Advertisement

Pleasure Barons Give Fans 3 Hours of Pleasurable Music

Share

The Pleasure Barons are no robber barons. Fans on hand Friday at the Palomino got their money’s worth and then some from the 13-piece aggregate formed and fronted by local lights Dave Alvin, Mojo Nixon and Country Dick Montana. With more than three hours of well-rehearsed music, “leave ‘em wanting more” was not the operating maxim.

Alvin is one of Los Angeles’ best songwriters, and this big band pushed him through barnstorm renditions of favorites like “Marie Marie” (from his Blasters years) and “4th of July” (from his X stint). The evening’s tone, however, was set by Montana (on leave from the Beat Farmers) and Nixon (on permanent leave from his senses), who serve up slapstick leaning toward the risque and irreverently sociopolitical.

Dominant music modes: R&B;, country, Vegas.

The last motif was reinforced by a mural of the Strip, tuxes for all (save for the outdoorsy Montana, who looked ready to go hunting), and such choices as a rockin’ “Take a Letter Maria” and a Tom Jones medley.

Advertisement

Amid all the campiness, it might’ve been nice to hear more of Alvin’s sober songs and less of Nixon’s overbearing mock-Pentecostal preaching. But then, restraint was hardly the buzzword for this pleasurably generous, if overwhelming, hedonistic revue.

Advertisement