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Newport Folk Festival | 08.01 & 08.02 | RI

Words by: Bear Connelly | Images by: Jim Brueckner

Newport Folk Festival :: 08.01.09 & 08.02.09 :: Fort Adams State Park :: Newport, RI

Newport Folk Fest 2009

The Newport Folk Festival is one of the longest running music festivals in America, and this year she celebrated her 50th anniversary (the festival did not take place from 1971-1985) with a huge array of artists spanning generations, countries and languages. The deep historical context of the festival resonates highly with the artists that play here, making it quite a destination for musicians and fans of the greater folk world. Dylan went electric here and Joan Baez played the first ever festival in 1959. NWFF is located at Fort Adams State Park, a defunct Naval base nestled in the harbor of the sailing mecca of Newport, Rhode Island. The festival has three stages, the main stage sitting right in front of the fort overlooking a huge lawn that leads to the ocean, and two tents containing smaller stages also along the water. Thousands of people attend each year, setting up blankets and lawn chairs and basking in the sunshine and music for two days every August. Due to the location, boats are encouraged to pull up close and drop anchor and listen to the music while swimming and playing in the water. This is truly a festival you need to see once in your life, if not many times.

As always there were so many great bands playing that I kind of felt like a chicken running around with his head cut off in order to see them all. For some artists, I only caught a couple songs, like folk legends Baez (whose voice has sadly lowered in register over the years) and Arlo Guthrie (who is an amazing storyteller) to Joe Pug (a young working class, Dylan-esque folkie from Chicago belting tunes like “My Father’s Drugs” with a Midwest snarl). With a festival as diverse as Newport – acts range from Mavis Staples to Brett Dennen, 23-year old John McCauley (Deer Tick) to 90-year old Pete Seeger – there was something for everyone.

Here are some of the highlights from this year’s event, and you can also listen to all these sets at npr.org.

Ben Kweller

The Avett Brothers :: NFF 2009

As I walked in to the festival I headed straight for the first music I could hear. I stumbled in to the Harborside Tent to find Ben Kweller playing with a stripped down version of his band. There was Ben, decked out in a sleeveless NYC t-shirt, jeans and boots (which reminded my of that classic John Lennon pic) with a drummer and a dobro/pedal steel player. Kweller cranked through tunes like “13,” which was apparently written about a night out in Block Island, an island off the coast of Rhode Island, and “Gypsy Love” with a great sense of enjoyment at being at this historical festival. He even tried out tunes that he normally plays on piano in the spirit of guitar driven folk music. The highlight of his set was a crowd sing-along version of “Falling” dedicated to Kelly, a girl who worked at the festival that asked if he would play it, despite the lack of a piano on stage.


The Avett Brothers

I haven’t really listened to The Avett Brothers but with the electricity of their live shows you don’t really need to in order to enjoy them. The North Carolina natives brought their brand of psych-emo, energetic folk-grass to the festival for the second time in as many years. The band ran through live staples such as “Paranoia in B flat Major” and “Ballad of Love and Hate,” along with new tunes off their upcoming album I and Love and You like “Kick Drum Heart” with little disparity for a newcomer. Read: their new tunes kick as much ass as their old ones.


Tom Morello/The Nightwatchman

Given the fact that Tom Morello is a Harvard educated, political junkie, effects infused shredder, I was perhaps most curious to see what he had in store for a folk festival. Morello, armed simply with a nylon string guitar (that had “Whatever It Takes” scrawled on it in black marker) and his rustic baritone voice played songs such as “Dogs of Tijuana” and “One Man Revolution.” Morello also mentioned how excited he was to play at the same festival as the legendary Pete Seeger. He dedicated his tune “The Road I Must Travel” to Seeger, who Morello believes is “a living body of justice-ness and righteousness,” and is glad that “in a world of passport carrying jackasses there are people like Seeger to balance it out.”

