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Gov’t Mule: Any Open Window

By: Dennis Cook

Warren Haynes

Gov’t Mule‘s ninth studio album, By A Thread (released October 27 on Evil Teen Records), roars out of the gate with a steely intensity – helped along by “badass guitar” from pal Billy Gibbons (ZZ Top) – that’s helped define the hard rocking group since its inception in the mid ’90s. For all the excellent ballads and fruitful exploration – which has exposed influences as diverse as Robert Johnson, Prince and Radiohead – Gov’t Mule is frequently at their best when they play blessedly heavy. And that’s the predominant vibe on By A Thread, which captures the energy and intensity of their early power trio recordings but melds them to the bandleader Warren Haynes‘ ever-increasing songwriting acumen and the richer, broader palette of the current quartet configuration of Haynes (vocals, guitar), co-founder Matt Abts (drums), Danny Louis (keys, trumpet, guitar) and newest addition bassist Jorgen Carlsson, who joined in 2008. What shines through on their latest offering is a renewed Mule, serving up densely layered classic rock that truly honors their forebears by playing with passion, musicianship and compositional skill equal to the best in the long line that precedes them.

JamBase was able to wrestle a few minutes out of Warren Haynes’ very busy schedule for an informative chat about where Gov’t Mule finds itself today, as well as the challenges and perks of playing with The Allman Brothers Band and The Dead, and how those experiences help enrich his work with the Mule.

JamBase: By A Thread might be the most confident, clear record you guys have made, at least with the four-piece lineup.

Warren Haynes: It’s hard for me to be objective about it, but I kinda think that as well. I’m very proud of it; the whole band is very proud of it. Of course, we listened to it a lot while we were making it and then got away from it for a while. When I hear it now I still feel the same way about it. I was very happy with High & Mighty as well, but I feel this one expanded beyond that and [went] a little more towards where we’re headed in the future.

JamBase: It feels like the identity of the band with keyboards, post-Allen Woody really came into something on this record. It seems like internally you guys figured out what your statement of purpose was.

Gov’t Mule

Warren Haynes: Hopefully [laughs]. We were just flying by the seat of our pants and this is what happened. We went into the studio with Jorgen shortly after he joined the band, just to kind of force the issue and see what happens. The fact that it went really smoothly and productively and we were happy with what was going on and writing songs in the studio, it sort of galvanized the chemistry in a cool way that kind of advanced us to the next level really quickly.

There’s something about that ‘trial by fire’ sort of thing, where it can either be very instrumental or very detrimental in making you grow together.

It confirmed that we’d made the right decision.

I think Jorgen is tremendous with this band. He brings in a heaviness that’s reminiscent of Woody, and I couldn’t offer a bigger compliment.

Myself as well, and I think it’s a change we’re ready for now. I don’t know if we’d have been ready for it seven or eight years ago, but for whatever reason we’ve discovered each other now and it makes total sense.

How did you discover Jorgen? I think his entry surprised many of us who were largely unfamiliar with him prior to Gov’t Mule.

He was recommended to us by our mutual friend Jeff Young, who used to be in New York when I first came to New York and worked with me for a couple years when I first started putting musicians together in the New York area. Jeff left New York for Los Angeles to play with Jackson Browne, and he called one day and said, “I hear you guys are auditioning bass players and I think I might have the right guy.” We were putting together about a dozen bass players, all of which came extremely highly recommended from really close friends. So, the audition process consisted of us auditioning 12 really great people, and it was hard to choose because they all did an amazing job. But Jorgen brought the original spirit of the band back more than anybody we’ve played with since Allen. It sort of hit us like a bolt out of the blue, where it not only sounded like Gov’t Mule but the beginnings of Gov’t Mule.

I think I saw the Mule for the first time around 1996 and I was just floored by the thickness of the trio.

Yeah. That’s a good description [laughs].

Jorgen Carlsson by Willa Stein

It really took my legs out from underneath me. And I don’t think I’d ever conceived of one band playing Mississippi Fred McDowell and Black Sabbath covers in the same set before Gov’t Mule.

Our diversity as a crazy rock band was evident even then. I think it reflects all of our tastes in music. Individually, everybody’s taste is different but collectively there’s a huge overlap, which consists of an extremely diverse array of influences that need to be dealt with or showcased.

We did a few reggae influenced tunes even with Allen. We did a “Lively Up Yourself” that was a soft reggae version with a loud rock chorus. “I’m A Ram” goes back as far as when Allen Woody was alive. Those influences were always bubbling to the surface even in the ’90s. It maybe surprised some people when we went full-bore with Mighty High, but that was just something to do for fun and for the fans. It was never meant to be the follow-up to High & Mighty. I view By A Thread as the follow-up.

By A Thread also shows your continued growth as a songwriter. While I definitely enjoy you in multi-headed beasts like the Allmans and The Dead, it’s in Gov’t Mule that we get to hear your songwriting voice strongest, where we get to hear the way you spin a story.

To me, that’s a big part of the overall picture. I would never be comfortable in any situation – no matter how great the improv or musicianship is – if there wasn’t a story to tell. My affinity for singer-songwriters has been there from the beginning. When I was 14 I used to sneak into these folk clubs in Asheville, NC and met a lot of the folk musicians and singer-songwriters and was very influenced by that. So, as I was listening to rock ‘n’ roll, jazz and blues the singer-songwriter thing never came out of focus for me. Maybe it’s coming more into focus now more than ever.

One of the challenges with Gov’t Mule, for me, has been to keep the singer-songwriter thing as part of the picture but not dilute the original power trio that Gov’t Mule started as, while at the same time also not sounding like the Allman Brothers, The Dead or anyone else I’m associated with because that would be futile to write and record songs for Gov’t Mule that sounded like they belonged somewhere else.

Continue reading for more on Gov’t Mule…

 


Jorgen brought the original spirit of the band back more than anybody we’ve played with since Allen. It sort of hit us like a bolt out of the blue, where it not only sounded like Gov’t Mule but the beginnings of Gov’t Mule.

-Warren Haynes

 

I’m actually pretty amazed at your ability to compartmentalize identity in that way and keep these different worlds separate.

Warren Haynes by Willa Stein

It is quite a challenge, and there are a few songs that overlap and could go in several different camps. But for the most part it seems obvious to me which ones belong where.

What do you find happens for you as you move through these different camps? What do you carry over from one to another?

The projects I’m involved with tend to influence each other in some way. I always tell people when asked about the hectic schedule that I’d rather be this busy with two or three bands than one. It’s much easier to get burnt out if you’re doing the same thing all the time, but if you bounce back and forth it becomes a source of inspiration, all the musicians I’m surrounded by and constantly influenced by. When I leave one project and enter another I bring that energy with me.

You manage to maintain your own identity when you play with The Dead. You really don’t sound like Garcia, but you’ve found your voice within the material, particularly the ballads associated with Garcia, which were a real challenge for them after Jerry died.

It’s an opportunity for me to express myself differently and express different sides of my musical personality. It’s an opportunity that a lot of musicians don’t have and may, in some cases, lead to some frustration. If musicians in general had a complaint, maybe that complaint would be they get stuck only showing a certain side of themselves. Being able to jump around and do different things like this, I don’t have that complaint and it’s something I’m very grateful for because the way I play and sing in one band is different from the other, even if it’s not drastically different. It’s the same overall personality but I’m allowed to utilize different sides of that. That helps keep me fresh, as well.

Having all these different influences, like most musicians, is a pretty natural thing. I think audiences today – or at least the audience we have in the circles we run in – are more open-minded about that and don’t tend to compartmentalize and stereotype as much as in the past, hopefully.

Matt Abts by Willa Stein

I liken it to ’70s AM radio, where you could have Bruce Springsteen, Al Green and Bob Marley all in the same set of music.

When I was growing up FM [radio] was coming onto the scene, and one minute you heard Sly & The Family Stone and The Byrds and the next you heard Jimi Hendrix.

You placed on Rolling Stones100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time [Number 23, sandwiched between Mike Bloomfield (22) and The Edge (24)]. Is that a strange experience?

It is strange, and when I first found out about it I was very surprised. Our office got a call saying they were doing this list and I was on it, but they wouldn’t say where. I was very surprised to be on the list, and thought, “Well, great.” But, we had to wait till the magazine came out to find out where I was in rankings. It’s obviously not my list but I’m very honored to be on there.

This speaks to the idea that you are now an influence. You’ve been at this long enough that there’s people picking up guitars because of something they vibed with in your playing. What do you think you’re imparting to them?

