EMC has deployed a virtual desktop infrastructure at N.C.’s Northern Hospital of Surry County to improve data protection and lower health care costs. – IT infrastructure company EMC has unveiled plans to deploy its VDI (virtual desktop infrastructure) software at Northern Hospital of Surry County, in Mount Airy, N.C., to lower health care costs and increase data protection at the facility.
quot;We were running out of processing capacity and spa…
Posts Tagged ‘carolina’
EMC, VMware Deploy VDI Cloud at North Carolina Hospital
Facebook to Build Second Data Center in North Carolina
New $450 million facility will be located near Forest City in Rutherford County, about 75 miles west of Charlotte. – Facebook revealed Nov. 11 that it plans to build its second data center in North Carolina.
In a joint announcement with the world’s largest social networking Website, Gov. Bev Perdue said that the new $450 million facility will be located near Forest City in Rutherford County, about 75 miles west…
Mark Karan: Florida Tour in Nov; Free Download, Guitar Pedal
NEW GUITAR PEDAL WITH HARTMAN ELECTRONICS; FREE ARCHIVE DOWNLOAD
![]() Mark Karan |
Mark Karan has announced
a string of dates in Florida, Georgia and South Carolina in November with The Roy Jay Band, who will open all the
shows on this run. All dates are below.
Karan also recently co-designed an envelope filter with Hartman Electronics. The pedal is a classic 70′s Mutron III
sound optimized for tone, flexibility, and ease of use. More info here. Fans can get $50
off by clicking here to purchase.
Karan, Robin Sylvester, Mookie Siegel and Billy Lee Lewis will perform a very unique show to
celebrate Deborah Grabien‘s new book London Calling. The performance will be on
Sunday, October 10 at Book Passage in Corte Madera,
CA. The reception and reading is from 3-5 PM and the performance is from 5-6 PM.
Jemimah Puddleduck will perform at
Brewtopia in The Compound Grill in Phoenix, AZ on October 15. They will also hit The Mint in Los Angeles on
October 16. Click here for an archive of past shows.
TOUR DATES
WED, 11/3 – Pour House, Charleston, SC
THUR, 11/4 – Jack Rabbits, Jacksonville, FL
FRI, 11/5 – Funky Buddha Lounge, Boca Raton, FL
SAT, 11/6 – Play, Ybor City, FL (Tampa)
TUE, 11/9 – The Atlantic, Gainesville, FL
WED, 11/10 – Social, Orlando, FL
THUR, 11/11 – Smith’s, Atlanta, GA
FRI, 11/12 -Local 662, St. Petersburg, FL
Mark Karan and
Jemimah Puddleduck
Tour Dates
::
Mark Karan and
Jemimah Puddleduck News
::
Mark Karan and
Jemimah Puddleduck
Concert
Reviews
MoogFest Adds Bernie Worrell, Pnuma Trio, Dan Deacon & More
OCTOBER 29-31 IN ASHEVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA
The countdown to MoogFest 2010, the extraordinary three-day festival that celebrates the innovative
spirit of sonic pioneer Robert Moog, during Halloween weekend, Oct. 29 – 31 in downtown Asheville, NC,
is officially underway! AC Entertainment has rounded out the lineup, including many special late night performances
to be held at Club 828 and the Moogaplex.
Friday’s MoogFest additions include Javelin, Star Mountain, Lorn and Paper Tiger, plus
the
MoogFest exclusive, Dan Deacon‘s Ambient Analog Moog Set. Saturday welcomes Alex B, The Volt Per
Octaves
w/ Special Guest Bernie Worrell, Nosaj Thing, Projek Moog w/ Brian Kehew, Pnuma Trio, Strut & Friends
Perform “Check Your Head”, RBTS Win, Virtual Boy and DJ Bowie. And Sunday will now feature
Dark Party, Shout Out Out Out Out, Headtronics, MartyParty, Mindelixir, THUMP, Dâm-Funk DJ Set,
Gramatik, and Michael Menart.
In addition to the Red Bull Music Academy Moog Workshops and Panels (http://moogfest.com/2010/moogfest-2010/workshops/), MoogFest has
announced the addition of a fine arts component to the festival weekend. SYNTH: A Group Art Show Inspired by
Bob Moog is a showcase of hand made limited-edition prints inspired by Bob Moog’s legacy. Confirmed
artists and more information can be found here.
MoogFest 2010 tickets are on sale now. To purchase weekend passes or single day tickets and for more information
about the festival visit moogfest.com. To see the weekend
schedule click here.
MoogFest supports the Bob Moog
Foundation. For more information about Moog Music and its founder, Bob Moog, visit moogmusic.com.
