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Posts Tagged ‘Bill Frisell’

Bruce Cockburn: New Album & North American Tour

NEW ALBUM OUT MARCH 8, 2011; TOUR STARTS IN MARCH


Bruce Cockburn

True North Records have announced the upcoming new album release from veteran Bruce Cockburn. On March 8,
2011, True North will release Small Source of Comfort. Small Source of Comfort will be
Cockburn’s 24th studio effort. The album is expected to contain 14 songs, with contributions by a range of guests
that include Madeleine Peyroux, Bill Frisell, Norah Jones, and Annabelle Chvostek.

After Small Source of Comfort is in the public’s hands, Bruce Cockburn will start a tour that begins in
Canada (at end of March), and will extend to the US in May. As the year progresses, the tour will likely move to
Europe and other locations. Check below for all available dates.

TOUR DATES

03/24/11 Thu Kelowna Community Theatre Kelowna, BC
03/25/11 Fri Chan Centre Vancouver, BC

03/26/11 Sat McPherson Playhouse Victoria, BC
03/27/11 Sun The Port Theatre Nanaimo, BC
03/30/11 Wed Southern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium Calgary, AB

03/31/11 Thu Eric Harvie Theatre Banff, AB

04/01/11 Fri Francis Winspear Centre Edmonton, AB

04/02/11 Sat E.A. Rawlinson Centre For The Arts Prince Albert, SK

04/03/11 Sun TCU Place Saskatoon, SK

04/05/11 Tue Burton Cummings Theater Winnipeg, MB

04/08/11 Fri The Grand Theatre Kingston, ON

04/09/11 Sat Massey Hall Toronto, ON

04/12/11 Tue Sean O’Sullivan Theatre St. Catharines, ON
04/13/11 Wed L’Astral Montreal, QC
04/14/11 Thu L’Astral Montreal, QC

04/15/11 Fri National Arts Centre Ottawa, ON

04/16/11 Sat Centre in the Square Kitchener, ON

05/03/11 Tue City Winery New York, NY

05/05/11 Thu Rams Head Live Baltimore, MD

05/06/11 Fri Keswick Theatre Glenside, PA

05/07/11 Sat Hart Theatre at The Egg Albany, NY

05/09/11 Mon Birchmere Alexandria, VA

05/11/11 Wed Boulton Center for the Performing Arts Bay Shore, NY

05/12/11 Thu Woodstock Town Hall Theater Woodstock, VT

05/13/11 Fri Calvin Theater Northampton, MA

05/14/11 Sat Berklee Performance Center Boston, MA

05/15/11 Sun Tarrytown Music Hall Tarrytown, NY

05/17/11 Tue The State Theater Ithaca, NY

05/19/11 Thu The Ark Ann Arbor, MI

05/20/11 Fri The Ark Ann Arbor, MI

05/21/11 Sat Barrymore Theatre Madison, WI

05/22/11 Sun Old Town School of Folk Music Chicago, IL

05/23/11 Mon The Cedar Minneapolis, MN

Bruce Cockburn
Tour Dates

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Bruce Cockburn News
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Bruce Cockburn
Concert
Reviews


Bill Frisell & Vinicius Cantuária: Lagrimas Mexicanas Out 1/25/11

DUO WILL TOUR IN 2011


Lagrimas Mexicanas

Bill Frisell and Vinicius Cantuária‘s new album,
Lagrimas Mexicanas,
epitomizes
a union of extraordinary musicians. Frisell’s and Cantuária’s own music have clearly distinctive origins, but with
complimentary styles. Through the blending of emotive rhythms and harmonies, and the melding of classic and
experimental sounds, the two artists have found an easy home with one another. Lagrimas Mexicanas is
scheduled for release on January 25, 2011 via Entertainment One Music.

TOUR DATES

February 16 &17 San Francisco, CA Yoshi’s

February 19 New York, NY Le Poisson Rouge
February 22 Minneapolis, MN Cedar Cultural Center

*More to be announced soon.


String Cheese Incident | Horning’s Hideout Review/Gallery

Words by: Bryan Tobian | Images by: Brian Spady

The String Cheese Incident:: 07.28.10-08.01.10 :: Horning’s Hideout :: North Plains, OR

Horning’s 2010 by Brian Spady

Throw away your inhibition hat, slip on your dancing shoes and let your freak flag touch the sky and you might just be ready for an Incident in the remote, tree-laden hills of Horning’s Hideout. The Hideout, owned by Portland area local and 2010 Oregon State Senate candidate Bob Horning, is a lush mountain resort tucked away in the outlying mountains West of Portland. Towering evergreen trees, offering shady camping areas, breathtaking scenery as far as the eye can see, and scarcely any reminder of an outside world encloses much of the park. Radiant blue peacocks roam the grounds and perch high in the trees, calling to each other with bellowing, catlike noises and leaving vivid souvenir feathers all around, serving as a colorful mascot for the park. A small lake in front of Mom Horning’s house feeds a creek which runs through the many camping and recreation areas, all connected by twisty, sloping trails like giant corridors in a secret, underground labyrinth. Every nook, cranny and corner has potential for magical discoveries while navigating the maze, but the place is intimate enough to never be too far from one’s campsite. Situated as a permanent staple, nestled away behind the lake, is the amphitheater; a sturdy wooden stage in front of a dusty dance floor and a treacherously steep hill making a semi-circle of theater seating around the stage.

The Boulder, Colorado-based jam band jesters String Cheese Incident have now played Horning’s on seven separate occasions since their debut in the majestic park ten years ago. With each occasion being a three-night stand, they have hosted a grand total of twenty-one spectacular nights of lighthearted, euphoric music, blissful dancing and breathtaking visual displays at their home away from home. And yeah, it’s more than just a concert, festival or party – it’s a celebration of the beauty of being alive.

Today, however, after three years of nearly unbroken hiatus, this particular Incident was as much a family reunion as it was anything else. Only 5,000 tickets were sold to the event, which comprised three of their ten scheduled 2010 shows, and completely sold out in a matter of moments. Months of planning and excitement clearly went into the event because when the String Cheese circus arrived on the scene the Horning family’s nature park was turned into a Technicolor, tie-dyed candy land complete with surreal dreamscape art fixtures and the glowing energy of a love-cano eruption.

SCI’s music is a concoction of bluegrass, rock, funk, Latin, tropical, reggae, disco, folk and jazz, all mixed and balanced neatly on a tightly knit but exploratory and peak laden improvisational seesaw, and featuring catchy, honest, sometimes humorous tales gathered from the many trails the band members have navigated. The hodgepodge band is comprised of the flat picking sage Billy Nershi bringing exciting life to the six-string acoustic guitar, the ever so smooth Kyle Hollingsworth presiding famously over all things keys, the prodigious Michael Kang on both violin and soaring electric mandolin, Keith Moseley manning the funky low end on bass alongside the rhythm duo of Michael Travis on the drum kit and Jason Hann in his incredibly complete percussion universe.

Their shows are like riding a steam train, coasting up a scenic mountainside straight into a series of theme park roller coasters before barreling back down the mountain with twice the intensity and plunging into an entirely different planet. As the sun goes down, the strobing stage lights glare and flash, showers of glow sticks launch at every musical peak, and lasers, disco balls, LED toys and everything else imaginable begin to light up the place in a phosphorescent shimmer like a Timothy Leary inspired Las Vegas strip. Hugs are passed out like handshakes, and as the ride draws to a close, those who were lucky enough to be there begin to process it as the after-parties rage on.

