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Phish | 08.11 | Chicago

Words by: Cal Roach | Images by: Chad Smith

Phish :: 08.11.09 :: Toyota Park :: Bridgeview, IL

Phish :: 08.11.09 :: Bridgeview, IL

Ah, predicting of the opener, a time honored tradition that I have always sucked at. Conventional wisdom would deem Toyota Park, the lone Midwestern stop on the second summer leg, a potential sleeper show, which just means that as usual, anything at all might happen. We hadn’t seen “Kill Devil Falls” open in a while, so I suppose we were about due, and this set the tone for a show that would see all the usual 3.0 suspects rolled out. By now, Phish is entrenched in “KDF.” It’s little more than a middle-aged “Chalk Dust Torture” update, but it has already shown itself to have potential, though tonight’s version was pretty standard, tight with a couple of nice little peaks.

You could smell the “Ocelot” coming already. Both of these tunes took their eighth at-bat of the year, and while “KDF” has had a couple of monstrous outings already, I’m beginning to lose faith in “Ocelot.” It features a very indistinct, vaguely Deadheaded guitar riff and doesn’t seem to be able to break free of that lackadaisical stroll. I’m sure it will probably blast into space one of these nights, but there are far more interesting launch pads in the repertoire.

Phish got “Sample In A Jar” out of the way sort of oddly in the number two slot, then busted out “Paul and Silas” after “Ocelot” for some guy Trey had met walking down the street. And then, the debut of “Windy City,” a new Page tune. It was about what you’d expect from a new Page tune – kind of bluesy, a little adventurous with the time signatures, well-sung and with a perfunctory Trey wail in the end. Nothing mind-blowing, but it was a pleasant surprise to hear a Chicago tribute coming from Phish.

Trey Anastasio :: 08.11.09

If this brand new song was exciting for its novelty alone, “The Curtain With” was exciting in every possible way. The song took on an untouchable reverence after its sacrificial slaughter at Coventry, and having missed the Red Rocks breakout (read the review here), this one hit me like a ton of cement blocks. It’s such a gorgeous composition in itself, and it is so nice to be able to hear the “With” portion in all its aching beauty without cringing. The jam was “Reba”-esque, concise but triumphant, maybe even defiant, taken back from disgrace.

After a quick “Train Song” that felt right in its placement, we were treated to a near-epic “Gumbo” dropped for the second time since Hampton. This one was textbook, but in a good way. Post-hiatus versions generally felt tossed-off, and while this was no barnburner, the short jam was melodic and smooth and Page’s solo was comfort food. “Heavy Things” perpetuated the upbeat, spirited playing, Trey naturally taking the reins this time and turning in some top-notch licks that any spoiled tourhead knows he could pull off in his sleep.

I know there are a lot of “Time Turns Elastic” haters out there, but I’m a firm believer in this end-of-set-one placement for the song. Those who don’t dig it can get to the bathrooms early, but I am still excited to watch it mature. I think it would really benefit from a high-octane guest vocalist (sort of a requirement for most prog-rock of this caliber) to be brought out as a rarity, but for now they have to keep powering through it or it’ll never find its feet. I thought it scorched to close set one at Alpine earlier in the summer (read the review here), and tonight’s closing improv was the most adventurous we’ve seen – sort of scattered and hectic, foreshadowing the madness to come, and explosive in the end.

Before this show, I didn’t see a lot of potential for “Backwards Down The Number Line” as much more than a first-set “Heavy Things” surrogate, but it proved me wrong. After the song proper, Trey and Mike instantly grabbed a sustainable groove and took it into stratospheric rock territory, eventually backing off into low-key skronk that cranked quickly back into high gear, finally dipping into some mad Atari funk. And before it had any chance to peter out, Trey ripped into THE breakout of the show: “Carini.”

Trey & Mike :: 08.11.09

Sometimes you have an experience dreamed out in your head to its maximum choiceness, then you forget about it for a while, and then it actually happens and it’s better than you’d even conceived of. Phish has done that for me more than any other group, and that might be the crux of why I love this band so much. I never expected Mike to be just busting bomb after bomb, the glorious screech of the final chorus, and then Trey just incinerated it in one of the most frightening displays I’ve heard from him this year.

