If you discount Fargo-bred Jonny Lang, the last time the Minnesota State Fair hosted an all-local concert at the grandstand was in 1986 with the Jets and Limited Warranty, who risked life and wardrobe to be there (aerosol hairdos + giant frying vats = major fire hazard). That's also around the time two of the five acts performing at Friday's Minnesota Music-on-a-Stick grandstand concert were getting started. The rest were just getting to kindergarten or potty-training.
Organized by 89.3 the Current, the first all-Minnesotan grandstand show in 26 years features two distinct eras of local musicians: The '80s/'90s players in Semisonic and the Jayhawks, and the more recent stars Dessa, Jeremy Messersmith and Lucy Michelle & the Velvet Lapelles, all of whom started in the mid-'00s.
Although well acquainted -- Semisonic singer Dan Wilson even produced Messersmith's first album -- the two generations of musicians rarely perform together.
Since people often compare today's Twin Cities music scene with the heyday of the '80s and early '90s, we thought this would be a good chance to compare the state of things then and now.
RECORD LABELS Semisonic and the band that spawned it, Trip Shakespeare, signed record deals early on, as did the Jayhawks. Nowadays, neither Dessa nor Messersmith operates with label support.
Marc Perlman, Jayhawks: "Back then, albums were still all sold physically, not digitally, so you really needed a label just to handle the distribution. We loved working with [local label] Twin/Tone, but they could only do so much. We went to [Rick Rubin's] American/Def Jam label and, even though it was only a small operation, you could feel the promotional arm behind it right away."
John Munson, Semisonic: "There was a certain hipness factor about being on a label, too. But you needed them, no question, because no band ever had the money to pay for their own LP manufacturing. That was part of the hustle then."
Dessa: "At first, we [Dessa's Doomtree crew] always thought the next step to success was getting a record contract, even though we didn't know what exactly a label would do for us. I'm not going to lie and say we've had people pounding on our door, but if they were, it would take a hell of a lot to convince us to sign now."