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Stockholm Syndrome Tour in Feb

SAN FRAN TO BOULDER IN TWO WEEKS!

Stockholm Syndrome will release their sophomore album, Apollo, on February 15, followed by a series of shows in the West. The band – comprised of Widespread Panic bassist Dave Schools (who also produced the record), Jerry Joseph (vocals, guitar), Eric McFadden (guitar), Gov’t Mule keyboardist Danny Louis and drummer Wally Ingram – produce a sound unlike any of their other projects, a thick, intoxicating rock spell that’s definitely more than the sum of its parts, especially live.

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Dates

2.18-19 San Francisco, CA – The Independent
2.20 Reno, NV – Knitting Factory
2.21 Park City, UT – Harry O’s
2.22 Telluride, CO – Sheridan Opera House
2.23 Aspen, CO – Belly Up
2.25 Denver, CO – Cervante’s Masterpiece Ballroom
2.26 Boulder, CO – Fox Theatre

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Dates :: Stockholm Syndrome News :: Stockholm Syndrome Concert Reviews


Stockholm Syndrome: Apollo

FIRST NEW STUDIO ALBUM SINCE 2004; BAND TO TOUR IN 2011


Stockholm Syndrome

Response Records has announced the upcoming release of Apollo, the hugely anticipated new
album from Stockholm
Syndrome
. The album – which follows the band’s 2004 debut, Holy Happy Hour – arrives
everywhere on February 15, 2011.

Stockholm Syndrome is the collaborative brainchild of two gifted musicians, Widespread Panic bassist Dave
Schools
and singer/songwriter Jerry Joseph. Initially conceived as a side project, the alliance soon
became a full-fledged band, with the able accompaniment of guitarist Eric McFadden, keyboardist
Danny Louis, and drummer Wally Ingram.

Apollo sees Stockholm Syndrome building upon its initial outing by distilling a distinctive sound fueled by
freewheeling creativity and incendiary rock power. Songs like “Finding” and the epic title track showcase the band’s
virtuosic interplay and genre-blurring ingenuity, all centered by Jerry Joseph’s creative, cathartic lyricism.

Produced
by Dave Schools in a converted chicken coop at Cotatai, California’s Prairie Sun Recording, with additional recording
at the famed Compass Point Studios in Nassau, Bahamas – Apollo places Joseph’s soulful vocals and
songwriting gifts at the forefront, all the while confirming Stockholm Syndrome’s remarkable ability to bridge sonic
styles spanning pop, psychedelia, and full-on rock ‘n roll.

In January, Stockholm Syndrome will herald the release of Apollo by taking to the open sea on Jam
Cruise
9
, the 2011 installment of the annual ocean-faring music festival – for full details, please click here. The band will will also tour in 2011 in support of
Apollo.

Stockholm Syndrome
Tour Dates

::
Stockholm Syndrome News
::
Stockholm Syndrome
Concert
Reviews


Gov’t Mule | Red Rocks | Pics

Words & Images by: Mike Hardaker

Gov’t Mule :: 09.04.10 :: Red Rocks Amphitheatre :: Morrison, CO

Gov’t Mule cranked their amps up to 11 at Red Rocks at the band’s annual end of summer concert, where they were joined by The Avett Brothers and Truth & Salvage Co.. Mule lead singer, guitarist and bandleader Warren Haynes is a master at the guitar, having played with the Allman Brothers Band, The Dead, David Allan Coe and many more talented musicians, not to mention the dozens if not hundreds of musicians he has jammed with over the years. Along with Haynes was the rock solid Matt Abts behind the drum kit, Danny Louis on keyboard and even guitar for a few songs, and new bass player Jorgen Carlsson throwing down at Red Rocks. The first set started out rocking but settled into a mellow groove, if that’s possible for Gov’t Mule. When Haynes came out for the second set, he said, “This is the rock ‘n’ roll portion of the show,” as his guitar cut through the thin Rocky Mountain; a hypnotic sound you can close your eyes and really drift off to. Special guest Eric Krasno (Soulive, Lettuce) added his guitar chops in this set much to the delight of the Colorado crowd.

Gov’t Mule is heading to Oakland for a spooky Halloween show on October 30th, and before that making a stop in Las Vegas with their friends Widespread Panic for an intimate night of music at the Hard Rock’s The Joint on October 23rd .

Setlist
Set I: Railroad Boy > Gameface with Mountain Jam Tease, Patchwork Quilt, Child Of The Earth, Frozen Fear > D’yer Mak’er > Frozen Fear, Kind Of Bird, I’d Rather Go Blind, Soulshine with Gospel Intro, Broke Down On The Brazos
Set II: Steppin’ Lightly, Inside Outside Woman Blues, About To Rage > Electric Funeral Jam > About To Rage, Sco-Mule > with Eric Krasno, Oye Coma Va Tease & Dance To The Music Lyrics, Drums > High Jazz Jam > Endless Parade, Blind Man In The Dark
E: 21st Century Schizoid Man > We’re Not Gonna Take It > Dazed & Confused

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”15″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=129″);}); 9/4/10 – Gov’t Mule @ Red Rocks Amphitheatre (Morrison, CO) View Photos

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Stockholm Syndrome: September Tour Dates

TOUR BEGINS SEPTEMBER 1 IN ATHENS, GA


Stockholm Syndrome

In anticipation of their upcoming studio album, tentatively titled Apollo, Stockholm Syndrome have
announced ten dates beginning in Athens, GA at the 40 Watt Club. Fan club tickets go on sale soon, including an
option to purchase a 10″ including 2 tracks from the forthcoming new studio album.

Stockholm Syndrome is Dave
Schools
, Jerry
Joseph
, Eric
McFadden
, Danny
Louis
and Wally
Ingram
.

Tour Dates:

September 1 Athens, GA 40 Watt Club

September 2 Atlanta, Georgia Buckhead Theatre

September 3 Asheville, NC The Orange Peel
September 4 Charleston, SC Music Farm
September 5 Wilmington, NC Greenfield Lake Amphitheater

September 8 Raleigh, NC Lincoln Theatre

September 9 West Chester, PA The Note
September 10 Richmond, VA The National
September 11 Baltimore, MD The 8×10

September 12 Brooklyn, NY The Brooklyn Bowl

Stockholm Syndrome
Tour Dates

::
Stockholm Syndrome News ::
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Concert
Reviews


Gov’t Mule: Island Exodus II

JANUARY 27-31 AT BREEZES GRAND IN NEGRIL, JAMAICA


Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule will host Island
Exodus II
. The event will take place over four nights from January 27-31, 2011 at Breezes Grand in Negril, Jamaica.

According to the Island Exodus website, Gov’t Mule will play 3 shows and Warren Haynes will play a sunset solo
show. Guest musicians including Ron
Holloway
(and more to be announced shortly) will sit in. The band is also offering a 6 night package, January
27-February 2 which will include a very unique “locals only” show in Negril on Tuesday February 1. All 6 night
packages will include tickets and round trip shuttle to this show.

Activities such as the Poster Signing, Danny Louis’ Golf Outing and Matt Abts’ Drum Clinic will also return alongside
new activities to be announced shortly.

All additional information can be found at www.mule.net/islandexodus.

Gov’t Mule
Tour Dates

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Gov’t Mule News ::
Govt’ Mule
Concert
Reviews


Jazz Fest After Dark | 04.29-05.02 | New Orleans

Words by: B. Getz | Images by: Casey Flanigan

Jazz Fest Night Shows :: 04.29.10-05.02.10 :: New Orleans, LA

The wise superhero SuperDee once told me, “Judge your Jazz Fest not by what you saw, but what you were forced to miss.”

Those who have been to Jazz Fest know that it’s extremely difficult to decide what shows to see. Head-to-head, there is simply so much incredible music, and rare treats, to indulge in over the course of ten days. Therefore, there will be plenty of fantastic music NOT covered in these dusk til’ dawn highlight. This is simply one boy’s second weekend journey to the musical Mecca that is Jazz Fest… After Dark.

Thursday, April 29

KDTU :: 04.29 :: Tipitina’s

No better way to start Fest then Dauphine and Lesseps in the Bywater, Thursday night at Vaughn’s. Though we arrived too late for his BBQ, Kermit Ruffins & the Barbecue Swingers welcomed us to town like only they can. A joyful mixture of brassy jazz, sultry R&B swagger and modern day braggadocio, Ruffins’ band mixed The Isley Brothers with Gnarls Barkley, with some Mystikal to boot.

Backbeat Foundation hosted another HBO star/brass band alum session at the Blue Nile, where Trombone Shorty & Orleans Ave seized their star turn, tearing down the Quarter for nearly three hours of nonstop NOLA stomp. His crack band, expanded for the occasion, more than ably laid a local foundation for Troy Andrews to delve deep into the Treme, unleashing blistering cuts from new album Backatown. Shorty cooked up a jambalaya of choice local brass anthems with a crunk-rock edge; a mammoth Marvin Gaye cover brought the house down.

Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe‘s Thursday late night show is always the place to be at Fest. The first in five years (and only KDTU Jazz Fest booking) was no different. Playing Tipitina’s Uptown until sunrise, Denson reminded us all of why he remains the King of Late Night Jazz Fest. The Tiny Universe dropped mammoth sets, balancing older favorites “Family Tree,” “Make it a Cosmopolitan” and “Because of Her Beauty” with blazing new joints like the blaxploitation banger “Brother’s Keeper Pt..II,” a lengthy dub-drenched take on “Mighty Rebel,” and an otherworldly keyboard battle between Robert Walter on Hammond B3 and Marco Benevento on Fender Rhodes.

Howlin Wolf held a benefit for the New Orleans Musicians’ Clinic, a huge post-Panic party with keyboardist Jojo’s Mardi Gras Band as the hosts. “Down on the Bayou II” included WSP bandmates Sunny Ortiz and John Bell (highlighted by a brief Panic set). Grateful Dead drummer Bill Kreutzmann and NOLA monarchs George Porter Jr., Anders Osborne, John “Papa” Gros, Papa Mali, Jon Cleary, Big Chief Bo Dollis, and Alfred “Uganda” Roberts all lent their skills. Gov’t Mule‘s Warren Haynes, Jorgen Carlsson and Danny Louis joined hard hitting local skinman Russell Batiste Jr. for an exciting short set.

Friday, April 30

Pretty Lights :: 04.30 :: Republic

The new frontier of live electronic music was on display throughout Friday night, a tribute to both the evolution of the genre and the breadth of the Jazz Fest palette. With respect to the Rusko/Big Gigantic party that went late the night before, for this writer, Friday was about pulsating beats. With a new take on dubstep delivered Live PA style, Uprise Dub kicked things off with proper wobble at Dragon’s Den; dark drum & bass deep in the Quarter. A progressive minded dubstep swagger with Bukem-informed jazzy jungle, Paul Knight is a breakout waiting to happen. Big t’ings in store for this rumbling conglomerate.

Pretty Lights set it off substantially at Republic. With the sold out massive getting crazier by the song, kids were crowd surfing and bouncing off walls; absolute bedlam as dancing spilled into the street. Mixing bombastic originals with seriously dirty reinterpretations, Derek Vincent Smith knows how to rock a crowd. “More Important than Michael Jordan” ignited the fuse, but the set closing “Rumpshaker” remix was a five alarm fire.

Both Friday and Saturday nights, Bear Creek Presents hosted Break Science at One Eyed Jacks to teeming late revelers. Both shows kicked off at the ungodly hour of 4 a.m. Drummer wunderkind Adam Deitch knows no boundaries, and clearly the Rusko set had inspired him; Friday night’s set leaned heavily on dubstep wobble and thunderous bottom end. Saturday saw a more diverse assortment, with Borahm Lee unleashing a ridiculous array of skills amidst mountains of keyboards, samplers and laptops. Highlight: choice tribute to the late Guru, in the form of a punishing take on Gang Starr‘s “DWYCK,” demolishing of Public Enemy’s seminal “Bring the Noise” in a way that would make Hank Shocklee proud.

Saturday, May 1

Superfly Presents always provides a quintessential NOLA experience on the Creole Queen Boat Cruise; and this year’s Greyboy Allstars hoedown was the ideal soundtrack. While Kirk Joseph’s 504 Brass Band held down the deck with typical Crescent City flair, a newly recharged GBA came correct indoors. Incorporating new rare groove styles amidst a sea of classic West Coast boogaloo, the Allstars were back on their mojo. A spooky, enchanting version of “Nautilus” was the highlight for this writer.

Bear Creek Presents delivered another stellar gig at One Eyed Jacks with Dr. Klaw, a malicious conglomerate of NYC meets NOLA crunk. Nick Daniels led the boys into battle, welcoming local cats Andrew Block, Maurice ‘Mo Betta’ Brown and Clarence ‘Trixzey’ Slaughter to the fold. Eric Krasno (MVP?) wailed above the gumbo funk with reckless abandon, with Deitch and Nigel Hall grinning feverishly as they pushed the grooves along.

Backbeat Foundation hosted two killer Saturday shows at Tipitina’s French Quarter. Bonerama killed the raucous room with a smattering of funky brass and rock energy. Joined by Scott McCaughey (guitar), David Silverman (sousaphone), and R.E.M.‘s Mike Mills (bass) the troupe tore thru an Alex Chilton tribute, and spirited takes on “Cabbage Alley” and “Lovelight.” Later, the eclectic grouping Some Cat From Japan interpreted the works of Jimi Hendrix with a fresh take, and a lot of mojo. Led by Will Bernard and Nigel Hall, and ably assisted by Scott Metzger, Ron Johnson and Bonerama drummer Eric Bolivar, the spirit of Jimi was on full display with unique new vision.

Sunday, May 2

A sisterhood of cities was on display at Howlin Wolf for The Royal Family Ball. George Porter and his Running Partners, Zigaboo’s Funk Revue and Break Science held things down early for the vicious combination of Soulive and Lettuce. Soulive delivered one of the final slamming Jazz Fest performance, ripping as a trio or when rolling augmented. But quite frankly, the finest hour belonged to a reinvigorated Lettuce, whose only performance of the weekend was a rage to remember. Welcoming back Boston OG’s Adam ‘Shmeans’ Smirnoff and E.D. ‘Jesus’ Coomes, the boys tore the roof off the Wolf. As if they didn’t already have enough ammo, Ian Neville, Maurice Brown and Khris Royal joined the fray, as did Skerik for the final banger. Lettuce had conquered Jazz Fest once again, sending off the masses with relentless, colossal funk jams.

Like a whirlwind, it was over just as suddenly as it started. Jazz Fest will do that to ya. Once again, it was an epic adventure of giant proportions. Special thanks to Paulina Trujillo and the Backbeat Foundation, Megan Sabella at Newsom Management, Paul Peck and Superfly Productions, Paul Levine and Bear Creek, as well as all the venues and promoters that join together to provide these rich experiences. Most of all, a heartfelt thank you to the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival and the City of New Orleans, without whom none of this would be possible.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”1″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=53″);}); Jazz Fest at Night Photo Gallery Jazz Fest at Night Photo Gallery from New Orleans… View Photos

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Allman Brothers United Palace Photo Gallery

Words & Images by: Dino Perrucci

The Allman Brothers Band

03.11 – 03.20 :: United Palace Theatre :: New York, NY

The Allman Brothers Band recently invaded NYC for their annual March run. Although the shows had moved from the Beacon Theatre to a new location, the United Palace Theatre, and despite being a few less shows than originally planned, the band was in top form throughout the run.

The Allman Brothers’ March New York Run is always a time to bring friends to the stage, and this year’s event was no different. Over the course of eight nights the band welcomed 17 special guests, including: Susan Tedeschi, Doyle Bramhall II, Gov’t Mule keyboardist Danny Louis, Eric Krasno, James Blood Ulmer, Rob Barraco, Bruce Katz, drummers James van de Bogert, Justin Stanley and Kenny Soule, guitarist Scott Sharrard, sax players Jay Collins, Kris Jensen and Bill Evans , flutist Kofi Burbridge, guitarist Junior Mack and bassist Todd Smallie.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”21″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=7″);}); The Allman Brothers Band | United Palace Theatre | New York, NY | 03.11.10 – 03.20.10 The Allman Brothers Band switch locations from the Beacon Theatre to the United Palace Theatre for their annual March New York City Run. Featuring more than 15 special guests and a few new songs, the band proved it doesn’t matter where they play, the roof shall burn! View Photos

Setlists

03.11.10 :: United Palace Theatre :: New York, NY

Set I: Don’t Keep Me Wonderin’ > Hot ‘Lanta > Statesboro Blues > That’s What Love Will Make You Do > No One Left To Run With > Desdemona > Every Hungry Woman > And It Stoned Me > Kind Of Bird

Set II: Melissa > Ain’t No Love > Come And Go Blues > Rocking Horse > Little Martha Tease > Jam > Rocking Horse > Black Hearted Woman > Oteil Jam >
JaBuMaOt > Black Hearted Woman > Jessica > Blue Sky Tease > Jessica

Encore: Preachin’ Blues (Warren & Derek), One Way Out

03.12.10 :: United Palace Theatre :: New York, NY

Set I: Don’t Want You No More > It’s Not My Cross To Bear, You Don’t Love Me, Midnight Rider, Who’s Been Talking, Trouble No More, Blind Willie McTell (Bob Dylan), Egypt, Guilded Splinters, Woman Across The River

Set II: Coming Home w/Susan Tedeschi, Lost Lover Blues w/Susan Tedeschi, Revival, All My Friends, Leave My Blues at Home > Oteil Jam > JaBuMa > Mountain Jam > Smokestack Lightning > Mountain Jameed

Encore: Southbound w/Susan Tedeschi

03.13.10 :: United Palace Theatre :: New York, NY

Set I: Done Somebody Wrong, Ain’t Wasting Time No More, Stand Back, Hoochie Coochie Man, , Heart Of Stone, Bag End, Good Morning Little School Girl, Whipping Post