There’s no denying that “Gotta Jibboo” was a shift in character, from evil to pure joy, but as far as an individual jam it was hard to say whether Trey or Page was more glorious. However, it was such a thrill just to be wondering such things again. “Theme From The Bottom” could have been better. While Page was busy killing it, Trey completely dropped the ball in the end, and he was pretty unimaginative throughout the jam. Their trip to the dark side continued with a ferocious “Wilson.” I could get used to hearing this deep into the second set. It was no paint-by-numbers version, too. They’ve barely jammed it out at all this year, and this one got heavy fast and just oozed electricity. I guess they can still have fun with it.

Then, the cult of “2001″ got its collective wish. It’s always a joy to hear, but it definitely has lost its luster since its heyday in the mid-to-late-90s. Then came the amazing version from Deer Creek earlier in the year (read the review here), and suddenly this one was a journey and a destination all over again. This reading didn’t approach the ecstasy of Deer Creek or the weirdness of the crawling Red Rocks version (read that review here), but it was certainly sufficient.

The “Chalk Dust” that emerged from “2001″ was the best I’ve heard in ages, a simply stunning construction of sound. Mike was creative from the very beginning and he dominated the jam, luring some truly intuitive group improv from the whole band, surging as one entity from a little downtempo groove to a heady peak.

Phish :: 08.11.09 :: Bridgeview, IL

Okay, I admit it, I was hoping for “Harry Hood.” I hadn’t heard a single version from this year that I thought was really good. This version’s jam started pretty sloppy and got dangerously ambient, Trey seeming almost to lose it completely but then he started “First-Tubing” his way out of it. Page caught on quickly and the first mini-peak was very sweet. What followed was simply Page taking control, waking “Hood” up from its post-millennial stupor and destroying it. It was far from perfect, the ending completely awkward as it’s been almost every time this year, but I really felt it was a heroic effort by Page. If “The Squirming Coil” hadn’t been in the plan already, Page had just earned it. Pure bliss to end the set, like a long-lost friend, plus Mr. McConnell’s excellent solo, it was pure John Paul Jones 1977 “No Quarter” stuff. Just stunning.

The “Loving Cup” encore could’ve just as easily been sung by Page. He played a baaad piano tonight, and in one of the heaviest sets by Phish 3.0 so far. But Trey deserves a shout-out as well. Even though the sets were light on segues or lengthy thematic explorations, they were tight, bursting with energy and never boring for a second. That only happens when everybody’s on, and tonight everybody was.

Phish :: 08.11.09 :: Toyota Park :: Bridgeview, IL

Set I: Kill Devil Falls, Sample In A Jar, Ocelot, Paul and Silas, Windy City, The Curtain With, Train Song, Gumbo, Heavy Things, Time Turns Elastic

Set II: Backwards Down the Number Line > Carini > Gotta Jibboo, Theme From The Bottom, Wilson, 2001 > Chalk Dust Torture, Harry Hood, The Squirming Coil

E: Loving Cup

For more pics of this show, go here.

Phish perform next on Thursday, August 13 at Darien Lake Performing Arts Center in Darien Center, NY. Check back for live Tweets, setlists, pics and full reviews. Complete Phish tour dates available href="http://www.jambase.com/Artists/2698/Phish/Shows">here.

Keep up to speed with all things Phish at jambase.com/phish.


JamBase | Pheelin’ It
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Phish | 08.11 | Chicago Photos

Images by: Chad Smith

Phish :: 08.11.09 :: Toyota Park :: Bridgeview, IL

Set I: Kill Devil Falls, Sample In A Jar, Ocelot, Paul and Silas, Windy City, The Curtain With, Train Song, Gumbo, Heavy Things, Time Turns Elastic

Set II: Backwards Down the Number Line > Carini > Gotta Jibboo, Theme From The Bottom, Wilson, 2001 > Chalk Dust Torture, Harry Hood, The Squirming Coil

E: Loving Cup


Order the show for Download on LivePhish.com

Phish perform next on Thursday, August 13 at Darien Lake Performing Arts Center in Darien Center, NY. Check back for live Tweets, setlists, pics and full reviews. Complete Phish tour dates available href="http://www.jambase.com/Artists/2698/Phish/Shows">here.

