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Posts Tagged ‘colorado’

Newhoma Music Fest: Sex Mob Grayson, Surprise Me, Outformation

FIRST ANNUAL FESTIVAL INCLUDES MUSIC, HIKING, YOGA, AND MORE

Surprise Me Mr. Davis

The first annual Newhoma Music and Mountain Festival is a three day event offering music, hiking, yoga,
great food and tasty beverages in Florissant, Colorado the weekend of August 20-22, 2010.

Musical acts scheduled to perform include Surprise Me Mr. Davis, Grayson Capps & the Stumpknockers, Sex Mob, Outformation, Paper Bird, Oakhurst, Yo Mama’s Big Fat Booty Band, and
more.

All information regarding tickets, complete lineup, event schedule, camping, meal plans, and hiking is available at
the Newhoma Festival website.


Bisco Inferno Photo Gallery

Join photographer Dave Vann as he documents The Disco Biscuits’ Colorado adventures this past weekend at The Boulder Theatre, The Fox Theatre (Conspirator), Denver’s Ogden Theater and finally Red Rocks Ampitheatre for Bisco Inferno.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”1″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=60″);}); 2010 Bisco Inferno Memorial Day Weekend Photographer Dave Vann documents The Disco Biscuits Memorial Day Weekend 2010. The band played The Boulder Theater /&/g The Fox Theatre (Conspirator) on 5/27, The Ogden Theatre in Denver on 5/28 and Red Rocks Amphitheater for Bisco Inferno on 5/29 with Crystal Method, The Pneuma Trio, Glitch Mob, Aeroplane and Booka Shade. View Photos

5/27/10 Boulder Theater, Boulder, CO
I: Flash Mob, Rivers, Story Of The World* > Aceetobee > Boom Shanker > Aceetobee
II: Save The Robots, The Very Moon > Digital Buddha > Lunar Pursuit > Digital Buddha
E: Spy
* unfinished

5/28/10 Ogden Theater, Denver, CO
I: Voices Insane > Run Like Hell* > Voices Insane, The Bridge**, Jigsaw Earth
II: Spectacle, Air Song, Basis For A Day* > Rock Candy > Tricycle > Rock Candy
E: Once The Fiddler Paid

* Unfinished, ** 1st time played

5/29/10 Red Rocks Amphitheatre, Morrison, CO
Bisco Inferno: Other acts included The Crystal Method, Booka Shade, Aeroplane, The Pnuma Trio and The Glitch Mob
I: Hot Air Balloon > Gangster > Portal To An Empty Head*, Mindless Dribble > The Great Abyss > Hot Air Balloon
II: House Dog Party Favor, On Time, M.E.M.P.H.I.S.* > Minions > Basis For A Day**, Magellan
E: Home Again

* with Chris Michetti (RAQ) on guitar, ** completes 5/28 version
Setlist Source: Phantasy Bisco

The Disco Biscuits
The Disco Biscuits


Charlie Sheen likely to plead guilty to assaulting wife

Two and a Half Men’ star Charlie Sheen is most likely to plead guilty to a misdemeanour charge of assault for allegedly assaulting his wife Brooke Mueller.
According to the Us Weekly, Sheen, 44, could spend up to 45 days in an Aspen jail as part of the plea deal he agreed to with prosecutors in [...]

String Cheese Incident Announces Initial Horning’s Hideout Lineup

TOUBAB, PIMPS, FRISELL AND OTHER TASTINESS JOIN SCI

String Cheese Incident

The initial artist lineup has been announced for The String Cheese Incident Horning’s Hideout Festival taking place July 29-August 1 at much beloved Horning’s Hideout in North Plains, Oregon.

The String Cheese Incident will perform on Friday, July 30th, Saturday, July 31st, and
Sunday, August 1st.

The initial lineup besides SCI includes:

The Travelin’ McCourys
Toubab Krewe
Bill Frisell with Steve Moore & Rudy Royston
Col. Bruce Hampton
Beats Antique
Soul Rebels Brass Band
Lynx & Janover
Rupa & The April Fishes
The Pimps of Joytime
Scott Law
Rachel Goodrich
Three For Madness
Liza Oxnard
Fou Fou Ha’s!
Kazum
Banana Slug String Band
Global Illage
Lewi Longmire
John Alex-Mason
Jamie Stillway

Thursday features Main Stage Performances by SCIde Projects:

Kyle Hollingsworth Band
CB3 w/ Michael Kang
Emmitt-Nershi Band
EOTO

Tickets for the Horning’s Hideout Festival sold out within an hour after going on
sale.

