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Posts Tagged ‘Derek Trucks’

Wanee 2011 Lineup Allmans, WSP, Robert Plant, Ween

INCREDIBLE LINEUP ANNOUNCED FOR FLORIDA FAVE

The 2011 Wanee Festival will take place April 14-16 at the Spirit of Suwanee Park in Live Oak, FL. Tickets went on sale today here, and the lineup this year is smoking hot:

Wanee 2010 by Ian Rawn

Wanee 2011 Lineup

Allman Brothers Band
Robert Plant & The Band of Joy
Widespread Panic
Steve Miller Band
Warren Haynes Band
Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Band
Jaimoe’s Jasssz Band
Ween
Stephen Marley
Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings
Mike Gordon
Hot Tuna
7 Walkers
Galactic
Taj Mahal
North Mississippi All-Stars
John Popper & The Duskray Troubadours
Keller Williams
The Radiators
Wanda Jackson
Rusted Root
Oteil Burbridge and The Lee Boys
Dirty Dozen Brass Band
Big Gigantic
Melvin Seals & JGB
Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe
Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk
New Deal
Lotus
Tea Leaf Green
DJ Logic
Toubab Krewe
Devon Allman’s Honeytribe
Bobby Lee Rodgers Trio
Soul Rebels Brass Band
Guitar Shorty
Dangermuffin
Honey Island Swamp Band
Kevin Hammond
Death On Two Wheels
The Yeti Trio
Jacob Jeffries Band
Griffin Anthony

Ticket includes: 4 nights of “primitive camping,” 3 full days of music, plus kick-off party on Wednesday from 2 pm-2 am. Pick up tickets here.


Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Band | NYE | Review

Words by: Scott Horowitz | Images by Ray Proetto

Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi :: 12.31.10 :: Florida Theatre :: Jacksonville, Florida

Derek & Susan by Ray Proetto

Derek Trucks and Susan Tedeschi put their solo acts on hold in 2010 to write and make music together with a fresh new band. In April they began playing new songs, trying to find their identity. Ten months later they have evolved into a cohesive unit, putting out sets of music that flow as majestically as the nearby St. Johns River into the Atlantic Ocean. Their New Year’s Eve celebration took place near the river banks of Jacksonville, Florida.

After an opening set from Scrapmatic, the Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Band began their NYE set with “Don’t Let Me Slide” followed by my personal favorite “Midnight in Harlem,” a hopeful tune with a comforting and familiar feel. Derek & The Dominoes tune “Anyday” saw Trucks sliding up and down his guitar, evoking cheers from the attentive audience. The show took a turn down Funky Street with “Love Has Something Else to Say.” Brothers Oteil (bass, Allman Brothers Band) and Kofi Burbridge (keyboards, Derek Trucks Band) emanated fun-loving grooves from their corner of the stage all night long, making way for some patrons to sashay in their New Year’s attire up the aisles of the Florida Theatre (until being told to sit down by security).

Horn section by Ray Proetto

Kebbi Williams flowed through his saxophone across the stage, inspiring impressive leads from Oteil. Though this marked only the second show with the horn section, put together specifically for this New Year’s run, it seemed as if they had been in the band since April. Joining Williams, on trombone, was Saunders “Service” Sermons and Maurice “Mo’ Betta” Brown on trumpet.

The execution of the Eric Clapton arrangement of “Presence of the Lord” had more and more people finding their way to their feet. However, most in the audience remained unsure of what to do with themselves physically, most remaining seated and grooving cerebrally. Mike Mattison took lead vocal duties on Taj Mahal‘s “Leaving Trunk,” which made way for new blues number “That Did It”. The verses have Mattison and Mark Rivers laying down playful background vocal harmonies with Motown-esque Aah-ooh’s while Susan sings a soulful tale of heartache.

It is no secret that Susan is a world class vocalist, but on “That Did It” her guitar skills were front and center. She laid into her instrument with enough soul and power to make the ghost of Sister Rosetta Tharpe proud. Her approach to the six-string is a no-gimmick, loud and subtle reminder that she is the mother of Derek Trucks’ children.

Derek Trucks’ role as bandleader is performed perfectly. He gives everyone else onstage the space they need to become who they are musically. At times, when all eyes turn to him for a solo, he will defer the moment to someone else. Once everybody has found themselves in their given space, Trucks’ bright red Gibson SG is implied. With a meditative expression on his face, Derek tears sonic holes in the universe; each one providing grist for the mill of his spiritual journey with a guitar.

“Learn How to Love” is a thick swamp-fueled song that Derek and Susan wrote with Eric Krasno. Max Roach’s “Garvey’s Ghost” made an appearance late in the set featuring a powerful, tribal and lyrical drum solo which started with Tyler “The Falcon” Greenwell on groove duty while JJ Johnson took lead until handing it off to Greenwell, which led to both drummers playing off of each other with brilliant melody. The other band members gave the drummers their full, conscious attention during the drum solo, including Trucks, who took a knee center-stage as if to show respect for the most ancient form of musical expression.

Derek & Susan Band by Ray Proetto

The best, and rarest, quality of a good drummer is selflessness. Johnson and Greenwell pull selflessness out of each other creating a huge seamless rhythmic foundation on which the rest of the band rests upon. The end of “Garvey’s Ghost” began a cover of Joe Cocker’s “Space Captain.” which Derek and Susan recorded earlier in the year with Herbie Hancock at their backyard home studio.

The triumphant vocals at the beginning of Delany & Bonnie’s “Coming Home” started the countdown to midnight. Smiles, hugs, and kisses welcomed in the New Year as the band celebrated with Ray Charles’ “Night Time is The Right Time” and Mattison’s song “Bound for Glory”. Aretha Franklin’s “Spirit in The Dark” encored the evening and sent the North Florida faithful strutting into the night.

The band is due to release their first album in June of 2011 and has dates booked in April for Australia and New Zealand.

May the best of last year be the worst of this year.

Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Band Tour Dates :: Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Band News :: Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Band Concert Reviews

JamBase | River City Namaste
Go See Live Music!


Bluesfest 2011 Sideshows

FEATURING TRUCKS & TEDESCHI, ROBERT RANDOLPH,
BLIND BOYS OF ALABAMA, MAVIS STAPLES,
IRMA
THOMAS


Mavis Staples

Bluesfest today announced its first run of
festival sideshows for Sydney, Melbourne and Adelaide based audiences. And, what an electrifying array of musical
delights it is, featuring some of the best world-class blues, roots, gospel, and soul talent announced so far for
Bluesfest 2011.

For the first show, Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Band will be ably supported by the amazing funk
soul pedal-steel master guitarist Robert Randolph and the Family Band in Sydney on April 21 at the Enmore Theatre,
and Melbourne on April 22 at the Palace Theatre.

This next show is ‘A Gospel Celebration!’ with Blind Boys of Alabama featuring Aaron Neville. Opening proceedings
will be none other than Rock & Roll Hall of Famer and legendary vocalist Mavis Staples. The dates are April 20 in
Melbourne at The Palais and April 25 in Sydney at the Opera House.

The third festival sideshow will include Irma Thomas. The soul queen of New Orleans will be traveling down under
for her first ever Australian tour. This “N’awlins Soul Sister No 1” is responsible for cutting some of the finest ever
soul music in the history of New Orelans music including “Time Is On My Side” later recorded by the Rolling Stones,
and “Ruler Of My Heart” which was changed to “Pain In My Heart” and recorded by Otis Redding. This sideshow is
scheduled for April 21 at The Factory in Sydney.

Click here for all information related to Bluesfest 2011
in Byron Bay, New South Wales, Australia.


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.


Jimmy Herring Tour Dates

TOUR KICKS OFF THIS WEDNESDAY IN NORFOLK, CT


Jimmy Herring

Jimmy Herring is hittting
the road with his current line-up, featuring Herring on guitar, drummer Jeff Sipe (Aquarium Rescue Unit,
Jazz is Dead, Shawn Lane), keyboardist Matt Slocum (Susan Tedeschi, Derek Trucks), and Neal
Fountain
on bass (Col Bruce Hampton, Alex Machacek). Tour dates are below.

