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Grateful Dead: Europe Â’72 Tour Box Set

INDIVIDUALLY NUMBERED, LIMITED EDITION COLLECTION

AVAILABLE EXCLUSIVELY AT DEAD.NET AND SHIPS IN SEPTEMBER


sketch of new box set

Grateful Dead slipped the
shores of America and crossed the pond for its first-ever major European tour in April 1972. The legendary 22-
show run spawned Europe ’72, a live triple album that remains one of the band’s best-selling and most
beloved releases. A tour this momentous deserves a boxed set of historic proportions and Dead.net has stamped your passport to relive every note from the European tour
with Europe ’72: The Complete Recordings, an individually numbered, limited edition collection
that includes more than 60 discs with over 70 hours of music featuring every show from what is arguably the
Grateful Dead’s greatest tour. The box set ships in September.

Europe ’72: The Complete Recordings is housed in a replica steamer trunk reminiscent of the ones
prevalently used at the time. The travel
chest contains tour memorabilia, a coffee-table book with never-before-seen photos, and a comprehensive essay
by noted Dead author Blair Jackson. Each performance will also be accompanied by an essay specific to
the show written by top Dead scholars including David Gans, Gary Lambert, Nicholas Meriwether, and
Steve Silberman.

Jeffrey Norman, the primary mixer of the Dead’s archival multi-track material for the past 15 years, is
mixing each
show from the original 16-track recordings.

Due to ship in September, the boxed set is available exclusively from Dead.net, which is taking orders now. The
price of the collection is $450, which works out to the remarkably low price of about $20 for each show, or roughly
the cost of a transatlantic flight from New York City to London in 1972 (price of time machine not included).

The first 3,000 fans to order will have
their copy personalized with a name requested by the purchaser. Once the 3,000 order goal is reached by April 1,
Dead.net will continue to take orders through the summer but will limit production of the collection to a maximum
of 7,200 pieces, all of which will be individually numbered. Orders will no longer be taken at some date (to be
determined) later in the summer.

The tour offers a snapshot of a band at the top of its game, still ascending in the wake of three straight hit albums—
Workingman’s Dead, American Beauty, and the live Grateful Dead (“Skull & Roses”). It had been a
year since
the lineup had gone to its single-drummer configuration, six months since Keith Godchaux had been
broken in as the group’s exceptional pianist, and this marked the first tour to feature Donna Godchaux as
a member of the touring band.

There was a ton of new, unreleased material that came into the repertoire in the fall of ’71 and during the spring of
’72, including “Tennessee Jed,” “Jack Straw,” “Mexicali Blues,” “Comes A Time,” “Ramble On Rose,” “One More
Saturday Night,” “Black-Throated Wind,” “Looks Like Rain” and Pigpen‘s “Chinatown Shuffle,” “The Stranger
(Two
Souls In Communion)” and “Mr. Charlie.” (Sadly, this was Pigpen’s final tour.) All those future classics were
interspersed with songs from the aforementioned “hit” albums—such as “Uncle John’s Band,” “Casey Jones,” “Sugar
Magnolia,” “Bertha,” and “Not Fade Away”—and then were topped off by loads of big jamming numbers—the Europe
’72 tour produced spectacular versions of “Dark Star,” “The Other One,” “Playing in the Band,” “Truckin’,” “China Cat
Sunflower” > “I Know You Rider,” “Good Lovin’,” “Lovelight,” and even the early Pig chestnut “Caution.”

