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Bob Weir to Perform with Marin Symphony Orchestra

BOB WEIR TEAMS UP WITH MARIN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA FOR;
SPECIAL ONE-NIGHT-ONLY
PERFORMANCE OF GRATEFUL DEAD MUSIC


Bob Weir & The
Marin Symphony Orchestra

Bob Weir has announced
plans for a special once-in-a-lifetime performance of Grateful Dead music with the Marin Symphony Orchestra to be held Saturday, May 7 at the
Marin Center in San Rafael, CA. Pre-sale tickets will be available January 31 via www.gdtstoo.com and the public on-sale is February 4 and will be available
through the Marin Center Box Office (11am-4pm PT, 415-499-6800) and through www.ticketmaster.com.

The “First Fusion” performance, orchestrated by Weir and Stanford University’s Dr. Giancarlo Aquilanti, is a
benefit for the Marin Symphony Orchestra and will feature over 50 musicians interpreting Grateful Dead music, the
band Weir co-founded in 1965.

Weir says, “This is completely different. For one thing, part of what makes this interesting is that’s not just going to
be an orchestra playing Grateful Dead songs. I’m going to be playing too, along with Jeff Chimenti, Jay Lane,
Robin Sylvester, Rob Wasserman
and some other guys, and there’s going to be real interaction between the
symphony and us.” Excited about the sonic explorations the music may take, Dr. Aquilanti described it as “a new
medium” and Weir adds that “this is definitely going to go to some new realms.”

Bob Weir
Tour Dates

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Bob Weir News
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Bob Weir
Concert
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Bob Seger: 2011 Tour

TOUR BEGINS IN MARCH

Bob Seger and the Silver Bullet Band will launch a new tour “to major cities across North America” starting in March, Seger’s first time on the concert trail since his tour of 2006-07. The exact cities and dates will be announced shortly, although a map that flashes in a brief video on his web page shows Michigan, Ohio, Massachusetts, New York and Missouri. Check out the teaser video here.

Bob Seger Tour Dates :: Bob Seger News :: Bob Seger Concert Reviews


Bob Dylan: Australian Tour

TICKETS GO ON SALE MONDAY, JANUARY 31 AT 9 AM


Bob Dylan

Bob Dylan is returning after
close to four years for a tour taking in Australian capital cities and festival appearances in Byron Bay for Bluesfest
and Fremantle for West Coast Blues & Roots.

Included in these headline shows will be a very special return to the WIN Entertainment Centre in Wollongong,
Southern NSW, the venue that he opened thirteen years in 1998, and a concert at the Adelaide Entertainment Centre
where Dylan will be joined by the one and only B.B. King. Special guests in other cities will be announced soon.

AUSTRALIAN TOUR DATES
04/19/11 Adelaide Entertainment Centre Adelaide, AU

04/20/11 Rod Laver Arena Melbourne, AU

04/23/11 Wollongong Entertainment Centre Wollongong, AU

04/27/11 Sydney Entertainment Centre Sydney, AU

Bob Dylan
Tour Dates

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Bob Dylan News
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Bob Dylan
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Fatburger Is Bob’s Burgers — For Now Anyway

Nearly 70 Fatburger restaurants across the country have transformed into Bob’s Burgers to promote a new animated FOX comedy of the same name. For the remainder of the month, all 64 Fatburger locations from Miami to Chicago will appear as Bob’s Burgers. The restaurant chain will also offer the fictional burger featured on the series [...]

Bob Weir and Mickey Hart Jam With Sammy Hagar

WONDER WHAT KIND OF TEQUILA THEY DRANK AFTER THIS SHOW?

Grateful Dead alumni Bob Weir and Mickey Hart joined red rocker Sammy Hagar at his annual charity benefit concert earlier this month in Mill Valley, CA. Bobby and Mickey played on covers of “The Weight” by The Band and “Rainy Day Women #12 & 35″ by Bob Dylan.


The Rhythm Devils: License To Fly

By: Dennis Cook

Check out some audience recordings of the new lineup here and here to accompany your reading.

Rhythm Devils 2010 by Suzy Perler

The new incarnation of The Rhythm Devils is like no other in this long running project for Grateful Dead percussionists Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann. Where earlier lineups focused on a worldly exploration of percussion, the 2010 version is directly engaging with the Dead catalog and generating a goodly amount of new material, too. Joining the drum masters are Tim Bluhm of The Mother Hips (guitar, vocals), Davy Knowles of Back Door Slam (guitar, vocals), Sikiru Adepoju (talking drum) and Andy Hess (bass). An earlier tour this year had Keller Williams in place of Bluhm. In many ways, this more song-oriented ensemble is a chance for Kreutzmann and Hart to lay rightful claim to their share of the Grateful Dead legacy, and in the original spirit of that band, extend the range and possibilities of one of the most enduring, flexible and downright amazing catalogs ever produced. Whatever the underlying reasons, the Devils are at it again.

Mickey Hart by Suzy Perler

“Our name was bestowed upon us by Garcia. Jerry, one night in one of his funny moods, said, ‘You guys are rhythm devils’ [his voice taking on a deep growl]. It was said in the funniest of ways, and we were really after the rhythm that night. That’s where it all started,” says Mickey Hart. “Originally it was just about Bill and I doing our thing in the second set. It was a free space, rhythmically speaking, and we just went out into the zone and discovered what the rhythm of the day was.”

As percussionists, Hart and Kreutzmann give off a trickster vibe with a knowing playfulness that’s touched by resounding confidence and wildfire. These are not guys one is likely to see knocking out straight bebop. The way rhythm speaks to them is peculiar and touched by something organic and unique.

“We look for the moment, and when we find it we’re not afraid to go after it,” says Hart. “One of things about performance is fear or the lack of it and respect for failing or not failing, which is always there. But the idea of discovery is more important than the fear of failure in our world.”

“Each night is valuable. Everyone has equity in the moment – we own it, you own it – and it will never be repeated again. So, it’s an original. Sometimes an original is better than others but it’s still an original,” continues Hart. “You try to make it as special as you can, and you settle for whatever happens. Hopefully it’s an uplifting moment. This is moment music, and that is the goal – to create something of value that’s never to be repeated again, an original.”

The New Guys

Bill Kreutzmann by Chad Smith

While all top-notch players, the Rhythm Devils 2010 lineup isn’t something that most listeners, even serious Deadheads, would likely have come up with. It speaks to an out-of-the-box intention from the Devils’ leaders that comes with risks but also potentially great rewards.

“We’re playing the songs. It’s not like free space all night. We have structure, and then you have release. You have to have some kind of physical architecture or you’re just jamming all night, and that becomes rudderless and meaningless at times. Just noodling and twittering just to be in the moment is not the object,” says Hart. “The object is to go somewhere together and making something of value and interest not just to you but to the people listening.”

“We’re making the old music our own, and Robert Hunter is composing for us, so we have a loads of new material,” says Hart. “The band is just being born and starting to own the songs. Playing the songs is one thing – you can play them well, you can play them badly – but to own the song, to put your signature sound and feeling on it, is really the objective here. Grateful Dead songs were created with that in mind, which allows for exploration; circumnavigation, as it were. Every night I see new sights, hear new sounds, new ways of putting it together. So, the band is loosening up and becoming a band, not just six players. There’s a difference.”

Tim Bluhm by Chad Smith

“I’m just grateful to the universe for having this opportunity, but I can’t say that it’s easy. What’s cool about Billy and Mickey is they don’t do what you think they’re gonna do. I think that’s a great quality to have,” says Tim Bluhm. “I’d heard them play but had never met them. I think Bill spent a lot of time on YouTube looking for guys. I had to learn all the music, and I’m still learning. One big challenge for me is we play at least one new song each show that I’ve never heard before. I’m constantly on my toes, always on the edge of learning new stuff. You’re never done learning stuff with this band. As soon as you’ve gotten a few songs down, there’s a new batch to learn. I’m having a lot of fun onstage hearing the songs get better all the time. It’s a miracle to see what hard work can do. These guys work hard!”