The Jimmy Herring Band will be performing a wide range of material, including compositions from Herring’s long-
awaited and much-acclaimed 2008 solo debut Lifeboat.

“The music for the upcoming tour will be a mixed bag. Some stuff from the album and some covers I have always
wanted to play- Led Zeppelin, Beatles, Mahavishnu Orchestra, Frank Zappa among others. Hopefully there will be
enough freedom for everyone to relax and have equal creative input. One thing I learned from Bruce Hampton is,
the simpler the music, the easier it is to reinterpret it each time you play it.”

Herring, who toured this summer with drummer Lenny White (Miles Davis, Return To Forever) will be one
of the
headliners at the New Universe Music Festival in Raleigh, North Carolina on November 20-21 as well as performing
there with The Lenny White Group and paying a tribute to guitar icon John McLaughlin with
whom he co-bills the
House of Blues concert in Boston on November 16.

Jimmy Herring Tour Dates

10-Nov Infinity Hall, Norfolk, CT
11-Nov Chameleon Club, Lancaster PA
12-Nov Toads New Haven, CT
13-Nov The Met-Pawtucket , RI
14-Nov Port City Music Hall,Portland, ME

15-Nov Highline Ballroom, NYC, NY
16-Nov House of Blues,Boston, MA (with John McLaughlin)

18-Nov Visulite Theater Charlotte, NC
19-Nov The Handlebar Greenville, SC
20-Nov Lincoln Theater, Raleigh, NC
21-Nov Lincoln Theater, Raleigh, NC
22-Nov Hat Factory,Richmond, VA
1-Dec Cox Capitol Macon, GA
2-Dec 40Watt Athens, GA
3-Dec Pourhouse-Charleston, SC

4-Dec Live Wire Music Hall-Savannah, GA
5-Dec Pisgah Brewing, Black Mountain, NC
6-Dec Rhythm and Brews, Chattanooga, TN
7-Dec Minglewood Hall Memphis, TN

8-Dec Mercy Lounge, Nashville, TN

9-Dec Bijou Theatre, Knoxville, TN
10-Dec Variety Playhouse, Atlanta, GA
11-Dec Workplay, Birmingham, AL

Jimmy Herring
Tour Dates

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Jimmy Herring News
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Jimmy Herring
Concert
Reviews


Soulive Live DVD Out 11/23

LIVE DVD FEATURES DEREK TRUCKS, WARREN HAYNES,
QUESTLOVE, RAHZEL, ROBERT RANDOLPH,
MARCO BENEVENTO & MORE


Soulive: Live at the Brooklyn Bowl

In March of 2010, the members of Soulive hauled their instruments through the doors of a newly-opened warehouse-
turned-music venue in Brooklyn that they would call home for the next two weeks. Eric Krasno, Alan
Evans
and Neal Evans called on a multitude of their closest friends and musical conspirators to join
them over the next fortnight – creating an incredibly broad guest lineup that included some of the pre-eminent
guitar virtuosos of our generation (Derek Trucks, Warren Haynes), some of the biggest names in hip-hop
(Questlove, Rahzel), and some of the most inventive improvisational players in modern rock n’ roll
(Robert Randolph, Marco Benevento, Oteil & Kofi Burbridge).

Bowlive: Live at the Brooklyn Bowl is out on DVD November 23.

Track Listing:

Introduction
What is Bowlive?

Hat Trick feat. The Shady Horns & Danny Sedownik

Nigel Hall

Too Much feat. Nigel Hall, Ivan Neville, Danny Sedownik & The Shady Horns

The Shady Horns
El Ron feat. The Shady Horns

Ivan Neville

Jesus Children of America -> If You Want Me To Stay feat Ivan Neville and Nigel Hall

Kofi and Oteil Burbridge
Butter Biscuit feat. Oteil Burbridge, Kofi Burbridge & The Shady Horns
Robert Randolph

Crosstown Traffic feat. Robert Randolph & The Shady Horns

Questlove
Give It Up Or Turnit Loose feat. Questlove, Nigel Hall & The Shady Horns
Made You Look feat. Rahzel, Questlove & The Shady Horns
The London Souls
Lucille feat. Tash Neal & The Shady Horns
Sunshine feat Raul Midon, Nigel Hall & The Shady Horns
Susan Tedeschi & Derek Trucks

Soul Serenade feat. Susan Tedeschi, Derek Trucks, Kofi Burbridge & The Shady Horns
Warren Haynes

Born Under a Bad Sign feat. Warren Haynes, DJ Logic, Nigel Hall & The Shady Horns
Conclusion
Credits
Robert Randolph

Soulive
Tour Dates

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Soulive News
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Soulive
Concert
Reviews


JJ Grey & Mofro: True Warhorses

By: Dennis Cook

JJ Grey by Darren Jackinsky

Maybe it’s the pounding soul of “All,” the slinky strut of “Diyo Dayo,” the synth-dappled, switchback funk of “Hide & Seek” or perhaps the crack-your-heart-open tenderness of “King Hummingbird” but something gonna get you on JJ Grey & Mofro‘s new slab, Georgia Warhorse (released August 24 on Alligator Records). Grey and his shifting ensemble specialize in ‘getcha music,’ the sort that runs its fingers through your hair, leaves lipstick on your collar and sometimes lifts your wallet and cell phone to run up a crazy bar tab and make calls to the other side of the world. Grey’s songs are earthy in all respects – lusty and impetuous yet rooted in soil tilled with the blood & sweat of generations. And he when he steps to the mic you’ll swear Otis Redding has an illegitimate white son. There are also echoes of the young Paul Rodgers who ignited Free and Bad Company – Grey shares his knack for slow burners and ability to make rock sound magisterial – not to mention a dash or two of Grey’s personal idols like Tony Joe White and Toots Hibbert. Put it all together and one’s body and soul warms when Mofro plays.

Hibbert along with Derek Trucks guests on Georgia Warhorse, helping make it the single strongest release in a catalog without a single dud. Without reinventing the wheel – as we’ll discuss in this chat – Grey and his collaborators, particularly producer-sidekick Dan Prothero, have crafted an album that sits up straight ‘n’ proud next to anything that came out of Muscle Shoals in its heyday. More impressive than Mofro’s gift for capturing the feel of Wilson Pickett, Otis, et al. is how they make it seem like that music never went away and has been growing up right along with Grey and his boys.

Grey is man enough to declare, “Hell no, I ain’t going down on my knees,” yet enough of a dreamer to ache out loud on simmering killers like “Gotta Know,” grind passionately like a Grade-A lover man on “Slow, Hot & Sweaty” or throw his whole being open on Georgia Warhorse‘s shattering closer “Lullaby.” In short, Grey is a grand revival shaman reuniting rock ‘n’ soul in a holy orgy for common folk.

JamBase: One of the things you’ve done from the beginning – and the new record certainly does it – is remember that rock ‘n’ roll has hips, which has been forgotten by a lot of your contemporaries. Soul music used to be a real close relative.

JJ Grey by Melanie Martinez

JJ Grey: Right, right, right. I want it to have the energy to rock and I want it to groove so you can dance to it. And I can’t dance worth a shit so I better find the funkiest players I can so I can get my groove on! These are all cats I’ve looked up to and I’m just lucky to get to play with them. They all understand my arrangements and the essence of what I’m trying to get musically. And with these kinds of guys playing, it’s easy. All I gotta do is show up.

JamBase: There’s been a lot of lineup changes in Mofro, and even your longest running partner, Daryl Hance, is no longer with you. How has that affected the music?

JJ Grey: Honestly, it’s always been my ship. Not to sound like an ego thing or nothing, that’s just the truth. Daryl has always supported me and now I can’t wait to help him in any way I can to help him with what he’s doing. He’s got his own tunes, like a lot of the other cats, and we will play together again. It’s hard to explain [the dynamics of Mofro] to people because it doesn’t really have an identity outside of who’s playing in it right at that moment. It’s like life – full of change.