Warren Haynes

Hopefully if someone is influenced by what I do part of that will be nodding back to where it all came from. As a guitar player, my style is an amalgamation of everybody I’ve ever listened to, and the people that are most important come out the most. But, it’s similar to what Gov’t Mule does as a band, where young people who may have never heard some of these influences have the opportunity to discover where a lot of this music came from, because it didn’t just come out of thin air.

I think it’s an unspoken responsibility. When I was learning how to play, I had my first few guitar heroes and I’d read interviews with those people and see who they listened to and listen to that list of people. So, it’s going backwards into a family tree. When you discover someone who was SO influential over so much music it’s eye opening. So, for me, someone like Albert King – who I don’t think was even on that list [editor's note: Nope, Albert wasn't] – in my opinion, and I’m equally a fan of B.B. and Freddy King, Albert is the blues guitar player who influenced rock more than anyone. My reasoning for saying that is he was a major, major influence on Hendrix. He was a major influence on Duane Allman and Clapton, and obviously, the biggest influence on Stevie Ray Vaughn. Just that in itself is an indication of Albert King’s impact. He’s the only one for some reason that I can never figure out where it came from before him. When I listen to everybody else I can trace the lineage but with Albert I never heard anyone sound like that before him.

It’s a joy to come across something truly unique, a fresh language to absorb and attempt to speak.

That’s what music is in the first place. Music has always been a form of expression, and when you trace it back to its earliest roots it’s about communication. So the fact that here we are thousands of years later using improvisation as a way of communicating with each other, it’s pretty amazing. I’m honored to be part of the enormous circle of people that speak that language.

In a recent article in Classic Rock Magazine, you called improvisation “instantaneous composition.” Inspired observation, because it isn’t just this freeform thing if handled properly. With talented improvisers you really are creating a unique piece of music on the spot.

That, to me, is the most gratifying. As much as I like composing, there’s something about being on the spot and composing on the spot that’s instant gratification. Look at somebody like Charlie Parker, who was an absolute master of that, and it’s equally important as someone like Mozart. You have to learn how to open yourself up and let the music come through without any blockage. And that’s something you can’t predict or force or depend on, but when it happens it’s the most rewarding experience imaginable.

Gov’t Mule will perform two nights at NYC’s Beacon Theatre for NYE followed by an Island Exodus in Negril, Jamaica. Complete Gov’t Mule tour dates available here.

JamBase | 40 Acres
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Trevor Hall 2010 Tour

TREVOR HALL TO EMBARK ON CROSS-COUNTRY HEADLINING TOUR IN 2010

Trevor Hall

After a series of sold out tours with Matisyahu, Colbie Caillat, and Michael Franti & Spearhead in 2009, Trevor Hall is hitting the road again – this time on his own six week headline run beginning January 27, 2010 in San Francisco.

Trevor’s self-titled debut on Vanguard Records was released last July and debuted on Billboard’s Heatseeker chart at #7. He toured the country three times over, was named one of the Top 20 New Artists in 2009 by Music Connection magazine, and received rave reviews for his intense live performances including this from Seattle Weekly: “I was blown away when he proceeded to perform chilling songs that sounded somewhere between Jack Johnson and Bob Marley,” and this from Metromix: “If you’ve never heard him, you need to. If you’ve seen him perform, come again. My heart is not so easily swayed, and Trevor Hall accomplished that feat in a matter of seconds. Imagine what he can do for a whole concert.”

Hall is a breath of fresh air in today’s music scene. His latest album, produced by Marshall Altman (Matt Nathanson, Kate Voegel, Marc Broussard), embodies a soulfulness, depth, and passion far beyond his 23 years. Trevor combines a unique musical mix of reggae and acoustic rock that serve as a landscape for his thought-provoking, inspiring lyrics.

Trevor infuses his songs with a deep sense of spirituality and social responsibility, as evidenced in the lead single “Unity,” written and performed with his friend Matisyahu. The two artists were on tour together when news of the Mumbai terrorist attacks hit the media. Trevor had made two trips to India, one a pilgrimage with two monks from a Southern California temple (whom he continues to live with), the second on his own in celebration of his 21st birthday. But the sectarian violence hit close to home for Matisyahu, who knew some of those who’d been murdered in a synagogue that had been targeted by the terrorists.

“We read about it, talked about it, meditated about it, and we started writing lyrics back and forth,” Trevor recalls. “On the external level, it’s obviously about the unity of all beliefs. We call it by many names, but there’s only one truth. But on a much deeper, internal level, it’s about the mystical place in your own heart where all these things merge into one thing. So the song works both ways.” Trevor also performed and co-wrote four songs that appear on Matisyahu’s new album, Light.

Amongst Trevor’s many charitable affiliations, he recently aligned himself with The Hunger Site, the Rainforest Action Network, and recently performed at an event for the Homeless Not Toothless Organization in Santa Monica, CA honoring Sharon Stone and Antwone Fisher.

Originally from South Carolina, Trevor Hall is most known for his songs “The Lime Tree” and “Other Ways,” which was featured on the Shrek the Third Soundtrack. He has been writing and performing since his early teens and touring since he was 17. Besides Trevor’s current Vanguard release, he also has released several independent recordings – This Is Blue, Alive & on the Road, Lace up Your Shoes, along with EP The Rascals Have Returned.

Trevor Hall Tour Dates

01/27/10 Wed Cafe du Nord San Francisco, CA

01/28/10 Thu Humboldt Brews Arcata, CA

01/29/10 Fri Doug Fir Portland, OR

01/30/10 Sat HUB North Den Seattle, WA

02/02/10 Tue The Trap Bar Alta, WY

02/03/10 Wed Reef Boise, ID

02/04/10 Thu Velour Provo, UT

02/06/10 Sat Bluebird Theater Denver, CO
02/09/10 Tue Vaudeville Mews Des Moines, IA

02/10/10 Wed Firebird St. Louis, MO

02/11/10 Thu Bottleneck Lawrence, KS

02/12/10 Fri Varsity Theater Minneapolis, MN

02/13/10 Sat Schubas Chicago, IL

02/14/10 Sun Schubas Chicago, IL

02/17/10 Wed The 8X10 Baltimore, MD

02/18/10 Thu Mercury Lounge New York, NY

02/19/10 Fri Higher Ground (Ballroom) Burlington, VT

02/20/10 Sat Iron Horse Music Hall Northampton, MA

02/21/10 Sun Harpers Ferry Allston, MA

02/24/10 Wed Tin Angel Philadelphia, PA

02/25/10 Thu Jammin’ Java Vienna, VA


Greensky Bluegrass/Sheaffer Tour

GREENSKY BLUEGRASS TEAMS WITH RAILROAD EARTH’S TODD SHEAFFER FOR TOUR

Greensky Bluegrass

Perennial bluegrass favorite Greensky Bluegrass has joined forces with Todd Sheaffer of Railroad Earth for an inspiring one-week tour in December.

Greensky Bluegrass is one of the most exciting bands in today’s music scene. Since winning the 2006 Telluride Bluegrass Festival Band Contest, Greensky has been touring the country consistently, averaging over 170 shows a year and playing to many sold out audiences along the way. In a very short time the band has performed with the likes of Tony Rice, Peter Rowan, Sam Bush, Yonder Mountain String Band, and Railroad Earth, and have performed at Telluride Bluegrass Festival, Rothbury and more. Add in the talents of Todd Sheaffer from Railroad Earth and you have one of the most well-rounded set of performers onstage today. Known for his soulful vocal delivery and song-writing skills, Sheaffer brings much more than just another acoustic guitar to the stage.

On any given night, in addition to the myriad of original songs, one might hear traditional bluegrass songs with an exploratory rock and roll jam, or selections from the Talking Heads, Jimi Hendrix, The Grateful Dead, or Bob Marley in the bluegrass form. “We are as likely to play a three minute song as we are a ten minute song on any given night,” says dobro player Anders Beck, “and I think that keeps it exciting for the audience.”

This is not the first collaboration between Greensky Bluegrass and Railroad Earth. Greensky is currently on tour in support of their recently released fourth album, Five Interstates, which was produced by Railroad’s Tim Carbone. Their strongest album to date, the 12 track journey features 11 original songs and one traditional bluegrass song (a nod to the deceased King of Bluegrass, Jimmy Martin). Carbone notes on the package: “Five Interstates came together like five lives intertwined, the intersection of a lifetime frozen in precious time and preserved in a digital tableau. I’m blessed… we’re all blessed to be witness to a band ascending as true as an arrow shot to the sky.”

Greensky Bluegrass and Todd Sheaffer Tour Dates
12/01/09 Tue Beachland Ballroom/Tavern Cleveland, OH

12/02/09 Wed 123 Pleasant St. Morgantown, WV

12/03/09 Thu Rex Theater Pittsburgh, PA

12/04/09 Fri The Field Bridgeport, CT

12/05/09 Sat Mexicali Live Teaneck, NJ

12/06/09 Sun Ram’s Head Tavern Annapolis, MD (early show)

12/06/09 Sun Jammin’ Java Vienna, VA

Complete Greensky Bluegrass tour dates available here.