Thursday, July 28, 2010

EOTO – Horning’s 2010 by Brian Spady

In a move forward from past Horning’s Hideout Incidents, this gathering was much like a festival, featuring three stages besides the main amphitheater stage, with some kind of music going on all the way from noon until 4 a.m. In the past few years since the last regularly scheduled Incidents, the members have all immersed themselves in new projects, some of which have very obvious lineage in Cheese like the Kyle Hollingsworth Band – whose funky, jammy jazz grooves opened the festival with a dirty “Taxman” jam as well as the highly covered Talking Heads tune “Naive Melody (This Must Be The Place)” – and some whose Cheesy roots are not so obvious like Jason Hann and Michael Travis’s synth charged dub-step improv duo EOTO, which closed out the main stage on the first night with an electrifying dance performance by a tequila bottle toting Billy Nershi. An appearance was made by Nershi’s current project, the Emmitt-Nershi Band, a bluegrass foursome featuring Billy on guitar and Drew Emmitt of Leftover Salmon on the mandolin. Also featured on the first night was the high energy of CB-3, with Chris Berry belting out positive reggae-like messages on vocals and Michael Kang doing what he does best on the electric mandolin.

Friday, July 29, 2010

Friday featured a captivating acoustic guitar duet during the day by Billy Nershi with Oregon’s own Scott Law as more and more exSCIted fans poured into the campground and eventually to the stage areas to explore the scene, shop in the merchants’ tented vending areas, sample some of the lovingly made foods and hand crafted ales, and eventually make their way to the stage for the first night of String Cheese madness.

The night started with a welcome from Bob’s mom, Jane Horning, thanking everyone for coming and always being such wonderful guests. From here, the band jumped into their first song of the festival, “Smile,” and sure enough everyone within close proximity was smiling as they blazed through the first set featuring highlights in the funky “Born on the Wrong Planet,” which brought the first improvisation of the night with a deep, trance-y, grooving jam, layering synthesizers by Hollingsworth and a jazzy exploration by Kang into the nether worlds of improvisation over Moseley’s thumping bass before Travis and Hann built the energy to an overwhelming apex. This was followed by the Paul Simon-esque “Under African Skies,” where Kang lit a fire with his violin over the upbeat music as the crowd rippled with delight. The jazzy “Climb” came next featuring a Hollingsworth solo that built fittingly from a slow trickle up to a massive peak, where Kang took over with his blazing electric mando. To finish the set, the boys invited the Soul Rebels Brass Band to give an extra dirty kick to the always-funky “Miss Brown’s Teahouse.”

Horning’s 2010 by Brian Spady

The second set was a barnburner from front to back with improv heavy songs like “Black and White” and a beautiful jam with sprinkling piano in “Water.” “Dirk” followed “Water” with a two-minute “Jungle Boogie” crammed in the middle of it, and the crowd was ecstatic as they built back into the end skyrocketing end of “Dirk.” Everyone but Hann and Travis left the stage for a drum jam followed by the nearly techno grooves of “Bumpin’ Reel,” which peaked the energetic set of music with Kang laying down fiddle madness over the synthy layers before mellowing out into grassy set closer “Restless Wind,” which gave playful picker extraordinaire Billy Nershi a chance to stretch out on his acoustic guitar before passing the fire between Kang and Hollingsworth as the second set dance party drew to a wild close.

After a moment’s break, the band returned to the stage with the Soul Rebel Brass Band to dust off that old New Orleans feel good classic “Hey Pocky Way,” sending everyone off cheering and smiling into the night woods to play.

Saturday, July 30, 2010

Saturday saw gray skies for much of the cool day but cleared up to mesmerizing, puffy, white clouds flowing and shifting with the winds through the azure nothingness while Bill Frisell, Steve Moore and Rudy Royston held an exhibition on how to properly perform dirty, slinky, funky jazz, which preceded the night’s highly anticipated performance from Cheese. Costumed concertgoers of all shapes, sizes, colors and themes poured into the bowl, and as the spaces filled in, it seemed as if at least half of the audience, clearly ready for blastoff, had decorated themselves for the maniac masquerade. No other scene finds fans quite as enthusiastic about being part of the show as does the String Cheese Incident, and one can only wonder what they will witness at the band’s Hulaween weekend at that end of Rocktober.

The boys took the stage and immediately gave a nod to the weather, opening their second show of the weekend with the upbeat hootenanny “Black Clouds,” whose second half also closed the first set. The rest of the set explored many places from the tropical feeling “Rhum ‘N Zouc” to the open, loose “Freedom Jazz Dance” (which included an impressive, flowing sit-in by Frisell), the exciting Kang driven “Cedar Laurels,” and a gripping version of Johnny Cash’s “Ring of Fire.” The set started later than listed and the lights from the stage started painting the band and the trees very early with a shimmer that made the place feel as if it was under water. As the set came a rocking conclusion, the dance floor was cleared for the now traditional ‘festival set.’

Fire Dancers – Horning’s 2010 by Brian Spady

The band took an unlit stage with very few cheers until dark blue lights fired up, revealing their silhouettes along with a team of samurai warriors waiting in the center of the field as the intense, driving, instrumental classic “Rivertrance” began the ceremony. The samurai dancers eventually resolved into acrobats and fire dancers wielding flaming hoops, sticks and poi flails. A giant wooden peacock at least 20 feet tall was rolled onto the field and the fire dancers ritualistically set it ablaze to the roar of the crowd as the music raged aggressively. Still in “Rivertrance,” the band slowed down to an amble and the lights were dimmed, bringing out a massive floating UFO over the audience chaperoned by emerald hued, fanning stage lasers, both of which would remain for the rest of the evening. Dancers with flashing LED hoops arrived on the scene adding to the stimulating ambiance before a dozen or so massive balloons were hauled out to the middle of the field in the darkness. In a moment, the balloons were released and floating up as a woman above the stage, attached only by her grasp to satin ropes, dangled acrobatically.

Billy called everyone back to the field under the levitating dancer as the song raced to its finale and the crowd, now more neon and glowing than ever, danced feverishly. “Joyful Sound” followed with Moseley laying down a poetic rap before handing the stage over to Hann and Travis to give a taste of their deep, womping improvisations. “Orion’s Belt” saw a seemingly infinite glow stick rope snaking through the audience as the crowd swayed to the Floyd-inspired groove. Another highlight came soon after midnight as the band paid a birthday tribute to one of their fallen heroes, the legendary Jerry Garcia, with an inspired rendition of the classic “I Know You Rider” (“gonna miss me when I’m gone”) as a last hurrah to the dazzling set.

After a short break, Cheese returned to the stage for the endearing message of “Sirens” and the hilarious tale of trifles with the police in “Texas” before again sending the partying people off into the night to further explore the magic of the decked out neon forests as they ran the marathon between stages all raging with a plethora of exciting music and many twinkling areas to hang out and enjoy the moment while trying to stay awake for the spectacular bubble show at dawn.

Sunday, August 1, 2010

All of the sudden, it was Sunday and the festival waned to its final glorious moments. The afterglow of the previous night’s theatrical exhibition could be seen on the shining faces of passersby and heard in their ongoing praises. The day started quite late for most since the night ended in a similar fashion and many had already started to pack it in for the trip back to reality directly after the final set of the weekend. But, before long the main stage was packed with rowdy jiggers and jigglers kickin’ up dirt to some of the smoothest, tightest, most precise bluegrass on the scene delivered by The Travelin’ McCourys as the sun made its triumphant return to the delight of the many shirtless and shoeless in the audience.

The final Incident of the weekend was a doozy from the start. After a quick sendoff from Bob Horning, the McCourys were welcomed back to the stage for a long bluegrass set of epic proportions culminating in a savage violin battle between Kang and the McCourys’ lightning fingered fiddler Jason Carter in a truly historical “Orange Blossom Special.” Before they left the stage, Col. Bruce Hampton joined the fray to belt out “Fixin’ to Die” as the sun shed its last glorious hues of day and fell into night. The exciting 70s funk of “Betray the Dark” segued nicely into the Latin pop of “Yo Se” with jazzy solos traded between Kyle, Kang and Nershi. Later, Kang reopened all cylinders in “Looking Glass.” The final nail in the first set was a soulful “San Jose” that everyone dug deep to summon the late-festival energy to boogie down.

