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Posts Tagged ‘Akron’

Akron/Family: Southern Tour

AKRON/FAMILY SOUTHERN TOUR WITH WARPAINT THIS FEBRUARY

Akron/Family

Akron/Family will bring their transcendent, engaging live show to the southern United States this February, with Warpaint supporting the entire run. Set ‘Em Wild, Set ‘Em Free, Akron/Family’s 2009 triumphant LP, continues to be the band’s bold new chapter in their always-evolving and enthralling sound.

Akron/Family’s live spirit is best described by Time Out New York: “This ‘everyone’s invited’ attitude is the crux of Akron/Family’s performance philosophy, and it seems to work; word-of-mouth enthusiasm about its live show builds like a grassroots movement. Auxiliary brass, audience-participation percussion, the occasional impromptu parade into the street, all while managing to play the songs that fans want to hear – small wonder these shows are some of the only occasions when you can literally witness 200 New Yorkers smiling in unison.”

Akron/Family, Warpaint Southern Tour

02/17/10 Wed Artistika Cafe Greensboro, NC

02/18/10 Thu 40 Watt Club Athens, GA

02/19/10 Fri The Backbooth Orlando, FL

02/20/10 Sat Club Downunder Tallahassee, FL

02/21/10 Sun One Eyed Jacks New Orleans, LA

02/23/10 Tue Walter’s On Washington Houston, TX

02/24/10 Wed The Parish Austin, TX

02/25/10 Thu Granada Theater Dallas, TX

02/26/10 Fri Hi Tone Memphis, TN

02/27/10 Sat Exit/In Nashville, TN

02/28/10 Sun Pilot Light Knoxville, TN

03/03/10 Wed Music Hall Of Williamsburg Brooklyn, NY

Praise for Akron/Family:

“Akron/Family delivers a style-hopping live show rich with improvisation and an exuberant, communal spirit.” – LA Times

“The songs have grooves and set pieces like inlaid jewels…the band’s musicianship has caught up with its ideas.” – The New York Times

Set ‘Em Wild, Set ‘Em Free truly lives up to its title by being both gloriously unhinged and joyously unrestrained…music made with imagination really let off the leash. Long may they roam untamed.” – BBC

Akron/Family is currently on tour in Europe, dates here.


Brand New/Manchester Orch | 10.16 | San Jose

By: Dennis Cook

Brand New/Manchester Orchestra/The Builders and the Butchers
10.16.09 :: San Jose Events Center Arena :: San Jose, CA

Brand New by JoelFaurote.com

The tightly massed fan-entity in front of the broad Event Center stage, squirming and expanding as the start time for Brand New approached, was like some youth amoeba as viewed from the seats above. The tensed energy of so many people with the need to be every centimeter closer that they could be was felt throughout the hall, their physical closeness echoing a kinship with this band, their music, and one another. And when the group eased atmospherically into “You Won’t Know” the whole place seemed to breathe with one pair of lungs as main man Jesse Lacey simmered, “Hey hey hey, Mr. Hangman/ Go get your rope/ Your daughters weren’t careful/ I fear that I am a slippery slope.” And then with an explosion of emotion, light, and carefully tempered rock fury, we were off.

It’s not as if the evening had been light on emotion prior to the headliner’s arrival. Brand New had a smartly picked lineup with them on the fall tour surrounding their new album, Daisy (released September 22 on Interscope), which managed to resonate on a similar frequency without stepping on each other’s toes sonically. First up were The Builders and the Butchers, who delivered energetic, thick music with a rattling folk foundation. If the Violent Femmes ever took their tongue out of their cheeks they might sound like this. The shifting instrumentation encompassed trumpet, mandolin, banjo, and more traditional electric rock bits, all delivered atop an oversized percussion kit shared by two drummers sitting close to one another, and their handclapping energy and eager audience outreach were vaguely reminiscent of Akron/Family. There’s a pleasantly ragged roots churn to The Builders, and when they’re belting out boatman chants or banging the strings like a badly abused hammered dulcimer it’s pretty hard to resist. Nice first impression to be sure.