Keep up to speed with all things Phish at jambase.com/phish.

JamBase | Chicago

Go See Live Music!



Football Season Preview

Last season in the AFC East, the unexpected, well, didn’t happen. No one beat out the New England Patriots to break the red, white, and blue stranglehold on the title. The New York Jets and Buffalo Bills showed major improvement over their performances of the previous season, and the Miami Dolphins were, well, the Miami [...]

‘Dire shortage’ at UN food agency

A World Food Programme plane in Darwin, Australia (file image)

The UN food agency says it is facing critical funding shortages that have forced it to cut aid deliveries to millions of people facing starvation.

The World Food Programme (WFP) said it could have to close parts of its airway, used to fly aid workers to humanitarian trouble-spots.

Deliveries have already been suspended to north Uganda, Ivory Coast and Niger.

The organisation has issued similar warnings in the past when facing funding shortages.

The UN Humanitarian Air Service (UNHAS), operated by WFP, has a budget for 2009 of $160m (£96m) but has received less than $90m in fees and contributions this year.

WFP spokesman Greg Barrow said UNHAS was "a vital component of humanitarian operations across the world".

"But because of a funding shortfall there is now a grave risk that the air service … could literally be grounded in the next few weeks due to a lack of funds," he said.

Closures

<img src="http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/46140000/jpg/_46140495_007349512-1.jpg" align="left" width="226" height="170" alt="People queue for WFP aid in Peshawar, Pakistan (20 May 2009)” border=”0″ vspace=”4″ hspace=”4″>

WFP said funding for the airline’s Chad service will run out on 15 August and needs $6.7m (£4m) to continue flying to the end of the year.

Spokeswoman Emilia Casella said the single-plane service flies an average of 4,000 humanitarian passengers to and from Chad each month.

She said the cancellation would not stop food deliveries taking place, but would mean that aid workers would not be able to reach communities that need them most.

The service supplying Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea needs $3.3m (£1.9m) to continue flying to the end of the year.

Pierre Carrasse, Chief of WFP’s Aviation Branch, asked how workers could reach the often remote areas affected by conflict without the airline.

"How will WFP reach the hungry How will doctors reach their patients How will people have clean water if the engineers who help to build wells can’t get there," he asked.

Shortages have already led to UNHAS closing its service in Ivory Coast in February.

The Niger service, also suspended that month, is expected to resume in August after a recent donation from the UN Common Emergency Relief Fund.

The UN says 102 million people in 78 countries received food aid last year. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Nigerian Islamist fighters ‘flee’

A police car stands near a pile of belongings taken from dead suspected militants in Maiduguri, 29 July

Members of a Nigerian Islamist radical sect have fled the northern city of Maiduguri after the military overran their enclave, reports say.

The army has stormed the base of Boko Haram’s leader and militants were fleeing the city, according to journalists and the army.

It came after the military drafted in 1,000 extra soldiers.

Earlier reports said the army had lost ground to militants who were using civilians as human shields.

At one point the local authorities said sect members had taken over six districts of the city.

"We have taken over their enclave, they are on the run and we are going after them"

Col Ben Ahanotu
Nigerian military

Nigeria’s ‘Taliban’ enigma

Eyewitness: Nigeria attacks

Fear and tension after attack

Nigerian attacks: Your reaction

map

Boko Haram says it is fighting against Western education. It believes Nigeria’s government is being corrupted by Western ideas and wants to see Taliban-style rule imposed across Nigeria.

More than 200 people have been killed in four days of clashes since an estimated 1,000 well-armed militants began attacking police stations and government buildings in Maiduguri.