The final set of the weekend was one of the best as the band unleashed a rocking 17-minute “Howard,” which spent a lot of time exploring the sonic depths of layered improvisation. The down-tempo “Emma’s Dream” followed as Keith Moseley’s daughter entered the stage near her father, dressed like a faerie gnome, and grooved zealously with the rest of the audience to the mellow music in what proved to be a very touching moment. The emotional “Don’t Say” segued seamlessly from the “Dream,” and, with an escalating jam, they dropped into the frenzied ending of “It Is What It Is.”

Again, as with the previous night, the set featured a tribute to the ever-beloved celestial birthday boy, Jerry Garcia, as the Incident steered itself into the cheerful and arousing “Eyes of the World.” Scott Law joined them for the timeless Garcia/Hunter hymn and stayed to finish out the set with “Outside and Inside.” The band returned to the stage after a short break, capping off the weekend with a very appropriate “Best Feeling,” surely a nod, wink, smile and bow to one of the most remarkable weekends anyone could ask for, tucked away in one of the most remarkable, pristine music venues in the country. One can only hope that their curtain call second encore “Good Times Around the Bend” is a gesture that there will be more of the same to come beyond the last two scheduled shows of the year set to take place over the Halloween weeekend at the Hampton Coliseum in Virginia.

The Aftermath

Jason Hann – Horning’s 2010 by Brian Spady

The String Cheese Incident, even on an indefinite hiatus from full time touring, is still a vibrant, flourishing community of incredibly enthusiastic, humorous and accepting people. In a brief interview with Jason Hann, in the wake of it all, he told me that the people – the group of talented musicians with whom he creates this mystical organism of incredibly diverse, colorful music, and the impassioned supporters – made the whole gig incredibly special.

As far as a future touring schedule for regular incidents? Hann says the band has enjoyed playing these regional multi-night residency type of events, noting, however, that, “There’s some give and take because you have to be so ‘on’ right out of the gate for any given show, as opposed to building chemistry throughout the coarse of a tour.”

Hann believes that next year’s schedule will be similarly fashioned with a few extra dates sprinkled in.

“Right now it’s all about trying to make every night and venue more memorable than the last. You try to do that anyway, but we’d like to raise the bar on the overall experience whenever we hit the stage.”

However, the guys won’t be totally split up yet. Michael Kang and Kyle Hollingsworth will be joining EOTO for a special post-Phish late night event at the Global Sol Festival near Berkeley, CA on Saturday August 7.

“Those [collaborations] will always linger,” says Hann. “We like playing with each other so those will come up as promoters request them. We also like to keep them special, so we probably won’t tour with that kind of package.”

This was indeed a very special weekend that came together nicely in so many ways. The weather, the music, the people, the shows, everything was beautiful. Before the festival, someone told me that there is no better place to see The String Cheese Incident than at Horning’s Hideout. Now, I am very much inclined to believe that. Either way, I’ll be doing my best to jump back into the fantaSCI next time the Cirque de Cheese comes to town.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”52″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=105″);}); 7/29/10 – 8/1/10 The String Cheese Incident @ Horning’s Hideout (North Plains, OR) View Photos

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String Cheese Incident Announces Initial Horning’s Hideout Lineup

TOUBAB, PIMPS, FRISELL AND OTHER TASTINESS JOIN SCI

String Cheese Incident

The initial artist lineup has been announced for The String Cheese Incident Horning’s Hideout Festival taking place July 29-August 1 at much beloved Horning’s Hideout in North Plains, Oregon.

The String Cheese Incident will perform on Friday, July 30th, Saturday, July 31st, and
Sunday, August 1st.

The initial lineup besides SCI includes:

The Travelin’ McCourys
Toubab Krewe
Bill Frisell with Steve Moore & Rudy Royston
Col. Bruce Hampton
Beats Antique
Soul Rebels Brass Band
Lynx & Janover
Rupa & The April Fishes
The Pimps of Joytime
Scott Law
Rachel Goodrich
Three For Madness
Liza Oxnard
Fou Fou Ha’s!
Kazum
Banana Slug String Band
Global Illage
Lewi Longmire
John Alex-Mason
Jamie Stillway

Thursday features Main Stage Performances by SCIde Projects:

Kyle Hollingsworth Band
CB3 w/ Michael Kang
Emmitt-Nershi Band
EOTO

Tickets for the Horning’s Hideout Festival sold out within an hour after going on
sale.

The String Cheese Incident returns to the stage at Colorado’s Red Rocks Amphitheater July 23-25 after taking a couple years off from tour (save for an appearance at Rothbury
last year).


50 Unsung Classics of the 2000s (Pt. 1)

By: Dennis Cook

Hey, we love Radiohead’s Kid A, OutKast’s Stankonia and My Morning Jacket’s Z as much as all the other music press hailing these albums as the best produced in the first decade of the new century. But, there was a LOT of incredible music made between 2000-2009 that isn’t showing up on the mega-lists at Pitchfork, Rolling Stone, etc. As is often the case, the most exciting music is frequently made outside the spotlight, working in bedrooms and basements to inch sound, composition and musicianship forward with sweat, determination and great invention.

This feature is an attempt to gather up a healthy sampling of some of the most amazing albums we encountered during the past decade that aren’t getting the recognition that their craftsmanship and creativity deserve. We at JamBase consider it our mission to seek out and share such quality work with our readers. We understand how the right album brought into someone’s hands can impact their life in ways that go way beyond entertainment or distraction. Oh, those are good, too, and we’re the first ones to encourage y’all to have a good time on this planet (trust us, as the old ditty goes, enjoy yourself, it’s later than you think…), but we approach music as something bigger and more important than just another commodity to be consumed and discarded. And so do each and every one of the artists included in this piece.

These selections represent a yearning for something – be it release or revelation, empathy or endorphin stimulation, a chance to set history straight or simply a telling of stories that need to be shared. Even the most jovial albums here engage with their craft with a seriousness and intent that’s palpable. With a few notable exceptions, most were made without much thought of charts, video exposure or People Magazine spreads. Something deeper and more intensely intangible drives these folks, and the results are albums that richly reward our own dedication of time and attention in endless ways.

This is not an attempt to be hipster-cool or one-up the competition. There’s no hierarchy of any kind to this assortment. This feature’s intent is much simpler: We aim to lay some beautiful, brightly thoughtful music at your feet in the hopes you’ll discover something that moves and delights you. Hidden amongst this intentionally jumbled selection are albums with the power to shake your foundations or just shake what mama gave ya. Either way, there’s gold in them hills and it’s waiting there for you happy prospectors.

50 Unsung Classics of the 2000s (Pt. 1)

1. Chris Whitley featuring Billy Martin & Chris Wood: Perfect Day (2000)

Whitley was snatched from us by lung cancer in 2005, but before he shuffled off he produced one of the most amazing catalogs in the past two decades, and this collaboration with MMW‘s rhythm team stands amongst his best work. Ostensibly a cover tune set, the trio, through empathetic interplay and wisely chosen platforms, puts an individual stamp on every tune, even iconic numbers like Dylan’s “4th Time Around” and Willie Dixon’s “Spoonful.” What’s remarkable is how these heavyweights under-play throughout, using their talents with sharply focused discretion and instinct. They play to the song and to one another, and the convergence of these elements results in a collection that makes one look at Whitley, Wood and Martin AND the artists they cover in a brand new light.

