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Posts Tagged ‘Dennis Cook’

Sat Eye Candy: Tangerine Dream

A NOD TO ONE OF LIVE-ELECTRONICA’S GREAT GRANDFATHERS

Germany’s Tangerine Dream are one of the least name-checked yet most pervasively influential bands of the late 20th century. Without their pioneering work in the 1970s, alongside kindred spirits like Can and Faust, it’s hard to imagine STS9, Lotus and many of today’s revered livetronica acts coming into being. Tangerine Dream injected hemoglobin into modernist sounds, a breathing ghost inside the rising machine world around them. What they helped get rolling continues now in a fresh generation hungry for the same kind of interface with the world at large. Today is the 58th birthday of Peter Baumann, one of Tangerine Dream’s core members during their early-to-mid-seventies heyday. Baumann also started the popular New Age music label Private Music in the 1980s. We offer our birthday well wishes and present a few snippets of this landmark band in their prime. (Dennis Cook)

If this doesn’t give you a big ol’ analog keyboard boner we don’t know what will!

From meditative to positively ferocious runs this version of “Ricochet.”

And here’s a studio clip of the same piece.

A strange, alien elegance clings to pieces like this one.

This performance predates Baumann’s joining the group but it’s just too sweet a moment not to share. There were apparently freaky people everywhere in 1969.

Another pleasantly peculiar early video from the band taken from 1971. The whole thing verily screams, “Art!!!”

In the 1980s Tangerine Dream achieved much wider recognition worldwide, particularly in the U.S. where they toured extensively and provided music for a number of films. Here’s a rare clip of the band in the late 80s that encapsulates their gentler approach in that decade.

We conclude with a couple Baumann solo cuts including his minor New Wave pop hit.


JamBase Questionnaire: Tom Hamilton

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from The Old Ceremony.

It takes an uncommonly open-minded musician to really grok the internal logic of utterly modern, untz-savvy rock and classic singer-songwriter fare, but Tom Hamilton is an uncommonly gifted cat. As the guiding light behind Brothers Past and American Babies, Hamilton shows a range of gifts – warmly charming singer, sharp songwriter, memorable guitarist, keen eared producer – seeming utterly at home in the post-Radiohead atmosphere of Brothers Past as he is plying pop-rock veins akin to Paul Simon and Wilco in the Babies. Hamilton always seems game to explore, be it in his own projects or collaborating with the likes of Younger Brother or The Disco Biscuits, all of which seems to fuel more colors and textures in each new chapter of his evolution.

A new American Babies album arrives later this year, and Brothers Past is currently experiencing a resurgence with active gigging and the monthly Everything Must Go live download series (check it out here), which just issued its fourth volume, a swinging, switched-on post-Phish gig from 2004 (available for the catering economy price of just $5 bucks!) that includes a boss cover of The Cure’s “Fascination Street” and other softly mesmerizing moments. Listen to it here.

What stands out about Hamilton’s work, wherever it crops up, is a totally engaged, often joyful engagement with the world and his craft. His music sends out tendrils into the void and what connections it makes can’t be predicted, only that new ties will be formed. (Dennis Cook)

Brothers Past plays live throughout February and March. Find full tour dates here. A special hometown show is planned for March 26 at the TLA in Philadelphia, PA.

Here’s what Tom Hamilton had to say to our inquiries.

Brothers Past by Dave Vann

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Sincerity

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
The first cassette I bought was Ozzy Osbourne’s Blizzard of Oz and the first CD I purchased was Led Zeppelin III.

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
Arcade Fire’s The Suburbs

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
Funny you should ask! When I was in sixth grade I had to write an autobiography and I recently found it. Each page was about different assigned subjects with the last one asking to talk about what I wanted to do with my life. I said I wanted to be a musician. Not bad….

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
The small market gig where the stage is shitty, the sound system is questionable at best, and there doesn’t seem to be a chance in hell anyone will be there. T hen by 11 pm the club is packed and you’re covered in sweat with people 10-inches away from you going nuts.

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
I enjoy privacy.

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
Jerry Garcia’s guitar in 1973

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
The Beatles’ Revolver

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
Some sushi place by The Independent in San Francisco.

10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
Colorado

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
I have a particular brand of humor, some might say “inappropriate.” Any internal filter I may have been born with has been completely wiped out from being on the road.

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
How this is even still a question boggles my mind. The Beatles. It’s not even fair to ask. They’re mark on music is unparalleled, pushing the boundaries of every aspect of song craft, production and album art. They were responsible for new technologies in recording so George Martin and his engineers could keep up with their artistic needs. The Beatles inspired Bob Dylan to go electric, and they didn’t just change music but pop culture as a whole.

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
A drug dog piss itself at the Canadian border as it searched my van.


Brothers Past Dates :: Brothers Past Tour News :: Brothers Past Tour Concert Reviews

American Babies Tour Dates :: American Babies News :: American Babies Concert Reviews

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Super 400 Tour with Stockholm Syndrome

TOUR STARTS FEBRUARY 18 IN SAN FRANCISCO

Coming off multiple sold-out shows across Europe, Northeast power trio Super 400 will head west for a
string of dates with Stockholm
Syndrome
, featuring Jerry
Joseph
and Widespread Panic‘s Dave Schools. Kicking off February 18 &
19 at The Independent in San Francisco and concluding on February 26 at Boulder’s Fox Theatre, the two bands will
play eight shows in nine days. Super 400 is currently at work on its fifth studio album.

Click here to read Dennis Cook’s review of 2009′s critically acclaimed Sweet
Fist
.

Super 400 Tour Dates with Stockholm Syndrome

02/18/11 San Francisco, CA The Independent

02/19/11 San Francisco, CA The Independent

02/20/11 Reno, NV Knitting Factory
02/21/11 Park City, UT Harry O’s

02/22/11 Telluride, CO Sheridan Opera House

02/23/11 Aspen, CO Belly Up Aspen

02/25/11 Denver, CO Cervantes’ Masterpiece Ballroom

02/26/11 Boulder, CO Fox Theatre

Super 400
Tour Dates

::
Super 400 News
::
Super 400
Concert
Reviews


Sat Eye Candy: Guns NÂ’ Roses

GOOD LORD, THEY WERE ONCE TITANS!

