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Posts Tagged ‘David Byrne’

If By Yes (Haden & Honda): Salt On Sea Glass

GUESTS INCLUDE DAVID BYRNE AND NELS CLINE

Salt on Sea Glass is the debut album from If By Yes, a collaborative project
helmed by two of the most original talents in pop music. Petra Haden, the vocalist behind the groundbreaking vocal projects Imaginaryland and Petra
Haden Sings The Who Sell Out, is known for her inventive harmonies and complex voicings. Yuka Honda‘s
kaleidoscopic audio production methods first came to public attention as a member of Cibo Matto, but she’s been
playing jazz, hip-hop, funk, pop and avant-garde music in various New York City bands for the past 15 years.

If By Yes also includes guitarist Hirotaka “Shimmy” Shimizu and drummer Yuko Araki, both long
time members of the
Japanese band Cornelius.

For Salt On Sea Glass, special guests include David Byrne (vocals & lyrics) on “Eliza”, guitarist Nels Cline, and remixes by Keigo
“Cornelius” Oyamada.

If By Yes
Tour Dates

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If By Yes News
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If By Yes
Concert
Reviews


Yo La Tengo Back With 8 Nights of Hannukah

TICKETS ON SALE NOW


Yo La Tengo

Yo La Tengo have
announced a run of 8 shows at Maxwell’s for 8
Nights of Hanukkah
. The shows will take place Dec. 1 through Dec. 8 and feature comedy and musical
performances from surprise guests, as well as a full set from Yo La Tengo. Except for a cancellation last year, the
shows have been a tradition for
every year since 2001.

In the past, opening acts and comedy guests have included Magnetic Fields, David Byrne, Alex Chilton, New Pornographers, David Cross, Eugene Mirman and Todd Barry.

Tickets are on sale now via TicketFly. All tickets are $30.

Yo La Tengo
Tour Dates

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Yo La Tengo News
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Yo La Tengo
Concert
Reviews


David Byrne: Bicycle Diaries Audiobook 9/28

PAPERBACK AND E-BOOK AVAILABLE THE SAME DAY


Bicycle Diaries

David Byrne‘s bestselling
Viking Press hardcover, Bicycle Diaries, will be released as an enhanced audiobook September 28
with pre-orders beginning today.

Offered exclusively at
www.bicycle-diaries.com, this new edition is narrated by Byrne
and features music (by Byrne) and location sounds to create an atmosphere more akin to a radio show than a simple
reading of the book. Presented in podcast-style downloads, the listener will have a choice to purchase individual
chapters or the complete book. The introductory chapter will be free. In addition to the audio version, the
paperback and E-book editions will also be released the same day. The E-book version will include color images not
included in the hardcover.

Part travelogue, part journal and part photo album, Bicycle Diaries chronicles what Byrne sees and whom he
meets as he pedals through metropolises ranging from Berlin to Buenos Aires, Istanbul to San Francisco, Manila to
New York. The collection includes records Byrne’s thoughts on world music, urban planning, fashion, architecture,
cultural dislocation and more.

David Byrne
Tour Dates

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David Byrne News
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David Byrne
Concert
Reviews


Dead Winter Carpenters: Tour

EMERGENT GENRE BLENDERS ON EARLY FALL TOUR

Dead Winter Carpenters, an eclectic quintet emerging from the shores of Lake Tahoe, CA, are in the midst on their first national tour in support of their debut studio album, D.W.C. Their sound is laced with elements of rock ‘n’ roll, bluegrass, folk, ragtime, blues, and reggae inspired from musical influences ranging from Neil Young to David Byrne and Ryan Adams to the traditional fiddle tunes of earlier times.

Dead Winter Carpenters Fall Tour Dates

8/30/10 Red Eyed Fly – Austin, TX
8/31/10 Super Happy Fun Land – Houston, TX
9/01/10 Chelsea’s – Baton Rouge, LA
9/02/10 Blue Moon Saloon – Lafayette, LA
9/03/10 Maple Leaf – New Orleans, LA
9/05/10 The Pour House – Charleston, SC

9/06/10 Smith’s Olde Bar – Atlanta, GA
9/08/10 Lexington Ave. Brewery – Asheville, NC
9/09/10 Awful Arthurs – Roanoke, VA
9/10/10 North Star – Philadelphia, PA
9/11/10 Higher Ground (Showcase Lounge) – Burlington, VT
9/13/10 Harpers Ferry – Allston, MA
9/14/10 Red Square – Albany, NY
9/16/10 Park Street Tavern – Columbus, OH
9/17/10 Booney’s – Avon, IN
9/18/10 Wuhnurth Music Festival – Spencer, IN
9/19/10 Tonic Room – Chicago, IL
9/21/10 Pier 357 – Pierre, SD
9/22/10 The Bottleneck – Lawrence, KS
9/23/10 Quixote’s True Blue – Denver, CO
9/24/10 Salt Water Cowboy – Avon, CO
9/25/10 320 South – Breckenridge, CO
9/26/10 Paddlepalooza – Page, AZ
9/27/10 Mystic Hot Springs – Monroe, UT
10/28/10 Las Tortugas Dance of the Dead V – Yosemite, CA

http://www.deadwintercarpenters.comDead Winter Carpenters Tour Dates :: Dead Winter Carpenters News :: Dead Winter Carpenters Concert Reviews


Jesse Harris: Through the Night & Cosmo

THROUGH THE NIGHT OUT AUGUST 24; COSMOS OUT SEPTEMBER
28


Jesse Harris

Singer/songwriter/guitarist Jesse
Harris
has announced the release of two new albums.

Through The Night is out August 24 and features a quartet of Bill Dobrow (Martha
Wainwright, Sean Lennon)
on drums, Mauro Refosco (Atoms For Peace, David Byrne, Forro In The Dark) on percussion,
Guilherme Monteiro (Bebel Gilberto, Forro In The Dark) on bass, and Jesse Harris on electric and
acoustic guitar and, for the first time, piano, wurlitzer and Hammond B3 organ. Through The Night
contains 14 tracks that compel the listener across a wide range of musical styles while maintaining a thematic
cohesion of sound and text.

