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Posts Tagged ‘Darling’

Bharadwaj offers variety in ’7 Khoon Maaf’ album

7 khoon maaf.jpg3Film: “7 Khoon Maaf”; Music Director: Vishal Bharadwaj; Lyricist: Gulzar; Singers: Usha Uthup, Rekha Bharadwaj, Vishal Bharadwaj, KK, Clinton Cerejo, Master Saleem, Suresh Wadkar, Suraj Jagan and Francois Castellino; Rating: *** 1/2 When Vishal Bharadwaj decides to score music for a movie, fans are confident that he will come up with high quality compositions that [...]

“Glee” Christmas Album Starts Spreading Holiday Cheer Nov. 16

Deck the halls with the screams of Sue Sylvester! The Glee cast is recording its first holiday album. Glee: The Music, The Christmas Album -– which will be released on Nov. 16 –- will contain covers of 12 holiday songs, including “We Need A Little Christmas,” “O Christmas Tree,” “Jingle Bells,” and “O Holy Night,” [...]

Zsa Zsa Gabor Plastinated Upon Death?

Zsa Zsa Gabor’s husband has some interesting plans for the Hollywood legend’s eternal rest, Darling.Sadly, the past few months have brought significant health challenges for the last surviving member of the glamorous Gabor Sisters. It all started in July, when Zsa Zsa broke her hip after falling from her bed during an episode of [...]

Zsa Zsa Gabor Plastinated Upon Death?

Zsa Zsa Gabor’s husband has some interesting plans for the Hollywood legend’s eternal rest, Darling.Sadly, the past few months have brought significant health challenges for the last surviving member of the glamorous Gabor Sisters. It all started in July, when Zsa Zsa broke her hip after falling from her bed during an episode of [...]

Primus & Gogol Bordello | Red Rocks | Pics

Words & Images by: Mike Hardaker

Primus/Gogol Bordello :: 08.12.10 :: Red Rocks Amphitheatre :: Morrison, CO

Gogol Bordello and Primus returned to Red Rocks Amphitheatre earlier this month. Primus features Les Claypool (bass, vocals), Larry LaLonde (guitar) and multi-talented drummer Jay Lane, who left touring with the latest Grateful Dead act, Furthur, to join Primus on the road in 2010. Primus formed in Northern California, with musical influences like Pink Floyd and Frank Zappa. There musical style is hard to define, and Primus has been referred to as psychedelic polka, thrash-funk, alternative rock, and much more.

Gogol Bordello’s eight band members hail from across the globe. The band formed in 1999 on NYC’s lower east side, and is known for theatrical stage shows and catchy polka sounding punk songs. Much of Gogol Bordellos sound hails from Gypsy music, and features violins, accordions, guitars, drums and other noisemakers. The last time Gogol Bordello played at Red Rocks Amphitheatre the band sat around with Manu Chao and played music outside of Red Rocks Park until the sun came up in true gypsy style.

Primus Setlist
Pudding Time, In The Flesh (Pink Floyd cover), Here Come The Bastards, Behind My Camel (Police cover), Groundhog’s Day, Those Damn Blue Collar Tweekers, Golden Boy, American Life, Big In Japan (Tom Waits cover w/ Gogol Bordello), Over The Falls, Drum & Whamola Jam, Eleven, Jerry Was A Race Car Driver, Over The Electric Grapevine, Harold of the Rocks. E: Tommy The Cat

Gogol Bordello Setlist
Intro (Illumination), Ultimate, Not A Crime, Wonderlust King, My Companjera, Tribal Connection, Trans-Continental Hustle, We Comin’ Rougher, Break The Spell, Immigrant Punk, When Universes Collide, Pala Tute, Start Wearing Purple, Break The Spell (reprise). E: Sun Is On My Side, Punk Rock Parranda, Sacred Darling

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”0″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=114″);}); 8/12/10 – Primus & Gogol Bordello @ Red Rocks Amphitheatre (Morrison, CO) View Photos

Primus Tour Dates :: Primus News :: Primus Concert Reviews

Gogol Bordello Tour Dates :: Gogol Bordello News :: Gogol Bordello Concert Reviews

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Zsa Zsa Gabor Gravely-Ill & Given Last Rites

Zsa Zsa Gabor has called a priest into her hospital room for her final rites, her publicist said on Sunday. The 93-year-old Hollywood star — who has been hospitalized three times in the past three weeks due to complications from a broken hip — “spent her 24th wedding anniversary hospitalized after surgery to remove two [...]

Reese Witherspoon Peggy Lee Biopic

First June Carter – now Reese Witherspoon is in talks to play another music legend: Peggy Lee! Witherspoon is set to play the late jazz great in a new movie based on her life.Reese won an Academy Award for her work in the 2006 Johnny Cash biopic Walk the Line and has secured the rights [...]

Zsa Zsa Gabor Hip Replacement Surgery

Hollywood legend Zsa Zsa Gabor — the Hungarian-born actress, known for her nine marriages and calling everyone “Darling” — will undergo hip surgery on Monday, Blanchette said.will undergo surgery to replace the hip she broke when she fell out of bed in freak an accident in her Bel Air home on Saturday.Gabor, 93, was watching [...]

B92, city, associations mobilize to help rescued dog

Fund B92, the Belgrade city administration, and SOS Animals association will join forces to raise funds and help a severely mutilated dog. The young female mixed breed, named Mila (Darling) by her rescuers, was found in a Belgrade suburb on Wednesday will all four legs cut off.

18 Disastrous Invasive Species (That Happen To Be Delicious)

Invasive species are a major problem the world over. They kill local plants and animals, clog streams, destroy habitats, and devastate anything natural in their path. Sometimes they were introduced for a purpose, sometimes they escaped into the wild — but they always cause trouble. However, there is sometimes one redeeming feature of the proliferation [...]

