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John Butler Trio: Fall Tour

JOHN BUTLER TRIO PRE-SALE SEPTEMBER 24; AMEX PRE-SALE SEPTEMBER 22


John Butler Trio

ATO Records is excited to announce the John Butler Trio‘s fall 2010 tour in support of the recently released April
Uprising
. The dates kick off November 9 with four shows with Dave Matthews Band at the TD Garden in
Boston and Madison Square Garden in New York City. It continues on through the United States and Canada ending
in December 3 at the Fox Theatre in the San Francisco Bay Area.

November

09 – Boston, MA – TD Garden*
10 – Boston, MA – TD Garden*
12 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden*
13 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden*
14 – Baltimore, MD – Rams Head Live
16 – Knoxville, TN – Valarium
17 – Nashville, TN – Ryman Auditorium

19 – Dallas, TX – House of Blues
20 – Austin, TX – Stubbs
23 – Minneapolis, MN – Fitzgerald Theatre
24 – Winnipeg, MAN – Burton Cummings Theater
26 – Edmonton, ALB – Edmonton Events Centre

27 – Calgary, ALB – Macewan Hall
29 – Spokane, WA – Knitting Factory
30 – Portland, OR – Crystal Ballroom

December

02 – Los Angeles, CA – The Wiltern
03 – Oakland, CA – Fox Theatre


* = w/ Dave Matthews Band

John Butler Trio
Tour Dates

::
John Butler Trio News
::
John Butler Trio
Concert
Reviews


Butler, Moore and Monaghan’s Michigan karaoke stuns fans

In what could have been the coolest musical treat for Partygoers at a karaoke bar in Michigan, Gerard Butler, Demi Moore and Michelle Monaghan all took to the stage to sing. Butler and Monaghan are currently shooting ‘Machine Gun Preacher’ together. And Moore is working on ‘LOL: Laughing Out Loud’ with Miley Cyrus, reports the [...]

Joel Cummins & Matt Butler Join Jam Cruise 9

UMPHREY’S KEYBOARDIST AND EVERYONE ORCHESTRA CONDUCTOR
GET ON THE BOAT!

Matt Butler

Matt Butler will once again join Jam Cruise to celebrate the accomplishments of the Greening and Positive Legacy programs on the boat with a performance of Everyone Orchestra on Jam Cruise 9, which sails January 4-9, 2011. Through a strategic alliance between the Greening and Positive Legacy programs, Jam Cruise will once again team up with the non-profit organization Trees, Water & People to offset 100% of the CO2 emissions from the 5-day voyage, making Jam Cruise “carbon neutral” for a 6th year in a row.

It was also announced that Umphrey’s McGee keyboardist Joel Cummins will be performing a set featuring the music of Umphrey’s McGee arranged for solo piano.

The annual “Vote To The Boat” nominees will be announced soon, and one lucky band will join the cruise in January. We’ll let you know when voting begins.

Cabins can be booked here.


John Butler Trio: Live Global Webcast 6/04

EXCLUSIVE GLOBAL WEBCAST FRIDAY, JUNE 4; LIVE FROM HISTORIC RED ROCKS
AMPITHEATRE,
COLORADO; FREE POWERED BY LIVESTREAM


John Butler Trio

Multi-platinum power trio John Butler
Trio
will webcast their largest North American headlining show to date for fans
worldwide on Friday, June
4. JBT, on tour for April Uprising, is partnering with Livestream to
broadcast a 2 hour-plus
concert from the historic Red Rocks Amphitheater, Colorado. The free broadcast will air
live June 4 starting at 8
p.m. PST, 11pm EST and will be available at www.livestream.com/johnbutlertrio. This special show will
open with a short
performance and blessing from indigenous Plains Indians, followed by John Butler Trio.

The Fremantle, Australia trio are currently touring North America, including appearances
on The Tonight Show
with Jay Leno
and shows at Candlestick Park, Central Park Summerstage, Bonnaroo Main
Stage and more.
Watch a clip of their hit AAA single “One Way Road” here.

Relix magazine, the webcast’s official media sponsor, has a multi-page feature on
the Butler in its
forthcoming July issue due to street in late June. As Butler tells Relix of his live
performances and music, “I’m part of
a very sacred and very special ritual. I’m part of that and I use it to change lives.”
Relix will also be hosting the
webcast on its website at www.relix.com/jbtlive.

With Livestream as the exclusive streaming provider, the player widget for the webcast can
be embedded anywhere.
Integration with Facebook and Twitter allows viewers to engage in an online conversation
with other fans. Check out
JBT on one of the tour dates below.

John Butler Trio
Tour Dates

::
John Butler Trio
News
::
John Butler Trio
Concert
Reviews


JamBase Questionnaire: John Butler

Welcome to the fourth installment of JamBase’s weekly feature where we put a baker’s dozen of probing, wide-ranging questions to the bright lights in the jam scene (and beyond) in order to expose juicy tidbits about their musical minds. Last week we heard from STS9′s David Murphy and upcoming weeks will include insights from Trampled By Turtles, Cornmeal, U-Melt, The Sadies and more!

John Butler

Decidedly socially and environmentally conscious, the John Butler Trio also rocks pretty bloody hard. There’s a snarling intensity to Butler’s impassioned vocals and finger destroying guitar work that’s pretty un-hippy despite a reputation for being one of the kingpins of the patchouli mafia. Butler has always been more complex than that soundbite, something abundantly clear on his latest offering, April Uprising (released April 6 on ATO – JamBase review), where his punk, pop and lover man sides get an earthy airing. Oh, he’s still a reliable source of 21st century common man anthems, but Butler is reveling in his complications these days and enjoying a welcome surge from his new rhythm partners Nicky Bomba (drums) and Byron Luiters (bass).