Manchester Orchestra by Janet K

The middle slot was held by Atlanta’s Manchester Orchestra, who, like Brand New, is very much the descendents of a post-Nirvana world. Rough and prettily melodic, tender and a little mean, contradictions abound but in a very winning, very modern way. Only two albums in, Manchester has the markings of a real thoroughbred and the live experience only built on this impression. They came on like a slow rising wave, a tide coming in with all the tsunami fury hidden beneath gently floating kelp. Again and again, they danced up with a roar and then slipped back with unforced dexterity. The dynamics are bloody exciting and they hold nothing back in their delivery. It doesn’t hurt that they can really write memorable tunes full of mood shifts and lyrics that sink hooks in deep. Less skilled musicians might flub these bounces from loud to soft and back again but Manchester Orchestra is so fully engaged and clever that it just works.

Manchester’s second studio release, Mean Everything To Nothing, has proven one of 2009′s sneaky growers, a little better every time you slip it on. As good as the studio work is, there’s a nervy, thumping transformation to the songs live, some chemical reaction that releases the howl inside them. There’s the whomp of metal married to melodic rock and a lyrical bent that’s intellectual and sometimes funny. Most, even those unfamiliar with the band, got caught up in their energy and sang along to swell refrains like, “I have friends in all the right places!” Closer “The River,” which also wraps the new album, was truly cathartic, a statement of purpose (“I sing about most everything”) surrounded by a moving, beautiful racket punctuated by punchy drums, where the whole of it reminded me of The Who in their vintage glory.

Brand New by Alexandra Johnson

At nearly 42 years of age, I was approximately twice the age (or more) than most of the Brand New fans at this gig. With my semi-unkempt silver mane, I was mistaken for Dinosaur Jr.’s J Mascis twice, and when my age came up in random conversations it really took people aback. Brand New isn’t really a band for dudes like me, guys brought up on classic ’70s FM rock, ’80s punk, and indie rock’s first wave of popularity with R.E.M., Camper Van Beethoven, etc. But, I was so floored by Brand New’s performance at last year’s Download Festival (see review here) that I needed to dig in further. They reminded me very distinctly of the first time I’d seen Kurt Cobain and company, and I wondered if that sensation was a fluke. In the year between these performances I explored their studio work, particularly the stunning depths of 2006′s The Devil and God Are Raging Inside Me. In broad terms, Brand New is sharp, overwrought, smarter than your average bear, and a good deal more musically serious than most of their peers. Nothing about them is light or fluffy, and while sometimes a bit too clever for their own good, there’s no doubting the veracity of their emotions or intentions. So, once more into their fray I descended in San Jose, and while not quite as viscerally devastating as my first encounter, they did give me a great deal of food for thought.

Opening with two standouts from The Devil and God was a good move, along with easing into the new material mid-set. Daisy is both harder and softer than its predecessor, though their songwriting, production, and overall playing continues to mature apace. There’s a touch more beauty inside all the angst and cogitation now, which further points to a promising future. They don’t seem locked into any one thing, despite labels like emo, indie, etc. that have been attached since they started. However, there’s a good deal of scream-singing and the general uber-intensity can get to be a bit much after a while. In concert, it creates a general state of agitation tempered by well placed soothing intros and spacey breaks. It’s not much of a stretch to see both a young Rush fan and a young Green Day fan finding much to love in Brand New.

Brand New by JasonSalesPhotography.com

Seeing their very together live show on a college campus cemented the sense that they’ve REALLY connected with the young adult set (and the remainder of the audience was largely teenage and equally fervent). Having lived through and thrown myself wholeheartedly into the music and culture of The Clash and Nirvana, I had no problem picking up on a similar fevered relationship in this crowd. It’s a powerful thing when one discovers music that seems to be speaking about things that we ourselves lack the words to convey. Combine that with music full of exposed feeling, fearless extravagance, and complex shifts and you’ve got a mix that makes Brand New one of the band’s of their generation. They seem fully aware of the love and expectation surrounding them, and while grateful seem somewhat outside of the mania, where they continue to grow and create music that will likely reflect the personal evolution of their fan base.

Their stage set is simple, a few rear projected films late in the show, but mainly it was an all black stage with boys in black making music bolstered by non-flashy, intelligently crafted lighting. Where one number had sharp lances of white light creating geometric lines around the shadowy figures pummeling their instruments, another was warmed by the amber glow of fake candelabra flames. Each choice was appropriate and helped stir the drama inherent to Brand New’s sound.