Set II: Little Martha, Blue Sky, Little Martha, Dreams (Warren Solo), No One Left To Run With, Sky Is Crying w/Bruce Katz, In Memory Of Elizabeth Reed w/Bruce Katz, Oteil Jam, JaBuMaOt, In Memory Of Elizabeth Reed

Encore: One Way Out

03.15.10 :: United Palace Theatre :: New York, NY

Set I: Hot ‘Lanta, Can’t Lose What You Never Had, Trouble No More, Come And Go Blues, Rocking Horse, Gambler’s Roll, Only You Know And I Know, Kind Of Bird, Statesboro Blues

Set II: Melissa, Good Clean Fun, Black Hearted Woman > Other One Jam, The Weight
Every Hungry Woman, Jessica > Will The Circle Go Unbroken > Oteil solo > Blue Sky Jam/Tease > Jessica (reprise)

Encore: You Don’t Love Me

03.16.10 :: United Palace Theatre :: New York, NY

Set I: Don’t Want You No More, Not My Cross To Bear, Leave My Blues At Home, Midnight Rider, Forty Four Blues, End Of The Line, Egypt, The Same Thing, Revival

Set II: I Asked For Water (She Gave Me Gasoline) w/James Blood Ulmer, One Way Out, Blind Willie McTell, That’s What Love Will Make You Do w/Eric Krasno, No One To Run With, In Memory Of Elizabeth Reed > JaMaBuBu > Bass Jam > In Memory Of Elizabeth Reed

Encore: Southbound w/ Rob Barraco & Eric Krasno

03.18.10 :: United Palace Theatre :: New York, NY

Set I: Statesboro Blues, Don’t Keep Me Wonderin’, Ain’t Wastin’ Time No More, Coming Home, Bag End, Come On In My Kitchen, Ain’t No Love In The Heart Of The City, Into The Mystic, You Don’t Love Me – w/Scott Sharrard (guitar)

Set II: Melissa, Mountain Jam, Desdemona w/Jay Collins (sax), Black Hearted Woman > Bass > JaMaBuBu > The Other One Jam > Black Hearted Woman, Mountain Jam (Part 2)

Encore: Whipping Post w/Jay Collins (sax)

03.19.10 :: United Palace Theatre :: New York, NY

Set I: Hot ‘Lanta, I Walk On Gilded Splinters, Trouble No More, Rocking Horse, Wasted Words, Soulshine w/Danny Louis, Good Morning Little Schoolgirl w/Danny Louis, Kind Of Bird w/Danny Louis (no Gregg), Midnight Rider

Set II: Meet Me At The Bottom w/Justin Stanley (drums) and Doyle Bramhall II, Dreams, Anyday, Stormy Monday w/Junior Mack (guitar), Jessica w/Kris Jensen (sax) > Little Martha (Oteil only) > Bass > JaMaBuBu > Jessica – w/Kris Jensen

Encore: One Way Out w/Doyle Bramhall II

03.20.10 :: United Palace Theatre :: New York, NY

Set I: Don’t Want You No More > It’s Not My Cross To Bear, Statesboro Blues, Stand Back, Woman Across The River, All My Friends, New Instrumental, Blind Willie McTell, Whipping Post

Set II: Little Martha, Jessica w/Kenny Soule (drums), No One To Run With, The Same Thing w/Kofi Burbridge (flute) & James van de Bogert (drums), Dreams w/Bill Evans (sax), In Memory of Elizabeth Reed w/Bill Evans > Bass solo with Oteil on bass and Kofi Burbridge on piano > Preachin’ Blues, You Don’t Love Me w/Todd Smallie (bass)

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Stockholm Syndrome | 03.05 & 03.06 | S.F.

Words by: Kayceman | Images by: Susan J. Weiand

Stockholm Syndrome :: 03.05.10 :: The Independent :: San Francisco, CA

Stockholm Syndrome :: 03.05 :: San Francisco, CA

It’s amazing how little has changed in six years. In 2004, I was in Europe with Stockholm Syndrome (read about it here). I was documenting the band’s first tour, carrying amps and selling t-shirts. While it was a great time to be around the band, watching them learn the material and wrestle their way into a hierarchy of sorts, it was not a cool time to be an American overseas. When Obama took office it became a little easier to wear your American pride outside our borders, but inside the confines of our 50 states, it’s still a shit-storm. We may have voted for change, but not much has changed.

Rock & roll is comfort food in times like these, and this band dishes it out in plentiful portions. Whether magnifying our demons on songs like “American Fork” and “Empire One” or helping us forget the pain for a minute with “Bouncing Very Well” or an uber-funky, Clav-heavy “Couldn’t Get It Right” (that sounded like it might drop into “Superstition” at one point), the power of a great song or inspired jam can medicate.

Few of us have known leaner times than today and there are few artists alive who channel struggle, pain and frustration as well as Jerry Joseph. Regardless of what configuration we find him in (Jackmormons, solo, Denmark Veseys, etc.), Jerry always charts a path to open hearts. But, he is never more affective than with Stockholm. Backed by bassist Dave Schools (Widespread Panic), drummer Wally Ingram (David Lindley, Sheryl Crow, Jackson Browne), keyboardist Danny Louis (Gov’t Mule) and the inimitable Eric McFadden on guitar, there are not many bands that can match the intensity and sheer power of SS.

Jerry Joseph :: 03.05 :: San Francisco

Mixing songs from the band’s 2004 debut, Holy Happy Hour, with new tracks off the soon-to-be-released sophomore album and Jerry’s solo work, Stockholm Syndrome also decimated a few huge covers on their first night in San Francisco. Coming out of a sprawling “Kind Of Place,” a Jerry song with a huge sing-along hook that should have charted on the radio years ago, the band closed set one with the late Vic Chesnutt‘s “Flirted With You All My Life.” A song about death by a man who recently took his own life, there is no heavier subject matter, and they paid homage by taking it into very dark terrain. But what was so remarkable about this song was the transition from pitch black despair into something with a slight reggae influence and upbeat conclusion. Together it was a musical reminder that there is light at the end of the tunnel, even if we have to cross over to find it.

The other bust-out cover came mid-way through the second set with Dylan‘s “Where Are You Tonight?” Beefed up on testosterone and delivered in classic Jerry style, they latched onto the original’s gospel roots and turned it into a rock burner. Even folks familiar with the song were scratching their heads for the first few minutes. You could almost read their minds: “I know this song… but what is it?”

More than any specific song, what makes this band so fun is watching them lock horns. Each member is a true Alpha Dog and if they don’t take some space, they won’t get any. This is what makes Danny Louis such an asset. The original keyboard player, German star Danny Dziuk, was more passive, Louis is not and he knows when to really lean in. The same could be said for McFadden. A more talented guitarist you will not find, and though he is at times overshadowed by Jerry’s massive stage presence (not to mention his often overlooked guitar work), McFadden is a powder keg ready to explode. His solos are always over-the-top, but it’s when he and Jerry rub against each other, harmonizing their guitars and weaving notes, as they did on “Ray Of Heaven” and “Conscious Contact,” that the sparks really fly.

McFadden & Schools :: 03.05 :: San Francisco, CA

Alas, one would be remiss to not make prominent mention of Dave Schools. Playing a bit more of a traditional bass role than in Widespread Panic, Schools utilizes a four-string here to devastating effect. From heavily dubbed out sections that would set Jerry up for surprisingly strong white-boy reggae (not easy, and Jerry does it better than just about anyone) to expansive bass solos, mean power rock and spot-on vocal harmonies, Schools is the not-so-secret weapon of Stockholm Syndrome.

It can be a dicey situation with Jerry Joseph as the bandleader. He can’t do it any other way. He has to be the frontman, and the more confident and loose he is, the better the performance. But this is not the Jackmormons and every player needs room to shine or they’ll grow bored (or worse, they might get angry). Finding that balance is the key to Stockholm Syndrome’s success, and longevity.

During second set standout “Shinning Path,” I couldn’t help but wonder what would happen if this band was the full-time priority for all five members. An older Jerry song about the brutal Communist Party of Peru, the band gave Jerry as much rope as he wanted, and he tied a knot around The Independent, pulling us deep into his world. A slow building, explosive rocker, when Jerry screamed, “You said that you’d die for me,” while McFadden blazed a solo and Schools dumped heavy bass over the top, it was everything rock fans dream about.

Stockholm Syndrome :: 03.05.10 :: The Independent :: San Francisco, CA

Set I: Red Lightning, Couldn’t Get It Right, These Grey Days, Sing Bird, In Your Cups, Kind Of Place, Flirted With You All My Life

Set II: Ray Of Heaven, Purple Hearts, Shining Path, Where Are You Tonight?, Friendly Fire, Bouncing Very Well, Conscious Contact

E: Wisconsin Death Trip

Continue reading for Dennis Cook’s review of the second night…

Words by: Dennis Cook | Images by: Susan J. Weiand

Stockholm Syndrome/These United States :: 03.06.10 :: The Independent :: San Francisco, CA

Stockholm Syndrome :: 03.05 :: San Francisco, CA

The best rock shows tend to carry a sense of ritual about them. It’s all fine and well for a band to play appealing songs good and loud, but if the instigators have deeper intentions – even if they’re primarily subconscious – then a gig becomes an experience, perhaps first felt in a visceral manner but followed by psychic aftershocks that keep one pondering what occurred. More simply, if musicians build a metaphorical bonfire, bang a drum and wag their talking stick in our faces we respond to the shaman’s call.

