Cover Story
People got the power
| AUDIO | |
WDET interviews Bill Holdship about this story. (MP3) | |
| SEE ALSO |
| More Local Music Stories |
The Music Issue (11/11/2009) Creeps and crawlers (10/28/2009) Gone Hollywood? (10/21/2009) |
| More from Metro Times music staff |
The Music Issue (11/11/2009) Sloppy seconds (7/1/2009) Around the outside (5/13/2009) |
The plan was quite simple: Name the top 50 (or in this case, two more for extra measure) people who gave — or are giving — shape to the current Detroit music scene. Similar annual lessons have been around for years, but most of them tend to focus on "power" in sheer financial terms, as a recent Vanity Fair piece demonstrated. But, hell, the music biz imploded years before the Big Three did, so dollars-and-cents probably mean less now than they ever did. Our contention is that there are also humbler shakers who have enormous impact on local music scenes. We think of power also in terms of creativity, historical significance and impact. Synonyms for the word "power" in the dictionary include authority, clout and control, none of which actually mean the same thing — so impact is ultimately the key.
We polled a few people and this is simply the list we came up with, following a little thinking. It's hardly definitive, aside from being definitively subjective. A lot of names are obviously missing; some may have never crossed our minds; we'd love to hear suggestions or complaints. There were few criteria, although some names were no-brainers. We first decided they had to still live in Detroit ... but that got squashed real fast. We had room for only several artists — it's really hard to whittle it down to 50, uh 52 — so a lot of worthy artists who've helped a lot of other local bands got left off in the end. Iggy Pop still represents Detroit... but he really doesn't have any roots here anymore; ditto Berry Gordy, etc. Russ Gibb would have certainly been here years ago but this is not really a historical list, though it's definitely rock-pop-centric, probably at the expense of a few other genres. Gospel superstar Fred Hammond was on ... and then off ... because no one ended up writing about him. So, again, in the end, it all boils down to impact as a small group of random voters see it.
Lists like this are kinda silly, actually — but, hey, we got the power ... — Bill Holdship
PUNCH ANDREWS
PUNCH ENTERPRISES
ARTIST MANAGEMENT, PRODUCER
Edward "Punch" Andrews might merit a place on this list even without the Bob
Seger association, thanks to his helping give Detroit's first garage era a kick-start with his
legendary teen club, the Hideout (also a small label). But when Seger auditioned for Andrews in
1964, it led to a relationship that continues to this day, with Andrews directing every single facet
of Seger's career, taking the artist from the small time to superstardom. Some have suggested the
two seem almost joined at the hip — and they do have an uncanny connection, with Seger
free to pursue his art from Day One. Five full-time employees manage the biz of being Seger at Andrews'
longtime Birmingham offices, from handling music publishing to holding Capitol Records accountable
for catalog sales. The east side native has turned down other artists over the years — J. Geils
and Diana Ross among them — though he did manage the Rockets, Grand Funk Railroad (during
their late '90s "comeback" tour), and, most famously, Kid Rock, who parted company with Andrews
the day his last album hit No. 1. A spokesperson says the association was never meant to be long term,
that the goal was to build Rock's touring audience base over the eight years they worked together
(mission accomplished), and that the pair parted amicably. Besides, administering the Seger
catalog is a full-time job in and of itself for the man who's also served as producer on most of Seger's
world-famous recordings.
GREG BAISE
PROMOTER, TALENT BOOKER
Do the trends follow Greg Baise or does Greg Baise follow the trends? Based
on the last two decades of his career as a promoter, record store clerk, writer, gadfly and DJ, let's
just say that the dude has his finger on the pulse of the underground (and the bubbling-over), and
his continued presence on the Detroit music scene is a vital link, keeping our fair city connected
to an outside world of wild and woolly musical ideas. Simply put, from his earliest days in the early
'90s championing obscure bands at long-lost joints like Zoot's Coffee and Ypsi's Green Room, to
his days of injecting adventure into the community as the booker of the Majestic Theatre, straight
through to his current tenure of capturing the zeitgeist as a booker at Pontiac's Crofoot, one sees
a throughline of true enthusiasm and passion. And as his DJ alter-ego Alpha Soixante, Baise occasionally
holds court on the turntables, spinning his fave jams for welcome ears at joints around the city
(and, for a time, online at viva-radio.com too). To sum it up, if Baise didn't exist, the
scene would have needed to invent him.
JEFF & MARK BASS
PRODUCERS, LABEL OWNERS
It's not a stretch to say that, without the production team of the Bass brothers
(aka FBT, aka the Funky Bass Brothers), the Eminem phenomenon would've never found its voice. From
those earliest indie releases on, the Bass duo was there to help Mathers find his sound. By the time
they heard Mathers freestyling on a JLB open-mic spot a decade ago, they were already the de facto
in-house production team for Michgander-via-the Planet Funkenstein, George Clinton, taking
and applying that funky know-how to Em. They've been with him ever since (even as Dr. Dre has taken
much of the production spotlight), scoring Grammys, handling the publishing for some of Em's music
and parlaying the resources and attention they've garnered into their own record label, Web Entertainment,
which has produced slabs of jams by the brutal horror-core rapper King Gordy as well as revived the
recording career of '80s power-pop maestros, the Romantics.
BLACK MILK
PRODUCER, EMCEE
Even though he's young, Black Milk (born Curtis Cross) is just as well-versed
in the beginnings of the Detroit rap scene as he is in its future. Getting his start under the tutelage
of the late Detroit super-producer J Dilla, the twentysomething learned firsthand what helped
establish the city's trademark hip-hop sound: dusty soul samples, interpolations from funk records
and hard-hitting drums. After placing beats with such local rap legends as Slum Village and Phat
Kat, he started his own career as an emcee to further complement his beat-making abilities. These
days, Black is still selling beats to his fellow Detroiters (Elzhi, Slum Village, Royce Da 5'9",
Fat Ray), but his clientele has grown to include such multiplatinum-selling stars as Lloyd Banks
and Busta Rhymes, highly regarded rap veterans like Pharaohe Monch and GZA (of Wu-Tang Clan), and
a slew of others. And though he's still cognizant of his Detroit roots, with his new album Tronic,
Black looks to keep the city's — and hip hop's — sound moving forward by adding synthy,
futuristic elements to its already proven formula. With his feet planted in the D, but with a wingspan
that spreads internationally, Black Milk is taking hip hop back to the future.
BILL BLACKWELL
BLACKBIRD PRODUCTIONS, PUNCH ENTERPRISES
TOUR MANAGEMENT, CONCERT MERCHANDISING EXECUTIVE
Bill Blackwell met Punch Andrews during the summer of 1973, while working
as a bouncer at a nightclub. Andrews hired Blackwell to work on getting Bob Seger airplay for "Beautiful
Loser" and then to promote a concert on the campus of Michigan State University, where Blackwell
served as the head of the university's Pop Entertainment. More than three decades later, Blackwell
is still promoting Bob Seger & the Silver Bullet Band concerts throughout North America as
a tour manager. He's also worked with Punch on the Rockets, Grand Funk Railroad and Kid Rock projects.
Today, Blackwell also runs Blackbird Productions, a concert promotion and merchandising company.