The String Cheese Incident returns to the stage at Colorado’s Red Rocks Amphitheater July 23-25 after taking a couple years off from tour (save for an appearance at Rothbury
last year).


30db | 05.20 | S.F.

Words by: Eric Podolsky | Images by: Brian Spady

30db :: 05.20.10 :: Great American Music Hall :: San Francisco, CA


Austin & Bayliss – 30db :: 05.20

“This is the fifth show we’ve ever played,” mandolinist Jeff Austin told the crowd at Great American Music Hall shortly after his new band 30db finished its second song. Considering this fact, the impressive size of the audience showed that these musicians’ reputations precede them. 30db’s roots stem from a casual musical relationship which formed between Yonder Mountain String Band‘s Austin and Umphrey’s McGee‘s Brendan Bayliss, eventually growing into a supergroup of sorts as their music called to be fleshed out. So, they recruited Cody Dickinson (North Mississippi Allstars/Hill Country Revue) to rock the drums, Nick Forster of Hot Rize to bring his professionalism on guitar and lap steel, and bassist Eric Thorin of Open Road to complete a fully-formed, well-oiled rock band.

Taking the stage to a casual, if not curious, audience, 30db introduced their music to our ears for the first time, and let the strength of the well-crafted songs from their debut album One Man Show do the heavy lifting throughout the night. First and foremost, Austin’s good-humored vocal delivery and excellent harmonizing with Bayliss stood out as the backbone of the music. The tunes were delivered in a straightforward rock format, notably punctuated by the hard strumming of Austin, whose mandolin sprinkles were just audible poking over the top of the music. Bayliss and Forster shared some soaring guitar line harmonies, though for much of the set Bayliss played acoustic and Forster shone on slide lap steel. Dickinson’s rock-solid drumming was the driving force in the band as they powered their way though the catchy, almost radio-friendly choruses of songs like “One Man Show,” “Liar,” and “Susannah,” arguably their strongest tune.

Other times, the band brought it down and let the music breathe, evoking almost U2-like wide open spaces with the lap steel and mandolin taking the forefront. A spot-on cover of The Beatles’ “Don’t Let Me Down” had Austin and Bayliss nailing the vocal harmonies. When the rock was brought back, the band used the rollicking, Southern-tinged tune “Grave” as their jam vehicle for the night, and everyone got some time in the spotlight, notably Forster, who ripped it on the lap steel.

After a single set, Austin and Bayliss reemerged on their own for an acoustic mini-set “encore,” which was arguably the highlight of the night. Their chemistry was uncanny, and it was very apparent that these guys get off on each other musically, both backstage and onstage. Introducing a gorgeous instrumental as “Psychotic Dive Bombing Hummingbirds of Colorado,” their combined acoustic chops were fluid, rapid, and playful. After a few more well-crafted, smile-inducing tunes and a couple of dueling solos, the rest of the band returned to flesh out the music, with Forster’s lap steel chiming and echoing though the open spaces of the music (think Chris Isaak). This segued into a sped-up, chugging modern rock take on Dylan’s “It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue,” which closed the show with abandon as Austin’s yearning tenor yelped out each verse one by one.

This band has only begun to realize its potential. Interestingly enough, its quality brand of catchy melodic rock is probably more accessible to the masses than its members’ full-time bands. Here’s hoping they treat this group as more than just a side-project and give the music the time it needs to mature.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”9″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=57″);}); 30db at Great American Music Hall in San Francisco, CA 30db photo gallery from Great American Music Hall in San Francisco, CA on May 20, 2010… View Photos

30db Tour Dates :: 30db News :: 30db Concert Reviews

JamBase | In Harmony
Go See Live Music!


Sprout food causes eSprout food causes epidemic in west US

A sort of emergency situation has cropped up in western region of the U.S following reports that many states in this part of the country have witnessed salmonella poisoning from alfalfa sprouts.
Many cases of salmonella infections have been documented and these are connected to alfalfa sprouts that are distributed as Caldwell Fresh Foods, [...]

Frenchy, Scramble & Kreutzmann Paint at Jazz Fest 2010

MALLETS, PAINT AND MUSIC INSPIRED ART, OH MY!!!