As mentioned, Jesse Lacey’s lead vocals are an acquired taste. Like metal’s strep throat rumble, Lacey’s screechy spikes and flailing cries can grate if you’re not up for them. However, he’s really just a gifted singer who is all over the place. He can carry a tune fine and his scream is mighty, but kid also yodels, croons, and even gets a little soulful at times. He’s unique but everything about the music and words he’s engaging with work with interlocking logic. A love song for Brand New declares, “Take me back to your bed/ I love you so much it hurts my head.” Everything about them is a conversation between intimacy and disconnection, claustrophobic closeness and breathy wide-open spaces, and how those aren’t necessarily opposites.

Hunched over their instruments, trying to pry loose something more, something that makes the whole goddamn mess make sense, Brand New is a true powerhouse sitting at the center of the generation just matriculating into adulthood. It’s likely that we will be talking about them for years to come, and their influence will be one cited by many bands forming in their wake. As modern American society continues to shake with profound changes of nearly every sort, Brand New is a worthy soundtrack to this upheaval that understands something about how human beings survive in such times. And they put on a mighty fine show, too.

Brand New :: 10.16.09 :: San Jose Events Center Arena :: San Jose, CA

You Won’t Know, Degausser, Okay I Believe You, But My Tommy Gun Don’t, Sic Transit Gloria… Glory Fades, Jaws Theme Swimming, The No Seatbelt Song, Vices,
Gasoline, Sowing Season, You Stole, In A Jar, Luca, Archers, Bought A Bride, Jesus Christ, At The Bottom, Play Crack The Sky

Brand New is on tour now; dates available here.

JamBase | California
Go See Live Music!


Fri Playlist: Cream of ’09 (Pt. 2)

MORE OF 2009′S BEST NEW MUSIC

We continue our survey of some of the best sounds to emerge thus far in 2009. Last week’s Playlist offered some softer, poppier, off-the-beaten path entries, but this week we go heavy ‘n’ hard, launching this assortment with Clutch barking about “anthrax, ham radio and liquor” and concluding with Big Rock Candy Mountain screaming, “Give me all your goddamn money!” In between things get weird, loud and ruinous. We’ll keep offering up baker’s dozens periodically until the end of this year, intermingled with our usual oddly themed mini-mixes. In the meantime, if you hear something that pricks up your ears here then by all means dig in deeper. You won’t regret it (and we’ve even included links to album reviews we’ve run for some of this week’s selections to help in this regard). And do take the opportunity to comment on what’s been flipping your wig in ’09. We’re all earsÂ…

-Clutch: Strange Cousins From The West album review

-Powder Mill: Do Not Go Gently album review

-Mike Dillon’s Go-Go Jungle: Rock Star Bench Press album review

-Akron/Family: Set ‘Em Wild, Set ‘Em Free album review

-Sam Roberts Band: Love At The End of the World album review

-Arctic Monkeys: Humbug album review

-Big Rock Candy Mountain: Hey Kid album review

Playlist assembled JamBase Associate Editor Dennis Cook, who delights in keeping the sonic conversation livelyÂ…


Sept. 3, 1925: Shenandoah Crash a Harbinger of Grim Future

1925: Caught in a squall over southeastern Ohio, the Navy dirigible USS Shenandoah breaks up and crashes into a field, killing 14 of the 43 men aboard. It is the first of three major accidents that eventually ends the Navy’s experiment with rigid airships.
The dirigible, a lighter-than-air craft with a skeletal framework, saw major [...]

Outside Lands Music Festival
Day 1 Photos & Top 3

Words by: Kayceman & Dennis Cook | Images by: Dave Vann

Outside Lands Music Festival :: Day 1 :: 08.28.09 :: Golden Gate Park :: San Francisco, CA

The second annual Outside Lands Music & Arts Festival brought unusually warm weather to San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park. Reveling under the clear hot sun without a fogbank to be seen, the crowds slowly trickled in swelling to an estimated 30,000-plus for Pearl Jam‘s two hour headlining show. From Autolux, Akron/Family and The Dodos early to Zap Mama, Built To Spill, Silversun Pickups and The National mid-day all the way to Tea Leaf Green, Tom Jones, Q-Tip and Thievery Corporation later, there was music of all variety and with such incredible weather and manageable crowds the vibe was overwhelming positive.