Cosmo, out September 28, is Jesse Harris’ first full length instrumental album. Half of the
album’s 12 tracks are new
instrumental compositions and half are versions of previously recorded Harris songs. Other guests on
Cosmo include Rob Burger, CJ Camerieri, Eivind Opsvik, Tony Scherr, and Doug
Wieselman
. Blending folk, soul, Brazilian and rock music, Cosmo is instrumental pop in the classic
tradition of
Burt Bacharach, with the indelible stamp of Jesse Harris.

Through The Night Tracklisting:

“Put It Out Of Your Mind”

“Till You Drop”

“Pixote”

“Through The Night”

“It’s a Long Way Just to Say Hello”

“What Am I Doing Out Here”
“All That Happened”
“Gone Without A Sound”
“Trees In A Fence”
“Dream Of The Past”
“All Day All Night”
“Way To Be”

“Tough As Water”

“Making Up For Lost Time”

Cosmo Tracklisting:

“Little Star”

“The Waves”
“Strange Bird”
“Pixote”
“Cosmo”
“I Think You’re Hiding Something”

“Somewhere Down The Road”

“Wish I Was A Bird”
“Dear Dorothy”

“Over The Bridge (And Into Queens)”
“No Way Out”
“Wedding Song”

Jesse Harris
Tour Dates

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Jesse Harris News ::
Jesse Harris
Concert
Reviews


Dead Winter Carpenters: Tour

NEW GROUP MERGES SF AND LAKE TAHOE BANDS

Dead Winter Carpenters

With feet firmly planted in the Northern California music scene, Dead Winter Carpenters is a newly formed quintet emerging on the shores of North Lake Tahoe, CA. Boasting members of San Francisco’s Montana Slim String Band and Lake Tahoe’s Rusty Strings, Dead Winter Carpenters are poised with an arsenal of original material and are preparing for a summer that will establish their presence on the national touring circuit beginning this June. DWC’s debut multi-city tour stops throughout Oregon, Montana, and Idaho.

Laced with elements of bluegrass, folk, ragtime, blues, reggae and rock and roll that incorporates styles inspired from musical influences ranging from Jerry Garcia and Neil Young to David Byrne to Ryan Adams, the band embraces their musical roots enabling them to traverse genres and defy musical boundaries. This combination is a unique blend of genuine, authentic songwriting and dynamic musicianship. When asked what the band is most excited about for their debut tour, the band all agreed to the answer provided by fiddler Jenni Charles: “The opportunity to continually challenge our abilities to bring the best performance we can to our fans playing music we all deeply believe in.”

The band consists of fiddler and vocalist Jenni Charles, upright bassist Dave Lockhart, guitarists and vocalists Jesse Dunn and Sean Duerr, and drummer Ryan Davis.

June Tour Dates

June 8th – Mt. Tabor Theater, Portland
June 9th- John’s Alley, Moscow, ID
June 10th – John’s Alley, Moscow, ID
June 11th – Di Luna’s Cafe, Sandpoint, ID
June 12th – Love Your Mother Earth Festival, Missoula, MT
June 13th – LYME festival, and Chico Hot Springs, Pray, MT
June 16th – Filling Station, Bozeman, MT
June 17th – Top Hat, Missoula, MT
June 18th – Terrapin Station, Boise, ID

Dead Winter Carpenters Tour Dates :: Dead Winter Carpenters News :: Dead Winter Carpenters Concert Reviews


Albums of the Week: February 5-11

JamBase Albums of the Week | February 5-February 11, 2010

Dennis’ Pick of the Week
Galactic: Ya-Ka-May (Anti)

These sons of New Orleans have done their city proud by honoring Armstrong, Prof. Longhair, and other innovators and crafting a distinct, resolutely modern collection that successfully incorporates ancestral elements. Less hip-hop oriented than its predecessor, 2007′s From the Corner to the Block, this announces with authority that music continues to evolve in the Big Easy, absorbing the crispness and edge prevalent on today’s charts and folding it into the city’s irresistible tub-thumping, primal swing. Ya-Ka-May (arriving February 9) differentiates itself from most other modern soul/funk by retaining a human feel, often felt in the crackling rawness of guest vocalists like Allen Toussaint, Big Chief Bo Dollis and Irma Thomas and big band largess of drum stud Stanton Moore. In these settings, the old hands school today’s chart toppers and Galactic themselves reveal what a sham the bloodless, Pro-Tools, Auto-Tuned mainstream really is. Bangers like “Liquor Pang,” “Dark Water” and “Double It” are ripe to go toe-to-toe with anything Timbaland or Lil’ Wayne serve up, except these sweat and grunt in a way that sidesteps the factory produced sterility of most mass consumption singles. One longs to see this entire assemblage tour as a massive revue that would showcase the interlocking nature of New Orleans music throughout several generations. Ya-Ka-May is a juggernaut of fat grooves and slinky sensibilities that announces that New Orleans is alive and well, at least when Galactic is the custodian of its traditions. (Dennis Cook)

Ron’s Pick of the Week
Peter Gabriel: Scratch My Back (EMI)