GRATEFUL DEAD EUROPE 1972 TOUR DATES

All shows included in their entirety

April 7 Wembley Empire Pool, Wembley

April 8 Wembley Empire Pool, Wembley

April 11 Newcastle City Hall, Newcastle

April 14 Tivolis Koncertsal, Copenhagen

April 16 Aarhus University, Aarhus

April 17 Tivolis Koncertsal, Copenhagen

April 21 Beat Club, Bremen

April 24 Rheinhalle, Dusseldorf

April 26 Jahrhundert Halle, Frankfurt

April 29 Musikhalle, Hamburg

May 3 Olympia Theatre, Paris

May 4 Olympia Theatre, Paris

May 7 Bickershaw Festival, Wigan

May 10 Concertgebouw, Amsterdam

May 11 Rotterdam Civic Hall, Rotterdam

May 13 Lille Fairgrounds, Lille

May 16 Theatre Hall, Luxembourg

May 18 Kongressaal – Deutsches Museum, Munich

May 23 Strand Lyceum, London

May 24 Strand Lyceum, London

May 25 Strand Lyceum, London

May 26 Strand Lyceum, London


Samuel Koch, Injured “Wetten Dass?” Stuntman, Paralyzed

A college student who was critically injured in a stunt on a live German TV show earlier this month, prompting Justin Bieber to abandon a concert on the program, has been told he’ll never walk again. Samuel Koch, 23, fractured his neck when he attempted to jump over a moving car on the live game [...]

E.ON halts Italy gas network sale

German energy giant E.ON dropped Wednesday plans to sell its gas pipelines in Italy after failing to receive any suitable bids and said it would continue to operate the network itself.
The dpa-AFX financial news agency quoted the Dusseldorf company saying it had been in talks with potential buyers to sell the 10,000-km network but their [...]

The Disco Biscuits: Planet Anthem

By: Dennis Cook

The Disco Biscuits have never been my thing. Long respected their general savvy and knack at carving out a unique niche for themselves, and there’s no denying they can play their butts off, but music either connects with us or it doesn’t. I offer this caveat because I came into Planet Anthem (released March 16 on Diamond Riggs Records) with ZERO expectations. And one’s POV on Bisco will heavily influence their response to their game changing new platter.

In a nutshell, the Biscuits have done what few bands to rise to prominence in the jam scene have done: Created a thoroughly modern, intensely sculpted set that has an honest shot of penetrating the mainstream. It’s also incredibly brave of a band to offer such a drastic reconfiguration of their sound this far into their career. They know dance music in ways few others can match, and they’ve whittled things down to a succinct beat science here. There’s some sexy space rock like “Uber Glue” likely to become live monsters, but there’s more cuts that could be singles or populist DJ fare (no problem imagining a Vegas disco spinning “You and I” next to Britney’s “Toxic,” or perhaps finding “The City” or “Big Wrecking Ball” sandwiched between videos by the Black Eyed Peas and Rihanna). Even if this doesn’t make it on the charts, the Biscuits now have a set custom made for the dance music underworld they’ve been French kissing for years.

For a band regarded by many as primarily a live entity, they’ve crafted a quality studio offering that holds up against the high gloss stuff on major labels and MTV. And as someone who didn’t come into this expecting “Morph Dusseldorf” or “Little Shimmy In A Conga Line,” I kinda dig this and see how it opens up a ton of new possibilities for them – fiscally, musically and otherwise. The ’60s psych-pop of “Fish Out of Water,” the Morcheeba-with-saucy-horns vibe of “Quad D,” the patient prog moan Of “Rain Song,” and post-punk, Public Image Ltd-esque “Sweatbox” are all fresh ground. And there’s little doubt the band will transform and trick out every tune in concert; their gift for variety and brainy rejiggering practically guarantees it.

There’s a sharp focus and pleasant disregard for their past on Planet Anthem that’s excitingÂ…if one can let go of insisting The Disco Biscuits continue to be as they have been.

JamBase | Worldwide
Go See Live Music!


Alberta Cross: Tour Dates

Alberta Cross Sells Out Shows Across The U.S., Tour Confirmed With Black Rebel Motorcycle Club

Alberta Cross

Alberta Cross just wrapped up their first ever nationwide headlining tour where they performed to sold out crowds in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington DC, San Francisco and more. This spring, Alberta Cross will tour with Black Rebel Motorcycle Club.

Their latest album, Broken Side of Time arrives on the heels of their EP The Thief & the Heartbreaker, which earned the band U.K. touring slots with Oasis, The Shins and Bat For Lashes.

Founded by guitarist/vocalist Petter Ericson Stakee and bassist Terry Wolfers, Alberta Cross took shape when the two began jamming together in London’s east end. Stakee, from London by way of Sweden, and Wolfers, a Brit himself, moved to New York City in 2008 in pursuit of renewed creative energy and new challenges. Broken Side of Time is born of the struggles and setbacks the band faced along the way. The album serves as Alberta Cross’ official introduction to the U.S.

