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Posts Tagged ‘colour’

Evolution and coat colour: Well spotted

The reason why some cats are plain and others are patterned

HOW the leopard got his spots is, famously, the subject of one of Rudyard Kipling’s “Just So Stories”. Kipling suggested they were handprints made by the leopard’s human friend. More plausibly, he had an explanation for what the spots are for: to break up the animal’s shape when it is hiding in the dappled light of the forest.

These days, the human-handprint theory of the leopard’s spots has fallen out of favour. Instead, a more prosaic idea has gained ground, based on what is known as reaction-diffusion pattern formation, in which chemicals that trigger the differentiation of cells in an embryo interact with one another to produce patterns that are then reflected in the fates of nearby cells. But that, too, has its difficulties. Just how much a process like this can be shaped by natural selection is unclear. …

Late Night TV Musical Guests: 10/11-10/17

Late Night TV Music Lineups



Can’t make it to any shows this week? We’ve got you covered. Check out our weekly schedule of late night talk show musical guests…

David Letterman Musical Guests


Mon, October 11 – Mark Ronson with Q-Tip and MNDR
Tue, October 12 – My Morning Jacket
Thu, October 14 – Diddy


Jay Leno Musical Guests


Mon, October 11 – Travie McCoy
Tue, October 12 – Johnny Mathis
Wed, October 13 – M.I.A.
Fri, October 15 – John Legend


Jimmy Kimmel Musical Guests


Mon, October 11 – The xx
Wed, October 13 – Mark Ronson
Thu, October 14 – Damian “Jr. Gong” Marley and Nas


Craig Ferguson Musical Guests


Tue, October 12 – Trace Adkins
Fri, Octboer 15 – Billy Currington


Jimmy Fallon Musical Guests


Mon, October 11 – Brad
Tue, October 12 – Everest
Wed, October 13 – My Morning Jacket
Thu, October 14 – Ben Folds


Carson Daly Musical Guests


Mon, October 11 – The Walkmen (Repeat)
Tue, October 12 – Broken Bells
Wed, October 13 – Lissie
Thu, October 14 – City And Colour
Fri, October 15 – Nathan Barr


Saturday Night Live Musical Guest


Sat, October 16 – Katy Perry


OK Go: Video Premiere & Tour Dates

OF THE COLOUR OF THE BLUE SKY OUT NOW;
NORTH AMERICAN TOUR LAUNCHES
OCTOBER 2


OK Go

The world premiere of “White Knuckles,” the video for OK Go‘s new single, will be on The Ellen DeGeneres Show today. The new clip
can be seen thereafter at Ellen’s website. OK Go will cap
off Monday with a performance of “White Knuckles” on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno.

OK GO – FALL 2010 NORTH AMERICAN TOUR DATES

10/2 Waltham, MA Brandeis University
10/3 Pomona, CA Los Angeles County Fair

10/6 Boulder, CO Fox Theater Company of Thieves/Summer Darling
10/8 Northfield, MN St. Olaf College Company of Thieves/Summer Darling
10/10 Chicago, IL House of Blues Company of Thieves/Summer Darling
10/12 Louisville, KY Discover Louisville Festival Company of Thieves/Summer Darling
10/13 Cleveland, OH Beachland Ballroom Company of Thieves/Summer Darling
10/14 Toronto, ON Phoenix Theater Company of Thieves/Summer Darling
10/15 Ottawa, ON Capital City Music Hall Company of Thieves/Summer Darling
10/16 Montreal, QC Le National Company of Thieves/Summer Darling
10/17 Burlington, VT Higher Ground Company of Thieves/Eytan & the Embassy
10/20 Portland, ME Port City Music Hall Company of Thieves/Eytan & the Embassy
10/22 Camden, ME PopTech Conference
10/26 Syracuse, NY Westcott Theater Those Darlins/Eytan & the Embassy
10/27 Clifton Park, NY Northern Lights Those Darlins/Eytan & the Embassy
10/28 Hartford, CT Webster Theater Those Darlins/Eytan & the Embassy
10/29 New York, NY Terminal 5 Those Darlins/Eytan & the Embassy
10/30 Madison, WI Freak Fest
10/31 Columbus, OH Newport Music Hall Those Darlins/Samuel
11/2 Asheville, NC The Orange Peel Those Darlins/Samuel
11/3 Charleston, SC The Music Farm Those Darlins/Samuel
11/4 Athens, GA 40 Watt Club Those Darlins/Samuel
11/5 Nashville, TN Mercy Lounge Those Darlins/Samuel
11/6 New Orleans, LA Tipitina’s Uptown Those Darlins/Samuel
11/19 Santa Barbara, CA The Hub @ UC Santa Barbara

OK Go
Tour Dates

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Reviews


Late Night TV Musical Guests: 7/12-7/16

Late Night TV Music Lineups



Can’t make it to any shows this week? We’ve got you covered. Check out our weekly schedule of late night talk show
musical guests…

David
Letterman Musical Guests


Mon, July 12 – Steel Train
Tue, July 13 – M.I.A.
Wed, July 14 – Laurie
Anderson

Thu, July 15 – Jimmy Cliff


Jay Leno Musical
Guests


Mon, July 12 – Tracy
Bonham

Wed, July 14 – Flo Rida
Thu, July 15 –
Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Fri, July 16 – The Swell
Season


Jimmy
Kimmel Musical Guests


Mon, July 12 – Sublime with Rome (Repeat)
Wed, July 14 – Korn (Repeat)
Thu, July 15 – The Dream


Craig Ferguson
Musical Guests


Tue, July 12 – Dierks Bentley

Thu, July 15 – Marina
and the Diamonds


Jimmy Fallon
Musical Guests


Mon, July 12 – Big Boi
Tue, July 13 – Kelis
Wed, July 14 – M.I.A.


Carson Daly
Musical Guests


Mon, July 12 – Angels & Airwaves
(Repeat)
Tue, July 13 – The Morning Benders
(Repeat)
Wed, July 14 – OK Go (Repeat)
Thu, July 15 – City and Colour
(Repeat)
Fri, July 16 – Nas & Damian Marley (Repeat)


Late Night TV Musical Guests: 5/24-5/30

Late Night TV Music Lineups



Can’t make it to any shows this week? We’ve got you covered. Check out our weekly schedule of late night talk show musical guests…

David Letterman Musical Guests


Tue, May 25 – The Black Keys
Wed, May 26 – John Prine and Jim James (of My Morning Jacket)
Thu, May 27 – OK Go (Repeat)
Fri, May 28 – Usher (Repeat)


Jay Leno Musical Guests


Mon, May 24 – Bettye LaVette
Tue, May 25 – John Butler Trio
Wed, May 26 – Hanson
Thu, May 27 – Allison Moorer


Jimmy Kimmel Musical Guests


Mon, May 24 – Nas and Damian “Jr. Gong” Marley

Tue, May 25 – Peter Frampton
Wed, May 26 – Stone Temple Pilots
Thu, May 27 – Stone Temple Pilots


Craig Ferguson Musical Guests


Tue, May 24 – Mishka
Thu, May 27 – Band of Horses
Fri, May 28 – The National


Jimmy Fallon Musical Guests


Tue, May 25 – Frightened Rabbit
Wed, May 26 – The Black Keys
Thu, May 27 – Reflection Eternal
Fri, May 21 – Stars


Carson Daly Musical Guests


Mon, May 24 – Holly Golightly (Repeat)
Tue, May 25 – OK Go
Wed, May 26 – City And Colour
Thu, May 27 – Nas and Damian “Jr. Gong” Marley
Fri, May 28 – Janelle Monae


Other Shows of Interest

Sat, May 29 – Saturday Night Live featuring a performance by Ke$ha (Repeat)

Sat, May 29 – Austin City Limits TV Show featuring Foo Fighters (Repeat)


White hot

Any colour, so long as it’s white

IF A single auction could encapsulate the crazy, competitive world of bidding for Chinese treasures, it was a sale of fine Chinese art at Bonhams in London on May 13th.