You’ve always struck me as a road warrior. I’ve seen you a lot of times and even when you seem to be draggin’ before the show, the moment the music kicks in you spring back. Something seems to hit your bloodstream when you’re in front of a crowd.

Definitely! I tell people all the time, I never got paid a dime to play a show – all the money is just so we can get there, unload the equipment, etc. Playing the show itself is just therapy; that part’s free. Everything else is what costs us money.

Not everyone appreciates what a privilege it is to get to do what you love for living.

That’s what it’s all about, and the best way to do it is to not try to do it. Just let it happen. If you’ve got a cut it’ll heal itself if you give it time and space and let the body do what it does. It’s the same way with music. I don’t write tunes, they write themselves. I honestly can’t take credit for that. They just pop out of thin air like conversations.

I wanted to get into your longtime working relationship with Dan Prothero, who’s helmed every Mofro album with you since the start. I don’t think he gets near enough credit. Every time he works with a musician, including you, he seems to draw out the best in them.

Well, if somebody wanted to get technical about the original members of Mofro, it’d obviously be myself, Daryl and Dan Prothero. As far I’m considered, Dan is probably a bigger part of Mofro than any one individual cat that’s played with me. Luckily, Dan only wants to work with people who are 95-percent there so he only has to add about 5-percent. He wants to help you get the right sound, the right tone, and that’s what Dan’s done. It’s been great.

You’ve had this partnership over five albums. How do you think the sound has evolved? I can’t quite nail the exact differences but there’s something quite refined about the sound on Georgia Warhorse.

JJ Grey by Adam McCullough

With Blackwater [Mofro's 2001 debut] there was a lot of shoulder shruggin’ on my part and nervousness. I didn’t know what he wanted; he didn’t know what I wanted. I don’t even know how a record came out of those sessions, and that’s not because of the musicians involved. That was my fault. I wasn’t stepping up to the plate, not so much in my takes but with the whole process. And Dan was instrumental in pushing me towards my strengths and away from my weaknesses. And when I say weaknesses, I guess what I should say is pushing me towards honesty, the things that felt genuine and honest, and away from things that felt contrived or phony. He also convinced me to learn how to play instruments. I played an instrument enough to write a tune, but going on the road I couldn’t afford to bring along the kind of band I wanted to. I wanted horns and everything on the first record and tour behind it, but I just couldn’t afford it. And I’d never played and sang at the same time before and Dan said, “You just gotta do it.” He pushed me, pushed me, pushed me.

So, to go back and answer your question, I send him demos now that I’ve cut at home and it’s pretty close to how it sounds on the record, except we go into the studio and get someone who plays drums better than me [laughs]. We don’t go in as a band. I put the songs together and think of who I’d like to be on a cut, like Derek Trucks or whatever. I’m at a point where I can make that call. Derek was easy because he lives in Jacksonville, and Toots was easy, too. We just sent him the stuff down to Jamaica and he jammed on it and sent it back [laughs]. The point is that now with Dan we don’t have to go through a song critique period or nothing. We’re just ready to go in and do it and make it interesting with cool 70s synth sounds and such.

One picks up on the shared curiosity with cool sounds that you and Dan have. For all the production that’s layered on rock music these days, that inquisitive, distinctly human touch is often missing.

JJ Grey by Darren Jackinsky

Chasing rabbits down holes is always fun. I’ll tell you something else that’s cool, and don’t get me wrong, I love Pro Tools and Logic – I use those things to write with and in the process of making this record these things get used – but Dan taught me not to rely on them. When things are done in the box – the controlled, computer-based box world – it has a flatness to it. There’s no spikes, no pits. No matter how great the recording or the players, it will lose something if it’s not mixed through a console. All the [Mofro] records have been done on two-inch tape. Dan mixes down off two-inch tape as much as he can, and then dumps all that into Pro Tools and does last minute editing.

Jimmy DeVito’s Retrophonics studio, where we always record, is a museum of the best gear ever made. You move something aside and there’s something else that makes you go, “Holy shit!” So you start messing around and thinking, “This vintage ’72 keyboard would be perfect on this take!” Jimmy provides that space, and I think that’s a huge part of the sound, too – Jimmy’s two-inch tape machine, his vintage amplifier collection, his guitars, his basses.

A place like that allows instinct and inspiration to take hold in the moment. Things are too neat today. You’d never get those wonderful pushing-the-meter-into-the-red moments on the classic Aretha Franklin recordings now. But that bold, ragged rush is what those songs are all about.

That’s what I push for on every record. On all my favorite records like Tony Joe White and all that Muscle Shoals stuff, when the singer gets going the tubes start to smoke and the pre-amps sizzle and it all starts to fly apart on the heavy, high, loudest notes. I love that! That’s also when guitars changed and became distorted, when the guitar player is just playing it so hard and so loud things start to bust apart. What people like Dan and I are doing is pursuing that distortion. We’re looking for the distortion that sounds like butter, not the newer circuit board distortion, which kinda shits out and sounds awful.

It’s great to see this kind of music being made today instead of it being simply something from yesteryear. These records and this sound endures because it sounds so, so, so good.

One of the things I explain to people is volume does not translate well to tape. So, when you play live you just play louder and people can feel those huge, dynamic shifts. With studio recordings what happens is people have to turn up their stereos when you’re quiet and then turn ‘em back down when it’s too loud, which led to compression. But all those old compressors gave you a form and a feeling, whereas now a Celine Dion recording might be smashed into oblivion to the point where you look at it as a line on a computer and the block volume is massive compared to say AC/DC’s Back In Black, which has these peaks and valleys that look small, not one continuous fat block of volume. Well, we know what happens when you put both on a stereo, you’ll say the AC/DC record is louder. It just seems louder because there’s not an Amex on it. These are the things Dan has taught me. Some people will say, “That’s retro,” but I say, “No, it’s just good.” The wheel is retro. It was invented a LONG time ago but it works [laughs].

JJ Grey & Mofro are currently on tour. They play The Compound in Phoenix, AZ (9/22), Belly Up Tavern in Solano Beach, CA (9/23), The Fillmore in San Francisco, CA (9/24) and the West Beach Music & Arts Festival in Santa Barbara, CA (9/25). Find full tour dates here.

JJ Grey & Mofro Tour Dates :: JJ Grey & Mofro News :: JJ Grey & Mofro Concert Reviews

JamBase | Hottest Spot In Hell
Go See Live Music!


Trucks & Tedeschi: NYE Florida Run

DECEMBER 29 IN CLEARWATER AND DECEMBER 31 IN JACKSONVILLE


Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi

The final two shows of 2010 are set for the Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Band. The band will perform on December 29 at Ruth
Eckerd Hall in Clearwater, FL – tickets go on-sale to the general public on September 24. On December 31, the
group
will take the stage at the Florida Theatre in Jacksonville, FL for what promises to be a great way to ring in 2011.
Tickets for the New Year’s Eve performance go on-sale to the general public on September 17. Stay tuned for an
announcement with full details on fan pre-sales for both shows.

Derek Trucks
&
Susan Tedeschi Band
Tour Dates

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Derek Trucks
&
Susan Tedeschi Band News

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Derek Trucks &
Susan Tedeschi Band
Concert
Reviews


Eric Clapton: Clapton

STEVE WINWOOD, WYNTON MARSALIS, DEREK TRUCKS, ALLEN TOUSSAINT GUEST


Eric Clapton

Guitar icon and three time Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee Eric Clapton announced today that
he will release his 19th solo studio album on September 28, 2010 simply titled Clapton.

Co-produced by guitarist and long-time collaborator Doyle Bramhall II, the album features an all star cast of musical collaborations starting with
the legendary JJ Cale, drummer
Jim Keltner, bassist Willie Weeks, and keyboardist Walt Richmond—and the sessions
later added guests including Steve
Winwood
, Wynton Marsalis, Sheryl Crow, Allen Toussaint, and Derek Trucks.

