Property management is a skill that requires a lot of effort with respect to the growth of business. To handle this task with ease and comfort, people prefer property management software for this purpose. However, it’s very tricky to judge, what kind software will be suitable for them. Here we are going to explain some of the important features which may be helpful for you to choose the correct product.
Posts Tagged ‘carl’
How to Choose a Property Management Software with Best Features Posted By : Carl Caris
Property Management Accounting is no more a Headache with Software Posted By : Carl Caris
In the modern times it is very easy to perform the task of accounting with the help of software. Software are not only the solutions for complicated tasks, but they also provide an interface to the service provider and user. Software are very much helpful to take care of nut-bolt types of problems in accounting. However you can’t depend completely upon these software for accounting tasks. A basic knowledge of accounting process is must for using the software effectively.
Lady Gaga Engaged?
Pop’s most notorious fashion nightmare may soon have a diamond sparkler to match her animated hatwear and heeless stilettos. Music hitmaker Lady Gaga is reportedly engaged to wed her bartender boyfriend, Luc Carl. We’re not sure how true this dish is, but we’ve got two words for you, Gaga: Prenuptial Agreement! Rumors are abuzz that [...]
Missing Infant Carlina White Returns Home After 23 Years
This item won’t do much for the Goss Watchers out there, but it’s pretty darn heartwarming nonetheless. A young mother — who disappeared from a Harlem hospital as an infant in 1987, becoming the subject of one of New York City’s most baffling missing persons cases — has been reunited with the parents who never [...]
Ultra Music Festival 2011 Lineup
PERFORMANCES FROM TIËSTO, DEADMAU5, THE CHEMICAL BROTHERS, DAVID GUETTA, CARL
COX, EMPIRE OF THE SUN, PENDULUM, CRYSTAL CASTLES, CUT COPY, TRENTEMØLLER, MSTRKRFT, BOYS NOIZE, STS9,
RUSKO AND MANY MORE
![]() Deadmau5 |
Following the announcement that Ultra Music Festival (UMF) is expanding as a massive three-day event this
year, promoters have now unveiled initial details of its highly anticipated line-up for the festival’s 13th annual
installment set for Friday, March 25, Saturday, March 26 and Sunday, March 27, 2011 in downtown Miami’s
Bicentennial
Park. Check out the lineup below.
Click here to get tickets.
LINEUP
Tiësto
Deadmau5
The Chemical Brothers
David Guetta
Empire of the Sun
Carl Cox
Pendulum
Crystal Castles
Röyksopp
Cut Copy
Trentemøller
Erasure
Chromeo
MSTRKRFT
Boys Noize
Laurent Garnier
Ferry Corsten
Benny Benassi
Afrojack
Rusko
Steve Aoki
Wolfgang Gartner
STS9
Simian Mobile Disco
CSS
Klaxons
Sander
Kleinenberg
Roger Sanchez
!!!
Sub Focus
Skrillex
Nero
Holy Ghost!
Claude
VonStroke
Hybrid
Martin Solveig
Chris Lake
Gui Boratto
Mr. Oizo
Tinie Tempah
Joris Voorn
Super Mash Bros.
Funkagenda, Alex Gaudino
Daedalus
Afrobeta
Beckham to get BBC Lifetime Achievement award
Ace midfielder David Beckham has been selected for the BBC Sports Personality Lifetime Achievement award. The lifetime honour is one of several awards, which will be presented during the BBC Sports Personality of the Year show on Sunday. The 35-year-old midfielder is England’s most capped outfield player and has won six Premier League titles and [...]
Carl Broemel: Heaven Knows
By: Dennis Cook
Some albums seem illuminated by twinkling, magic catching light, birthed in quietude and redolent of domesticity and other simple pleasures that sustain us amidst the hustle ‘n’ bustle. This is the atmosphere of the solo debut from My Morning Jacket lead guitarist Carl Broemel, whose work outside MMJ has the shimmering, comforting timelessness of Big Star’s Chris Bell, Gary Higgins and other cult adored, warm, vinyl-spirited singer-songwriter fare. All Birds Say (released August 31 on ATO) ushers the listener into soundscapes full of bittersweet musing and hand holding sensitivity. It’s a far cry from the roar and epic heights he traverses in MMJ, but in its way, about as charming as his main gig, perhaps especially because of the wider lens it offers on this extremely talented & humble musician.