Is Your Life Predetermined Or Me Determined?


I’ve never been one to sit on my hands and wait for some cosmically pre-ordained life purpose to miraculously reveal itself via a series of dreams, visions or prophecies. Or for an angel to appear at my window with hand-written instructions from God. Although an angel would be pretty cool.

Nor have I been the type to buy into the widely-held view of destiny and I’ve mostly considered (the concept of) fate to be the refuge of the indecisive, the lazy, the fearful and the deluded. But that’s just my (not-very-popular) view. For many people, the traditional concept of destiny provides a level of comfort and if there’s one thing we fearful, lazy creatures like; it’s comfort.

In some ways, destiny is our (perceived) escape clause: life’s all predetermined anyway, so what’s the point of working hard, taking chances, getting uncomfortable and setting goals?

Destiny Schmestiny

People talk about destiny all the time. Especially when they’re talking about big-picture life stuff. Or when they’re rationalising why something didn’t (or won’t) happen. “Don’t worry Darling; it’s not meant to be”. The term destiny has an almost romantic, mystical, feel-good kind of vibe about it. “That was always going to be her destiny” (as the orchestra comes to life in the background).

It seems that no matter what she did (thoughts, behaviours, reactions, decisions, plans, goals) her life, or part thereof, was predetermined by destiny. It was always going to unfold in a certain way. Despite her; not because of her. Apparently some unseen, cosmic force was firmly behind the steering wheel of her life. She didn’t really have to touch the controls because her life path (destiny) was pre-ordained and non-negotiable.

Am I the only person who considers this thinking to be a load of self-limiting, mumbo-jumbo crap? Am I missing something obvious? Why on earth would anyone buy into this? Oh, that’s right; it requires less effort and courage than the alternative.

Beyond our Control

In my opinion, one of the most destructive notions we embrace is the traditional concept of destiny. Why? Because it teaches us that our life, and what we might do, be, create and achieve in this life, is somehow beyond our control. Some people embrace this kind of thinking because it takes pressure off them to steer their ship, shape their own future, and be responsible for what they produce in their world.

Take a look at what conventional ‘wisdom’ teaches us about destiny:

De-sti-ny (noun):

1) The predetermined, usually inevitable or irresistible, course of events.

2) The inevitable or necessary fate to which a particular person or thing is destined; one’s lot.

3) A predetermined course of events considered as something beyond human power or control.

If the above dictionary definitions are to be accepted and believed then I may as well sit on the couch and let life happen to me, around me and despite me, because apparently, it’s all gonna eventuate in a particular way no matter what. It’s predetermined. Inevitable. We’re all just helpless passengers on destiny’s back.

I wish someone had shared this with me earlier; I wouldn’t have wasted so much time making those tough decisions, taking those chances, facing my fears, dealing with my destructive habits, overcoming those obstacles, going to university, working hard and busting my arse to create my best life.

To think that people actually believe this “preordained, inevitable and beyond human power” crap? Give me a bucket. I’ll create my own destiny, thanks.

What about you?

Image


Craig Harper (B.Ex.Sci.) is a qualified exercise scientist, author, columnist, radio presenter, television host, motivational speaker and university lecturer. For the past 25 years he has been a leading presenter, educator, motivator and commentator in the areas of personal and professional development. You can visit Craig’s blog at Motivational Speaker.FREE eBook – So… You’ve Decided to Get in Shape (Again) Craig’s FREE eBook takes 20 – 30 minutes to read, and addresses the REAL getting-in-shape issues based on his 25 years of experience. To get Craig’s FREE eBook click here, weight loss books.

Madhavan to team with Kamal once again

Madhavan was priory seen with Kamal Haasan in Anbe Sivam. Again he will be teaming up with the versatile actor in Yaavarum Kelir. Kamal Haasan’s new project had been announced two months ago with K.S. Ravikumar wielding megaphone. The movie is produced by Udhayanidhi Stalin under the banner of Red Giant Movies.
Madhavan will have an [...]

Thee Silver Mt. Zion Memorial Orchestra: Tour/Album

Thee Silver Mt. Zion Memorial Orchestra Premiere Video and Announce U.S. Tour
in Support of New Album, Kollaps Tradixionales

Thee Silver Mt. Zion Memorial Orchestra

Thee Silver Mt. Zion Memorial Orchestra (SMZ) returns with its sixth full-length recording and first since the band’s lineup change in summer 2008. Having shed three members and recruiting a new drummer, the group officially dropped the “Tra-La-La Band” from its name, played a debut performance as a newly minted quintet at All
Tomorrow’s Parties in upstate NY, and embarked on an extensive European tour through the Fall of 2008. As Kollaps Tradixionales ably demonstrates, the band has lost none of its raw and frazzled anthemic power and continues to forge bold new ground in its search for a unique hybrid of punk, blues, psych, folk and modern orchestral idioms.

Kollaps Tradixionales is available on standard CD (in a custom gatefold paperboard jacket) and limited-edition deluxe CD (which is packaged together with a 6″x9″ 16-page perfect-bound art book and poster). The album also comes in a deluxe first pressing on double 10″ vinyl, with the art book, a CD copy, and two different posters
inside. The album is also available digitally. You can purchase the album here.

