There was the stroll through the historic graveyard with Jeremy Messersmith. The hike through the woods in southwestern Wisconsin with Cloud Cult. The shortcut through the kitchen to the rehearsal space at the Box Car Diner with Communist Daughter. The quest for a Wi-Fi signal at Owatonna High School to cover Owl City. The visit to the Ax-Man Supply Store in search of a missile shell for Marathon 3 with Mark Mallman. And the 10 minutes on the phone to Austin, Texas, police in the quietest place I could find to give them the correct spelling of Gayngs: a portojohn.
Who says covering local music doesn't take you to interesting places?
The stories out of the Twin Cities music scene similarly were all over the place in 2010, running the gamut from the elated to the tragic, and the laughable to the legal. Here are the ones that stand tall at year's end. Kind of like I did in that Satellite toilet.
Biggest non-story of the year: The repainting of First Avenue's mural of stars. Even Menudo retained its place on the wall.
Runner-up: Lady Gaga hung out at the Turf Club following her second of two sold-out Xcel Center shows at the end of August. Instead of the promised influx of hot pants, fishnets and outerwear bras among patrons of the Turf, though, it's still mostly just ratty rock T's and flannel.
Worst reason for a Rhymesayers all-star show: The Minneapolis hip-hop crew flexed its organizational, scene-rallying muscle by putting together a stellar lineup on the fly to raise more than $25,000 for Haiti earthquake relief at First Ave in February, during which a winter-clad Slug earned the nickname MC Snowpants, and Brother Ali talked about how the calamity struck close to home.
Tie: Tragedy truly struck at home with Eyedea's death from opiate toxicity on Oct. 16, which was followed by a moving First Ave tribute on what would have been Mikey Larsen's 29th birthday, Nov. 9. Terrible circumstances, but commendable shows.
Best reason to get in the van: Not that they had much of a choice with 10 band members, but Ryan Olson and the Gayngs crew clearly should have found a different mode of transportation than the tour bus they rented from a Nashville company in September. The bus was repossessed by its owner over a contract dispute -- with all of the band's musical gear in tow -- hours before Gayngs was to play the biggest gig of its brief, bizarre life at the Austin City Limits Festival. The name of their replacement on the bill, Lance Herbstrong, did not help quell rumors that it was all a baked-up ruse. But court papers certainly did.