Complete Railroad Earth tour dates available here.


Fat Freddy’s Drop: Beyond Bob

By: Jim Welte

Fat Freddy’s Drop by Kerry Brown

By official counts, Bob Marley fathered 11 children. But Tuff Gong’s musical ancestry extends far beyond one man’s fertility frontier, having spread his sonic seed across the globe in a period so fruitful that his progeny continue to turn up in far-flung places nearly three decades after his death.

In 1979, Marley performed a set at the Sweetwaters Music Festival on the West Coast of New Zealand’s North Island. Jamaican riddims fit Kiwis nicely, and the socially conscious lyrics tapped into the longstanding struggle of the indigenous Maori people for cultural and political recognition. The aftershocks from that show continue to be felt to this day, as a diverse and burgeoning dub and reggae influenced music scene in the capital city of Wellington has blossomed and taken its own message on tour around the globe. Bands like The Black Seeds, Salmonella Dub, and TrinityRoots have all had a hand in spreading the New Zealand reggae gospel over the past decade-plus.

But none has done it like Fat Freddy’s Drop, and there are a few crucial reasons why. For one, the septet boasts a multi-tentacled sound that seems to grow each time the band tours a new part of the world, while also remaining true to its dub and reggae roots. Its new album, Dr. Boondigga & the Big BW (released in U.S. November 10 on !K7), based on a fictional nemesis and his brain-washing robot henchman, reveals a beast of a band that seems ready to unleash the hounds. Secondly, they have taken their time since forming in 1999, touring the U.K. and Europe consistently and biding their time for a U.S. onslaught, which officially kicks off this week with a brief tour of California (full tour dates here).

Fat Freddy’s Drop by Kerry Brown

Finally and most importantly, Fat Freddy’s Drop is fronted by a voice for the ages. Dallas Tamaira (aka Joe Dukie) is a singer with so much warmth and soul in his voice that he’d captivate you whether he was busking on the corner or crooning intermittent verses amidst a cacophony of horns and techno thumps, as he is on Boondigga‘s marathon second track, “Shiverman.” Dukie, who got his nickname by combining the names of his musician father and grandfather, is the best singer you’ve never heard of. He draws on verses from prominent Maori authors like Hone Tuwhare and Witi Ihimaera, and says that his early imitations of people like Stevie Wonder and Luther Vandross “sounded [like] shit, so I had to kind of find my own voice.”

As a result, the sound of Fat Freddy’s Drop is a “Lovely Day”-era Bill Withers backed by the Aggrovators, with Mad Professor at the controls.

Like many intrepid musical excursions, it all began with some terribly good LSD. After their jam band Bongmaster fizzled out around 1998, Dukie, trumpeter Toby Laing and Samoan beatmaker Chris Faiumu (aka Fitchie aka Mu) began playing parties and club gigs. Mu had a host of regular DJ gigs, and he’d play all sorts of instrumentals, from house to soulful hip hop, over which Dukie and Laing could sing and play. Using vinyl limited the group a bit – “By the time they’d worked out some good ideas and some good melodies, the song would be over,” Mu says – so he bought an MPC 2000 sampler and started making his own beats.

Dallas Tamaira by Kerry Brown

The trio was tasked by the college radio station where Mu worked to come up with a song for a compilation. The flavor of the month LSD at that time in New Zealand featured the image of the Fat Freddy’s Cat from Gilbert Shelton’s comic strip, The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers. Over two days of writing, recording, mixing and mastering “Hope,” a soulful piece of sanguine space-out jazz, emerged. “We indulged,” says Mu. “We were quite young then.”

When asked what their group name was and having given it no thought, they put down Fat Freddy’s Drop. “We had planned to change the name but as time went on it was kind of too late,” Mu says. “We were too slack to change the name to a proper one, but people who didn’t know the story behind it liked the ring of it.”

Mu created the independent label The Drop that same year and steadily began releasing 12-inch singles, including “Midnight Marauders,” which was re-released by German electronic stalwart Sonar Kollektiv. Thus began a series of regular treks to Europe for the band and a growing following there fueled by tastemakers like BBC Radio 1 DJ Gilles Peterson. Mu also built himself a ProTools studio in the basement of his waterfront home in Wellington, a move that fostered a family vibe that has helped anchor the band through marriages and kids.

Fat Freddy’s 2006 debut album, Based On a True Story, featured tracks they’d been playing live for up to six years. It was aggressively mellow, rarely venturing outside soulful head-nodding territory. It was also spellbinding, the kind of record that pulls you in deeper with each spin.

Fat Freddy’s Drop by Kerry Brown

But unsurprisingly for a band that births most of its songs out of jam sessions, Fat Freddy’s Drop has fortified its rep on tour. As a fill-in at the Movement electronic music festival in Detroit in 2004, the band took the stage in front of about five people. “No one knew who the hell we were,” Mu says, “but we played a two and a half hour set and by the end, we attracted a huge crowd and people were digging it.”

Other than that show, Fat Freddy’s Drop hasn’t performed in the U.S. and Based On a True Story never got a U.S. distribution deal. As a result, a band that has been doing its thing for a decade, selling out shows in Europe and winning a bevy of awards in its home country, is largely unknown in America. The band had previous plans to tour the U.S. but they never came together, either because of the length of the trip, dependable European support, or post 9/11 nerves.

“We’re so far removed from America and it’s easy to look at America as such a huge place that you think, where do you start?” Mu says.

“We took what we thought was a safe option,” Dukie adds.

With Boondigga out through the !K7 label in the U.S. and the band set to tour California, all that is about to change, and both Mu and Dukie are thrilled at the opportunity. In the age of Obama, Dukie is sure that American listeners will take to older songs like “Hope for a Generation” and “Ray Ray,” which asks, “What’s the world with no soul?”

Boondigga sees the band spreading its wings, from the techno-meets-Gypsy jazz on “Shiverman” to a New Orleans flavor on “The Nod” that would be right at home in any second line parade. On the dubbed-out “The Raft,” Dukie hints at big things with lines like, “Although my people may not be many/ we are ready for the storm to come.”

“The time just feels right for us now to come to the States,” Dukie says. “We’ve done a lot of material, and it’s the kind of material that I would love to play for the American audience. We want to give them a taste of where we’re from and show them what makes us who we are. I know that there are people over there that will be able to appreciate that kind of thing.”

“It really feels like a long time coming,” he adds. “I can’t wait. And I’m nervous as well.”

Fat Freddy’s Drop Tour Dates

11/19/09 Thu The Independent San Francisco, CA

11/20/09 Fri The Roxy Theatre West Hollywood, CA

11/21/09 Sat WorldBeat Center San Diego, CA

11/22/09 Sun Saint Rocke Hermosa Beach, CA

11/26/09 Thu The Paradiso Amsterdam, NL

11/27/09 Fri Astra Berlin, GER

11/29/09 Sun Le Bataclan Paris, FRA

11/30/09 Mon Hammersmith Apollo London, GB

12/01/09 Tue Manchester Academy Manchester, GB

JamBase | Outbound
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State Radio: Let It Go

By: Dennis Cook

Rarely in music does wearing one’s politics on their sleeve turn out well; noble intentions and good music are usually strange bedfellows. But, there are fine exceptions, including Let It Go (released September 29 on Ruff Shod), the third full-length from State Radio, which powers ahead on the same steam that fueled The Clash, Bob Marley, Woody Guthrie, and other notable success stories in the mingling of social agenda and songcraft. With distinct echoes of these ancestors, State Radio has succeeded at the difficult trick of being forthrightly politically and socially progressive AND a blast to listen to.

Many admirable causes set to music have been undone by a preachy tone, clunky, obvious lyrics, or simply their sheer lack of entertainment. It’s not that every high-minded song needs to be fun but it doesn’t hurt the freeing of minds if people’s feet are on the same page. Let It Go freely mingles agit-punk-pop, credible roots reggae, pub ready proletariat shouters, and twisty hard rock into a seriously appealing variety platter. Upheaval of the power hoarding status quo seems both achievable and tuneful as one sways to “Bohemian Grove,” lifts a pint high while screaming themselves hoarse on “Knights of Bostonia,” or head-nods passionately to “Held Up by the Wires.” Led by ex-Dispatch man Chadwick Stokes, the trio plays lean but bold – punk trim but unafraid to soar skyward when the moment demands. Let It Go is potent stuff with the happy pulse of living beings in joyful action.