Words by: John Prinzo | Images by: Bob Compton

Beyond the stellar line-up of performances, this year’s New Orleans Jazz Fest saw the convergence of two great talents working in unison to record the magic of the music on canvas. Legendary performance painter and New Orleans mainstay Frenchy worked side-by-side with Colorado by-way-of-Orlando artist Keith “Scramble” Campbell. These two artists share a similar style, which stirs rumors of bitter rivalry in art circles, but it is quite the contrary. Frenchy and Scramble are long-time colleagues and friends and they worked in concert throughout the entire festival to collectively produce nearly 50 paintings that captured the vibe of the festivities.

Frenchy has painted and attended Jazz Fest since 1988, and in 2010 had his first opportunity to actually work on stage and add to the overall performance of Trombone Shorty and another native Nawlins band, The Radiators. Among many others, Frenchy was able to paint jazz trumpeter Kermit Ruffins and rock titans Pearl Jam. You can see all the Jazz fest collection from Frenchy at his Oak Street gallery or online at the Frenchylive Website

Scramble Campbell was also painting at an astonishing rate for the duration of the festival. Inspiration seemed to be in abundance as the two artists produced a prolific run of paintings. Throughout the festival, Scramble displayed his artwork at Frenchy’s New Orleans gallery. Scramble’s works from the festival can be seen and purchased on his website.

In the impromptu spirit of jazz, legendary Grateful Dead drummer Bill Kreutzmann popped his head in Frenchy’s Oak Street gallery to say hello to his close friend. Before he left, the casual visit evolved into a collaboration with Frenchy and Scramble to seize the essence of the festival on canvas. Together they danced and grooved to the Dead’s 1973 classic “Eyes of the World,” all while dousing and splaying paint in a stream-of-conscious frenzy of inspiration and improvisation. Like jazz masters, Frenchy and Scramble weave their visual notes of shape and color in and out of each other while Kreutzman adds rhythm and texture with his paint soaked mallets. This was a stunning confluence of thought, expression, talent, creativity, and chance, which sums up this storied city and whimsical event.


Barber’s Back at Bisco Inferno

The Disco Biscuits have released a video showing guitarist Jon “The Barber” Gutwillig springing back into action on the guitar. Jon suffered an injury to his wrist in March and the band has been playing shows with an adjusted lineup.

According to the video, Gutwillig will join the band next weekend at Red Rocks in Colorado for Bisco Inferno. Tickets are available at Ticketmaster.


10 Biggest Volcanic Eruptions in History

The recent eruptions of the Eyjafjallajökull volcano in Iceland were a stark reminder of nature’s ability to bring human activity to an abrupt standstill. The cloud of smoke that drifted over Western Europe made aviation travel untenable, returning European skies to a quietude not felt for decades. Yet, while the effects of the eruption were [...]

Charlie Sheen Returns To “Two And A Half Men”

For those who care, Charlie Sheen, the highest-paid actor on television, has agreed to reprise his role as womanizing writer Charlie Harper on the CBS sitcom Two And A Half Men for an additional two years, after threatening to walk away from the hit show over a salary dispute as his private life spiralled out [...]

10 Tackiest Celebrity Mansions

Sometimes, here at PopCrunch, we can’t help but feel dissatisfied with our lot. It’s not that scrutinising the lives of celebrities isn’t a riot, that following their failure is not fun, and marvelling at their weight gain not an excellent way to pass the time; it’s that sometimes we wouldn’t mind trading in our gossiping [...]

Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers Perform New Songs on SNL

FIRED UP BAND OFFERS PREVIEW OF FAB NEW ALBUM

Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers will release their much-anticipated new album, Mojo, on June 15. This past weekend, they were the musical guests on Saturday Night Live‘s season finale with Alec Baldwin. JamBase has gotten a special early listen to Mojo and can say it’s one of the band’s best ever and possesses a lot of fire and blues-rock grit. We’ll have more on the new album soon, but in the meantime here’s their lively performances of new corkers “I Should Have Known It” and “Jefferson Jericho Blues” from SNL.

Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers begin their summer tour on June 1 at Red Rocks Amphitheatre in Colorado. Find full tour dates here.

Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers Tour Dates :: Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers News :: Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers Concert Reviews


Heidi Montag Seeking Restraining Order Against Own Mother!

Heidi Montag is considering obtaining a legal order to bar her own mother from contacting her after Darlene Egelhoff showed up unannounced to the filthy Pacific Palisades home the reality starlet shares with hubby Spencer Pratt early Thursday. Egelhoff has been estranged from her 23-year-old daughter since publicly blasting Heidi’s plastic marathon on an episode [...]

