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Posts Tagged ‘bowery ballroom’

The Mountain Goats: Spring Tour & New Single

THE MOUNTAIN GOATS CONFIRM 2011 TOUR DATES
AND RELEASE FIRST SINGLE FROM ALL
ETERNALS
DECK


The Mountain Goats

The Mountain Goats have
confirmed initial U.S. tour dates supporting All Eternals Deck, out March 29. Megafaun will support all shows except
April
8 in Chapel Hill. Click here to download “Damn These Vampires”
off the new album (via Stereogum).

Tour Dates:

3/24 Richmond, VA @ The National
3/25 Washington DC @ 930 Club

3/26 York, PA @ Strand-Capitol PAC

3/28 New York, NY @ Bowery Ballroom
3/29 New York, NY @ Bowery Ballroom
4/01 Boston, MA @ Paradise
4/02 Ithaca, NY @ Castaways
4/03 Toronto, ON @ Opera House

4/05 Chicago, IL @ The Vic
4/06 Nashville, TN @ Mercy Lounge

4/07 Atlanta GA @ Variety Playhouse
4/08 Chapel Hill, NC @ Cat’s Cradle

4/10 Asheville, NC @ The Grey Eagle

4/11 Columbus, OH @ Wexner Center
4/12 Pittsburgh PA @ Mr Smalls

4/15 Philadelphia PA@ Theater of Living Arts

The Mountain Goats
Tour Dates

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The Mountain Goats News
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The Mountain Goats
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Lauryn Hill: East Coast Dates

TOUR INCLUDES NEW YEARS DAY GIG AT THE BOWERY BALLROOM IN NEW
YORK


Lauryn Hill

Former Fugees star Lauryn Hill has scheduled a few U.S. dates, beginning with December 19 at Higher
Ground in Burlington, VT. She will also perform on New Years day at the Bowery Ballroom in New York, NY. All
announced dates are below.

LAURYN HILL TOUR DATES

12/19/10 Sat Higher Ground, Burlington, VT
12/20/10 Mon Wilbur Theatre Boston, MA
12/22/10 Wed Toad’s Place New Haven, CT
12/27/10 Mon Highline Ballroom New York, NY

12/28/10 Tue Music Hall Of Williamsburg Brooklyn, NY

01/01/11 Sat Bowery Ballroom New York, NY
01/29/11 Sat House of Blues Atlantic City, NJ

Lauryn Hill
Tour Dates

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Lauryn Hill News
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Lauryn Hill
Concert
Reviews


Patti Smith: NYE Run in NYC

THE GODMOTHER OF PUNK RINGS IN THE NEW YEAR AT BOWERY BALLROOM

Patti Smith has announced
she will ring in the new year with a three night run at the Bowery Ballroom in New York City. Tickets for December
29 and 30 are $40, tickets for the New Years Eve show are $55. On sale is this Friday, October 15 at Noon EST at Ticketmaster.com. (via Paste Magazine)

December 29 — New York, N.Y. @ The Bowery Ballroom
December 30 — New York, N.Y. @ The Bowery Ballroom
December 31 — New York, N.Y. @ The Bowery Ballroom

Patti Smith
Tour Dates

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Patti Smith News
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Patti Smith
Concert
Reviews


U-Melt | 02.20 | New York

Words by: Jarrod Dicker | Images by: Jesse Borrell

U-Melt :: 02.20.10 :: Bowery Ballroom :: New York, NY

U-Melt :: 02.20 :: New York

“There’s definitely a central theme to our new record,” U-Melt keyboardist Zac Lasher said before the group’s official album release show at New York’s Bowery Ballroom. “We set out to intentionally write a bunch of songs about the search for universal truth. There is a lot of existentialism going on in it, and it’s really philosophical. It’s about trying to cut through the bullshit and get to something honest and real about our existence.”

Universal truth proved more complicated to convey than originally envisioned. As U-Melt faithful already know, the tracks from the new album Perfect World (JamBase review) have regularly been performed on the live circuit for nearly two years. Their first album under a label (Harmonized Records), the group left no strings untied in terms of perfection, as they restructured the original tracking sessions via overdub one instrument at a time in search of excellence. A year and a half later, fans are offered a Perfect World, celebrated in U-Melt’s home base of New York City.