Carl Broemel |
JamBase: All Birds Say is one of the loveliest records to come along in a while, and I don’t say that lightly. The opening instrumental is so cinematic that it’s as if we’re being welcomed into a cool indie film. Coming out of Morning Jacket, it certainly wasn’t what I expected, and I mean that entirely as a compliment. How did this album evolve?
Carl: I’m glad you had that reaction. It’s kind of like what I end up doing when I’m not touring with [MMJ] and I’m home just jamming with friends in Nashville. Right when I moved to Nashville I met Teddy Morgan, who’s a producer & songwriter, and a drummer friend of his and we started goofing around and making noise experiments. We’d just record ourselves making crazy noises on drums and keyboards and steel guitar. We call that band Winthrop, but nobody really likes it live so it’s really a studio thing. So, we’d goof around and drink wine and do Winthrop things, and eventually I played them a few songs and they said, “Well, let’s record one of your songs.” That’s how [All Birds Say] started, right there in Teddy’s garage, where we captured 4-5 songs in between everybody’s busy schedules. Then last year when [MMJ] was off most of 2009, I decided I had time and I just finished the rest of it.
JamBase: That’s cool that it evolved in that relaxed way. So many people want to do solo work and resent their day job, so to speak. You seem pretty happy being part of My Morning Jacket and this evolved simply because it wanted to come into being.
Carl: Exactly! There’s nothing I’d rather be doing than being in the band. It’s really a perfect situation for me. I feel complete by it. But it’s also a good situation where everybody in the band wants you to work on your family life or whatever else interests you simultaneously, thereby making the band a healthier being. This kind of activity is encouraged.
Time off and time away seem part of the architecture of All Birds Say. There’s a contemplative quality that runs through the entire thing. It’s a very thoughtful record. It’s a space it’s hard to get into these days, with phone-computers in our pockets and seemingly 24-hour input and access to everyone and everything. This record is an invitation to step back and look at life with a capital “L.”
That’s kind of where I’m at when I’m sitting alone with my guitar late at night, mumbling into a microphone. This is just what came out. With some of my earlier songs I felt they were almost too personal, and I wondered if anybody would even want to hear them [laughs].
You’re a strikingly different lyricist than Jim [James], more forthright in a way, where Jim is often a wonderful puzzle box to unlock.
I don’t go home from tour and listen to loud, crazy rock music very much. I tend to go home and listen to Big Star, Nick Drake or Simon & Garfunkel. Or if I’m on a plane, I’ll listen to Galaxie 500 and just drift away. I love the mellowness of this music. It’s some of my favorite stuff to listen to. I still love to rock, too, but when I’m sitting at home late at night and everyone’s asleep, there’s an energy level where thoughtfulness is at a high. And that’s when I wrote most of the record.
Was it fun to explore all the things you can do as a musician on this album, which lets you get into dobro, autoharp, baritone sax and all sort of instruments outside your role in MMJ?
Carl Broemel |
I’d love to get one of EVERY stringed instrument because I think I could sort of play it. And it’s not like I can’t experiment with these sorts of instruments on a Jacket record. Basically, I use whatever’s around. I ended up buying an autoharp and a dobro during that year off. And I had a violin in the closet but I can barely play! Still, I managed to play it on the record.
My dad played a ton of woodwind stuff on the record, too, like clarinet and bassoon, and he plays viola, too. It’s a really special part of listening to the record, hearing him play. He spent his career as a bassoon player in the Minneapolis Symphony, and he did that for almost 30 years. He’s retired now and I coaxed him into working on this album since he doesn’t play everyday anymore like he used to. We kind of combined our ways of making music and made it work. He’s used to reading music and I’m used to making it up on the spot.
That’s a nice intersection. A little friction in music never hurts.
Agreed!
As you worked on this album, were there themes or ideas that began to surface for you as a lyricist?
The lyrics are the hardest part for me. The music kind of comes easy, and I love doing all the background vocals and just layering things, probably because I feel confident doing that. But the lyrics took a while, except for “Retired” and “Carried Away,” which happened fast. Most of it was tons of pages with scribbles and alterations. But since I’ve always dabbled in songwriting, I didn’t have to create an entirely new persona.
Do you think this experience will carry over into the next Jacket record?