While maybe not a full blown pagan revival meeting, Stockholm Syndrome with testifying openers These United States, flirted with this sort of ontological rising tide. For sure, both bands proffer some of the sturdiest, thickest rock out there right now, but both also actively engage in questions of spirit, humanity, politics and ethics. No teenybopper tripe here, and while some of the headier notions got caught in a snarl of guitars, volcanic bass and the sweat ‘n’ heat of the moment, there was no denying we collectively surfed the edge of a deep wave. Sometimes the music held us high, staring out over an ocean, and at others pulled us down into the salt and seaweed to gasp a little.

From their reaction inspiring name through their coiled group energy and increasingly tricked out catalog, These United States long to connect – for good or bad – with any audience they face. Largely unknown to the heavily Panic slanted crowd at The Independent, TUS nevertheless delivered a raggedly right performance that leapt with such joy and happy intensity that I stood dumbfounded at the mostly motionless people around me – dear lord, how can you NOT move to this!?! Watching lead singer/frontman Jesse Elliott leap into the yawning divide between the stage and hangers-back, there was no doubting their dedication to bridging such spaces. From their foundation up, TUS is about connections, all of them – love, hate, envy, history, etc. – just so long as truthful feeling is involved. And their strong playing and cool variety in interpreting their earlier tunes shows the density of shared intentions has grown very strong with this lineup. There’s more than a touch of mid-70s Dylan to them, and their interpretation of Bob’s “Meet Me In The Morning” this night would have put a smile on Dylan’s pancake white face during the Rolling Thunder days. As with every other time I’ve seen TUS, it seemed like they left everything they had in them on the stage. To withhold from one’s calling would be a sin and these boys aren’t sinners in any but the most playful ways.

Dave Schools :: 03.05 :: San Francisco

There are a lot of “what if’s” in rock history. What if Blind Faith hadn’t been undone by ego and friction and managed to make a second or a third album? What if Robbie Robertson hadn’t pirated The Band’s fortunes and instead shared the wealth and creative control with his comrades? There are too many such seemingly brilliant combinations of talents that imploded despite the best hopes of all involved. Which brings us to Stockholm Syndrome, a supergroup of sorts, at least within the cloistered jam community. Jerry Joseph (lead vocals, guitar), Dave Schools (bass, vocals), Wally Ingram (drums), Eric McFadden (guitar, mandolin, vocals) and Danny Louis (keyboards) all have their fingers in multiple pies, some high profile (Schools’ enduring role in Widespread Panic, Louis’ anchor role in Gov’t Mule), some cultily adored (Jerry J, McFadden), some relentlessly busy (Ingram’s in-demand studio talents and hired killer status for big name acts as well as collaborator with great lesser-knowns). But, every damn time they assemble as Stockholm Syndrome we I start wishing they’d quit their day jobs and really see what Stockholm can do. It’s usually a few songs into the first set that this feeling hits me, hard, and right on time it whacked my solar plexus as Joseph roared, “I’m a killer, baby, that’s what killers do!” with McFadden prodding his ass like the devil with a new pitchfork and a luxurious, furious undercurrent of Schools, Louis and Ingram creating a rumble you felt in the meat of you.

This is not small-ball rock ‘n’ roll. Stockholm not only aspires to but achieves the dense, intermingled thickness of ’70s progenitors like Zeppelin, Deep Purple and Thin Lizzy but with Jerry’s politically and psychologically intense lyrics (which provide the lion’s share of the words thrown out) transforming them into a totally different animal than these classic rock stepping stones. And here’s where that shamanic/cosmic thing comes in. Combined with music that’s not just reaching out but actively snatching one up and slapping them around a bit, the lyrics hold a deep, dark, truthful mirror up. It’s for society in the larger sense, but also for us, personally. Slamming down drinks and numbing the working week’s disappointments, I still couldn’t escape the feeling I’d been psychically depantsed by Joseph refrains like, “It’s good to be alone,” “We see what we want to see,” and other nitty gritty couplets that hit close to home for dreamers and lovers that struggle to do either in the world as it is today.

Stockholm Syndrome :: 03.05 :: San Francisco, CA

Some sections are strong and uplifting, but even that is hard won in Stockholm’s scheme of things. The work of life, the labor of being better than our past and emerging into the best we can be, floats in their themes and stories, which sometimes offer us “crayons from our childhood/ a 64-pack set” but more often hand us a gun or torch. Personally, I freakin’ love it and welcome any chance to dive deep in this shallow world. It’s clear they won’t be satisfied in the shallows based on the new material played at this show, all of which is promising and worthy of further inspection. It’s hard to get a distinct sense of Stockholm’s catalog or where it’s going because they play together so rarely, but for guys who only gather occasionally they sure exhibit a TON of chemistry that largely overcomes the rough edges. Dressed in jeans and t-shirts, this feels like their “working band,” a project that reconnects them to the roots of their inspirations AND is a total blast to play in. None of these guys is known for oodles of smiles in their other bands, yet they can’t seem to stop grinning in Stockholm Syndrome. That alone is a powerful sign that they should invest whatever time they can in this band. Plying one’s craft with genuine pleasure is the surest way to guarantee positive end results.

The steaming, churning engine inside them was firing on all cylinders by the end of the first set with a blistering takedown of “Crime & Punishment” and especially “American Fork.” Wasting little time with a break – who could deny them a smoke after a set that left one feeling pleasantly wrecked like after good sex – they attacked the second set with enormous vigor, with the highlights, perhaps predictably, being shattering, faith affirming versions of Joseph’s signature tunes “The Jacob Ladder” and “Road To Damascus.” Now, nothing surrounding these two was any slouch, and it’s intriguing how the songs are starting to mingle and morph with this quintet. If nothing else, the relatively intimate Independent allowed one the rare opportunity to perch mere feet over Dave Schools’ shoulder and just let his technically brilliant, he-man-as-hell bass work vibrate your balls and make you feel alive. The man oozes rock power and his presence as much as his playing informs this band in totally positive ways.

Stumbling out onto Divisadero Street, I once again entertained the question that’s followed me from every Stockholm show: What if these guys made this band their priority? My gut says the possibilities are pretty limitless and that they’ve only just scratched the surface. The collective confidence and sheer talent of these five men is staggering and incredibly exciting. I just hope we get to see it come to its full fruition one day.

Stockholm Syndrome :: 03.06.10 :: The Independent :: San Francisco, CA

Set I: Tight > Empire One > Easter, Tarantula Hawk, Miranda, Crime & Punishment, American Fork

Set II: Apollo > The Jacob Ladder > Emma’s Pissed, That Which Is Coming, Spy > Road to Damascus, Light Is Like Water
E: Lick The Tears

Continue reading for more pics…

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Stockholm Syndrome Tour Dates :: Stockholm Syndrome News :: Stockholm Syndrome Concert Reviews

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Stockholm Syndrome: Live EP Tour Starts 2/24

STOCKHOLM SYNDROME LIVE EP OUT 2/16, ANNOUNCE TOUR

Stockholm Syndrome

Stockholm Syndrome (featuring Wally Ingram, Jerry Joseph, Eric McFadden, Dave Schools and Danny Louis) will release a seven song Live EP February 16; recorded at Streetlight Records in Santa Cruz, CA last September, and includes four previously unreleased tracks.

A new, full length studio album is also in the works, with details coming soon.

The band will also be on tour this February and March in the Western U.S., including stops in Denver, Seattle and two nights at San Francisco’s Independent.

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Dates

02/24/10 Wed Vail Village Vail, CO

02/25/10 Thu Sheraton Ballroom Steamboat Springs, CO

02/26/10 Fri Fox Theatre Boulder, CO

02/27/10 Sat Bluebird Theater Denver, CO

02/28/10 Sun Harry O’s Park City, UT

03/02/10 Tue The Crystal Ballroom Portland, OR

03/03/10 Wed Neumos Seattle, WA

03/04/10 Thu McDonald Theatre Eugene, OR

03/05/10 Fri The Independent San Francisco, CA

03/06/10 Sat The Independent San Francisco, CA

03/08/10 Mon The Roxy Theatre West Hollywood, CA

03/09/10 Tue Belly Up Tavern Solana Beach, CA

03/10/10 Wed Orpheum Theater Flagstaff, AZ

03/12/10 Fri Telluride Conference Center Telluride, CO

03/13/10 Sat Belly Up Aspen, CO

03/14/10 Sun Black Sheep Colorado Springs, CO

For more on Stockholm Syndrome see our behind the scenes feature: A Band Is Born.


Gov’t Mule | 01.15 – 01.19 | Jamaica

Words & Images by: Dino Perrucci

Gov’t Mule Island Exodus :: 01.15 – 01.19 :: Negril, Jamaica

Gov’t Mule :: 01.18 :: Jamaica

Gov’t Mule held its first ever Island Exodus at the all-inclusive Grand Lido Resort in Negril, Jamaica. The event featured three headlining shows from Gov’t Mule as well as a Warren Haynes solo show, three sets from Grace Potter and The Nocturnals, guests Ron Holloway (sax), “Mean” Willie Green (drums) and DJ Logic. The weekend fiesta also featured a golf outing, Drum Clinic with Matt Abts, road stories from Warren Haynes’ guitar tech Brian Farmer and much more.