President Umaru Yar’Adua earlier ordered Nigeria’s national security agencies to take all necessary action to contain and repel attacks by the extremists.

The BBC’s Caroline Duffield reports from Lagos that the sect appears to be larger than the authorities previously thought and the government has been taken aback by events.

The officer commanding the operation, Col Ben Ahanotu, said on Wednesday night: "We have taken over their enclave, they are on the run and we are going after them," reports AFP news agency.

The military told the BBC personal items found on the bodies of young men indicated that many had come from neighbouring Chad and Niger.

Security forces flooded into Maiduguri and began shelling sect leader Mohammed Yusuf’s compound on Tuesday.

Fierce fighting continued through the night and into Wednesday with the militants returning heavy gunfire.

Also on Wednesday police freed about 100 women and children who were being held by the sect in a building in Maiduguri.

The captives told the BBC they had been held six days, living on dates and water.

Many of the women said their husbands were Boko Haram followers, and that they had been forced to travel to Maiduguri from other parts of Nigeria.

Four states in northern Nigeria have been affected by Boko Haram unrest – Borno, Bauchi, Kano and Yobe.

A total of 103 deaths were officially reported in Maiduguri and reports say more than 50 people died in Bauchi and Yobe, but the true number of casualties may be much greater. There were also reports of Christian churches being torched.

Sharia law is in place across northern Nigeria, but there is no history of al-Qaeda-linked violence in the country.

The country’s 150 million people are split almost equally between Muslims in the north and Christians in the south.


Are you in Nigeria Have you been affected by the clashes Send us your comments.</b


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Captives freed in Nigerian city

Mothers and their children at a police station in Maiduguri after being held by Islamist radicals and released by police forces 28 July 2009

Police in Nigeria have freed more than 180 women and children from a house in the north of the country where they had been held by a radical Islamist sect.

They told the BBC they were held for six days and lived on dates and water.

They were rescued in Maiduguri, where heavy fighting continues between troops and militants of the Boko Haram sect.

Boko Haram is blamed for attacks on police stations and government sites in northern Nigeria, triggering violence that has killed at least 150 people.

The women and children were said to have been abducted from the town of Bauchi, where the violence erupted on Sunday.

Nigeria’s ‘Taliban’ enigma

Eyewitness: Nigeria attacks

Fear and tension after attack

map

Boko Haram is led by Mohammed Yusuf, who has his base in Maiduguri, capital of Borno province.

Security forces flooded into Maiduguri and began attacking Mohammed Yusuf’s compound on Tuesday, shelling it with heavy weapons and exchanging gunfire with militants.

The fierce fighting continued through the night and into Wednesday.

The officer commanding the operation, Col Ben Ahanotu, told the BBC the militants were well-armed and keeping up a steady stream of fire.

He said there were at least 250 armed men guarding Mohammed Yusuf’s home, also the headquarters of the sect.

‘Foreigners’

There were about another 1,000 people inside the enclave, all believed to be followers of Boko Haram.

Col Ahanotu also said that papers and personal items found on the bodies of the young men that have been killed indicated that many of them were not Nigerian and appear to have come from neighbouring Chad and Niger.

Four states in northern Nigeria have been affected by the violence involving Boko Haram – Borno, Bauchi, Kano and Yobe.

Boko Haram is against Western education. It believes Nigeria’s government is being corrupted by Western ideas and wants to see Islamic law imposed across Nigeria. President Umaru Yar’Adua has ordered Nigeria’s national security agencies to take all necessary action to contain and repel attacks by the extremists.

"These people have been organising, penetrating our societies, procuring arms, learning how to make explosives and bombs to disturb the peace and force abuse on the rest of Nigerians," he said before departing on a trip to Brazil.

Maiduguri police said 103 had died in the violence in the city, including 90 members of Boko Haram.

In Bauchi, scene of the first bloodshed on Sunday, 176 people remain under arrest. At least 39 people were killed in Bauchi.

Sharia law is in place across northern Nigeria, but there is no history of al-Qaeda-linked violence in the country.

