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Posts Tagged ‘colorado’

STS9 Colorado Late Nights

Official STS9 Late Night Events in Colorado


Amon Tobin

Surrounding Sound Tribe Sector 9‘s massive Day out of Time celebration in Colorado, Euphonic Conceptions will be presenting another round of blockbuster after parties on July 24 & 25 at the Gothic Theatre in Englewood, CO. These shows feature a diverse array of some of the best and freshest in electronic music, with each performance continuing until 5 a.m.

On July 24, after STS9 and Lippservice play The Fillmore Auditorium, the party moves to the Gothic Theatre. Headlining the event is the widely acclaimed Amon Tobin, making his long anticipated return to Colorado. Joining him will be the San Francisco-based Eskmo, who recently remixed STS9′s track “Shock Doctrine.” This show also features the Colorado debut of up-and-coming Emancipator, and the wizardry of legendary producer Richard Devine.

Then, immediately following STS9′s massive July 25 Day Out of Time festivities at Red Rocks Amphitheatre, a special event comes to the Gothic that has only been witnessed previously in London, Barcelona, San Francisco and Los Angeles. Brainfeeder, a new digital label launched early this year by the world-renowned Flying Lotus, features a revolving group of artists hand-picked by the brilliant producer. “Brainfeeder Colorado” will include sets from Brainfeeder mainstays FlyamSam (Flying Lotus and SamiYam), Ras G, Lorn and Teebs. There will also be the very special debut of a unique tag-team set with Alex Botwin of Pnuma Trio and Derek Vincent Smith, the mastermind behind the exploding phenomenon that is Pretty Lights.

Advance Tickets are available now at STS9.com.

Shuttle buses from the Fillmore to the Gothic will be available. Bus to Show Packages from Boulder, Fort Collins – Call 720.204.0408 to reserve.

Euphonic Conceptions and 1320 Records Present
Re:Creation the Official STS9 After Parties:

July 24 |Gothic Theater | Englewood, CO

Amon Tobin with Eskmo, Emancipator and Richard Devine

Music until 5 AM
limited $17 advance tickets available | $22 D.O.S.

July 25 | Gothic Theater | Englewood, CO

Alex B vs Derek Vincent Smith (Brainfeeder Colorado)

with Flyamsam (Flying Lotus and Samiyam), Ras G, Lorn and Teebs

Music until 5 AM
limited $17 advance tickets available | $22 D.O.S.


FREE Mile High Fest Playlist: Panic, Mule, RRE, Thievery, Keys…

Free Mile High Music Festival Playlist

With Colorado’s Mile High Music Festival set to take place this weekend in Commerce City, CO, we’ve put together a FREE playlist of artists at the event to get you ready to rock! (Unfortunately there are no Tool tunes available at this time.) Enjoy!

For details on the Mile High Fest go to www.milehighmusicfestival.com.

How Lala Works:

By clicking the “free playlist” button on the Mile High Fest Playlist and signing up for Lala (also free) you get all the songs for free to start your Lala collection. With sign up, you also get 25 songs of your choice for free, Lala has over 7 million tracks to choose from. Signing up for Lala is akin to signing up MySpace or Facebook – it’s free and no credit card is required.

Lala enables you to build a web music collection – you can take your music and fuse it with a massive licensed catalog to easily play, buy, and share on the web from any location. You can add all the music you already have (MP3s, ripped albums, tracks bought on iTunes, etc.) to your collection on Lala for free.


If you’re at home, work, a friend’s house, where ever… your music collection is there too, all easy to access in a browser.

Once you have signed up you can stream any song in the Lala catalog, again a whopping 7 million tracks, one time, including all of the albums and songs that appear in Lala player widgets on JamBase.


You may be wondering after the first full play of a song, what happens then? Lala is a store, they sell MP3 downloads and streams, which they’ve dubbed “web songs.” You can pay $0.10 for the web song and stream it an unlimited number of times from any computer, and an additional $0.79 to buy a downloadable MP3 without DRM protection. MP3s on Lala are typically $0.89 each. Any MP3 you buy on Lala is bundled with the “web song,” which is added to your Lala collection for unlimited streaming.


You can add web songs to your Lala collection from JamBase by clicking the “add” button, visible by scrolling over the song in the Lala player. Once you add a song to your collection, you can stream it anytime on Lala or whenever you see it on a Lala player. As noted, to start you out on Lala, the first 25 web songs are free!

Check out the Lala FAQ for details: www.lala.com/#howitworks.

So get started with the FREE Mile High Playlist!