The merchandising division manages concert merchandise sales in 18 different venues throughout
the Midwest. "If you look back at our management roster over the last 35 years — Seger, Grand
Funk, the Rockets and Kid Rock," he says, "it's a fantasy lineup that I would proudly take into any
battle of the bands."
JAMES CARTER
ARTIST
It's been 15 years since the saxophonist became a jazz world sensation with
the domestic release of his JC on the Set. In the intervening years, he's a) rarely been without
a big label release, b) never been far from the jazz world spotlight, c) never lost his roots in his
hometown, and d) almost always given fellow Detroiters a major spot on the bandstand and in the studio.
His latest release, Present Tense (Emarcy), ought to boost jazz world awareness of Detroit
trumpeter Dwight Adams, as past releases gave platforms to Craig Taborn, Tanni Tabal, Jaribu Shahid
and Larry Smith, among others. When he's not on the road, world-traveling jazz star Carter is often
to be found hanging out and jamming with the hometown cats.
CARL CRAIG
PRODUCER, DJ
The Belleville Three (Atkins, May and Saunderson) may have gotten there
first in the 1980s — but it's second-waver Carl Craig who makes Detroit Techno a sustainable
force in the worldwide dance-music community (as well as continuing to make D-town his home). He
produces and spins tracks for the clubs, sure, but he does something rarely attempted in this scene:
he makes fucking daringly authentic music, man. Craig has brought jazz, rock, dub and modern classical
influences into his productions better than anyone who ever jacked the house with a stack of vinyl,
a synth or midi controller. His newest project, a collaboration with Berlin icon Moritz von Oswald,
is an ambitious recomposition of music by 19th and 20th century classicists Ravel and Mussorgsky.
He recently brought together surviving members of Detroit's Tribe (Marcus Belgrave, Wendell
Harrison, Phil Ranelin) to revisit the space odyssey the group launched in the early 1970s. Respect
for C2 is global; his creative trajectory, now approaching 20 years and counting, still rising.
Play on, brother!
DAILY PAPER MUSIC SCRIBES
MARTIN BANDYKE, GARY GRAFF, ADAM GRAHAM, BRIAN MCCULLOM, MARK STRYKER, SUSAN WHITALL
JOURNALISTS
They seem to write more about national acts coming to the city than they do
the local scene, with the exception of the Detroit News' Whitall, whose beat includes local
radio and all things Motown Records. Nevertheless, despite the lessened impact daily newspapers
may have in this era of the Internets (much to our chagrin), all four of these individuals do
wield power as music reporters at dailies in one of the nation's largest cities.
JIM DIAMOND
PRODUCER, LABEL OWNER
Over the last 12 years, exactly how many bands have schlepped their gear up
and down the stairs and freight elevator leading to the former chicken processing plant now occupied
by Jim Diamond's Ghetto Recorders? And how would the late '90s and early '00s jams that spread Detroit's
rock rep far and wide been enabled without the disheveled Greek Buddha presence of Diamond behind
the boards, capturing it all on his trusty reel-to-reel? For a good chunk of time, when you asked
a musician at, say, the Magic Stick or Lager House where they were recording, the simplest answer
was usually just: "Diamond's." Just like "Ford's." It's fair to say the dude should be co-credited,
alongside a handful of others — such as Jack White, Mick Collins and Dan Kroha, Matt Smith,
John Szymanski and Tim Purrier, and Steve Shaw and Jeff Meier — as architects of the Detroit
"garage rock" sound. And although a high-profile royalties court case with the White Stripes may
have left him off some scenesters' Christmas card lists, Diamond still does a brisk business, capturing
the raw and cooked sounds of bands from everywhere from Brooklyn to Seattle, as well as discerning
locals who dig the relaxed warehouse homeyness of the studio, the one-on-one attention Diamond
offers, and the downtown vibe that Ghetto Recorders embodies.
EMINEM
ARTIST, RAP STAR, ENTREPRENEUR
Jack White may have played Elvis Presley in a movie, but Eminem is
the Detroiter who's been most compared to the King of Rock during his career, thanks to his excelling
in a genre that was once the domain of black folks. Proving there can be much more to white hip hop than
Vanilla Ice or even the Beastie Boys, the man born Marshall Mathers is one of the highest-selling
rappers of all time, having sold more than 80 million albums worldwide. And years before Detroit
became a new hub for motion picture production, Eminem insisted that his semiautobiographical
film, 8 Mile, be filmed right here in the city he calls home and has always celebrated via
his music. In the process, he won an Oscar for his song, "Lose Yourself," in 2003 — which he
added to his slew of Grammys. And, like Kid Rock, he's employed a ton of people from Detroit to work
for him, while making many other Detroiters world famous, be it beat-maker Paradime, musician
Luis Resto (who was part of the Oscar team for co-writing "Lose Yourself"), his late mentor Proof
or Steve King, whose 54 Studios in Ferndale is now known internationally, thanks to Em's work there.
He heads his own Shady record label, his own SIRIUS radio station and numerous other entrepreneurial
ventures. He heads a charity to give back to disadvantaged kids in the Detroit community. And he
remains a true star. Four years away from the pop scene is like an eternity these days — but
Eminem has returned with a new autobiography and an upcoming album, Relapse, that already
has the industry buzzing. In fact, VIBE magazine just named him "The Best Rapper Alive."
And when he headlined Ford Field right before going on hiatus, then-Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick filmed
a special introduction for the superstar ... though we're betting that won't happen again! Still,
that's clout! What we like best, though, is that despite all the potshots he's taken from
within the city, he remains a loyal defender and champion of Detroit to this day. If we'd ranked this
list, Eminem would surely be No. 1 and we'd have probably named him "Powerbroker of the Year."
DAVE FEENY
PRODUCER, MUSICIAN, STUDIO & LABEL HEAD
As the Detroit area's go-to pedal-steel guitar player and a member of local
alt-country heroes Blanche, Feeny is part of the area's musical elite. But what really puts him
on this list is his role as owner of Tempermill Studios, which is responsible for a long run of terrific
recordings, as well as his main manning the launch of Gangplank Records and new indie recordings
by the aforementioned Blanche, American Mars, the Friendly Foes and Sunshine Doray. And his co-production
credit (with Jack White) on Loretta Lynn's last Grammy-winning LP brought him national prominence.
JIM FLEMING
FLEMING ASSOCIATES
ARTIST MANAGEMENT
His nearly 50-artist roster includes at least one granddad of the folk circuit,
Tom Paxton, and plenty of the righteous younger generation epitomized by Ani DiFranco. They're
mostly in the United States, but also in England, Ireland, Australia and Wales. They've got Jeff
Daniels (for concert gigs), not to mention hardcore hero Eddie From Ohio and Detroit's rocking
Hard Lessons. But folk is where the roots are, and in 1995, Billboard said of Fleming Artists'
predecessor, Fleming-Tamulevich & Associates: "It is the Big Kids on the Block. It not only
understands [the modern folk market] better than anyone else, it helped invent it." Founded in
1978 by Fleming, a college administrator-turned-entrepreneur, the group now handles about 2,500
gigs a year with a staff of nine in Ann Arbor, plus a one-man office in Australia. Meanwhile, David
Tamulevich, part of the organization from 1982 until about five years ago, remains a heavy-hitter;
based in Ann Arbor, he's an agent and vice president for the Root Agency, whose roster includes Arlo
Guthrie, the Chieftains and others.