Rock is full of tantalizing “what ifs” but perhaps no single band has inspired more of them than Guns N’ Roses. What if Axl Rose hadn’t become a money squandering, megalomaniac control freak? What if Izzy Stradlin had stayed involved? What if the band that made Appetite For Destruction had gotten to evolve longer before the gold toilets and limos arrived? Ask anyone who was ground zero when the band roared out of Los Angeles in 1987 and the general consensus was one of the greatest rock ‘n’ roll outfits ever was being born. But unlike the Stones, Zeppelin, et al. it quickly descended into madness, acrimony, self-indulgence and Olympian scale ego. It’s not to say that Use Your Illusion isn’t brilliant in parts, but in a single album’s time the over-tinkering fussiness that marks almost all of their subsequent work was already evident. The rawness and possessed invention of Appetite never surfaced again, devoured by the fame machine, lawyers, overblown, under-thought concepts and their own big, dumb mouths. And still, there’s more than a few who wonder what might have been for G n’ R if they’d been strong or smart to follow a different path. Would that band have brought us their own Sticky Fingers or Houses of the Holy? Might they still be making rock that reconnects one to the lascivious juju of Chuck Berry, Johnny Rotten and Elvis? It’s a mighty wistful “what if.”

Today is original Guns N’ Roses drummer Steven Adler’s 46th birthday. It’s a bit of a surprise that he’s still with us at all given the life he’s lived, but one thing he’ll always have is being part of one of THE great moments in rock history, brief as it was. Truly a band that internalized the whole “better to burn out than fade away” mentalityÂ…and then lost control of the monster, which limps along still, powered by the residual love and excitement that remains from their late 80s heyday. Still, there’s some real moments and we’re gonna celebrate a few in honor of Steven’s bday. (Dennis Cook)

Where better to begin our stroll down seedy memory lane than “Paradise City,” a tune with all the sack swinging perfection of “Won’t Get Fooled Again” or “Black Dog.”

The creepy tingle that went up our collective spine the first time we heard this one is impossible to shake, the whole enterprise ringing with menace and bad intent, the sound of dreams crashing down into harsh reality.

An ugly little gem that evokes both 70s Stones and the New York Dolls.

Oh, Big Hair Axl, you were fun and wrote great, gritty love songs!

A cautionary tale about heroin that’s still so catchy it makes you understand on a non-verbal level why people dance with ol’ Mister.

Like most really great songs, the tunes off Appetite have a lot of malleability. The bands early dip into acoustic territory was one of the best things they ever did.

The ladies were right at the core of early Guns N’ Roses, represented by some of the rankest misogyny ever and an almost school boy sincerity and sweetness. We conclude our lil’ salute to the G n’ R that might have been with two about women, one sour and one as sweet as its title.


JamBase Questionnaire: The Old Ceremony

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from Roots of Creation.

Smart, full of different colors, hooky as hell, Chapel Hill, North Carolina’s The Old Ceremony are everything rock should be but usually isn’t. One picks up on the same vibe that infused late period Beatles and early Tom Waits, but tempered with a pleasantly jaundiced eye and a sonic range that touches on tango, folk, sophisticated jazz, Arabic tones, punk and more. What’s more impressive is how they harness this variety into frameworks that get the job done in just a few minutes.

The group has grown from strength to strength on each successive album, with their latest, Tender Age, coalescing their many charms into a series of super catchy cautionary tales for lovers and dreamers. The curveballs come fast on Tender Age, where seemingly dark titles like “Gun To My Head” and “Ruined My Plans” are snappy love songs, one tune is sung in Chinese, and the whole thing simmers down to a gently spiritual hum that sneaks up and leaves one reflective in the best of ways. (Dennis Cook)

The Old Ceremony plays next at the Motorco Music Hall Benefit for Central Park Charter School on Friday, January 28 in Durham, NC, then on Friday, February 4 in Raleigh, NC as part of the Kings WKNC Double Barrel Benefit. After that The Old Ceremony will open a string of dates for Rooney that will hit Philly, D.C. and more Find full tour dates here.

Here’s what TOC singer-songwriter-bandleader Django Haskins had to say to our inquiries.

The Old Ceremony

Instrument of choice: Picasso guitar, barroom piano
Nicknames: “Dave”

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Breaking some eggs. The older I get, the more impatient I am with safe choices.

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
The Cars’ Heartbeat City

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
The Walkmen album You and I. It’s the aural equivalent of oversaturated 35mm film: rich, almost rotten colors bleeding into each other nostalgically with occasional bursts of sad yellow light. I lived in that album for at least a year.

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
Elvis Presley. Or Humphrey Bogart. Or a Harlem Globetrotter. I was a mixed up kid.

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
The surprising one. We always enjoy playing together, but every so often there’ll be a show that shows all the signs of being a downer before we start, but explodes into overjoydom. On nights like that, I usually can’t stop grinning at everything that happens onstage.

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
I still have all my fingers.

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
Rocky beaches. I used to wander beaches in Maine and Nova Scotia in the summers, smashing rocks down on the ground hoping that one would split and reveal a geode. Never found one, but it got out a lot of my childhood angst.

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
Bowie’s Ziggy Stardust or Rum, Sodomy and the Lash by The Pogues

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
We’ve have some great ones. Off the top of my head, I’d say Vatan, a prix fixe Indian place on E. 37th St. in NYC.
10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
The frozen foods section. And house concerts.

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
Staring listlessly at trees flying by for hours on end. And my cowboy mouth.

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
The Beatles. They actually reinvented themselves over and over. The Stones, though I love them, found one good sound and stuck with it. I prefer variety, if I have to choose only one.

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
A long distance bus ride in China that was so crowded that the only place I could stand was on top of a basket of pig parts heading to market.

The Old Ceremony – Til My Voice Is Gone from Sam Griffith on Vimeo.

The Old CeremonyTour Dates :: The Old Ceremony Tour News :: The Old Ceremony Tour Concert Reviews

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The Black Crowes Schedule European Shows Before Hiatus

TICKETS GO ON SALE MONDAY, JANUARY 31 AT 9 AM


The Black Crowes

The Black Crowes recently
wrapped up their last scheduled U.S. show in San Francisco as part of a six-show sold-out run at the Fillmore
(December 12-19), and will embark on their final eight shows in Europe (July 7-18), concluding their 20th
anniversary tour in Amsterdam with a two-night engagement at The Paradiso. The band recently announced they
are going on an indefinite hiatus to spend time with family and work on other projects.