Kollaps Tradixionales Track List:
1. There Is A Light
2. I Built Myself A Metal Bird
3. I Fed My Metal Bird The Wings Of Other Metal Birds
4. Kollapz Tradixional (Thee Olde Dirty Flag)
5. Collapse Traditional (For Darling)
6. Kollaps Tradicional (Bury 3 Dynamos)
7. ‘Piphany Rambler

Tour Dates:

Europe

03/16 – Bristol, England – The Fleece
03/17 – Birmingham, England – Asylum
03/18 – Dublin, Ireland – The Button Factory
03/19 – Glasgow, Scotland – The Arts School
03/21 – Manchester, England – Academy 3
03/22 – Leeds, England – TJ’s Woodhouse Club
03/23 – London, England – Electric Ballroom
03/24 – Nottingham, England – Rescue Rooms
03/25 – Sheffield, England – Corporation
03/26 – Oxford, England – The Regal
03/27 – Brighton, England – St. George’s Church
03/30 – Rennes, France – Ubu
03/31 – Paris, France – Alhambra
04/01 – Reims, France – Cartonnerie
04/02 – Brussels, Belgium – Botanique
04/03 – Zottegem, Belgium (Dunkfestival)
04/04 – Munich, German – Feierwerk
04/06 – Padova, Italy – Unwound
04/07 – Rome, Italy – Circolo Degli Artisti
04/08 – Bologna, Italy – Locomotive
04/09 – Torino, Italy – Spazio 211
04/10 – Arezzo, Italy – Karemaski
04/11 – Varese, Italy – Twiggy
04/13 – Toulouse, France – Le Bikini
04/14 – Marseille, France – Espace Julien
04/15 – Nice, France – Theatre Lino Ventura
04/16 – Montpelier, France – La Taf
94/17 – Lausanne, Switzerland – Impetus Festival
04/18 – Luzern, Switzerland – Schurr
04/20 – Zurich, Switzerland – Rote Fabrik
04/21 – Lyon, France – Grnd Zero
04/22 – Paris, France – Alhambra
04/23 – Lille, France – Le Splendid
04/24 – Groningen, Netherlands – Vera
04/25 – Amsterdam, Netherlands – Paradiso

North America

05/13 – Cambridge, MA – Middle East Downstairs
05/15 – Brooklyn, NY – Music Hall Of Wiliamsburg
05/16 – New York, NY – Bowery Ballroom
05/17 – Philadelphia, PA – First Unitarian Church Sanctuary
05/18 – Baltimore, MD – Ottobar
05/19 – Washington DC – Black Cat
05/20 – Carrboro, NC – Cat’s Cradle
05/21 – Asheville, NC – Grey Eagle Tavern
05/22 – Atlanta, GA – The Earl
05/24 – Nashville, TN – Mercy Lounge
05/25 – Newport, KY – Southgate House
05/26 – Chicago, IL – Lincoln Hall
05/27 – Chicago, IL – Schuba’s
05/28 – Pontiac, MI – Crofoot Ballroom
05/29 – Toronto, ON – Lee’s Palace
05/31 – Ottawa, ON – Mayfair Theatre


Seth Avett: Solo Albums

SETH AVETT RE-RELEASES EACH OF HIS SOLO EFFORTS

Seth Avett by Crackerfarm

Seth Avett of The Avett Brothers has re-released all of his recorded solo work, which was originally released under the artist title Timothy Seth Avett as Darling. The collection includes each of Seth’s three solo albums, and is available on iTunes and a separate website here.

A note from Seth, on these solo works, his new website and more:

In the year 2001, at twenty-one years of age, I recorded an album entitled To Make the World Quiet. The inspiration for the piece was urgent and impatient. There was no managerial or label involvement. There was no funding. Without any consideration towards who (if anyone) would hear the result of this outing, I happily executed each aspect of the process, including all writing, performance of each instrument, engineering and modest production. The following year, I again, by the same process was obliged to record an album. Killing the Headlamps was the realization of this second venture as ‘Darling.’ Both albums were made on a 4-track cassette recorder. I initially mixed them both on a low-fidelity home stereo in my kitchen (to yet another cassette). I spent a perhaps unhealthy amount of time with a ruler, an X-acto knife, and a real-time dual-deck CD duplicator, hand-assembling these two albums (along with the first couple thousand units of the first official Avett Brothers recording Country Was).

Until New Years Eve 2010, the only physical copies of these records laid in the hands of maybe a few hundred people that I sold them to personally. I have been honored by the continued interest in these early works as expressed by those who have inquired about them at Avett performances. It is this kind inquiry that has inspired me again; this time to make them readily available through a proper duplication and ordering process.

All three albums can be obtained from the website by download or through a mail-order process for the actual physical copies.

In addition, a set of 5 videos have been created by the fine people at Crackerfarm to coincide not only with the new found availability of these recordings, but with the New Year as well. Each video is a one-camera/one-angle performance of a song from one of the 3 ‘Darling’ records. These visual pieces are defined by their simplicity, as there has been no editing or audio overdubbing of any kind. We have posted two of these videos — and for the next three weeks, a new video will be posted on Monday morning at ten o’clock (EST) on the Darling website. We hope you enjoy them.

My sincere thanks go out to all who have made these current developments possible, not least of all to the Avett Brothers fans, who have graciously provided the fire to keep the interest in these solo works alive.

-Seth


The Black Crowes | 12.04 – 12.06 | S.F.

Words by: Dennis Cook | Images by: Josh Miller & Jay Blakesberg

The Black Crowes :: 12.04.09 – 12.06.09 :: The Fillmore :: San Francisco, CA

The Black Crowes :: 12.04 By Miller

The Black Crowes barreled out of the station Friday, gaining steam with every minute, as opener “Good Morning Captain,” cried, “Well there’s a ruckus on the levee/ Unruly crowd on the courthouse steps/ And if I make it to Sunday/ I’m sho’nuff going to ask the good lord for help.” As it turned out, the heavens smiled on them all weekend as they completed a five-night Fillmore stand that proved one of the finest runs in their 19 year history, an exhibition of their core qualities delivered with real prowess and passion.