As Stakee explains, “It’s kind of a desperation album, a darker album; it’s definitely angrier. We’ve been in a crazy place during the whole album and you can hear that.”

Led by Stakee and Wolfers, Alberta Cross is rounded out by guitarist Sam Kearney, drummer Austin Beede and keyboardist Alec Higgins. Broken Side of Time was recorded in Austin, TX and produced by Mike McCarthy (Spoon, Dead Confederate, Heartless Bastards). John O’Mahony (Depeche Mode, Coldplay, Kasabian) mixed the album at Electric Lady in New York City.

Tour Dates

02/16/10 Tue Congress Centrum Hamburg, GER ^

02/17/10 Wed Tempodrom Berlin, GER ^

02/19/10 Fri Gasometer Vienna, AUS ^

02/20/10 Sat Zenith Munich, GER ^

02/21/10 Sun Kiff Aarau, SWI

02/22/10 Mon PalaSharp Milan, IT ^

02/23/10 Tue Palalottomatica Rome, IT ^

02/24/10 Wed Locanda Atlantide Rome, IT

02/25/10 Thu Palasport San Lazzaro Padova, IT

02/27/10 Sat ZAKK Dusseldorf, GER

02/28/10 Sun Palladium Cologne, GER ^

03/01/10 Mon Lotto Arena Antwerp, BEL ^

03/02/10 Tue Tivoli Utrecht, NL

03/03/10 Wed Heineken Music Hall Amsterdam, NL ^

03/04/10 Thu Jahrhunderthalle Frankfurt, GER ^

03/06/10 Sat O2 Arena London, GB ^

03/07/10 Sun Manchester Apollo Manchester, GB ^

03/08/10 Mon Auntie Annies Belfast, GB

03/09/10 Tue The O2 Dublin, IR ^

03/11/10 Thu SECC Glasgow, GB ^

03/12/10 Fri Night & Day Manchester, GB

03/14/10 Sun Shepherd’s Bush Empire London, GB

03/15/10 Mon Dingwall’s London, GB

04/01/10 Thu Phoenix Concert Theatre Toronto, ON *

04/02/10 Fri La Tulipe Montreal, QC *

04/03/10 Sat House of Blues Boston, MA *

04/05/10 Mon 9:30 Club Washington, DC *

04/06/10 Tue Theatre of Living Arts (TLA) Philadelphia, PA *

04/07/10 Wed Mr. Small’s Theatre Pittsburgh, PA *

^ with Dave Matthews Band

* with Black Rebel Motorcycle Club

Fore more on Alberta Cross see our exclusive feature/interview here.


SXSW: Partial Band List/Panels

SOUTH BY SOUTHWEST ANNOUNCES PARTIAL BAND LIST, PANEL INFO, STAGE NEWS

Pretty Lights

The South by Southwest (SXSW) Music Conference and Festival, scheduled to take place March 17-21, 2010 in Austin, Texas, is pleased to announce a few of the bands scheduled to perform, artists that are participating on panels and exciting changes at the SXSW Day Stage.

This year’s SXSW Music Conference will feature some notable artists that will be speaking on panels taking place in the Austin Convention Center. Judy Collins shares her thoughts on Where Goes English Folk Music?, John Doe joins Ian Rogers‘ panel The Cultural Significance of Direct-to-Fan Marketing, DJ Spooky encourages the spread of music into established cultural institutions in Performing Arts: New Frontier for Live Acts, Melissa Auf Der Mar exhibits her photographic side on Image Makers Of Rock and Soul, Suzanne Vega kicks MP3 butt on Music Artists: Getting A Digital Ass-Kicking, Andrew WK dissects rock star myths on What Becomes A Legend Most, Chris Walla highlights his studio work on Producers Adapt & Survive, Chris Frantz and Tina Weymouth recall early gigs on CBGBs Stories, and Anya Marina talks soundtracks on Case Study: New Moon.

Join these artists and over 350 other speakers for an enlightening look at the past, present and future of the music industry.

