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Jazz Fest 4.25 Day 3 | Photo Gallery & Best Of

Words by: Kayceman | Images by:
Dino
Perrucci

Jazz Fest Day 3 :: 04.25.10 :: Sunday :: New Orleans, LA

Crystal clear blue skies and a steady breeze set the stage for an idyllic Sunday
experience at Jazz Fest. Patrons were decked out in fancy hats and kids danced along with
second line parades and Mardi Gras Indians. During one set at the main stage, a woman
shared her tray of chocolate covered frozen strawberries with strangers while a young
gentleman got out of his chair and insisted that the older lady standing near him have a
seat. The communal spirit was in full bloom on Sunday, and it seemed as if everyone from
the artists to the vendors to the crowd could feel it.

Kayceman’s Top 3

#1 Levon Helm
Band

Legendary drummer Levon Helm and his outstanding band, featuring guitarist Larry Campbell,
played a wonderful set that included Band classics like “Chest Fever” and “The Weight” as
well The Grateful Dead’s “Tennessee Jed.” A healthy dose of special guests, including
Dr. John,
Allen
Toussaint
, Ivan Neville and Stanton Moore, all
graced the stage during this quintessential Jazz Fest show.

#2 Blind Boys of
Alabama

The Blind Boys of Alabama in the Gospel Tent on Sunday is a special experience. Soul-
stirring harmonies filled the open air tent as people were visibly moved, raising hands
high towards the sky. Curtis Mayfield’s “People Get Ready” was coupled with “Spirit In
The Sky,” The Wire theme song “Way Down in the Hole” (originally written by Tom
Waits), and a beautiful rendition of “Amazing Grace” that reminded us all why they call
this God’s music.

#3 The Allman
Brothers Band

The Allman Brothers Band is playing some of its best rock & roll since Duane died, and
their First Weekend Festival concluding set was yet another reminder of their enduring
power. Guitarist Derek Trucks used crutches to get on and off stage and sat for the
entire show, but the injury didn’t affect his incredible slide work in any way. Long jams
with spiraling guitars and burning leads from guitarist Warren Haynes
were punctuated with classic Gregg Allman vocals and the never-ending propulsion of the three-
piece percussive unit. The entire set was full of hits and every song was someone’s
favorite, but the crowd responded most enthusiastically to “Whipping Post,” “Soulshine”
featuring saxophonist Jay Collins, and “One Way Out.” But nothing seemed to define the
weekend better than the beautiful rendition of Van Morrison‘s “And
It Stoned Me” sung by Haynes.

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New
Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival Day 3 | New Orleans Fairgrounds | New Orleans, LA

Day 3 of our New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival photo galleries includes Levon Helm,
Stanton Moore, The Allman Brothers Band, Big Chief Monk Boudreaux, James Andrews,
Preservation Hall Jazz Band, Jim James, Terence Blanchard, Voice of the Wetlands All-
Stars, Theresa Andersson and more… View
Photos

Check our Jazz Fest Survival Guide for Must See Bands, food suggestions and
more…

Check out Friday’s coverage of Jazz Fest here.

Check out Saturday’s Coverage of Jazz Fest here.

Check back next Thursday for the start of our Second Weekend Jazz Fest
coverage…

JamBase | New Orleans

Go See Live Music!


Tabloids “Digging For Dirt” On Crystal Bowersox

Her down to Earth attitude and soulful vocals have Crystal Bowersox well on her way to striking gold at next month’s American Idol finale….and naturally here come the vulgars! The Sandusky Register, a local newspaper in Crystal’s hometown of Elliston, Ohio, claims that “celebrity gossip magazines” and various websites have been sneaking around town [...]

Crystal Bowersox “Betrayed” By Ryan Seacrest, Says Katelyn Epperly

American Idol star Crystal Bowersox wasn’t happy Ryan Seacrest shared a tale of how he coaxed the homesick frontrunner back to the show after she threatened to quit earlier this month.On Friday, TMZ.com published a report claiming Crystal nearly quit the show two weeks ago after succumbing to lonesomeness for her young son back [...]

