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Posts Tagged ‘Bob Mould’

Foo Fighters Dates & New Album

TICKETS ON SALE NOVEMBER 9; NEW ALBUM REUNITES GROHL WITH VIG &
NOVOSELIC


Foo Fighters

Foo Fighters will make their
live return in 2011 at Milton Keynes Bowl on July 2 and 3 2011. Biffy Clyro will perform both nights,
while Death Cab for Cutie and Tame Impala will play on July 2 and Jimmy Eat World and The Hot Rats opens
up July 3. Tickets will go on sale Friday November 5 at 9 AM.

In an interview with BBC’s Zane Lowe, Dave Grohl confirmed that the band are working with
producer Butch Vig on a new album. Grohl said the album was being done “totally old school analog,”
with no acoustic guitars.”

The new record marks the first time Grohl and Butch Vig have worked together since
Nevermind in 1991. Says Grohl, “This whole project has been really cool. I haven’t made a record with
Butch for 20 years.” The new album also features Husker Du frontman Bob Mould on a track called “Dear
Rosemary,” and Grohl’s former Nirvana bandmate Krist Novoselic stopped by to play bass on one
song.

Foo Fighters
Tour Dates

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Foo Fighters News
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Foo Fighters
Concert
Reviews


The Who To Be Honored at Carnegie Hall 03/02

MUSIC OF THE WHO TO BE HONORED BY STAR-STUDDED GATHERING OF ARTISTS SPANNING GENRES AND GENERATIONS, MARCH 2, 2010 AT CARNEGIE HALL

The Who

Michael Dorf announced today the first artists confirmed to play a special tribute concert to take place March 2, 2010, at Carnegie Hall, celebrating the anthemic, insurgent music of The Who.

The initial group of artists honoring the group’s unparalleled repertoire include: Frank Black (The Pixies), Bobby McFerrin, Bob Mould, The Gaslight Anthem, Matt Nathanson, Sondre Lerche, The Postelles, Warren Haynes & Gov’t Mule, Living Colour, Robyn Hitchcock, The Smithereens, and Mose Allison. As many as ten more artists will be added to the line-up in the coming weeks.

This will be the sixth concert in a series to raise crucially needed funds benefiting music education programs for underprivileged youth. Previous sold out concerts presented by Dorf have honored the music of such timeless artists as Joni Mitchell, Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, Elton John, and R.E.M.

100% of the net proceeds from the March 2 concert will be given to six music education non-profits: The American Symphony Orchestra Music Notes, Church Street School of Music, Young Audiences, Music Unites All-Youth Choir, The Pinwheel Project, and FIKS (Fixing Instruments for Kids in Schools).

“I grew up listening to The Who,” said Dorf, “and while the artists we’re bringing together to honor them are incredibly diverse, they share a certain authenticity that has also defined music of The Who. This series has produced some unforgettable moments – including seeing Bruce Springsteen and R.E.M. make surprise appearances at their own tributes – and I expect The Who night to be one of the most memorable shows yet.”

Fans will have a number of ticket options for The Who tribute concert, including a VIP package that guarantees the best seats in the house plus an after-party hosted by City Winery (155 Varick St. New York, NY) to be attended by all the performing artists.

For tickets, plus more information on the concert and the organizations will benefit go to, please go here.


Treasure Island Fest | 10.17 & 10.18 | CA

Word by: Chris Clark & Kayceman | Images by: Steven Walter

Treasure Island Music Festival :: 10.17 & 10.18 :: Treasure Island :: San Francisco, CA

Treasure Island Fest 2009

Truly a tale of two very different days, the third annual Treasure Island Music Festival was quintessential San Francisco. Served up on a small strip of manmade land sitting between S.F. and Oakland, the two-day weekend event was once again split between dance/hip hop on Saturday and indie rock on Sunday. With only two stages set about 100 yards from each other and all the food, beer, shopping, Ferris Wheel, etc. adjacent, walking is minimal and with no overlapping sets, it was difficult to not hear every note all weekend long.

Saturday was hot, in the 80s, and people were wearing close to nothing. A much younger, shinier (lots of neon spandex and ironic accessories) and hopped-up crowd, got down and dirty on a balmy, beautiful October evening featuring one of the most beautiful sunsets the Bay has seen all year. Sunday was windy and chilly, down to the 50s by the time the city skyline came to life, but patches of sun and the pristine, loud sound system kept the older, hairier, and more subdued rock fans in the game for the duration. Sunny and 82 one day, foggy and cold the next; cuties in skimpy skirts grinding to beats here, bearded dudes in hoodies head-nodding to guitars there – welcome to San Francisco.

Saturday, 10.17

By: Chris Clark

Crown City Rockers :: 12:40-1:15 p.m.

CCR’s well-known, high-octane live performances are always something to witness. The Oakland-based quintet fuses full band arrangements with ferocious hip hop from Raashan Ahmad and crew. What Treasure Island got was 35 minutes full of balls-to-the-wall, rocking hip hop with a sliver of Fender Rhodes funk, earning early day crowd-pleaser status.

Murs :: 1:20-2:05 p.m.

10.17 :: TI 2009

For years Murs has been bringing his positive, sometimes political message to an increasingly diverse crowd. Clearly, the festival wanted to add that extra little touch of flavor by having Murs take the stage to keep the party going. While it wasn’t the most amazing hip hop performance I’ve ever seen, he clearly got the crowd interacting and swaying their arms to the beat, so at the end of the day, Murs was a success. Murs for President tracks abound, and the crazy, dreaded underground icon did a quality job of working up the crowd’s energy and getting them ready for the music ahead.