Kayceman’s Top 3 From Friday

1. Pearl Jam – Almost two hours of unrelenting rock from acoustic slow burns to mid-tempo tension to all-out ball-busters, Pearl Jam is still one of the best rock bands on the road. Featuring only two songs from the forthcoming new album Backspacer, both “Got Some” and “The Fixer” came off well, but it was classics like “Alive,” “Animal,” “Better Man,” “Evenflow” and particularly psychedelic versions of “Corduroy” and “Black” that made the show. Beginning at sunset and playing into a gorgeous, warm night, even Eddie Vedder‘s end-of-tour-beaten voice couldn’t slow the band as they closed a stellar performance with two Neil Young covers, “Throw Your Hatred Down” (off 1995′s Mirrorball which Young recorded with Pearl Jam) and “Keep On Rockin’ In The Free World.”

2. Built To Spill – Although it should have been louder, Built To Spill’s swarming guitar madness made up for any volume deficiencies. Playing a hit-heavy set that included “The Plan,” “You Were Right,” “Car,” “Unconventional Wisdom,” “Carry The Zero” as well as one new track, “Hindsight,” from their album due in October, the band moved from spacey free-rock jams to punked-up aggression to patient restraint. There’s a reason BTS received more shout-outs than any band all day with both Eddie Vedder giving respect and Silversun Pickups frontman Brian Aubert gushing, “Built To Spill is one of the greatest bands ever!”

3. Silversun Pickups – After this set, it should now be clear to all why this L.A. indie quartet is playing major time slots at festivals like Lollapalooza, Coachella and Outside Lands. They freakin’ rock! Any volume issues from Built To Spill’s set had clearly been regulated and SSPU was big – HUGE actually – and loud like it needs to be. Less Smashing Pumpkins than a year or two ago, this band has grown into their sound. Overdrive guitars, feedback storms and some of the best scream-vocals around made songs like “Swoon,” “There’s No Secrets This Year” and “Kissing Families” fierce and cathartic.


Special Reunion Slot: A Tribe Called Quest – At Q-Tip‘s funner-than-hell hip-hop set (which was sadly dedicated to DJ AM who passed away Friday night) featuring a live band, fans got something super-duper special when Q brought out Phife Dawg, his partner from Tribe, for “Award Tour.” Upon the song’s conclusion Q was visibly giddy, beaming as he remarked, “Don’t know if y’all will ever see that again.”

Dennis Cook’s Top 3 From Friday

1. Tom Jones – Oh my Lord, Tom was glorious! There’s something enduringly entertaining about old school showmen like Jones, who continues to sing like Zeus himself while exuding a manly aura that makes one want to paw him, regardless of one’s sexual orientation. Backed by a crazy tight, super talented band, including a swinging, forceful horn section and on-point back-up singers, Jones showed no signs of slowing down, ranging through his giant catalog and showing off the way-better-than-expected new tunes and setting off waves of pure joy with generation crossing hits like “She’s A Lady,” “It’s Not Unusual” and his saucy cover of Prince’s “Kiss.” It was pure Golden Gate Park magic to see grandmas cutting loose with tattooed love boys and hardened bikers, everyone belting out the words with massive grins.

2. The National – After close to a decade this Brooklyn band is proving one for the long run and a real cumulative powerhouse on a festival stage. Not a dud note in their hour set, which dropped one beautifully crafted, emotionally delivered number after another. The jangle is strong in this band but it’s often layered over music that vibes with the poppier end of Radiohead, though The National’s dark side tends to be more lyrical than sonic. “Fake Empire,” which was used extensively during Obama’s White House run, including accompanying the video that ran just prior to his election night speech, was enormously well received by the hyper blue state audience. At one point, Aaron Dessner said, “I just killed a bug on my nose,” and then dedicated the next song to the fallen insect. Class act in every way.

3. Midnite – While a good portion of the crowd seemed either bored or perplexed by the St. Croix-based reggae institution, they nonetheless delivered as deep and heady-spiritual a display as their genre offers. Built around sustained, insistent rhythms and inspired textural shifts, there’s not a lot of peaks and valleys, and Bob Marley’s influence is almost nil, which, shooting straight, is what much of the buttermilk colored audience seemed to be craving. Too bad, because Midnite played an elemental, intense set that exemplified why they’ve built a large and ever-increasing worldwide fanbase.

