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Posts Tagged ‘Dino Perrucci’

Warren Haynes Christmas Jam 2010 | Photos

Images by: Dino Perrucci

Warren Haynes Christmas Jam :: 12.11.10 :: Asheville Civic Center :: Asheville, NC

This past Saturday Warren Haynes hosted the 22nd Warren Haynes Christmas Jam in his hometown. Joining Haynes and his soulful new solo band were the Gregg Allman Band, Steve Miller Band, Widespread’s John Bell, Umphrey’s McGee and more, all of whom donated their time and talent to a worthy cause. All proceeds from the Christmas Jam will go to Habitat For Humanity. To date, Haynes’ annual event has raised close to $850,000 for the organization.

Find the extensive setlist here. There’s nifty roundup for this year’s event by Scott Bernstein over at Glide, and we’ve got these prime shots from the very talented Mr. Perrucci.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”2″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=180″);}); 12/11/10 – Warren Haynes Christmas Jam @ Asheville Civic Center (Asheville, NC) View Photos

JamBase | North Carolina
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Grace Potter and the Nocturnals | Secret Show Review

By: Shayna Hodkin

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals :: 08.19.10 :: Bryant Park :: New York, NY

Grace Potter by Dino Perrucci

“Where else would we rather be? Nowhere.” Grace Potter wasn’t the only one who felt this way last Thursday night. The audience was full of fortunate people, feeling like winners, who were all incredibly lucky to be where they were.

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals‘ last-minute Thursday night show, hosted by The Artist’s Den, was packed. An announcement about ticketing for the secret show was released Tuesday by Relix Magazine, where fans were able to submit their names all day Tuesday and Wednesday to a free ticket raffle and the winners were emailed the event details on Wednesday night. The announcement soon ended up all over Twitter and music blogs, and by Wednesday’s end, hundreds of names had been submitted for a tight guest list. Showtime Thursday proved Potter’s popularity in New York with a line that stretched for three blocks, moving into the rest of the park and its surrounding area.

The show kicked off with the fitting “Hot Summer Night.” Bassist Catherine Popper and drummer Matt Burr threw down a funky rhythm section until Potter, looking like a goddess with her white dress and long hair, jumped on stage with her hands in the air and her voice bringing everyone all over the park to their feet. The band then moved into some older material, with a kickin’ “Ah, Mary” that set the tone for what Potter described as “the saddest happy breakup song,” “Goodbye Kiss,” from the band’s self-titled album released this past June on Hollywood Records.

The selection of old and new material, along with some narration by Potter, established a pretty clear theme for the setlist, namely heartbreak that is always followed by a strong return. “That Phone”, “Apologies” and “Low Road” highlighted not only Potter’s incredibly soulful chops but also her ability to engage a crowd; Potter’s banter with the band is always witty, and her choice of stories is always relatable. New Yorkers can be a tough crowd, but you would never guess Potter was from anywhere else. She loves New York, even though sometimes there’s dog poop on stage, a problem the band faced Thursday night with good humor. Only in New York, Popper lamented, will you get dog poo on your shoes when you’re onstage at your own concert.

Nocturnals by Dino Perrucci

The enthusiasm of Grace Potter and the Nocturnals is undeniable. Though the show was scheduled from 7:30-8:45, the music didn’t stop until closer to 9:30. The band was having a great time, and the audience was sucked in; the venue stayed full from long before the band took the stage until the end of the encore’s fourth and final song. The eagerness and love of everyone onstage was contagious, and there was no way to avoid catching some of their energy.

“Sexy” is the word that most accurately describes everything about Grace Potter and the Nocturnals. Even when she isn’t making out with Catherine Popper onstage – although it’s definitely a plus when she is – she and the band pour a passion into the show that leaves the audience a sweaty, exhausted, fulfilled mess. Songs like “Paris,” “Oasis,” “Medicine” and “Nothing But The Water” highlight Potter’s unapologetic confidence, while also spurs the rest of the band to showcase their own talents and extremely good looks. When it came time for the drum jam, the whole band intertwined over the drum kit, and the sheer amount of physical attractiveness onstage was slightly overwhelming. Somehow all six band members won the genetic lottery, so their live show is a pleasure even for the deaf.

The spirit of Grace Potter and the Nocturnals brought a breath of country air to a stagnant New York City summer. The surprise, secret nature of the show lent a VIP feel to a great venue and consistently incredible live act. If summer has to end, this is a great way to blow it out.

Setlist:
Hot Summer Night, Ah, Mary, Goobye Kiss, Only Love, Tiny Light, Apologies, One Short Thing, Low Road, That Phone, Oasis, White Rabbit (Jefferson Airplane cover),
Paris (Ooh La La), Medicine > Drum Jam. E: Heart of Glass (Blondie cover), Stop the Bus, Big White Gate, Nothing But the Water Part I > Nothing But the Water Part II > Drum Jam

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals Tour Dates :: Grace Potter and the Nocturnals News :: Grace Potter and the Nocturnals Concert Reviews

JamBase | Big Apple
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Telluride Blues & Brews B.B. King, ZZ Top, Galactic

TELLURIDE BLUES & BREWS ANNOUNCES INITIAL LINEUP

B.B. King, ZZ Top, The Mick Fleetwood Blues Band, Allen Toussaint, and Galactic

Telluride Blues & Brews 2009 by Dino Perrucci

The Telluride Blues & Brews Festival, which will be held September 17-20, 2010, has announced B.B. King and ZZ Top will be headlining this year’s festival. Joining these legendary artists on the Blues & Brews stage will be Mick Fleetwood Blues Band, Allen Toussaint, Galactic, Black Joe Lewis & the Honeybears, JJ Grey & Mofro, Lightnin’ Malcolm & Cedric Burnside, Matt Schofield, Alberta Cross, Dana Fuchs, Ronnie Baker Brooks, Gospel Morning with The Otis Taylor Band featuring Chuck Campbell and the Sheryl Renee Choir (Otis Taylor & Chuck Campbell will also be performing at one of the Juke Joints), Phil Wiggins & Corey Harris, Grady Champion, Terrence Simian & the Zydeco Experience, The Sugar Thieves, Bill Magee Blues Band, Little Al Thomas and The Deep Down Fools. And that’s not all! The final lineup for the 17th Annual Telluride Blues & Brews Festival, along with a very special Saturday headliner, will be announced on August 16, 2010. Stay tuned!

Along with an amazing weekend of music, Telluride Blues & Brews proudly presents the Grand Tasting on Saturday, September 18, 2010. One of the premier tasting events in the Southwest, the Grand Tasting features more than 150 beers from over 50 microbreweries, including those from the Telluride Blues & Brews official beer sponsor, Sierra Nevada Brewing Company. This event has it all, from ales to lagers, nut browns to I.P.A.’s and everything in between, from award-winning microbreweries from the Southwest and beyond.

Additional festival highlights include, late night shows at the local Juke Joints and after hours jams, Free Acoustic Artist Series, Blues for Breakfast, The Rainbow Kids area and Kid’s parade and the Telluride Acoustic Blues Competition.

Juke Joint tickets, three-day passes and camping passes for the 17th Annual Telluride Blues & Brews Festival are on sale now. A three-day pass is available for $160.00 and Juke Joint tickets are sold per night at $25. Festival camping is available adjacent to the festival grounds for $40 per person and are valid for 4 nights starting Thursday, September 16. Single-day, Bal de Maison and After Hours Jam tickets go on sale Thursday, July 1 at 10:00 a.m. MST. Friday and Sunday tickets can be purchased for $55.00 each and Saturday for $65.00. Bal de Maison are $20. After Hours Jam are $15.00. Tickets can be purchased at www.tellurideblues.com or by calling 866-515-6166.

For more on Telluride Blues & Brews see or 2009 coverage here.


Jazz Fest 5.02 Sun | Photos & Best Of

Words by: Tom Speed | Images by: Dino Perrucci

Jazz Fest – Weekend 2 – Day 4 :: 05.02.10 :: Sunday :: New Orleans, LA

The Neville Brothers :: 05.02.10 :: Jazz Fest

The nursery rhyme goes, “Rain, rain, go away, come again another day.” Tens of thousands of people were likely chanting that little prayer, to themselves at the least, throughout the weekend. “Another Day” finally came for Jazz Fest’s second weekend on Sunday. While the weather portended rain throughout the weekend, it finally delivered on Sunday. It wasn’t severe. Just drizzles and a brief shower. And who couldn’t use a good shower after seven days of Jazz Fest? But with every cloud there’s a silver lining, and the lining on a rainy Jazz Fest day is that it keeps the fair weather festival-goers away, so the crowds were significantly thinned, and pleasantly so. In many ways, it was the best of days. The best of the best were:

Tom’s Top Three Aural

#1 The Radiators (Gentilly Stage)

For many people, the annual Jazz Fest does not officially end until the “first family of New Orleans,” The Neville Brothers, completes their closing Sunday set at the Acura Stage. For an entirely different breed of freaks, the culmination of festivities is marked by The Radiators’ annual throw-down on the Gentilly Stage. As always, it was a celebratory after party for all those who had made it through the entire 10-day fest featuring searing guitar solos and relentless groove tunes. They continue to be the preeminent progenitors of swampy, blues-based jam rock in New Orleans.