Everything you do informs the next thing you do. The big thing for me doing this is getting past fear. I always get nervous before I do a show, particularly a solo show. I wonder, “Should I be doing this? What’s the point?” Afterwards I’m always excited and glad I did it. I feel like I’m getting better at it. So, maybe I’ll feel a little more confident being up there [on stage] and doing my thing as well as the Jacket stuff.
Are there any musical ideas you came across that you want to bring back to the guys and say, “Hey look at what I found! What can we do with it?”
Carl Broemel by Dave Vann |
Maybe [laughs]. The mode of working with the band is not entirely one-directional, but it starts with Jim coming to us with his ideas. I’m not gonna do my solo record and come in like, “I got these songs and we’ve got to do them! [laughs]“
My Morning Jacket is synonymous with Jim. Everyone involved serves his vision, or at least that’s my take.
I love doing that, but when I say that it makes it seem like it’s not an open forum and it is. It’s just like whatever’s working is working; it’s never discussed much.
It seems like the time off did you guys good. I saw you at Outside Lands and was again blown away by MMJ’s ability to step up in front of a massive crowd like that and just knock it out in a way that’s both stadium ready and quite personal.
That show sticks out for me as one of my favorites on this last tour. We hadn’t been out to San Francisco in a while and I felt the moment we stepped onstage, “This is the crowd we should be playing for. We should have been back here sooner!” It just felt right.
You guys can certainly do a pure rock show but it seems like you’re aiming for something bigger.
It’s nice to put all the pieces in place that should make a show good, but there’s something intangible that you can’t plan for but you hope happens. We’re thinking about that even as we’ve got the lights together, picked a good setlist, etc. But we’re still hoping that something extra shows up and you forget about everything you’re playing and it just feels right. If we don’t feel that we’re kinda bummed.
Carl Broemel will perform his last hometown show of 2010 in Nashville on December 9 at The Bluebird Cafe. Carl will be performing alongside Abigail Washburn and Kai Welch. Tickets on sale here.
Carl Broemel “Heaven Knows” from Tugboat Productions on Vimeo.
Carl Broemel Tour Dates :: Carl Broemel News :: Carl Broemel Concert Reviews
JamBase | Winged
Go See Live Music!
Alex Stebbins: “Lady Gaga Stole My Man!â€
It sucks for anyone to lose their boyfriend to The Evil Ex — Now imagine that The Evil Ex is an international pop star with a small army of “Little Monsters” at her disposal! Meet Alex Stebbins, a 21-year-old aspiring actress from The Big Apple. Stebbins said she had been happily dating bartender/drummer Luc Carl [...]
My Morning Jacket: Fire Still Burns
By: Dennis Cook
See a track-by-track discussion of MMJ’s debut here
See a video salute to MMJ’s debut here
See full details on MMJ’s Terminal 5 shows here
The Tennessee Fire |
1999′s The Tennessee Fire would be an auspicious debut for any band – a haunting yet happily shuffling blast of ideas woven together by strange poetry and gutbucket invention. It is what rock ‘n’ roll at its best aspires to but often gussies up too much these days. For My Morning Jacket it was the first solid footstep in a journey that’s cemented them as one of the most ceaselessly creative, fearless and engaging bands of the modern era – a group able to ascend to the heights of pop culture awareness without losing their tenacious, fiercely independent spirit that makes no concessions to trends, critics or anyone outside their ranks. One would be very, very hard pressed to find five musicians – Jim James (singer, songwriter, guitar, grand vision), Carl Broemel (guitar, sax, vox), Bo Koster (keys, vox), Tom Blankenship (bass, vox) and Patrick Hallahan (drums, percussion) – with more raw talent, obvious determination or sympathetic interconnectivity.
This week MMJ will tackle their entire catalog one album at a time at New York City’s Terminal 5 beginning tonight, October 18, with a run through The Tennessee Fire. We sat down with Tom Blankenship (aka Two Tone Tommy) to discuss their debut and the experience of preparing for the Terminal 5 shows.
JamBase: In revisiting your debut, it dawned on me that you’re the only guy besides Jim that’s been on every single album. In getting ready for the Terminal 5 shows, does it occur to you, “Yeah, I have been on this whole weird trip.”
Tom: I get reminders about it every once in a while. People will say, “Weren’t you a founding member?” I get that more & more as the years go by. It isn’t something I necessarily think about because the five of us with Carl and Bo have been together for almost seven years, which is the majority of the band’s lifespan. So, it feels like two different bands; the first three or four years we were together and then there’s this band.