“This album wasn’t what it was intended to be at all,” says Eric Clapton. “It’s actually better than it was meant to be
because, in a way, I just let it happen. It’s an eclectic collection of songs that weren’t really on the map—and I like it
so much because if it’s a surprise to the fans, that’s only because it’s a surprise to me, as well.”

TRACK LISTING:

1 Travelin’ Alone
2 Rocking Chair
3 River Runs Deep
4 Judgement Day

5 How Deep Is The Ocean
6 My Very Good Friend The Milkman
7 Can’t Hold Out Much Longer

8 That’s No Way To Get Along
9 Everything Will Be Alright
10 Diamonds Made From Rain*
11 When Somebody Thinks You’re Wonderful
12 Hard Times Blues
13 Run Back To Your Side
14 Autumn Leaves

Eric Clapton
Tour Dates

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Eric Clapton News
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Eric Clapton
Concert
Reviews


Allman Bros. Band: Live Dates

GREGG ALLMAN RETURNS TO THE STAGE


The Allman Brothers Band

The Allman Brothers Band have commenced their return to the concert road with select shows confirmed in November, marking Gregg Allman‘s first live performances since his successful liver transplant surgery in June. The iconic Rock & Roll Hall of Fame band–Allman(vocals and keyboards), Butch Trucks (drums and tympani), Jaimoe (drums), Warren Haynes (vocals, lead and slide guitar), Derek Trucks (slide and lead guitar), Oteil Burbridge (bass) and Marc Quinones (congas and percussion)–announced an East Coast intimate theatre tour of “Evening With” shows including three nights at Boston’s prestigious Orpheum Theatre starting November 18.

“I’m ready,” says Gregg, who spent time in the Jacksonville area after the surgery, before returning to his Georgia home where he has been spending time with his children, family and friends. “I’ve been itching to play since I got the operation and am glad to be back. Can’t thank everyone enough for their help and support.”

Tickets go on sale Thursday, August 12 starting at 10am at LiveNation.com, Ticketmaster outlets, and at the Orpheum Theatre box office.

Thu 11/18 Boston, MA Orpheum Theatre
Fri 11/19 Boston, MA Orpheum Theatre
Sat 11/20 Boston, MA Orpheum Theatre

The Allman Brothers Band
Tour Dates

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The Allman Brothers Band News ::
The Allman Brothers Band
Concert
Reviews


Derek Trucks Guests On New JJ Grey Album

TOUR STARTS AUGUST 21 IN HOXEYVILLE, MI


Georgia Warhorse

Guest guitarist Derek
Trucks
joins swampy, funky roots rock artist JJ Grey on “Lullaby,” a highlight of the new album Georgia Warhorse,
nailing his performance on the first take.

Grey says, “He’s a one take person. It sounded like the greatest take of all time. He insisted we do two, three more
takes but we used the first take. It was just awesome. To me, he’s in the category of Louis Armstrong.”

Trucks admires Grey’s abilities as a writer as well, saying, “It’s a real skill to be able to take your life and what you do
and just put it to music where it actually translates, where you can trace those threads back. I enjoy that about JJ’s
music.”

Grey’s new album Georgia Warhorse comes out August 24 on Alligator. His previous album Orange
Blossoms
hit #4 on the Billboard Heatseekers chart.

JJ Grey & Mofro
Tour Dates

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JJ Grey & Mofro News ::
JJ Grey & Mofro
Concert
Reviews


Widespread Panic: Live in the Classic City II

LIVE IN THE CLASSIC CITY II TO BE RELEASED BY ATO RECORDS ON SEPTEMBER 28;
FEATURING PERFORMANCES HEARD FOR THE FIRST TIME ON CD AND VINYL


Widespread Panic

Following the release of their acclaimed 11th studio album Dirty Side Down (career high Billboard chart
debut), Widespread Panic and
ATO Records will release the two-disc/three-vinyl set Live In The Classic City II on September 28.
2010 marks the ten-year anniversary of this monumental three-night run that took place on April 1-3, 2000 at the
Classic Center Theater in Athens, Georgia. These recordings are also significant because they mark the first time
Widespread Panic asked their fans, who are regularly permitted to record and circulate live performances, to refrain
from recording these particular shows. Live In The Classic City II will mark the first time that these
performances have been made available, and even heard if you weren’t there.

Live In The Classic City II includes special guests Mike Mills (R.E.M.), percussionist Arvin
Scott
, producer John Keane and vocalists Daniel Hutchens and Anne Richmond
Boston
. Chosen from the same set of dates, Live In The Classic City I was released in 2002 and went
on to sell over 100,000 copies. The collection featured special guests such as Bill Berry (R.E.M.),
Chuck Leavell (Rolling Stones), Randall Bramblett (Traffic, Steve Winwood), Col. Bruce
Hampton
, and Derek Trucks (Allman Brothers).

Widespread Panic has announced dates for their much-anticipated fall tour. The tour begins on September 17 in
Morgantown, WV and includes stops in Atlanta, Baltimore, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Oakland and ends with a three-
night stand in New Orleans, LA that includes their annual Halloween bash. Check out the dates below.

2010 FALL TOUR DATES:

Sept. 17 West Virginia University Coliseum Morgantown, WV
Sept. 18 Charlottesville Pavilion Charlottesville, VA
Sept. 19 Pier Six Pavilion Baltimore, MD

Sept. 21 PNG Pavilion at Riverbend Music Center Cincinnati, OH
Sept. 23 Centerstage Live Atlanta, GA

**Annual ‘Tunes For Tots’ Benefit

Sept. 24 Verizon Wireless Amphitheater Alpharetta, GA

Sept. 25 Verizon Wireless Amphitheater Alpharetta, GA
Sept. 28 Leon County Civic Center Tallahassee, FL
Sept. 30 The Fillmore Miami Beach Miami, FL

Oct. 1 St. Augustine, Amphitheater St. Augustine, FL
Oct. 2 Patriot’s Point Charleston, SC
Oct. 4 The Ryman Auditorium Nashville, TN
Oct. 5 The Ryman Auditorium Nashville, TN
Oct. 6 The Ryman Auditorium Nashville, TN
Oct. 8 Midland Theater Kansas City, MO

Oct. 9 The Riverside Theater Milwaukee, WI

Oct. 10 The Riverside Theater Milwaukee, WI

Oct. 13 The Rail Events Center Salt Lake City
Oct. 15 Fox Theater Oakland, CA
Oct. 16 Fox Theater Oakland, CA
Oct 17 Fox Theater Oakland, CA
Oct. 19 Grand Sierra Theater Reno, NV
Oct. 20 Grand Sierra Theater Reno, NV
Oct. 22 The Greek Theater Los Angeles, CA
Oct. 23 The Joint at The Hard Rock Cafe Las Vegas, NV

Oct. 24 Open Sky Theater at Harrah’s Valley Center, CA
Oct. 27 Verizon Theater Grand Prairie, TX

Oct. 29 Kiefer UNO Lakefront Arena New Orleans, LA
Oct. 30 Kiefer UNO Lakefront Arena New Orleans, LA
Oct. 31 Kiefer UNO Lakefront Arena New Orleans, LA

Widespread Panic
Tour Dates

::
Widespread Panic News ::
Widespread Panic
Concert
Reviews


Mile High Music Fest: DMB, Bassnectar, Stoopid

MILE HIGH MUSIC FESTIVAL PRESENTED BY KYOCERA
ANNOUNCES PERFORMANCE SCHEDULE; ELECTRONIC MUSIC ADDED: “BETA BEACH”


Dave Matthews Band

With just four weeks until Colorado’s third annual Mile High Music Festival, today festival organizers
announce the weekend’s performance schedule. Unveiled with the schedule is Mile High Music Festival’s brand new
Beta Beach. Booked in partnership with Denver’s world-renowned Beta Night Club, the already diverse festival
expands its musical terrain by now hosting an impressive list of Denver’s most cutting-edge DJs and electronic
music including Second Sun, Halo
and Hipp E, and Dragon. Visit www.milehighmusicfestival.com/schedule for
complete schedule details and to purchase tickets.

