Les Claypool’s Fearless Flying Frog Brigade mark their first tour in 20 years with a sold-out gig at The Wiltern & Pink Floyd’s ‘Animals’

Les Claypool's Fearless Flying Frog Brigade - The WilternBy Josh Herwitt //

Les Claypool’s Fearless Flying Frog Brigade with Moon Duo //
The Wiltern – Los Angeles
July 14th, 2023 //

There aren’t many musicians who have made a living at the intersection of the alt-metal and jam scenes quite like Les Claypool has.

Best known for being the founder, lead singer, bassist and primary songwriter of Primus since the three-piece formed nearly 40 years ago, the Northern California native has also made a habit of collaborating with artists and bands across a variety of genres during that stretch.

Just in the past year, he has toured with percussionist Mike Dillon, saxophonist Skerik and drummer Stanton Moore of Galactic for his side project Les Claypool’s Bastard Jazz before Primus performed with drummer Danny Carey and bassist Justin Chancellor of Tool during a benefit show back in April (you can watch them cover Tool’s 1997 single “Ænema” alongside Queens of the Stone Age guitarist Troy Van Leeuwen here).

Claypool’s résumé, moreover, has seen him team up with All-Star talent across the musical spectrum, whether it has been Green Jellö, Tom Waits, Trey Anastasio of Phish, Metallica, Buckethead, Stewart Copeland of The Police, Adrian Belew, Gov’t Mule, Jerry Cantrell of Alice in Chains, Bill Laswell, Zach Hill, Fishbone, Alex Lifeson of Rush, Charlie Hunter, Death Grips, Hank Williams III, Beats Antique or Josh Homme. Forgive us if we missed a few names there, but you get the idea that when it comes to friends in the music business, Claypool has no shortage of them.

Most recently though, he has spent the last several years working with Sean Ono Lenno — the son of John and Yoko — beginning in 2015 when the duo conceived The Claypool Lennon Delirium and now with Claypool reuniting his Fearless Flying Frog Brigade for their first concerts in 20 years.

Les Claypool's Fearless Flying Frog Brigade - The Wiltern

Featuring a star-studded cast led by Claypool and supported by Lennon, Dillon, keyboardist Harry Waters — the son of Pink Floyd co-founder Roger Waters — and drummer Paolo Baldi formerly of CAKE, the quintet was also supposed to boast Skerik (born Eric Walton) on saxophone before he suffered a shoulder injury that has sidelined him for three months.

But that didn’t stop the Brigade from drawing a capacity crowd in LA when they arrived at The Wiltern last Friday on their “Summer of Green Tour” — the official title of the 42-date run that was even more fitting given the strong aroma of marijuana wafting through the historic theater as soon as I walked in.

Of course they performed Pink Floyd’s Animals as was expected, yet they still had a couple tricks up their sleeves that included The Claypool Lennon Delirium’s “Blood and Rockets: Movement I, Saga of Jack Parsons / Movement II, Too the Moon” and a cover of King Crimson’s single “Thela Hun Ginjeet” from 1981’s Discipline with Primus guitarist Larry LaLonde stepping onstage before an encore break.

And despite entering his seventh decade soon, Claypool hasn’t lost the ability to captivate an audience with his bass-playing techniques — from tapping and slapping to flamenco-like strumming and whammy bar bends — unique vocals, silly lyrics and costume changes, one of which was a pig mask as he took to his upright bass and later a disco helmet while manning a Whamola. Why not a frog mask, you ask? Considering the number of fans there who had their Claypool-approved frog caps on, well … you’ll just have to inquire with “Colonel Claypool” about that.

Claypool, after all, has always done things his own way, and for those at The Wiltern, it didn’t matter that the Brigade’s only studio album Purple Onion came out in 2002. With a ribbiting two-hour and 15-minute performance on the penultimate night of the group’s summer tour, one of our greatest bass players ever made it clear that he has no issue hopping (ribbit ribbit) back into any one of his many solo projects and sticking the landing with a full house on hand.

Setlist:
Up on the Roof
Rumble of the Diesel (Les Claypool song)
Amanitas (Les Claypool song)
Blood and Rockets: Movement I, Saga of Jack Parsons / Movement II, Too the Moon (The Claypool Lennon Delirium cover)
Pigs on the Wing, Part 1 (Pink Floyd cover)
Dogs (Pink Floyd cover)
Pigs (Three Different Ones) (Pink Floyd cover)
Sheep (Pink Floyd cover)
Pigs on the Wing, Part 2 (Pink Floyd cover)
Precipitation (Les Claypool and the Holy Mackerel cover)
One Better (Les Claypool song)
David Makalaster
David Makalaster II
Thela Hun Ginjeet (King Crimson cover) (with Larry LaLonde)

Encore:
Whamola
Cosmic Highway

Marco Benevento gets TigerFaced at The Independent

Marco-Benevento

Marco Benevento and Mike Dillon, the melodic elements behind the jazz-fusion supergroup Garage A Trios, played a long and excellent show at The Independent on Saturday, February 2.

It was a night of delightfully endless jams and improvisation, and the fun crowd was there to party, dance and celebrate life behind the exuberant leadership of the Tigerfaced headliner Marco Benevento.

Marco-Benevento

Mike-Dillon

Mike-Dillon

Mike Dillon began the evening with an eclectic “New Orleans Punk” set. Since last summer, Mike Dillon has been touring with trombone upstart Carley Meyers, who is a New Orleans-based star in the making. Meyers plays the trombone with perfection, passion and she matches Mike Dillon’s punk rock stage persona. Meyers should be part of the NOLA staple of musicians that reign over Jazzfest for the foreseeable future.

Mike-Dillon

Marco Benevento joined the Mike Dillon group for their final song in his casual pre-show digs.

Marco Benevento joined Mike Dillon, Carly Meyers & the rest of Dillon’s band for their final song
in his casual pre-show digs.

Marco-Benevento

Marco-Benevento

Benevento’s positive vibes and mellow, zen-like leadership capabilities are something to behold at a live show. He listens, adapts, reacts and obviously gets high from music. You can see it in Marco’s face when a song hits a peak or euphoric point. Benevento soaks up the moments, taking them in with a genuine smile.

Marco-Benevento

This tour, Marco Benevento has been rockin’ futuristic coke-bottle glasses, and this night he didn’t leave the piano until the end of the set, when he put the tiger-face that had been adorning his piano on his head. This led to a couple more tracks from his 2012 LP TigerFace, and a show closing number with “Limbs of a Pine.”

Marco-Benevento

Upcoming shows like Marco Benevento at The Independent:
The Wailers perform Survival on Thursday, February 7.
•North Mississippi Allstars – Friday February 8, Saturday February 9
•The Dirty Dozen Brass Band – Friday February 15, Saturday February 16

Marco-Benevento

Marco-Benevento

Marco-Benevento

Marco-Benevento

Marco-Benevento

Marco-Benevento

Marco-Benevento

Marco-Benevento

Marco-Benevento

Marco-Benevento

Mike-Dillon

Mike-Dillon

Mike-Dillon

Mike-Dillon

Mike-Dillon

Mike-Dillon

Mike-Dillon

Mike-Dillon