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Snoe.down Photos & Review | 03.26-03.28 | VT

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”0″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=10″);}); moe. | Snoe.down 2010 | Rutland, VT moe. celebrates Snoe.down 2010 in Rutland, VT with Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings, The Bridge, Moonalice, The McLovins and more… View Photos

Words by: Bill Clifford | Images by: Rob Chapman

Snoe.down :: 03.26.10-03.28.10 :: Killington Resort & Spartan Arena :: Rutland, VT


Sharon Jones and The Dap-Kings

Live music fans celebrated the arrival of spring in New England with the return of Snoe.down, a winter sports and music festival, hosted by
moe., at Killington Ski Resort. A glorious weekend full of inspiring artist and the wonders of nature, for many this was the start of festival season.

Friday, March 26

The Bridge was the second act to perform on Friday at Bear Mountain. This mid-Atlantic band has been garnering quite a following over the last several years at festivals large and small, and I come away more impressed with each performance. Guitarist and lead singer Chris Jacobs has a sultry, honeyed voice that carries some of Lowell George’s soul. Fans were getting down to the New Orleans boogie of “Old White Lightning 95,” led by Mark Brown‘s ivory tickling. And the Southern jazz of “Bury My Bones In Baltimore” featured the horn of Patrick Rainey. Once again, The Bridge proved to be one of the most alluring yet under appreciated bands on the circuit.

Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings were the opening act at Spartan Arena on Friday night and played to a thin crowd that slowly sauntered in. The Dap-Kings, an eight-piece ensemble, took the stage sans Jones and warmed up the crowd with some instrumentals. But the show really got hot when Jones, a stout, fiery performer, lit up the stage. She promenaded from one wing of the stage to the other, enticing the crowd to sing along with her. When raising her powerful, gospel voice, she sang with deep emotion, writhing and contorting her body. Jones and the Dap-Kings are reviving the classic sounds of Motown and Stax recording artists, and Jones is clearly a leader of the scene.

moe. is currently celebrating its twentieth anniversary and have been performing shows filled with classic moe. songs since Halloween. Friday night’s first set was a bit by the numbers; not boring but nothing really stood out. “Mexico” made a fine opener, warming up both the crowd and the band as vocalist/guitarist Al Schnier‘s fingers raced up and down the neck of his guitar. Bassist Rob Derhak‘s pop nugget “Captain America” was played in a faster time signature than normal, but then slowed for a long, improvised segue into “Four,” a meandering dirge. The set closed with an upbeat note on “Shoot First,” featuring percussionist Jim Loughlin on MalletKat. That found its way into fan favorite “Moth,” with guitarist Chuck Garvey‘s searing notes drawing an ovation from the arena, about three quarters full.


Chuck Garvey – moe. :: 03.26 :: Snoe.down 2010

Set two had a bit more to offer the average moe. fan. The lovely ballad “Faker” began slow and mellow but picked up the tempo later, led by Garvey’s lead guitar bending notes. It then busted into a rarely played verse of the song, an upbeat, funky interlude that featured triple vocal harmonies from Garvey, Derhak and Schnier. Another bust out was their cover of James Bouchard’s “Cape Cod Girls,” played here with a slow, rumbling bass line and the cadent drumming of Vinnie Amico, which rolled right into “Water,” highlighted by Garvey’s mercurial guitar solo. As “Hector’s Pillow” bounced seamlessly into “Timmy Tucker,” the crowd sensed a set closer and began to sway and sing along in the high point of the evening. Mid-song, moe. brought the tempo to a lull, giving both the band and the fans a moment to breath, and then led back into a rousing peak by Loughlin’s MalletKat. The two-song encore of “She Sends Me” and “Spine of a Dog” was played short and sweet due to the curfew.


Saturday, March 27

I began Saturday at the K1 Lodge, with vaulted ceilings, exposed beams, stunning views of the slopes, and The McLovins onstage. The Saturday crowd was noticeably larger than the previous day, and the barroom was at standing room only capacity as the band began with “Milktoast Man.” The musical growth in this teen trio was evident immediately. “Deep Monster Trance” was announced as a new song on the band’s upcoming full-length CD, and is every bit as up and down in tempo as its title suggests. A long, improvised guitar solo from Jeff Howard, with languid notes drawn out on a whammy bar stirred the crowd. The McLovins also premiered their cover of Paul Simon’s “Diamonds on the Soles of Her Shoes,” which enticed the crowd to shake their butts and move their feet. These youngsters have come a long way in a short time.