Folks will have ample opportunity to see the new configuration in action as the Trio begins summer dates with perfectly empathetic tour partner State Radio on May 20 in San Diego, opens for Melissa Etheridge at S.F.’s Candlestick Park (5/22), and makes stops at Bonnaroo (6/13), Central Park’s SummerStage (6/15) and the Gurtenfestival in Switzerland (7/16-7/17). This is a band that spills it all out on the stage – and has since its inception – armed with fresh, interesting material and a renewed sense of purpose, all of which makes this a fine time to explore what Butler and his mates are laying down. (Dennis Cook)

Here’s what Butler had to say to our inquiries.

1. Great music rarely happens without…
Instruments and soul.

2. The first album I bought was…
Somewhere In Time by Iron Maiden. “The Loneliness of a Long Distance Runner” is a great song. Or at least that’s how I remember it.

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig was…
Missy Elliot‘s Under Construction.

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to be…
A fricking Green Beret!!! Can you believe that? Then a pro skater, then an art teacher, and finally realized music is what was for me.

5. My favorite sort of gig is…
One where the crowd gives as much as the band. It’s pretty essential to a good gig.

6. One thing I wish people knew about me is…
Don’t know. I think if I answer this it will just sound gay. It’s one of those kind of questions.

7. I love the sound of…
Kookaburras (an Australian bird), my kids laughing, Hendrix’s Marshall and Timbaland‘s beats.

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic as…
Rumours by Fleetwood Mac.

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was at…
Just last week in France.

10. I always find the coolest audiences in…
The summer, everywhere on the planet.

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

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
Mmmmm. I like ‘em both, but I guess The Beatles. Yep, THE BEATLES!!!

13. The craziest thing I ever saw was…
This was when I was 16, watching a group of drunk guys at a festival push a car through the festival boundaries. Then, a whole crowd, with me in it, started ramming the gates. The crowd behind us pushed so hard that they started pushing people underneath us; kinda like a wave. Then we became the bottom of the wave. It was crazy, scary, dangerous shit. Then all hell broke loose and all the punters raided the venue’s semi-trailers full of alcohol. It was anarchy and chaos. I’m glad I made it through that festival.

John Butler Trio Tour Dates :: John Butler Trio News :: John Butler Trio Concert Reviews

JamBase | Down Under and Otherwise
Go See Live Music!


John Butler Trio New AlbumStream For Free on JamBase

JOHN BUTLER TRIO NEW ALBUM, APRIL UPRISING FREE STREAM ON JAMBASE

Album Released April 6, 2010 on ATO Records, Fans Listen For Free On
JamBase

John Butler
Trio
returns with their first studio album in three years, April Uprising.
Released on April 6, 2010 through ATO Records, the album is streaming exclusively on
JamBase for free. You can check out the JamBase review of April Uprising here.

The album finds the multi-platinum Australian artist with a new lineup and a new label in
the States, ATO Records. As with all of Butler’s projects, this is an album that combines
the personal, the political and the musically memorable with skill and passion. Recorded
at The Compound, Butler’s self-built studio in the heart of his hometown of Fremantle,
Western Australia, and mixed in Melbourne, Australia at Sing Sing Studios, April
Uprising
is the follow-up to 2007′s critically acclaimed and globally successful
release, Grand National. April Uprising has already yielded a #1 single in
Australia with “One Way Road;” which is currently the “most added” track on Triple A radio
in the States.

Butler unveiled his new band mates in June 2009: Melbourne musician Nicky Bomba
(drums and percussion) and Byron Luiters (bass) from Sydney outfit Ray Mann Three.
The newly revitalized JBT recorded at The Compound with long-time engineer Robin
Mai
and found themselves with whole new musical palette in the can: playful and
explosive, rhythmically complex and melodically immediate, charged with new purpose but
more committed than ever to the principles of classic song craft.

JBT has also built a reputation as a live band not to be missed. This will be the band’s
first full North American tour with the new lineup and includes a return to Red Rocks,
this time as a headliner, as well as first-time stops at Central Park’s Summerstage and
Philadelphia’s Penn’s Landing. State Radio will be on all concerts, with Medeski Martin &
Wood
added to the Red Rocks bill. Check out our recent review of the new JBT here.

John Butler Trio Tour
Dates
:: John
Butler Trio News
:: John Butler Trio Concert Reviews


Albums of the Week: April 2-April 8 John Butler, Erykah

JamBase Albums of the Week | April 2-April 8, 2010

Dennis’ Pick of the Week
Flowmotion: Ghost Pepper (Flowmotion Music)