Gillian Welch

Gillian Welch :: NFF 2009

Fan favorite Gillian Welch delighted the main stage crowd yet again (in the three years I’ve been, she’s been there every time) with a nice mix of songs from her entire repertoire. Apparently she and her partner, Rhode Island native Dave Rawlings, had to get a police escort from Boston just to make their set after a five-hour flight delay at LAX. Welch joked that she felt “Like Mirabelli getting escorted to the Sox game in order to catch Wakey a couple years back,” referring to Red Sox catcher Doug Mirabelli’s return trip to Fenway after being reacquired mid-season. Although sleep deprived and unkempt, they didn’t let the jetlag stop them from delivering angst melting tunes like “Orphan Girl,” “My First Lover” and “Look at Miss Ohio,” the latter featuring a blistering solo from Rawlings, who is perhaps the tastiest guitarist in Americana music today. Midway through the set, she debuted her haunting version of Jefferson Airplane’s “White Rabbit” to the crowd’s enjoyment.


Mavis Staples

One of the more historical acts at the festival was the gospel stylings of Mavis Staples and her energetic band. Staples’ set included a rousing rendition of The Band’s “The Weight,” which she sang at The Last Waltz with The Staple Singers 30 years ago, and “Why Am I Treated So Bad,” her father’s song written after a conversation with Martin Luther King, Jr.


The Low Anthem

Hometown heroes number one (Deer Tick being number two) played their first set of presumably many to come at Newport after a whirlwind summer that saw them playing all over the world, including sets at Bonnaroo, Hyde Park and Roskilde Festival (read about Roskilde here). Since releasing Oh My God Charlie Darwin on Nonesuch (and Bella Union in Europe) the band has been touring relentlessly and it shows. The once awkward folkies that could barely play their secondary instruments – there is a clarinet, French horn, upright bass, drums, organ, acoustic and electric guitars and crotales on stage, with all three members rotating between them for each song – have tightened their sound to captivate the audience, which overflowed the small Waterside Tent they played in. The band played some new, unreleased tunes that held water alongside older gems like “Ballad of Broken Bones” and “To Ohio.” The highlight for me came with their take on the traditional “Don’t Let Nobody Turn You Around” that featured guitarist/singer Ben Knox Miller on drums, Jeff Prystowsky on upright bass and clarinetist Jocie Adams showing off her electric guitar chops, all of which showcased the band’s growing versatility.


Iron & Wine

Fleet Foxes :: Newport Folk Fest 2009

Sam Beam played a solo acoustic set on Saturday afternoon to a packed Harborside Tent. Beam, whose wispy vocals and percussive yet intricate guitar picking was a perfect soundtrack for a sunny afternoon on the water. He started his set off with a cover of Postal Service‘s “Such Great Heights” that quickly turned into a group sing-along after he forgot the words to the chorus. Next came the stomping “Woman King,” which induced some of the crowd (mostly seated) to dance. Beam had great stage presence, talking about how “beautiful but distracting” the view from the stage was and handling catcalls like a woman in the crowd who yelled, “I want to live in your beard… because it seems like a warm place to sit,” with a quick wit. Beam closed his set with the fan favorite (and Twilight soundtrack hit) “Flightless Bird, American Mouth,” which left the audience standing and cheering for an encore. Beam sheepishly walked back on stage to deliver “Sunset Soon Forgotten,” a wonderful finger picking tune off Our Endless Numbered Days.


Fleet Foxes

I was really interested in checking out the Fleet Foxes, one of the past two years’ biggest hype bands. I really like their harmonies and arrangements on the album and wanted to see if they could pull it off live. Well, they killed it. Unfortunately, their small discography lead to them basically playing their album and EP in their entirety. However, getting a main stage slot at Newport is quite a feat for such a young band. Songs like “White Winter Hymnal” and “Oliver James” oozed lush melodies and dispersed waves of their “baroque harmonic pop jams” amongst the festival-goers and aquatic onlookers.