The consignors of the first 61 lots were the heirs of Jack Rose, an English collector whose widow died last year. Half of these were carved pieces of jade, many dating as far back as the 16th century. A number came with an exceptional provenance having been sold to Rose by Sydney H. Moss, one of London’s great post-war dealers. …

Frightened Rabbit: From the Greys to Colour

By: Ryan Dembinsky

Frightened Rabbit by Jannica Honey

Back in October of 2008, huddled together closely in a cluttered green room upstairs at the Music Hall Of Williamsburg, the members of a band from Selkirk, Scotland called Frightened Rabbit – most of whom wielded Apple computers as they killed time before their set supporting Delaware’s Spinto Band – chatted amiably about their friendships with one another, the critical success of their latest album, The Midnight Organ Fight, and its acoustic offshoot Liver, Lung, FR, as well as their current U.S. tour.

What they didn’t know at the time was that they were actually responsible for my own personal Almost Famous moment so-to-speak. That was my first real backstage interview. Everybody always tells a newbie or an underdog to “act like you’ve been here before.” So, that’s what I did. Being a tad nervous, I polished off about eight beers beforehand at a bar across the street, only to find out Frightened Rabbit consists entirely of down-to-earth, thoughtful gents who are happy to share their insights on any number of subjects. What resulted were a lot of laughs and subsequently, one of the finest indie rock shows I’ve seen – and that’s not just because of all the beers!

Fast forward about 18 months and Frightened Rabbit no longer play the role of underdog either. On the contrary, having just released their third full-length album, The Winter of Mixed Drinks (released March 1 on Fat Cat Records), produced by indie wunderkind Peter Katis (The National, Swell Season), fans and critics alike have been teeming with anticipation for this release ever since The Midnight Organ Fight went on to populate so many 2008 “Best Of” lists and the band itself emerged as leaders of a burgeoning Glasgow music scene – one of the most compelling locales in music today.

On the day before the big release of The Winter of Mixed Drinks, JamBase caught up with the busy rockers to check in on all things Scottish, working with Peter Katis, and the unwritten rules of being a Frightened Rabbit.

JamBase: List 3-5 things that influenced this record, such as people, books, movies, other musicians, events in your life, or feelings at the time.

Scott Hutchison: Ted Hughes’ book Songs of the Crow was a massive influence lyrically. It’s an amazingly powerful set of poems, and there is a wonderful thread running through the series. It’s terrifying in places. The North Sea had a huge effect on the record. There are clear nautical references throughout, and they would not have been there were it not for my coastal location at the time of writing. Walking was a major factor in the way I finished the writing process. There is something about the rhythm of striding across the land that gets the mind ticking over. A brusque walk always sparks an idea for me.

JamBase: Could you give some background on your relationship with Peter Katis, both from a working and friendship perspective?

Scott Hutchison by Lewis Cooper

Scott Hutchison: We were incredibly lucky to work with Peter on The Midnight Organ Fight. He is an old friend of Adam Pierce’s [the head of Fat Cat, USA] and as such we probably got a good deal. At first, everyone was unsure about what we were trying to do; I think he wondered what the hell we were doing in his studio. But slowly we gained an understanding of each other and it started a great working relationship. I love what he does with records. His style is a little different from my own, perhaps he works a lot more subtly, but that is something that adds a great deal to the records. He creates space, whereas I have a tendency to fill it up with all sorts of shit.

Last time we spoke, we joked around about your childhood growing up with Grant [Hutchison, his sibling and FR's drummer] and how when you first started playing music it wasn’t so cool to have your little brother in the band, but as you guys grew up you came to become close friends. How would you characterize your relationship these days?

It’s still a totally solid friendship. We have fairly distinct roles within the band, and we tend not to step on each other’s toes. Grant deals with much of the day-to-day running of the band, something I am fairly inept at. It’s great that he has a knack for organization, because it allows me to go forward with the creative side. We still argue, but it’s always constructive. And I am always right [laughs].

Along those same lines, how would you describe the camaraderie of the band?

The best way to sum things up is through the unwritten, and usually unspoken, rules within the band. You don’t finish Grant’s cider. You don’t fuck with Billy [Kennedy, bass] when he’s hungry. You let me sit in the front seat for most of the journey. If Andy [Monaghan, guitar] has gone missing, he will be “on a wander.” Don’t try to find him; he always comes back on time. Gordon [Skene, keyboards] doesn’t like shit food. If you suggest a Chinese buffet, he won’t be joining you.

Could you talk about some of the interesting elements from working in the studio that came across on the new album, such as cool overdubs, effects, interesting things you used for sound effects, etc.?

Frightened Rabbit from last.fm

The most important item of equipment became the SP-404 sampler that I bought when I was writing the record. We just took some of the loops and sounds straight off there. They were pretty lo-fi, but I think it stopped the record from becoming too “over-produced,” although some may argue otherwise.

I gather in listening to the album that it’s meant to be emblematic of escaping one’s life or running away, so to speak, which seems somewhat consistent with Midnight Organ Fight. Could you give a little background on how you got to this concept?

Quite simply, I was alone for a certain amount of time, which gave me the space to assess what was and was not important in life. I’m not saying I’ve got it figured out, but the simplicity of things out in Crail [Scotland, where the bulk of the record was written] made everything seem so fucking easy. My brain just worked the way it ought to out there. The city can be stifling.

On the flip side, there’s some unbridled optimism toward the end of the record on “Living in Colour” and “Not Miserable.” Are you happy these days?

Yep! I was never terribly unhappy for long periods of time before, but I suppose listening to the last record you could be forgiven for thinking that I was permanently miserable. I’m pleased to say life is pretty good right now. Long may it continue!

So, you guys are getting closer to full-on fame nowadays. How do you feel about fame? Do you welcome it or is it a little scary to think about it?

Frightened Rabbit

I can’t say I’m aware of being on the brink of full-on fame. There are different levels I suppose. It’s nice when people come up to you in the supermarket to tell you that they like your music. I won’t ever get tired of that. When they start telling me I’m a dick and my music sucks, I will begin to worry.