With a stage located right next to the water on a beautiful sandy beach, the table was set for the experience of a lifetime. The Gov’t Mule sets throughout the weekend offered a great mix of songs from the new release By A Thread mixed with old favorites and island themed covers. Friday nights opener “Jam-Aica” > “The Joker” (Steve Miller cover) set the tone for what was to come. By the end of the set when Ron Holloway stepped out for “Dirty Work” (Steely Dan cover) and the set closer “Sco-Mule,” the beach was on fire.

Saturday night opened with a nod to local hero Toots Hibbert with a cover of the Maytals’ “54-46″ that led into “I’m A Ram.” The strong show was topped off with multiple guests joining for encores of “32/20 Blues” featuring Willie Green and Ron Holloway, followed by “Stop That Train” with Willie Green, Ron Holloway, Grace Potter and Nocturnals guitarist Scott Tournet.

Sunday evening featured a big Nocturnals set and two full sets of Warren Haynes solo. Though somewhat marred by rain and the ensuing sound problems, the show still provided some of the finest musical moments of the weekend. Monday night’s final set was one for the ages. High energy from the start, things really took off once “Rocking Horse” led into a “Beat It” jam with Warren ripping the Eddie Van Halen solo through the Jamaican night. “Beat It” also featured the stage debut of Sean Carlsson (Jorgen’s son) and his robot dance. The second set opened with Matt Abts on vocals leading the band through a cover of the Rolling Stones’ “Shattered” with Jorgen Carlsson on drums and Danny Louis on bass. It’s worth noting that over the course of the weekend Danny Louis, while usually seated behind the keys, also stepped out to play trumpet, guitar, bass and even joined Abts on Drums. The “Many Rivers To Cross” that opened the encore saw many goose-bumps and more than a few tears. I couldn’t help while standing there in paradise but to think for a moment that not too far away in Haiti there is a whole country with many, many rivers to cross. Ending the night with a rousing “Southern Man” (Neil Young cover), everyone walked away with big smiles on their faces.
In the end, fans and musicians alike seemed to agree that this was one of the most memorable times any of us have ever spent together.

Continue reading for lots more pics of Gov’t Mule’s Island Exodus…

Gov’t Mule :: Friday :: 01.15.10

Set I: Jam-Aica > The Joker, Thorazine Shuffle, Banks Of The Deep End, Larger Than Life, Have Mercy On The Criminal, Lay Your Burden Down, Steppin’ Lightly > Any Open Window, Dirty Work (w/ Ron Holloway), Sco-Mule (w/ Ron Holloway)

Set II: Find The Cost Of Freedom (w/ Grace Potter) > Ohio (w/ Grace Potter),
Take Me To The River (w/ Grace Potter), Brand New Angel, Broke Down On The Brazos, The Shape I’m In > Afro-Blue (w/ Ron Holloway), Lively Up Yourself

E: Raven Black Night, Gold Dust Woman (w/ Grace Potter)

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Continue reading for lots more pics of Gov’t Mule’s Island Exodus…

Gov’t Mule :: Saturday :: 01.16.10

Set I: 54/46 > I’m A Ram, Gameface, Child Of The Earth, Frozen Fear, Beautifully Broken, Mule (w/ Ron Holloway) > I’ve Been Workin’ (w/ Ron Holloway) > Mule w(/ Ron Holloway)

Set II: Bad Little Doggie, Streamline Woman, Brighter Days > Like Flies > Drums >
Drums & Bass, Railroad Boy > Fallen Down > The Other One Jam with Gimme Shelter Tease (w/ Ron Holloway), Blind Man In The Dark with Get Up, Stand Up & Sleepwalk Teases (w/ Ron Holloway & Danny Louis on drums)

E: 32/20 Blues (w/ Willie Green & Ron Holloway), Stop That Train (w/ Willie Green, Ron Holloway, Grace Potter & Scott Tournet)

Artist Signing

Artist Signing

Matt Abts Drum Clinic

Matt Abts Drum Clinic

Matt Abts Drum Clinic

Grace Potter and The Nocturnals

Grace Potter and The Nocturnals

Grace Potter and The Nocturnals

Grace Potter and The Nocturnals

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Continue reading for lots more pics of Gov’t Mule’s Island Exodus…

Warren Haynes Solo :: Sunday :: 01.17.10

Set I: Patchwork Quilt, The Real Thing, Listen To The Lions, No Celebration, Back Where I Started, Stranded In Self Pity (w/ Ron Holloway), Change Is Gonna Come (w/ Ron Holloway), Goin’ Down Slow, Old Friends, Wild Horses (w/ Grace Potter)

Set II: Hallelujah Boulevard, Panonica’s Dream, It Hurts Me Too, Poor Boy Blues, In My Life (w/ Matt Abts), End Of The Line

E1: Hallelujah (w/ Danny Louis)

E2: That’s Why I’m Here > Stella Blue

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Warren Haynes Solo

Warren Haynes Solo

Warren Haynes Solo

Warren Haynes Solo

Warren Haynes Solo

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Continue reading for more pics of Gov’t Mule’s Island Exodus…

Gov’t Mule :: Monday :: 01.18.10

Set I: Hammer & Nails > Time To Confess > Painted Silver Light, Wandering Child, Monday Mourning Meltdown > Forevermore > Rocking Horse > Beat It Jam (w/ Sean Carlsson on the dance floor & Ron Holloway), Reggae Soulshine (w/ Ron Holloway > Devil Likes Slow (w/ Ron Holloway

Set II: Shattered, New World Blues, Effigy > Folsom Prison Blues Jam > Effigy > Slackjaw Jezebel > Drums (w/ DJ Logic), Play With Fire (w/ Ron Holloway & DJ Logic), No Need To Suffer, Money (w/ Ron Holloway)

E1: Many Rivers To Cross (w/ Ron Holloway & Grace Potter), Somebody To Love (w/ Grace Potter)

E2: Southern Man (w/ Grace Potter & Scott Tournet)

Brian Farmer – Warren Haynes’ guitar tech

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

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Gov’t Mule tour dates available here.

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Stockholm Syndrome Tour

Stockholm Syndrome Announce Tour

Stockholm Syndrome

Stockholm Syndrome, featuring Dave Schools (Widespread Panic), Jerry Joseph (Jackmormons), Eric McFadden, Wally Ingram and Danny Louis (Gov’t Mule), has announced a string of tour dates in support of their forthcoming new studio album, which will be available in 2010.

In related news, Jerry Joseph is performing a free show tonight (01/07) at the House of Blues – Foundation Room in Boston, MA. There are no tickets on sale but fans must be put on the guest list to attend. In order to get a guest spot please email: bostonguestlist@jerryjoseph.com.

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Dates

02/24/10 Wed Vail Village Vail, CO

02/25/10 Thu Sheraton Ballroom Steamboat Springs, CO

02/26/10 Fri Fox Theatre Boulder, CO

02/27/10 Sat Bluebird Theater Denver, CO

02/28/10 Sun Harry O’s Park City, UT

03/02/10 Tue The Crystal Ballroom Portland, OR

03/03/10 Wed Neumos Seattle, WA

03/04/10 Thu McDonald Theatre Eugene, OR

03/05/10 Fri The Independent San Francisco, CA

03/06/10 Sat The Independent San Francisco, CA

03/08/10 Mon The Roxy Theatre West Hollywood, CA

03/10/10 Wed Orpheum Theater Flagstaff, AZ

03/12/10 Fri Telluride Conference Center Telluride, CO

03/13/10 Sat Belly Up Aspen, CO

For more on Stockholm Syndrome see our behind the scenes feature: A Band Is Born.


Gov’t Mule | 10.31 | Philadelphia

Words by: Jake Krolick | Images by: Jake Krolick & Allison Murphy

Gov’t Mule :: 10.31.09 :: Tower Theater :: Philadelphia, PA

Gov’t Mule :: 10.31 :: Philadelphia by Krolick

Chaos from the previous evening had yet to be stuffed back into the hole that it crawled out from. You could gauge the craziness of this year’s Halloween in several ways. One way was hop into the back seat of a cab early the next morning and find it filled with the putrid stink of an evening of over-indulgence and what appeared to be the remains of some spooky rice dish regurgitated in the vilest of manners. The cabby apologized in a heavy Indian accent saying, “Crazy night in the city man.” It’s the kind of evening you would imagine Mick Jagger and Keith Richards shared more than once in their heydays. I’m sure that the band members from Gov’t Mule had also danced with that kind of devil before, but you don’t hear about Danny Louis snorting his dad’s ashes cut with a line of coke. Sure, Warren Haynes is a stud on the guitar, but the ladies aren’t exactly tossing their panties at him like they did with Jagger. However, what Gov’t Mule lacked in quintessential Rolling Stones rock star unruliness they compensated for in their musicianship. It just made sense that Gov’t Mule covered the Rolling Stones when you listen to how deeply both bands are rooted in American blues and R&B. No, it was not quite the death defying genre leap heard at previous Halloweens, but their performance was well executed and Matt Abts take on “Shattered” was more fun than a barrel of monkeys!