The SXSW Day Stage also in the Austin Convention Center, will be partnering with six great radio stations from around the country who will present Day Stage performances on their airwaves. These are KCRW, KEXP, WXPN, The Current, KUT, and Mexico City’s Reactor.

Each station will present a three hour block of music. Highlighting KCRW‘s block on Saturday March 20 will be Rogue Wave, Middle East and Lissie. More artists will be announced soon. SXSW Day Stage performances take place in Ballroom D from 12:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m. on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, and 12:00 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. on Saturday.

SXSW Initial Band List (selected from over 10,000 entries)

!!! (Brooklyn, NY)
Amaral (Madrid, SPAIN)
Anita Tijoux (Santiago, CHILE)
Apoptygma Berzerk (Oslo, NORWAY)
Athlete (London, ENGLAND)
Bajofondo (Buenos Aires, ARGENTINA)
Balkan Beat Box (Tel Aviv, ISRAEL)
Band of Skulls (London, ENGLAND)
Bear In Heaven (Brooklyn, NY)
Black Milk (Detroit, MI)
Black Rebel Motorcycle Club (Los Angeles, CA)
Bomba Estereo (Bogota, Colombia)
Broken Social Scene (Toronto, CANADA)
Chalie Boy (Hearne, TX)
Chamillionaire & Paul Wall (Houston, TX)
Cymbals Eat Guitars (New York, NY)
Deer Tick (Providence, RI)
Evan Dando (New York, NY)
Frightened Rabbit (Selkirk, SCOTLAND)
Fucked Up (Toronto, CANADA)
Grant Hart (St. Paul, MN)
Hauschka (Dusseldorf, GERMANY)
Here We Go Magic (Brooklyn, NY)
Hudson Mohawke (Glasgow, SCOTLAND)
Invincible (Detroit, MI)
jj (Gothenburg, SWEDEN)
Killer Mike (Atlanta, GA)
LA Riots (Los Angeles, CA)
Les Savy Fav (Brooklyn, NY)
Maldita Vecindad (Mexico City, MEXICO)
Marina & The Diamonds (London, ENGLAND)
Mayer Hawthorne & The County (Ann Arbor, MI)
Midlake (Denton, TX)
Miike Snow (Stockholm, SWEDEN)
Mr Hudson (London, ENGLAND)
Mundo Livre SA (Recife, BRAZIL)
Murs (Los Angeles, CA)
Natalia Lafourcade (Mexico City, MEXICO)
Pretty Lights (Charlottesville, VA)
Rye Rye (Baltimore, MD)
Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings (Brooklyn, NY)
She & Him (Los Angeles, CA)
Shwayze (Malibu, CA)
Spoon (Austin, TX)
Steve Aoki (Los Angeles, CA)
Systema Solar (Taganga, COLOMBIA)
Texas Tornados (San Antonio, TX)
The Drums (Brooklyn, NY)
The Middle East (Townsville, AUSTRALIA)
The Soft Pack (San Diego, CA)
The Very Best (New York, NY)
The xx (London, ENGLAND)
Trae (Houston, TX)
VV Brown (London, ENGLAND)
Wolfgang Gartner (Austin, TX)

This list is subject to change. This is only a portion of the bands that will be performing at the SXSW Music Festival.

For more on SXSW, check out our 2009 coverage here.


Eric Clapton U.S. Dates w/ Daltrey

Eric Clapton Announced 2010 U.S. TOUR DATES

Very Special Guest Roger Daltrey To Kick Off The Show

Eric Clapton

On the heels of two major U.S. Grammy nominations for his CD release with Steve Winwood last year, Eric Clapton has announced a series of North American solo shows. The tour will begin on February 25 in Pittsburgh, PA and will travel to 11 U.S. cities and feature a very special guest, The Who‘s Roger Daltrey to kick off the show.

In recent years, Clapton has done some of his most innovative and collaborative work, pairing with iconic artists such as Steve Winwood, Jeff Beck and JJ Cale for concert and CD projects. Recent concert setlists have seen a variety of Clapton music featuring some of his biggest solo hits alongside classic Derek and The Dominos and Blind Faith songs. The band will consist of Steve Gadd on drums, Willie Weeks on bass, Chris Stainton and Walt Richmond on keyboards, and Michelle John and Sharon White as backing vocalists.