Click here to read Dennis Cook’s review of The Black
Crowes at the Fillmore on December 14 and 15

THE BLACK CROWES TOUR DATES
07/07/11 Thu Dieci Giorni Suonati City Festival Vigevano, IT (on sale 1/27)
07/09/11 Sat Bilbao Rock Festival Bilbao, ES (on sale now)
07/11/11 Mon Manchester Academy Manchester, GB (on sale 1/28)
07/12/11 Tue Shepherd’s Bush Empire London, GB (on sale 1/28)
07/13/11 Wed Shepherd’s Bush Empire London, GB (on sale 1/28)
07/15/11 Fri Zwarte Cross Festival Lichtenvoorde, NL (on sale now)
07/17/11 Sun The Paradiso Amsterdam, NL (on sale 1/27)
07/18/11 Mon The Paradiso Amsterdam, NL (on sale 1/27)

The Black Crowes
Tour Dates

::
The Black Crowes News
::
The Black Crowes
Concert
Reviews


Sunday Eye Candy: Can

A PRIMARY ANCESTOR IN MODERN ROCK MUSIC

We’ll return this feature to its usual Saturday spot next week but felt like mixing it upÂ…

For a lot of folks under the age of 30, Germany’s Can are an unknown factor in rock’s DNA. Rules breakers, pioneer jammers and melders of disparate elements, Can whispers in the background of bands as diverse as Phish, Aphex Twin, Comets On Fire, Tricky and countless others. One of the group’s lead singers, Damo Suzuki, turns 60 today. In honor of he and his former band’s influence on modern music, we offer this small sampling of their work and blow him a birthday kiss. (Dennis Cook)


Sat Eye Candy: Drunkenness

HOW’S YOUR HEAD FEELING?

Prodigious amounts of alcohol were consumed last night. Perhaps some of it was swallowed hungrily by you and you’re feeling the after-effects this morning. No worries. Put on a pot of coffee and enjoy this assortment of tunes about drunkenness as you shake it off. Happy New Year, kids. Take some ibuprofen, Vitamin C, drink lots of water and heal up before the next show. (Dennis Cook)


JamBase Questionnaire: Roots of Creation

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from The Steepwater Band.

new live album

Southern New Hampshire isn’t the first spot folks start looking for high-octane modern reggae, which is too bad since Roots of Creation are one of the most exhilarating, rules breaking units blowing up right now. With of ample dousing of gnarly, rock-flavored guitars and a healthy blip logic that shows more than a passing familiarity with contemporary electronica, RoC join the shortlist of young bands – UK-based Soothsayers, New Zealand’s The Black Seeds and fellow U.S. acts John Brown’s Body and Groundation – moving reggae forward into the 21st century.

You can hear their highly engaging, forward pushing sound in action on RoC Live, Vol. 2 (released on October 26 on Harmonized Records). Culled from performances from 2009 and 2010, including songs recorded during sets at the Wormtown and Nateva Music Festivals, The Paradise Rock Club in Boston and more, Live Vol. 2, the band’s fourth album, features the engaging single “Policy, ” a bouncing cover of Talking Heads’ “This Must Be The Place” and a barnstorming finale take on Tom Petty’s “You Don’t Know How It Feels,” that reinvents the tune. Elsewhere, unpredictable, heavy duty instrumental “Mammoth” and originals “Dubby Conqueror” and “Searchin’” hint at good things to come from RoC. The album was mixed by engineer Pete Peloquin (Pixies, Dave Matthews, OAR) and co-mixed by the group’s live sound engineer Cooper Leafe, giving the set an immediacy and clarity that mixes the best traits of home listening and live sound.

Roots of Creation formed in 2000 while attending college together and began touring seriously in 2004. Today the band is comprised of original members Brett Wilson (lead vocals, guitar), Tal Pearson (keyboards) and Mike Chadinha (drums), and they are currently touring with bassist Brandon Downs and second guitarist Jay McGuinness. Based on the evidence of Live Vol. 2, this is a lethal live act with a promising drive and open minds. Can’t ask for more than that, particularly in a genre that often plays too heavily to tradition. In RoC’s hands, reggae is both relevant and exciting. (Dennis Cook)

Roots of Creation will play New Year’s Eve at Middle East Upstairs in Cambridge, MA, followed by a January 1st show at Crotched Mountain in Bennington, NH.

Here’s what Brett Wilson and Tal Pearson had to say to our inquiries.

Brett Wilson of RoC

Instrument(s) of choice:

Brett: Vocals / Guitar – DeArmond Starfire & Ibanez Artcore Hollowbody through a Fender Amp with lots of pedals

Tal: Keys. Right now having lots of fun with my Roland SH-201. It’s good for Whomping.

Nicknames:

Brett: “Bdubs” & “Wilson”

Tal: “The mantis”

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Brett: Inspiration, originality, chemistry, passion, pain, and my buddies Sauza and Mary Jane.

Tal: Inspiration. Vibes. A feeling in the room.

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
Brett: Ten cassette tapes for a penny from Columbia House. Favorite one was the Grateful Dead.

Tal: Dookie by Green Day

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
Brett: Rebelution’s “Feelin’ Alright”

Tal: Mumford and Sons’ Sigh No More

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
Brett: A movie reviewer or comic book illustrator.

Tal: Still not really sure.

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
Brett: When we turn a club into an arena and a late night festival slot into a house party.

Tal: When you can feel the venue shaking because everyone is dancing so much! And I love it when the crowd is responsive to different things, like the music changing or the lights getting intense.

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
Brett: Gingers DO have soul!

Tal: I really do have good taste in music!

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
Brett: Wookies WHOMPing

Tal: HUGE bass in the speakers!

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
Brett: Beck’s Midnight Vultures

Tal: Band of Horses’ Everything All The Time

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
Brett: Green Mountain College, all the vegetarian food and breakfast cereal you could ever want. Plus they recycle, compost, and are super nice.

Tal: Probably a giant breakfast somewhere with everything – eggs, bacon, French toast, sausage, home fries, soda, andÂ…American Cheese! Don’t remember where exactly.

10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
Brett: Smaller cities, festivals and colleges, especially in MI, NC, CO, NH, and the West Coast

Tal: Music festivals.

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
Brett: Pizza and a Smartphone addiction.

Tal: Sleeping til 1 pm.

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
Brett: The Stones. Beatles = great songs, but the Stones were bad ass and have raw energy – the epitome of rock ‘n’ roll. Plus, Mike Jagger kicked it with Peter Tosh and Keith Richard’s new roots reggae albums are great!