If there is anything to be learned about Peter Gabriel in the 40-plus years he has been in the pop eye, it’s the fact that he is definitely one advanced-minded Englishman. Whether it be pushing the boundaries of rock ‘n’ roll theatre as the Fox-headed, flute playing frontman of Genesis, with his music videos in the 1980s as a solo act, or the art of the film score with his stunning soundtracks to such critically acclaimed films as The Last Temptation of Christ and Rabbit Proof Fence over the last 20 years, the man hasn’t seen a glass ceiling he didn’t want to throw a bowling ball through. So, leave it up to PG to reinvent the concept of the covers album as well, which is exactly what he’s done with the haunting Scratch My Back (arriving February 16 in the U.K. and March 2 in the U.S.), his first proper solo album since 2002′s Up. With nothing more than a piano and a string section, Gabriel handpicks a dozen songs – six from like-minded contemporaries David Bowie, Paul Simon, Neil Young, Lou Reed, Randy Newman and David Byrne, and six from some of the newer acts he admires like Radiohead, Bon Iver, Elbow, Regina Spektor, The Magnetic Fields and Arcade Fire – and by the power of his unmistakable rasp, makes every one of them entirely his own. Most of his choices fit swimmingly with the stripped down format, most notably Bon Iver’s haunting “Flume,” Young’s “Philadelphia,” Reed’s “The Power of the Heart” and surprisingly, “Listening Wind,” a deep cut from Talking Heads’ Remain In Light. But it’s his take on Simon’s Graceland hit “The Boy in the Bubble,” substituting the song’s quasi-Zydeco buoyancy with a downright somber arrangement that really brings out the paranoia in the song’s Orwellian message that seems more fitting now than it did in 1987. Following Scratch My Back is I’ll Scratch Yours, where the artists featured here have their way with the Peter Gabriel catalog. Thom Yorke is allegedly already on board and planning to record “Wallflower” from Gabriel’s 1982 album Security. And one could only hope Randy Newman comes through with a full-on Basin Street run through “Sledgehammer.” (Ron Hart)

Salvador Santana: Keyboard City (Quannum)

The label that brought us Blackalicious, Lyrics Born and other bright lights in today’s funk/hip-hop scene scores again with Santana’s solo debut, a swirling analog hot tub of muddled Latinismo (a la War), lilting disco, ’70s Herbie Hancock-isms, the brighter side of Gil Scott-Heron & Brian Jackson and video game bloops. Nuggets like “Don’t Even Care” and “This Day (Belongs To You)” are sonic sunshine and ooh, don’t it feel good. Helped out by Money Mark, Gza and Del the Funky Homosapien, Keyboard City (released February 2) is a lovingly stirred concoction that goes down as sweetly as home brewed lemonade on a thermometer poppin’ afternoon. (DC)

King Crimson: Lizard: 40th Anniversary Edition (Panegyric/Discipline Global Mobile)

The 40th anniversary remaster campaign of British progressive rock titans King Crimson, helmed with great detail by group founder and resident guitar genius Robert Fripp and self-anointed uber-fan Steven Wilson of Porcupine Tree, with the deluxe edition of Crimson’s third and most challenging album, Lizard (released January 12). In his scholarly liner notes, Fripp derides his group’s 1970 work as “unsatisfactory” and “joyless”. But thanks to the skillful care of Wilson’s loving revamp, which features bonus material and a DVD-A containing the album in lossless 5.1 surround sound stereo, he renewed the doubtful author’s faith in its unprecedented fusion of classical, free jazz and experimental rock. And if you never quite took to the most misunderstood monster of the King Crimson canon like you did with, say Red or Discipline, allow this definitive version to school you on the brilliance of this legendary band’s transitional classic. (RH)

The Wishing Tree: Ostara (Eagle)

“It’s time for eyes to open now/ It’s time to raise the dead.” Uttered by the honeyed, effervescent voice of Hannah Stobart and given further lift by Marillion guitarist Steve Rothery (who also produced and engineered), these lines are indicative of the big ideas and striking beauty of this prog-pop outing, which begs comparisons to All About Eve, Jane Siberry and frothier Peter Gabriel. Unabashedly romantic and sweetly melodic, Ostara resonates with Rothery’s Fish-era Marillion work infused with female energies. A fine, lovingly sculpted second outing by this pair (released January 19). (DC)

Pierced Arrows: Descending Shadows (VICE)

Garage punk fans the world over were rightfully shocked when Fred and Toody Cole unexpectedly put their longtime group Dead Moon out to pasture in 2006, just six months after the release of Sub Pop’s stellar two-disc anthology, Echoes of the Past (JamBase review) chronicling the Oregon mainstays’ two-decade-strong run. But as quick as they were to shoot the Moon, they returned just as quickly in the form of Pierced Arrows, whose only significant change was the replacement of longtime drummer Andrew Loomis with Portland punker Kelly Hallliburton, whose father played with Fred in the ’60s. Descending Shadows (released February 2) is the Coles’ second album under the new moniker, and finds them as visceral in their AARP years as they were when they first started rattling cages in the Pacific Northwest 20-odd years ago. (RH)

Big Smith: Roots, Shoots & Wings (Mayapple)

It’d be very easy for a group with song titles like “Toted A Load” and “My Overalls (Don’t Fit Me Anymore)” to be jokey, just another tongue-in-cheek country act like Nashville pumps out with alarming regularity. Happily, Big Smith is rootsy as hell and slathered in hot jazz technique, pinches of dissonance, an earthy vocal mix that’s part bluegrass & part The Band, and a good sense of bittersweet humor. If anything, they remind one of early killer Jimmy Buffett and the ’70s Outlaw Country gang, right down to Willy’s penchant for swing. Damn fine band, sweet lil’ album (arriving February 9). (DC)

Black Cobra: Chronomega (Southern Lord)

Though only two players deep, San Francisco’s Black Cobra play their unique brand of sludgy punk-metal with the precision and fury of the four-to-five man Bay Area thrash bands that preceded them 25 years ago. Their fourth album and Southern Lord debut shows ex-Cavity guitarist/vocalist Jason Landrian and one-time Acid King drummer Rafael Martinez can throw down their trademark Death Angel-cum-Melvins style riff attacks. Chronomega also shows how well these guys can space out a la Sunn 0))) and Earth as well. (RH)

Field Music: (Measure) (Memphis Industries)

Following a short three-year break that saw the Brothers Brewis record a pair of respective solo albums that barely held up to their work as a group, Field Music makes a momentous return to the world stage in 2010 with a magnificent double LP that explores the darker edges of the English duo’s Steely Dan-gone-indie-rock sound. (Measure) (arriving February 16) finds the Brewis boys challenging themselves by adding prog-jazz phrasing, rhythm-defying time signatures and embellishments of guitar fuzz to their effortless harmonies, all married perfectly across this 20 song thread about the human condition. Few newer bands could pull off a double album with such panache, and Field Music stay in line with the age-old tradition of making theirs a masterpiece. (RH)

Lionel Loueke: Mwaliko (Blue Note)

