10/05/2022

In The Red Celebrates Kid Congo Powers With Two New Digital Albums October 14th / Live Shows & Book Launch Dates

IN THE RED CELEBRATES KID CONGO POWERS WITH TWO NEW DIGITAL ALBUM RELEASES
ON OCTOBER 14TH
 
Sophomore Wolfmanhattan Project album Summer Forever And Ever and concert set Live in St. Kilda with Harry Howard and The Near Death Experience will complement the publication of the forthcoming memoir, Some New Kind of Kick
 
LP and CD Editions To Be Released in 2023
 
Watch Video for Wolfmanhattan Project's Silky Narcotic
 
Kid's memoir, Some New Kind Of Kick, published October 18th through Hachette Books
 
Upcoming live shows & book launch tour 
 
  
Hi res artwork here and here
 
Kid Congo Powers, whose solo work with his band the Pink Monkey Birds has appeared on In the Red Records since 2009, will be feted with two albums to be released digitally by the label on October 14thSummer Forever and Ever, the second album by Wolfmanhattan Project, his supergroup trio with Mick Collins and Bob Bert, and Live in St. Kilda, featuring the singer-guitarist in concert in Australia backed by Harry Howard and the Near Death Experience. The collections will be issued on LP and CD in 2023.
 
These new recordings will celebrate Hachette Books’ October 18th publication of Powers’ memoir Some New Kind of Kick. The volume covers the musician’s youth as a queer Mexican-American teen in the Los Angeles punk rock scene and his work in such legendary bands as the Gun Club, the Cramps, and Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds. Cave calls the book “a gem…bursting with humor, heart, and good grace,” while Lydia Lunch praises it as “hilarious, heartbreaking, and historically juicy.”
 
Wolfmanhattan Project photo by Ebru Yildiz  / hi res
 
Summer Forever and Ever succeeds Blue Gene Stew, 2019’s debut by the Wolfmanhattan Project, a collective unit co-starring two other musicians familiar to In the Red listeners: singer-guitarist Mick Collins, front man of the seminal Detroit-bred garage units The Dirtbombs and The Gories, and drummer-vocalist Bob Bert, whose skin work has distinguished albums by Sonic Youth, Pussy Galore, Lydia Lunch’s Retrovirus, and Jon Spencer and the HITmakers.
 
Powers says of the genesis of the Wolfmanhattan Project, “I met Mick at the South By Southwest Music Conference in Austin. There was just a great vibe from him, and I admire him so much. I said, ‘We should do something together someday!’ Bob is a mutual friend of ours, and he actually pulled it together by saying, ‘Hey, let’s go in the studio.’ We had a rough concept of two baritone guitars and drums, with all of us singing. It ended up that I found a baritone guitar and no one else did, so I became the default ‘bass player.’”
 
Bert recalls, “It’s unbelievable that the Wolfmanhattan Project has been together for 10 years at this point. I went to a show at the Brooklyn Bowl, and Kid and Mick did a song together. I have to give Larry Hardy the credit for almost curating the band, in a way. I heard they were thinking about recording, and I happened to be in L.A. hanging with Larry, and he got a call from Mick, and I said, ‘Oh, I wanna get in on that.’ I’ve known Mick and Kid for a really long time, so it all kind of fell together.”
 
The group was founded as a studio project by three musicians who are kept busy by their primary bands. Blue Gene Stew was written and recorded quickly. Powers says, “I think that the new record was much more a group effort. I think there’s more of a group kind of sound, as eclectic as it is. I feel like we all played together, as opposed to playing on each other’s songs.”
 
Bert notes that the band’s music is grounded in spontaneity: “Me and Mick went in and had a couple of rehearsals, and I would come up with a beat, he would come up with a riff. I still have a cassette Walkman, believe it or not, and wed put it down on that. It wasnt even a full song. Wed just put down a bunch of ideas. When it came to recording wed lay down the basic tracks and work out different things, and a lot of it was made up on the spot. It really is a great collaboration.”
 
