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Monsters of Bass Tour: FreQ Nasty, MartyParty, Opiuo

BASS IN YOUR FACE

This winter will see FreQ Nasty, MartyParty and Opiuo join forces to form a three
headed bass behemoth dubbed Monsters Of Bass. This 17-date tour brings the dancefloor destruction to markets both large and small including Vancouver, Whistler (AKA Mount Bass), Seattle, Portland,
Sacramento, Eureka, Petaluma, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Tempe, Denver, St. Louis, Atlanta, Knoxville, Chicago,
Pittsburgh, and lastly, New York City. Moreover, this is the largest Bass Music tour to ever hit North America.

MONSTERS OF BASS 2011 NORTH AMERICAN TOUR DATES

FEB 17 :: VANCOUVER, BC @ FORTUNE SOUND CLUB

FEB 18 :: WHISTLER, BC @ TOMMY AFRICAS
FEB 19 :: SEATTLE, WA @ NEUMOS

FEB 20 :: PORTLAND, OR @ ROTTURE

FEB 22 :: SACRAMENTO, CA @ TOWN HOUSE

FEB 23 :: EUREKA, CA @ NOCTURNUM
FEB 24 :: PETALUMA, CA @ MYSTIC THEATER
FEB 25 :: SAN FRANCISCO, CA @ 103 HARRIET
FEB 26 :: LOS ANGELES, CA @ EL REY THEATRE
FEB 27 :: TEMPE, AZ @ 910 LIVE
MAR 02 :: DENVER, CO @ CERVANTES
MAR 04 :: ST. LOUIS, MO @ KOKEN ART FACTORY

MAR 05 :: ATLANTA, GA @ MASQUERADE
MAR 06 :: KNOXVILLE, TN @ VALARIUM
MAR 09 :: CHICAGO, IL @ DOUBLE DOOR
MAR 11 :: PITTSBURGH, PA @ REX THEATER

MAR 12 :: NEW YORK, NY @ TOUCH


Dexfest Adds Telepath, Labcoat Count Bass D, The Malah & more

BEEPS ‘N’ BLIPS ‘N’ BOOM-BAP!

Telepath

The final artist additions for the second annual Dexfest, this year known as Cosmic Convergence, have been announced. Telepath, Count Bass D, Labcoat (featuring Two Fresh, Bookworm, Lane Shaw of Pnuma & More), The Malah, Corleone, Papadosio and Mindelixir join a line up that already includes Conspirator, EOTO, Big Gigantic, Starkey, EP3 and Freepeoples Frequency (featuring members of SeepeopleS).

Dexfest takes place June 17-20 at Sherman Oaks Campground in Dandridge, TN. Dexfest is a four-day multiple stage music festival occuring the weekend of the summer solstice.

Dexfest 2010 Lineup

Conspirator
EOTO
Telepath
Starkey
Big Gigantic
Count Bass D
Mindelixir
Lab Coat ft. Two Fresh Bookworm, & Jables
Papadosio
Corleone
Bowie Van Ling
Charlie P
The Malah
EP3
DJ Kidsmeal
This is Art
Archnemesis
Zoogma
Dex
Truly Grimy
Gravity A
White Noise
Agobi Project
The Mindnight Ace
Somni Suite
Total Recall
Arpetrio
FreepeoplesFrequency
Uprise Dub
Noise Org
Melee’
Jamwerks
Ga-Na-Si-Ta
The Running
Sojorn
Dailon
Greenhouse Lounge
Digital Butter
Brownee
Robosapien
Fast Nasty
Spooky Jones
Light Switch & The Purple Monk
Headstache
Protohype
Deep Fried Five
Fresh Hats Tight Beats
Deep Machine
Mills by Beats
Beat Repeat
Dirt Leg
Word of Mouth


Free Album Featuring: Russo, Benevento, Dreiwitz

Radio Soap Star Opera – Free Album Featuring

Joe Russo, Marco Benevento, Stuart Bogie, Dave Dreiwitz and More

Joe Russo

Below is a link to a zip file for Radio Soap Star Opera. It is currently only available as a free download and will not be sold anywhere ever.