Also released today, Mile High Music Festival’s custom schedule feature created by Gigbot. Visit www.milehighmusicfestival.com to create a schedule to highlight
the artists you want to see most.

Bands confirmed to perform at Colorado’s Mile High Music Festival presented by Kyocera, happening at the Fields at
Dick’s Sporting Goods Park on August 14 and 15, include headliners Dave Matthews Band and Jack Johnson, also Weezer, Steve Miller Band, My Morning Jacket, Slightly Stoopid, Atmosphere, Phoenix, Train, Nas & Damian “Jr. Gong” Marley, Jimmy Cliff, Keane, Bassnectar, Cypress Hill, Z-Trip, Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Band, Drive-By Truckers, Railroad Earth, Ozomatli, and many more.

Tickets for Mile High Music Festival presented by Kyocera are on sale now, including Single Day Tickets and 2-Day
Packages, plus VIP Ticket options and hotel packages. Get tickets online at www.tickethorse.com and
www.milehighmusicfestival.com, by phone at 866-461-6556 and at Dick’s Sporting Goods Park Box Office. They
can also be purchased with a credit card at the Ticket Outlet Kiosks in the twelve Colorado Dick’s Sporting Goods
stores.

Visit www.milehighmusicfestival.com for complete details. The Fields at Dick’s Sporting Goods Park are conveniently
located just nine miles from downtown Denver, and only 1.8 miles from the I-70 and Quebec exit.

Check out the schedule for Mile High Music Festival presented by Kyocera at www.milehighmusicfestival.com/schedule


All Good | 07.08-07.11 | West Virginia

Word by: Jarrod Dicker | Images by: Jeffrey
Dupuis

All Good Festival :: 07.08.10-07.11.10
Marvin’s Mountaintop ::
Masontown, West
Virginia

All Good Music Festival is the premier summer event that completely satisfies its
cheerful, laid-back
moniker in both an audible and societal sense. Nestled comfortably on Marvin’s Mountaintop, the
four day
extravaganza flaunts over 40 hours of music on three different stages with no overlapping
acts, period. Celebrating
its 14th anniversary, this year’s mid-Atlantic holiday held nothing back, scheduling over
35 bands for around-the-
clock performances that left you sacrificing sleep for fear of missing anything.

Unofficially, this year’s All Good Festival had become a multi-day tribute to the music
and culture of the Grateful
Dead. While other mega-acts were peppered throughout the lineup, Dead affiliated groups
were undoubtedly worth
their salt, drawing packed crowds throughout each of their respected sets.

This year, the ingredients for “goodness” were simple: Great music, laid-back vibes,
beautiful scenery, and friendly
people. Dash on some of the best musicians on the scene like Widespread Panic, Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi, Grace Potter and the
Nocturnals
, George Clinton and
Parliament-
Funkadelic
, etc. and you had a recipe that bolsters the truly celebrates 14 years
of sights and sounds
where life is actually “All Good.”


Bob Weir

Forever Grateful

Friday evening, festival juggernauts Furthur took the stage and performed nearly four hours of material
for the 15th
anniversary of Jerry Garcia’s last performance with the Grateful Dead. Repeating only
three tracks that were
performed at Garcia’s last show in July of 1995 (“Cumberland Blues,” “So Many Roads” and
“Sugar Magnolia”), Furthur
injected vigor into various Dead classics from “Brown-Eyed Women” in the first set to
kicking off the second set with
“Uncle John’s Band” and encoring with “Ripple.” They even glossed over original work with
new track “Colors of the
Rain,” which fit soundly with the unruly weather Friday night.

On Thursday, the Donna Jean
Godchaux Band
opened the musical celebration, honoring the Dead with “Sugaree” and
“Help on the
Way/Slipknot!,” where guitarist Jeff
Mattson
further promoted his ability to mimic Jerry’s playing (and even physical
demeanor) to a T.
Dark Star
Orchestra
, who
headlined Thursday night’s festivities, were the talk of the festival. Faced with
categorical adversity, the Grateful
Dead “cover band” truly lived up to their insistence that they are prolonging the message
of the Dead as a “spirit
band.” Performing an original set, DSO highlighted a series of hits including “Cassidy,”
“China Cat Sunflower > I
Know You Rider,” and “Not Fade Away.” A beautiful sight to be seen and heard, DSO
successfully made believers out
of doubters atop Marvin’s Mountain.


Donna Jean Godchaux

Late Night Revels

Customary to most festival’s late night acts, All Good provided an overnight scene packed
with electronica and DJ
sets by The New
Deal
, Bassnectar, Lotus, DJ Harry
and
others to offer some
momentous fuel to keep the audiences’ tanks off empty.

However, two major highlights of this festival were from late night performers who are not
wedged into the hip-
hop/electronica field. On Saturday night, improvisation laced experimental jazz quartet
Garage A Trois
took the stage and
launched the audience on a journey via manipulated horns, keys, circuit bent toys and
doorbell sounds. Amassing
the best improvisational artists on the scene, this jam band mega-group of Marco
Benevento, Mike Dillon,
Stanton Moore
and Skerik have further positioned themselves as forces to be
reckoned with when
considering the must-see groups on the jam circuit. They performed their staple cover of
Led Zeppelin’s “No
Quarter,” which left half of the crowd struggling to lift their jaws from the grass and
muck.

Following GAT’s Saturday evening performance was bluegrass favorite’s Yonder Mountain String
Band
, who
carried the musical torch energetically into the night. The group hit some newer material
(“Out Of The Blue”) and
rested lightly on covers, channeling Ozzy Osbourne (“Crazy Train”) and J.J. Cale (“After
Midnight”). Diehard fans were
pleased by the band dipping into their first album Elevation with “Mental
Breakdown” and “If There’s Still
Ramblin’ in the Rambler.” Even late into the night, YMSB can re-ignite the sky with
blazing bluegrass riffs and high
energy on stage persona that make the audience in attendance oblivious to the chirping
birds and impending
sunrise as they edge into morning.


Keller Williams

K-Dub Sandwich

Sunday, the final day of the festival, was reserved for Keller Williams, bookending the festival with a morning and
afternoon closing set. The
morning run, dubbed Keller’s Moonshine Breakfast, involved husband and wife duo
Larry & Jenny
Keel
for a set that focused primarily on their new album, Thief (a collection
of cover songs), but
peppered in some hits to the crowd’s delight. Passing out moonshine to all the early
risers, fans were pleasantly
bopping to bluegrass renditions of Marcy’s Playground’s “Sex and Candy” and Kris
Kristofferson’s “Year 2003 Minus
25″ ’til they tipped over. Later in the day, the All Good legend closed the festival with
Keller Williams & The
Added Bonus
, comprised of Claude Arthur, Jay Starling and Toby
Fairchild
. As stated
earlier, All Good 2010 unofficially paid homage to the Grateful Dead throughout the
weekend and as expected, the
Added Bonus put the icing on the cake with renditions of “Bertha” and “Shakedown
Street.”


Widespread Panic

Beyond the Music

Beyond the spectacular variety of music and festivities All Good provides for its fans, it
also contributes its altruistic
nature to the residents of Masontown, West Virginia as well. In a town where the
population tops out at 1,000
strong, it can often be overwhelming to see tens of thousands of “strangers” roll through
your neighborhood for one
weekend each year. But as Tim Walther of Walther Productions explains, All Good
donates funds
throughout the local community and other departments around the neighborhood as a symbol
of gratitude for their
space.

“We generate a ton of revenue to all of the local retail outlets,” he told the
Meadville Tribune. “We generate
a lot of taxes for the state, we put local folks and companies to work for the week and we
hire local nonprofit
groups.”