The country’s 150 million people are split almost equally between Muslims in the north and Christians in the south.


Are you in Nigeria Have you been affected by the clashes Send us your comments.</b


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Darfuris ‘face election hurdles’

Head of UN Peacekeeping Alain Le Roy

People in the Darfur region of Sudan could be left out of next year’s election, according to the head of the United Nations peacekeeping force.

Alain Le Roy said millions might not get to vote because of a dispute over a new census and large scale displacement of people caused by the conflict.

Mr Le Roy said this would disenfranchise people already disempowered by the fighting.

But he also said the security situation in Darfur had improved substantially.

Speaking at the United Nations Security Council, Mr Le Roy said that large-scale violence and civilian deaths and displacement associated with attacks were "no longer hallmarks of the crisis".

‘Enormous risks’

Last month Sudan said its nationwide elections would be delayed for two months until April 2010, the second time the date has changed.

They were postponed after former rebels in the south disputed new census results.

The poll in Africa’s biggest country will be the first in more than two decades.

It was agreed under a 2005 peace deal – the Comprehensive Peace Agreement -that ended more than two decades of civil war between north and south Sudan.

Mr Le Roy said: "The contested census, large-scale displacement and volatility – particularly in the area bordering Chad – create enormous risks that the people of Darfur will not be in a position to participate in the electoral process. "

He said the Sudanese election results would have an "enormous impact" on the distribution of political power in Darfur where millions of displaced refugees who fled the fighting live in camps.

The US Deputy Ambassador to the UN Rosemary DiCarlo told the Security Council that the possibility that Darfuris would be left out of the electoral process was a real concern.

A convoy of the United Nations Assistance Mission in Darfur (UNAMID) crosses through a mud track in the southern village of Kashalongo, South of the city of Nyala, in southern Darfur on June 18, 2009.

The fighting in Darfur in western Sudan dates back to 2003, when mostly non Arab rebels took up arms against Khartoum, accusing it of neglecting the region.

The government deployed troops and mostly Arab militias to crush the uprising.

The UN says the conflict has claimed 300,000 lives. Khartoum disputes the figure, saying only 10,000 people have lost their lives.

Mr Le Roy said that the joint UN-African Union peacekeeping force was now in the final phase of its deployment and would have most of its 26,000 troops in place by the end of the year.

He said the troops would soon be able to provide a sustained presence around the camps set up for the two million people displaced, providing a much greater degree of security for them.

But BBC Africa analyst Martin Plaut says that at a political level there is little movement.

Talks in Doha with one of the main rebel groups, the Justice and Equality Movement or JEM, appear to have ground to a halt.

The rebels earlier this month released 60 government troops and police, but there has so far been no reciprocal gesture from the Khartoum government. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Pitchfork Fest | 07.17 – 07.19 | Chicago

Images by: Chad Smith

Pitchfork Music Festival :: 07.17 – 07.19 :: Union Park :: Chicago, IL

Friday, July 17

Bathroom Line

The Jesus Lizard

The Jesus Lizard

Tortoise

Yo La Tengo

Built To Spill

Built To Spill


Continue reading for pics of Saturday at the Pitchfork Music Festival…

Saturday, July 18

The Pains of Being Pure at Heart

Disappears

The Dutchess & The Duke

The Dutchess & The Duke

Plants and Animals

Plants and Animals

Fucked Up

Fucked Up

Bowerbirds

Final Fantasy

Ponytail

Ponytail

Yeasayer

Yeasayer

MF Doom

Matt & Kim

Matt & Kim

Beirut

Beirut fan

The Black Lips

The Black Lips

The Black Lips

The Black Lips

The National

The National

The National


Continue reading for pics of Sunday at the Pitchfork Music Festival…

Sunday, July 19

Blitzen Trapper

Blitzen Trapper fans

Wayne Coyne checking out Blitzen Trapper

Pharoahe Monch

Women

The Thermals

The Thermals

DJ/Rupture

The Walkmen

The Walkmen

Japandroids

Japandroids fans

M83

M83

Vivian Girls

Grizzly Bear

Grizzly Bear

Grizzly Bear

The Flaming Lips

The Flaming Lips

The Flaming Lips

The Flaming Lips

The Flaming Lips

The Flaming Lips

JamBase | Chitown

Go See Live Music!


