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Posts Tagged ‘California’

Jodie Sweetin Owes IRS Nearly $30K In Back Taxes

Stephanie Tanner couldn’t be bothered to pay her taxes last year. We think we speak for Full House fans everywhere when we say: “How rude!” Uncle Sam cometh for former child star Jodie Sweetin, whose adult years after of the spotlight have been seeped in meth addiction, a pair of failed marriages, and two children [...]

Taiwanese Animators Spoof Miley Cyrus Bong Scandal; Salvia Sales Shoot Through The Roof

You knew it was coming! Disgraced Disney darling Miley Cyrus is only three days into her latest public scandal, but her boo-boo’s already inspiring web parodies. Taiwanese animators have put together a side-splitting spoof of the now infamous leaked video that featured the 18 year-old giggling uncontrollably after taking a huge hit of smoke. Sources [...]

Lady Gaga Billboard Magazine “Artist Of The Year” 2010

Taylor (Swift that is) may be tops at Entertainment Weekly, but for Billboard bosses 2010 was the year of Madame Gaga. Gaga has been named Artist of the Year by editors at the music bible. The outre songstress topped Billboard’s Year-End Honors “PokerFace” singer after she dominated both the Billboard 200 albums and Hot 100 [...]

Matty B, 7-Year-Old Rapper, Serenades Katy Perry

When Matty B Met Katy P! Matty B, a seven-year-old rap sensation whose YouTube vids have turned the pint-sized wonder into an online sensation, bust a rhyme to Katy Perry’s Billboard No. 1 hit, “Firework,” for the “California Gurl” herself in a video that has gone viral. “I’ll come I’ll see I’ll conquer, I’ll drive [...]

Miley Cyrus Bong-Smoking VIDEO Hits The Web

This oughta get the blogosphere chatting about Miley Cyrus again. TMZ.com has gotten it’s Hot Little Hands on cellphone video footage of the scandal-prone singer-actress smoking a legal substance out of a bong, cursing, and laughing uncontrollably while a friend records the whole scene. Oh Miley, you make it so easy to make fun of [...]

Miley Cyrus celebrates 18th b’day with a bong

miley cyrus 3Miley Cyrus has been video taped celebrating her 18th birthday by experimenting with a bong. The video had been shot during a party at Cyrus’ L.A. area home five days after her birthday, TMZ.com reported. A source close to the singer said the smoke filling the bong is a natural herb called salvia, which has [...]

Randy & Evi Quaid Tell-All Book

“The Starwhackers” are headed to a bookseller’s shelf near you! Hotel-hoppin’ twosome Randy and Evi Quaid are looking for a ghostwriter to translate their — Er…shall we say unique? — story to the written word. The actor, best known as Uncle Eddie in The National Lampoon’s Vacation movies, and his troubled wife Evi have spent [...]

Hot Buttered Rum Headed To Africa To Study, Record, Film

HBR AND MEMBERS OF IZABELLA AND POOR MAN’S WHISKEY HEAD TO GHANA
TO REALIZE A DREAM AND YOU CAN HELP!

Though very much an American string band, San Francisco’s Hot Buttered Rum has long had roots in African music, mingling the original Motherland inspirations with their modern take on acoustic music. Now the band is making a full leap into learning and recording in Africa early in 2011. In January, Nat Keefe and his comrades and friends will assemble in Ghana. To find out more about this exciting adventure (and perhaps donate the much-needed funds to make it all happen) pop over here.

Here’s a mission statement from Keefe:

Nat Keefe by Josh Miller

A decade ago I traveled to Ghana, West Africa and found the missing piece of my musical education. In studying drums, xylophone, palmwine guitar, dancing, and singing, I found the roots of, and a new perspective on, some of my favorite music. Oldtime banjo, Stravinksy, James Brown, Radiohead, all of this music has roots still resonating in West Africa.

It was an “a-ha” moment for me, which has changed everything since. I wrote symphony, choir, and percussion ensemble pieces based on Ghanaian rhythms. I returned to Ghana and filmed a documentary and recorded a disc of field recordings. I started a benefit project for an orphanage in Accra. With my brothers in Hot Buttered Rum, I created a fresh approach to American string band music. Things have not been the same for me since my trip to Ghana!.

