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Harmony Festival Complete Lineup Plus Keynote Speakers

HARMONY FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES COMPLETE MUSIC LINEUP PLUS KEYNOTE SPEAKERS

AND THE RETURN OF THE ECO RALLY ACTION SPORTS SKATE ZONE
ROSTER INCLUDES VERY SPECIAL PERFORMANCE BY LAURYN HILL

Lauryn Hill

With world-class performers, a global marketplace featuring more than 300 vendors and 30,000+ attendees, the
Harmony Festival is the West Coast’s premier outdoor music and progressive lifestyle festival. Set for June 11-13 at Sonoma County Fairgrounds in Santa Rosa, CA, Harmony thrives by promoting the values of music, art, ecology, healthy living and spirituality as the keys to creating abundant
communities and a vibrant planet. Repeat winner of The Bohemian’s Best Festival and Best Music Festival Sonoma
annual reader awards, Harmony takes place annually in Santa Rosa, recently named California’s #1 “happiest and
healthiest” place to live, and the country’s fifth overall in healthy behavior.

The 2010 headline music roster features a very special performance by multiple Grammy award-winning singer
Lauryn Hill, U.K.-based reggae legends
Steel Pulse, New Orleans
funk and jazz jam sextet Galactic, Slightly Stoopid, beach reggae band Rebelution, and surf
skate punks The
Expendables
. As always, classic rock is represented on the roster and 2010 includes a unique
presentation of the music of Frank Zappa performed by his son Dweezil, Zappa Plays Zappa, and the North
Bay debut
of 7 walkers, a new band
led by Grateful Dead drummer Bill Kreutzmann, among many more bands to be announced
soon.

The 2010 initial key speaker roster includes internationally acclaimed “new thought” leaders including Dr. Bruce Lipton, a pioneer in bridging science and spirit; renowned mycologist Paul Stamets, visionary activist Caroline Casey,
best-selling author Dan Millman, Peak Oil theorist and author Mike Ruppert, world-renowned saint and divine guide
Pujya Swami Chidanandji, alchemical healer Nicki Scully, and political satirist, “cosmic comic” Swami Beyondananda.

Celebrating its 11th year, Mystic Beat Lounge – Saturday Night’s Techno-Tribal Dance After Dark is recognized far
and wide as the greatest dance and performance art extravaganza in the North Bay, where the majesty of Burning
Man meets the artistry of Cirque du Soleil. This year’s lineup features DJ performances by Tipper, Ott, and Beats Antique, plus Lynx & Janover and Galactic with
special guests Chali 2na
(Jurassic Five/Ozomatli) and Lyrics
Born
,
attracting thousands of attendees writhing to a new edge of sound, light, technology and talent. Bringing
unparalleled wonder and imagery to the music will be fire arts troupes Luminesque, Liquid Fire Mantra and Phoenix
Rising.

Returning in 2010 is the festival’s newest breakout attraction, The Eco Rally Action Sports Zone (formerly Eco Cup),
featuring continuous skateboarding, contests and a public street course (BYO Board), and live music by skate rock
legends Fishbone, rising stars The Expendables, plus a rare semi-acoustic performance by Slightly Stoopid and other
very special guests. The Eco Rally brings a positive message and eco-awareness to action sports fans in the North
Bay and beyond. Get involved, activate and go skate!

Ticket Information: Advance “Eco-Harmonic Stimulus Package” tickets are available now. Early bird prices range from
$30 per day, to $149 all-weekend pass including camping, to $300 VIP Package. Kids under 6 are FREE. On-site
camping is $30-75 all weekend (see web site for complete details). Tickets available at HarmonyFestival.com plus local retail outlets listed on the Harmony site.


Superfly During Jazzfest Mule, Kreutzmann, Les, Galactic

SUPERFLY PRODUCTIONS ANNOUNCES 14th ANNUAL SUPERFLY DURING JAZZFEST CONCERT
SERIES
GOV’T MULE, RODRIGO Y GABRIELA, GALACTIC, GREYBOY ALLSTARS, LES CLAYPOOL, NORTH MISSISSIPPI
ALLSTARS AND 7 WALKERS FEATURING BILL KREUTZMANN & PAPA MALI AMONG THOSE CONFIRMED TO
PERFORM

Gov’t Mule

Superfly Productions is proud to announce the 2010 Superfly during Jazzfest concert series. Series events will take
place April 23-25 and April 30-May 2 at several signature New Orleans venues, including the recently renovated
Mahalia Jackson Theatre and the Riverboat Creole Queen, among many others. Confirmed shows are listed below.
As usual, the festival’s 14th annual installment will present top national talent alongside some of the best acts from
New Orleans’ infinitely rich music scene.

Superfly During Jazzfest will include Gov’t Mule and Rodrigo Y Gabriela at the Mahalia Jackson Theatre. The theatre re-opened in January
2009 and was the first to do so after Hurricane Katrina. Joining Gov’t Mule will be 7 walkers featuring Bill Kreutzmann & Papa Mali. The shows at the
Riverboat will feature Galactic, Greyboy Allstars, Les Claypool and North Mississippi Allstars. Kirk Joseph’s 504 Brass Band have been enlisted to join each of the Superfly shows
aboard the legendary Riverboat Creole Queen.

Conceived in 1997, the Superfly during Jazzfest Concert Series eventually attracted thousands of fans from all over
the country, and became the foundation for the iconic Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival. The popular series has
presented live music fans with creative entertainment options throughout the past 13 festival seasons, and will
continue to offer memorable events in the company’s birthplace for years to come. “New Orleans is still so important
to us,” says Superfly’s Rick Farman. “We feel spiritually connected to New Orleans and we always look forward to
putting on these shows every year.”

About the Superfly During Jazzfest Series:

The Superfly during Jazzfest concert series began in 1997 to fulfill an intense demand for nighttime music events
during the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival. Since then, the event has become a premier destination for music
fans from all over the country. Spanning 10 days and several venues, the Superfly series attracts rabid fans who
appreciate quality live music from an adventurous range of styles and traditions.

Visit www.superflypresents.com for complete
information on the Superfly During Jazzfest concert series.

The Superfly at Jazzfest 2010 lineup is below:

  • Galactic
  • Saturday, April 24th
  • w/ Kirk Joseph’s 504 Brass Band
  • Riverboat Creole Queen
  • Les Claypool
  • Sunday, April 25th
  • w/ Kirk Joseph’s 504 Brass Band
  • Riverboat Creole Queen
  • Gov’t Mule
  • Friday, April 30th
  • w/ 7 Walkers featuring Bill Kreutzmann and Papa Mali
  • Mahalia Jackson Theatre
  • North Mississippi Allstars
  • Friday, April 30th
  • w/ Kirk Joseph’s 504 Brass Band
  • Riverboat Creole Queen
  • Rodrigo y Gabriela
  • Saturday, May 1st
  • w/ TBA
  • Mahalia Jackson Theatre
  • The Greyboy Allstars
  • Saturday, May 1st
  • w/ Kirk Joseph’s 504 Brass Band
  • Riverboat Creole Queen
  • Mahalia Jackson Theatre shows are on sale through www.ticketmaster.com and through the venue box office located at
    801 N. Rampart, New Orleans LA 70116.

    Tickets to shows on the Riverboat Creole Queen are available online at superflytickets.musictoday.com and at the
    Mushroom Records located in New Orleans.


    7 Walkers Tour: Papa Mali, Bill Kreutzmann, George Porter Jr.

    NEW PROJECT FEATURING FRESH ROBERT HUNTER LYRICS
    HITS THE ROAD

    Bill Kreutzmann by Chad Smith

    Legendary drummer and co-founder of the Grateful Dead, Bill Kreutzmann, together with funky bluesman and voodoo electronic pioneer Papa Mali, officially unveil 7 Walkers‘ spring plans. 7 Walkers, which also features bass virtuoso Reed Mathis (Tea Leaf Green, JFJO) and multi-instrumentalist Matt Hubbard (Willie Nelson and Friends), will stop at select markets and festivals through out the country, all in anticipation of a new album release. The complete list of currently confirmed tour dates is included below.

    7 Walkers recently spent time at an Austin, Texas studio, recording an album to be released later this year. In addition to a brand-new batch of Robert Hunter (Grateful Dead and Bob Dylan lyricist) originals that were co-written with the band, the new album offers up favorites from the Grateful Dead repertoire, Papa Mali originals, and some New Orleans and Southern songbook interpretations. Overall, the result is a fiery and funky collection of tunes that quite brilliantly capture the unique collaboration between these two very different musical shamans.

    Bill Kreutzmann (who played every show in the Grateful Dead’s illustrious 30 year career as well as The Dead incarnations since) first met funky Papa Mali at a festival in 2008. Bill recalls in a recent interview, “We first met at the Oregon Country Fair last year. He was the headliner on the main stage, and I sat there and watched him and went, ‘This guy’s for real man, I like this guy.’ Then we met, after that he came over to my trailer that I was staying in and you couldn’t separate us, we talked for hours. It was just one of those natural things, you know? You can’t plan it; You can’t make it happen. And then we started playing together.”

    Live audio recordings of the 7 Walkers can be heard at the newly re-launched www.billkreutzmann.com.

    Meanwhile, at nugs.net, fans can now download live BK3 recordings from their 2009 Colorado shows. Another potent Kreutzmann musical project, BK3 first toured in 2008 and featured a rotating lineup including such players as guitarist Scott Murawski (Max Creek) and bassists James “Hutch” Hutchinson (Bonnie Raitt), Oteil Burbridge (Allman Brothers) and Mike Gordon (Phish).

    Kreutzmann is also working to support the efforts of University of California at Santa Cruz, who has committed to helping to archive all things Grateful Dead. As Kreutzmann explains, “I am incredibly happy that the kind archivists at UC Santa Cruz understand the social value of [the Grateful Dead's] priceless archive, and its hallowed meaning to our most beloved ‘Dead Heads.’ Without the care it is now going to receive, these treasures would be lost.”

    7 Walkers Spring/Summer Tour Dates

    (Please note: Guest bass player George Porter Jr. will perform these dates with 7 Walkers)

    Tuesday, April 6 Sierra Nevada Brewing Co., Big Room Chico CA
    Wednesday, April 7 Red Fox Eureka CA
    Thursday, April 8 Crystal Bay Club Crown Room Crystal Bay NV
    Friday, April 9 Great American Music Hall San Francisco CA
    Saturday, April 10 Moe’s Alley Santa Cruz CA
    Friday, April 16 Spirit of Suwanee Music Park Live Oak FL
    Saturday, April 17 The Salt Lick Driftwood TX
    Friday, April 30 Mahalia Jackson Theatre New Orleans, LA
    Thursday, June 3 Wakarusa Festival Ozark AR
    Friday, June 11 Sonoma County Fairgrounds Santa Rosa CA

    7 Walkers Tour Dates :: 7 Walkers News :: 7 Walkers Concert Reviews


    Dark Star Orchestra: Life After Dead

    By: Jarrod Dicker

    Dark Star Orchestra by Peter Wochniak

    “We are NOT the Grateful Dead,” professes Dark Star Orchestra‘s rhythm guitarist and vocalist Rob Eaton. “I think the main misconception is that we strictly copy the Grateful Dead’s music or somehow mimic their persona and none of that is true. We love this music, we live and breathe this music and when we step onstage there is no thought process of us trying to be or do anything except serve this music.”

    Established in 1997, Dark Star Orchestra embarked on a single mission: reincarnate exact setlists from the Grateful Dead’s tour catalog which, throughout its 30 year existence, accumulated nearly 2,500 live performances. Dark Star Orchestra conveys these live performances by employing two distinct methods – a “recreation set,” where DSO mirrors a historical setlist of a genuine Grateful Dead performance, and the “elective set,” where the group generates their own setlist of Grateful Dead songs.

    The tradition of Dark Star Orchestra’s pedigree is for members to adapt terminology and choral arrangements originally exhibited by the actual Grateful Dead. By doing this, they are able to familiarize the audience and transcend them spiritually to a nostalgic time when the Grateful Dead were an active, animate part of the rock & roll scene. Thus, rather than label themselves a “cover band,” DSO prefers a more accurate, incorporeal term.

    “I say we are a spirit band,” Eaton explains. “We play the music in the spirit that it was originally conceived. The heart, soul, emotion and spirit of the music are the only things we can do to carry it through. It is impossible to copy a setlist exactly. You cannot recreate a show. You can play a setlist, but you absolutely can’t recreate it. That’s basically something that happens in the moment.”

    Dark Star Orchestra by Peter Wochniak

    The group’s commitment to heavy improvisation goes all the way back to the formation of their band name. The Dark Star Orchestra moniker was chosen deliberately by founding members who believed that the Hunter/Garcia song “Dark Star” was the single most fitting piece to categorize the fundamental nature of the Grateful Dead. Meagerly including a sizeable verse/chorus arrangement, the song highlights the non-structure inventiveness of the Grateful Dead more than any other song in their extensive catalog. “Orchestra” was affixed onto the group’s name to communicate the obligation these artists felt to keep this music alive by communicating to the world the classic compositions of the Grateful Dead.

    “The name ‘orchestra’ in our band is so apt because when you think about what an orchestra does, they’re recreating classical work,” DSO keyboardist Rob Barraco observes. “The difference is classical work is really orchestra, but we’re kind of approaching it in a similar way. We’re trying to be true to a particular era and sound, but by the very nature of what Grateful Dead music really is, you have to live in the moment of the music.”

    In October 2008, the group performed its 1,600th career show. They are one of the only tribute groups that have achieved such heightened notoriety, having played major festival’s like Bonnaroo, Gathering of the Vibes and Summerfest, as well as nurturing a devoted nationwide following with a relentless touring schedule.

    This past December, Dark Star Orchestra co-founder and lead guitarist John Kadlecik announced that he would be leaving the group after 12 years to join Bob Weir and Phil Lesh with their current project, Furthur. While this news initially stalled the DSO freight train in its tracks, the band kept playing on, electing Zen Tricksters founder and Donna Jean Godchaux Band guitarist Jeff Mattson to fill the “Jerry” role… for now.

    Stu Allen by Susan J. Weiand

    “There is another guitar player that we’re going to be taking out and touring with in April,” reveals Barraco. “It’s only to be fair, because you don’t want to simply choose one guy and then realize later that you made a mistake. So, we’re going to be going out with Stu Allen [JGB] and doing a whole West Coast tour with him. He’s a tremendous player, has a beautiful voice and a really nice sound. Then after we play with Stu, we will have a clear idea of where we’re going to go in terms of Kadlecik’s official replacement. We’ll see after we play with Stu in April what the final decision will be.”