Of late, rock has gotten a bit inelegant. There’s edginess, aloofness, ginned up loft, experimentation and angst aplenty, but there’s a real dirth of quality melodies and un-syrupy romance and hopefulness that don’t resort to cliches. Part of the reason ’70s classic rock endures is the abiding craftsmanship and real savvy of its best exponents at creating sonic spaces with lots of room for people to inhabit. There’s a real art to creating rock that’s primed to connect across a wide spectrum AND doesn’t feel like some gross, lowest common denominator ploy. In Ghost Pepper (released March 17), Flowmotion delivers a song cycle that’s as skillfully wrought and artfully sculpted as “classic” forebears like Traffic and early Journey and Doobie Brothers, while managing to work in nuances in keeping with peers like The Mother Hips and ALO. If you dream and stumble and love and struggle, well, there’s plenty to grab onto here, and the music carries one along with a deceptively easy flow. This is not simple music but in keeping with their name, Flowmotion makes things seem easy, never showboating or strutting, letting the quality of their tunes, lyrics and musicianship speak for themselves while maintaining a distinctively organic feel, where one senses the players in the room together chasing something big & true and capturing it with their bare hands and nakedly passionate vocals. Oh sure, there’s blistering guitar solos and crazy, time changing turnarounds but all of it serves the songs, which are uniformly excellent and show that the whole damn band has real compositional acumen. Captured largely live in the studio in a whirlwind session with relentlessly great producer Scott Colburn (Arcade Fire, Animal Collective), Ghost Pepper hums with life – hard won happiness and sorrowful moments distilled into a very useful tool for our own living. There’s real focus here, though one can hear all the jazzbo-technical, jam-ready bits lurking in the curves, making this an extremely satisfying home listening experience that also stirs high hopes for the live counterparts to come. Ghost Pepper is the work of real pros more than ready for AOR airplay and a much wider audience beyond their fervent Pacific Northwest following, and more simply, a lovely album packed with muscular, graceful rock ‘n’ roll of the very best kind. (Dennis Cook)

Dennis’ Runner-Up of the Week
Rotary Downs: Cracked Maps & Blue Reports (Rookery/Reapandsow)

A propulsive, infectious urgency informs this latest bumptious, captivating offering from one of New Orleans’ emerging rock joys. There’s more than a whiff of Pavement at their hooky, quirky, inventive best here, particularly press-repeat-then-repeat-again opener “Ragna Rok” and dissolving pop melt of “Vampires/Werewolves.” But the Downs’ reach is wide and wisps of late ’70s Bowie, Camper Van Beethoven, The Specials and other tasty ancestors dangle off this set, though they never seem bent on copying anybody; there’s just the same sort of smarts, catchiness and creative intent to these cats ‘n’ kittens. Each cut is lovingly layered, harmonically stretched and played with palpable affection, but unlike many contemporaries, Rotary Downs doesn’t come off as too busy or trying too hard. Other than a strong rhythmic sensibility, there’s not a lot that pins this to New Orleans specifically. Like a lot of quality modern rock, Cracked Maps & Blue Reports (released ) is a soundtrack for the rush-rush anywhere we hectic beings find ourselves living in today, a bouncing rumination on crying angels and random digs with layers galore to peel away by & by. (DC)

Ron’s Pick of the Week
Earl Greyhound: Suspicious Package (Hawk Race)

Grizzly Bear drummer Chris Bear’s first band returns with a monster of a replacement for the indie rock wunderkind behind the kit. Thanks to an introduction courtesy of Roots guitarist Kirk Douglass, drummer Ricc Sheridan said that he “knew [Earl Greyhound] was my band” after seeing them a few times live. Together, this power trio delivers a second album that stands as one of the finest hard rock albums to emerge from Brooklyn since Anthrax’s Persistence of Time. The interplay between Sheridan, frontman/guitarist Matt Whyte and bassist/singer Kamara Thomas is harmonious and crushing all at once, with the crisp production of Dave Schiffman, the man behind Mars Volta’s De-Loused in the Comatorium and the Red Hot Chili Peppers’ One Hot Minute, demands maximum volume. Suspicious Package (arriving April 13) is the album I hoped Living Colour had made for their comeback. (Ron Hart)

Ron’s Runner-Up of the Week
Erykah Badu: New Amerykah Part Two: Return of the Ankh (Control Freaq-Motown)

“Erykah’s got a bubble!” exclaimed the recent text message my friend sent me after he finally got to watch the controversial video for “Window Seat,” the hit single from Ms. Badu’s new album where she strips naked in Dallas while walking the same path the JFK motorcade took on that fateful day in November of 1963 (for which she was recently charged with disorderly conduct). But just because ‘E’ freed her ass (and a mighty fine one at that), it’s still her mind that we continue to follow. And on Part Two of her New Amerykah project, that brain takes us on her most soulful and sexy audio journey since Baduizm. Beaming with post-Obama positivity and gathering together an absolute wrecking crew of a studio team – including Madlib, the late J. Dilla, Sa-Ra Creative Partners, avant-R&B sista Georgia Anne Muldrow and Soulquarians mastermind James Poyser – Return of the Ankh (released March 30) is everything weird and wonderful about this next level “Southern Gul.” (RH)

John Butler Trio: April Uprising (ATO)

Change can be a very positive thing. In John Butler’s case, it’s produced his single best, most decidedly rocking album to date. While his longtime rhythm section was much beloved – by fans and the man himself – bassist Byron Luiters and drummer Nicky Bomba inject coursing new blood into Butler’s music, which rattles like never before on April Uprising (arriving April 6). While his earlier work sometimes carried a hippie-musk-meets-Pearl Jam vibe, Butler is sharply defined on this set, which not only cranks up the electric guitar but also shows an increasing acumen at earthy roots material and power pop. His conscious, message oriented stripe remains but he shows off some darker facets, too, and combined with his broadest, most interesting musical palette ever, Butler is proving a more and more interesting artist with each passing year. (DC)