2. Joe Bataan: Call My Name (2005)

The King of Latin Soul reclaims his crown on this career-resurrecting marvel. A household name in ghettos and barrios everywhere in the 1970s, Bataan had been out of sight for almost 20 years when young NYC producer/composer Daniel Collas came calling. He’d created a series of instrumentals with Bataan in mind and managed to lure the legend back into the studio. What the pairing created is every bit the equal of Bataan’s heyday Salsoul records, a genre he almost single-handedly birthed that blends Afro-Cuban, Puerto Rican, and South American musical motifs and has influenced everything from disco to reggaeton to mainstream soul. Tracks like dance floor dynamite “Chick A Boom” and slow jam extraordinaire “I’m The Fool” revealed a richness and maturity to Bataan’s voice, and surrounded by a largely unknown but absolutely stunning group of young musicians, the man has never sounded better.

3. Marc Ford: It’s About Time (2003)

Known primarily as the on-again, off-again lead guitarist in The Black Crowes, Ford’s solo debut revealed a mature, highly satisfying composer and singer very much in the vein of Ronnie Wood’s ’70s solo efforts. The title is a nod to the six years after his first expulsion from the Crowes that it took him to release this, but listening to stunners like the prickly “Feels Like Doin’ Time,” the unvarnished sweetness of “Darlin’ I’ve Been Dreamin’” or the thundering smack of “Two Mules and a Rainbow” (where he’s backed by the original trio lineup of Gov’t Mule, who also appear on the Crazy Horse-like “Just Let It Go”) one can’t help wonder how the Crowes might’ve evolved had they welcomed Ford’s compositions into the mix. Ford is one of the guitarists of his generation but this album showed there was far more to him than solos.

4. Subtle: For Hero: For Fool (2006)

One of the most underrated bands of the past decade, Subtle have aggressively sought newness, originality and angular accessibility. A furious swirl of future forward hip hop, advanced electronica, antique prog flavors and stratospheric experimentation, For Hero alternates between bludgeoning and tickling one’s psyche. Often it’s felt first before the mind can comprehend what this snarled cultural pipe bomb is blowing up about, but there’s simply no way to NOT react to what they’re laying down. This Oakland/S.F.-based crew melds academic level discourse with devastating musicianship and fearless sonic curiosity. For all the accolades Radiohead, Beck (who once asked these guys to be his backing band!) and others have received in recent years, Subtle is equally, if not more, deserving.

5. Opeth: Blackwater Park (2001)

The metal world knows and loves Sweden’s Opeth, but it’s albums like the landmark Blackwater Park that make them one of the finest bands – genre tags be damned – on Earth. Inserting exciting atmospheric rumbles and nakedly beautiful melodic elements into an incredibly heavy sound not only changed the game for themselves but for metal in the larger sense. With this release, stunningly produced by Porcupine Tree‘s Steven Wilson, Opeth showed one could have both grumbling, black tinged vocals and proper, even pretty singing, not only on one album but within a single song. Everything about Blackwater screams of an artistry way beyond most of their metal peers, and announced an ambition to reach beyond the cliches of their chosen genre. Everyone in thrall to Mastodon’s Crack The Skye is encouraged to explore one of the cornerstones in that band’s sound and approach.

6. Caetano Veloso: A Foreign Sound (2004)

While revered in Brazil and Europe on the level of Neil Young, Leonard Cohen or Bob Marley, Veloso is known primarily to a dedicated cult in the U.S. This is partially due to the fact that he’s rarely recorded in English. And while his native Portuguese is pleasing to the ear, to most monolingual Americans it’s just sound. For only the second time in his long career – the first being his brilliant, sorrowful self-titled 1971 album made while in exile in England – Veloso puts his golden pipes and sublime phrasing to work on English language material, delving into Jerome Kern (“Smoke Gets In Your Eyes”), Elvis Presley (“Love Me Tender”), Irving Berlin (“Blue Skies,” “Always”), Talking Heads (“Nothing But Flowers”) and Nirvana (“Come As You Are”). It’s a dizzying assortment handled with utmost class, and perhaps the finest gateway into Veloso’s work a neophyte could find.

7. Buck 65: Talkin’ Honky Blues (2003)

Canada’s Richard Terfry (aka Buck 65) had been filed under hip hop since his emergence in the late ’90s, but this release pushed him further afield than that simple category could contain. Madly snatching scraps of Woody Guthrie, Gil Scott-Heron, Tom Waits, Laurie Anderson, Eric B and Rakim and countless other visionaries, Buck expunged a brilliant song cycle that neatly bridged the worlds of underground hip hop, spoken word, and post-Radiohead rock, and managed to do it without overt studiousness. Instead, this Honky spills positivity and thoughtful enzymes everywhere, encouraging us to find happiness and purpose no matter how little our bank accounts hold.

8. Autechre: Draft 7:30 (2003)

Much of the bleeps and bloops of today’s electronic players is informed by English duo Rob Brown and Sean Booth. Never anxious to fill dance floors, these studio artisans excel at breaking preconceptions of what constitutes a song or even what one calls “music.” Full of sharp angles, disorienting digressions, unstable rhythms and noises that seem not-of-this-world, Draft 7:30 adds something like a groove. It was and remains their most accessible album and a landmark blueprint for all the button pushers and pitch wheel benders that have followed in their footsteps.

9. The Society of Rockets: Our Paths Related (2007)

The word ‘psychedelic’ is so overused it should probably be retired. But, it’s also an incredibly useful shorthand for an altered state of consciousness and perhaps a more tactile engagement with the universe at large. Which brings us to this stunning, honestly psychedelic album by this criminally unknown San Francisco group. For sure it’s rock ‘n’ roll – the kinetic guitars and slicing, fabulous vocals make that clear – but one can reach out and tug on the Super Strings of culture and consciousness woven into this song cycle. This Path leads us to engagement in an age that encourages us to remain separate and build walls against our neighbors. What’s incredible is how it takes us on such a road without sounding holier-than-thou or preachy, and even manages to be great fun while it skips through the fire and tumult around us.

10. Fannypack: So Stylistic (2003)

Lookin’ mad cute and taking sips of your ripple, Fannypack exploded out of New York City, shakin’ that ass and proud as hell to hail from the home of Biggie and P. Diddy. Few albums of any time period exude this level of whoo-ha, hands-in-the-air excitement and bargain basement ingenuity. Cat, Belinda and Jessibel – three deceptively goofy yet curiously skilled lady MCs – backed by the beat manipulation and sample savvy of two dudes named Matt and Fancy sounds like a recipe for forgettable dance fluff. Yet, this is one of the few albums to really capture the mojo of hip hop’s revered ancestors like the Sugarhill Gang and Liquid Liquid and run with it. Between the irresistible handclap frenzy, laugh out loud rhymes and near-cartoon Brooklyn accents you almost miss how damn good the songwriting, production and performances are. If all you know is novelty hit “Cameltoe” – easily the weakest cut here – then it’s time to get knee deep in this Fanny. Throw this on – LOUD – fire up a few thrift store strobe lights and crack open a case of cheap beer and you’ve got a party. Believe that!

Continue reading for next batch of sublime selections from the past decade…

11. AC/DC: Black Ice (2008)

Malcolm and Angus Young dug deeper as composers on their fifteenth studio album than they had since the last record with “Black” in the title. It’s easy to dismiss AC/DC as a known quantity but Black Ice expands their Chuck Berry, crosscut blues inspired hardcore basic thump with sugary pop (“Anything Goes”) and a classic that approaches bittersweet melancholy for these Aussies (“Rock N Roll Dream”). This on top of some of the sturdiest rockers they’ve mustered in more than two decades (“Skies On Fire,” “Spoilin’ For A Fight” and the ominous title cut). Long after most of their peers have ceased being a force in the studio, AC/DC is as ready for action as ever, captured magnificently in all their glorious, ballsy greatness by Brendan O’Brien, who lit similar fires under Springsteen and Pearl Jam this past decade.