You can download the album for free now at:
http://www.sendspace.com/file/u86hrc

Radio Soap Star Opera was recorded in seven days over three years. The tremendous musicians include: Joe Russo (drums, percussion, glockenspiel, vocals, producer of tracks 2, 3, 5-9), Stuart Bogie (clarinet, alto saxophone, jaw harp, bass harmonica, producer of tracks 1, 4), Don Piper (lap steel, vocals, harmonica, engineer and mix), Andrew Southern (bass 2, 3, 5-9), Kevin Kendrick (vibraphone 1, 4-7, 9), Colin Stetson (tenor and baritone sax on 1), Jon Shaw (trumpet on 6), Nick Movshon (bass on 1), Dave Dreiwitz (bass on 4), Marco Benevento (organ on 2), Sean Bones (guitar on 6), Ryan Thornton (tambourine).


Radiohead, Wilco, Crowded House:
Collaborate for Charity Album

7 WORLDS COLLIDE’S THE SUN CAME OUT TO BE RELEASED SEPTEMBER 29 VIA SONY MUSIC

BAND FEATURES MEMBERS OF RADIOHEAD, WILCO, CROWDED HOUSE, THE SMITHS, TUNSTALL & MORE

The first 7 Worlds Collide album (you can hear samples at myspace.com/7worldscollide), a collection of amazing musical talents from across the globe in aid of Medecins Sans Frontières, was a unique live performance experience, fusing the varied talents of a stellar cast across a range of cover versions to create a series of shows that culminated in the live album of the same name. Seven years after that project, instigator Neil Finn has upped the ante with the new 7 Worlds Collide project, The Sun Came Out, a double album of original songs created and recorded by many of the original cast alongside notable new additions in an intense three weeks in his native New Zealand. This time the beneficiaries of this album will be Oxfam, as well as music lovers worldwide.

Familiar faces from the original album abound, Johnny Marr, Ed O’Brien and Phil Selway of Radiohead but this album, first and foremost presents the listener with new songs rather than interpretations of old favourites. The Sun Came Out also features a whole host of new guest talents such as KT Tunstall and Wilco and heart stopping firsts, including Phil Selway’s songwriting and vocal debut as well as dream collaborations such as those between Johnny Marr and Wilco’s Jeff Tweedy; and KT Tunstall and Neil Finn.


At the heart of the record is Neil Finn. His enthusiasm and drive persuaded the likes of celebrated producer Jim Scott, Lisa Germano, Johnny Marr and Wilco’s Jeff Tweedy, Pat Sansone, John Stirratt and Glenn Kotche (amongst others) to spend their Christmas holiday in New Zealand and even interrupted KT Tunstall’s honeymoon in the process.

With families welcome, the studio became a constant whirl of creativity and energy throughout the three weeks allocated to create the record. Johnny Marr returned from a run on the beach with the basis of “Too Blue,” where Jeff Tweedy was waiting to add his talents; KT Tunstall stopped Neil retiring to his bed to complete “Hazel Black;” a wandering Johnny Marr added a chorus melody to Liam Finn’s “Red Wine Bottle;” Ed O’Brien fashioned “Bodhisattva Blues” from a Tibetan chant. In this atmosphere, anything was possible and Neil’s wife Sharon found herself laying down her debut vocal on “Little By Little” whilst Phil Selway also took his vocal bow and unveiled a hitherto unknown songwriting talent with his solo turn “The Ties That Bind Us” in one take.

Jeremy Hobbs, Director of Oxfam International said: “7 Worlds Collide is a great project. I hope The Sun Came Out is a huge success. Not just because it’s a unique musical experience but because each CD sold will make a difference – raising money to fund Oxfam’s work to fight poverty.”