Jon Spencer Blues Explosion: Dirty Shirt Rock ‘n’ Roll: The First Ten Years (Majordomo/Shout Factory)
While much ado has been rightfully made about the reunion of Pavement, we shouldn’t forget to notate the existence of their influential Matador Records labelmates the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, whose uncanny sound was almost the major presence on the ’90s indie circuit as their Stockton slacker brethren. And though Matador doesn’t seem to deem the downtown NYC, maximum R&B trio’s catalog cool enough to give such classic albums as Extra Width, Orange and Now I Got Worry the deluxe treatment its giving Malkmus and the boys, Shout! Factory subsidiary Majordomo is picking up the slack with a promising reissue campaign that refurbishes the majority of the JSBX canon with choice bonus material, new packaging and other enhancements. Kicking things off, however, is this 22-track collection jam-packed with some of the most quality noise frontman Spencer, guitarist Judah Bauer and drummer Russell Simins crafted with their unholy union of Brooklyn hip-hop, Memphis rockabilly and D.C. punk fury. Dirty Shirt Rock ‘n’ Roll (released March 30) is a great starting point for anyone who has yet to feel the power of the Blues Explosion, while also serving as a thrilling mixtape meant to remind longtime fans why these cats were in heavy rotation on stereos back when. (RH)

Trampled By Turtles: Palomino (Banjodad)

Just based on the evidence of this chugging, potent album, Trampled By Turtles is one of the most gifted young string bands today. Having seen them live, I know there’s plenty of satisfying fireworks to their concerts, but Palomino (arriving April 13) allows listeners an intimacy that illuminates their skill as pickers and the glowing artistry of Dave Simonett‘s insightful, gently wise songwriting. The only really apt comparison in the current string band crop is Chatham County Line, who share a similar ability to, by turns, break one’s heart and make one sway contentedly. There are licks of flame on the instrumentals here, but it’s Simonett’s enticing oak-cask-aged voice (bolstered by his pal’s sweet harmonies) and the things it says that crawl inside you. “Again” and “Bloodshot Eyes” are tenderness and beautiful yet unsentimental delicacy personified, while “Help You” has a Nitty Gritty Dirt Band pop feel and “Gasoline” is just plain haunting. In fact, it’s when they ease off the accelerator that one really sees what a fine, fine band Trampled By Turtles is. (DC)

Brad Mehldau: Highway Rider (Nonesuch)

Brad Mehldau, the rightful heir to the throne of piano giant Bill Evans, once again pairs up with art pop super-producer Jon Brion for their first collaboration since 2002′s mesmerizing Largo on this epic two-disc set. Highway Rider (released March 16) finds the 39-year-old Jacksonville native branching out into entirely new territory beyond his piano trio formula, incorporating electronic beats, horns, vibraphones and full-on sweeping orchestral arrangements with strings that pull from his recent classical work as prominently as it does his trio material. And who better to bring it all together than the mighty Brion, who offers the same sense of adventure and imagination he delivers with his soundtrack work for such films as Punch Drunk Love and Synecdoche, New York on what should be considered to be Mehldau’s career-defining masterpiece. (RH)

Elliott Smith: Roman Candle/From a Basement on the Hill (Kill Rock Stars)

Though he recorded for about eight labels over the course of his career, Kill Rock Stars will always considered to be the true home for the late, great Elliott Smith. And now two key orphaned titles in the ES canon find a good home alongside such KRS classics as his 1995 self-titled LP and 1997′s masterful Either/Or. Roman Candle, Elliott’s 1994 solo debut on the Portland-based Cavity Search imprint, has been beautifully remastered from the artist’s original mixes by Smith family archivist Larry Crane and engineer Roger Seibel, and has never sounded better. Meanwhile, From a Basement on a Hill, originally released on Anti- in October of 2004, sadly suffered from the stigma of Elliott’s shocking suicide a year before. So, this KRS edition of the singer’s unintended swan song gets another opportunity to present itself as a collection of the richest and most electric tunes in the ES songbook (although it would have been cool to see it get reissued as the double LP it was initially intended to be). (RH)

Dum Dum Girls: I Will Be (Sub Pop)

If the Go-Go’s recorded an album as lo-fi as that party tape that was going around with the girls all high on coke and coaxing one of their male crew members to jerk off on camera, it would sound like this outstanding debut album from Brooklyn’s Dum Dum Girls. Featuring guest turns by Nick Zinner of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs and former Vivian Girls drummer Frankie Rose, as well as production from Richard Gottehrer (who coincidentally produced Belinda and the girls as well as Blondie), I Will Be (released March 30) is a tighter, more concise version of the Spector-aping squall-of-sound girl-group post-punk that’s all the rage in their neck of the King’s County as front-gal Kristin “Dee Dee” Gundred (formerly of Grand Ole Party) sings sultry/paranoid odes to her husband Brandon Welchez (Crocodiles). This album is so Brooklyn hip, it should come with free drink tickets at the Turkey’s Nest. (RH)

Black Tambourine: Black Tambourine (Slumberland)

The vast majority of bands signed to the highly in vogue Slumberland Records owe a shot and a beer to label chief Mike Schulman’s first band, Black Tambourine, whose melding of the best moments on their favorite albums by The Pastels, Galaxie 500, Phil Spector and the Jesus and Mary Chain between 1989-1991 gave this Silver Spring, MD-based quartet a unique and powerful sound that can be heard over the din of such popular modern day groups as Crystal Stilts, the Vivian Girls, the Pains of Being Pure at Heart and Dum Dum Girls. This 16 track set upgrades the group’s 1999 Complete Recordings collection with gorgeous new packaging, revised liner notes and six more tracks, four of which were recorded during the summer of 2009, including covers of Buddy Holly’s “Heartbeat” and a version of Suicide’s “Dream Baby Dream” to rival the Boss’ take. (RH)

Mulatu Astatke: Mulatu Steps Ahead (Strut)