    The current touring DSO lineup includes Jeff Mattson, Rob Eaton, Kevin Rosen (bass, vocals), Lisa Mackey (vocals), Rob Koritz (drums), Dino English (drums) and Rob Barraco. As mentioned, Kadlecik was a founding member of the group along with the late Scott Larned, and his presence and veteran role in DSO most certainly will be difficult to replace. However, with the addition of Mattson, the band believes that he will not only be able to aptly fill the departed’s shoes, but also inject a new element into the group that they have never experimented with while Kadlecik was involved.

    “John Kadlecik became a Deadhead a lot later than Jeff because of the fact that he’s younger,” Barraco states. “I think John’s real forte is playing more of the later ’70s and ’80s Grateful Dead. The one thing that Jeff has above everybody else is that he really understands the earlier bend on the Dead. The late ’60s, early ’70s. He does it so well and that’s something that we really haven’t concentrated on in this band until now. Jeff brings just a little more grease, that psychedelic greasy element that was missing in John’s playing. Not to demean John’s playing, because he’s brilliant. That’s just what Jeff brings that is different.”

    John Kadlecik with Furthur by Susan J. Weiand

    “[Mattson] comes at it from a place of its inception almost,” Eaton interjects. “He understands where it started and how it started and what it felt like when it started. He brings to the table a really deep understanding of what Jerry meant to this music in a pretty profound way that I didn’t realize until I started playing with him.”

    Mattson’s comprehension and knack to play early renditions of Dead music has transcended the group to places they’ve never been before. A few weeks back, drummer Dino English and his wife welcomed a child to the world, which understandably prevented him from attending the opening week of tour. Dark Star couldn’t play a show that called for two drummers if only one, Koritz, was going to be present. So what did they do?

    “We decided to do a whole string of Europe ’72 shows and recreate those concerts [these shows feature just drummer Bill Kreutzmann],” says Barraco. “Dark Star had never done that before, all that old Pigpen stuff. Jeff was just ripping it up. It’s been so psychedelic.”

    The Europe ’72 shows were chosen by Eaton, who holds the chief responsibility of deciding the setlist for every DSO performance. He is a three-time Grammy Award winning producer as well as a former Grateful Dead taper who recorded throughout the late ’70s and early ’80s. He produced all of Pat Metheny‘s records for the past 20-25 years and has recently worked with Peter Wolf and Richard Bona. Joining DSO in 2001, Eaton had always selected setlist material with one “Jerry” in mind, John Kadlecik. Have any complications come about creating setlists to compliment their new guitarist?

    “Nope, not at all,” Eaton confidently proclaims. “He did five shows with us in November, mid-tour, and I threw the gauntlet at him to see what he was made of. I gave him EVERYTHING! I gave him a show from ’89, and it had some stuff we’ve never even played before. There were some songs that John Kadlecik just didn’t want to learn sometimes. Certain shows would have a song called ‘California Earthquake’ that we never got around to doing. So, I threw that at Jeff – I said, ‘Learn this song. We’re going to do this exact show’ – right out of the box without any rehearsals or anything like that. I tested him right away and he passed all the tests with flying colors. At the end of the day, the exocentric components of a specific tone are all about the heart and soul of the music and what the emotional content of it is. The emotional content with Jeff is very strong. That I think, at the end of the day, is what Grateful Dead music is all about. It’s all about the emotion.”

    Continue reading for more on Dark Star Orchestra…

     


    John Kadlecik became a Deadhead a lot later than Jeff [Mattson] because of the fact that he’s younger. I think John’s real forte is playing more of the later ’70s and ’80s Grateful Dead. The one thing that Jeff has above everybody else is that he really understands the earlier bend on the Dead. The late ’60s, early ’70s. He does it so well and that’s something that we really haven’t concentrated on in this band until now. Jeff brings just a little more grease, that psychedelic greasy element that was missing in John’s playing.

    -Rob Barraco

     

    Photo of Jeff Mattson by Peter Wochniak

    The duty of arranging the setlist night after night is no simple task, and none of the others envy Eaton’s role. On a nightly basis he must satisfy the desires of the crowd as well as those of his bandmates. He and he alone holds the vital judgment of whether to execute an “elective” or a “recreation” set.

    Rob Eaton by Peter Wochniak

    “I look at what we’ve done at a venue and go back to the last five times we played that city on tour. If we haven’t done one of our own setlists [elective] in four or five years, then we are due for one,” says Eaton. “I plot out what it is that we should be doing and then I start going through setlists to put the Rubik’s Cube together and make it all work. It’s quite a tedious process, but it keeps it interesting for us and gives the fans something different every time we come to town. They know they’re not going to see the same thing.”

    The relationship between Dark Star and living Grateful Dead members is congenial. As mentioned, John Kadlecik left DSO to join Furthur. Jeff Mattson is the guitarist in the Donna Jean Godchaux Band and has co-written a song with Barraco on Phil & FriendsThere and Back Again. Barraco has played in The Other Ones, The Dead, RatDog and Phil & Friends. All remaining DSO members have either been involved with previous Grateful Dead affiliations or tribute groups, too. But it’s Barraco who had the grand opportunity to work side by side with a key Dead “member,” Robert Hunter. Meeting him while on a string of shows with Phil & Friends in 2001, Barraco humbly introduced himself to the lyricist and from that moment on a friendship bloomed. This segued to the production of a co-written studio album in 2007 titled When We All Come Home.

    “We started talking about songwriting as a craft and I looked at him and said, ‘I got some stuff.’ He just stopped me in my tracks and said, ‘Send it to me, and let me hear what you’re doing.’ He gave me his address and I went back to my girlfriend at the time’s place in Portland and sat in the bedroom for days doing demos. I was so excited that Robert Hunter was going to listen to my music,” Barraco explains. “I sent him three songs, and three weeks later I got an email stating, ‘Your music is speaking to me.’ In that, he sent his phone number and said to give him a call in a week or so. So I called him up and he says, ‘Listen man, can you come down here to San Rafael? I got some really good stuff for you.’ I went down and visited him. I sat in his living room and he handed me these sheets of paper. In my head I’m listening to my music and reading his lyrics and I was just so blown away because he captured the spirit of it all – I basically did not have to do any editing with it, he did it perfectly. I looked at him, dumbfounded, and said, ‘Do you think you’re up for a little more?’ And he just said to lay it on him. After that, I just started sending him stuff and in a very short period of time it became an album’s worth of material.”

    Dark Star Orchestra’s claim to fame with fans will always be their magical reincarnation of the Grateful Dead’s music. However, some original creative expansion is taking place removed from the Dead catalog.

    Dark Star Orchestra by Peter Wochniak

    “We’ve started working on an original project,” says Barraco. “We all live in different parts of the country though, and it’s hard for us to get together in the studio at given times. Rob Eaton is a Grammy Award winning studio engineer and [he's] just brilliant. He’s a brilliant producer and a brilliant recording artist. One of our drummers is a really good producer as well, and is really into recording. We all have Pro Tools on the road, so the way we do it is somebody comes up with an idea and we pass it around, see what one another could make of it. They’ll play a part and put a part down, and so on. So, we started working on that and so far it has been really cool. Unfortunately, John [Kadlecik] leaving the band sort of put a little monkey wrench in that for the time being, but whoever we end up with as our guitar player, they’re both down to do it.”

    Dark Star has constantly had to deal with misconceptions about what they do. Dismissing the tag of “cover band,” the group feels that their mission and performance expands way beyond the generic label. Yes, they carry out a catalog of music created by another group, but it is in the spirit of the improvisations where they shine most uniquely. They do NOT think they are the Grateful Dead, and as Eaton puts it, they know damn well who they are.

    “Here’s a great analogy I have used before,” explains Eaton. “Say I’m a painter and I have a setlist and this wood frame. The wood frame on this white canvas is the setlist, the order of the songs and the arrangements of the songs. All the colors and textures and patterns that get splattered on this canvas over the course of the night are the improvisations that differ on a nightly basis. I think that’s all we can do, to be true to ourselves and to be true to the emotional content of the music. We play it with heart and soul, and that’s really what the people get. People get the feeling. When you can transfer something you’re feeling into sound that someone else could hear and feel that’s a great thing. Jerry was really great at it. If we can tap into even a little part of that, that’s really what it’s all about.”

    “We honor that music like Bach, Beethoven and Chopin because we think that this music needs to live on through the ages,” Barraco continues. “It’s incredibly important, it’s uniquely American, and we want to honor it that way. We want to approach it the same way they approached it. We want to take ourselves on that journey. By the very nature of doing that, we take the entire audience on the same journey.”

    JamBase | Ridin’ That Train
    Go See Live Music!

    Dark Star Orchestra Tour Dates :: Dark Star Orchestra News :: Dark Star Orchestra Concert Reviews


    Grateful Dead: ’89 Philly Release

    Grateful Dead Complete July ’89 Show Due in Three CD/One DVD Set

    Grateful Dead

    The Grateful Dead were enjoying a late-career renaissance in 1989 when the band steamed into Philadelphia on one of the hottest days of the summer to play the last concert ever at John F. Kennedy Stadium. The July 7 show in the City of Brotherly Love
    highlights the band’s exuberant resurgence, a peak that rivals any that came before it.

    Rhino salutes life, liberty, and the pursuit of “hippieness” with a collection that includes every note from this epic show on three CDs and one DVD. The DVD captures the entire concert, shot from an amazing multi-camera perspective by the same crew that shot the legendary Truckin’ Up To Buffalo DVD.

    Crimson, White & Indigo: Philadelphia, July 7, 1989, will be available April 20 from Grateful Dead/Rhino at all retail outlets, including Dead.net, for a suggested list price of $39.98. A digital version featuring all of the audio content will also be available.

    The 19 tracks on three CDs – all but one previously unreleased – were mixed from the 24-track analog master tapes, enhanced using the latest audio engineering technology and presented here in HDCD. The set comes packaged with a booklet of rare photos and an essay by Steve Silberman, who co-produced the Grateful Dead’s boxed set of
    previously unreleased recordings, So Many Roads (1965-1995).

    The Philadelphia concert offers a snapshot of the Dead’s 1989 tour, where the band played to some of its biggest audiences ever, a result of the group’s only Top 40 hit, “Touch Of Grey” from 1987′s In The Dark. During this tour, the band was recording the follow-up to that album, Built To Last, which is an important reason
    why the jamming heard here is particularly fluid and concise. In fact, the band played a pair of songs from the upcoming album, the aching ballad “Standing On The Moon” and the poignant “Blow Away,” a song co-written by keyboardist Brent Mydland, who sadly died a year later.

    The band helped raze the aging stadium, thundering through “Hell In A Bucket,” “Little Red Rooster,” and Bob Dylan’s “Stuck Inside Of Mobile With The Memphis Blues Again.” Many sitting at the north end of the open-air stadium recall the concrete bleachers trembling during Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann’s drum duet in the second
    set. The show closed with another Dylan cover, “Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door,” the last song ever performed at JFK.

    When this show was recorded, the band included guitarist Jerry Garcia, drummers Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann, bassist Phil Lesh, keyboardist Brent Mydland, and guitarist Bob Weir.

    Track Listing:

    CD 1
    “Hell In A Bucket”
    “Iko Iko”
    “Little Red Rooster”
    “Ramble On Rose”
    “Stuck Inside Of Mobile With The Memphis Blues Again”
    “Loser”
    “Let It Grow”
    “Blow Away”

    CD 2
    “Box Of Rain”
    “Scarlet Begonias”
    “Fire On The Mountain”
    “Estimated Prophet”
    “Standing On The Moon”
    “Rhythm Devils”

    CD 3
    “Space”
    “The Other One”
    “Wharf Rat”
    “Turn On Your Lovelight”
    “Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door”


    Tropical Jam 5: Kimock, Kang Kreutzmann, Vega, Berry

    Tropical Jam 5 and Chris Berry Trio Tour Announced

    Steve Kimock

    Fresh Jam Radio and Dove will be sponsoring Tropical Jam 5 on three Hawaiian Islands this March – Maui, Oahu and Kauai on March 12, 13 & 14, 2010. The island retreat will feature Steve Kimock Chris Berry, Bill Kreutzmann, Michael Kang and Bobby Vega.

    All of the shows are benefits for various important causes, both on the islands and for Haiti. As a special bonus, those on Kauai will get a special treat for Equinox with the rare powerhouse trio of Bill Kreutzmann, Steve Kimock and Bobby Vega on Saturday March 20 in the intimate venue The Lava Lounge (formerly Tapaz Lounge) in Kapaa, Kauai.

    Tropical Jam V – Hawaiian Heart Tour

    March 12 Voyage East in the Pauwela Cannery -Haiku, Maui
    March 13 Pikake Pavilion, Waimea Valley – Hale`iwa, OAHU
    March 14 Kilohana Plantation – Lihue, Kaua’i

    Artists Include:
    Bill Kreutzmann
    Steve Kimock
    Bobby Vega
    Michael Kang
    Chris Berry

    Under the guise of Chris Berry Trio (CB-3), featuring Steve Kimock alongside the rhythm section of the Brazilian Girls, the group will be performing together for their first multi-night West Coast tour. The 10-day tour which launches on February 24 will maneuver along the West Coast including dates in Santa Cruz, San Francisco, Eugene and Portland Oregon.

    Chris Berry Trio feat: Steve Kimock Tour Dates:

    02.24 Moe’s Alley- Santa Cruz CA
    02.25 Montbleu Resort (Bleu Room)- Lake Tahoe
    02.26 Yoshi’s- San Francisco CA
    02.27 Yoshi’s- San Francisco CA
    02.28 Mystic Theater- Petaluma CA
    03.01 Ukiah Brewing Co- Ukiah, CA
    03.02 Red Fox Tavern – Eureka CA
    03.04 W.O.W Hall- Eugene OR
    03.05 Mt. Tabor Theater Portland OR
    03.06 Domino Room- Bend OR


    Superfly During Jazzfest Mule, Galactic, Les, GBA, NMA

    SUPERFLY DURING JAZZFEST 2010

    Gov’t Mule

    The initial Superfly During Jazzfest lineup has been released. Included in the announcement is a very special Gov’t Mule show at the Mahalia Jackson Theatre. Ravaged by Hurricane Katrina, the theatre was fully restored, given a state of the art renovation and was reopened to the public in January of 2009.

    Gov’t Mule
    w/ 7 Walkers featuring Bill Kreutzmann & Papa Mali
    Friday, April 30th
    Mahalia Jackson Theatre – New Orleans
    Tickets: $35
    Doors 7 p.m. / Show 7:45 p.m.

