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Posts Tagged ‘crowd’

Google Android 3.0 Honeycomb on Xoom Wows Crowd at Googleplex

Google built on the buzz swirling around its forthcoming Android 3.0 operating system for tablets during an event showcasing the Honeycomb platform tailored for tablets. After a brief introduction at the Googleplex in Mountain View, Calif., Android lead Andy Rubin passed the torch to Hugo Barra, product management director for Android, and Chris Yerga, Android engineering director for cloud services. Barra whizzed through an array of demos using Motorola’s soon-to-be-launched (as in late February, early March) Xoom tablet, showing off multitasking, widgets, application bars and several other perks that were introduced to developers via the Android 3.0 preview SDK last week. Yerga then relieved Barra to show off Google’s new Android Market Website, a destination that will allow consumers to purchase applications, games and music on Android smartphones and tablets. In-application purchasing is also part of the mix, as you’ll see here. Peruse the Honeycomb demos and the new Android application perks here in this eWEEK slide show. – …


Lyle Lovett and John Hiatt | Boston | Review | Pics

Words & Images by: Nancy Nutile-McMenemy

John Hiatt and Lyle Lovett :: 01.13.10 :: Wilbur Theatre :: Boston, MA

Lyle Lovett by Nancy Nutile-McMenemy

Ever wonder what it would be like to invite the legendary singer-songwriters John Hiatt and Lyle Lovett over to your house for an evening of song and good times? Well, during the pos- blizzard of 2011 in the intimate setting of the Wilbur Theatre in Boston an event very similar to such an “ever wonder” scenario took place for a sold out crowd.

Lyle Lovett and John Hiatt are on tour together; performing in small, intimate theaters for, at least in New England, sold out audiences. They two are so comfortable with themselves that they make you feel like you are sitting in the living room with them, getting to know them better through their songs.

They play well off each other and their banter at times can get very humorous. Hiatt arrived Tuesday before the storm but Lovett flew in Thursday morning. This discussion lead to the two thanking the crowd for coming out and also gushing over Logan Airport, with Lovett saying, “Love what you’ve done [with Logan].”

In these “together” shows, the two take turns playing songs from their huge repertoires and at times sing harmonies or play guitars on each other’s songs. A truly supportive jam session results. Hiatt opened with “Open Road,” the title cut from his most recent CD, and Lovett followed with “Farther Down the Line.”

Hiatt next took the crowd on a road trip with his classic “Tennessee Plates,” which made Lovett exclaim, “It’s really a song about a self-starter,” and “It certainly has a Zen quality to it.” Lovett continued his critique by saying the main character “finds true love,” has a “Mecca to Graceland,” and in the end “learns a trade.”

Lovett spoke about being in a restaurant the other day when Eric Clapton’s version of Hiatt’s “Riding with the King” came on the radio. Lovett whined, “Clapton’s never recorded one of my songs!”

Lovett spoke about his experience this past December when he worked with The Shakespeare Center of Los Angeles. Artistic Director Ben Donenberg asked Lovett to write a few songs for a production of Much Ado About Nothing. Donenberg explained to Lovett that Shakespeare used to include songs, from the time to time, to lighten up his plays when they “weren’t going so well” said Lovett. Lovett performed a lullaby that the he said he “felt like he co-wrote with Shakespeare.”

Hiatt killed on “Drive South,” after which Lovett put away his guitar and said boldly, “I quit.” But he pulled it together and wowed the crowd with “Natural Forces,” the title cut from his most recent CD.

John Hiatt by Nancy Nutile-McMenemy

Hiatt jumped in with “Crossing Muddy Water” to which Lovett responded with “If I Had A Boat.” Hiatt tore through “Riding with the King” and then both Hiatt and Lovett thanked the audience again for their support over the years saying that Boston is a great music town. Lovett ended appropriately enough with “Closing Time.”

The crowd jumped to the feet, thanking them for a great evening and after a small pause, the two returned to the stage. An audience member yelled out for Hiatt to play “Icy Blue Heart” and Hiatt said, “Well, alright!” and proceeded to once again awe the crowd with his skillful lyrics and masterful guitar playing. Lovett chose to finish the night off with “My Baby Don’t Tolerate” and was joined by Hiatt on harmonies and a stinging guitar solo on his gorgeous blonde Gibson with the mother of pearl inlays.

The crowd was again on their feet and the two, like gracious guests, thanked the audience again and jogged off stage.

More photos from this show here.

Continue reading for more pics of Hiatt/Lovett in Portland, ME…

John Hiatt and Lyle Lovett :: 01.14.11 :: State Theatre :: Portland, ME





























Continue reading for more pics of Hiatt/Lovett in Northampton, MA…

John Hiatt and Lyle Lovett :: 01.15.11 :: Calvin Theater :: Northampton, MA




















Continue reading for more pics of Hiatt/Lovett in Boston, MA…

John Hiatt and Lyle Lovett :: 01.16.11 :: Wilbur Theatre :: Boston, MA

John Hiatt Tour Dates :: John Hiatt News :: John Hiatt Concert Reviews


Lyle Lovett Tour Dates :: Lyle Lovett News :: Lyle Lovett Concert Reviews


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Less Known Process to Deliver Speedy and Effective Software Development Services Posted By : opheliaalina

Being different from the crowd can help deliver better software development services.

Teradata Joins Unified Computing Crowd with New DW Framework

The Unified LDM is a new portfolio of products and services for incorporating data warehousing analytics into an IT system. – Data warehouser Teradata officially
joined the unified computing trend Oct. 25 on the first day of its annual
partner conference in San Diego.
Teradata, which is said to own about two-thirds of the enterprise data warehousing
market, unveiled its Unified Logical Data Model Framework and Product …


Virtualization Draws Record Crowd to VMworld 2010

Plenty of IT events during the last two years have been "ghost towns," in the words of at least one respected IT analyst, Charles King, and he’s right. However, this year’s seventh annual VMworld conference and expo at San Francisco’s Moscone Center belied that image. More than 17,000 people roamed the show floor, crowded technical meetings, and heard VMware executives and their industry partners talk about their technology "road maps" in general sessions. Virtualization continues to be a huge topic of discussion. Following are some snapshots of various parts of the show. (All photos by Chris Preimesberger, eWEEK) – …


Dell Teases Citrix Synergy Crowd with Streak Demo

Dell’s founder and CEO gives a minute-long sneak preview of the Streak mobile Internet device, which runs Google’s Android OS and uses Citrix’s virtual desktop software. – <p>SAN FRANCISCO Michael
Dell went onstage for his keynote speech May 13 at the Citrix Synergy conference
to certify once again that his company and virtualization software maker Citrix
Systems are the best of tech friends and intend to cultivate their relationship
for the good of the world.


Hitachi Data Systems Joins Unified Computing Crowd

Partners in the system include Microsoft for its virtualization layer and infrastructure services, QLogic for network adaptors and Emulex for storage controllers. VMware’s ESX hypervisor can also be deployed within this setup, depending upon the user’s choice.
– Hitachi Data Systems has jumped aboard the unified computing system bandwagon currently occupied by Hewlett-Packard, Dell/Brocade and Cisco Systems’ UCS partnership with EMC and VMware.

The Santa Clara, Calif.-based subsidiary of Japan’s Hitachi Ltd. announced April 19 that it is launching its ow…


Snoe.down Photos & Review | 03.26-03.28 | VT

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”0″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=10″);}); moe. | Snoe.down 2010 | Rutland, VT moe. celebrates Snoe.down 2010 in Rutland, VT with Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings, The Bridge, Moonalice, The McLovins and more… View Photos

Words by: Bill Clifford | Images by: Rob Chapman

Snoe.down :: 03.26.10-03.28.10 :: Killington Resort & Spartan Arena :: Rutland, VT


Sharon Jones and The Dap-Kings

Live music fans celebrated the arrival of spring in New England with the return of Snoe.down, a winter sports and music festival, hosted by
moe., at Killington Ski Resort. A glorious weekend full of inspiring artist and the wonders of nature, for many this was the start of festival season.

Friday, March 26

The Bridge was the second act to perform on Friday at Bear Mountain. This mid-Atlantic band has been garnering quite a following over the last several years at festivals large and small, and I come away more impressed with each performance. Guitarist and lead singer Chris Jacobs has a sultry, honeyed voice that carries some of Lowell George’s soul. Fans were getting down to the New Orleans boogie of “Old White Lightning 95,” led by Mark Brown‘s ivory tickling. And the Southern jazz of “Bury My Bones In Baltimore” featured the horn of Patrick Rainey. Once again, The Bridge proved to be one of the most alluring yet under appreciated bands on the circuit.

Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings were the opening act at Spartan Arena on Friday night and played to a thin crowd that slowly sauntered in. The Dap-Kings, an eight-piece ensemble, took the stage sans Jones and warmed up the crowd with some instrumentals. But the show really got hot when Jones, a stout, fiery performer, lit up the stage. She promenaded from one wing of the stage to the other, enticing the crowd to sing along with her. When raising her powerful, gospel voice, she sang with deep emotion, writhing and contorting her body. Jones and the Dap-Kings are reviving the classic sounds of Motown and Stax recording artists, and Jones is clearly a leader of the scene.

moe. is currently celebrating its twentieth anniversary and have been performing shows filled with classic moe. songs since Halloween. Friday night’s first set was a bit by the numbers; not boring but nothing really stood out. “Mexico” made a fine opener, warming up both the crowd and the band as vocalist/guitarist Al Schnier‘s fingers raced up and down the neck of his guitar. Bassist Rob Derhak‘s pop nugget “Captain America” was played in a faster time signature than normal, but then slowed for a long, improvised segue into “Four,” a meandering dirge. The set closed with an upbeat note on “Shoot First,” featuring percussionist Jim Loughlin on MalletKat. That found its way into fan favorite “Moth,” with guitarist Chuck Garvey‘s searing notes drawing an ovation from the arena, about three quarters full.


Chuck Garvey – moe. :: 03.26 :: Snoe.down 2010

Set two had a bit more to offer the average moe. fan. The lovely ballad “Faker” began slow and mellow but picked up the tempo later, led by Garvey’s lead guitar bending notes. It then busted into a rarely played verse of the song, an upbeat, funky interlude that featured triple vocal harmonies from Garvey, Derhak and Schnier. Another bust out was their cover of James Bouchard’s “Cape Cod Girls,” played here with a slow, rumbling bass line and the cadent drumming of Vinnie Amico, which rolled right into “Water,” highlighted by Garvey’s mercurial guitar solo. As “Hector’s Pillow” bounced seamlessly into “Timmy Tucker,” the crowd sensed a set closer and began to sway and sing along in the high point of the evening. Mid-song, moe. brought the tempo to a lull, giving both the band and the fans a moment to breath, and then led back into a rousing peak by Loughlin’s MalletKat. The two-song encore of “She Sends Me” and “Spine of a Dog” was played short and sweet due to the curfew.


