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Reunited Knitters Play Benefit In San Francisco

Reunited Knitters Play Benefit In San Francisco

SonicNet's Derek Carmean reports

 
The Knitters, a revered country side project started by members of Los Angeles punks X and rockabilly revivalists the Blasters, are back.

The band reunited for two shows at Slim's in San Francisco on Monday and Tuesday. Self-described "insurgent country" label Bloodshot Records will release Poor Little Knitter on the Road (Oct. 5), a track-by-track tribute to the Knitters' lone album, Poor Little Critter on the Road (1985).

"The Knitters are all about covering great songs so people can go back and find 'em," X singer/songwriter Exene Cervenkova — formerly Exene Cervenka — said during Tuesday's show.

In late 1984, three of the four members of X — Cervenkova (born Christine Cervenka), 43; singer/songwriter/bassist John Doe, 46; and drummer D.J. Bonebrake, 43 — thought it might be fun to cover a few of their favorite country songs as a side project for benefit shows.

They formed the Knitters with standup bassist Johnny Ray Bartel and Blasters singer/guitarist Dave Alvin. "We made it so that it would be truly fun," Cervenkova recalled. "No tensions and no rivalries and no egos."

They played a few late-'80s dates in California, which Doe recalled as "drunken ... that includes both the band and the audience." The Knitters recorded Poor Little Critter on the Road, an album of mostly cover songs, and then they dissolved in 1991 to pursue other projects.

They re-formed this year partly to celebrate the upcoming tribute album, partly to play Monday's benefit show — for friend Annie Whiteside, 41, whose San Francisco apartment was destroyed by a fire — and partly because they all were available and thought it would be fun.

"The Knitters are the flag bearers for foot-draggers ... the people that keep things from going too fast," Doe said over the phone before Tuesday's show. "If people would have asked me two months ago if the Knitters would play again, I wouldn't have believed it."

Monday and Tuesday night, the crowd of aging X and Blasters fans, greased-up rockabilly boys and tattooed honky-tonk gals were treated to a mix of country classics, including Merle Haggard's "Silver Wings" (RealAudio excerpt of Knitters version), and countrified X numbers, such as "The New World" (RealAudio excerpt of Knitters version).

Other highlights of the shows included Helen Carter's "Poor Old Heartsick Me" and the Stanley Brothers' "Rank Stranger."

John Stern, 32, one of many audience members wearing a cowboy hat, said, "I've been waiting 15 years for this. I was a big X fan, and when the Knitters played, it just all came together. I was a punk-rock kid, and when I heard [Critter] I realized it wasn't that much of a stretch from punk to country."

Kim Williams and Vince Martini, two members of Sacramento, Calif.'s slide-guitar punk outfit 99 Tales who were in the audience, described themselves as "suckers for melodies and guitars." Singer/bassist Williams said, "To me, [the Knitters are] real musicians playing real music, instead of all this electronica."

Their band opened one of the Knitters' last shows in 1991 and contributed the track "Baby out of Jail" to the upcoming tribute. Vocalist and lap-steel guitarist Martini said, "It was just great to be playing with — and even just going to dinner with — people that had such an influence on your music."

The Knitters also influenced the formation of Bloodshot Records, according to co-founder Nan Warshaw, who claims the label wouldn't have had the courage to start without the Knitters paving "a lot of dirt road."

"Coming from a punk background and releasing a country record, they were really going out on a limb," Warshaw said.

"I'm sure we had our detractors, as anyone does, that thought we were making fun of country music, or thought that punk bands shouldn't have those kinds of interests," Cervenkova said. "I don't even remember, to tell you the truth. It just was always really fun."

Poor Little Knitter on the Road will include tracks by alt-country favorites Whiskeytown and Old 97's (with John Doe), as well as the previously unreleased Knitters track "Why Don't We Try Anymore?"

[ Fri., August 27, 1999 3:04 AM EDT ]

Bloodshot Label Compiles Tribute To Knitters

Insurgent country label Bloodshot Records will release a tribute to the Knitters' sole album, Poor Little Critter on the Road (1985), on Oct. 5. The Knitters were a country side project of singer Exene Cervenka, bassist John Doe, drummer D.J. Bonebrake and guitarist/songwriter Dave Alvin (ex-Blasters) — all former members of legendary punk band X — and Johnny Ray Bartel (Mike Ness). The tribute includes songs by punks-gone-country acts Whiskeytown, Old 97's (with John Doe) and Trailer Bride. The re-formed Knitters will play selected dates beginning Sept. 13-14 in San Francisco, according to a label publicist.


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