“I was never a big Dead guy. I didn’t grow up listening to them. I knew who they were peripherally but I had to learn a LOT of this music and make my own sort of Grateful Dead 101 study class,” says Andy Hess. “The way I got involved was I’d met Mickey’s manager many times over the year in other situations. He thought of me, and then Bill, who I’d met a bit, was sort of a champion for me when my name came up. I told them, ‘If you’re expecting a Phil Lesh type of bass player, that’s not me.’ Bill was very supportive and said, ‘Play how you play. That’s why I pushed for you to be here.’ So, I’m trying to make it my own a bit with respect to the music. I’m such a different bassist than Phil. I really love John Paul Jones, he’s one of my heroes.”

Davy Knowles by Suzy Perler

“I absolutely have no idea whatsoever how I got this gig [laughs]. I got a call from my agent asking if I wanted to join this band for a bit of a tour. I said absolutely; it wasn’t even a decision, it was just ‘Of course.’ What an honor,” says Davy Knowles. “Suddenly I’m getting phone calls from Mickey Hart asking, ‘Do you play lap steel? Do you own one? Well, you should probably get one.’ So, I was pretty much thrown into the deep end without really knowing what was going on, which is great.”

“I wouldn’t say I was a [Grateful Dead] fan before. I’d heard stuff and had huge respect for them, but I hadn’t delved deeper into them. Now I’m just kicking myself for not doing it sooner. It’s such an amazing library of music that I’m being opened up to,” says Knowles. “What I love about them is they’re a true American band. They play real Americana – blues, country, pretty much every form of American music.”

“Bill just wanted to do it again, so we searched around for these different players that we thought were flexible enough and high-caliber enough to play together and enjoy each other – their personalities, their singing abilities, their playing abilities [were all factors],” says Hart. “I used YouTube quite a bit to study their musical habits and listened to their recordings. I did a lot of research into who they were, and we brought them all together. There’s no telling about chemistry but it worked. You just never can tell.”

Rhythm Devils 2010 by Chad Smith

“We don’t count it anymore, but the poor kids playing with us now have to count it. It’s hard for us to explain why we added two beats before you go into this other part. It just seemed like a good idea at the time,” chuckles Hart. “We just smile with it when they fumble the ball a little bit. Sooner or later, they get the pocket and hold the ball tight and they run. Bill and I don’t put any real pressure on the guitarists because they had to learn 40-plus songs. They probably thought they were going to learn a set or something and here they’ve got 40-plus songs on their plate with lyrics and chord changes and tempo changes. They study all the time. We have long sound checks where play through the songs and have transitions and see if we can find our way from this song to that song. We let ‘em know if it’s going to be faster or slower, but to just keep their ears open and play through it. And all of the sudden, we’ll wind up there! Just stay with it, kid! And all of a sudden, a little smile crosses their face when they can see the light at the end. You’re swimming deep and all of the sudden you can see the surface for a little air, something known as opposed to the unknown, chaos to order, order to chaos and somewhere in between.”

This sort of risk taking – a leap into the unknown with a grin and crossed-fingers – is indicative of how Hart and Kreutzmann have made music their whole lives. Too often, particularly in music these days, artists are unwilling to make such leaps, paralyzed by fear of failure or looking bad or some other hitch that keeps their feet planted.

“That seems like a waste of a good life,” offers Hart. “You’ve got to have musical adventure in your life. Music is life for me, at least a big part of it. It really wouldn’t be a smart idea if I played it safe at this stage in my life. So, what you do is try to find people that want to do something that’s a bit out of the ordinary, out of the box. And if they agree on doing it without having to force them into it – which is not fun – then you have something.”

Tim Bluhm & Davy Knowles by Suzy Perler

“It’s absolutely terrifying, but a real education. I can’t see any other way I’d have gotten this education. It’s such a unique experience. Perhaps the most terrifying thing was Mickey wanted to hear the renditions I was doing with these songs. He asked me to record MP3s of me doing Jerry songs with Robert Hunter lyrics and send them back to him. You can imagine how terrifying it was to record these songs, send them to a Grateful Dead member and wait for a reply. I was quivering,” says Knowles. “I have a whole new respect for Jerry Garcia. What an incredible musician, not just a guitar player. Just amazing.”

“Garcia was such an accomplished guitarist and songwriter, but even more than that, he seems like such a benevolent spirit. I respect him and the material so much. You can’t go too wrong if you approach it that way,” says Bluhm. “It’s like a rock band with these moments of trance. Both Davy and I have learned a lot about playing that kind of Africanized trance rock ‘n’ roll. It’s so fun to play with [Billy and Mickey] because they have that thing that only the Dead had. In some ways, it’s almost more distinctive than what Phil and Bobby brought to it. There’s no mistaking them for anyone else.”

Finding a bassist with the flexibility and quickness to follow two utterly idiosyncratic percussionists like Hart and Kreutzmann is no simple task. But Andy Hess, with a CV that includes Gov’t Mule, The Black Crowes and John Scofield, possesses the sort of fluid open-mindedness necessary to complete the low-end in the Devils.

Andy Hess by Chad Smith

“I’ve sort of been a lifelong sideman who’s played with a lot of people. When I played with Gov’t Mule for five years that was the longest I’ve been in a band,” says Hess. “I’m a very supportive kind of player. I’ve done a lot of different things, and I’ve always liked a lot of different kinds of music. I’ve been in New York City for 20 years, and there’s a lot of great players there. In order to make a living sometimes I have to do different stuff. I may not always be totally into it but I try to be open to it. It’s a constant work in progress. Every time I go onstage I think, ‘Okay, here’s an opportunity.’ Some nights are good and other nights are terrible. It’s so intangible, but it’s humbling to get to do this for a living.”

“Mickey has soooo much energy and he can really inspire you. He’s always saying, ‘Let’s do this and let’s do this,’ and it keeps going. Oh my god, this guy is 25 years older than me and he’s all over the place!” says Hess. “He cares and he’s a lot of fun. He’s got a strong personality. He’s cool and respectful to us all. Even though he wants to get what he wants out of all of us, he’s appreciative and he’s a smart guy.”

Knowles had the pleasure of playing guitar and singing with Keller Williams and Tim Bluhm, two very distinctive players and singers with almost nothing in common. How did this go over in the Devils?

“It’s wonderful both ways. They’re both incredible musicians and it’s been an honor and a privilege to work with both of them and get to know their styles and even rob parts of their styles, too. That’s what playing with other people is all about really,” says Knowles. “Keller is kind of a hyper solo musician and all his tempos are really quick – he’s the first to say that – and it’s kind of awesome. He’s so used to playing by himself, whereas Tim Bluhm is sort of the definition of laid-back California. He’s just an unbelievable guitar player, but he seems a bit shy about it. The one thing I love about Tim is his tone and touch. He doesn’t have to play a lot of notes. He’s drenched in soul, and his playing is just fantastic.”

Mickey Hart by Suzy Perler

As for bandleader Hart’s assessment of this newest bunch:

“This is not telepathic yet, so you have to lead a little bit more and you have to be a bit more on top of things to give these signals to the rest of the band, who aren’t intuitive yet,” says Hart. “Being intuitive means being in the groove for hundreds of hours to be able to move and pulse and throb as one. The goal, eventually, is to go there together instantly. There are so many possibilities and how are they going to know where to go without some leading. They can’t read each other’s minds like Bill and I can with just body language, just a wink or a nod. Moving forward a quarter of an inch can mean everything. Even just in thinking I can crawl around in his mind. It’s not a pretty thought [laughs]. We’d do that with Phil or Bob or Jerry, too. Our conversations were non-verbal on a musical and personal level.”