Saturday, March 27

I began Saturday at the K1 Lodge, with vaulted ceilings, exposed beams, stunning views of the slopes, and The McLovins onstage. The Saturday crowd was noticeably larger than the previous day, and the barroom was at standing room only capacity as the band began with “Milktoast Man.” The musical growth in this teen trio was evident immediately. “Deep Monster Trance” was announced as a new song on the band’s upcoming full-length CD, and is every bit as up and down in tempo as its title suggests. A long, improvised guitar solo from Jeff Howard, with languid notes drawn out on a whammy bar stirred the crowd. The McLovins also premiered their cover of Paul Simon’s “Diamonds on the Soles of Her Shoes,” which enticed the crowd to shake their butts and move their feet. These youngsters have come a long way in a short time.


The McLovins :: Snoe.down 2010

Over at Bear Mountain, we caught the second half of Hot Day at the Zoo. Again, the bar was wall-to-wall packed. There was an absolute, insatiable energy coming from the jamgrass quartet onstage, and I was immediately struck with the string bending of the mandolin and banjo players, as well as the group’s tight harmonies. While there was no percussion player, there was enough foot stomping and guitar slapping to make up for the lack of drums. The faster and harder this band played, the more the crowd hollered and danced along. HDATZ certainly gained more than one new fan from their performance at Snoe.down.


From the lodge it was a short walk to an outdoor stage for an afternoon performance from moe. After welcoming fans to Snoe.down, Schnier quipped, “This is fantastic. It’s a whole lot better than playing in single digits on Whiteface Mountain,” referencing a frigid outdoor performance in Lake Placid at the previous Snoe.down in 2006. Today, there was a crystal blue sky above and temps were easily in the high 60s to 70s. From my vantage point ten rows back, Chuck side, I glanced upwards towards the slope at a the surreal scene: a sea of heads bobbing and shaking, fans in t-shirts and sunglasses, skiers and boarders shredding the slopes.


Amico’s rat-a-tat-tat drumming began “St. Augustine” and immediately the horde was set in motion. On the pop nugget “OkayAlright,” Derhak could be heard laughing as he sang the words, “Smoking joints in the parking lot,” bringing its usual roar from the crowd. “Akimbo” was a rare afternoon bust out. Schnier and Garvey traded lead and melody parts before Derhak stepped up for a bass solo. Not to be outdone, Amico and Loughlin hammered at their respective kits behind it all.


moe. & family :: 03.27 :: Snoe.down 2010

Derhak drew a laugh when he noted that someone had “just wiped in the half-pipe!” With dusk settling, “Happy Hour Hero” was an obligatory choice late in the set, which segued into “Seat of my Pants.” Late in the song it seemed to take on the sound of an ’80s metal band as Schnier scratched a pick along his strings while Garvey wailed. As quick as flipping a light switch, moe. moved into “Sensory Deprivation Bank,” one of its oldest songs, to close the set. Ever the family values band, moe. invited their kids to dance to the encore, “Down Boy,” where they playfully laughed and interacted with the kids and fans.


Assembly of Dust was the opening act at Spartan Arena on Saturday night, and initially took the stage to a disappointingly sparse crowd. AOD opened with the sultry “Sinner,” one of bandleader/lead singer/songwriter Reid Genauer‘s oldest songs, going back to his days with Vermont’s Strangefolk. Lead guitarist Andy Terrell‘s dulcet harmony tones stood out on “Sinner” while the band’s three-part harmony vocals shined on “Edges” and “Telling Sue,” the latter highlighting their ’60s pop influences. “Whistle Clock” was a driving rock song with lots of room for improvisation, and Terrell’s guitar cried while the rhythm section of drummer Andy Herrick and bassist John Leccese was thunderous. AOD closed where it started: “Sometimes,” another gem from Genauer’s Strangefolk days. Again, Terrell proved himself to be a versatile sideman, going from mellow and hushed to wailing when needed. The crowd had grown since the band began and gave rousing applause as AOD left the stage.


Railroad Earth followed AOD and their set was a highlight of the weekend. Opener “Mighty River” is a lovely folk melody laced with Tim Carbone‘s eloquent violin. Like many mighty rivers, the tune has a meandering yet deliberate tempo, which flowed directly into “Like A Buddha,” which featured sweet flute interludes from Andy Goessling. The gorgeous acoustic ode to breaking down walls, “Bird in a House” was filled with sweet violin and mandolin, a lovely waltz that got feet moving, and the more straight ahead rock protest song “Warhead Boogie” kept the energy at a high. The rollicking “Long Way To Go” brought the set to a rousing close, and left fans eager to get down with some moe. Lest I forget, Railroad Earth’s new bassist, Andrew Altman was stellar the whole set. You’d have never known he was a recent addition to the band based on his playing.


moe. Sunday Brunch :: 03.28 :: Snoe.down 2010

moe. saved its best for Saturday night, beginning with “Wind It Up,” featuring Loughlin’s MalletKat fills peppered throughout. He’s one of the most talented multi-instrumentalists on the scene, but I pay special attention when he tinkers away on the MalletKat. Mid-set, the band revived its cover of The Meters‘ “Cissy Strut,” not played since 2001, sandwiched inside their own “Stranger Than Fiction,” and Derhak and Amico laid down a thick funk for Garvey’s melodious guitar flourishes. This was the highlight of the first set, which then closed with a long, improvisational excursion through “Plane Crash,” a high-energy rager that left fans exhausted but eager for set two.


From that high point forward moe. never really mellowed. The second set was an upbeat run through classic moe. beginning with “Threw It All Away.” The jaunty highway song “The Road” transitioned seamlessly into the funk-rooted “Lazurus,” where Schnier’s scorching guitar swells seemed to float through the dense din of the arena crowd. Jason Huffer‘s lights illuminated the arena coming back into “The Road,” as violet, yellow and royal blues splashed on the ceiling and walls. His lighting throughout was fantastic, but one could certainly lose themselves in the dither of colors at that point.


I heard the opening guitar and bass strains to my personal favorite moe. song and moved into the horde to get lost in “Opium.” While some may find it a dark, heavy song, I love to set myself adrift, eyes shut, on the soulful, slinky groove and mellow spaces of this particular tune. Garvey’s swirling slide guitar was a purple haze and Derhak’s deeply resonating bass and passionately bellowed vocals filled the arena. Coming down, they moved seamlessly into a carousing “32 Things” to close, drawing a cheer from the crowd happy to have something to dance to again. Up close for this jam, I took notice of the interaction between Loughlin and Amico, their heads nodding in agreement as Loughlin moved from drums to shakers to tambourines, as the set ended on an emotional high. After wishing a happy birthday to Loughlin’s dad Bill, moe. encored with a soulful rendition of Little Feat‘s “Willin,’” and then ended the evening with a rambunctious run through “New York City.”


moe. closed the weekend with a 10 a.m. brunch for V.I.P. ticket holders, though, unfortunately, this critic wasn’t privy. And despite Leroy Justice and Red Rooster both being booked on Sunday afternoon, there was a long drive to Connecticut after an exhausting but joyful weekend. moe. seems to have found a wonderful new home for Snoe.down in beautiful Central Vermont, where some of the kindest folks graciously welcomed us moe.rons.

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

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Chris Berry Trio with Kimock | 03.01 | Ukiah

Words by: Zack Sampsel | Images by: Rob Burgess

Chris Berry Trio with Steve Kimock :: 03.01.10 :: Ukiah Brewing Company :: Ukiah, CA

Kimock & Berry – CB3 :: 03.01 :: Ukiah, CA

The Chris Berry Trio returned to the certified organic confines of the Ukiah Brewing Company once again, this time with guitar legend Steve Kimock in tow, and gave the Redwood Empire crowd a lesson in feel-good fun and psychedelic exploration.

The evening began with a solo set from Steven Bates on acoustic guitar, who at first struck me as a woodsy version of James Blunt mixed with the voice of Bob Dylan. As the crowd packed in, Bates utilized a strong catalog of covers to raise the temperature on a damp Monday night. Launching into a strong rendition of The Beatles’ “A Day in the Life,” Bates evoked some Phish-y thoughts and a sing-along from the eclectic and equally colorful crowd. Bates also showed off his mandolin skills with a heartfelt rendition of Bob Marley’s “Three Little Birds” that immediately had this Widespread Panic fan thinking of John Bell and the Marley raps he peppers throughout versions of “Stop-Go.”

Previously when CB3 visited Ukiah last summer, Berry brought with him longtime friend and Panjea member Michael Kang of String Cheese Incident fame, but the revolving door of CB3 guest musicians had turned and with it came Steve Kimock. Throughout the nation, and the West Coast in particular, Kimock has made guest appearances with a plethora of bands and brings with him a legion of loyal followers – for good reason, too. Kimock, Berry and Aaron Johnston and Jesse Murphy, both of Brazilian Girls (though Murphy is no longer an active member), took the stage to show Ukiah just what they had up their sleeves.

Kimock – CB3 :: 03.01 :: Ukiah, CA

Opening with “Come Away,” Berry wasted no time in getting out his unique mbira and filling the Brew Co. with its xylophone-meets-organ sound, and the crowd loved it. From Kimock’s upstroke guitar riffs to the bouncy, rolling tones of the mbira, the inimitable sound of CB3 was locked in and the kettle was starting to boil. I’ve come to expect that the soundscapes Berry and the band create can often be so rich that they’re almost visual, and this show was more of the same.

The previous CB3 show in Ukiah featuring Kang kept with a mostly island-like, calypso groove, but Kimock brought an entirely different flavor. With a row of effects pedals in front of him that looked like he could launch rockets, Kimock did just that. Following the opening verses of “Start Over Again,” Berry said, “Take it, Stevie,” and the ensuing solo dipped into an inspired jam that resonated through the room leaving mouths agape. Creating an almost Egyptian feel, Kimock took the jam into the depths of world beat downtempo before igniting the crowd with his fluid style of searing electronica and spacey interplay. Johnston and Murphy kept the first set flowing with a quick drum and bass solo as Kimock’s nimble fingers danced up and down the fretboard over the top. From there, the band uncorked a track that sounded like something from The Disco Biscuits‘ catalog thanks to the flavorful combination of guitar and pedal magic.