JamBase | Called Up
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Bebel Gilberto: All In One

By: Cal Roach

Brazilian pop singer Bebel Gilberto is probably known more in the U.S. for her collaborations (Thievery Corporation and David Byrne, etc.) than for her solo work, even though she is a native New Yorker. The new All In One, her first album for Verve, doesn’t stray far from the strains of adult-oriented world music that you’ll find in her other solo work. It might strike you as mildly exotic bubblegum on first listen, but the quality of the songs themselves will reward the patient listener.

A couple of appropriate covers don’t hurt: Bob Marley’s “Sun Is Shining” is almost unrecognizable, but a clever Latin-lite arrangement and Gilberto’s throaty moan make it a pleasant daydream. Stevie Wonder‘s “The Real Thing,” however, may be the highlight of the album; with production by Mark Ronson, the subtle horn, flute and vibraphone accompaniment and snappy snare backbeat allow Bebel’s voice to be the star, and the song stands out as the main booty-shaker on the disc.

Some tracks just don’t play to the singer’s strengths. “Bim Bom,” a song written by her father, João Gilberto (widely known as the inventor of Bossa Nova), benefits from lush harmonic arrangements, but Bebel’s phrasing is inexplicably rushed, with loud, unnatural breaths interrupting the flow of the song. But when she gets intimate and personal, as on “Nossa Senhora” and “Far From The Sea,” her voice is at its most effective, not lilting but airy and somewhat intoxicating. Her disregard for melodic and rhythmic precision lends character, whereas on glossier tunes like the title track, it just sounds a little amateurish. But then there are the breezy harmonic sighs that carry you away. This song highlights the best and worst qualities of the album: four different producers (at least eight over the whole album) surely contribute to an overall lack of cohesion, but some lovely arrangements and an almost tactile warmth make up for the missteps.

JamBase | Swaying
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Julian & Stephen Marley | 10.23 | Chicago

Words by: Nick Krkles | Images by: Julie Collins

Julian Marley feat. Stephen Marley :: 10.23.09 :: The Wild Hare :: Chicago, IL

Julian Marley :: 10.23 :: Chicago

Awake, Julian Marley‘s latest album released earlier this year is a great example of him stepping out from the Marley Brothers fold and into his own musical identity. Not to say that Julian didn’t work with his brothers during the making of this album; Stephen, Damian, and Ziggy play and offer production touches throughout, but Julian has grown vastly in his songwriting capabilities by crafting material that is roots-oriented and echoes back to the days of his father’s music. Nowhere was this evolution more visible than when Julian came to The Wild Hare reggae club as he passed through Chicago on a six week tour alongside his brother Stephen Marley.

It was a rainy, chilly, Friday evening and The Wild Hare was packed to the gills. A banner with the cover of Awake hung as the stage backdrop. The Uprising Band came onstage without an introduction and started off with the “Slow Motion” riddim, which was the intro chant during Bob Marley’s final tour in 1980. Once the MC came on and introduced Julian, the first song of the evening was “Babylon Cookie Jar,” followed by the rootsy title track from Julian’s 1996 debut, Lion In The Morning.

As the setlist went deeper and more people crammed up to the front of the stage, Julian spoke to the audience about a few new tracks on the Awake album. We were all invited to dance “On The Floor,” where everyone was grooving in their own way. We also heard the old Montego Bay tale of a white witch in Julian’s temptress tale “Rose Hall.” “Boom Draw,” one of the standout songs on the new album, was a heavy reggae/dancehall equivalent to Damian Marley’s “Welcome To Jamrock.” Like “Jamrock,” the song is a conscious Rastaman’s homage to the sacramental herb, explaining the association of a Rastaman or woman with his/her herb and Bible. “Sharp As A Razor” was a rebel jam reminder to stay aware that Babylon is ruthless.

Julian Marley :: 10.23 :: Chicago

Julian squeezed in a few of his dads more obscure classics like “Positive Vibration” and a quicker paced version of the original Studio One rhythm “Stir It Up” from the sixties. You couldn’t miss glimpses of Bob in Julian as he sang his father’s music while he danced and skanked around the stage, down to using the same Gibson guitar as his dad.

As the show went forward, the vibes got higher and so did the temperature. Before Julian went into Awake‘s title track, which was written about the passing of his grandmother (Bob Marley’s mother), Mrs. Cedella Marley Booker, the side doors were propped open for a moment, letting in a much needed cool breeze. The crowd was now reawakened for “Awake.” Using a classic roots rhythm, “Too Much Violence In The Streets” worked a refreshing, hard-hitting combination of consciousness and economic strife. Aston “Family Man” Barrett Jr. was on bass and rhythm guitar and long time Uprising Band member Dready was on bass and guitar, as well; at times in between tunes they would switch instruments allowing each other equal playing time.

One clear highlight was “Things Ain’t Cool,” which is the final cut on Awake. It’s a roots reggae tune that sounds like a modern day Bob Marley song. It features a slow, heavy riddim with a skanking feel to it – a nice one to hear live. After a certain length of time, one comes to the conclusion that Julian is the most roots reggae oriented of the Marley clan.

Julian & Stephen Marley :: 10.23 :: Chicago

Stephen Marley made an appearance during “A Little Too Late,” which is a cool song dealing with women who are heartbreakers. Stephen naturally came out and pumped up the audience, doing a bounce around chant with a constant smile on his face. It was kind of amusing to see Stephen with at least three layers of clothes on during the set; I suppose he was prepared for the Chicago weather. A few songs from Stephen’s Mind Control album, “Iron Bars” and “Traffic Jam,” were played, giving the show a climactic point before leaving the stage to set up for the encore.

As the crowd cried for more, we soon got what we wanted. “Give Thanks & Praises,” a tune from Bob Marley’s posthumous Confrontation album, started off the encore, followed by the reggae rockers anthem “Could You Be Loved,” and rounding out the sequence with Julian’s own “I’m Trying.” A smooth segue took us into the finale combination of “Exodus” and “Wake Up & Live.” This was a fitting way to close out a stellar show because the movement of Jah people will make you wake up and live. In other words, you’ll become awake.

It’s safe to say that the second reggae generation is picking up from where the founders left off, and there’s no better way to do this than with music made by the offspring of the originators. Things are looking bright for Julian Marley. If this show is a sign of what’s in store for the future it’s going to be an interesting, ground breaking evolution.

Julian Marley is on tour now; dates available here.

Continue reading for pics of Julian Marley in Chicago…

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Groundation: Here I Am

By: Dennis Cook

With elements of Cuban son, and 70s soul-jazz melded to a strong roots reggae, Groundation are traditionalists unbound by pure tradition. There’s little doubt anyone who strongly vibes with Bob Marley & The Wailers and Steel Pulse won’t dig Here I Am (Young Tree Records) a great deal, but there’s a sumptuous reach riding inside their largely easy skankin’. Vocally, Groundation are miles ahead of most of their competition, with guitarist-singer Harrison Stafford melding sweetly with songbirds Stephanie Wallace and Kim Pommell. There’s an island lilt underpinned by gritty, determined playing by the whole ensemble, and the tunes roll off easy but linger in a way that lures one back. If Groundation is less, well, ground breaking than contemporaries Soothsayers and The Black Seeds they make up for it with plain old warmly delivered roots music that’s easy to enjoy even as it explores serious things, i.e. fairly pure reggae music full of conviction and solid entertainment value.

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SOJA: Born in Babylon

By: Jake Krolick

Building off of their 2006 breakthrough reggae release, Get Wiser, SOJA‘s Jacob Hemphill, Bob Jefferson, Ryan Berty, Ken Brownell and Patrick Oshea pour their lion hearts and communally conscious lyrics into a third album, Born In Babylon. Their time touring through Hawaii seemed to have a greater affect on them than just a DVD and some live shows. Their previously punchy drum and bass reggae sounds have hopped a flight to a promised land filled with purple and gold sunsets of smooth, flowing rhythms that shimmer with the effortless drip that is the essence of reggae. These songs work magic on one’s psyche by not raising the pulse as much as they expand the mind and lift the shoulders of a society that needs more positive minded storytellers that sooth with their craft instead of destroying.

SOJA had just started to scratch the surface of well-built reggae on their previous efforts, cultivating a depth that pushed them uniquely apart from the multitude of rock steady beats and so-called reggae stars around the globe. With Born In Babylon, we hear even more of that depth as each song manages to grow into something worthwhile and distinctive, while the free-flowing rhythms keep the record’s tracks anchored to one another. The songs are timely hymns focused on our modern day struggle with global issues. Each theme is dealt with in a way that lets the listener relate without alienating some group or section of the globe. There is a significant depth and poignancy throughout Born In Babylon that stands out on several of the tracks where violin, viola and cello echo the tone of Hemphill’s high-pitched voice and make up the choir to his songs. SOJA plays in a realm similar to the one Ben Harper went towards on his album Fight For Your Mind and Citizen Cope echoed on his Clarence Greenwood Recordings ballad “Sideways.”