JamBase: Has it been fun to explore these older records, to go back and say, “Wow, look at what we made!”
Tom: It’s really cool to go back to those records. We just spent a week in Louisville, just the five of us, rehearsing all the stuff that hasn’t been played live like “Butch Cassidy,” “If All Else Fails” and a couple other acoustic numbers from At Dawn, where Jim had done them by himself but we’d never done them as a band where we’re creating some kind of atmosphere like on the record. It’s a fun trip down memory lane. A lot of times I’m pleasantly surprised that the performance I gave are better than I remembered and some of the mistakes on the albums are now kind of charming.
I picked up on the same thing listening to The Tennessee Fire again. The tendrils of what this band would become are all already germinating in that first batch of material.
My Morning Jacket by Dave Vann |
To try and revisit those things again today is sometimes strange because sometimes when I close my eyes I have flashbacks to being onstage when the band was just a four-piece. But I quickly realize the sounds we’re making are not the same and we’re not the same people. And Jim’s voice has changed SO much from that album to today. But there’s still a piece of the feeling I had making that record, the personal connection I made to those songs, whether it was the music or lyrics. A piece of that’s still there, but it mostly feels fresh and new playing it with this lineup.
How do you find the material transforming with this lineup tackling it?
10 or 11 years ago we just played as hard as we could because we were excited to be playing live, period. So it was more raucous and us just having fun, and now it feels more moody and atmospheric. There are songs I’m playing on live that I’ve never played on before, just to beef things up here & there and give things a different kind of voicing. It’s weird to say but it feels like this very adult version of the songs.
Mature or adult are dirty words in our youth obsessed culture, especially in rock ‘n’ roll, except they aren’t really. To play music well and to evolve one’s earlier efforts are good things, and that can only happen over time. But right from the start you guys were anxious to complicate what it meant to be My Morning Jacket.
One of the reasons I’ve always liked the name is because it doesn’t sound like anything at all. Nothing comes to my mind except, “That’s kind of a weird name for a band [laughs].”
There’s some weird echoes of stuff on The Tennessee Fire but I couldn’t exactly say that you guys sounded like ANYONE else from the beginning.
I had the same impression when I first got the demo tape given to me by the drummer Jeremy maybe 6 or 8 months before I joined the band. Most of the album had already been completed. Number one: I was blown away by this guy Jim, who was the same age as me but could write these haunting yet kinda poppy sounding songs. What I loved about the album was that it had all these familiar elements that I’d never heard put together before. I couldn’t put my finger on what the sound was or how to describe.
Listening back again before this talk, I picked up on the cool Phil Spector-ish elements and echoes of vintage soul inside these strange new shells. It doesn’t play to the popular sensibilities of the era it came out in, choosing instead to seek out the classic and the enduring as its influences, something Jim does a lot in his songwriting. It’s a good trick if you can make people scratch their head and still keep listening.
Keep it interesting enough that it will take people a while to figure it out.
One thing I noticed looking at the liner notes was Sir Patrick T. Hallahan shot the photos used on The Tennessee Fire. So well before he became the drummer, he had a presence in MMJ.
The Tennessee Fire inside cover |
Oh brother, I haven’t looked at those notes in forever. I think his name appears on all the albums even if he wasn’t in the band. I love the back cover shot with all of us with the cigarettes in our mouths and the fedoras.
So, this is a band from Louisville, Kentucky but their first album is called The Tennessee Fire. Why is that?
Before I joined the band, I remember pulling up to the studio in Shelbyville. I was in a band called Winter Death Club at the time, and we’d have practice after My Morning Jacket practice. At the time MMJ was just a 3-piece of two guitars, drums and vocals. They even played a few shows with that lineup, which is how [The Tennessee Fire] was mainly recorded. I remember pulling up and hearing that Jimmy had got a record contract with Darla but he didn’t know what to name the band. I think he maybe wanted to call the band The Tennessee Fire at one time. As far as I know, that’s how it came about, that and the picture inside the album of the Tennessee fireworks store where the ‘works’ is cut off.
Another thing that came up for me listening back to the Morning Jacket catalog recently is how sly and darkly funny Jim is. There are traces of that right from this first slab. Despite his whole rep of being this serious artiste, he’s never failed to bust me up each time we’ve spoken.