If CB3′s first set was all about structure and composed rhythm, then the second set was an experimental free-for-all with Kimock let loose on almost every track, stirring the crowd like a bowl of psychedelic soup. While Berry made up lyrics on the fly about the sky splitting Redwood trees of Mendocino County, the crowd stayed engaged as they fist pumped in unison. As the set drew to a close, Berry was in typical madman form onstage, multitasking between the bongos and mbira while keeping up with the vocals the whole time. With one track left, Kimock and Berry squeezed out the last of the crowd’s energy with a huge jam that touched on elements of jungle, calypso and some old fashioned rock & roll. As the jam reached its final crescendo with Kimock’s guitar placed in his lap, a good friend turned to me and gave a colorful conclusion about the show: “Steve Kimock is the Doctor Digital of the lap licks on guitar.” I think that about sums it up.

Continue reading for more pics…

Chris Berry Trio Tour Dates :: Chris Berry Trio News :: Chris Berry Trio Concert Reviews

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St. Vincent | 02.08 | California

Words by: Kyle Fortinsky | Images from: myspace.com/stvincent

St. Vincent :: 02.08.10 :: Great American Music Hall :: San Francisco, CA

Annie Clark – St. Vincent

There’s something to be said for a 75-minute set of music that allows the audience to leap through a gamut of feelings and cascade down a breadth of wonder. Cohesion is everything. The venue, the crowd, the songs – this flowing, cyclical trifecta is what makes a show memorable. It’s what causes one to actually “feel” the mysterious and often-elusive artist/audience connection – one where banter and smiles are exchanged while mutual appreciation is shown through respect and understanding.

Everything was in place for such an experience on this misty Monday night, as the alluring madness of Annie Clark and her group St. Vincent brought in a sold out crowd to San Francisco’s Great American Music Hall. Packed in at 8:15 p.m. (an hour before the band’s scheduled start time) the crowd aggressively, but politely, nudged and pushed for a clear view of the stage. Swedish openers Wildbirds & Peacedrums catered to the organized chaos with a short set of impressive, experimental, drum/synth combinations and bellowing, powerful vocals from Mariam Wallentin.

As the lights dimmed at exactly 9:15 p.m., Ice Cube’s “It Was a Good Day” continued to play over the PA system while Clark and co. sauntered nonchalantly out onto the stage, chuckling about something we’ll never discover. Throwing her guitar over her shoulder, nodding her head to Cube’s final verse as she looked out into the whooping crowd, her four-man touring band assembled and tuned their collection of drums, basses, violins and woodwind instruments (most notably the flute and clarinet).

“God, I love this place,” quipped Clark.

Annie Clark – St. Vincent

With little more than a glance to one another, St. Vincent launched into “The Strangers,” the lead track from 2009′s critically acclaimed Actor. The soft yet upbeat initial two verses were interrupted by a volcanic, building guitar riff before dipping down again into the clarinet-led chorus. Leaving about five seconds for applause, the band then drove into Actor‘s second track, “Save Me From What I Want.” By now everyone was bobbing, finding some minimal elbowroom and completely transfixed on Clark.

“Laughing With a Mouth Of Blood” followed – soothing and coating in the way the first spoonful of ice cream sometimes feels off a plastic spoon. Then things got loud with the guitar-distorted, horn-driven “Actor Out Of Work,” seeing Clark get substantially frantic behind the microphone for the first time of the evening. Being slightly partial to this aspect of her style, along with what seemed like many in attendance, these actions consistently resulted in the crowd’s loudest sounds of approval.

Throughout the night, each time Clark retreated from the microphone for a similar guitar jaunt, her mannerisms reflected a low-voltage electric shock. Choppy abdomen jolts and dipping neck snaps complimented her oft-closed eyes during these explorations. “Jesus
Saves, I Spend” and “Just The Same But Brand New” allowed for more of this craved, edgy showmanship, before the group slowed things down on “The Bed.”

Following this segment, Clark’s band left the stage for what would be her only solo offering of the show, “These Days.” While she tuned her guitar under dim, blue lighting and amid a churning dry-ice machine, the crowd reciprocated with complete silence, staring at Clark as if she held the answers to everyone’s life-altering questions. Clark took this opportunity to express her admiration for the city of San Francisco.

“You know, I always see the most interesting things here,” she began. “Last year, there was a gentleman, um, sitting down on the sidewalk, and… he was picking his scabs and eating them,” she said with a laugh, as the crowd clapped and chuckled as if to say, “That’s nothing!” Clark continued, “And yesterday, I saw another, ah, fine gentleman peeing on a tree in broad daylight by City Hall. That’s why I love this city – those are the flavor crystals.”

“These Days” concluded its crooning sentiment and the band returned to the stage for the ferocious double shot of “Black Rainbow” and “Marrow.” All aspects of St. Vincent culminated in these two songs – harmony, volume, instrumentation, oddity and variation. Again showing her command and versatility, one moment Clark was nearly punching the
guitar’s head and slashing at the fretboard during “Rainbow’s” dramatic, song-ending build, and the next she was poignantly standing at the microphone, swooning the first ambient verse from “Marrow,” a sound worthy of any vocalist’s admiration.

St. Vincent

Set closer “The Party” brought the entire experience together, the song’s choral crescendo mixing perfectly with the thick, red lights. As Clark strummed and leaned to her left towards the frets of her guitar, the crowd subconsciously leaned to the right, ears nearly touching their shoulders – perhaps the closest an artist and their audience can get to harmonic convergence. Following the song’s abrupt ending, flowers were given to Clark from the front row and the band appreciatively exited the stage.

An emphatic, resounding round of cheers and foot stomping beckoned St. Vincent back out for an encore. They answered the call with a blistering, downright demonic version of “Your Lips Are Red.”

With two albums of material (Actor and 2007′s Marry Me), a St. Vincent setlist won’t catch you off guard. Compensating, however, is the ease with which any of the 22 released tracks translate to the live setting. The band seamlessly satiates with a contrasting mix of mellowness and horn-driven grunge, no doubt a testament to extensive touring the past three years.

“I just love coming here and playing the Great American,” said Clark late in the set. “I think it’s my favorite venue in the country… well, the world actually.”

You’re welcome here anytime, Ms. Clark.

St. Vincent :: 02.08.10 :: Great American Music Hall :: San Francisco, CA
The Strangers, Save Me From What I Want, Laughing With A Mouth Of Blood, Actor Out Of Work, Jesus Saves I Spend, Just The Same But Brand New, The Bed, These Days (solo), Black Rainbow, Marrow, The Party
E: Your Lips Are Red

St. Vincent Tour Dates available here.

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SAP’s boss departs abruptly: Three’s a crowd

An old broom sweeps the German software giant’s chief executive aside

LEO APOTHEKER’S tenure as boss of SAP, the world’s third-biggest software firm, was short-lived. He had taken sole charge only in May, having shared the job with his predecessor for a few months; the company announced his departure on February 7th. But no one has a longer history at the firm than the man who masterminded the move, Hasso Plattner, its co-founder and now the chairman of its supervisory board. Indeed, Mr Plattner may be as much to blame for the firm’s troubles as his former underling.

Mr Apotheker had inherited lots of problems. SAP’s attempt to offer software as an online service, called Business ByDesign, was a flop. The firm’s decision to raise maintenance fees, which customers have to pay to get upgrades and support on products they have previously bought, was proving wildly unpopular. Worse, the recession forced him to cut costs sharply and lay off nearly 4,000. …

Psychology: Alone in the crowd

Loneliness is a contagious disease

ON THE surface, Framingham, Massachusetts looks like any other American town. Unbeknown to most who pass through this serene place, however, it is a gold mine for medical research. Since 1948 three generations of residents in Framingham have participated in regular medical examinations originally intended to study the spread of heart disease. In the years since, researchers have also used Framingham to track obesity, smoking and even happiness over long periods of time. Now a new study that uses Framingham to analyse loneliness has found that it spreads very much like a communicable disease.

Feeling lonely is more than just unpleasant for those who yearn to be surrounded by warm relationships—it is a health hazard. Numerous studies show that loneliness reduces fruit-fly lifespans, increases the chances of mice developing diabetes, and causes a host of adverse effects in people, including cardiovascular disease, obesity and weakening of the immune system. Simply being surrounded by others is no cure. In people, the mere perception of being isolated is more than enough to create the bad health effects. However, in spite of its significant impact, precious little is known about how loneliness moves through communities. …

‘Tipsy’ Julia Roberts rolls out laughter riot at fundraiser

Julia Roberts reportedly drove the crowd at LAByrinth Theater’’s Celebrity Charades fundraiser to tears with a laughter riot.
The actress allegedly hit the bottle before the beginning of the event, sponsored by Entertainment Weekly.
“She was drinking vodka and tonic beforehand, and was pretty tipsy by the time the event started,” the New York Post quoted [...]

Massive crowd gathers for patriarch’s funeral

More than 600,000 people gathered in Belgrade this Thursday for the funeral ceremonies of His Holiness Serbian Patriarch Pavle, police said. The spiritual leader of the Serb Orthodox Christians was laid to rest this afternoon at the Monastery of the Holy Archangels in Rakovica, near Belgrade, next to Patriarch Dimitrije, who headed the Serb Church from 1920 until 1930.

Large Crowd Gains Insight into Future of Cloud Computing

Most of the 30 or so sessions on Day 1 of the Cloud Computing Conference Expo were well-attended, and the three main presentations in the late afternoon were packed to standing-room-only status. That there exists plenty of hunger for information on this topic is a no-brainer.
– SANTA CLARA, Calif. There may be a worldwide recession that is cutting back travel for many people, but don’t tell it to the organizers and attendees of the fourth annual Cloud Computing Conference amp; Expo, which opened Nov. 2 and is being held here at the Convention Center through Nov. 4.

Mos…


Austin City Limits | 10.02 – 10.04 | Texas

Words by: Sarah Hagerman | Images by: Daniel Perlaky, Manny Moss & Matt Ellis

Austin City Limits Festival :: 10.02.09 – 10.04.09 :: Zilker Park :: Austin, TX

Austin City Limits 2009 by Moss

Out on my apartment’s splintery balcony, my cowboy boots are caked in a heaping mess of dried earth. I’ll clean them later, but right now I have some rain-spotted, mud-splattered, and sun-baked notebook pages to sort through. Spread out over 8 stages, 130 bands had their moments in the spotlight at the eighth annual Austin City Limits Music Festival. With a newly gussied up Zilker Park and an early October weekend, organizers C3, not to mention us patrons, were definitely hoping for cooler temperatures and less dust. Careful what you wish for.

