Published on Taipei Times
http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/feat/archives/2008/03/24/2003406952

[THE WEEKENDER]: Welcome to Taipei. We hope you enjoy your flight

By Alita Rickards
CONTRIBUTING RFEPORTER
Monday, Mar 24, 2008, Page 13

From left to right: Andy Francis, Greg Russell, Moshe Foster and Michael Tennant of High Tide.
PHOTO: ALITA RICKARDS
The weekend was notable both for live bands and clubbing, with entertainment that covered a wide spectrum of sounds, visions and spectacle.

Starting early on Thursday night, a new band called High Tide completely rocked the crowd at Bliss, which was to be expected, given its lineup: Jesse Morden from Johnny Fatstacks on guitar, Moshe Foster from Public Radio on guitar and vocals, Greg Russell from Consider the Meek on drums, and Andy Francis from The Money Shot Horns on trombone.

Bass player Michael Tennant provided a slippery, whacked-out backbone for the group's primarily reggae sound.

Foster's sweet voice and lyrics charmed the audience. Francis took trombone playing to a new level with rock star moves - he jumped in the air and executed a flying kick while playing, which sent some of the ladies in the crowd into a frenzy.

The group was followed by Johnny Fatstacks, which started out a bit on the slow side with cover songs. Once the group moved onto its original music, the outfit's real style shone through. Johnny Fatstacks is a rock group that crosses the line into rockabilly and alternative country, which sets it apart from the more generic sounds of local run-of-the-mill bands and makes dancing mandatory.

The Money Shot Horns played Bliss on Friday and pleased the crowd with crooning blues lyrics and funky, sexy music.

On Saturday night, superstar DJ SL played a kicking set at Barcode. It was a definite departure from the norm, and introduced a new sound to Taipei: dance-house-electro-rock.

The night continued at underground club AgeHa, with DJs F Dragon, Kid Killy, Funkstar, and others playing new-wave rave mixed with down-tempo drum and bass enthused with electro thrash. There was a massive turn out of Taipei kids, who got into the Neon Ball theme with gusto: bizarre hair cuts and fluorescent colors, Day-Glo clothing, and anime-style outfits. One boy had a fluorescent green stocking on his head. A sexy transvestite rounded out the crowd dressed as a kinky flight attendant. Props go to her for showing this reporter where the emergency exit was.

"I was a model. I had to carry a boom box," said Taipei resident Jenna Pearce. "A bunch of those Ximenting kids went. They were pretty rad. They hang out at that Vicious Circle club. The electro thrash was top notch; I was really excited to hear Yell. It was good to dance to. There was something in the air. The neon theme was mostly about the clothes, which were really different with super busy prints, and that's really fresh right now and the trend for this summer. The night was meant to be a promo for Pet Shops Girl, a shop in Ximending."

To check out the freshest clubbing style in town, visit www.wretch.cc/blog/petshopsgirl.