Michael Strong: The Most Progressive Movement on the Planet

What if we could apply the power of creativity, innovation, and entrepreneurship to the problem of poverty reduction?

EOTO: Building Beauty From Scratch

By: Greg Gargiulo

EOTO

For the countless individuals who create it, music is, fundamentally, all about composition. And though there are a great many ways of interpreting the concept due to the massive variation of styles and genres, it is at music’s very core that elements be sequenced in such a manner that’s appealing to the ear. So, for the great majority, accomplishing that feat means spending hours in the studio or with a pen to paper, tweaking, altering, refining and rearranging to eventually come up with the absolute best possible product, which may or may not assume a new life on stage. Others, still working laboriously in the studio or elsewhere, strive only to form a vague outline to build upon. The foundation is then taken to a live show and compositions are either replicated or expanded upon, with additions, extensions, effects and all sorts of improvisational techniques making it blossom into something much greater and giving new identity to what started out only as a concept. This summation, more or less, is the system by which almost all live acts come to deliver their sound to the masses. Then, of course, there’s EOTO.

When it comes to composition – or planning sets or any other preparations usually met prior to a show – EOTO saves it all for the moment they set foot on stage. While a number of bands can claim the setlist-free approach to the live setting, few others, if any, take it to EOTO’s extent. Entering each show devoid of even a rough sketch of a game plan, Jason Hann and Michael Travis choose instead to rely on their inner and outer environments – mood and energy level, location, vibe of the crowd, what they were listening to earlier in the day, etc. – plus maybe some guidance from the cosmos, to pave their path of brain-tingling musical madness. The product is as diverse and far-reaching as they want it to be, and on any given night that usually means an infinitely broad sonic playing field. From heavy, thick, body-drenching dubstep to rich, textural psychedelia, throbbing drum-and-bass and dirty, computerized glitch-pop, plus healthy dabs of trance and house, their ever-transitioning electronic mishmash is a pure, unstoppable dance-provoking machine. It’s a machine that melts and flows seamlessly from one groove to the next, unexpectedly and without warning, compelling all those present to ditch any questions and just… get… moving. It’s a strange, at times perplexing beast, this EOTO. And it’s never – ever – exactly the same twice.

To say the response to EOTO – originally an acronym for End Of Time Observatory that went through a few transitional phases, but is now pronounced “E-Oh-Toe,” the Japanese word for “good sound” – has been positive is clearly an understatement. If further evidence is needed, look no further than their next late night appearance at an upcoming festival, which will likely be jam-packed and moving in unison like one giant amoeba. Swooping across the country with relentless momentum, word of their improvisational mysticism is out and spreading fast.

Coming off three or four rehearsals a week for the recent one-night reunion of The String Cheese Incident at Rothbury (read our review here) on top of regular EOTO practices, live shows and work on a forthcoming studio album set to drop before EOTO’s fall tour, Jason Hann is a rather busy man at the moment. But, he was still able to squeeze in some quality time to discuss the being that he and Travis have built and offer some insight on how they plan to keep it growing:

JamBase: Take us back to some of the formative days. How exactly did you and Travis initially come to found what is now EOTO?

EOTO

Jason Hann: It was really in the summer of 2006, at which time I’d been in String Cheese for a little while, and most times after practice ended around seven or so, me and Travis would just set up different instruments and get things going until about four or five in the morning. We started off basic, then after a while it got a bit more fusion-y, and eventually Travis got a looper pedal and I had been working regularly with Ableton Live, so we decided to utilize those programs to add more textures to what we were making. This sort of guided the process of us realizing that these programs leant themselves really well to electronic music, and that we could do a lot more than just the fun we were having with it. Then, the very first Sonic Bloom happened to be coming up at that time and we were asked to be a part of it. So, we pretty much said, “That’s reason enough to get our shit together and take this thing seriously.” And so the first ever EOTO show was at Sonic Bloom in late May of ’06.

