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Posts Tagged ‘earth’

US threatens China with WTO case on rare earth exports

us lflagUS trade officials Thursday threatened trade action against China over exports of rare earth materials, one day after embarking on a separate case before the World Trade Organization (WTO) against wind power subsidies. The office of the US Trade Representative (USTR) also accused China of a “troubling trend” towards state intervention into its economy in [...]

Christmas Trees in Google Earth 6

What Christmas isn’t complete without the obligatory festive Christmas tree? The symbol of the holidays, spruce, fir and cedar trees dressed in colorful lights and ornaments go a long way in getting us into the festive mood. In an apparent effort to get into the holiday spirit themselves, the guys at Google have decided to [...]

Railroad Earth: Take My Hand

By: Dennis Cook

New Album

“Tell me have you heard the story going down the line?

Say the name Railroad Earth and instantly images of steam engines, high crested mountains and open plains spring to mind. There’s a rooted romance to this band, a sonic cousin to Terrence Mallick’s Days of Heaven, the lingering Wild West imagination, and traveling spirits up to their eyeballs in living, dreaming aloud and game to hit the road with just a carefully packed bindle and a pal or two. It’s both a personal and widescreen vision that’s finally finding fruition on album with the self-titled Railroad Earth (released October 12 on One Haven). Produced by Angelo Montrone (Matisyahu), the album pares back the group’s sound and sharpens their focus, marking a new chapter in RRE’s nearly decade long history.

“When the band first started we were intentionally focused on being more of a bluegrass band. The first shows we booked were like the Telluride and Grey Fox Bluegrass festivals, and we were a string band with a bluegrass approach and a drummer,” explains singer-songwriter-guitarist Todd Sheaffer. “We’ve grown beyond that narrow category, and you can’t really describe it that way anymore. There are elements of bluegrass, rock, pop, country and traditional music. It’s a lot of stuff, and we’ve definitely gone past our original starting point. It’s something much more than that now.”

“This album is a demarcation point. This is Railroad Earth at this moment,” says violinist-singer-guitarist Tim Carbone. “This record sounds different than any of our other records. For me, as the fiddle player, there’s one actual solo on the album. But there are three times as many guitar solos, which is a departure. When I produce records I try to emphasize the songs, and I think that’s what was going on here. The producer wanted to keep the arrangements sparse and focus more on the vocal arrangements. That creates some difficult choices live because the vocal arrangements aren’t something we can completely, 100-percent duplicate live. So, we’ve had to make intelligent decisions about what vocals we do live.”

Tim Carbone by Ian Rawn

The arrangements on Railroad Earth have a lot more air in them than previous studio releases, and while it doesn’t mirror the live RRE melange, it does allow individual instruments to shine while further utilizing the studio’s pleasant differences.

“That was actually a conscious approach to make the arrangements less dense and focus on and support the melody more than passing solos around. [It's] a little more pop approach,” says Sheaffer. “Other than The Good Life (2004), our albums are self-produced, and this is the first time since then that we’ve brought in a producer and turned it over to them to really shape and have significant input. Of course, we had discussions about what we wanted to do, and one thing we wanted was to do more with our vocal harmonies. We have a bunch of singers in the band and some really good ones, and it’s a side that’s been under-utilized in the past. There are a lot of vocal textures [on Railroad Earth] used in ways we haven’t normally used them. We experimented and stretched our vocabulary.”

“We got all six of us singing on some tracks like ‘Long Walk Home.’ It was pretty exciting,” continues Sheaffer. “One of the things that gets overlooked about our group is Carey [Harmon's] singing. He does most of the harmony singing with me, and he gets singing parts above me, which can be pretty high, and he sings them with power. He has an incredible feel for singing harmony, where he’s really feeling the mood and emotion of the songs not just playing the drum parts.”

There’s little doubt that Railroad Earth represents the band’s best shot yet at penetrating the mainstream. “Long Walk Home” and “On The Banks” have strong single potential, and other than endlessly mining the jam scene that’s already embraced RRE wholeheartedly, the mainstream represents the next logical step. The upside is that while they aren’t likely to be bumping off Tom Petty or Paul Simon anytime soon, they do craft music with the same high level musicianship and stand a chance of snaring the general public that wants more than fluff from their radio rock.