ARETHA FRANKLIN
ARTIST, LEGEND, ICON
The real Queen of Soul (eat your heart out, Tina!) seems to be the butt of too
many mean-spirited jokes these days, due to her size (which she good-naturedly poked fun at by covering
Mariah Cary's "Touch my Body" during a recent concert). But when it comes to genuine local legends
still representing the Motor City and still residing in Detroit, she takes the cake. An
eternal symbol of this city's soul, R&B and gospel stranglehold, Aretha can still sell out
theaters and arenas from Los Angeles to New York City in no time (especially since those appearances
can be sparse due to her fear of flying). She recently placed No. 1 on Rolling Stone magazine's
"Greatest Singers of the Rock Era" list, beating out both Ray Charles and Elvis. And you can bet she'll
be one of the performers at President Obama's inauguration gala (just as she was for President Clinton's).
In fact, Lady Soul recently donated $10,000 to help out a local high school choir that's been invited
to Washington, D.C., to perform for the new president during inauguration week and she expressed
a desire to perform with the group while there. Martha Reeves may have the local political clout
when it comes to soul divas, but when it comes to musical power, the queen still rules.
BRENDAN GILLEN
LABEL OWNER, ARTIST
When someone gets to the point in their career where they're mostly known
by an acronym, you know they're a potent brand. Such is certainly the case with Brendan M. Gillen
— aka BMG. One measure of power is the connective tissue that an artist or entrepreneur provides
to his music community. When that person is a label owner, radio personality, writer and acclaimed
electronic artist (the latter is as one-half and founding member of the recording duo Ectomorph),
then you got yourself a walking, talking nexus. Because he's been releasing Ectomorph records
and unleashing the best and brightest of electro on an unsuspecting world with his Interdimensional
Transmissions record label for the past decade, he's bridged the gap between the second wave of
Detroit techno to the global diaspora that it birthed. Plus, homeboy recently moved from his longtime
home in Ann Arbor to a new palace in Detroit, thus further solidifying the I-94 techno-jam love connection.
Many are the roads leading back to BMG. We're lucky to have him in the mix.
CHRIS HANDYSIDE
JOURNALIST, GADFLY, BLOWOUT FOUNDER
The modest Mr. Handyside hemmed and hawed when informed he made this list
and even strongly suggested he should be removed. And as a former MT music editor and a current
columnist (writing a very important local column), his inclusion may seem incestuous. But as the
original founder of the Blowout festival (along with Brian Boyle, now publisher of Model D) and
a local rock historian (who knows where the bodies are buried and how to find the skeletons in the
closet), how could we possibly leave him off? Plus, he's known, respected and even loved by almost
everyone on the local scene (though we'd love him even more if he was better with those damn deadlines!),
with the possible exception of one Mr. White. But he doesn't live here anymore, so who cares?
HOWARD HERTZ
ATTORNEY
The 58-year-old Detroit native is probably the best-known entertainment
lawyer in town, although he started his career as a public defender before hooking up with novelist
Elmore Leonard, his first showbiz client, whom he met through his law partner, Brad Schram. When
he began repping local producers Mark & Jeff Bass (see above), it led to a relationship with
one Marshall Mathers, better known as Eminem; one of Hertz's most visible and well-documented
cases was a lawsuit involving the rap superstar and other plaintiffs in a lawsuit to block five Internet
companies from selling Eminem ringtones online. A founder of the Motor City Music Foundation and
that group's annual awards, Hertz's client roster includes artists, producers, record labels,
managers and songwriters. If that weren't already enough, he also manages several local bands
and artists, including MT faves the Go.
JASON HUVAERE
PROMOTER
Earning his entrepreneurial stripes as an underground promoter in the DIY
raver scene of the 1990s, Jason Huvaere (and his cohorts from Paxahau) built a party empire the old-fashioned
way: by developing solid relationships with artists in North America and Europe, professional,
efficient events programming, and, most importantly, an intuitive grasp on making the dance floor
experience fun for everyone. Huvaere's 21st century business model is as practical as it is savvy.
Most Paxahau events are $5, sending a message that experiencing globally rich artistry does not
need to be unaffordable. Yes, the Movement Festival, successfully promoted and programmed by
Paxahau since 2006, now costs $40 for a weekend pass. But, c'mon, that's more than fair considering
you get to see more than 70 local and international performers over a three-day period. Huvaere
and Paxahau are also involved in new-economy and creative-class initiatives in Detroit, lending
their talents to retooling the cultural landscape. Hell, yes to all of the above, dude(s); keep
the bodies rocking.
INVINCIBLE
ARTIST, EMCEE
Forget that she's an expert emcee — arguably the finest one in the country
at the moment (hear her DIY debut album, ShapeShifters) — and the fact she does generous
favors on an international level for fellow Detroit musicians. No, what you need to know is how Invincible
(born Alana Weaver) contributes to the greater good of Detroit and its youth through hip hop and
literature. The woman successfully and selflessly mentors kids through the nonprofit group,
Detroit Summer, using hip hop in particular as a way to question authority, resist oppression and
create change — both personally and as a community. Her success stories with inner-city
kids are stacking up, and beyond that, she takes her messages of creating community and change to
places as far away as California prisons and the West Bank.
STEVE & TED JANKOWSKI
CLUB OWNERS, BOOKERS
The Jankowski brothers have run the I-Rock nightclub on Harper, one of the
best hard rock clubs in the country, for 20 years. Along with brother Adam, the Jankowskis originally
opened the bar as a rehearsal space for their band, American Jam, but the spot soon evolved into a
club with one of the finest sound systems anywhere. Not only that, but the I-Rock features a memorabilia
collection on its walls that could make the Hard Rock Café and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame green
with envy. Says Bob Seger sax man Alto Reed: "[It's] the bar that was built by musicians for
rock 'n' rollers in the Motor City."
CHRIS JOHNSTON
PROMOTER, MANAGER, CLUB OWNER
Chris Johnston is a walking example of how an earnest investment of time,
enthusiasm and intellect can transform a community. Though he might not swing the kind of weight
in the scene that a high-powered lawyer or booking agent might, the co-owner of Woodward Avenue
Brewers, the Emory and the upcoming Loving Touch pool hall in Ferndale has created a critical density
along Woodward Avenue in Ferndale, to which rockers, artists and creative folk of all stripes flock.
More than that, the former guitarist of Lansing alt-rockers 19 Wheels has put his money where his
heart is in two critical categories: a) He's the manager of the perennially touring, hardest-working
band in Detroit, the Hard Lessons, and b) he's a major prime mover behind the recent smashing success
of Ferndale's DIY Fest, which brought together artists, craftspeople, musicians and locally
made beers for one whopping good confluence of the creative class in this here town. And, for what
it's worth, his wife Krista is behind the recent spate of arresting "Slow" lawn signs that have popped
up along the side streets of northwest Ferndale too. With the Johnstons, apparently, it's all for
the kids.