Federico Aubele :: 2:05-2:45 p.m.

Offering a decidedly more mellow show than most at TI, Federico Aubele did however provide a deliciously sophisticated set of stylish salsa with a dollop of acoustic flare. Playing at the side or Tunnel Stage, I sat back and watched as a growing crowd of onlookers gathered for an act many probably hadn’t heard of before but will surely be downloading soon. What I liked best about Aubele was how at ease he seemed to be onstage. Performing 40 minutes of straight baby making music, he had a substantial amount of young ladies gazing up at him as he sang songs of seductive romance.

Passion Pit :: 2:50-3:35 p.m.

I would venture to say for many this was the best set of the day. Unless you’ve been hiding somewhere or haven’t spent one bit of time in today’s music scene, you’ll surely be familiar and quite possibly be in love with Passion Pit. If there was any doubt of their talent or ability to rock a crowd, that doubt is now evaporated. While young in age, the band takes a unique spin on the indie-electronic combination and turns it into a dance friendly, fiery mix that’s only getting more refined as they go. Everywhere I looked, the crowd at the Bridge Stage was throwing a dance competition for Passion Pit, as hipsters flocked in droves to shake their rabbit tails and pop a button on their skinnies from excessive movement.

Dan Deacon :: 3:35-4:20 p.m.

The Streets :: 10.17 :: TI 2009

This was kind of odd. Electro-pop, freak show, performance art wildness performed by a 15-piece percussion ensemble is an apt description but I’m not sure it really captures the essence of Deacon and his massively colorful band. Performing live is right up his alley and the direction he took his set was something of organized chaos, where just when you think it’s about to fall apart, everything comes together melodiously and life is grand. I’d never caught him live before and was glad to witness such a bombastic musical and visual experience. He was also playing Mezzanine late night, this likely would have been a much better setting to catch Deacon’s brand of multi-layered, elaborate performance.

The Streets :: 4:25-5:15 p.m.

The Streets’ set came off as rather drab and boring. 30 minutes of attempting to sing/rap ala Drake that didn’t do much for me, or most of the crowd either. There was a time a while back where I thought The Streets was kind of cool, but after seeing him live again I’ll gladly go in another direction.

DJ Krush :: 5:15-6:00 p.m.

Brazilian Girls :: 10.17 :: TI 2009

This was clearly one of the best sets of the day. Krush has always killed the break beats and electronic melodies and been able to cross over to crowds of varying degrees. After 11 albums and countless tours, Krush has honed and refined his jazz-heavy textures, creating such a lush soundscape of samples, live touches, and beats that watching him play live is something of a marvel. Not one of the step-on-stage-and-press-a-button DJs (I’ll get to that in a bit), Krush is instead a master live manipulator, performing everything on the fly, and nowhere was that more apparent than his TI set. Never before have I heard him drop so much bass-heavy, chest-pounding dub step. Obviously a nod to San Francisco and our burgeoning dub step culture, he came out flying, dropping some of the heaviest beats I’ve heard in some time. If that’s the direction he’s going now, I’ll be his biggest advocate.

Brazilian Girls :: 6:05-6:55 p.m.

Normally, the trio kills the festival sets, playing an eclectic balance of mellow grooves and deep bangers. Well, at Treasure Island we were treated to much more of the mellow, enough so to bore me straight to the bathrooms. While I always enjoy the lyrics in different languages and the cultural, worldly vibe put forth by Brazilian Girls, this set seemed out of place and contrasting to the overall vibe being built.

LTJ Bukem & MC Conrad 6:55-7:40 p.m.

10.17 :: TI 2009

If you like drum n’ bass, here you go. I think the first time I caught these guys was almost 10 years ago and frankly, their set is still very similar. Looking for a ton of BPMs with some raps layered on top of it? Look no further. To me, it’s not the most memorable set, but on the flip side, I did have a blast and danced to the beats, and most around where I was surely did as well.

MSTRKRFT 7:45-8:35 p.m.

This electro duo knows how to rage a party. The Canadians Al-P and Jesse F. Keeler have taken the Toronto scene to the masses, enjoying a chain-smoking, kick ass & take names kind of reputation in clubs everywhere. Their set at TI was a mix of original material off Fist of God and Justice (“D.A.N.C.E.”) and Daft Punk (“Around the World”) mixes, which blew the crowd up beyond oblivion. It takes many bands a full set, or a good portion of it, to warm up, but that wasn’t the case for MSTRKRFT, who came out swinging and never stopped brining the electro tinged bombardment.

Girl Talk :: 8:35-9:20 p.m.

While Girl Talk, aka Gregg Gillis, claims that he’s not a DJ and says things like, “I want to be a musician and not just a party DJ,” I don’t find a lot of value in that. I’ve been seeing him perform live for the last several years and, to put it bluntly, Girl Talk is all about bringing a party atmosphere with someone else’s beats to whatever venue he’s playing at. Yes, his set was raucous and teenage girls were going crazy as the stage beside him filled up to the brim with scantily clad tennie boppers and guys trying to get with said girls. To me, he presses a button and then just dances onstage like a caveman. Take or leave it.

MGMT :: 9:25-10:40 p.m.

MGMT :: 10.17 :: TI 2009

Without a doubt the most anticipated set of the weekend was that of MGMT. After playing a somewhat-surprise show at The Independent the night before, there was a decent amount of clamoring that the Brooklyn boys should keep their tunes in the studio and not in the live setting. Back in 2008, it was MGMT’s time; “Electric Feel” and “Kids” could be heard just about everywhere you went, and even now their debut album, Oracular Spectacular, is widely rumored to be on Phish’s short list of possible albums to cover this Halloween. The kids are on fire, but can they bring that fire to the live setting?