Carey Harmon by Susan J. Weiand

“We’re basically the sum total of all our influences, as most natural sounding bands are. Believe it or not, there’s nothing overly contrived about us at all. We’ve never ever said, ‘We need to write a song that sounds like this or that.’ Yet somehow, we still manage to sound like ourselves, and I think that’s one of our strengths,” says Carbone. “We have a lot of options for sounds within the band. We have a number of multi-instrumentalists, so we have the luxury of artists with a full complement of colors available to them. I always advocate using ALL the colors, but I was sometimes a lone voice.”

“There was a strong sense that we needed to stay on the acoustic side of things for a long time, but we got a producer this time out that said we needed to bring in some electricity. So, I immediately broke out the electric guitar on ‘Black Elk Speaks’ and he loved it,” continues Carbone. “I played all the tremolo and feedback on that song, all the stuff that sounds like the world’s about to be destroyed [laughs]. Live, I’ve figured out how to do that without destroying anything. In the studio, I blew up one of the producer’s amplifiers. I was overfeeding it signal from this distortion box he had and felt the amp and it was red hot. He told me, ‘Keep going! Don’t worry about it!’ At the end it was smoking out the back.”

“We’re holding fast to the [album] arrangements for the most part live. We’ve figured out the right ways to sing them with the layers of vocals in them. On the record, I’m like a little mini string orchestra, which I’m not able to reproduce live, but I’m playing parts that are sympathetic to the idea that there’s more than one string part going on,” says Carbone. “I’m a believer that a record is a separate kind of art form. We don’t need to be overly worried about reproducing it live the way it is on record. We’ve always been really good at the live thing and we’ve made good records but not great ones. And I think [Railroad Earth] is our best one yet.”

What Divides And Connects Us

Todd Sheaffer by Josh Miller

Beyond the shifts in style and approach, Railroad Earth is littered with big American ideas, stuffed with a drive and reach that has marked the best – and sometimes worst – parts of the American character, as exemplified by “The Jupiter & The 119″ and “Black Elk Speaks.”

“Those two songs, even though they’re back to back, are sort of the thematic bookends of the record. The other songs touch on the ideas in these two in various ways. They’re the ideological pillars of the album, the dark and the light of those big American ideas,” says Sheaffer. “I wrote these songs around the time the Obama campaign was making its way around the country, really reviving a great American spirit as this momentous event is taking place and we’re all a part of it. That kind of spirit is in ['The Jupiter & The 119], an optimism that we can overcome our differences and do great things. And ‘Black Elk’ is about a people who’ve been completely displaced and lost their home.”

Within these two songs and the reverberations throughout the new album, Railroad Earth divines the conscience and ambition of the United States, the Westward Expansion spirit and the bloody trail it left behind. The bright lilt of “The Jupiter & The 119″ is shaded by a clear-eyed engagement with death that ultimately lands the listener in “Potter’s Field.”

“‘Day On The Sand’ also comes to mind along those lines. It’s a sad song but there’s also redemption. That song is about clearing out the house of a loved one that had passed away, going down to box up their belongings and clear out the house and close it down. The last verse is the memorial service on the beach,” explains Sheaffer, touching on the fact that Railroad Earth doesn’t exactly make pop music despite a real facility with hooks and snappy choruses. Face it, Railroad Earth don’t exactly churn out ditties. “That one definitely doesn’t qualify as a ditty [laughs]. Somebody just dropped dead – sing along! But, I find those are the songs that really mean something to people, the songs that touch them and they crave and need, like the song ‘Storms’ from The Good Life. I can’t tell you the number of people who’ve sent me letters and emails saying how much it meant to them, and other songs, too.”

Railroad Earth by Dave Vann

One of the functions of music is to communicate these prime experiences in a form that transcends simple conversation. The melding of music, emotion and ideas truly is greater than the sum of its parts, particularly when the situations and feelings are as strong as death, birth and other signpost events in a life. Railroad Earth, under Sheaffer’s stewardship as primary songwriter, excels at creating music that encapsulates and elevates these key moments that most of us experience. More simply, what they do is a good companion for the winding, rocky road, music for the long haul that lift heels and raises a weary head.

