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Posts Tagged ‘Columbia River’

Sasquatch! Sells Out Lineup & Day Schedule Finalized

SASQUATCH! MUSIC FESTIVAL SELLS OUT IN RECORD TIME

LINEUP AND DAY SCHEDULE FINALIZED WITH THE ADDITION OF AZIZ ANSARI, THEY MIGHT BE GIANTS AND MORE

Sasquatch 2009 by Nelson

The 2010 Sasquatch! Music Festival is now sold out, with the highest amount of tickets sold in the quickest time since the festival’s inception. Proudly featuring the recently reunited Pavement, Massive Attack, My Morning Jacket, Ween, Vampire Weekend, MGMT, Kid Cudi, LCD Soundsystem, The National, Band of Horses and many others, the festival confirms its final lineup and stage schedule while adding comedian Aziz Ansari, They Might Be Giants and more.

Sasquatch! returns to The Gorge in Quincy, WA May 29-31 (Memorial Day Weekend) and is completely sold out. Known for its bucolic location as well as its programming zeitgeist, the Sasquatch! Festival marks its ninth year at The Gorge, a concert venue built in the Columbia River Gorge and offering spectacular views of the river canyon.

2010 SASQUATCH! FESTIVAL LINEUP

Saturday, May 29

My Morning Jacket

Vampire Weekend

The National

Broken Social Scene

Deadmau5

OK Go

Wale

Minus the Bear

Brother Ali

Shabazz Palaces

Public Enemy

The Hold Steady

Miike Snow

The Posies

Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros

Portugal. The Man

Mumford & Sons

Why?

The Lonely Forest

Patrick Watson

The Middle East

Nurses

Fool’s Gold

Morning Teleportation

Aziz Ansari

Garfunkel & Oates

Nick Kroll

Moshe Kasher

Z-Trip

Dam-Funk

The Very Best

Sunday, May 30

Massive Attack

Pavement

LCD Soundsystem

Tegan & Sara

Kid Cudi

They Might Be Giants

Midlake

Caribou

Nada Surf

Dirty Projectors

Girls

The xx

City & Colour

Cymbals Eat Guitars

The Tallest Man on Earth

Local Natives

Fruit Bats

Vetiver

Freelance Whales

Avi Buffalo

tUnE-YarDs

Jets Overhead

Martina Topley Bird

Mike Birbiglia

Rob Riggle

Luke Burbank

Rory Scovel

Booka Shade

Simian Mobile Disco

A-Trak

Yacht

Monday, May 31

Ween

MGMT

Band of Horses

She & Him

Passion Pit

Drive-By Truckers

The Temper Trap

Mayer Hawthorne

The Heavy

The New Pornographers

Camera Obscura

The Mountain Goats

Dr. Dog

Quasi

Yes Giantess

Jaguar Love

No Age

Japandroids

Telekinesis

Fresh Espresso

Phantogram

Past Lives

Shadow Shadow Shade

Craig Robinson

Bobcat Goldthwait

Todd Barry

Hannibal Buress

Boys Noize

Neon Indian

Hudson Mohawke

For more on Sasquatch! check out 2009 review here.


Sasquatch! Lineup: Pavement, MMJ, Ween, MGMT

SASQUATCH! MUSIC FESTIVAL LINEUP FEATURES:

PAVEMENT, MASSIVE ATTACK, MY MORNING JACKET, WEEN, VAMPIRE WEEKEND, MGMT AND MORE

MAY 29-31 (MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND) AT THE GORGE

The 2010 Sasquatch! Music Festival will proudly feature the recently reunited Pavement, Massive Attack, My Morning Jacket, Ween, Vampire Weekend, MGMT, Kid Cudi, LCD Soundsystem, The National, Band of Horses and many others. With “The Office’s” Craig Robinson and “The Daily Show’s” Rob Riggle, this year’s Sasquatch! Festival also presents the best in up-and-coming comedic acts. Please see below for the complete festival lineup and ticket information.