The simple answer: No. What was cool about their TI set was the performance of Oracular Spectacular in its entirety. “Time to Pretend” was a smooth opener, but I noticed that the crowd of thousands began to dissipate rather quickly. For me, it was nice to hear them play “Electric Feel,” but live, just as I was told from the night before, MGMT was rather sloppy in both their playing and singing. The polished product of a heavily produced album just didn’t compare well when placed in the concert setting.

Continue reading for Day II at Treasure Island…

Sunday, 10.18

By: Kayceman

Spiral Stairs :: 1:55-2:25 p.m.

Vetiver/Tunnel Stage :: 10.18 :: TI 2009

Guitarist Scott Kannberg helped found seminal indie rock band Pavement with Stephen Malkmus back in 1989. But no one knows who the hell Scott Kannberg is; they know Spiral. “Everyone knows me as Spiral. It’s weird when someone calls me Scott,” he says. “I’m not sure anyone knows who Scott Kannberg is.” Scott or Spiral it doesn’t really matter, the music still sounds good with a similar ’90s lo-fi vibe, and it was especially sweet when they covered Spiral’s old band at the end of the set. Fun as it was, with Pavement getting ready to launch a reunion tour it was hard to think of this as much more than a warm-up.

Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros :: 2:30-3:15 p.m.

If you buy what Edward Sharpe (real name Alex Ebert) is selling, then this band has the potential to be awesome. If you’re a cynic who refuses to drink the Kool-Aid, it could come off as shtick. Bounding around the stage one minute and sitting the next, stripping off his shirt despite the frigid temp, conjuring a church revival sing-along before an off-key hoarse scream, and looking like a Devendra Banhart knock-off leading the Polyphonic Spree (minus the cool robes), this was the start of a theme that would proliferate Sunday: Drama. Not in a bad way, but an indie rock way that carried through The Decemberists (opera-rock drama), Beirut (European gypsy drama), Grizzly Bear (symphonic drama), The Walkmen (vocal melodrama), and The Flaming Lips (Broadway-rock drama). As tough as it was to get a bead on ole Eddie Sharpe, with the aid of his well-rehearsed nine-piece band (dig the accordion, one of several at the fest) and really strong female vocal counterpoint Jade Castrinos, he sorta won this writer over… for now.

Vetiver :: 3:15-3:55 p.m.

Grizzly Bear :: 10.18 :: TI 2009

Playing a song he “wrote about a bar in the Mission,” bandleader Andy Cabic‘s homage to local S.F. joint El Rio received a huge cheer. With a relaxed vibe and peaceful tone, Vetiver’s earthy indie-folk brought a bit of campfire warmth to the cooling afternoon crowd. “Sister,” with its hypnotic calypso beat, had folks grooving in time, while an electric mid-set jam with jazzy drums had a bit of a Tulsa trance, JJ Cale playing “Spoonful” feel. A strong showing by a true local gem.


Grizzly Bear :: 5:30-6:20 p.m.

If the Beach Boys didn’t just dip their toes into psychedelic waters and instead dove eyes open into the heavy stuff for years, then sobered up in Brooklyn circa 2000-something, this very well may be what they’d sound like. The layers of impeccable vocal harmonies, dynamic songs with multiple parts, and various unique instruments were captivating and inspiring without ever feeling forced or pretentious. Beautiful songs danced from indie-pop sing-along gold to airy flute interludes to dramatic crests of crashing drums, horns, and distorted guitars. Somehow fully inviting yet absolutely boundary-pushing experimental, what perhaps proved most impressive was the rich tone and delicate execution amidst blustering winds on an outdoor stage. A set like this should secure these Bears time in grand theaters built to accentuate such genius.

Bob Mould :: 4:45-5:25 p.m.

It was a big week for Bob Mould. The former singer, guitarist, and songwriter for alt-rock heroes Husker Du and Sugar celebrated his 49th Birthday last Friday (though he joked that he “just turned 39 again”), swapped bass players mid-tour due to a birth, and moved to San Francisco. Clearly happy to be playing what he called his “first true local gig,” Mould sounded remarkably strong, mean, and virile. Playing with stellar Superchunk drummer Jon Wurster, as he has for a while, and Athens, GA legend David Barbe (who was in Sugar) subbing on bass last minute, Mould took fans right back to the relentless alt-punk days of yore he helped create. Full of sludge-rhythms, viscous guitar, and that unmistakable growl, it was like 1992 all over again.


Beirut :: 5:30-6:20 p.m.

Beirut :: 10.18 :: TI 2009

With horns, stand-up bass, and accordion, at times Beirut sound like an Eastern European carnival, at others a funeral procession from another time. It’s all very pretty and Zach Condon (from Brooklyn by way of New Mexico) clearly has a vision; it’s just not a very easy one to relate to. When not looking for a pet monkey or wondering if we slipped into some Old World wormhole, the gypsy jazz showed a folk heart and had folks singing along by the end. Not one thing wrong with it, but like the name, Beirut proves rather uninviting.

The Walkmen :: 6:20-7:05 p.m.

Taking their post-punk rock out of the garage with keyboard flourishes (they prefer piano on record) and a new song featuring a country/Americana waltz feel, The Walkmen continue to evolve with each passing album. Led by the gruff, emotionally-saturated vocals of Hamilton Leithauser, the quintet proved just as comfortable at Muse style stadium bombast as they did mid-tempo lounge rock. Without one proper guitar solo and a locked-in rhythm section, the emphasis is on compositions, but it’s the passionate execution and delivery that make it work. The highlight came at the end with a sticky swamp jam fueled by a swarming horn section that sat-in for a few of the better songs.