#2 Van Morrison (Acura Stage)

Van The Man earned his moniker with his mid-afternoon, rain-soaked set on the Acura Stage. Nimbly shifting between piano, guitar and saxophone, he led his sprawling band through a passionate set that touched on the most well-known songs of his catalog, with “Moondance” in particular receiving a languid, pleasant stretching out, and included a great take on “St. James Infirmary Blues,” where he stated from the stage, “We’re in New Orleans, so why not?”

#3 Los Po-Boy-Citos (Lagniappe Stage)

This Latin funk band’s set at the covered Lagniappe Stage under the grandstand during a downpour drew a crowd that was perhaps seeking shelter but left having danced away any concerns about it.

Tom’s Top Three Gustatory

#1 Crawfish Strudel

#2 Strawberry Lemonade

#3 Coors Beer

Because on the third day it was really hard to find, kind of like in Smokey and the Bandit.

Tom’s Top Three Lagniappe

#1 Treme

It’s difficult to take in the sights and sounds of New Orleans and Jazz Fest without thinking of the new HBO series Treme from David Simon, the creator of The Wire. That’s in large part due to the fact that in seeking an authentic tone, the show features many local musicians. Kermit Ruffins, Trombone Shorty, Allen Toussaint and members of Galactic were all featured prominently in the early episodes, which have shown great promise.

#2 Scoring a free, legal parking spot on Crete Street.

#3 Wondering how to schedule my Monday without the help of “cubes.”

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”8″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=48″);}); New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival Sunday Weekend 2 | New Orleans Fairgrounds | New Orleans, LA Our Second Weekend Sunday Photo Gallery features The Neville Brothers, Irma Thomas, The Dead Weather featuring Jack White, Zion Harmonizers, Davell Crawford, Preservation Hall Jazz Band, Wayne Shorter, Brian Blade, Richie Havens, the Wild Magnolias 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 Second Weekend Friday coverage of Jazz Fest here.

Check out Second Weekend Saturday 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.

JamBase | New Orleans

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Jazz Fest 5.01 Sat | Photos & Best Of

Words by: Tom Speed | Images by: Dino Perrucci & Chad Smith

Jazz Fest – Weekend 2 – Day 3 :: 05.01.10 :: Saturday :: New Orleans, LA

Pearl Jam :: 05.01.10 :: Jazz Fest by Smith

Massive crowds swarmed the Fairgrounds Racetrack on Saturday as blustery weather whipped the track and infield into dust gusts. It didn’t deter the sea of people who lined up across the track at the Acura Stage to hear Pearl Jam and filled the Gentilly Stage area for Band of Horses and Jeff Beck. The smaller stages, too, enjoyed swelling crowds. Lots of people, lots of music, lots of food and lots of drinks. And the highlights were:

Tom’s Top Three Aural

#1 Anders Osborne (Acura Stage)

Backed by the Stanton Moore Trio (Stanton Moore on drums, Robert Walter on keyboards and Will Bernard on guitar), Anders Osborne and his prodigious beard delivered a blistering set on the main, Acura Stage Saturday afternoon, leaning heavily on his new album, American Patchwork (released 4/27/10 on Alligator Records), which features the same backing band. The set kicked off the same way as the record with shredding power rocker “Road To Charlie Parker.” It’s a meditation that includes the memorable lines, “You’re like a diamond that doesn’t shine, a Rolex that won’t tell time.”

It’s no secret that Osborne has dealt with demons in the past, and he thanked his backing band from the stage for helping him to “get my shit together.” He got it together all right. Front to back, their performance was a tour de force that included saxophonist Skerik on the reggae bounce of “I’ve Got Your Heart” and similarly bearded guitarist Pepper Keenan (who co-produced American Patchwork) for a string of heavy rockers. Osborne quipped that the pair had a ZZ Top cover band on the side.


Osborne has been a guitar slinger, a pensive songwriter, a genre-bender, a bluesman and more. While this current outing incorporates many of those elements, he’s surfaced as a rocker and is sounding as good as ever.

#2 Honey Island Swamp Band (Fais Do Do Stage)

The Honey Island Swamp is a real place. It resides near the border of Louisiana and Mississippi. It’s therefore a fitting name for this band that draws inspiration from the music of those two states. With the Honey Island Swamp Band, soul, country, R&B and blues are all on equal footing. The two man songwriting/guitarist team of Chris Mule and Aaron Wilkinson produce expressive, hook-laden tunes that honor songcraft while respecting the groove. For their Jazz Fest set at the Fais Do Do Stage, the four-piece was bolstered by a three-piece horn section, keyboards, and backing vocalists. The rousing set included material from their debut Wishing Well and forthcoming follow-up Good To You.

#3 Pinstripe Brass Band (Parade)

If you’ve ever experienced the magnetic pull that causes you to involuntarily become part of a parade regardless of where you were going before the parade reached you, then you know how much fun this was.

Tom’s Top Three Gustatory

#1 St. Charles Street Car Cocktail

This eye-opener at Restaurant Luke features St. Germain elderflower liqueur, peach vodka and champagne. Delicious.

#2 Mango Freeze

This sorbet-type treat is wonderful in its own right, but even better with some smuggled rum.

#3 Canned Coors

Because, if for no other reason, the chorus of “East Bound and Down” from Smokey and the Bandit pops to mind whenever you pop the top.

Tom’s Top Three Lagniappe

#1 Best Festival Flag: “Super Bowl Champions”

Numerous sightings. Who Dat!?

#2 Anders Osborne’s beard

It deserves its own zip code. Would also be a pretty good name for a rock band.

#3 Folk Life Village

Blacksmiths and pirogues and hand drums, oh my!

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”12″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=47″);}); New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival Saturday Weekend 2 | New Orleans Fairgrounds | New Orleans, LA Our Second Weekend Saturday Photo Gallery features Pearl Jam, Band of Horses, Jeff Beck, Anders Osborne, Galactic, Trombone Shorty and Orleans Avenue, Irma Thomas, Skerik, Johnny Sansone, Brian Blade, Aaron Neville, Pete Fountain 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 Second Weekend Friday 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 the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival…

JamBase | New Orleans

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!


Jazz Fest 4.29 Thurs | Photos & Best Of

Words by: Tom Speed | Images by: Dino Perrucci & Chad Smith

Jazz Fest – Weekend 2 – Day 1 :: 04.29.10 :: Thursday :: New Orleans, LA

Dave Schools – WSP :: 04.29.10 :: Jazz Fest

The opening day of Jazz Fest‘s second weekend brought with it clear skies, temperatures in the mid 70s and a slight breeze – ideal weather for an outdoor music festival. After severe rain and mud stained the first weekend, the sunshine was a welcome respite for festival faithful.

The day’s aural, gustatory and otherwise indescribable cultural delights provided a banquet of sensory inputs for the incessantly insatiable. The following is a brief but faithful recounting of some of the highlights.


Tom’s Top Three Aural

#1 Elvis Costello and The Sugarcanes (Gentilly Stage)
Every day of Jazz Fest is marked by that intangible Jazz Fest magic – a single set or experience that makes the spine tingle. Sometimes it comes as planned, but usually it comes unexpectedly. Thursday it came in the form of Elvis Costello and the Sugarcanes, his top-flight acoustic band that includes Jerry Douglas on dobro and Jim Lauderdale on guitar, along with mandolin, fiddle and bass instrumentation.


The group worked their way through a stellar set of roots rock renditions from Costello’s catalog and some choice cover selections. They nimbly navigated their way through the Grateful Dead’s “Friend of The Devil” and the Stones’ “Happy.” They breathed new life into Costello stalwarts like “Allison,” “Peace, Love and Understanding,” and a down-tempo reboot of “Every Day I Write The Book.” Costello brought out New Orleans legend and collaborator Allen Toussaint for a rousing “encore” that consisted of five songs and left the crowd in bliss. Magic.

#2 Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk (Acura Stage)

With a double bass assault, Dumpstaphunk harnesses the runaway power of decades of incessant, ferocious chugging. They serve as the torchbearers of that delightful slice of American music known as New Orleans funk. In a city and festival full of contenders to the throne, they are the kings of the hill. By the time they launched into the now-anthemic thrust of “Put It In The Dumpster” their harnessed momentum had exploded into a full-blown frenzy.


