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“In Detroit 442, maybe, baby, I could ride with you”: Blondie rolls into the Fox Theatre on Friday.
Build back Blondie
DANIELLE ST. LAURENT
Debbie Harry and co. drop retrospective box set on day of Detroit gig, but don’t call them a nostalgia act
For new wave veterans Blondie, 2022 has been a year of making up for lost time.
The band rolls into Detroit’s Fox Theatre on Friday with spooky punk legends the Damned. They’re fresh off of a U.K. co-headlining tour with Johnny Marr and a triumphant performance at the Cruel World festival in California, where they joined a who’s who of vintage alternative acts.
“Since the intensity of the pandemic slipped away, we’ve been going full blast,” says drummer Clem Burke by phone from Los Angeles.
After the U.K. tour, the band went into the studio to record tracks for its first new studio album since 2017’s Pollinator, which is expected to be released in the spring. The new album is part of a flurry of work that was sidelined by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Co-founded by singer Debbie Harry and guitarist Chris Stein in 1974, Blondie was an integral part of New York’s fecund punk scene. But the group’s approach — combining lush pop sensibility with the au courant sounds of electronic music, disco, reggae, and rap — was always bigger than any constricting genre labels.
The band scored big hit singles with “Heart of Glass,” “Call Me,” “Rapture,” and “The Tide is High” before taking a 15-year hiatus in 1982. Even with that
By Brian J. Bowe
impressive CV, continuing to make new music is important, Burke says, because Blondie works hard to avoid being pigeonholed as a strictly nostalgia act.
“I mean, Debbie in particular is not big at looking back,” Burke says. “That’s why, when we got back together in the late ’90s, the agenda was to make a new record, when we did that record No Exit. We never wanted to come back and just start playing the hits, without new music.”
But even as Blondie plots a new album, the band has been contemplating its past. The same day Blondie plays Detroit, a gargantuan new retrospective box set hits stores. Titled Against The Odds 1974-1982, the set includes the band’s first six LPs and a heaping helping of pre-hiatus rarities. The unreleased tracks are culled from demos, rehearsal tapes, B-sides, and obscure singles.
The set was put together by Chicago’s Numero Group, which is perhaps best known for its lavish reissues of weird obscurities. Numero co-founder Ken Shipley says the genesis of the box set was inspired by Chris Stein’s tape archive, which had been stored in his home near Woodstock.
“We went to Chris’s barn, and immediately when we opened it up, it was just like, here’s a great project,” Shipley says. “This is a massive band whose master tape archive is, for the most part, just weathering the storm out here in upstate New York.”
From that wealth of material, the best 50 songs were culled. “It was about trying to get it down to the best of it, to the most interesting, the most listenable version of it,” Shipley says.
Shipley says the band’s initial reaction was mixed, noting that some members at first didn’t like the warts-and-all approach.
“I’m kind of interested in Blondie not as the polished band that people know them as, not as the hits,” Shipley says. “A work in progress Blondie to me is a more interesting Bondie. So our initial drafts really, like, leaned on the rougher, more unpolished version of the band.”
Part of Blondie’s artistic appeal has always been the way the group digested the sounds of its milieu to make something fresh.
“The disco scene that was going on at the same time was almost more subversive and more underground than the New York rock scene in the mid ’70s,” Burke says. “Disco music was always kind of like the soundtrack in New York City simultaneously as the whole scene at CBGB and Max’s was evolving.”
Living in New York, those sounds would merge. “I think that was part of the influence of ‘Heart of Glass’ for us,” Burke says.
By releasing some Blondie music in its embryonic state, the box set shows listeners how songs “Heart of Glass” came together.
“There’s like five different versions of that song,” Shipley says. “When you listen to the beginning, you realize that it’s a reggae song, and then you listen to the final version and you can kind of hear it as a reggae song, too.”
Burke cites other influences for that tune. “We thought we were experimenting with electronic music when we did ‘Heart of Glass,’ it wasn’t quote-unquote ‘a disco song’ to us,” he says. “It was kind of a combination of Kraftwerk and Donna Summer.”
Lurking beneath it all is a pop sensibility, Shipley says.
“All the girl-group flourishes, to me, were really interesting. I love how there’s this kind of [Phil] Spector-esque production to some of Chris’s arrangements that he is borrowing from this really early-’60s place,” Shipley says. “When you listen to some of the recordings, what makes them so magical is that you’re really stripping away any of the new wave artifice.”
Working on the box set was a pleasant experience for Burke.
“It was great to hear that stuff again,” Burke says. “I don’t sit down and listen to Blondie music all the time, so yeah, to do it all in a couple of sittings was kind of nostalgic, but in a good way.”