Anyone that’s met him in real life sees that he’s constantly joking. The first time I met him we were playing in a storage garage in Lexington, Kentucky, his band Month of Sundays and Winter Death Club. I arrived early and Jim was sound checking by himself and he kept playing “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On,” but he didn’t know any of the lyrics. He just kept saying, “Whole lotta shakin’ goin’ on,” for what felt like 15-20 minutes. He did it so much that eventually everyone had to laugh. His humor has always been if you say it enough eventually people will laugh. They might hate you in between but they’ll come around to see the humor.
Finally, how are you feeling about tackling the entire catalog in the space of a few days? That’s a daunting task for any band.
Above all else, it’s been a bit stressful. But Carl put it into perspective. He said, “The morning you wake up for that show all you need to worry about are the songs for that night. And you can tackle the other nights as they come.” If you compartmentalize it like that it’s not too bad. It’s been fun to revisit covers from each era. It’s been cool because we were doing songs I can’t believe we ever did! Hopefully people will feel like they got a unique experience.
Continue reading for Tom’s track-by-track commentary on MMJ’s debut album…
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My Morning Jacket bassist Tom Blankenship’s reflects on the band’s 1999 debut, The Tennessee Fire.
Heartbreakin Man
I don’t think I even had a full band version of this when I first heard it. It was Jim on a 4-track with all those crazy vocal harmonies laid on top of each other. It was so different from the finished product, and the whole vibe of it was haunting, like ghosts flying over your head and some of them were laughing at you and some were there to help you out. Some of the spirit of that made it to the final version. I think it’s a great start to the record, where you hear that ka-shhh and then the band crashes in.
They Ran
It’s just predominantly bass ‘n’ drums. I thought “Heartbreakin’ Man” was a great intro to Jim’s vocals but the treatment of his vocals and the harmonies and the way they layer themselves one after another at the beginning of “They Ran” is the perfect showcase of what Jim is capable of vocally. All those vocals are his and still sound distinctly different. I think he’s always been really good at making up characters that he does vocally song-to-song, especially on the last album [2008's Evil Urges]. But even in a subtle way like “They Ran,” each harmony has a different feel to it.
The Bear
It has that perfect Motown intro. That drumbeat has probably been used on hundreds of songs, yet it’s still one of my favorite intros to any song we’ve done. We’ve done some pretty rockin’ versions of it live, too..
Nashville to Kentucky
I don’t why I’ve always had this image in my head of Jim literally driving from Nashville to Kentucky, and it is one of the most boring drives EVER to go from Louisville to Nashville. You’re just on 65 pretty much the whole way and there’s really not a lot to see. There’s Dinosaur World about halfway, a Corvette manufacturing plant with a museum, and not much else. I imagine that it’s at night and completely dark and he can barely pick up any radio stations – just the reality of it.
Old Sept. Blues
When I first got the demo tape I listened to “Evelyn” and “Old Sept. Blues” on repeat, just those two songs over & over & over again. So, it’s always been one of my favorite songs. It’s just a perfectly crafted nugget, where all the fat’s been trimmed off.
If All Else Fails
Oh man, I’m gonna have to skip this one.
The Tennessee Fire |
It’s About Twilight Now
It’s the most rock song on Tennessee Fire, which is funny because it has no bass on it at all. I think it’s just the two guitars, drums and vocals. It takes me back to that studio in Shelbyville where everything was done on ¼-inch tape. It’s the sound you’d get there if you were trying to be really raucous like we were in the punk hardcore bands we were in before [MMJ]. That was the way drums and everything would blow up on tape. I always loved that song and thought it was going to have a different life. It became such a different piece when played live. It was still raucous but it was so brutal. At the end we’d slow down and it was like stoner rock.
Evelyn Is Not Real
I think it’s the hook that gets me. That guitar line is definitely a hook, and it’s kind of a take on the country tradition of mourning the loss of a love or a love that isn’t real. In a way, it’s always felt a touch tongue in cheek but sincere at the same time. We’re kind of poking fun at the genre but doing so with love. I don’t know if that was ever Jim’s intention but that was the way I first felt about this song. It’s kind of like that song “Faraway Eyes” by The Rolling Stones, where it’s a great song but it’s also grinning at convention.