Greene :: 10.31 by Murphy

The setlist onstage gave away the trick before the treat. Someone had created it and then changed their minds. Instead of waiting to cover the Rolling Stones during the second set at the Tower Theater, they jumped right in and played the second set first. We were treated to 12 first time played Rolling Stones covers spanning from the classic 1971 album Sticky Fingers to 1978′s Some Girls, and all that was around and in between. Lending Gov’t Mule a hand was guitarist/vocalist Jackie Greene and saxophonist Steve Elson. The set they unveiled proved that all of the musicians onstage were capable of handling multiple duties.

Haynes and Greene tackled the intricate Keith Richards and Ronnie Wood manner of weaving rhythm and lead guitar, while both clearly expressed their own stylistic flourishes. Greene took Keith Richards’ playing style and smoothed out the edges, while Haynes’ slide work was more a cross between Brian Jones and Ronnie Wood. Mule’s frontman was no Mick Jagger, and opener “Under My Thumb” lacked the song’s classic kick as the show took flight. Boundless pompous rock attitude and stage swagger did not suddenly emerge from the relatively subdued Haynes, whose first set was strongly played but found him staying out of the limelight while he let two of his bandmates strut their stuff. The haphazard beginnings fell away by the fourth song when Danny Louis traded spots with Greene for “Can’t You Hear Me Knockin’.” Louis played a raw, gutsy guitar that was cranked full blast as he shimmied back and forth between Haynes and bassist Jorgen Carlsson. His Richards-like leg bends, power chords, and plethora of rock & roll faces were just the catalyst needed to get the Tower shaking.

Greene was good for a backing vocal on “Angie,” as Haynes wrapped his patient tones around the chorus in his unique way of singing every word like each of us were a lone audience member and he was talking directly to us. Greene earned his keep on a majestic version of “Ventilator Blues” as he traded guitar licks with Haynes before switching gears to work the harmonica. The action shifted quickly as Louis traded trumpet blows with Greene’s harp and Elson’s sax. Louis’ hands never left the keys as they did a dirty dance that really knocked our boots around. By all accounts, it’s doubtful The Rolling Stones themselves sounded this good when they played the Tower in 2002.

Abts & Greene :: 10.31 by Murphy

By the middle of the first set all bets were off as Matt Abts ran out from behind his kit to play the role of Jagger on “Shattered.” Carlsson rotated into Abts’ spot on drums while Louis slapped the bass. Abts’ imitation of Mick Jagger was so fucking awesome that if you just caught one song all evening it should have been “Shattered.” Just seeing Abts do Jagger’s chicken strut back and forth across the stage in his tight white pants and black kneepads was priceless. Sure, his singing wasn’t perfect, but when he yanked a banana out of his crotch and sang, “Look at me, I’m in tatters,” we lost our shit. It was comedic and rocking all at the same time, and it showcased some seldom seen musical abilities within Abts, Carlsson, and Louis.

Gov’t Mule had teased “Play With Fire” the night before and they set aside their reggae take to keep the set steeped in the Stones’ classic rock sound. Greene’s added harmonies and Louis’ bravado on keys matched the hard-hitting bass pokes that Carlsson was tossing out. The Carlsson-era Mule has all the crudeness and excitement of the Allen Woody days without sounding like a step in reverse. The balcony was swaying and bouncing hard as Haynes steered us into “Paint it Black.” Drinks sitting on the edge of the balcony were actually sloshing in their cups. Haynes finished The Rolling Stones anthem with a simple shout to the audience, “This is what we call Mule-o-ween.” If only Abts had stepped back out for “Bitch” then that old outspoken lady of a song would have spread her legs wide and our costumed crowd would have charged right in. No matter, the second Haynes and Louis got their hands on “Brown Sugar” all was good as they faked an ending and gave us another round of house light flashes, arm waves, and sing-a-long (“I say yeah, yeah, yeah, WOOO!) to finish the set.

The cheers started to dissipate as we wandered through a sea of red and white Phillies garb. Those who chose to put the game aside and live in the moment of the concert were the lucky ones. Gov’t Mule’s new album, By A Thread (released October 26 on Evil Teen Records), was fresh on the record shelves as Haynes and crew dug through six tracks, including an extremely inspired “Monday Mourning Meltdown.” This new bit of Gov’t Mule peculiarity featured everything from Louis’ jazzy key work to Haynes’ thickly textured, head-throbbing guitar. He extended a peaking jam in around the fifth minute of the song that made me wonder where his wild, howling Gibson guitar had been earlier in the evening. His left hand bent the strings as his right played out some acrobatic fly swats that set the jam on fire. It was the first real face-scrunch I had seen from his lion-like mug all night.

Warren Haynes :: 10.31 :: Philadelphia by Krolick

The extended intro to “Blind Man in the Dark” had a bit of a Dr. John “Walk on Guilded Splinters” echo, complete with Louis’ eerie, Thriller-like sound effects. This was the longest, most experimental jam of the evening, and even though its predecessors would be more talked about, it featured some of the best playing buried within its well-constructed walls. Abts switched the grip on his drumsticks and started a snazzy little shuffle on his cymbals as Louis and Elson worked out a stellar bit of bebop that ached to be a new fangled Peanuts theme song. The backset trio ripped the center of the song clear out and jazzed up the jam proper.

“Going Out West” could have been spotted from miles away with its familiar, flamboyant sounding low end intro. Haynes’ Peter Gunn tease was just more candy in the bag as he pummeled costumed fans with the Spy Hunter theme song. The crowd that had been perched out in the hallways watching the game now raced back in for the colossal encore as a cover of T. Rex‘s classic “Bang A Gong” launched us back into raucous Halloween fun. It wasn’t a Rolling Stones cover, but the Chuck Berry inspired ditty fit well inside that realm of inspiration that drove The Rolling Stones. The transition back into “Going Out West” rumbled as Gov’t Mule sent us out with a huge finale to another memorable Mule-o-ween filled with love and hope and sex and dreams.

Gov’t Mule :: 10.31.09 :: Tower Theater :: Philadelphia, PA

Set I: (full set with Jackie Greene) Under My Thumb*, Monkey Man*, Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo*$, Can’t You Hear Me, Knockin’*$, Angie*, Ventilator Blues*$, Shattered*$ (with Matt on lead vocal, Danny on bass & Jorgen on drums), Wild Horses, Slave*$, Gimme Shelter*$, Play With Fire, Paint It Black*, Bitch*$, Brown Sugar*$

Set II: Steppin’ Lightly, Broke Down On The Brazos, Railroad Boy > Monday Mourning Meltdown > Forevermore, Frozen Fear > Brighter Days > Blind Man In The Dark$

Encore: (Encore with Jackie Greene) Goin’ Out West$ (with Peter Gunn tease) > Bang A Gong (Get It On)$ > Goin’ Out West$

* 1st Time Played
$ with Steve Elson

Continue reading for more images of Mule on Halloween…

Images by: Jake Krolick

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ABB & WSP Setlists TX: Epic Tour Comes To End

Widespread Panic & The Allman Brothers Band Setlists

10.17.09 :: Sat :: Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion :: The Woodlands, TX

Widespread Panic:

Let’s Get Down To Business, Give > Disco > Tall Boy, Blue Indian > Junior > Party At Your Mamas House > Ribs and Whiskey, North, Pilgrims, Good People > Use Me* > Cortez the Killer* > Lawyers, Guns and Money, Henry Parsons Died

* with Warren Haynes on guitar

The Allman Brothers Band:

Revival, Done Somebody Wrong, Rocking Horse, One Way Out, Guilded Splinters*, The Sky is Crying, Franklins Tower**, Black Hearted Woman, Dreams***, In Memory of Elizabeth Reed****

E: Southbound^

* with John Bell on guitar/vocals, Sunny Ortiz on percussion

** with Sunny Ortiz on percussion, Jimmy Herring on guitar

*** with Dave Schools on bass, without Oteil Burbridge

**** with Jimmy Herring on guitar

^ with all of Widespread Panic

You can stream Panic’s set at panicstream.com.

You can download Panic’s set at LiveDownloads.com.


10.16.09 :: Fri :: Superpages.com Center :: Dallas, TX

Widespread Panic:

Radio Child, Weight Of The World > Don’t Be Denied, Wondering, Greta > Under The Radar Jam > Three Candles > Space Wrangler, Gradle, From The Cradle, Second Skin* > Blackout Blues*, All Time Low, Makes Sense To Me

* with Derek Trucks on guitar

The Allman Brothers Band:

Statesboro Blues, Come And Go Blues, No One To Run With, Who’s Been Talking, Midnight Rider, Highway 61 Revisited*, Why Does Love Got To Be So Sad?, One Way Out, Into The Mystic, Jessica

E: Melissa, Whipping Post

* with John Bell on guitar/vocals

You can stream Panic’s set at panicstream.com.

You can download Panic’s set at LiveDownloads.com.


