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05.22.02
Jack
McDowell of
stickfigure writes
a weekly column for foxsports.com
"Black Jack"
McDowell was called one of baseball's last true mavericks. The former
Cy Young-winner-turned-rock musician now brings his idiosyncratic perspective
to FOXSports.com where he'll share his weekly take on baseball, music
and anything else that's on his (or your) mind. Read the first column
here
03.31.02
Album Review - from bullz-eye.com
So
where do middle-aged professional baseball players go when they retire?
If they're former major league pitcher "Black" Jack McDowell,
of last decade's Cleveland Indians, Chicago White Sox and New York Yankees,
then they pick up a guitar, write a few songs, and live out a rock and
roll dream. What makes McDowell's band Stickfigure and new album Ape of
the Kings interesting is that he successfully pulls from generational
experience to blow the dust off the 1980s modern rock movement. No, I'm
not talking about Loverboy or Huey Lewis & The News. Instead, Stickfigure
works off a page of notable throwbacks like The Smithereens and XTC to
create a collection of simple, riff-happy staples that never drift too
far from one another.
Close your eyes and spin the opener, "The Grave," and you might
well believe Marshall Crenshaw has gotten the old band back together.
It doesn't get much easier than following along with "Let me be what
I wanna be, feel what I wanna feel." But then, nobody ever said a
songwriter or his band had to blow you away with complexity in order to
hold an ear. Make no mistake, it's the harmless simplicity of this record
that makes it so pleasing. "Hey Man" could have fallen off most
any Connells record, with its jangly guitars and shuffling mandolin. But
if you're looking for the "crank it up" arena rock track, then
it's "Just Like Them," probably the best bid for a breakout
radio song.
As for the supporting cast, Stickfigure is no thrown-together, minimum
wage staff of session musicians. The Vandals' drummer Josh Freese (who
has Paul Westerberg and Axl Rose on his current resume) straps in to provide
most of the beats, while former Smithereen Mike Mesaros rounds out the
rhythm section on bass. McDowell lays down most of the guitar work himself,
nearly as effortlessly as he once hung curve balls in front of 40,000
people at Comiskey Park. Finally, Tom Weir climbs behind the mixing board
to assist in giving Ape of the Kings its polished clean sound. While the
second half of the record begins to fade, there is more than enough sing-along,
1980s style guitar rock woven within this recent Stickfigure project to
keep most listeners happy! And in the end, I have to believe this is a
far more admirable venture than Shaquille O'Neal's attempt at a rap career.
03.06.02
Peter Gammons on stickfigure in Tempe, AZ
From ESPN columnist Peter Gammons: "...two
dozen players crowded into a Tempe spot Friday night to see former big-leaguer
Jack McDowell's band StickFigure. He did not disappoint. "This is
a difficult business to break into," says McDowell, "and I don't
want to be thought of as some ballplayer who's dabbling in music. Music
is now my entire life. I once was a pitcher who played music, now I'm
a musician who used to play baseball."
"Jack certainly is intense up there," says Anaheim Angels first
baseman Scott Spiezio, "but then, no one should be surprised that
Jack is intense about anything." stickfigure's new disc "Ape
of the Kings" will be released nationally by What Are Records? at
the end of next month."
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