West Indian Girl – featuring Guest Vocalist Miranda Lee Richards

Akron/Family

The Dodos

Built To Spill

Vau de Vire & Madd Vibe Orchestra

Midnite

The National

Incubus

Tom Jones

Pearl Jam

Pearl Jam

Pearl Jam


Late Night at the Golden Gate Gramble at Mezzanine…

ALO

GramJam: Jeff Miller, Eric McFadden, Bradly Bifulco, Steve Adams

Check back for lots more from Outside Lands…

JamBase | In The Park

Go See Live Music!



Do Make Say Think: Other Truths

Do Make Say Think
Announce New Album, Other Truths, Out October 20


Do Make Say Think

The sixth full-length from the ever-expanding and contracting Toronto quintet Do Make Say Think features four long-form tracks, three of which clock in at over 10 minutes and all of which trace inimitable musical arcs that have made this band justly celebrated. The five members’ unique sonic palette and vibrant distillation of compositional forms have made Do Make Say Think some of the past decade’s most consistently rich and rewarding instrumental rock.

Bucking the trend towards diminishing attention spans, immediate gratification and snappy digital singles, DMST admirably stick to their roots and allow the vines that spring from their fertile musical garden to wind, curl and climb for as long as required. More than ever, the players keep their heads down, creating wonderful multi-movement instrumental works (with the occasional wordless vocal passage, courtesy of guest singers Akron/Family and Lullabye Arkestra). The songs off Other Truth overflow with attention to tone and timbre and are animated by unfussy yet ornate harmony, melody and polyrhythmic soul. The album represents the first time since the band’s debut (recorded over a dozen years ago) that they’ve found themselves with an entire collection of songs that unfold organically over long duration.

Do Make Say Think has always managed to gather, balance and synthesize various poles simultaneously – ragged/precise, dirty/clean, atmospheric/stratospheric – forging sonic narratives that combine broad strokes and clusters of detail. Perhaps more than their overtly ‘post-modern’ commingling of various musical genres (psych, jazz, dub, folk) this less conspicuous, indefinable ability to maintain such a consistently enthralling fusion of instincts is the true mark of the band, yielding a music that sounds and feels natural and human. Certainly a key part of this unquantifiable equation is the band’s self-production, which has shaped their sound from the beginning. Led by Ohad Benchetrit and his home studio in Toronto, along with Charles Spearin and Justin Small, DMST has developed a canny and novel toolbox of recording and mixing techniques that contributes significantly to their sonic identity.

Other Truths is available on CD in a custom gate-fold cardstock jacket and in a first pressing on deluxe 180 gram vinyl that includes a limited edition poster (unique to the vinyl package), an artwork insert printed on heavyweight translucent paper and a CD copy of the album all packed in a thick 24pt. paperboard record jacket. The album is also available digitally.

Other Truths Track Listing
1. Do
2. Make
3. Say
4. Think

Do Make Say Think Tour Dates:
09/10/09 Thu Miller Theatre New York, NY

10/22/09 Thu The Scala London, GB

11/25/09 Wed La Sala Rossa Montreal, QC

11/26/09 Thu La Sala Rossa Montreal, QC

11/27/09 Fri Middle East Downstairs Cambridge, MA

11/28/09 Sat Music Hall Of Williamsburg Brooklyn, NY

11/29/09 Sun Bowery Ballroom New York, NY

11/30/09 Mon First Unitarian Church Philadelphia, PA

12/01/09 Tue Rock & Roll Hotel Washington, DC

12/02/09 Wed Brillobox Pittsburgh, PA

12/03/09 Thu Crofoot Ballroom Pontiac, MI

12/04/09 Fri Schubas Chicago, IL

12/05/09 Sat Lincoln Hall Chicago, IL



Outside Lands Late Nights
& The Barbary Tent Artists

Outside Lands Announces String Of Late Night Shows


Come see ALO late night at the Gramble

San Francisco’s Outside Lands has announced a round of night shows during the weekend and days leading up to the festival. Some of San Francisco’s premier music venues – Mezzanine, The Independent, Rickshaw Stop – will play host to bands looking to play past Golden Gate Park’s noise curfew. Tickets range in price from $10 to $25 for the various acts that include ALO, The Dodos, Akron/Family, Howlin Rain, Conor Oberst and The Mystic Valley Band, Extra Golden, Gang Gang Dance, Calexico, Street Sweeper Social Club and others.