Lyrics Born’s Mix Tape

Lyrics Born’s Brand New Mixtape Available Now


Lyrics Born

The one-and-only Lyrics Born, the Quannum MC whose career, spanning from the 1996 release The Album, to 2008′s Everywhere at Once, just put out a brand new mixtape titled The Lyrics Born Variety Show: Season Pho (4!). The mixtape comes as he finishes up his fourth studio album, As U Were, and is available as a digital download only at Lyricsborn.com.

The mixtape – fourth in The Lyrics Born Variety Show series – features LB, along with some his best friends (including Dan the Automator, Lateef the Truthspeaker, and Gift of Gab), on 22 tracks, includes “Pushed Aside, Pulled Apart” and “Funky Hit Records” – both sneak peeks from his upcoming album.

Still, Lyrics Born has found time to be on tour all this month! Having just appeared at the Rothbury Festival as part of the Quannum All-Stars, the rapper will hit up festivals in Colorado, British Columbia, and his native California, including a hometown appearance at San Francisco’s coveted Stern Grove Festival on July 26, which he curated and will be headlining.

The Lyrics Born Variety Show: Season Pho (4!) Tracklisting

1. Season Pho Intro ft. Joey Guila
2. The Divide Is Widening – Lyrics Born
3. Revolution – J-Boogie ft. Lyrics Born & The Mamaz
4. Stay Professional – Lyrics Born
5. Funky Hit Records / FHR DJ Erb Remix – Lyrics Born
6. Pop Campaign – Lyrics Born
7. Block Bots – Lyrics Born ft. Clyde Carson & Trackademicks
8. Mama’s Got A Brand New Swag – Joyo Velarde ft. Lyrics Born
9. The Utmost Versatyle – Lyrics Born ft. Joyo Velarde
10. The World Is Calling (Remix) – Lyrics Born ft. Lateef the Truthspeaker & Joyo Velarde
11. Beautiful Bowlegged Lady – Lyrics Born
12. Turn It Up – The Bamboos ft. Lyrics Born
13. Trippin’ – Eric Legnini Trio ft. Lyrics Born
14. Take Aim (Automator Remix) – Kasabian ft. Lyrics Born, Dan The Automator, The Gift of Gab & Lateef The Truthspeaker
15. Alien – Dosmoccos ft. Lyrics Born
16. Put ‘Em Up – Soulico ft. Lyrics Born
17. Differences (Mash Up) – Lyrics Born
18. I’m A Phreak (Mash Up) – Lyrics Born
19. Make It Good – Lyrics Born
20. Ill Vacation – The Mighty Underdogs ft. Lyrics Born
21. Pushed Aside Pulled Apart – Lyrics Born ft. Lateef The Truthspeaker
22. Season Pho Outro ft. Joey Guila

LYRICS BORN SUMMER 2009 TOUR DATES:

07/17/09 Fri Ghost Ranch Saloon Steamboat Springs, CO

07/18/09 Sat Dick’s Sporting Goods Park Commerce City, CO

07/19/09 Sun Starbelly Jam Festival Crawford Bay, BC

07/25/09 Sat Love Field Point Reyes, CA

07/26/09 Sun Stern Grove Festival San Francisco, CA

08/14/09 Fri Crown Room Crystal Bay, NV

08/16/09 Sun Brew Brother’s Reno, NV

08/25/09 Tue three20south (formerly Sherpa & Yeti’s) Breckenridge, CO

09/27/09 Sun Earthdance (Black Oak Ranch)


Cyril Neville’s Gear Stolen

Cyril Neville’s Gear Stolen


Cyril Neville

Earlier this week numerous pieces of equipment were stolen from Cyril Neville and Tribe 13‘s trailer. Neville and his solo band were in Denver for a series of Colorado gigs when their trailer was broken into early Tuesday morning. The group’s missing equipment includes: a Fender 5 String Black Jazz Bass, a Nord Lead Keyboard and numerous personal belongings.

Please contact the band if you have any leads on the robbery.

Cyril Neville is on tour now, dates available here.


Deanna Neil: Soap, Schools and Swine Flu

No soap. Not even a dispenser. Enraged, I walked out into the hall. There, standing in perfect contrast, was a laminated poster explaining each step of how to properly wash your hands.