#3 Sunpie Barnes & The Louisiana Sunspots (Congo Stage)
The warm weather was the perfect backdrop for Sunpie Barnes’ soulful set of swinging zydeco.

Tom’s Top Three Gustatory

#1 Crawfish Pie
From the people that bring you the Natchitoches meat pie, this particular crawfish pie was fluffy on the outside, creamy on the inside and possessed just the right amount of spice to become a new favorite.

#2 The Ruby Slipper
Though it’s often inadvisable to eat before entering the Fairgrounds racetrack, an early breakfast at this local mid-city joint provided a much needed and well-spiced Bloody Mary, not to mention a delicious take on Eggs Benedict that incorporated a grilled tomato. It was the perfect prelude to a great day at the fest.

#3 Coors
Because the banquet beer will do in a pinch.

Tom’s Top Three Lagniappe

#1 Field Trips
The sight of numerous middle school groups roaming the festival grounds on field trips gave reason to believe in an oft-maligned local school system that was imparting an undeniably unique life lesson on regional heritage and a serious steeping in the arts.

#2 Funny Hats
Big, small, wide, pointy, colorful, floppy, majestic, droopy. You gotta love a hat party, and Jazz Fest is among the biggest and best in the world.

#3 Chance Encounters
You know those people that you only kinda know, and if you’re bad with names (raise your hands!) you know them only by face and not necessarily by name, but it doesn’t matter. They’re at Jazz Fest, and it’s great to see them.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”0″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=44″);}); New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival Thursday Weekend 2 | New Orleans Fairgrounds | New Orleans, LA Second weekend of Jazz Fest kicks off with Widespread Panic, Gov’t Mule, Elvis Costello, Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk, Steve Martin, Blues Traveler, Kirk Joseph, Preservation Hall Jazz Band, Sunpie Barnes and the Louisiana Sunspots, Dr. Klaw, Soul Rebels Brass Band, 101 Runners, Martin Sexton, Dee Dee Bridgewater and more… View Photos

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

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

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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!


Jazz Fest 4.24 Day 2 | Photo Gallery & Best Of

Words by: Kayceman | Images by: Dino Perrucci

Jazz Fest Day 2 :: 04.24.10 :: Saturday :: New Orleans, LA

Despite weather reports of rain, hail, floods and maybe even a tornado, not once did water fall from the sky, helping make Saturday an amazing day at the Fairgrounds. And by the time the headliners took the stage (My Morning Jacket and Simon & Garfunkel), it was gorgeous outside with blue skies and glorious sun.

Kayceman’s Top 3

#1 – My Morning Jacket

I have seen Jim James bring rain to Bonnaroo when Tennessee needed it, and now I’ve seen him bring sun to Jazz Fest when New Orleans needed it. A powerful, moving performance by the Jacket, they touched on all facets of their catalog including Curtis Mayfield’s “Move On Up” to close the set. But what made this show so special was the inclusion of New Orleans legends Al “Carnival Time” Johnson singing “Carnival Time” and the Preservation Hall Jazz Band on a wicked version of “Highly Suspicious” that had this writer wondering if we might be witnessing the start of a horn relationship for MMJ similar to what Widespread Panic has developed with NOLA’s Dirty Dozen Brass Band.

#2 The Funky Meters

Rain seemed imminent. The sky was a mean color of gray and you could feel the thick water in the air. And then The Funky Meters played “The World Is a Little Bit Under the Weather” and the sun broke free for the first time all weekend and the crowd erupted. Jazz-funk can get predictable and even boring, but not with this crew. They keep it deep in the pocket, grinding out raunchy NOLA grooves that are impossible to deny. A truly wonderful set by local legends.

#3 Guitar Woodshed featuring Steve Masakowski, Todd Duke and Jack Eckert

A rotating cast of three guitarists shared the stage with a bangin’ B-3 player and stud drummer Johnny Vidacovich. The highlight was when Vidacovich’s Astral Project bandmate, seven-string guitar genius Steve Masakowski, took control, alternating between streams of flowing jazz-fusion and slinky funk grooves that felt sophisticated yet sexy. The set ended with all three guitarists taking on Wes Montgomery.

Bonus Coverage: Late Night My Morning Jacket with Preservation Hall Jazz Band at Preservation Hall

The late night ticket of the weekend, this show was the stuff of legend. Roughly 60 or so people were allowed into the famous, tiny Preservation Hall for over two hours of spirit-channeling music. Acoustic Jacket with the Preservation Hall Jazz Band both starting the show and sitting in, this was a special, special event that those lucky enough to witness will likely never forget.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”1″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=36″);}); New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival Day 2 | New Orleans Fairgrounds | New Orleans, LA Day 2 of our New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival photo galleries includes My Morning Jacket, Preservation Hall Jazz Band, Treme Brass Band, Bonerama, The Funky Meters, Cowboy Mouth, Harry Shearer, Davell Crawford, Dr. John, Jon Cleary, George Porter Jr., Art Nevill, Midnite Disturbers, Skerik, Stanton Moore, The New Orleans Bingo Show 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 back tomorrow for coverage of Sunday at Jazz Fest…

JamBase | New Orleans

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Jazz Fest 4.23 Day 1 | Photo Gallery & Best Of

Words by: Kayceman | Images by: Dino Perrucci

Jazz Fest Day 1 :: 04.23.10 :: Friday :: New Orleans, LA

Fans at the 41st annual New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival were greeted with buckets of rain on the first day. Though the numbers were a bit thin and most of them damp, those who did weather the storm were rewarded with spirited performances, no lines for food and plenty of Fest atmosphere. Between noon and 3 p.m. roughly two inches of rain covered the Fairgrounds, but the only set that got canceled was Bruce Daigrepont Cajun Band. Everyone else played right on through.

Kayceman’s Top 3

#1 – Lionel Richie

Watching Lionel Richie go from “Dancing On The Ceiling” into an instrumental Van Halen “Jump” tease and back into “Dancing On The Ceiling” was a standout moment of Richie’s Friday Festival closing set. Playing lots of Commodores, talking ’bout Afros and making the cougars purrrrr, this was nothing but fun fun fun.

#2 – Rotary Downs

As the rain finally broke, local rock band Rotary Downs began to play the Lagniappe Stage. Bandleader James Marler commented that drummer Zack Smith “paid the devil $20 to stop the rain” as they tore through a set of propulsive indie rock with pop hooks and psychedelic burns. The rain started to pick up again and Marler asked Smith to put another twenty in the meter before the band dismantled The Beatles’ “Get Back” in glorious fashion.

#3 Maurice Brown Effect

Dashing into the Fairgrounds as the sky opened up, many ducked into the Jazz Tent, where trumpet virtuoso Maurice Brown was holding court. Offering shelter from the storm, Brown’s banging five-piece band (trumpet/sax/drum/piano/upright bass) floated from traditional jazz phrasing into wild excursions full of noise-jazz and trumpets laced with wah-wah effects. At this point, the rain hardly seemed to matter.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”6″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=35″);}); New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival Day 1 | New Orleans Fairgrounds | New Orleans, LA Day 1 of our New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival photo galleries includes The Black Crowes, Trombone Shorty, Glen David Andrews, John Fohl, Johnny Sansone, Anders Osborne, Amanda Shaw, Little Freddie King, Wanda Rouzan, Dr. John, George Clinton and Parliament Funkadelic, New Orleans NightCrawlers and more… View Photos

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

Check back tomorrow for coverage of Saturday at Jazz Fest…

JamBase | New Orleans

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Them Crooked Vultures | 04.14 | L.A.

Words by: L. Paul Mann

Them Crooked Vultures :: 04.14.10 :: Club Nokia :: Los Angeles, CA

Jones & Grohl – Them Crooked Vultures :: 02.08.10
Taken in New York by Dino Perrucci

This was a surprise concert at the luxurious new Nokia Club, in downtown Los Angeles’ massive new L.A. Live Center. The relatively new “supergroup” Them Crooked Vultures played a “warm up” for their performance at Coachella. The venue is one of the nicest new live music clubs in the country. Claiming a capacity of 2,300, it actually feels much smaller. The crowd is dispersed in a large oval shape with a second level balcony comprising half of the seating. State of the art sound and lighting are joined with live video, digitally edited for maximum coverage. It is the perfect platform for live rock bands.

The term “supergroup” has been tossed about for decades. “Blind Faith” may have been the first legitimate band to claim the moniker. The Traveling Wilburys were probably the last, until now. Them Crooked Vultures certainly has the pedigree to warrant such a title. John Paul Jones, the historic bass player for Led Zeppelin, Dave Grohl, the drummer from Nirvana and leader of the Foo Fighters, and Josh Homme, the leader/mastermind of Queens of the Stone Age comprise the group, with Homme’s Queens bandmate Alain Johannes rounding out the live configuration.