Following up on his 2007 star-making Herbie Hancock-produced debut Karibu, West African guitar lion Lionel Loueke pays homage to his motherland on his second Blue Note offering. Here, Loueke tests his dazzling fusion of playing, rooted in the fretwork rulebooks of Jim Hall and King Sunny Ade, against a series of intimate duets with the likes of vocalist Angelique Kidjo (who hails from the guitarist’s home nation of Benin), singer/bassists Esperanza Spalding and Richard Bona, as well as promising young jazz drummer Marcus Gilmore, the grandson of the immortal Roy Haynes. However, Mwaliko‘s true gems are three new tracks featuring his longtime trio rounded out by Massimo Biolcati and drummer Ferenc Nemeth, whose seamless interplay is unmatched in 21st century jazz. (RH)

Various Artists: Psych Bites: Australian Acid Freak Rock -1967-1974 (Vol. 1) (Past & Present)

If there is anything we learned from AC/DC, The Birthday Party and Lubricated Goat, it’s that the Australian continent shows no fear in displaying its collective ability to get loud. So it should come to no surprise that Oz’s surprisingly little-known late ’60s/early ’70s psychedelic rock scene was equally as brain melting. Compiled by master freak rock archivist Psychomania for Bevis Frond frontman Nick Salomon’s Past & Present imprint, Psych Bites (released February 2) compiles 20 super heavy, mega-rare artifacts from Australia and New Zealand’s second and third wave freak rock movements, a true collector’s bin of bands you’ve probably never heard of but should like Pirana, Long Grass, Flake, Chook, Freshwater and The Dave Miller Set, to name a few. Dig it! (RH)


Grammys: Young, Fleck, Trucks Byrne, KOL, Zac Brown, Earle

Neil Young, Derek Trucks, Bela Fleck, David Byrne, Kings of Leon, Zac Brown

Take Home Grammys at the 52nd Annual Awards Show

Kings of Leon

Last night (Monday, January 31) the 52nd Annual Grammy Awards were held in Los Angeles. While most of the performances were not particularly inspiring, the Michael Jackson tribute featuring Smokey Robinson, Jennifer Hudson, Celine Dion, Carrie Underwood and Usher was done very well and proved quite moving. After the performance, Jackson’s children, Prince and Paris Jackson, accepted the Lifetime Achievement Award for their father.

Other performances of note included a somewhat interesting pairing of Lady Gaga and Elton John, a nice reading of “You and Me” by Dave Matthews Band, a tribute to Haiti featuring Mary J. Blige, David Foster and Andrea Bocelli, Zac Brown Band singing with Leon Russell, and the show closing combo of Drake, Lil’ Wayne and Eminem. Meanwhile, both the Black Eyed Peas and Bon Jovi were incredibly underwhelming; which is perhaps, not a shock.

And now onto the awards. There were a number of JamBase regulars who took home Grammys. Neil Young won his first ever, taking home the Grammy for Best Boxed or Special Limited Edition Package for The Archives Vol. 1 (1963-1972). Bela Fleck , who has been nominated in the most categories in Grammy history, took home the award for Pop Instrumental Performance for Throw Down Your Heart. Derek Trucks Band won the Best Contemporary Blues Album for Already Free. Phoenix grabbed Best Alternative Music Album with Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix, Zac Brown Band was named Best New Artist, Kings of Leon won for Record of the Year, Rock Performance, Duo or Group With Vocals and Rock Song. David Byrne and Brian Eno‘s Everything That Happens Will Happen Today won Best Recording Package, Booker T. Jones grabbed a trophy for Pop Instrumental Album, Bruce Springsteen for Solo Rock Vocal Performance on Working on a Dream, Steve Earle for Best Contemporary Folk Album with Townes, and Beyonce won more trophies than anyone else, setting a record for most awards by a female artist in a single night with six.

Awards

Record Of The YearUse Somebody – Kings Of Leon

Album Of The YearFearless – Taylor Swift

Song Of The Year – “Single Ladies (Put A Ring On It)” – Beyonce

Best New Artist – Zac Brown Band
Best Female Pop Vocal Performance – “Halo” – Beyonce
Best Male Pop Vocal Performance – “Make It Mine” – Jason Mraz
Best Pop Instrumental Performance – “Throw Down Your Heart” – Bela Fleck
Best Pop Instrumental AlbumPotato Hole – Booker T. Jones

Best Solo Rock Vocal Performance – “Working On A Dream” – Bruce Springsteen

Best Rock Performance By A Duo Or Group With VocalsUse Somebody – Kings Of Leon

Best Hard Rock Performance – “War Machine” – AC/DC

Best Rock Instrumental Performance – “A Day In The Life” – Jeff Beck

Best Rock Song – “Use Somebody” – Kings Of Leon

Best Rock Album21st Century Breakdown – Green Day

Best Alternative Music AlbumWolfgang Amadeus Phoenix – Phoenix

Best Rap Solo Performance – “D.O.A. (Death Of Auto-Tune)” – Jay-Z

Best Rap AlbumRelapse – Eminem

Best Jazz Instrumental Album, Individual Or GroupFive Peace Band – Live – Chick Corea & John McLaughlin Five Peace Band

Best Americana AlbumElectric Dirt – Levon Helm

Best Traditional Blues AlbumA Stranger Here – Ramblin’ Jack Elliott

Best Contemporary Blues AlbumAlready Free – The Derek Trucks Band

Best Traditional Folk AlbumHigh Wide & Handsome: The Charlie Poole Project – Loudon Wainwright III

Best Contemporary Folk AlbumTownes – Steve Earle

Best Zydeco Or Cajun Music AlbumLay Your Burden Down – Buckwheat Zydeco

Best Reggae AlbumMind Control – Acoustic – Stephen Marley

Best Contemporary World Music AlbumThrow Down Your Heart: Tales From The Acoustic Planet, Vol. 3 – Africa Sessions – Bela Fleck

Best Comedy AlbumA Colbert Christmas: The Greatest Gift Of All! – Stephen Colbert

For a complete list of winners and nominees, go to www.grammy.com/nominees.