Mezzanine

Friday, August 28: Golden Gate Gramble II with ALO, Counter Clarkwise (Josh Clark and Steve Molitz) and Newfangled Wasteland

Saturday, August 29: Conor Oberst and The Mystic Valley Band

The Independent

Friday, August 28: Street Sweeper Social Club

Saturday, August 29: Calexico, Sergio Mendoza y La Orkesta

Sunday, August 30: Os Mutantes, Extra Golden

Rickshaw Stop

Wednesday, August 26: The Dodos, Spency Dude and The Doodles

Thursday, August 27: Akron/Family, Howlin Rain

Saturday, August 29: The Dirtbombs, The Sermon and Ty Segall

Sunday, August 30: Gang Gang Dance, Ariel Pink and Amanda Blank

More information regarding the night shows is available here.

Other Outside Lands news includes “The Barbary” tent. Named for San Francisco’s infamous Barbary Coast district, the tent will be hosted by San Francisco’s theatrical-circus/variety group Vau de Vire Society and will showcase the finest local rock, cabaret, circus, variety and comedy acts. The tent itself is the world famous Victoria Spiegeltent, on loan from Belgium. The turn of the century “magic mirror tent” or “spiegeltent” is anything but a conventional circus tent, as its walls are made of oak-framed mirrors and ceiling adorned in stained glass.

The complete Barbary lineup is below:

The Yard Dogs Road Show

Vau de Vire Society

The Madd Vibe Orchestra

Reggie Watts

Rosin Coven

Loop! Station

Brent Weinbach

Eric McFadden Trio

Jacob Sirof

Kevin Camia

Gooferman

Sherry Sirof

Fou Fou Ha…with Kitten on the Keys playing Madame/Hostess

Zap Mama and Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears have also been added to perform at the festival.

For more on Outside Lands, check our extensive coverage of the 2008 event here.



Megafaun:Gather, Form & Fly

By: Dennis Cook

This is magic, pure and not-so-simple. Megafaun creates exuberant, never-predictable music that makes one’s brain expand and crackle like Jiffy Pop on a fire hot stovetop. That they accomplish this feat largely without the sturm und drang of punk or machine clatter (think TV on the Radio or The Mars Volta) is doubly impressive. While Megafaun can bring da’ noize (as the kids say) it’s their aptitude and finesse with quieter sonics and gentler emotions that generates much of the wallop on their freakin’ fabulous sophomore album, Gather, Form & Fly (released July 21 on Hometapes), which draws sinewy lines of connection between African strains and barbershop harmonies, vintage British folk rock (a la John Martyn, particularly) and modal jazz, Kinks-ian pop and musique concrete.

The vast array of musical colors on Gather could be kinda dizzying except for the firm grip the trio – Joe Westerlund (percussion) and brothers Brad (guitar) and Phil Cook (banjo, keys, various), aided here by members of The Rosebuds, Mount Vernon, Tender Fruit and others – possesses. While seemingly all over the place listed in print, the shape they build here is all Megafaun. What bubbled up in a germinal form on their terrific debut, Bury The Square, has metastasized marvelously. They fearlessly play with space and sharply jabbed statements on the title cut but prove equally skilled at unadulterated sunshine pop on “The Fade” and spirited, right in the moment white country blues on “Solid Ground,” which delightfully recalls Johnny Winter’s yelping, string brutalizing giddiness on the Muddy Waters albums he produced in the late ’70s. Past experiences collaborating with Dreyblatt and Akron/Family have sharpened their high brow, mighty conceptualizing chops, which hover in the background, but Megafaun boldly chooses to extend a friendly paw on Gather, eager to wag their tail and gobble up Scooby snacks with any kind human that reaches back towards them.

It’s a path perhaps less angled at general critical tastes, which tend to reward darkness and edginess with gold stars far more readily than they do empathetic, positivity arched chameleons like Megafaun. Their loss because Gather, Form & Fly is the kind of record that will pull you from the dumps, change your thinking (on a number of subjects) and remind you of music’s endlessly mutable charms.