12. James Carter, Cyrus Chestnut, Ali Jackson & Reginald Veal: Gold Sounds (2005)

Trust me, you’ve never heard Pavement like this. Born from the question, “What album would we want to buy which doesn’t exist?” this set finds four of the strongest players in jazz tackling Pavement gems like “Cut Your Hair,” “Stereo,” “Blue Hawaiian” and “Summer Babe” with off-handed grace, unearthing jam pockets and structural beauty hitherto unknown in the work of Stephen Malkmus and company. Gold Sounds harks back to the 1960s jazz scene that playfully and fearlessly wrangled with the rock and pop worlds to create hybrids instructive to both. Veal, Jackson, Chestnut and Carter reveal a sophistication not usually afforded to “indie rock,” even with a band as revered as Pavement, and in the process show off a totally new side of themselves that’s pretty damn cool, too.

13. Otis Taylor: Respect The Dead (2002)

Otis Taylor is the deepest, finest thing to whack the blues upside the head in the past 10 years. With strong African elements, he’s roughed up the smoothness that’s infiltrated the blues since the 1980s and returned some of the mystery and danger intrinsic to the genre before it got gussied up for mainstream white consumers. Undeniably black in heritage, Taylor isn’t overbearing in his handling of race, but neither is he shy in exposing the pervasive racism marbled into American society. Respect The Dead, his fourth album, is the pinnacle of several collaborations with bassist/producer Kenny Passarelli and haunting guitarist Eddie Turner. Full of resounding heart but frightfully unsentimental, Respect is inhabited by the sorts of ghosts and tales that cling to the best blues, drawing us down to the crossroads again and again, despite knowing what sorts of things await us there.

14. Scott Amendola Band: Believe (2005)

Believe is one of the most artful, engaging instrumental albums of the past quarter century. Birthed in both the jazz and alternative rock spheres, this set is so free-ranging and capable at all moods and textures that one happily gives up on trying to categorize it. Amendola, a world-class percussionist and staple of the Bay Area improv scene, gathered some of the best musicians alive for a mix of “voices” that’s absolutely intoxicating. Pre-Wilco Nels Cline intertwines with Tortoise’s Jeff Parker for one of the most exciting guitar pairings ever, and the group is rounded out by evocative violinist Jenny Scheinman and bassist John Shifflett. Music this fearless is rarely so well constructed or grandly eloquent.

15. Matt Deighton : The Common Good (2002)

Perhaps the most apt touchstone for Deighton’s work is vintage Traffic, right down to utterly satisfying singing, playing and songwriting worthy of Steve Winwood and Jim Capaldi at their peak. This crazy talented Englishman is largely unknown outside the U.K., where he’s had chart success with the short-lived Mother Earth and even played guitar for Oasis for a spell. The Common Good is the best place for new listeners to jump in, though you’ll likely find yourself scrambling to scoop up his somewhat elusive catalog after you’ve digested it. The album features well-placed guest turns from Paul Weller, Mick Talbot (Style Council), Marco Nelson (Adam & The Ants) and others stalwarts of post-Mod British music. Anyone sweet on ALO, The Mother Hips and other substantive, song-based rock are heartily encouraged to check out Deighton.

16. Bill Frisell: The Intercontinentals (2003)

Frisell – pretty much an endlessly exciting, unpredictable guitarist and musical visionary – has always operated without borders. His style and general sensibilities speak of a man who’s just as turned on by down home country music as he is by samba, electric fusion, distorto-improv and nursery rhymes. However, he’s rarely been as forthright in his worldly perspective as The Intercontinentals, which mingles Greg Leisz‘s breathtaking pedal steel with Sidiki Camara chattering calabash and djembe, Jenny Scheinman’s freebird violin excursions, Christos Govetas‘s sophisticated oud and bouzouki, and the sinewy guitars of Vinicius Cantuaria. What could be a hideous Benetton sound clash turns out to be a fabulous hot pot of hugely diverse styles and timbres finding common ground. This is the sound of a planet bleeding its cultures into one, with individual flecks left intact but the greater pattern being a shared one.

17. Tim Bluhm: California Way (2006)

Captured in a single day, this represents the burning core of The Mother Hips’ lanky golden genius. Armed almost exclusively with just his phenomenally expressive voice and clean, incisive acoustic guitar, Bluhm dives into a specially selected sweep through his massive catalog and comes out the other side with one of the finest singer-songwriter albums ever made, a work on par with Joni Mitchell’s Blue and Bert Jansch’s Birthday Blues in terms of its intimacy, unabashed feeling and quiet yet potent show of skill. “Tiara Dievers” has the ageless beauty and understanding of music handed from picker to picker over long years, and small, movingly etched vignettes like “Shiny Leather Shoes,” “Envelope Please” and the incredible title track further mark Bluhm as one of the shining lights of his generation. California Way makes it nakedly obvious how stupidly gifted the man is.

18. Brain Donor: Too Freud To Rock ‘N’ Roll, Too Jung To Die (2003)

Julian Cope had the best decade of his long, circuitous career in the 2000s, but he’d never had as much marvelous, dumb fun as Brain Donor before. This English uber-power trio – Cope (bass, vocals) and Spiritualized members Kevin Bales (drums) and Doggen Foster (guitar) – slurped hungrily from Blue Cheer and Detroit’s filthy best (Stooges, MC5) and spat out a viscous gob all their own. For the many claims of “return to rock” one encountered in the press for relative lightweights like the Strokes and Kings of Leon, one needed only to tap into this bunch for a flood of the sticky, unruly good stuff. Too Freud… gathers together their early singles and a smattering of suitably rough live tracks on two discs that celebrate love, peace and fucking. Pagan ’nuff to give shoutouts to Loki and Odin and savvy enough to see the promise in covering Van Halen’s “Atomic Punk,” Brain Donor does their forebears right by keeping rock uncivilized and a lil’ scary.

19. Christina Aguilera: Back To Basics (2006)

There’s a temptation to assume that anything from the mainstream just sucks out loud. That’s largely true but overly dismissive, especially when an incredible pop record like this is hiding amongst the dross. While Aguilera’s teen work failed to achieve any real depth, this album announced an artist with her sights on the enduring work of Stevie Wonder, Aretha Franklin and Chicago. Spread out over a double album, Back To Basics finds Christina working with Steve Winwood, Gang Starr’s DJ Premier and Mark Ronson, but the real secret is her own vision, crafted with under-credited songwriter-producer Linda Perry, who largely helms the more experimental, rangy second disc. The team of Perry and Aguilera is every bit the equal of the more ballyhooed Justin Timberlake and Timbaland, and killers like “Makes Me Wanna Pray,” “Still Dirrty” and “Candyman” rank amongst the mainstream’s best in a long while. With the exception of a few duds – inevitable on almost any double record – Back To Basics is worthy of the ancestors Aguilera reveres. Scoff if you want, but approached with an open mind this is a fantastic album.

20. Efterklang: Parades (2007)

Parades is probably unlike almost anything you’ve heard. With a name that smacks of promising onomatopoeia, Efterklang is joined here by a brass quintet, several choirs and a string quartet, alongside the usual rock instrumentation and a healthy dose of electronic manipulation. At the risk of hyperbole, Parades may be the most achingly lovely merger of electro-acoustic elements to ever sneak out of the experimental realm and into our hearts. Hailing from Denmark, there’s a sizeable remove from what anyone in the alternative scene in the States is doing, but their sound has some resonance with recent work from Grizzly Bear and Midlake, though Efterklang is a touch bolder in their aspirations. Since its release, Parades has been performed live in a theatrical production with The Danish National Chamber Orchestra captured on last year’s Performing Parades audio/video release.