The McLovins :: Snoe.down 2010

Over at Bear Mountain, we caught the second half of Hot Day at the Zoo. Again, the bar was wall-to-wall packed. There was an absolute, insatiable energy coming from the jamgrass quartet onstage, and I was immediately struck with the string bending of the mandolin and banjo players, as well as the group’s tight harmonies. While there was no percussion player, there was enough foot stomping and guitar slapping to make up for the lack of drums. The faster and harder this band played, the more the crowd hollered and danced along. HDATZ certainly gained more than one new fan from their performance at Snoe.down.


From the lodge it was a short walk to an outdoor stage for an afternoon performance from moe. After welcoming fans to Snoe.down, Schnier quipped, “This is fantastic. It’s a whole lot better than playing in single digits on Whiteface Mountain,” referencing a frigid outdoor performance in Lake Placid at the previous Snoe.down in 2006. Today, there was a crystal blue sky above and temps were easily in the high 60s to 70s. From my vantage point ten rows back, Chuck side, I glanced upwards towards the slope at a the surreal scene: a sea of heads bobbing and shaking, fans in t-shirts and sunglasses, skiers and boarders shredding the slopes.


Amico’s rat-a-tat-tat drumming began “St. Augustine” and immediately the horde was set in motion. On the pop nugget “OkayAlright,” Derhak could be heard laughing as he sang the words, “Smoking joints in the parking lot,” bringing its usual roar from the crowd. “Akimbo” was a rare afternoon bust out. Schnier and Garvey traded lead and melody parts before Derhak stepped up for a bass solo. Not to be outdone, Amico and Loughlin hammered at their respective kits behind it all.


moe. & family :: 03.27 :: Snoe.down 2010

Derhak drew a laugh when he noted that someone had “just wiped in the half-pipe!” With dusk settling, “Happy Hour Hero” was an obligatory choice late in the set, which segued into “Seat of my Pants.” Late in the song it seemed to take on the sound of an ’80s metal band as Schnier scratched a pick along his strings while Garvey wailed. As quick as flipping a light switch, moe. moved into “Sensory Deprivation Bank,” one of its oldest songs, to close the set. Ever the family values band, moe. invited their kids to dance to the encore, “Down Boy,” where they playfully laughed and interacted with the kids and fans.


Assembly of Dust was the opening act at Spartan Arena on Saturday night, and initially took the stage to a disappointingly sparse crowd. AOD opened with the sultry “Sinner,” one of bandleader/lead singer/songwriter Reid Genauer‘s oldest songs, going back to his days with Vermont’s Strangefolk. Lead guitarist Andy Terrell‘s dulcet harmony tones stood out on “Sinner” while the band’s three-part harmony vocals shined on “Edges” and “Telling Sue,” the latter highlighting their ’60s pop influences. “Whistle Clock” was a driving rock song with lots of room for improvisation, and Terrell’s guitar cried while the rhythm section of drummer Andy Herrick and bassist John Leccese was thunderous. AOD closed where it started: “Sometimes,” another gem from Genauer’s Strangefolk days. Again, Terrell proved himself to be a versatile sideman, going from mellow and hushed to wailing when needed. The crowd had grown since the band began and gave rousing applause as AOD left the stage.


Railroad Earth followed AOD and their set was a highlight of the weekend. Opener “Mighty River” is a lovely folk melody laced with Tim Carbone‘s eloquent violin. Like many mighty rivers, the tune has a meandering yet deliberate tempo, which flowed directly into “Like A Buddha,” which featured sweet flute interludes from Andy Goessling. The gorgeous acoustic ode to breaking down walls, “Bird in a House” was filled with sweet violin and mandolin, a lovely waltz that got feet moving, and the more straight ahead rock protest song “Warhead Boogie” kept the energy at a high. The rollicking “Long Way To Go” brought the set to a rousing close, and left fans eager to get down with some moe. Lest I forget, Railroad Earth’s new bassist, Andrew Altman was stellar the whole set. You’d have never known he was a recent addition to the band based on his playing.


moe. Sunday Brunch :: 03.28 :: Snoe.down 2010

moe. saved its best for Saturday night, beginning with “Wind It Up,” featuring Loughlin’s MalletKat fills peppered throughout. He’s one of the most talented multi-instrumentalists on the scene, but I pay special attention when he tinkers away on the MalletKat. Mid-set, the band revived its cover of The Meters‘ “Cissy Strut,” not played since 2001, sandwiched inside their own “Stranger Than Fiction,” and Derhak and Amico laid down a thick funk for Garvey’s melodious guitar flourishes. This was the highlight of the first set, which then closed with a long, improvisational excursion through “Plane Crash,” a high-energy rager that left fans exhausted but eager for set two.