Megafaun is currently on a co-headlining tour with Bowerbirds. Click here for tour dates.

JamBase | Well Formed
Go See Live Music!


July 23, 1995: Inventors Hall of Fame Opens Doors

<< previous image | next image >>

1995: The National Inventors Hall of Fame opens its doors in Akron, Ohio.
The museum moved to the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office headquarters in Alexandria, Virginia, in March 2009. But over the last few years, as the This Day in Tech crew has produced more than 600 entries, we’ve [...]

Dan Auerbach Solo Trek

Dan Auerbach of The Black Keys will embark on Another Tour

To Support Solo Debut Keep It Hid / Tour Begins November 5


Dan Auerbach

Dan Auerbach — best known as half of The Black Keys — will embark on a winter tour beginning November 5 in Columbus, OH. The tour, which includes shows at New York City’s Webster Hall, Nashville’s Cannery Ballroom and Philadelphia’s Theater of the Living Arts, arrives on the heels of Auerbach’s critically acclaimed solo debut Keep It Hid. The album received wide praise from The New York Times, NPR’s Fresh Air, The New Yorker, Rolling Stone, Pitchfork and JamBase. Opening for Auerbach on the fall dates are Justin Townes Earle and Jessica Lea Mayfield. Please see below for tour details.

Keep It Hid was produced and engineered by Auerbach at his studio Akron Analog and features him playing a variety of instruments, including drums, guitar, percussion, and keyboards. Many of Auerbach’s friends and family play on the album, including his uncle James Quine, who contributes vocal harmony and electric guitar on the track “Street Walkin.” Other musicians include Jessica Lea Mayfield, who sings on the track “When the Night Comes,” and Bob Cesare, who plays drums on “Whispered Words,” a song originally written by Auerbach’s father.

Dan Auerbach Tour Dates:

11/05/09 Thu Newport Music Hall Columbus, OH

11/06/09 Fri Majestic Theatre Detroit, MI

11/07/09 Sat Phoenix Concert Theatre Toronto, ON

11/08/09 Sun Le National Montreal, QC

11/09/09 Mon Paradise Rock Club Boston, MA

11/11/09 Wed Webster Hall New York, NY

11/12/09 Thu Theatre of Living Arts (TLA) Philadelphia, PA

11/13/09 Fri Sonar Main Stage Baltimore, MD

11/14/09 Sat Cat’s Cradle Carrboro, NC

11/16/09 Mon Orange Peel Asheville, NC

11/17/09 Tue Variety Playhouse Atlanta, GA

11/18/09 Wed House of Blues New Orleans, LA

11/20/09 Fri Minglewood Hall Memphis, TN

11/21/09 Sat The Cannery Nashville, TN

12/03/09 Thu Turner Hall Ballroom Milwaukee, WI

12/04/09 Fri First Avenue Minneapolis, MN

12/06/09 Sun Bluebird Bloomington, IN

12/08/09 Tue Southgate House Newport, KY

12/09/09 Wed House Of Blues Cleveland, OH

For more on Dan Auerbach check our recent feature/interview here.


Jonathan Spalter: Cleveland Rocks & Other Wireless News

Last week, the Senate Commerce Committee unanimously cleared a bill requiring the FCC and the Commerce Department to conduct annual audits of our wireless airwaves….

Akron/Family 7” Vinyl Series

Akron/Family Announce Tour Dates, 7″ Vinyl Series and “Sun Will Shine” Vincent Moon Video


Akron/Family

As experimental folk outfit Akron/Family gears up for its North American tour, the band plans on releasing a series 7″ vinyls. For the band’s summer jaunt, the Slaraffenland horns will join the Family on stage to form the Akron/Family Big Band.

Soon to be released are a series of Akron/Family 7″ that will feature songs from the band’s most recent album, Set ‘Em Wild, Set ‘Em Free, and exclusive 7″ only tracks. These albums will be available at the band’s shows during the summer then will be made available at traditional record store outlets.

Akron/Family 7 Inchers:

7″ #1 – Everyone is Guilty/Total Destruction
7″ #2 – River/Morning on Michigan Ave
7″ #3 – Many Ghosts/??!