The festival also donates funds to the local Masontown Fire Department, who provide a
shower service for the event.
All Good also prides itself on working with even larger non-profits like the Rex
Foundation, Conscious Alliance,
Headcount, and Rock the Earth. All Good is truly a festival where the name fits the place
(and the people).


New Mastersounds

Key Covers

Umphrey’s
McGee
wowed
the crowd on a hazy, grey afternoon. Rolling through hits old and new, the jam band
princes performed an
instrumental ” I’m On Fire” (Bruce Springsteen) and a flawless “It’s About That Time”
(Miles Davis). Greensky
Bluegrass
woke up
Shakedown dwellers with “We’re an American Band” (Grand Funk Railroad) on the Grassroots
Stage. Derek Trucks
and Susan Tedeschi kicked off their performance with The Beatles’ ” I’ve Got a Feeling”
and teased Bob Marley’s
“Trenchtown Rock” midway through their set. Donna Jean Godchaux and Jeff Mattson
channeled The Beatles as well,
displaying dual vocals on “She Said, She Said.”

Key Collaborations

Derek Trucks sat in with Widespread Panic to close their first set with “Second Skin,”
“Gimme,” and “Henry Parsons
Died.” Earlier in the evening Panic’s Jimmy Herring sat in with Derek Trucks and Susan Tedeschi. Jennifer
Hartswick
played trumpet
with Tea Leaf
Green
on
“Georgie P” as well as joining the Rex Jam during the Everyone Orchestra set. Dark Star Orchestra’s Rob Koritz
sat in with Donna
Jean Godchaux Band and Baltimore’s The Bridge for “Geraldine.”

JamBase | Mountain High
Go See Live Music!

View more photos below or flip over to page two to check ‘em all out on one screen.

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7/8/11 – 7/11/10 – All Good Festival @ Marvin’s Mountaintop (Masontown,
WV)
View Photos

Images by Jeffrey Dupuis


Donna Jean Godchaux Band w/Jeff Mattson


Femi Kuti


Phil Lesh


Bob Weir


Railroad Earth


George Clinton & Parliament Funkadelic


Perpetual Groove


Susan Tedeschi


The New Mastersounds


Widespread Panic


Stanton Moore


The Lee Boys


All Good/Forecastle Previews

By: Dennis Cook
JamBase Associate
Editor

How you holding up? It’s only July, kids, and there’s MANY more sets and sunrises to enjoy before summer comes to
an end. Eat some high fiber cereal, take your vitamins and pack enough beer. We’re far from over this season! Let’s
dive into two primo offerings this coming weekend.

All Good Festival :: 07.08.10-07.11.10 :: Marvin’s Mountaintop :: Masontown,
WV

This mid-Atlantic darling genuinely lives up to its catchphrase name. With no overlapping music on its twin Dragon
and Crane Stages, All Good encourages one to settle in and enjoy the musical adventure they’ve programmed for
you, cutting back on the gypsy wandering one experiences at most summer fests. Umph’s Jake Cinninger has dubbed
to performance space “the concert bowl,” and it’s all-too-easy to imagine stretching out on the grass as headliners
Furthur, Widespread Panic, Umphrey’s McGee and Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi rock ya for a little
while. Here’s a few suggestions for sets you should be out of your tent in time to enjoy.

1. Femi Kuti & The Positive Force ::
Friday :: 3:45-4:50 PM :: Dragon Stage

While his father is currently the toast of Broadway, Femi Kuti is breathing hot life into the musical tradition Fela
began. A fiery blend of dance-ready African rhythms, political themes and tight, large group musicianship, Femi &
Positive Force are lethal live. Come prepared to kick off your shoes and dance.

2. Dr. Dog :: Saturday :: 2:40-
3:40 PM :: Dragon Stage

If The Beatles had decided to NOT retire from the road and instead suss out ways to transmute their studio brilliance
into equally brilliant live performances, well, it might have sounded a good deal like Dr. Dog. While the band’s
presence has grown rapidly on the national stage, based on what JamBase heard at High Sierra, many fest veterans
haven’t experienced their life-affirming concert performances yet. This is soul-deep music that arms one with small
kernels of wisdom and puts a warm breeze beneath your heels.

3. The Lee Boys & The Travelin’ McCourys :: Sunday ::
12:15-2:15 PM :: Dragon Stage

Sacred steel meets bluegrass and southern rock. It’s a gosh darn beautiful combination and a far cry from the way
these boys play when Del is leading the charge. A real conversation that expands one’s musical horizons takes place
when this bunch assembles onstage. Not to be missed, and a grand way to get your Sunday rolling.

Check out JamBase’s 2009 All Good review for fuller picture of what awaits you on Marvin’s
Mountaintop.

All Good Music Schedule

All Good Directions

All Good Official Site

Continue reading for our picks for Forecastle Festival…

Forecastle Festival :: 07.09.10-07.11.10 :: Waterfront Park :: Louisville,
Kentucky

The 9th Annual Forecastle Festival, located in the heart of one of the great cities of the South, takes its
name, according to the fest’s website, from a sailing term meaning “a superstructure at the bow of a ship where the
crew is housed. Hard at work in the boundless blue sea, a place where workers unite after a hard day of labor. A
place where the people come together.” Sounds nice, and it won’t be hard to have a good time with headliners like
Widespread Panic, Smashing Pumpkins, Spoon and The Flaming Lips providing the
soundtrack for one’s revels. And there’s a lot of other golden moments waiting to happen on Forecastle’s four music
stages. Here’s three keepers we want to steer attendees towards.

1. Lucero :: Friday :: 10:30-12:00
midnight :: East Stage

While many of you will be glued to Widespread on the main stage, another American rock ‘n’ roll great will be playing
a short distance away. Over the past 12 years, Lucero has married punk to southern rock and quality singer-
songwriter sensibilities. Anchored by Ben Nichols and Brian Venable, the band is as real as a
heart attack and tuneful as the best Drive-By Truckers and The Replacements, just two kindred spirits to this
exceptional band.

2. Devo :: Saturday :: 7:30-8:45
PM :: West Stage

The term “devolution” didn’t exist before these spud boys invented it. Not many bands alter the general social
lexicon AND cover the Rolling Stones with aplomb. Devo is playing with real energy and wit these days, perhaps
reveling in the fact that they were already living the present moment decades before us all. You don’t want to tell
your grandkids one day that you missed a chance to see these guys live.

3. Joe Purdy :: Sunday :: 1:00-
1:45 PM :: West Stage

Very quietly but with sure, strong steps, Purdy has crafted one of the finest, heaviest songbooks of any American
singer-songwriter going. His beautifully broken voice, his vaguely hobo-esque appearance and especially his insight
into the human condition leave a profound impression.

Check out JamBase’s 2009 Forecastle review for insights into what lays ahead in year nine.

Forecastle Schedule

Forecastle Directions

Forecastle Official Site

JamBase | Toes In The Grass
Go See Live Music!


Nateva/High Sierra Festival Previews

By: Dennis Cook, JamBase Associate Editor

As the summer festival season rolls on, JamBase looks ahead to 4th of July weekend with helpful links and considered suggestions for two major gatherings, one in the East and one in the West.

Nateva Music & Camping Festival

Maine hasn’t had a gathering like the inaugural Nateva Music & Camping Festival before. A more intimate cousin to big boys like Coachella and Bonnaroo, Nateva is a three-day (or four if you count the Thursday night warm-up with Gypsy Tailwind, Lettuce and Lotus) jam-happy event, July 2-4, at the 100 acre Oxford Fairgrounds, which are just a couple hours from Boston and 45 minutes from Portland, Maine. With headliners moe., Grizzly Bear, The Flaming Lips, Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi, STS9 and festival closers Furthur, this is set to be an auspicious debut.

Nateva organizer Frank Chandler told the Bangor Daily News today, “It’s all about creating this little temporary community that is centered around music. It’s uniquely intimate, since we’ve capped ticket sales at 15,000. It’s not like other festivals, where there are just thousands upon thousands of people. We don’t want anyone to feel overwhelmed. That was always the goal.”