Mulatu mania continues to sweep the tastemaker nation as the father of Ethiopian jazz makes a grand return to the studio with this amazing new album (released March 30). Backed up by members of Either/Orchestra and The Heliocentrics – England’s premier live instrumental hip-hop band, whose collaboration with Astatke last year remains the crown jewel of Strut Records’ Inspiration Information series – among others, this globetrotting gem of a record melds the traditional and high life vibes of Mulatu’s motherland with a mellow mood of modality in line with classic performances by Chet Baker and late period Duke Ellington. Also worth checking out is the Mochilla label’s recent DVD release of Astatke’s sold-out performance at Los Angeles’ Luckman Fine Arts Complex featuring such West Coast legends as Bennie Maupin, Azar Lawrence and the great Phil Ranelin sitting in with Mulatu and The Heliocentrics as they waltz through 40-plus years of Ethio-jazz genius. (RH)

The Plimsouls: Live! Beg, Borrow and Steal (Alive)

Los Angeles’ finest act from the New Wave era were certainly a force of nature on the clubland stage, as this scorching soundboard of Peter Case and co. in their prime clearly indicates. Recorded on a particularly fiery Halloween night in 1981 at the legendary Whisky A Go Go, the high gloss sheen of the quartet’s out-of-print eponymous debut (released that year) is completely washed away amidst the heat of overdriven amps on songs like “Hush Hush”, “Zero Hour” and a rowdy version of the old rock standard “Hey Hey Hey Hey” sizzle with a rawness on par with the punkers panhandling on the Sunset Strip. (RH)

Elephant9: Walk The Nile (Rune Grammofon)

As a member of the Norwegian ambient group Supersilent, keyboardist Ståle Storløkken pushes the boundaries of quiet with sinister skill. But playing alongside drummer Torstein Lofthus and bassist Nikolai Eilertsen, Storløkken plugs in his Hammond and just kills it the way John Medeski did on The Dropper, only the end results yield as much Jon Lord (Deep Purple) as they do Keith Jarrett circa Live-Evil. This is seriously heavy organ trio shit that any fan of good instrumental bump music should recognize. Walk The Nile (released March 30) is 21st century Viking jazz at its finest. (RH)

Mugstar: Â…Sun, BrokenÂ… (Important)

Heavy psych, krautrock and NYC art ghetto noise come together to create something entirely unique and transcendental on the second full-length from Liverpool, England-based Mugstar, who gained notoriety across the U.K. and parts of the U.S. as the last band to log in a session with John Peel before the BBC legend passed away. Â…Sun, BrokenÂ… (released March 23) could have been the sound of Pink Floyd and electric Miles Davis jamming with special guest Holger Czukay of Can had organizers of the 1970 Isle of Wight Festival been adventurous like that. Any fan of space rock in its purest form must give Mugstar an orbit in your stereo. (RH)

Mimicking Birds: Mimicking Birds (Glacial Pace)

From the opening notes of “Home and Somewhere Else,” the opening track off the sublime debut by the home recording project of Portland’s Nate Lacy and his one man show Mimicking Birds, it’s easy to see why Modest Mouse’s Isaac Brock is amped enough about this kid to have taken him under his wing, so to speak. And it seems all the tutelage, touring and tinkering with Brock, who produced the Birds’ eponymous debut for his Glacial Pace label, has paid off in spades for Lacy. Mimicking Birds (released March 9) is full of the kind of minor-key, looping melodies that Modest Mouse made their calling card since their EP debut on Sub Pop, Blue Cadet-3, Do You Connect?, albeit stripped to the bone, exposing a lucid Leonard Cohen afterworld underneath. Also worth checking out is the home demos Lacy made available on Virb. Check it out. (RH)

Vintage Stash Pick of the Week
The Runaways: The Mercury Albums Anthology (Hip-O Select)

They were the original Bad Girls Club: a group of flaming schoolgirls from Los Angeles whose fiery, provocative blend of punk-infused hard rock served as the missing link between KISS and The Germs in the mid-to-late 1970s and harbored more of a bite than the music of men twice their age. For four whirlwind years, The Runaways reigned as the most dangerous band in America as they were all under the age of 18 and elicited the kind of attention from their sex-and-sin-fueled lyrics that by today’s standards would have landed more than a few of their adult male fans in front of a camera with Dateline‘s Chris Hansen. By now most are aware of the critically acclaimed biopic featuring Twilight‘s Kristen Stewart as rhythm guitarist and eventual frontwoman Joan Jett and a suddenly matured Dakota Fanning as original lead singer Cherie Currie currently in theatres. And just in time for its release at the box office comes this long-overdue reissue of the girls’ four-album catalog, the entirety of which fits gamely into this jam-packed, beautifully packaged two-CD set. In listening to this anthology, especially The Runaways’ pair of 1977 studio albums, Queens of Noise and the Jett-led Waitin’ For The Night on the second disc, you come to realize who the real star of this jailbait squad truly was. Turns out it’s the new film’s most vocal critic: lead guitarist Lita Ford, whose Blackmore-like ferocity and Frehley-esque precision on her axe – especially for someone so young at the time – was the real scene stealer of the band. Her solos on songs like “Neon Angels on the Road to Ruin”, “Johnny Guitar” and “Trash Can Murders,” as well as a scorching version of their staple “Cherry Bomb” from their Live in Japan concert album are just sick and will give you a newfound respect for her six-string skills, especially if you grew up with the image of her romping around in that “Kiss Me Deadly” video on MTV. It’s no wonder she wants nothing to do with the movie. (RH)

Check out Dennis’ 2008 interview with Joan Jett!