JamBase: So around this time, as EOTO was in its earlier stages, did you guys know that you wanted to pretty much stick to a strictly improv model, with something different every night and no “songs” in the traditional sense?

Jason Hann: Yeah, I think so, pretty much right from the start. Before we started getting fancy and adding the computers and everything, we’d basically just try not to play any songs, just start playing whatever with total freedom. Then, we started getting some of the looping elements involved and that sort of thing, but we were really frightened to transition from one thing to a completely different thing, which required a lot of changes. So, when we did that for the first time, we were high-fiving and pretty psyched about it because it was like the biggest cliff that we were jumping over at the time. Now we do whole sets without even thinking about it, and the challenge has become to just keep getting better and better each night.

From a personal standpoint, I caught you guys twice in the span of about five months at Sullivan Hall in New York City. The first show brought in a relatively thin crowd, but the second one had to be filled to capacity or close. Clearly, people are catching on quickly to EOTO. What do you feel it is that kids are responding so well to?

Jason Hann – EOTO by Chad Smith

Well, first off, we feel we’re definitely getting better at what we’re doing, so that’s part of it. Plus, we’re starting to focus on some new styles of music that a lot of people are getting into. Dubstep, for instance, has really just begun to catch on in the past year, and there are some kids that are definitely looking for that type of stuff particularly. Also, if you look at the crowds that are coming to our shows, they’re mostly between, say, 18-24, so I think we’re touching the nerve of that age group, and it seems like a lot of them are willing to come out and give us a try because they heard good things. Or maybe we’re just the only show happening that night. Either way, they’re definitely coming.

Going back to the element of freedom in how you guys go about playing shows, what would you say the major advantages are of going in with no real pre-recorded plan?

Well, the best part about that is every night you have to have that creativity window completely open. There’s no, “I already know what I’m gonna do before the night even starts,” with us. When we’re improvising every night, it’s absolutely, “Where can we take it tonight that we haven’t been able to take it before?” So, we sort of instinctively go into that mode, and if we’ve been listening to a lot of different types of music that day that we don’t normally listen to sometimes you can even hear that in the recording.

Continue reading for more on EOTO…

&nbsp;


The best part about [EOTO's improv model] is every night you have to have that creativity window completely open. There’s no, “I already know what I’m gonna do before the night even starts,” with us. When we’re improvising every night, it’s absolutely, “Where can we take it tonight that we haven’t been able to take it before?”

-Jason Hann

&nbsp;

On the opposite side of that, just since it seems natural when dealing with something like this, do you feel there are any downsides of going in and not having anything to fall back on when you’re not feeling particularly creative on a certain night?

Michael Travis – EOTO by Norman Sands

Yeah, we definitely do have some of those. There’ll be some themes or some sounds that come up, or a certain beat where it’ll be like, “Let’s go there just to reach it.” That happens almost every night, but the minute you start stacking up parts behind the theme or under the theme, as we’re doing that, then the unlocking process [starts] and new ideas really start to come out. Ultimately, the biggest disadvantage of not having pre-made songs that we’re playing to is trying to accomplish the depth of production that’s made from lots of time in the studio. It’s a little bit of a deeper thing when you realize in that moment, those two people did that on the spot without planning it out before, and there’s a certain depth to that concept that just makes it cooler to a lot of other people than something that’s super-produced.

Definitely, and I think when you do hit some of those fantastic peaks or really nasty grooves, the fact that it’s all organic makes it so much more amazing. So, sticking with that element, on a normal day do you guys put any preparation whatsoever into what you’re gonna play that night? Or is it completely, “Let’s figure it out as we go?”