Sasquatch! returns to The Gorge in Quincy, WA May 29-31 (Memorial Day Weekend) following early sellouts and rave reviews the past several years. Festival tickets are available at sasquatchfestival.com and Ticketmaster.com. Known for its bucolic location as well as its programming zeitgeist, the Sasquatch! Festival marks its ninth year at The Gorge, a concert venue built in the Columbia River Gorge and offering spectacular views of the river canyon. Tickets go on sale Saturday February 20 at 10 a.m. PST.

2010 SASQUATCH! FESTIVAL LINEUP:

Sasquatch 2009 by Nelson

My Morning Jacket

Massive Attack

Pavement

Ween

Vampire Weekend

MGMT

Band of Horses

The National

LCD Soundsystem

Tegan & Sara

Broken Social Scene

Passion Pit

Deadmau5

She & Him

Public Enemy

Nada Surf

The New Pornographers

The Hold Steady

The xx

Dirty Projectors

OK Go

Drive-By Truckers

Kid Cudi

The Long Winters

Minus the Bear

The Mountain Goats

Quasi

Camera Obscura

Fruit Bats

Brother Ali

Midlake

Dr. Dog

Caribou

Simian Mobile Disco

City & Colour

No Age

The Temper Trap

Vetiver

Miike Snow

Portugal. The Man

Telekinesis

Mayer Hawthorne

Why?

Girls

Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros

Wale

The Lonely Forest

Japandroids

Boys Noize

Yacht

Freelance Whales

Laura Marling

Patrick Watson

Past Lives

Cymbals Eat Guitars

The Low Anthem

The Very Best

Phantogram

Neon Indian

Nurses

The Tallest Man on Earth

Fresh Espresso

Mumford & Sons

Jets Overhead

tUnE-YarDs

Shabazz Palaces

Fool’s Gold

Morning Teleportation

Z-Trip

Dam-Funk

Hudson Mohawke

The Middle East

Local Natives

Avi Buffalo

Booka Shade

A-Trak

Yes Giantess

Craig Robinson

Rob Riggle

Garfunkel & Oates

Luke Burbank

…and more to come!

For more on Sasquatch! check out 2009 review here.


Nov. 6, 1944 & 1971: A Double Nuke Anniversary

1944: Weapons-grade plutonium, for the very heart of the Fat Man atomic bomb used to obliterate Nagasaki, Japan, is first produced at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation in south-central Washington state. Twenty-seven years later, in 1971, the Atomic Energy Commission detonates the largest U.S. underground hydrogen device, during testing in Alaska’s Aleutian Islands.
The development of weapons-grade [...]

Phish | 08.08 | Gorge II

Words by: Court Scott | Images by: John Crouch

Phish :: 08.08.09 :: Gorge Amphitheatre :: George, WA

Phish :: 08.08.09 :: The Gorge

I’m not even gonna preface this with anything except to say that Saturday night’s show at The Gorge was as close to flawless as I’ve seen mah boys in a long time. Some may argue that the Friday night setlist was superior, and that may very well be the case, but I feel that the playing, energy and intent to get the crowd off was far stronger on night number two. The instrumentation was utterly focused, organic in a way that made me at times feel they were just channeling something greater. In short, night two completely ripped.

A full hill and floor full of phans rose to the occasion as the band launched into a “Mango” opener – a huge bust-out – and chugged right into “Chalkdust.” Next up was a Mike Gordon/Leo Kottke tune, “Middle of the Road,” a bit slower and none too well known but a nice breather before Trey played the opening notes of a big, fat, juicy “Tweezer.” I think the word ‘funk’ and most of its derivatives often don’t convey the authenticity of the word, but Page‘s solo was a tweaked-out space funk beauty.

Bringing it down a notch was “Driver,” a pleasant little ditty, and the subsequent new song, “20 Years Later,” had Trey and Gordon trading proggy, stuttered licks. The groove was locked down as they barreled into “Ya Mar,” a recent replay from Shoreline. The last four songs from the first set hit like a ton of bricks. “It’ Ice” (Bam!) flowed into a ridiculously funked out “Wolfman’s Brother,” which featured the first of several massive glow stick wars. A short pause and then a raging “Character Zero,” which we figured was the set closer. Wrong! It was full speed ahead into “Antelope,” with Gordon shape-shifting the bass ine and Trey tucking “Mango” teases here and there. The level of adventurousness is building, evident with each set’s song selections. And Saturday night was the first time I actively noticed tons of teases and maybe even a touch of secret language here and there. That the band is beginning to get super playful and overtly confident puts me greatly at ease.