From that high point forward moe. never really mellowed. The second set was an upbeat run through classic moe. beginning with “Threw It All Away.” The jaunty highway song “The Road” transitioned seamlessly into the funk-rooted “Lazurus,” where Schnier’s scorching guitar swells seemed to float through the dense din of the arena crowd. Jason Huffer‘s lights illuminated the arena coming back into “The Road,” as violet, yellow and royal blues splashed on the ceiling and walls. His lighting throughout was fantastic, but one could certainly lose themselves in the dither of colors at that point.


I heard the opening guitar and bass strains to my personal favorite moe. song and moved into the horde to get lost in “Opium.” While some may find it a dark, heavy song, I love to set myself adrift, eyes shut, on the soulful, slinky groove and mellow spaces of this particular tune. Garvey’s swirling slide guitar was a purple haze and Derhak’s deeply resonating bass and passionately bellowed vocals filled the arena. Coming down, they moved seamlessly into a carousing “32 Things” to close, drawing a cheer from the crowd happy to have something to dance to again. Up close for this jam, I took notice of the interaction between Loughlin and Amico, their heads nodding in agreement as Loughlin moved from drums to shakers to tambourines, as the set ended on an emotional high. After wishing a happy birthday to Loughlin’s dad Bill, moe. encored with a soulful rendition of Little Feat‘s “Willin,’” and then ended the evening with a rambunctious run through “New York City.”


moe. closed the weekend with a 10 a.m. brunch for V.I.P. ticket holders, though, unfortunately, this critic wasn’t privy. And despite Leroy Justice and Red Rooster both being booked on Sunday afternoon, there was a long drive to Connecticut after an exhausting but joyful weekend. moe. seems to have found a wonderful new home for Snoe.down in beautiful Central Vermont, where some of the kindest folks graciously welcomed us moe.rons.

moe. Tour Dates :: moe. News :: moe. Concert Reviews

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Haiti Benefit: Members of Ween RRE, Hot Tuna on 2/14 in NYC

Haiti Benefit this weekend features members of Railroad Earth, Ween and Hot Tuna

Railroad Earth

Americana Artist George Kilby Jr. will produce a Valentine’s Day Benefit Concert for Haitian Aid, February 14, from 3 p.m. till Midnight at Mannys on Second in New York City. Internationally known musicians who are based in New York will be featured, along with regional bands playing a wide variety of genres including bluegrass, jazz, blues, country, funk, and rock & roll.

Partners in Health is the beneficiary of all proceeds. The organization has been doing work in Haiti for 20 years which has put them “on the ground” and in the midst of the aid process at the time of the earthquake.

Venue Information:
Mannys on Second
1770 2nd Ave (btwn 92nd and 93rd St)
New York, NY, 10128
Phone:(212)410-3300
mannyonsecond.com
Tickets are $20

Lineup:
Sean Kershaw and the New Jack Ramblers
Barbecue Bob w/ Special Guest Dave Dreiwitz
Dave Dreiwitz (Ween, Marco Benvento Trio)
George Kilby Jr. and Road Dogs w/ guests Henry Butler, Andy Goessling and Lily White
New Orleans Piano Legend Henry Butler (a special guest to be confirmed)
Andy Goessling (Railroad Earth)
Lily White

Bluegrass Allstar Revue
Tony Trishka – The Godfather of the Modern Banjo (to be confirmed)
Andy Goessling, John Skeehan – Railroad Earth
Skip Ward – Steve Martin Band
Danny Weiss – Skyline/Reckon SO
Popa Chubby


Railroad Earth: NYE, Hitting Studio Bassist Grubb’s Last Shows

RAILROAD EARTH ANNOUNCE NEW YEAR’S PLANS, NEW ALBUM IN THE WORKS

Railroad Earth

After a largely successful fall tour, Railroad Earth is wrapping up a momentous 2009 with performances on both coasts before heading to the studio for their forthcoming album. The six-piece Americana outfit is scheduled for a short east coast run before heading to San Francisco’s Fillmore on December 27 and 28, and Portland, OR’s Crystal Ballroom December 30 and 31 for a New Year’s Eve blow out.

The New Year’s performance will mark the final show with long-time bass player and friend, Johnny Grubb, who recently resigned from the project. With numerous sell-out performances around the country, the final performances with Grubb are not to be missed. The band will be taking the first part of 2010 to focus on the creation and release of their sixth album before hitting the road again in the summer.

