Arkansas Times

Rock Candy

« Friday To-Do: Anne Pressly Benefit | Main | A New-fashioned Revival »

Friday To-Do: The Boondogs



BOONDOGS
10 p.m., Juanita's. $10.

The Boondogs abide. For almost a decade, the local pop-rock group's been a study of persistence, releasing new albums about every other year and playing out just enough that their shows always feel long-coming. The central dynamic, too, remains largely unchanged: Lead singers and songwriters and husband and wife Indy Grotto and Jason Weinheimer frame songs (each usually anchors songs alone) as if they're having a conversation, and one that often takes dark turns. But don't mistake persistence for creative sameness. With each album, the 'dogs have built on their formula, which has lately meant albums that deeply deserve an audience beyond Little Rock. Their new record, “Take Shelter,” a sunnier, bigger sounding rumination on love and loss, easily fits that bill. On Friday they'll celebrate its release. The famed producer, session man and singer/songwriter Jim Dickinson opens the show with a rare performance in his hometown. The $10 entry fee includes a copy of the album.

See a short video on the Boondogs in our video player above.

Comments

Bravo, LM. Just lovely...and quite funny, too. How come I can't send the video to anybody?

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)

Thrown a bone
Date: 7/2/2009
By: Gerard Matthews

When the General Assembly passed a law earlier this year to make acts of aggravated animal cruelty a felony in Arkansas, Kay Simpson, director of the Humane Society of Pulaski County, cried. /more/
>> In frame

Will fill job
Date: 7/2/2009
By: Arkansas Times Staff

Dan O'Byrne, informed by e-mails from City Director Ken Richardson that it was high time the CEO of the Little Rock Convention and Visitors Bureau filled the director of diversity sales position, said Monday a national search will begin once the city's human resources office approves the job description. /more/


That was him, this is me
Date: 7/2/2009
By: Arkansas Times Staff

When Bill Clinton was president and Mark Sanford was in Congress, the South Carolina representative and moralist was unforgiving of Clinton's marital misconduct. /more/