Sounds like a good mindset and game plan for a fine festivarian experience. And here’s a few pointers of our own for your listening adventure.

1. Greensky Bluegrass :: Friday :: 12:05-1:05 PM :: Main Stage 1

There’s a curious, compelling mixture of roughneck energy and brainy sophistication to Greensky. They dabble in bluegrass ways but have just as much in common with the rowdy cleverness of early Ozark Mountain Daredevils and fellow contemporary rules breakers the Punch Brothers. They’re also super swell when they take things down a bit, making folks lean in and plucking heartstrings as efficiently as their instruments.

2. The Heavy Pets :: Friday :: 5:30-7:00 PM :: Port City Music Hall Stage

There’s no dirth of ambition in the Pets, who proudly wear the “jam band” tag in an age where it’s increasingly less cool. If groups played with as much fire or snaking imagination as this Florida outfit then it might not be on the slide. The Heavy Pets have built a fan base the old fashioned way, i.e. through tireless touring, which has sharpened their chops and grown their catalog extensively. The lines between rock, reggae, electronica, soul and prog get blurred nicely in the Pets, who just released their self-titled sophomore album in May.

3. Crash Kings:: Saturday :: 3:15-4:15 PM :: Main Stage 2

Dirty ass rock ‘n’ roll rarely happens without guitars, but there’s wonderful exceptions like the Crash Kings, a trio with serious whomp that’s got keys as their primary assault weapon. Throw that on top a rhythm section that reminds one of a robust young Zeppelin plus a singer with the raw energy of young Rod Stewart and you’ve got good times. Our guess is they’ll bring it hard in this afternoon set.

4. Nate Wilson Group :: Sunday :: 1:15-2:00 PM :: Port City Music Hall Stage

Melodic hard rock has few better allies than former Assembly of Dust keyboardist Nate Wilson and his fine Group, who in more than a few ways nod back to the original Jeff Beck Group with AOD guitarist Adam Terrell burning hot front and center on many pieces (though the guy has a Gilmour-like subtlety, too – definitely one of rock’s under-sung greats). What the NWG has over the competition is super strong songwriting that scoops out the yummy parts of rock and serves them up in a really appealing way. JamBase awaits the follow-up to their killer debut impatiently.

5. Moonalice:: Sunday :: 1:45-2:45 PM :: Main Stage 2

Moonalice delivers good ol’ hippie freak rock with a genuine love of festival type folks, you know quality weirdos who like to kick down a door of perception or three but wanna boogie a touch as they break on through to the other side. This rising West Coast group is working on being a national concern and this is a chance for our East Coast readers to get a taste of what we’ve been enjoying in the Bay Area for a spell.

The good folks at iClips will be webcasting from Nateva here during the festival.

Nateva Music Schedule

Nateva Directions

Nateva Official Site

Continue reading for our picks for High Sierra Music Festival…

High Sierra Music Festival

The High Sierra Music Festival celebrates its 20th anniversary this year. From Thursday, July 1st through late Sunday, July 4th, the mountain fairgrounds in Quincy, CA that serve as home to this fest will overflow with great music and hearty companionship. With tents and RVs surrounding the performance spaces and the most casual artist-fan relationship in the fest circuit, High Sierra stands apart in many ways. The “hang” is all, and it casts a spell over attendees and performers alike, where often the guitarist who shredded your mind in the afternoon is standing next to you in the evening while headliners like Widespread Panic, The Black Crowes, Railroad Earth and The Avett Brothers (it’s nigh impossible to hold a summer fest in 2010 without them!) flatten the masses. You’ll both have the same stupid, entirely copacetic grin on your faces, too.

Here’s five winners from the broad assortment on offer this year.

1. Nicki Bluhm & The Gramblers :: Thursday :: 12:15-1:30 PM :: Vaudeville Tent

It’s worth getting set up early so you can leave your tent behind and catch this nooner with one of the most talented, charming young singers and bands on the West Coast. They’ve got the swerve and bluesy slap of vintage Linda Ronstadt and Traci Nelson & Mother Earth, though their straight pop chops ain’t shabby neither. In a nutshell, good, good, good rock ‘n’ roll fronted by a powerful, fetching singer. What the hell else do you need to kick off your revels?
[Nicki & The Gramblers also perform on Friday from 11:30-12:45 pm on the Big Meadow Stage]

2. Nels Cline Singers :: Thursday :: 7:30-8:45 PM :: Vaudeville Tent

People who only caught wind of mind-blowing guitarist Nels Cline after he joined Wilco have whole worlds to explore in Cline’s past, not to mention his ongoing solo, projects with gifted pals like Jenny Scheinman and more. However, it’s with the Singers that one feels closest to whatever internal mojo fires up Cline. Flanked by Devin Hoff (contrabass, bass guitar) and percussion & electronics whiz Scott Amendola, Cline veers into hitherto unexplored sonic spaces. At times jarring or unexpectedly beautiful in the strangest places, the Nels Cline Singers harness adventurousness to some of the best musicianship we’re likely to witness at HSMF 2010.
[The Singers also perform on Friday from 11:15-12:30 pm in the Vaudeville Tent]

3. Rubblebucket :: Friday :: 4:55-6:20 PM :: Vaudeville Tent

Frequently those that delve into Afrobeat sound like mere copycats, though many come off well due to high energy presentation. What’s swell about Rubblebucket is how they clearly draw from Afrobeat’s ideas but mingle them with bits of Talking Heads and other rhythm-wise modern rock. Hailing from three fine B’s – Burlington, Boston and Brooklyn – this is a cool opportunity for West Coasters to experience one of the most justifiably buzzed about bands on the circuit right now.
[Rubblebucket also plays Thursday 3:30-4:45 in the Vaudeville Tent]

4. The Black Seeds :: Saturday :: 2:20-3:40 PM :: Vaudeville Tent

New Zealand may not be the first place one thinks of when it comes to quality funky reggae music, but that might change real fast once you hear the Seeds. With a reach way beyond roots reggae (though they do that well, too), this band makes honestly soulful music with one of the strongest vocal mixes around. And their compositions are smartly drawn and full of perfect, unexpected twists and breakdowns. Come prepared to sweat a bit.
[The Black Seeds also play Sunday 1:45-3:00 on the Big Meadow Stage]

5. Newfangled Wasteland :: Sunday :: 5:30-6:45 PM :: Big Meadow Stage

You ain’t never heard Beck like this. Made up of Trevor Garrod (Tea Leaf Green) on keys & vocals, bassist-singer Steve Adams (ALO, Big Light), guitarist Chris Haugen and drummer-singer Dave Brogan, the quartet shows real affection and just enough irreverence to make the material soar. Even the more familiar Beck ditties wiggle differently in their grasp, and their knack for unearthing pleasures in deep cuts is something else.
[Newfangled Wasteland also plays 2:30-3:45 pm on the Grandstand Stage on Thursday]

High Sierra Music Schedule

High Sierra Late Night Music Schedule

High Sierra Directions

High Sierra Official Site


Desert Rocks Festival | 05.28-05.30 | Utah

Words & Images by: Jared Dayley

Desert Rocks Festival :: 05.28.10-05.30.10 :: Moab, Utah

Desert Rocks 2010 was the culmination of hard work by organizers over the
past six years. The location outside the legendary town of Moab, Utah is a magnet for many
other reasons besides a festival. The festival has gained steam and presence in the minds
of those not just in Colorado and Utah, and although they may have been the majority of
attendees, the license plates represented at Desert Rocks showed diversity from across the
country.

The festival started with a couple flat bed trailers as stages by organizers who, to my
knowledge, had little to no experience running a festival. Over the years, bands like
Derek Trucks, ALO, Hot Butter Rum and The Mother Hips have headlined (and in many cases
returned multiple times), have performed, and this year featured greats like Melvin Seals with the
Jerry Garcia
Band
(who sincerely brought about the spirit of Garcia), The Mother Hips,Groundation, Emmitt-Nershi Band,
The Motet, Equaleyes, Chali 2na, Wisebird
and
David
Gans
.