Friday may have been the most forceful, strictly rock ‘n’ roll night of the series, with rafter shaking versions of “Cosmic Friend,” “Goodbye Daughters of the Revolution,” and particularly their signature epic, “My Morning Song.” Few things compare with finding one’s hand raised skyward, quite involuntarily, as massed voices join Chris Robinson in yearning to make our “haze blow away.” Chris, in full bohemian shaman mode, came off especially forceful and reassuring as he intoned:

If music got to free your mind
Just let it go ’cause you never know, you never know
If your rhythm ever falls out of time
You can bring it to me and I will make it alright

Chris Robinson :: 12.04 By Miller

For all its depths, the Crowes’ music is also a charming, blood stirring affirmation of rock’s fundamental power. Sure, blues, jazz, and much else lurks below the riffs and searing vocals, but sometimes, like this Friday show, what they do just feels fantastic. Here was the burbling, happiness inducing, gonad tickling stuff that made poodle-skirted teen girls jump on soda shop tables. This was the stuff that makes boys form bands and firm up the courage to finally kiss someone they’ve ached to touch for ages. This was good times fitted to songs that also hummed with larger, darker things, be it the needle damage of “Nebakanezer” (which really nailed this tune’s jubilant musical counterpart to the gut sick lyrics), the thousand yard stare of “Lost My Drivin’ Wheel” (a version that wrung every bit of melancholy from Tom Rush‘s original), or the suspended beauty of encore “Last Place That Love Lives.”

Yet, even with some forlorn breezes and black night thinking, the Crowes generated a mighty roar on Friday that tied them to the long line of ancestors before them, a foundational display of rock’s impure perfection, where electric bluesmen grope country kin and longhairs sprinkle the whole thing with something they picked up in the parking lot as a gospel choir nibbles their ears. If this is snake oil, as so many claimed at rock’s dawning, then it’s not without legitimately healing properties, a “Remedy,” if you will.

If I come on like a dream
Would you let me show you what I mean?
If you let me come on inside
Will you let it glide?

The Black Crowes :: 12.04.09 :: The Fillmore :: San Francisco, CA

Good Morning Captain, Nebakanezer, Cosmic Friend, Whoa Mule, Roll Old Jeremiah > Jam > Good Friday, My Morning Song, Shine Along, Lost My Drivin’ Wheel, Blackberry, Show Me, Nonfiction > Jam, Goodbye Daughters Of The Revolution, Remedy

E: Last Place That Love Lives, God’s Got It, Hey Grandma

Continue reading for Saturday night…

The Black Crowes :: 12.06 By Miller

Saturday was a showcase for the delightful malleability of the Crowes’ catalogue, and how the current lineup has embraced every page of their songbook with a gusto and intelligence that outdoes any previous incarnation. I’ve been seeing this band in concert halls since 1990 and have had revelatory evenings with every single configuration, but Saturday I was repeatedly struck by the same thought:

This is the band I always hoped The Black Crowes might grow into.

Each previous chapter has its highlights – Marc Ford, when he was on, is one of the guitarists of his generation; Eddie Harsch is perhaps the best “feel” keyboardist since Nicky Hopkins, etc. – but the overall cohesion of the band has never ever been better than today. For many reasons, this combination has a chemistry that dovetails perfectly and allows them to range imaginatively through the entirety of their song pool, originals and the ever-growing stack of choice covers all actively engaged and explored in a way that shows them enjoying the process, which in turn increases the quality of what they’re laying on us.

This unification principle shined brightly on “Sister Luck,” where they performed the Crowes’ sleight of hand that takes a slowly paced number from a gripping, emotional simmer into spaces of heaviness and release. After the bite ‘n’ grapple of openers “Sting Me” and “Gone” – both delivered with real fire and uplifted nicely by guest percussionist Joe Magistro, who brought one back to the Amorica tour with his Latin accents – “Sister Luck” was a reminder that there’s perhaps no better ballad band in rock. Between Chris’ jagged, searching vocal and the tight, sinewy movement of the band, this take honored the original’s spirit while opening things up into fresh territory in the tail end jam. Then, taking advantage of the thoughtful stillness they’d engendered, they offered up a quietly constructed “Polly” that sucked the tender marrow from Gene Clark’s tune while adding a few layers of muscle all their own.

Chris Robinson :: 12.06 By Miller

The room was thick with emotion by this point, and it was clear that this was going to be far from a typical Saturday night affair. No major hits were played, and instead we were given rarities like “Darling of the Underground Press,” “Title Song,” and “Downtown Money Waster” – three songs that the Crowes have tackled with mixed results over the years. This is the material hardcore fans wait for, and even if many previous live outings didn’t always compare well with their studio counterparts, we were usually glad they showed up at all. However, at The Fillmore, these three sparkled. If anyone has wondered what keyboardist Adam MacDougall and guitarist Luther Dickinson bring to the table they need only listen to these versions. “Darling” matched the blues-modern perfection of the Southern Harmony b-side, while “Title Song” was simply majestic and “Money Waster” skipped with appropriate mischief. “Too many late nights and you don’t go to Heaven,” indeed, and four nights into the run for many of us found us laughing and wondering if we’d put a few red marks in St. Peter’s big book this week. No regrets, just wondering.