For a taste of how Akron/Family sounds with their newest touring band check out the performance of the Vincent Moon classic “Sun Will Shine” here:

The band’s tour leading up to the release of Set ‘Em Wild, Set ‘Em Free saw the group playing at select small, intimate venues across the county. The current tour will see Akron/Family playing larger stages including stops at several festivals.

Akron/Family tour dates:

07/22/09 Wed Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Cleveland, OH

07/23/09 Thu 10,000 Lakes Festival Detroit Lakes, MN

07/24/09 Fri The Bottom Lounge Chicago, IL

07/25/09 Sat Calgary Folk Festival Calgary, AB

07/26/09 Sun Calgary Folk Festival Calgary, AB

07/29/09 Wed Ghost Ranch Saloon Steamboat Springs, CO

07/30/09 Thu Sandbar Sports Grill Vail, CO

07/31/09 Fri Bluebird Theater Denver, CO

08/02/09 Sun All Points West Festival Jersey City, NJ

08/11/09 Tue Rock & Roll Hotel Washington, DC

08/12/09 Wed Cat’s Cradle Carrboro, NC

08/13/09 Thu The Earl Atlanta, GA

08/14/09 Fri BottleTree Birmingham, AL

08/15/09 Sat Grey Eagle Asheville, NC

08/28/09 Fri Outside Lands Festival San Francisco, CA

08/29/09 Sat El Rey Theater Los Angeles, CA

09/07/09 Mon Bumbershoot Festival Seattle, WA

09/08/09 Tue Bagdad Theater Portland, OR

09/10/09 Thu Talking Head Club Baltimore, MD

09/11/09 Fri Johnny Brenda’s Philadelphia, PA

09/12/09 Sat Kutshers Country Club Monticello, NY

09/14/09 Mon Jason’s Upstairs Hudson, NY

09/15/09 Tue Site: B Williamsport, PA

09/16/09 Wed Castaways Ithaca, NY

09/17/09 Thu Mohawk Place Buffalo, NY

09/18/09 Fri Lola London, ON

09/19/09 Sat Magic Stick Detroit, MI

09/20/09 Sun 21C Museum Hotel Louisville, KY

For more on Akron/Family check our recent live review here and recent album review here.


ATP Adds Sufjan, Super Furry

FIRST U.S. SUFJAN STEVENS PERFORMANCE IN TWO YEARS

Super Furry Animals

The 2nd Annual ATP New York Festival, taking place September 11-13 at Kutshers Country Club in Monticello, New York, has added the following artists to this year’s All Tomorrow’s Parties lineup: Sufjan Stevens, Crystal Castles, Super Furry Animals, Shellac, Circulatory System, Grouper, Boris, Low Lows and Oneida Presents the Ocropolis.

Last year’s festival was co-curated by My Bloody Valentine, and this year’s Fest will be co-curated by The Flaming Lips.

The full line-up so far for this intimate, wholly unique fest (capacity limited to just 2800 people) is as follows:

Friday

The Jesus Lizard

Iron and Wine

Don’t Look Back: Dirty Three Performing Ocean Songs

Don’t Look Back: Suicide Performing First LP

Don’t Look Back: The Feelies Performing Crazy Rhythms

Don’t Look Back: The Drones Performing Wait Long By The River

Comedy Stage -Hosted and curated by David Cross

Saturday (curated by ATP)

Animal Collective

Panda Bear

Sufjan Stevens

Deerhunter

Melvins

Shellac

Boss Hog

Autolux

Dead Meadow

EL-P

Anti-Pop Consortium

Circulatory System

Autolux

Atlas Sound

Akron/Family

Grouper

Sleepy Sun

Bridezilla

Sunday (curated by The Flaming Lips)

The Flaming Lips

Boredoms perform 9 drummer BOADRUM

No Age perform Husker Du

Caribou perform as Caribou Vibration Ensemble

Deerhoof with Martha Colburn

Crystal Castles

Super Furry Animals

Boris

Low Lows

Oneida Presents the Ocropolis

Limited single day tickets now on sale. Friday single day pass is $75 + booking fee
Saturday or Sunday single day passes are $95 + booking fee. Weekend passes are $235 + booking fee. Tickets and full information available here.