Tal: I’ve always gone with The Beatles on this one. I think their music is much more interesting, and that they had a greater influence on the sounds of rock and roll to come.

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
Brett: Tie between playing a guerilla set at Rothbury on shakedown to a literal sea of people and my picture in High Times – January 2011 issue on page 108 of the 420th issue – playing at Nateva with a SSDP shirt on.

Tal: The catering areas of big music festivals are always sort of surreal to me because you’re eating lunch next to people you’ve listened to and watched for a long time! I remember at Rothbury in 2009, casually eating some delicious food next to the guys from Soulive and then Willie Nelson happened to wander by. Surreal.


Roots of Creation Tour Dates :: Roots of Creation News :: Roots of Creation Concert Reviews

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A Yonder Mountain New Year

By: Dennis Cook

YMSB by Chad Smith

On December 30 and 31, Yonder Mountain String Band will gather at St. Louis, MO’s The Pageantwith their faithful Kinfolk to ring in the New Year. The NYE show will feature three sets, including one set suggested entirely by the fans – drop your suggestions at yondermountain.com, phantasytour.com or the band’s Facebook or Twitter pages. We grabbed the boys for a few minutes to discuss playing at this special time of year.

JamBase: What is it about New Year’s Eve that floats your boat? It is a special time for both bands and fans.

Dave Johnston: New Year’s Eve is pretty cool because it’s like amateur night [laughs]. There’s a lot of electricity and good vibes going on, and we’re very receptive to that sort of energy. If you put us in that situation we find it to be a good experiential and musical nexus of propulsion to the next year!

Ben Kaufmann: For me – and I guess everybody – it’s a time of reflection or 50-percent reflection, 50-percent looking forward. I get to sit there onstage and think about all the things we’ve done – all the trials & tribulations overcome, the great successes – and the other part of my brain is looking forward to the next year and the things we’re gonna do and the new ideas. It is a very liminal, transitional period of time. I don’t know how the calendar worked 2000 years ago but this was the time picked for the changing of the old from the new, and it’s a very powerful time.

Adam Aijala: It’s also, for a long time now, been a time to let loose, and that definitely goes for bands and fans around the country. There’s a bit of reflection but also a good bit of drinking going on. It’s always been fun for us. I don’t think we’ve missed a New Year’s since we started. It’s one of the bigger shows of the year for us just for the fun factor.

JamBase: New Year’s Eve is one the core tribe of a band comes out because they want to celebrate with YOU.

Adam: That’s probably true. We’ve done New Year’s in St. Louis before but it’s been 10 years. Usually we’re in our home turf, and it’s definitely true there. We also have a good core of fans in the Midwest, so I have a feeling we could be drawing people from as far North as Madison and Milwaukee and East to Indianapolis and people from Champaign, Bend and Chicago, St. Louis folks and Lawrence, KS as well. There’s so much music going on that people have their pick.

What do you get out of a multi-night run as band?

YMSB NYE ’09 by Tobin Voggesser

Adam: We don’t treat it any differently. From night to night, we don’t play the same show, whether or not we’re in the same town. Our crew, obviously, is thrilled when we do multiple nights in the same city and venue because there’s only one load in and load out. For us, the preparation doesn’t seem much different. We want to make it unique every night. There are people following us on any given tour and even if it’s just one or two dudes you don’t want them thinking, “Shit, they did the same tunes last night.”

Dave: Let’s get this straight: It’s not dudes following us, it’s hot chicks. This ain’t an Umphrey’s McGee show. Let’s get that clear. I think multi-night is a lot like multi-ball in pinball – more points, more lights, more bumpers, more flippers. I keep pushing for lasers. We all just saw Roger Waters do The Wall. Lasers and bluegrass, I swear it goes together.

Is there any special thought that goes into a New Year’s Eve show?

Adam Aijala
by Tobin Voggesser

Adam: This year, we decided to do three sets on New Year’s and one of the sets will be built by fans. People can write in on our website, Phantasy Tour or wherever, and we’ve given them carte blanche to suggest anything they want – things we’ve forgotten that we play, things they’ve always wanted us to play, even different jams, different seques. And we’ve been getting some crazy ideas! The more you sit with them and analyze them, the more cool they seem. Some really good ideas. And I think that’s the case with our audience and the audience in this scene. It’s a very educated audience musically. They have such a depth of musical knowledge that these people are throwing out things we’ve heard of but others we need to research. So, this year fans will build their dream setlist, what THEY want to hear, and then it’s up to us to bring it.

This shows a respect for your fans, which has been a hallmark of Yonder since the start. You guys really seem to respect the time and money and affection folks invest in YMSB.

Adam: Absolutely! When you’re a kid and you tell your parents, “I want to be in a band.” Think of the look they give you – that sort of concerned, dropped thing – and now imagine telling them you want to be in a bluegrass band! That’s a brown trouser conversation.

Ben: We’re constantly amazed at the things we get to do. I think back to all the people along the way who said, “You guys will be limited. This is as big as you’ll get,” almost in the sense of don’t dream too big. That’s a horrible thing to suggest to somebody. That being said, when we look back at what we’ve done and look ahead to the dreams we’ve yet to accomplish, it’s massive. I’m shocked by what we get to do, and it’s all because of the fans. If they weren’t there we’d be fucked.

Yonder Mountain String Band Tour Dates :: Yonder Mountain String Band News :: Yonder Mountain String Band Concert Reviews

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Nicki Bluhm: New Album In Feb

SOPHOMORE NOD IS GOLDEN

Nicki Bluhm will release her sensational new album, Driftwood, on February 1st, 2011 on Reapandsow [JamBase got an advance listen so that's how we know it's sensational. Bluhm has crafted a collection that makes her a real competitor for the spotlight currently being thrown on Grace Potter and Jenny Lewis. -Dennis Cook]. Driftwood features her ever-excellent band The Gramblers with guest turns from Tim Carbone (Railroad Earth), Dave Ralicke (Dengue Fever) and members of ALO and The Mother Hips. Deft production courtesy of Tim Bluhm and ace studio whiz Dave Simon-Baker. Here’s a taster of the forthcoming release:

Driftwood Track Listing
1. Carousel
2. Before You Loved Me
3. Stick With Me
4. I Wanna Be Your Mama Again
5. Mountain Out Of Nothing
6. Jetplane
7. Women’s Prison
8. Figure You Out
9. Barbary Blues
10. Kill You To Call
11. Wall of Early Morning Light

“Carousel” and “Before You Loved Me” are streaming at Nicki’s website, and the album can be pre-ordered here.