The new songs from Before The Frost… After The Freeze were equally impressive on Saturday, and offered further evidence that what they’re churning out today fits very well with the best parts of their earlier output. “A Train Still Makes A Lonely Sound,” rolling in smack dab in the show’s middle, was a chooglin’ sing-along and proof that the blues still have some fresh curves when shaken by a band like the Crowes. “Lady of Avenue A” was wistfulness, something culled from cold sidewalk strolls in the Big Apple but primed for any post-midnight, thought riddled walk one takes all alone. Best of the bunch – and I know there’s a healthy portion of the fan base that will differ – was disco dabbling “I Ain’t Hiding.” Its Chic-with-balls strut was glorious live, and the lyric is one of Chris’ most playful in years. Anyone who’s partied out of bounds and lived to tell of it should appreciate this one, and the naughty rhythmic pulse and background vocals are hugely infectious, especially with the boys playing hard as deep red lights bathed them and The Fillmore’s mirror ball spun high above.

Rich Robinson :: 12.06 By Miller

Another of Saturday’s pleasures was seeing Rich Robinson step out more – stronger, more forthright lead vocals and far more luscious, inventive soloing than any previous night in the run. And this trend continued into Sunday. I think sometimes Rich doesn’t realize how fuckin’ good he is, but when he steps outside his innate reserve he’s a glorious catalyst for kick ass rock ‘n’ roll, and the way he sparked everyone from his beaming brother to the rest of the band each time he stepped up showed the proof of this.

It was the first encore number that really cemented the major changes that have taken place in the past two years. “Descending” was a real showpiece for Eddie when he played keys. For a while, there was an attempt to have MacDougall approximate Ed’s solo bookends and provide that continuity for fans. This night, MacDougall took the song into far different spaces, his literal spotlight solo showing off his Ray Charles licks and command of stride piano moves before the tinkling conclusion. It is not a new song, and has been played many times, but it was utterly transformed here.

Where The Black Crowes find themselves as 2009 ends is a place where the old can be made new, where the predictable can be circumvented, where their virtues far outweigh their flaws. It is not what it has been but it’s also unclear – in a wholly positive way – what it will be tomorrow, except to say that the quality of their music has never been higher.

The Black Crowes :: 12.05.09 :: The Fillmore :: San Francisco, CA

Sting Me, Gone, Sister Luck, Share The Ride, Polly, Garden Gate, Darling Of The Underground Press, A Train Still Makes A Lonely Sound, Title Song, Downtown Money Waster > Jam, Lady Of Avenue A, High Head Blues, I Ain’t Hiding, Don’t Do It

E: Descending, Hot Burrito #2, Will The Circle Be Unbroken (w/ tour openers Truth & Salvage Co.)

Continue reading for Sunday night…

Chris Robinson :: 12.06 By Miller

Sunday was one of the most poetic, moving nights of music I’ve ever experienced by any band, but all the more poignant coming from a group that’s soundtracked the lives of myself and not a few others in attendance for nearly two decades. Two years and two albums on with this lineup – Chris Robinson (lead vocals, guitar, percussion), Rich Robinson (guitar, vocals), Steve Gorman (drums), Sven Pipien (bass, vocals), Adam MacDougall (keys, vocals), and Charity White and Monalisa Young (background vocals) – they’re capable of delivering on any part of their catalogue and seem increasingly skilled at juxtaposing the right things in a single night. It’s not a hits-package or anything like it, and in this way it’s a steeper slope for audiences with less obvious handholds than most bands this far into their career. It’s an artistically minded decision that also keeps the experience of getting on stages alive and immediate for the band. You can’t coast when it’s a different game every night, and this Fillmore run was especially challenging, with not a single repeat in five nights. And even still they didn’t get to a bunch of great songs; there is just too much to work with these days.

The music was flowing loose and steady in their veins as they opened with a suitably bittersweet skip through Traffic’s “Feelin’ Alright,” with the songbirds putting a sharp edge on Chris’ lead line. The soft contours of “Seeing Things,” moaned with wounded intensity with every note matching Chris’ powerful vocal. This was the first of many quieter numbers they explored on Sunday. They excel when the lights are low and the feelings usually kept silently inside are explored in verse and melody, and their prowess in this regard was on full display Sunday. It’s a brave group that moves from one ballad to another, but they did so and made it work by the sheer quality of the compositions and their execution. From a delicate reading of “Ballad In Urgency” to the cheek-to-cheek tenderness of “Greenhorn,” the Crowes played in a fully exposed way, the songs thriving because of the honesty of all involved. Twice I felt a tear come to my eye, stirred to the surface by their direct engagement with things too often shunted into the shadows, hopes and fears and disappointments too true to speak aloud most days, yet sung shoulder-to-shoulder with the third sold out crowd in a row, well, it was a release and a benediction of the first order.

Luther Dickinson :: 12.06 :: By Miller

One was struck by the quality of their lyrics, both the originals and spot-on covers, this night. While the world says less and less of substance all the time, as a general rule, here was a band basically obsessed with depth and real feeling. Standing stock still as Chris oozed emotion on “Ballad,” I sang along with the black invitation, “Let’s start this misery, if that’s where you want to be,” and recalled the many bad pathways I’ve set out upon in my life. Earlier it was Rich on “What Is Home” that got me thinking about the “charge into the foothills” of other’s lives and how easy it is to get lost there. It was an intensely thoughtful selection on Sunday, which frequently sent me off on philosophical tangents, though never so my focus wasn’t mostly fixed on the music unfolding around me. I love that they challenge their audience to feel and think, to grapple with things we might not choose to face on our own. This inward movement usually happens quickly, not unlike the verse from the fabulously rendered “Appaloosa” that noted, “Simple as lightning starting wild fire/ Just down from a trip off my high wire/ Just coming home to walk my own floors.”