This may be the best new hard rock band formed in a decade. While you can hear distinct influences from each of the player’s respective other bands, the group melds their talents into a new, incendiary sound that lends itself well to experimental, improvisational live jams. Jones, the magical pied piper of the group, played no less than seven different instruments. As well as the bass and a heap of keyboards reminiscent of his Zeppelin days, he also played violin and a sort of electronic slide guitar device. Grohl did what he does best: Put his head down and played ferociously on the drums, reminding many of John Bonham and Keith Moon. Homme, with his characteristic high-pitched voice and wailing lead guitar, acted as the bridge to the audience, bantering with the crowd and using his sarcastic personality to keep a personal connection going. Unofficial band member Alain Johannes was the stoic straight man, seamlessly keeping the rhythm on his guitar, or switching to bass when Jones would experiment with a different instrument. He even sported a McCartney style Hofner bass at one point.

A year of touring has turned the group into a juggernaut of sound capable of improvising on a dime, pumping out unusual jams. About the only complaints heard this night came from Foo Fighters fans, which seemed to long for that band’s more melodic, commercial earworms. The closest this group has come to commercial pop is “New Fang,” which has received extensive airplay. But witnessing them in concert, it’s clear this band cares little for radio hits. This is about the sweaty grind of playing rock & roll live in front of an audience.

The Vultures tore through nearly two hours of music in an explosive set. Homme took a break late in the set to acknowledge their Coachella gig. “I’m from the desert. I’m Joshua. Anyone going to Coachella? Well, fuck you. This isn’t for you guys,” he said. Then recanted, “Just kidding. This is for everyone.”

Them Crooked Vultures :: 04.14.10 :: Club Nokia :: Los Angeles, CA

Elephants, Gunman, Scumbag Blues, Dead End Friends, Nobody Loves Me & Neither Do I, Highway 1, New Fang, Bandoliers, Mind Eraser, No Chaser, Interlude with Ludes, Caligulove, Johannes guitar solo > You Can’t Possibly Begin to Imagine, Spinning in Daffodils, Warsaw or The First Breath You Take After You Give Up

Them Crooked Vultures Tour Dates :: Them Crooked Vultures News :: Them Crooked Vultures Concert Reviews


JamBase | West Coast

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Allman Brothers United Palace Photo Gallery

Words & Images by: Dino Perrucci

The Allman Brothers Band

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

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

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

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

Setlists

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Encore: Southbound w/Susan Tedeschi

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

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

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

Encore: One Way Out

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

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

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

Encore: You Don’t Love Me

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

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

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

Encore: Southbound w/ Rob Barraco & Eric Krasno

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

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

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

Encore: Whipping Post w/Jay Collins (sax)

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

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

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

Encore: One Way Out w/Doyle Bramhall II

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

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

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

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

JamBase | New York City

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Soulive | 03.02 – 03.13 | Brooklyn

Words & Images by: Dino Perrucci

Bowlive :: 03.02 – 03.13 :: Brooklyn Bowl :: Brooklyn, NY

Last Saturday night Soulive wrapped up their two week, 10-night stand at Brooklyn Bowl. Easily one of the musical highlights of this young year, the run featured special guests every night, including: Ivan Neville, Robert Randolph, Charlie Hunter, Warren Haynes, Derek Trucks, Susan Tedeschi, Kofi and Oteil Burbridge, The Shady Horns, and many more. Most nights featured an opening set from Nigel Hall followed by a set of Soulive in classic trio configuration and a set of Soulive with guests, while some nights saw a third Soulive set go into the early morning hours and even a mini-set from NYC’s own London Souls.

The musical highlights were far too many for this photographer to write about; I’ll have to let my photos speak for themselves. Wetlands founder and current Brooklyn Bowl co-owner Peter Shapiro has once again created an environment where the musicians and fans alike have a great level of comfort that allows for an experience that is like no other. The great success of this run will certainly make Bowlive a can’t miss in the future.

Bowlive!

Neal Evans – Soulive :: 03.04

Eldar with Soulive :: 03.04

Bowlive – Brooklyn Bowl :: 03.05

Eric Krasno – Soulive :: 03.05

Alan Evans – Soulive :: 03.05

Soulive :: 03.05

London Souls :: 03.05

London Souls :: 03.05

Neal Evans, Ivan Neville, Nigel Hall :: 03.06

Nigel Hall & Alan Evans :: 03.06

Ivan Neville :: 03.06

Robert Randolph with Soulive :: 03.06

Robert Randolph :: 03.06

Robert Randolph & Pete Shapiro :: 03.06

The Shady Horns :: 03.06

Nigel Hall :: 03.09

Charlie Hunter with Nigel Hall :: 03.09

Charlie Hunter :: 03.09

Nikki Glaspie :: 03.09

Eric Krasno – Soulive :: 03.09

Charlie Hunter with Soulive :: 03.09

Robert Randolph & Eric Krasno :: 03.09

Kofi Burbridge with Soulive :: 03.10

Kofi Burbridge with Soulive :: 03.10

Oteil Burbridge with Soulive :: 03.10

Talib Kweli with Soulive :: 03.10

Soulive with Oteil, Kofi and The Shady Horns :: 03.10

Soulive & Their People :: 03.10

Neal Evans – Soulive :: 03.13

Alan Evans – Soulive :: 03.13

Warren Haynes with Soulive :: 03.13

Warren Haynes & Eric Krasno :: 03.13

Warren Haynes & Nigel Hall with Soulive :: 03.13

Soulive Tour Dates :: Soulive News :: Soulive Concert Reviews

JamBase | Brooklyn

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Galactic: A Long Time Coming

By: Wesley Hodges

Galactic

These are epic times to be in New Orleans, and that may be the understatement of the young decade. Although Carnival season officially got under way in early January, the full-bore pandemonium that generally commences the last week leading up to Mardi Gras Day got a considerably early start this year as the Saints finally ascended to the pantheon of NFL glory, winning their first Super Bowl in the franchise’s 43-year history.

“It’s been a long time coming,” says Galactic keyboard player Rich Vogel, a comment applying to his band’s new album, Ya-Ka-May (released February 9 on Anti Records – stream it on JamBase), and the general feeling of a brighter tomorrow for New Orleans. “[The Saints have] had a lot of good seasons since Katrina and it’s been almost like something’s been building that’s strong, and I think it’s a great metaphor for the city.”

Now, the time has come to celebrate that achievement and Ya-Ka-May is an excellent soundtrack for fans of the “overgrown rhythm section.” With a colorful parade of very special guests like Allen Toussaint, Trombone Shorty, Rebirth Brass Band, Big Chief Bo Dollis, Walter ‘Wolfman’ Washington and Irma Thomas, the album picks up where 2007′s rap-centric From the Corner to the Block left off, providing the rest of the world with insight into not just Galactic’s ongoing progression but also the city’s revitalized music scene as well.

JamBase: Looking at the track listing and the names of all the special guests, this album feels like it’s been a long time coming for Galactic. How was this album finally conceptualized and eventually conceived?

Rich Vogel: It actually has been a long time coming. I think it’s an album we’ve kind of wanted to make for a while. There were some tracks on the last record that kind of hinted at and pointed the way towards this record; I’m thinking of some of the instrumentals that have brass players. On From the Corner to the Block we had Soul Rebels Brass Band on a track, we had Monk Boudreaux [and the] Mardi Gras Indian Chiefs, and those tracks were kind of pointing the way towards this one. It was an album we’ve always wanted to make to get some of the NOLA artists we’ve loved and admired over the years like Allen Toussaint and Irma Thomas. Having done this for many years, we’ve bumped into everyone and gotten to know them. We’re at the stage in our career where we can say, “Let’s call Allen Toussaint,” and he might actually call us back [laughs]. So, we started doing that and one thing led to another and we were so pleased that he came over to our studio one day and listened to a few of our tracks and took them home and wrote some fantastic songs. With Irma Thomas, she came by and we had a tune in mind for her, and she went and learned it and came by and cut her vocals.

At the same time, we wanted to get some [artists] that some people don’t know outside of New Orleans at all and kind of bring in some of the talent from the people just playing in the clubs; artists who are famous on the local level and are a part of the late night musical party, which is New Orleans on an almost nightly basis. We wanted to do that and mix it all up in a way that hopefully made sense. I don’t know if we were really trying to make a specific point. This is all New Orleans music and we wanted to show the city the way we see it.

JamBase: It’s an interesting cross-section of artists you guys were able to work with. Was there any kind of formula as far as crafting these songs with the artists, or did it just depend on the artists and what they arrived to the studio with?