In typical Texas weather-fashion, Ma Nature gave us a gorgeous Friday, then rained hard on Saturday, which turned Sunday into a humid muck pit. But, you got to roll with the punches, and I overheard folks matter-of-factly, and very truthfully, remark, “Well, we’ve needed this rain.” It’s been a dry, hot summer in Texas (where summer, for all intents and purposes, stretches into October), and that strange wet stuff falling from the sky washed us straight into autumn as we celebrated the end of festival season 2009 in a city known for live music.

For this writer, it began with the first pre-festival stroll down Barton Springs Road, as we walked past vendors setting up shop on every available piece of sidewalk space, hocking assorted wares from pizza to pipes to ponchos, all in the midst of the businesses and restaurants, which were setting up their own clever hooks to draw the festivarians in (like the DJ on top of Daily Juice or the beers-to-go at Uncle Billy’s). ACL ended on the last notes of an absolutely killer Pearl Jam show. Throughout the weekend, I just went with the flow, and this is where it took me. Although my beleaguered boots might grumble otherwise, it was definitely worth it.

Friday, 10.02

Sarah Siskind :: 12:40-1:20 p.m. :: BMI Stage

Sara Watkins & John Paul Jones :: ACL 09 by Moss

It’s no mystery why Nashville-based singer-songwriter Siskind is well loved in the bluegrass and folk communities, where her songs have been covered by the likes of Alison Krauss and Bon Iver. The gravel in her words reminded me of Lucinda Williams, with a mind towards the naked eccentricities of the human heart. Her voice sounded a bit raspy due to illness, but she bravely powered through her arresting set. “One Step Closer” was so full of naked yearning it was hard not to feel it in the pit of your stomach when she sang the line, “I’ll do whatever it takes/ To get one step closer to you.” The song floated with glistening, fractured guitar lines, while closer “Conversation With Fear” was dense and rousing, as her backing band’s low end growled under her sweeping strumming. She definitely does her own thing, and it’s awe-inspiring.

Sara Watkins :: 1:20-2:00 p.m. :: Austin Ventures Stage

Former Nickel Creeker Watkins has a solo album produced by John Paul Jones, and that honeyed voice and sneakily aggressive, liquid fiddle pack a powerful punch. Stomping around in some fabulous knee high red boots, inspiring severe footwear envy on my part, she commanded the stage, in spite of New Orleans’ The Knux blaring nearby. Joined by her brother Sean Watkins on guitar, as well as Sebastian Steinberg on bass and Don Heffington on percussion, she drew some notable guests, including Austin singer-songwriter David Garza who joined her for his tune “Too Much,” which she covers on her latest album. And Jones himself busted out the mando on the uber-pretty original “All This Time,” Jimmy Martin’s well-loved “Hold What You Got,” and John Hartford’s “Long Hot Summer Day,” which takes advantage of Watkins’ vocal range. As Watkins and Jones threw down together, beaming as they leaned into one mic, it was a wonderful chance to witness the long reach of a musical maestro whose love of Americana roots runs as deep as his love of mighty rock & roll.

Blitzen Trapper :: 1:30-2:30 p.m. :: Dell Stage

John Medeski :: ACL 09 by Perlaky

Soft grass in between our fingers and the sun baking our heads, Blitzen Trapper’s mellow sound was certainly appropriate for the moment. But considering the hype around this band, I guess I was expecting more. Still, their sound was warm, hearkening back to the hums of my parents’ folk records. I enjoyed the use of the Claviola on “Lady on the Water,” but then the next band I saw completely blew the use of that particular instrument out of the proverbial water. However, this set soundtracked a moment of peace, as the festival grounds were still sparsely populated and the ground was still luscious underfoot.

Medeski Martin & Wood :: 2:30-3:30 p.m. :: LIVESTRONG Stage

Every time I see them, it’s a wildcard, and that’s why I keep coming back. I wish they had done an after-show, because I’m used to seeing this trio in sweaty clubs where they have three hours to let their madness roam through such sardine-packed spaces, but MMW pulled out a huge sound on the cavernous main stage. Starting out tight and hella freaky, they quickly pulled out the crazed basement scientist combustion and let the chemicals spill where they may. Medeski is always a little spooky to watch, as he is totally possessed by his tools at hand, playing a screaming organ line on one keyboard while his other hand laid down a rumbling piano strata. Wood drew out the highest notes possible on his bass, while Martin threw down dense rhythms for Medeski to writhe all over. And only MMW could make a cowbell and Claviola duet sound like the absolute most badass thing you’ve ever heard. A burly looking guy held some devil horns aloft in the audience, and that was the most appropriate sentiment for the deliciously dark feelings they inspired.

The Avett Brothers :: 2:30-3:30 p.m. :: AMD Stage

Todd Snider :: ACL 09 by Moss

Oh, the heartbreaking scheduling at ACL. I tore myself away from the MMW fire to catch the end of this set. These brothers held me last year at Bonnaroo in their catharsis, in a moment that weekend where I needed it most, and I had to pay my respects. Running across Zilker, I found Scott Avett, the red bandana across his forehead soaked while Seth Avett looked about ready to melt away in his light blue western shirt. They certainly pour themselves into every word, letting the syllables bleed with a vulnerable conviction that completely draws one in. The encore of “The Perfect Space” from the latest album, I And Love And You, exemplified this, as Scott sang, “I want to have friends that I can trust/ That love me for the man I’ll become/ Not the man that I was,” while he plaintively played the keyboards. In the middle it broke out into a full-on stadium worthy rock pump that had the whole band screaming red-faced. Americana, punk, pop, whatever label you slap on them, at the end of the day, the Avetts are the sound of release, pure and simple.

Todd Snider :: 3:30-4:15 p.m. :: Austin Ventures Stage

He may share his opinions with you, but he won’t share them because he thinks they’re smart or they’re important. No, he will only share them with you because they rhyme. Easily in my top three sets of the day, Snider charmed the crowd with his affable, refreshingly humble and self-effacing vibe. But under that aw-shucks stoner exterior lays a razor sharp wit that slices directly to the absurdity bone, a keen outsider whose sleepy eyelids belie 20/20 vision. He played favorites like “Ballad of the Kingsmen” and “Easy Money” alongside cuts from his latest album, The Excitement Plan, like “Greencastle Blues” and “America’s Favorite Pastime.” Introducing “Pastime,” which tells the tale of Doc Ellis, a pitcher for the Pittsburgh Pirates who threw a no-hitter on LSD, he said that Ellis was “the patron saint of ill-prepared people everywhere.” Afterwards, Snider related his own story about how he quit the football team in high school to hang out with “the burnouts from the smoke pit,” eating mushrooms and watching the goalposts turn into Roman candles. The crowd cheered his story of descent into slackerdom. Snider abides, and I for one take some comfort in that, as he’s taking ‘er easy for all us sinners out there.

The Wood Brothers :: 4:40-5:20 p.m. :: BMI Stage

Daniel Johnston :: ACL 09 by Perlaky

It was very cool to witness Chris Wood shedding his seriously out-there jazz clothes for a different sort of getup with his brother Oliver, who laid down some gritty vocals on pure Americana gold. With his steel-bodied guitar slipping and ringing, Oliver grafted pure heat over his brother’s sticky-like-peanut-butter bass lines. Sitting under the outstretched branches of the tree that became me and my husband’s default meeting point for most of the festival, it was the perfect environment to carry that easy feeling Snider gave us over through the rest of the day, as Oliver cheerfully remarked, “It sure smells good out there.”

Daniel Johnston :: 4:45-5:30 p.m. :: Austin Ventures Stage

Johnston is an icon in this town, with his artwork swathed across many t-shirts in our fair city (most famously the image of the “Hi, How Are You?” mural that bears his alien creature, Jeremiah the Innocent). Johnston’s struggles with his demons lend an incalculable weight to his songs, which on the surface can seem charmingly simple but have an incredibly raw longing for the salvation of love in the midst of their whimsy. That clash between innocence and the weight of this world is especially heavy when you see him perform, where his hands shake, practically strangling the mic, reading the words from a music stand. His set treated us to songs like the wrenching “Grievances,” the sweet “Living Life,” and a rousing “Speeding Motorcycle,” as well as material from the new album, not to mention a stirring cover of “You’ve Got to Hide Your Love Away,” which had the crowd singing in unison. Beautiful.

K’naan :: 5:45-6:45 p.m. :: The Wildflower Center Stage

Starting off with a song he wrote backstage about crossing oceans to be here with us, K’naan proceeded to barrel through a set that had the whole tent hanging on his every word. There’s an undeniable joie-de-vivre about him, and considering that his biography would make most gangsta rappers quake in their Timberlands, you know that shit comes from a very genuine, hard-won place. His powder keg mic moves were lit up by his snappy backing band, and as I fought my way closer into the throng inside the tent, I wrapped myself around the drum beat and shimmied my way as close to the front as I could. He drew us in close with acoustic number “Take a Minute” and an a cappella Somali traditional. Then, he began building, through “Fatima,” a broken-hearted tale of lost love with a twiggy guitar line, through “Bang Bang,” which swiped staccato shots aimed squarely at our dancing shoes. Then, he asked our permission to set the tent on fire, and that spark was “Freedom,” an undeniable flashbulb moment. As the band broke in, uplifting his story of childhood trauma on the streets of Mogadishu into a story of strength, the crowd waved their hands like the flag in the chorus. An absolutely inspiring set from a not-to-be-missed poet warrior.

Thievery Corporation :: 6:30-7:30 p.m. :: LIVESTRONG Stage

Thievery Corporation :: ACL 09 by Daniel Perlaky

Fighting my way into K’naan meant fighting my way out, and I then had to think about things like food and port-a-pottie lines, so I didn’t get to cover as much of Thievery’s set as I’d intended. But they held court over a striking scene, a crowd lost in their hypnotic, deeply tribal pulsations. Somewhere in their music the ancient and the “now” meet, and as I watched the sun wash the buildings of the Austin skyline in shades of pink, it seemed like the rhythms of the wide, organic world and the turntable twitches were melding in a perfect harmony for this magic hour moment.