Waterfront Music Festival:Aijala/Kaufmann, Cornmeal, Nershi

WATERFRONT MUSIC FESTIVAL & CAMP OUT RUNS MAY 14-16 OUTSIDE OF FT. COLLINS
COLORADO

The 1st annual Waterfront Music Festival & Camp Out will take place from May 14-16 at the Mishawaka
Amphitheater outside of Ft. Collins, Colorado. This three day event features and array of great performers, including:
Adam Aijala & Ben Kaufman (Yonder Mountain String Band), Head for the Hills, Billy Nershi’s Blue Planet, Greensky Bluegrass, Cornmeal, Drew Emmitt Band & many more.

Head For The Hills

Friday

Head for the Hills (2 sets)
Gregory Alan Isakov
The Grant Farm with Benny Galloway, Tyler Grant, Andy Thorn, and Jordan Ramsey

Saturday
Wicked Messenger plays The Grateful Dead & Bob Dylan (featuring Adam Aijala & Ben Kaufmann with special guests)
Adam Aijala & Ben Kaufmann Duo (of Yonder Mountain String Band)
Greensky Bluegrass

The Drew Emmitt Band
Swing Set featuring Dave Johnston of Yonder Mountain String Band
White Water Ramble

Sunday
Billy Nershi’s Blue Planet (featuring Keith Moseley and Bill Nershi of String Cheese Incident)
Cornmeal

Mountain Standard Time
Pete Kartsounes Band
Spring Creek Bluegrass Band
Springdale Quartet


Umphrey’s McGee Summer Tour

UMPHREY’S MCGEE ANNOUNCE COMPLETE SUMMER TOUR SCHEDULE

INCLUDING BONNAROO, SUMMERFEST, ALL GOOD AND OTHERS

PLUS, BIG PLAYS RED ROCKS AMPHITHEATRE ON JULY 3 WITH GALACTIC AND THE WAILERS

AT LC OUTDOOR AMPHITHEATRE IN COLUMBUS OPENING FOR WISESPREAD PANIC, AND MORE

Jake Cinninger – UM :: 01.22.10 :: Aspen by
Spady

On the heels of big plays in Amsterdam and Australia, and still buzzing from the ground-breaking first annual UMBowl (JamBase review and photos here) in Chicago, pop prog rockers Umphrey’s McGee today unveil their complete summer 2010 tour schedule.

The band’s summer plans include stops at festivals throughout the country: Bonnaroo, Summer Camp, Wakarusa, Summerfest, and All Good, among others. Additional tour highlights include a highly anticipated Colorado visit – for a July 3 “Red Rocks & Blue” show at Red Rocks Amphitheatre with Galactic (featuring Cyril Neville) and The Wailers and an intimate play on the 4th of July at the Gothic Theatre, and an opening stint for Widespread Panic on July 13 at LC Outdoor Amphitheater in Columbus, OH. Umphrey’s McGee’s complete summer tour schedule is included below.

Umphrey’s McGee’s complete list of summer tour dates is as follows:

May 28 – Sunday, May 30 Summercamp Chillicothe IL

June 2 House of Blues New Orleans LA w/ Brock Butler

June 3 House of Blues Dallas TX w/ Brock Butler

June 4 – Saturday, June 5 Wakarusa Festival Ozark AR

June 10 – Sunday, June 13 Bonnaroo Manchester TN

June 30 Summerfest Milwaukee WI

July 2 Nateva Music & Arts Festival – Oxford Fairgrounds Oxford ME

July 3 Red Rocks Amphitheatre Morrison CO w/ Galactic and The Wailers

July 4 Gothic Theatre Englewood CO

July 7 Centennial Terrace Sylvania OH Co-headlining w/ moe.