Zac Brown Band: Play The Road
By: Dennis Cook
Zac Brown Band |
Success often makes new listeners wary of a band. Too many hits too fast and one may wonder if an artist is a flash in the pan and unworthy of a serious music fan’s attention. However, sometimes a truly talented, hard working group breaks through and the world is simply wise enough – for a rare change – to recognize a good thing when it lands in their lap.
In 2008 it seemed the Zac Brown Band came out of nowhere to pulverize the country charts, racking up four number one singles and double platinum album sales for what many thought was their debut, The Foundation. But, two self-released albums preceded this first major label release, along with a tour schedule that had kept the band away from home for as many as 200 gigs a year since 2002. All that wood shedding and club humping rings out in the confidence and craftsmanship of The Foundation, and the past two years where they’ve become a major headlining draw and a fixture on CMT and country radio shows in the utterly confident, absolutely winning follow-up You Get What You Give (released September 21 on Southern Ground/Atlantic), which opens with a scene full of hippie-esque wisdom played out over chord-skipping acoustic guitar and playful fiddle that ride a shuffling beat.
Spent the night with a friend of mine and a handle of good whiskey
Picked guitars and talked about how the glory days went missing
It didn’t take too long to find the truth inside that bottle
Cast a-sea so long ago was a message from my father
You keep your heart above your head and your eyes wide open
So this world can’t find a way to leave you cold
No, you’re not the only ship out on the ocean
Save your strength for things that you can change
Forget the ones you can’t
You got to let it go
You Get What You Give is a record with a huge potential audience, not just the country establishment that’s already embraced them. Within this talented bunch lays many points of connection for jam band aficionados (high level musicianship, broad cover tune sensibilities, a 420-friendly attitude, shifting setlists), Americana purists (dead solid songwriting, twang that’s stretched into interesting new forms) and straight-up mainstream rock fans.
ZBB @ Bonnaroo ’09 by Dave Vann |
“We realize that country radio and TV is the way they’re selling this music and the way we’re connecting with our fans but only during 4 or 5 songs in our live set do we even think we’re a country band,” says multi-instrumentalist Clay Cook. “I think we’re more concerned with songs than genre. Sure, we’re telling stories in our songs but it’s more of a southern approach than a strict country one.”
Like the best southern bands in the modern era, ZBB scoops up a wide array of influences and gives them a below-the-Mason-Dixon accent. Ronnie Van Zant-era Skynyrd did this well, as do contemporaries like JJ Grey & Mofro and Hill Country Revue, both of whom have more in common with the Zac Brown Band’s general vibe than most of what’s coming out of Nashville today. At the core of this group is one of the strongest emerging songwriting teams out there, namely Zac Brown and lyricist Wyatt Durrette, who possess a Tom Petty-like populist feel that’s VERY hard to resist.
“The way Zac approaches performing songs is so much different than anything I’ve been involved with before. You just really believe every word he says with the way he sings it,” says Cook. “I feel very lucky to be where I am in this band, especially because of the way we connect with audiences, and that stems from Zac.”
The band doesn’t hesitate to place their originals next some of the finest songwriting of the past 50 years, regularly covering tunes from The Band, Bob Marley, Van Morrison, Ray LaMontagne and other heavy hitters, with the company they keep reflecting the larger ambitions of the band. One also sees this in the high powered patronage of certifiable icons like Jimmy Buffett, Dave Matthews and Kid Rock, who’ve taken the band under their wing and welcomed them as openers and kindred spirits.
“When we’re picking covers we pick things we want to play, the songs we’re listening to on our iPods. This is the music we love. It’s stuff we’re intimately familiar with and huge fans of. We feel like it’s our duty to do a good job,” says Cook. “We’ve been playing Bob Dylan’s ‘I Shall Be Released,’ and I can’t tell you how many other versions are out there. But when we get onstage to play that song, I feel like we’re only the second or third band to ever attempt it, just by how we love it SO much. It’s a weird feeling, but we think we do that with certain songs, really live inside them and make them somewhat our own. Otherwise, we’ll play a song once and never again.”
Zac Brown Band |
On the Deluxe Edition of You Get What You Give, they do a fantastic cover of Ryan Adams’ “Oh My Sweet Carolina” (off Ryan’s solo debut Heartbreaker).
“It’s a live version and we did it in Louisville. And it was one of those situations where everyone felt so good about it, even though it was only the second or third time we’d attempted it in two or three years,” says Cook. “The only reason we played it in Louisville is it’s got a line that goes, ‘I miss Kentucky and I miss my family.’ Zac said, ‘Let’s just play this one!’ and we did and it was just beautiful. We had somebody mix it and throw it on the Deluxe Edition.”