The toughest part about attending Desert Rocks is knowing when to retire for the day
because you’re afraid you’ll miss out on something great after 2 am. However, the music
can be clearly heard all over the campsites and parking lots. The festival is located in
a natural sort of amphitheater with a 30 foot cliff circling the grounds. One of the best
parts of this festival is getting out of one’s vehicle or tent in the warm morning and
finding a Grateful Dead style atmosphere – telltale paraphernalia, converted school buses
and waking up to “China Cat Sunflower > I Know You Rider” being played from the second
story of a VW bus.

Desert Rocks may be a little smaller than many more widely publicized gathering but that’s
what gives the festival a free and easy feel. The distant snow capped mountains, the
desert rock formations, the flowering cacti, interesting lizards afoot, and good vendors
with interesting clothing and food make for a fine atmosphere and experience that for some
folks marks the beginning of the summer music season.

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Desert Rocks Music Festival (Moab, UT) View
Photos

JamBase | Utah
Go See Live Music!


Jazz Fest 4.30 Fri | Photos & Best Of

Words by: Tom Speed | Images by: Dino Perrucci

Jazz Fest – Weekend 2 – Day 2 :: 04.30.10 :: Friday :: New Orleans, LA

Kermit Ruffins :: 04.30.10 :: Jazz Fest

The best laid plans aren’t worth a damn. Repeatedly, the ad hoc yields the sweetest fruit. Days like Friday, April 30 at the Jazz Festival reinforce this truth time and time again.

The giddiness rears its head when the cubes are published. Hours pored over scheduling increases excitement. When the day comes, it’s irrelevant. A well-planned and structured itinerary is no substitute for a day of happy accidents and splendid surprises. With the rain staying away despite the weatherman’s best attempts to doom and gloom the otherwise optimistic, a gentle fairgrounds-wide mist tent effect cast a pleasant ambiance over a day filled with brilliant unplanned pleasure. To wit:

Tom’s Top Three Aural

#1 Allen Toussaint (Acura Stage)

Allen Toussaint was a contributing factor in the best set of the day on Thursday and helmed the best set on Friday. He’s New Orleans royalty, and his mid-afternoon performance on the Acura Stage proved why. Exuding class and professionalism, Toussaint’s top-notch band (including the resplendent Theresa Andersson as one of the background vocalists) radiated confidence as they spun the sounds Toussaint helped birth many moons ago. Touching on standards and mainstays, they were at times funky, soulful, and moving. Giving “City of New Orleans” a twist that removed any sense of cliche was a mean feat that was handled adroitly, and the sprawling “Southern Nights” closer was awe-inspiring fun.

#2 Steve Riley and the Mamou Playboys (Fais Do-Do Stage)

The infectious zydeco groove commands your dancing, your swaying, and your shuffling. The onstage capabilities grab your respect. When the band was joined by three trombonists from Bonerama, it underscored the wide swath that the music at Jazz Fest covers and cross-pollinates at the same time.

#3 Mardi Gras Indian Orchestra (Louisiana Heritage Stage)

A loose amalgamation of Mardi Gras Indian tribesmen and various interested instrumentalists, the Mardi Gras Indian Orchestra celebrates this musical tradition with the addition of a string section and a cavalcade of participants, including Reggie and Camille of The Radiators.

Tom’s Top Three Gustatory

#1 Fried Chicken

Like playing guitar, making fried chicken is easy to do competently but takes real talent to do exceptionally. The fine folks at Jazz Fest have talent.

#2 William’s Plum Street Snowballs

The nectar cream snowball could easily be classified a Schedule IV narcotic.

#3 Coors in a can

Here’s a fun game: try to drink the whole can before the “cold activated” thingy turns from blue to gray. It’s tough in the New Orleans heat, but practice makes perfect. Or something like that.

Tom’s Top Three Lagniappe

#1 Eric Lindell

The overflowing crowd at the Blues Tent before and during Lindell’s set rendered the situation unsympathetic to mellowing out to his groovy vibe. It’s great that he’s catching on with so many new fans, but it’s well past time to put him on a main stage. Ya heard?

#2 Pinwheels

They’re a highly underrated form of entertainment. Just sayin’.

#3 Celebrating your wife’s birthday with her at Jazz Fest

Every year. It’s one hell of a birthday party.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”0″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=46″);}); New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival Friday Weekend 2 | New Orleans Fairgrounds | New Orleans, LA Our Second Weekend Friday Photo Gallery features Kermit Ruffins, Allen Toussaint, Derek Trucks and Susan Tedeschi Band, New Orleans Social Club featuring George Porter Jr., Henry Butler, Ivan Neville and Leo Nocentelli, Jonathan Batiste, Astral Project, Eric Lindell, Forgotten Souls Brass Band, John Boutte, Elvis Perkins in Dearland, Nicholas Payton and more… View Photos

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

Check out Second Weekend Thursday coverage of Jazz Fest here.

Check out First Weekend Friday coverage of Jazz Fest here.

Check out First Weekend Saturday coverage of Jazz Fest here.

Check out First Weekend Sunday coverage of Jazz Fest here.

Check back tomorrow for more coverage of Jazz Fest…

JamBase | New Orleans

Go See Live Music!


Nateva Adds: Lettuce, Grizzly Bear Toubab, EOTO, Truckers, Greene

4TH OF JULY WEEKEND FEST IN MAINE ADDS 33 MORE BANDS


The Nateva Music & Camping Festival has added the following artists to their 2010 lineup:

Grizzly Bear

She & Him
Passion Pit
Grizzly Bear
Drive-By Truckers
Ghostland Observatory
Jackie Greene
Jakob Dylan & Three Legs
Crash Kings
Mark Karan’s Jemimah Puddleduck
Rustic Overtones
Lettuce
Gypsy Tailwind
EOTO
Big Gigantic
The Brew
The Constellations
Toubab Krewe
The Indobox
Roots of Creation
Bow Thayer & Perfect Trainwreck
Nate Wilson Group
The Alchemystics
The Kind Buds
Adam Ezra Group
The McLovins
The Heavy Pets
Nephrok! Allstars
You Can Be a Wesley
Billy Keane and the Misdemeanor Outlaws
Brenda
The Mallet Brothers
Grand Hotel
Magic Magic

The bands will join an all-star roster of artists previously announced, including July 4 Festival headliner Furthur, July 3 headliner The Flaming Lips; July 2 headliner moe.; and Lotus, who will close out the special Thursday night festivities on July 1. Also scheduled to perform at the three-day festival are The Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Band, Zappa Plays Zappa, Keller Williams, Moonalice, STS9, George Clinton & Parliament Funkadelic, Umphrey’s McGee, Max Creek, John Brown’s Body, The Felice Brothers, Ryan Montbleau Band, Giant Panda Guerilla Dub Squad, and Greensky Bluegrass.

The Nateva Music & Camping Festival is a 3-day, multi stage outdoor camping event to be held July 2, 3 & 4 at the beautiful 100 acre Oxford Fairgrounds – 2 hours and 25 minutes from Boston and 45 minutes from Portland, Maine.

Weekend passes to this musical oasis in Maine with camping are $249 and without camping $229 but, will remain on-sale through Friday, May 7th for $219 and $199 here. A limited number of VIP packages ($425), featuring special viewing platforms, preferred parking, camping, dining, a full-service bar, and more amenities are also available.


Jazz Fest 4.25 Day 3 | Photo Gallery & Best Of

Words by: Kayceman | Images by:
Dino
Perrucci

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

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

Kayceman’s Top 3

#1 Levon Helm
Band

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

#2 Blind Boys of
Alabama

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

#3 The Allman
Brothers Band

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

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

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

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

Check out Friday’s coverage of Jazz Fest here.

Check out Saturday’s Coverage of Jazz Fest here.

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

JamBase | New Orleans

Go See Live Music!