Chris Gunn: New Bill Could be Powerful Economic Stimulus for Middle Class Firms

More than two years ago, notable small business advocate Lloyd Chapman sat in a hotel in Durango, Colorado and drafted a bill to stop billions…

Steve Earle | 06.19.09 | Texas

Words by: Sarah Hagerman | Images by: Manny Moss

Steve Earle :: 06.19.09 :: Paramount Theatre :: Austin, TX

Steve Earle :: 06.19.09 :: Austin, TX

In 1972 at The Old Quarter in Houston, a seventeen-year-old was playing to a nearly empty room. In the front row, the songwriter he idolized was sitting with his boots propped on the stage. Although his idol had a reputation for being a quiet, sensitive soul, tonight he was certainly loud and wasted, heckling the young musician to play “The Wabash Cannonball” between each song. Embarrassment growing in his mind, the young musician finally had to admit he didn’t know the song.

“You call yourself a folk singer and you don’t know ‘The Wabash Cannonball’?!” his idol yelled.

The young man gathered his composure and proceeded to play one of his idol’s own songs, and a complicated one to sing at that. Fast forward 37 years later, and the young songwriter has since survived years of dangerously hard living followed by a productive renewal of purpose in his sobriety, his salt and pepper beard now growing long. When he played that same song on stage at the Paramount Theatre in Austin, on a steamy June evening, he ripped into it with a vicious energy, after he recounted this story. When he was done, he looked up at the audience and finished the tale.

“And then he shut up,” he said.

The song was “Mr. Mudd and Mr. Gold,” and the two men in question were Steve Earle and Townes Van Zandt. Van Zandt would become a friend and teacher to Earle after that night, and Earle’s latest album Townes, an entire album of Van Zandt’s songs, is a testament to that artistic and personal influence. Many have covered Van Zandt, who passed away on New Year’s Day in 1997, his heart weakened by years of drug and alcohol abuse. But Earle is in a unique position to share some insight into the man behind the myths.

Steve Earle :: 06.19.09 :: Austin, TX

Following an opening set by up-and-comer Joe Pug (of whom I only caught a couple songs that both displayed winning lyrical chops with a captivating stage presence), Earle took the stage, dedicating the show to Stephen Bruton, a much-loved Texas guitarist, songwriter and producer who recently passed away. Armed with acoustic guitars, mandolins and a harmonica, Earle wove his own material through Van Zandt’s in the setlist, the stripped down setting letting the hefty words of both songwriters sink in. It was interesting to notice how Earle’s demeanor seemed to subtly change as he performed the Van Zandt songs, his voice taking on a more guttural edge as he shuttered from side to side with possession. Tonight, we also sat down with Earle’s stories. Even if some stories are well repeated, like the story of their first face-to-face meeting at The Old Quarter (Earle had been working up the nerve to talk to Van Zandt for awhile before that, even watching him in awe at a birthday party for Jerry Jeff Walker he crashed, where Van Zandt showed up in the wee hours and quickly lost all his money and a buckskin jacket in a craps game), it was a way to celebrate the artistic legacy of a true genius while bringing him into a flesh and blood creature, bruises, moments of grace and all.

There’s something about Van Zandt’s writing which strikes me as sincere. It doesn’t fuck around. He would forgo heaps of twisting symbolism and artsy word play to keep things lean and deceptively simple, refreshingly naked with flab and pretension stripped away. I find his work is more devastating, more gorgeous, more graceful and more potent for that economy. Van Zandt’s words floor you with stark beauty captured in amber and then absolutely flatten your heart with a weighty fist. Earle really did his language justice in the live setting, lovingly singing the quietly sweeping love song (as much about a woman as the place itself) “Colorado Girl,” and resonating hushed despair with “Marie.” The latter, an upsetting portrait of a drifter couple, always crushes me. Before Earle played it, he said that although Townes himself came from a family with money, he “had a hard time figuring out why some people had so much and some people had so little, through no fault of their own.” Van Zandt used to bring homeless people in to feed them and give them a place to stay (even to other’s homes, when he didn’t have his own place, as Earle explained).

Steve Earle :: 06.19.09 :: Austin, TX

Earle himself spent some time homeless when he was in the midst of his drug addiction, and Van Zandt even spoke to him about his problem at one point, in a visit during which he played Earle “Marie” for the first time. As Earle described it, it wasn’t a confrontation so much as Van Zandt asking Earle if he was using clean needles, but, as he said dryly, “You know you’re in trouble when Townes comes to your house to give you a temperance lecture.” To introduce “Pancho and Lefty,” he said he decided to record it first for Townes, jokingly likening it to your first day in prison, when you take on “the biggest motherfucker in the yard” to establish your toughness.