However, perfection comes at a cost. On December 9, 2009, lead guitarist and U-Melt co-founder Rob Salzer announced that he would be leaving the band to pursue other ventures. Releasing an album in the impending months and departing on a winter tour, U-Melt had to act fast to name a replacement.

Who they found was beyond a substitute. In newcomer Kevin Griffin the group found spiritual renewal, as U-Melt drummer George Miller explains: “He is a different guy with different influences, so he approaches everything completely differently. It’s a fresh take on the new stuff and it has rejuvenated us, putting new life into old tunes.”

Consider The Source :: 02.20 :: New York

With a rejuvenated band and a new album to commemorate, U-Melt arranged an evening no fan in attendance will soon forget.

The group selected fellow New Yorkers Consider the Source as their opener. This was U-Melt’s third attempt to team up with Consider the Source in recent months, and luckily on their biggest night, they were able to incorporate the trio. The opener’s scheduled start was at 9:00 p.m. sharp, and Bowery Ballroom was wall-to-wall packed by 8:30.

Consider the Source highlights three musicians who are spiritually and physically immersed in their playing. Guitarist Gabriel Marin surrounds himself with pedals and effects to administer a resonance inimitable by many peer players on the jam circuit. The bass work of John Ferrara evokes as much bodily emotion as it does musical passion, and drummer Justin Ahiyon serves as spokesperson for the group. Incorporating bells, synthesizers, sound boards and other effects, this group delivers something innovative in an electronic genre that sometimes seems repetitive in its modern shape.

Fans were beyond pleased as the hour-long performance covered all musical aspects people value in the group. Marin’s improvisation and in-depth guitar solos invited the crowd aboard a fantasy ride transcending them to musical nirvana. The audience stood in awe as Marin manipulated his double-neck guitar throughout the performance, exhausting every note that could possibly be unearthed. Before announcing the second to last track, “How Am I Not Myself,” Ahiyon shouted, “Now go ahead and drop some acid,” leaving many who were already in an instrumental trance to ponder, “Why not?”

Zac Lasher – U-Melt :: 02.20 :: New York

U-Melt took the stage with no direct intention (okay, maybe a little) of putting on one of the greatest shows they’ve ever performed. But, the result was just that – complete musical matrimony and a salutation to their fans, who’d been waiting impatiently for the new album’s arrival for some time.

Kicking off the first set with “Pura Vida,” U-Melt invited the crowd on the proverbial magic bus that traveled on a mystical journey through jovial, soothing and quick vocal patterns. As the drums took center stage in what would eventually become a blending fusion of all their instruments, the lyric “everyone’s connected” hit ever so softly, creating a virtual family of all gathered parties.

The following tracks welcomed the familiar electronic element of U-Melt. “Disclaimer” presented consistent drum rhythms stroked softly by intrusive keys and eventual group vocals. It was at this moment when the audience accepted Griffin as the official guitarist of the band. The chorus of “Disclaimer” allowed Griffin to display his heavier elements using distortion and speedy, strong playing that amplified the senses.

Having had to learn the entire U-Melt catalog in a month and a half (this was only his fifth live show with the group), Griffin is still on his way to getting entirely acclimated with the formula. However, I would be lying if I didn’t say that his presence has truly transcended the band onto a whole ‘nother level.

U-Melt :: 02.20 :: New York

The transition from “Disclaimer” to “Disillusion” shot me into the Pink Floyd zone. Through the utilization of keyboard effects, electronics and front-and-center guitar leads, “Disillusion” drew close to Dark Side of the Moon territory. Griffin’s concluding solo made even the soberest person in-house see trails.

Fan favorite “Eternal Groove” came next, revealing the salsa and Spanish influence in U-Melt; a true heavy hitter for all U-Melt faithful. The title track “Perfect World” gave the audience a moment to relax and offered a slower disposition. The “Question Matters” slingshot revisited the loudness of the guitar and drums as Griffin utilized a variety of ascending and descending guitar patterns throughout the track.