However, SOJA does not turn a blind eye to the greats of the roots reggae world. You can clearly hear hope and love flowing through Hemphill’s voice as he sings original consciously minded reggae with the conviction of an old soul. He strikes me as a man well beyond the years he has already lived on the earth (or what he refers to as his “blue and green church” in “Waking Up”). At the record’s core are simple messages that build into complex stories. Sitting on the top of these 14 tracks is SOJA’s wildly catchy prayer for the world, encapsulated by “Waking Up” and “Here I Am,” whose finger plucked guitar style and gentle melody plays out like an homage to Bob Marley’s masterpiece, “Redemption Song.” Both tracks grab at your neck and place a bump in your step while expanding your mind with multifaceted ideas of what is right and wrong in the universe.

Don’t call me one and only/ Just call me when you get lonely / Something that gets her there/ So feel better and get well/ There is no time without this pain / There is no time without again (“Here I Am”)

Turbulent times call for uplifting music and a hopeful sprit. Born In Babylon offers a refuge from the negative vibes found throughout most people’s daily grind on the highways, interwebs, and elsewhere in this mass consumer, media driven world hell-bent on preacher convictions and reporter glory. Hemphill, Jefferson, Berty, Brownell and Oshea inject their reggae with the sort of love and hope that holds us on this spinning globe of life, while simultaneously stirring us to action and movement as they elevate this art form to new heights.

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Music occupies an important place in our life

Music occupies an important place in our life. We can’t live without it. Actually people have different musical tastes depending on their age, education and even mood. Some people like classical music, others prefer rock, pop or jazz, but nobody is indifferent to it. Popular Music refers to the kind of music that appeals to [...]

Brett Dennen & Grace Potter Tour

BRETT DENNEN ANNOUNCES FALL TOUR WITH GRACE POTTER & THE NOCTURNALS


Brett Dennen

Brett Dennen, whose narrative-rich lyrics and world-infused melodies have earned comparisons to Bob Marley and Paul Simon, has announced a Fall Tour with Grace Potter and the Nocturnals. He will hit the Austin City Limits Festival in October, then perform at both The Greek and The Hollywood Bowl with Jason Mraz in October before setting out with Potter in November (full dates listed below). Registered fans on BrettDennen.net can purchase presale tickets on Thursday, September 10. Tickets go on sale to the general public for all shows starting Friday morning, September 11.

Already one of the fastest growing touring artists on the road, Brett recently told Billboard Magazine, “I’m really excited about this tour because I think it’s going to be a little more rocking than tours I’ve done in the past.” He adds, “Grace really knows how to rock it.”

Dennen’s current single, “Heaven” featuring Natalie Merchant debuted on iTunes last week and is already being adopted early and fast by AAA radio. The single’s success is a further step in Dennen’s rising profile after a summer of touring some of the biggest festivals like Bonnaroo, Rothbury, Summer Fest, Mountain Jam, Outside Lands Festival and Bumbershoot, as well as joining O.A.R. at venues like Red Rocks and Madison Square Garden.

Brett Dennen Tour Dates

10/04/09 Sun Zilker Park Austin, TX

10/09/09 Fri Greek Theatre Berkeley, CA

10/10/09 Sat Hollywood Bowl Los Angeles, CA

10/23/09 Fri La Salumeria della Musica Milan, IT

10/25/09 Sun Princess Pavilion Falmouth, GB

10/26/09 Mon Dingwall’s London, GB

10/27/09 Tue Melkweg Amsterdam, NL

10/28/09 Wed De Helling Utrecht, NL

10/29/09 Thu Doornroosje Nijmegen, NL

10/30/09 Fri Le Botanique Brussels, BEL

10/31/09 Sat Culturecentrum de Oosterpoort Groningen, NL

11/02/09 Mon Cafe de la Danse Paris, FRA

11/03/09 Tue Abart Zurich, SWI

11/05/09 Thu 59:1 Munchen, GER

11/06/09 Fri Magnet Berlin, GER

11/09/09 Mon Bikini Barcelona, ES

11/10/09 Tue Sala El Sol Madrid, ES

11/13/09 Fri The Cannery Nashville, TN (w/ Grace Potter and the Nocturnals)

11/14/09 Sat The Tabernacle Atlanta, GA (w/ Grace Potter and the Nocturnals)

11/16/09 Mon Rams Head Live Baltimore, MD (w/ Grace Potter and the Nocturnals)

11/17/09 Tue 9:30 Club Washington, DC (w/ Grace Potter and the Nocturnals)

11/19/09 Thu House of Blues Boston, MA (w/ Grace Potter and the Nocturnals)

11/20/09 Fri Terminal 5 New York, NY (w/ Grace Potter and the Nocturnals)

11/21/09 Sat The Trocadero Philadelphia, PA (w/ Grace Potter and the Nocturnals)

11/23/09 Mon The Guvernment Toronto, ON (w/ Grace Potter and the Nocturnals)

11/24/09 Tue St. Andrews Hall Detroit, MI (w/ Grace Potter and the Nocturnals)

11/25/09 Wed House Of Blues Cleveland, OH (w/ Grace Potter and the Nocturnals)

11/27/09 Fri Pantages Theatre Minneapolis, MN (w/ Grace Potter and the Nocturnals)

11/28/09 Sat House of Blues Chicago, IL (w/ Grace Potter and the Nocturnals)

11/30/09 Mon Turner Hall Ballroom Milwaukee, WI (w/ Grace Potter and the Nocturnals)

12/01/09 Tue Peoples Court Des Moines, IA (w/ Grace Potter and the Nocturnals)

12/03/09 Thu Ogden Theatre Denver, CO (w/ Grace Potter and the Nocturnals)

12/05/09 Sat The Crystal Ballroom Portland, OR (w/ Grace Potter and the Nocturnals)

12/06/09 Sun Moore Theatre Seattle, WA (w/ Grace Potter and the Nocturnals)

12/07/09 Mon Commodore Ballroom Vancouver, BC (w/ Grace Potter and the Nocturnals)

12/10/09 Thu House of Blues San Diego, CA (w/ Grace Potter and the Nocturnals)

12/11/09 Fri Marquee Theatre Tempe, AZ (w/ Grace Potter and the Nocturnals)

12/12/09 Sat The Wiltern Los Angeles (w/ Grace Potter and the Nocturnals)


Camp Bisco 8 | 07.16 – 07.18 | New York

Word by: Kevin Schwartzbach | Images by: Dave Vann

Camp Bisco 8 :: 07.16.09 – 07.18.09 :: Indian Lookout Country Club :: Mariaville, NY


The Disco Biscuits :: Camp Bisco 2009

It’s occurred to me that Camp Bisco has a completely different mentality than any other festival I have ever been to. Now of course, every festival has its idiosyncrasies, but more and more festivals seem to be converging on related themes. In addition to the music, festivals these days often attempt to have a broader focus; most have not been shy about promoting progressive ideals regarding society and the environment. Camp Bisco, now in its eighth year, on the other hand seems to be all about immediate gratification. No think tanks about how our actions today will affect the world in the long-term, no green-themed concession stands, hell I don’t even remember seeing any recycling bins. There were a handful of extra-musical activities present focusing on various social issues, such as the Marc Brownstein founded Head Count and Strangers Helping Strangers, but these were inconsequential to the overall Camp Bisco experience.

But that’s not necessarily a bad thing (though recycling bins would have been nice). You may not learn about societal problems or the environment but what you do learn at Camp Bisco is how to live in the moment, how to really grab life by the balls and have a good time – this festival truly has an emphasis on the here and the now. It’s not a perfect template – obviously focusing on the ‘greater good’ has its importance, but this shouldn’t stop you from living your own life to its fullest. And well, that’s evidently just what the folks at CB8 came to do. They came to get down.

Our hosts, The Disco Biscuits put together quite the lineup in an attempt to fulfill the best mode of immediate gratification – music. Each year Camp Bisco seems to gravitate more and more towards the electronica and hip-hop scenes and away from its jamband roots. With the likes of hip-hop great Nas and the electronic masterminds Pretty Lights and Shpongle amidst a multitude of other DJs and rappers, this year saw a lineup that was pushed even farther in that direction, while maintaining an eclectic mix of other artists.

For the third year in a row the sprawling fields of upstate New York’s Indian Lookout Country Club served as our playground. It’s high time that this formerly nomadic festival found a place to call home. And on these familiar grounds an opportunity to string golden moments together slowly presented itself over the course of the weekend.

