 
He’s put together quite an evening, showcasing some of the genres and subgenres represented at the annual fest, from folk to metalgrass to thrashbilly and beyond. See the full schedule below!
 
 
Indoor stage:
5:30 – Whiskey for the Lady
6:30 – Wells the Traveler
7:30 – Betse Ellis
8:30 – Famous Seamus and the Travelbongs
9:30 – Fast Food Junkies
10:45 – The Calamity Cubes
12:15 – Deadman Flats

Patio stage:
5:00 – Kasey Rausch and Friends
6:00 – The John Brown Boys
7:00 – Cadillac Flambe
8:00 – Loaded Goat
9:15 – The Kansas City Bear Fighters
 

--Michelle Bacon

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Photos: Plaza Art Fair, 9.21 and 9.22.12

(Above photo: Diverse)

Last weekend, hundreds gathered at the Plaza Art Fair for art, food, music, and fun. The Ink stage hosted some of Kansas City's most popular bands. See our photos below, from Todd and his budding photographer son, Ian Zimmer.

Cadillac Flambe

Photo by Ian Zimmer:

Photo by Ian Zimmer:

The Grisly Hand

Photo by Ian Zimmer:

Sons of Great Dane

Photo by Ian Zimmer:

Victor & Penny

Diverse

Not A Planet

Beautiful Bodies

All uncredited photos by Todd Zimmer. Please do not use without permission.

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