Earlier this month Clapton announced a set of dates with Jeff Beck. Complete Clapton tour dates available here:


02/13/10 Sat O2 Arena London, GB (w/ Jeff Beck)

02/14/10 Sun O2 Arena London, GB (w/ Jeff Beck)

02/18/10 Thu Madison Square Garden New York, NY (w/ Jeff Beck)

02/19/10 Fri Madison Square Garden New York, NY (w/ Jeff Beck)

02/21/10 Sun Air Canada Centre Toronto, ON (w/ Jeff Beck)

02/22/10 Mon Bell Centre Montreal, QC (w/ Jeff Beck)

02/25/10 Thu Mellon Arena Pittsburgh, PA (w/ Roger Daltrey)

02/27/10 Sat Sommet Center Nashville, TN (w/ Roger Daltrey)

02/28/10 Sun Birmingham Jefferson Arena Birmingham, AL (w/ Roger Daltrey)

03/02/10 Tue BOK Center Tulsa, OK (w/ Roger Daltrey)

03/03/10 Wed Sprint Center Kansas City, MO (w/ Roger Daltrey)

03/05/10 Fri FedEx Forum Memphis, TN (w/ Roger Daltrey)

03/06/10 Sat New Orleans Arena New Orleans, LA (w/ Roger Daltrey)

03/08/10 Mon RBC Center Raleigh, NC (w/ Roger Daltrey)

03/09/10 Tue Gwinnett Civic & Cultural Center Duluth, GA (w/ Roger Daltrey)

03/11/10 Thu BankAtlantic Center Sunrise, FL (w/ Roger Daltrey)

03/13/10 Sat Amway Arena Orlando, FL (w/ Roger Daltrey)

05/18/10 Tue LG Arena (NEC Arena) Birmingham, GB (w/ Steve Winwood)

05/20/10 Thu Wembley Arena London, GB (w/ Steve Winwood)

05/23/10 Sun Sportpaleis Antwerpen Antwerp, BEL (w/ Steve Winwood)

05/25/10 Tue Bercy Paris, FRA (w/ Steve Winwood)

05/28/10 Fri Phillipshalle Dusseldorf, GER (w/ Steve Winwood)

05/29/10 Sat Gelredome Arnhem, NL (w/ Steve Winwood)

05/31/10 Mon Malmo Arena Malmo, SE (w/ Steve Winwood)

06/02/10 Wed O2 World Berlin, GER (w/ Steve Winwood)

06/03/10 Thu Color Line Arena Hamburg, GER (w/ Steve Winwood)

06/05/10 Sat Konigsplatz Munich, GER (w/ Steve Winwood)

06/07/10 Mon Stadthalle Vienna, AUS (w/ Steve Winwood)

06/09/10 Wed Belgrade Arena Belgrade, RS (w/ Steve Winwood)

06/13/10 Sun Santral Istanbul Istanbul, TR (w/ Steve Winwood)


Welcome to the cool club

It is the college that gave the world Damien Hirst. Are today’s Goldsmiths graduates aiming to shake up the world?

The atmosphere is hot and still. The only noise is the sound of examiners’ footsteps as they pad from one exhibition space to another – looking, absorbing, assessing. I’m in the studios of Goldsmiths College in London, where MA art students have just installed their degree shows and are nervously waiting to see what grades they will get. For them, education is over. Look out world, here they come.

A good degree isn’t everything, of course. A tutor here tells me that, contrary to popular belief, Damien Hirst does not have a close relationship with his former college because he has never forgiven them for awarding his work a 2.2 (lower second class). Still, Hirst’s name is synonymous with Goldsmiths. In 1988, while still a student here, he curated Freeze, a seminal show in a Docklands warehouse that, as well as his own work, featured pieces by Angus Fairhurst, Mat Collishaw and other fledgling YBAs. Goldsmiths and its then professor, Michael Craig-Martin (creator of the Tate’s infamous glass of water on a shelf), were credited with giving these students their go-getting attitude.