Recorded and engineered by Mark C. of Live Skull at his studio, Summer Forever and Ever finds Powers playing piano and the Kaoss touch-pad effects unit and Collins playing synthesizer, in addition to their usual instruments. The album reflects the same eclectic mix of musical styles heard on the debut. References and sometimes even direct quotes from sources as diverse as the Andrea True Connection, Captain Beefheart, the Count Five, and Eurythmics leap out of the speakers.
 
“My biggest influence is beatnik poetry,” says Powers. “Bob comes from the no wave scene. Mick is an incredible source of all kinds of very strange musical information. We all have library cards and we read. We listen to all kinds of things. Our thing is garage rock, and to be a good garage rocker you have to be informed by many other things, or else you’re just nostalgia.
 
“It’s a great band,” he adds. “It’s fun, it’s playful, it’s kooky and arty and rock ’n’ roll. It contains all those parts of us. We all share in the lyrics and the vocals, so it’s very much a mind-meld and a group effort.”
 
 
Live in St. Kilda was a rare appearance at which Powers was backed by a group other than his longtime combo the Pink Monkey Birds. The November 9th, 2019 show at the titular Australian city’s MEMO Music Hall was mounted to launch Nine Parts Water, One Part Sand: Kim Salmon and the Formula for Grunge, the autobiography of the singer-songwriter-guitarist of the famed Antipodean band The Scientists (whose most recent album Negativity was released by In the Red in 2021).
 
The hard-rocking group that ended up backing Powers on the show flashed some storied credentials of their own. Guitarist Harry Howard is the brother of the late Rowland S. Howard of the Bad Seeds, and played with Rowland in Crime and the City Solution and These Immortal Souls. Harry’s partner Edwina Preston is a keyboardist, a member of ATOM and the tribute unit Pop Crimes (playing the songs of Rowland Howard), and a well-known novelist and nonfiction writer. The group’s other couple, bassist Dave Graney and drummer Clare Moore, are well known Down Under for their earlier groups The Moodists and the Coral Snakes.
 
Kim wanted me to come and play for his book launch,” says Powers. “There was not enough budget for me to bring the Pink Monkey Birds. And we both said, ‘Oh, let’s use Harry’s band.’ That was a no-brainer, and it was great. I loved playing with them. They played with the Pink Monkey Birds when we went to Australia. They were so great, and I really love their albums. We did some of their songs, because it was a collaboration.”
 
The evening featured the Pink Monkey Birds’ “LSDC,” “Black Santa,” and “La Llorona,” The Gun Club’s “Sex Beat,” and The Cramps’ “New Kind of Kick” and “Garbage Man.” The Near Death Experience’s repertoire was represented by “The Only One, “”She Doesn’t Like It,” and “When He Finds Out”; the latter song was penned by the late Spencer P. Jones of Beasts of Bourbon. The night also included an eclectic batch of cover versions: East L.A. rock ’n’ roll heroes Thee Midniters’ “I Found a Peanut,” ‘60s girl group The Shangri-Las’ “Sophisticated Boom Boom,” and proto-punk noise terrorists Suicide’s “Diamonds, Fur Coat, Champagne.”
 
The rousingly received MEMO Music Hall gig served as a homecoming for ex-Bad Seed Powers, who also played a legendary Aussie tour with the Gun Club in 1983 as the Scientists’ opening act.
 
Powers says, “We’ve been to Australia several times and have built up a great following.” You can hear the love and feel the fire on Live in St. Kilda."
 
Kid Congo & The Pink Monkeybirds live shows:
 
October 6 - Yucca Valley, CA Awe Bar
October 8 - Oakland, CA Halloween Meltdown
October 9 - Los Angeles, CA Zebulon
November 10 - Portland, OR Mississippi Studios
November 11 & 12 - Seattle, WA Freakout Festival
 
Some New Kind Of Kick -  Book Launch dates:
 
October 18 - Brooklyn, NY Powerhouse Arena
October 19 - Los Angeles, CA Stories Books & Cafe
October 21 - San Francisco, CA Green Apple Books
 October 22 - Las Vegas, NV Writer's Block 
November 5 - Los Angeles, CA LA Review Of Books @ The River
more dates/signings to be announced
 
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PHANTOGRAM @ HOB anaheim 01.16.25 // THE PORTABLE INFINITE

All photos taken by Martin Worster