Sandy Hurvitz: Sandy’s Album Is Here At Last (Collector’s Choice)

Hey Zappa fans, ever wonder where the term “Uncle Meat” originated? Well, before it became known as Frank’s challenging 1969 album of experimental fusion (and subsequent film of the same name) it was the moniker the late guitarist bestowed upon Essra Mohawk during the then-barely legal Philadelphian singer’s short-but-storied stint as the only official female member of the Mothers of Invention. However, Mohawk, who as introverted teenager Sandy Hurvitz was an aspiring songwriter in the mid-60s, whose tunes were recorded by the Shangri-Las and Vanilla Fudge, is an incredible performer in her own right, as the reissue campaign of her first three albums indubitably signifies. Mohawk believes that her beautifully raw and intimate 1969 debut, recorded under her given name and “under-produced” by fellow Mother Ian Underwood, was the subject of sabotage on the part of Zappa, who had turned on her because she made one suggestion too many when FZ was the original producer and employed the Mothers to back her up. But the stripped-bare nature of Sandy’s Album Is Here At Last (reissued February 23), with many songs featuring just her on piano with minimal accompaniment from such notable jazz sidemen as Bill Evans, bassist Eddie Gomez and acclaimed journeyman flautist Jeremy Steig, backfired on ol’ Frank, as Essra/Sandy’s gorgeous voice and immense talent on the piano shone brightly through the production’s lo-fi din. This is a lovely sidebar to the Zappa Universe that will certainly appeal to fans of Joni Mitchell as much as it does to more liberal-minded Mother lovers. (RH)


John Butler Trio | 02.20 | San Francisco

Words by: Justin Gillett | Images by: Eric Lawson

John Butler Trio :: 02.20.10 :: Great American Music Hall :: San Francisco, CA

John Butler Trio :: 02.20.10 :: San Francisco, CA

Last year John Butler started a new chapter in his storied career with the induction of two new musicians into his Trio. The new lineup signaled a change for Butler, who had been playing with his longtime bandmates bassist Shannon Birchall and drummer Michael Barker since 2003. While changing the dynamics of the band must have been a decision that required a lot of thought on behalf of Butler, the move almost seems like it was necessary to keep the vitality of the Trio alive. The new guns Butler brought aboard, Byron Luiters (bass) and Nicky Bomba (drums), have given the Trio a much needed shot of energy. The different skills Luiters and Bomba bring with them has helped brighten the band’s overall sound and remind people why, years ago, they fell in love with John Butler Trio in the first place.

Considering this was the Australian act’s first North American tour to feature Luiters and Bomba, when they touched down at San Francisco’s Great American Music Hall all three musicians seemed intent on proving themselves individually as well as validating the strength of the band’s current incarnation.

It took a few songs for the band to truly lock in, but once they found the sweet spot the Trio was playing as tight as any previous incarnation of the band. Butler wailed on his assortment of guitars – using distorted effects to add an extra push to his acoustic solos – while Bomba kept impressive time on the drum kit. Opting to keep more of a focus on toms rather than cymbals, Bomba’s playing had a distinct tribal quality and further contributed to the Trio’s alternative roots rock sound.

John Butler Trio :: 02.20.10 :: San Francisco, CA

While it was refreshing to see Luiters start off the set with an upright bass (a mainstay of the Trio’s old sound), he quickly changed to an electric four-string Fender Precision. Because the Trio’s erstwhile bass player predominantly used an upright, the changing of instruments caught some people off guard who were not expecting piercing, metallic sounding electric bass tones. But Luiters’ delicate touch and fondness for playing in a song’s pocket worked well with the Trio’s heady sound and furthered the band’s new approach.

Though it was easy it get lost in some of the band’s Afro rhythm melees, focus couldn’t be shifted from Butler and his impressive manipulation of the various instruments he played. While he was positioned stage right, Butler’s commanding demeanor and musical dexterity held the audience rapt as he shifted between six-string acoustic, banjo, 11-string acoustic (which is really just a 12-string model with the high G string removed), six-string electric and lap steel guitar. The way Butler changed guitar tones with his myriad of effects pedals further complimented his range and innovation as an instrumentalist. His intricate, ever changing sound was a testament to Butler’s development since bursting on the scene back in the mid-90s.

As the show concluded it was apparent that Butler is now venturing into unknown territory with his new band and is in the process of truly embarking on a new musical path. He’s come a long ways from busking on the streets in Western Australia, yet somehow Butler’s enduring qualities remain intact. John Butler proved with this San Francisco show that he doesn’t need to turn his back on his roots to grow and evolve as a musician.

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John Butler Trio

John Butler Trio

John Butler Trio

John Butler Trio

John Butler Trio

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Bonnaroo Adds: Ween Umphrey’s, Galactic, Butler

BONNAROO MUSIC AND ARTS FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES ADDITIONAL ARTISTS FOR 2010 LINEUP

WEEN, GALACTIC, UMPHREY’S McGEE, JOHN BUTLER TRIO, THE GOSSIP AND MORE CONFIRMED

Superfly and A.C. Entertainment have announced that the Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival has added several artists to the 2010 event. Updates include Bonnaroo veterans Ween, Galactic and Umphrey’s McGee as well as gifted singer/songwriter Brandi Carlile and the genre-bending, post-punk trio The Gossip.

For more on Bonnaroo, check our extensive coverage of the 2009 event here.