    There are also several Riverboat shows already announced:

    Galactic

    w/ Kirk Joseph’s 504 Brass Band

    Saturday, April 24

    Riverboat Creole Queen

    Tickets $45

    All Ages

    Les Claypool

    w/ Kirk Joseph’s 504 Brass Band

    Sunday, April 25

    Riverboat Creole Queen

    Tickets $45

    All Ages

    North Mississippi Allstars

    w/ Kirk Joseph’s 504 Brass Band

    Friday, April 30

    Riverboat Creole Queen

    $40

    All Ages

    Greyboy Allstars

    w/ Kirk Joseph’s 504 Brass Band

    Saturday, May 1

    Riverboat Creole Queen

    Tickets $40

    All Ages

    Tickets go on sale on Saturday, February 13 at 12 p.m. ET. Visit superflypresents.com for more information.


    Old Settler’s Fest Initial Lineup

    23RD ANNUAL OLD SETTLER’S MUSIC FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES INITIAL 2010 LINEUP

    Joe Ely

    The four nights of the upcoming and much anticipated Old Settler’s Music Festival, which won an Austin360.com A-List readers poll, promise a bonanza of the acclaimed roots music that has delighted attendees and repeat attendees for 23 years, and will do so again this year. The Austin, TX festival is scheduled for Thursday, April 15, through Sunday, April 18.

    Award-winning songwriter-producer-recording artist Joe Ely, a veteran of the road and live performance, headlines Friday. Folk-rock singer-songwriter Patty Griffin – whose duet with Dierks Bentley on his song “Beautiful World” has been nominated this year for a Grammy Award for Best Country Collaboration with Vocals and whose new album, Downtown Church, will be released January 26 – headlines with her band, including Buddy Miller, on Saturday.

    Vanguard Records Americana artist Mindy Smith, award-winning banjo virtuoso and independent record label founder Alison Brown with Joe Craven, Alaskan bluegrass band Bearfoot, 7 Walkers featuring Bill Kreutzmann and Papa Mali, The Infamous Stringdusters, Fred Eaglesmith, and Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver are also among the more than 30 acts that are slated to perform on four stages at the Salt Lick Pavilion and Camp Ben McCulloch in the Texas Hill Country south of Austin.

    Festival-goers can save as much as 30 percent over at-the-gate prices when they order early-bird wristbands by January 31 here.

    Available are 4-day wristbands with campground access (Thursday-Sunday), 3-day wristbands with campground access (Friday-Sunday), 3-day no-camping wristbands and all-inclusive Platinum Passes. Children 12 and younger will be admitted free. Camping access is expected to sell out.

    In 23 years, Old Settler’s Music Festival has delivered one of the best roots-music festival experiences in the United States with amazing performers including Joan Osborne, Iris Dement, Michelle Shocked, Bruce Hornsby, Yonder Mountain String Band, Nickel Creek, Alison Krauss, Bela Fleck, Rodney Crowell, Vassar Clements, Del McCoury Band, Kasey Chambers, and local favorites Ray Wylie Hubbard, The Belleville Outfit, Hayes Carll and Sarah Jarosz.


    Wanee: Allmans, Panic, Weir, Mule

    2010 WANEE MUSIC FESTIVAL

    THE ALLMAN BROTHERS BAND, WIDESPREAD PANIC, BOB WEIR & MANY MORE

    Wanee 2009 by Saba

    The Allman Brothers Band will lead a cavalcade of outstanding performers in the all-star lineup for the 2010 Wanee Music Festival. The festival runs Friday April 16 through Saturday April 17 at the Spirit of Suwannee Music Park in Live Oak, FL. There will be an expanded Wanee Kick Off Party on Thursday April 15 starting at 3 p.m. Tickets for the Festival go on sale Friday, January 22 at 10 a.m.

    The Allman Brothers Band and Widespread Panic will perform Friday and Saturday night of the Festival. Other performers include: Gov’t Mule; Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi; Bob Weir, Rob Wasserman, & Jay Lane are Scaring the Childern; Stephen Stills; The Black Keys; Dr. John; Hot Tuna Electric; 7 Walkers featuring Bill Kreutzmann & Papa Mali; JJ Grey & Mofro; Johnny Winter; George Clinton & Parliament Funkadelic; The Funky Meters; The Wailers; Sharon Jones and The Dap-Kings; North Mississippi Allstars; A Family Affair with Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk (performing Sly & The Family Stone); Jaimoe’s Jasssz Band; Chuck Leavell with The Randall Bramblett Band; Particle; Oteil and Kofi Burbridge with The Lee Boys; Col. Bruce Hampton; Devon Allman’s Honeytribe; Scrapomatic; Bobby Lee Rodgers Trio and Bonobos Convergence.

    TWO DAY GENERAL ADMISSION FESTIVAL TICKETS:

    -$158.00 from January 22nd – February 22

    -$178.00 from February 23rd – April 14

    -$188.00 Gate Price (April 15th – 17th)

    All prices include the Expanded Wanee Kick Off Party on Thursday April 15 starting at 3 p.m. Tickets are available at Music Today and LiveNation.com.

    VIP TICKETS:

    VIP tickets are $353 and will be available on a limited basis. All VIP credentials will be available at the park and can be picked up on April 15th or 16th.
    VIP Tickets Include: (1) Two day pass to the festival, VIP Parking, VIP Hospitality Tent with catering, Discounted Beverages, Private Restrooms, Special concert viewing for the Peach Stage, Wanee Festival t-shirt and poster, VIP Welcome Party Thursday Night. VIP Tickets are available at Music Today and LiveNation.com

    For more on Wanee check our 2009 review here.


    Austin City Limits | 10.02 – 10.04 | Texas

    Words by: Sarah Hagerman | Images by: Daniel Perlaky, Manny Moss & Matt Ellis

    Austin City Limits Festival :: 10.02.09 – 10.04.09 :: Zilker Park :: Austin, TX

    Austin City Limits 2009 by Moss

    Out on my apartment’s splintery balcony, my cowboy boots are caked in a heaping mess of dried earth. I’ll clean them later, but right now I have some rain-spotted, mud-splattered, and sun-baked notebook pages to sort through. Spread out over 8 stages, 130 bands had their moments in the spotlight at the eighth annual Austin City Limits Music Festival. With a newly gussied up Zilker Park and an early October weekend, organizers C3, not to mention us patrons, were definitely hoping for cooler temperatures and less dust. Careful what you wish for.

    In typical Texas weather-fashion, Ma Nature gave us a gorgeous Friday, then rained hard on Saturday, which turned Sunday into a humid muck pit. But, you got to roll with the punches, and I overheard folks matter-of-factly, and very truthfully, remark, “Well, we’ve needed this rain.” It’s been a dry, hot summer in Texas (where summer, for all intents and purposes, stretches into October), and that strange wet stuff falling from the sky washed us straight into autumn as we celebrated the end of festival season 2009 in a city known for live music.

    For this writer, it began with the first pre-festival stroll down Barton Springs Road, as we walked past vendors setting up shop on every available piece of sidewalk space, hocking assorted wares from pizza to pipes to ponchos, all in the midst of the businesses and restaurants, which were setting up their own clever hooks to draw the festivarians in (like the DJ on top of Daily Juice or the beers-to-go at Uncle Billy’s). ACL ended on the last notes of an absolutely killer Pearl Jam show. Throughout the weekend, I just went with the flow, and this is where it took me. Although my beleaguered boots might grumble otherwise, it was definitely worth it.

    Friday, 10.02

    Sarah Siskind :: 12:40-1:20 p.m. :: BMI Stage

    Sara Watkins & John Paul Jones :: ACL 09 by Moss

    It’s no mystery why Nashville-based singer-songwriter Siskind is well loved in the bluegrass and folk communities, where her songs have been covered by the likes of Alison Krauss and Bon Iver. The gravel in her words reminded me of Lucinda Williams, with a mind towards the naked eccentricities of the human heart. Her voice sounded a bit raspy due to illness, but she bravely powered through her arresting set. “One Step Closer” was so full of naked yearning it was hard not to feel it in the pit of your stomach when she sang the line, “I’ll do whatever it takes/ To get one step closer to you.” The song floated with glistening, fractured guitar lines, while closer “Conversation With Fear” was dense and rousing, as her backing band’s low end growled under her sweeping strumming. She definitely does her own thing, and it’s awe-inspiring.

    Sara Watkins :: 1:20-2:00 p.m. :: Austin Ventures Stage

    Former Nickel Creeker Watkins has a solo album produced by John Paul Jones, and that honeyed voice and sneakily aggressive, liquid fiddle pack a powerful punch. Stomping around in some fabulous knee high red boots, inspiring severe footwear envy on my part, she commanded the stage, in spite of New Orleans’ The Knux blaring nearby. Joined by her brother Sean Watkins on guitar, as well as Sebastian Steinberg on bass and Don Heffington on percussion, she drew some notable guests, including Austin singer-songwriter David Garza who joined her for his tune “Too Much,” which she covers on her latest album. And Jones himself busted out the mando on the uber-pretty original “All This Time,” Jimmy Martin’s well-loved “Hold What You Got,” and John Hartford’s “Long Hot Summer Day,” which takes advantage of Watkins’ vocal range. As Watkins and Jones threw down together, beaming as they leaned into one mic, it was a wonderful chance to witness the long reach of a musical maestro whose love of Americana roots runs as deep as his love of mighty rock & roll.

    Blitzen Trapper :: 1:30-2:30 p.m. :: Dell Stage

    John Medeski :: ACL 09 by Perlaky

    Soft grass in between our fingers and the sun baking our heads, Blitzen Trapper’s mellow sound was certainly appropriate for the moment. But considering the hype around this band, I guess I was expecting more. Still, their sound was warm, hearkening back to the hums of my parents’ folk records. I enjoyed the use of the Claviola on “Lady on the Water,” but then the next band I saw completely blew the use of that particular instrument out of the proverbial water. However, this set soundtracked a moment of peace, as the festival grounds were still sparsely populated and the ground was still luscious underfoot.

    Medeski Martin & Wood :: 2:30-3:30 p.m. :: LIVESTRONG Stage

    Every time I see them, it’s a wildcard, and that’s why I keep coming back. I wish they had done an after-show, because I’m used to seeing this trio in sweaty clubs where they have three hours to let their madness roam through such sardine-packed spaces, but MMW pulled out a huge sound on the cavernous main stage. Starting out tight and hella freaky, they quickly pulled out the crazed basement scientist combustion and let the chemicals spill where they may. Medeski is always a little spooky to watch, as he is totally possessed by his tools at hand, playing a screaming organ line on one keyboard while his other hand laid down a rumbling piano strata. Wood drew out the highest notes possible on his bass, while Martin threw down dense rhythms for Medeski to writhe all over. And only MMW could make a cowbell and Claviola duet sound like the absolute most badass thing you’ve ever heard. A burly looking guy held some devil horns aloft in the audience, and that was the most appropriate sentiment for the deliciously dark feelings they inspired.

    The Avett Brothers :: 2:30-3:30 p.m. :: AMD Stage

    Todd Snider :: ACL 09 by Moss

    Oh, the heartbreaking scheduling at ACL. I tore myself away from the MMW fire to catch the end of this set. These brothers held me last year at Bonnaroo in their catharsis, in a moment that weekend where I needed it most, and I had to pay my respects. Running across Zilker, I found Scott Avett, the red bandana across his forehead soaked while Seth Avett looked about ready to melt away in his light blue western shirt. They certainly pour themselves into every word, letting the syllables bleed with a vulnerable conviction that completely draws one in. The encore of “The Perfect Space” from the latest album, I And Love And You, exemplified this, as Scott sang, “I want to have friends that I can trust/ That love me for the man I’ll become/ Not the man that I was,” while he plaintively played the keyboards. In the middle it broke out into a full-on stadium worthy rock pump that had the whole band screaming red-faced. Americana, punk, pop, whatever label you slap on them, at the end of the day, the Avetts are the sound of release, pure and simple.

    Todd Snider :: 3:30-4:15 p.m. :: Austin Ventures Stage

    He may share his opinions with you, but he won’t share them because he thinks they’re smart or they’re important. No, he will only share them with you because they rhyme. Easily in my top three sets of the day, Snider charmed the crowd with his affable, refreshingly humble and self-effacing vibe. But under that aw-shucks stoner exterior lays a razor sharp wit that slices directly to the absurdity bone, a keen outsider whose sleepy eyelids belie 20/20 vision. He played favorites like “Ballad of the Kingsmen” and “Easy Money” alongside cuts from his latest album, The Excitement Plan, like “Greencastle Blues” and “America’s Favorite Pastime.” Introducing “Pastime,” which tells the tale of Doc Ellis, a pitcher for the Pittsburgh Pirates who threw a no-hitter on LSD, he said that Ellis was “the patron saint of ill-prepared people everywhere.” Afterwards, Snider related his own story about how he quit the football team in high school to hang out with “the burnouts from the smoke pit,” eating mushrooms and watching the goalposts turn into Roman candles. The crowd cheered his story of descent into slackerdom. Snider abides, and I for one take some comfort in that, as he’s taking ‘er easy for all us sinners out there.

    The Wood Brothers :: 4:40-5:20 p.m. :: BMI Stage

    Daniel Johnston :: ACL 09 by Perlaky

    It was very cool to witness Chris Wood shedding his seriously out-there jazz clothes for a different sort of getup with his brother Oliver, who laid down some gritty vocals on pure Americana gold. With his steel-bodied guitar slipping and ringing, Oliver grafted pure heat over his brother’s sticky-like-peanut-butter bass lines. Sitting under the outstretched branches of the tree that became me and my husband’s default meeting point for most of the festival, it was the perfect environment to carry that easy feeling Snider gave us over through the rest of the day, as Oliver cheerfully remarked, “It sure smells good out there.”

    Daniel Johnston :: 4:45-5:30 p.m. :: Austin Ventures Stage

    Johnston is an icon in this town, with his artwork swathed across many t-shirts in our fair city (most famously the image of the “Hi, How Are You?” mural that bears his alien creature, Jeremiah the Innocent). Johnston’s struggles with his demons lend an incalculable weight to his songs, which on the surface can seem charmingly simple but have an incredibly raw longing for the salvation of love in the midst of their whimsy. That clash between innocence and the weight of this world is especially heavy when you see him perform, where his hands shake, practically strangling the mic, reading the words from a music stand. His set treated us to songs like the wrenching “Grievances,” the sweet “Living Life,” and a rousing “Speeding Motorcycle,” as well as material from the new album, not to mention a stirring cover of “You’ve Got to Hide Your Love Away,” which had the crowd singing in unison. Beautiful.