The Decemberists

The Decemberists :: Newport Folk Fest 2009

Saturday’s headliner (other than Pete Seeger, who closed both nights as more of an honorary guest) brought their literary folk rock to the main stage for the first time. Armed with a plethora of vocalists and rare instruments (like the hurdy-gurdy), the band ripped through a greatest hits set – they’ve been playing their folk opera, The Hazards of Love, in its entirety most nights this tour – including “The Crane Wife Part 3″ and upbeat closer “Sons and Daughters.” Mid-set the band’s Decemberists Family Players acted out a scene from the Festival’s storied past – the day Dylan went electric. Four people represented festival founder George Wein, Pete Seeger, Bob Dylan and a squirrel to act out a scene inspired by Seeger’s famous comments after hearing Dylan go electric (“Damn it, if I had an axe, I’d cut the cable right now”) referring to shutting down the sound system.


Dave Rawlings Machine

For those of you who don’t know, David Rawlings Machine is just him and Gillian Welch but with reversed roles. They play his songs instead of hers and he sings lead vocals to her harmonies. These two are amazingly captivating with just two guitars and voices. Rawlings, known as a producer and session guitarist mostly, ran through wonderful cover songs ranging from Bright Eyes’ “Method Acting” to Dylan’s “Queen Jane Approximately,” Ryan Adams’ “To Be Young (Is to be sad, is to be high)” (which he co-wrote) to “Big Rock Candy Mountain.” The set was so fierce that the late morning crowd called for an encore, which is usually reserved for headlining acts. Dave answered the call with a foot stomping, hand clapping cover of Johnny Cash’s “Jackson.”

Neko Case

Neko Case :: Newport Folk Fest 2009

Also known in the indie world for her work with the New Pornographers, Neko Case has been churning out great alt-country albums on her own for years. Supporting her latest, critically acclaimed album, Middle Cyclone (JamBase review here), Case played the main stage on Sunday. She barreled through songs from her whole repertoire including “Wish I Was the Moon,” “Hold On Hold On” and her roaring new single “This Tornado Loves You.” Not only does Case have one of the best lovesick howls in the business but her backing singer Kelly Hogan (who has also sung with Andrew Bird, The Minus 5 and Edith Frost) provided a nice layer on which Case could stray more and show off her pipes. After a standing ovation from the crowd, who spent her set in lawn chairs, Case ripped through a stellar version of The Shangri-La’s “The Train from Kansas City” as an ode to female groups of yesteryear.


Deer Tick

The second hometown favorite of the festival was the fast-rising Deer Tick. The band took the stage while leader John McCauley III stated, “I don’t know what an acoustic guitar is. Give me one and I’ll try to plug it in. Let’s do it like Dylan did!” before launching into the raucous “Easy” off the band’s latest album, Born on Flag Day. Before their second tune, “Little White Lies,” a fan from the mostly seated crowd asked, “Can we stand up? We just want to dance.” After the okay from security, chairs were moved out of the way and the littlest tent of the festival gave birth to its biggest dance party. Deer Tick plowed through their songs showcasing new, full band arrangements to previously mellow acoustic songs on their albums. Even when the solo song “A Song About A Man” was played the rest of the band sang three-part harmonies, where the last time I saw them they just left the stage. After a guest spot from singer Liz Isenberg on “Friday the XIII” and a cover of John Prine’s “Aimless Love,” the band brought down the house with a rockin’ take on “La Bamba,” which seemed very genuine and relevant despite coming from a 23-year-old white kid from North Providence, RI.