Set two was where I felt the guys started to sizzle. Since they’ve been back, a number of the shows have been cover tune heavy, which is great, because the “Rock and Roll” that they opened set two with was a freaking monster. People, it was huge. Clocking in at just around 20 minutes, Trey was in his element and going nuts; even yelling at the end. He was shattering as Gordon laid the lines down, down, down, just so we could pick them up. The next tune, “Makisupa,” was also Gordon’s time to shine, with what seems to be becoming a standard bass solo each show. It was Gordon’s filthy, liquid bass effects that dropped the bomb on everyone from top of the hill to the front row (and quite possibly the fish in the Columbia River behind the stage). And Trey, for a short while, was running some new high pitched, almost nitrous-y effect over Gordon. Then, Gordon and Trey switched instruments and each took solos on the other’s gear, harkening back to the rotating jams from years back.

Trey :: 08.08.09 :: The Gorge

“Alaska,” another new tune, was next and is a pleasant song but I hope it doesn’t get into heavy rotation. The lyrics seem trite and simplistic, not nearly as interesting as Tom Marshall’s work with Trey. “Alaska” has a nice little edge and Trey manifested a soulful solo, but I remain unconvinced. And then out of the darkness came “Wedge,” an old tune that used to be quite rare now being called up more frequently. “Y.E.M.” was next on deck and featured loads of smoke and red and blue lights. Gordo had another sub-stratospheric solo as the trampolines appeared on stage. As he and Trey jumped and spun in unison, Page lead a nice solo, which morphed into a flashing strobe-light vocal jam. Right out of the darkness of a “Y.E.M.” jam appeared the new, not totally bad “Backwards Down the Number Line.” It’s growing on me, but again, it just lacks a certain oomph I not only love but also have come to expect as a second set closes. Luckily, it wasn’t the closer, instead we got a “Piper” jam; incomplete song, but a short rager with Fishman teasing the hell out of “Llama.” To end the set, the fellas came out for an a capella “Grind,” another way old tune back in the roster. The encores featured a huge version of Zeppelin’s “Good Times Bad Times” naturally segueing into a “Tweezer Reprise.”

The band seemed to be having a great time, with loads of smiles, waving at the crowd and a general ease that makes me feel like this time it really is different. I’m also deeply appreciative that all the band’s instruments are generally back to a pared down, early ’90s sound rather than relying on effects to cover lazy or sloppy playing. Ditto for Kuroda‘s light show, which is being used more like punctuation and less like a part of the message. Don’t get me wrong, the lights will still spin your noodle, but there is a difference in the pace at which they change and evolve that I’m into. Looking forward to next week with a renewed fervor!!!

Phish :: 08.08.09 :: Gorge Amphitheatre :: George, WA

Set I: The Mango Song, Chalk Dust Torture, Middle Of The Road, Tweezer, Driver, Twenty Years Later, Ya Mar, It’s Ice, Wolfman’s Brother, Character Zero > Run Like An Antelope

Set II: Rock & Roll > Makisupa Policeman, Alaska, The Wedge, You Enjoy Myself, Backwards Down the Number Line > Piper, Grind

E: Good Times Bad Times, Tweezer Reprise

For more pics of this show go here.

Phish perform next on Tuesday, August 11 at Toyota Park in Bridgeview, IL. Check back for live Tweets, setlists, pics and full reviews. Complete Phish tour dates available href="http://www.jambase.com/Artists/2698/Phish/Shows">here.

Just like Leg I of Phish’s Summer Tour, JamBase will be at every stop with more coverage than you’ll find anywhere! Keep up to speed with all things Phish at jambase.com/phish.

JamBase | Simply Gorgeous

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