This January I am returning to Ghana to record an album with Ghanaian musicians and American musicians from Hot Buttered Rum, ALO, Poor Man’s Whiskey, Elephant Revival, and Izabella. This will be a masterwork of sorts for me, bringing together music, community and service. Let me explain the scope of the trip. There are three phases:.

First, I’ll spend the first part of January alone in Ghana paying respects to old friends and making arrangements for the rest of the trip. Then, on January 18 my American colleagues are arriving in Accra. This will include Erik Yates, Lucas Carlton, Eli Jebidiah, Bonnie Paine, Audio Angel and Murph Murphy. I invited each of these artists to come for a week of workshops, cultural exchange, and service. Together we’ll learn music and dance from Ghanaian masters, and share our own music with people in the capital city of Accra and the beach village Keta. The group will do service projects in each city and music sharing in schools. The week will be filmed and made into a movie by Eli Jebidiah..

After our workshop, we’ll record for several days in Accra. I’ll also do some more recording when I’m back in California. I’m going to produce an album of shining collaboration with American and African musicians that can stand beside any great music. I’ve got the songs, the vision, and the organizational skill to put the pieces together. It will be passionate, accessible, fun music that will find an audience in and beyond the Hot Buttered Rum world.

This album will bring together elements of Ghanaian music and Bluegrass music, all tied together with my Americana-style songwriting. It will bring together luminaries from Ghana and the States alike. It has taken a decade of experience to be in a place to do this, and I’m going to work tirelessly to bring it to fruition.

All of the workshop participants are paying their own way. I am paying for my travel expenses. The place I need support is in the production of the album. While all these elements are aligned, I want to be able to do things right and produce the project with tools in my hand. I don’t have the resources myself to make this happen. So I’m asking for people who believe in this idea to help make it happen, in a variety of ways.

Once again, if you would like to help bring this dream to fruition head over here and share what you can.

Hot Buttered Rum Tour Dates :: Hot Buttered Rum News :: Hot Buttered Rum Concert Reviews


Depressed smokers ‘less likely to kick the butt’

Depressed smokersA new study has revealed that smokers suffering from depression are less likely to stay tobacco free. Depressed smokers want to quit the nicotine habit just as much as non-depressed smokers, but the new study found that depression can put a kink in their success. The study showed that about 24 percent of surveyed callers [...]

Reuters: Republicans Are Trying to Intentionally Bankrupt California and Illinois to Weaken Unions

The New York Times points out that some states like California and Illinois are at risk of default, and that a default could spread to other states:While next year could be even worse, there are bigger, longer-term risks, financial analysts say. Their…

Octomom Offered Porn Party Hostess Gig

Some of the biggest names in pornography really have a thing for Octomom Nadya Suleman. Vivid Entertaiment, the XXX company behind the celebrity sex tapes that turned Kim Kardashian and Paris Hilton into pop culture phenomenons, is giving the overcaffeinated and undermedicated mother of 14 one last chance to earn some much needed cash. Don’t [...]

OFF! | NYC | Review

By: Ron Hart

OFF! :: 10.22.10 :: Generation Records :: New York, NY


OFF!’s debut, The First Four EPs, is out digitally worldwide. iTunes has the exclusive bonus track “Zero Hour” and eMusic has the exclusive bonus track “Sexy Capitalists.” The vinyl box set and cassette versions of The First Four EPs will be released on December 14th.

OFF! by Dan Monick

For a guy who collects vinyl, having to wait in line for a show in the basement of one of your favorite record shops instead of thumbing through the racks is a practice in restraint no crate digger worth his weight in wax should be required to endure. But when the concert you are waiting to see is an intimate performance from former Black Flag/Circle Jerks frontman Keith Morris’ new California punkcore supergroup OFF!, it is well worth the torture.

Formed by Morris in 2009 and rounded out by guitarist Dimitri Coats of Burning Brides, Rocket from the Crypt drummer Mario Rubalcaba and Steven McDonald of Red Kross fame on bass guitar, the band is a total throwback to the days when punk rock was a bloodsport, a time that Morris fondly recalled several times over the course of OFF!’s half-hour set.