John Legend :: 6:30-7:30 p.m. :: AMD Stage

I had a prime spot to peep some of Legend’s set, and holy hell, can this cat perform! Somehow, he’s slipped past my radar, but I’m going to have to check him out further, because between his back-up singers decked out in sparkling dresses and showing off Motown moves, his firmly buttoned backing band, and his own energy whirling at the center of it all, Legend seduced us with enticing piano ballads and center-stage grabbing vintage soul vigor. He had the crowd at the AMD Stage swooning. That’s some smooth baby-making material.

Them Crooked Vultures :: 7:30-8:30 p.m. :: Xbox 360 Stage

John Paul Jones by Perlaky

This was a glorious mind fuck that had moments of mess for sure, but always came around to testify to the power of loud ass rock and or roll. The lineup involved here – Dave Grohl (Foo Fighters) on drums, where he’s a force of nature, Josh Homme (Queens of the Stone Age) on guitar and vocals, where he’s a weirdly seductive dirty man, and John Paul Jones on bass, who needs no introduction whatsoever, joined by QOTSA guitarist Alain Johannes – was enough to pique my interest. The songs seemed to lean heavily in a QOTSA direction (which is hardly a bad thing), and were executed with a loose, ball-swinging swagger that gave the core trio plenty of room to let things just hang out. Homme’s stage banter was amusing. “This one’s called ‘Scumbag Blues,’” he said, but then after checking in with his bandmates, he turned back to the mic and said, “‘What?!? Oh fuck that, this one’s called ‘Mind Eraser.’” Grohl’s brain destroying skins were the glue, but Jones and Homme both gave the set the metallic propulsion that pushed the whole operation over the edge into the wild ether. This is rock ‘n’ roll with teeth – real big, fuck-off fangs. As the moon rose in the sky, there was certainly some dangerous beast sprouting fur, claws breaking through its skin as it howled to the heavens.

Yeah Yeah Yeahs :: 8:30-9:45 p.m. :: AMD Stage

Honestly, after the Vultures capping off a day of stellar sets, I was sort of feeling let down on the headliners. It was a bummer that the Beastie Boys understandably had to cancel, and the replacement choice wasn’t inspiring a lot of excitement for me. I liked the YYY’s first album, but never really got seriously into them (and I really don’t dig that “Zero” song from new album It’s Blitz!, mostly because I can’t seem to escape it every time I turn on the radio). But I gave them a shot, and I honestly had a riot at their set. Say what you want about this band, but Karen O is one hell of a performer. She really understands how to bring theatrics into the rock & roll arena, and anyone who can’t appreciate that should probably go burn all their David Bowie and Jane’s Addiction records, for starters. With a backdrop swirling around a giant eyeball, O pulled her limp rag doll body throws, pogo jumps, and suggestive mic swallowings in an outfit that resembled some kind of disco kachina doll (it’s a party in the pueblo and everyone’s invited!). From a fashion designer’s perspective, it must be fun to sew for this lady, because you could clear out your scrap closet and somehow O will make it work. And that admittedly superficial surface observation speaks volumes about why the YYYs work as a band – they strut between high fashion and total anarchy, noticeably revolving around O’s slightly chaotic and arresting stage presence. But guitarist Nick Zinner‘s squalls, alongside drummer Brian Chase‘s pure hammer pounding aggression, frame her wackiness with turns that reflect both their older pure garage aggression – the highlight for me was probably a vicious “Pin” from that era – and their newer electro-tinged work. Live, the latter took on a stripped-down, menacing edge. The lead-up into aforementioned “Zero” was murky, with some gruesome keyboard groans, that built the tension up to the point where the bright, breakout chorus felt well-earned. I may keep the radio on for this one after all. And eyeball balloons bouncing through the crowd? Win!

Kings of Leon :: 8:30-10:00 p.m. :: LIVESTRONG Stage

Karen O – Yeah Yeah Yeahs :: ACL 09 by Perlaky

I left YYYs to catch some of KOL. Their first two albums were stellar testaments to the raw, testosterone-laden power of young dudes making rock & roll, and their third seemed to show promising growth, but If Only By Night is an astonishing exercise in mediocrity. Yet, this album was the one that made them huge. Go figure. What I caught of this set didn’t change my feelings on that front whatsoever. To be fair, their set was plagued by muffled sound, but older songs, like “The Bucket” seemed slowed down, and the new material elicited cheers, while I was left severely underwhelmed and wishing the Followills would just grow back their beards and get some mess on them. I heard the next day that Eddie Vedder came out and joined them for an encore, tambourine in hand, of “Slow Night So Long.” But I was already long gone. By comparison, the YYYs performed with conviction and bruises, which happily dictated the stage I ultimately found myself at to close out my day at Zilker.

Late Night: Deer Tick at Emo’s Indoors

After the action in the park closes for the night, the city lights up with after-shows, from official ACL events like STS9 at Stubb’s, to the rsvp-only Broken Social Scene show at the Power Plant, to Lotus and Evol Intent at Aces Lounge, which ran until 4 a.m. each day.

In the hustle leading up to the fest, my husband and I purchased tickets for Deer Tick at Emo’s Indoors, and although I wondered later if I made the right choice, with so many other options out there, it was just the tonic we needed after a day tromping around. After refueling at our apartment, we made it down in time to catch the tail end of the second opener, Henry Clay People, who were energetic, if a little unmemorable.

I honestly didn’t know much about Deer Tick going in, other than they were an Americana band from Providence, RI, my old stomping grounds, and they were getting some seriously good word of mouth. But count me sold after this weekend. Opening with some riffing on Bo Diddley’s “Who Do You Love?” they quickly took us on a trip that packed as much from The Basement Tapes swagger as it did from grungy blues, rolling down the highways of Hank Williams. John J. McCauley III‘s two-pack-of-Marlboro Reds a day voice (as my husband put it, “I pictured him looking like a pirate”) puts serious grizzle into his words, as his bandmates mouthed along to the songs, which is always a good sign. This group believes in what they are doing, but have a damn good time doing it. From slow dancing twangy numbers to some riotous rocking with a slide guitar meltdown, they brought us to last call, leaving us hooked and baited to set our alarms to see them the next day.

Continue reading for Saturday’s coverage of ACL…

Saturday, 10.03

Deer Tick :: 11:45-12:30 p.m. :: Dell Stage

ACL 09 by Perlaky

The steely sky was spitting as we approached Zilker. We were still yawning from the night before, but the boys in Deer Tick seemed raring to go. They must have been as sleep deprived as us, but they certainly didn’t show it. Their originals, like the open-palmed, weathered “Ashamed,” have a timeless glow, while energetic covers of Townes Van Zandt’s “White Freightliner” and the celebratory “La Bamba” had loose limbs waving in the drizzle. Well versed in the bibles of American music and rock & roll, they are certainly a band to keep an eye on as they mark their own entries in those pages.

Alberta Cross :: 12:30-1:15 p.m. :: LIVESTRONG Stage

Brits and Swedes who have resettled in Brooklyn, this outfit reminded me a bit of a rootsier version of Austin’s Black Angels, with their emphasis on fuzz and swirling textures, and a strong dose of Crazy Horse thrown in for good measure. Lead singer Petter Ericson Stakee has an otherworldly set of scaffolding shaking pipes, and looked like he could have stepped out of the yellowed pages of newsprint from a 1960′s Rolling Stone. Ending on a song entitled, appropriately, “ATX,” that started off in a hum and ended on a scream, they were intense enough to set a storm brewing onstage that matched the increasingly ominous weather.

The Felice Brothers :: 1:15-2:00 p.m. :: Dell Stage

Felice Bros :: ACL 09 by Perlaky

“We were created by a corporation called Dell,” Ian Felice said, in one of the only comments on the corporate sponsorship of the festival, “but we failed miserably.” It’s true that if there is a group that is the antithesis of everything shiny, sleek, and disposable, it would be this band of brothers, who travel the byways and overlooked back roads where salvation comes in the form of a bottle, a fist fight and back seat romp, and someone with itchy trigger fingers is always a few steps away. A consistently captivating bunch to watch, Ian and Christmas leap up to lean over the drum kit, truly embodying the music from their physical demeanor to their fresh out of the van appearance. The interplay of Greg Farley and James Felice‘s fiddle and keys gave us a sinister, slinky buildup to “Greatest Show On Earth.” Later in the set, as Farley rose from his knees, where he’d been swaying in possession during “River Jordon,” he picked up a washboard, and Ian Felice picked up his accordion. The unmistakable opening notes of “Frankie’s Gun” were met with whoops from the crowd, many of who mouthed the words with passion equal to Farley’s onstage. This was our moonshine to get us moving, and to paraphrase “White Limousine,” The Felice Brothers gave us just a little red to paint the park.

!!! :: 2:00-3:00 p.m. :: AMD Stage

Definitely one of my top sets of the whole weekend, !!! whipped the crowd into a frenzy, under a cloudy but momentarily dry sky that looked like it just might give us a break for awhile. Bringing a neon club vibe to the early afternoon set, frontman Nick Offer commented on how he had his coffee earlier than usual to get amped for their performance. And was he ever amped, shooting across the barrier and dancing with freaky arm flails and suggestive hip juts. He jumped into the crowd, where he was ravenously swallowed up by the jumping mess of bodies, only to be spit out so he could leap back onstage. Spandex-stretchy, leggy guitar lines, throbbing disco beats, funkotron sax solos and trumpet flourishes – if this set didn’t get you grooving, I would have called the medics to check your pulse. Highlights included ode-to-one-night-stands “Must Be the Moon” and “Heart of Hearts,” which saw Offer banging on the dual drummers’ cymbals, and closer, the aptly named “Intensify.” !!! showed a refreshing lack of pretension, with songs focused squarely on screwing, drugging and shaking your ass with abandon. This is everything dance music should be – dirty, sexy, sweaty, and a little bit messy.

Grizzly Bear :: 3:00-4:00 p.m. :: Dell Stage

Bill Kreutzmann w/ Papa Mali :: ACL 09 by Perlaky

After the high energy of !!!, Grizzly Bear, although quite lovely, felt like a bit of a comedown. It mostly had to do with the huge, noisy crowd at the Dell Stage and the quiet sound, but it was hard for me to feel totally absorbed in this show. This band requires an ear tuned to the pin-needle fine details and a hyper-attentive audience, as the silver slivers and constantly changing sonic tapestry that make up their stunning 2009 album Veckatimest (JamBase review) attest to, and it was hard to capture all of those pieces in this setting. Ed Droste‘s high, sweet voice still rang through the din though, and “Fine for Now” cascaded in crystalline surges. I look forward to seeing them again, when my mood and theirs matches better. They got shout-outs from both The Felice Brothers and !!!, so they certainly draw a diverse fan base who respects their uncanny approach to songcraft.