Elvis Perkins in Dearland

Pete Seeger :: NFF 2009

Playing the festival for the second time, the singer-songwriter and his energetic, multi-instrumentalist band (they all play horns and some other primary instrument) closed down the Harborside Stage on Sunday. Half the band attended Brown University and his bassist was from Newport, so there was kind of a homecoming vibe to Dearland’s set. Despite suffering some tragedies within his own family (his dad, actor Anthony Perkins died from AIDS, while his mom was on board one of the planes that hit the World Trade Center), he is able to sing positive, “live in the moment” style songs that shine bright lights on to the dark zones of the human mind. Perkins, who understands the gravity of playing at such a storied festival, treated the crowd to his own gems like “Chains Chains Chains” and “Shampoo” while mixing in covers like “Weeping Mary” and “Four Strong Winds.” Set closer “Doomsday” had Elvis singing: “Man, I went wild last night…/ I don’t let doomsday bother me/ Do you let it bother you?”


Pete Seeger

It’s a rare opportunity to see a living legend these days. I felt this way when I saw Ray Charles. Pete Seeger IS folk music. Marking both his 90th birthday and the 50th anniversary of the festival he helped create, Seeger treated the crowd to a sing-along set that started with the help of his grandson Tao Rodriguez-Seeger. Pete played “Turn Turn Turn” and “Midnight Special,” saying the lyrics before each line was to be sung so no one in the crowd had an excuse to not sing. It was great to hear the stories behind all these songs – this man knows who wrote the songs we all know as “traditional”! Midway through his sunset set, Seeger invited “every musician who played today” on stage for huge group versions of “Guantanamera,” “If I Had a Hammer” and the obvious closer, “This Land is Your Land.” Never again will I see Colin Meloy singing with Tom Morello, Ben Kweller sharing a mic with The Low Anthem’s Jocie Adams or Seeger himself singing with Gillian Welch and Ramblin’ Jack Elliot. It’s moments like these that make the kinship, history and stature of this festival what it is today.

Final Song led by Pete Seeger featuring everyone!

Continue reading for more pics of Newport Folk Festival 2009…

Joan Baez

Arlo Guthrie

Sam Beam – Iron & Wine

Del McCoury

Brett Dennen

Campbell Brothers

Guy Clark

Dala

The Low Anthem

Joe Pug

Tom Morello/The Nightwatchman

Dave Rawlings Machine

Deer Tick

Elvis Perkins in Dearland

Tao Rodriguez-Seeger

Final Song led by Pete Seeger featuring everyone!

Final Song led by Pete Seeger featuring everyone!

Final Song led by Pete Seeger featuring everyone!

JamBase | Rhode Island
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Kris Kristofferson: New Album

Kris Kristofferson Reflects On Life And Love On His New Album Closer To The Bone


Kris Kristofferson

Grammy Award-winning music legend Kris Kristofferson opens his latest release with the title track “Closer To The Bone,” an intense, intimate song that seems to sum up the entire album. The record, Kristofferson’s second with New West Records, continues with 11 poignant tracks and will be released on September 29. The new record was produced by Grammy Award-winning producer Don Was (The Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, Bonnie Raitt) who also produced Kristofferson’s last CD, the critically acclaimed This Old Road. Closer To The Bone will be released as a standard CD, deluxe two-CD set as well as limited edition 180 gram vinyl.

Closer To The Bone features Kristofferson on vocals, guitar and harmonica, Don Was on bass, Rami Jaffee on keys, Jim Keltner on drums and longtime friend, the late Stephen Bruton, to whom the album is dedicated, on guitar, mandolin and backing vocals. All lyrics and music were written solely by Kristofferson except “From Here To Forever” which was written in collaboration with Stephen Bruton and Glen Clark.

On November 10, Kristofferson will be honored with the BMI Icon Award at the performing rights organization’s 57th annual Country Awards, the oldest awards saluting country’s top music makers. The Icon designation is given to BMI songwriters and artists who have had “a unique and indelible influence on generations of music makers.” Kristofferson, who will be saluted with an all-star musical tribute that evening, joins an elite list of past honorees that includes country music stalwarts Willie Nelson, Merle Haggard, Dolly Parton, Charlie Daniels, Loretta Lynn and last year’s honoree Hank Williams, Jr.