Thursday, 07.16


Asher Roth :: Camp Bisco 2009

Aside from an early Bisco soundcheck that included a “Shem-Rah Boo” and “Caterpillar,” the first band of the festival to be heard was Beautiful Small Machines over at the Tent Stage around 4 p.m. In fully white-clad garb this band sounded like Bends-era Radiohead if they had a female singer and were a tad poppier. Frontwoman Bree Sharp let out passionate wails in what sounded like an attempt to recapture that grungy sound of the early to mid ’90s.

Torrential downpours stranded us at the (relatively) dry Tent Stage so I held tight until Dr. Fameus. The side project of Bisco drummer Allen Aucoin, this was an opportunity to see a creative side of Aucoin that rarely shines through in the Biscuits’ music (not to mention the only time you’ll ever get to hear him talk). While in previous years Aucoin was often joined by DJ Drizno, this year he was flying solo. With a familiar look of diligent concentration, Allen hammered out mesmerizing beats often bordering on breakneck drum-n-bass tempi on top of trancey bass and synth samples manipulated by his laptop.

The eighth Camp Bisco was one of the most hip-hop heavy in years. After my appointment with Dr. Fameus I ventured back to the Main Stage for Kid Cudi followed by Asher Roth, each with a completely different style of hip-hop. Cudi had bumping club beats that he smoothly rapped over with tight lines, while Roth had more of a college rock meets hip-hop feel. I have to be honest; when I first saw Roth’s name on CB’s lineup I thought it was some practical joke that the Biscuits were trying to play on us. And though he seems to me mostly a novelty act (particularly during the song “I Love College”) parts of it weren’t half bad. Steven Ellison, otherwise known as Flying Lotus, sat behind his turntables mixing an array of hip-hop samples in an impressive showing of DJ talent in the slot right before the headliners.


Jon Gutwillig :: Camp Bisco 2009

Say what you will about The Disco Biscuits during the year, but when it comes to their own festival, Bisco habitually bring it. This is their kingdom and they reign over it with a trance fist. Jon ‘The Barber’ Gutwillig‘s syncopated guitar matched Brownie’s bass to start Thursday night off with “Morph Dusseldorf.” “Morph is who a boy you see, he’s changing as we speak/ from Adavan to ale man in twenty-forms a week,” sang Brownie – no Tractorbeam nor Perfume this set. One of the main things that make Bisco sets so great is the uncertainty that looms once they start jamming. It was not before long that teases of “Cyclone” began to surface but the band quickly pulled the rug out from under us, segueing into “Digital Buddha.” Symmetric LED lights flashed in synch with Brownie’s pulsing bass as they began kicking out the untz, slowly transforming the “Buddha” into “The Great Abyss.” Barber was hitting all the right notes, but this was undoubtedly a Magner dominated set, his wraithlike synthesizer captivating most of my listening attention.

A plodding crescendo reached “Cyclone” at its apex, fulfilling those shattered expectations from earlier in the set. “Cyclone” indeed got my feet moving but I’ve heard this song peak so much harder than this particular rendition. Aucoin, now in a spiffy paisley shirt, meticulously banged on his kit while the band took us into a powerful “Buddha” ending. With puddles of sloppy mud scattered all across the once grassy field, we were treated to an appropriate “Wet” and “Above the Waves.” Despite being unfinished, “Waves” was the highlight of the set. A rushed “Morph” ending closed off the first of six Bisco sets a bit haphazardly.

While the first set was good it certainly left something to be desired. On paper this looks like an amazing set but they simply didn’t nail the songs like they could have. That being said it was miles ahead of the first set at Camp last year. Luckily, we still had five more Bisco sets coming our way.


Prometheus :: Camp Bisco 2009

A sheath of darkness now covered the grounds as I wandered over to the Tent Stage, now dubbed the “Twisted All Star Tent” to kick off the first late night with some Prometheus. When I arrived, however, I found Ott spinning some of his chilled-out, psychedelic dub music that infused reggae with a heavy backbeat and synthetic noises from another planet. Ott spun a stellar set but the late night party didn’t really get kicked into high gear until Shpongle took the stage.

Shpongle is a master of timbre. Unearthly synthetic sounds that have only ever been conjured by the demented mind of Simon Posford swirled around in my head – we’re talking sounds that are just simply unimaginable to the average human being. Aided by the mysterious Raja Ram on flute and various other instruments Posford mixed these timbres with tribal rhythms, ethnic samples manipulated in the most ingenious and, of course, a lively entrancing backbeat. “Let’s get shpongled,” quipped Posford in his delightful British accent before spinning out Shpongle classics such as “Schnitzeled in the Negev” and “Divine Moments of Truth,” though it’s hard to say how much of what Posford does is “spinning” and how much of it is just hitting a button and dancing.

Continue reading for Friday’s coverage of Camp Bisco…

Friday, 07.17


Camp Bisco 2009

The accumulating heat inside my tent incited me to wake up to a beautiful Friday morning. The weather for the time being was comfortable but the clouds overhead served as a premonition for tempests to come. However, the knowledge of bad weather on the horizon was hardly enough to get me down as looking at the schedule Friday appeared to be the most stacked day of music at the festival.

After minor technical delays Dr. Dog got the music rolling on the Main Stage. Their lyric-driven brand of psychedelic rock was a good start to the day. Their voices swirled in harmony over rugged guitars that had a bit of a poppy feel mixed with a roller coaster of energy making the music very translatable to even someone completely unfamiliar with their repertoire. The rain slowly began to trickle from the sky, but that didn’t stop these guys from thundering ahead.

I wandered over to the Hill Stage for some Otherwise, a band that mixed elements of hip-hop with reggae and electronic music, before heading back to the Main Stage for K’naan. This Somalian artist out of Toronto was quite possibly the best showing of hip-hop this weekend. K’naan (born Kanaan Warsame) takes the fluid beats of American hip-hop and fuses it with the music of his homeland, giving his songs a kind of worldly touch. His style of rapping often sounded like Eminem but his lyrical content relayed a much more poignant social message and on the whole felt much more poetic.


K’naan :: Camp Bisco 2009

Back on the hill the DJ and guitarist duo BoomBox were bumping their tripped out funk-rock music. I had not heard much about these guys previously but the lineage of guitarist Zion Rock Godchaux (son of the Grateful Dead’s Keith and Donna Godchaux) was enough for me to check ‘em out. The first couple of minutes were rather enjoyable but the energy level hardly seemed to fluctuate so I lost interest in the meandering beats after a while. Friday also offered a smattering of dub-step for those who were so inclined with Starkey and Martyn each spinning their own unique brands of the electronic genre at the Tent Stage. Wiring two turntables through a computer, Starkey was the most entertaining to watch as he scratched away at his vinyl.

The highlight of Friday midday was without a doubt the Younger Brother live set. Imagine the psy-trance of Posford and Vaughan – the vast spectral timbres, the pulsing beat, the cleverly cut up samples – compounded with a rocky intensity provided by the raucous orangutan drumming of Joe Russo. And of course, Brownie – the perfect bassist for this trance/rock amalgamate – added forceful Bisco-y climaxes with just a tinge of untz. Tom Hamilton, on the other hand, seemed hardly to make a peep, almost inaudible over the rest of the band. Posford switched back and forth from his DJ station and an electric guitar, where he fingered out impressive licks. Though much of what they played came from one of Younger Brother’s two studio albums, this manifestation sounded wholly different from the more down-tempo productions.


Nas & Damien Marley :: Camp Bisco 2009

The sky had held up for a while but the clouds couldn’t bear to pass up this prime opportunity to drop some drizzle on us. We endured the mild wetness while Brownie and Posford shouted, “I am a freak/ I am unique,” in synchronized repetitions before blasting us with a powerful peak. I caught my breath afterwards and ran over to the Hill Stage for Bonobo. Another British DJ bringing his music to life with a live band, Bonobo (born Simon Green) delivered jazzy trip-hop grooves. Green went back and forth between spinning at his turntables and plucking out the often extremely complex basslines on an electric bass. Throwing saxophone and a live drummer into the mix, as well as a guitarist, keyboardist and lush jazz vocals, this incarnation of Bonobo turned out to be one of the best sets at Camp on Friday.

A rain delay kept Nas and Damian “Jr. Gong” Marley at bay but the Pnuma Trio and Orchard Lounge were more than enough to satiate me while I waited for them to recover. I took refuge under the Tent Stage as a writhing hoard of people coagulated around for Orchard Lounge. Normally a three-pronged DJ collective, O-Lounge only had a third of its constituency spinning at Bisco. Apparently the overhang of the Hill Stage wasn’t enough to make Pnuma impervious to the rain, as Alex Botwin (bass/computer) seemed to have technical troubles throughout the set. Fortunately, Lane Shaw (drums) and Ben Hazelgrove (keyboards) had no trouble picking up the slack, each turning it up a notch when Botwin’s bass went awry. This set was heavy on the new stuff, playing a bunch of tunes off their latest release, Character, and even some previously unreleased material. Their newer stuff paints strokes of electronica layered with dabs of hip-hop onto a complex jazzy canvas.