The first set closed similarly to how the second one opened. Covering Robert Palmer’s “I Didn’t Mean To Turn You On” to close set one, the band stepped back onstage for set two and opened with Peter Gabriel‘s “Sledgehammer,” covered for the first time to the audience’s acute pleasure.

“Green Paper Society” served as a perfect instrumental set-up to launch fan favorite “The Fantastical Flight of Captain Delicious.” As the title hints, this lengthy non-LP track takes you on a fantastical and spiritual journey incorporating a wide range of dissimilar, unique note progressions.

Another oldie, “415,” dragged me back to the story of U-Melt’s inception. One of their more “Phishy” tracks, one can witness firsthand the influence of Phish over the band since their formation at 2003′s “It” festival in Maine. Lasher’s free form, complex keyboard rhythms hint at Page McConnell, which sweetens the air and pleasures all auditory senses.

And if there was a genre that U-Melt hadn’t covered this night, the three songs that followed filled the gap: “Panacea” highlighted jazz, “Elysian Fields” offered an electronic hoedown, and “Clear Light” spit the blues.

It seemed only appropriate that the foursome would close their album release show with “Almost Perfect.” For a band that spent the last two years in a musical search for truth, honesty and excellence, “Almost Perfect” symbolized a sigh of relief from creative exhaustion. Perfection can never truly be found, as no one or no thing in this world is entirely perfect. For U-Melt and their fans on this celebratory night, “Almost” proved more than adequate, as the band played their final note and exited the stage with no regrets.

U-Melt :: 02.20.10 :: Bowery Ballroom :: New York, NY
Set I: Pura Vida, Disclaimer/Disillusion, Eternal Groove, Perfect World > Question Matters, I Didn’t Mean To Turn You On*
Set II: Sledgehammer^, Green Paper Society, The Fantastical Flight of Captain Delicious, 415, Panacea, Elysian Fields > Clear Light
E: Almost Perfect

*Robert Palmer cover
^1st time played – Peter Gabriel cover

Continue reading for more pics…

U-Melt

U-Melt

U-Melt

U-Melt

Consider The Source

Consider The Source

Consider The Source

Consider The Source

Consider The Source

Consider The Source

Consider The Source

U-Melt Tour Dates :: U-Melt News :: U-Melt Concert Reviews


JamBase | Melty
Go See Live Music!


Sufjan Stevens | 10.05 | New York

Words by: Alex Nief | Images by: JC McIlwaine

Sufjan Stevens :: 10.05.09 :: Bowery Ballroom :: New York, NY

Sufjan Stevens | 10.05 | Bowery Ballroom

To set the scene: It was a lovely fall evening in New York. I was delirious with fever and the Bowery Ballroom basement was flooded with water emanating from the women’s bathroom.


When faced with the ominous tickles and aches of an oncoming illness there is only one thing to do: drink heavily. The simple fact of the matter is that you’re going to be bedridden for the remainder of the week so you might as well load up while you’re able (and if, in so doing, you manage to poison the oncoming virus, well, you win twice).


I grabbed a few drinks at the basement bar and took up residence on a comfortable, well-decorated bench. I was almost instantly unnerved at the sight of a pocket-sized notepad that had been placed on the table in front of me by a gentleman a few feet to my right. The top page read: “Sufjan Stevens 10/05 Bowery.” Wholly unwilling to be moved by this puerile gesture – clearly a fellow journalist attempting to intimidate me – I scrawled the same title atop my legal pad and slammed it down on the table, dwarfing his diminutive flip-pad. I gave him a sharp stare and tilted my head slightly as if to say, “If you like that, you should see my pen.” The amateur evacuated. I began to study the room, searching for non-white Sufjan Stevens fans (I gave up after twenty minutes).


Thirty minutes of observing the crowd revealed a strikingly homogeneous group. The Sufjan Stevens fan can be described as white, 25-35 years of age, well dressed, and in good shape from excessive bicycling. Most who adore Stevens do so with a cult-like passion. For the women in the audience, they would gladly leave their significant others for a night of passionate cuddling and crying with Stevens. The men would likely do the same.