How much influence did Peter Katis have on the sound and the material? Did he help write with you at all?

He didn’t have a role in the writing, but he has an absolutely magic touch on all of the records he works on. The albums quite simply would not sound as they do without Peter’s input. As I said before, he mixes very subtly, and especially in the new record, has helped to create some space in a rather busy, layered record.

With Midnight Organ Fight you spent about two weeks in the studio. How did the process this time around compare?

We had about twice as much time. On Organ Fight we essentially recreated the demos note-for-note in the studio. This time, we saved a lot of the arranging and creativity for the studio itself, so it was a lot more involved. Perhaps the luxury of time led to certain portions of the album getting a tad overblown, musically, but it’s something we were aware of, and it’s definitely the way I wanted this one to sound. It’s not something I wish to repeat next time.

There’s quite an indie music revolution occurring in Scotland these days, particularly on Fat Cat, with you guys, James Graham and We Were Promised Jetpacks. What would you say makes Glasgow and Scotland in general so special for music?

Frightened Rabbit

Scotland is an indoor nation. Making music, or any kind of art, is perfect for us. We are pale and pasty-faced, hate the sun and love a dark room. There’s a very specific dark and self-deprecating nature in lots of Scots that filters through to the creative output of the nation. Glasgow is the center for most of this activity. It’s a city built for the arts. There are so many spaces to play and work in. It just breeds good stuff.

What are your two favorite songs on the album, one from the perspective of the music and one from the perspective of the lyrics?

“Things” is the most succinct song I’ve ever written, lyrically speaking. There’s not much wasted language in there, which I like. I think parts of “Skip the Youth” are our most musically ambitious to date; I’m especially fond of the two minute intro. I’m aware that it could be incredibly annoying for some people, but that only makes me love it more.

Finally, when last time we spoke, you had some pretty funny comments about the Enemy [aka, NME]. It seems as though they have since taken quite a liking to Frightened Rabbit. Are you still skeptical about them? What are your feelings toward the music media in general these days?

I have no beef with anyone in the music media. I don’t expect to be universally loved. I don’t want to be. It’s healthy to read articles by people who clearly hate my band. The NME has been kind in recent months, which is great, though it’s not incredibly important to me. It’s best not to take any of that stuff too seriously. Reviews are relatively ephemeral in comparison to the actual content of the record.

Frightened Rabbit’s next U.S. show is at Coachella in April.

Frightened Rabbit Tour Dates :: Frightened Rabbit News :: Frightened Rabbit Concert Reviews

JamBase | Burrowing
Go See Live Music!


PM gives political colour to fragile economy


ISLAMABAD – Chairing first meeting of the Economic Coordination Committee (ECC) of the Federal Cabinet after Shaukat Tarin’s resignation, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani on Tuesday gave political colour to the state of economy as against the ground realities.
An official statement quoted the Prime Minister as saying during the meeting that within a period of two years, important economic targets had been achieved and the economy was back on the path of stability and progress. On the other hand, the GovernmentÂ’s own estimates have shown that it had missed the targets both deficit and revenues, let not talk about the inflation. Meanwhile IFIs with the International Monetary Fund on top of them have also termed the economy as still fragile despite emergence of recovery trend.
However, the Prime Minister stated that foreign exchange reserves were at a respectable level, workers remittances had shown impressive growth and revenue collection had improved.
According to the Prime Minister, the investorÂ’s confidence is also improving and manufacturing has started picking up. This turn around is a result of prudent economic decision making by the Government. The ECC decisions reflect the true aspirations of democratically elected Government for the welfare of people and alleviation of poverty.
The Prime Minister said that he introduced the system of obtaining endorsement of the Cabinet to all decisions of the ECC with a view to providing broad-based ownership to these decisions and then decided to bring these decisions to the Cabinet for information and discussion.
He bagged the credit for the GovernmentÂ’s subsidy of Rs 3 billion through Utility Store Corporation on the occasion of Eids, the price control on sugar, intervention price mechanism on wheat and rice that according to him have resulted in impressive growth in the agriculture sector reducing poverty from the rural areas.
In pursuance of earlier decision of the Cabinet, the Prime Minister directed setting up of Price Control Committees at the district, tehsil and town level throughout the country. The Committees should ensure availability of essential food items particularly sugar at the affordable prices to the common man, he added.
He desired timely implementation of the Cabinet decision regarding import of sugar so as to ensure smooth supply of white sugar in April. The ECC was informed that sufficient stocks of sugar were available and the Government would be able to purchase sugar at the most competitive rates which would reflect a saving of US $180 million.
Approving the import of 0.4 million tons of urea through TCP and its distribution by NFC / NFML for Kharif 2010, the ECC decided to import urea up to 0.1 million tons out of 0.4 million tons for remaining Rabi and Kharif season 2009-10 by TCP through Karachi Port immediately.
The ECC also endorsed its earlier decision of restoration of Pakistan Oilseeds Development Board (PODB).
While considering incentive package for investment in petrochemical complex Naphtha Cracker (NC), Polythylene (PE) Polylene (PP), the ECC allowed extension in the financial closure for a period of 12 months with effect from date of issuance of the approval.
Regarding deepening and widening of Port Qasim Navigation Channel, the ECC decided to accord approval for Sovereign Guarantee, enabling loan financing for the project.
In the light of recommendations of the Tariff Anomalies Committee, the ECC approved imposing 5 percent regulatory duty on the import of pigment thickener (PCT 3906.9030) and acrylic thickener (PCT 3906.9040).
In order to discourage export of waste and scrap of aluminium and copper, and promote export of value-added products manufactured from locally available raw materials, the ECC approved imposing 25 percent Regulatory Duty on the export of waste and scrap of aluminium and copper along with bars, rods, ingots, slabs and billets, etc made of these materials.
During the meeting, Ministry of Industries and Production made a presentation on the National Fertilizer Strategy. The ECC set up a Ministerial Committee to make final recommendations.
While discussing post Balancing, Modernisation and Replacement (BMR) concession for feed gas for M/s Pak American Fertilizer Limited and allocation of 16 mmcfd gas from SNGPL system for expansion in fertilizer expansion by Pak Arab Fertilizers Limited, the ECC accorded approval to the following recommendations of its sub-committee on this issue; The deadline for signing of GSA as given in Fertilizer Policy 2001, under clause 2.1.4 may be extended to 30th June 2012. Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Resources and the Ministry of Industries & Production need to review the cross subsidy / fertilizer feed gas price provisions under Fertilizer Policy 2001.
On Ministry of Food and Agriculture proposals regarding mechanism for procurement of rice directly from the small farmers, the ECC decided that the State Bank may ensure in time availability of Commodity Finance by the consortium of banks to enable PASSCO to start physical operation from 1st October in Sindh and 1st November in Punjab; limit on maximum quantity to be accepted from a single farmer up to 500 Mds should be strictly enforced; verification of land record by the provincial agriculture department / revenue authorities to ascertain the authenticity of the growers by a committee constituted by the provincial government be ensured; provincial government / local administration shall monitor the rice mills operation and facilitate PASSCO in its operation of procurement of paddy; capacity building of PASSCO & provincial agriculture / food departments, to enable these organisations for timely and responsive intervention in procurement of Paddy/other crops.
The ECC reviewed the indicators of the national economy with core inflation excluding food and energy decreased from 10.7 percent in December 2009 to 10.3 percent in January 2010. House Rent index has also declined from 18.4 percent in May 2009 to 13.4 percent in January 2010. CPI-based inflation stood at 10.8 percent in July – January 2009-10 as compared to 23.9 percent in the same period last year. Food inflation stood at 10.9% as against 29.8% last year. At the same time, non-food inflation stood at 10.7% as against 19.3% in the corresponding period of last year.
The Sensitive Price Index (SPI) for the week ending March 04, 2010 increased by 0.40 percent over previous week (Feb 25, 2010) and averaged 16.99 percent over the corresponding week of last year. Inflation (Y-o-Y) on the basis of SPI has been showing decreasing trend since the first week of February 2010.
The stock of wheat as on March 01, 2010 amounted to 5.1 million tons as against 1.2 million tons in the same period last year, thereby showing a higher stock of about 3.9 million tons as compared with the last year. As far as allocation and lifting position of wheat made from PASSCO for the year 2009-10 are concerned, the provinces / agencies have so far lifted 62.0 percent (1,085,864 m/tones) of their total allocated quantity (1,762,801 m/tones).
The Quantum Index of Large-Scale manufacturing (QIM) has registered a positive growth of 1.4 percent during July-December 2009-10, against negative growth rate of 5.4 percent during comparable period last year, while it grew by 6.8 percent during December 2009 over the same month last year. Imports recorded growth of 31.3% in January 2010 over the same month of the last year. Trade deficit improved by 22.0% to $8.4 billion in July-January 2009-10 from $10.8 billion in the same period last year. Workers remittances amounted to $5,198.1 million in July-January 2009-10 as against $4,277.3 million, showing an increase of 21.5% over the same period last year. Foreign exchange reserves stood at $14.8 billion as on March 03, 2010 – up from $6.4 billion on November 25, 2008.