The complete track listing and credits for the 2-CD set is below:

Disc 1

1. Too Blue – (Johnny Marr/Jeff Tweedy) – Johnny Marr and Neil Finn vocals
Elroy Finn & Glenn Kotche (drums), Phil Selway (percussion), John Stirratt (stand-up bass), Johnny Marr & Ed O’Brien (guitars), Pat Sansone (piano), Nile Marr & Neil Finn (acoustic guitars), and Lisa Germano (violins)


2. You Never Know – (Jeff Tweedy) – Jeff vocals
Jeff Tweedy (acoustic & electric guitars), Glenn Kotche (drums), Pat Sansone (acoustic 12 string guitar & piano), John Stirratt (bass), Neil Finn (Wurlitzer piano, fuzz guitar), Liam Finn (additional fuzz guitar), Nels Cline (electric/slide guitar), and Mikael Jorgensen (organ/synth)


3. Little By Little – (Sharon Finn/Neil Finn) – Neil and Sharon vocals
Glenn Kotche (drums & percussion), Liam Finn (additional drums), Sharon Finn (bass), and Neil Finn (guitars, Chamberlin, Jupiter 8, marimba)


4. Learn To Crawl – (Ed O’Brien/Johnny Marr/Liam Finn/Neil Finn) – Neil and Liam vocals
Glenn Kotche (drums), Ed O’Brien, Johnny Marr, Pat Sansone (acoustic guitar arpeggio), Neil Finn (bass), Pat Sansone (background harmonies), Jeff Tweedy (disembodied voice), and Lisa Germano (violin)


5. Black Silk Ribbon – (KT Tunstall/Bic Runga) – KT and Bic vocals
Luke Bullen (drums, thigh slap), KT Tunstall & Bic Runga (acoustic guitars), Sebastian Steinberg (stand up & bowed bass), and Lisa Germano (violin)

6. Girl, Make Your Own Mind Up – (Don McGlashan) – Don vocals
Don McGlashan (guitar), Glenn Kotche (drums), Ed O’Brien (electric guitar atmosphere), John Stirratt (bass), Ivy Rossiter (backing vocal), and Jeff Tweedy (electric guitar solo)

7. Run In The Dust – (Johnny Marr) – Johnny vocals
Phil Selway (drums), Sebastian Steinberg (bass), Johnny Marr (guitar), Ed O’Brien (electric guitar), Pat Sansone (Hammond organ), Jeff Tweedy (harmonica), Neil Finn, Lisa Germano, and Pat Sansone (harmonies)


8. Red Wine Bottle – (Liam Finn/Chris Garland/Johnny Marr) – Liam vocals
Glenn Kotche (drums), John Stirratt (bass), Liam Finn (acoustic guitars, guitar loops and solo, Hammond mash), Neil Finn (Hammond flourish), Johnny Marr (electric guitar), Eliza Jane Barnes & Cecilia Herbert (harmonies)


9. The Ties That Bind Us – (Phil Selway) – Phil vocals
Phil Selway (acoustic guitar), Glenn Kotche (drums, percussion), Pat Sansone (acoustic guitar, celeste), Sebastian Steinberg (standup & bowed bass), Lisa Germano (violin & whisper), Don McGlashan (euphium, flugelhorn), and Jeff Tweedy (additional arrangement)


10. Reptile – (Lisa Germano) – Lisa vocals
Lisa Germano (electric guitar, Theremin), Sebastian Steinberg (bass), Spencer Tweedy (drums), Glenn Kotche (toys and robots drumming), Pat Sansone (12 string guitar), Neil Finn (xylophone), Sonny Marr, Nile Marr, Sam Tweedy, Jeff Tweedy, Louise Callaghan, Emma Scott, Pearl McGlashan, mae Moreno, Sharon Finn, Julia Connolly, Sebastian Steinberg, and Milla (humans & dogs singing background vocals)


11. Bodhisattva Blues – (Ed O’Brien/Liam Finn) – Ed and Neil Finn vocals
Ed O’Brien (electric guitar), Elroy Finn (drums), Liam Finn (guitar), Neil Finn (Wurlizer piano, bass), Jeff Tweedy (guitar solo, vocal response & scream), and Johnny Marr (guitar solo)

12. What Could Have Been – (Jeff Tweedy) – Jeff vocals
Glenn Kotche (drums, percussion), Jeff Tweedy (acoustic guitar), John Stirratt (bass), Neil Finn (vibes, electric guitar, harmony), and Pat Sansone (piano, Wurlitzer organ)