Bonnaroo 2009 by Snyder

BONNAROO 2010 ARTISTS:

Dave Matthews Band

Kings of Leon

Stevie Wonder

Jay-Z

Tenacious D

Weezer

The Dead Weather

Damian Marley & Nas

Phoenix

Norah Jones

Michael Franti & Spearhead

John Fogerty

The Flaming Lips performing Dark Side of the Moon featuring Stardeath and White Dwarfs

Regina Spektor

Jimmy Cliff

Ween

LCD Soundsystem

The Avett Brothers

Thievery Corporation

Galactic

Rise Against

Tori Amos

The National

Zac Brown Band

Les Claypool

John Prine

Umphrey’s McGee

The Black Keys

Steve Martin & the Steep Canyon Rangers

Jeff Beck

Dropkick Murphys

She & Him

Against Me!

Deadmau5

Daryl Hall & Chromeo

Jamey Johnson

Clutch

Bassnectar

Kid Cudi

The Disco Biscuits

Kris Kristofferson

Medeski Martin & Wood

Brandi Carlile

The xx

John Butler Trio

GWAR

Dan Deacon Ensemble

Tinariwen

Wale

Baaba Maal

The Melvins

The Gaslight Anthem

Miike Snow

Nitty Gritty Dirt Band

The Gossip

Dr. Dog

They Might Be Giants

Punch Brothers featuring Chris Thile

Isis

Blitzen Trapper

Blues Traveler

Miranda Lambert

Calexico

OK Go

Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue

Martin Sexton

Lotus

Baroness

Dave Rawlings Machine

Mayer Hawthorne and the County

Japandroids

Jay Electronica

Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros

Ingrid Michaelson

The Dodos

Manchester Orchestra

The Temper Trap

Cross Canadian Ragweed

Big Sam’s Funky Nation

Carolina Chocolate Drops

Needtobreathe

Tokyo Police Club

The Entrance Band

Local Natives

Mumford & Sons

Rebelution

Diane Birch

Monte Montgomery

Fanfarlo

Julia Nunes

The Postelles

Lucero

Here We Go Magic

Hot Rize

Neon Indian

B.O.B

Tickets and complete festival information for the 2010 event are available at Bonnaroo.com.


John Butler Trio: Tour, New Album

John Butler Trio Announces Tour Behind Release of New Album, April
Uprising

John Butler Trio

John Butler Trio has announced the first run of dates behind the release of their first studio album in three years, April Uprising. The tour dates include the band’s return to Red Rocks, this time as a headliner, as well as first-time stops at Central
Park’s Summerstage and Philadelphia’s Penn’s Landing. This will be the band’s first full North American tour with the new lineup, consisting of Butler with drummer Nicky Bomba and bassist Byron Luiters. State Radio will be on all concerts. Medeski Martin & Wood will be added to the Red Rocks bill.

April Uprising, out April 6, is JBT’s label debut with ATO Records. The first single from the record, “One Way Road,” is now available at iTunes.

John Butler Trio Tour Dates :: John Butler Trio News :: John Butler Trio Concert Reviews


John Butler Trio: April Uprising Out 4/6

JOHN BUTLER TRIO TO RELEASE APRIL UPRISING APRIL 6

John Butler Trio

John Butler returns with his first album in three years, April Uprising, to be released April 6. The album finds the multi-platinum Australian artist with a new line up and a new label in the States, ATO Records.

Recorded in Melbourne, Australia at Sing Sing Studios, April Uprising is the follow-up to 2007′s critically acclaimed and globally successful release, Grand National, which yielded a No. 1 U.S. Triple A single, “Better Than,” and rave reviews for its sophisticated mix of guitar stylings, hip hop beats and intelligent, socially conscious lyrics. The release also attracted a global audience and found the former busker-turned-international-recording-and-touring artist appearing at music fests worldwide performing as the John Butler Trio.

April Uprising, Butler’s most focused, diverse and accessible album to date, has already yielded a No. 1 song on the Australian charts with its first single, “One-Way Road.” A video for the single can be viewed on the JBT website here.

This spirit of renewal and rebirth was the culmination of an especially momentous period in Butler’s life. It began with the seemingly innocuous act of cutting his hair and taking a few months off in late 2008. But it was his appearance on the Australian TV series, Who Do You Think We Are, which takes well-known artists and traces their family trees, which turned out to be a life-changing experience, leading him on the personal and spiritual journey that inspired the revolutionary tone of the album.

Although many of the tracks for the April Uprising had been written, the experiences that ultimately inspired the album’s title came about through Butler’s incredible journey with the series’ documentary filmmakers. He started the voyage hoping to find poets, musicians, and revolutionaries in his past. Instead, he traced the Butler name through generations of hardship to a matriarch who sang for her survival and he traced his Bulgarian ancestry to a forebearer caught up in a violent revolt. Getting to know his ancestors – trailblazers, idealists and bona fide revolutionaries – helped him to make profound sense of his passions as a writer and musician.

Butler unveiled his new band mates in June 2009: Melbourne musician Nicky Bomba (drums and percussion) and Byron Luiters (bass) from Sydney outfit Ray Mann Three. The newly revitalized JBT recorded with long-time engineer Robin Mai and found themselves with 22 songs – 16 of which made it on the album – and a whole new musical palette in the can: playful and explosive, rhythmically complex and melodically immediate, charged with new purpose but more committed than ever to the principles of classic song craft.


Between the epic opening track, “Revolution,” and a whispered acoustic coda, “A Star is Born,” dedicated to John’s son, April Uprising is an album that combines the personal, the political and the musically memorable with skill and passion.

JBT will be touring their highly acclaimed live show to all corners of the world with many iconic festivals throughout 2010, including a sold out North American promo tour of major markets in February, followed by a full U.S. tour scheduled for late May through June 2010.