The Decemberists :: 7:10-8:10 p.m.

Yo La Tengo :: 10.18 :: TI 2009

The Decemberists have created their own little world. Big movements with lush orchestration and vintage charm support Colin Meloy‘s distinct vocals and vivid tales with a Shakespearean appeal. It’s impressive stuff and proved particularly engaging when the players dug in and turned out a few squalls of distorted rock & roll. But, it can also be a hard world to jump into. There’s a lot of nuance and history with the material, and at a fest for casual fans it’s easy to get lost staring at the lights twinkling in the skyscrapers across the bay. That is until the angelic female harmonies fit for a church wash upon the shores, pulling eyes and minds back to the incredibly tight ensemble onstage. The indie-drama soared at the end with a beautiful lap-steel and organ song propelled by a male-female vocal dynamic that made the cool night feel warm for just a moment.

Yo La Tengo :: 8:10-9:00 p.m.

Yo La Tengo may have turned in the best set of the day. Playing the final slot on the smaller Tunnel Stage, the legendary experimental rock trio could have easily taken the main Bridge Stage at an earlier time, but probably benefited from the darkness of night. It started with an abusive keyboard blast that called John Medeski to mind before a dark, patient, slow building groove emerged over aching guitar. Mixing the heavy, dissonant, way-out-there jams with a Pink Floyd Animals-inspired section, quirky indie-pop, and a jazzy number from the new album, Popular Songs, their ability to shift styles and kick genres in the teeth kept fans hanging on every dangling guitar note. Crawling from the depths of a deep slow burn emerged a massive guitar meltdown. Hunched over his instrument, Ira Kaplan looked to be feeding the music through his body into his guitar as drummer/wife Georgia Hubley knocked out room for her husband to fill with distortion. Kaplan wrestled with his instrument for at least ten minutes, swinging it over his head, harnessing the feedback, and forcing it into submission with expert use of space, tone, and distortion. If you’re into that sorta thing, it was hard to beat and I’m not sure anyone did.

The Flaming Lips :: 9:05-10:35 p.m.

The Flaming Lips :: 10.18 :: TI 2009

The Flaming Lips are forever tied to drugs. They are a psychedelic band with trippy albums and a far out live show – UFOs, fake blood, bunnies, Santas, weird camera angles, naked people, confetti-filled balloons, a giant hamster ball rolling atop the crowd with the lead singer in it, and lots of other really cool shit is common place at their shows/celebrations. They currently have a giant video screen that features a naked woman with a vagina that pulses in time with the music and eventually opens up for the band to walk out before they play “Race for the Prize” to start the set. It’s pretty cool even if you’ve seen it. Along with the psychedelic shock of rare gem “Enthusiasm for Life Defeats Existential Fear,” the Lips played favorites like “Fight Test” and “Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots Pt. 1,” which were both slowed down and maybe a little flat. “The W.A.N.D.” and “She Don’t Use Jelly” relit the crowd, but it was the only two songs from the new album, “Silver Trembling Hands” and “Convinced of the Hex,” that seemed to bring the most excitement to the band.


Yup, The Flaming Lips are like drugs. And as drugs go – even really good ones – you’ll never get as high as that first time. The Lips are still cool, genuine, and absolutely giving it their all every time you see them, but knowing all the punchlines and most of the special gags takes its toll, and after that initial rush some of the excitement is simply lost forever. But this doesn’t mean it’s not still great and necessary. The Lips are constantly writing cool, new material (this latest batch in particular), and Wayne Coyne is hard to resist. You don’t always need to get blasted or freak out to have a good time; it can be pretty damn nice to just take a hit and kick back. Turns out The Flaming Lips are a worthy companion no matter what your trip might be.

Continue reading for more pics of Treasure Island 2009…

Saturday, 10.17

The Streets

The Streets

DJ Krush

Brazilian Girls

LTJ Bukem feat. MC Conrad

MSTRKRFT

MSTRKRFT fans

Girl Talk

Girl Talk

MGMT

MGMT

MGMT

Continue reading for more Sunday pics of Treasure Island 2009…

Sunday, 10.18

Vetiver

Grizzly Bear

Grizzly Bear

Grizzly Bear

Grizzly Bear

Bob Mould

David Barbe with Bob Mould

Jon Wurster with Bob Mould

Beirut

Beirut

The Decemberists

The Decemberists

Yo La Tengo

Yo La Tengo

The Flaming Lips

The Flaming Lips

The Flaming Lips

The Flaming Lips

The Flaming Lips

The Flaming Lips

The Flaming Lips

JamBase | Bay Area

Go See Live Music!


Farrar & Gibbard Set Dates For Kerouac Concerts

JAY FARRAR & BENJAMIN GIBBARD SET FOUR SPECIAL KEROUAC CONCERTS

COLLABORATIVE ALBUM ONE FAST MOVE OR I’M GONE: KEROUAC’S BIG SUR
OUT OCTOBER 20

Jack Kerouac

Jay Farrar (Son Volt) and Benjamin Gibbard (Death Cab for Cutie, Postal Service) will perform songs from their collaborative album One Fast Move Or I’m Gone: Kerouac’s Big Sur, along with other surprise material, at four concerts in October, underscoring the influential author’s enduring legacy 40 years after his death on October 21, 1969.

JAY FARRAR & BENJAMIN GIBBARD TOUR DATES

10/23 – El Rey Theatre – Los Angeles, CA

10/24 – Bimbo’s 365 Club – San Francisco, CA

10/26 – Lincoln Hall – Chicago, IL

10/28 – Webster Hall – New York, NY

The band features Jay Farrar, Benjamin Gibbard, Nick Harmer (Death Cab for Cutie), Mark Spencer (Son Volt) and Jon Wurster (Superchunk, Bob Mould, The Mountain Goats).