“[With the current Rhythm Devils lineup], we don’t know these guys. We haven’t done everything in the world with them, and those life experiences carry over into the music. We haven’t lived together as a band as we did with the Grateful Dead, so we have to be a bit kinder to them in how we approach the music,” says Hart. “Actually, instructive is a better word. We need to give them something to grab onto, some invisible thought process as we learn to mind-meld with each other. Each night it gets to that place of mind-meld in places, and they gain more confidence and you gain more confidence in them and they gain more confidence in you and slowly you grow and become an organism.”

Continue reading for much more from Mickey Hart and the other fresh Devils…

Bill Kreutzmann & Mickey Hart by Chad Smith

Lessons In The Dead

The palpable in-the-moment quality of the Grateful Dead was often most visible in the interplay of Kreutzmann and Hart, whose faces and bodies often conveyed a joyful daring-do that infected others, tapping into the primal, childlike need to bang on things until cool noises leap out. Their relationship often feels like we’re getting to eavesdrop on a very long, involved exchange that’s still a blast for both parties.

“We practiced a lot in the early days – thousands of hours personally, alone – to be able to throw it away and be fluid onstage. It’s not something that just happens. We worked at it,” says Hart. “We think of it more as a conversation. So, this conversation has lasted 40-odd years now, and it’s still interesting because we’ve never really totally codified things. We never talk about what we’re going to talk about. We never say, ‘You play that and I’ll play this.’ We never do that. We just search around until we find a combination that works and then settle into it. When we listen back to tapes on the bus we might say, ‘See, that thing you did there was really cool.’ And if the other person thinks it was cool, too, they’ll do it again. There’s still a learning curve on what works. We don’t do things different every night just to be different. It’s a constant state of morph and fluxing that’s about change in the right direction, not just change for change sake.”

Mickey Hart by Suzy Perler

“I like a lot of processing and space and delays and reverb and all kinds of instruments unborn. I like to find new sounds and new spaces every night that just amaze me. I’m certainly a hunter. I stalk the groove. I’m a stalker [laughs]. I work really hard to be able to do that,” continues Hart. “I warm up every night and rehearse the band to be able to relax enough to be able to go after the good, the rare, the thing that shines and makes you want to go back again the next night. Being a musician is not easy. You go from city to city, you set up, you play a few hours and you tear down. Unless you really want to do it don’t bother because it’s not really that comfortable mentally, physically and so on.”

The mythology of the Grateful Dead has long acknowledged that the audience is part of the music, inexorably threaded into what the musicians do, for good or bad.

“At its best moments, you get a full circle, a round trip, if you will, where the audience is feeding the band, the band is feeding the audience and neither can do it without the other,” says Hart. “It truly becomes a musical moment that’s shared as opposed to someone’s listening and someone’s giving. There’s a blurring of the lines between the stage and the audience. The better it is, the more cathartic it is, with many crashing, enlightening and uplifting moments throughout the evening.”

However, Grateful Dead Music requires both this audience-band synergy and a high level of musicianship to pull off. Within these powerful unfolding moments, there are still the practical issues of following the music in tandem, hitting the right keys and segues and so on.

Bill Kreutzmann by Suzy Perler

“You have to have trust,” says Hart. “It’s a little heroic, and sometimes you have to go into a place you’ve never been. It feels very euphoric when you find it but you have to let go, and letting go in front of thousands of people isn’t easyÂ…at first. Then, it becomes easier. It becomes your style, and the expectations people bring with them to a show are realized and courted. When that happens it’s a successful night, a successful moment, but you have to believe you’re going to find your way out of this dark alley you find yourself in. It’s a seemingly dead-end street and you find yourself at the end of it. So, how are you going to get out of this dark alleyway or super light alleyway or whatever it might be? How are you going to travel? It’s the way of going that’s important.”

“When you have group-mind, then you depend on that. Everyone just listens intently and is really sprightly in their work – moving quickly or slowly as the case may be – but listening and reacting and updating based on miniscule times. The time frames are tiny when you’re improvising and you have to make your decisions in a split second or else you’re behind. It becomes more intuitive instead of thinking,” continues Hart. “Once it becomes a body, the music takes on a whole other aspect. Once you develop that group-mind you move differently. Instead of moving a sea tanker where you have to go real slow, you can cut and run on a dime. It’s kind of a license to fly once everybody understands how high and fast they can fly individually and as a group. Then you become a group, and the rush of group melody, rhythm and harmony becomes intuitive rather than thinking, ‘Where do I go now?’ And obviously, the better in tune you are with yourself and the group, the more successful you are at jamming.”

Cracking The Songbook

Andy Hess & Bill Kreutzmann by Suzy Perler

The organic malleability of the Dead catalog is perhaps the heart of its enduring viability and the reason so many hands and voices can handle it while still creating something of their own.

“There’s certain signature things you have to have to make it the song, but we couldn’t remember what we did the night before, so a method was born [laughs]. We didn’t do this on purpose,” says Hart. “I remember one day there was an incident where Bob was supposed to do something and he didn’t do it and we came down on him. And it was so sad and we thought, ‘We can’t do this forever. If we’re gonna play this music forever we can’t go into the blame game.’ So, we dropped that and let it happen and it worked out. It wasn’t that kind of child; it didn’t have discipline in that respect. You could whip it into shape and discipline it and make it do what you wanted it to do OR you could let it go and just see it grow.”

“No one really tried to commit most things to memory. Some things we had to so people would recognize the songs,” continues Hart. “Things were going from one thing to another, just morphing and morphing, and there weren’t really any songs, there was just music. Then we tried to make songs out of it, and the songs grew. Robert Hunter started writing words to our music as we were playing it. He’d sit there and just write words. ‘Uncle John’s Band’ came out of a jam, most of ‘Dark Star’ and ‘The Other One’ were just moments we went through and Hunter just heard the words. And we never really codified or crystallized a lot of this. We never said this is the way it has to be. It was made to be explored, so everybody had some kind of personal freedom to explore on a daily or nightly basis. And it was okay to change things, and even when things became signatures we could still play with that signature riff because we birthed them. So, that’s the way it is in the Grateful Dead musical lexicon.”

“It’s fun and it’s getting better,” says Hess. “This music is all a great melting pot. It’s also really loose. I’ve also played in a lot of bands where it’s about being tighter, and this floats here and then floats into the next song. It’s a different approach that they’ve mastered over the years. That’s been challenging to me to let go of a stricter time thing. Mule was loose in a lot of ways and improvisational, but I come from groove music where there’s a lot of repetition. I’m trying to bring myself into this music and make the songs work.”

Davy Knowles by Suzy Perler

“My ultimate favorite is ‘So Many Roads.’ I think it’s absolutely perfect. If you can find a better definition of music, I’d like to hear it. It’s achingly beautiful. The lyrics are beautiful and the melody is incredible. It’s a road song without being cheesy. It’s just correct and so stunning,” says Knowles, who’s also enjoying the Dead’s old blues chestnuts. “I’m really digging the Pigpen-era stuff. And ‘Easy Wind’ is such a great blues track. It’s a different kind of blues. I’m very happy it’s not a 12-bar. It’s something else entirely. I figure if you to hear a 12-bar blues why not put on a Freddie King or Albert King record because they can do it a lot better than I ever will. The idea is to take those influences and make something of your own out of them. I’m 23-years-old and I don’t want to play 12-bar blues the rest of my life. I want to pay tribute to it, but there’s a lot of people that came before me that do a much better job at it. If you want to hear that, then go put it on. It’s important to try something which is why I like songs like ‘Easy Wind.’”