In fact, right when we walked down the steps of Generation Records’ nugget-rich used section that comprises the basement, Morris was in the middle of a yarn about his old bandmate in Black Flag, Robo, making extra money in the old days allegedly digging ditches for a snuff film operation before OFF! tore into an uncompromising mini-set that featured select tunes from the band’s excellently brief 7-inch box set The First Four EPs. As records by Iggy Pop, AC/DC, David Bowie and The Who adorned the wall behind them, the quartet played loud, fast and fearless, tearing through minute-long songs like “Darkness,” “Killing Away” and “Fuck People” with the tenacity of a far younger band, interspersed with Morris musing on everything from the capitalist practices of his former peers on the L.A. scene like the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Gwen Stefani to meeting guitarist McDonald when he was just an 11-year-old Black Flag fan who used to sneak into shows.

However, the most poignant moment of the evening came when Morris performed a stirring, ferocious tribute to his old pal, the late Jeffrey Lee Pierce of western punk icons The Gun Club, and with whom Keith was in the early stages of working on a musical collaboration before Pierce tragically succumbed to a brain hemorrhage in 1996.

And nothing was cooler than seeing this whole thing go down at Generation, a place where so many NYC punk fans discovered the dreadlocked trail of inspiration, influence and energy Keith Morris has blazed for over 30 years and continues to do so as a 55-year-old creating some of the most incendiary sounds of the 21st century.

JamBase | Pissed Off
Go See Live Music!


Danny Bonaduce Married Manager Amy Railsback In Hawaiian Wedding

Former teacher Amy Railsback got the surprise of her life when fiance Danny Bonaduce — best known for his role on the ’70s sitcom The Patridge Family — jetted her off for a pre-Thanksgiving trip to Maui, Hawaii and announced that they were getting hitched! Danny and Amy, who is Bonaduce’s manager, tied the knot [...]

NASA Finds Arsenic-Based Microorganism in California Lake

A research team funded by the space agency found life built with the toxic chemical arsenic in a California lake. – NASA-funded researchers conducting tests in the harsh environment of Mono
Lake in California
announced they have discovered the first known microorganism on Earth able to
thrive and reproduce using the toxic chemical arsenic, a discovery NASA
officials said has changed the fundamental knowledge …


Double Dip In Housing Largely Caused By Failure to Prosecute Mortgage Fraud

There’s a double-dip in housing prices (and see this and this).As CNN points outs: U.S. home prices fell 2% in the third quarter after having gained steadily since early 2009.The S&P Case-Shiller Home Price Index has recorded gains in four of th…

Randy & Evi Quaid Talk Murder Plot With Esquire: “RadarOnline Arranged Dairy Queen Conspiracy Against Us!”

Either we’re on Candid Camera or kooky couple Randy and Evi Quaid truly are “CooCoo for Coco Puffs.” If you thought you’d already heard the best of The Quaids ramblings about those pesky StarWhacker, who are out to kill them — leaving a trail of unpaid hotel bills in their wake, pull up a chair. [...]

Dawes and The Moondoggies | California | Review

Words by: Dennis Cook | Images by: John Margaretten

Dawes & The Moondoggies :: 11.20.10 :: The Independent :: San Francisco, CA

Dawes :: 11.20.10 by John Margaretten

Organized religion is a psychological hornet’s nest built on hierarchies, fairytales and guilt grafted onto basically good ideas. At the core of most of the world’s major spiritual practices is the notion that human beings are flawed and must atone to a creator that we disappoint on a daily basis. It’s a lousy setup, especially for highly individualized folks given to questioning stated truths and power structures. Still, it’d be a lie to suggest that there isn’t an ache inside all of us for greater meaning, a larger sense of the universe and one’s place in it, not to mention a hope – however mustard seed small – that compassion, kindness and love are stronger than all the dark forces that seem to hold sway so many places. This ache need not lead one to “God” or anything like it, but it hums in our skulls when night comes and the day’s crush and chatter subsides. So, where then does one turn to slake this ontological thirst? Where do doubters and cynics gather to bolster their spirits?