Disc 2

1. All Comedians Suffer – (Neil Finn) – Neil vocals
Glenn Kotche (drums), Neil Finn (electric guitar), Pat Sansone (acoustic guitar), Liam Finn (bass, electric guitar, harmonies), and Jeff Tweedy (chorus fuzz, electric guitar solo)

2. Duxton Blues – (Glenn Richards) – Glenn vocals
Glenn Richards (guitar), Liam Finn (drums, guitar & vocal loops), Johnny Marr (electric guitar), Sebastian Steinberg (bass), Bic Runga & Neil Finn (background vocals)


3. Hazel Black – (KT Tunstall/Neil Finn) – KT and Neil vocals
KT Tunstall (acoustic guitar, handclaps, background vocals), Luke Bullen (drums, handclaps), John Stirratt (bass), Johnny Marr & Pat Sansone (electric guitars), Neil Finn (piano, harmony), Glenn Kotche (handclaps), Sonny Marr & Bic Runga (back-
ground vocals)

4. Riding The Wave – (Tim Finn) – Tim vocals
Tim Finn (piano), Elroy Finn (drums), Neil Finn (acoustic guitar, slide guitar, harmony), Liam Finn (harmonies), Sebastian Steinberg (bass), Johnny Marr (electric guitar), and Pat Sansone (Hammond organ)


5. The Witching Hour – (Phil Selway) – Phil vocals
Phil Selway (acoustic guitar), Bic Runga & KT Tunstall (background vocals), Lisa Germano (violin), and Jeff Tweedy (Optigan organ, piano)


6. Over And Done – (John Stirratt) – John vocals
John Stirratt (guitar), Glenn Kotche (drums), Pat Sansone (bass, piano), Don McGlashan (Euphonium, Flugelhorn), and Neil Finn & Pat Sansone (harmonies)


7. A Change Of Heart – (Bic Runga/Dan Wilson) – Bic vocals
Bic Runga (acoustic guitar), Glenn Kotche (drums), John Stirratt (bass), Neil Finn (piano), Pat Sansone (Hammond organ), and Don McGlashan (humming)


8. Don’t Forget Me – (Pat Sansone) – Pat vocals
Pat Sansone (guitar), Glenn Kotche (drums), John Stirratt (bass), and Johnny Marr (electric guitar)


9. Long Time Gone – (Don McGlashan) – Don vocals
Don McGlashan (guitar), Phil Selway (drums), Pat Sansone (bass), Ed O’Brien (electric guitar), and Johnny Marr (12 string & 6 string acoustic guitars, backing vocals)


10. The Cobbler – (Elroy Finn) – Elroy vocals
Elroy Finn (guitar), Lisa Germano (violin), and Sebastian Steinberg (bowed bass)


11. 3 Worlds Collide – (Glenn Kotche/Phil Selway/Neil Baldock)
Glenn Kotche & Phil Selway (drums, percussion)


12. The Water – (Sebastian Steinberg) – Sebastian vocals
Sebastian Steinberg (guitars, bass), Neil Finn (piano), Glenn Kotche (drums), and Johnny Marr (ghost guitar)


Produced by Jim Scott and Neil Finn, additional production Neil Baldock



Les Claypool: Deep Into The Fungi

By: Matt Dalley

Les Claypool by Jay Blakesberg

With his wildly experimental music and eccentric personality, electric bass legend Les Claypool has been freaking out the eardrums of music fans worldwide since the 1980s. The role he took as lead singer and bass player for alt-rock trio Primus sent Claypool skyrocketing into the public eye. After Primus went on hiatus in 2000, a few musical side projects, the occasional show with Primus and a plethora of other endeavors led the bass virtuoso to his current gig – selling out venues across Americas while promoting his most recent work of solo aural art, Of Fungi and Foe (released March 17 on Prawn Song).

As one of the music industry’s more ambitious players, Les Claypool didn’t always have the luxury of a cult following like he does today, rather his beginnings are quite humble. It was during his freshman year of high school that his enjoyment of listening to music began to evolve into a passion for playing it.


“We [Les and his father] went down to Al’s Music, he knew Al, and we bought this Fender P-Bass copy. I pulled weeds all summer to pay for the damn thing. And because there weren’t that many bass players back then – everybody wanted to be Eddie Van Halen – I was in big demand immediately. So, I was instantly in a band,” remembers Claypool.