10.14.09 :: Wed :: Municipal Auditorium :: Nashville, TN

Widespread Panic:

Let’s Get The Show On The Road > Happy > You Should Be Glad, Pickin’ Up The Pieces, Up All Night, Love Tractor, Big Wooly Mammoth* > Fishwater > Drums > Fishwater > Don’t Wanna Lose You** > It Ain’t No Use** > Jam** > Driving Song > You Got Yours > Driving Song > Chilly Water

E: Vacation > Life During Wartime

* Johnny Neel on keys

** Audley Freed on guitar

The Allman Brothers Band:

Don’t Want You no More > Not My Cross To Bear > Don’t Keep Me Wondering, Trouble No More, Good Morning Little Schoolgirl, Midnight Rider*, Done Somebody Wrong**, Black Hearted Woman* > Other One Jam, Woman Across The River*, Soulshine, It Takes A Lot To Laugh It Takes A Train To Cry***, In Memory of Elizabeth Reed**** > Drums & Bass > In Memory of Elizabeth Reed****

E: Melissa*****, You Don’t Love Me******

* Chris Jackson on keys

** Elizabeth Pearson on bass and Chris Jackson on piano

*** JB on guitar & vocals; Johnny Neel on piano

**** Jack Pearson on bass with Oteil; Chris Jackson on piano

***** Gregg Allman on acoustic; without Derek Trucks

****** Jimmy Hall on harmonica; Elizabeth Pearson on bass; without Oteil

You can stream Panic’s set at panicstream.com.

You can download Panic’s set at LiveDownloads.com.


10.13.09 :: Tue :: Knoxville Coliseum :: Knoxville, TN


Widespread Panic:

Better Off, One-Arm Steve, Old Neighborhood > Action Man, Time Zones > Jam > Angels On High > Rebirtha > Watching The Sleeping Man, Papa’s Home > Stop/Go > Papa’s Home > Travelin’ Man > Ride Me High > Drum Solo > Jam* > Surprise Valley* > Drum Solo > Surprise Valley* > Climb To Safety*


* With Derek Trucks on guitar

The Allman Brothers Band:

Statesboro Blues, One Way Out, Sky Is Crying, Come and Go Blues, Any Day, 44 Blues, Leave My Blues at Home, Melissa, Rocking Horse > Little Martha > Rockin Horse, Dreams*, Mountain Jam*

E: Whipping Post*


* With Jack Pearson on guitar

You can stream Panic’s set at panicstream.com.

You can download Panic’s set at LiveDownloads.com.


10.11.09 :: Sun :: Time Warner Cable Music Pavilion at Walnut Creek :: Raleigh, NC


Widespread Panic:

Pigeons, 1 x 1, Proving Ground, Down > Holden Oversoul > Little Lilly > Tie Your Shoes, City of Dreams > B of D > Barstools & Dreamers, Ribs & Whiskey* > Stop Breakin’ Down Blues* > Ribs & Whiskey*, Tall Boy > Ain’t Life Grand

w/ * Warren Haynes

The Allman Brothers Band:

Don’t Want You No More, Not My Cross To Bear, Done Somebody Wrong, Don’t Keep Me Wondering, Only You Know and I Know*, Can’t Find My Way Home**, No One To Run With, Who’s Been Talking, You Don’t Love Me, The Same Thing, Melisa, In Memory of Elizabeth Reed***

E: Southbound****

w/ * James van de Bogert on drums

w/ ** JB and James van de Bogert

w/ *** Jimmy Herring

w/ **** J Herring, JoJo, D Schools


10.10.09 :: Sat :: BJCC Arena :: Birmingham, AL

The Allman Brothers Band:

Midnight Rider, Trouble No More, Can’t Lose What You Never Had, You Don’t Love Me, Soulshine, Stand Back, And It Stoned Me*, Revival, Statesboro Blues, Mountain Jam > Smokestack Lightnin’** > Mountain Jam

E: Black Hearted Woman


* w/ with John Bell, guitar & vox; James van de Bogert, drums

** w/ with Colonel Bruce Hampton, vocals

Widespread Panic:

The Take Out > Diner > Rock > Porch Song, Dyin’ Man*, Slippin’ Into Darkness**, Just Like A Woman***, Bust It Big**** > Drums > Airplane > Pilgrims > Goodpeople > Dark Bar > Goodpeople > Junior

E: Expiration Day > Goin’ Out West


* with DJ Logic on turntables

** with Marc Quinones on percussion, Warren Haynes on guitar

*** with Gregg Allman on vocals

**** with Warren Haynes on guitar

Review of this show here.


10.09.09 :: Fri :: BJCC Arena :: Birmingham, AL

Widespread Panic:

Hatfield > Walkin’ (For Your Love) > Wondering, Tickle the Truth > Chainsaw City > Machine > Arleen > Space Wrangler, Her Dance Needs No Body > Greta > Drums* > Maggot Brain** > Time Is Free*** > Give

* with DJ Logic on turntables

** with Derek Trucks on guitar

*** with Col. Bruce Hampton on vocals, Derek Trucks on guitar, Oteil Burbridge on bass

['Time Is Free' without Dave]

The Allman Brothers Band:

Done Somebody Wrong, Come and Go Blues, End Of The Line, The Weight*, Key To The Highway*, Rocking Horse, Dreams**, Highway 61 Revisited***, Into The Mystic****, Leave My Blues at Home, Melissa, Jessica

E: One Way Out*****

* with JoJo Hermann, piano

** with Dave Schools, bass

*** with John Bell, guitar & vocals; Dave Schools, bass; James van de Bogert, drums

**** with James van de Bogert, drums

***** with Jimmy Herring, guitar


10.07.09 :: Wed :: NTELOS Wireless Pavilion :: Portsmouth, VA

Widespread Panic:

From The Cradle > Can’t Get High > Love Tractor, I’m Not Alone, Imitation Leather Shoes > Jam > Jack > Impossible > Jam* > Nobody’s Fault But Mine > Blight > Driving Song > Disco > Drums > Solid Rock > All Time Low > Under The Radar Jam > Driving Song > Conrad

* with Danny Louis on keyboards

['Nobody's Fault But Mine' without JoJo]

The Allman Brothers Band:

Don’t Keep Me Wonderin’, Statesboro Blues, Hoochie Coochie Man, Come On In My Kitchen, No One To Run With, Stormy Monday, The Same Thing*, Franklin’s Tower**, Midnight Rider, In Memory of Elizabeth Reed***


E: You Don’t Love Me


* with James van de Bogert, drums

** with Oteil Burbridge, vocals; Jimmy Herring, guitar.; Sonny Ortiz, percussion; Dave Schools, bass; Todd Nance, drums; Danny Louis, B3, no Gregg

*** Danny Louis, B3, no Gregg


10.06.09 :: Tue :: Merriweather Post Pavilion :: Columbia, MD

Widespread Panic:

Travelin’ Light, Thought Sausage > Pleas > Who Do You Belong To?, C. Brown, Up All Night, Three Candles > Flicker > Contentment Blues > North > Second Skin* > Protein Drink > Sewing Machine* , Radio Child > Action Man > Chilly Water

* w/ Warren Haynes

The Allman Brothers Band:

Trouble No More, Leave My Blues At Home, One Way Out, Sky is Crying, Dreams, Guilded Splinters*, Woman Across The River, Don’t Think Twice**, South Bound***, Melissa, Stand Back****, Mountain Jam > Dazed & Confused > Mountain Jam

E: Whipping Post

Danny Louis on keyboard entire show

* w/ JB & Sunny Ortiz

** w/ Susan Tedeschi, Jaimoe Jr (without Jaimoe)

*** w/ Jimmy Herring, Ron Holloway on sax, Susan Tedeschi, Todd Nance (without Jaimoe)

**** w/ Ron Holloway on sax

Gregg Allman is recovering from the pinched nerve in his back but did sit out the set closer “Mountain Jam.” As noted above, Gov’t Mule‘s Danny Louis continues to perform on keyboards throughout the show.

You can stream Panic’s set at panicstream.com.

You can download Panic’s set at LiveDownloads.com.


Widespread Panic and The Allman Brothers Band began the second leg of their co-headlining tour over the weekend with a pair of shows at the Verizon Wireless Amphitheater in Charlotte, NC. On Saturday evening guitarist Warren Haynes was unable to perform due to travel complications and Jimmy Herring subbed for the entire show. Haynes’ Gov’t Mule bandmate, Danny Louis also joined the Allmans on keys to help support Gregg Allman who was suffering from back pain. Allman performed the entire show on guitar and was still able to sing.

Special guests for Widespread Panic’s set included longtime producer John Keane, Bloodkin‘s Danny Hutchins as well as Danny Louis and Derek Trucks on loan from the Allman Bros. Warren Haynes would join Panic on Sunday night. Complete notes below.