Crystal Bowersox Almost Quit “American Idol”

Dreadlocked soul star Crystal Bowersox is well on her way to winning the ninth season of FOX’s American Idol, but A.I. insiders dish that the homesick single mom came thisclose to throwing in the towel and leaving the competition to return to her home in Ohio about two weeks ago. According to TMZ.com, the [...]

Hugh Hefner ready to settle down for good

Hugh Hefner is no longer interested in having multiple girlfriends, instead he just wants to stick with new love Crystal Harris.
Hefner, 84, found new love with his current girlfriend Crystal Harris, 23, after his number-one girlfriend Holly Madison left him in the summer of 2008.
“(With Crystal Harris) I have found the relationship that I thought [...]

HARD Summer Tour Crystal Castles, Sinden, Rusko

DANCE THE NIGHT AWAY!

Crystal Castles

HARD has officially announced the launch of the HARD Summer Tour with Crystal Castles, Rusko, Sinden and Destructo. Beginning August 6, the twelve city tour kicks off in Oakland, CA and hits L.A., Denver, Austin, Chicago, Toronto, Montreal, Boston, Philly, DC, New York, and closes on August 22 in Baltimore.

Toronto underground dance-punk duo Crystal Castles will share the stage with multi-tasking UK Dubstep producer Rusko, fellow UK producer Sinden and HARD’s own Destructo.

Tickets went on sale Tuesday, April 6. For more information on where to purchase and event info visit www.hardfest.com.

HARD Summer Tour Dates

Fri Aug 6 Oakland, CA Fox Theater
Crystal Castles, Rusko, Sinden, Destructo and TBA

Sat Aug 7 Los Angeles, CA HARD Summer Music Festival 2010
Soulwax, Crystal Castles, Diplo, Tiga, Digitalism, Green Velvet, Skream, Caspa,
Benga, Sinden, Destructo, The Twelves, Breakbot, Schlachthofbronx, and much more TBA

Mon Aug 9 Denver, CO Ogden Theater
Crystal Castles, Sinden, Destructo and more TBA

Wed Aug 11 Austin TX Stubbs Waller Creek Amphitheater
Crystal Castles, Sinden, Destructo and more TBA

Fri Aug 13 Chicago IL Congress Theater
Crystal Castles, Sinden, Destructo and more TBA

Sat Aug 14 Toronto ON Koolhaus
Crystal Castles, Rusko, Sinden, Destructo and more TBA

Sun Aug 15 Montreal PQ Metropolis
Crystal Castles, Rusko, Sinden, TBA, and Destructo

Tue Aug 17 Boston MA House of Blues
Crystal Castles, Rusko, Sinden, Destructo and more TBA

Wed Aug 18 Philadelphia PA Electric Factory
Crystal Castles, Rusko, Sinden, Destructo and more TBA

Fri Aug 20 Washington DC 9:30 Club
Crystal Castles, Sinden, Destructo and more TBA

Sat Aug 21 New York Terminal 5
Crystal Castles, Sinden, Destructo and more TBA

Sun Aug 22 Baltimore MD Sonar
Crystal Castles, Rusko, Sinden, Destructo and more TBA


“American Idol” Crystal Bowersox Remains Hospitalized

On Tuesday, FOX reps announced that the Top 10 male American Idol semifinalists would perform on Tuesday’s show instead of the women after dreadlocked singer Crystal Bowersox was hospitalized for complications from diabetes early yesterday. On this morning’s “On Air with Ryan Seacrest,” Idol host Ryan Seacrest spoke with series Executive Producer Ken Warwick in [...]

Crystal Bowersox Illness Shuffles “American Idol” Schedule

American Idol is shuffling its schedule to accompany ill contestant Crystal Bowersox — the season’s deadlocked frontrunner — FOX reps announced on Tuesday morning.
The Top 10 male semifinalists will perform tonight instead of the women.

“Due to medical issues which would prevent Crystal Bowersox from performing tonight, the 10 male semifinalists will perform this evening, and [...]