Closer To The Bone Track List:
1. Closer To The Bone
2. From Here To Forever
3. Holy Woman
4. Starlight And Stone
5. Sister Sinead
6. Hall Of Angels
7. Love Don’t Live Here Anymore
8. Good Morning John
9. Tell Me One More Time
10. Let The Walls Come Down
11. The Wonder



Dumpstaphunk Special Austin Gig:
West Coast Dates w/ Kraz’ Ch. 2

Dumpstaphunk, Blondie Chaplin and The Lee Boys To Play Special Show In Austin
Join Up with Eric Krasno & Chapter 2 On the West Coast


Dumpstaphunk

An exclusive three band musical feast at Antone’s on Friday, August 28 in Austin, TX, will feature Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk, Blondie Chaplin (currently with The Rolling Stones) & Friends including George G. Receli (currently with Bob Dylan) and The Lee Boys. Each group will perform full sets – doors open at 8 p.m., Show starts at 8:45 p.m. with The Lee Boys. Tickets – Advance $15, then $20. For sales please visit antones.net.

Leading up to the special Austin show, Dumpstaphunk begin their tour tomorrow (August 6) in Wichita, KS and perform at the Mountainside Mardi Gras event on Saturday, August 8 at Red Rocks. And when Dumpstaphunk hit the West Coast they’ll be joined by Eric Krasno & Chapter 2 for what’s sure to be a funky run.

Dumpstaphunk Tour Dates

08/06/09 Thu Sedgwick County Zoo Wichita, KS

08/08/09 Sat Red Rocks Amphitheatre Morrison, CO (w/ Dr. John, DDBB, Porter & more)

08/09/09 Sun Santa Fe Brewing Company Santa Fe, NM

08/11/09 Tue Rhythm Room Phoenix, AZ

08/12/09 Wed House of Blues San Diego, CA (w/ Eric Krasno & Chapter 2)

08/13/09 Thu Key Club West Hollywood, CA (w/ Eric Krasno & Chapter 2)

08/14/09 Fri Moe’s Alley Santa Cruz, CA (w/ Eric Krasno & Chapter 2)

08/15/09 Sat The Fillmore San Francisco, CA (w/ Eric Krasno & Chapter 2)

08/16/09 Sun Brews, Jazz and Funk Fest Squaw Valley, CA (w/ Eric Krasno & Chapter 2)

08/18/09 Tue The Hut Tucson, AZ

08/28/09 Fri Antone’s Austin, TX (w/ The Lee Boys, Blondie Chaplin & more)

08/29/09 Sat Bogie’s Baton Rouge, LA (w/ The Lee Boys)

09/05/09 Sat Hookahville Thornville, OH

09/06/09 Sun Sonar Main Stage Baltimore, MD

10/04/09 Sun Gretna Heritage Festival Gretna, LA

10/10/09 Sat Red River Revel Shreveport, LA

10/29/09 Thu Las Tortugas Dance of the Dead (Evergreen Lodge) Groveland, CA

10/30/09 Fri Las Tortugas Dance of the Dead (Evergreen Lodge) Groveland, CA

11/14/09 Sat Bear Creek Music and Arts Festival Live Oak, FL

11/15/09 Sun Bear Creek Music and Arts Festival Live Oak, FL



Maria Rodale: Fuzz Is My New Buzz

Maybe it’s because I’m getting older (with the granny glasses to prove it), but I’m starting to tire of the whole “buzz”-chasing world. Now, it’s…

Carla Bruni Performs At New York Mandela Concert Saturday (PHOTOS, VIDEO)

*Scroll down for photos and video*

NEW YORK — A flock of global entertainment notables and politicos, including France’s first lady Carla Bruni, toasted Nelson Mandela’s 91st birthday with an all-star concert at Radio City Music Hall.