Sufjan Stevens | 10.05 | Bowery Ballroom

When Sufjan Stevens took the stage the packed Bowery audience erupted for about twenty-five seconds before falling silently transfixed as he grabbed his banjo and, with horn accompaniment, eased us in with “The Mistress Witch from McClure (or The Mind That Knows Itself),” a depressing ditty which is part evocative memoir and part auto-philosophical. Almost every Sufjan Stevens song has a strange way of sounding like the recounting of a slow and painful death. The crowd, which had not so much as sneezed during the three-minute opener, again came to life with startling applause at its conclusion.


Stevens’ onstage persona calls up memories of a young Bob Dylan fielding questions from eager reporters upon his arrival in San Francisco in 1965. At one point early in his set, Stevens moved a piece of paper, leaned into the microphone and said, “Sweet.” The entire audience roared with laughter, and you could almost sense that there were people rushing to the bathrooms with their iPhones to call every bar in Williamsburg with the fantastic news.


Despite the too-clever post-hipster art worship crowd that seems to gather at his feet, Sufjan Stevens is a gifted songwriter with an uncommon skill: taking fairly simple musical compositions, applying dynamic arrangements for multiple instruments and ultimately creating cute little symphonies that are quite impressive. This, coupled with hauntingly evocative lyrics, makes Stevens the admired artist that he is and no amount of derisive commentary from a non-believer like myself can change that. But allow me to continue to try.

Sufjan Stevens | 10.05 | Bowery Ballroom

I would sooner climb a barbed wire fence naked than pay to see this circus displayed at a general admission, standing-room-only venue such as the Bowery. Make no mistake – the Bowery has one of the best layouts of any venue in NYC – but one must consider the performer (it was as counterintuitive as a seated thrash show). But it is a testament to his cult following that Sufjan Stevens holds the record for the most sellouts at the Bowery. He could probably sell out the quarantine unit at New York Presbyterian during an Ebola outbreak.


The highlight of the show was the introduction of a couple of new songs, which showed a clear departure from his previous work. The new numbers were robust and energetic, more “Flaming Lips” than his earlier “Belle & Sebastian on downers” sound. It was still Sufjan Stevens though: well-orchestrated cacophony, post-folk art rock.


About halfway through his set, I tried to make my way from the balcony to the stage. Since nobody dances during a Sufjan Stevens show – the audience huddles close together, forming a giant, mesmerized mass – this ended up taking about twenty minutes, and I arrived at stage right covered in corduroy burns.


As one fan moved toward the exit after the last encore he stopped by my barstool in the basement where I had been hiding for a short while with a bottle of Maker’s Mark, now beyond delirium. “How’d you like the show?” I asked. He shrugged and gave it an “Alright.” “Lots of people though,” I said. His response summed it up: “Yeah, but that’s the thing: I’d rather listen to Sufjan in my living room with headphones on.” I couldn’t agree more.

Continue reading for more images of Sufjan Stevens in New York…

JamBase | Disaffected
Go See Live Music!


The Warlocks | 08.14 | NYC

Words & Images by: Alex Borsody

The Warlocks :: 08.14.09 :: The Bowery Ballroom :: New York, NY

The Warlocks :: 08.14 :: NYC

The Warlocks have been playing for over ten years, surviving lineup changes with the one constant being frontman Bobby Hecksher. I caught the band just off the U.K./France leg of their tour, supporting their new album, The Mirror Explodes (released May 19 on Tee Pee). What’s in a name? In this case, at least, something. The Warlocks was the original name for both the Grateful Dead and The Velvet Underground, two bands which helped define 1960′s music yet existed at opposite ends of the cultural spectrum. The Velvet Underground was similar to The Doors in rejecting the hippie lifestyle, preferring a darker, more urban mystique. Brian Eno sums up their influence on modern music: “Despite hardly anyone buying this album [The Velvet Underground and Nico] on its release, everyone that did buy it seemed to have formed a band.” On the other end, the earthy Grateful Dead were equally influential, being responsible in large part for the entire jam band scene.

So, the band name The Warlocks has quite the legacy and is evocative for many people. You only need see The Warlocks perform to notice the Velvets influence; their dark sunglasses and somber expressions bring back memories of NYC’s original hipsters. Songs off this night’s setlist that were most obviously influenced by VU include “Song for Nico,” “Shake the Dope Out” and “The Dope Feels Good.” The link can be heard clearly in their live sound, which evokes the dark, bi-polar landscapes of Live at Max’s Kansas City.