“When I first started out, a lot of my songs and shows were really funny. That’s not always clear sometimes,” chuckles Sheaffer. “We have a song called ‘RV’ that’s in our shows these days, and it’s kinda funny, light in spirit, but at the same time it’s got a warmth and sweetness to it. It’s about Phil and Stacy, who work for the band, and they started coming around and showing up at shows with their RV and cooking food for us and taking care of us. They had retired and this is what they wanted to do – cruise around the country with Railroad Earth. I have songs like that in addition to things like ‘Black Elk.”

Up Around The Bend

Andy Goessling by Susan J. Weiand

Like kindred predecessors the Grateful Dead and The Byrds, Railroad Earth taps into the Great American Songbook, which comprises the fine, enduring ideas drawn from every possible genre but derived from a distinctly American spirit that longs to blur lines and bring old ideas together into something new.

“If you don’t have those limitations within yourself, then why not? It’s the heart of this band really that we can do a LOT of different things,” says Sheaffer. “We have some great players. For instance, Andy [Goessling] can not only do a lot of things but he can do them well. It just opens things up, even for me as a writer. I can bring any kind of material to the group and we can handle it.”

And for anyone concerned about Railroad Earth putting a toe into the mainstream, there’s still elements far outside the VH1 sanctioned corridors on RRE’s latest. No one on that channel is offering up swinging, complex instrumentals like “Spring-Heeled Jack,” for example.

Tim Carbone by Keith Berson

“That song was one take, completely live. There are no overdubs at all. It is as it was played,” says Carbone. “Actually, a lot of the record is that way. Bass, drums, scratch vocal and scratch rhythm guitar were done first, and then we set up in the main room of this very small studio around three microphones facing each other and violin, guitar and mandolin were basically played live. Then, any of the string parts would be duplicated later, which was big. I would do two violin parts and a baritone violin part, and each part would be doubled or tripled. So, we’re talking a minimum of nine tracks of violin and one time I think I did twelve [laughs].”

Much of Railroad Earth deals with life in sickness and in health, acknowledging the awful dips as well as the exhilarating highs.

“I don’t think you can appreciate the highs if you haven’t been through the lows,” says Sheaffer. “I don’t consciously try to write about anything. I write what’s in my heart and on my mind at the time I’m writing a song, and I try to detail and capture it as honestly and purely as I can. Then, I find if I’m able to hone in on something that’s true to me, I tend to find there’s other people out there that relate to it and it means something to them. Ultimately, that’s the goal and reward – to share this common bond of humanity with your family and friends through the idiom of music.”

The sense one gets with Railroad Earth is their story is still unfolding. Rapidly approaching their tenth anniversary, it seems like much is still left to be written in their shared history.

“It’s pretty wide-open,” says Sheaffer. “It’s just a matter of choosing which direction we’ll go next.”

Railroad Earth Tour Dates :: Railroad Earth News :: Railroad Earth Concert Reviews

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Telluride 2011: R. Plant, Béla, Railroad Earth, Emmitt-Nershi

MORE ARTISTS TO BE ANNOUNCED


Robert Plant

The initial lineup has been announced for the 38th Annual Telluride Bluegrass Festival, set for June 16-19
2011 in Telluride, Colorado. More acts will be announced in the coming months. Telluride Bluegrass passes
(including a limited number of discounted holiday-priced tickets) and camping are now on-sale at shop.bluegrass.com or 800-624-2422.

Lineup
Robert Plant & Band of Joy
Telluride House Band featuring Sam, Bela, Jerry, Edgar, Bryan & Stuart
Sam Bush Band
Bela Fleck & the Original Flecktones
Emmylou Harris

Yonder Mountain String Band
The Decemberists
Railroad Earth

Tim O’Brien Band

Edgar Meyer

Punch Brothers
Peter Rowan

Emmitt-Nershi Band

Tim O’Brien & Kevin Burke

The Infamous Stringdusters

Cornmeal

Michael Cleveland & Flamekeeper
Trampled by Turtles

Nora Jane Struthers & the Bootleggers


Get a Glimpse of the Past with Google Earth

One of the coolest and most exciting features of Google Earth is probably something you really haven’t given much thought to – historical imagery.  Who wouldn’t want to visit the past and check out the historical record of our world?  A look at the evolution of rising communities, destruction by nature, and so much more [...]