Claypool has come a long way since high school. Currently, it’s not uncommon for the musician to be found galloping around a large stage at a massive music festival, appearing at ease in front of tens of thousands of fans. However, his first public performance couldn’t have been any more to the contrary. “My first gig was in the cafeteria at our high school and I was so nervous I stood sideways ’cause I couldn’t look at the audience,” Claypool reminisces.

Post-high school, Claypool accrued valuable experience by playing in a number of local bands, including an R&B outfit that primarily played to the occupants of biker bars in Northern California. “I was playing for Hell’s Angels pretty much every weekend. That was good discipline for me,” he comments. “I learned a lot in those days.”

With his dues fully paid, Claypool formed Primus in 1984. Primus spent years moving up the musical ladder of fame. Out of the six studio albums Primus released, two (Sailing the Seas of Cheese and Pork Soda) attained platinum status. Although Primus acquired international recognition and a Grammy nomination, their obscure sound remains challenging to categorize.

Les Claypool

“We’ve been listed as alternative back in the day. We were progressive metal at one point in time. We were punk funk. When we opened for U2, we were listed as a grunge band,” explains Claypool. “We’ve played with all these different artists through all these different things, so I don’t really know what to call it or how to define any of this.”

In the early 2000s, when Primus took a hiatus, Claypool had the opportunity to focus on other projects. However, even before Primus took the break, Claypool had other combos in the works. Formed in 2000, Oysterhead was one of the more well-known projects Claypool played a role in. Oysterhead involved Phish’s six-string shredder Trey Anastasio and drummer Stewart Copeland from The Police. Oysterhead’s only release, 2001′s The Grand Pecking Order, garnered three-and-a-half stars from Rolling Stone and a world tour.

During the Oysterhead days, Claypool also spent time with another side project, Colonel Les Claypool’s Fearless Flying Frog Brigade. The group, that included the likes of Skerik, Jack Irons, Tim Alexander and Mirv, was originally concocted for the Mountain Aire Festival in Calaveras County, California. The lengthy band name is an allusion to Mark Twain’s 1867 work “The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras Country.” The collective, often simply referred to as the Frog Brigade, released one studio album, Purple Onion, and two live album’s, Live Frogs: Set 1 and Live Frogs: Set 2. The latter of the two live albums is a cover of Pink Floyd’s entire epic Animals album.

Les Claypool by Jay Blakesberg

Another major endeavor, Colonel Claypool’s Bucket of Bernie Brains, began seemingly by chance. Praxis and Les Claypool were both slated to play Bonnaroo in 2002. When Praxis bass player Bill Laswell found himself unable to perform, the entire band was nearly dropped from the bill. Saving the day, Claypool stepped in and volunteered his talents by offering to jam with the available members which included keyboard wizard Bernie Worrell, best known for his work with Parliament-Funkadelic and The Talking Heads. Also sharing the stage was the mysterious, mask-donning guitarist Buckethead and drummer Bryan “Brain” Mantia. Although the impromptu group played no pre-rehearsed songs, members of the band felt great about what happened that fateful day in Tennessee.

“The first note I ever played with Bernie Worrell was in front of 5,000 people,” says Claypool. “We just enjoyed it.” Jamming remained a popular theme of Colonel Claypool’s Bucket of Bernie Brains, often referred to as C2B3, especially as the band recorded and released their only album, The Big Eyeball in the Sky.

Continue reading for more on Les Claypool…

 


It’s a bit darker and eerier than some of the stuff I’ve done in the recent past. It’s very textural, somewhat tribal, sort of abstract Americana.

-Les Claypool on Of Fungi and Foe

 

Photo of Claypool by Jay Blakesberg

The concept of jamming has spanned into other aspects of Claypool’s diverse career. The jam scene finds itself at the center of the 2008 release, Electric Apricot: Quest for Festeroo. The mockumentary, which Claypool wrote, directed and starred in, follows the rise to fame of the fictional jam band Electric Apricot. Hilarity ensues as the Grateful Dead worshiping neo-hippie members of the Electric Apricot attempt to record an album and play an opening slot at the famed (and fictional) jam festival Festeroo. Massive ego problems combined with drug and alcohol related issues frequently plague the quirky group.