STS9 | 02.18 – 02.21 | Northwest Run

Words by: Jonathan Zwickel | Images by: Dave Vann

Sound Tribe Sector 9 (STS9) :: 02.18.10-02.19.10 :: Crystal Ballroom :: Portland, OR

Sound Tribe Sector 9 (STS9) :: 02.20.10-02.21.10 :: Showbox :: Seattle, WA

STS9 :: 02.13 :: Oakland, CA

There’s a bigger picture to STS9 than a song-by-song concert review allows. It’s an idea I’ve articulated elsewhere: STS9 is a barometer for the health of electronic dance music. When electronic dance music is vital and populist, STS9 swells with creativity. When electronic dance music chases its own tail into esotericism, STS9 strays, too.

Judging by STS9′s recent activity, everyone’s feeling fine.

Ad Explorata, the new album from the 13-year-old Santa Cruz quintet, is their best in years. Unsurprising, because it takes as sonic touchstone the cosmic beat orchestrations of Flying Lotus (an L.A.-based producer and former STS9 opening act with a new record, Cosmogramma, coming on Warp Records in April), Hudson Mohawke (a 24-year-old Scottish wunderkind who released his brilliant post-hip hop debut, Butter on Warp late last year), and Mike Slott (an Irish electro-futurist whose debut micro-album Lucky19 came out this spring on Scottish indie Lucky Me). FlyLo, HudMo, and Slott are the most exciting thing happening in music right now, live or otherwise, true auteurs crafting bass-heavy, deeply psychedelic, frequently beautiful songs from samplers and sequencers. They’re at the apogee of 15 or so years of evolution, from drum ‘n’ bass to trip-hop to glitch to dubstep to now and their still-unnamed music incorporating it all.

STS9 is on tour right now, doing just that: incorporating it all. The band has always tried new ideas and directions, sometimes to its detriment; over the last few years, longtime fans dropped out as STS9 bored deeply into cold, meticulous laptopism or low-key acid-jazz grooves. Now it seems they’re no longer trying new ideas – they’re no longer trying anything; they’re simply doing it, revisiting and refracting and refining trails they previously blazed. It’s a very good fit.

Hunter Brown – STS9 :: 02.13 :: Oakland, CA

A week after a reportedly disappointing concert in Oakland, CA, they played two shows at Portland’s Crystal Ballroom, and two more Saturday at the Showbox in Seattle (Friday’s Crystal and Saturday’s Showbox shows were sold out). All four performances saw the band involved and sparring and juggling, the crowd responsive and willing and dancing. Short version review: They ripped. Long version…

Maybe it’s the band’s veteran status, maybe it’s my own longstanding relationship with the music (my first-ever published article was an STS9 album review for JamBase back in 2000) but there was a welcome, middle-aged comfortableness in these shows, in the band’s relaxed onstage demeanor, in its accessibility via pre-show charity meet-n-greets. No thousand-dollar rare, crystal shrines onstage, no fire dancers or flower arrangers – yes, longstanding ally/performance painting innovator J Garcia onstage; yes, dynamic two-hour shows; yes, a band warm, professional and ready to rock.

Of course, comfortableness and professionalism can be a problem, signs of a band settling – into old age, into a job, into predictability. But for a group usually predictable in its unpredictability, it might be a good thing. And judging by the makeup of the crowds – tweens, teens and college-aged fans jammed the all-ages section of the Crystal – STS9 appeals to eager rave-revival kids 20 years their junior as much as pleasure seekers their own age.

Over these four nights, STS9 sounded like a band again, tightly interwoven as usual but daring to foray into solos via guitarist Hunter Brown and keyboardist David Phipps. Old songs were played with fresh tempos and strange changes. New elements have surfaced – Neu!-inflected motorik grooves via drummer Zach Velmer and bassist Dave Murphy; guitar-heavy “post-rock dance band” vibes, as STS9 themselves have put it; wonky, propulsive, post-dubsteppish low-end via their new material. Not that these elements weren’t there before but they were brought into sharper relief.

STS9 :: 02.13 :: Oakland, CA

Hard to name single-song highlights (always is with STS9) but Portland’s second night “Circus” was the gorgeous, glorious pinnacle. Seattle’s first night was the most relentlessly hard-rocking; Seattle’s second night-closing “Heavy” the best moment brought up from the new album. Setlists spanned very old and very new material. Each night the crowd was in full-blown dance party mode, even Sunday in Seattle, which was sparsely attended.