Earle has a lot of honesty and self-deprecating humor when it comes to his own life, giving him onstage accessibility and compassion with a no bullshit edge. He would never glamorize self-destruction. His tunes wind around that scar tissue, rising to the surface with a fighting spirit. He stubbornly refuses to accept that things should be the way they are, and thank god for that. Songs like “Rich Man’s War” boil over with anger at the inherent unfairness of the disconnect between who fights and who decides, while “The Mountain” looks at mountaintop removal mining from the eyes of a miner who calls the peak home, a gorgeous mando rolling with its heartbreak. Both songs were powerfully placed in a succession of Earle tunes, including the rousing “City of Immigrants,” which he played on an octave mandolin, and the gripping Celtic string band number “Dixieland,” before he capped off the set with a one-two punch of Van Zandt’s “Lungs” and “To Live is to Fly.”

As Earle said, introducing “Lungs,” “If this doesn’t scare you, you’re overmedicated.” He exhaled its chilling vapor over us:

Well, won’t you lend your lungs to me?

Mine are collapsing
Plant my feet and bitterly breathe
Up the time that’s passing.
Breath I’ll take and breath I’ll give
Pray the day ain’t poison
Stand among the ones that live
In lonely indecision.

Van Zandt’s music is often unfairly characterized as wholly gloomy, and much of it is heavy, even frighteningly so. His blues ran deep. But “To Live is the Fly” shows his gift at capturing illumination as well as darkness, even in the midst of his transitory existence. This song always gives me heartening acceptance, hope in strong proof. We often dwell in our tragedies, run from our mistakes. We fail, fall down, fuck up, but only by lifting ourselves back up do we gain grace.

Steve Earle & Townes Van Zandt

We all got holes to fill
Them holes are all that’s real
Some fall on you like a storm
Sometimes you dig your own
But choice is yours to make
And time is yours to take
Some dive into the sea
Some toil upon the stone
To live is to fly
Low and high
So shake the dust off of your wings
And the sleep out of your eyes
Shake the dust off of your wings
And the tears out from your eyes

Earlier this year, on the night of Van Zandt’s birthday, March 7, at a wine bar down the street from my apartment, we sat outside and listened to a gentleman playing that very song. Turns out he knew Van Zandt, although not very well, he professed, but he shared a few stories with us (“The last time I saw Townes, he parked his car in the middle of the street in New Braunfels and wandered off with a bottle of vodka in his hand…”). Texans love their mythology, and it seems everyone’s got a tall tale or two about Townes in these parts, especially in these Austin streets haunted by the specter of musical legends. At one point during the show, a gentlemen sitting next to me said, his eyes turning to the Paramount’s ceiling, “You know, they say there’s ghosts in this theatre.” My goose bumps could have been from the air conditioning, but closing my eyes, as I listened to Earle sing his teacher’s enduring words, I wondered if he was right.

Continue reading for a more pics of Steve Earle in Austin…

Steve Earle is on tour now, dates available here.

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Eye the centre

The contenders for Uruguay’s presidency emerge

Primary elections were held in Uruguay on June 28th and confirmed what opinion polls have long suggested—that the presidential candidates for the October 25th election will be Jose Mujica, from the ruling centre-left Frente Amplio (FA) coalition, Luis Alberto Lacalle, from the right-wing Partido Nacional (PN, also known as the Blancos), Pedro Bordaberry from the centre-right Partido Colorado (PC) and an independent, Pablo Mieres. The only two candidates with a realistic chance of winning the presidency are Mr Mujica and Mr Lacalle, which some fear brings the possibility of a polarised campaign. However, the need to attract centrist voters is important for both candidates, who are likely to focus their presidential campaigns on the centre ground.

Both Mr Mujica and Mr Lacalle won convincing victories: Mr Mujica beat the former finance minister, Danilo Astori, by 53% to 38% with a third FA candidate, Marcos Carambula, polling 9% of the votes; within the PN, Mr Lacalle beat Jorge Larranaga by 57% to 43%. According to exit polls, the PN obtained the largest share of the vote (43.1%) against 42.2% for the FA. Although the figures do not reflect the overall level of support for the parties, the FA had been expected to top the polls and the turnout has been interpreted as a boost for the opposition. …

Rep. Steve Israel: Roll Back the Darkness in a Sustainable, Cost-Effective Way

One of the smartest foreign assistance initiatives the United States could undertake is to jump-start promising solar-powered efforts around the world.

Wyatt Closs: Workonomics 101: Car Wash, Boss?

“Ooh, ooh, You might not ever get rich But let me tell ya, It’s better than diggin’ a ditch” This opening line from the title…

Kristen Diane Parker, Scrub Technician, Causes Major Hepatitis Scare In Colorado

DENVER — Kimberly Spencer’s 9-year-old son went to Audubon Ambulatory Surgery Center last month for what was supposed to be a routine surgery. The rambunctious child stuck a BB in his ear and doctors had to operate to remove it.

What ha…