July 8 Party in the Park Rochester NY w/ Cornmeal

July 9 All Good Music Festival Masontown WV

July 10 Forecastle Festival Louisville KY

July 11 Jamboozle Big Flats NY

July 13 LC Outdoor Amphitheater Columbus OH Opening for Widespread Panic

July 15 Lafayette Square Buffalo NY w/ Tea Leaf Green

July 16 Frederick Meijer Gardens Grand Rapids MI

July 17 White River Lawn Indianapolis IN w/ Rusted Root

July 29 South Shore Music Circus Cohasset MA w/ Rebelution

July 30 Cape Cod Melody Tent Hyannis MA w/ Rebelution

July 31 Gathering of the Vibes Bridgeport CT

August 1 Hampton Beach Casino Room Hampton Beach NH w/ Rebelution

August 4 Saranac Brewery Utica NY w/ Rebelution

August 5 Theatre at Westbury Westbury NY w/ Rebelution

August 6 Penn’s Peak Jim Thorpe PA

August 7 Stone Pony Asbury Park NJ

August 11 The Norva Norfolk VA

August 12 House of Blues Myrtle Beach SC w/ Rebelution

August 13 Raleigh Amphiteater Raleigh NC w/ Rebelution

August 14 Masquerade Music Park Atlanta GA w/ Rebelution

November 11 – Friday, November 12 Bear Creek Music & Art Fest Live Oak FL

Umphrey’s McGee Tour Dates :: Umphrey’s McGee News :: Umphrey’s McGee Concert Reviews


Can You Transform Without Getting Uncomfortable?


Here’s one of my theories on success:

Hypothesis: There is a positive correlation between how uncomfortable an individual is prepared to get and their likelihood of success – irrespective of the field of endeavour.

I came to this conclusion after decades of incidental and intentional research, exploration and observation.

The Genesis of My Company

I remember when I signed a commercial lease for the first time to secure a building and open my first training centre twenty years ago. Yes, I’m that old. I was twenty-six. I had no business experience, no assets (to speak of), owned no property and had zero experience as an employer. I put every cent I had into the business set-up and was left with less than a hundred dollars in the bank. I signed a lease committing me to a rent of six hundred dollars per week for the next three years. To me at that time, thirty thousand dollars a year was almost incomprehensible. I felt physically ill as I signed the papers. It may as well have been six million dollars a week - so nervous and stressed was I. To say I was uncomfortable is a massive understatement. I didn’t sleep properly for weeks. If there was another way, I would have chosen it. There wasn’t, so I got uncomfortable.

It worked out okay.

Speaking

I remember my first professional speaking gig. I was terrible. And terrified. Some of you have heard the story but the short version is that I sweated so much before my gig (yep before) that I had to dry my shirt with a hand dryer in a public bathroom before I could walk into the room. Classy, I know. I feel sorry for my audience (and the people who witnessed the shirt-drying fiasco) but I could never have delivered my thousandth presentation (which I did long ago) without doing that horrible initial one.

University

I also remember my first day of university as a thirty-six year-old who had never used a computer, never sat in a lecture theatre and who hadn’t studied formally for eighteen years. To be honest, I never really studied formally - even at school. I did more study in my first week of college than I did in thirteen years of primary and secondary schools combined. There I sat in an auditorium full of tech-savvy, computer-literate, fresh-out-of-school, eighteen year-olds who had never heard of black and white TV, Jackson Browne or the Eagles. Shameful. In my first class I had to ask the lecturer what a mouse, a hard-drive, a floppy disk (not what I pictured) and cursor were. He thought I was kidding. For two months I typed at the devastating speed of five words per minute. Unless they had more than two syllables – then I dropped back to four words. In the first week I actually paid a kid to give me remedial computer lessons between classes. She thought it was hilarious. And profitable. For the entire first semester I felt like a total fraud who should have been somewhere (anywhere) else. Socially, technically, academically and emotionally I was uncomfortable every day for most of the first year of my degree. Three years later I was a university lecturer. With a published book - typed by me! (Slightly faster than five words per minute too.)

Being Full Figured. Thick Set. Stocky. Big-Boned… er… Fat

Then there was my first ever run as an obese teenager. I was in year eight, weighed 90 kilos (198lbs) and was more suited to sitting or shuffling than I was to running. As much as it (and the subsequent hundred runs) hurt, I knew that nothing could be as painful as the social and emotional rejection that accompanied being a fat kid. So running it was. Discomfort it was. Five months after my first (painfully slow) jog and 30 kilos (66lbs) lighter, I was an endorphin junkie; addicted to the high that running gave me.

Where there’s discomfort, there’s growth. Where there are barriers, there are lessons. And where there is adversity, there is strength to be found and potential to be explored.