“The blues crowd is incredibly faithful but sometimes it feels like you can’t do anything outside the blues or they’ll lynch you. And the craziest thing is the blues came from black people being oppressed in these just evil times, and suddenly the blues market is all white, middle-aged guys with long hair trying to wear zoot suits. You think, ‘Wow, the white guys have kind of taken over again,’” says Knowles. “It’s very strange how upside down it is. If you’re a white kid who plays the blues but doesn’t play them like Freddie King or Albert King or one of the legendary black blues guys, then they say you’re not playing blues no more.”

“Probably [the most difficult song to learn has been] ‘Uncle John’s Band.’ There’s bars of three and suddenly it goes from 4/4 to 3/7. And my timing is pretty rubbish. I’ve played with 4/4, maybe 6/8 or 3/4 now and again, for so long and that’s about it. So, my timing needs a lot of work and suddenly it’s, ‘Oh crap!’ and I need to come in at precisely the right place,” says Knowles. “And these guys [Mickey and Billy] don’t know all the timing. They’ve played them for so long that they just know them. I’d ask if there was a bar of three and they’d say, ‘I don’t know. That’s just how it goes.’ Arrgh! What do I do? Help! Help!”

Tim Bluhm & Andy Hess by Suzy Perler

“I think the things that are working the best for me so far are the Dead ballads like ‘Brokedown Palace,’ which are right in my comfort zone,” says Bluhm. “Davy does a great ‘So Many Roads’ and I get to sing harmonies on that. He kills – he just rules it. I’m enjoying playing with him, but he’s definitely pushing me. I’m playing more guitar solos in this band than with the Hips. I saw the same thing happen with Jackie [Greene], where he learned more about big guitar playing when he was out with Phil. You learn what equipment works and what will cut through. I can’t really see it from inside but I know I’m growing when I think about it.”

Making music, on some level, is an act of regurgitation – what comes out after one has digested tradition. But it’s often a snake eating its tail, where music often sounds like mere variations on a theme instead of moving into fresh territory. This is one of the crucial differences in Grateful Dead music, which formed its own language since nothing previous quite got the message across in the right way for them. Make no mistake what Hart, Kreutzmann and their compatriots forged is a true American original distinct from anything before its arrival.

“That’s why I thought I could do this the rest of my life, this kind of music, and I was right,” says Hart. “It allows for growth. When you have this kind of architecture it’s not inhibiting to your creativity, as opposed to playing the song the exact same way every night, which is really the death knell for creativity. Playing songs really well is a wonderful art, but it’s not ours. Not to put that down at all, to play a song with all its nuances intact, but for us it would be creative suicide.”

“You gotta be like a warrior in a way, a road dog, and desperate in a way to bring your music to the people or else you shouldn’t do it, you shouldn’t take up the wand. I wouldn’t recommend it for most people,” says Hart. “It’s a very intense kind of life, and you have to balance it with family and a home life. People pay good money to see us and I try to reward that with an effort, to go to that place that will make them charmed. That’s my responsibility to them. If you go out and don’t deliver what you’re capable of then you’re ripping them off, and I don’t like that, brother. It’s a rip off if you don’t put in everything you have into it that night. Even if you fail it’s okay as long as you try real hard.”

The Rhythm Devils will perform next on Jam Cruise on January 7-8, and then a post-cruise show at Revolution Live in Fort Lauderdale, FL on January 9. Check out setlists from this past year along with a list of new tunes being performed here.

The Rhythm Devils Tour Dates :: The Rhythm Devils News :: The Rhythm Devils Concert Reviews

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‘We talk every now and then’, says Jolie’s ex Billy Bob Thornton

Billy Bob ThorntonAngelina Jolie’s ex hubby Billy Bob Thornton has revealed that he is still in talking terms with the actress. The two were married for three years, and even though they showed their affections by wearing viles of each other’s blood around their necks, they ended up divorcing in 2003. “We talk every now and then, [...]

Lotus lunch at the RAC

I attended a Lotus media lunch earlier this week at the RAC Club in London (marvellous institution, very old style gentlemen’s club; some superb paintings on the walls; and the staff will have severe words with you if you are not attired in business suit with collar and tie).

The latest ambitious plans for Lotus certainly make for a good story and Dany Bahar seems to be enjoying himself telling everyone how great the future is going to be. The business plan is very public. There’s just the small matter of execution and making it all happen now and there are more than a few hostages to fortune if anything slips. A few media colleagues said they’d heard it all before from Lotus. I know what they mean and it isn’t difficult to be cynical, but this time it has the ring of ‘we’re really going for it because this is it, we really have to make it work in order to have a future’.

It is an impressive sounding plan and Lotus does have a strong brand with heritage, a manufacturing base and plenty of engineering expertise. Is annual production of 8,000 units a big deal, really? Porsche does 75,000 a year. It ‘just’ needs to all be brought together in a coherent way. But having a management team with a plan is a fundamental prerequisite to do that. They seem to have that, so there are certainly grounds for optimism. I just hope they can take Lotus forward with the new models and do it in a way that keeps their loyal fan base and the Lotus spirit intact, while still getting the brand out to new customers. 

Tom Purves – used to be head of BMW USA – was a real gent and a pleasure to hear chatting about the industry over lunch. He seems to be really enjoying himself in his advisory capacity with Lotus. As Dany Bahar said, they have a young and ‘super-ambitious’ team, and some advice from wise and experienced heads is a good thing to add in to the mix. Bob Lutz is also part of the Lotus advisory council and I’d imagine he must have a few interesting things to say. And, well, Maximum Bob doesn’t mess around when it comes to letting people know what he thinks does he? Something in Autocar caught my eye…

Still on Lotus, the latest edition of the e-magazine that we produce on behalf of Lotus Engineering – proActive, is now available. There’s more on the Lotus strategy, as well as an interview I did with Lotus Design Director Donato Coco and an interview with Torotrak’s CEO.

http://www.just-auto.com/proActive/

UK: Lotus CEO sets out ‘British Porsche’ strategy

Hot Club of Cowtown: What Makes Bob Holler

BAND TO APPEAR AT SXSW AND NPR MOUNTAIN STAGE


What Makes Bob Holler

Bob Wills has always been a core inspiration for the Hot Club of Cowtown‘s sound, but
it has taken the Texas-based trio a dozen years to fully honor the King of Western swing. A fortuitous tour in
England last spring led the band to London’s Specific Sound studio, where they spent two days recording a 14-song
marathon of only Bob Wills tunes. The result, What Makes Bob Holler, is a lively tribute to the
American music icon, respecting Wills’ legendary music while putting Hot Club’s own signature on these songs. “We
have been meaning to make this album for a long time,” says Elana James, who co-founded Hot Club with
Whit Smith (they’re joined by bassist Jake Erwin).

With the imminent release of What Makes Bob Holler on Proper American on February 1, the Austin-based
band looks to a busy 2011. They start the year opening seven U.K. arena dates with Roxy Music, followed by a taping of
NPR’s Mountain Stage in Charleston, W.V. in late January and an appearance at South by Southwest ( SXSW) in March
— before touring coast to coast in support of the album.

Hot Club of Cowtown
Tour Dates

::
Hot Club of Cowtown News
::
Hot Club of Cowtown
Concert
Reviews


Devo Cancels 2010 Tour Fun Fun Fun Fest Adds Acts

CULTS, WASHED OUT, NORTEC COLLECTIVE & MORE
ADDED TO FUN FUN FUN
FEST; MOOGFEST APPEARANCE SCHEDULED


Devo

Devo deeply regret that
they have had to postpone all of their upcoming live dates for 2010 due to a serious hand injury sustained by
guitarist Bob Mothersbaugh. A glass shard sliced Mothersbaugh’s right thumb to the bone, severing a
tendon. He underwent immediate emergency surgery and is expected to make a full recovery after proper care and
therapy.