KEM
ARTIST
Call him a neo-soulman, hip hop's answer to Al Jarreau, "modern Motown" —
but definitely call him ambitious. Once homeless, Kem Owens graduated to waiting tables
and singing at weddings, eventually financing his debut release, 2002's Kemistry —
subsequently picked up by Motown and reissued — which went gold. Album II was followed
by a 20-city tour featuring American Idol's Fantasia as an opening act. Kem remains based
in the Detroit area (he may be Lathrup Village's biggest star), with local management. He tours
extensively, employs a hometown band and crew, and, we're told, makes a point of pulling his wardrobe
from local boutiques. And when he's not on the road making music, he's often on the road as a motivational
speaker, making an example of his own rags-to-riches saga. Expectations are high for a third release
in 2009.
KID ROCK
ARTIST, ROCK STAR
Love him or hate him, the man born Bob Richie 37 years ago in Romeo is one of the
three most famous faces currently representing the latest wave of hit music from Detroit. After
all, the dude's sold 25 million records! He's also one of the greatest musical genre-straddlers
of today; he, of course, started out as a rock-rapper, but is currently scheduled to be one of the
headliners at next spring's Stagecoach Festival in California (the country version of Coachella).
He even seems to have some "political clout" — it was reported that Sarah Palin and one of John
McCain's daughters bonded over their admiration of the Kid's music — and he's of course campaigned
for both McCain and Bush (every generation has its own Ted Nugent, we suppose, even if Bob likes to
think he has more in common with Bob Seger, whom he inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame several
years ago). Plus, he employs a shitload of Detroiters in this bad economy, and even recently started
a Wayne State University scholarship in his own name, which he's funding via his clothing line.
The Kid also continues to celebrate all things Detroit (his latest video famously explores downtown
landmarks), although some have questioned his loyalty since — following a local interview
in which he stated he'd never sign with an out-of-state agency — he parted ways with
longtime manager Punch Andrews the very day his new Rock 'N' Roll Jesus hit No. 1 on the charts
and signed with a Nashville firm.
EVE DOSTER KNEPP
BLOWOUT PRODUCER, PUBLICIST
When planning this list, we ruled that MT staffers were ineligible.
Thus, Eve's inclusion here may raise a few eyebrows ... but the plain fact is that she's not an official
staffer and she absolutely needs to be on any such list. After six years with the MT editorial department, the Royal Oak native (who's spent the majority of her adult life in Detroit
and Hamtramck) left to form Norwegian Blue, a boutique PR firm that counts Hi-Fi Hand Grenades,
Dan Miller and downtown Hamtramck (!) among its clients. But what really puts her on the list of local
powerbrokers is her role as current producer-booker of our own Blowout Music Festival. Come the
winter months and damn near every musician in the vicinity wants to be Ms. Doster-Knepp's "friend."
Plus, she knows more about the local scene and its history — especially the late '90s garage
rock explosion — than almost anyone we know, which always makes her a valuable resource.
CHRIS KOLTAY
PRODUCER, STUDIO OWNER
Cincinnati native Chris Koltay is the kind of dude who, were the city realistic
about its promotional materials, would be on a poster for Detroit. A devout music fan, he loved the
sounds coming out of Detroit at the turn of the millennium. Knowing he had skills at recording and
bringing out the best in bands, he saw a niche in a Detroit music scene that was a wee bit balkanized
at the time, bought a cheap joint in an up-and-coming neighborhood, fixed it up as a labor of love,
craft and money, and hung a shingle outside. He promptly began making friends via his gregarious
attitude, while influencing people with the recordings he was making. Koltay's High Bias Studios
sits across the street from Corktown hotspot LJ's (oh, and that little barbecue restaurant; what's
its name again?). Early in his tenure there, one could find him mingling at the bar where he'd spy
an errant musician nursing a Bud. Koltay would then move in and insist that said musician
check out his studio. His enthusiasm was irresistible. So, now, three years into his experiment,
it's a compliment to both his networking and production skills that his CV now merits remarks such
as "He's the new Jim Diamond" from downtown musicians. And that CV includes records by such stalwarts
and up-and-comers as the Rescue, SSM, Magic Shop, Lee Marvin Computer Arm, Daniel Johnson and many
others.
THE LIVE NATION CREW, DETROIT
DAVE CLARK, DIANNA FRANK, RICK FRANKS
CONCERT PROMOTION EXECUTIVES
Based in Beverly Hills, Calif., Live Nation — which formed in 2005
as a spin-off of Clear Channel Communications — is a powerful force in any major city, and
Detroit is no different. These are the folks responsible for bringing all the big (and even
some of the smaller "hip") shows to the community. The organization's Detroit operations are headed
by Clark, VP of marketing North Central, who oversees all the marketing for Michigan, Ohio and Indiana
(and who played a helluva drum kit in the Dave Clark Five — we kid, we kid!), Frank, who does
all the club and theater marketing for the area, and Franks (like Bill Blackwell, he's another former
head of MSU's Pop Entertainment), president of North Central, who's termed the "Big Kahuna" by
associates and is responsible for booking all of the really big shows — Springsteen, Madonna,
Coldplay, etc. — into the sheds and arenas.
ERNIE MCCAUSLAND
CLUB OWNER, BOOKER
Harpos Concert Theatre is one of the best metal clubs in the nation, and has
been for eons now. A classic movie palace built in 1939, it was converted into a nightclub in the '70s
and quickly became the local venue of choice for hard rockers, ranging from Rory Gallagher to the
black metal groups. McCausland has owned and booked the large room since the early '90s. As a result,
he probably has more clout with local headbangers and thrashers than almost anyone else in the Motor
City.
AL MCWILLIAMS
MANAGER, LABEL OWNER
Tally Hall, the first official signing on Ann Arbor's Quack! Media, was recently
featured on a business video blog, which claimed that the A2 quintet is "re-inventing the music
business." No small claim, to be sure. Tally Hall is now making money for Atlantic Records, but the
outfit's guileless "We're business-savvy showpeople! Let's put on a show!" attitude springs
from its heritage as part of the Quack! media hothouse, which sprang from the creative energy and
business acumen of founder Al McWilliams. Since founding Quack! in 2003, primarily as a video production
house, McWilliams has since gone on to blur the lines between media — Quack! is truly multimedia,
signing and releasing music, videos and promotional product from a west side-centric talent pool
that's a who's-who of the current musical landscape, including the Great Lakes Myth Society, the
Hard Lessons and — in what might be his greatest coup, music-scene-wise — the entire
Suburban Sprawl label. With the Sub Sprawl move alone, he provided the resources for a gang of talented
and creative kids — who had previously made-do with DIY resources and tip money — to
record, release, distribute and, most importantly, promote some of the Detroit area's best indie
exports. Recently notable releases by bands like Javelins, Child Bite and Pop Project have created
a reason to celebrate that has, in turn, had an energizing ripple effect on Suburban Sprawl-friendly
outfits like New Grenada, Friendly Foes and other collections of folks who make the kids swoon.
So, let's take a moment to pay a little attention to the man behind the curtain, shall we?
THE MUSIC BLOGGERS
BLOGGERS, SCENE BOOSTERS
There was a time it seemed like almost every person in Detroit was in a band
or at least knew somebody in a band. These days, almost everyone has a blog. These run from really
good to mundane, from helpful to hideous (Lenny Bruce who?), from self-worthy to self-entitled
to self-indulgent (a fave is the guy who took an out-of-context shot at one of our reviews for being
narcissistic — without actually using that word — following a post about his bowel
habits, later followed by a photo of his bare, black-and-blue, 350-pound butt following a fall).
