Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Booze & Bands II


The Drink: Booker's Bourbon
The Music: Bob Dylan's Bringing It All Back Home

Present: John (host), Patrick, Aaron, Ian, Jase


The Drink
      
Booker's Bourbon is named after Booker Noe, grandson of Colonel Jim Beam. Beam was one of the first distillers to rebuild after prohibition ended in 1933, but the Beam line of distillers goes much further back. German immigrants settled in Kentucky in the late 18th century and began distilling whiskey from the grains they produced. Made with the clear limestone spring water of the Appalachians, the whiskey had a distinct characteristic and became known as Bourbon. 
In the 1980s, master distiller Booker Noe hand-selected single-barrel bourbons, bottled them in old wine bottles straight from the charred oak casks, and gave it to his friends as gifts for Christmas. It was so popular among his friends, he decided he should share bourbon the way it was meant to be, straight from the cask, with the world. He continued to hand pick the casks for Booker's until his death, when his son took over the responsibility. 
Booker's comes from a long tradition, but is a bit edgier than the average bourbon. Coming from a single cask, it varies in its potency from 121 to 127 proof and is not smoothed out by blending with other barrels. Booker's has a serious kick and is "the world's first uncut, straight-from-the-barrel bourbon." With the bottling of Booker's, the bourbon market changed. More and more consumers wanted the unique flavors of a master distiller's single cask. In the last decades, there has been a move in the whiskey industry towards unique bottlings and small batch or single barrel whiskeys. It could be argued that Booker's is responsible for the change by bringing bourbon back to its roots, its home, in the single barrel. 

The Music

Dylan's Bringing It All Back Home, released in the spring of 1965, changed everything. Dylan had become synonymous with the folk and protest music of the early 60s, even called by many the "voice of his generation." His songs, such as "Blowin' in the Wind" and "Only a Pawn in their Game," had made him famous, but transition was coming. Dylan had grown tired of being the voice and being leaned on. He began to feel that he himself had become the pawn in the game of political folk music. In the poetry that he included in his liner notes, he wrote that the district attorney was screaming "You're the one that's been causing all them riots..." followed by his sound engineer picking him up and asking for his latest works of art. Clearly, Dylan is finished being the voice, the pawn. He is moving away from the politics and into the personal. He is accepting the chaos, recognizing that he cannot lead the revolution, and maybe there doesn't need to be one at all. He is changing. 
Recorded over a series of three days in January 1965, BIABH would become the album that transitioned Dylan from acoustic folk singer to electric rock legend. Opening with "Subterranean Homesick Blues," the album kicks off loud and heavy, without direction, without politics, without his solo acoustic guitar. The A-side is entirely electric, one raucous blues tune after the next, still with Dylan's keen eye, quick, wit, and smart words, but with a little more psychedelia and a lot less politics. The B-side returns to his acoustic roots, but lacks the imperative for social change as had been seen in his earlier works. As he says, "its alright, ma- it's life and life only." Even though the album had both electric and acoustic, it was clearly a departure from his folk past and a sign of things to come for Dylan.
Dylan's move to electric shocked his folkie fan base and created mixed reviews. Many other artists, inspired by his fusion of folk and rock, took it as a sign of the future. (The Byrd's released a folk-rock version of "Mr. Tambourine Man" very soon after Dylan) Many of his fans felt he had lost his way, had sold-out, or had forgotten what he was fighting for. Dylan would take the next step later in the same year with the release of Highway 61 Revisited, opening with "Like a Rolling Stone" which he played with a full band in his first electric concert at the Newport Folk Festival in the summer of 1965.
Dylan going electric changed everything. It could be cited as one of the most important events in music history, up there with Elvis on Ed Sullivan and Michael Jackson's "Thriller" video. Dylan refused to be pigeon-holed by his fans, stood up for artistic expression, and, though called a traitor and a "Judas," continued to play his music the way he wanted to. It all started with Bringing It All Back Home.

Tasting/Listening Notes
The album, like the whiskey, starts off brash, but mellows by the time you get to the B-side.

