Monday, April 29, 2013

"Where Do You Wanna Eat?": Dan Eats Washington, DC


Washington, DC- U Street Neighborhood, March 15th, 2013

We’ve found ourselves in the clamoring, crowded party-central that is 9th and U streets in DC many times. Usually, we’re playing at the Velvet Lounge, which is an excellent room to see music in DC, and we always have a blast playing there. Up until our most recent trip, I was always a bit disappointed with eating around there. There were mostly Middle Eastern and Indian restaurants, and while I love both cuisines, they’re not my go-to choices for a pre or post gig meal. Usually, I end up eating from a trendy, slightly over priced food cart and am generally pretty unhappy with my eating choices. Blah blah blah, boo hoo hoo, yeah, I get it... First World Problems.

As it turns out, all I had to do was make a RIGHT out of Velvet Lounge instead of a left. THAT’S where everything is! Under (or to the right of) my nose the whole time! That right turn was a complete game changer.

It was after the set (which was excellent, by the way, our first set out of town in 2013 and it went like a well-oiled machine of rock) and I made my right turn out of the club. I start ambling past various Irish looking pubs, more Middle Eastern restaurants, a jerked chicken place (filed away in the brain as a ‘maybe’) and then I see it. Ben’s Chili Bowl on U Street, next to the Lincoln Theater. Problem solved.

I watch a lot of “No Reservations”, and my favorite ones are usually the ones where Anthony Bourdain is exploring deeper into American cities, showing us places that haven’t been flogged to death by Michelin or Zagat or any of the Food Network on-the-road shows (note: I do grasp the irony that "No Reservations" used to be a Food Network show). I remember his episode on DC, where he goes to Ben’s, and all I could think when I was watching was “I want to go to there.” So fast forward to 2013, and there I stand, in fact, about to go to there.

Based on its proximity to Howard University and the sheer number of bars on U street, Ben’s gets characterized (rather unfairly) as a late-night, drunk-food establishment by most of the people I’ve talked to. It’s true, when I walked in around 11pm, it was full of mostly students, and they were probably in the midst of the Friday night drink-fest that is standard in college. But as I sat at the counter, it felt like a neighborhood place, a place that probably looks almost exactly the same as when it first opened. True, there’s a Ben’s souvenir shop, as well as a Ben’s bar next door, but the place definitely has its neighborhood roots, back before U Street got itself all gentrified and fancy. There’s even a sign behind the counter that reads: “People Who Eat For Free: Bill Cosby. President Obama/Family. And No One Else.” In a town where everyone wants to rub elbows with “good, honest, hard-working American people”, Ben’s makes it clear that you still have to pay for lunch after your “keepin’ it real” photo-op is over.

I ordered a half-smoke (which is a half beef/half pork smoked sausage and) with chili sauce and onions (this item is known as “The Bill Cosby”), and a bowl of chili. They were both eaten in about 10 minutes. This place does not take long to accomplish what you need from it. It was a really solid, medium-heat bowl of chili. Nothing fancy about it, it reminded me of diner chili with a little something extra special about it. I can see why the place has stood the test of time: simplicity. They know how to make a few things, and how to make them really well. Go somewhere else for your organic, free-range, low fat whatever you want. Go to Ben’s for food that people have been eating forever, and will continue to eat forever.

Now here comes the unfortunate part about the whole trip: I did not have my phone with me. Imagine me, sitting at the counter at Ben’s, digging on my chili, listening to Parliament on the jukebox (it is a fantastic jukebox, by the way), and thinking “The rest of the guys need to be here RIGHT NOW.” And reaching into my back pocket and realizing that my phone, with all its calling and picture-taking and Facebooking abilities, is sitting on top of my bass amp back in the club. And that the club is a five minute walk away. And I am not getting up from this chili. So I decided to enjoy things the way people used to enjoy things they stumbled upon by themselves before the age of smart phones: I enjoyed it for the moment that it was and let it pass without anything to commemorate it. No phone pic of my meal, no tweet or check-in, and no call to the rest of the band telling them what they were missing. It was a moment for me, to enjoy something by myself, and to think about how I am lucky sometimes that I get to go to new places, explore them and have little moments like this.