David Byrne & Fatboy Slim: Here Lies Love Due 02/23

David Byrne & Fatboy Slim To Release Here Lies Love on Todomundo / Nonesuch February 23

David Byrne and Fatboy Slim have paired up for a 22-track song cycle about the life of former First Lady of the Philippines Imelda Marcos and her childhood servant, Estrella Cumpas. Due February 23 on Todomundo / Nonesuch Records, the album includes a 100-page book detailing the project and a DVD.


In addition to Byrne and Fatboy Slim, Here Lies Love features performances by Santigold, Florence Welch (Florence And The Machine), Sia, Steve Earle, St. Vincent, Natalie Merchant, Tori Amos, Sharon Jones, Nicole Atkins, and many others.

“The story I am interested in is about asking what drives a powerful person — what makes them tick? How do they make and then remake themselves? I thought to myself, wouldn’t it be great if — as this piece would be principally composed of clubby dance music — one could experience it in a club setting? Could one bring a ‘story’ and a kind of theater to the disco? Was that possible? If so, wouldn’t that be amazing!”


—David Byrne, from the album’s introduction

Track list is available here.


52nd Grammy Noms: Phish, Béla, DMB, Byrne/Eno

BELA FLECK, DMB, DAVID BYRNE/BRIAN ENO, PHISH RECEIVE GRAMMY NOMINATIONS

Bela Fleck

The 52nd Annual Grammy Nominations were announced last night, including some relevant JamBase artists. To be eligible for an award, artists must have released a recording between October 1, 2008 and August 31, 2009.

Among those receiving nominations were David Byrne and Brian Eno‘s Everything That Happens Will Happen Today for Best Alternative Music Album, Dave Matthews Band‘s Big Whiskey And The Groogrux King for Album of the Year and Best Rock Album, Kings of Leon‘s “Use Somebody” for Song of the Year, Silversun Pickups and Zac Brown Band for Best New Artist, Bela Fleck‘s “Throw Down Your Heart” for Best Pop Instrumental Performance, T Bone Burnett for Producer of the Year, Steve Earle for Best Contemporary Folk Album for Townes, Neko Case earned two nominations for her album Middle Cyclone, one for Best Contemporary Folk Album and the other for Best Recording Package, Mos Def got the nod for Best Rap Album, and Phish‘s Clifford Ball DVD Box Set for Best Boxed or Limited Edition Package.

Beyonce led all artists with 10 nominations, while Kanye West, Jay-Z, Maxwell, Lady GaGa, and Taylor Swift all received a predictably large amount of nods.

The Grammys will be held on January 31, 2010 in Los Angeles. Major category nominations are listed below.

Record of the Year:
Beyonce: “Halo”
The Black Eyed Peas: “I Gotta Feeling”
Kings Of Leon: “Use Somebody”
Lady Gaga: “Poker Face”
Taylor Swift: “You Belong With Me”

Album of the Year:
Beyonce: I Am… Sasha Fierce

The Black Eyed Peas: The E.N.D.
Lady Gaga: The Fame

Dave Matthews Band: Big Whiskey and the Groogrux King
Taylor Swift: Fearless

Song of the Year:

Lady Gaga: “Poker Face”
Maxwell: “Pretty Wings”
Beyonce: “Single Ladies (Put a Ring On It)”
Kings of Leon: “Use Somebody”
Taylor Swift: “You Belong With Me”

Best Alternative Music Album:

David Byrne & Brian Eno: Everything That Happens Will Happen Today
Death Cab For Cutie: The Open Door
Depeche Mode: Sounds of the Universe
Phoenix: Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix
Yeah Yeah Yeahs: It’s Blitz!

Best New Artist:

Zac Brown Band
Keri Hilson
MGMT
Silversun Pickups
The Ting Tings

Best Rap Album:

Common: Universal Mind Control
Eminem: Relapse
Flo Rida: R.O.O.T.S.
Mos Def: The Ecstatic
Q-Tip: The Renaissance

Best Rap Song:

Drake: “Best I Ever Had”
Kid Cudi: “Day ‘N’ Nite”
T.I. and Justin Timberlake: “Dead and Gone”
Jay-Z: “D.O.A. (Death of Auto-Tune)”

Jay-Z: “Run This Town [ft. Rihanna and Kanye West]”

The complete list of nominations can be seen here.


Bebel Gilberto: All In One

By: Cal Roach

Brazilian pop singer Bebel Gilberto is probably known more in the U.S. for her collaborations (Thievery Corporation and David Byrne, etc.) than for her solo work, even though she is a native New Yorker. The new All In One, her first album for Verve, doesn’t stray far from the strains of adult-oriented world music that you’ll find in her other solo work. It might strike you as mildly exotic bubblegum on first listen, but the quality of the songs themselves will reward the patient listener.

A couple of appropriate covers don’t hurt: Bob Marley’s “Sun Is Shining” is almost unrecognizable, but a clever Latin-lite arrangement and Gilberto’s throaty moan make it a pleasant daydream. Stevie Wonder‘s “The Real Thing,” however, may be the highlight of the album; with production by Mark Ronson, the subtle horn, flute and vibraphone accompaniment and snappy snare backbeat allow Bebel’s voice to be the star, and the song stands out as the main booty-shaker on the disc.

Some tracks just don’t play to the singer’s strengths. “Bim Bom,” a song written by her father, João Gilberto (widely known as the inventor of Bossa Nova), benefits from lush harmonic arrangements, but Bebel’s phrasing is inexplicably rushed, with loud, unnatural breaths interrupting the flow of the song. But when she gets intimate and personal, as on “Nossa Senhora” and “Far From The Sea,” her voice is at its most effective, not lilting but airy and somewhat intoxicating. Her disregard for melodic and rhythmic precision lends character, whereas on glossier tunes like the title track, it just sounds a little amateurish. But then there are the breezy harmonic sighs that carry you away. This song highlights the best and worst qualities of the album: four different producers (at least eight over the whole album) surely contribute to an overall lack of cohesion, but some lovely arrangements and an almost tactile warmth make up for the missteps.