Lissie: Feb/March Dates

LISSIE ADDS FEBRUARY, MARCH TOUR DATES

Lissie

On the heels of her recent tour with City and Colour, Lissie has announced new tour dates for February and March.

She will travel to London this week for two shows – including a performance at the HMV Next Big Thing Festival – before returning home to headline two of her own gigs, on Valentine’s Day at Muddy Waters in Santa Barbara, CA, and on February 16 at the Hotel Cafe in Los Angeles, CA. Lissie will then head out to sea to perform on the Cayamo 2010: A Journey Through Song cruise from February 21-26 alongside Emmylou Harris and Lyle Lovett, among others. Beginning March 11, she will tour in support of The Low Anthem en route to SXSW. Lissie is also now confirmed to perform on select dates of the Lilith Fair tour later this year.

Lissie’s Why You Runnin’ EP was released November 10, 2009 on Fat Possum Records and has been earning the young singer high praise, with coverage in Bust, Filter, Marie Claire, Nylon, and Under The Radar, among others. In addition to the recent Best of What’s Next profile in Paste, the Boston Globe included her in their Names To Know in 2010 feature, declaring she is “…not so much a soul singer as she is an incredibly soulful Americana artist who finds the sepia-toned sweet spot between Neko Case, Laura Marling, and the Shangri-Las.”

Her live shows have been drawing acclaim as well, with Soundcheck Magazine‘s blog writing, “The first time I heard Lissie on Minneapolis’ ‘The Current’ I had only one reaction: this is the breakout artist of 2010, I’m calling it now. Seeing her perform live at Central Presbyterian Church in Austin, TX merely confirmed this assumption. Lissie, standing like a dirty angel under the cross performing…singing, wailing, about angels following her home – pretty freakin epic if you ask me.”

Lissie has also recently stopped by a number of outlets to record or film live sessions, including: Baeble Music‘s Guest Apartment, Daytrotter, The Fader‘s Open Bar, HearYa, and Yours Truly.

Lissie Tour Dates

02/05/10 Fri Jazz Cafe London, GB

02/09/10 Tue The Social London, GB

02/14/10 Sun Muddy Waters Santa Barbara, CA

02/16/10 Tue The Hotel Cafe Los Angeles, CA
02/21/10 Sun Cayamo Music Cruise Miami, FL

02/22/10 Mon Cayamo Music Cruise Miami, FL

02/23/10 Tue Cayamo Music Cruise Miami, FL

02/24/10 Wed Cayamo Music Cruise Miami, FL

02/25/10 Thu Cayamo Music Cruise Miami, FL

02/26/10 Fri Cayamo Music Cruise Miami, FL

03/11/10 Thu 9:30 Club Washington, DC*

03/12/10 Fri First Unitarian Church Philadelphia, PA*

03/13/10 Sat Cat’s Cradle Carrboro, NC*

03/14/10 Sun Smith’s Olde Bar Atlanta, GA*

03/15/10 Mon Belcourt Theatre Nashville, TN*

*Supporting The Low Anthem


Colour me dazzled

Record auction prices for rare coloured diamonds

“If you have money to invest, there is no safer haven than something rare,” says Laurence Graff, the London-born “King of Diamonds”. If this is sales talk, he is his own best customer. In December 2008, during some of the bleakest days of the credit crisis, Mr Graff paid $24.3m for the 35.56-carat, 17th-century Wittelsbach blue diamond at Christie’s in London. He set the auction record for any jewel. But in his opinion, “it was the bargain of the century. In my life, it is the rarest of them all; it is the supreme coloured diamond.”

Yet Mr Graff felt it could be improved. His team began work on the Wittelsbach almost immediately. It was a daring, even daredevil, move. When he bought the historic diamond it worked out at $1.46m per carat. As a result of polishing it weighs four carats less. This could be calculated as a loss of about $6m, but not by Mr Graff. He values the Wittelsbach-Graff, as the gem is now called, at $100m. “We have given it life which it didn’t have before,” he explains. Many may soon judge for themselves. The Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC, has been in discussions with Graff regarding the possibility of a public presentation of the diamond at the National Museum of Natural History. …

Living Colour | 10.30 | NYC

Words by: Matt Draper | Images by: Greg Aiello

Living Colour :: 10.30.09 :: Highline Ballroom :: New York, NY

Living Colour :: 10.30 :: New York

When thinking about Living Colour, most music fans remember a funk-metal foursome who was a regular fixture on MTV in the early ’90s. Sporting enough neon to guide an airplane in, their outfits matched their sound: a loud, explosive force comprised of many flavors.

26 years after forming in New York City, Living Colour returned to Manhattan’s Highline Ballroom as part of a world tour in support of its fifth album, The Chair in the Doorway.