Nicki Bluhm & The Gramblers Tour Dates :: Nicki Bluhm & The Gramblers News :: Nicki Bluhm & The Gramblers Concert Reviews


Sat Eye Candy: Nikki Sixx of Mötley Crüe

52 YEARS OLD AND STILL SHOUTING AT THE DEVIL!

Mötley Crue bassist/songwriter Nikki Sixx takes another step into his fifties today. Easily the busiest dude in the Crue, Sixx hosts two nationally syndicated radio shows, writes books, runs a great charity, and has his own band, Sixx:AM, outside of Mötley Crue. Yet, the man can – as Ted Nugent once put it – rock his balls into a firestorm every night. Anyone who’s read The Dirt or his excellent collection of journal entries The Heroin Diaries: A Year in the Life of a Shattered Rock Star may marvel that the man is still ambulatory at this point, but there’s little doubt that Nikki is one tough son of a bitch. He’s also been a part of some of the raunchiest, most visceral hard rock of the past 30 years, and based on 2008′s Saints of Los Angeles it’s clear Sixx and his Crue mates aren’t done yet. Thanks for the music and the madness, man. We salute ya! (Dennis Cook)

JamBase is looking forward to the return of Crue Fest in 2011, too. We had a real good time at the last one. Read about it here.

We begin with a recent dirty gem off Saints. Need something to get your blood moving this gray Saturday? Here it is.

Next, a standout from the soundtrack album for The Heroin Diaries performed at the first Crue Fest.

This is arguably the most misunderstood song in all of hard rock. Here’s a hint: It’s ANTI-Satan not pro. This clip comes from one of the biggest rock concerts in history, the Moscow Music Peace Festival in 1989, where Mötley Crue joined Cinderella, Bon Jovi, The Scorpions, Ozzy and more to bring loud Western culture to the Soviets. Now shout!

Last year the Crue celebrated the 20th anniversary of the Dr. Feelgood album by playing it in its entirety. One of the best parts was the collective swoon that hit during closer “Time For Change.” For a bunch of roughnecks, they can be kinda sweet sometimes. This song hadn’t been performed live but a handful of times before the 2009 tour.

The earliest Crue material has a distinctly British punk edge. Here’s the guys in 1983 whipping up the massive US Festival audience with the first track off their debut album Too Fast For Love.

Another slice of Sixx: AM in action.

Strip clubs would not be the same without this song.

One of the more unjustly overlooked albums in the Crue catalog is 2000′s New Tattoo, which contains this fab cover of The Tubes’ classic.

And we end where so many high school proms ended in the 1980s. Happy birthday, Nikki. Thanks for keepin’ it sleazy.

Ah hell, one more for good measure.

Mötley Crue Tour Dates :: Mötley Crue News :: Mötley Crue Concert Reviews


JamBase Questionnaire: The Steepwater Band

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from Brian Haas.

The Steepwater Band by Daniel Bartel

Listening to Live At The Double Door (released October 19 on Diamond Day) it’s hard to fathom how Chicago’s The Steepwater Band isn’t a longtime staple on the festival and theatre circuit. Lean, menacing toughness infuses a mixture of electric blues, country flavors and gloriously faded denim classic rock, all delivered in a way that seizes one rather than wait for the listener to tiptoe in.

Anyone who’s ever swooned over North Mississippi Allstars, The Black Crowes, Buddy Guy, Hound Dog Taylor, Savoy Brown and other similar certified greats will feel their blood bubble happily as snarling opener “Indiana Line” leads into killer after killer captured at Chi-town’s finest lil’ juke joint, the Double Door, in a single night this past May. You can practically smell the sweat pouring down the walls as TSB drag blues rock back to the same craggy, longhaired territory where early Zeppelin had their way with it. However, unlike a lot of blues based outfits, the songwriting here is thoughtful and sharp enough to draw blood and the arrangements pop and swing with prizefighting intensity. Crank Live At The Double Door up LOUD and this shit will crawl right into the meat of you, and you won’t be sorry for the reminder of your basic incarnation and carnality – real music that stirs lizard brain level satisfaction while offering a tickle to the superego.

This live set follows a 12 year run for Jeff Massey (vocals, guitar), Tod Bowers (bass) and Joe Winters (drums) that’s only seen the band grow stronger every year, tightening and toning their music to produce a sound that’s utterly full yet utterly uncluttered. While it’s a treat to finally have a concert document that does the trio justice, there’s also a string of excellent studio work behind them. The latest single (which also features a bang-up cover of Tom Petty’s “Honey Bee”) is “The Stars Look Good Tonight,” a skipping corker that’s found some inroads on AOR radio, and it’s preceded by 2008′s Marc Ford produced Grace And Melody (JamBase review), where the maturity of TSB’s tunes and playing marked the full arrival of a great contemporary rock band whose roots proudly show but whose style echoes the blessed, befuzzed pounding of The Who and The Small Faces in their youthful prime. (Dennis Cook)

The Steepwater Band play tonight, December 10, at The Voodoo Lounge in Burbank, IL and next Thursday, December 16, at RIBCO in Rock Island, IL. TSB will also open for Robert Randolph & The Family Band and North Mississippi Allstars on New Year’s Eve at the House of Blues in Chicago.

Here’s what the Steepwater guys had to say to our inquiries.

Jeff Massey

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Tod Bowers: Mistakes

Joe Winters: A groove

Jeff Massey: Inspiration and Southern Comfort

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
Tod Bowers: Thriller (if I don’t count Star Wars soundtracks)

Joe Winters: Motely Crue’s Theatre of Pain

Jeff Massey: Led Zeppelin IV

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
Tod Bowers: The Black Keys’ Brothers

Joe Winters: Fistful of Mercy

Jeff Massey: Neil Young’s Le Noise. Just Neil and some angry fuzzed out guitar.

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
Tod Bowers: Football player

Joe Winters: A professional baseball player

Jeff Massey: Very tall

Tod Bowers

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
Tod Bowers: Loud

Joe Winters: A medium size, roots-y rock and roll joint

Jeff Massey: One outside with 70-degree temperatures, a kickin’ sound system and a mob of crazy rock fans!

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
Tod Bowers: I can make a mean batch of turkey tacos.

Joe Winters: I realize every day that love is the most important thing in the world.

Jeff Massey: I make some mean steamed salmon.