Galactic :: 02.07.10 :: Brooklyn, NY by Dino Perrucci

Rich Vogel: Yeah, it was definitely a case-by-case basis, for sure. A guy like Allen Toussaint, who is the consummate songwriter, we’d have these little demo tracks we liked with a groove and a change and could form the basis for a verse and a chorus, but they were instrumental ditties essentially. We had a couple of these that made us think of him, so he came by and listened to them and was into it. He actually took them home and wrote songs in a more classic sense – wrote lyrics, sung harmonies. It was the kind of thing you would expect an experienced songwriter and arranger like Allen Toussaint to do. On the flip side, we’d have some of the rappers come by and just roll with a rhythm track we’d made and spit as much as they wanted to, sort of a stream-of-consciousness thing like they like to do in the clubs. Then, we’d mix it down, kind of distill it into something we thought was hook-y, find what we thought was the best verse material and sort of build the track up that way. The whole project was a very collaborative effort. It was just amazing to see the parade of people we saw go through our studio over the past year. It was covering a lot of ground, but to us it made sense because it was all New Orleans music with good energy and groove to it. Everybody, even the classic artists, go back to the same thing of playing the clubs, parties and entertaining the party people. It’s really the common denominator that binds us as artists down here. Playing the clubs until the wee hours you gotta keep the party going.

It had to be surreal to send a guy like Allen Toussaint home with one of your tracks. It seems to play in really well with the collaborating you guys do out on the road and especially at festivals.

Absolutely, we’ve always liked to collaborate, because Galactic is, in a sense an overgrown rhythm section. We love collaborating with people we think are special songwriters or people we think have an interesting vocal element.

What is Ya-Ka-May?

We hyphenated to make it kind of look like “Look-Ka Py Py,” the old Meters song, which is just an old Mardi Gras Indian term. “Ya-Ka-May” is kind of an alternate pronunciation of a noodle dish we have in New Orleans called Ya Ka Mein that they serve at the corner store or at the second-line. Somehow that led us to Ya-Ka-May, which we thought was cool.

How is it different to tour in support of an album than to just be out there in the grind?

It’s more fun and exciting because we have to challenge ourselves. We make a record like this and we haven’t really performed this material. All we’re doing this week is meeting in the studio, hashing it out and figuring out how we’re gonna play this [material]. We’re lucky we’re gonna have Cyril Neville with us, and he can sing just about anything you ask him to. So, we’re gonna work some of the tunes up with him, and we can kind of cover the brass-y stuff because we’ll have Corey Henry. I can play some of the horns stuff on the keys and cover that angle of it on tracks like “Boe Money” and “Cineramascope.” It’s great when you have a new thing to present, new music to play. Sometimes the challenge is good and intimidating when you realize, “I overdubbed four keyboards here,” and you have to figure out how to play it.

Continue reading for more on Galactic…

 


It was an album we’ve always wanted to make to get some of the NOLA artists we’ve loved and admired over the years like Allen Toussaint and Irma Thomas. Having done this for many years, we’ve bumped into everyone and gotten to know them. We’re at the stage in our career where we can say, ‘Let’s call Allen Toussaint,’ and he might actually call us back [laughs].”

-Rich Vogel

 

I feel very blessed having just moved to New Orleans in late July. It seems like such an exceptional time to be here now with Mardi Gras season under way, the Saints having their best season ever, and each day getting further away from the mess of Katrina. How would you describe the energy of the city right now compared to the last few years?

Galactic

It’s definitely at a high point, we had a couple of shitty years there; there’s no two ways about it. I think that’s why people are particularly enjoying things and are fired up and getting pumped about the Saints. Now we’re moving into Carnival season and with each passing year getting further from the past, things slowly do get better, things get rebuilt. It’s felt like a slow crawl at times. I live in Mid-City, an area that was pretty devastated, and I think about what it was like in ’06 and I just think, “Man, life is good.” You just got to appreciate the little things, things you used to take for granted.

Give me a few artists outside of the jazz, funk and New Orleans style that you guys listen to out on the road.

Ben [Ellman - sax] has us listen to a lot more Balkan and Eastern European music than I would have otherwise. He loves blending that stuff with New Orleans music. I listen to a good deal of classical music when I’m home. It gives me a complete departure into a different world. I’ve always had an interest [in it] on and off. I studied it a little before all my road days.

What have been a few of your favorite moments performing over the last several years as a band here in New Orleans?

Any Jazz Fest; I love that one! First of all, I live near the Fairgrounds, so I get up, have breakfast, walk over, get to play in front of 60,000 people, look out over the Fairgrounds on a beautiful day, go get a soft-shell crab po-boy and walk home.

So, that almost resembles a normal job for you on a day like that?

Yeah [laughs]. When you have a moment like that, you’re kind of like, “My job is kinda cool and conveniently located.” I kind of miss some of those theatre shows at some of the places that didn’t come back because of Katrina, places like The Saenger or The State. I remember the circus [show] we did when we played Bolero, with acrobats performing on and above the stage with trapeze artists. That was a memorable one. There have been so many really.

Try to explain Mardi Gras to people who’ve never been a part of it. How is music incorporated into the whole celebration?

Galactic

Wow, that’s a good question. There are books upon books about that. Mardi Gras comes out of the Carnival tradition and is celebrated in the Catholic traditions and a lot in the Latin American world, and serves as a sort of blowout before the Lenten season when you’re supposed to live this life of sacrifice. Of course, Fat Tuesday is Mardi Gras Day and ends the season. Mardi Gras goes way back and New Orleans has a lot of ties to the French and Spanish culture and has those Catholic ties that you don’t see in a lot of the more Anglo-Protestant areas of the country. So, that’s kind of why it’s celebrated here.

The thing about Mardi Gras that I try to explain to people is that there are many Mardi Gras depending on who you’re with and where you go. A lot of people think Mardi Gras is just Bourbon Street and people flashing, and that’s definitely one part of it. That’s something when you’re in college and you come down here that you tend to gravitate towards. But, there are a lot of rich, local traditions with the Krewes [and] debutante balls. Then there are the Mardi Gras Indians who go out and parade early on Mardi Gras Day. You’re talking about guys that make these incredibly elaborate, beautiful headdresses getting ready for this day. You think about New Orleans and partying late night for the most part, but on Mardi Gras Day it’s really about the daytime celebration. It’s an incredible party to see if you end up at the right place at the right time. Everybody’s out in the streets from Uptown to Downtown. There’s an Uptown vibe that’s a little more family-oriented and Downtown it’s a little grittier, with people partying very hard and less children. It’s a huge day of celebration with people everywhere making the most of the day and getting their yee-haws out, if you’re a good Catholic, which I’m not… but I pretend that I am.

What has the Saints’ success meant to the overall morale of this city?

It’s just thrilling for the team to go to the Super Bowl. It’s been a lot of fun for a lot of people. It’s been fun to watch it build and progress. We’ve all been working hard and it’s nice for everyone to see something built [in New Orleans] that is very successful. Also, the lifelong fans have grown quite cynical through the years from their days wearing bags over their heads.

I’m not from here and I root for the enemy, but it’s hard not to take a liking to a team with such a blue-collar feel with stars like Marques Colston, who seemingly came out of nowhere to help lead the team to the Promised Land.

Yeah, guys like Drew Brees, who’s not just a great QB but also a great citizen in the way he’s embraced the town and given back, and his story of coming here to play and adopting the city as his home [has] been really special. Brees is gonna be the King of Bacchus, he’s kind of god in this city and he can do no wrong.

Galactic Tour Dates :: Galactic News :: Galactic Concert Reviews

JamBase | Big Easy
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Mardi Gras | 2.12-2.16 | New Orleans

By: B. Getz

Mardi Gras :: 02.12-02.16 | :: New Orleans, LA

Trombone Shorty :: Mardi Gras
By Dino Perrucci

Descending on New Orleans five days after the Saints’ enormous Super Bowl victory, we encountered a city boiling with elation. Despite the frigid temperatures, this city was as hot as ever, with deafening chants of “Who Dat?” reverberating night and day, bouncing off walls of venues, up and down parade routes, at dinner tables and tailgates. I have literally never seen a city so jacked up, and it was as infectious as ’twas intoxicating.

By day we walked various parade routes, first the Krewe of Morpheus and Krewe of Muses, enjoying the Cameltoe Steppers and Miss Karina’s Bearded Oysters, amongst others. For most parades we rolled uptown to watch on St. Charles and Napoleon Streets, though Saturday we started in Lakeview, rolling with Krewe of Endymion and feting Saints owner/Grand Marshall Tom Benson and Head Coach Sean Payton like Crescent monarchs, with Trombone Shorty the Grand Marshall’s personal guest.

Carnival is truly a cultural and family event. Generations of kin and friends of all races come together and celebrate in magnificent unity; the likes of which I have never seen before. The only moment I ever feared for my own safety was during the Krewe of Bacchus‘ parade when Drew Brees, Saints quarterback, Super Bowl MVP, and 2010′s King Bacchus, turned the corner of St. Charles on a parade float. It was as if Touchdown Jesus had arrived, setting off complete pandemonium.