JamBase | Swaying
Go See Live Music!


Dirty Projectors | 10.22 | Washington, DC

By: Dan Ettinger

Dirty Projectors :: 10.22.09 :: The Black Cat:: Washington, DC

Dirty Projectors from last.fm

Dirty Projectors‘ critically acclaimed 2009 release Bitte Orca has won them a diverse fan base, including the likes of former Talking Heads frontman and current bicyclist extraordinaire David Byrne. They even wowed ?uestlove and The Roots backstage before their October 28 appearance on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon.

Singer-songwriter Dave Longstreth has surrounded himself with some considerable talent, including mustachioed bassist Nat Baldwin, drummer Brian Mcomber, and a triumvirate of incredible (and cute!) female singers who each had their share of the spotlight. It’s fair to say that while the Projectors all play off each other seamlessly, there is no argument as to who is the leader. “It is Dave’s group,” explains Angel Deradoorian (guitar, bass, keyboard, samples) in a recent JamBase interview. “It’s been his project for a long time.” His leadership was evident throughout the evening, as he was the only member of the group that remained onstage for the entire show. He deftly directed traffic with his left handed finger-picking, at times melodically emphasizing the downbeat while Mcomber forged on.

After a rousing set by opening band The Givers, Dirty Projectors began shyly with Orca track “No Intentions.” Swirling guitar riffs met a basic drumbeat and subtly hinted at what would transpire over the next 90 minutes. The second tune, “Remade Horizon,” sounded at times like Battles‘ hectic “Race:In” and showcased for the first time the astoundingly complex vocal interplay of Deradoorian, Amber Coffman, and Haley Dekle.

Longstreth spoke about the Projectors’ emphasis on vocals in a July 2009 interview with Pitchfork.com: “What we want to do is to make music that feels good, and feels expressive – even as it does so in a new vocabulary.”

This new vocabulary was evident in the band’s diversity of sound; highlighted by the use of a thirteenth century technique called hocketing overlayed guitar lines that could have been borrowed from West Africa’s kora tradition. Yet abruptly, the instrumental “Ascending Melody” dropped into some serious funk. The jam band fan in me wanted the group to extend this one, but they kept the song under five minutes.

Dirty Projectors by Greg Neate

Never was the group’s diverse sound more evident than in the middle of the set, where re-imagined Black Flag tracks “Gimmie Gimmie Gimmie” and “Police Story” were sandwiched between acoustic beauties “Two Doves” and “The Bride.” The Rise Above songs were self-indulgent and nihilistic, while the two Orca tunes evoked romantic images by sounding ethereal and peaceful. “Doves” was simply gorgeous; Longstreth provided the muse by softly strumming an old classical guitar. Despite some unwanted microphone feedback (to which Longstreth chuckled at mid-song as if to say, “Really? On this song?”), Deradoorian’s voice did truly sound angelic. Before her solo, she triumphantly pumped her fist and proclaimed, “We finally get to play upstairs!”

Baldwin added an upright bass for “The Bride,” which wasn’t his only moment to shine. Manning his electric for the electro-indie pop sensation “Stillness is the Move,” Baldwin mimicked a lead guitar to give the song a bouncy feel that should have made the crowd move a little more than it actually did. Show closer “Useful Chamber” was raw and explosive. At times, the mish-mash of polyrhythms, odd tempos, dropped beats, and Longstreth’s obsession with dissonance gave the group a chaotic sound, as if they were teetering on the edge of a sonic cliff. They never did fall off, always pulling together masterfully at the perfect moment, leaving everyone in the room with an understanding smile (think of the breakdown in Flecktones live staple “Stomping Grounds”).

Admittedly, Longstreth’s crooning was occasionally abrasive, however, it was difficult not to admire the group’s effort and passion. It was clear that not only do they love what they do but they are damn good at it, too. Following a stellar encore that included their Byrne collaboration “Knotty Pine,” there was no question that Dirty Projectors are as tight and unique a band as any currently touring.

Dirty Projectors :: 10.22.09 :: The Black Cat :: Washington, DC

No Intention, Remade Horizon, Ascending Melody, Temecula Sunrise, Fucked for Life, Gimmie Gimmie Gimmie, Two Doves, The Bride, Police Story, Cannibal Resource, Stillness is the Move, Useful Chamber

E: Fluorescent Half Dome, When the World Comes to an End, Knotty Pine

Dirty Projectors are on tour now; dates available here.

JamBase | Chocolate City
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Yeah Yeah Yeahs | 09.10 | California

Words by: Justin Gillett | Images by: Steven Walter

Yeah Yeah Yeahs :: 09.10.09 :: Fox Theater :: Oakland, CA

Yeah Yeah Yeahs | 09.10 | Oakland, CA

If a band is able to fully expose itself and connect with listeners it will surely find itself with a pack of dedicated fans that only grows with time. While it is no doubt difficult to ignore the critics and make music that is personal and self-disclosing, when a band does it’s refreshing and brings to light a style of music that most would be afraid to even attempt.

For the Yeah Yeah Yeahs it seems like such character is at the cusp of its existence. The band’s very nature seems to encompass a mentality that ignores public opinion and musical mores. By doing so, the band has sharply defined itself and ridden a wave of success that has led to a spot as one of the preeminent pop rock acts of the early 21st century. With a stage show that highlights singer Karen O‘s natural performance ability as well as Nick Zinner‘s manic guitar skills and Brian Chase‘s dance inspired drumming, the band has matured and grown since releasing its debut album, Fever To Tell, in 2003. The band released its third studio LP earlier this year, and the trio has been busy on the tour and festival circuit (even replacing the Beastie Boys as a headliner at Lollapalooza). The overwhelming success that the group has experienced over the past few years has manifested itself in a band that is now playing at a peak level, and fans who showed up for the performance at the newly restored Fox Theater in Oakland bore witness to Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ steady rising excellence.