One potential answer could be found at The Independent, where two bands that dig their hands deep into this rich, complex mulch put on a concert that was as close to holy as rock ‘n’ roll can manage. Los Angeles-based Dawes and Seattle’s The Moondoggies each delivered everything a four-piece combo can in terms of spirit and skill on a rain dappled autumn evening, each proving painfully honest and resoundingly hopeful, not to mention dead solid songwriters, performers and musicians. When churches and temples prove unfriendly to modern people it’s left to other avenues to nourish us in ways that go beyond entertainment. Each group put on a fine rock show, but if you slipped off your armor and bared your breast to them then something more occurred this night, something all the outstretched arms and heaven-reaching singing in the crowd testified to – something rare from bands that have only a handful of recordings and a few years under their belts, but such is the immediate, tangible power and grace of what they do.

The Moondoggies :: 11.20.10 by John Margaretten

Taking us “way out in the tidelands” and probing complex notions like “what’s exactly inside a man,” The Moondoggies played first, their cracking good rhythm team – bassist Robert Terreberry and drummer Carl Dahlen – actively reaching out and sucking one into their cavernous, harmonious spaces. There’s something of vintage CSNY and the 1970s Laurel Canyon bunch to them, but stripped of the hippie drippiness and lackadaisical jamming. Their inquiry is pointed and their songwriting melodic and free of much fat, often settling into a riff or refrain because it needs repeating for proper impact – one of the basic truths of the blues or classic folk often overlooked in contemporary rock. Drawing heavily from their ace sophomore album Tidelands (released October 12 on Hardly Art/Sub Pop), the set was infused with gospel-like energy set free of holy book brow beating. Not to overplay a metaphor, but their music held an oceanic pull to it – horizon filling, elemental, natural. More than once I kept conversations at bay as the audience grew throughout their hour onstage so I might focus and absorb everything they were laying down.

At the heart of The Moondoggies’ music lies the songwriting and open-wound voice of Kevin Murphy, who repeatedly succeeds in pulling the veils off commonly held illusions, revealing what’s really going on rather than what we think is happening. The others in the band, rounded out by keyboardist Caleb Quick, delivered harmonies that brought their live presence up to the high standards of their studio recordings. As the lights came up one felt they’d witnessed a wonderful group of searchers that handcraft music as a walking stick for a journey that won’t be long or easy. But, when they cried, “Wake up, wake up, let me drink from your cup,” the sense was that they would not go thirsty or without friends wherever they might wander, reminding us that “man ain’t meant to crawl/ feel like he’s nothing at all” and delivering music of utter conviction that’s truly uplifting.

Normally I wouldn’t envy a headliner having to follow such a set but Dawes is no normal headliner. Despite having just one album to their name – the tremendous North Hills (JamBase review) – Dawes is rapidly building a cult following whose eyes burn bright, a chorus of ragged voices grown hoarse but happy by show’s end. I caught a glimpse of this fervor at Outside Lands this past summer but it was a pale shadow of the ecclesiastical bent of The Independent crowd. Looking around at the number of people who knew every line, even to the unreleased tunes, one felt they were in on the ground floor of something big, something rising in the same way as past greats like Neil Young and Bruce Springsteen, and their performance backed up this impression in every way.

Dawes :: 11.20.10 by John Margaretten

The lightning rod in Dawes is singer-songwriter-guitarist Taylor Goldsmith, a future legend in the making possessed of abundant charisma, a heartbreaking voice capable of roaring power, and a knack for nuances that ensnare an audience – sly grins, hip swivels and pauses and conscious tics that punctuate the already great music in ways that make one hoot and connect with the moment at hand. Shoulder-to-shoulder with him are Tay Straithairn (piano, keys), Griffin Goldsmith (drums) and Wylie Gelber (bass), who serve this music with immaculate intuition, taking possession of it and delivering fine performance after fine performance. Yes, they are a new, quite young band but it feels like they’re in for the long haul – in a number of ways. These songs are not passing fancies. They are streetwise hymns to haunt our ear buds and solitary listening time, and then later enjoyed in good company with our fellow travelers, glasses and spirits raised high as Dawes drives us into fevered jubilee. Reflective music – and Dawes surely makes that sort – is rarely well served in the live setting, but this band makes it work in spades. In fact, the band-audience synergy with Dawes is one of the most striking I’ve ever encountered, and again, only seems to be the tip of the iceberg.