“WHO DAT! New Orleans is rolling! The City is alive!” cried Brandon Tarricone of Brotherhood of Groove.

As we thawed from the Morpheus/Muses parades Friday night, we strolled to Tipitina’s Uptown for the first of four visits to the hallowed room. Thriving in this celebratory atmosphere, George Porter Jr., Leo Nocentelli, Ivan Neville and Raymond Weber (Dumpstaphunk) took the stage to cheers. Henry Butler was then led stage right to a thunderous ovation as the band took their spots, with Butler seated at a keyboard facing Ivan, who was buried beneath an array of keys. They immediately congratulated the Super Bowl Champions to more screaming decibels. Ivan and Leo repeated the salutations throughout the show, a harbinger of “Who Dats?” to come.

Henry Butler :: Mardi Gras/Tip’s
By Dino Perrucci

Weber and Porter’s instant lockstep unveiled opener “Everything is Everything,” a crawfish jamboree of distinct NOLA styles, their collaborative spirit evidenced immediately. “Everything” had everything, passing around the jam, with driving Weber funk and George laying down his patented, joyful, nasty bass runs. This song encapsulated their entire performance – equal parts jubilant NOLA sing-along and vicious, loose, powerful funk – serving songs that resonated with joy, pain and the road to redemption. “Cabbage Alley” was a joyful romp through the Professor Longhair classic, with Fess grinning “Hey Now Baby” from the top of the house he built.

Henry Butler asked if he could take us to church, and that he did, with glorious bright piano and charming verve. Butler was distinguished royalty, and that’s amongst Porter, Leo, and Ivan, all stalwarts in their own right. The blind man stoked several raging Nocentelli screaming solos drenched in tubed-out distortion and Gibsonics. Porter and Weber responded with tight riddims and big wrap around fills swollen with laughter.

Ivan Neville’s charged “Fortunate Son” oozed Bayou and sparked some fantastic interplay between Ivan and Porter, plus more ragin’ Leo licks. This exhilaration was a theme for two full sets of huge smiles, jams and Crescent City spirit. “Talkin’ ‘Bout New Orleans” was just that – the pulse of a city ablaze. It’s Carnival Time!

For three consecutive nights we stumbled out of Tip’s and made our way down to the Blue Nile for the Backbeat Foundation’s 4th Annual Mardi Gras Funkstravaganza, a series of Royal Family hosted hoedowns lasting well into the wee hours, in true Quarter style. New York and NOLA are sister cities, and the likes of Adam Deitch, Eric Krasno and Nigel Hall would make their presence known at this Lombardi Gras, and of course, be joined by their NOLA forefathers all weekend long.

Khris Royal, Kraz, Deitch, Hall :: Royal Family
By Amanda Barry

Friday late night, Dr. Claw featured a malevolent conglomerate of Deitch, Kraz, Nigel, and locals Ian Neville on guitar and the inimitable Nick Daniels on bass and vocals. “God Made Me Funky” was an aggressive jolt of stutter-step bounce and friendly one-upmanship. A reading of R&B staple “Leave Me Alone” displayed soothing vocals from Hall and Daniels, while Kraz wailed away on a gold guitar emblazoned with the Saints’ fleur de lis. A Daniels propelled cover of Stevie Wonder’s “Higher Ground” was a bludgeoning stomp of lead-bass, wailing Kraz, and sordid drumming; this colossal rendition most displayed the group’s shared kinetic energy. Ivan Neville hustled down from Tip’s to join the aural fracas, with Raymond Weber and Papa Mali checking it out from the crowd.

On Saturday, the Nigel Hall Band (featuring George Porter Jr.) was geared to a more R&B feel. Krasno played bass before George’s arrival as Hall crooned with joie de vivre. A deep Rhodes take on James Taylor’s “You’ve Got a Friend” punctuated the early part of the set until Deitch commandeered the ship, directing Porter into murderous funk grooves. This was “Meters take Manhattan” on some crunk shit. Sheer delight shone on the faces of the elder statesman and boy wonder, as they played puppet-master to one another’s nastiness amidst carnival sights and sounds.

Porter & Krasno by Dino Perrucci

In true “only in New Orleans” fashion, long after the band had left the stage there were still 25 or so fans hanging around the Nile. As Jill Scott’s “Is it the Way” pumped through the PA, one by one the musicians returned to the stage, first Hall on bass with Krasno soon taking it from him. Hall shifted to keys as Deitch got behind the kit, and they moved from playing along to the record to some live improv. An elongated vamp morphed to a full-band version of Herbie Hancock’s “Watermelon Man,” a boundless crunk-a-thon with seven different musicians rotating around the stage, including sax and keys maven Khris Royal, guitarist Andrew Block and local sax man Clarence “Trixzey” Slaughter. The half-hour workout was NOLA indulgence, almost a private show for the Royal Family Frenchman Street faithful.

Sunday evening at the Nile was billed as Eric Krasno & Chapter 2, the Soulive guitarist’s red-hot side project; which this time featured Porter in the mix. Several cuts from Kraz’s forthcoming solo album – “76,” “Be Alright” and “Too Sweet” – joined stormy covers including a rare-groove styled rendition of The Beatles’ “Get Back” and an aggressive take on Jimi’s “Manic Depression.”

Kermit Ruffins & the Barbecue Swingers may have opened the 4th Annual Bacchus Blowout, but this was no warm-up act. Fellow Treme second-line prodigal son Ruffins absolutely owned this packed-to-the-gills room from jump. “How ’bout them New Or-lee-anz Saints!!” he greeted the roaring post-parade massive and led everyone into a jubilant “All Mardi Gras Day.” The audience upped the ante, as the obligatory “Saints Come Marching In” gave way to a bedlam-inducing take on the omnipresent Saints anthem by local rapper K. Gates, “Black N Gold New Orleans,” which was the theme song to the entire city – you couldn’t go three blocks without hearing a brass band, car stereo or house party system blaring it. When Kermit and Co. dropped it, the frontman’s lazy, gruff Treme drawl steeped in bliss, Tip’s fucking exploded.

Kermit Ruffins :: Bacchus Blowout
By Dino Perrucci

Ever the showman, after a few healthy pulls from a Bud Light and some humorous banter, Ruffins quickly reminded us that it was Valentine’s Day as he delivered maybe The evening’s finest performance, a surreal take on the Isley Brothers’ “Between the Sheets.” The swanky love-fest gave way to an appearance by Corey “Boe Money” Henry, a run through The Roots’ “U Got Me,” Frankie Beverly and MAZE’s “Joy and Pain” and more NOLA-fried second-line flavor.

After a lengthy changeover, the legendary Rebirth Brass Band delivered an enjoyable set of Crescent City ecstasy; cramped audience skanking and brass n’ drums thumping along. “Boe Money,” Derek Shezbie (trumpet) and Vincent Broussard (sax) led the troupe through an hour of bulbous brass anthems.

However, when headliner Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue took the stage just after 1 a.m., the energy levels in the room rose to even more raucous levels. Troy Andrews’ meteoric rise from child trombone prodigy and member of Rebirth to feted second-liner and member of Lenny Kravitz’s touring band to leading his own band is a true American dream. Hailing from the Treme, he has a long awaited album dropping soon and a reputation for superior showmanship. Leading a crack-band of childhood friends, including “Freaky” Pete Murano on guitar and Joey “In and Out” Peebles on drums, Shorty displayed a pomp ‘n’ verve that kept the room at full attention.

Andrews gave Kravitz a “le bon temps” lesson in crunkadelic rock with his reworking of The Guess Who’s “American Woman,” a pulsating banger with crunchy guitars and clobbering funk percussion. “Get Down” and “Orleans & Claiborne” were enigmatic doses of ridiculous second-line melodies and festive beats. “St. James Orleans Avenue” really took it to the Treme, and the new vibes took the crowd to “Backatown.” He led the boys through a medley that mixed hometown rapper Mystikal, the Black Eyed Peas, Sly Stone and the Violent Femmes. Crooning for the ladies, Shorty channeled Al Green and Marvin Gaye, and blew surreal trumpet runs between patented trombone romps that mesmerized the cuties.

Robert Mercurio – Galactic

Lundi Gras at Tip’s by Bob Compton/CapturedLight.com

Galactic hosted two shows at Tipitina’s Uptown, the first on Saturday and then Monday night’s traditional Lundi Gras sunrise throw-down, each with Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe supporting.

The first show saw a short set of primarily new material from KDTU, highlighted by an incredible collaboration (“Baker’s Dozen”) between Denson, KDTU guitarist (and birthday boy) Brian Jordan and Galactic. The headliners threw down a show heavy on material from their newest record, Ya-Ka-May (JamBase review).