One Fast Move or I’m Gone: Kerouac’s Big Sur (F-Stop/Atlantic) features 12 original songs composed and performed by Farrar and Gibbard, with lyrics based on the prose of Jack Kerouac’s landmark 1962 novel “Big Sur.” The album will be released October 20 along with a feature-length documentary directed by Curt Worden and produced by Gloria Bailen and Jim Sampas of Kerouac Films. The film features appearances by writers, poets, actors and musicians including Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Sam Shepard, Patti Smith and Tom Waits.


The album and film will be released as a stand alone CD, a CD/DVD package, a limited edition boxed set packaged with the novel, a 24-page book on the documentary and the CD/DVD. The album will additionally be released on vinyl.

Preorders of the boxed set and CD/DVD package will ship to customers through the Kerouac movie website two weeks prior to the Oct 20 street date.


Frequency Festival | 08.20-08.22 | Vienna

Words by: Lindsay Colip | Images by: Steven Walter

Frequency Festival :: 08.20.09 – 08.22.09 :: St. Polten, Austria

Frequency Festival 2009

Frequency Festival, in St. Polten, Austria (outside Vienna), was JamBase’s last stop on our European Festival circuit. For the first time in eight years, the park had been moved from Salzburg to St. Polten and the seven stages had been split into two different parks, the DayPark and NightPark. The DayPark had four stages – The Race Stage (Radiohead, Bloc Party, Kasabian, Jet, Ting Tings, Editors, Subways), The Green Stage (Grace Jones, Little Boots, Enter Shikari, Ska-P), Weekender UK Stage (Airborne Toxic Event, Official Secrets Act, The Black Box Revelation) and the Open Air Stage (bands who won an earlier online contest), while the NightPark had The Electro Floor (Crystal Castles, Eric Prydz, Crystal Method), Urban Art Forms Floor (Carl Cox, MSTRKRFT), and NME Floor (Kele Okereke from Bloc Party, Michael Mac vs. Fake Lashes, Andy Rourke from The Smiths). It was a lineup sure to be insane, bringing thousands of teenagers with raging hormones out from their parent’s houses and into the dust.

Thursday, August 20

It was bloody hot and the only appropriate attire was bikinis and boardies. Unless you came fully clothed, in which case you probably ran through the sprinklers or got hosed off by one of the security guards. The overall scene can be described in four words: teenagers on the loose. The average age was 17, maybe even younger. These kids seemed frantic to smoke, drink and make out as much as humanly possible. Which meant that at 3 p.m. on the first day of the fest people were already passing out and slurring their words. What little variety of beverage and food that existed was pretty expensive, and the venue didn’t have any water stands readily available to refill your cup either, so unfortunately you had to keep buying more and more plastic. I also realized how much I appreciated the hand sanitizers that were everywhere at the other festivals but absent here. Toilet paper was also in short supply. So, a hormonally challenged crowd, bad bathrooms (for chicks), blah scenery, no free water and expensive food. My immediate thought was the music better kick ass.

Enter Shikari :: Frequency Fest 2009

Glasvegas, a Scottish alt-rock band that had previously under-whelmed me at Melt! Festival (JamBase review here), took the Main Stage first. James Allan (lead vocals, guitar) started the day saying, “Austria, I fucking love you already. The girls are incredible and they aren’t wearing much!” Supporting Allan was Rab Allan (lead guitar, backing vocals), Paul Donoghue (bass) and Caroline McKay (drums). Besides a Christmas record they put out last year, they’ve released just one self-titled studio album. So far it has brought them plenty of press and praise, including being nominated for approximately 13 awards and most notably winning the Phillip Hall Radar Award (NME Awards). They’ve also supported Oasis on tour and are about to play a few dates with U2. So why do I still think this is an incredibly boring band? I simply can’t get into their overly dramatic (but not in a fun Editors or White Lies way) and uninspiring sound. Am I missing something?

From here I went over to the Green Stage to catch Enter Shikari, the opening band on tour with The Prodigy this summer. The crowd seemed extremely amped up way before the guys even came onstage. When they finally ran out, I understood why. This is a high-octane, head banging, post-hardcore screamo band from the U.K. Electronica mixed with hard beats, dirty bass and plenty of screaming. This isn’t my scene, however to be fair, they were really entertaining. Roughton “Rou” Reynolds (vocals, electronics), Liam “Rory” Clewlow (guitar, vocals), Chris Batten (bass, vocals) and Rob Rolfe (drums) played their instruments with energy and style, spinning and jumping and beating the crap out of the poor things. They played plenty of songs off of their new album, Common Dread, and I fully understand why The Prodigy would want this in your face, energetic act on the ticket.

Kasabian :: Frequency Fest 2009

Back to the Main Stage, where Jet had just started. This Aussie rock ‘n’ roll band was at its best again today. The crowd loved their old school rock sound, singing enthusiastically along to favorites “Are You Gonna Be My Girl?” and “Cold Hard Bitch.” They played several from their new album, Shaka Rock as well, including “She’s A Genius” (which is definitely the song to download) and “Beat On Repeat.” Frontman Nic Cester was singing/screaming his heart out and his scratchy voice sounded absolutely perfect live. A highlight of the show was when Cester’s brother and drummer, Chris Cester, sang a few of the songs from behind his drum set, including “Holiday.” The other members rounding out the band were Cameron Muncey (lead guitar) and Mark Wilson (bass). They had to play a very short set, like most of the earliest performers did, so they didn’t get to play very many songs off of their new album, but I think the crowd got the idea. If you like rock ‘n’ roll, you will like this band. Period.