The band mixes up their song selections nightly very much in the spirit of the never-repeat-yourself ethos of the jam scene.
“We kinda have to but the lighting and video guys really wish we’d stick to the same setlist [laughs]. But if we did the same setlist three nights in a row, by the third night we’d be fit to be tied. We’d be ready to do something different or even change [the arrangements of] songs up if we couldn’t change the setlist, changing up sections of songs as we’re playing them,” says Cook. “It forces you to be creative in different ways. We’ve had to feed from our record that’s been out there for a while. It’s been two years since The Foundation came out, and we have to play stuff from it because that’s why people bought tickets to see us. At least half the people in the audience have never seen us before and don’t know they’re going to see a real live show. And then hopefully the other half of the show is new stuff and covers. Unless we have three hours to play, we really have a hard time boiling down what we want to play every night.”
“At this point, we have six songs that are singles and that’s half an hour already. You have to play those songs. Then you have a few covers you’ve been playing that are working, so you have to play those because if we feel good about them at the moment we want to capitalize on that feeling. And the next time we come around [to a city] we’ll have a whole new set of covers. Then you want to play the stuff off the new record, and we also have special guests on this tour. Like Robert Randolph is opening for us, so we want to play a song with him. So, pretty soon the two-and-a-half-hours for our setlist is pretty full. It’s actually easier to write a three-hour setlist than a two-hour setlist.”
Zac Brown @ Bonnaroo ’09 by Dave Vann |
“A pop artist just wants to play their hits and get off the stage. They want to play a 90-minute set and anything more than that is unbearable to them. I remember talking to this country group Lady Antebellum, who came up to us at one of the awards shows. They just released their second album earlier this year, and they heard we were playing three and four hour shows and said, ‘Why are you doing this to us?’ They’ve only got about 90-minutes of material without covers, and that’s only if they play everything off both records. I said, ‘Well, we’re not a country band.’ We’re a live experience mainly.”
One area they excel at, live and in the studio, is in their rich harmonies. The overlap of voices, not just Brown’s own powerful, flexible pipes, is a lovely alternative to the Clean Room pristine quality of most of today’s auto-tuned, Pro-Tools enhanced “singing.”
“When they did the harmonies on the previous record [before Clay Cook joined ZBB], they had to work really hard on the vocals. And that record was cut almost four years ago with two of the vocalists that are here now and one that’s gone. Now, we sing SO much that I don’t think it took two days to get the background harmonies on [You Get What You Give]. We were just knocking them out. It was almost comical at one point when we realized that a great deal of these harmonies were done in one take,” says Cook. “We didn’t spend a lot of time in the studio tracking [anything on the new record]. A lot of the time spent was between gigs, where we’d go a month without doing anything because we’d be on the road. When we were off the road everybody wanted to go home for two or three days, so we couldn’t jump right back into the studio. And then we were on the road again!”
“We’ve taken measures to fix that on the next record. We’re building a studio in Zac’s backyard,” reveals Cook. “I think we’re gonna try to do this next record live, the solos and everything except maybe the vocals. We care a lot about the vocals and it’d suck to get all the way through an awesome take as a band and discover that two of the vocalists were a little bit off. At worst, we’ll record the entire band live and go back and capture the vocals, OR we’ll be just as gutsy as I hope we’ll be and just capture EVERYTHING live in the studio.”
Perhaps the best way to think of the Zac Brown Band is as the next generation of Great American Music bands in the spirit of the Grateful Dead, Little Feat and Goose Creek Symphony, where the inflection of their music can lean one way or another but the language they’re ultimately speaking is their own. What separates Zac Brown and his collaborators from these ancestors is an almost unerring knack for sinking deep into the pop vernacular. Spin You Get What You Give for almost anyone, regardless of their primary listening habits, and by the last track there’s bound to be one or more cuts that float their boat. It’s a broad, readily appealing reach that hints at a future cult following the likes of which Buffett, Rock and the Dave Matthews Band enjoy.
Zac Brown Band Tour Dates :: Zac Brown Band News :: Zac Brown Band Concert Reviews
JamBase | Giving
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North Carolina Continues to See IT Job Growth
The Tar Heel state has seen three straight months of technology job opportunity expansion, with two months seeing double-digit growth. A North Carolina industry trade group which sponsors a monthly report is tempering the growth with regional caution. – For two straight months, the
state of North
Carolina has
seen double-digit growth in jobs for technology professionals. Home to
many
technology-rich university research facilities, technology startups and
a
plethora of technology-centric enterprises, North Carolina saw 14.9
percent more tech…
August 2, 1790: New Nation Comes to Its Census
1790: In keeping with a tradition at least as old as the Romans and constitutionally mandated by the Founding Fathers, the first U.S. Census begins.