    K’naan :: 5:45-6:45 p.m. :: The Wildflower Center Stage

    Starting off with a song he wrote backstage about crossing oceans to be here with us, K’naan proceeded to barrel through a set that had the whole tent hanging on his every word. There’s an undeniable joie-de-vivre about him, and considering that his biography would make most gangsta rappers quake in their Timberlands, you know that shit comes from a very genuine, hard-won place. His powder keg mic moves were lit up by his snappy backing band, and as I fought my way closer into the throng inside the tent, I wrapped myself around the drum beat and shimmied my way as close to the front as I could. He drew us in close with acoustic number “Take a Minute” and an a cappella Somali traditional. Then, he began building, through “Fatima,” a broken-hearted tale of lost love with a twiggy guitar line, through “Bang Bang,” which swiped staccato shots aimed squarely at our dancing shoes. Then, he asked our permission to set the tent on fire, and that spark was “Freedom,” an undeniable flashbulb moment. As the band broke in, uplifting his story of childhood trauma on the streets of Mogadishu into a story of strength, the crowd waved their hands like the flag in the chorus. An absolutely inspiring set from a not-to-be-missed poet warrior.

    Thievery Corporation :: 6:30-7:30 p.m. :: LIVESTRONG Stage

    Thievery Corporation :: ACL 09 by Daniel Perlaky

    Fighting my way into K’naan meant fighting my way out, and I then had to think about things like food and port-a-pottie lines, so I didn’t get to cover as much of Thievery’s set as I’d intended. But they held court over a striking scene, a crowd lost in their hypnotic, deeply tribal pulsations. Somewhere in their music the ancient and the “now” meet, and as I watched the sun wash the buildings of the Austin skyline in shades of pink, it seemed like the rhythms of the wide, organic world and the turntable twitches were melding in a perfect harmony for this magic hour moment.

    John Legend :: 6:30-7:30 p.m. :: AMD Stage

    I had a prime spot to peep some of Legend’s set, and holy hell, can this cat perform! Somehow, he’s slipped past my radar, but I’m going to have to check him out further, because between his back-up singers decked out in sparkling dresses and showing off Motown moves, his firmly buttoned backing band, and his own energy whirling at the center of it all, Legend seduced us with enticing piano ballads and center-stage grabbing vintage soul vigor. He had the crowd at the AMD Stage swooning. That’s some smooth baby-making material.

    Them Crooked Vultures :: 7:30-8:30 p.m. :: Xbox 360 Stage

    John Paul Jones by Perlaky

    This was a glorious mind fuck that had moments of mess for sure, but always came around to testify to the power of loud ass rock and or roll. The lineup involved here – Dave Grohl (Foo Fighters) on drums, where he’s a force of nature, Josh Homme (Queens of the Stone Age) on guitar and vocals, where he’s a weirdly seductive dirty man, and John Paul Jones on bass, who needs no introduction whatsoever, joined by QOTSA guitarist Alain Johannes – was enough to pique my interest. The songs seemed to lean heavily in a QOTSA direction (which is hardly a bad thing), and were executed with a loose, ball-swinging swagger that gave the core trio plenty of room to let things just hang out. Homme’s stage banter was amusing. “This one’s called ‘Scumbag Blues,’” he said, but then after checking in with his bandmates, he turned back to the mic and said, “‘What?!? Oh fuck that, this one’s called ‘Mind Eraser.’” Grohl’s brain destroying skins were the glue, but Jones and Homme both gave the set the metallic propulsion that pushed the whole operation over the edge into the wild ether. This is rock ‘n’ roll with teeth – real big, fuck-off fangs. As the moon rose in the sky, there was certainly some dangerous beast sprouting fur, claws breaking through its skin as it howled to the heavens.

    Yeah Yeah Yeahs :: 8:30-9:45 p.m. :: AMD Stage

    Honestly, after the Vultures capping off a day of stellar sets, I was sort of feeling let down on the headliners. It was a bummer that the Beastie Boys understandably had to cancel, and the replacement choice wasn’t inspiring a lot of excitement for me. I liked the YYY’s first album, but never really got seriously into them (and I really don’t dig that “Zero” song from new album It’s Blitz!, mostly because I can’t seem to escape it every time I turn on the radio). But I gave them a shot, and I honestly had a riot at their set. Say what you want about this band, but Karen O is one hell of a performer. She really understands how to bring theatrics into the rock & roll arena, and anyone who can’t appreciate that should probably go burn all their David Bowie and Jane’s Addiction records, for starters. With a backdrop swirling around a giant eyeball, O pulled her limp rag doll body throws, pogo jumps, and suggestive mic swallowings in an outfit that resembled some kind of disco kachina doll (it’s a party in the pueblo and everyone’s invited!). From a fashion designer’s perspective, it must be fun to sew for this lady, because you could clear out your scrap closet and somehow O will make it work. And that admittedly superficial surface observation speaks volumes about why the YYYs work as a band – they strut between high fashion and total anarchy, noticeably revolving around O’s slightly chaotic and arresting stage presence. But guitarist Nick Zinner‘s squalls, alongside drummer Brian Chase‘s pure hammer pounding aggression, frame her wackiness with turns that reflect both their older pure garage aggression – the highlight for me was probably a vicious “Pin” from that era – and their newer electro-tinged work. Live, the latter took on a stripped-down, menacing edge. The lead-up into aforementioned “Zero” was murky, with some gruesome keyboard groans, that built the tension up to the point where the bright, breakout chorus felt well-earned. I may keep the radio on for this one after all. And eyeball balloons bouncing through the crowd? Win!

    Kings of Leon :: 8:30-10:00 p.m. :: LIVESTRONG Stage

    Karen O – Yeah Yeah Yeahs :: ACL 09 by Perlaky

    I left YYYs to catch some of KOL. Their first two albums were stellar testaments to the raw, testosterone-laden power of young dudes making rock & roll, and their third seemed to show promising growth, but If Only By Night is an astonishing exercise in mediocrity. Yet, this album was the one that made them huge. Go figure. What I caught of this set didn’t change my feelings on that front whatsoever. To be fair, their set was plagued by muffled sound, but older songs, like “The Bucket” seemed slowed down, and the new material elicited cheers, while I was left severely underwhelmed and wishing the Followills would just grow back their beards and get some mess on them. I heard the next day that Eddie Vedder came out and joined them for an encore, tambourine in hand, of “Slow Night So Long.” But I was already long gone. By comparison, the YYYs performed with conviction and bruises, which happily dictated the stage I ultimately found myself at to close out my day at Zilker.

    Late Night: Deer Tick at Emo’s Indoors

    After the action in the park closes for the night, the city lights up with after-shows, from official ACL events like STS9 at Stubb’s, to the rsvp-only Broken Social Scene show at the Power Plant, to Lotus and Evol Intent at Aces Lounge, which ran until 4 a.m. each day.

    In the hustle leading up to the fest, my husband and I purchased tickets for Deer Tick at Emo’s Indoors, and although I wondered later if I made the right choice, with so many other options out there, it was just the tonic we needed after a day tromping around. After refueling at our apartment, we made it down in time to catch the tail end of the second opener, Henry Clay People, who were energetic, if a little unmemorable.

    I honestly didn’t know much about Deer Tick going in, other than they were an Americana band from Providence, RI, my old stomping grounds, and they were getting some seriously good word of mouth. But count me sold after this weekend. Opening with some riffing on Bo Diddley’s “Who Do You Love?” they quickly took us on a trip that packed as much from The Basement Tapes swagger as it did from grungy blues, rolling down the highways of Hank Williams. John J. McCauley III‘s two-pack-of-Marlboro Reds a day voice (as my husband put it, “I pictured him looking like a pirate”) puts serious grizzle into his words, as his bandmates mouthed along to the songs, which is always a good sign. This group believes in what they are doing, but have a damn good time doing it. From slow dancing twangy numbers to some riotous rocking with a slide guitar meltdown, they brought us to last call, leaving us hooked and baited to set our alarms to see them the next day.

    Continue reading for Saturday’s coverage of ACL…

    Saturday, 10.03

    Deer Tick :: 11:45-12:30 p.m. :: Dell Stage

    ACL 09 by Perlaky

    The steely sky was spitting as we approached Zilker. We were still yawning from the night before, but the boys in Deer Tick seemed raring to go. They must have been as sleep deprived as us, but they certainly didn’t show it. Their originals, like the open-palmed, weathered “Ashamed,” have a timeless glow, while energetic covers of Townes Van Zandt’s “White Freightliner” and the celebratory “La Bamba” had loose limbs waving in the drizzle. Well versed in the bibles of American music and rock & roll, they are certainly a band to keep an eye on as they mark their own entries in those pages.

    Alberta Cross :: 12:30-1:15 p.m. :: LIVESTRONG Stage

    Brits and Swedes who have resettled in Brooklyn, this outfit reminded me a bit of a rootsier version of Austin’s Black Angels, with their emphasis on fuzz and swirling textures, and a strong dose of Crazy Horse thrown in for good measure. Lead singer Petter Ericson Stakee has an otherworldly set of scaffolding shaking pipes, and looked like he could have stepped out of the yellowed pages of newsprint from a 1960′s Rolling Stone. Ending on a song entitled, appropriately, “ATX,” that started off in a hum and ended on a scream, they were intense enough to set a storm brewing onstage that matched the increasingly ominous weather.

    The Felice Brothers :: 1:15-2:00 p.m. :: Dell Stage

    Felice Bros :: ACL 09 by Perlaky

    “We were created by a corporation called Dell,” Ian Felice said, in one of the only comments on the corporate sponsorship of the festival, “but we failed miserably.” It’s true that if there is a group that is the antithesis of everything shiny, sleek, and disposable, it would be this band of brothers, who travel the byways and overlooked back roads where salvation comes in the form of a bottle, a fist fight and back seat romp, and someone with itchy trigger fingers is always a few steps away. A consistently captivating bunch to watch, Ian and Christmas leap up to lean over the drum kit, truly embodying the music from their physical demeanor to their fresh out of the van appearance. The interplay of Greg Farley and James Felice‘s fiddle and keys gave us a sinister, slinky buildup to “Greatest Show On Earth.” Later in the set, as Farley rose from his knees, where he’d been swaying in possession during “River Jordon,” he picked up a washboard, and Ian Felice picked up his accordion. The unmistakable opening notes of “Frankie’s Gun” were met with whoops from the crowd, many of who mouthed the words with passion equal to Farley’s onstage. This was our moonshine to get us moving, and to paraphrase “White Limousine,” The Felice Brothers gave us just a little red to paint the park.

    !!! :: 2:00-3:00 p.m. :: AMD Stage

    Definitely one of my top sets of the whole weekend, !!! whipped the crowd into a frenzy, under a cloudy but momentarily dry sky that looked like it just might give us a break for awhile. Bringing a neon club vibe to the early afternoon set, frontman Nick Offer commented on how he had his coffee earlier than usual to get amped for their performance. And was he ever amped, shooting across the barrier and dancing with freaky arm flails and suggestive hip juts. He jumped into the crowd, where he was ravenously swallowed up by the jumping mess of bodies, only to be spit out so he could leap back onstage. Spandex-stretchy, leggy guitar lines, throbbing disco beats, funkotron sax solos and trumpet flourishes – if this set didn’t get you grooving, I would have called the medics to check your pulse. Highlights included ode-to-one-night-stands “Must Be the Moon” and “Heart of Hearts,” which saw Offer banging on the dual drummers’ cymbals, and closer, the aptly named “Intensify.” !!! showed a refreshing lack of pretension, with songs focused squarely on screwing, drugging and shaking your ass with abandon. This is everything dance music should be – dirty, sexy, sweaty, and a little bit messy.

    Grizzly Bear :: 3:00-4:00 p.m. :: Dell Stage

    Bill Kreutzmann w/ Papa Mali :: ACL 09 by Perlaky

    After the high energy of !!!, Grizzly Bear, although quite lovely, felt like a bit of a comedown. It mostly had to do with the huge, noisy crowd at the Dell Stage and the quiet sound, but it was hard for me to feel totally absorbed in this show. This band requires an ear tuned to the pin-needle fine details and a hyper-attentive audience, as the silver slivers and constantly changing sonic tapestry that make up their stunning 2009 album Veckatimest (JamBase review) attest to, and it was hard to capture all of those pieces in this setting. Ed Droste‘s high, sweet voice still rang through the din though, and “Fine for Now” cascaded in crystalline surges. I look forward to seeing them again, when my mood and theirs matches better. They got shout-outs from both The Felice Brothers and !!!, so they certainly draw a diverse fan base who respects their uncanny approach to songcraft.

    Papa Mali :: 3:30-4:15 p.m. :: Austin Ventures Stage

    Despite some early tech problems, understandable in the weather, as the skies opened pretty much as soon as Papa’s set was slated to start, the propulsive version of “I Know You Rider” and a nasty take on “Little Sadie” gave us reason to charge forward. Bill Kreutzmann, who has been joining Papa Mali during the last year on various projects, of course, gave us a hearty dose of his drumming so we could spin pure tribal-style in the rain, and the sousaphone player was also a standout, keeping a bass beat with ass-smacking thump. As the rain pelted down on us, an intrepid member of the tech crew scaled the scaffolding in the back of the stage to cover the lights with plastic bags. It was too wet to take notes, but sometimes, all you need is to dance to “Bertha” in the rain. It’s better than therapy, as you catch other people’s glances singing along, raising your big ole Texas sized beers to the crying skies.

    Flogging Molly :: 4:00-5:00 p.m. :: AMD Stage

    Flogging Molly by Perlaky

    The water was whipping down in diagonal sheets during Flogging Molly, causing frontman Dave King to remark that he needed windshield wipers for his glasses because, “All I can see are spots.” If he could have seen the crowd, he would have taken in a passionate throng at the front, carousing in spite of the rain, raising their arms and singing the words with their soaking faces turned towards the sky in complete ecstasy. With amphetamine, punked-up Irish drinking songs, with tin whistles and fierce fiddles, these silver-tongued storytellers brought out the Irish in all of us. A big standout for me was “If I Ever Get Out of This World Alive,” whose title could very well be a nod to Hank Williams, delivered with the spitfire of Joe Strummer. At this point I realized my five-dollar poncho that I bought from some hippie on Barton Springs Road was completely soaked through, but no matter; I just stood under the trees and pogo-ed my shivers away through the end of their set. Note to self: Invest in proper rain gear.