21. Richmond Fontaine: Post To Wire (2004)

While a number of their contemporaries at the birth of what’s become known as Americana, notably Wilco, have gone onto wider fame and riches, Portland, Oregon’s Richmond Fontaine have steadily and unobtrusively carved out a ceaselessly rich, intense, original sound that marks them as one of the great American acts of our age. Master storyteller Willy Vlautin leads this subtle ensemble, who can rage with the best of them but often prefer to simmer and slide more elusively. The characters in their songs hum with vibrant, often painful life and bear the same scars and wear ‘n’ tear as most folks living paycheck to paycheck and hoping they’ll be just a smidgen better than their past. Post To Wire signaled an awakening to the band in England and Europe after they’d already been toiling productively (if not lucratively) since 1994. Since then they’ve developed a fervent following overseas that has them pond hopping several times a year. Stateside they’re still relatively unknown outside a smaller but equally dedicated fan base, but one hopes that the stirring power of their music, as exemplified by Post To Wire, will ultimately get the recognition it deserves in their native land.

22. Salvatore: Fresh (2001)

A call to prayer for digital children – a muezzin beckoning us inwards. Norway’s Salvatore was a six-piece instrumental unit that sounded like what might have happened if someone sent a copy of the Boards of Canada’s Music Has The Right To Children through time to say Amon Duul or Can. Recorded in Morocco with portable generators and ad hoc equipment, Fresh is planted in foreign soil, redolent with ancient history translated by modern instruments, unfolding on an eternal loop, swallowing its tail while simultaneously growing new coils. Even on repeat, the album never arrives in the same way and gives one the feeling that the music continues on in another realm long after you push stop. Beginning with “Get The Kids On The Streets It’s A Party” and winding through sandy corridors like “100 Camels In The Courtyard” (a nod to author Paul Bowles), Fresh is the open-ended promise of contemporary instrumental music that recognizes few boundaries in its evocation of dust-swirled dawn and burnished, electric evening glow.

23. Edan: Primitive Plus (2002)

Though he got more alterna-ink for 2005′s Beauty and the Beat (currently his last proper album), Edan’s debut was one of those word-of-mouth treasures that folks enamored of Anticon Records and their ilk were handing around to pals for years before the critics caught wind of him. Raw as early Wu-Tang but possessed of a humor and frankly Caucasian flava far removed from the 36 Chambers, Primitive Plus is a thrilling gumball machine full of colorful, wildly flavored treats. Foul mouthed and book smart, Edan shows what a clever boy with a few tools – the proverbial two turntables and a microphone in many instances – can achieve. As far as hip hop has come from its roots in 2010, this album can bring you back to the fundamentals with a quickness that’ll snap your neck.

24. Robyn Hitchcock: Spooked (2004)

All longtime fans of one another’s work, Hitchcock, Gillian Welch and David Rawlings holed up at Woodland Studios in Nashville and got inside the best set of tunes Robyn had penned in years. Spooked builds on the solo acoustic bent of earlier Hitchcock albums like I Often Dream of Trains and Eye, and the presence of Rawlings and Welch adds considerably to the nuances and sonic charge of this still fairly reserved collection. There is laughter and love and genuine weirdness in these grooves, which retain the intimacy of the trio even when they liven things up. There are few better, more clear-eyed love songs than “Sometimes A Blonde” and few so-called kid’s tunes that compare with “We’re Gonna Live In The Trees.” Further pleasures lie in their handling of Dylan’s “Trying To Get To Heaven Before They Close The Door” and Hitchcock’s pop culture bashing “Television.” More than anything, this is wonderfully enjoyable music that feels like we’ve been allowed to listen in on a cool, private conversation between the three principles.

25. The Servants: Mostly Monsters (2002)

This long defunct California hard rock unit found the sweet spot between The Black Crowes’ Southern Harmony & Musical Companion and Guns N’ Roses’ Appetite For Destruction with this woefully overlooked debut. Produced by drummer Chris Kontos – a veteran of Machine Head, Exodus, boffo Zep tribute band Custard Pie and many more – this neatly joins classic rock sensibilities to razor sharp modern hard rock. What elevates this above the pack is an embrace of boogie and listener tickling lyrics that suggest we all missed out on one of the greatest good time bands of all-time. From the snaky turns of “Fade Resistant” to the power ballad greatness of “Waiting” and a primo cover of Skynyrd’s “Saturday Night Special,” Mostly Monsters is crushing quality hard rock powered by Valhalla shaking percussion, air guitar worthy riffing and a lead singer, Tony Malson, who has most of the long haired mic jockeys beat all to hell. Kontos currently drums for Attitude Adjustment and has a new project, SpiralArms, with their studio debut coming out in 2010 and the teasers on their website have some of The Servants’ flavor, so maybe this round more folks will tune in and rock out properly.

Check back next week for numbers 26-50 of our Unsung Classic Albums of the 2000s…

JamBase | Listening Intently
Go See Live Music!


Rickie Lee Jones Adds Dates

RICKIE LEE JONES ADDS FEBRUARY TOUR DATES IN SUPPORT OF
BALM IN GILEAD

Rickie Lee Jones

Rickie Lee Jones has added additional tour dates in February in support of her recently released album Balm in Gilead. The tour includes stops in Chicago, Seattle and Portland, and the set will feature songs from the new album as well as fan favorites from Jones’ memorable past albums. The New Yorker called Balm in Gilead Jones’ “strongest record of the second half of her career.”

The tour comes on the heels of several TV performances including Jools Holland in the U.K., The Tonight Show with Conan O’Brien and The Ellen Degeneres Show, where Jones performed a stunning live version of “Old Enough” with Ben Harper. Harper is featured on the new album among other highly talented friends including Jon Brion, Bill Frisell, Victoria Williams, Alison Krauss and the late Vic Chesnutt, who recently passed away.

Click here to watch Rickie Lee Jones and Ben Harper on Ellen.

The release of Balm in Gilead celebrates Rickie Lee Jones’ 30th anniversary of making music and reflects the lifetime work of a woman, whose very name is a genre. With her 1979 self-titled debut album and its top 10 hit, “Chuck E.’s in Love,” Jones made an immediate impact on pop culture beginning with an indelible SNL appearance and an instantaneous Rolling Stone cover, all while winning a Grammy for Best New Artist. Three decades’ worth of acclaimed creative journeys have ensued with both her singing and writing “voice” remaining, despite her pervasive and incalculable influence on two or three entire generations of singer/songwriters, among the most distinctive and instantly recognizable in music.

Rickie Lee Jones Tour Dates

02/13/10 Sat John Ascuaga’s Nugget Sparks, NV

02/14/10 Sun Rio Theatre Santa Cruz, CA

02/16/10 Tue Vista Theatre Los Angeles, CA

02/18/10 Thu Aladdin Theater Portland, OR

02/19/10 Fri The Triple Door Seattle, WA

02/22/10 Mon Fitzgerald Theater Saint Paul, MN

02/23/10 Tue Barrymore Theatre Madison, WI

02/24/10 Wed Lincoln Hall Chicago, IL

02/25/10 Thu New York Society for Ethical Culture New York, NY

03/04/10 Thu Stenhammarsalen Gothenburg, SE

03/06/10 Sat Sentrum Scene Oslo, NO

03/07/10 Sun Berns Stockholm, SE

03/09/10 Tue Tavastia Helsinki, FI

03/11/10 Thu Katalin Uppsala, SE

03/12/10 Fri Palladium Malmö, SE


Savannah Music Fest 2010 Season

SAVANNAH MUSIC FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES 2010 SEASON

FEATURING UNIQUE PAIRINGS, ORIGINAL PRODUCTIONS AND INSTRUMENTAL VIRTUOSITY
Highlights include Wilco, Wynton Marsalis, Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi

Wilco

Tickets are now on sale for the 2010 Savannah Music Festival (SMF), which runs from March 18 through April 3. Opening with the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra and Chinese superstar pianist Lang Lang. The 21st edition of Georgia’s largest music festival features its most diverse array of acts ever. Called “one of the best events around the world” by The Times of London, SMF’s 2010 season is comprised of original productions, unique pairings, and a focus on instrumental virtuosity, including world-class artists in jazz, classical, bluegrass, blues, gospel, and a wide variety of other American and international musical traditions. Set in the idyllic atmosphere of Savannah in the early spring, these unique programs combine to create a musical arts event with worldwide resonance. Tickets are available here.