Federal representatives fanned out across the original 13 states, tabulating information on American households, just as they have every 10 years since. The information was used to estimate taxes, assign [...]
The 50 Hottest South American Women
The recent World Cup made pretty clear that, overall, South America easily has the most beautiful women in the world. Sure, you can find 10s on any continent (there’s probably even a hot scientist or two on Antarctica) but average is a hell of a lot hotter in South America than in the rest of [...]
June 7-13
MONDAY, JUNE 7
JOIN homegrown singer Jessica Soo for an intimate concert, Favourite Folk Tunes. The former TV host is accompanied by friends Cat Ong, David Ng and Keong, as they perform an hour of familiar folk songs of the 60s and 70s like Joni Mitchell’s Both Sides Now, The Seekers’ I’ll Never Find Another You and James Taylor’s Carolina On My Mind.
Date: June 7
Time: 10.30am and 3pm,
Venue: Esplanade Recital Studio.
Tickets: $12 from Sistic.
My Morning Jacket | 04.30 | North Carolina
Words by: Nick Todaro | Images by: Lane Flexner
My Morning Jacket :: 04.30.10 :: Koka Booth Amphitheatre :: Cary, NC
MMJ :: 04.30 :: North Carolina |
It was four songs into My Morning Jacket‘s first North Carolina set in three years that Jim James demonstrated how charismatic of a guy he actually is. Drunken concertgoers had been pelting the band with glow sticks following an explosion of them during “Gideon.” Relentlessly, a few bumptious audience members decided to make the band members’ faces targets for the plastic luminaries. Rather than acting annoyed or frustrated by the behavior, Mr. James took it in stride by picking up an orange one he had managed to dodge and placing it in his mouth. As the band roared into “Off The Record,” James continued gnawing on the stick as if he were a dog chewing his favorite bone.
For the group’s show at Cary’s beautiful Koka Booth Amphitheatre, this incident summed up the theme of the night: try to make a bad situation enjoyable. Neither Jacket or the Preservation Hall Jazz Band contributed to the atypical circumstances surrounding the show, it was completely out of their hands. As a matter of fact, the Preservation Hall Jazz Band, who went on just before sundown and had Jim James join them onstage for two songs, had spirits high throughout their signature performance of NOLA classics. Unfortunately, both the sound quality and the crowd atmosphere seemed to have been in the gutter on what could have been a monumental My Morning Jacket show.
A complaint about this particular venue frequently voiced within the Triangle music scene is that the sound is way too low during performances. This is mostly due to the amphitheatre park being surrounded by neighborhoods that like to complain. Being third row at a concert should mean that you’re engulfed in a sea of sound, not struggling to hear the lyrics to your favorite song. Working against this was also the rowdy, talkative crowd. Packs of overly intoxicated – and most likely fraternity – “bros” made the pit situation even worse by persistently shoving and taunting fans that would not allow them closer access to the stage. Constantly, threats of violence echoed out down in the pit as if it were a battle between Jacket fans and the kids treating the experience as a keg party.
If any of these conditions affected My Morning Jacket, there was no way of telling. The setlist featured a number of specialties that had some fans overwhelmed. Following the opener, “Tonight I Want To Celebrate With You,” twilight had struck the grounds, providing the perfect scenic conditions for a spine tingling “At Dawn.” With twinkling specks of light reflecting off the lake positioned to the left side of the venue, the song had a genuine feel to it while acting as a gift to the folks hoping to hear anything off of At Dawn.
Watching Jim James’ onstage antics also helped make up for the horrible atmosphere. Sporting a gun holster with a toy revolver and a Nintendo Duck Hunt gun inside, Jim showed off his slinging capabilities during “What A Wonderful Man” and “Touch Me Pt. 2.” “Wordless Chorus” further displayed James’ playful nature with the singer donning a cap and joyfully posing as a superhero. Remarkably, none of this distracts the rest of the musicians in the group. Bo Koster, Patrick Hallahan and Tom Blankenship all seemed to be feeding off the vibes James created throughout the night by gradually increasing the intensity of their playing.
Guitarist Carl Broemel was notably front and center for a good portion of the show, too. Between his feverish guitar solo on “Steam Engine” and dulcet display of saxophone playing on “Dondante,” he had the chance to sing lead vocals on a new track, “Carried Away.” Premiering at the band’s recent Nashville stop, the tune finds MMJ going back to their It Still Moves days with a twangy, Southern feel.