To be clear, this was not a reunion tour. Frontman Corey Glover has gone on record to say that despite each member’s side projects, Living Colour has been together for nearly a decade following its eight-year hiatus. These side projects included Glover playing the role of Judas in Jesus Christ Superstar, bassist Doug Wimbish and drummer Will Calhoun forming the drum and bass group Head>>Fake, and guitarist Vernon Reid playing with a range of artists, including forming the Yohimbe Brothers with DJ Logic. However, with the new album and massive tour, the band has a feel of reinvention. Better put, this latest incarnation of Living Colour features the same blistering metal-funk rockers who, as we found out at the Highline, have an even greater arsenal of sounds.

From his first words (“We’re baaaaaack!”), Glover commanded a vice grip on the sold out crowd, who was already fist-pumping during the first few lines of the band’s opener, “Burning Bridges,” an aggressive rock song that opens the new album. Glover led the way with his signature halting vocals, made all the more mesmerizing by his night-before-Halloween butcher costume, complete with goggles and leather apron. Calhoun and Wimbish drove the beat while Reid joined the fray to send the song home with his trademark wailing, dizzying guitar.

Vernon Reid :: 10.30 :: New York

A pair of new songs, “The Chair” and “Decadance,” followed next. “Chair,” which, according to a recent JamBase interview served as the album’s key metaphor, evoked a dark, hardcore feel with shouting vocals and deep, dripping bass lines, while “Decadance’s” hard-charging metal sound echoed early Metallica.

Reid stepped to the forefront in the next song, fan-favorite “Middle Man” from the band’s first album, Vivid. As Reid made a flourish of short solos, Glover showed off his vocal range, moving from powerful chorus shouts to flying falsettos. Riding a fired-up crowd hanging on every lyric, Glover unleashed his snarl, which built up to an exploding guitar solo by Reid.

“Time’s Up” followed, featuring Calhoun’s pulsating, rapid-fire drums before moving into “Go Away,” another dark, metal-tinged song. Mirroring many of the politically charged tunes from the Stain album, “Go Away” saw Glover twisting and lunging while belting out stinging lyrics on the topics of suffering and starvation. Reid was again let off his leash for a frenzied solo that seemed to climb higher with Glover’s final chorus shout of “Go awaaaaaaay!” Exhausted, Glover stuck out his tongue as if to pant after the full-body workout.

Shifting gears, Calhoun laid down delicate drums to a sampled backing beat that led to “Method.” The manufactured beats sandwiched between Living Colour’s heavy live sound built a layered effect, adding a new – and welcome – contemporary element to the band’s repertoire.

Corey Glover :: 10.30 :: New York

And then it was time for church. Summoning every ounce of gospel and soul, Glover took over the room with an extended vocal introduction to “Open Letter to a Landlord,” Vivid‘s housing-project anthem. Standing at the mic, bathed in a yellow spotlight, it was hard not to be blown away by Glover’s vocal command. As loud as it was beautiful, Glover hung onto the final word, “memories,” for what seemed like 15 seconds before letting it vanish into Reid’s ripping guitar. A large video screen behind Calhoun served as a visual of the lyrics, displaying dilapidated houses surrounded by flames.

The band then launched into “Bi,” a standard funk-rock tune that quickly became a set highlight when a ferocious Wimbish, now wielding a tiger-patterned bass, hopped down into the crowd and launched into a raging solo that featured him playing with fingers and, yes, his teeth.

“Y’all ain’t ready,” said Glover to the frenzied crowd, which included a packed floor section and second level of seated diners, many of whom had abandoned their chairs. And we weren’t ready, as Calhoun proceeded to slay the crowd with an eye-popping drum solo that made those played by Widespread Panic or The Dead seem like yawners in comparison. Clocking in at more than 10 minutes, Calhoun unleashed an onslaught of sonic weapons, manipulating drum-machines, smashing gongs, and hammering techno-triggered cymbals with neon-tipped drumsticks that made him look like the conductor of a firework show.

Doug Wimbish :: 10.30

With all four members returning to the stage, the band moved back in time with a cover of The Temptations‘ “Papa Was a Rollin’ Stone,” that quickly moved into the old-school hit “Glamour Boys.” Next was new one “Behind the Sun” followed by “Hard Times,” a funky blues number, and “Out of Mind,” a primal, stripped-down metal song warmly greeted by a few head-bangers in the front row.

And just when the band appeared ready to turn it up another level, things took an unusual turn. While Glover spoke to the crowd between songs, he couldn’t seem to take his eyes off Reid. What seemed like funny interplay between the two became a bit awkward, with Glover calling Reid a “crack head” several times (maybe for good reason – though Reid was killing it on guitar, he was shouting a steady stream of gibberish and at one point delayed a song when he didn’t realize his axe wasn’t plugged in).

A forgettable “Elvis is Dead” came next. Played at hyper-speed and featuring saxophone work by Jeff Smith, the song seemed to meander throughout. While impressive, Smith’s solo never hit the song’s high note and, with Reid looking a bit lost, the song came undone before transitioning to a short rendition of Elvis‘ “Hound Dog.”

“Type,” another crowd favorite, kicked the energy back up. The band sped up the studio version, striking a harder, faster tone before stopping on a dime to float into the tune’s “children of concrete and steel” chorus. With the song changing tempos, Glover’s vocals ebbed and flowed over Reid’s crunching guitar licks, and the song melted into a soaring, reggae-inspired finish.

With the band hitting its stride – and with the brief drama behind it – a familiar voice boomed over the speakers. It was Malcolm X, whose soundbite, “And during the few moments that we have left…,” serves as the introduction to “Cult of Personality,” the band’s biggest song that still, 20 years and a million worn-out cassette tapes later, carries an absolutely infectious hook. The crowd erupted with Reid’s first guitar lick and ended up providing, via Glover’s direction, back-up vocals through most of the song, including belting the last stanza at the top of its collective lungs.

Living Colour :: 10.30 :: New York

The band returned for an encore, with Glover informing the crowd he and Reid were bickering backstage over the final song. After mentioning the options – “Love Rears Its Ugly Head” or “Asshole” – Reid piped up, “Why not both?”

And that’s what they did. “Love” came out tight and super funky, and “Asshole” added a melodic touch to finish the show.

The crowd was beyond satiated and the band left the stage to a sea of clapping hands and full-throttle screams. A long line waited to buy merchandise, and the post-show crowd spilling onto 16th Street sung high praise. Living Colour delivered a rollicking two hours of metal, rock, punk, funk, and even a bit of dance music with Calhoun’s drum-circus solo. Minus a couple thrash-heavy metal tunes and Reid’s end-of-show aloofness, they threw down. Simply put, the band came roaring out of the gate, mowing through old and new material with balance while adding some new flavors. While things have drastically changed in both New York (the Highline Ballroom didn’t exist the last time the band put out an album) and the music industry (songs are now purchased electronically) since its beginnings, Living Colour continues to deliver a downright gripping live experience.

Living Colour :: 10.30.09 :: Highline Ballroom :: New York, NY

Burning Bridges, The Chair, Decadance, Middleman, Time’s Up, Go Away, Method, Open Letter to a Landlord, Bi, Drum Solo, Papa was a Rollin’ Stone, Glamour Boys, Behind the Sun, Hard Times, Out of Mind, Elvis is Dead, Hound Dog, Type, Cult of Personality

Encore: Love Rears Its Ugly Head, Asshole

JamBase | Colourful
Go See Live Music!