Building a Blog

Being a person who writes for an audience can be both gratifying and terrifying. Nobody likes criticism but I get it every day. Not some days, every day. Most bloggers with a large readership do. Or maybe it’s just me. Have enough readers and someone will hate you or hate what (or how) you write; it’s unavoidable. While writing for a high-traffic interactive blog like this one can be a stimulating, challenging, exciting and rewarding experience, it can also be freakin’ uncomfortable. Putting your thoughts, ideas and beliefs out there opens you up for all kinds of.. er… feedback. The truth is that, in order to create one of the best personal development resources in the world (one of my goals), I need to get uncomfortable often. That discomfort might come in the form of less-than-desirable feedback from a reader. It might come in the form of physical pain (back and neck mostly for me) which comes with too many hours spent at a keyboard. Or, it might simply be the reality of having to sacrifice certain things (for a period of time) in order to build and maintain the kind of resource that’s representative of my philosophy and consistent with my standards. Is it all worth it? Absolutely. Is it easy? Nope. It is uncomfortable? Often. Do I know why most bloggers throw in the towel before their site is a year old? Yep – because creating a high-quality site (and getting traffic to that site) is more work and effort than most people would ever imagine.

My Research Centre

Working on a gym floor for decades has been the perfect ‘laboratory’ for me to test the above hypothesis. You don’t need to be a genius to realise that people who are committed to being ‘comfortable’ (versus productive) in the gym are also the ones who are committed to staying where they are (consciously or not) – metaphorically speaking. I’ve always been amused by people who pay for a membership and turn up at the gym regularly, only to go-through-the-motions month after month. It is their lack of willingness to get uncomfortable (not their genetics, age or physical potential) which stands between them and their best body. Or, at the very least, a better body. Why do you think Australians spend over two million dollars every day on weight-loss pills, powders and potions when they could simply eat less and move more to get the job done? Because they want the results without the discomfort; that’s why. After all, progressive exercise programs and controlled calorie intakes ain’t much fun – so pills it will be. For some.

Major Discomfort

And then there are those people who will deal with a level of discomfort that the rest of us wouldn’t even want to consider. Aaron Ralston is an adventure dude who famously cut off his own right arm to free himself after a tragic hiking accident. Here’s a snapshot of his story (as shared on msnbc.com):

Ralston’s gripping story captured the world’s imagination back in April 2003. Known for being a daredevil, Ralston, now 32, went mountain-climbing in Canyonlands National Park in Utah. And not only did he travel solo – he neglected to tell anyone about his trip.

Ralston fell into a crevice, dislodging an 800-pound boulder in the process, and the slab pinned him against a canyon wall. After five days trying to lift and break the boulder, he came to an agonizing decision: He had to cut off the lower part of his lifeless right arm. Ralston managed to snap the bones of his arm against the rock, and then used the dull blade of a multi-use tool to cut through the tissue around his broken arm. He used pliers to sever the tendons and finally extricated himself.

Ralston then rappelled down a 65-foot wall. He had begun an 8-mile (13 km) hike back to his vehicle when a vacationing family met up with him on the trail and called for help. After months of rehabilitation, Ralston returned to an active lifestyle and even resumed climbing. Two years after his accident, he climbed 14,000-foot peaks in his native Colorado with the help of a prosthetic right hand.

But…

Now, I know what you’re thinking: “but Craig, he was in a life or death situation”. I agree, the circumstances were extreme but it’s my belief that the vast majority of people finding themselves in a similar situation would simply have perished out there. The prospect of cutting off any limb (especially one attached to our own body!) is simply something that would be too much for most people to deal with.

Or perhaps I’m wrong?

In that moment, that place and that situation, success (living) for Aaron meant getting very (very) uncomfortable. And not only did he choose to deal with the physical discomfort (discomfort doesn’t really seem adequate does it?), but can you even begin to imagine the psychological and emotional discomfort that would accompany such a decision and action? It’s amazing what we can tolerate (how uncomfortable we can get) and how much power, strength and ability we can tap into when we believe we have no other option.

When we take away the safety net (the one we always give ourselves) it’s amazing what we can do.

While there are many variables which play a role in the transformational process (vision, planning, preparation, goal-setting, talent, knowledge, support, etc.), it’s my experience that the person with every ingredient except a willingness to get uncomfortable, is the person who will fail. Time after time. Once we acknowledge (and accept) that lasting transformation can only occur when we face our fears and choose to get uncomfortable on a regular basis, then we begin to move from self-limitation to self-empowerment.

So, what is it you’re after - comfort or transformation?

Image: mccheek

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Craig Harper (B.Ex.Sci.) is a qualified exercise scientist, author, columnist, radio presenter, television host, motivational speaker and university lecturer. For the past 25 years he has been a leading presenter, educator, motivator and commentator in the areas of personal and professional development. You can visit Craig’s blog at Motivational Speaker.FREE eBook – So… You’ve Decided to Get in Shape (Again) Craig’s FREE eBook takes 20 – 30 minutes to read, and addresses the REAL getting-in-shape issues based on his 25 years of experience. To get Craig’s FREE eBook click here, weight loss books.