But we live in an era in which every single thought simply must be expressed instantaneously,
no matter how profound or hateful — and it's the smarmy anonymous (as in cowardly) comments
everywhere these days that are lowering the bar on genuine discourse. Some of these sites do have
impact, though, by fostering a scene. Sometimes the tastes may be questionable, and unsubstantiated
rumors get printed as fact. But motorcityrocks.com tries hard to list every gig by every Detroit
rock band, while filtering area gossip. And Deastro, at least, owes much of his local rise to two
of the seemingly most popular bloggers, who've recently teamed up to create eatthiscity.com,
though technical difficulties have plagued its early history thus far.
STEVE NAWARA
LABEL OWNER, ARTIST, DJ
It's dudes like Steve Nawara who give the word "scene" a good name. The man
— once simply known as Disco during his days holding down the low end in the Wildbunch-Electric
Six — has gone on to establish his own name as a player doing and keeping time in such core rock
city outfits as Rocket 455 and the Detroit Cobras. Last year, he and a few like-minded friends started
the country-blue-rock 'n' roll-awesome outfit, the Magic Shop, which is releasing its debut 45
on the resuscitated Italy Records label this month. In a musical community that can sometimes get
a wee bit jaded and a wee bit balkanized, Nawara has been a beacon of agnostic Switzerland-like optimism,
impeccable musical taste and leadership in the Detroit music scene and beard-growing community.
That connectivity and optimism led him to take a stab at starting a record label — and an online-only
record label (at first) at that! The Beehive Recording Company — the label and home studio
Nawara founded a couple years ago — has released jams by artists as diverse as blues-rockers
Cuckold and cheeky rap-ironist esQuire. All that's great, but perhaps nothing encapsulates the
Nawara zeitgeist as concisely as the jams he spins weekly at Corktown's LJ's lounge under the moniker
DJ Anytime & his Incredible Pop Machine. Far from the hard-bitten rock you might expect from
someone with his onstage CV, Nawara gathers scenesters, hipsters and other-sters like flies to
honey, with a mix of pop gems, left-field bubblegum, dance music and whatever the hell else he feels
like playing. Every Wednesday, Nawara assures that LJ's is the place you need to be. Now that's power.
MIKE NOVAK
ATTORNEY
The Troy-based entertainment lawyer's name may be a tad less known locally
than Howard Hertz's — but Novak has no less clout when it comes to representing the stars.
The Wayne State Law School graduate represents a wide range of talents, including Bob Seger, Ted
Nugent (he's probably already earned a spot in heaven having to deal with that one!), Kid Rock and
WRIF 101.1 FM radio hosts Drew & Mike. Novak reps producers, venues and radio talent, both here
and nationwide, and as the lawyer of record for the original Paxahau Promotions Group when that
company founded the Detroit Electronic Music Festival (which evolved into Movement), his clout
expands beyond just the rock and radio markets.
JEREMY & BRIAN PETERS
LABEL OWNERS
Amid the constant ebb and flow of incoming freshmen from around the country
that refresh the Ann Arbor music scene every year, it's hard to sort the tourists from the tenured,
the goonies from the townies. It's no problem to start up a band with a bunch of dudes from Oakland,
Calif., Long Island or Brooklyn, N.Y., and then settle into a New York City loft when you've graduated.
It's quite the other thing to stick around town and become part of the culture. So it is that Jeremy
and Brian Peters of Quite Scientific have broken through the clutter of "me-too" to form an organic
record label, releasing the works of local talents. It's a label born from passion and purpose.
And it's a label that gives a shit about its aesthetics, packaging, distribution and, naturally
and primarily, the music. The boys behind Quite Scientific have, over the course of just
a couple of years, established a track record that has led them to New York's massive CMJ festival,
as well as accolades and kudos from an ever-growing legion of fans and supporters. And they've done
it by sticking to their mission statement of only putting out jams they really, truly care about,
made by artists they love even outside the studio. Idealistic? Yep. Admirable? You betcha!
Long may they experiment.
JOEL PETERSON
CONCERT PROMOTER, MUSICIAN
As the longtime promoter of the Bohemian National Home, Peterson has brought
avant-garde jazz, rock, noise pop and experimental music to the Detroit area that the city may have
otherwise missed out on, ranging from a reunited Mission of Burma to nationally renowned pianist
Matthew Shipp. For the past three years, his Festival of Jazz & Improvised Music has been an
annual "don't miss" event for those seeking more adventurous sounds. Due to a disagreement with
his business partner, the 35-year-old Peterson — an excellent avant-garde bassist in his
own right — was forced to stop booking shows at the official Bohemian Home, proper. But he
simply moved his shows to the CAID and other venues without missing a beat.
DOUG PODELL
RADIO PROGRAMMER, DJ
Detroit is still a very important market for breaking national acts —
and WRIF remains a powerhouse in that arena. Thus, as RIFF's program director, in addition to hosting
his own popular midday on-air show, Podell, aka "The Doc of Rock," is a human powerhouse
with clout that extends far outside the city. A longtime veteran of Detroit radio, the east side
Detroit native also remains a big fan of the local scene, giving various D- town acts a boost on his
station for decades now.
TERRI PONTREMOLI
MUSIC FESTIVAL EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, BOOKER
Big, free, outdoor music fests in the Detroit area can trace their roots to
the Montreux-Detroit International Jazz Festival's 1980 kickoff. To survive against the competition
it sired, the granddad fest has had to reinvent itself several times. In recent years, Carhartt
clothing heir Gretchen Valade bailed the festival out financially, and former exec director Frank
Malfitano repositioned it geographically to expand beyond the confines of Hart Plaza. Since 2007,
exec director Pontremoli has reinvigorated the jazz component and scaled back the nonjazz offerings
from mega-acts like Chaka Khan and Aretha Franklin to the more compatible likes of Bettye LaVette
and the Derek Trucks Band. A former classical violinist, she learned the festival ropes with Tri-C
Jazz Festival (in her hometown of Cleveland) before joining the Detroit fest staff in 2005.
MR. PORTER (DENAUM PORTER)
PRODUCER, DJ
While his production style isn't as easily traceable to what's widely considered
Detroit's trademark sound, Denaun Porter — widely known as "Mr. Porter" — is still
one of the city's most important and successful beat makers. He got his start crafting quirky soundbeds
for his groupmates in the Eminem-led D12, but after producing the infectious "P.I.M.P." single
from 50 Cent's seminal 2003 album Get Rich or Die Tryin', the floodgates would open. Known
as a versatile go-to option for both gritty or playful beats and a catchy chorus (whether it's rap
or sung) to match, hip-hop's top dogs — Snoop Dogg, the Game, Busta Rhymes, Method Man —
have all enlisted Mr. Porter's services, both for viable radio singles or album builders.
PAUL ROSENBERG
GOLIATH ARTISTS INC.