Living Colour: A Lively Conversation

By: Dennis Cook

Living Colour by Bill Bernstein

Who says a jazz band can’t play dance music?
Who says a rock band can’t play funky?
Who says a funk band can’t play rock?
Oh yeah!
We’re gonna play some funk so loud
We’re gonna rock and roll around
Watch them dance, Watch them dance

Rock music is a strange sausage. Originally stuffed with blues structures, jazz energy and country compositional sensibilities, the casing continues to stretch in the wake of electric fusion, hip hop, glam and countless other ingredients. And while some revel in trying to simplify rock’s flavors there are those that savor its capacity for complexities and contradictions. Since their explosive emergence in 1988 up through their potent new album, The Chair in the Doorway (released September 15 on Megaforce), Living Colour has been a poster child for rock’s expansive nature. Their latest release presents their intrinsic diversity with an overhanging cohesiveness that suggests the band makes more sense today than ever. As continents and cultures creep ever closer, Living Colour’s disregard for borders and healthy engagement with the world as it is seems right on time.

Their first single, “Cult of Personality,” was so striking, so unique and so forceful that it knocked one on their heels. It seemed a defining sound that a band could milk for ages but not long afterward they offered something as playful and humorous as “Love Rears Its Ugly Head” as single. The sense that Living Colour – Vernon Reid (guitar), Corey Glover (vocals), Doug Wimbish (bass) and Will Calhoun – could do anything lies at their core. This is a band that has truly freed their minds enough to embrace music outside of expectations or posted restrictions. For those of us in the late ’80s who loved Bad Brains, Chic, Ornette Coleman, Pere Ubu and The Talking Heads with equal vigor, Living Colour’s arrival seemed a beacon for heavy duty diversity. And absolutely nothing has changed since the group reformed in 2003 after an eight year hiatus.

Corey Glover by Greg Styer

“We don’t live in a monolithic kind of world. We never did. We supposedly – at least they sold us the idea – live in a melting pot with all kinds of different people and things in it. Particularly for African-American and people of color, you’ve been told you’re living in somebody else’s world and you have to adapt. So, we’ve always tried to adapt our world into the world that exists, into the everyday world. So, we took from everything,” says Corey Glover. “I will listen to an Eric Dolphy record right before I listen to some Creedence. It’s all the same shit to me!”

This potentially sloppy, utterly enthusiastic embrace of wide ranging musics is what rock is all about. At its best, the genre welcomes all comers and sorts out the collisions as they occur.

“Absolutely! Some people will often look at [Living Colour] and say we’re a funk-metal band. Well, that’s very limiting in its scope. We’re more than people who just play funk and metal. If you listen to the work you’ll know that to be true. It’s not the rote idea of what rock ‘n’ roll was,” Glover observes. “Vernon and I are from Brooklyn, Crown Heights in particular, where there’s a big African-American population, a big Caribbean and Latino community, as well as Hasidic Jews. So, who’s NOT going to listen to ALL kinds of stuff coming out of people’s car radios?”

However, not everyone has their big ears and after having spent close to a decade on the sidelines, Living Colour, a band whose debut, Vivid, was a Top 10 album with four high charting singles, found that much of their audience had dissipated.

“We came back in 2003 and nobody paid attention,” says Vernon Reid, while acknowledging that the time out of the spotlight helped the revived group grow stronger creatively. “This is the point bands of our vintage make desperate attempts to regain their youth. They try to come back to what they did before or, God help us, try to become hip. I believe we sidestepped those pitfalls.”

The Chair In The Doorway is certainly their most striking outing since Vivid, and perhaps their most cohesive, together album to date, working together from end-to-end in overlapping sonics and themes. It’s the kind of record one can come back to in six months or a year and keep discovering new things as they unravel different passages.

Vernon Reid by Greg Styer

“I’m amazed at the way it turned out. Each record we’ve made has had its own circumstances, their own difficulties. I think I had the most fun making Vivid because we were riding a rush of adrenalin for even having come that far. To have gotten that far was pure gravy,” says Reid. “Now, with The Chair In The Doorway, we’re a band with history. We’ve been through a breakup. We’ve had an original member leave the group [bassist Muzz Skillings left in 1992]. We’ve had children; we’re all fathers – it’s a beautiful burden and you are dad forever whatever happens! We’ve gone through all the various emotional thingsÂ…well, I don’t want to get too grand. Nobody shot anybody or anything! Nobody slept with anybody else’s wife! There’s certain places we haven’t gone but we’ve had a pretty intense band experience, and to make this record was real work to realize it.”

“We had a plan. The name of the record came before everything else, so each piece had to fit into that idea. That was the rubric we needed to figure out if a song worked or not for the record,” says Glover, touching on the album’s subtle interconnectedness. “That’s what the title is supposed to be. Some of my conversations with Vernon going into this had a surreal or super-real quality to them. My idea with The Chair in the Doorway was really talking about the four of us [in Living Colour], and talking about how some things are obvious to some people and not obvious to others, on the inside and the outside.”

The Chair In The Doorway is unique amongst our catalog because it’s the first record where we had the title of the album before we had any songs. During the initial recordings for Collideøscope (2003) we were putting ourselves through so much pressure, ill at ease having just come back together. In a way, 9/11 gave us something to make that record kind of about. The song ‘Flying’ is a direct result of 9/11. ‘A Question of When’ was written before 9/11 but became about 9/11,” continues Reid. “So, we had a break during recording Collideøscope and Corey and I went to see Spiderman 2. And there’s the usual bellyaching afterwards and Corey says, ‘You know, the chair is in the doorway.’ That’s one of the typical Yogi Berric type of things Corey will say. Then, later on we were in Paris doing press for Collideøscope, waiting for a photographer in this lovely courtyard, and I turned to Corey and said, ‘You know that thing you say about the chair being in the doorway? That’s the title of our next album.’”

Doug Wimbish by Greg Styer

“What I love about it is it’s the rarest of things, completely concrete – the chair is a physical thing – AND completely abstract. That’s what’s beautiful and terrible about language. That’s why political language is never to be trusted. George Orwell knew very well that language has many layers and levels. With music it’s often about who can come up with the phrase that pays,” laughs Reid. “The Chair In The Doorway spoke to me. There’s an obstruction. It’s an obvious obstruction. Who placed it there and who’s gonna get up and displace the obstruction? The chair is not supposed to be in the doorway. The chair’s supposed to be at a table or desk. The Chair In The Door is an unintended concept album. The title exerted this weird energy on the whole project. It’s so much about how we get in our own way and how something is so obviously in our way.”

A big part of the new release’s flavor is bassist Doug Wimbish, a veteran of industrial groove pioneers Tackhead, the revered On-U Sound label and former member of the Sugarhill Gang house band. His style is stealthy and lethal, a snake charmer with significant bite.