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
Tod Bowers: My tubes turning on and getting all toasty warm.

Joe Winters: Opening the first can of Diet Coke of the morning.

Jeff Massey: Semi-trucks passing by on the expressway. Ya know, the sound George Lucas used for the tie-fighters in the original Star Wars movie.

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
Tod Bowers: The Faces’ A Nod Is as Good as a WinkÂ…to a Blind Horse

Joe Winters: Muddy Waters’ Hard Again

Jeff Massey: Led Zeppelin’s Physical Graffiti

Joe Winters

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
Tod Bowers: Rib-eye steak dinner at the Dinosaur BBQ

Joe Winters: In Switzerland. Our tour manager’s parents made dinner for the band on a raclette grill. It was fantastic.

Jeff Massey: The giant hot dogs provided by Bon Jovi’s personal chef when we opened for them.

10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
Tod Bowers: Â…toxicated. Kidding, kind of. Actually, Spain has the coolest non-pretentious rock fans in the world, and they’re excited and full of energy.

Joe Winters: Spain

Jeff Massey: Spain. They have too much fun to be pretentious. They do not fear the act of applause.

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
Tod Bowers: Playing bass in a rock ‘n’ roll band.

Joe Winters: Having to ride “shotgun” all the time in the vehicle.

Jeff Massey: A heavy addiction to spicy Cheez-It’s.

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
Tod Bowers: Depends on the day, but usually the Stones.

Joe Winters: Stones, because of Charlie Watts. Enough said.

Jeff Massey: The Stones…because the Stones wrote “Can’t Ya Hear Me Knocking.”

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
Tod Bowers: It’s a long story but it involves a brightly lit room, a guitar icon and giant bolts. It’s not Marc.

Joe Winters: Spending four hours backstage with Eddie Van Halen in Detroit, MI in 2007. Not enough room here to even scratch the surface.

Jeff Massey: Eddie Van Halen doing pushups in front of me and then throwing his guitar across the room to prove its durability.

The Steepwater Band Tour Dates :: The Steepwater Band News :: The Steepwater Band Concert Reviews

JamBase | Back Pocket
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JamBase Questionnaire: Brian Haas

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from The New Up.

Odysseys are a tricky business. By nature, they are circuitous and fraught with sirens calling one towards the rocks and angry, jealous gods tossing stones in one’s pathway. The long, winding road of Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey handily reflects the mythological origins of their name, with myriad lineup changes and stylistic shifts over their many years. But one element remains constant – though perhaps bobbing his head wildly – and that’s Brian Haas, who is hands down one of the finest keyboardists of his generation, a player for the ages who continues the line begun by Earl Hines, Chick Corea and John Medeski.

Another facet of an odyssey is surprise around each turn, and one need only press play on Stay Gold, the latest JFJO studio joint (released June 21 on Royal Potato Family), and they’re whisked into brightly hued fresh spaces dappled with Chris Combs’ lap steel (and growing compositional acumen) and Haas’ ever-potent piano. The atmosphere of opener “The Sensation of Seeing Light” touches on Jacob Fred’s existing gift for capturing elemental qualities in song, but it’s followed by “Trampoline Phoenix,” which shifts and explodes in a patient, intense way for a vibe that’s genuinely new. This vibe – a little Okie, a little funky, a little classical – continues on the superb “Hanby’s Window,” which burns and jumps with giddy life. A lovely melodic sense infuses this set, with the entire quartet using conscious control and playing to the shared sensibilities of each piece. So, as usual, instrumental music is given a gift when JFJO gathers, particularly in the flowing, gorgeous piano work of Haas on Stay Gold.

Jacob Fred plays NYE in their native Tulsa, Oklahoma – tackling, perhaps literally, the music of Madonna, Beyonce and Lady Gaga – and then a special NYC Winger Jazz Fest gig in NYC at Le Poisson Rouge on January 8 (late night – starting at 1 am), but Mistah Haas squirreled away a few moments to answer our questions. (Dennis Cook)

Brian Haas by Josh Miller

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Risk

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
Thriller.

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
Wooden Arms by Patrick Watson

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
A rock star

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
A relaxed, peaceful, exuberant celebration

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
I stopped wishing a long time ago – I create.

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
Birds, the ocean, the wind in the trees and my breath.

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
John Coltrane’s A Love Supreme

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
A friend’s house

10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
Europe

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
An addiction to driving.

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
The Beatles. John Lennon.

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
A naked man wearing shoes run through an alley in West Hollywood and approach a black Chevy Suburban. An arm came out of the Suburban window and the naked man received fast pleasuring. This happened 100 feet away from a large group of us. The man said nothing. He ran off and the Chevy drove away. We cheered.

JFJO Tour Dates :: JFJO News :: JFJO Concert Reviews

JamBase | Tied To The Mast
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Sat Eye Candy: Chris Hillman

A PIONEER AND A COUNTRY GENTLEMAN

We wouldn’t have country-rock, as we know it, or perhaps even the first real bloom of psychedelic rock in the mainstream without Chris Hillman. As one of the original members of The Byrds and later The Flying Burrito Brothers, Manassas and The Desert Rose Band, amongst others, Hillman has proven one of the most reliably excellent singer-songwriter-multi-instrumentalists to emerge from the 1960s. These days he’s firmly entrenched in the high end acoustic music world alongside the likes of Tony Rice and Herb Pederson. Recently, Hillman spent much of 2010 recovering from spinal surgery but has returned to touring. He’s one of the best and he turns 66-years-old today. We wish him the happiest of birthdays and thank him profusely for the mountain of great music he’s given us. (Dennis Cook)

While a formidable, unique bassist on the first few Byrds albums, it was 1967′s Younger Than Yesterday where Hillman came into his own, including co-writing this most covered number.

Just a year later, The Byrds took a steep turn into bluegrass and country, introducing the world to Gram Parsons and opening up rock’s boundaries with Sweetheart of the Rodeo.

Hillman left The Byrds for the first time right after the completion of Sweetheart and soon formed The Flying Burrito Brothers with Gram. Here’s a few gems from the band..

Concurrently with the Brothers, Hillman joined Stephen Stills’ short-lived Manassas, who produced two stellar studio albums before shuffling off.

Here’s a sampling of the kind of quality music Hillman has been making since the 1980s.

Hillman returned to commercial success in the 80s/90s with Nashville hitmakers The Desert Rose Band, who he continues to tour with to this day. This stuff is real easy to like.