ARTIST MANAGEMENT
Once an aspiring rapper known as Paul Bunyan, Detroit native Rosenberg began
his career as a personal injury lawyer in NYC after graduating from Mercy School of Law at the University
of Detroit. That was before he returned to his first ambition — namely, entertainment law
— and started reaching out to artists in his hometown. One of those artists, Eminem, sent
him the bare bones of what would become The Slim Shady EP, and the duly impressed Rosenberg
offered to represent the aspiring hip hopper. Today, Rosenberg continues that relationship with
the superstar and is now president of Shady Records, manager of Shady Ltd. (Em's clothing line)
and the president and CEO of Goliath Artists Inc., which includes Em's custom SIRIUS radio station
and numerous other entrepreneurial ventures. How powerful is he overall? Well, put it this way:
Only two rap acts in history have won an Oscar ... and Rosenberg manages both of 'em!
BOB SEGER
ARTIST, ROCK STAR, ICON
He may give new meaning to the word "graybeard" these days — but Seger
still symbolizes Detroit to the rest of the world probably more than anyone else still living in
the city, this side of Aretha. Plus, as he demonstrated just two years ago, all he has to do is simply
give manager Punch Andrews the word, and he can immediately sell out arenas all over the world, delivering
shows with an energy and intensity unmatched by many half his age. He also remains a strong reflection
of Detroit's rock past, when one became a musician simply because they had to be a musician,
not because they were looking to become "rock stars." Just look at how many years it took him to break
through nationally after being a local cult figure for decades. But, hey, Bob, the world is still
waiting for that compilation of recordings from your early garage rock era.
RAMONA SHUREB
BOOKER
When you actually take a measure of the music scene in Detroit, there are perhaps
too many venues for bands to play. But, over the past 15 years, no matter what joints pop up as de
rigeur hotspot, the Majestic Theatre complex looms large in both the consumer's and touring
band's imagination. Whereas St. Andrew's Hall was once the place where local rockers graduated
to a national profile, the Magic Stick now offers those diplomas. The Zainea family has done an admirable
job of keeping their doors and minds open to the local music community, and it has been rewarded in
kind. But as much as omnipresent owners Dave and Joe Zainea are crucial to the joint's appeal, the
musical end has had a lucky streak that extends from bookers and promoters, from Model D publisher
Brian Boyle through the über-plugged-in Jason Schusterbauer and Greg Baise (see his entry
elsewhere). After Baise's departure, one might have expected a drop-off in Magic Stick-ness on
the scene. Enter one Ramona Shureb, who cut her teeth on Detroit's (largely unsung) hardcore and
aggressive rock scene in the '90s, and has been making the scene as a promoter and evangelist for
the rock underground ever since. (Hell, she even did a stint with Live Nation.) Since taking the
reins at the Stick (and Garden Bowl and Majestic), the energetic thirtysomething Shureb has kept
the door open to Detroit's indie underground, featuring its best and brightest and giving opening
spots to an admirable flow of touring acts.
JOHN SINCLAIR
POET, ACTIVIST, COUNTERCULTURAL LEGEND
If "power" means making lots of money and forcing people to do things (a definition
we definitely don't agree with), then Sinclair certainly doesn't belong here. But as a symbol of
Detroit's countercultural legacy, Sinclair is the man and the one who's still recognized
worldwide. He'll forever be remembered due to his association with the MC5, although he managed
many younger local bands in the '80s and just recently rocked out — both onstage and on CD —
with local experimental youngsters Pinkeye. Besides, how many local people — legends or
not — have had a song written about them, with their name as the title, by a former Beatle? Granted,
he calls Amsterdam "home" these days — but it's awfully hard to miss Sinclair, since he seems
to be here more than he's not.
SLUM VILLAGE
ARTISTS, TRAIL BLAZERS
Detroit is becoming a hub for internationally and nationally recognized
hip hop, but the guys in Slum Village were the pioneers that got it all started. Originally, the trio
of producer-MC J Dilla (who died of lupus in February 2006), T3 and Baatin, SV made noise in the underground
rap scene with Dilla's soulful, laid-back grooves and the trio's stylish, playful rhymes. Dilla
would leave the group to pursue what would be a successful career as a solo producer, but the group
kept it moving by enlisting other talented beatmakers in the city, like Karreim Riggins and B.R.
Gunna (the duo of currently successful solo producers Black Milk and Young RJ). During the construction
of their third album, Detroit Deli, they welcomed new member Elzhi, whose technical lyrical
skills rounded out Slum's style-over-substance approach. And after the release of Trinity:
Past, Present and Future, health problems would force Baatin to leave the group. But since
their self-titled disc in 2005 reestablished momentum, the duo of Elzhi and T3 continues to be one
of the city's most powerful rap acts, with steady international live shows, Elzhi's budding reputation
as one of the most talented lyricists in the industry, and another SV album in the works.
MATTHEW SMITH
ARTIST, PRODUCER
Matthew Smith is one of those guys who's always present, but isn't: You only
know he's here because his fingerprints are everywhere. Not only does he lead the power-pop
nihilists Outrageous Cherry, the Americana-y Volebeats and prog-freakouts THTX, he's an expert
studio knob-twirler (see albums by Denise James, the Cuts and the Go, among many others) and song
doctor. Kevin Ayers is a fan. Hell, no less than producer-starmaker-opportunist-songwriter-genius-weirdo
Kim Fowley has likened Smith's skills in the studio to Nick Lowe in his prime. The Hamtramck-raised
Smith has fans in some of the most unlikely places in the world, from Chile to France, from Japan to
the UK. The guy has attached local songwriters to labels and labels to local bands. Plus, he's a local
rock historian of the highest order ... and he recorded and produced Nathaniel Mayer's
final album, following that up by backing the late Detroit legend on tour.
MICHAEL SOLAKA
CLUB OWNER, NEW CENTER COUNCIL PRESIDENT
As co-owner of midtown Detroit's well-appointed and lovely Northern Lights
Lounge — and as acting president of the New Center Council — Michael Solaka is a local
music force, and might not even know it. When he took over the Tamdem bar and helped it to become a local
nightclub (and venue) powerhouse that successfully blended rap, hip hop, electronic and rock
'n' roll under a single roof, who knew it'd become this elite club, a desirable place to perform,
to be seen and to engage in social intercourse? As the New Center Council prez, Solaka oversees the
annual CityFest (formerly TasteFest), which is the city's biggest, best and most prestigious
summer festival. The unforgettable quote: Solaka once said, "It's about your wits in this town."
Truer words cannot be spoken.
R.J. SPANGLER
ARTIST, MANAGER, PRODUCER
R.J. Spangler's a manager, a producer, a drummer and an arranger, and damn
skilled at it all. He co-founded the Sun Messengers in 1980, and has his R.J.'s Rhythm Rockers still
cooking. He has helped to resurrect careers, from singer Alberta Adams and pioneering guitarist
Johnnie Bassett (that's him on Tamla's first million-seller, Smokey's "Shop Around") to vocalists
Joe Weaver and Odessa Harris. He has been up for a prestigious W.C. Handy award (for Best Instrumentalist
— Drummer) and his patented shuffle beat is known the world over. He's a foremost R&B
revivalist and his Detroit music connections run deep and wide, both here and around the globe.