-Dan
Poster from our 3.15 show in DC


Sunday, March 31, 2013

Setlist, 3.29.13

The Legendary Dobbs, Philadelphia, PA - 3.29.2013

Two Lanes
Inventing The Game*
The Thing About This
Boundary Blurring
Aida
Whatever
Good Times Roll**
To Reason Why***
Twelve
Vapors
My Father's Watch

E: Summer Feels Like Forever
The Weight****

* "Billie Jean" tease (Michael Jackson)
** Harry Nilsson cover
*** "Ask" tease (The Smiths)
**** The Band cover, with Jayson Verdibello (Venice Sunlight) on vocals

W/ Venice Sunlight, Rachel Schain, John & Brittany, Noelle Picara

Setlist, 3.15.13

Velvet Lounge, Washington, DC - 3.15.2013

Two Lanes*
The Thing About This
Boundary
Aida*
Whatever*
Halfdone+
Tomorrow's Clothes*+
To Reason Why**
Twelve
Vapors
My Father's Watch

* TWH debut
+ With Evan Polisar (Fujank) on Alto Sax
** "Ask" tease (The Smiths)

W/ Dot Dash, Black Checker

Monday, March 25, 2013

"Where Do You Wanna Eat?": Dan's History of Gigs Through Food


I love to eat as much (if not more) as I love to play music. There’s something immensely satisfying about the pre or post-gig meal, whether it’s from a dive bar’s kitchen or a swanky bistro down the block from the club. We strive to all eat together when we’re on the road, but I definitely strike out on my own pretty often, especially when we’re out of town. I was recently reading Jesse Jarnow’s book on Yo La Tengo (Big Day Coming), and there’s this recurring element of the band on the road in the 80s, seeking out these off-the-path barbecue joints that they found in this thumbed-through book about regional restaurants. I thought about how that is very much me, and that people interested in The Way Home might also get a kick out of my recollections of the various food-related adventures that we’ve had over they years. 

So I hope you enjoy my culinary stroll down memory lane. It will be fraught with all the trappings of human memory: names and dates mixed up, misremembered details, completely inaccurate reconstructions of events, etc. We have a great time on the road, playing for everyone that we can. And the first thing I always want to tell people about when I get home is where I ate, what I ate, how much of it I ate and what I’m going to eat when I go back.

PS: If you’re familiar with a city or region we’ve visited, feel free to comment with suggestions for new places to eat. I’ll try my best to check them out, and probably end up writing about them. Also, if you cook really well and we’re in your town, feel free to invite us over to eat. Some of the best food we’ve had on the road has come from someone’s home. We’ll even do the dishes.

Philadelphia, PA- Triumph Brewery, Dec 16th 2011

I thought I’d start with somewhere close to home. Triumph Brewery is first and foremost a brew pub and restaurant that someone decided to put a stage in the back and “get into the whole having bands thing”. They’ve gotten away from a regular music schedule as of late, but back in 2010-2011, I played a ton of gigs in various groups there. We played one of the first gigs as The Way Home there in December of 2011.

The cool thing about Triumph, aside from their dedication to good live music, is that it’s one of the few places in Old City where you can get a good beer and a good meal and a) not pay most of your weekly earnings for it and b) not be overwhelmed by gaggles of drunken college kids. Old City has plenty of places where both those things can be and are easily accomplished. Triumph offers one of the best “people watching” spots in all of Philadelphia. On a warm night (or even a cold one), one of our favorite post-gig rituals was to sit at one of the patio tables and just watch the chaos that is the weekend unfold in front of you. Let me offer some advice to people visiting the neighborhood: high heels plus cobblestones plus alcohol will usually end with you on the ground.

As for the food, Triumph has some of the best wings in town, and speaking as a Western New Yorker, that’s pretty high praise. I’ve eaten some really creative dishes here, from braised short ribs to sauerbraten to a smoked duck sandwich. Their house brewed beer is also some of the best you’ll find. James loves their bar so much, he wrote our song “Aida” about one of the regular bartenders there. He still has to pay for his drinks, as do all of us. So don’t think that a well-crafted pop song with bouncy piano and harmonies will get you free run of the place. 

It is, in all seriousness, one of the most relaxed places on that particular stretch of Chestnut Street. I’ve been hearing rumors since the fall that it’s going to get sold and that’s why they’ve been booking less music lately. I hope whoever buys it keeps the stage and the attitude that they’ve always had. It’s one of the better small rooms in Philly, and one of the only spots with live original music in Old City that’s open to walk-in traffic. Because that’s who we want to play to: the people who walk in, take a chance and pay the cover. Some of the best shows I’ve ever seen have been shows I didn’t know I was attending until I was there. And if you can get a tasty pint and some very good grub, so much the better.


Dec 11, 2011 at Triumph Brewery
Photo by Bill Cassidy