Measuring small things: The force is weak with this one

Scientists measure a few yoctonewtons for the first time

HOW small is small? In the widely used international system of units known as the SI system (after the French Systeme International d’Unites), “yocto” is the smallest prefix. Adopted in 1991, it stands for a multiplying factor of one part in a million billion billion (one septillion) parts, which is often written as 10-24.

That is pretty small. A proton’s mass at rest is about 1.6726 yoctograms and a neutron’s mass just a tad more at 1.6749 yoctograms. But other than this, there has not been much need for the yocto prefix. That may change. Michael Biercuk, then at America’s National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) in Boulder, Colorado, and his fellow researchers have reported that they have measured a force of 174 yoctonewtons (yN). This is the smallest force ever detected, by some three orders of magnitude. …

moe. | 04.17.10 | Denver

Words by: Ray Bowden | Images by: Larry Hulst

moe. :: 04.17.10 :: Fillmore Auditorium :: Denver, CO


moe. with Kyle Hollingsworth :: 04.17.10 :: Denver

moe. has long been accused of endless noodling, but as any fan of the band would argue, “You either get it or you don’t.”

On Saturday night at Denver’s Fillmore Auditorium, more than 2,000 moe. fans “got it.”

The band hit the stage for the final show of their two-night stint at the Fillmore wearing suits and ties, dressed like stunt doubles from a Martin Scorsese movie, and leapt into three hours of their patented polyrhythmic rock.

The evening’s first set began with a frenetic “Skrunk,” punctuated by Rob Derhak‘s full-frontal bass assault. Following a cheerful wave from Derhak came “Captain America,” which had everyone on the packed floor – including one fire marshal – grooving to the music and singing “You may be right, you may be wrong” during the chorus.

Without missing a beat, the band transitioned into “Akimbo,” showcasing for the first time their ability to change musical direction with whiplash precision. After a brief pause to get everything just exactly right, the audience was rewarded with the Caribbean lilt of “Bring it Back Home,” drummer Vinnie Amico and percussionist extraordinaire Jim Loughlin stirring the pot with their percolating rhythms while guitarist Al Schnier led the jubilant throng through the song’s sing-along chorus.

During the slow transition into “Blue Jeans Pizza,” String Cheese Incident keyboardist and opening act Kyle Hollingsworth, sporting a black and white bovine suit, joined the boys for a trip to “Mexico,” his virtuosity shining through.


Jeff Austin with moe. :: 04.17.10 :: Denver

moe. began its second set sans Hollingsworth with a 15 minute “Water” which bled into “Tailspin,” the audience dancing in tandem with the song’s almost preternatural funk, before bounding into “Wind it Up.” Schnier and fellow guitarist Chuck Garvey simply shredded during the instrumental breaks, wrestling fat chords and piercing leads from their instruments.

Loughlin’s xylophone fills smoothed the jagged edges of the introspective “Letter Home,” before Yonder Mountain String Band‘s Jeff Austin stepped up to the plate with electric mandolin in hand for “Happy Hour Hero,” and “She.”

“Jeff’s a good dude,” Derhak said with a smile while Austin tuned his instrument. “He’s always up for a challenge.”

This musical “challenge” lasted 40 minutes, the band riding the waves of “Happy Hour Hero” while Austin’s mandolin riffs poured over the audience, adding splashes of color before turning the corner into the extended “She.”

After Austin left the stage to prolonged cheers of gratitude, moe. wrapped up its second set with “Seat of My Pants.” Quickly returning to the stage, they summoned their resources for one encore, an epic “Plane Crash,” during which they explored nearly all the genres of music they had touched upon earlier in the evening.

moe. taper and audience member Jim McCreedy, a longtime moe. fan from Boulder, said he has followed moe. for a number of years and called the band’s music “psychedelic rock on steroids. It makes the hair on the back of my neck stand up,” McCreedy said.