Most of Devo’s upcoming November tour dates, including Solana Beach’s Belly Up, Los Angeles’ Club Nokia, and San
Francisco’s Warfield Theater, will be rescheduled for next spring and the public will be informed once new dates
have been confirmed.

Fun Fun Fun Fest are working with a number of different bands that are excited to step in and fill the
headliner slot
on Sunday. In the meantime, the following bands have been added:

Cults!

Margot & The Nuclear So and Sos
Washed Out
Nortec Collective
the Antlers

Tickets are available here

MoogFest has released the following statement via Facebook: “We were on the phone yesterday with
Mark
Mothersbaugh and
Gerald Casale from Devo. In spite of Bob’s horrible accident, both of them are still coming to Moogfest and they are
working on a couple of performance ideas, including a possible collaboration with another band/artist. We’re all still
discussing the possibilities but both Mark and Gerald have promised something immensely entertaining, at the very
least.”

Devo
Tour Dates

::
Devo News
::
Devo
Concert
Reviews


Sat Eye Candy: Bob Weir

HAPPY BIRTHDAY, BOB!

Bust out your khaki shorts and Birkenstocks and do a happy shuffle for Bob Weir, who turns 63 today. As a member of the Grateful Dead, leader of RatDog and all the other variations like Furthur, Weir has helped navigate one of the great songbooks in American music as well as pioneering a live music style that will continue to inspire forever. Here’s a few tidbits from Bobby’s vast repertoire in celebration of his natal day.

We begin with a sing-along crowd pleaser.

Here’s Bob talking about the dynamics of RatDog before playing a great version of one of the band’s best numbers.

Weir has been an on-again, off-again participant in the band Kingfish since the early 1970s. Here’s the band in Half Moon Bay, CA in the late 80s.

Taken from the “Stealth Rehearsals” at the Mill Valley Masonic, here’s Furthur with one of Bob’s signature tunes.

Despite a reputation outside the flock as a bunch of hippies, the Grateful Dead was one of THE most musically robust acts ever. Here’s the evidence.

After Jerry Garcia’s sudden passing the future of Dead music seemed in question. Without much pause, The Other Ones came roaring out to keep things rolling. This clip comes from the first show played at Alpine Valley after Garcia’s death.

Bob has always had a way with covers, and this is one of his early best.


“Jersey Boys” Movie

Broadway’s Jersey Boys is headed to the big screen, Entertainment Weekly reports. Graham King’s GK Films — the producer of the Oscar-nominated film The Departed — has purchased the film rights to the 2006 Tony Award winner for Best Musical and will adapt the story of of how Frankie Valli, Bob Gaudio, Tommy DeVito and [...]

Bob Dylan: Fall Tour Dates; Halloween & Thanksgiving Shows

TICKETS AVAILABLE NOW


Bob Dylan

Bob Dylan will begin his fall
tour tomorrow night in Ft. Lauderdale at Nova Southeastern University. The tour will travel through the South before
hitting the Midwest and finishing up in the Northeast. On Halloween night, Dylan will play in Indianapolis, IN at the
Murat Theatre. The three day run-up to Thanksgiving will find Dylan performing for three nights at Terminal 5 in
New York. Check out all the dates below.


OCT 6 Fort Lauderdale, FL Nova Southeastern University — The Arena at Don Taft University Center

OCT 7 Tampa, FL University of South Florida — Sun Dome

OCT 8 Gainesville, FL University of Florida — Stephen C. O’Connell Center

OCT 10 Orlando, FL University of Central Florida — UCF Arena

OCT 11 Tallahassee, FL Tallahassee-Leon County Civic Center

OCT 13 Birmingham, AL BJCC Concert Hall

OCT 14 Charlotte, NC UNC Charlotte — Halton Arena

OCT 16 Winston-Salem, NC Lawrence Joel Veterans Memorial Coliseum

OCT 17 Clemson, SC Clemson University — Littlejohn Coliseum

OCT 19 Nashville, TN Nashville Municipal Auditorium

OCT 21 Saint Louis, MO Saint Louis University — Chaifetz Arena

OCT 22 Champaign, IL University of Illinois — Assembly Hall

OCT 24 Cedar Falls, IA University of Northern Iowa — McLeod Center

OCT 25 Madison, WI Overture Hall

OCT 25 Madison, WI Overture Hall — Late Show

OCT 26 East Lansing, MI Michigan State University — MSU Auditorium

OCT 28 Ann Arbor, MI University of Michigan — Hill Auditorium

OCT 29 Kalamazoo, MI Western Michigan University — Miller Auditorium

OCT 30 Chicago, IL The Riviera Theatre

OCT 31 Indianapolis, IN Murat Theatre

NOV 2 Akron, OH University of Akron — EJ Thomas Performing Arts Hall

NOV 3 Highland Heights, KY Northern Kentucky University — The Bank of Kentucky Center

NOV 4 Columbus, OH Ohio State University — Schottenstein Center

NOV 6 Rochester, NY Rochester Institute of Technology — Gordon Field House

NOV 7 Pittsburgh, PA University of Pittsburgh — Petersen Events Center

NOV 9 State College, PA Penn State University — Bryce Jordan Center

NOV 10 Charlottesville, VA University of Virginia — John Paul Jones Arena

NOV 12 Bethlehem, PA Lehigh University — Stabler Arena

NOV 13 Washington, DC George Washington University — Charles E. Smith Center

NOV 14 West Long Branch, NJ Monmouth University — MAC Center

NOV 17 Binghamton, NY Binghamton University — Events Center

NOV 19 Amherst, MA University of Massachusetts Amherst — Mullins Center

NOV 20 Lowell, MA University of Massachusetts Lowell — Tsongas Center

NOV 22 New York, NY Terminal 5

NOV 23 New York, NY Terminal 5

NOV 24 New York, NY Terminal 5

NOV 26 Atlantic City, NJ Borgata Hotel Casino & Spa Event Center

NOV 27 Mashantucket, CT MGM Grand Theater at Foxwoods

Bob Dylan
Tour Dates

::
Bob Dylan News
::
Bob Dylan
Concert
Reviews


JamBase Questionnaire: Spiritual Rez

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from Cochemea Gastelum.

new album

“There’s no need for introduction/ To make your body move is our function.” This inviting ‘handshake’ open “Rollin’ Dutches,” just one of numerous infectious modern reggae numbers on Nexus, the latest release from Boston-based Spiritual Rez.

The Rez sing sweet songs of lioness ladies and groovy ganja but skirt the jokiness that so often infects lighter-spirited reggae. This band possesses an abundantly inviting energy that taps into the brighter side of Bob & Ziggy Marley but also more soul & horn-infused progenitors like Johnny Nash with significant rock crunch in spots. As evidenced by Nexus, they excel at easy to like, positivity infused music, and they’ve been sharpening their skills on the touring circuit for half a decade, laying down roots everywhere they can so they might grow as strong and free as the Spaceship Tree that adorns the cover of their latest release. (Dennis Cook)

The band is on tour now and plays tonight, September 10, at Funk N Waffles in Syracuse, NY, then tomorrow at the Backwoods Pond Fest tomorrow. Next week they are at the Stone Church in Newmarket, NH on Thursday, September 16, and The Paradise in Boston with Bernie Worrell on Friday, September 17. Find full tour dates here.

Spiritual Rez is currently in competition for Jam Cruise 9′s “Vote To The Boat” contest. You can vote for them here until September 20.

