The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

SHAKY KNEES

WHAT TO EXPECT, WHOM TO SEE AT Alice Cooper brings ‘in-your-face rock and roll’ ‘Detroit Stories’ to Atlanta

- Phil W. Hudson For the AJC By Dave Gil de Rubio For the AJC

tlanta indie rock lovers and hipsters have a reason to bust out their ripped jeans and faux-leather jackets: Shaky Knees is upon us.

After moving the festival from May to October before deciding to cancel the 2020 edition due to COVID-19 concerns, Shaky Knees is set to return by invading downtown’s Central Park today through Sunday, with Foo Fighters headlining today, Run The Jewels headlining Saturday and The Strokes closing out the festival as the Sunday headliner. Foo Fighters joined the bill in August to replace Stevie Nicks after the singer canceled her 2021 concerts due to concerns over COVID-19 and the spread of the delta variant.

“We are really happy to be able to deliver Shaky Knees this October with a lineup that truly has something for everyone,” festival founder Tim Sweetwood said in a statement

Shaky continued on

In coming out of the pandemic, Alice Cooper had plenty to grapple with, from getting over a case of COVID-19 in December to figuring out what direction he was going to head into with his 21st solo album. Fast-forward to the present, and the 73-year-old former high school track star has recuperate­d from the coronaviru­s and is flexing his respirator­y system by running 2 miles a night in 100-degree Arizona heat and waxing rhapsodic about “Detroit Stories,” the aforementi­oned new album, which features 15 songs thematical­ly tied to his birthplace.

Phoenix may be where Alice Cooper calls home, but the Motor City is where the die was cast for the future Rock & Roll Hall of Famer. It was the driving inspiratio­n for this latest project.

“We were recording it right when everything was starting,” Cooper explained. “When my producer Bob Ezrin and I work on projects, they’re usually conceptual projects almost all the time, from ‘Welcome to My Nightmare’ to ‘Alice Goes to Hell.’ We do a lot of concep

tual stuff, and we didn’t really have one for this album. It developed on its own. We decided to do a great album of really great hard rock songs. Then we decided we couldn’t do it in Nashville, because that’s not the right atmosphere for a hard rock album. L.A. was not good for that, and New York was not good for that. The only place that really worked was Detroit. So we went to Detroit, and at that point, the concept started taking place. Once we were there, I said since we were in Detroit, we should start writing the songs there and make them about Detroit. Then I said we should use all Detroit players.”

Cooper and Ezrin took to the task at hand with great relish. The duo tapped fellow Detroiters like Wayne Kramer (MC5), drummer Johnny “Bee” Bedanjek, the Detroit Horns and original Alice Cooper band members Michael Bruce, Dennis Dunaway and Neal Smith. Song choices include an uber-catchy take on Detroit power-pop outfit Outrageous Cherry’s “Our Love Will Change the World” and a gritty version of “East Side Story,” Bob Seger’s debut single with his early band The Last Heard. All this on top of enlisting Kramer, Bedanjek and Grand Funk Railroad’s Mark Farner to put their stamp on a thumping cover of MC5’S “Sister Anne.” For Cooper, pulling together songs that represent a broad swath of music was as important in representi­ng Detroit as tapping musicians who hail from that city.

“This is the thing: We wanted to keep it in the realm of Detroit, so we did have to move around a little bit,” Cooper said. “You can’t leave Motown out of Detroit. So we wrote a song called ‘$1000 High Heel Shoes,’

and I told Bob we should get the Detroit Horns and Sister Sledge, and we’ll make this into a Motown song. Then you’ve got a blues song, and I brought Joe Bonamassa in. I wanted to play hard against his guitar because I knew I’d never get that

chance again. Then we had a punk song, a hard rock song and a psychedeli­c kind of street song. I thought if we could capture all of Detroit’s feel, then that’s what we were going to do.”

For Cooper, the camaraderi­e he achieved on “Detroit Stories” is an extension of what he felt the first time he returned to Detroit after releasing his 1969 debut, “Pretties for You,” for Frank Zappa’s Straight label.

“The very first time we ever played in Detroit, we finally got this gig at the Saugatuck Pop Festival,” he recalled. “We came in from out of state. We were used to playing with the Doors, Love and bands like that. We come into Detroit, and there’s 300,000 kids out there — long hair and the whole thing. We were louder than the Stooges and had more energy than the MC5. We were welcomed because we were a Detroit band. At the end of that show, we met everybody because the Stooges and MC5 were watching our show. This was something that they had never seen. We got along immediatel­y, and when they found out the band was from Detroit, that was the capper. We were the longlost sons. The great thing about the Detroit scene was that everybody was cheering everybody else on. There was no backbiting or fighting. It was all about rock and roll. When I did interviews, I would talk about the Stooges, the MC5 and bands like that.

I’d read their interviews, and they’d talk about us. We were all promoting each other.”

Not unlike the homecoming feeling he got at that long-ago festival, Cooper feels the same way with what he accomplish­ed on “Detroit Stories.”

“‘Detroit’ is in-yourface rock and roll,” he said. “It’s not produced on the level of ‘Welcome to My Nightmare,’ ‘Billion Dollar Babies’ or any of those big albums. That was in the era of the big production, where an album took four months to do. Everybody was bragging about how much it cost to do their album. This album was about capturing the live feel, and there’s always going to be a little bit of Motown. If you take Wayne Kramer and Johnny Bee, who are walking Detroit — their DNA is just drenched in ‘Detroit.’ And if you put in Mark Farner and a few other great studio players in there, it’s in the DNA, that R&B is. Any other time I would say we shouldn’t hang on that. On this album I said, ‘Yes, absolutely.’ The thing is that it is Detroit. Hard rock is Detroit.”

And as the dean of masterful stage presentati­on and spectacle, Cooper promises fans all the bells and whistles people have come to expect on the current tour.

“It’s the full-on Alice Cooper show,” he said. “I’ve got the best touring band of anybody right now. Hurricane Nita Strauss and Ryan Roxie on guitar. Glen Sobel was voted best drummer a couple of years ago. [Nita] was voted best guitarist of the decade. So this band is unbelievab­le. We do all the hits, and on top of it all, it’s probably the most theatrical show we’ve done since ‘Welcome to My Nightmare.’ It’s the full Alice package. Nobody will be disappoint­ed in this show.”

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 ?? PHOTOS BY ROB GRABOWSKI/INVISION/AP 2019 ?? Alice Cooper performs in Chicago in July 2019. The rock icon spent his downtime during the COVID-19 pandemic with his family in Phoenix, developing an unlikely new skill: tap dancing. He also had a case of COVID-19 last December.
PHOTOS BY ROB GRABOWSKI/INVISION/AP 2019 Alice Cooper performs in Chicago in July 2019. The rock icon spent his downtime during the COVID-19 pandemic with his family in Phoenix, developing an unlikely new skill: tap dancing. He also had a case of COVID-19 last December.
 ?? ?? Ryan Roxie, left, and Nita Strauss of the Alice Cooper band performs in Chicago in July 2019. Both musicians will be accompanyi­ng Alice Cooper at Shaky Knees.
Ryan Roxie, left, and Nita Strauss of the Alice Cooper band performs in Chicago in July 2019. Both musicians will be accompanyi­ng Alice Cooper at Shaky Knees.

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