    Levon Helm Band :: 6:00-7:00 p.m. :: LIVESTRONG Stage

    Helm couldn’t sing under doctor’s orders, having just had throat polyps removed a week earlier, but that didn’t stop his spirit, and he was all joy behind that kit. Guitarist Larry Campbell took over the vocal reins for Levon on a couple songs, including a classic “Tennessee Jed,” which is on his latest album, Electric Dirt, and got into a fiery duel with Helm on mando during a jiving “Deep Ellum Blues,” which had some tuba thrown in for a twist. When Amy Helm and Teresa Williams switched off verses on “It Makes No Difference,” one of The Band’s best numbers, I dug my boots in the mud to keep myself steady while I swayed, drinking deep from their well. Closer “Chest Fever” had the horn section blaring and the organ wailing, drawing night in around us with a baptism of sound to match Mother Nature’s swell. The warm grin on Helm’s face as he left the stage said more than words could. This is one humble legend and we’re lucky he’s out there.

    Sound Tribe Sector 9 :: 7:00-8:00 p.m. :: Xbox 360 Stage

    The tent for DeVotchKa was rammed with folks hiding from the weather, so I thought I would reacquaint myself with STS9, who I hadn’t seen in a few years. I stood towards the back of the crowd to take in their light show, which was easily one of the best of the festival, as the screens behind them whirled with imagery and the white lights swirled above the crowd, revealing hands and pockets of dancers in the sea below. They kept the show hurtling at a breakneck pace, ominous groans shifting into bass grooves and moments of twinkling space, mostly hitting upon angular trance movements. The set ended in a more old school STS9 fashion, with Hunter Brown breathlessly flying across the fretboard and the band coming to collectively rest on one soaring note.

    Dave Matthews Band :: 8:00-10:00 p.m. :: LIVESTRONG Stage

    Dave Matthews Band :: ACL 09 by Ellis

    With the mud sliding full force by this time, we had to watch our step as me made our way precariously down through the crowd assembled at the LIVESTRONG Stage, with the lasers from Ghostland Observatory – who I heard mostly great reports on the next day – forming a clear line in the sky over our head. I’d never actually seen Dave Matthews live, although back in my younger days, I will admit that one of the first CDs I bought with my own hard-earned babysitting money was Under the Table and Dreaming. In a weird coincidence, the other CD I bought was Pearl Jam’s Vs., so this ACL had me reflecting on the past more than a few times. I remember when I first heard Under The Table, it was a refreshing respite, at least to my ears that were filled with grunge and punk rock, utterly different from most of the music in my collection, not to mention most of the music on the radio. It’s easy to forget that when you look at the massive machine they’ve become since their humble beginnings, and Matthews’ vocally appreciative stage presence at ACL made me think he isn’t one to easily forget that.

    With the force of their instrumentation, DMB create a potent train of sound, especially on punchier songs like “Shake Me Like a Monkey” from their newest album, Big Whiskey and the Groo Grux King. The highlight for me was definitely the jam during “Jimi Thing,” with its swampy and lofty turns and a nasty trumpet and sax battle between Rashawn Ross and Jeff Coffin, where Ross worked that mute to its muckiest effect. Matthews then scatted with raucous grunts. They were well-oiled, keeping the whole thing tight and moving into a sly sing-song by Matthews: “You’re a sexy motherfucker/ shaking that ass.” A killer cover of “Burning Down to House,” and especially the line, “Hold tight, we’re in for nasty weather,” had the crowd shrieking, as Ross and Matthews wove their vocal lines together.

    I made my way to the back to get a sense of the scale of the audience, and it was sweet to see people with arms around each other, mouthing the words to older songs like “So Much to Say” and “Ants Marching.” Although they may not be my scriptures, I appreciate the passion and community of real fans when I see it, and they’ve certainly found a band that gives them what they want with undeniable acumen. There’s a lot of hope in this music, and lord knows that can be in short supply these days. I have to say, DMB certainly gave me some reasons to grasp those elusive feathers as I headed out of Zilker into the night.

    Late Night: The Felice Brothers at Emo’s Indoors

    The sidewalks glistened on our pedicab ride downtown (big props to our hard working driver), the festivarians still chasing down music in the muggy night. Although part of me had wondered if I shouldn’t have bought tickets to see a band I missed during the day, I absolutely had no regrets on this decision. The night shows can offer you something different, or even just more of what you love. And although there was a bounty to choose from, I’m glad I went with what I loved.

    This show was incredibly intimate, with maybe a hundred heads or so, and counted amongst those were all of Deer Tick. Likeminded musical co-conspirators, they were brought onstage for a rousing rendition of Townes Van Zandt’s “Two Hands,” where McCauly jokingly tried to steal Farley’s Yankees hat. Drawing heavily from their 2008 self-titled album, we were close enough to see the beads of sweat on the Felices’ foreheads, while those of us down on the floor slung arms around strangers for “Whiskey In My Whiskey” and “Ballad of Lou the Welterweight.” If Bob Dylan and The Band drew on what Greil Marcus dubbed “old weird America,” what we witnessed this night was the rumblings of “new weird America,” and there ain’t no place I’d rather be.

    Continue reading for Sunday’s coverage of ACL…

    Sunday, 10.04

    Reverend Peyton’s Big Damn Band :: 1:00-2:00 p.m. :: The Wildflower Center Stage

    The B-52′s :: ACL 09 by Perlaky

    Having spent my night getting rowdy with the Felices, my first show was Reverend Peyton, and he certainly got me revved for our last day at Zilker. This band would be perfect on the Squidbillies soundtrack, with song titles like “My Brother Stole a Chicken from the Fort Lang Zoo” and the infectiously catchy “Your Cousin’s on ‘Cops’.” Both of these songs, as Peyton claimed is the case for all his tunes, are apparently based on true stories. With his wife Breezy Peyton twirling her washboard over her head, his brother drummer Jayme Peyton pounding with punk rock fury, and the Rev’s TV-preacher-ready vocals and throaty steel-bodied guitar, they had the tent testifying revival style. These proud Indiana rednecks were the best damn way to start a Sunday!

    The B-52′s :: 2:00-3:00 p.m. :: AMD Stage

    I admittedly was only familiar with their three biggest songs going in – “Love Shack,” “Rock Lobster,” and “Roam” – and so I assumed this show was simply going to be some good, nostalgic fun. But, this easily came in as one of my favorite sets of weekend. Seriously skilled musicians and jubilant performers, The B-52′s create their own quirky world where you just have to throw your hands up and surrender. With the huge Austin dragonflies swooping over the crowd, a diverse demographic of old school fans and folks like me who probably knew them best from “Love Shack” being played at high school dances, they commanded the stage. The three lead singers – the soprano doo-wops and squeals of Kate Pierson and Cindy Wilson, standing on either side of Fred Schneider, who distinctively delivers every line with the straight-faced seriousness of an emphatic supermarket sales announcer – saved those big hits for the end, with a loose take on “Shack” doused with some funk, but everything leading up to it was fried gold. A Cramps-like jitter snakes through their low end, slithering under the surf guitar waves that are scattered with sounds that could be pulled from B-movies where giant foam aliens rum amuck eating teenagers pulled from shiny convertibles. And I loved their wry use of language, whether it was the deliciously ironic ode to the mall “Funplex,” (where Schneider proclaims, with proud irony, “I’m at the mall on a diet pill!”) or “Love in the Year 3000,” which had the Rocky Horror-worthy image “in the spandex spiral vortex,” this Athens, Georgia outfit fearlessly shook their freak thang and the crowd responded in kind.

    Jyspi :: 2:40-3:20 p.m. :: BMI Stage

    E. Wennerstrom – Heartless Bastards
    ACL 09 by Perlaky

    On my way to the Dell Stage, I was called to this outfit by their dueling fiddle skills. I’m a sucker for anything bluegrass or bluegrass-related, and this Nashville group, three sisters and a brother, plus their backing duo on bass and drums, really delivered on the few songs I caught. Although they have a bit of a CMT-friendly hot girl image going on, they really pulled it out with vigor and heavy drive like Cornmeal, and more than a touch of the Dixie Chicks to keep it sugary. I enjoyed their distinctly feminine humor, with songs about flirting with officers to avoid speeding tickets and reconsidering writing a fuck-off message on a soon to be ex-lover’s mirror (“I don’t want to waste good lipstick on you”). Think I’m going to have to investigate further.

    Heartless Bastards :: 3:00-4:00 p.m. :: Dell Stage

    Drawing heavily from their latest release, The Mountain, Wennerstrom and co. played a solid set, with their simmering power washing over the crowd gathered at the Dell Stage. A fiddle player wove some mysterious energy through “So Quiet” and “Had to Go,” and the stirring call to personal arms “Hold Your Head High” was in my own head the rest of the day as I felt my toes starting to ache in my boots from slipping and sliding through the muddy fields. With the sun breaking through to unveil a deep blue sky, the Bastards gave us plenty of true grit.

    Ben Sollee :: 4:00-5:00 p.m. :: The Wildflower Center Stage

    One of my happier discoveries of the festival was Sollee, who I was mainly familiar with as the cello player from Abigail Washburn‘s fab outfit The Sparrow Quartet. Under the tent, the crowd was hushed, held in rapt attention, and between the delicious shade and the quiet, it felt like a much-needed sanctuary where one could recharge their batteries. His cello picking had turns both feathery and thunderous, as his soulful voice traveled between hushed breaking points and clear vehemence in equal measure. Joined by a fiddle player and a drummer, his musical style draws on bits of jazz, pop, and roots, but is so seamlessly blended and filtered through his lyrical imagination that it becomes something captivating, fresh and completely his own. His words were great, too, from the wry gender stereotype commentary of “Boys Don’t Cry” to “Panning for Gold,” which featured some striking imagery, such as, “I saw God in the forest/ Teaching tai chi to the trees.” Ending on a great cover of Cat Stevens’ “Wild World,” this was flat-out stellar.

    Dirty Projectors :: 5:00-6:00 p.m. :: Dell Stage

    Mosshart – The Dead Weather
    ACL 09 by Perlaky

    I’m still not sure what to make of this. It was definitely one of the more intriguing sets I caught this weekend, but I’m not sure I quite found the heart in their mission. Still, the Projectors are really trying something unique, and they obviously believe in it, which makes it understandable why someone like David Byrne would champion them. There’s simply no easy description for this band. Stitched together from so many pieces in unexpected patterns, every time I thought the music was about to fall apart, they would twist a knob, add a shake of this and a pinch of that, and, somehow, the whole mixture would gel. Then another twist and we’d be somewhere totally different. The unpredictability alone was captivating. One song started off with a serious blues kick, then the combined voices of Dave Longstreth, Amber Coffman and Angel Deradoorian sailed over the top. Drummer Brian McComber was a real standout for me, tying everything together with the beat and then snapping the thread. At one point he just threw driving beat after beat under Longstreth’s guitar noodling, each one heavier than the last. Someone in the front of the crowd waved a plastic battle axe aloft in approval.

    The Dead Weather :: 6:00-7:00 p.m. :: LIVESTRONG Stage

    Jack White‘s latest group, which sees him taking over on the drums, is heavy on the psych fuzz and manic blues, with plenty of sonic heft to pump your fists to. With a stage backdrop reminiscent of a Rorschach test, The Dead Weather definitely tap into some of the nightmarish recesses of the psyche. I was impressed with commanding frontwoman Alison Mosshart‘s moves, but the beginning of the set featured a lot of meandering and some plodding moments. About halfway through, it picked up, and as the sun drew us into a golden glow, the Weather drew us into a mental breakdown filled with heavy guitar squalls, pounding bass and some wild vocals from White and Mosshart. I do seriously dig the grind of “Treat Me Like Your Mother,” where Mosshart sneers, “C’mon look me the eye/ You wanna try to tell a lie/ I’ll bet you can’t and you know why/ I’m just like your mother.” She delivers the words with such acidic venom that one would surely think twice before trying to pull a fast one on her. I left the set wowed by but not yet in love with White’s new outfit.

    Michael Franti & Spearhead :: 7:00-8:00 p.m. :: Dell Stage

    Michael Franti & Spearhead :: ACL 09 by Perlaky

    From the moment he stepped on the stage to the deafening cheers that hung in the air after he left, Franti owned every second of his stage time. The crowd was in the palm of his hand, and it was easily the most enthusiastic throng I saw at the Dell Stage all weekend, probably one of the more enthused of the festival. Say what you want about Franti (yes, he did ask us how we were feeling a few times), the guy knows how to work a crowd. As Spearhead seamlessly blended their hip hop, reggae, and rock elements into a riotous show, Franti would leap into the crowd, speak passionately about the power of music to bring folks together, and even moonwalked across the stage at one point to a “Billy Jean” tease. His absolute sincerity about what he’s doing can’t help but command your respect. I tend to like my music with more blood and bruises, but he thoroughly breaks down my resistance every time I see him. Playing well-known crowd-pleasers like “East to the West,” “Everyone Deserves Music,” and “Yell Fire,” the set was turbo charged from start to finish, where several little kids sweetly came onstage for closer “Say Hey (I Love You).” “Clouds, we thank you for not raining down on us right now,” Franti said at one point, noting, “It’s a beautiful night, y’all.” With the sunset streaking pink across a blue-gray sky, he was certainly right about that.

    Dan Auerbach :: 7:15-8:00 p.m. :: Austin Ventures Stage

    I ventured over to take in some of Auerbach’s set. Sinewy, meaty guitars to sink your teeth into, two ripping drummers (one of whom is Patrick Hallahan from MMJ), and slices-of-woe lyrics like, “I’m falling apart with all this money and trouble,” kept things draped in the blues. Rollicking “My Last Mistake” had a radio friendly rock strut, or at least it would have back in the day when Tom Petty ruled the airwaves with brighter horizons and a bar band shimmy. Auerbach and co. were obviously enjoying themselves immensely, and with the Girl Talk crowd pumping to our right and the Spearhead crowd wildly waving to our left, at that moment, Auerbach’s center of gravity felt like the most intimate corner of the bustling festival.

    Pearl Jam :: 8:00-10:00 p.m. :: LIVESTRONG Stage

    Eddie Vedder :: ACL 09 by Perlaky

    For many folks, this was the set of the weekend, and ACL couldn’t have closed out on a better note. Playing a set that pulled ace after ace, Pearl Jam came in viciously swinging with the open wound yowl of “Why Go” followed by “Corduroy,” which was drawn out something fierce at the end, as Vedder threw himself around with his guitar. The next two hours were big and heavy, giant foot stomps in the mud. The ending of “Daughter” was particularly thick, as Vedder hypnotically sang, “The shades go down,” with muffled intensity over Jeff Ament‘s quaking bass line and twisted guitar work by Mike McCready and Stone Gossard. Vedder’s vocals then broke down into wails and the lines spiraled down into blackness. “Thank you, Austin, you are some good singers,” he remarked at the end. Although I tend to get a little spun out by big crowds, there was something seriously awe inspiring about thousands upon thousands of voices raised to the heavens singing along at once. Vedder remarked on how the band hadn’t been back to Austin since 1995: “I just want to apologize. I don’t know what the fuck we were thinking.”