Another highlight of the evening was the encore portion accented by the Preservation Hall Jazz Band. For the second time this tour, the group busted out “Dancefloors” with the boys from NOLA backing them up. Having this and “Move On Up” – a Curtis Mayfield cover that premiered as the opener to MMJ’s New Year’s Eve show at Madison Square Garden in 2008 – being played at a regular Jacket stop felt absolutely sensational. With any luck, this tour will be the first in a long history of collaborations between the two ensembles.
As the saying goes, if you don’t like something change it; and if you can’t change it, change the way you think about it. In this case, the show should be remembered for the consequential value of premier musicianship by one of America’s best live bands. No matter how obnoxious some spectators may have been, they can never take that away from My Morning Jacket.
My Morning Jacket :: 04.30.10 :: Koka Booth Amphitheatre :: Cary, NC
Tonight I Want To Celebrate With You, At Dawn, Gideon, Off The Record, What A Wonderful Man, I’m Amazed, Mahgeetah, Touch Me Pt 1, Golden, Steam Engine, The Way He Sings, Wonderful (The Way I Feel), Carried Away^, Dondante, Smokin From Shootin, (End Of) Run Thru, Touch Me Pt 2, One Big Holiday
E: Wordless Chorus, Dancefloors*, Highly Suspicious*, Carnival Time*, Move On Up*
^ Carl On Lead Vocals
* w/ Preservation Hall Jazz Band
My Morning Jacket Tour Dates :: My Morning Jacket News :: My Morning Jacket Concert Reviews
JamBase | Still Moving
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12 People Who Are Clearly Not Smarter Than A Fifth Grader
While there may be billions of fools out there, these 12 very famous people have been deemed fit to be recognized as being dumber than a fifth grader.


Deerhunter | 03.21 | North Carolina
Words by: Nick Todaro | Images by: Josh Jarrett
Deerhunter :: 03.21.10 :: Cat’s Cradle :: Carrboro, NC
Deerhunter :: 03.21.10 :: Carrboro, NC |
When a band like Deerhunter decides to take on the role of supporting act for a big name band like Spoon, the regular elements of their live show become constrained to appeal to a broader audience and succumb to time limitations. That’s why, in many cases, these bands decide to do a one-off headlining gig to blow off such restrictions and have some fun. On a cloudy Sunday night in Carrboro, NC, Bradford Cox and company decided to take a break from their opening gig with Spoon and put on a show of their own.
The evening’s opening acts were local and provided a taste of Carrboro’s music scene. Free Electric State and Schooner both had the crowd in a pleasant mood with their takes on the indie genre. As the latter concluded their set with a powerfully thick instrumental breakdown, their hometown audience began crowding the front stage area for a spot up close to the headliner.
One of these crowd members, a lanky young man with dark, shaggy hair, progressed his way to the front row holding a head of cabbage with four raw hotdogs stuck in its leaves at various angles. “I must give my present to Bradford,” shouted the giddy fellow as he took his spot front and center and plopped the outre gift directly in front of Cox’s microphone stand.
Not long after, Deerhunter took the stage with the title track from 2007′s Cryptograms. Quickly, the venue became an epicenter for an explosion of pulsating percussion and disintegrating guitars. Bradford Cox’s wraithlike silhouette whimpered out the concluding lines of the song, “My eyes were blurred/ There was no sound/ There was no sound,” as the elements of the performance continued to amalgamate then fade out.
Following this electrifying opener were two new songs, one of which featured lead vocals by guitarist Lockett Pundt. Much like the rest of their catalogue – and even most of Cox’s Atlas Sound side project – a bright layer of ambience immersed from the band’s tightly knit blend of indie rock. Pundt’s primary singing was a new effort for the band, and it kept the sound fresh while maintaining lots of commotion and tempo changes.
“Those were two new songs and this is an old one,” declared Cox as the group went into Microcastle favorite “Never Stops” before diving back into another Cryptogram crowd pleaser “Hazel St.” During its breakdown, the manipulation of the song’s original structure once again identified Deerhunter as one of the front-runners in indie music. After all, any band that takes songs that are merely three years old and creates entirely new dimensions to them earns such a title. The band also mastered a similar experience with “Little Kids.”
Bradford Cox :: 03.21.10 :: Carrboro, NC |
Wanting to try out more new material, the quartet tested “Revival” to an accepting crowd. Much like tracks off of their most recent release, Rainwater Cassette Exchange EP, the material mixed the post-punk, art rock and experimental genres for a completely unique sound. “Nothing Ever Happened” and “Microcastle” both received a warm reception, as did the dancey b-side “Operation.”