Here’s what Spiritual Rez drummer Ian Miller had to say to our inquiries.

Spiritual Rez

Instrument of choice: Orange Country drums & percussion
Nickname: “Meat”

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Fulfilling live energy. Too often I see groups on stage not getting the crowd off simply because they aren’t getting themselves off..

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
Bloodhound Gang’s One Fierce Beer Coaster, shortly followed by Foo Fighters’ The Colour and Shape.

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
Easy Star All-Stars’ cover album Radiodread – ha ha ha, I’ve been jamming that pretty constantly.

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
My first answer was fireman but that moved quickly to astronaut.

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
One that involves all-ages. The whole band loves playing for children – goes back to question 1. Fulfilling. Energy. AWESOME!

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
Come say hi and find out in person!

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
The huge flapping tarp outside our apartment’s window.

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
Pink Floyd. In my opinion it took them a few tries to get there, but damn could they meld.

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
Rhumb Lines in St. John, U.S. Virgin Islands. They really know how to treat the band there. We’ve played there three springs running and I believe this year it was the surf & turf for me – nothing but the most premium!

10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
Festivals, usually. Everyone is there for the music! Well, most everyone.

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
Diet. Diet. Diet. Diet.

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
The Beatles. They just wrote better albums. Works as answer for question 8 as well.

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
The storm cell in Kansas, which almost drove our van and trailer off the freeway with a small tornado. That sky had life and it was attempting to feast upon us! Experience + Beauty = 100 points.

Spiritual Rez Tour Dates :: Spiritual Rez News :: Spiritual Rez Concert Reviews

JamBase | Sippy
Go See Live Music!


Bob Dylan To Play The Warfield in San Francisco

WEDNESDAY AUGUST 25; NO ADVANCE TICKETS; CASH ONLY


Bob Dylan

Bob Dylan and his Band will
play The
Warfield
in San Francisco for the first time in nearly twenty years on Wednesday, August 25.

All tickets are general admission and will be available at The Warfield box office on the day of the show only. No
advance tickets will be available anywhere for this performance. Admission to the show is $60 cash. No credit cards
or checks will be accepted.

The box office and the doors will open at 5:30 pm on August 25 with show time at 8 pm. Ticketholders will enter
the venue immediately at the time of purchase, one ticket per customer. Line-ups will begin no earlier than noon on
day of performance.

Goldenvoice Vice President of Booking, David Lefkowitz said, “Given the state of touring and how fees
have
escalated, it was a real breath of fresh air to do something very consumer oriented by eliminating all ticketing
charges, it’s almost a throwback to another time. It’s been almost twenty years since Bob Dylan played The Warfield
and in my opinion, he is an artist that needs no big promotions or hoopla. He comes, he plays, and it’s an incredible
experience.”

Bob Dylan
Tour Dates

::
Bob Dylan News
::
Bob Dylan
Concert
Reviews


Outside Lands | 08.14-08.15 | SF

Words by: Dennis Cook & Eric Podolsky | Susan J Weiand & Josh Miller

Outside Lands :: 08.14.10-08.15.10 :: Golden Gate Park :: San Francisco, CA

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”28″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=110″);}); 8/14/10 – 8/15/10 @ Outside Lands Festival (San Francisco, CA) View Photos

Furthur’s John Kadlecik by Weiand

As the expression goes, third time’s the charm. Outside Lands, the biggest Bay Area summer festival, had things dialed in for year three. By trimming two stages, moving the main entrance and generally reorganizing the geography into a long, straight line between stages and tents, OL ’10 was more pleasant, less hectic and generally refined. Subtle changes throughout, including a better-informed staff and a never-ending dance tent, made for a fairly effortless, enjoyable atmosphere. With extensive wine offerings, Korean tacos and perhaps the finest coffee on earth, the Lands once again played to San Fran’s unique sensibilities, which were also reflected in a lineup that tapped local royalty (Furthur), genre defying oddities (Gogol Bordello, Garage A Trois), hipster gold (The Strokes, Phoenix), and rave faves (Pretty Lights, Bassnectar).

Perhaps the best compliment one can give a festival is that it’s thoughtfully assembled. An extra dash or three of care clearly went into the third installment of this growing summer fixture. There was less sound overlap between the stages than either previous year, and the programming moved closer to Bonnaroo’s science-like knack for putting the right bands in the right order on each stage in a way that plays to a certain sensibility, thus cutting down on nomadic wandering between stages, which is admittedly a real hike inside Golden Gate Park, even with the reduced number of stages. Corporate shilling was still strong but Outside Lands is set up in a way that one can largely ignore it and enjoy the bucolic setting – as long as they’ve brought plenty of layers and clothing options to contend with SF’s ever-changing weather, which offered flashes of sunshine Saturday, plenty of damp and largely moderate temps this year before really brightening up on Sunday.

What seemed like a keeper the first two years is now cemented as a pleasant fixture in one of the most singular (and challenging to master) settings for a music festival. Outside Lands is an ambitious yet easygoing affair, and thus a pretty fine fit for the quirky, outer fringe Bay Area. (Dennis Cook)

Saturday Highlights

1. My Morning Jacket :: 5:00-6:30 PM :: Lands End Stage

MMJ’s Jim James by Weiand

With the simple, direct announcement, “Tonight, I want to celebrate with you,” Jim James, omnichord in hand, struck up MMJ’s unique incantation, a mixture of bare skin intimacy and giant size rock spectacle. It’s a combination prone to blow up in lesser hands but MMJ has it sussed to perfection at this point, moving from eyelash flutter hush to sky climbing enormity with such skill and grace it leaves one a bit dizzy. Before “Golden,” James talked about playing a forested, disco ball strewn fest in Japan called Field of Heaven and how being in Golden Gate Park felt like Field of Heaven 2 or Revenge of Field of Heaven. The magic of the moment and specialness of place are rarely lost on MMJ, who excel at bringing the immediate world into focus with their highly romantic yet curiously barbed POV. The beauty of our shared time in such lovely surroundings, especially with MMJ providing the soundtrack, was not lost on many. With the best rock rhythm section from the south since Bill Berry put his sticks away, a colossally compelling frontman (often stalking the stage in a little black cape!), GIANT guitar gusto and one of the finest catalogues in the past 20 years, My Morning Jacket seized hold of the park. As James sighed, “I’ve been waiting for this moment for so long,” one felt a delightful shiver. The time between MMJ shows creates a lovely anticipation for the faithful, the next chapter devoutly wished for and appreciated with moist-eyed sincerity. One of the reoccurring themes in this band is it’s not only okay but essential to feel whatcha feel, and this performance had no lack of emotion, intensity or unflinching honesty. (DC)

Take 2
This band’s perfect blend of epic, crushing rock and Jim James‘ haunting, otherworldly falsetto never fails to deliver, especially on a big stage. Coming back after a big break from touring, one expected them to debut some new material, but their setlist was mostly identical to the 2008 tour (though they did debut a nifty new one called “Circuital”). No matter, they crushed every tune with reverb-laced majesty. Their huge, dreamy sound fit the gorgeous GG Park setting better than any band of the weekend, making them a perfect transition from afternoon into evening. (Eric Podolsky)

2. Wolfmother :: 6:30-7:20 PM :: Sutro Stage

Hands down, Andrew Stockdale and his band of Aussies stole the show on Saturday with the most consistently hard-rocking set of the day. Wolfmother made the most of their fifty-minute set, barraging the audience with song after song of feedback-laced, grungy, riff-laden rock and roll. Playing directly into the misty ocean breeze that descended on GG Park as the sun set, the band made the most of their short time slot by keeping their energy at a continuous peak of sonic mayhem. Ian Peres‘ crunchy Entwistle-like bass lines drove the band through their consistently great catalog, which included a short run through The Doors’ “Riders of the Storm” and a superbly reckless take on The Who’s “Baba O’Reilly.” Top Notch. (EP)