We conclude with a little profile of Hillman and a vintage Byrds clip featuring some of Hillman’s most amazing bass work.


Jam Cruise 10: Pre-Booking Starts Today

COMPLETE EVENT DETAILS TO BE ANNOUNCED IN SPRING 2011


STS9 :: Jam Cruise 8 by Casey Flanigan

Today at 12:00PM (EST), pre-book reservations began for Jam Cruise 10. Pre-book between Dec. 1 and
Jan.
9 and you
will be entered into a drawing to win an iPad, fully loaded with every Cruise Tunes set from Jam Cruise 9 and photos
from official photographers.

Your $250 deposit reserves your place in line to book your cabin prior to the general on-sale. Only one deposit per
cabin will be applied to the final cabin cost. Pre-booking begins today. Click here for details. Complete event details will be announced in
Spring 2011.

Click here to check out the full
performance schedule for Jam Cruise 9, which sets sail January 4-9, 2011 onboard the MSC Poesia from
Port
Everglades in
Fort Lauderdale, FL and will visit the ports of Roatan, Honduras and Costa Maya, Mexico.

Click here to read Dennis Cook’s review of Jam Cruise
8
.


Dawes and The Moondoggies | California | Review

Words by: Dennis Cook | Images by: John Margaretten

Dawes & The Moondoggies :: 11.20.10 :: The Independent :: San Francisco, CA

Dawes :: 11.20.10 by John Margaretten

Organized religion is a psychological hornet’s nest built on hierarchies, fairytales and guilt grafted onto basically good ideas. At the core of most of the world’s major spiritual practices is the notion that human beings are flawed and must atone to a creator that we disappoint on a daily basis. It’s a lousy setup, especially for highly individualized folks given to questioning stated truths and power structures. Still, it’d be a lie to suggest that there isn’t an ache inside all of us for greater meaning, a larger sense of the universe and one’s place in it, not to mention a hope – however mustard seed small – that compassion, kindness and love are stronger than all the dark forces that seem to hold sway so many places. This ache need not lead one to “God” or anything like it, but it hums in our skulls when night comes and the day’s crush and chatter subsides. So, where then does one turn to slake this ontological thirst? Where do doubters and cynics gather to bolster their spirits?

One potential answer could be found at The Independent, where two bands that dig their hands deep into this rich, complex mulch put on a concert that was as close to holy as rock ‘n’ roll can manage. Los Angeles-based Dawes and Seattle’s The Moondoggies each delivered everything a four-piece combo can in terms of spirit and skill on a rain dappled autumn evening, each proving painfully honest and resoundingly hopeful, not to mention dead solid songwriters, performers and musicians. When churches and temples prove unfriendly to modern people it’s left to other avenues to nourish us in ways that go beyond entertainment. Each group put on a fine rock show, but if you slipped off your armor and bared your breast to them then something more occurred this night, something all the outstretched arms and heaven-reaching singing in the crowd testified to – something rare from bands that have only a handful of recordings and a few years under their belts, but such is the immediate, tangible power and grace of what they do.

The Moondoggies :: 11.20.10 by John Margaretten

Taking us “way out in the tidelands” and probing complex notions like “what’s exactly inside a man,” The Moondoggies played first, their cracking good rhythm team – bassist Robert Terreberry and drummer Carl Dahlen – actively reaching out and sucking one into their cavernous, harmonious spaces. There’s something of vintage CSNY and the 1970s Laurel Canyon bunch to them, but stripped of the hippie drippiness and lackadaisical jamming. Their inquiry is pointed and their songwriting melodic and free of much fat, often settling into a riff or refrain because it needs repeating for proper impact – one of the basic truths of the blues or classic folk often overlooked in contemporary rock. Drawing heavily from their ace sophomore album Tidelands (released October 12 on Hardly Art/Sub Pop), the set was infused with gospel-like energy set free of holy book brow beating. Not to overplay a metaphor, but their music held an oceanic pull to it – horizon filling, elemental, natural. More than once I kept conversations at bay as the audience grew throughout their hour onstage so I might focus and absorb everything they were laying down.

At the heart of The Moondoggies’ music lies the songwriting and open-wound voice of Kevin Murphy, who repeatedly succeeds in pulling the veils off commonly held illusions, revealing what’s really going on rather than what we think is happening. The others in the band, rounded out by keyboardist Caleb Quick, delivered harmonies that brought their live presence up to the high standards of their studio recordings. As the lights came up one felt they’d witnessed a wonderful group of searchers that handcraft music as a walking stick for a journey that won’t be long or easy. But, when they cried, “Wake up, wake up, let me drink from your cup,” the sense was that they would not go thirsty or without friends wherever they might wander, reminding us that “man ain’t meant to crawl/ feel like he’s nothing at all” and delivering music of utter conviction that’s truly uplifting.

Normally I wouldn’t envy a headliner having to follow such a set but Dawes is no normal headliner. Despite having just one album to their name – the tremendous North Hills (JamBase review) – Dawes is rapidly building a cult following whose eyes burn bright, a chorus of ragged voices grown hoarse but happy by show’s end. I caught a glimpse of this fervor at Outside Lands this past summer but it was a pale shadow of the ecclesiastical bent of The Independent crowd. Looking around at the number of people who knew every line, even to the unreleased tunes, one felt they were in on the ground floor of something big, something rising in the same way as past greats like Neil Young and Bruce Springsteen, and their performance backed up this impression in every way.

Dawes :: 11.20.10 by John Margaretten

The lightning rod in Dawes is singer-songwriter-guitarist Taylor Goldsmith, a future legend in the making possessed of abundant charisma, a heartbreaking voice capable of roaring power, and a knack for nuances that ensnare an audience – sly grins, hip swivels and pauses and conscious tics that punctuate the already great music in ways that make one hoot and connect with the moment at hand. Shoulder-to-shoulder with him are Tay Straithairn (piano, keys), Griffin Goldsmith (drums) and Wylie Gelber (bass), who serve this music with immaculate intuition, taking possession of it and delivering fine performance after fine performance. Yes, they are a new, quite young band but it feels like they’re in for the long haul – in a number of ways. These songs are not passing fancies. They are streetwise hymns to haunt our ear buds and solitary listening time, and then later enjoyed in good company with our fellow travelers, glasses and spirits raised high as Dawes drives us into fevered jubilee. Reflective music – and Dawes surely makes that sort – is rarely well served in the live setting, but this band makes it work in spades. In fact, the band-audience synergy with Dawes is one of the most striking I’ve ever encountered, and again, only seems to be the tip of the iceberg.