Papa Mali :: 3:30-4:15 p.m. :: Austin Ventures Stage

Despite some early tech problems, understandable in the weather, as the skies opened pretty much as soon as Papa’s set was slated to start, the propulsive version of “I Know You Rider” and a nasty take on “Little Sadie” gave us reason to charge forward. Bill Kreutzmann, who has been joining Papa Mali during the last year on various projects, of course, gave us a hearty dose of his drumming so we could spin pure tribal-style in the rain, and the sousaphone player was also a standout, keeping a bass beat with ass-smacking thump. As the rain pelted down on us, an intrepid member of the tech crew scaled the scaffolding in the back of the stage to cover the lights with plastic bags. It was too wet to take notes, but sometimes, all you need is to dance to “Bertha” in the rain. It’s better than therapy, as you catch other people’s glances singing along, raising your big ole Texas sized beers to the crying skies.

Flogging Molly :: 4:00-5:00 p.m. :: AMD Stage

Flogging Molly by Perlaky

The water was whipping down in diagonal sheets during Flogging Molly, causing frontman Dave King to remark that he needed windshield wipers for his glasses because, “All I can see are spots.” If he could have seen the crowd, he would have taken in a passionate throng at the front, carousing in spite of the rain, raising their arms and singing the words with their soaking faces turned towards the sky in complete ecstasy. With amphetamine, punked-up Irish drinking songs, with tin whistles and fierce fiddles, these silver-tongued storytellers brought out the Irish in all of us. A big standout for me was “If I Ever Get Out of This World Alive,” whose title could very well be a nod to Hank Williams, delivered with the spitfire of Joe Strummer. At this point I realized my five-dollar poncho that I bought from some hippie on Barton Springs Road was completely soaked through, but no matter; I just stood under the trees and pogo-ed my shivers away through the end of their set. Note to self: Invest in proper rain gear.

Levon Helm Band :: 6:00-7:00 p.m. :: LIVESTRONG Stage

Helm couldn’t sing under doctor’s orders, having just had throat polyps removed a week earlier, but that didn’t stop his spirit, and he was all joy behind that kit. Guitarist Larry Campbell took over the vocal reins for Levon on a couple songs, including a classic “Tennessee Jed,” which is on his latest album, Electric Dirt, and got into a fiery duel with Helm on mando during a jiving “Deep Ellum Blues,” which had some tuba thrown in for a twist. When Amy Helm and Teresa Williams switched off verses on “It Makes No Difference,” one of The Band’s best numbers, I dug my boots in the mud to keep myself steady while I swayed, drinking deep from their well. Closer “Chest Fever” had the horn section blaring and the organ wailing, drawing night in around us with a baptism of sound to match Mother Nature’s swell. The warm grin on Helm’s face as he left the stage said more than words could. This is one humble legend and we’re lucky he’s out there.

Sound Tribe Sector 9 :: 7:00-8:00 p.m. :: Xbox 360 Stage

The tent for DeVotchKa was rammed with folks hiding from the weather, so I thought I would reacquaint myself with STS9, who I hadn’t seen in a few years. I stood towards the back of the crowd to take in their light show, which was easily one of the best of the festival, as the screens behind them whirled with imagery and the white lights swirled above the crowd, revealing hands and pockets of dancers in the sea below. They kept the show hurtling at a breakneck pace, ominous groans shifting into bass grooves and moments of twinkling space, mostly hitting upon angular trance movements. The set ended in a more old school STS9 fashion, with Hunter Brown breathlessly flying across the fretboard and the band coming to collectively rest on one soaring note.

Dave Matthews Band :: 8:00-10:00 p.m. :: LIVESTRONG Stage

Dave Matthews Band :: ACL 09 by Ellis

With the mud sliding full force by this time, we had to watch our step as me made our way precariously down through the crowd assembled at the LIVESTRONG Stage, with the lasers from Ghostland Observatory – who I heard mostly great reports on the next day – forming a clear line in the sky over our head. I’d never actually seen Dave Matthews live, although back in my younger days, I will admit that one of the first CDs I bought with my own hard-earned babysitting money was Under the Table and Dreaming. In a weird coincidence, the other CD I bought was Pearl Jam’s Vs., so this ACL had me reflecting on the past more than a few times. I remember when I first heard Under The Table, it was a refreshing respite, at least to my ears that were filled with grunge and punk rock, utterly different from most of the music in my collection, not to mention most of the music on the radio. It’s easy to forget that when you look at the massive machine they’ve become since their humble beginnings, and Matthews’ vocally appreciative stage presence at ACL made me think he isn’t one to easily forget that.

With the force of their instrumentation, DMB create a potent train of sound, especially on punchier songs like “Shake Me Like a Monkey” from their newest album, Big Whiskey and the Groo Grux King. The highlight for me was definitely the jam during “Jimi Thing,” with its swampy and lofty turns and a nasty trumpet and sax battle between Rashawn Ross and Jeff Coffin, where Ross worked that mute to its muckiest effect. Matthews then scatted with raucous grunts. They were well-oiled, keeping the whole thing tight and moving into a sly sing-song by Matthews: “You’re a sexy motherfucker/ shaking that ass.” A killer cover of “Burning Down to House,” and especially the line, “Hold tight, we’re in for nasty weather,” had the crowd shrieking, as Ross and Matthews wove their vocal lines together.

I made my way to the back to get a sense of the scale of the audience, and it was sweet to see people with arms around each other, mouthing the words to older songs like “So Much to Say” and “Ants Marching.” Although they may not be my scriptures, I appreciate the passion and community of real fans when I see it, and they’ve certainly found a band that gives them what they want with undeniable acumen. There’s a lot of hope in this music, and lord knows that can be in short supply these days. I have to say, DMB certainly gave me some reasons to grasp those elusive feathers as I headed out of Zilker into the night.

Late Night: The Felice Brothers at Emo’s Indoors

The sidewalks glistened on our pedicab ride downtown (big props to our hard working driver), the festivarians still chasing down music in the muggy night. Although part of me had wondered if I shouldn’t have bought tickets to see a band I missed during the day, I absolutely had no regrets on this decision. The night shows can offer you something different, or even just more of what you love. And although there was a bounty to choose from, I’m glad I went with what I loved.

This show was incredibly intimate, with maybe a hundred heads or so, and counted amongst those were all of Deer Tick. Likeminded musical co-conspirators, they were brought onstage for a rousing rendition of Townes Van Zandt’s “Two Hands,” where McCauly jokingly tried to steal Farley’s Yankees hat. Drawing heavily from their 2008 self-titled album, we were close enough to see the beads of sweat on the Felices’ foreheads, while those of us down on the floor slung arms around strangers for “Whiskey In My Whiskey” and “Ballad of Lou the Welterweight.” If Bob Dylan and The Band drew on what Greil Marcus dubbed “old weird America,” what we witnessed this night was the rumblings of “new weird America,” and there ain’t no place I’d rather be.

Continue reading for Sunday’s coverage of ACL…

Sunday, 10.04

Reverend Peyton’s Big Damn Band :: 1:00-2:00 p.m. :: The Wildflower Center Stage

The B-52′s :: ACL 09 by Perlaky

Having spent my night getting rowdy with the Felices, my first show was Reverend Peyton, and he certainly got me revved for our last day at Zilker. This band would be perfect on the Squidbillies soundtrack, with song titles like “My Brother Stole a Chicken from the Fort Lang Zoo” and the infectiously catchy “Your Cousin’s on ‘Cops’.” Both of these songs, as Peyton claimed is the case for all his tunes, are apparently based on true stories. With his wife Breezy Peyton twirling her washboard over her head, his brother drummer Jayme Peyton pounding with punk rock fury, and the Rev’s TV-preacher-ready vocals and throaty steel-bodied guitar, they had the tent testifying revival style. These proud Indiana rednecks were the best damn way to start a Sunday!

The B-52′s :: 2:00-3:00 p.m. :: AMD Stage

I admittedly was only familiar with their three biggest songs going in – “Love Shack,” “Rock Lobster,” and “Roam” – and so I assumed this show was simply going to be some good, nostalgic fun. But, this easily came in as one of my favorite sets of weekend. Seriously skilled musicians and jubilant performers, The B-52′s create their own quirky world where you just have to throw your hands up and surrender. With the huge Austin dragonflies swooping over the crowd, a diverse demographic of old school fans and folks like me who probably knew them best from “Love Shack” being played at high school dances, they commanded the stage. The three lead singers – the soprano doo-wops and squeals of Kate Pierson and Cindy Wilson, standing on either side of Fred Schneider, who distinctively delivers every line with the straight-faced seriousness of an emphatic supermarket sales announcer – saved those big hits for the end, with a loose take on “Shack” doused with some funk, but everything leading up to it was fried gold. A Cramps-like jitter snakes through their low end, slithering under the surf guitar waves that are scattered with sounds that could be pulled from B-movies where giant foam aliens rum amuck eating teenagers pulled from shiny convertibles. And I loved their wry use of language, whether it was the deliciously ironic ode to the mall “Funplex,” (where Schneider proclaims, with proud irony, “I’m at the mall on a diet pill!”) or “Love in the Year 3000,” which had the Rocky Horror-worthy image “in the spandex spiral vortex,” this Athens, Georgia outfit fearlessly shook their freak thang and the crowd responded in kind.

Jyspi :: 2:40-3:20 p.m. :: BMI Stage

E. Wennerstrom – Heartless Bastards
ACL 09 by Perlaky

On my way to the Dell Stage, I was called to this outfit by their dueling fiddle skills. I’m a sucker for anything bluegrass or bluegrass-related, and this Nashville group, three sisters and a brother, plus their backing duo on bass and drums, really delivered on the few songs I caught. Although they have a bit of a CMT-friendly hot girl image going on, they really pulled it out with vigor and heavy drive like Cornmeal, and more than a touch of the Dixie Chicks to keep it sugary. I enjoyed their distinctly feminine humor, with songs about flirting with officers to avoid speeding tickets and reconsidering writing a fuck-off message on a soon to be ex-lover’s mirror (“I don’t want to waste good lipstick on you”). Think I’m going to have to investigate further.