“How’s everybody doin’? We’re The Ting Tings. Pleased to meet ya!” Katie White said as she greeted her audience. The other half of the electro-pop U.K. duo, Jules De Martino, was already out onstage, rocking the keyboard, drums AND guitar, all on one song. These two put on quite an impressive, entertaining show. The wild outfits, the fist pumping/dancing around, the multiple instrument playing and their dynamic stage presence make them a hard act to beat, if you want to dance and sing, that is. They played catchy sing-alongs such as “Great DJ,” “Shut Up and Let Me Go” “Fruit Machine” and ended on mega cult hit “That’s Not My Name.” Although a fantastically entertaining and enthusiastic show, it was the exact same show as Sziget Festival (JamBase review here). If you plan on seeing these guys (and you should) just don’t expect to see something different from show to show. Further, good luck NOT getting “That’s Not My Name” stuck in your head. Impossible.

Kasabian, an alt-rock band from the U.K., blew the crowd away. Tom Meighan (lead vocals), having just been quarantined in Sydney literally DAYS before because of Swine Flu, put on an impressive show. His other bandmates had been sick as well, but nobody showed signs of being sluggish or tired. Meighan was supported by guitarist/backup vocalist Sergio Pizzorno, bassist Chris Edwards, drummer Ian Matthews, touring guitarist Jay Mehler and touring keyboardist Ben Kealey. They played for almost two hours, including packed arena favorites “Club Foot,” “LSF,” “Underdog,” “Processed Beats” and “Shoot the Runner,” as well as newbies off their latest album, West Ryder Pauper Lunatic Asylum, including “Fire” and “Where Did All The Love Go?” Catchy lyrics, good beats, great guitar riffs and a nice blend of rock & roll and electronic, their new album is a definite grab if you like these guys.

Continue reading for Friday’s coverage…

Friday, August 21

Frequency Festival 2009

First up was Milow, aka Jonathan Vandenbroeck, a 27-year-old Belgium singer-songwriter. The ONLY reason I had heard of this guy was because his super popular and cheesy 50 Cent cover, “Ayo Technology,” had been on every single radio station since I arrived in Europe back in June. The cover has received more success than the original in Europe and his video has gotten over 20 million hits on YouTube. That being said, Milow wants to be known for more than this cover song. He wants to be taken seriously as a musician and I wanted to give him that chance. What I witnessed was definitely a sensitive singer-songwriter, along the lines of a James Taylor or Bob Mould. He happily sang folksy love song after folksy love song to the semi-confused crowd. Where was the smarmy “Ayo Technology” guy they wanted to see? Vandenbroeck even played a cover of Van Morrison’s “Brown Eyed Girl,” so there’s that. The music was so fluffy and sugared that I had to leave. I couldn’t even stay for his ‘hit’ song.

To put things back on track was Little Boots, aka Victoria Christina Hesketh, an electro-pop singer/musician from the U.K. She plays keys, piano, stylophone and some crazy Japanese instrument called the Tenori-On. Having only put out one studio album, Hands, she’s amassing quite a following and so I wanted to check out the hype. All five feet of her came out smiling in a cute, silver futuristic dress with her bleach blond hair in Princess Lei buns. She certainly resembled Kylie Minogue in size and appearance but in no way did she hold a candle to Miss Minogue’s stage presence, swagger or song quality. Hesketh definitely has something about her – a pleasant sweet voice, a cute package, a desire to get people disco dancing – but she isn’t delivering yet. Her popular songs “New In Town” and “Stuck On Repeat” weren’t catchy lyrically nor made me want to dance. As opposed to say The Ting Tings, who make one want to shake-shake regardless of what they’re playing, what Hesketh might need is for someone to get a hold of her and help her grow into the pop star she has the potential to be. I was hoping for much more and perhaps in a year or so, she’ll be someone to enjoy watching.

Radiohead :: Frequency Fest 2009

Next, it was off to the Main Stage for Bloc Party, where the sold out crowd crushed towards the front for an almost two-hour mega dance/mosh show. Like their performance at Sziget Festival last week, they were high-energy and loads of fun. Old hits “Banquet,” “Hunting for Witches,” “Helicopter,” “Mercury,” “Two More Years,” “This Modern Love” and “Signs” were flung into the air, as well as new single “One More Chance.” Kele Okereke broke a guitar string for the first time in years because of his excesses rocking out, which only brought the crowd into more of a frenzy. The cool thing about this performance was that it was completely different from the setlist at Sziget and Melt! Festival. Thank you, Bloc Party, for shaking it up a bit. Yes, they played several of the same songs, but nothing like the verbatim Oasis or Ting Tings back-to-back shows we saw. Much appreciated. If you want to dance and be yelled at by a frontman with the biggest smile EVER, go see these guys. A fun sing-and-dance-along show.

And then came Radiohead. The most impressive crowd I’ve seen all summer pushed, shoved and finally crunched itself into a tight Tetris like formation and waited for Thom Yorke and company to come out and smack the absolute shit out of them. I couldn’t keep my eyes off Jonny Greenwood (“the mad scientist” as photographer Walt calls him), who seamlessly goes from ATTACKING his guitar to tinkering on the piano to making beat after wicked beat on whatever the hell he uses. There are so many wires, buttons and gadgets that he uses that it’s impossible to tell what’s going on, which makes the sound even more impressive. You can’t understand it, nor can you understand how the hell Yorke comes up with the music. The stage was set like last year’s tour, with the hanging icicle lights glowing with crazy colors. The HD screens were back as well, with close-up shots of each of the member’s face/body parts. Honestly, the show was leaps and bounds more remarkable than any I’ve seen since my arrival in Europe that it’s almost unfair to compare. Radiohead is a different league of musicians/creators/aliens.