Like The Moondoggies, they hit all their marks, building on the sturdy bones in their songbook but not settling for an “okay” rendition when they might blow the doors off the joint. From a purely spectator perspective, Dawes is a goddamn blast to watch. The battle scarred instruments and lunging energy onstage speak to guys willing to do the miles and club crawling to forge something solid and lasting. The new songs in SF were uniformly excellent and worthy additions to the eleven gems on their debut, and one suspects there’s a pile more waiting in the wings. One killer had this memorable couplet: “If I wanted someone to cut me down/ I’d have handed you the blade/ I want you to make the days move easy.” Zing!

Things built to a heady pitch with set closing “When My Time Comes,” where the whole audience seemed to inch forward, pulled in by the song’s gravity and the band’s searing, absolutely engaging playing. It is a tremendous tune, a balm for those of us who’ve lived “less like a workhorse and more like a slave.” The struggle of existence and the inevitable end that awaits us all writhes inside this one, and you could see a number of folks breaking through to something unspoken and perhaps unspeakable as they pitched in on the intentionally rhetorical chorus. Who’s to say what will happen when their time comes? Isn’t it better to leave the question mark hanging flagrantly in the air, a cry of “whoa-oa-oa” standing in for certitude as nuggets of wisdom fall from Murphy’s lips? “You can judge the whole world on the sparkle that you think it lacks/ Yes, you can stare into the abyss but its staring right back.”

We may understand on an intellectual level that we’re all in the same boat but feeling it in your bones is another matter entirely. The combination of Dawes and The Moondoggies made for a community, however briefly gathered, that understood on some level that existence is shared and our dreams and fears are not so different from one another in the final accounting. Most longings are universal and that truth has few better songsmiths and messengers than these two bands at this moment.

Dawes Tour Dates :: Dawes News :: Dawes Concert Reviews

The Moondoggies Tour Dates :: The Moondoggies News :: The Moondoggies Concert Reviews


Sat Eye Candy: Delaney & Bonnie

MUSIC FOR THE SAKE OF IT

While The Band have been gathering accolades as for their role as a primary influence on rock ‘n’ roll that followed, another group from the same era had almost as big an impact on the movers & shakers in the 60s & 70s (and subsequently since then). Delaney & Bonnie were a then-husband & wife rock ‘n’ soul revue that put the zap on Eric Clapton, George Harrison and scores of others. The undeniable groove and spirit of their homegrown, deliciously earthy music brought rock down from its big stages and reconnected some of the biggest players of the day with what it meant to make music for the sake of making music. This gift still reverberates in the work of Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi, Mofro, Lucero and countless others. We love giving credit to worthy ancestors at JamBase and wanted to offer up a smattering of their fine music to enrich your weekend. (Dennis Cook)

We begin with a corker featuring Clapton and Harrison along with the future rhythm section for Derek & The Dominoes.

While Dave Mason had the hit with this one, D & B do it great justice.

An early music video from the band.

The Black Crowes have taken this tune up in recent years.

There’s not much sexier than Bonnie’s wicked smile and joyous jiggling and Delaney’s slinky ass guitar work in this clip. The slide solo near the end is just ridiculous!

Another one from the same television appearance.

We conclude with a glimpse of Delaney and Bonnie Bramlett performing without one another. Delaney passed away in 2008 and Bonnie Bramlett continues to make great music today. Still, few fires that burned as briefly as theirs have been brighter or more warming to music as a whole.


Sat Eye Candy: Duane Allman

TRULY A HOLY ROLLIN’ SOUND

Duane Allman would have turned 64-years-old today. We couldn’t let the day pass without tipping our hat to Skydog and honoring the ever-lingering legacy of one of the 20th Century’s most influential musicians. (Dennis Cook)

We begin with some insights into Duane’s genius and contribution to music.

The combination of Duane Allman and Dickey Betts remains one of the finest, most unique pairings rock has ever produced. Here’s the pair in flight together.

Besides the Allman Brothers and his extensive session work, Duane was also a key ingredient in another of rock’s all-time greatest ensembles, Derek & The Dominoes. There’s no decent footage of him playing with the band but here’s an interesting outtake that shows Clapton and Allman sparring nicely.

Let’s jump on the stage with ABB back in the day. This is what one calls “putting your back into it.”

Another succinct blast of Duane’s studio brilliance.

Just the audio but what audio it is! This pairing of the Dead and Duane on a signature blues standard shows what honest, gritty interpreters of the blues these young cats were.

We wrap with a few more Allman Brothers moments with Duane. Rest in peace, buddy. We miss ya more than we can ever express.


JamBase Questionnaire: Charlie Hunter

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from Soulive.

Solo guitar performance is one of the oldest, grandest traditions in the blues and jazz fields. It’s a brave, exposed display of talent that works as an intimate conversation between the musician and listeners. It’s been 10 years since Charlie Hunter stripped down to his 7 & 8-string skivvies, and Public Domain (released September 14 on Reapandsow) finds the fleet-fingered picker tackling copyright free chestnuts like “Danny Boy,” “Ain’t We Got Fun” and “Alexander’s Ragtime Band” alongside more obscure offerings like “Low Bridge Song (15 Miles On The Erie Canal)” and “Cielito Lindo.” The dedication to “Blind Blake, Joseph Spence, Joe Pass, Ted Greene and Tuck Andress” goes a long way in capturing the vibe of Public Domain, with Andress’ feel coming through the strongest in the atmosphere and mercurial arrangements. “This album,” says Hunter, “is really about the songs and how rhythms work together. It’s not about anything flashy.” In the end, Public Domain is a modernist take on the music that folks once “enjoyed listening to on crank-up Victrolas and on tube radios many decades ago” (as per the intro inscription from Hunter’s grandfather Sidney Greenman). (Dennis Cook)

Here’s what Hunter had to say to our inquiries.

Charlie Hunter by Susan J. Weiand

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Un component sociale

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
Original Dixieland Jazz Band

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
Blind Blake

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
A woman

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
One with people!

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
I collect glass animals

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
Cat fights

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
Why Is There Air?

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
Some grandma’s home in Kiev

10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
Everywhere

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
Reading

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
Beatles…duh?!?!

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
Little Richard

Charlie Hunter Tour Dates :: Charlie Hunter News :: Charlie Hunter Concert Reviews

JamBase | Strummed
Go See Live Music!