The Disco Biscuits :: Camp Bisco 2009

Finally, the rain had died down enough for Nas and his colleague of legendary lineage to start their set. Nas’ slick, poignant lyrics gained a smooth Caribbean edge with the help of Marley. The two artists’ distinct styles meshed together in a congenial manner – a good sign for their upcoming studio collaboration, Distant Relatives. Nas left the stage, giving Damien the chance to uphold his father’s legacy, jamming out Bob Marley classics such as “One Love” and “Exodus.” “Jr. Gong” showed off his own contemporary brand of reggae, though the backing band often seemed to lose step with the vocalist. Though they played a set astonishingly similar to the one a few weeks earlier at Rothbury (read the review here), this is still an act worth going to see at least once.

With one set already behind them, Friday’s Bisco sets saw our hosts finally hitting it in full stride. “You guys having fun out there despite the soaked environment?” joked Brownie before the Biscuits jumped right into “Rockafella.” This is a song I previously did not appreciate but Bisco has been killing this one of late, bringing it to places they never would have dreamed of when they first introduced it in ’07. “Strobelights & Martinis” began with a minor flub from Barber but he recovered quickly. As the show progressed, the sonic blips of Barber’s guitar occupied my hearing, and kaleidoscopic visuals displayed on hexagonal panels tripped out my vision. The set peaked in tandem with the monstrous precipitation during two separated sections of “Hot Air Balloon,” each equally majestic. One of Barber’s most beautifully written pieces, this song just breeds feelings of utter elation. Despite bearing its moniker twice on this setlist “HAB” still remained unfinished.


Chromeo :: Camp Bisco 2009

Chromeo played during the set break and aside from a hilarious take on Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believing,” they played the exact same set I had seem them play previously at Rothbury and Starscape. Bisco’s second set was Thursday night’s polar opposite. If the night before they had an amazing setlist but did not nail the songs like they could have, Friday’s second set looked rather tame on paper but my god did these guys play the shit out of each song. And it’s a damn good thing too because an epic Bisco set was about the only thing I was willing to sit through during a tumultuous downpour. After “Koncrete,” a forgettable new song that featured Barber’s menacing glottal scraping, the first “Floes” of 2009 was dropped – and a heavy drop it was. “Mirrors” > “Minions,” though each relatively weak songs in my opinion, contained some of the best jamming of the weekend. The set ended with a bang, finishing off the “Waves” from the previous night. A mesh of a sinister trancey synth from Magner and Barber’s classically infused guitar line saw these masters of jam at their best so far this weekend.

The late night Tent Stage had become a quagmire from all the bad weather, but this didn’t stop people from packing in tight for Pretty Lights. Cory Eberhard kept things tight on the drums, constantly laying down thick rhythms while Derek Vincent Smith spun his heart out. Normally keen on contrasting points of extreme ferocity with more relaxed down-tempo grooves, PL seemed to have every intent of making Friday’s late night an absolute rager, throwing down with balls-to-the-wall intensity. Like so many of their other sets, Pretty Lights closed their show with an affable mash-up of M.I.A.’s “Paper Planes” with Wreckx-n-Effect’s “Rump Shaker.” Two Fresh was up next on the bill. Offering a fun set with a mixture of organic soul, funk and hip-hop samples, an unreal synthesizer and a live drummer, the double DJed trio sounded like a lackluster version of the preceding act, and the fact that Pretty Lights completely killed it didn’t help their case.


STS9 :: Camp Bisco 2009

Sound Tribe Sector 9 closed off Friday’s late night to a packed house. When I first saw these guys about three or four years ago I wasn’t too impressed, but the STS9 of today is a completely different animal from what I experienced way back when. Formerly their shows featured a whole lot of wispy ambience that felt like it should be going somewhere but never did. Over time, however, Sound Tribe reincarnated itself as a straight-ahead, heavy hitting electronic rock outfit capable of erupting into rapturous peaks. Hunter Brown manned both his guitar and a laptop computer (as did three other members of the band), and Brown managed to squeal out phantomous sounds that barely sounded like a guitar at all. His simple themes looped around in the air continuously until they blossomed into flowering melodies that provoked a musical dialogue with keyboardist David Phipps. These melodies often tended to remain stagnant while rhythmic forces propelled the music to new heights. Tribe’s set ended much earlier than expected but just as well because many of us were tired with our feet and legs covered in mud.

Continue reading for Saturday’s coverage of Camp Bisco…

Saturday, 07.18


Camp Bisco 2009

With no music on Sunday, Saturday was the final day of Camp Bisco, and what a day it was. Brownie had predicted the previous night that the weather would be beautiful all day Saturday – and luckily the often-bombastic Brownie proved an accurate meteorologist. The electronic hip-hop stylings of BLVD seeped into my tent from the Main Stage around noon to wake me up. I was more than obliged to groggily crawl out of my tent caked in mud to give them a better listen.

After some breakfast Telepath took the Main Stage. A live trio from Philadelphia, these guys take salacious down-tempo electronic music and add an ethnic twist. Samples of Indian and Arabic music accompanied ambient keyboards provided by Michael Christie while Curt Henry and his ‘fro rocked back and forth to his fluid basslines. Up on the hill I caught a bit of Indobox before returning to the Main Stage for an afternoon Biscuits set.

I braved the muddy field for a rare opportunity for a daytime show. “We’re gonna do a Saturday afternoon set for you guys. Otherwise known as Tractorbeam vs. The Perfume,” said Brownie before diving into a hip-hop version of “M.E.M.P.H.I.S.” Brownie and Barber, armed with nothing but their microphones, each jumped around the stage trading off rapping lines, revealing Brownie’s secret desire to be a member of the Beastie Boys. All the while Barber did his classic dance move where he rocked back and forth pumping a lone fist circularly through the air – a move I’ve dubbed “The Barber Shuffle.” For those of you that don’t know, The Perfume is when TDB take their own material and recreate it in different genres. For the most part Perfume versions of their music felt mostly like a novelty, as each time they dropped a song in a different genre I couldn’t shake the desire to just hear the original tune.


Drummers Unite – Altman & Aucoin :: Camp Bisco 2009

Apparently Tractorbeam vs. The Perfume meant that they’d switch off between the two. The Perfume morphed into Tractorbeam before my eyes as Magner’s whistling synth brought us into “Rock Candy” while Brownie and Barber dawned their axes. Tractorbeam essentially removes the two worst parts of a Biscuits show – the singing and the time in-between songs. Seriously though, as enjoyable as Tractorbeam was, and as much as the Biscuits don’t have the greatest vocals in the world, the lack of singing really made it feel like something was missing. “Run Like Hell” just wasn’t the same without Brownie doing his best Roger Waters impersonation. The Perfume-d “Once the Fiddler Paid” was a bit anti-climactic though the calypso take on the song was an interesting twist. I don’t know if the vs. in “Tractorbeam vs. The Perfume” implied that this was supposed to be some sort of competition, but if it was Tractorbeam won.

We were treated to an epic surprise at the end of the first set as a special guest was introduced – Sam “The Professor” Altman. “That’s Dr. Sammy to you,” joked Brownie. This was the former Bisco drummer’s first appearance with the band at Camp in four years and the first ever since (as far as I know) he played “Magellan” with them at an Electric Factory show during the ’07 New Year’s run. The original quartet played a honky-tonk “Sound One” that really was something special.

Few people were willing to wade through the mud for Break Science but those brave enough to do so had their courage rewarded. The breakbeat drumming of Adam Deitch was supplemented by the DJ skills of what was suppose to be Alex Botwin of Pnuma but turned out to be someone else. Nevertheless this mystery DJ held his own, pumping out a mix of trip-hop, hip-hop, dub and some DnB. But, it was Deitch that stole the show with his insane drum chops.


Brothers Past :: Camp Bisco 2009

I gave my feet a break from the mud over at the Hill Stage – the one stage that was not laden in mud – where Brothers Past threw down a dirty set. Tom Hamilton finally got the opportunity to shine after barely having an impact on Younger Brother’s set the day before. Tom McKee laid down an ambient synthetic soundscape over which Hamilton and Clay Parnell dubbed to a rocky high. Most of what they played had a very progressive feel to it as they tightly transitioned through wholly dissimilar sections while somehow managing to maintain a sense of continuity in their music.