The new lighting situation reflects the creative middle ground the band occupies. Over the years, from video projections on a white bed sheet to seizure-inducing swirling strobes to elaborate narrative storyboards, STS9′s lighting design has burned through as many formats as light bulbs. Last year they took a new direction by letting go of longtime lighting tech Saxton and switching to a modular LCD backdrop, customizable to the size of the venue. It’s a far subtler experience – more passive, abstract animation, less in-your-face spots – plus a couple Pink Floyd-worthy lasers (!), at least at the second Portland show. Like the plain black t-shirts the band members wore each night, it’s a more subdued, conventional approach that focuses audience attention on the music (though not without occasional retina-searing surprises).

The gripes about STS9 – too glitchy or too smooth – applied during a few moments throughout the run. At times the transitions between songs were utterly smooth to the point of lulling (during the first night encore in Portland, for instance – never lull during an encore!). STS9 operated by their own mathematics, a build-up-to-payoff ratio of their own devising. As with all good electronic dance music, patience is essential. What sounded like a malfunctioning laptop was the lead-in to a glorious crescendo; what began as low-key interplay ended up as impossibly locked-in group improv. By design, there were no rough edges to the music. It was streamlined, almost unconscious, until it reached a point of ecstatic release, over and over but via a different route each time. This is the way of good electronic dance music.

(Case in point, Four Tet, aka British producer/auteur Kieran Hebden, who slayed a packed Chop Suey in Seattle two days after STS9 was here. Check out “Love Cry,” a nine-minute electro-Afro-jazz masterpiece of slowly shifting repetition from his recent album There Is Love in You, another smooth-edged gem. This is another electronic producer dude I’ve written about in the Seattle Times who shares an aesthetic sensibility with STS9.)

Again, STS9 has always been a band on a mission of evolution. They showed a renewed sense of purpose last weekend, though perhaps not as lofty as past ambitions – “healing through music” and all that. Now they’re trying to entertain while fostering community and growth. They’re older, more practical, more understanding of their powers. This is not to say that those powers have diminished but that their relationship to them has changed. Many of us have changed along with them. Just as many have just now joined the ride.

Sound Tribe Sector 9 (STS9) :: 02.18.10 :: Crystal Ballroom :: Portland, OR

Set I: One a Day, Hubble, 118, The Rabble, Crystal Instrument, Music, Us, Metameme, Circus
Set II: Really Wut, Beyond Right Now, Hidden Hand, Hidden Fist, Move My Peeps, Aimlessly
E: 4 Year Puma, Peoples

Sound Tribe Sector 9 (STS9) :: 02.19.10 :: Crystal Ballroom :: Portland, OR
Set I: Arigato, Kamuy, Satori, New New 4 U U, Empires, The New Soma, Ramone and Emiglio, EHM
Set II: Peaceblaster, F Word, We’ll Meet in Our Dreams, Be Nice, Atlas
E: And Some Are Angels, Monkey

Sound Tribe Sector 9 (STS9) :: 02.20.10 :: Showbox :: Seattle, WA
Set I: Shock Doctrine, Glogli, Tap-in, Hi-Key, Untitled New Acoustic, Tooth,
Evasive Maneuvers, Moonsocket
Set II: Lion, Tokyo, Wika Chikana, Rent, The Unquestionable Supremacy of Nature
E: Lo Swaga, Inspire Strikes Back

Sound Tribe Sector 9 (STS9) :: 02.21.10 :: Showbox :: Seattle, WA
Set I: Somesing, Hidden Hand Hidden Fist, Metameme, Mobsters, Surreality,
EB, Oh Little Brain, Grow, Abcees, Beyond Right Now
Set II: Once Told, Crystal Instrument, Instantly, One A Day, Heavy
E: re:stereo, EHM

Check out our exclusive feature/interview about the new album Ad Explorata and the band’s recent evolution here.

Continue reading for more of Dave Vann’s pics of STS9 at The Fox in Oakland…

JamBase | Tribal
Go See Live Music!