Pretty much no game plan. There’s about maybe thirty seconds before we hit the first note where we decide if we wanna start off faster or slower or four-on-the-floor or something else. But other than that, we’ll kind of just look at the crowd and make that determination based on the vibe we’re getting off of them. Whether it’s a crowd that seems really excited and knows us well or a relatively new one, we’ll try to get things started based on that.

Switching over to the technical end of the equation, what do each of your set-ups consist of on stage? I’ve noticed Travis uses at least a synth, a bass, bongos and a MacBook Pro, and you’ve clearly got your kit, a djembe and some other gear. What other main pieces have I missed?

Travis’ world consists of two computers, one of which he runs Reason on as a standalone, and the other has Ableton Live running, which all of our microphones go through so we can effect everything. Then, in my world, as far as electronics, I’ve got a Roland SPD-S Sampling Pad decked out with all sort of custom sounds, then under that I’ve got a multi-touch screen called a JazzMutant Lemur, which has a bunch of great audio features but also helps me set up a visual thing for myself so I don’t have to keep looking up at the main computer that’s running Ableton.

JamBase logged you in with 189 shows in 2008, which averages out to more than a show every other day. How do you guys keep up with that insane pace and not burn out?

EOTO by Dave Vann

I think that goes back to the whole improvising part, because we don’t really get sick of the same songs, and it’s actually easier to play night after night as opposed to taking a night off and not knowing what to do with ourselves. We also feel that the non-stop touring has been one of the main reasons we’ve improved so much, and we’d probably be nowhere near where are now if we only played 20 or 30 shows a year.

You guys have become pretty much a lockdown for late night time slots at festivals, and you’ll be hitting up another sizable load this summer [Summer Camp, Starscape, Wakarusa, Sonic Bloom and Rothbury already, with Camp Bisco to come]. At times it seems some people are getting more psyched for these than for headliners. What do you think the major draw is of the late night?

Most late nights definitely become a bit more intimate than the main stage, and the way they have the Tripolee Domes set up at Rothbury, for example, makes it really conducive for electronic music and what we’re putting out there. Plus, I think there are so many times when people are just starting to party at midnight or one, and it gives people a chance to let loose and get out whatever they haven’t gotten out already during the daytime.

Let’s talk about String Cheese a bit. Everyone is clearly excited for the one-stop reunion at Rothbury. What was the process that led to you guys deciding to come back and make this happen?

It made it really easy that all our crew and management and so many other people were already involved in the festival. Just about any other scenario would’ve required a real lot of work and would’ve been less inspiring than Rothbury. Roth just seemed to make it an easy process for us to get together.

And generally, what’s the vibe been like around Cheese lately? I assume you guys are pretty stoked.

EOTO by Dave Vann

Oh yeah, it feels really good. The scary part is we have to really, really deliver, because a lot of people are counting on it, and Phish came back so strong after taking a few years off. We want to just be super sharp and go out there and play the songs really well. The nerve-racking part is that there are all these factors you think about since it’s just one night out there.

Is there anything you can say on whether this is going to be just a one-time thing with Cheese or if you guys see anything more coming out of this down the line?

I think we’ll see how Rothbury goes for now and what comes off of that. For now, we’re just having fun in practice and it feels good playing these songs again. So, maybe we’ll play Rothbury and not even talk about it for a while since we all have so much else going on. So, it’s really Rothbury first and then we’ll talk about all the other stuff afterwards.

And just bringing it back to EOTO, while it’s tough to predict the future, are there any particular ways you see you guys evolving in the near or distant future?

We just got a new computer and it’s gonna be able to handle a lot more of the ideas we have going on. Right now the computer we have is completely maxed out as far as what we can do, and we can’t add any more effects or anything without bad things happening. With the new computer we should definitely be able to have more items in our arsenal, which will in turn inspire us to find all these other little paths.

For us, it’s really about having all these sorts of pieces to choose from, because you don’t want to bore anyone with the same sound or the same trick every time. So, if you have enough variety in there then there’s always something new and different coming out. And that’s a big thing, to keep people going with the groove, but also to keep their attention or involvement with the music.

Download a free EOTO show here. EOTO is on tour now, dates available here.

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