The Warlocks :: 08.14 :: NYC

The Bowery Ballroom is one of NYC’s many strange and beautiful venues. There is a bar downstairs with the concert hall upstairs, and the clientele are low-key rocker types who wear a lot of black. The opening band, The Morning After Girls, put on a powerful performance, projecting a very genuine energy. The band obviously cared a lot about their live show, and the lead singer was incredibly engaged and seemed to deliver music from his own private world. The sound was a familiar indie rock formula, but darker and with greater emotion.

The Warlocks took the stage around 11:30 p.m. and did not miss a single change or beat. Their sound was raw, and despite all my impulses to say otherwise, unpretentious. The singing was high energy, with tactful use of back-up harmonizing. The group had solid vocals, creating a sound that was very clean and exact, at times even giving things a studio mastered effect. The solos were experimental and unpredictable, and at one point I felt like one of the guitarists was channeling John Cale (the violinist/multi-instrumentalist for The Velvet Underground) with distorted and ambient screeching effects. Three guitarists, a bass player and a keyboardist are usually hard to keep so perfectly in sync.

The backstage area had a case of PBR on the floor across from a bottle of Makers Mark on the table – the art school combo. I asked the band why they chose their name and it seemed not to be too big of a deal for them, a simple nod to The Velvet Underground’s inspiration. I came to the show wondering if the band had known about the Grateful Dead connection but realized how narrow my taste in music had become. I had been overtaken by Phish/Dead mania and completely forgot about my childhood hero Lou Reed. The Warlock’s lead singer Bobby Hecksher is a soft spoken, androgynous character who seemed to be somewhat anxious, possibly due to the fact that he was one of the only ones not drunk in a room full of intoxicated people. As he came out from behind his dark sunglasses, I asked him if he had ever met Lou Reed. He said, “It would probably be a weird conversation.”

The Warlocks :: 08.14 :: NYC

The Warlocks and other similar sounding art rock bands are sometimes categorized as psychedelic rock. Wondering where this label came from, I asked people at the concert if they had ever done psychedelics, or if they thought that was a part of the culture surrounding the music. The resounding answer was no, so this appeared to have little to do with it. It seemed ironic on the 40th anniversary of Woodstock that a band with the Grateful Dead’s original name was billed as psychedelic rock. To top it all off I had skipped a local Phish show to see something new at this concert. The band talked about being from the West Coast, where the real hippies actually listen to art rock. Today’s psychedelic rock often sounds like U.K. pop bands from the 1960s, and the guy who coined the term “psych rock” came from Texas, so the roots of the sound are hard to pin down or understand anyway.

There was an accepting and non-egotistical atmosphere at the concert. Fans were standing around looking somber and subdued, which seemed perfectly normal. No one was jumping up and down in catharsis as a musician’s fingers began to start a fire on the fretboard. Because of this, The Warlocks, especially in their later work, have been described as shoegazers, a genre named after people who go to concerts and stare at their shoes while nodding to the rhythm. In the end, music is music, and by dividing genres and subcultures into target markets it only suppresses artistic expression.

JamBase | Loaded
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N.A.S.A. Mini-Tour

N.A.S.A. Launch U.S. Tour – August 12-20


N.A.S.A.

Prepare to blast off on an intergalactic musical experience when electronic alt-dance duo N.A.S.A. blasts off for a mini-tour in August with Hollywood Holt as their main support for four of the six dates.

Representing both North America and South America (hence the name), N.A.S.A. went on a mission to integrate an eclectic collection of musical genres into one amazing project – creating the group’s recent album The Spirit of Apollo.

Check out a few examples of N.A.S.A.’s live performance:

Clip #1
Clip #2

Upcoming U.S. Tour Dates:

08/11/09 Tue Nikki Beach Reno, NV

08/12/09 Wed El Rey Theater Los Angeles, CA

08/13/09 Thu Gallivan Center Salt Lake City, UT

08/14/09 Fri Beta Denver, CO

08/15/09 Sat The Independent San Francisco, CA

08/20/09 Thu Bowery Ballroom New York, NY