STS9 Tour Dates :: STS9 News :: STS9 Concert Reviews


X-rays can trigger formation of new type of crystal

A team of Northwestern University researchers has discovered that X-rays can trigger the formation of a new type of crystal.
These new crystals are charged cylindrical filaments ordered like a bundle of pencils experiencing repulsive forces, which is unknown in crystals.
Similar phenomena may occur naturally in biology, such as in the cytoskeleton filaments of cells, which [...]

Hugh Hefner Shannon Twins Breakup

Hugh Hefner’s barely-legal Buss It Babies are leaving the nest. Shocking, we know. Twins Kristina and Karissa Shannon are moving out of the mansion, the Playboy founder Tweeted Tuesday.
“The Shannon Twins are growing up. They’re moving to the Playmate House with my blessing so they will be free to do other things.”

Hef explains that the [...]

REVIEW: Parallels Desktop 5 Pulls Neck-in-Neck with Windows-on-Mac Rivals

The tight Windows-on-Mac market just got tighter with the release of Parallels Desktop 5. Parallels Desktop can now make Windows virtual machines appear as the only system in Full Screen mode or almost invisible and as just another Mac application in the new Crystal mode. Parallels also now ships with useful tools for managing virtual machine creation.
– The tight competition among products designed to push Windows onto the Mac got a little tighter with the release of Parallels Desktop 5.
Running neck-in-neck with rivals VMware Fusion 3 and Sun VirtualBox 3, Parallels Desktop can now make Windows virtual machines appear as the only system in Full…


Andre Agassi admits in memoir to using crystal meth

Former tennis champion Andre Agassi, an eight-times Grand Slam winner, has admitted in a new autobiograpy that he used the recreational drug crystal meth in 1997 when his career was foundering.        People magazine said in a story on its website on Tuesday that Agassi admits to drug use inFormer tennis champion Andre Agassi, an eight-times Grand Slam winner, has admitted in a new autobiograpy that he used the recreational drug crystal meth in 1997 when his career was foundering. People magazine said in a story on its website on Tuesday that Agassi admits to drug use in

I don’t have body confidence, says Megan Fox

She has been named the world’s sexiest woman, but Megan Fox insists she lacks body confidence.
“I don’t have body confidence,” the Daily Express quoted her as saying.
“I can wake up feeling thin and fit and then the very next day, nothing will have happened to change anything but I just feel I’ve gained 10lb overnight, [...]

Kelly Osbourne refuses to pose nude for Playboy

Kelly Osbourne has refused to pose nude for men’s magazine Playboy.
The magazine’s owner Hugh Hefner had earlier told Eonline.com: “Kelly would be happy to pose.”
Also, his twin girlfriends Karissa and Crystal Shannon had expressed their desire to see her nude, Contactmusic reports.
Crystal said: ‘She’’s losing weight and she’’s blonde now. She looks good. I want [...]

Plus-size model Crystal Renn reveals disturbing details about anorexia

Plus-size model Crystal Renn has revealed chilling anorexia details and how it affected her life.
In her new book “Hungry”, Renn, 23, chronicles the heart palpitations, excessive water retention, clumps of hair that would fall out and loss of her menstrual cycle, as she struggled to slim down to the unrealistic sample sizes.
“I honestly couldn”t feel [...]

Plus-size model Crystal Renn reveals disturbing details about anorexia

Plus-size model Crystal Renn has revealed chilling anorexia details and how it affected her life.
In her new book “Hungry”, Renn, 23, chronicles the heart palpitations, excessive water retention, clumps of hair that would fall out and loss of her menstrual cycle, as she struggled to slim down to the unrealistic sample sizes.
“I honestly couldn”t feel [...]

Paltrow’s mom did not want her daughter to become an actress

Gwyneth Paltrow’s mother Blythe Danner has revealed that she had not wanted her daughter to follow in hers and late husband Bruce Paltrow’s footsteps.
Danner, 66, who is an award winning actress, while her husband had been a director, had wanted her daughter to do something along the lines of saving the world.
“She’s so smart we [...]