Radiohead Setlist

15 Step, There There, Airbag, All I Need, Kid A, The National Anthem, Nude, Weird Fishes/Arpeggi, The Gloaming, Myxomatosis, Climbing Up The Walls, Street Spirit (Fade Out), Videotape, Jigsaw Falling Into Place, Karma Police, Bodysnatchers, Idioteque
Encore: These Are My Twisted Words, Pyramid Song, Reckoner, (Nice Dream), Paranoid Android
Encore 2: Everything In Its Right Place

Continue reading for Saturday’s coverage…

Saturday, August 22

The Sounds :: Frequency Fest 2009

What is it with festivals either having extreme heat or excessive rain? To see if we really want to be here? To prove our dedication to the love of music? Regardless, despite heavy rains, the performances started on time and the first show on Sunday was Port O’Brien, a folk-indie rock group from Northern California. A little bit Modest Mouse, a little bit Vetiver, these guys sang their folk hearts out to a very small but dedicated crowd (because it was pouring rain). The band started out as folk duo Van Pierszalowski and Cambria Goodwin and soon after they added a rhythm section of Caleb Nichols and Joshua Barnhart. Pierszalowski works on his father’s fishing boat up on Kodiak Island, Alaska while Goodwin holds the title of head baker back on shore at Larsen Bay, and THIS is where they get most of their musical inspiration. Songs about being stuck at sea, living amongst beautiful wilderness, surviving the freezing cold weather, isolation and longing are beautifully penned by the duo. They harmonized and twanged their way through several songs off Threadbare, their new album coming out October 2009. A very pleasant, appealing, folksy sing-along band, Port O’Brien is definitely one to keep an eye on.

Cue The Sounds The Swedish new wave, punk synth pop group is led by a hottie in stilettos named Maja Ivarsson. A total Blondie throwback, she grinds, gyrates, squats and curses her way through each song, giving the front row quite a show. Although she has an incredibly sexy and tough stage presence, she remains approachable by constantly thanking the crowd for their support. The only problem is her voice is not good. It’s not bad or annoying, per se, but it’s just blah and flat, which sucks because she looks hot (unbelievable legs) and seems like a fireball. And the band behind her looked fantastic as well (think A Flock of Seagulls) and played their hearts out. The songs are actually quite good, too. Catchy lyrics, great synth, good dance beats, Atari sounds here and there, it all works for a fun dance band, EXCEPT her voice. Their third album, Crossing the Rubicon, came out this summer and they played several songs from it including “No One Sleeps When I’m Awake.” They also played some of their more popular songs, including “Painted By Numbers” (which I really enjoyed), “Living In America” and “Tony The Beat.” I’ll give them another try when Ivarsson gets some vocal training. Then again, what do I know; I like Crystal Castles and Alice Glass’ voice sounds like cars crashing.

Frequency Festival 2009

The Subways took the stage and even though the rain held, the crowd moved in. I had been introduced to this U.K. alt-rock band at Sziget Festival and although I didn’t like the music necessarily, I LOVED the performance. Billy Lunn (lead vocals, guitar) and Charlotte Cooper (bass, backing vocals) are so much fun to watch thrashing about onstage. And Cooper certainly thrashes; it looks as if her head is going to pop right off with each head thrust. Lunn dances and twirls about, frequently yelling at the crowd to “get craaaaazy!” amongst other things. They play with such intensity and enthusiasm that it is impossible to not join the party. Now that I knew the songs better, I really enjoyed the performance. I can honestly say that I probably will never buy one of their albums, but I wouldn’t miss one of their shows if they came to town.

After another 30 minutes of pouring rain, the Editors took the stage. Ah, how perfectly dramatic this U.K. dark indie group can be, reminiscent of a Phantom of the Opera performance – moody, dramatic, sexy, theatrical. Taking your eyes off of Tom Smith (lead vocals, guitar, keys) is impossible. He sings each song with such passion and enthusiasm it would be rude not to give him your full attention. With his booming, commanding voice he silences the crowd and stirs them into a frenzy as well. “Blood,” “All Sparks” and “Munich” were huge hits at this set, but really every song was just as good as the next. Their new album, In the Light and On This Evening, will be released in October, and from what I’ve heard it’s a little more synth friendly/heavy than previous albums. Based on the live versions it works as fantastic, dark indie disco rock.

Editors :: Frequency Fest 2009

All in all, Frequency Festival was sub par. The lineup was indeed great, with highlights being Radiohead, Editors, Jet, Kasabian, The Subways and Bloc Party. The crowd, however, was SUPER YOUNG, and it actually made more of a difference to my enjoyment than I’d expected. Excess pushing, shoving, drunkenness, shenanigans and a blatant disregard for others made it difficult to enjoy the scene. The food was so expensive that most people went to the supermarket down the street, which was an absolute shit storm each morning. Drink prices were hefty as well, prompting people to get completely sloshed before heading into the grounds. The fact that it was balls hot at times – so hot that people were passing out left and right – and so wet at other times that you had to fully commit to being soaked and frozen for the day, was unfortunate. But, alas, the Festival Gods wanted it that way. The grounds were nothing special nor interesting, especially after being to Melt! Festival (amongst the enormous At-Ats) and Sziget (set on an island in the Danube). Hell, even Lollapalooza, sitting amongst the beautiful cityscape of Chicago, or Sasquatch!, nestled at The Gorge in Washington, or even Outside Lands, perfectly placed in Golden Gate Park… now THOSE are settings for festivals, not some random patch of grass and gravel an hour outside of Vienna.