War Begun
I always loved this bass line. I think John played bass on it. Listening back to it now, it reminds me of JJ Cale, where the guitar solo is kind of tiny sounding but still powerful. And the lyrics are brilliant – “Whenever your war gets out of hand I’ll take it on.” Everything about it I just loved. It gets requested a lot and it’s kind of a substitute for “Lay Low” or anything like that.
Picture of You
It’s got this lyric, “I’ve got a house in a court” but then, “I’ve got a car and a door and a big left arm.” That’s one of the strangest lyrics ever [laughs]. The lyrics all over this song are brilliant – “You don’t say I’ll wait up” and “You know I’m sorry/ You know I’d give you anything on a dime.”
I Will Be There When You Die
The original version of it sounds like a chair is being knocked over and a tape recorder is being walked through a room. Jim’s in one corner of the room playing and it’s like the tape recorder is coming to him. I love any recording where you get a sense of the room it was recorded in and the time and place. So, the original version I had on the demo tape had about a minute long intro where it was just guitars on top of guitars and chairs falling and this craziness. That was THE song when we first started touring Europe. I think there were a couple nights when Jim played it twice. He’d always step away from the mic and sing it in the crowd. Everybody would be dead silent, and a couple of us would take our smoke break during this song. There was something so beautiful about rolling a cigarette and smoking and experiencing the song the exact same way the crowd was. You didn’t really feel like a band member at that point; you’re just another member of the audience. You try not to search out these kinds of moments because you can’t force them, but it’s hard not to think, “How can I get back to this place?”
The Tennessee Fire inside cover |
The Dark
This has always been one of my favorites to play live. We used to start shows with this song for years and years. It’s got some pretty funny lyrics in it as well. The whole tinkling on the cymbals and the spaced out guitar in the intro has an incantation vibe to it.
By My Car
We always joked that we were going to put a sticker on At Dawn that said, “From the band that brought you ‘By My Car.’” Not that it was an unremarkable song at all, but we thought it was funny because it was one of the last songs on the record and we’d only played it live a few times. Again, this has some great lyrics in it. I love Jim’s hilariously violent lyrics and I think that started with this song. This has the line about wanting to kick his head in but it’s said with a sincerity that makes you wonder how serious he is. You just don’t know.
Butch Cassidy
I’m really excited to play this live. It’s always been one of my favorites, and I don’t think I’ve heard Jim play it until we were doing the rehearsals [for the Terminal 5 shows]. It has one of my favorite lyrics, not just by Jim, but of all-time: “‘Cause a soldier’s death is so much better than defeat just hanging around.” That’s such a gorgeous line, and like the best songs on this record, the song is just haunting and dark but done in a way that doesn’t feel like total despair. There’s still a little bit of hope.
I Think I’m Going to Hell
This brings back a memory of one of the first shows we played. It was outside on a hillside at a college campus, and we ended that show, like a lot of shows at that time, with this song. And there’s that line, “Lovers and children beware, devils and demons are coming to take me to hell.” And in the field beyond the crowd was this little girl skipping through the field with a kite tied to her hand. And I remember how fucked up and evil it was that Jim was screaming these lyrics with this little girl out there. That’s always stuck in my brain ever since. This song feels like Halloween.
While much of the Terminal 5 run is sold out, a handful of tickets remains for The Tennessee Fire and At Dawn performances. Find tickets here.
My Morning Jacket Tour Dates :: My Morning Jacket News :: My Morning Jacket Concert Reviews
JamBase | Aflame With Rock ‘n’ Roll
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MMJ Play Late Night TV & Live Webcast
5 ALBUMS IN 5 NIGHTS AT TERMINAL 5
![]() My Morning Jacket |
My Morning Jacket will be
taking over New York the next two weeks with multiple late night TV appearances leading up to their five-night
stand at Terminal 5. Tonight, guitarist Carl Broemel will be sitting in with The Roots on Late Night With Jimmy
Fallon. Click here for more info
on Carl’s new solo album, All Birds Say (ATO Records), which is in stores now.
The full band will then be the musical guest on Wednesday’s episode. Click here to enter the show’s “Band Bench”
sweepstakes for a chance to attend that taping. Tomorrow night, the quintet will perform on the Late Show With
David Letterman and as an added bonus will do a set for Live on Letterman. Starting at 8pm EST, the
guys will kick off an hour-long performance that fans can watch live over at the webcast’s official site.