SMF Executive & Artistic Director Rob Gibson remarks, “With the ever widening gap between commercial music and the performing arts, we want to serve as a bridge that connects audiences with a wide range of first-class artistry, while also illuminating musical traditions from all over the world.”

Savannah Music Festival Original Productions
For the sixth year, SMF Associate Artistic Director and acclaimed violinist Daniel Hope has curated an original chamber music series called Sensations. Daniel Hope and friends welcome first-time guests and musical collaborators Gabriela Montero, Gautier Capuçon, Mark O’Connor, and Jeffrey Kahane.

Highlights of the series include performances of both sextets written by Brahms, a program entitled Forbidden Music, featuring works by composers incarcerated in the Thereseinstadt concentration camp including Schulhoff, Schull, Klein and Haas performed at Temple Mickve Israel (the third oldest Jewish temple in America), and an American music program featuring an O’Connor String Quartet, Heifetz‘ Gershwin arrangements, and works by Williams, Copland, and Bernstein. Pianists Sebastian Knauer and Jeffrey Kahane will perform a one-time only duo recital.

The New Orleans Blues Party features the Henry Butler Trio joined by several special guests and jazz greats throughout the evening. Additional jazz and blues productions include the annual Piano Showdown, which this year pits Butler, Marcus Roberts, Gerald Clayton, and Dick Hyman at opposite ends of the stage, on different Steinways, performing solos and duets. Ben Tucker at 80, celebrates the birthday of Savannah’s beloved jazz bassist/composer in a program featuring such jazz stalwarts as Marcus Printup, Wycliffe Gordon, and Kevin Bales. The prolific jazz pianist Dick Hyman plays an all-Fats Waller concert. All Star Swing Summit, the culmination of SMF’s Swing Central High School Jazz Band Competition & Workshop, features the Clayton Brothers, the Marcus Roberts Trio, the Ted Nash Ensemble, and the Georgia Horns featuring Chris Crenshaw, Wycliffe Gordon and Marcus Printup.

A multi-generational gathering of great mandolinists featuring Mike Marshall, Chris Thile, and Caterina Lichtenberg reaches back to the origins of the instrument in Italian music from the 1600s, also spotlighting the mandolin’s history up to the present day. The most formidable husband/wife team in the history of southern rock/blues, Derek Trucks and Susan Tedeschi, perform a set of ’60s and ’70s soul music.

Unique Pairings and Double Bills
· The Big World of Music series pairs innovative American instrumentalists with international virtuosos in Wizards and Gypsies: The Assad Brothers and the Roby Lakatos Ensemble; Mark O’Connor’s Hot Swing! and the Renaud Garcia-Fons Trio; and the Bill Frisell Trio with Bassekou Kouyate & Ngoni Ba.
· Divas of Country Music features two of neo-traditional country music’s biggest talents: Patty Loveless and Kathy Mattea.
· The passionate and gritty blues, rhythm & soul of Ruthie Foster intersects with the intimate and rich sound of Savannah native Kristina Train, whose debut recording is being released this month on Blue Note Records.

· Major Minors: Teenage acoustic music sensations Sarah Jarosz and Sierra Noble share a bill showcasing their youthful virtuosity and their respective trios.
· Jazz elder statesmen Dick Hyman, Ken Peplowski and Howard Alden are paired with the youthful and hard-swinging Gerald Clayton Trio.
· Mike Marshall’s innovative Big Trio and western swing/alt-country rockers The Belleville Outfit perform on the opening night of the festival.
· The “first family of bluegrass,” Cherryholmes, shares the stage with North Carolina singer/multi-instrumentalist Shannon Whitworth.

About the Savannah Music Festival
The Savannah Music Festival presents a world-class celebration of the musical arts by creating timeless and adventurous productions that stimulate arts education, foster economic growth, and unite artists and audiences in Savannah, Georgia. The 2010 festival runs from March 18 through April 3, including more than 100 performances of world-class jazz, classical, blues, bluegrass, gospel and other genres of American and international roots music in intimate venues throughout the historic district of Savannah.

The entire festival line up can be viewed here.


Charlie Hunter New Album 01/12

CHARLIE HUNTER TO RELEASE
GENTLEMEN, I NEGLECTED TO INFORM YOU YOU WILL NOT BE GETTING PAID ON JANUARY 12, 2010

Charlie Hunter

Charlie Hunter‘s latest recording effort, Gentlemen, I Neglected To Inform You You Will Not Be Getting Paid, features the jaw-dropping guitarist alongside drummer Eric Kalb (Sharon Jones, John Scofield), and a new horn section including trombonist Curtis Fowlkes (Jazz Passengers, Lounge Lizards, Bill Frisell), trombonist Alan Ferber (Don Byron, Kenny Wheeler), and trumpeter Eric Biondo (Antibalas, TV on the Radio).

Gentlemen, I Neglected To Inform You You Will Not Be Getting Paid marks Hunter’s second full-length release on his independent label Spire Artist Media, and will be available physically in retail outlets nationwide, online, and digitally everywhere through reapandsow music starting Tuesday, January 12, 2010. Hunter will celebrate the release of Gentlemen with a four-week Tuesday night residency at Rose Live Music in Brooklyn, NY beginning January 5, 2010.

Hunter follows up his latest trio album, Baboon Strength, with an ambitious effort recorded live direct to two-inch analog tape. No mixing, no overdubs, just straight-ahead powerhouse playing captured by the finest recording equipment dating back to the ’50s. This is familiar territory for Hunter as all of his recordings are recorded live. He comments, “We wanted to do an old sounding record, it’s fun to do it all analog. Artists are into mixing, and that’s fine, but I’m so on the raw side of things, I get the sounds I like and go. You need to know how to play if you do it this way. I could never do it digitally, I play live with a lot of improv, so I go with my strengths. Why not go all in!”

With a nod to the history of brass music, Hunter set out to embrace the full brass experience on Gentlemen. A fan of Lester Bowie’s Brass Fantasy, he enlisted two trombonists and a trumpeter to open up the nine original compositions to infinite possibilities. Hunter says, “I love the sax, but it’s a modern jazz instrument, and when you hear it, it forces you to play a certain way. Brass is more malleable, how it works with an electric instrument, it can be so out of left field. I love that. There are so many things you can do.”


With a career spanning 16 years and almost 20 albums, Hunter consistently ups his game as an innovative writer and bandleader. He has worked with the likes of Norah Jones, Mos Def, John Mayer, D’Angelo, and countless others. He is widely considered the authority on the seven and eight-string guitar, and continues to stun audiences with his ability to simultaneously bust out tasty bass parts, melodic leads, and swinging rhythms. Hunter has previously recorded for the venerable Blue Note label, Concord, Ropeadope and others. His recent independent venture is steered by his motivation to release music that most inspires him. Critics have touted his genius technique, but it’s his profound artistic sensibility that propels his original music. Hunter’s signature style of writing and performing has secured his place as one of today’s great guitarists.