Carla Bruni’s ‘dying cat’ rendition gets audience’s thumbs down

French First Lady Carla Bruni’s rendition of a Bob Dylan classic at Nelson Mandela’s 91st birthday bash turned out to be a flop show, as music fans likened her voice to the sounds of a “dying cat”.
The supermodel-turned-singer crooned ‘Blowin’ In The Wind’ at Radio City in New York on Saturday, as part of a [...]

Phil Ramone and Danielle Evin: Dog Ears Music: Volume Eighty-One

This week’s column features Ralston Bowles, Emmylou Harris, Linda Ronstadt & Dolly Parton, Arthur Crudup, Lola Flores, Colored Shadows and The Impressions.

‘Dylan’s conversion from Judaism to Christianity made Jimmy Carter give up on him’

American singer songwriter Bob Dylan is said to have lost one of his biggest fans, former US President Jimmy Carter, when he converted from Judaism to Christianity, after wallowing in drugs and bed-hopping with female fans, reveals a new book.
Kevin Mattson, the author of “What the Heck Are You Up To, Mr. President?”, which comes [...]

Levon Helm:Electric Dirt

By: Tim Dwenger

One of the great spirits of American music, Levon Helm, has returned with Electric Dirt (released June 30 on Vanguard Records), a stellar follow-up to 2007′s Grammy winning Dirt Farmer. Like Dirt Farmer, Helm’s new offering features a wide variety of cover tunes but this time the record showcases Helm’s return to songwriting on the bittersweet “Growin’ Trade.” The ballad, which he penned with former Bob Dylan guitarist Larry Campbell (who also produced the album), laments the plight of an American farmer who has been forced to turn his family’s cotton plantation into a pot farm in order to make ends meet. It’s a plight that is close to Helm’s heart as he grew up on a cotton farm in Arkansas in the 1940s and he’s immortalized it beautifully with this song.

From the get-go, the record shows that Helm’s still in fine form behind the kit and at the mic with a strong, horn-bolstered take on Garcia/Hunter’s legendary country shuffle “Tennessee Jed.” From there Helm and a top notch band of seasoned musicians launch into a guided tour of Southern musical history as elements of back porch blues, gospel and Dixieland seep into the arrangements of songs by the likes of The Staples Singers, The Stanley Brothers and Muddy Waters.

Though most of these arrangements were put together by Campbell, Helm renewed a partnership with another legendary musical name, Allen Toussaint, during the sessions for Electric Dirt. The pair had worked together back in the early ’70s when Toussaint was called into handle the horn arrangements for The Band’s 1971 New Year’s Eve concert (documented on Rock of Ages), and it’s clear he hasn’t lost a step either. His contributions to album closer “I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel To Be Free” and a rollicking take on Randy Newman’s “Kingfish” are two of the standout cuts on the album.

Helm’s warbly tenor may be a little shakier than it was 40 years ago but it’s every bit as heart-warming and soul-wrenching as it was in his days with The Band. Electric Dirt is a powerful album that adds to Helm’s already monumental legacy and further cements his place as a true American musical legend.

JamBase | Keepin’ On
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Sun Spin:Creedence Clearwater Revival

A CRY FROM THE STREETS AS THE SIXTIES TURNED TO THE SEVENTIES

Throughout the remainder of 2009, Sunday Spin will regularly celebrate and explore some of the seminal albums released in 1969 as they reach their 40th anniversaries. We couldn’t think of a better slab to start withÂ…

Some folks are born wise, and John Fogerty is surely one of them. Two years on from the Summer of Love, Fogerty could see which way the wind was blowing, his young ears able to “hear the voice of rage and ruin.” The Vietnam War shuddered a half a world away, entering U.S. living rooms every night on the news, while corporate culture had already absorbed the trappings of the ’60s youth revolution, diluting a legitimate social movement into a series of largely empty, marketable symbols (“”Is that a real poncho? I mean is that a Mexican poncho or is that a Sears poncho?”). Fogerty picked up on this sharp dip in general hope, addressing the nostalgia already settling into America’s mindset – not just for some fictitious bygone time but for what had transpired only recently – a dynamic that persists in even more pronounced form today. The first words of Creedence Clearwater Revival‘s third album, Green River are, “Well, take me back down where cool water flows/ Let me remember things I love.” From there he swiftly introduces us to the hangman’s rope and announces, “You’re gonna find the world is smould’rin’.”