Heartless Bastards :: 3:00-4:00 p.m. :: Dell Stage

Drawing heavily from their latest release, The Mountain, Wennerstrom and co. played a solid set, with their simmering power washing over the crowd gathered at the Dell Stage. A fiddle player wove some mysterious energy through “So Quiet” and “Had to Go,” and the stirring call to personal arms “Hold Your Head High” was in my own head the rest of the day as I felt my toes starting to ache in my boots from slipping and sliding through the muddy fields. With the sun breaking through to unveil a deep blue sky, the Bastards gave us plenty of true grit.

Ben Sollee :: 4:00-5:00 p.m. :: The Wildflower Center Stage

One of my happier discoveries of the festival was Sollee, who I was mainly familiar with as the cello player from Abigail Washburn‘s fab outfit The Sparrow Quartet. Under the tent, the crowd was hushed, held in rapt attention, and between the delicious shade and the quiet, it felt like a much-needed sanctuary where one could recharge their batteries. His cello picking had turns both feathery and thunderous, as his soulful voice traveled between hushed breaking points and clear vehemence in equal measure. Joined by a fiddle player and a drummer, his musical style draws on bits of jazz, pop, and roots, but is so seamlessly blended and filtered through his lyrical imagination that it becomes something captivating, fresh and completely his own. His words were great, too, from the wry gender stereotype commentary of “Boys Don’t Cry” to “Panning for Gold,” which featured some striking imagery, such as, “I saw God in the forest/ Teaching tai chi to the trees.” Ending on a great cover of Cat Stevens’ “Wild World,” this was flat-out stellar.

Dirty Projectors :: 5:00-6:00 p.m. :: Dell Stage

Mosshart – The Dead Weather
ACL 09 by Perlaky

I’m still not sure what to make of this. It was definitely one of the more intriguing sets I caught this weekend, but I’m not sure I quite found the heart in their mission. Still, the Projectors are really trying something unique, and they obviously believe in it, which makes it understandable why someone like David Byrne would champion them. There’s simply no easy description for this band. Stitched together from so many pieces in unexpected patterns, every time I thought the music was about to fall apart, they would twist a knob, add a shake of this and a pinch of that, and, somehow, the whole mixture would gel. Then another twist and we’d be somewhere totally different. The unpredictability alone was captivating. One song started off with a serious blues kick, then the combined voices of Dave Longstreth, Amber Coffman and Angel Deradoorian sailed over the top. Drummer Brian McComber was a real standout for me, tying everything together with the beat and then snapping the thread. At one point he just threw driving beat after beat under Longstreth’s guitar noodling, each one heavier than the last. Someone in the front of the crowd waved a plastic battle axe aloft in approval.

The Dead Weather :: 6:00-7:00 p.m. :: LIVESTRONG Stage

Jack White‘s latest group, which sees him taking over on the drums, is heavy on the psych fuzz and manic blues, with plenty of sonic heft to pump your fists to. With a stage backdrop reminiscent of a Rorschach test, The Dead Weather definitely tap into some of the nightmarish recesses of the psyche. I was impressed with commanding frontwoman Alison Mosshart‘s moves, but the beginning of the set featured a lot of meandering and some plodding moments. About halfway through, it picked up, and as the sun drew us into a golden glow, the Weather drew us into a mental breakdown filled with heavy guitar squalls, pounding bass and some wild vocals from White and Mosshart. I do seriously dig the grind of “Treat Me Like Your Mother,” where Mosshart sneers, “C’mon look me the eye/ You wanna try to tell a lie/ I’ll bet you can’t and you know why/ I’m just like your mother.” She delivers the words with such acidic venom that one would surely think twice before trying to pull a fast one on her. I left the set wowed by but not yet in love with White’s new outfit.

Michael Franti & Spearhead :: 7:00-8:00 p.m. :: Dell Stage

Michael Franti & Spearhead :: ACL 09 by Perlaky

From the moment he stepped on the stage to the deafening cheers that hung in the air after he left, Franti owned every second of his stage time. The crowd was in the palm of his hand, and it was easily the most enthusiastic throng I saw at the Dell Stage all weekend, probably one of the more enthused of the festival. Say what you want about Franti (yes, he did ask us how we were feeling a few times), the guy knows how to work a crowd. As Spearhead seamlessly blended their hip hop, reggae, and rock elements into a riotous show, Franti would leap into the crowd, speak passionately about the power of music to bring folks together, and even moonwalked across the stage at one point to a “Billy Jean” tease. His absolute sincerity about what he’s doing can’t help but command your respect. I tend to like my music with more blood and bruises, but he thoroughly breaks down my resistance every time I see him. Playing well-known crowd-pleasers like “East to the West,” “Everyone Deserves Music,” and “Yell Fire,” the set was turbo charged from start to finish, where several little kids sweetly came onstage for closer “Say Hey (I Love You).” “Clouds, we thank you for not raining down on us right now,” Franti said at one point, noting, “It’s a beautiful night, y’all.” With the sunset streaking pink across a blue-gray sky, he was certainly right about that.

Dan Auerbach :: 7:15-8:00 p.m. :: Austin Ventures Stage

I ventured over to take in some of Auerbach’s set. Sinewy, meaty guitars to sink your teeth into, two ripping drummers (one of whom is Patrick Hallahan from MMJ), and slices-of-woe lyrics like, “I’m falling apart with all this money and trouble,” kept things draped in the blues. Rollicking “My Last Mistake” had a radio friendly rock strut, or at least it would have back in the day when Tom Petty ruled the airwaves with brighter horizons and a bar band shimmy. Auerbach and co. were obviously enjoying themselves immensely, and with the Girl Talk crowd pumping to our right and the Spearhead crowd wildly waving to our left, at that moment, Auerbach’s center of gravity felt like the most intimate corner of the bustling festival.

Pearl Jam :: 8:00-10:00 p.m. :: LIVESTRONG Stage

Eddie Vedder :: ACL 09 by Perlaky

For many folks, this was the set of the weekend, and ACL couldn’t have closed out on a better note. Playing a set that pulled ace after ace, Pearl Jam came in viciously swinging with the open wound yowl of “Why Go” followed by “Corduroy,” which was drawn out something fierce at the end, as Vedder threw himself around with his guitar. The next two hours were big and heavy, giant foot stomps in the mud. The ending of “Daughter” was particularly thick, as Vedder hypnotically sang, “The shades go down,” with muffled intensity over Jeff Ament‘s quaking bass line and twisted guitar work by Mike McCready and Stone Gossard. Vedder’s vocals then broke down into wails and the lines spiraled down into blackness. “Thank you, Austin, you are some good singers,” he remarked at the end. Although I tend to get a little spun out by big crowds, there was something seriously awe inspiring about thousands upon thousands of voices raised to the heavens singing along at once. Vedder remarked on how the band hadn’t been back to Austin since 1995: “I just want to apologize. I don’t know what the fuck we were thinking.”

Besides the raw muscle Pearl Jam is known for – and lord did we get beaten to a pulp throughout this set, especially in “Hail, Hail,” “Insignificance,” and “Don’t Go” – what was so cool about this set was some of the details and quieter moments, the spaces between the thunder. I was particularly psyched to hear “Modern Girl,” a song by the now sadly defunct Sleater-Kinney, teased at the end of “Not For You,” as Vedder rumbled, “My whole life/ Is like the picture of a sunny day,” or to watch the moon disappear and reappear behind a veil of clouds as he sang, “See the path cut by the moon,” in “Unknown Thought,” or the moment where Vedder looked wide-eyed over the crowd and said rather wistfully, “It looks like a fucking ocean… It’s beautiful.”

Ben Harper, who Vedder informed us he had stayed up drinking with until 8:30 that morning, “figuring everything out,” came out for their first encore, and they did a song called “Jazzy Odyssey” before slinking into “Red Mosquito,” (from their vastly underrated 1996 album No Code) before busting out “Do the Evolution,” where Vedder appeared to collapse for a moment, then suddenly shot himself back up to throttle the mic before charging straight into “Alive.” The second encore featured Perry Farrell (no kidding!) on “Mountain Song,” perhaps hinting at an ACL headliner to come next year. Or perhaps Farrell just didn’t want to be left out of the party. Finally, they sent us into the night with “Keep On Rockin’ In The Free World,” a tune they own as much as Neil Young’s original version.

Eddie Vedder – Pearl Jam :: ACL 09 by Perlaky

As we left the festival grounds and headed back to my apartment, our walk took us through the vendors. On the roof of Daily Juice, a DJ was spinning and various sorts were dancing together – hippies shaking in tie dye dresses, a couple of guys in UT hats, older women in their cowboy finery, sleepy kids slung on parent’s shoulders – representing the diverse cross-section of Austin. I stopped for a moment to watch, my heart still pounding from Pearl Jam. I reflected on how they were the first band I fell in love with when I was young, and, having rediscovered them in the past couple years, I feel I’ve grown with them. Their lyrics are often as much about personal evolution as they are about anger, as much about acceptance and beauty as they are about the self-destructive nature of humanity. One of my favorite songs recently has been “Present Tense,” and in many ways that summed up my experience at ACL this year. No matter the weather or other challenges, the most important thing is to grasp each moment for what it is. I remember standing in the muddy field, surrounded by thousands of other voices, singing that song’s cathartic cry:

You can spend your time alone
Redigesting past regrets
Or you can come to terms and realize
You’re the only one who cannot forgive yourself
Ah, makes much more sense to live in the present tense

My mind was silent, as I simply took those words in. Although that moment has passed into memory, I can only hope some of its wisdom remains.

Continue reading for more images from ACL 2009…

Images by: Daniel Perlaky

Dr. Dog

Blitzen Trapper

Chris Wood – MMW

Thievery Corporation

Phoenix

Phoenix

Dave Grohl – Them Crooked Vultures

Josh Homme – Them Crooked Vultures

Dave Grohl – Them Crooked Vultures

!!!

!!!

Papa Mali

Neon Indian

Mos Def

Grizzly Bear

Ghostland Observatory

Dave Matthews by Matt Ellis

The B-52s

Arctic Monkeys

L.A.X.

Dirty Projectors

The Dead Weather

The Dead Weather

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The Avett Brothers | 9.29 | NYC

Words by: Ryan Dembinsky | Images by: Maria Egan/theavettbrothers.com

The Avett Brothers :: 09.29.09 :: Envoy Enterprises :: New York, NY

The Avett Brothers

An interesting phenomenon occurs when a band breaks through and outgrows its loyal fan base. The rare opportunity arises where they try their damndest to play an intimate show that mimics their early days, yet pre-show conversations tend towards a comparison of who caught the band at the smallest venue, which fans are there for the first time, and how much better it would be if the crowd was all true fans.