Deciding to stick to the more avant-garde side of their group personality, the b-side to Microcastles‘ “Calvary Scars,” “Calvary Scars II/Aux Out” surprisingly commenced. During its performance, a younger fan – a boy around 11-12 years-old wearing a Grizzly Bear shirt – was brought up to play tambourine. As the song progressed, bassist Josh Fauver decided to set aside his instrument and hoist the youngster up on his shoulders. Setting the boy down, he took him off-stage while the remaining three members, with Cox now on synthesizer, jammed out the rest of the song.
Suddenly, empty beer cans began flying from the backstage area. Confused, Cox climbed on top of his amplifier to raise his middle finger in the air, and the two perpetrators soon returned to their respective spots. Looking at Bradford, Fauver admitted, “I paid him to throw things at you.” With a mischievous look in his eye, Cox asked the kid to come back onstage. He whipped out a $100 bill and proposed, “I will give you 100 dollars if you pull down Josh’s pants.” Laughing, the kid accepted his offer and Fauver reluctantly allowed himself to be embarrassed in front of the large audience. Lucky for him, and the crowd, he remembered to put on his boxers that day.
Gearing back into performance mode, “Agoraphobia” mesmerized the crowd with it gorgeous composition and eldritch lyrics:
Cover me, Cover me
Comfort me, Comfort me
I had a dream, no longer to be free
I want only to see, four walls made of concrete
Six by six enclosed, see me on video
Feed me twice a day, I want to fade away
As the other three band members walked off the stage for a break, Cox remained and picked at his guitar for a few extra measures. Thinking he should follow them before the encore, he propped his guitar on its stand, stepped in the direction of backstage, stopped, and came back to the mic. “Ya know, I don’t really have to piss,” proclaimed Cox, and Deerhunter returned to the stage to bang out “Fluorescent Grey” to close the night.
Ending the number with another sonic storm of experimentation, the band left eardrums pounding as the house lights came up. Adding to what was an already remarkable night, the band decided to head outside of the club to shake hands and sign autographs. Proving their musical chops, and backing it up with a humble attitude toward their fans, these guys deserve to one day establish themselves as a prominent force in the world of live performances.
Deerhunter :: 03.21.10 :: Cat’s Cradle :: Carrboro, NC
Cryptograms, New Song, New Song, Never Stops, Hazel St., Little Kids, New Song (Revival), Nothing Ever Happened, Microcastle, Operation, Calvary Scars II/Aux Out, Intro > Agoraphobia
E: Fluorescent Grey
Deerhunter Tour Dates :: Deerhunter News :: Deerhunter Concert Reviews
JamBase | Deerly Beloved
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Details On New Kate Gosselin Reality Show
Former Jon & Kate Plus 8 star Kate Gosselin will return to television in a new TLC reality show later this year, the network said Wednesday.
The still-untitled show will feature the newly-divorced mother of eight as she embarks on “different jobs and tasks and showing how she performs in the different environments,” an network [...]
The Avett Brothers | 12.31 | NC
Images by: John Zara
The Avett Brothers :: 12.31.09 :: Asheville Civic Center :: Asheville, NC
The Avett Brothers celebrated the end of 2009 in their home state of North Carolina. Joining the Avetts on this special night were Langhorne Slim and Sallie Ford & the Sound Outside.
Setlist
Greatest Sum (Electric), Go To Sleep, Head Full of Doubt Road Full of Promise, Will You Return, Talk On Indolence, Ballad of Love and Hate, January Wedding, The Perfect Space, Tin Man, Distraction #74, Salvation Song, Wanted Man
NYE countdown
This Will Be Our Year*, And It Spread, Tear Down The House, Salina, Gimmieakiss, I and Love and You, Swept Away**, Slight Figure of Speech, Laundry Room
E: Paranoia in bFlat Major, Colorshow
*Zombies cover
**with Avetts’ sister, Bonnie
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For more on The Avett Brothers see our exclusive feature interview here.
JamBase | Ashvegas
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Carolina Chocolate Drops: Genuine Negro Jig & Tour
CAROLINA CHOCOLATE DROPS’ GENUINE NEGRO JIG OUT 2/23
Carolina Chocolate Drops |
Nonesuch Records is set to release Genuine Negro Jig, the label debut of North Carolina-based string band the Carolina Chocolate Drops on February 23. The album was produced by critically acclaimed recording artist and songwriter Joe Henry (Allen Toussaint, Elvis Costello, Solomon Burke).
Genuine Negro Jig features string band interpretations of Blu Cantrell‘s beat-box driven R&B single “Hit ‘Em Up Style” and Tom Waits‘ “Trampled Rose,” as well as a pair of original compositions, alongside traditional tracks such as “Cornbread and Butterbeans” and “Trouble in Your Mind.”