CCR’s second album in a year that would ultimately see them release three classics is a sharp shock to the system. For all of its ’50s inspired bounce, the waters in their river are cloudy and tangled with weeds and bodies. Like the bluesmen and folk heroes that fueled Fogerty’s pen, his songs here invite mindless sing-alongs, seeming jubilant yet ever-touched by something far darker. The quintessential example in the Creedence catalog is “Bad Moon Rising, ” which has been reduced to a backdrop for film and television, just another piece of the general cultural landscape, but is nothing less than a scathing gospel warning, barking, “Hope you got your things together/ Hope you are quite prepared to die/ Looks like we’re in for nasty weather/ One eye is taken for an eye.” Creedence isn’t screwing around on this album, and as baldly enjoyable as the music is (and it is a freakin’ ball that’ll have you smacking the ceiling of your hoopdie like El Duderino) this is largely serious business, as heavy and truthful as Robert Johnson, Leadbelly or Bob Dylan.

It does not hurt that the band is ablaze on every cut. The myth goes that this is John’s show and the rest are merely players, but no matter the brilliance of the playwright you’re going to have an empty house if there’s no one there to execute the script. Stu Cook (bass), Doug Clifford (drums) and John’s brother Tom Fogerty (rhythm guitar) are jook joint mean and Hamburg underground tight, a party band extraordinaire with steam rising from their pores. John Fogerty’s lead guitar and ruthless lead vocals are indeed the sharp point of their phalanx but the muscle behind it comes from Tom, Stu and Doug. The sad evidence of this is how none of them ever again achieved a fraction of the mojo harnessed during CCR’s five-year existence. Green River presents the combo at their most cohesive, where each aspect feeds the others to create one of the most appealing, robust sounds in the history of rock. The conversation between instruments generates a density and immediacy that defies age – a model for anyone seeking a “timeless” quality to their music.

And oh what tunes! The proto-punk of “Commotion,” the bent knee cry for connectivity in “Wrote A Song For Everyone,” the gleeful foreboding of “Tombstone Shadow,” the ennui and impotence of “Lodi,” the urge for going inside “Cross-Tie Walker” and the shiver-inducing prognostication of “Bad Moon Rising” and “Sinister Purpose” – each number a lustily attacked marvel that culminates in a “Fuck it, let’s party” vibe with a cover of jump blues standard “The Night Time Is The Right Time.” Throwing jagged stones at “pharaohs” and the self-deluded, this song cycle is simultaneously delightful and harrowing. In sequencing, execution and insight, Green River is a tough one to beat in any era, even one as rich as the late 1960s.

Track Listing

Side One
1. Green River
2. Commotion
3. Tombstone Shadow
4. Wrote a Song for Everyone

Side Two
1. Bad Moon Rising
2. Lodi
3. Cross-Tie Walker
4. Sinister Purpose
5. The Night Time Is the Right Time

Do yourself a favor and check out Letters to Fogerty by the wonderful John Moe. You can thank us later when you stop laughing.

This nasty lil’ tune nicely captures the hurly-burly of modern life in under three minutes.

Death songs have a long, grand tradition and this is up there with the best of them.

During their 1999 tour this was a Pavement staple, just one example of this album’s far reaching influence.

Here’s John Fogerty getting “stuck” all by his lonesome.

A clearly stoned Mama Cass introduces “Clarence Clamwater.” JamBase would like to dedicate this one to our pal Nathan Moore (he knows why…). Play it loud and long as we all try to find our way back to the river.

And lastly, the title tune.