Like The Moondoggies, they hit all their marks, building on the sturdy bones in their songbook but not settling for an “okay” rendition when they might blow the doors off the joint. From a purely spectator perspective, Dawes is a goddamn blast to watch. The battle scarred instruments and lunging energy onstage speak to guys willing to do the miles and club crawling to forge something solid and lasting. The new songs in SF were uniformly excellent and worthy additions to the eleven gems on their debut, and one suspects there’s a pile more waiting in the wings. One killer had this memorable couplet: “If I wanted someone to cut me down/ I’d have handed you the blade/ I want you to make the days move easy.” Zing!

Things built to a heady pitch with set closing “When My Time Comes,” where the whole audience seemed to inch forward, pulled in by the song’s gravity and the band’s searing, absolutely engaging playing. It is a tremendous tune, a balm for those of us who’ve lived “less like a workhorse and more like a slave.” The struggle of existence and the inevitable end that awaits us all writhes inside this one, and you could see a number of folks breaking through to something unspoken and perhaps unspeakable as they pitched in on the intentionally rhetorical chorus. Who’s to say what will happen when their time comes? Isn’t it better to leave the question mark hanging flagrantly in the air, a cry of “whoa-oa-oa” standing in for certitude as nuggets of wisdom fall from Murphy’s lips? “You can judge the whole world on the sparkle that you think it lacks/ Yes, you can stare into the abyss but its staring right back.”

We may understand on an intellectual level that we’re all in the same boat but feeling it in your bones is another matter entirely. The combination of Dawes and The Moondoggies made for a community, however briefly gathered, that understood on some level that existence is shared and our dreams and fears are not so different from one another in the final accounting. Most longings are universal and that truth has few better songsmiths and messengers than these two bands at this moment.

Dawes Tour Dates :: Dawes News :: Dawes Concert Reviews

The Moondoggies Tour Dates :: The Moondoggies News :: The Moondoggies Concert Reviews


Nov. 29, 1972: Pong, a Game Any Drunk Can Play

1972: Pong, the first popular videogame, is released in its original arcade-game form.
If it seems crude by today’s standards, well, it was crude then, too. And it was meant to be. Pong was the brainchild of Nolan Bushnell, a founder of Atari, who was inspired to develop it after playing an electronic table-tennis game at [...]

Can Facebook and Twitter predict election results better than polls?

Social networking sites such as Facebook and Twitter are slowly gaining ground in politics too – in fact, many wonder if the social networking sites could predict election results. In November”s elections, the candidate who more people “liked” on Facebook won in 71 percent of Senate elections. Twitter was even more accurate, with the candidates [...]

Peter Case: New Album & CA Dates

WIG! OUT NOW

Peter Case has gone back
to his
rock roots following emergency open heart surgery last year with an inspired new rock album
Wig!, released June 29, 2010. Listen to the album below.

Last nominated for his 2007 Yep Roc album Let Us Now Praise Sleepy John, Case, like thousands of
musicians and artists in the United States, was nearly a statistic of our now slowly recovering health care system.
Following a double-bypass in early 2009, Case was lucky to walk out of the hospital with a renewed vigor for life
and music but he also had a six-figure medical bill he couldn’t pay. Case’s fans and peers like T-Bone Burnett,
Richard Thompson, Joe Henry
and Loudon Wainwright III immediately rallied to organize a benefit
concert to help with his obligations. While on the mend, Case prepped the reissues of albums by his early rock
outfits The Plimsouls and The Nerves. “I had to do the mastering and spent quite a bit of time listening to the old
records. It really got me going, hearing those guitars.”

Following an especially rocking sold-out comeback show at McCabe’s where he debuted the tunes he’d been
assembling in his recovery months, Case began to work in earnest on a new album. Recovered physically and
emboldened by the generosity of his fans and friends, Peter recorded the resulting raucous and dirty electric blues
rock of Wig! in only three days. Case is headed home to California for a handful of dates listed below.

12.02.10 @ The Palms Playhouse in Winters CA
12.03.10 @ the Point Richmond Concert Series in Point Richmond CA
12.04.10 @ Amnesia Bar in San Francisco CA
12.05.10 @ Piedmont Piano Company, Oakland CA


Peter Case
Tour Dates

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Peter Case News
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Peter Case
Concert
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