That was then. I’ve come to Goldsmiths to see how final-year MA students are feeling about their futures now, in the shadow of recession. Four budding artists from the class of 2009 meet me in a lecture room and I quickly sense that everything has changed for this generation. Their idea of a life in art has little in common with the fiercely ambitious artists the college was turning out in the early 1990s. Is it the economy? Is it the sheer number of artists competing for attention in today’s Britain? Have tutors’ attitudes changed here since the retirement of Craig-Martin? Whatever it is, these students seem to have no illusions at all about their chances of making it big.

Jason Underhill, a tall, bearded 26-year-old from California, has the studied air of an independent film-maker. And that’s what he is, albeit one who is just finishing a fine art MA. His graduation piece is a film called Howlin’, about aimless young people in an American city. It features bodies turning up in a supermarket freezer, and two characters looking down on a town they see as a scar on the beautiful wilderness.

There’s clearly an ambition here to say something as well as to make something, but Underhill – whose work featured in last year’s prestigious New Contemporaries exhibition in Liverpool – does not seem in any danger of getting overexcited about success. “I chose Goldsmiths because I needed to reconsider my position,” he says. “My ideas felt half-formed, possibly because I didn’t know how to address a place like California. I thought that some distance could help me articulate things.”

Annie Hémond Hotte, born in Montreal in 1980, is a painter. Although she started out on a musical path, she now can’t imagine life without painting: “My family are not very artistic so I had to fight a bit when I decided I wanted to paint. I didn’t want to do anything else.” Like the others, she’s on the fine art MA and her degree show features large-scale paintings of Pinocchio-like characters. They drip with thick, waxy colour.

Tina Hage, a photographer born in Haiti, studied media arts in Cologne before moving to London. At first, the photographs in her degree show seem to zoom in on moments of crisis in crowd scenes; then you realise that Hage, in her early 30s, plays all the parts. She is the quietest of the group and reticent about her art, preferring to let her digitally manipulated fictions speak for themselves – which they do, rather well.

Jon Moscow, also in his 30s, feels art is his vocation and he’s not too bothered what the world makes of him and his fellow students: “We consider that we are artists already – I became an artist for the art, not for the art world.” Moscow, from Cleethorpes, used to be a chartered accountant. But, during the 1990s, when Hirst’s generation were becoming famous, he quit to follow his artistic urge. He has exhibited in Düsseldorf and London. His room in the degree show is filled with sculptures and significant objects, arranged in a surreal style. “I make rooms,” he says of his work, before highlighting one of its drawbacks: “How do you sell a room?”

Much may have changed in art schools, but one thing seems to have stayed the same: the cool demeanour of the students. You could almost imagine this lot in a band together, with Moscow as the Jarvis Cocker figure. Goldsmiths is renowned for equipping its charges for the reality of a career in art: if charm is part of what it takes, they have plenty. However, while all four are determined to put art at the centre of their lives, they are sceptical about actually making a living from it, especially during a recession. “There’s nothing we can do about it,” says Hotte. “But you can’t say, ‘the art market looks bad so I’ll stop producing work.’ It wouldn’t make sense.”

Their response is to look forward to lives as artists, with the intention of supporting themselves by other means. “There are statistics from the Arts and Humanities Research Council,” says Moscow. “They make depressing reading if you’re interested in making a living from your art. A tiny proportion of artists do that, so I don’t even go there.”

This approach – passionate about the work, doubtful of economic reward – has always been the best attitude for an artist to have throughout history. It costs money to be a student and they expect it to cost money to be an artist: making films, printing photographs, buying canvases. But it’s something they have to do. They are what you might call hardheaded dreamers. Art, says Underhill, “is a strange relationship that you have with yourself”.

“We want to keep in touch,” says Hotte. “Not just in terms of showing our art, but in terms of making it, and having discussions. It’s a big part of the Goldsmiths thing, to meet people who push you.” This is perhaps the most important thing they’ve got out of their time here. You get the impression that the friendships forged at Goldsmiths will play a part in their lives for years to come, as they go out into a world they seem well-armoured for. “My biggest hope in the next couple years is to develop a practice as an artist making feature films,” says Underhill. “My biggest fear is that it will take longer than a couple years to do it.”

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