The Crystal Method:Divided By Night

By: Greg Gargiulo

Electronic pioneers The Crystal Method are back at it again. One of the primary forces at the forefront of the breakbeat/house movement since its slow rise to prominence starting in the early ’90s, the team of Scott Kirkland and Ken Jordan have steadily kept their proverbial ball rolling over the years, and they’ve managed to do so without doubling back over ground already covered. Divided By Night (released May 12 on Tiny e Records), though lacking and failing in a few departments, proves the duo still has their knack for concocting some rather nasty beats and interspersing them with all sorts of trippy hooks, entrancing samples and wild effects to create a mind invasion with just enough of that sonic boom, an explosive infiltration distinctive to the Method, that the scattered holes and weak spots can be overlooked and covered up by the high points.

For Divided, their fourth studio album and first in more than five years, the tandem again scouted out a crew of guest vocalists with intentions of lending support and adding depth, just as they did on predecessor Legion of Boom. It is in assessing these bold vocal assignments – some of which add a layer of sweetness to what’s already delightful, and others which turn semi-sweet numbers truly sour – that the real making and breaking process goes down. Matisyahu, who has recently been popping his head up in unlikely pairings with acts like STS9 and the Biscuits, appears on “Drown in the Now,” and it works. There’s an overwhelming sense of chaos and confusion throughout Divided, particularly on “Drown,” and his hollowed-out yowls and repeated phrasings of surrender (or is it acceptance?) pair up with and play off each other nicely. “Sine Language,” on the crusty, overturned bottom side of things, starts with a solid enough musical base that appears to have some real potential for the first minute until the vocals come through. LMFAO, the latest newcomers in a relentless emergence of processed party hip-pop duos, then proceeds to take that sound foundation and sully it until it’s spoiled with their trite blend of overused rhymes and lame material, ruining fully what could have been a hypnotic, inviting jam. “Come Back Clean” shares a similar odor of stinky cheese, though its musical assistance isn’t nearly as strong to begin with.

Then there are pieces like “Black Rainbows” and “Falling Hard” which fall into another separate category. “Rainbows” finds Stefanie King Warfield offering a soothing display of lofty, echoing vocals that aerate its glitchy, atmospheric core, while “Falling” showcases the best vocals on the disc by far from Meiko, who reminds one a great deal of some of those late ’90s female pop stars. Both are catchy and bright, yet neither sounds as if it would ever in a lifetime come from the same two dudes who once sampled the taunt, “Yo motherfucker you were the man a minute ago,” into a grating, rough-and-tumble barrage a few years back (“Tough Guy on ’01′s Tweekend). Sure, change/evolution is fundamental/necessary, but from apparently talking shit and getting ready to throw down to serenading, “Heaven help me, I think I’m in love, I’m all in love with you”?

So what is Divided By Night‘s saving grace, then, with all these vocal-related flaws? There’s plenty, and as you might expect, it comes in the form of the instrumental tracks and in the musical portions of select lyrical cuts. “Smile?” goes trance with some sprinkles of dubstep, taking a mechanical drumbeat to an creepy set of key riffs, and it rises and falls to the breaks and builds of the music alone. Volatile opener “Divided By Night” only samples the voice of a robot and hearkens back to the Method’s earlier days with an entire panel of crazy alarms sounding from all directions and an acceleration of pace from the instant the first note pops. “Dirty Thirty,” which plays off a steady central guitar riff, epitomizes a juxtaposition of gloom and lightness felt all over the LP, an attempt to find that middle ground between the forces that uplift you and those that try to drag you down.

Pushing voices in electronic music, particularly for a band that prospered for so long without them, is risky business. Occasionally it shocks in its success, but most times plummets. Nix most of the vocals and Divided By Night is a super strong studio effort from the Method, rife with body-rockin’ beats, sick drops and an assortment of glitchy, tweakable madness. With them, the intrigue and the pull is all still there, just don’t keep your finger too far from the fast-forward button while listening.

JamBase | Rhythmic
Go See Live Music!


Crystal Smith: Precious

How precious is life? When we look into the eyes of a newborn baby, caress their tiny little hands, kiss their soft smooth forehead and…