Google Earth Engine Launches as Cloud Climate Platform

Google Earth Engine will provide satellite images to help scientists see how forests are changing over time. The idea is to stunt deforestation in developing countries. – Google Dec. 2 rolled out a new cloud-based computing platform that puts past
and present satellite imagery online to gauge changes in Earth’s environment.
Introduced at the International Climate Change Conference in Cancun,
Mexico, Google
Earth Engine is intended to help scientists detect how fo…


Google Earth Engine Takes Off

The guys over at Google just launched a brand new Google Labs goodie; Google Earth Engine.  It is a new technology platform that actually puts an incredible amount of satellite data and imagery online.  The data is both current and historical. So, why is Google Earth Engine so cool?  For one, it allows scientists to [...]

15 Hottest Bollywood Actresses on Earth

Bollywood; an odd and under-rated phenomenon. Here in the US the whole Indian movie scene seems to be overlooked slightly, which we reckon is fair enough given the insane amount of dancing and singing which goes on in half of these movies: imagine the most colorful LSD trip ever met an attention deficit disorder version [...]

Google Earth 6 Gets Integrated Street View, 3D Trees

Google Earth 6 includes integrated Street View imagery, more than 80 million 3D trees and more searchable historical imagery. – Google Nov. 29 released
Google Earth 6, which integrates Street View and adds historical imagery and 3D
trees to bring more realism to the Web service.
Google Earth is the search engine’s digital atlas, allowing
users to search for places all over the globe and see satellite views of the
sky, …


15 of the Best Miniseries of All Time

A good miniseries has flexibility that movies don’t. They can spend more time exploring characters, cover a longer period, or just look at topics in more depth. Rather than being limited to the two hour attention span of most movie goers, by drawing out a story over a week or longer, a miniseries manages depth [...]

Michael Douglas Gives Cancer The Finger From “The Happiest Place On Earth”

Cancer-battling Michael Douglas is done with his radiotherapy – so what better way to celebrate giving the Big C a giant Eff-U than a trip to Disney World in Orlando with the fam? Michael, 66, completed his eight-week radiotherapy and chemotherapy treatment last month, and has been recovering in his New York home ever since, [...]

Space Station Crew Arrives Safely Back on Earth

After six months on board the International Space Station (ISS), Expedition 24 and 25 crews return safely to Earth. – The crew of the International Space Station (ISS) Expedition 25 landed safely in Kazakhstan just before midnight on Thursday (Friday morning Kazakhstan time). The trio — Doug Wheelock, Shannon Walker and Soyuz Commander Fyodor Yurchikhin — undocked in the Soyuz TMA-19 at 8:23 p.m. ending their fiv…


Railroad Earth: Thanksgiving Concert Film

RAILROAD EARTH TO PERFORM NEW ALBUM IN ITS ENTIRETY AT THANKSGIVING BASH IN
STROUDSBURG, PA NOV 27; FANS TO FILM SET FOR LIVE CONCERT VIDEO


Railroad Earth

Railroad Earth are adding
something new this year to their annual two-night Thanksgiving bash at the Sherman Theater in Stroudsburg, PA.
On Friday Nov 26, they’ll play a traditional, anything-goes Railroad Earth show, but on Saturday Nov 27, the “Wilco-
via-a-Nashville-detour” (Blurt) band will open the concert by performing its critically acclaimed new self-titled from
start-to-finish.

Additionally, Railroad Earth is calling on a select few superfans to videotape the show. This footage will be edited
with pristine soundboard audio for a concert film – “by the people, for the people” – to be released in the new year.
More info on the release will be revealed soon via the band’s website and Facebook page.

Railroad Earth
Tour Dates

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Railroad Earth News
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Railroad Earth
Concert
Reviews


Evangelical Christians: Heaven and earth

An intra-Christian gap has closed a little

FOUR decades ago, global Christian bodies were riven by rows over where their main duty lay—changing the world or saving souls. The Geneva-based World Council of Churches (WCC), dominated by liberal Protestants and Orthodox churches from communist lands, stressed “liberation” and social justice. That was one reason why America’s Billy Graham and other top evangelicals went to Lausanne in 1974 to set up a new body that would focus more on winning the 2.7 billion people who, by its calculation, had yet to hear the Christian message.