Color: Dark amber, tawny, caramel. Hints of scarlet.
Nose: Leather and dried fruits.
Body: Dry and fire-y. Full.
Palate:  Intense burst of complex flavors, followed by the tannin and burn.
Finish: Long finish with sweet notes of smoke and caramel.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Booze & Bands I

December 2, 2010

Drink: Long Island Iced Tea
Musician: Gogol Bordello
Song: Ultimate

Present: Ian (host), John, Patrick, Aaron, Jase

Drink
There are several versions of the origins of the Long Island Iced Tea. A few tell of it's start during the times of prohibition. Others simply state that it came from Long Island, New York in the 1970's. Still others say it came about in the 50's by proper Long Island House wives mixing a little from each bottle in the liquor cabinet. I tend to believe the story from prohibition. I ran across a website run by a man in Long Island, NY that had an email from someone claiming to know the real story of the origins of long island iced teas. The email states the following:

"Long Island Iced Tea isn't from New York at all. It first surfaced in the 1920's in a community called Long Island in Kingsport Tennessee.

The inventor of it was Old Man Bishop. He passed the recipe on to his son Ransom - who perfected the drink in the 1940's. This is a fact. The Teetotaler info is true - and the Click Bros. took the cocktail mainstream.

There was another drink from Long Island called Tap Water that has a different name these days, due to patrons not wanting to be poured water from the sink when they ordered it."

The lack of a clear-cut time and place of the discovery of this drink could be due to prohibition and the secrecy it required imbibers to have.



Music
Gogol Bordello started after a few of the soon-to-be band members met at a Russian wedding in Vermont in 1998. There was no official first show, but as GB played parties and galleries, more immigrants joined. Gogol Bordello was banned from CB/GB, Mercury Lounge, Fez, and Bowery Ballroom after their first performances for being too over-the-top. GB received an award from Colbert Foundation and NY Downtown Arts Project for Pioneering Efforts and Artistic Excellence. They used all of the money for strictly immoral purposes.

The history claims they "walk the path of a gypsy punk rock revolutionary, living it up and ain't giving a fuck."

The mission of Gogol Bordello is written on a wrinkled piece of paper and scanned onto their website. It reads:

Gogol Bordello.
Artest's Statement:
Gogol Bordello's task is to provoke audience out of post-modern aesthetic swamp onto a neo-optimistic communal movement towards new sources of authentic energy.
With acts of music, theatre, chaos, and sorcery Gogol Bordello confronts the jaded and irony-deseased. Our treatment of traditional material is freewilloos (? hard to read), but is not irony-driven and thus real. Our theatre is chaotic and spontaneous and becauase of that is alarming and responce provoking.
From where we stand it is clear that world's cultures contain material for endless art-possibilities and new mind-stretching combinations, raw joy and survival energy. We chose to work with Gypsy, Cabaret and Punk traditions. Its what we know and feel. And many more are possible that can make the beloved statement of post-modernism "everything is been done" sound as an intellectual error.
The troubadours of neo-authentics are comin as a trans-global Art syndicate family that has never been witnessed before. PARTY!
-Hütz and GB

I feel the song "Ultimate" by Gogol Bordello is a great example of how they live.


Mix
Long Island Iced Tea and Gogol Bordello have a similar style in the variety of culture they include.

The primary ingredients of Long Islands are Vodka, Rum, Gin, and Tequila. Vodka originated in Eastern Europe. The name stems from the Russian word for water "voda". Rum has it's origins in the Caribbean. Gin has Dutch origins, but became popular in England when the government allowed unlicensed gin production and at the same time imposed a heavy duty (tax) on all imported spirits. Tequila originates from Spain and Mexico.

Gogol Bordello is even more culturally diverse. The lead singer, Eugene Hütz, is from Ukraine. Others in the band are from places in Russia, Israel, Ethiopia, Ecuador. The rest are the first generation in their family to be US citizens and are descended directly from Chinese, Thailand, Swedish, and Caribbean.


The night was a great success.  Everyone enjoyed my Long Island, Gogol Bordello, and the Kartoplyanka (Ukrainian potato soup) that I made.


Booze & Bands I