“Doug is really the catalyst for this new record. Without Doug Wimbish we wouldn’t have made the CD we did in Prague. It was Doug that codified all this music. He took all the grooves we did at sound checks and gigs and put them on a list for us to listen to and figure out what we were gonna do. Doug was the man in terms of how this record came to be what it is,” enthuses Glover. “There’s these gypsy bands that come out of the Czech Republic that takes bits of funk and rock and really mix stuff together. That’s how Doug really got involved in this scene and they introduced him to [Sono Studio in Prague, where The Chair in the Doorway was recorded]. These are people who appreciate music on all levels because this is a just-opening-up Eastern Bloc country that’s taking in everything. The guys who run the studio were a major catalyst for cool things on the new album.”

Continue reading for more on Living Colour…

 


. In a lot of ways, I think this is a good time for rock, and I think it’s going to become a better time for rock. When I look at say The Mars Volta, the complexion of what rock is has been fundamentally altered. And that’s a good thing.

-Vernon Reid

 

Race has been a pronounced issue for Living Colour since day one, but almost always coming from outside the band. Inside, these guys understand that rock is the child of multiple influences – some white, some black and some brown. The notion that black men playing rock is somehow unusual announces the ignorance of any critic speaking such nonsense. One would have to conveniently forget Arthur “Big Boy” Crudup, Buddy Guy, Sly Stone, Jimi Hendrix and countless others to utter such stupidity.

“Rock was an amalgam of so many things. It was mutt music to begin with. It was a little bit of gospel, a little bit of country music, a little bit of classical, a little bit of everything just thrown in there and all of a sudden here’s this new thing. That’s the only way innovation occurs. Something new is born of several different mothers and fathers,” says Glover. “The fact that we didn’t come directly from the blues, that a lot of it came from fusion jazz, maybe set people back a bit. Unfortunately, I read a lot of blogs, and the so-called metal blogs think we’re a metal band. We’re not a metal band. There’s aspects of metal music to it – we play HARD – but we’re in no way a metal band. There’s no particular category that suits us well. You couldn’t say we’re a jazz band or a complete rock band because we play elements of R&B. So, what are you going to say? We’re a band. Leave it at that.”

Will Calhoun & Corey Glover
by Greg Styer

Modern music culture has become very comfortable labeling things. It’s easier to market and sell that way, but music itself is fluid and hard to contain. It is, by nature, liquid stuff.

“It should be fluid! Do you listen to your iPod that way? You’re not going to go the ‘Rock’ category and just listen to rock songs. No, you hit play and whatever comes up you’re surprised and delighted by because it’s all the music that you love,” says Glover. “The other day I was listening to [69 Boyz'] ‘Tootsee Roll’ and then something real dark like the Swans came on afterwards and it worked!”

Realizing that he wasn’t alone in his struggles, in 1985 Vernon Reid co-founded the Black Rock Coalition, an organization formed in “reaction to the constrictions that the commercial music industry places on Black artists.” The Coalition continues to this day and Reid is suitably proud and excited about the current generation of artists of color reshaping rock and popular music.

“Now we have great bands like TV on the Radio, Santigold and Earl Greyhound on the scene. And there’s Afro-punk, which is kind of the snarky little brother to the Black Rock Coalition,” says Reid. “I’ll tell you what’s really got me jazzed right now. A really good friend of mine, William DuVall, is the new singer in Alice In Chains and I’m so happy for him. I had a solo record, This little room, that was going to be the follow-up to Mistaken Identity (1996) and William sings on two of the songs on that (unreleased) record. In a lot of ways, I think this is a good time for rock, and I think it’s going to become a better time for rock. When I look at say The Mars Volta, the complexion of what rock is has been fundamentally altered. And that’s a good thing.”

“One of the things I love about The Mars Volta is I don’t get it! I listen to it and it’s weird. It’s partly in Spanish but it’s prog. I love the fact that I didn’t already know where it was going,” continues Reid. “So much rock is a lifestyle, a factory produced thing. Led Zeppelin was still tied to the blues in a fundamental way, but the idea behind Led Zeppelin was still this experimental thing. You hear these bootlegs where they played ‘The Battle of Evermore’ for a half hour! There’s this whole notion that they were the beginning of cock rock – and in a way it is – but there’s so much more to it.”

Will Calhoun by Bill Bernstein

One characteristic that runs throughout Living Colour’s catalog is a pronounced love of interesting sounds. Beyond the stellar musicianship and compositional edge, their albums overflow with cool noises and interesting digressions. This passion extends to a breathless enthusiasm for old gear like Mellotrons.

“You’re singing my song right there! There’s something about an instrument, because of the nature of what it is, that lends an air of instant nostalgia to anything you do with it,” offers Reid. “Hearing the sound of strings that sound like they’re from an old movie instantly transports you. Psychedelia wouldn’t have been possible without the Mellotron. The sound of those Beatles records is justÂ…[Reid trails off into a sigh of pure delight].”

“We recorded The Chair In The Door in a very different way. With all the other records we’d been hitting the tunes and playing and playing them in front of people. With this record we did overdubs with live skeletons, and a lot of this record was broken down into parts and components, which in a sense is how things are done now. There’s parts of this record that are very live. You can tell that ‘Bless Those’ is just recorded live. There’s a lot of tunes that are very dense, and what I like about ‘Bless Those’ is it’s very stripped down, very rock ‘n’ roll band. We went 360-degrees with that tune, where one take was too bar-bandy, etc. At the end of the day it was right the first time,” says Reid. “Other pieces like ‘Behind The Sun’ were found digging through an archive of things we’d done. I heard it and said, ‘Oh, that’s that crazy tapping riff!’ We wound up getting into it and it evolved, like the whole project. I think album concept still has merit as an organizing principle. I think sequencing matters. I think having a body of songs that pertain to something – a real song cycle – matters. I think the fact that you can release a single song and not be tied to an album is cool, but people say the album is over or irrelevant and I don’t believe that. Further on the convergence of various technologies are going to take the notion of albums and the experiential objects therein and change them.”

“The [new album] was inspirational to me. When they heard me sing something new or in a different way it helped inspire us to do more stuff. I tried to get at things the best I could,” says Glover. “Technically, I’d been schooled constantly by the time we got the studio because I’d been touring with Jesus Christ Superstar [playing Judas Iscariot] for two years (2006-2008). So, my voice was ready to go when it was time to hit play because I haven’t stopped singing for two years! My vocal coach gave me a lot of good ideas if you want to keep doing this. You need to have a personal routine but also growth, because if there’s no growth it becomes boring and uninteresting. The singer is the emotional interpreter of the song. If he’s not able to tell you what the emotions are that the band is playing then it doesn’t make any sense. It’s just not worth doing if you don’t throw your personality into it. It’s the bravado or the angst or the melancholy of whoever is singing and those they’re singing with. And with an uncategorized band it’s going to be different every time.”

Living Colour by Bill Bernstein

Regardless of anything else they may do, Living Colour will likely always be best known for “Cult of Personality,” simply one of the great moments in late 20th century music. It’s a piece that will be knocking skulls together and making folks question the celebrity driven nature of modern culture long after all of us are resting ashily in our urns. The song has become so ubiquitous – Guitar Hero anyone? – it’s become part of the contemporary background noise through no fault of its own.