On Tuesday night, when The Avett Brothers performed a largely unknown New York City release party for their latest effort, I and Love and You (released September 29 on American Recordings – stream it here), to maybe 150-200 diehard fans and friends at the tiny basement bar called Envoy Enterprises, the evening predictably began like the above scenario. Yet oddly enough, once the music began peoples’ guards dropped. What previously felt like a crowded floor verging on a traffic jam opened up into a friendly chatterbox of new pals with a purpose, i.e. getting to know each other’s connections to the band, talking about what they wanted to hear and cheering like Premier League hooligans.

Praises for the new album were sung, yet not as boomingly as by the music press. While being hailed as a ‘Best of the Year’ candidate by the rags (not ridiculous by any stretch), many folks frankly seemed to say, “It’s pretty and all but I like it when they rock out.” Well, that was just before the show. As much as this sentiment rings true for some of the newer material in the album format – where no shortage of love themes and a smattering of piano-driven ballads take the place of raging banjo strums – even the heartfelt pieces emanate bursting energy in the live setting, particularly when Scott Avett gets behind the drums. Moreover, they did rock out, particularly on the harrowing imagery-laden rager “Slight Figure Of Speech,” hollering the line, “I cut my chest wide open.”

The locale should have come as no surprise to Avett fans as Scott showed his artwork at the bar back in 2008 – as was the case on this evening – in the upstairs floors of the space, which function as an art gallery, while the basement played host to the bar and stage where the Avetts performed. After the show, the band retreated upstairs to chat and sign posters.

The Avett Brothers

A small show like this invites interplay with the crowd, and despite the obvious need by the band to play a hefty dose of new tunes from the new album – this being a release party and all – the crowd did not hesitate to request no less than 450 favorite songs. The highlight of this interplay came after a “Chesterfield” shout out, which I believe is just a town and not an actual song. Confused, the Avetts took the banter in stride, commenting about the time they spent in Chesterfield recording A Carolina Jubilee, which led to the fan favorite “Pretty Girl from Annapolis,” which then segued into “Mary,” by the Avett’s old touring friend Langhorne Slim.

“Kick Drum Heart,” the standout catchy tune from the new album, came early in the set and earned a warm reception. This song sounds a lot like Matt Costa’s “Mr. Pitiful” and will indeed become a mass appeal staple, but may perhaps be less well received by longtime fans. Frankly, the Avetts possess heavy-duty followers, so this may become more a symbol of the major label changeover than a fan favorite. Nonetheless, the song sounds whimsical and uplifting.

Other standouts included the I and Love and You track “Ten Thousand Words,” which highlighted some honest to goodness guitar soloing and the newer-than-the-new-album tearjerker “Skin and Bones,” with gorgeous cello work by Joe Kwon and Scott Avett rocking on drums.

“I wanna fit into the perfect space; feel natural and safe in a volatile place.”

The Avett Brothers know how to work a crowd. After stomping through a smattering of old and new tunes and joking that they were excited to have finally played Madison Square Garden, the band silenced the crowd with a heartfelt “Perfect Space” that said everything about performing at an unquestionably populous yet not-quite-irritatingly small venue. The crowd packed the place. My neighbors and I joked about this being the first time New York City brought out all the tall people to a show. While most fans probably saw little more than the ornate neck of Bob Crawford‘s stand-up bass peaking out over the tops of heads, the room felt overwhelmingly cheerful.

Despite the New York locale, The Avett Brothers took a pass on the title track off the new record with its Brooklyn hearty nod, but performed a much longer, more passionate than expected, free private show. Guess the New York crew will have to wait until Terminal 5 on October 17 to hear “I and Love and You,” but The Avett Brothers proclaimed their love of the crowd and the crowd gave it back. With Rick Rubin‘s producing credit and an undeniably catchy overall feel, their major label debut will likely grow the Avetts out of their small town britches. However, with this intimate fan “thank you,” they proved that they could never grow out of their skin.

The Avett Brothers :: 09.29.09 :: Envoy Enterprises :: New York, NY

Laundry Room, January Wedding, Paranoia In Bb Major, Kick Drum Heart, And It Spread, Slight Figure Of Speech, Skin and Bone, Pretty Girl from Annapolis (with Mary), Ten Thousand Words, Perfect Space

The Avett Brothers are on tour now; dates available here.

JamBase | Brotherly
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Lily Allen’s worst concert experience

Popstar Lily Allen recently revealed one of her worst concert experiences when crowd in Seattle were asking for more while she was sitting on the lavatory at end of the show.
””I came down with diarrhoea but I still went on. I was desperate to do a poo the whole way through,” the Telegraph quoted her [...]

Huge crowd at Batajnica 2009 air show

The military airport in Batajnica today hosted the international air show Batajnica 2009, which reports say attracted some 100,000 visitors. 200 participants from 15 countries took part, including Serbian, Czech, Greek, Romanian, British, Danish, Spanish, Hungarian, Slovenian, Italian, Austrian, French, Turk, and U.S. pilots and crews.

The Flaming Lips | 07.28 | Australia

Words & Images by: Alex Anastas

The Flaming Lips :: 07.28.09 :: Hordern Pavilion :: Sydney, Australia

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The Flaming Lips :: 07.28 :: Sydney, Australia

If Willy Wonka had music piping through his personal quarters at the Chocolate Factory, The Flaming Lips would be in heavy rotation. Their contagious zest for life, underlying political consciousness and general wacky Prankster behavior is rare in today’s minimalist scene. Often times I wonder if Rip Taylor or Wavy Gravy have ever seen or been a part of a Lips show. If either of those unique characters were present, Wayne Coyne‘s hard-working crew would certainly have to bring even more confetti and balloons, if that’s actually possible.

Kicking off their show at Sydney’s Hordern Pavilion with an enthusiastic synthesizer laden groove, Melbourne standouts Midnight Juggernauts laid down a backbeat reminiscent of Ziggy Stardust-era Bowie. Featuring voice box effects, heavy metal vamp endings and a Floydian flair for dramatic key changes, the Juggernauts received a warm reception from the now anxiously frothing audience, many dressed appropriately in a variety of costumes. Perhaps having seen the film 24 Hour Party People one too many times, Vincent Vendetta spilled forth youthful exuberance in his operatic vocal turns and ambivalent posturing. Meanwhile drummer Daniel Stricker never relented his pounding on the skins, even when his comrades joined him on an electronic percussion jam center stage. However, Andrew Juggernaut stood out as he led his fellow bandmates with commanding skills on the bass, guitar and synth, taking almost all the solos. Juggernaut and Vendetta occasionally switched instruments, most successfully while sampling some Daft Punk during a “Welcome to the Freakshow” jam. Ending by stating, “This is the third time we’ve shared the stage with The Flaming Lips in as many days,” Wayne Coyne certainly enjoyed his protegees, smiling like a Cheshire cat in the shadows side stage.

While the crowd swelled to near sold out capacity, the master of ceremonies, Wayne Coyne, repeatedly surveyed his band’s equipment, stalking back and forth across the stage while his mates sound-checked their gear. Soon disappearing backstage, their massive lo-fi display screen came to life, depicting a naked, glowing neon woman contorting as an emanating light from between her widely spread legs sent the words “birth” out to the band and crowd. This must be seen to be believed as one by one band members opened a hidden door in the screen and marched down a plank positioned by stagehands. With guitar/synthesizer wizard Steven Drozd positioned behind his rig stage left, Kliph Scurlock sitting atop his drum throne center stage, and the always cool Michael Ivins seated bass in hand off to the right, the crew slowly inflated Wayne’s now customary sphere. Bouncing around the first few rows of the crowd as the Lips opened with “Race for the Prize,” Coyne’s shit-eating grin inside his clear bubble was matched by every fan that pushed his orb back towards the stage.

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The Flaming Lips :: 07.28 :: Sydney, Australia

The show’s energy may have peaked early with Coyne introducing the third tune, “The Yeah Yeah Yeah Song,” as an ode to the new President of the U.S. of A. However, throughout the evening The Flaming Lips frontman was extremely cordial and talkative with the rabid crowd, stating the last time they were in Australia was for 2004′s Big Day with Metallica, The Strokes and The Mars Volta, and that they’d be back sooner if “only Australia wasn’t 9,000 fucking miles away.” So true. Dedicated to their “cosmic brother Nick Cave,” “Vein of Stars” had the Worm King and frogs stage left grooving with the Fat Sun and hot bunny dancers stage right in the wild party atmosphere of pure bliss that a Lips concert perpetuates. A ballad version of “Yoshimi… Part 1″ followed closely by Coyne on trumpet for “Taps” mellowed the show with olfactory sensations of dank, possibly brought from their recent stop at Byron Bay’s Splendour in the Grass days before.

Closing their set with a video display of The Daily Show‘s Jon Stewart introducing “She Don’t Use Jelly,” this smash tune off 1993′s Transmissions from the Satellite Heart, let the rapturous Tuesday night crowd show they had a little more in their tank. Before capping it all off with “Do You Realize?,” Coyne proclaimed, “The Flaming Lips audience is the greatest ever. You’re not cynical. We throw balloons and confetti and you treat each as a magical piece of fairy dust or squishy magical piece of plastic. Through all this happiness, there are a couple people out there experiencing real sadness in their lives, too, and YOU give them a reason to think that tomorrow will be a brighter day.”

During the extremely brief encore break, Coyne quickly ducked backstage to grab two of the frog people for a marriage proposal center stage, to which the female frog proclaimed, “It’s about time.” After a blowout night of Flaming Lips bombardment, I think many of their Australian fan-base would agree.

The Flaming Lips :: 07.28.09 :: Hordern Pavilion :: Sydney, Australia

Race for the Prize, Silver Trembling Hands, The Yeah Yeah Yeah Song, Fight Test, Enthusiasm for Life, Convinced Of The Hex, Mountain Side, Vein Of Stars, Yoshimi Battles The Pink Robots – Part 1, Pompeii Am Götterdämmerung, Taps, The Wand, She Don’t Use Jelly

Encore: Do You Realize??

The Flaming Lips tour dates available here.

Continue reading for more pics of The Flaming Lips in Australia…

Midnight Juggernauts

The Flaming Lips

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