Railroad Earth’s most successful year to date, 2009 saw the band grace stages at some of the country’s most prestigious festivals including Bonnaroo, Austin City Limits Festival, Telluride Bluegrass Festival, Rothbury, and the 10,000 Lakes Festival. In their relatively short tenure, the band has released five critically acclaimed albums and amassed an impressive national following with sold-out shows from coast-to-coast.

Mixing an unlikely blend of instruments to make up their well-traveled sound, the project features Todd Sheaffer (lead vocals, acoustic guitars), Tim Carbone (violin, vocals), John Skehan (Mandolin, vocals), Andy Goessling (acoustic guitars, banjo, dobro, mandolin, flute, pennywhistle, saxophones and vocals), Carey Harmon (drums, hand percussion, vocals) and Grubb (upright bass).

Railroad Earth Tour Dates

12/10/09 Thu Music Hall Of Williamsburg Brooklyn, NY

12/11/09 Fri 9:30 Club Washington, DC

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

12/27/09 Sun The Fillmore San Francisco, CA

12/28/09 Mon The Fillmore San Francisco, CA

12/30/09 Wed The Crystal Ballroom Portland, OR

12/31/09 Thu Aladdin Theater Portland, OR

01/03/10 Sun Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/04/10 Mon Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/05/10 Tue Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/06/10 Wed Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/07/10 Thu Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/08/10 Fri Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL


YMSB/Railroad Earth | 10.17 | NYC

Words & Images by: Bill Clifford

Yonder Mountain String Band & Railroad Earth :: 10.17.09 :: Nokia Theatre :: New York, NY

Adam Aijala – YMSB :: 10.17 :: New York City

For live music fans, it’s always a wonderful rush when two of your favorite acts are performing together. Such was the case for this writer when Yonder Mountain String Band and Railroad Earth were booked in New York City. That the performance would take place in Times Square was simply the icing on the cake.

New Jersey-based Railroad Earth opened the show with an upbeat and inviting reading of “Seven Story Mountain” before the lilting violin and acoustic guitars of “The Forecast” drew shrieks of excitement from enthused fans now gathered in front of the stage. Older instrumental “Bread and Water” inspired a small portion of the crowd to clap their hands in unison, slightly pulling in a tent revival feel to the proceedings.

The tempo mellowed on the sweet ballad “Loving You,” then lifted again with the familiar opening guitar picking of the buoyant “Smiling Like A Buddha.” Todd Sheaffer and Andy Goessling‘s guitars weaved in and out with John Skehan‘s mandolin and Tim Carbone‘s violin, exhorting the crowd to do-si-do along. RRE closed out its NYC stop with their version of Neal Casal’s “Dandelion Wine.” Their most traditional bluegrass-sounding song of the performance, it got the audience shuffling and stomping its feet and inspired quite a bit of honky-tonk dancing – a sight to see in Times Square of all places.

The lights dimmed and Yonder Mountain String Band took the stage with gracious smiles, looking pleased to see such a large crowd in New York City. The band opened the first of two sets with a sprawling, high-speed romp through “Raleigh & Spencer.” It was an inspired choice for an opener, immediately drawing a mix of suave hipsters and country hippies to the open floor.

Railroad Earth :: 10.17 :: New York City

Frontman Jeff Austin introduced stand-up bassist Ben Kaufmann, who stated, “Thank you very much. This is the most people we’ve ever played to in New York City. We’ve been coming here a long time. Remember The Wetlands? I do.” Austin added that the first time the band played The Wetlands “about twenty three of you were there. Our van got broken into, and we’re like, ‘We’re going to make it in this town.’”

“40 Miles From Denver,” Kaufmann’s bittersweet ode about leaving someone behind to return to life in the Appalachian Mountains, followed, and here it seemed that a large portion of the crowd sang with him. Austin brought a huge cheer from the audience when he said with a bit of a grunt, “We’re gonna cram as much music as we can into tonight for all of you. And when we’re full, were gonna add just one or two more.”

Kaufmann’s lament to the ramblin’ gamblin’ lifestyle of the road, “Sometimes I’ve Won,” featured a sweet guitar and banjo interlude. “Another Day,” sung by guitarist Adam Aijala, was a traditional bluegrass stomp that further shone the spotlight on Dave Johnston‘s banjo picking.

YMSB has an incredible repertoire to pull from, and this evening’s selection of Kaufmann’s “Complicated” was evidence of that fact. The only song they played off their most recent studio CD, The Show (JamBase review), his bass held the low end fine enough, but missing were the drums that many of that album’s tracks were recorded with.