It is the band’s second record; their 2007 release, Dona Got a Ramblin’ Mind, was praised by Paste for “bravely and expertly reclaiming the string band tradition for modern African-American culture,” while NPR‘s Weekend Edition calls the band “the hottest thing to hit the old-time music community in decades.” The band is touring in advance of the album’s release, dates below.
The Carolina Chocolate Drops formed after band members Dom Flemons, Rhiannon Giddens and Justin Robinson met at the Black Banjo Gathering in Boone, NC in 2005, and have toured continuously since the band’s inception. All three trained in the Piedmont banjo and fiddle musical tradition under the tutelage of Joe Thompson, who, at age 90, is believed to be the last living performer from the Piedmont string band heyday. While old-time Southern string music is often associated with Caucasian musicians from Appalachia, Giddens pointed out in a recent NPR interview that “it seems that two things get left out of the history books. One, that there was string band music in the Piedmont, period. (And that) black folk was such a huge part of string tradition.” The Carolina Chocolate Drops seek to not only correct this misunderstanding, but to keep the centuries-old string music tradition alive and developing.
The members of Carolina Chocolate Drops all come from diverse musical backgrounds, sharing singing duties and swapping instruments throughout their sets. Flemons has immersed himself in the music of the past, with a prodigious record collection and an immense knowledge of the different playing styles of the blues, country, and string band traditions. In addition to her work with Joe Thompson, Giddens — a Piedmont native — studied opera at Oberlin Conservatory, performs with a Celtic band and is also an avid contra dancer and caller. Robinson, the group’s main fiddler, also plays banjo; he grew up in a house full of musicians—his mother is a classically trained opera singer and cellist, his sister a classical pianist and his grandfather a harmonica player.
Carolina Chocolate Drops Tour Dates
01/08/10 Fri Melting Point Athens, GA
01/10/10 Sun The Pour House Charleston, SC
01/14/10 Thu Dartmouth College Hanover, NH
01/15/10 Fri Dartmouth College Hanover, NH
01/16/10 Sat Dartmouth College Hanover, NH
01/18/10 Mon Birchmere Alexandria, VA
01/19/10 Tue Rams Head On Stage Annapolis, MD
01/21/10 Thu Venue Music Bar Freeport, ME
01/22/10 Fri Iron Horse Music Hall Northampton, MA
01/23/10 Sat Somerville Theatre Somerville, MA
01/30/10 Sat Derby University Derby, GB
01/31/10 Sun Memorial Hall Sheffield, GB
02/03/10 Wed St. Georges Bristol, GB
02/04/10 Thu Bush Hall London, GB
02/05/10 Fri Arlington Arts Centre Newbury, GB
02/06/10 Sat The Met Bury, GB
02/25/10 Thu Royal Art Theater Danville, IN
02/26/10 Fri Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis St. Louis, MO
02/27/10 Sat Fitzgerald’s Berwyn, IL
02/28/10 Sun Schubas Chicago, IL
03/01/10 Mon Down by the Riverside Rochester, MN
03/02/10 Tue Down by the Riverside Rochester, MN
03/03/10 Wed Down by the Riverside Rochester, MN
03/04/10 Thu Down by the Riverside Rochester, MN
03/05/10 Fri Down by the Riverside Rochester, MN
03/06/10 Sat Mayo Civic Center Rochester, MN
03/09/10 Tue Calvin College Grand Rapids, MI
03/13/10 Sat Stone Mountain Arts Center Brownfield, ME
03/14/10 Sun Bowery Ballroom New York, NY
05/01/10 Sat Schomburg Center For Research In Black Culture New York, NY
05/22/10 Sat Ohio River Valley Folk Festival Madison, IN
05/28/10 Fri Montpelier Cultural Arts Center Laurel, MD
06/13/10 Sun Spoleto Festival Charleston, SC
James Taylor & Carole King Announce World Tour
CAROLE KING AND JAMES TAYLOR ANNOUNCE TROUBADOUR REUNION WORLD TOUR
Hollywood Bowl Tickets Go On Sale November 23 With N. American and European Dates To Be Announced Soon
James Taylor |
Iconic musicians Carole King and James Taylor announced today that they will embark on a Troubadour Reunion world tour. The world tour will kick off in Melbourne, Australia on March 27 and will then travel to New Zealand and Japan before coming to North America and Europe. This once-in-a-lifetime event brings together two of the most beloved singer/songwriters for a rare concert experience. The set list will include a breadth of material including songs King and Taylor performed during their 1970 debut show at the Troubadour in Los Angeles, which helped propel them both to the world stage. Tickets for dates in Australia, New Zealand, and The Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles go on-sale November 23. Tickets for dates in Japan go on sale December 12. Additional dates in North America and Europe will be announced soon.