Take 2
With the best cover choices of the day, Wolfmother offered an indication that they aren’t competing with their contemporaries so much as rock’s giants. It’s what most young bands are aiming for but rarely boldly state outright like Stockdale and his new-ish four-piece lineup. What particularly impressed (and even surprised to a degree) is how well their originals stand up next to iconic radio staples like “Riders” and “Baba.” Stockdale has a bloody great set of furnace hot pipes and a gift for mimicry (Morrison and Daltrey have rarely been aped so well), and the quartet interlocks and slams with unified muscle. At this set, Wolfmother could not be ignored as they grasped and thrust at the large crowd, rock’s poking ‘n’ prodding essence kept vibrantly alive in a really enjoyable way. (DC)

3. Levon Helm Band :: 3:45-4:35 PM :: Twin Peaks Stage

Levon Helms by Weiand

“Thank you for all this loveliness,” croaked Levon towards the end of his band’s too brief, utterly satisfying set. Without question, what Levon and co. are doing is the closest thing to The Band that most of us that grew up after Winterland was shut down have experienced. The intertwining of American musics is complete and seemingly effortless with this huge band (10 people onstage by my count), and there’s a touch more growl and attack than one might expect. Levon is not a young man and his age is sometimes apparent, though not when the wind catches his back and he strums a mandolin or drums in a way that makes the years disappear. With an ace band led by Larry Campbell, Helm is keeping the flame lit for one of the cornerstones of rock ‘n’ roll as we know it, and it was a gift to be in his company for a short spell. (DC)

Take 2
Even though Levon’s voice was shot, his professional Americana band of veterans was a breath of fresh air in the middle of a day comprised of young, up-and-coming bands. His group’s sound was defined by its huge four-piece horn section, which gave all those classic Band songs a huge, refreshing sound. Highlights included Levon’s take on Dylan’s “Blind Willie McTell,” and a rousing NOLA two-step “All On A Mardi Gras Day” to close their too-short set. (EP)

4. The Whigs :: 12:00-12:40 PM :: Panhandle Solar Stage

With waves of befuzzed bass, air kicking guitar rattle and crisp, intense drums, The Whigs roared out of the gate, kicking off the day with nothing-held-back energy. They play in an almost archetypal fashion, looking and sounding just like a rock band should. There’s scads of testicular fortitude but also numerous lyrics that recall Thom Yorke at his pithy, prickly best (“I don’t need to kill anyone to prove I’m real,” “Somebody better come and speed up your heart ’cause it’s dying”). Swinging from cavernously thick, Sabbath-worthy crush (often with a downhill speed up near the end of tracks that was honestly exhilarating) to hooky pop to the softly psychedelic, The Whigs showed off their considerable chops and a songwriting acumen that thoroughly skunks most peers. Every track from this year’s In The Dark was stronger live, and by set’s end it was obvious that The Whigs have ALL rock’s fundamentals down cold. (DC)

5. Dawes :: 1:25-2:05 PM :: Panhandle Solar Stage

Touring behind one of the strongest debuts in years, this Southern California band is rapidly shaping up to be one of today’s finest, most striking bands, melding cherry influences like The Band, 70s California rock (Eagles, Jackson Browne, Neil Young, Linda Ronstadt), and heaping measures of barroom gusto and stadium-eyeing moxie. Vocalist-songwriter-guitarist Taylor Goldsmith and his highly in-tune compatriots exude the crackling vibe of the E Street Band in their early club days. Dawes has the same hungry energy about them and the same ceaseless need to connect with every person in the audience, no matter how big or small. Dawes has the talent, tunes and tenacity to achieve great things, and they were fueled by infectious confidence and road hardened tunes in GG Park. Looking around at the sizeable number of people belting out the “oh, oh, oh’s” on “Western Skyline” it was obvious I wasn’t the only one really feeling this band and taking their music into their heart. Only expect the number of faithful followers to grow with this band. (DC)

6. Gogol Bordello :: 3:05-4:05 PM :: Lands End Stage

Gogol Fans by Weiand

In many ways, Gogol Bordello’s MacGyver‘s stew of world musics just shouldn’t work. Fiddles and electric guitars and accordions and menacing moustaches, oh my! Watching them beneath their standard banner of a hand holding a slingshot ready to launch a red star, it became clear at Outside Lands that it’s a rugged, Clash-like undercurrent that stitches this crazy quilt together. They are a People’s Band, marching forward towards truth and love and other big, honorable things, and maybe throwing a steel toe into the shins of aggressors and money hoarders along the way. Often yelling, there’s actually a fair amount of substance inside their routine, where we’re reminded that we’ve only got today to live and not waste on looking backwards at “good old days” that never were. Gogol is also as entertaining as watching a clown car unload onto a water slide. Their energy and sheer gusto for life is endearing and inspiring, and their music ain’t half bad either. (DC)

Honorable Mention: Furthur

Never one to genuflect too deeply at the Grateful Dead altar, even in my 1984-90 peak mania, I’m still not totally convinced by Furthur. At Outside Lands, Bob’s singing was better than usual, and the band played with patient insistence, but it still smacked of guys chasing something that’s unattainable – i.e. raising the ghost of the Grateful Dead. I know these songs – well – and I know there are two guys from the Dead in their ranks but I can’t put my finger on what makes Furthur their own band and that’s what’s off-putting for me. If one is likewise trying to raise that ghost then this might be the best seance on offer today. I think from my perspective I’ll still go with Dark Star Orchestra, but this configuration of Dead veterans, Dead music aficionados and a drummer new to the whole thing are fine musicians all and it’s certainly not an unpleasant way to spend one’s time, especially if one adores this songbook. (DC)

Continue reading for Sunday Highlights…

Al Green by Weiand

While Saturday’s eclectic lineup proved somewhat jarring in its musical scope (Pretty Lights > Levon Helm > Furthur> The Strokes?), Sunday’s focus on soul/R&B/dance music proved more cohesive in the day’s flow. Likewise, the festival crowd’s lack of an identity on Saturday gave way to a looser, more vibey scene on Sunday, which saw the sun come out in GG Park for the first time in weeks. While Saturday felt like a series of concerts, Sunday felt like a real festival experience, with everyone grooving under the eucalyptus trees all day long.

My only real qualm with the very efficiently run urban festival would be the consistently short set times, which forced many bands to squeeze their acts into digestible introductions rather than a legitimate representations. This, when combined with the half-mile walk between stages and overlapping sets, meant you were lucky to catch 35 minutes of a band before having to walk another half-mile back to catch most of the next band you wanted to see. Regardless, there was nary a lull to be had all day, with nine straight hours of fantastic music.