NICK SPEED
PRODUCER, DJ, ARTIST
Ever since he moved to Detroit as a child, Nick Speed has always been proud
of the city's music scene — from the soul of Motown Records to the national electronic scene
that got its start here — and everything in between. So as a hip-hop producer in the area, he's
always aimed to make his work a worthy addition to Detroit's legacy and to school others in the city's
importance. Getting his start as the musical mind behind 925 Colony — the trio of him, Elzhi
(of Slum Village) and Magestik Legend — Speed put in extensive work around the city before
a beat CD he had circulated around New York found its way onto the desk of D-Prosper, A&R for rap
superstar 50 Cent's G-Unit Records. Speed inked a deal as an in-house producer with the label and
got Sha Money XL, former president of the label, to manage him. Since then, Speed has been landing
beats on albums from 50, his fellow G-Unit member Lloyd Banks, popular "conscious" rapper Talib
Kweli and more. And Hot Soup, his summertime '08 release with Motor City rapper Danny Brown,
pays homage to the city by making all of its production incorporate elements from Detroit's extensive,
historical musical palette of soul, electronic and house. With both solo and collaborative projects
in the works — including a beat tape made out of sound splices from YouTube videos —
Nick Speed is doing his part to make sure that Detroit stays relevant in the music world.
STIRLING SILVER
ARTIST, BOOKER, MAN-ABOUT-TOWN
Sure, the elegant, glam rock-tinged Stirling Silver could regale us with
his stories of hanging with the Faces and David Bowie back in the day. But what that doesn't explain
is how this guy has helped so many local musicians in so many different ways, either on a quasi-management
level or simply through word of mouth. He's done much to aid the beginning careers of many (from Audra
Kubat to Molly Jean Brown) simply because he can. Until this month, he was a constant at Jacoby's
upstairs, where, with partner Sue Static, he booked the cream of Detroit rock. The man knows everyone
— he's pals with both Kid Rock and Meg White — proven by those numbers stored
away in his little black book. Moreover, who knew this dude could sing? Watch for his Jim
Diamond- and Eddie Baranek-helmed debut album, due any day now.
AL SUTTON & ERIC HOEGEMEYER
PRODUCERS, STUDIO OWNER
Al Sutton — and his Rustbelt studio — has been the rock of Detroit
rock studios for longer than many of the newest scene entrants have been out of diapers. Sutton produced
Big Chief's debut for Sub Pop in 1991, and studio production partner Eric Hoegemeyer was playing
drums in Charm Farm around that time. Since 1990, Rustbelt has been a brand name, an open-minded
home for a wildly diverse bands (from ska to funk, from punk to blues, including indie obscure gems
hitmakers like Sponge). It was the scene-defining 1996 Detroit Rust City compilation,
though, that became Rustbelt's calling card. There was a Kid Rock track on the comp, leading to an
ongoing relationship after first receiving huge sonic dividends from Rock's monster debut release
for Atlantic Records, Devil Without a Cause. Since then, Rock has returned to the Royal
Oak studio, bringing newfound talent and protégés through the studio doors too. Oh,
yeah, that '96 comp came out on a Huntington Woods start-up label called Small Stone. Thousands
of records sold later, Rustbelt is still Small Stone's studio-of-choice for recording, mixing
and tweaking heavy music that spreads that Detroit soul around the globe.
SAM VALENTI
LABEL HEAD
About three years ago, Ghostly International label head Sam Valenti probably
sat back and realized that he was one of those rare business folk who had achieved his five-year plan.
The label that started in 1999 with the economically inauspicious occasion of Valenti having to
ship boxes of his first release back from an apartment in London, England, where he was flopping,
has over the past decade evolved into a multinational cultural force. And it's all headquartered
right here in southeast Michigan. Valenti, the namesake of Masco's honcho Sam Valenti III, would
seem to have had an easy row to hoe. But money isn't everything. The roadside is littered with shitty
labels started by well-to-do kids. Valenti's acumen and discipline, combined with his unfailing
sense of taste, style and marketing savvy, have made Ghostly (and its sister imprint Spectral)
an iconic destination for folks around the globe who dig the finest in head-, foot- and soul-stirring
electronic-based music. Whether it's the "boy-cat-bird" visuals or the surprisingly diverse
selection of artists, ranging from the minimalist techno of Matthew Dear, Brooklyn's Michna,
London minimalpopsters the Chap, D-town buzz kid Deastro and beyond, Valenti has accomplished
his goal of becoming the Midwest's version of Factory, Felt and other brand-name indie labels upon
which his musical taste was weaned. And he's done it in a way that has embraced the community from
which it sprang. Not bad for a business that started with a freshman Valenti wandering into a basement,
partially wondering why no one was paying attention to a then-unknown Matthew Dear. C'est le
musique.
DON WAS
PRODUCER, ARTIST, ORGANIZER
Unlike certain other local stars who've gone on to international fame and
fortune, Was (born Don Fagenson) believes it's his duty and responsibility to keep giving back
to the Detroit music community. He keeps his eyes and ears on the local scene — and, most recently,
he presented the awesome Detroit Super Session at last summer's Concert of Colors fest, in addition
to filming and recording a slew of Detroit locals, from Black Merda to the Go to the Sisters Lucas,
for his Wasmopolitan website. All this in addition to still being one of the most sought-after producers
in the world. And Was (Not Was) — the Detroit-centric group he heads with "brother" David
Was (né Weiss) — still stands as one of the most visible and recognized Motor City musical
components, especially in the UK, even if most of its members call Los Angeles "home" these days.
JACK WHITE
ARTIST, ROCK STAR, PRODUCER
There was some debate as to whether the man born John Anthony Gillis 33 years
ago (right here in Detroit, as his biggest fans and family members are always keen to point out) deserved
inclusion on this list. After all, he now makes Nashville his home. That would not be a big deal, though,
if it wasn't also true that he hasn't had much positive to say about his hometown's music scene —
the one that gave him his start — in years. Still, White was, is and remains the face
of Detroit's garage rock scene and almost single-handedly took the genre to the heights of international
dominance via the White Stripes. Plus, if power involves being able to get things done, White's
power extends way beyond the confines of Detroit these days, although his specter hangs over this
city — which isn't always necessarily a good thing, since it conceivably led to the trend
of loads of bands thinking they can become "rock stars" overnight before even beginning
to pay their dues. That old Detroit journeyman ethic has suffered as a result. Nevertheless, he
really can't be blamed for that, even if, just like in the good old days, there are still people in
this town who'd probably sell their souls to the devil simply for the possibility that they might
get to work with the dude who's worked with the Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan and Alicia Keys (?!) during
the last several years.
WILLY WILSON
CLUB PUBLICIST, PROMOTER, MAN-ABOUT-TOWN
Everybody in the local music scene seems to know Willy. While managing Car
City Records and hosting a WDET music show, Wilson organized his own music festival, Gutterfest,
at the Magic Stick, beginning in 1996, and running for several more years. The fest presented local
greats who more or less fell into the "garage" category, from the Go, the White Stripes and the Dirtbombs
to Gino Washington, ? & the Mysterians, and a reunion of the surviving members of Sonic's Rendezvous
Band. As a result, he was there right at the forefront of the Detroit garage renaissance, just as
it began its trek to world domination. Those gigs — a few were held at the legendary, now-defunct
Gold Dollar — led to Magic Bag owner Jeremy Haberman hiring Wilson to do the Ferndale club's
publicity and to basically handle day-to-day operations.