“And The Band Played On” was as appealing as on Before The Frost… but taken into a pulsating, Pink Floyd-like jam that left me slack-jawed, softly stunned by the hum of distant machines and a feel that was total “Shine On You Crazy Diamond” shit. Really stunning, and a sign that even with over a hundred shows under my belt that they keep coming up with pleasant surprises, taking their audience to new places and traveling there by unfamiliar trails. The possibilities only seem to be expanding with this band, and that’s not something one usually finds in a 20-year-old group. Chris is stretching out on electric guitar more, taking a juicy solo here and there and helping steer this great guitar driven entity from time to time, and Luther is playing tasty electric mandolin on some newer tunes. The whole bunch of them seemed frequently surprised at what they pulled off this run and anxious to keep exploring their boundaries and potential permutations.

Lesh & Chris Robinson :: 12.06 By Blakesberg

The main show would have been the perfect period on this Fillmore run, which indeed proved to be their best ever at this venue, however, being in the Bay Area, bassist/elder statesman Phil Lesh joined them for a Grateful Dead focused mini-set for the encore. While this might have been a letdown for those hoping for just a few more Crowes gems, it proved surprisingly intense and musically switched-on. Phil clearly loves playing with these guys, and more so than in past Phil sit-ins, the band hit Lesh’s wavelength quickly but also put their own stamp on the material.

“Loose Lucy” had everyone thanking them for a “real good time,” and initially sounded like they might play T-Rex’s “Bang A Gong.” They milked the call-and-response with the Dead savvy crowd, and it worked like it always did in Jerry’s day. But, the real stunner of the set was next AND it wasn’t sung by Chris. “To Lay Me Down” is profound ache pushed into notes, and Rich sung the ever-loving heart out of it, hitting just the right emotional tone and evoking shiver inducing memories of Garcia several times. The patience and care the band executed this one with was impressive and it showed that their own approach to quiet material has its forebears, though few of them.

The throttle opened up again with “Sugaree” side-stepping the overused cover’s omnipresence with sweet ass solos from MacDougall, Dickinson, and particularly Rich, whose slide work throughout Saturday and Sunday was a grand swing between guttural snarl and angelic hosanna, but always touched by lingering vocal qualities. In short, the boy sings when he plays slide, and I caught more than a few people looking towards Luther’s side of the stage and then doing a double take when they found Dickinson doing the rhythm part instead of the slide work that was knocking them out. “Deal” was its usual shuffling joy, and Chris turned it on brightly for “Lovelight,” pulling the rest of the people onstage right along with him into the promised land.

While a touch odd to have the final expression of this five-night stand be the music of another band, it worked, if only to announce that the aesthetics and philosophy inside Grateful Dead music has been carried on and morphed into something new with the Crowes. And it showed that this band can play the hell out of just about anybody’s songs if they put their mind to it.

By Jay Blakesberg

By Jay Blakesberg

By Jay Blakesberg

By Jay Blakesberg

By Jay Blakesberg

By Jay Blakesberg

By Jay Blakesberg

By Jay Blakesberg

By Jay Blakesberg

The Black Crowes :: 12.06.09 :: The Fillmore :: San Francisco, CA

Feelin’ Alright, Seeing Things, Stare It Cold, Space Captain, So Many Times, What Is Home, Appaloosa, Ballad In Urgency > Wiser Time, Oh Josephine, And The Band Played On > Jam, Greenhorn, Soul Singing

E: Loose Lucy (1st time played)*, To Lay Me Down (1st time played)*, Sugaree*, Deal*, Turn On Your Lovelight (1st time played)*

* = w/ Phil Lesh


Continue reading for more of Josh Miller’s pictures from Friday and Sunday…

12.04.09

Continue reading for more of Josh Miller’s pictures from Sunday…

12.06.09

JamBase | California
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Sat Eye Candy: Abbey Road

THE SUN KING IS HERE TO GREET YOU AFTER YOUR GOLDEN SLUMBERS

Today marks the 40th anniversary of The Beatles‘ landmark Abbey Road being released in the United Kingdom. Few records can truly be called “essential” but this one rates and we’ve put together a “video album” to commemorate the occasion. Of course, John, Paul, George and Ringo are here, but we’ve opened it up to interpreters who’ve taken these songs and continued to breathe life and love into them since the collection arrived four decades ago.

We begin with John Lennon doing “Come Together” with his own band in the 1970s.

Next, a rare promo video for “Something” from the band that pioneered the notion of rock music with a visual counterpart.

Here’s Paul teaching “Maxwell’s Silver Hammer” to the lads.

Emily Elbert does a swell solo acoustic cover of “Oh! Darling.”

Few band’s work habits and rough takes have been more sorted over than The Beatles, and we wouldn’t want to be remiss, so here’s Ringo and George working on “Octopus’s Garden”

Uncle Sam gets in on the action in this version of “I Want You (She’s So Heavy)” from Julie Taymor’s most excellent Across The Universe.

Continue reading for Side Two of Abbey Road

Sometimes it’s a long, cold, lonely winter, but this lovely acoustic take on “Here Comes The Sun” should warm our bones nicely.

Maybe it’s our current delight with new TV show Glee coloring our judgement but we think this acappella rendition of “Because” by the U Mass Dynamics rocks pretty hard.

Next, it’s Wonderous Stories doing a spot-on version of “You Never Give Your Money” at B.B. King’s. Well done, sirs.

It’s truly amazing what grand music The Beatles continue to tease out of other human beings. Case in point, this stellar run through “Sun King,” “Mean Mr. Mustard,” “Polythene Pam” and “She Came In Through The Bathroom Window” by Bubble recorded at a sold out performance at New York’s Symphony Space.

There’s a particularly wistful quality to Paul’s concert take on the last section of the Abbey Road medley (“Golden Slumbers,” “Carry That Weight” and “The End”) captured in Montserrat, Spain with a full string section and Mark Knopfler on guitar.