Fans of the electro dance fusion genre were in luck, as YACHT opened up with a rousing and extremely physical set. The musical duo, comprised of Jona Bechtolt and Claire Evans, came out onto the stage and immediately fell into choreographed musical dance numbers. As they moved in jerky movements and shouted into their mics it seemed like they were trying to prove their musical prowess to the crowd. YACHT’s second album, See Mystery Lights (released by the dance punk label DFA), has received significant critical praise, which has forced the band to deliver the goods live. While Bechtolt and Evans never picked up an instrument during the duration of their set – Bechtolt controlled the music via a laptop positioned at the side of the stage – the pair’s energy was enough to garner the attention and admiration of the crowd. Dressed in a white suit as he flailed onstage, Bechtolt acted like a modern version of the young David Byrne. The surprisingly industrial beats behind YACHTs music were a vast departure from the pop laden tracks that fill the group’s most recent release. While lacking any sort of instrumental forays, the performance was aesthetically pleasing and worked in favor for an act that’s in the process of defining itself. YACHT finished its set with the current single, “Psychic City,” which, due to the downtempo nature of the song, was the least enjoyable part of the set.

Yeah Yeah Yeahs | 09.10 | Oakland, CA

When the house lights dimmed in the elaborately decorated, Persian themed theater, Zinner and Chase walked to their respective instruments and the crowd burst into applause. But the collective roar that ensued when Karen O steeped up to her mic was a greeting fit for a queen. Known as a performer who garbs herself in outrageous outfits, O’s costumes at the Fox – starting with an intricately patterned green and purple poncho/throw, which was quickly shed exposing a similar colored leotard – highlighted her eccentric stage personality. As they eased into the set, it was evident, both in tracks off its most recent album as well as notable classics like “Gold Lion,” that the band is really hitting its stride right now. One would be hard pressed to find another front person with as much charisma and command of the stage as Karen O. As a band, the three members have been able to hold true to the indie scene, yet still attain commercial viability.

As Karen O frolicked across the stage and belted into the microphone, it was hard to focus on what Zinner and Chase played. The frontwoman’s all encompassing regulation of the stage made it difficult for the other two musicians to exploit a defined presence. But as the Yeah Yeah Yeahs played on it was easy to understand why the group is popular yet still musically and critically respected. As Karen O flaunted herself onstage, giving fans a finely tuned musical spectacle, the drummer and guitarist offered up impressive arrangements that oftentimes went unnoticed. Zinner’s guitar playing occasionally seemed reserved and not quite as pronounced as it could be. He used such a plethora of effects that it was hard to discern just what he was playing in certain segments. Aided at times by an extra musician at the side of the stage who occasionally came out to play keys, bass and acoustic guitar, Zinner proved more than able to hold down many of the band’s songs with striking efficiency.

Chase’s drumming, more often than not relying heavily on the hi-hat, was subtle yet oftentimes punchy, especially on dance-y numbers that required a more pronounced beat. By playing traditional, a style uncharacteristic of most modern rock drummers, Chase latched onto a sound that was not driven by precision but instead focused more on song structure and changes in tempo. His playing on slower tunes was highlighted as he got into a deeper groove than Zinner or Karen O seemed to be working in. While the group’s music doesn’t really let Chase experiment with rhythm too much, what he does in the confines of the band’s sound couldn’t be more suitable.

As Karen O stuffed the head of her microphone into her mouth for “Zero,” the first single off the band’s recent It’s Blitz, the audience definitely got the impression that this is a woman who gives 110-percent of herself in concert. Putting her leather jacket on during the song – one of her many costume changes during the show – and skipping and grinning as she yelped her distinct vocals, Karen O affirmed that she’s one of the preeminent bandleaders of her generation.

Closing the set with an acoustically refined version of “Maps,” the Yeah Yeah Yeahs demonstrated their versatility as a band that can play everything from floor stomping, disco inspired tunes to acoustic, melody driven pop songs. If the band continues on the course it outlined at The Fox they will surely continue to find success as a band that’s unafraid to experiment with its sound regardless of the consequences.

Continue reading for a few more pics of Yeah Yeah Yeahs in Oakland…

Yeah Yeah Yeahs are on tour now; dates available here.

JamBase | Oaktown

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Dirty Projectors: Clear Vision

By: Andrew Bruss

Dirty Projectors

For a group that’s been touring and recording for the better part of the past decade, Dirty Projectors didn’t break into the blogosphere hype machine until the second half of 2009. The release of their latest studio album, Bitte Orca (released June 9 on Domino), has earned them billing on an array of major festivals, an opening slot on tour with TV On The Radio, and the very public adoration of both David Byrne and Bjork.

Their lineup has changed drastically over the years, boasting more ex-members than they currently have on the road with them, but it seems as though things are finally settling into place for Dirty Projectors. They’ve been touring behind a steady lineup, making fans across the country, and it seems as though Bitte Orca is likely to find its way to many “Best Of ’09″ lists.

With all that’s been going on in their world, JamBase caught up with Angel Deradoorian, keyboardist, guitarist, and backup vocalist for Dirty Projectors, to get a feel for the inner workings of the group and discuss the direction things are headed in.

JamBase: How did you get involved with the band?

Angel Deradoorian: [Dirty Projectors' founder and principle songwriter] Dave [Longstreth] invited me to be in the band when I moved to New York and I’d known Amber [Coffman, vocals/guitar] previous to that. Dave was looking for a new person so he invited me [to join the band].

So, as someone relatively new to the group, why do you think the latest album, Bitte Orca, has received so much more attention than the group’s previous studio works?

We’re working really hard. We toured really hard on [our reimagined cover of Black Flag's] Rise Above, to push that record and to get the word out and I think things are building up a bit more. But, Dave has been working really hard for a long time. Eventually, I think with hard work you get recognized, and the fact that we pushed the Rise Above stuff until people realized how motivated we all were it helped to get the word out on Bitte Orca.

Is it tough getting the tunes to transfer into the live setting?

Dirty Projectors by Greg Neate

For the new record it was tough. I switched my musical role a bit in the band and we had new people come in, so it was like starting over and learning a lot of new material with new people. Working out those parts together isn’t always easy, but we did it. We got it.

What instruments are the new members playing?

So, there used to be four people in our band – me, Dave, Amber and Brian [Mcomber, drums] – and we brought in Nat [Baldwin, bass] and Haley [Dekle, vocals].