    Besides the raw muscle Pearl Jam is known for – and lord did we get beaten to a pulp throughout this set, especially in “Hail, Hail,” “Insignificance,” and “Don’t Go” – what was so cool about this set was some of the details and quieter moments, the spaces between the thunder. I was particularly psyched to hear “Modern Girl,” a song by the now sadly defunct Sleater-Kinney, teased at the end of “Not For You,” as Vedder rumbled, “My whole life/ Is like the picture of a sunny day,” or to watch the moon disappear and reappear behind a veil of clouds as he sang, “See the path cut by the moon,” in “Unknown Thought,” or the moment where Vedder looked wide-eyed over the crowd and said rather wistfully, “It looks like a fucking ocean… It’s beautiful.”

    Ben Harper, who Vedder informed us he had stayed up drinking with until 8:30 that morning, “figuring everything out,” came out for their first encore, and they did a song called “Jazzy Odyssey” before slinking into “Red Mosquito,” (from their vastly underrated 1996 album No Code) before busting out “Do the Evolution,” where Vedder appeared to collapse for a moment, then suddenly shot himself back up to throttle the mic before charging straight into “Alive.” The second encore featured Perry Farrell (no kidding!) on “Mountain Song,” perhaps hinting at an ACL headliner to come next year. Or perhaps Farrell just didn’t want to be left out of the party. Finally, they sent us into the night with “Keep On Rockin’ In The Free World,” a tune they own as much as Neil Young’s original version.

    Eddie Vedder – Pearl Jam :: ACL 09 by Perlaky

    As we left the festival grounds and headed back to my apartment, our walk took us through the vendors. On the roof of Daily Juice, a DJ was spinning and various sorts were dancing together – hippies shaking in tie dye dresses, a couple of guys in UT hats, older women in their cowboy finery, sleepy kids slung on parent’s shoulders – representing the diverse cross-section of Austin. I stopped for a moment to watch, my heart still pounding from Pearl Jam. I reflected on how they were the first band I fell in love with when I was young, and, having rediscovered them in the past couple years, I feel I’ve grown with them. Their lyrics are often as much about personal evolution as they are about anger, as much about acceptance and beauty as they are about the self-destructive nature of humanity. One of my favorite songs recently has been “Present Tense,” and in many ways that summed up my experience at ACL this year. No matter the weather or other challenges, the most important thing is to grasp each moment for what it is. I remember standing in the muddy field, surrounded by thousands of other voices, singing that song’s cathartic cry:

    You can spend your time alone
    Redigesting past regrets
    Or you can come to terms and realize
    You’re the only one who cannot forgive yourself
    Ah, makes much more sense to live in the present tense

    My mind was silent, as I simply took those words in. Although that moment has passed into memory, I can only hope some of its wisdom remains.

    Continue reading for more images from ACL 2009…

    Images by: Daniel Perlaky

    Dr. Dog

    Blitzen Trapper

    Chris Wood – MMW

    Thievery Corporation

    Phoenix

    Phoenix

    Dave Grohl – Them Crooked Vultures

    Josh Homme – Them Crooked Vultures

    Dave Grohl – Them Crooked Vultures

    !!!

    !!!

    Papa Mali

    Neon Indian

    Mos Def

    Grizzly Bear

    Ghostland Observatory

    Dave Matthews by Matt Ellis

    The B-52s

    Arctic Monkeys

    L.A.X.

    Dirty Projectors

    The Dead Weather

    The Dead Weather

    JamBase | Austin
    Go See Live Music!


    Las Tortugas IV: Full Schedule, Daily Themes and Single Day Tix

    VOODOO, BOOGIE AND ENCHANTMENT UNDER THE SEA!

    Umph :: 10.31.08 :: by Dave Vann

    With Halloween fast approaching, it’s time to start sewing costumes, carving jack-o’-lanterns and begin thinking about the lovely mischief we’ll get into on All Hallow’s Eve. How about a diverse, cozy music festival with Umphrey’s McGee, Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk, the Grateful Dead’s Bill Kreutzmann and the cream of Northern California’s rock scene, all set amongst Yosemite’s redwoods at a well appointed lodge? Las Tortugas IV – Dance of the Dead takes place Thursday, October 29 – Sunday, November 1 at Evergreen Lodge.

    The festival has just announced their full schedule to help with your holiday weekend planning. Single day tickets are also now on sale. A customizable day-by-day grid can be found here. Even if you can’t make all four days, there’s exciting, diverse options available each day like Umphrey’s on Friday & Saturday, Papa Mali with Kreutzmann on Saturday & Sunday, Tea Leaf Green on Sunday and Dumpstaphunk on Thursday & Friday, along with a packed lineup of top flight musicians including BAG of Trix (Gill, Adams & Brogan of ALO), The Mother Hips, Hot Buttered Rum, New Monsoon, Nathan Moore, Front Street featuring Stu Allen (JGB) and much more. Single day tickets can be purchased here.

    Las Tortugas has also revealed this year’s daily themes, which always bring out a peacock array of fantastic sights at this strongly communal affair, where folks decorate their cabins and share a fantastic distillation of the festival experience at its best. This year’s themes are:

    Thursday: Voodoo Circus
    Friday: Boogie Nights
    Saturday: Halloween
    Sunday’s Jubilee Theme: Enchantment Under the Sea Dance

    Las Tortugas IV hopes you can join in this inspirational, uplifting gathering with one of the strongest festival lineups this fall in a beautiful, thoroughly unique setting.

    -Full Las Tortugas IV schedule here.

    -Four-day and single day tickets here.


    The Grateful Dead: Winterland, June 1977

    THE DEAD SATISFY THE SAN FRAN FAITHFUL

    Winterland, June 1977: The Complete Recordings Spotlights the Grateful Dead’s
    Transcendent Three-Night Run in a Nine-Disc Boxed Set Remastered in HDCD

    The Grateful Dead rolled into San Francisco riding a long streak of hot-damn shows during the spring of 1977, a legendary road trip that many Deadheads agree was a tour for the ages. The band didn’t disappoint the hometown faithful when it took to the stage June 7-9 at Winterland Arena – the Dead’s spiritual home – for one of the group’s most beloved hometown runs. As veteran Dead archivist David Lemieux puts it, “A lot of Deadheads say ’77 is their favorite year. And of these shows, the first night is a Top 15, the second is a Top 10, and the third is a Top 3.”

    WINTERLAND, JUNE 1977: THE COMPLETE RECORDINGS packs every note from those three transcendent nights into nine discs that encompass what might be some of the greatest live Dead ever. A worthy successor to last year’s extraordinary Winterland 1973 collection, this set surges and sighs with the inspired sound of rock’s most unpredictable dance band hard at work, in peak communion.

    WINTERLAND, JUNE 1977 is presented in HDCD, mastered from the original soundboard reels and enhanced using cutting-edge audio engineering technology including Plangent Processes’ state-of-the-art audio-time alignment procedure. Handsomely packaged in a custom archival box, the set contains 68 previously unreleased tracks as well as an extensive, full-color booklet featuring rare photos, a thoughtful essay by Rolling Stone senior editor and Winterland veteran David Fricke, and a few other surprise goodies.

    On sale now exclusively from www.dead.net for $99.99, WINTERLAND, JUNE 1977 will be shipped by the end of September. Fans who order the set before then will also receive an exclusive bonus disc featuring more than an hour of unreleased music recorded live May 12, 1977 at Chicago’s Auditorium Theatre.

    At the time of these recordings, the band included guitarist Jerry Garcia, singer Donna Jean Godchaux, keyboardist Keith Godchaux, drummers Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann, bassist Phil Lesh, and guitarist Bob Weir.

    WINTERLAND, JUNE 1977: THE COMPLETE RECORDINGS

    Track Listing

    Disc 1: 6/7/77

    1. “Bertha”

    2. “Jack Straw”

    3. “Tennessee Jed”

    4. “Looks Like Rain”

    5. “Peggy-O”

    6. “Funniculi Funnicula”

    7. “El Paso”

    8. “Friend Of The Devil”

    9. “The Music Never Stopped”

    Disc 2: 6/7/77

    1. “Scarlet Begonias”

    2. “Fire On The Mountain”

    3. “Good Lovin’”

    4. “Candyman”

    5. “Estimated Prophet”

    6. “He’s Gone”

    7. “Drums”

    Disc 3: 6/7/77

    1. “Samson And Delilah”

    2. “Terrapin Station”

    3. “Morning Dew”

    4. “Around And Around”

    5. “Uncle John’s Band”

    6. “U.S. Blues”

    Disc 4: 6/8/77

    1. “New Minglewood Blues”

    2. “Sugaree”

    3. “Mexicali Blues”

    4. “Row Jimmy”

    5. “Passenger”

    6. “Sunrise”

    7. “Brown-Eyed Women”

    8. “It’s All Over Now”

    9. “Jack-A-Roe”

    10. “Lazy Lightning”

    11. “Supplication”

    Disc 5: 6/8/77

    1. “Bertha”

    2. “Good Lovin’”

    3. “Ramble On Rose”

    4. “Estimated Prophet”

    5. “Eyes Of The World”

    6. “Drums”

    Disc 6: 6/8/77

    1. “The Other One”

    2. “Wharf Rat”

    3. “Not Fade Away”

    4. “Goin’ Down The Road Feeling Bad”

    5. “Johnny B. Goode”

    6. “Brokedown Palace”

    Disc 7: 6/9/77

    1. “Mississippi Half-Step Uptown Toodeloo”

    2. “Jack Straw”

    3. “They Love Each Other”

    4. “Cassidy”

    5. “Sunrise”

    6. “Deal”

    7. “Looks Like Rain”

    8. “Loser”

    9. “The Music Never Stopped”

    Disc 8: 6/9/77

    1. “Samson And Delilah”

    2. “Funniculi Funnicula”

    3. “Help On The Way”

    4. “Slipknot!”

    5. “Franklin’s Tower”

    Disc 9: 6/9/77

    1. “Estimated Prophet”

    2. “St. Stephen”

    3. “Not Fade Away”

    4. “Drums”

    5. “St. Stephen”

    6. “Terrapin Station”

    7. “Sugar Magnolia”

    8. “U.S. Blues”

    9. “One More Saturday Night”

    Dead.net Bonus Disc

    Auditorium Theatre — Chicago — 5/12/1977

    1. “Mississippi Half-Step Uptown Toodeloo”

    2. “Dancing In The Street”

    3. “Terrapin Station”

    4. “Playing In The Band”

    5. “Drums”

    6. “Not Fade Away”

    7. “Comes A Time”

    8. “Playing In The Band”


    Bill Kreutzmann Joins Tortugas

    GRATEFUL DEAD PERCUSSION MARVEL
    TO BE HONORED GUEST AT THIS YEAR’S LAS TORTUGAS HALLOWEEN WEEKEND GATHERING


    Bill Kreutzmann

    The 4th annual installment of Las Tortugas – Dance of the Dead, taking place October 29 – November 1 in Yosemite, CA, is very proud to announce that the legendary drummer and co-founder of the Grateful Dead, Bill Kreutzmann, will be the Honored Guest for this year’s festival. After honoring the Dead’s legacy the past two years with sizzling performances from Melvin Seals & JGB, Las Tortugas is delighted to continue the festival’s warm embrace of the roots of the jam-centric scene at the heart of this intimate, exciting festival. Kreutzmann’s innovative approach to drumming combined with his deep understanding of the power of rock ‘n’ roll and improvisation will be on display as he guests with Papa Mali at Las Tortugas. Las Tortugas is delighted to have Bill on board this year and look forward to the many surprises he’ll unleash from his voluminous trick bag!

    Las Tortugas IV takes place at Evergreen Lodge in Yosemite and will feature performances from Umphrey’s McGee, Dumpstaphunk, Tea Leaf Green, Hot Buttered Rum, Bag of Tricks (Brogan, Adams & Gill of ALO), The Mother Hips, Blue Turtle Seduction, New Monsoon, Nathan Moore, Poor Man’s Whiskey, Pimps of Joytime, Papa Mali, Izabella, Big Light and more. The complete festival schedule and daily themes will be announced soon to aid folks in their holiday weekend planning for this special annual event.

    Tickets for Las Tortugas are on sale now at evergreenhalloween.inticketing.com.

    For more on Las Tortugas, check our coverage of the 2008 event here.


    Phish | 08.02 | Red Rocks Day 4

    Words by: Brian Bavosa | Images by: Dave Vann

    Phish :: 08.02.09 :: Red Rocks Amphitheatre :: Morrison, CO

    src="http://images.jambase.com/bands/phish/090802_vann/21_1.jpg">
    Phish :: 08.02 :: Red Rocks Amphitheatre

    Sunday night closed out Phish‘s famed return to Red Rocks. With hundreds of ticket-less folks outside and word of a tight band to kick off the current tour, hopes were high for the final night. Keeping with the theme of busting out fan favorites, Phish took the stage shortly after 8 p.m. and jumped into Ween‘s “Roses Are Free.” The previous night there was a fan up close who had a sign that read, “Jerry Loves Roses,” and apparently threw roses on the stage during the encore, with a note that quoted one of the songs lines: “Don’t believe the florist,” which Trey supposedly picked up as he walked off stage. I guess he took the hint because it was only the second time the band has played “Roses” since 2000, with the other being a badly butchered version at Alpine Valley in ’04. This version was tight, short and to the point and, like many songs this run, well executed.

    “Wilson” kept the energy high and echoed the call-and-response between the band and crowd, before Trey blistered his ways through this oldie but goodie. An always fun “NICU,” which, in my opinion, has one of the most unique grooves of any Phish number, saw McConnell take charge after Trey demanded, “Play it, Leo!,” a tradition for this tune. An early set “Prince Caspian” and an out of place, mid-set, a cappella “Grind,” which Phish apparently loves singing, sandwiched another big gem, “Reba.” One of Phish’s compositional masterpieces, “Reba” had some intricate portions before a chill section that blasted into a soaring, uplifting jam. It’s one of the easiest tunes to close your eyes and drift off with. This version, sans the whistling at the end, was spot on and allowed me to do just that. Also, somewhere in there, Trey thanked everyone for making this weekend possible and relayed how much the band loved playing at Red Rocks.

    src="http://images.jambase.com/bands/phish/090802_vann/30_1.jpg">
    McConnell – Phish :: 08.02 :: Red Rocks Amphitheatre

    The rest of set one took on a slight resemblance to the Worcester Centrum show in ’03, where the band debuted a tune from each of their solo projects. The second ever rendition of McConnell’s “Beauty of a Broken Heart” from his ’07 album (read the JamBase interview with Page about this release here), and the second ever Gordon tune, debuted earlier this summer, “Sugar Shack,” filled in the latter portions of set one. “Broken Heart” allows Page to shine on vocals in a different way than his normal crooning, and boasts a really solid jam with collective efforts by the four members. “Sugar Shack” is, simply put, a Gordo tune. It screams quirky, bassy and bubbly, and is impossible to not bounce to. “Waste” and “Kill Devil Falls,” the new, 3.0 rocker off the forthcoming new album, Joy, closed a set one that was well played but sort of all over the map.