April Uprising Track Listing

1. Revolution 5:07
2. One Way Road 3:08
3. Come On Now 2:44
4. I’d Do Anything 3:23
5. Ragged Mile 3:59
6. Johnny’s Gone 3:34
7. Close To You 3:52
8. Don’t Want To See Your Face 2:45
9. Fool For You 5:10
10. Take Me 5:03
11. To Look Like You 4:21
12. Steal It 3:45
13. Mystery Man 3:57
14. Gonna Be A Long Time 3:48
15. A Star Is Born 4:33

John Butler Trio tour dates available here.


Cascadia Yulegrass Dates Anger, Nershi, Moseley, Butler

Cascadia Yulegrass Tour: Inaugural Acoustic Holiday Bluegrass Celebration

Darol Anger to direct players including Sharon Gilchrist, Scott Law, Bill Nershi, Keith Moseley

Darol Anger

Looking for an alternative to traditional holiday entertainment this season? Acoustic holiday bluegrass visits the Pacific Northwest December 16-20 with the inaugural Cascadia Yulegrass celebration. Featuring world-renowned musicians and regional favorites including Darol Anger, Sharon Gilchrist, Bill Nershi and others, Cascadia Yulegrass is a contemporary, family-friendly, and affordable holiday alternative that doesn’t involve cracked nuts or ballerinas.

Fiddle master Darol Anger will direct and perform. Exceptional among modern fiddlers for his versatility and depth, Anger has driven the evolution of the contemporary string band through his involvement with numerous path-breaking ensembles such as the Turtle Island String Quartet, the David Grisman Quintet, and his Republic of Strings. Today Darol can be heard on NPR’s “Car Talk” theme song along with Earl Scruggs, David Grisman and Tony Rice, and is a featured soloist on dozens of recordings and motion picture soundtracks. For Cascadia Yulegrass, Anger is joined by Rowan/Rice, mandolin-player Sharon Gilchrist, regional guitar hero Scott Law, flat-picking master and String Cheese Incident guitarist Bill Nershi, and SCI bassist Keith Moseley. Nershi is coming off a diverse and successful 2009, including a performance at folk music icon Pete Seeger’s 90th birthday party at Madison Square Garden. The event was recorded by PBS and is currently being broadcast nationally.

Cascadia Yulegrass also features special guest appearances by Hot Buttered Rum drummer/Everyone Orchestra founder Matt Butler and vocalist Jilian Nershi. Opening the event is feel-good artist Big Water.

Cascadia Yulegrass hits the following locations this season:

12/16/2009 – River City Saloon, Hood River, OR

12/17/2009 – Tractor Tavern, Seattle, WA

12/18/2009 – Wild Buffalo, Bellingham, WA

12/19/2009 – Historic McDonald Theatre, Eugene, OR

12/20/2009 – Wonder Ballroom, Portland, OR

Tickets priced from $10 – $22. A variety of VIP and seating packages are available.
Tickets for all markets are on sale now at CascadiaYulegrass.com and venue box offices.


Don’t Forget the Food Drive!

In a year when the need for emergency food boxes throughout the Oregon and Washington foodbank networks skyrocketed to historic highs, Cascadia and The Conscious Alliance is proud to announce food drives at each concert – with 100% of donations going to benefit local area food banks. Each patron who donates 10 non-perishable food items will receive a free limited edition Cascadia Yulegrass poster. The Conscious Alliance always encourages food donations to be low-sodium health food oriented products.

Cascadia Yulegrass from Jason Mastrine on Vimeo.


Lindsay Lohan ‘snogs’ Gerard Butler at Morocco bash

Lindsay Lohan has raised eyebrows after she was seen locking lips with Jennifer Aniston’s rumoured beau Gerard Butler at a recent star studded bash in Morocco.
The actress, who was believed to be still yearning for former lover Samantha Ronson, was spotted snogging the Hollywood heartthrob at The Sanctuary Club.
The 23-year-old, wrapped in a slinky, black [...]

Brock Butler (Perpetual Groove) Debut Solo Album Now Available

Brock Butler (Perpetual Groove) Debut Solo Album

Lately Here Though Now Available For Download

Brock Butler‘s (of Perpetual Groove fame) debut studio album, Lately Here Though, is now available for digital download here for $9.99. Produced and recorded by David Barbe (Drive-By Truckers, Cracker) at Chase Park Transduction in Athens, GA, this nine track collection brings together a mix of collaborators including Karolyn Troupe and Daniel Lawson of Venice is Sinking, Albert Suttle from Perpetual Groove, and several long time friends that have all been a part of Butler’s musical journey throughout the past decade. Physical copies of the album are tentatively planned for early 2010.


Katherine Heigl And Gerard Butler Evacuate Hotel During Bomb Scare

While police were investigating a bomb scare at the Four Seasons Hotel Los Angeles, actors Katherine Heigl and Gerard Butler, inside the hotel promoting their upcoming film, The Ugly Truth, were forced to evacuate, along with 400 other guests….

Car Dealer Gives AK-47s To Buyers

BUTLER, Mo. — Those purchasing a vehicle at Max Motors in Missouri will receive an AK-47 assault rifle with their purchase during the month of August.

This is the second consecutive year the dealership has given away vouchers for a firearm a…

Jennifer Aniston ‘gets cozy with Gerard Butler’

Actress Jennifer Aniston was spotted getting cozy with co-star Gerard Butler on the set of their new movie The Bounty.
The former ‘Friends’ star had one arm wrapped tightly around Gerard’s back and a palm pressed flat against his chest – the exact same pose she struck for public cuddles with former hubby Brad Pitt, old [...]