Tacked onto the album by sound engineer John Kurlander in an inspired mistake, “Her Majesty” was originally cut from the Side Two medley but once The Beatles heard the lacquer with this jaunty epilogue they decided to keep it. Easy to understand given that not smiling when this plays is a serious challenge. In the spirit of the tune, we close with several playful ukulele renditions that made us grin, starting Julia Nunes‘ charming clip that apparently caught on and became a bit of a Web thang. Ain’t no telling what the power of The Beatles can do, eh?


Loans still too dear, says Darling

Chancellor says small and medium-sized businesses are still paying too much for bank loans that remain in short supply

British bank chiefs will come under renewed pressure today to make more credit available to small and medium-sized businesses in a crunch meeting with the chancellor, Alistair Darling.

Some of the country’s most powerful banking executives are said to be squaring up for a new battle after yesterday rejecting Darling’s complaint that struggling businesses were still paying too much for bank loans that remain in short supply.

Stung by the chancellor’s renewed criticism ahead of today’s meetings with the Treasury, the British Bankers’ Association took to the airwaves yesterday to insist it is doing its best in hard times for recession-hit customers.

Lending to small businesses rose by £391m in June as almost 50,000 new small business relationships were established with banks, the industry group said. Deposits from small businesses also grew by £577m, perhaps reflecting “improved business confidence”, the BBA said.

But John McFall, the chairman of the Treasury select committee, today warned that MPs would expect banks to make their lending agreements more transparent.

He told BBC Radio 4′s Today programme: “There is a tension between what the banks are doing and what the governor of the Bank of England wants to do. The banks want to sustain the level of profitability, so build up the capital.

“There is the government’s and the governor’s fear that the recovery will be jeopardised by an inadequate provision of credit and increased cost of borrowing, and the anecdotal evidence that’s been coming to the select committee for the past number of months has been … that it’s small and medium sized businesses that are losing out.

“The Bank of England report that came out last week said quite clearly that there is less credit available for businesses and it’s more expensive. In May, lending was negative – it went down 5.4%. These are the facts. The banks and the government need to get round the table today to ensure that we have this increased lending.”

McFall said he wanted to see a plan put in place to ensure “that lending agreements are transparent, so we can see it in black and white”.

Angela Knight of the British Banking Association told the programme: “Overall lending to British businesses has continued to increase. Equally, it is a very difficult market out there, the recession is a big one and some sectors are hit more than others.”

But she added: “Demand [for credit] has dropped off and we need to address this as well.”

With the economy’s second quarter growth figures worse than predicted – a 0.8% contraction in the three months up to June – Darling had used the platform provided by BBC1′s The Andrew Marr Show yesterday to protest that “what companies are being charged does seem to have gone up relative to what banks are actually having to pay because of the fact we’ve got very low interest rates”, which are currently 0.5%. “They’ve got to live up to their promises,” he emphasised.

Public hostility towards the banks has focused on the return of high-flying bonuses in the investment banking sector, despite the multi-billion pound rescues by the taxpayer which – Darling and David Cameron both admitted yesterday – will mean cuts in public spending.

In Belfast, a Northern Ireland MP said he would name and shame some of the province’s banks over their failure to help out small businesses. Alasdair McDonnell, the SDLP’s deputy leader and the MP for South Belfast, is to hand over a dossier on the local banks to the prime minister later this week. He complained that their failure had “pushed a number of viable local businesses over the edge – with many more on the precipice. Banks could – and should – be providing a better service to the public.”

The chancellor receives similar complaints whenever he meets small business leaders. He acknowledged on TV that he is also asking the banks to rebuild their balance sheets to make them stronger than before the financial crisis.

But he added: “People have got to understand in the banks: we did not stabilise the banking system, rescue some banks, out of some sort of charitable act or because we felt sorry for them. Far from it. We did it because if you don’t have a banking system that provides credit for businesses, then you will make recovery and prosperity after that much, much more difficult.”

Opposition politicians complained that ministers had dithered on banking reform. Vincent Cable, the Liberal Democrats’ Treasury spokesman, said: “It is amazing that the chancellor has only just woken up to the fact that this is a problem.” Mark Hoban, a shadow Treasury minister, said: “We have been warning about the lending crisis, including in government-owned banks, for months.”

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Tories can’t wait to make cuts, says Darling

Alistair Darling accused the Conservatives today of “almost wallowing” in the prospect of making deep cuts in public expenditure if they win the next general election and promised he would set out Labour’s own spending priorities before polling day, so that voters would have a clear choice.

The chancellor spoke as David Cameron, the Conservative leader, confirmed the Guardian’s weekend report that the Tories are preparing for a decade of retrenchment. He admitted his party could no longer afford to reverse either Labour’s 50p income tax rate on top earners immediately or to fulfil its pledge to abolish family inheritance tax.

“It’s incredibly daunting, the scale of the challenge and the mess that is being left in terms of the economy and, particularly, the budget balance. I mean it really is a daunting prospect,” Cameron said on BBC1′s Andrew Marr Show. “And that’s why I’ve said, you know, I can’t remember an opposition leader who in opposition has looked the British public in the eye and said ‘you know we are going to cut public spending, we have to do that’.”

In line with his strategy of highlighting his party’s openness – evident in shadow Treasury chief secretary Philip Hammond’s “pain and brickbats” admission in Saturday’s Guardian, Cameron said voters were “crying out actually for someone who’s going to lead them and who’s going to say ‘right, we’re all in this together’.”