10.04.09 :: Sun :: Verizon Wireless Amphitheater :: Charlotte, NC

Widespread Panic:

Papa Legba, Worry, Pigeons, Angels On High, Heroes, Ribs & Whiskey, Party At Your Mamas House > Tall Boy > Blue Indian, You Got Yours > Papas Home > Drums > Papas Home > Porch Song, Henry Parsons Died* > Mr. Soul*

* w/ Warren Haynes

The Allman Brothers Band:

Don’t Want You No More* > It’s Not My Cross To Bear*, Done Somebody Wrong*, Revival*, Good Morning Little School Girl*, No One To Run With*, Midnight Rider*, Rocking Horse**, Soulshine*, Little By Little***, Black Hearted Woman*, Melissa****, Les Brers In A Minor*****

E: You Don’t Love Me******

Gregg Allman on B3 throughout except where noted

* w/ Danny Louis on piano

** w/ Danny Louis on B3, no Gregg

*** w/ Susan Tedeschi on guitar & vocals; Danny Louis, piano; James van de Bogert, drums

**** w/ Gregg Allman on acoustic guitar

***** w/ Kofi Burbridge on B3

****** w/ with Gregg Allman on electric guitar, Danny Louis on B3

You can download Panic’s Sunday night North Carolina set at LiveDownloads.com.


10.03.09 :: Sat :: Verizon Wireless Amphitheater :: Charlotte, NC

Widespread Panic:

Little Kin > Holden Oversoul > Surprise Valley, Pilgrims > Blackout Blues, This Part of Town*, Ain’t Life Grand**, Diner > Drums > You Should Be Glad*** > Climb To Safety > Fishwater****

E: End of the Show*****

* w/ John Keane on pedal steel

** w/ JB on mandolin; John Keane on pedal steel

*** w/ Derek Trucks on guitar

**** w/ Danny Louis on keyboard

***** w/ John Keane on pedal steel and Danny Hutchens on vocals

The Allman Brothers Band:

Mountain Jam, Don’t Keep Me Wonderin’, Stormy Monday, Statesboro Blues, Anyday*, Trouble No More*, In Memory of Elizabeth Reed
E: One Way Out

Gregg Allman was on guitar for the entire show

Danny Louis was on Keyboards and Hammond B3 for the entire show
Jimmy Herring played guitar for the entire show
Warren Haynes did not play


* with Paul Riddle (The Marshall Tucker Band) on drums

You can stream Panic’s set at panicstream.com.

You can download Panic’s Saturday night North Carolina set at LiveDownloads.com.


Stockholm Syndrome | 09.06 | S.F.

Words by: Justin Gillett | Images by: Susan J. Weiand


Stockholm Syndrome :: 09.06.09 :: The Independent :: San Francisco, CA

Stockholm Syndrome :: 09.06 :: San Francisco

It’s interesting to see a band that rarely tours actually play live. Going into the show, concertgoers don’t know if what they are about to see will be a sloppy display due to infrequent interaction or a finely tuned act that simply lacks the ability to dedicate itself to the road due to band members’ conflicting schedules. In the case of Stockholm Syndrome, it’s undoubtedly the later.

Using the term super group to define the band almost seems cliche, but for lack of a better word that’s what the band is – a super group. What originally started as a collaboration between guitarist/vocalist Jerry Joseph (Jackmormons) and bassist Dave Schools (Widespread Panic), turned into a serious musical endeavor a few years back with the additions of lead guitar shredder Eric McFadden(EMT), drum wiz Wally Ingram and versatile keyboardist Danny Louis (Gov’t Mule). Even though the group rarely tours, a testament to how busy all the members’ respective main musical endeavors are, when Stockholm Syndrome does announce an off-hand set of dates, the shows are worth attending, if for nothing more than witnessing five musicians at the top of their game perform together. The musical backgrounds and styles of the five artists are quite different, although when playing together the collaborative rock monster that is created is truly remarkable, especially considering the band typically performs less than 10 dates a year. Stockholm Syndrome’s show at The Independent in San Francisco on Sunday night found the band in great form, performing as if the group lived on the road – which, in one way or another, they kinda do.

Dave Schools – Stockholm Syndrome :: 09.06

Opening up the show was local San Francisco blues inspired rock outfit The Stone Foxes. With two guitarists, a bass player and a drummer – all sharing vocal duties – the band displayed an impressive command of the stage. Oftentimes sounding like a classic rock throwback act, the quartet’s sound was consistently driven forward with the solid, occasionally spastic drumming of Shannon Koehler and the steady, rarely faltering bass lines of Avi Vinocur. Even though all the musicians often sang together, they did not seem to be achieving any sort of refined harmonies. Instead, their vocals acted as contrasts to one another, which added to the group’s unique sound.

As Stockholm Syndrome arrived onstage and greeted the slightly older crowd, the band tuned up and launched into a massive set that would persist for the better part of two hours. Schools, playing without his stalwart Modulus Quantum six-string, opting to play a Modulus Funk Unlimited four-string instead, imminently lit up a smoke, one of the countless number he sparked during the show, and looked eager to kick off the evening’s musical ventures. While Stockholm songs are a vast departure from the Panic songs that Schools normally plays, his dominating bass lines are still extremely similar in nature. He’s proven himself a bass player that can perform in several musical contexts, yet still hold onto a characteristic semblance that makes all of his playing unique and unmistakable.

Stockholm Syndrome :: 09.06 :: San Francisco

As the band got warmed up with its first few songs, attention shifted to Ingram’s diverse drumming. Attaching hand drums to his drum kit, Ingram occasionally tapped into a sound that deviated from the typically rock driven sound of the band. Apart from Ingram’s remarkable drumming, the songs proved that Stockholm really is the love child of Joseph and Schools. The other three musicians onstage played with as much dedication as Joseph and Schools did but occasionally it felt like they may not have invested as much heart into the songs as the noted guitarist and bass player have. The songs seemed to have been crafted by Joseph as singer-songwriter tunes, then as all the musicians in the band sear their brand onto the songs they morph into something completely different. But, the core of the songs is clearly Joseph’s lyrics, which prove above all else he is a talented storyteller.

At points during the show the two guitarists would harmonize their instruments during solos, which created an amazing sound that worked surprisingly well considering Joseph’s and McFadden’s vastly different approaches. Typically, when the band’s songs called for some sort of solo, McFadden would be the player to step up and deliver. His skill on the guitar was so impressive that it’s astonishing he doesn’t command more respect amongst serious six-string followers. His style is extremely flashy but McFadden displayed such dexterity while playing that his fellow musicians seemed to be in awe of him. His showboat style is no doubt bolstered because he looks like a bad ass when he plays, too. Sporting a sneer, thin dreadlocks and tattoo-covered forearms, McFadden just looks like a dude who plays a guitar really well.

Stockholm Syndrome :: 09.06 :: San Francisco

While many of the songs seemed to lack any sort of coherent “hook,” the extended jamming and improvisation more than made up for any sort of apparent lack of mainstream listening appeal. The band brought out several tunes that will appear on their forthcoming new album, which the band claims will drop soon. On some of these fresh songs, Joseph’s voice was extremely pronounced – a welcome change to some of the band’s songs that lacked a characteristic inflection. The song selection as the band neared the end of its set seemed to really capitalize off the musical diversity that Louis displayed behind his keyboards. Ranging from reggae to Texas rock, Louis’ knack for cross-genre competence really proved that he’s one of the more talented and severely underrated keyboardists on the circuit today.

After the unrelenting set concluded, the band bowed off the stage visibly stricken from the massive amount of musical movement all had taken part in. After the crowd cheered for a bit, they returned to the stage and launched into an extremely heavy two-song encore so intense that Ingram broke his snare.

Continue reading for Dave Vann’s pics from the previous night of Stockholm Syndrome in San Francisco…

Images by: Dave Vann

Stockholm Syndrome :: 09.05.09 :: The Independent :: San Francisco, CA

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Gov’t Mule Island Exodus: 1/15-1/19 Negril, Jamaica

Gov’t Mule Island Exodus: January 15-19 Negril, Jamaica


Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule has announced The First Annual GOV’T MULE ISLAND EXODUS, taking place at The Grand Lido Negril Resort in Negril, Jamaica, January 15 through the 19 (4 nights).


Grand Lido Negril is a SUPER-INCLUSIVE resort, meaning that all meals and beverages (including top shelf liquor), as well as non-motorized water sports, scuba diving, airport to resort ground transportation & all gratuities are included.


This event will feature three full-length Gov’t Mule shows and a Warren Haynes solo show on the beach just steps from the ocean. The band will be bringing some special guests with them, such as long time collaborator Ron Holloway on saxophone, and DJ Logic will be spinning nightly in the Atlantis nightclub.

In addition, the long weekend will feature unique activities with Gov’t Mule and its extended family, such as:



-Poster Signing w/ Gov’t Mule

-The Gov’t Mule Invitation Golf Tournament Hosted By Danny Louis *

-True Roadie Stories w/ Brian Farmer

-Matt Abts Drum Clinic

-Farmer Sez

-The “Crew-lywed” Game featuring members of the GM road crew

-Gov’t Mule On Stage & Off Photo Exhibit – Featuring the photography of Chris Rushin & Lance Eubanks

* Will require an additional Greens Fee

Reservations will begin on Tuesday July 28, and early bird pricing will run through August 15. More information, including prices, cabin levels & payment options can be found at www.mule.net/islandexodus.