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Posted on Tue, Feb 26, 2013 : 7:59 a.m.

Blind Pig hosting local bands' tribute to legendary Velvet Underground

By Will Stewart

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The Velvet Underground with singer Nico.

If the saying about the Velvet Underground is true—that even though they never sold many records, everyone who bought one went out and formed their own band—then a bunch of those bands must have been from around Ann Arbor.

How else to explain the number of artists clamoring to get on the bill for VU Fest, a tribute show, of sorts, scheduled for March 2 at the Blind Pig.

“People have been very excited to take part in it,” said Dave Sharp, the local bassist and bandleader, who is putting the show together. “We’ve had three rehearsals so far and they’ve been a blast.”

Sharp and Ohio-based drummer Chuck Mauk will serve as the backline throughout the show, as other artists rotate through, offering their own, unique takes on the Velvets’ unmistakable catalog.

Sharp said he hatched the idea for the show—based on the popularity of past tributes to Bob Dylan and Johnny Cash—during a recent drive up north for a gig.

I was listening to (the VU album) ‘Loaded,’ which I hadn’t heard for a long time and each time a song came on, I was like, ‘This is a good song,’” he said. “And they just kept coming.

PREVIEW

VU Fest

  • Who: Countless local music acts, organized by Dave Sharp.
  • What: Velvet Underground tribute concert.
  • Where: Blind Pig, 208 S. First St.
  • When: 9:30 p.m. (doors) Saturday, March 2.
  • How much: $10 (ages 18-20, $13).
That’s when I got the idea for the show, because I know a lot of people—and particularly musicians—are really into them.”

And he was right.

More than 20 artists are on board for the gig, including Saturday Looks Good to Me frontman Fred Thomas, producer-artist Jim Roll, FUBAR singer Sophia Hanifi and her guitarist-husband David Keeney, and local guitar sliner Brian Delaney (Bluescasters, Vibratrons), among many others.

“The cool thing is that people are finding their own ways to interpret these songs,” Sharp said. “For instance, Alex Johnson (the founder of the Ann Arbor Music School) is doing kind of a David Bowie-like thing on ‘Waiting For My Man,’ and some other guys are doing a more Lou Reed solo version of ‘White Light White Heat.’”

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Dave Sharp

Angela J. Cesere | AnnArbor.com file photo

Casual fans might only be hip to tunes like “Sweet Jane” or “Rock and Roll,” but the Velvets’ catalog is endlessly fascinating and full of great, great songs. The band can be seen as a precursor not only to punk and new wave, but also to lo-fi and indie rock.

The band never sold many records while it existed in the 1960s and early 1970s. However, its importance as swelled as bands like REM championed its legacy.

“As I learn this stuff for the show and go back and listen to it, it’s pretty simple music, but the attitude is great,” Sharp said. “It has this, like, this New York City kind-of creative attitude.”

Artistic expression and free interpretation are the name of the game for this gig, Sharp said. To that end, he’s also enlisted local muralist Mary Thiefels to perform live painting on stage while the musicians are playing.

“I want to evoke sort of a downtown Factory vibe,” he said, referring to the studio/hangout of the Velvet Underground’s patron and producer, Andy Warhol. “I’m definitely telling people that if they have ideas to bring them out.”

Comments

Tizz

Fri, Mar 1, 2013 : 12:51 a.m.

VU were geniuses.

aanative

Thu, Feb 28, 2013 : 5:55 p.m.

Great idea! Hope it introduces some the VU catalogue to a new generation of hipsters

Steve Bean

Tue, Feb 26, 2013 : 3:39 p.m.

Great idea, Dave! Thanks for covering, Will. Maybe I'll see you there.