The chancellor adopted a different approach to the “hard choices” ahead on tax-and-spending. With the Hammond interview in mind, he said that over the past few days some senior Tories had been “almost wallowing in the prospect of making cuts here, there and everywhere”.

All the parties should now set out their spending priorities “underpinned by values and principles” so that voters could decide whose mandate they should endorse to govern them until 2015, Darling said. “I think there is a distinction between people, if you like the slash and burn mentality, and those who believe that public spending actually can make a difference to the fabric of this country.”

Gordon Brown was still the man with “the values (and) commitment” to win the election despite Thursday’s drubbing at the Norwich North byelection, he said.

A handful of Labour MPs have called for a change of leader since the Conservative Chloe Smith, 27, took the Labour seat on a 16% swing. Brown told the Sunday Mirror: “We’ve got to show that we are a disciplined party getting on with the work of government. I think people are very clear that we’ve got a task ahead. We’ve got work to do to prepare for the autumn.”

Darling claimed international support for Labour’s response to the recession and said the VAT cut from 17.5% to 15% had been right, despite costing the Treasury £1bn a month. It would also be right to restore it next year as conditions eased, he said, a crucial distinction for Labour which claims the backing of leading economists in saying that cuts designed to balance the budget would repeat the mistakes of the 1930s if imposed before the economy was growing steadily again.

For his part Cameron stressed the need to cut deeply and soon, not least to persuade the City that it is safe to finance huge government borrowing, a Tory priority.

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Darling presses banks on lending

Chancellor says he is ‘extremely concerned’ about cost of borrowing remaining high while interest rates are low

Alistair Darling today called on banks to improve lending to businesses, saying he was “extremely concerned” about the cost of borrowing.

Bank bosses are to be summoned to explain why they are charging more for credit when interest rates are at historically low levels. The chancellor suggested they had failed to keep promises to improve lending facilities in return for taxpayer support.

He said banks had not been rescued as “some sort of charitable act … We did it because if you don’t have a banking system that creates credit for businesses then you will make recovery and prosperity after that much more difficult.”

Speaking on BBC1′s Andrew Marr Show, Darling acknowledged that banks needed to rebuild their balance sheets in the aftermath of the financial crisis. But he said: “At the same time, because of the particular circumstances we are in now, because of the fact we’ve got this recession, we also need them to lend money and that’s why we recapitalised them to do that.

“That means they’ve got to live up to the promises they’ve made. That’s why we will be going through with each individual bank asking them why is it, at a time when the cost of borrowing is coming down, it would appear that the cost to small business appears to have gone up? We’re playing our part; the banks have got to understand that the public will not understand it if they do not play their part to the full.”

Angela Knight, chief executive of the British Bankers’ Association, said banks were improving lending. “As far as the major banks are concerned they are lending, and increasing their lending,” she told BBC Radio 4′s The World This Weekend.

On interest rates, she said the base rate did not represent the real cost of money. “People say, ‘look, base rate is down to 0.5%, so why do you charge what you do for lending?’ The answer to that is that you can’t get the money at that rate. Base rate is not the money which a bank pays.”

Knight said the wholesale price of money was about twice that of the Bank of England rate. “But also, what there isn’t is capacity in the wholesale market because it’s credit crunch worldwide, so in fact the cost to the banks has gone up.”

Vince Cable, the Liberal Democrats’ spokesman on Treasury affairs, said: “It is amazing that the chancellor of the exchequer has only just woken up to the fact that this is a problem. We have been warning about the lending crisis, including in government-owned banks, for months.

“The problem isn’t just about the cost of borrowing, but the difficulties which many companies who are solvent, with a good credit history, have in obtaining bank credit without unreasonable demands for personal security and charges. It’s time the government stopped being a passive investor in the nationalised and semi-nationalised banks and ensured that they maintain lending to good British companies for the wider interest of the national economy.”

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Britain ‘will take until 2014 to recover’

• NIESR forecasts a further fall in house prices
• Cost of servicing national debt set to double

The UK economy will not fully recover from the recession until 2014, according to a top thinktank which also warned today that house prices will keep falling for another three years.

The National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR) predicted that it will take another five years until income per head has returned to the level seen before the recession started in the second quarter of 2008. In a gloomy assessment of Britain’s economic prospects, it also warned that the cost of servicing the country’s soaring national debt will almost double within four years.

NIESR’s latest forecast is that the UK economy shrank by 0.4% between April and June, which would mean the recession would have lasted for five quarters. It believes the recovery will not begin until the last three months of 2009, and then only with anaemic growth of 0.5%.

“The recovery will be weak,” warned NIESR economist Simon Kirby yesterday. “We see continued contraction in consumer spending and business investment [in 2010].”

On house prices, NIESR does not share the recent optimism that the market might be bottoming out.

“There has been talk of stabilization and some recovery in the housing market, but we don’t think this is the case,” said Kirby. “We only see growth in the housing market returning in 2012.”

Faced with the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression, the UK government is planning to spend its way back to recovery. NIESR warned that the resulting public borrowing will put a heavy burden on the public finances, and called for aggressive cuts to public spending.

“The introduction of a more credible plan to return the public finances to a path of fiscal sustainability remains a necessity,” it said, in a clear warning to chancellor Alistair Darling – and his possible successor, George Osborne.

Even after assuming that public spending will indeed be slashed, NIESR has calculated that annual borrowing will still be over £120bn in 2014 – some £23bn more than Darling’s own estimate.

The government is expected to borrow £165.7bn this year to balance the books, with further massive borrowing already inked in for future years. Last month alone it borrowed £13bn to cope with a sharp fall in tax receipts.

According to NIESR’s forecasts, the cost of servicing this debt will swell from £25.6bn this fiscal year to £50.7bn in 2013/14.

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