“What I really didn’t want to be were the people I was singing about [laughs]. At a certain point it kinda got that way, but that’s not what I was saying. There’s a certain thing that goes on. Just watch the Sonia Sotomayor hearings to see it,” says Glover. “What’s funny about it is it’s a phenomenon that occurs in every aspect of life. There’s an insurance salesman that every other insurance salesman talks about. What we were talking about is rock stars. And I’m not a rock star. Mick Jagger isn’t a rock star. Barack Obama IS a rock star! I’m not the one who can stop traffic. Michael Jackson is the biggest star in the worldÂ…next to Barack Obama [laughs].”

“I read a book a while back that said that what people do to their betters is raise them up, bring them down and then raise them up again. And it’s only after their death that they truly raise them up and the reality of their impact can be assessed. It’s what happened with Elvis. He was the biggest thing in the world, then they said he was kind of corny and then he died and he was the greatest thing in the world again,” comments Glover. “It’s going to happen to every person of any note everywhere in the world. It happened to Bill Clinton. It happened to Ed Koch. It happens to your local community board member, who once seemed so new and young and hip. Look at John Travolta’s career! That’s the way it works. That’s how [culture] manifests itself. You’re hot shit one minute and then you’re out. Like Frank Sinatra said, ‘That’s life’ [laughs].”

“As long as there’s a forum for social commentary – whether it comes from music or the arts or life itself – there’s always going to be a conversation to be had. There’s always going to be a conversation to what’s considered infantile or sophomoric. There’s going to be a real conversation about the world we live in. That’s what philosophy is, and that’s how these things come apart. That’s how we deal with our music,” says Glover. “This conversation is one we’re trying to have with our audience. Of course, some people would love to hear Living Colour do ‘Back In Black’ and we’d love to get out there and do that, too [laughs].”

Living Colour is on tour right now. Dates available here.

JamBase | Saturated
Go See Live Music!


Living Colour: New Album & Tour

Living Colour Announce North American Tour

New Album The Chair In The Doorway Set For Release September 15


Living Colour

Living Colour has announced North American tour dates in support of the new album The Chair In The Doorway. The 28-date run will be bookended by performances at the Highline Ballroom in New York City, as they appear August 11 opening for The Roots, at their weekly Tuesday night jam session, and then again on October 30 for their own headline performance.

The Chair In The Doorway, set for release September 15, was recorded at Sono Studios just outside of Prague in the Czech Republic. Renowned producer Count (Galactic, Lyrics Born, No Doubt) was onboard to helm the sessions, while Ron St. Germain (U2, Mos Def, Muse) mixed the album. The 11-track collection is Living Colour’s most personal collection of songs yet with razor sharp lyrical observations and kinetic jams that seamlessly weave elements of metal, funk and soul. Vernon Reid described the album as, “an unintentional concept record about life and how we are all in this thing together.”

Living Colour Tour Dates:


08/11/09 Mon Highline Ballroom New York, NY

08/14/09 Fri Patronaat Haarlem, NL

09/01/09 Tue Birchmere Alexandria, VA

09/02/09 Wed Bottle & Cork Dewey Beach, DE

09/03/09 Thu World Cafe Live Philadelphia, PA

09/04/09 Fri The Crazy Donkey Farmingdale, NY

09/06/09 Sun Infinity Music Hall & Bistso Norfolk, CT

09/08/09 Tue Tupelo Music Hall Londonderry, NH

09/09/09 Wed Fairfield Theatre Stage One Fairfield, CT

09/10/09 Thu Johnny D’s Somerville, MA

09/11/09 Fri Mexicali Live Teaneck, NJ

09/12/09 Sat Rams Head On Stage Annapolis, MD

09/14/09 Mon The Loft Atlanta, GA

09/15/09 Tue House of Blues Orlando, FL

09/16/09 Wed Jannus Landing St. Petersburg, FL

09/18/09 Fri Emo’s Alternative Lounge Austin, TX

09/19/09 Sat Granada Theater Dallas, TX

09/20/09 Sun Warehouse Live Houston, TX

09/23/09 Wed Canes Bar and Grill San Diego, CA

09/24/09 Thu Key Club West Hollywood, CA

09/25/09 Fri The Regency Ballroom San Francisco, CA

09/26/09 Sat Berbati’s Pan Portland, OR

09/27/09 Sun Studio Seven Seattle, WA

09/30/09 Wed Fine Line Music Cafe Minneapolis, MN

10/02/09 Fri Magic Bag Ferndale, MI

10/03/09 Sat Lee’s Palace Toronto, ON

10/04/09 Sun Double Door Chicago, IL

10/05/09 Mon Grog Shop Cleveland, OH

10/16/09 Fri Circo Voador Rio De Janeiro, BR

10/30/09 Fri Highline Ballroom New York, NY



Fear of red may be hardwired in our brains

Birds are hardwired to fear colour red, say researchers who believe that this may be true in humans as well.
Lead researcher Sarah Pryke of Macquarie University in Sydney conducted her study on Australian Gouldian finches (Erythrura gouldiae), who are genetically prone to develop either red or black heads.
The redheaded birds were aggressive, dominant and [...]

Morality and colour: Dark for dark business

The association of white with virtue and black with sinfulness is deep

THE virtuous are often said to be as “pure as the driven snow” while villains are frequently described as having hearts of coal or blackened souls. And the metaphor is made flesh (or, at least cloth) in many plays and films where the baddy wears black and the goody white. But how deep does the metaphor actually run, psychologically speaking?

That is the question which was asked by Gary Sherman and Gerald Clore of the University of Virginia. They were pondering a well-known tendency, called the “Macbeth effect”, for people to want to clean themselves physically if they have acted unethically or even had thoughts of corrupt behaviour. (The name comes from the scene in Shakespeare’s play in which Lady Macbeth desperately tries to wash phantom bloodstains from her hands after encouraging her husband to murder the king.) This association of cleanliness with moral probity is further bound up with the now well-established link between moral disgust (eg, at unusual sexual practices) and physical disgust (eg, at handling dirty objects or eating polluted food). The researchers’ ponderings led them to wonder if the moral roles of black, which is roughly the colour of dirt, and white, which shows up the dirt so well, were connected with the Macbeth effect. …

Bats’ eyes adapted for both daylight and ultraviolet vision

In a new research, s team of scientists has detected cones and their visual pigments in two flower-visiting species of bat, which has lead them to conclude that bats’ eyes are adapted for both daylight and UV (Ultraviolet) vision.
The research was conducted by scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Brain Research in Frankfurt and [...]

What makes the “jeweled beetle” appear bright green

A team of scientists has found that the stunning metallic green sheen of the “jeweled beetle” is produced by microscopic cells in its exoskeleton.
These cells were almost identical to hi-tech liquid crystals.
According to a report by BBC News, the scientists found that the structures make the beetle appear very intensely green under light [...]