Indeed.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”4″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=31″);}); moe. | The Fillmore Auditorium | Denver, CO moe. perform at The Fillmore in Denver with special guests Kyle Hollingsworth of The String Cheese Incident and Jeff Austin of Yonder Mountain String Band… View Photos

moe. :: 04.17.10 :: Fillmore Auditorium :: Denver, CO

Set I: Skrunk, Captain America > Akimbo, Bring It Back Home > Blue Jeans Pizza* > Mexico*

Set II: Water > Tailspin, Wind it up, Letter Home^ > Happy Hour Hero^ > She^, Seat Of My Pants

Encore: Plane Crash



* w/ Kyle Hollingsworth

^ w/ Jeff Austin

moe. Tour Dates :: moe. News :: moe. Concert Reviews

JamBase | Colorado

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iPad thieves rip off man’s finger

A pair of thieves in Denver, Colorado wanted a man’s iPad so badly that they ripped off his little finger to get it, according to local media reports Tuesday.
The victim, Bill Jordan told FOX31 News that he bought the device to give as a business gift last week and that he was attacked by two [...]

Bluegrass In Paradise Fest Crested Butte w/ Emmitt, Nershi

BLUEGRASS COMES HOME TO CRESTED BUTTE; A NEW ROOTS GATHERING FINDS ITSELF IN
PARADISE

Drew Emmitt

For thirteen years, the Crested Butte Music Festival (CBMF) has turned Crested Butte into one big concert
hall in the summer, with music resounding from outdoors venues, hotels, stunning private homes, churches and
barns. This summer, for the first time, CBMF will host Bluegrass in Paradise, a five-day festival for one of
the most popular musical genres in the American West. From July 6-10, both traditional bluegrass and “newgrass”
will be showcased in a range of events: a three-day camp for kids, workshops for adults, jam sessions, children’s
performances and six top-level bands. For five days of foot-stomping fun, learning, and camaraderie, Bluegrass in Paradise will keep festival goers on their feet.

The host of the Festival is internationally acclaimed newgrass star – and resident of Crested Butte – Drew Emmitt. Emmitt is not only
one of the most energetic and innovative mandolin players in bluegrass today, he is also a singer, storyteller, and
master of multiple stringed instruments. He has played with the band Leftover Salmon, and most recently, the
Drew Emmitt Band. This jack-of-all-roots-trades will be a stimulating guide through the five days of Bluegrass in
Paradise.

2010 Performer Lineup:

Ralph Stanley & The Clinch Mountain Boys: Stanley, The Godfather of bluegrass, is still the best banjo picker and tenor singer in bluegrass music
after 55 years in the business. As a recording artist, he has performed on more than 170 albums, tapes and CDs. He has written countless songs both individually and together with his brother, the late Carter Stanley. Ralph has played throughout the United States and the world, including several tours of Japan.

Emmitt-Nershi Band:
Festival host Drew Emmitt will perform with Billy Nershi, the founding member and acoustic guitarist of The String Cheese Incident, an American
jam band from Boulder, Colorado. The Emmitt-Nershi Band will feature Emmitt on mandolin and vocals, Nershi on
acoustic guitar and vocals, Andy Thorn who plays with both Larry Keel and the Drew Emmitt
band on banjo, and Tyler Grant from the Drew Emmitt Band on bass.

Bearfoot: Bluegrass music
from Alaska? Not just any bluegrass, but some of the best. Telluride Band Contest winner Bearfoot has a fresh
approach to acoustic music that features twin fiddles, fast-picking mandolin and guitar, upright bass, and beautiful
harmony vocals. Bearfoot’s exuberant stage presence elicits an appeal that bridges generations.

Shannon Whitworth:
Shannon Whitworth, a founding member of the acclaimed acoustic quartet The Biscuit Burners, has set a high bar
for Americana music in the last few years. Her definitive songwriting and captivating voice have earned her national
praise. Shannon’s debut solo release, No Expectations, is pure, strong, and heartfelt, catching
the ears and touching the hearts of the most unsuspecting bystander.

Blue Highway: Now in its
sixteenth year as a band, Grammy-nominated Blue Highway is indisputably one of the most esteemed and influential
groups in contemporary bluegrass. With a deep bench of virtuosic songwriters, vocalists and instrumentalists, Blue
Highway’s hallmark is an unwavering commitment to the ensemble, the “democracy of the band” that makes Blue
Highway a powerhouse.

Spring Creek: In 2009,
Spring Creek joined the ranks of Ralph Stanley & The Clinch Mountain Boys, Kenny & Amanda Smith and Steep Canyon Rangers as a Rebel Records
recording artist. Hailing from Lyons Colorado, Spring Creek’s creative original songs and meticulous harmony vocals
made it the first Colorado-based band to be signed by Rebel.