    The second set held the fireworks and more surprises. “Boogie On Reggae Woman” kicked things off and was super funky, with Gordon’s bombs leading the way and Trey’s sexy guitar licks hot on his heels. This was a very good version, indeed. “You Enjoy Myself,” one of the remaining big guns, was up next, and appropriate since many claim the 6.11.94 version of “YEM” from Red Rocks to be one of, if not the best ever. It showed the band was focused and ready to rock. “YEM” highlighted everything Phish represents – soaring solos, funky bass lines, sharp interplay, trampoline dance moves and a vocal jam at the song’s end – under black-and-white lights that segued seamlessly into “Undermind.” During the vocal jam, a second drum kit was set up and Bill Kreutzmann (Grateful Dead) took a spot behind the kit to help push the set along. This again made me think of the final night at RR in ’96 where Phish welcomed Tim O’Brien to help them close that run out. Anyone that wanted a Jerry Garcia nod the previous night on his birthday would have to settle for Kreutzmann this night. Kreutzmann and Gordon have played together with Scott Murawski, so this sit in is not as far-fetched as some might think, but still awesome nonetheless.

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    Anastasio – Phish :: 08.02 :: Red Rocks Amphitheatre

    A loose and funky “Undermind,” which seemed to take its time (a strength of the song), led into a fierce drum duel between Fishman and Kreutzmann, before Trey hit the opening hook for “Seven Below,” which bobbed and weaved with Trey repeating the infectious licks while Fish and Kreutzmann had a ball holding down the low end with arms flailing to and fro. A complete segueway-fest saw the band dive into some spacier territory for “Also Sprach Zarathustra,” commonly referred to as the “Theme from 2001.” All songs with Kreutzmann were a half step slower – in a good, loose way – and the “2001″ was no exception. In fact, it was so loose and dance-able with all of the empty space moving in and out that it was like trying to eat tomato soup with a fork – things just kept morphing and moving in a slippery way.

    “Waves” saw Kuroda‘s lights shine once more on the majestic setting of Red Rocks before Trey took hold and shook all in attendance with a raging “Character Zero.” An all out fireball of blazing, scorching, heavy guitar rock, “Zero” is a fist-pumper that fires up everyone something fierce. It was a great ending to a super, guest filled second set.

    The encore saw the four members proper come out again and had Trey explain that his daughter had been asking him to play this tune all tour and in turn, dedicated it to “Matt,” whom his daughter said should “keep your hair straight,” before the first “Bittersweet Motel” since Star Lake in ’03. “Bouncing Around the Room,” one of the songs that anyone who casually likes Phish probably knows, was nice to hear, regardless of whether you love or hate it, and featured the typical vocal levels and jam that peters out.

    However, I simply knew the band wasn’t quite done yet, and was hoping for the one song that felt right to close things out: “Slave to the Traffic Light.” My personal, favorite Phish song, “Slave” represents the delicate, raw thunder and emotion that is Phish in a nutshell. It was the perfect closer to a historic, four-night run and return to one of the most amazing venues on Earth. And as “Slave” wowed the crowd with its sheer emotion, it felt more comfortable than a fleece blanket on a cold, winter night. An absolutely perfect conclusion.

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    Phish :: 08.02 :: Red Rocks Amphitheatre

    Phish :: 08.02.09 :: Red Rocks Amphitheatre :: Morrison, CO

    Set I: Roses Are Free, Wilson, NICU, Prince Caspian, Get Back on the Train, Reba, Grind, Beauty of a Broken Heart, Sample in a Jar, Sugar Shack, Waste, Kill Devil Falls
    Set II: Boogie on Reggae Woman, You Enjoy Myself > Undermind* > Drums* > Seven Below* > 2001* > Waves* > Character Zero*
    E: Bittersweet Hotel, Bouncing Around The Room, Slave to the Traffic Light

    * with Billy Kreutzmann

    For more pics of Red Rocks Sunday night go here.

    Phish perform again Wednesday night at Shoreline Amphitheatre in Mountain View, CA. Check back for live Tweets, setlists, pics and full reviews. Complete Phish tour dates available href="http://www.jambase.com/Artists/2698/Phish/Shows">here.

    Just like Leg I of Phish’s Summer Tour, JamBase will be at every stop with more coverage than you’ll find anywhere! Keep up to speed with all things Phish at jambase.com/phish.

    JamBase | Rocked
    Go See Live Music!



    Phish | 08.02 | Red Rocks Photos 4

    Images by: Dave Vann

    Phish :: 08.02.09 :: Red Rocks Amphitheatre :: Morrison, CO

    Set I: Roses Are Free, Wilson, NICU, Prince Caspian, Back On The Train, Reba, Grind, Beauty Of A Broken Heart, Sample In A Jar, Sugar Shack, Waste, Kill Devil Falls

    Set II: Boogie On Reggae Woman, You Enjoy Myself > Undermind* > Drums* > Seven Below* > 2001* > Waves* > Character Zero*

    E: Bittersweet Motel, Bouncing Around The Room, Slave To The Traffic Light

    * = w/ Bill Kreutzmann on drums


    Order the show for Download on LivePhish.com

    Phish perform again Wednesday night at Shoreline Amphitheatre in Mountain View, CA. Check back for live Tweets, setlists, pics and full reviews. Complete Phish tour dates available href="http://www.jambase.com/Artists/2698/Phish/Shows">here.

    Just like Leg I of Phish’s Summer Tour, JamBase will be at every stop with more coverage than you’ll find anywhere! Keep up to speed with all things Phish at jambase.com/phish.

    JamBase | The Edge

    Go See Live Music!



    Sirius Celebrates Jerry Garcia:
    “Jerry Week” Runs 8/1-8/9

    SIRIUS XM RADIO TO COMMEMORATE

    THE LIFE AND MUSIC OF JERRY GARCIA ON ITS GRATEFUL DEAD CHANNEL
    “Jerry Week” beginning on the anniversary of Jerry Garcia’s birth on August 1

    Jerry Garcia by Jay Blakesberg

    WHAT: SIRIUS XM’s Grateful Dead Channel will feature “Jerry Week” in honor of the legendary Grateful Dead frontman Jerry Garcia showcasing music, archival interviews, and rarely heard concerts. “Jerry Week,” a Grateful Dead Channel tradition, will launch on the anniversary of Garcia’s birthday, August 1, and will end on the anniversary of his death, August 9. The nine-day long special “week” will highlight Garcia’s music – Dead songs he sang and performed as well as songs from his various side projects, including Legion of Mary, Garcia/Grisman and Jerry Garcia Band.

    As part of “Jerry Week,” listeners will hear two fan recordings of live performances by the Jerry Garcia Band that have never before been released. The two performances were recorded live in 1980 and 1990.

    On August 9, listeners will hear the vigil held for Garcia four days after his death in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park, featuring tributes from Garcia’s family, bandmates and close friends.

    Additionally, Garcia’s former wife and longtime companion, Carolyn “Mountain Girl” Garcia, has created a special program featuring her personal stories and memories of the legendary music icon for SIRIUS XM’s “Jerry Week.”

    The Grateful Dead Channel’s regular shows, “Today in Grateful Dead History” and “Tales From The Golden Road,” will also feature programming devoted to Jerry Garcia.

    WHERE: Grateful Dead Channel, SIRIUS channel 32 and XM channel 57.

    WHEN: Saturday, August 1 through Saturday, August 9.

    MORE: The Grateful Dead Channel is an exclusive channel that features music spanning the band’s career with unreleased concert recordings and original shows hosted by band members Bob Weir, Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann. The channel also features rare archival interviews with Jerry Garcia and contributions from Grateful Dead expert David Gans and Dead archivist David Lemieux.



    Gathering Of The Vibes | 07.23 – 07.26 | CT

    Words by: Andrew Bruss | Images by: Adam McCullough, Robert Chapman & Dave Vann

    Gathering of the Vibes :: 07.23.09 – 07.26.09 :: Seaside Park :: Bridgeport, CT

    GOTV 2009 by Vann

    Bob Weir & RatDog, Buddy Guy, moe. and Crosby, Stills & Nash topped the bill at the 14th annual Gathering of the Vibes, but the lineup of any Vibes is only one side of a story that has to be experienced to be understood. Unlike the great majority of festivals, the Gathering Of The Vibes is more about the attendees than it is about the performers. Vibes is where friends are made, bonds are built and people literally fall in love. Wavy Gravy, the original hippie clown who MC’ed the event, as well as the original Woodstock, was asked what drew him to Gathering of the Vibes. “I found that the Gathering Of The Vibes is the one festival that I feel has the spirit of sharing and caring and helping each other out that was prevalent in the first Woodstock Festival,” he responded. “Various festivals have been after me, and somehow the timing was right, and I fell in love [with Gathering of the Vibes].

    Throughout the course of the weekend, as an array of artists from genres of all kinds performed sets to an enthusiastic crowd, whenever folks were asked about the highlight of the weekend, it was always about the people, the place and the “vibes.”

    Bryan Byrne of Cambridge, Massachusetts said his highlight was just “drinking beers, watching people, enjoying bands and just being here.” It was his second year coming to the Vibes and he said, “I would have come regardless of who’s playing. I don’t know a lot of the bands. I just come here for the atmosphere.”

    Sunrise at GOTV 2009 by Vann

    Joanna Trossbach of Richmond, Virginia brought her granddaughter to the event and told JamBase, “Everyone should try to make it here because of the beautiful location. Everyone has worked hard to keep it clean. The Port-O-Johns are the cleanest of any festival I’ve ever attended, and everything is wonderful. Everyone should try and come to Vibes.”

    Although the event has changed locations several times over its 14 year history, Vibes returned to Bridgewater, Connecticut’s Seaside Park for the third year in a row. Many in attendance categorized Bridgewater as “ghetto,” and based on the shotgun shells washed up on the park’s ocean shore they weren’t far off. But even though the park is not known for being safe past dark, for the four days out of the year that Gathering Of The Vibes takes over the Deadhead mentality makes the public park a place that even a Virginia-based grandmother feels comfortable taking her granddaughter to.

    Josh Schroder is a Bridgeport local who came to Vibes for the first time this year and he seemed to appreciate the influence GOTV had on his community. “The funniest thing about it all is here we are in the middle of the hood, unbeknownst to everybody, and this is not really where you want to hang out normally, but right now this is the place to fucking be. Bridgeport isn’t a place you’d want to raise a family or anything, but then you have this festival and what can you say?”

    Thursday, 07.23

    DSO :: GOTV 2009 by Chapman

    Although a great deal of the event’s DNA revolves around community, you can’t forget that it always has been and always will be the music that draws people to the festival. Thursday was highlighted by performances from the Donna Jean Godchaux Band, as well as the ultimate Dead tribute act, Dark Star Orchestra, whose set was unfortunately cut short due to rain. When it rains, it pours, and as torrential downpours opened up on the early arrivals, ocean winds blew into the campgrounds, exacerbating the situation. This would normally put a damper on people’s time, but on the first night of the four-day weekend the conditions did nothing but provide campers an opportunity to rally together, seek cover under each other’s makeshift shelters and bond with their neighbors.

    Fortunately, the rain let up in time for a late night performance on the Green Vibes Stage from The Machine, a Pink Floyd tribute band that was considered by many to be the best set of the day. This was the first year to feature the Green Vibes Stage, and throughout the weekend it hosted late night sets that proved to be among the most memorable of the weekend. Unlike Dark Star, who strives for authenticity, The Machine take subtle creative license with Floyd’s material, where songs like “Shine On You Crazy Diamond” and “Time” had audible differences from the studio versions. The set’s highlight was a version of “Pigs (three different ones)” that let frontman Joe Pascarell truly shine. Nailing the vocal style of Roger Waters and the guitar tone of David Gilmour, Pascarell went nuts on the talkbox guitar solo, making crazed faces that brought to mind Floyd’s mad founder, Syd Barrett.

    Continue reading for Friday’s coverage of GOTV…

    Friday, 07.24

    Keller Williams :: GOTV 2009 by McCullough

    The sun rose early on Friday, and made enjoying JJ Grey & MOFRO that much easier. The Florida natives belted out powerhouse vocals, horns, guitars, electric organ and precise drums that brought the crowd down to alligator ally through MOFRO staples like “Orange Blossoms” and “Everything Good Is Bad.” Aside from his showmanship, the power and grit of Grey’s voice, in and of itself, is worth the price of a ticket, and his steady burn got the crowd good and ready for a set from Keller Williams and MDS.

    Keller classic “Freaker By The Speaker” had people dancing hard, and Phish‘s “Birds Of A Feather” provided one of the groovier covers of the weekend. When asked about the differences between a MDS performance and a solo slot, Keller said, “It’s a totally different thing. I learned a long time ago that it’s impossible to please everyone. So, the most important thing in my world is to be happy and I’m happy on stage, and hopefully that comes across to the audience.” He added, “We [MDS] haven’t played since January. We’ve rehearsed but there’s this un-jaded vibe that we’re all bringing and we’re excited to play and listen to each other.”

    George Clinton & P-Funk :: GOTV 2009 by Chapman

    Keller’s set was followed by Vibes vets George Clinton and P-Funk, whose set was a shit show in all the right ways. With duel synth stations, seven electric guitarists, a handful of scantly clad back-up vocalists and a performance by Clinton’s granddaughter, things were very busy on stage and in the crowd. Clinton’s set didn’t offer up any new material, nor did it seem nearly as groundbreaking as his material proved to be in its heyday, but with a back catalogue like his Clinton can afford to ride the gravy train all the way to the bank. To be blunt, “We Want The Funk” proved one of the best songs to dance to over the weekend, and that said, he doesn’t have to “keep it fresh” to keep things funky.

    From up close or afar, it was clear that Deep Banana Blackout‘s set had everybody in front of the stage dancing their collective asses off. The GOTV regulars have earned quite a reputation over the years and they didn’t disappoint. Carolanne McDowen of Worcester, Mass told JamBase that last year Deep Banana Blackout was one of the bands she went home having gained a new appreciation for, and this year they proved to be another highlight.