Blondie music still evokes images of “Racing down the Bowery on a crowded afternoon,” as Harry sings on “Long Time” from Pollinator. But the world has come a long way from those heady times on New York’s Lower East Side. Burke laments the current social climate, which seems to be the antithesis of the open-minded scene that gave birth to Blondie.
“It’s just insane what’s going on,” Burke says. “I don’t really want to get into politics, but … I don’t know what’s happening with all these reactionary throwback sort of precedents that are being set now. It’s really terrible. Everybody should just be able to do what they want to do as long as you don’t hurt anybody else.”
On this tour, Harry and Burke will be joined by longtime guitarist Tommy Kessler and keyboardist Matt KatzBohen. Co-founder Chris Stein is not up for touring, so KMFDM guitarist Andee Blacksugar are filling in. Sex Pistols co-founder Glen Matlock is filling in on bass in place of Leigh Foxx, who Burke says is also sidelined by health issues.
Blondie performs with special guests the Damned on Friday, Aug. 26 at the Fox Theatre; 2211 Woodward Ave., Detroit; 313-471-7000; 313presents.com. Tickets start at $29.50. Doors at 7 p.m.
FOOD
Dearborn’s Sesame House introduces kaak, a Lebanese bagel sandwich.
TOM PERKINS
Bagels, Lebanese street food-style
By Tom Perkins
Warren Avenue in Dearborn
is stacked with banging Lebanese bakeries serving incredible sfeeha, mashrouha, and other meat and spinach pies.
But, so far, there hasn’t been a shop dedicated to kaak, a ubiquitous Lebanese dish that is, in essence, the Middle Eastern nation’s bagel. The kaak is thin, flat, and round with a big hole that gives it a purse-like shape, and the package is coated in sesame seeds. At its best, kaak is a bit crispy on the outside from being cooked in a super hot oven and slightly chewy on the inside.
Dearborn’s Sesame House is the first in the neighborhood to build a concept around the kaak, though some others serve it, and offers a menu with about 30 combinations of cheeses from across the Middle East and Eastern Europe, meats like soujouk or kafta, and condiments and spreads like mahammara or chili paste.
Owner Kassem Elhajj, who immigrated from Lebanon in 2010, said the kaak was originally a breakfast and lunch food sold by street cart vendors in the 1960s and ’70s. At the time, vendors generally just served it with za’atar, but in recent decades the dish has evolved. Brick and mortar stores in Beirut started serving it with creamy cheeses, and in more recent years it’s further developed to become more of a sandwich. One gets the sense it now fills a similar role as the bagel sandwich.
In Lebanon, Elhajj used to eat the dish nearly daily, and he was surprised to see that no one ran a kaak store in Dearborn. Prior to opening in April, he spent a few months training and learning how to make kaak at Abou Arab, Lebanon’s largest kaak shop.
Sesame House’s cheese roster is impressive — haloumi, bulgareh, akkawy, kashkawan, labneh, picon, and more. The menu is divided into about four sections — salty, sweet, specialties, and meat.
The salty dishes are primarily cheese and a condiment, like one with akkawy and kashkawan that bursts with the super melty cheese. Akkawy is a soft, smooth, and salty brine cheese made with cow’s milk, while kashkawan is a mild yellow cheese also made from cow’s milk that some compare to cheddar, though that seems to be more about the physical properties than taste. Altogether, an intense kaak.
The kashkawan cheese worked well with bologna, and if you’re as much of a connoisseur of fried bologna sandwiches as I, then this is the dish for you. Among the best kaaks is one with bulgareh cheese, a Bulgrian cousin to feta, though a bit creamier and a bit saltier. It came with olive oil, cucumbers, tomatoes, and kalamata olives.
The kafta and soujouk kaaks each arrive with tomatoes, pickles, corn, and mayonnaise, along with a healthy coating of kashkawan cheese. For those who haven’t had them, kafta is essentially ground beef that’s heavy on seven spice, cumin, and cinnamon, while soujouk is an intense Middle Eastern sausage with red chili, fenugreek, cumin, and other spices. Both are the best bets if you’re in the market for Lebanese meats.
The haloumi with chili paste offers a nice balance with mild, spongy haloumi that maintains its shape when melted, and a garlicky, chili-packed red paste. The only item we tried off the sweet section was a kaak full of nutella. Nutella is universally good, so we knew going into the order that this would be a winner.
Each kaak is roughly 12 inches — enough to fill up a hungry person and leave some leftovers, and the sandwiches are quickly assembled and run through the oven once ordered. Sesame House’s interior has a fast casual vibe seating, though kaaks are also made to take on the road.
Sesame House
14240 Warren Ave., Dearborn instagram.com/ housesesame 313-722-4639
$3.49-$9.49 Wheelchair accessible