The annual Lundi Gras show was one to remember. Beginning with a fierce 90-minute set of firing KDTU, Diesel & Co. delivered the seminal “Ruff, Tuff and Tumble” and sultry “The Answer,” then closed with an ethereal version of “S&G,” a funk barnstormer that segued into evocative R&B. Galactic then hijacked their stage back and proceeded to uncork a colossal, three-set performance that went until 7 a.m. Culling from their now-vast catalogue of genre-bending compositions, the funk got deep and dark as the crowd bathed in their patented crunk gumbo, with “Boe Money” ably assisting throughout. Mixing in covers from Rakim to Zeppelin and featuring cameos from John Gros, Denson, Trixzey Slaughter, Cyril Neville and more, this was a gluttonously N’awlinz rager. Stanton Moore‘s punishing drums stoked the patented swamp-funk rumble, and bassist Robert Mercurio, guitarist Jeff Raines and sax/harp man Ben Ellman channeled the “Who dat?” mayhem into feverish pitches. Staggering out of Tip’s alongside the band, crew, staff and revelers bound for the 8 a.m. Zulu parade was a surreal experience, even for the Crescent City.

Mardi Gras Indian Chiefs by Jessica Dore

The musical portion of the Mardi Gras program is often overlooked by outsiders who see Carnival as a season of consumer excess with heaps of plastic beads, rivers of “Big Ass Beers” and boobs running the sleazy course of Bourbon Street. Beyond the celestial floats, bejeweled krewe members and mansion-lined avenues, a simpler Carnival culture flourishes in New Orleans’ neighborhoods. Seeking some truer roots and humbler hometown carnival essence, we looked for those marching betwixt the pricey floats and royalty costumes, i.e. the public school marching bands that rounded the corner of St. Charles and Josephine with the Zulu Parade on Tuesday morning. New Orleans’ uniformed youths marched beautifully through the route and it was clear this is ground zero, the place where the seeds of Jazz Fest, Jam Cruise and summer festivals are sewn. This is the path that the likes of Big Sam, Trombone Shorty and all the Rebirth Brass Band took during their school years in this city.

The spirit of New Orleans’ carnival music is caught not with a $30 ticket to Tip’s or Howlin’ Wolf, but for free out in front Handa Wanda’s bar room at 2nd and Dryades Streets on Mardi Gras Day. Tucked within Central City, this is the Mardi Gras of legends like Professor Longhair, James Booker and the Nevilles.

Post-Zulu, around 1 p.m., we went to check and pay respect to the Mardi Gras Indian Chiefs, strutting in their suits to drum circle beats with family, friends and plates of barbeque. This year, as they do each year, the Indians donned the fruits of each year’s labor: Hand sewn suits and headdresses, some weighing more than fifty pounds with feathers, fabrics and intricate beadwork illustrations. There, in a crowd of mostly city locals, we enjoyed the peak of the day – some no-frills booty shaking among neighborhood royalty.

Additional reporting by Jessica Dore

JamBase | Louisiana
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Them Crooked Vultures | 02.08 | NYC

Words by: Ryan Dembinsky | Images by: Dino Perrucci

Them Crooked Vultures :: 02.08.10 :: Roseland Ballroom :: New York, NY

Jones & Grohl – Them Crooked Vultures :: 02.08 :: New York

Despite being a supergroup comprised of rock royalty best known from the southern California desert, the United Kingdom, and Seattle, when Josh Homme (Queens of the Stone Age, Eagles of Death Metal), Dave Grohl (Nirvana, Foo Fighters), and John Paul Jones (Led Zeppelin) took to the Roseland Ballroom with Them Crooked Vultures on Monday night, it felt decidedly New York City. To be clear, we’re not just talking about a skinny Jim Carroll nodding off in a booth at Max’s Kansas City or a Lester Bangs taking stealth pulls of Romilar at CBGBs. Rather, we’re talking about that weird mix of wise-beyond-their-years high school kids, ultimate fighting champions with razor sharp facial hair, unstoppable hipsters, and the occasional girl that congeal together to form the unmistakable smell of Slim Jims – that kind of New York City.

Both band and fans alike shook off their Super Bowl hangovers, including Grohl, who according to frontman Josh Homme “drank Jägermeister until 5:30 in the morning. He’s such an alcoholic,” and still rattled the very foundation of the always-overcrowded ballroom.

From the get-go, the Vultures played one jam-heavy rager after another, hardly letting up long enough for inhabitants of the stuffed sausage floor to catch a breath or grab a drink to cool down from the visceral hot mustard being liberally applied. The band kicked it off right, as the evening’s second tune, “Scumbag Blues” – the best cut in their catalog – reached epic proportions with John Paul Jones showing his most dexterous bass work and quickly putting to rest any potential complaints that we’re reviewing just another indie band here at JamBase. All night, in fact, the band could have easily been classified as a jam band if only they weren’t so jaw-droppingly loud and heavy.

Homme & Johannes – Them Crooked Vultures :: 02.08

Beyond “Scumbag,” the band essentially tackled its entire catalog, which comes as no surprise as said catalog encompasses only one album, though they did perform the unreleased tune “Highway One,” which serves in part as a slight oasis from the pulsating loudness and a vehicle for Jones to morph an effected mandolin bluegrass run into a slick rock riff. Other highlights included the giant climax of “Warsaw or the First Breath You Take After You Give Up” and Homme’s Zep-esque blazing lead riff on “Elephants.”

Make no mistake, Grohl and Jones hold the star power, but Homme serves as the frontman. And while some criticize Homme for not stacking up to the likes of JPJ or Grohl, Homme’s strait-laced, square appearance and whimsical personality serve only to focus the attention on the music. Of course, his vocals do not resonate anywhere close to the likes of a Robert Plant or a Kurt Cobain, but his searing guitar work does and he makes for a charismatic bandleader.

Homme joked amicably before going into “Mind Eraser, No Chaser” that when the band played Saturday Night Live two days prior, in classic rock fashion, he slipped in three expletives without the censors even noticing before highlighting, “This one’s a song about being tricked.” Homme continued to incorporate good comedy throughout the evening.

As for Grohl, it’s almost worth the price of a ticket just to witness one of the most passionate drummers in the business at work. There’s something about seeing that trademark breakneck hair flipping in person that feels like a must in every diehard music fan’s concert scrapbook. Furthermore, you really can’t get the full sense on a record of his uncanny ability to lead a jam from “meander” to “climax” by pounding at the same fill, adding extra hits when needed and working a pair of cymbals the size of an elliptical orbit, without seeing him in the thick of it.

Dave Grohl – Them Crooked Vultures :: 02.08 :: New York

Guitarist Alain (Eleven and a Desert Sessions veteran), who turns the touring band into a quartet, serves sixth-man duties so-to-speak, adding largely rhythm guitar and trading subdued licks and solos with Homme, but he also adds a more notable dimension at times. In particular, the band flourishes when he steps to the Clavinet and takes the band away from thrashing and into the heavy funk, again most successfully on “Scumbag Blues.” He also showed off his desert rock chops when the three members proper left the stage, giving Johannes the spotlight for a unique guitar solo perfectly suited for a Joshua Tree walkabout.

Last but not least, JPJ really shines in this band, not only on bass but also on keys, mandolin, keytar and a crazy ass custom made bass slide. What’s particularly compelling about Jones in this mix is how he consistently steals the show, effortlessly and without the spotlight as he works with Grohl to build a thundering rhythm section. At other times, he’ll stealthily blaze through virtuoso chops on any one of his instruments, where you almost forget to notice him, until you do.

Finally, the lights made a subdued, but notable contribution. A backdrop of white diamonds provided a base setting, but the use of shadows and darkness set the tone. At times, the lighting director projected huge silhouettes of the musicians on the walls to each side of the stage; a nice alternative to the excessive lasers used by most lighting directors these days.

Given the nature of the beast, it’d be easy to size up Them Crooked Vultures for what they are not, namely Led Zeppelin or Nirvana, but that would be slighting. Josh Homme, Dave Grohl, and John Paul Jones exhibit honest to goodness chemistry – like Bangs and his cough syrup, NYC and its melting pot – this band is its own thing. Against the odds of a Monday night show on the day after the Super Bowl, Them Crooked Vultures put on a rock clinic and New York City took notes.

Them Crooked Vultures tour dates available here.

Continue reading for more pics of the Them Crooked Vultures in New York City…

Here’s a sweet clip of the band performing “New Fang” on ACL:

JamBase | Carrion On
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Galactic | 02.05 & 02.07 | New York

Images by: Dino Perrucci

Galactic :: 02.05 – Terminal 5 :: New York, NY & 02.07 – Brooklyn Bowl :: Brooklyn, NY

After performing at New York’s Terminal 5 on Friday night, Galactic was scheduled to head to Washington, DC on Saturday but blizzard conditions grounded the band in Manhattan. With the DC show pushed back until Monday, Galactic, along with special guests Cyril Neville and Corey Henry, announced a Sunday night show at the Brooklyn Bowl. After the Saints defeated the Colts in the Super Bowl, roughly 500 people swarmed the Bowl to celebrate in style with the New Orleans funk outfit.