Complete Charlie Hunter tour dates available here.


Thanksgiving Playlist

HEY, YOU MADE OUR LIST OF THINGS TO BE THANKFUL FOR!

Mary Gauthier

Except for the saddest lives, there is always much to be thankful for. However, the pace of modern life doesn’t afford many opportunities to slow down and reflect on one’s blessings. For this alone we can be grateful for the annual arrival of Thanksgiving.

As there are many ways to be thankful, our little Thanksgiving Playlist attempts to reflect the myriad meanings in some ways. From the darker tinged offerings from stunning folkie Mary Gauthier and Van Morrison to the more forthright gratitude of Bonnie Raitt and Tesla (doing Zeppelin!), we acknowledge the vast spaces inside a ‘thank you.’ We open and close with instrumentals, which, by their nature, have a tendency to make one a touch more thoughtful. We give the final ‘word’ to a seminal holiday track by George Winston and begin with a jewel from the very cool Bass Desires band led by bassist Marc Johnson, with drummer Peter Erskine and guitar masters John Scofield and Bill Frisell.

We offer this assortment as a small thank you to the readers and fans of JamBase. We appreciate you more than we can possibly say.

Playlist assembled by JamBase Associate Editor Dennis Cook, who’d always rather make mixes than labor over a turkeyÂ…


Danny Barnes: New Album

PIZZA BOX AVAILABLE NOW DIGITALLY AND IN STORES JANUARY, 2010

Danny Barnes

Danny Barnes, banjo pioneer and a founding member of the Bad Livers, a seminal Austin alternative country band, has digitally released his new album, Pizza Box, through ATO Records. Pizza Box can be purchased through all digital retailers, as well Barnes’ ATO page here. It is Barnes’ first release since being signed by Dave Matthews to his New York-based ATO Records. Matthews, a longtime fan of Barnes, also contributed the cover illustration for Pizza Box.

On Halloween, Barnes wrapped up an 18-date tour supporting the new album, spanning much of the Northeast and Midwest.

With Pizza Box, Barnes spins tales of American life like a latter-day John Steinbeck, wielding banjo and pen with equal effect, and the character of his voice as the perfect mouthpiece to truly bring these songs and stories to life. Pizza Box comes stuffed with sharp hooks and addictive vocal and instrumental melodies, but it’s Barnes’ storytelling skills that shine the strongest. He tells tales with the wry wit and humor of Garrison Keilor, the lyrical eccentricities and intellect of Randy Newman, and performs with the southern twang and swagger of Levon Helm. Barnes combines and blends all of these elements into a style that is uniquely his own.

“Overdue,” the lead single from Pizza Box and already receiving airplay, is a moving look at a relationship that’s endured some rough times. The track is one of three that Matthews sings background vocals on. The album was produced by John Alagia (Dave Matthews Band, John Mayer, Jason Mraz) and recorded at Haunted Hollow in Charlottesville, VA. It features Matt Chamberlain (Pearl Jam, David Bowie, T Bone Burnett) on drums and Rashawn Ross (a touring member of Dave Matthews Band) on horns.

According to Matthews, “Danny Barnes’ Pizza Box is my favorite new music, my favorite rock record, and my favorite country record. From the first time he sat down and played me ‘Road,’ I knew his next record was going to be great, but I didn’t expect this. The music is smart and soulful, and the lyrics are profound. It is heaven and earth. It is Americana, from the back porch to the pulpit, shattered dreams on angels’ wings. I can’t stop listening. In the haze of over produced, ‘perfect’ recordings, Danny Barnes spent less than two weeks banging out an album that may well save your soul.”

“The label ‘true original’ gets bandied about too often these days, but Danny Barnes deserves it,” said Paste Magazine, while the Austin American Statesman has hailed Barnes as “One of the most wildly imaginative musicians on the planet.”

The list of artists Barnes has performed alongside is as eclectic as his music and includes Bela Fleck, Robert Earl Keen, Lyle Lovett, Gov’t Mule, Bill Frisell, and members of the Butthole Surfers, Dead Kennedys, and Ministry. Barnes is prominently featured on two tracks on Dave Matthews Band’s latest album, Big Whiskey and the GrooGrux King.

Pizza Box Full Track Listing
1) Caveman*
2) Road
3) Pizza Box
4) Sleep*
5) Misty Swan
6) TSA
7) Bone
8) Overdue*
9) Charlie
10) Broken Clock
11) Sparta, TN

* Featuring Dave Matthews on background vocals


Bill Frisell: Disfarmer

By: Ron Hart

Michael Disfarmer was an odd, curmudgeonly fellow from the WWII-era Midwest whose hobby was taking photographs of the various townsfolk from his hometown of Heber Springs, AK. And, like all great unsung-artists, little did Disfarmer know that his photographs would later become a treasured look into the vortex of Little America in the early-to-mid 20th century. Commissioned by Ohio State University’s Wexner Center for the Arts, jazz guitar great Bill Frisell got together with members of his longtime “country” ensemble to create 26 pieces of music to accompany Disfarmer’s haunting photos for an audio/visual performance that took place at Wexner in March of 2007. Over two years later, the “soundtrack” to this unique project finally gets its official release courtesy of Nonesuch Records and should please any fan of such Frisell classics as 1997′s Nashville and 1999′s outstanding Good Dog, Happy Man. Nobody in modern music can blur the line between dark country and modal jazz like Frisell, and these 26 tracks manage to create a thoroughly fitting atmosphere to parallel the mood of Disfarmer’s photographs, several of which are featured prominently in the liner notes of this album. Largely inspired by Ozark Mountains fiddle music – Disfarmer himself was said to be a casual fiddle player – songs like “Lonely Man,” “No One Gets In,” an effective rendition of Arthur Crudup’s “That’s Alright Mama” (made famous by Elvis Presley), and an ace pair of Hank Williams Sr. covers (“Lovesick Blues” and “I Can’t Help It If I’m Still In Love with You”), perfectly capture the era and the region in all of its sepia-toned beauty. Needless to say, seeing Frisell and his band perform these songs with Disfarmer’s photos projected in the background at Wexner that night in March, 2007 must have certainly been something to behold.

For more on Bill Frisell, check out JamBase’s 2009 interview.

JamBase | Imagistic
Go See Live Music!


Vic Chesnutt Album: w/ Fugazi & Godspeed Guys

Vic Chesnutt’s At The Cut Out September 22


Vic Chessnutt

At the Cut, the latest effort from Athens, GA-based singer-songwriter Vic Chesnutt, is due September 22 on Constellation Records. A collaboration with Fugazi‘s Guy Picciotto and members of Godspeed You! Black Emperor and Silver Mt. Zion, At the Cut is the follow-up to Chesnutt’s 2007 collaborative recording, North Star Deserter.

Recorded by former Arcade Fire member Howard Bilerman at Montreal’s Hotel2Tango studio, At the Cut focuses on themes of cowardice, courage, mortality, tenacity, defiance, mourning and memory. The opening track, “Coward,” reflects the broad stylistic range of contributors on the album, the songs spans the musical spectrum from classic Vic Chesnutt solo acoustic tracks to the sweeping walls of noise and snarling, angular guitars trademarked by his many collaborators.

In the 19 years since Chesnutt’s debut album, he has made his mark by collaborating with a wide range of artists including Michael Stipe, Bill Frisell, Elf Power, Widespread Panic and the Cowboy Junkies. Hailing from rural Georgia and confined to a wheelchair since an automobile accident at the age of 18, Chesnutt has released 15 critically acclaimed records; been covered by a number of artists on the tribute album Sweet Relief II: Gravity of the Situation including R.E.M., Smashing Pumpkins, Madonna and Sparklehorse.