How did the group come to the conclusion that more members were needed?

We knew we needed new people because of the instrumentation on the new record. We needed help playing these songs live so they sounded similar to what we recorded.

I know Dave is the longest running member of the band. Is Dirty Projectors his group or is it a democracy?

It is Dave’s group. It’s been his project for a long time.

So, what kind of creative input do the other members have? Do other members in the group write songs or help with making set lists? Or is that all up to Dave?

Angel Deradoorian – Dirty Projectors

It’s usually up to Dave. He writes the music, but we are part of the process because we’re all in this together, making music and making our sounds.

Are you working on getting another album ready, or is the group focused on touring behind Bitte Orca?

We just released Bitte Orca in June so we’re just touring and promoting it right now. We’re getting it going, so it’s going to be a while before we make another record, but we’ve always planned on making another record.

Are things stressed within the group? Is it more difficult being under the public lens now that things are picking up or are people psyched about the response? What’s the affect like within Dirty Projectors?

It’s a lot being on tour and doing press and balancing all of these things, and being tired and wanting to rest for a bit. We’ve been on tour for two months at this point, but we’re excited about the feedback we’re getting for the record and how supportive everyone has been.

How do you feel about doing press? Does it feel like a chore or do you enjoy it?

Doing press? That depends… it depends on where you’re at. It isn’t always fun to do when you’re on tour because you’re working so hard as it is. But nobody is anti-press. It’s a good thing that helps the band.

David Byrne sat in with you guys at the Bonnaroo Music Festival. How did that come to be?

Dirty Projectors from last.fm

I’m not sure. I think Dave and David [Byrne] spoke about it before hand. It was Byrne’s curate stage [that we were performing on], and he came around checking out the band. I didn’t know until right before he came onstage [that he would be performing with us]. So, I was pretty surprised.

Did it throw you off? Or did it psych you up?

It was totally awesome. It didn’t throw me off. Big festivals are a little intimidating but we’re getting more used to it now, and we’re playing larger audience capacity rooms.

When you think about the ideal Dirty Projectors performance, is it in a nightclub, a theater, a festival or an amphitheater?

Personally, I like playing smaller shows and slightly dingy venues [but] not like dingy bars. If you’re playing where everyone is going to be psyched, and everyone in the room has the same feeling of excitement about what is going to happen, that helps. A lot of what makes a band great is the audience and their reaction.

So, if Bitte Orca went platinum overnight and you guys found yourselves playing arenas on a nightly basis, would you be stoked or would you consider that to be less than ideal for a performance?

I have no idea [laughs]. Sorry. If I had something to compare that to I would have something to tell you, but I have no idea. We played last night to about five thousand people at the Brooklyn Waterfront in Williamsburg.

If you were going to summarize the essence of Dirty Projectors, how would you summarize it?

That’s a hard question to answer. We’re just a really vocal oriented band. It’s always really hard to answer that question. I’d like to pass on this one.

How about the fans? Do you appeal to a specific demographic?

Dirty Projectors from last.fm

Our audience has expanded as we’ve become more recognized, but usually it’s a cool, diverse crowd at every show. I like that they go in that direction instead of one targeted demographic.

Do you think there’s a genre you guys fall into?

Not particularly. I think we cover a pretty broad array of sounds, and I think people need to find things in your music that they can associate with one word. I’m not trying to sound pretentious or avoid answering this question, but it is difficult to describe it. I haven’t really thought about what the music is. It could fit into many different genres I suppose.

Where do you want Dirty Projectors to be in a year? Do you expect things to keep up at this pace?

Things are becoming much more positive and our career is starting to bloom, so in a year? I think we’re moving in an upward direction, so I’d like to be playing new songs and maybe playing some festivals in Europe or something like that.

As far as new songs, are you looking to write new material or is it understood that Dave exclusively writes new material?

Just Dave. I have my own project I write for, so I’ve never thought about writing for Dirty Projectors.

Ever think about opening for Dirty Projectors?

Nope [laughs]! That would be too hard.

As a solo recording artist with her own thing going on, what do you bring to the Dirty Projectors?

Every person in this band is very individualistic. We work well together, so I don’t know if any of my style musically has much to do with what I bring to the band because I learn what Dave writes. Ultimately, everyone’s personality goes into the band individually in its own way.

Dirty Projectors are on tour now; dates available here.

JamBase | Projecting
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Byrne Calls Out Bono

Byrne Calls Out Bono

On a recent post to his blog, David Byrne totally called out U2 and Bono, bringing to light the estimated cost (both financially and environmental) of their extravagant tour.

Here’s the blog in Byrne’s words:


Thank You U2!


David Byrne

Mark E pointed out as we prepped for our show last night in Warsaw (at a not so big club/venue called Stodoła) that these undersized dates are in effect being subsidized by U2′s world tour. The promoter of these dates, and of much of the U2 stadium tour, is Live Nation, the global conglomerate. A venue like Stodoła could not possibly afford to pay for us, the catering, or even their local crew given the relatively small number of tickets to be sold here — and it’s not even an “exclusive” VIP-type venue. It’s not like they can charge $200 a seat and make up their losses that way — this is a standing room club… with a floor made of plywood. So in order to book our date, they must (we figure) be losing money now, then making it up with what they expect to earn on the upcoming U2 stadium dates.

Those stadium shows may possibly be the most extravagant and expensive (production-wise) ever: $40 million to build the stage and, having done the math, we estimate 200 semi trucks crisscrossing Europe for the duration. It could be professional envy speaking here, but it sure looks like, well, overkill, and just a wee bit out of balance given all the starving people in Africa and all. Or maybe it’s the fact that we were booted off our Letterman spot so U2 could keep their exclusive week-long run that’s making me less than charitable? Take your pick — but thanks, guys!

One can only hope Bono responds…



Brad Balfour: Take a Trip To MoMa’s Premiere Brazil Film Festival This July

Brazil occupies a special place in the popular imagination. Whether it’s because of the exotic music, the colorful and kinetic fashions, or the enduring mystique…