Galactic released their brand new album Ya-Ka-May on February 9 through Anti-. You can currently stream the entire album for free on JamBase.

Friday :: 02.05.10 :: Terminal 5 :: New York, NY

Continue reading for pics of the Super Bowl Celebration at the Brooklyn Bowl…

Sunday :: 02.07.10 :: Brooklyn Bowl :: Brooklyn, NY

With Will Bernard

Galactic tour dates available here.

JamBase | NOLA to NY

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Gov’t Mule | 01.15 – 01.19 | Jamaica

Words & Images by: Dino Perrucci

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

Gov’t Mule :: 01.18 :: Jamaica

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

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

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

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

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

Gov’t Mule :: Friday :: 01.15.10

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

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

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

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

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

Gov’t Mule :: Saturday :: 01.16.10

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

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

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

Artist Signing

Artist Signing

Matt Abts Drum Clinic

Matt Abts Drum Clinic

Matt Abts Drum Clinic

Grace Potter and The Nocturnals

Grace Potter and The Nocturnals

Grace Potter and The Nocturnals

Grace Potter and The Nocturnals

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

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

Warren Haynes Solo :: Sunday :: 01.17.10

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

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

E1: Hallelujah (w/ Danny Louis)

E2: That’s Why I’m Here > Stella Blue

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Warren Haynes Solo

Warren Haynes Solo

Warren Haynes Solo

Warren Haynes Solo

Warren Haynes Solo

Warren Haynes Solo

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

Gov’t Mule :: Monday :: 01.18.10

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

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

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

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

Brian Farmer – Warren Haynes’ guitar tech

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule tour dates available here.

JamBase | Jamaica

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Gov’t Mule | 12.31 | New York

Images by: Dino Perrucci

Gov’t Mule :: 12.31.09 :: Beacon Theatre :: New York, NY

Gov’t Mule celebrated NYE and closed out the decade with two shows at New York’s Beacon Theatre. With special guests Marc Quiñones (The Allman Brothers Band – percussion), Dana Fuchs (vocals) and a three-piece horn section, it was a night to remember for sure.

Setlist (from mule.net)

12.31.2009 | Beacon Theatre | New York, NY

Set I: Bad Little Doggie, Inside Outside Woman Blues, Larger Than Life > Frozen Fear, Forevermore, Painted Silver Light > No Need To Suffer > Mule (with Highway Star Tease) > Whole Lotta Love > Mule

Set II: Freedom*$ (Warren & Marc), Coming Into Los Angeles*$ (Without Matt), Good Morning Little Schoolgirl, Going Home*, Ball & Chain*@#, Piece Of My Heart*@#, Savior*$ > Jingo*$, Soul Sacrifice*$, Delta Lady*$@#, Let’s Go Get Stoned*$@#, With A Little Help From My Friends*$@# > New Years Countdown > With A Little Help From My Friends*$@#, Dance To The Music$@# > Music Lover*$@#, I Want To Take You Higher$@#

Set III: The “Fish” Cheer/I-Feel-Like-I’m-Fixin’-To-Die Rag* (Matt Solo Acoustic), Dark Star*$ > Somebody To Love*$@, I Put A Spell On You, Don’t Do It*#, Mean Mistreater*, Helplessly Hoping* (Warren acoustic with Marc, Danny, Dana & Pam), “Don’t Eat The Brown Acid”, Helplessly Hoping Reprise*, I’m Free* > Listening To You

E: The Star Spangled Banner > Purple Haze



* First Time Played

$ Marc Quiñones – Percussion

@ Dana Fuchs – Vocals

# Pam Fleming – Trumpet, Jenny Hill – Sax, Buford Osullivan – Trombone

Watch Gov’t Mule with Dana Fuchs perform “Ball and Chain” on New Year’s Eve:

JamBase | New York

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Phish | 12.03.09 | MSG Night 2

Words by: Brian Bavosa | Images by: Dino Perrucci

Phish :: 12.03.09 :: Madison Square Garden :: New York, NY

Phish :: 12.03 :: MSG

Night two of Phish‘s Madison Square Garden party was a tale of two “Cities.” The first set, while featuring some hot numbers, seemed the most disjointed of the four thus far and may end up being the most forgettable.

Starting strong with a raucous “Punch You in the Eye,” which brought back memories of the epic New Year’s 1995 show that opened with the same tune, and Joy jam-vehicle “Backwards Down the Number Line,” by the time “Axilla I” hit the adrenalin was pumping through our collective veins.

A mid-set “Boogie On Reggae Woman” foreshadowed the funk that would dominate set two and featured Gordon on his new “meatball” pedal and found Trey teasing some “Macarena” riffs. “Stash” was exploratory, slowly walking up to the edge of the precipice and peeking over but never quite leaping. Unfortunately, the next portion of the set killed any momentum that had been built up.

An always welcome, lounge lizard “Lawnboy” saw many in the upper seats enjoying empty space, while Trey’s new opus, “Time Turns Elastic,” seemed to divide the crowd. This new number has established a love it or hate it relationship with the fans. I fall in the latter category, as this tune is better left for Trey’s solo gigs in an orchestral setting. While the ending section of the song does get the juices going, the journey to get there just doesn’t translate well. A hot “Julius” closed the set and saw some fiery fretwork from Trey, but the second half of the set seemed to drain the energy from MSG.

Phish :: 12.03 :: MSG

What we know now is that night two was all about set two. Not a down moment, this setlist was simply gigantic. Kicking off with “Down With Disease,” it was the first moment all night that the band seemed to stretch their collective legs and take things out a bit with two or three distinct jams, ranging from the funky to the spacey to the downright rocking. Clocking in at nearly 20 minutes, “DWD” bled into “Piper,” which showcased a quick peak before a jam that devolved into sonic wildness, weirdness, and clickity-clacking.

If “Time Turns Elastic” is Trey’s new orchestral-inspired, slightly geeky masterpiece, then “Fluffhead” is its cooler, older brother that gets high in the parking lot and lands all the chicks. A song that shines in Phish 3.0, “Fluffhead” has been back in heavy rotation, much to the delight of fans new and old.

The Talking Heads‘ “Cities” was another extremely welcome treat and again saw the band deliver on some very relaxed funk before an absolutely slamming “Free.” I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, “Free” is the quintessential Phish song – lyrically, stylistically and spiritually. Gordon owned this tune, like always. “Halley’s Comet” followed and the slight flub didn’t even matter as the Garden was bouncing to the line, “I’m going down to the central part of town.” MSG is not only the central part of town, but might be the central vortex of the world’s greatest city.

Phish :: 12.03 :: MSG

As the short jam tried to find its legs, Trey signaled the band to blastoff with the drum kicks of “Also Sprach Zarathustra,” commonly referred to as “2001.” While the band was cooking this set, lighting guru Chris Kuroda was tossing a broad palette of colors across the Garden, truly playing along with the band for the duration. The rainbow textures he used during “2001″ were simply mind-blowing. Packed into six or seven minutes, “2001″ still manages to “go there” with the super space funk, albeit in a smaller package than in years past. Phish 3.0 seems to be the grown up version of the same band. There is no doubt, they can still blow it up, but in a different way.

As Fishman began riding his cymbals, signaling the set closing “David Bowie,” the place just about erupted. Another old school gem, set two of MSG’s second night will stand out as one of the best in a long time. The playing was very good, but might have looked slightly better on paper than it actually was. Don’t get me wrong, it was super enjoyable, and much like the previous night’s heavy hitters, if you didn’t dig this set you simply don’t like Phish.

An encore of “Character Zero” saw the place raging, with white lights illuminating the entire, fist-pumping arena. It served as the perfect exclamation point to a huge second set that completely blew the first out of the water. With rumors swirling of special guests (a repeat of Halloween’s “Loving Cup” with New York’s own Sharon Jones perhaps?) for night three, the stage is set for Phish to do what they have always done best: top themselves when few thought they could.

Phish :: 12.03.09 :: Madison Square Garden :: New York, NY
Set I: Punch You In The Eye, Backwards Down the Number Line, Axilla I > Taste, Boogie On Reggae Woman,
Stash, Lawn Boy, Time Turns Elastic, Back On The Train, Julius

Set II: Down With Disease > Piper > Fluffhead, Cities > Free, Halley’s Comet > 2001, David Bowie

E: Character Zero

Continue reading for more pics of Phish at MSG…

Phish perform again tonight (12/04) at MSG; complete tour dates available here. Check back for complete review following the show.

You can keep up with all things Phish, including live Tweets and setlists, at jambase.com/phish.

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