The music always saves the day. In this case, hearing Kasabian belt out “Fire,” Bloc Party rip open “Banquet,” The Ting Tings bop up and down to “Great DJ,” Editors croon to “Munich” and Radiohead serenade us with “Videotape” made everything okay. Better than okay, really. The point of these festivals is always the music and sometimes we get greedy. But hey, if you’re dishing out money in this day and age it better be worth it, right? That’s the whole point of the review, to answer the questions, “Who is worth opening my thin wallet for? Who deserves my love and affection?” I dare say, unless the lineup is off the freaking charts (Radiohead all day, every day?) then this is NOT the festival to propel you overseas. We never even made it over to the NightPark because the crowds were too insane (and not in a good way) and the lines to get on buses were outrageous (especially when it’s pouring rain). I’m sure that Crystal Castles, MSTRKRFT, Eric Prydz and The Crystal Method kicked ass because they did at all the other festivals. Frequency Festival is not to be frequented… unless you’re 17. Then, get after it!!!

Continue reading for more photos of Frequency Festival 2009…

Enter Shikari

Glasvegas

Jet

Eagles of Death Metal

Eagles of Death Metal

Radiohead

The Sounds

The Sounds

The Ting Tings

The Subways

The Subways

Little Boots

Kasabian

Kasabian

Milow

Port O’Brien

JamBase | Austria
Go See Live Music!



Blog of the month: Not For Tourists

This month’s top online tip features secret New York bars with in-house hot dogs, comedy sports in Chicago and cult LA record stores

Not For Tourists snared me with the simplest of ruses. Somebody says “don’t think about an antelope!” and within seconds you’re picturing one leaping across a grassy plain. A policeman cautions “nothing to see here… move along…” and yup, you’ve slowed to a standstill to gawp. And likewise, Not For Tourists instructed me that I wasn’t their intended audience, and two hours later I was knee-deep in their offerings.

NFT started off as a series of guidebooks – you know, the paper things. But their website has supersized their content, tapping into a network of expertise in nine US cities, and, recently, London. In each city, the NFT “radar” churns out restaurant tips, bar reviews, gallery openings and the like … as reported by a handful of savvy local writers. The site breaks down the tips into districts, plugs tips into maps, and has even begun melding them into iPhone apps. Mod cons aside, at NFT’s core is that most important of things … good taste.

We’ve pilfered their cabinet for some recent best bits.

New York: Crif Dogs and private clubs

Every now and then there comes a boozy late-night hour when a smoked, deep-fried hotdog spiralled in bacon sounds like your ticket to heaven. And this St Mark’s Place dugout will probably be aglow and waiting for you and everyone else with gluttony on the brain. Fans of Gray’s Papaya Recession Special may grumble about Crif Dogs’ $2.75-$5 per dog prices, but the bacon wrapping alone adds a salty kick that’s worth lightening your wallet a little. Then there are the toppings – avocado and sour cream, fried egg and cheese, chilli and jalapenos, and virtually any other combination you can dream up. Note the secret door through the telephone booth against the wall. This is the entrance to PDT, a swanky lounge that serves up serious cocktails, where you can order in hot dogs and tater tots from next door.
Extract and photo: NFT/Sara Bogush

• 113 St Marks Place, pdtnyc.com

LA: Origami Vinyl

As regular folks shift to iPods and MP3s, hardcore music fetishists are resurrecting the vinyl LP – it’s been a “trend” for the last 20 years or so – and artists such as Bob Mould are offering free downloads to anyone who buys the 12-inch physical object. Origami Vinyl sells nothing but new analog reprint LPs. They’re sealed, and they’re pricey. The selection is lovably erratic, ranging from the rock canon through the electronic underground. But OV also styles itself as something of a social centre, hosting parties and live performances and getting damned crowded on weekends. Compared to the experience of using a file-sharing service, it’s a pop-art gallery.
Extract and photo: NFT/Emerson Dameron

• 1816 W Sunset Blvd, origamiorigami.com

San Francisco: Fecal Face Dot Gallery

This tiny studio-sized gallery proves once again that size doesn’t matter. FF Gallery is the physical counterpart to the culture and art community website fecalface.com. Open Wednesday through Saturday, this art space boasts monthly and, during some summer months, weekly installations from artists who are inspired from the underground, urban, skateboard, and graffiti counterculture. On reception nights, the gallery explodes on to the street with people who’ve come by to see what new art FF has to showcase. You can often find folk, comic and graffiti art, photography and mixed media pieces. The cozy space enhances the opportunity to mingle with guests and featured artists. So it’s time to stop judging the gallery name and head over to what is easily one of the most vibrant art spaces in the city.
Extract and photo: NFT/Cristian Cartes

• 66 Gough St, fecalface.com

Chigago: ComedySportz

On your mark, get set, go … to ComedySportz, yet another one of Chicago’s big improv establishments. This one differentiates itself from other comedy houses by making the improv games a competition between two rival teams of players all vying for a trophy and the title of winners (for that evening!) ComedySportz has a no swearing, no dirty topics rule for both the actors and its audience. If anyone gets naughty, a brown paper bag is placed on their head by a referee who is the MC for the event and keeps the performers and audience in line. The audience is included in all the night’s proceedings from determining which team wins each game with clapping measured by an applause meter to offering suggestions for almost every game played.
Extract and photo: NFT/Lisa Siciliano

• 29 W Belmont Ave, comedysportschicago.com

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