Beginning next week on Monday, October 18, MMJ will kick off their feverishly anticipated run of five shows at
Terminal 5. Each night they will play one of their five beloved full-lengths from beginning to end. This is the first
time the ever-evolving band’s entire, eclectic catalogue can be experienced live in the span of a week. The guys will
also be playing in Louisville, KY on 10/29 and are proud to have The Louisville Youth Orchestra on hand to both
open and collaborate with the band.
My Morning Jacket Live Dates:
10/15: Portland, ME @ State Theatre
10/18: New York, NY @ Terminal 5
10/19: New York, NY @ Terminal 5
10/21: New York, NY @ Terminal 5
10/22: New York, NY @ Terminal 5
10/23: New York, NY @ Terminal 5
10/29: Louisville, KY @ KFC YUM! CENTER
My Morning Jacket
Tour Dates
::
My Morning Jacket News
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My Morning Jacket
Concert
Reviews
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Carl Broemel: Three Video Performances
VIDEO PERFORMANCES FOR “QUESTIONS,” “ENOUGH,” AND “CARRIED AWAY”
Leading up to the release of his solo album All Birds Say, which is out next week on August 31
(ATO Records), My Morning Jacket
guitarist Carl Broemel has
been steadily revealing performances of some of the tracks off the record. Check out “Questions,” “Enough,” and
“Carried Away” below.
Carl Broemel
Tour Dates
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Carl Broemel News
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Carl Broemel
Concert
Reviews
Lady Gaga Engaged To Marry Boyfriend Luc Carl?
No one would accuse Lady Gaga of being one of the world’s most conventional stars, but the pop hitmaker may be ready to settle down by moving in with and marrying her boyfriend, if a new tabloid scoop is to be believed.Gaga only reunited with her on-off lover Luc Carl two months ago, but the [...]
Lady Gaga’s Man is A Heartbreaking Cheat!
Lady Gaga’s Man is a Heartbreaking Cheat Lady Gaga’s ex-boyfriend, Luc Carl, is causing the singer tons of pain and torment. Grazia Magazine was first to report that the bartender who just went on holiday with Gaga in Texas, is still shacking up with his former girlfriend, despite recent photographs of Gaga and Luc making out [...]
Lady Gaga avoids sex to protect her ‘creativity’!
Lady Gaga has revealed that she avoids having sex for fear that someone could steal her ”creativity”. The eccentric singer, 24, who recently reunited with her ex Luc Carl, says she is trying to avoid sex for a rather off-beat reason. “I have this weird thing that if I sleep with someone they”re going to [...]
Lady Gaga Vanity Fair UK Sept. 2010 Cover Photo
Have you seen the September issue of Vanity Fair UK?The “Alejandro” hitmaker goes gray on the cover of the latest edition of the style guide. Things are also looking promising on the personal front in Gaga’s World. Gaga’s ex-boyfriend Luc Carl dumped his girlfriend to get back together with the pop star. New York bartender Luc [...]
MMJ’s Carl Broemel Carried Away Video
THAT SURE IS A PRETTY SHIMMER
While the exquisite, personal debut solo from My Morning Jacket multi-instrumentalist Carl Broemel doesn’t arrive until August 31 (pre-order here), we’ve got this advance peek at one of the album’s standouts.
Carl Broemel “Carried Away” from Tugboat Productions on Vimeo.
Carl Broemel Tour Dates :: Carl Broemel News :: Carl Broemel Concert Reviews
Carl Broemel: All Birds Say
MMJ GUITARIST WILL RELEASE SOLO ALBUM WEEK OF AUGUST 30
![]() Carl Broemel |
Carl Broemel‘s All
Birds Say is now available for pre-order. Each pre-order includes an immediate digital download of the
record, and delivery of the physical CD and/or vinyl during the August 30 week of release.
To visit the online store click here.
Select Fall Tour Dates:
9/1 – Nashville, TN – The Basement Album Release Show
10/7 – Indianapolis, IN – Radio Radio Onsale 7/30
10/9 – Chicago, IL – Schubas Onsale 7/30
10/20 – New York, NY – Joe’s Pub
Carl Broemel
Tour Dates
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Carl Broemel News
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Carl Broemel
Concert
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Carl Broemel
Carl Broemel
Carl Broemel by Dave Vann
The Tennessee Fire
My Morning Jacket by Dave Vann
The Tennessee Fire inside cover