    Rob Derhak – moe. :: GOTV 2009 by McCullough

    moe. was the night’s headliner, booked to perform for nearly three hours but were cut short due to thunderstorms. The band came out of the stable strong with “Not Coming Down” and managed to riff through a solid set. But with thunder a-brewin’ in the sky, the set had to come to a halt. Many fans commented throughout the rest of the weekend that moe. should have been allowed to finish up their set after the storm, but even after the rain halted a truly impressive display of atmospheric electricity continued to threaten from above.

    Fortunately for all those who still had a funky monkey on their back, Lettuce brought the nitty-gritty grooves to the Green Vibes Tent for a late night show that made it impossible to stand still. With Eric Krasno and Neal Evans of Soulive fame on guitar and keys, Brotherhood Of Groove‘s Sam Kininger on sax and producer/drummer extraordinaire Adam Deitch on skins, to name a few, the stage was a who’s who of the neo-funk scene, and for a few hours, when most decent people were asleep in their tents, the hardest partiers were dancing their hearts and souls out to what had to have been the funkiest spot on the face of the earth for that short period of time.

    Continue reading for Saturday’s coverage of GOTV…

    Saturday, 07.25

    GOTV 2009 by Chapman

    Saturday was the only day of the weekend that provided relief from the rain, and after two full days of festival conditions everyone seemed to let themselves go. Women went bare-chested with painted breasts (with some telling JamBase that they did not feel harassed) and one dude on stilts calling himself Tall Paul roamed the grounds, engaging festival-goers and giving everyone another story to bring home to their friends in the “real world.”

    For as many folks tuned in, turned on and dropped out, there was one group of music loving attendees who were entirely on the ball. The Clean Vibes crew proved to be one of the greatest sources of pride Gathering Of The Vibes has to show the world. Kids from all backgrounds came to the event for the music, but throughout the course of the weekend “trash talking” volunteers directed people to dispose of their waste in the proper can, collected trash from the field and sorted out compost, landfill and recyclables with an on-the-radar presence that outdid their work at other festivals. Even Wavy Gravy noted the effort, saying, “For most of these people this is not their first festival. From one vibe to the next, they know the drill – they pick up the trash. There is an enormous effort to recycle, and you don’t see that at most shows.”

    Bridgeport native Josh Schroder cited Big Moon‘s Saturday slot on the Green Vibes Stage as a weekend highlight. “The singer owns one of my favorite bars, Acoustic Cafe on Fairfield Avenue. There’s folks from all over the place. You’re from Boston, everyone is from all over, and to get people I know personally represented on the national scale is very cool.”

    Levon Helm :: GOTV 2009 by McCullough

    Aside from Big Moon, the first half of the day was marked by a set from the Ryan Montbleau Band that had all the pretty ladies shaking it, and a Max Creek performance that Tom and Kasey Hunter from Sydney, New York cited as a highlight. “Max Creek was nice and relaxing,” Tom said. “It’s fun music. You can spin to it or move to it or watch it in the pouring rain.” Donna Jean Godchaux provided backup vocals on “Cassidy” and “Bertha,” and with guitarist Scott Murawski playing guitar for the Grateful Dead‘s Bill Kreutzmann in BK3 you can bet that his guitar tone rang rich with that Jerry Garcia groove that has come to be expected at Vibes.

    State Radio canceled their performance the day of the event, and the promoters opted to allow all of the Saturday performers to have some extra time, rather than scramble to fill the void. And it was Guster, the band on the bill most likely to share their fan-base, that helped us forget all about State Radio with a nice taste of feel good rock. Guster seemed like one of the most unusual acts on the bill given their popularity with a mainstream, teenage demographic, but they synced up with the crowd better than a great deal of the “groovier” acts on the bill. They engaged the audience with spot-on banter and played on festival characters we’d all come across, and after an anti-encore tirade, citing the tradition as the lamest in the concert circuit, the group wrapped up on a positive note with their most well known single, “Fa Fa.”

    Rob Bob Weir & RatDog :: GOTV 2009 by McCullough

    The Levon Helm Band followed Guster, but unfortunately, Helm was suffering from laryngitis and had his daughter Amy and guitarist Larry Campbell sing the overwhelming majority of the set. Bob Weir, who was slated to follow Helm, came out to lend a hand on The Dead’s “Attics,” “Tennessee Jed,” and The Band‘s timeless classic “The Weight” to close the set where Weir traded vocals with Helm for his only singing of the night. Although his lack of vocal contribution was disappointing one couldn’t help but commend the drummer for his perseverance in light of State Radio’s willingness to disappoint their audience.

    For a festival that’s built itself around the community of The Grateful Dead, Bob Weir’s Saturday night slot was considered by many to be one of the most anticipated performances of the weekend. Joanna Trossbach of Richmond, Virginia saw him three times in nine days this year and thought that this set was better than the rest, and especially appreciated his help during Levon Helm’s performance. He opened with the appropriate “Festival” (which hadn’t been played since 8/24/2006 – 175 shows) and followed up with a solid “Jack Straw” that pulled in anybody who wasn’t already drinking the Kool-Aid. It was a mellower performance, and one attendee was overheard saying, “Bobby must have taken a Xanax tonight,” but a cover of “Iko Iko” that flowed right into “Drums” kept the evening’s pace mellow, yes, but consistent and coherent. A predictable “One More Saturday Night” closed the set, followed by an encore of “Ripple,” the former and latter featuring Vibes All Star Donna Jean on vocals. The setlist could have been better and the energy could have been higher, but having been on the road the past few months Weir sounded rehearsed and the instrumental components of the set were rather tight, and with folks trashing his previous appearance at the Vibes there was a sense of redemption in his show.

    Continue reading for Sunday’s coverage of GOTV…

    Sunday, 07.26

    Grace Potter :: GOTV 2009 by Vann

    Sunday once again brought the threat of a storm that was expected to bring hail and lightning, but the rhythm of John Brown’s Body kept the sun shining throughout the afternoon. Following the positive reggae vibe of John Brown’s Body, Grace Potter and the Nocturnals played into Buddy Guy, followed by the fest’s highlight, at least on paper, Crosby Stills & Nash. And while CSN was one helluva treat, the threat of a storm had plenty of folks packed up and gone before Potter graced the stage.

    Grace Potter is one of the most promising up-and-coming female vocalists around, and you can tell by her stage presence that she’s well aware. Her beauty complements her talent, and her confident-not-cocky mentality always goes over well. Somber ballads like “Great White Gate” and “Apologies” gave the crowd something to sway with, and tunes like “Stop The Bus” and “Ah Mary” gave her fans something to rock out to. After telling the audience about her first Vibes experience as a 15-year-old Vermont native, she continued her set, trading off between an electric organ and a Flying V electric guitar, as she belted her way through covers of “Come On In My Kitchen,” a Robert Johnson nugget she picked up on the road with Gov’t Mule, and Jefferson Airplane’s “White Rabbit.” The set concluded with a powerhouse “Nothing But The Water” that more than anything was a vehicle for Potter to display the full force of her vocal chords. She literally squealed like a schoolgirl as she hit the high notes before bringing the set to a close on a synchronized, hard hitting note, strummed over and over before a sudden halt.

    Buddy Guy :: GOTV 2009 by McCullough

    As could be expected, Buddy Guy fucking nailed it. Plain and simple. The man who Jimi Hendrix considered one of his major influences has continued doing his thing well into his golden years, and he does it better than a lot of the younger cats who strapped on a guitar over the course of the weekend. Guy has a “I’ve got your nose” goofiness to his stage presence and the sea of sun tanned faces consistently brought a smile to the legend throughout his 90-minute set. Tunes like “Hoochie Coochie Man” demonstrated his ability to shred the guitar, making spastic runs up and down the neck in a way that clearly showed where the anarchy in Hendrix’s playing came from. With the heat as strong as it was, Guy opted to sit the last song out, allowing a pre-teen named Quinn Sullivan to nail Hendrix’s “Voodoo Chile,” making it seem as though Guy was passing on the torch to a protege working on the licks of an icon who got so much out of Guy’s playing.

    As the clouds grew gray and thick, folks were hoping weather would play nice until Crosby Stills & Nash finished the final set of the weekend. For as much condescending criticism can be written about geriatric rockers from the ’60s trying to cash in on dated material, CSN, more than most of their peers, have held onto the magic that made them what they are. The sharp, precise melodies they trademarked were spot-on, and the fest’s final performance was by far one of the weekend’s best, at least for those left to witness it. Opening with “Love The One Your With” got everyone singing along, and they followed up with songs like “Lady Stardust” and a “Dejà Vu” that featured some fresh instrumental rearranging. Add to that “Helplessly Hoping” and they made their mark on the audience before they had really gotten started. Choice covers of The Rolling Stones’ “Ruby Tuesday” and Bob Dylan’s “Girl From North Country” demonstrated the effort that went into putting the setlist together, and segueing from “Moonlit World” into Joe Walsh’s “Rocky Mountain Way” did nothing more than underscore the above sentiment.

    Crosby Stills & Nash :: GOTV 2009 by Vann

    Beyond their technical precision, what stood out was the strength of the group dynamic they’ve kept intact. Stephen Stills, still the Fender-slinging brain of the group, perfectly accompanied the Paul McCartney-esque British charm of Graham Nash, and even David Crosby was looking lively as ever, taking to his acoustic 12-string for “Teach Your Children.” They knew when to sing and when to let the audience take over for what proved to be a sing-along set, apparently by design. Although it seemed like “Teach Your Children” was slated to close the set before a hefty encore, the rain that was expected all afternoon finally arrived, and as Stills swung the neck of his guitar towards the ground, strumming out one final chord, lightning in the sky roared above us, almost on cue, as Wavy Gravy took the stage to let everyone know the show was over and to get to their cars asap because a severe electrical storm was coming.

    If you’re thinking this review seems overly positive that’s because it is. RatDog may have been slow. moe. getting cut off early was a disappointment to many. State Radio dissed the crowd without much of an explanation, and it would have been great to hear Levon Helm’s voice had he been feeling better, but with Gathering Of The Vibes the performances themselves are just one component of a weekend that is more than anything about vibes. Keller said it best: “It’s a fantastic vibe, hence the name.”

    And whether it came to the interactions amongst staff and patrons, performers and attendees, locals and visitors or campers and their neighbors, the feel good climate that has characterized Gathering Of The Vibes over the years was fully intact, perhaps more than ever, and it’s that Vibe that keeps drawing the same crowd back to the same event year after year.

    You’re not going to see Phish and Bruce Springsteen make history at the Vibes, and you’re unlikely to see any big name reunion take place like Coachella has done so many times in the past. GOTV has found their niche, knows their audience and masterfully executed a weekend of great music, solid campground logistics and a communal atmosphere that fostered various bonds and connections that attendees will dwell on long after their ears stop ringing.

    Continue reading for more pics of GOTV 2009…

    Images by: Adam McCullough

    Thursday, 07.23

    Donna Jean Godchaux

    Dark Star Orchestra

    Friday, 07.24

    Cornmeal

    Allie Kral – Cornmeal

    Chris Barron

    King For A Day

    JJ Grey

    Keith Moseley with Keller & MDS

    George Clinton

    Deep Banana Blackout

    Eric Krasno – Lettuce

    Neal Evans – Lettuce

    Al Schnier – moe.

    Saturday, 07.25

    Reid Genauer & Assembly of Dust

    Jaimoe’s Jasssz Band

    Pimps of Joytime

    Ryan Montbleau

    Scott Murawski – Max Creek

    Levon Helm

    Bob Weir & RatDog

    Sunday, 07.26

    John Brown’s Body

    Grace Potter

    Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

    Harlem Gospel Choir

    McLovins

    Stephen Stills – CSN

    CSN

    Continue reading for more pics of GOTV 2009…

    Images by: Dave Vann

    Levon Helm

    Guster

    Buddy Guy

    Lettuce

    Perpetual Groove

    Bob Weir & RatDog

    CSN

    Continue reading for even more pics of GOTV 2009…

    Images by: Robert Chapman

    Reid Genauer and the Assembly of Dust

    Guster

    Wavy Gravy

    Ryan Montbleau Band

    Reckoning

    P.J. Pacifico

    moe.

    Lettuce

    Levon Helm

    Bob Weir with Levon Helm

    Bob Weir & RatDog

    Perpetual Groove

    CSN

    David Crosby – CSN

    Wavy Gravy & Levon Helm

    Wavy Gravy & Levon Helm

    JamBase | Gathered
    Go See Live Music!


    The Dead | 04.18 | Worcester, MA Pics from Jay Blakesberg!

    Images by: Jay Blakesberg

    The Dead :: 04.18.09 :: DCU Center :: Worcester, MA

    The Dead (Phil Lesh, Bob Weir, Mickey Hart, Bill Kreutzmann, Warren Haynes and Jeff Chimenti) played the fifth show on their Spring Tour last night (Saturday April 18, 2009) at the DCU Center Worcester, MA.

    Set I: Jam > Feel Like A Stranger, Goin’ Down The Road Feeling Bad, Mountains of the Moon > Dupree’s Diamond Blues, Althea > Bird Song, China Cat Sunflower > I Know You Rider

    Set II: Jam > Dancin’ In The Streets > Milestones > Terrapin Station > Drums > Space > Days Between > Jam > Birdsong > One More Saturday Night

    E: Johnny B. Goode


    Pre-Order the show for Download on LiveDownloads.com

    The Dead perform again tonight (4/19) in Worcester, MA, check back tomorrow for pics and updates. Complete Dead tour dates available here.

    JamBase | Dead Set
    Go See Live Music!


    The Dead | 04.17 | Albany, NY

    Images by: Christopher Bull

    The Dead :: 04.17.09 :: Times Union Center :: Albany, NY

    The Dead (Phil Lesh, Bob Weir, Mickey Hart, Bill Kreutzmann, Warren Haynes and Jeff Chimenti) played the fourth show on their Spring Tour last night (Friday April 17, 2009) at the Times Union Center in Albany, NY.

    Set I: Casey Jones, Cold Rain & Snow, Minglewood Blues > Into The Mystic, West L.A. Fadeaway, Brown-Eyed Women, Cumberland Blues

    Set II: Viola Lee Blues > Sugaree > The Other One, Drums > Space > Comes A Time >
    Unbroken Chain, Throwing Stones

    E: Not Fade Away


    Pre-Order the show for Download on LiveDownloads.com

    The Dead kick-off a two-night stand in Worcester, MA this evening (4/18). Check back tomorrow for more pics and updates. Complete Dead tour dates available here.

    JamBase | New York
    Go See Live Music!