Les Claypool by Fil Manley

At face value, one may interpret the film as Claypool taking a jab at the jam scene, but Claypool feels as though the film is a parody of creative people taking themselves too seriously, not specifically freeform musicians. “The film is more taking the piss out of the four creative individuals. It’s taking the piss out of the creative mind,” Claypool comments. “People within the [jam] scene find the film very endearing.”

Even on his current tour, improvised music can regularly be found creeping out of the Ampeg bass amps located on stage. Although his various projects may not be one of the first to come to mind when the term ‘jam band’ is spoken, Claypool still finds improvisation to be an important aspect of his work.

“I find the [jam] scene, especially as I’ve moved through it over the past several years, it’s not so much about the style of music you play, because it covers many different styles,” says Claypool. “It’s about the approach to music. It’s about keeping the parameters loose and keeping the borders, of songs and what not, open.”

Claypool is able to expand the borders of jam music without using one of the jam scene’s cornerstone instruments, the electric guitar. Much of his recently released and live work is sans guitar. This non-standard instrumentation forces the emphasis of a song into other areas than guitar soloing. Bringing a smile to the faces of low-end enthusiasts everywhere, the bass guitar is frequently found in the front of the mix. And the basses Claypool utilizes are sometimes as unconventional as the music he uses them to play. His instruments range from a bass that closely resembles a banjo to a six string bass to the Whamola, which looks like a very thin stand up bass with only one string and a lever at the top. Claypool creates a tone by hitting the string with a stick. He then moves the lever up and down to adjust the pitch. The Whamola bears an odd resemblance to the Grim Reaper’s scythe and can create sounds similar to a car revving up.

The Whamola provides the percussive bass sounds that can be heard on “Mushroom Men,” the opening track from Of Fungi and Foe. The song “Mushroom Men” began as part of a soundtrack Claypool was working on for the Nintendo games Mushroom Men: The Spore Wars and Mushroom Men: Rise of the Fungi. The video games center around tribes of living and warring mushrooms that call Planet Earth their home.

Les Claypool by Jay Blakesberg

Also based upon a soundtrack is “Booneville Stomp,” which can be found on his newest release. This time, Claypool steps away from sci-fi and takes a dive into the horror genre by writing the song for the 2008 release Pig Hunt, which chronicles the story of a 3,000 pound wild boar that wreaks havoc on the marijuana fields of Northern California.


“Basically I had this material lying around that I did for these scores that I really enjoyed. So, I took the material and put lyrics to them and arranged them. I brought in some other material that I had, some stuff that I had lying around, some stuff I did with Eugene Hutz [Gogol Bordello] in sort of a drunken frenzy. And when I eventually had something that seemed cohesive, I slapped it all together and put a title on it,” comments Claypool.

Even though Claypool developed parts of the release for exciting video games and a thriller movie, he doesn’t feel that the album is putting the ‘fun’ in fungi. “It’s a bit darker and eerier than some of the stuff I’ve done in the recent past,” muses Claypool. “It’s very textural, somewhat tribal, sort of abstract Americana.”

In order to recreate the highly original “Abstract Americana” in a live setting, Claypool enlists the help of Mike Dillon (marimba, vibraphone, junkyard percussion), Paulo Baldi (drums) and Sam Bass (cello). The quartet is currently completing a tour though the Americas, but the ever-ambitious artist has no plans to slow down.

“I’ve got some other pots on the stove. I’m not sure what’s going to be moved to the front burner at this point in time,” he says. “I do have to go to Europe later in the year. I’m going to Australia later in the year with this band. I’m trying to get a couple of film projects off the ground. I’m working on another book. Mostly I just need to get my tractor running so I can finish mowing my damn field.”

Les Claypool tour dates available here.

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Hyatt Bass: The Embers Road Show: One Author’s Thoughts on Going on a Book Tour

When my novel, The Embers, first launched, there was only one thing I was afraid of. Unfortunately in the next few months I was going to be doing a lot of it: Reading my book. Out loud. To complete strangers.