RODNEY WHITAKER
ARTIST, ACADEMIAN
Like the aforementioned James Carter, Whitaker came through the middle-
and high-school-age group Bird-Trane-Sco-Now. Whitaker became one of the most in-demand bassists
in New York (he's on 100-plus discs), with high-profile gigs including with the Lincoln Center
Jazz Orchestra (Wynton Marsalis' big project), all while staying based in Detroit. We figure he's
really a power guy when you add in his posts a) directing jazz studies at Michigan State University
and heading the university-based Professors of Jazz, and b) as conductor and music director of
the civic jazz ensembles at the DSO.
THE WINANS FAMILY
ARTISTS, GOSPEL DYNASTY
Discovered by Andrae "Godfather of Contemporary Gospel" Crouch, the four
brothers in the Winans became hitmakers in the early 1980s. In the wake of their continued success,
the same followed for others of the 10 Winans siblings (notably Bebe, Cece and David), and later
spouses and children. The success has mainly been in gospel, but there've been significant spillovers
into secular R&B as well, with Winans emerging as triple threats as writers, producers and
performers. While much of the family has extended to other parts of the country, several remain
prominently hereabouts, including the Rev. Marvin L. Winans (of the original Winans, currently
pastor of Perfecting Church in Detroit and host of a Sunday morning radio show, "Rhythm & Praise"
on Mix 92.3) and his ex-wife Vickie (whose voice has graced her own hits and an Art Van radio commercial);
their sons include Mario (who topped R&B charts with "I Don't Wanna Know" a couple years ago,
featuring P. Diddy) and Marvin Winans Jr. (who released his debut CD, Image of a Man, in September).
BUBBLING UNDERS
These folks, too, served ...
MELODY BAETENS
This performer-DJ-publicist-booker-bartender gets a mention beyond
other local bloggers because a) her blog's on the Detroit News site, where she reports,
um, news; and b) she sometimes goes to those other blogs to correct misleading information, despite
the smarmy commenters.
THE GHOST OF LESTER BANGS
In an age where everyone has a blog, everyone wants to be Lester, whether
they know it or not — though the very thought probably has him rolling, wherever he might be.
BEN BLACKWELL
His catholic underground enthusiasm, as expressed via his Cass Records'
consistent run of vinyl releases, keeps us all plugged into that same DIY touring underground ethic
Blackwell so accurately captures on his blog Tremble Under Boomlights (trembleunderboomlights.blogspot.com)
as the second most visible member of the Dirtbombs.
DAVE BUICK
David Dunbar Buick has taken his lumps on the scene he helped foster with
releases by the White Stripes, Hentchmen, Greenhornes, Rocket 455 and Whirlwind Heat, among others,
but the city is a better place now that he's re-launched Italy Records.
BECKI CARR
A lot of her PR clients are national indie acts, but Carr holds local clout
as publicist for CityFest, founder of the Hamtramck Music Awards and coordinator of Facebook's
local Live Nation group.
MICK COLLINS
If this dude needs an introduction, then you should go right out and get
as many records by the Gories, the Dirtbombs, the King Sound Quartet and Blacktop as you can find.
This guy is the Detroit music scene's resident renaissance rocker and perhaps should be a cultural
advisor to the next mayor.
WARREN DEFEVER, UFO FACTORY
Warren Defever (His Name is Alive) was making groundbreaking music
in his Livonia bedroom before many of you even realized there was life outside the Top 40, and as one-third
of the UFO Factory art space team and head of his own record label, Silver Mountain, Defever has evolved
into a curious kind of adulthood where he's in control of a media universe of his and his friends'
making.
DETROIT POLICE GANG SQUAD
With last summer's CAID raid, they managed to do what one of the most corrupt
mayors in history and even President Bush sending their peers to death or dismemberment in a stupid
war couldn't do — namely, they got young people angry and active.
THE DETROIT POSTER ARTISTS
Names like Gary Grimshaw, Mark Arminski, Carl Lundgren and many in the
new breed have put Detroit on the worldwide cultural musical map as much as anybody from this city.
THE GHOST OF J DILLA
He influenced, worked with and inspired everyone who's anyone in Detroit
hip hop, with work so groundbreaking and ahead of the curve, it's still taking time to digest all
his accomplishments, especially with new tracks featuring Dilla beats still surfacing.
SCOTT DUNKERLY
As head of X! Records, he puts out releases by bands he believes in (or
bands that he is in), promotes them via grass-roots efforts, and generally takes care with
each release, all of which has led to annual fests of noise and fun.
CAREY GUSTAFSON
Ferndale's Carey Gustafson is, quite simply, an exemplar of the DIY
spirit, organizing folks around her, whether as a co-founder of Handmade Detroit, a member of the
group that launched the DIY Fest, as a prime mover behind the annual Zombie Dance Party or as a member
of the band Serenity Court.
BRAD HALES
After months of rebuilding his collection and preparing a new space,
the founder of the now-legendary (and original) Funk Night dance parties and his People Records
is back and perhaps better than ever in new Woodward Avenue digs. Come one, come all. Listen, mingle,
chill and shop till your jaw drops.
BEN HERNANDEZ
When MOCAD opened its doors a few years ago, it had a huge task: brand itself
as a place that mattered. So MOCAD turned to Hernandez, a dude who knows how to present the edge with
special performances by some of the city's newest and brightest underground soundmakers and many
other one-off events.
MATT LEE
"Super publicists" are what you find in New York, London and Los Angeles,
generally not Detroit. But Lee, a former touring musician, makes it work here, with his hand in everything
from the Jazz Fest to the annual Motor City Blues & Boogie Woogie Festival and numerous ports
in between.
JOE NIEPORTE
Mount Clemens may be a tad far outside the city for our list purposes,
but as the founder (with partner Kevin Cassidy) of that city's Stars & Stripes festival, which
his Funfest Productions books, and owner of the Emerald Theatre, one of the finest local venues
outside D-town, Nieporte hits a double whammy.
SCRUMMAGE UNIVERSITY
Signaling a generational change in the Detroit musical weather, with
kids dressing up and getting their dance on to weirdo noisy jams, this collective has gone underground
since its move to the east side into an old toy factory. But keep your eyes and ears peeled.
RALPH VALDEZ
As curator of cultural programming for the Arab American National Museum
in Dearborn, the former WDET host is the hands-on programming guy (working with longtime multicultural
visionary Ismael Ahmed) for the museum's Global Thursday series and the annual Concert of Colors
at the Max.
ROBERT WHITALL
Detroit may not be the hotbed of blues music it once was, but Whitall (better
known as Robert Jr. Whitall) — who also serves on the board of the Detroit Blues Society —
still publishes Big City Blues, one of the finest national publications of the genre, using
former MT (and CREEM) art director Charles Auringer as his designer.
WINDY AND CARL
Before Detroit was rebranded Detroit Rock City, Dearborn was already
space-rock city, thanks to the exploratory and intimate jams from this married duo, which is still
making some of the best music of its career while running one of the most meticulously crafted specialty
record stores this side of, well, anywhere.
Blurbs by Chris Handyside, W. Kim Heron, Bill Holdship, William E. Ketchum III, Brian Smith and Walter Wasacz. Send comments to letters@metrotimes.com.
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