Jeff Austin – YMSB :: 10.17 :: New York City

Austin made note of his family’s Queens connections and that his mom had long dreamed of seeing him play on Broadway. “So, I got to call my mom, and I said, ‘Mom, I just took a picture of my face in Times Square, and I’m playing actually address-wise on Broadway!” Then, stepping back from the microphone, he added with a laugh, “Anyway, this one’s for you, mom!” and with a few plaintive strums on his mandolin was off into their classic “Southbound,” enticing Aijala into a mid-song guitar solo.

YMSB closed the first set with a four-song run that began with the evocatively intoned traditional bluegrass instrumental “Elzic’s Farewell,” featuring stellar picking from Austin. It was followed by the equally dark “New Horizons,” about a farm family running from a deluge of rain, which dissolved via a bass solo into the much more high-spirited “Holdin’,” with Kaufmann’s cheerful chorus of “Do-da-do,” and finally came back around to the closing crescendo of “New Horizons.” Austin and Johnston played right up to one another, locking eyes and bringing it together at just the right moment. It was exactly this kind of “nu-grass jam” that created so many fans for the band in the first place. This closing run lifted the crowd’s spirit and had folks spinning, shuffling, smiling and dancing.

“Is that it on a Saturday night, New York?” asked Austin as the band took the stage for the second set, coaxing a cheer from the remaining fans at the Nokia Theatre. Though it had thinned a bit, the theater was still fairly packed. “I knew ya had more than that in ya. We’ve got a lot more in us as well.”

Ben Kaufmann – YMSB :: 10.17

A sweet “Traffic Jam” > “Little Rabbit” > “Traffic Jam” sandwich featured Johnston and Aijala picking at a vigorous pace and feeding off the crowd’s energy. Austin made a reference to several of the band’s influences and energetically stated, “Without a guy in a band called the Bad Livers, a musician named Danny Barnes, we might not be standing here. So, we’d like to welcome Mr. Danny Barnes out to the stage, to just rip some shit in New York City with us. What do ya say, Mr. Barnes?”

“Pine County Breakdown” was a traditional bluegrass dueling banjo instrumental, while the Bad Livers’ “Where They Do Not Know My Name,” though rooted in bluegrass, was played with the speed and punk aesthetic the Livers built their name on. When Barnes set into picking with Johnston and Austin, his influence on the quartet was evident.

“Finally Saw The Light” tells the tale of a rambling outlaw who finally finds solace in the Lord’s graces. Kaufmann sang it with passion and zeal, and Johnston’s plaintive banjo was a guiding light in the darkness. Disappointingly, the song drew only modest applause. And Austin’s second set closer, “Peace Of Mind,” which featured slashing mandolin runs against Aijala’s melancholic guitar strums, barely seemed to raise most fan’s energy. Despite a packed house in Times Square, there is just something incredibly different about hearing YMSB perform down South or in the mountains that just wasn’t present in New York City.

As the band returned for the closing two song encore, Austin thanked the crowd, stating that if they’ll keep turning up that the band will keep coming back. Closing out the performance, RRE’s Tim Carbone joined the band on fiddle for a choice cover of Jimmy Cliff’s “The Harder They Come;” the reggae classic taking on a new feel played on traditional stringed instruments.

“We got time for one more big old bluegrass number. Are you feeling it friends? Are you feeling it New York City?” hollered Austin. Together with Carbone and Barnes, they launched into a speedy version of “Shady Groove” to end the night.

Railroad Earth Setlist

Seven Story Mountain, Old Dangerfield, Bird in a House, The Forecast, 1759, Bread and Water, Lovin’ You, Like a Buddha, Dance Around Molly > Dandelion Wine

Yonder Mountain String Band Setlist

Set I: Raleigh & Spencer, 40 Miles From Denver, Pride Of Alabama, Sometimes I’ve Won, Winds On Fire, Another Day, Complicated, Southbound, Elzic’s Farewell > New Horizons > Holdin’ > New Horizons

Set II: Traffic Jam > Little Rabbit > Traffic Jam, Crazy, Pike County Breakdown*, Going Where They Do Not Know My Name*, Finally Saw The Light, Country Boy Rock & Roll, Natchez Whistle > Peace Of Mind

E: Harder They Come Harder They Fall#, Shady Grove#

* Danny Barnes on banjo & vocals

# Tim Carbone on fiddle

YMSB is on tour now; dates available here. RRE is also on tour now; date available here.

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