I left Brothers Past early to catch STS9′s second set of the festival. With the daylight gradually fading away, Sound Tribe perfectly complimented the aura of the moment, playing a much more laid-back set than their late night rager. There were, of course, moments of epic intensity placed strategically throughout their set. Back over on the hill EOTO offered up a hodgepodge of electronic musical mastery. It’s hard to believe that this glitched-out duo has its origins in the organic jammy goodness of the String Cheese Incident. SCI’s percussive force of Jason Hann and Michael Travis create all the music they play on the spot, relying on the energy and atmosphere of the occasion to guide them, seamlessly jumping from one dance-inducing groove to the next. This particular EOTO showing was heavy on the trance, appropriate given their location.


KJ Sawka with Biscuits :: Camp Bisco 2009

Keeping with the spirit of inciting people to dance to trance, The Disco Biscuits jumped right into their second set of the day. Night now upon us, this was the Biscuits’ darkest, most evil set of the festival, and every song they played had a surreal ominous overtone. “Sister Judy’s Soul Shack” – the first since 2006 – started the set with an eerily jazzy melody from Barber while the rest of the band held down a dark, trance-heavy groove. An uncharacteristically sinister inverted “And the Ladies Were the Rest of the Night” segued flawlessly into the ending of “Save the Robots.” This one-two punch was the highlight of the set, particularly the vigorous climax of “Robots” that Barber completely owned.

LCD Soundsystem‘s James Murphy graced us with his DJ stylings during Bisco’s set break. It had the same LCD Soundsystem feel with an in-your-face punk edge mixed with house music that can make you dance your ass off, though Murphy didn’t spin any actual material from his most noteworthy project.

In typical Bisco fashion, they kicked off their final set with the beginning of “Robots” and then proceeded to play the remaining parts of the song out of order. The music finally took an exultant turn with the transition into “Hope.” As it should be, this ultimate set was shaping up to be their best. KJ Sawka replaced Allen on drums during “Hope” and utterly cleaned up sitting behind the thrown.


Brownie & Barber :: Camp Bisco 2009

A jam reminiscent of early Pink Floyd brought us into a “Basis for a Day” that rolled along its many peaks and valleys. After nailing the tightly composed section of the song, we reached the track’s sublime ending. There is this feeling of supreme visceral pleasure that for many can only be triggered by music – endorphins flood your brain as your knees go weak – a feeling that no other physical realm seems to have the ability to reproduce. Even within music few pieces are capable of inciting such gratification. And if there ever was a piece of music that had this capacity, the breathtaking ending of “Basis” was it. It’s moments like this that people are referring to when they tell you to live in the moment. The victorious ending of “Hot Air Balloon” gave us closure to finish off what might well have been the best of all six Bisco sets. Their only encore at this year’s Camp continued this epic trend, as our hosts treated us to “Very Moon” > “Mr. Don” to end their tenure at Camp Bisco 8.

The DFA Disco Tent ended this mother of all weekends starting with Holy Ghost. This was no misnomer – ’70s style string section samples abound over bumping beats – this was straight discothèque fare. James Murphy took the stage once more, this time joined by LCD Soundsystem cohort Pat Mahoney for CB8′s finale. And what a finale it was, as the duo let loose an energetic blend of disco and house music to cap off the weekend.

The moments had come and gone, but thanks to that carpe diem attitude produced by Camp Bisco’s mentality it was possible to grab hold of all of them. Though it would be nice to see Camp become a bit more environmentally friendly in years to come, since it would not really compromise our ability to live in the moment, it is undeniable that over the last eight years Camp Bisco has evolved into one bitchin’ good time.

Continue reading for more of Dave Vann’s Camp Bisco pics…

Thursday, 07.16

Asher Roth

Tuphace

Tuphace

Flying Lotus

Land Squid

Marc Brownstein – The Disco Biscuits

Allen Aucoin – The Disco Biscuits

Aron Magner – The Disco Biscuits

Ott

Shpongle with Raja Ram

Continue reading for Friday pics of Camp Bisco…

Friday, 07.17

Joe Russo and Simon Posford

Joe Russo

Joe Russo, Tuphace, DJ Harry

Younger Brother

Younger Brother

Otherwise

Dirty Paris

Dr. Dog

BoomBox

K’naan

Nas & Damian “Jr. Gong” Marley

Nas & Damian “Jr. Gong” Marley

Orchard Lounge

The Disco Biscuits

Pretty Lights

Hunter Brown – STS9

David Murphy – STS9

Conspirator in the VIP Lounge

Continue reading for Saturday pics of Camp Bisco…

Saturday, 07.18

The Disco Biscuits and Crew

Brownie and Alan with #1 Fan contest winners

Brothers Past

The one and only Super D

Break Science ft Adam Deitch

KJ Sawka

Mike LaSage and the Stumbling Troubadours

Biodiesel

Telepath

Two Fresh

Telepath

Synewave

AC Slater

Break Science ft Adam Deitch

Biodiesel

BLVD

Brownie – The Disco Biscuits (Day Set)

Allen Aucoin – The Disco Biscuits (Day Set)

Joe Nice

Zach Velmer – STS9

STS9

Bisco FOH engineer Patrick Hutchinson with Johnny R. Goode (background) Biscuits Lighting Designer

The Disco Biscuits

The Disco Biscuits

The Disco Biscuits

The Disco Biscuits

JamBase | Biscolated
Go See Live Music!


Mike Ragogna: HuffPost Premiere: Zero 7′s “Medicine Man” plus Paul McCartney’s MPL Promotes Catalog & New Talent in a New Way

It’s been three years since former Tea Boys-turned-Mix Mavens Sam Hardaker and Henry Binns released their last Zero 7 collaboration, The Garden, a project that…

Toubab Krewe Release “Fire”: Tour with Earl Smith

Toubab Krewe launches the second wave of summer tour with release of “Fire”
A new single featuring Jamaican legends Lukani, Earl Smith and Leroy Wallace


Toubab Krewe

Fresh from widely praised performances at Rothbury (read our review here), where members of the band joined The Dead on percussion during their headlining July 4th set, Toubab Krewe launches into the second leg of their summer tour with the release of a new single, “Fire.” The collaborative new song was recorded recently at reggae guitar legend Earl Smith‘s front porch home-studio in Kingston, Jamaica and features Lukani (vocals), Smith (guitar) and Leroy “Horsemouth” Wallace (drums).

Toubab Krewe kicks off the tour aboard the first annual Toubab Kruise in New York City on July 15. The band will bring its dance-party inducing fusion of rock ‘n’ roll and West African music to the boat as it sails along the East River, heading through the New York Harbor to the Statue of Liberty.

Special guest Earl Smith will join Toubab Krewe on guitar at all of the upcoming shows through August 1. Perhaps the most sought after guitarist in reggae, Smith has performed and recorded with everyone from Bob Marley, Jimmy Cliff, Peter Tosh and Burning Spear to more recent pop icons like Lauren Hill, Erykah Badu and Joss Stone.

Toubab Krewe plans to spend much of August in the studio recording a new full length album (details TBA).

An extensive fall tour is also in the works, with confirmed dates including the Great American Music Hall in San Francisco (October 8) and the Joshua Tree Music Festival (October 10).

A short video taken of the band’s time in Jamaica during the recording can be seen here:

Upcoming Summer Tour Dates:

07/15/09 Wed The Rocks Off Concert Cruise New York, NY

07/17/09 Fri Festivus for the Restivus (Manifestivus) Cabot, VT

07/18/09 Sat Festivus for the Restivus (Manifestivus) Cabot, VT

07/24/09 Fri Floyd Fest Floyd, VA

07/25/09 Sat Floyd Fest Floyd, VA

07/31/09 Fri Smith’s Olde Bar Atlanta, GA

08/01/09 Sat Smith’s Olde Bar Atlanta, GA

08/07/09 Fri Sweet Pea Festival Bozeman, MT

08/13/09 Thu Camp Barefoot Music Festival Gore, VA

08/14/09 Fri St. Clair Park Greensburg, PA

08/21/09 Fri The Blind Tiger Greensboro, NC

08/22/09 Sat The Blind Tiger Greensboro, NC

09/17/09 Thu Legend’s Music Hall Boone, NC

09/19/09 Sat Exit/In Nashville, TN

09/20/09 Sun Levitt Shell Memphis, TN

09/30/09 Wed Tractor Tavern Seattle, WA

10/08/09 Thu Great American Music Hall San Francisco, CA

10/10/09 Sat Joshua Tree Roots Music Festival Joshua Tree, CA

10/30/09 Fri Neighborhood Theatre Charlotte, NC

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

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

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

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

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

For more on Toubab Krewe see our recent feature/interview here.