The idea for the Troubadour Reunion tour came together in 2007 after Taylor and King performed at the famed Los Angeles venue for the first time since 1970 to celebrate the Troubadour’s 50th Anniversary. The shows sold out immediately and garnered rave reviews from fans and critics alike. The Los Angeles Times noted “the sense of occasion [and] weight of history in the evening” and Variety said “Taylor and King reminded us about the intensity of song, that the artistically-rich and commercially-viable are not mutually exclusive and how one tiny club continues to be a birthing room for some of this city’s most memorable music.”
Now fans outside of Los Angeles will be able to experience what was created on that magical evening in 2007. Nearly four decades after helping define the singer-songwriter movement, King and Taylor will tour together with their original band mates: guitarist Danny “Kootch” Kortchmar, drummer Russ Kunkel, and bassist Lee Sklar, famous in their own right as The Section.
“When James and I first played together in the early seventies, we connected immediately, both musically and personally, with an effortless, comfortable familiarity,” says Carole King. “After we reunited in 2007 with Danny Kortchmar, Lee Sklar, and Russ Kunkel, the original band from our early Troubadour shows, none of us wanted the fun to stop. We can’t wait to bring our Troubadour Reunion tour to Australia.”
“This tour, our Troubadour Reunion, has been waiting to happen for a long time and the years seem to have vanished, where does the time go?” asks Taylor. “When we reunited for the Troubadour’s 50th Anniversary celebration, it felt like yesterday. It was and still is all about the music and the songs that we get to perform together.”
James Taylor and Carole King Tour Dates
03/14/10 Sun Hollywood Bowl Los Angeles, CA
03/27/10 Sat Rod Laver Arena Melbourne, AU
03/31/10 Wed Brisbane Entertainment Centre Brisbane, AU
04/03/10 Sat Hope Estate Winery Hunter Valley, AU
04/06/10 Tue Sydney Entertainment Centre Sydney, AU
04/10/10 Sat Vector Arena Auckland, NZ
04/14/10 Wed Budokan Hall Tokyo, JP
04/16/10 Fri Budokan Hall Tokyo, JP
Carole King performed with James Taylor at the Troubadour in November 1970. This historic show marked King’s debut as a solo artist after penning 22 Top 40 hits for artists ranging from Aretha Franklin to The Monkees, while Taylor was supporting his self-titled Apple Records release featuring classics such as “Carolina In My Mind” and “Something In The Way She Moves.” Both have since become multi-platinum-selling artists, Grammy winners, and members of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the Songwriters Hall of Fame.
In 1971, King gave us the landmark Tapestry. The album received a Diamond Award from the RIAA for sales of more than 10 million units in the U.S., with more than 25 million units sold worldwide. King was the first woman to win four Grammy Awards in one year (Best Album, Best Song, Best Record, and Best Vocal Performance in 1972), a feat unsurpassed for more than 25 years, and was featured on the cover of Time Magazine in 1973. In 1987, King and Gerry Goffin were inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame and honored with their Lifetime Achievement Award in 1988. Goffin and King were also inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1990 and were honored by The National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences in 2004 with the Grammy Trustees’ Award. To date, more than 400 Carole King compositions have been recorded by more than 1000 artists, resulting in 100 hit singles – many reaching #1. She is arguably the most successful and revered female songwriters in pop music history. Carole King has released 25 solo albums, the most recent being The Living Room Tour double-live CD on her own Rockingale Records label. The companion DVD, entitled Welcome to My Living Room, is now available.
Over the course of his career, James Taylor has sold more than 40 million albums, and won more than 40 gold, platinum and multi-platinum awards as well as five Grammy Awards. Taylor’s first Greatest Hits album also earned him the RIAA’s elite Diamond Award. In 2000, Taylor was inducted into both the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the Songwriters Hall of Fame. In February 2006, The National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences named Taylor its MUSICARES Person of the Year. Taylor’s 2007 CD/DVD One Man Band was nominated for an Emmy and his most recent album, Covers, was nominated for two Grammy Awards in 2008. He most recently released Other Covers in April 2009.
Two F-16s collide over Atlantic
The US military launched a nighttime search for a pilot missing in the Atlantic ocean Thursday after two F-16 fighter jets collided, the US Air Force said. One of the two aircraft landed safely at an air force base near Charleston in the southeastern state of South Carolina, from where the





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