With the huge number of overlapping sets, there were some tough decisions to be made. The toughest had to be the choice of catching Al Green in lieu of both Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros and Garage A Trois. This ended up being a somewhat regrettable choice, as the good Reverend seems to have reached the point in his career where he’s coasting on his own legacy. Al was all smiles and enthusiasm, but when it came to performing, he actually only sang about half of the time. The other half was stage banter, as he preached the merit of his own songbook and threw roses to the crowd. This complacency was easily forgiven though, as this was Al-fucking-Green, and Al Green can do whatever the hell he wants. He knew that most were there just to have said that they saw Al Green, and everyone forgave him when he skipped a verse in the middle of “Let’s Stay Together” to drink some Gatorade. Fantastic version of “Pretty Woman,” though. (Eric Podolsky)

Sunday Highlights

1. Mayer Hawthorne & The County :: 1:30-2:10 PM :: Sutro Stage

Mayer Hawthorne by Weiand

The most fun I had all day was dancing to the one band I had never heard of. Hawthore stole the day for me with his early afternoon set of tight-as-a-drum neo-soul. With a groove equally rooted in 60s Motown, 70s Philly Soul and modern hip-hop, Hawthorne and his band serenaded the crowd with their on-point, Temptations-style falsetto harmonies. In matching suits, the multicultural band delivered earnest, danceable love songs while avoiding both irony and sap, most notably in the slinky “Just Ain’t Gonna Work Out.” Hailing from Detroit, it is clear that Hawthorne has Motown in his blood. His voice is like a cross between classic Smokey Robinson and 70s Michael McDonald, in the best way imaginable. It is not often that a band’s performance finds me actively seeking out their catalog, but this music is so supremely likeable and original that it’s impossible to not be enthralled. (EP)

2. The Devil Makes Three :: 2:10-2:55 PM :: Twin Peaks Stage

By the time this trio from Santa Cruz, CA started their peppy afternoon set, the sun had fully emerged from its cloud shroud, which made for a happy country hoedown in the park. Comprised of banjo, guitar and upright bass, The Devil Makes Three can sure throw a party, thanks to their fantastic songwriting and bouncing, bluegrass basslines. Their sound carries a tinge of jug band inanity, which makes anthemic tunes such as “All Hail” sound like they potentially could have a kazoo in there somewhere, though they don’t. This set really felt like a festival, with the crowd dancing harder than I had seen all weekend. Lead singer/guitarist Pete Bernhard‘s vocals were rollicking and enthusiastic, and the group’s three-part harmonies really captured that “high and lonesome sound.” Cooper McBean‘s loping banjo playing had a cool compression to it, which made it sound like it was being broadcast on an old-time radio show. These guys surely won over a ton of new fans with their set, including this writer. (EP)

3. Janelle Monae :: 3:05-3:55 PM :: Sutro Stage

Who is Janelle Monae? The way this girl is performing people won’t be saying that for much longer. Her set was probably the most anticipated of the weekend, and for good reason. Unfortunately, her flight from Toronto was delayed and she took the stage late, cutting her already short time slot down to around 25 minutes. This was a minor tragedy, as she was simply electric. As soon as she stepped onstage, it was clear that this 24-year old girl is a star in the making. Boasting a perfect pompa-fro, Monae and her band let loose an abridged show of frantic, freaky-deeky hip-hop soul, a la Outkast/ Gnarls Barkley. Prancing around the stage like Andre 3000′s little sister, the pint-sized Monae showed off serious pipes and dance moves to match. Her three-piece band was somewhat of an accessory to the pre-recorded tracks that they played along with, but no matter, it was a performance and she worked it. The set peaked and ended with a funky take on “Tightrope,” in which Monae wailed and thrashed about on the drum riser in a cape. Monae’s music has that frantic, weird, Danger Mouse feel to it, and she can sing like Beyonce. In other words, expect to see this girl on MTV sooner than later. (EP)

Phoenix by Weiand

4. Phoenix :: 5:55-6:55 PM :: Lands End Stage

These guys probably attracted the most fervent young fans of the weekend, which crunched the pit with bodies and energy. Frontman Thomas Mars was acutely aware and supremely grateful of his audience, and responded with a balls-out rock star performance of festival-size proportion. Phoenix has so many catchy, infectious, utterly danceable rock songs that their live show is bound to be a great time. The band played (and nailed) them all with drummer Thomas Hedlund kicking some serious ass, though it was Mars who owned every minute of this show. His earnest, clear-eyed vocal delivery truly defines this band. It was eye-opening how good his voice sounded live, and his patented repetition of phrases was right in groove with the tunes. Mars seemed so genuinely happy and grateful for his audience that his rock star stage antics came across as endearing, where his amp climbing and stage diving worked and fed the show’s energy well. This was the most fun rock show I’ve seen in a long time. (EP)

5. Budos Band :: 7:40-8:25 PM :: Panhandle Stage

Playing at the tiny stage, the Budos Band were the sleepers of the weekend, and the intimate crowd that chose to forgo Kings of Leon for some real music were rewarded for it. Though their 45-minute twilight set was far too short to really get into the zone, the ten-piece band (four being percussionists) of Daptone fame laid it down for us in the park with strutting, hard-hitting instrumental Afrobeat funk. This was a heavy groove with a huge sound, with Jared Tankel‘s baritone sax was at the forefront of the polyrhythms rumbling our sternums with its low squawks. The music inspired a stomping, elephant-march dance party of a few hundred people as the sky darkened, and we got our ya-yas out, knowing the end of the weekend was upon us. (EP)

6. Chromeo :: 5:15-6:05 PM :: Twin Peaks Stage

Chromeo Fans by Weiand

Usually, DJ sets don’t really do it for me in a festival setting, as they’re better suited for a late-night club dance party, but Chromeo’s music is just so silly and fun that it translated very well to a sunny afternoon in the park. Their music is a straight tongue-in-cheek tribute to early-80s electro-soul, a celebration of robot rock, and a straight vocoder party. The duo, perched behind their keyboards with woman leg stands (think the lamp in A Christmas Story), played live guitar, keyboards and vocoder along with their backing tracks, and inspired the weekend’s biggest dance party in the process. Alternating Dave 1‘s sung vocals with P-Thugg‘s vocoder-enhanced vocals, Chromeo delivered clever lyrics about gettin’ it on atop layered funk. At one point, after a tease of “Money For Nothing” and somewhere in the middle of “Bonafied Lovin’,” some rowdies knocked the barrier fence down and gate crashed, inspiring cheers throughout the audience. There’s nothing like gettin’ down in the park with a few thousand other peeps to really make your day. (EP)

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Eminem’s ‘Recovery’ tops charts for the 3rd time

Eminem is back to the top of the charts yet again, with new album ‘Recovery’. The US rapper replaced last week”s number one album – ‘The Suburbs by Arcade Fire’, reports The Mirror. ‘Recovery’ has been in the top 10 for eight weeks and has been knocked off the number one slot twice- by ‘Arcade [...]

Detroit, The Simpsons and The New York Times

I’m a 20-years-and-counting fan of The Simpsons which tends to keep up with, and parody, current life in the US. Last night’s episode here in the UK was about much of the ficititious city of Springfield being in foreclosure, giving Sideshow Bob, aka Matt Warren, a chance to move in next door to the famous yellow family and plot his latest attempt at removing Bart from the earth.

Motown was in the writers’ sights this episode: as the departing neighbours’ moving van leaves, Bart turns to his mom and says: “There they go, another Springfield family, off to seek a new life in Detroit.”

But if this weekend report in the New York Times is any guide, that may not be as much of a joke as the screenwriters – it takes nine months to produce one episode – intended it to be…

Back to Work

Some random stuff today that I wanted to put out on my first day back. I completed our first Griswold-style road vacation, logging 2,000 miles in less than 2 weeks driving from Boston to Torch Lake, Michigan. Aside from some … Continue reading

String Cheese Incident | Horning’s Hideout Review/Gallery

Words by: Bryan Tobian | Images by: Brian Spady

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

Horning’s 2010 by Brian Spady

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

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

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

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

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

Thursday, July 28, 2010

EOTO – Horning’s 2010 by Brian Spady

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

Friday, July 29, 2010

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

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

Horning’s 2010 by Brian Spady

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

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

Saturday, July 30, 2010

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

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

Fire Dancers – Horning’s 2010 by Brian Spady

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

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

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

Sunday, August 1, 2010

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

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

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

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

The Aftermath

Jason Hann – Horning’s 2010 by Brian Spady

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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