The so-called Lausanne movement remains ebullient. Its gathering of 4,000 evangelicals from 200 countries, which ended in Cape Town on October 25th, was billed as the biggest and broadest Christian meeting in history. But coming from a body that stresses the spiritual, parts of the meeting’s final statement were quite earthly. Humanity must “repent of our part in the destruction, waste and pollution of the Earth’s resources, and our collusion in the toxic idolatry of consumerism,” it said. Also, the WCC’s new head, Olav Fykse Tveit of Norway, was invited to Cape Town, despite his roots in liberal Nordic Lutheranism. …

U.S., EU in rare earth minerals fear

The US and the EU have warned that a shortage of rare earth metals from China could harm their economies.
Officials and industrialists in Washington and Berlin said a lack of the minerals, 90% of which come from China, would have severe repercussions.

Watch Railroad Earth Spin New LP On Facebook

SPINNING NEW ALBUM ON THE DENON 100 TURNTABLE


Railroad Earth

Railroad Earth‘s new self-
titled album is out on October 12 via One Haven Music. Tomorrow at 1pm EDT the
band will test-drive a vinyl copy of the new album, in its entirety, at the HQ of legendary electronics-maker Denon.
They’ll spin the album on a new Denon
100 turntable
, manufactured to commemorate Denon’s 100th anniversary.

You can watch the whole thing on the Railroad Earth Facebook page.


Oct 9 Roseland, VA @ The Festy Experience
Oct 14 Ozark, AR @ Mulberry Mountain Harvest Music Festival
Oct 15 Austin, TX @ La Zona Rosa

Oct 16 New Orleans, LA @ Tipitina’s
Oct 19 Athens, GA @ The Melting Point
Oct 21 Live Oak, FL @ MagnoliaFest
Oct 22 Charlotte, NC @ Visulite Theatre
Oct 23 Carrboro, NC @ Cat’s Cradle
Oct 28 Woodstock, NY @ Bearsville Theater
Oct 29 New York, NY @ The Fillmore NY @ Irving Plaza
Oct 30 Boston, MA @ The Paradise
Oct 31 Ithaca, NY @ State Theater
Nov 4 Buffalo, NY @ The Tralf Music Hall

Nov 5 Cleveland, OH @ The Beachland Ballroom

Nov 6 Grand Rapids, MI @ The Intersection
Nov 7 Ann Arbor, MI @ The Ark
Nov 20 Baltimore, MD @ Rams Head Live
Nov 26 Stroudsburg, PA @ Sherman Theater

Nov 27 Stroudsburg, PA @ Sherman Theater
Dec 2 Londonderry, NH @ The Tupelo Music Hall

Dec 3 Burlington, VT @ Higher Ground Ballroom

Dec 4 Skowhegan, ME @ Skowhegan Opera House

Dec 10 Washington, DC @ 9:30 Club
Dec 11 Philadelphia, PA @ World Cafe Live
Dec 29 Denver, CO @ Ogden Theatre

Dec 30 Denver, CO @ Ogden Theatre
Dec 31 Denver, CO @ Ogden Theatre

Railroad Earth
Tour Dates

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Railroad Earth News
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Railroad Earth
Concert
Reviews


8 Conspiracy Theories That Make the Reptilians Seem Normal

So you’re in the market for a good conspiracy theory to justify your chronic social isolation. But you don’t want to be one of those conspiracy theory conformists. You want to stand out from the crowd of Truthers, Reptilians, and whatever you call those people who think that the Third Reich continues at the center [...]

The Geek Shall Inherit The Earth Posted By : Jennifer Robinson

1955 saw the arrival of a set of computer leaders that were to change the world. From Apple to W3c this year saw the birth of a generation that would reinvent information across the globe.

Google Earth Pro 5.2 Out of Beta

Well, we’ve all been waiting for it – Google Earth Pro 5.2 is finally out of beta. The new version, initially launched two months ago, has a bunch of cool new features including Elevation Profile and Multitrack. While these features are already available to all Google Earth users, the Pro version has a few extra [...]

Railroad Earth NYE Run

DECEMBER 29-31 IN DENVER AT THE OGDEN THEATRE


Railroad Earth

Railroad Earth have
announced their plans for a three night New Years Eve run at the Ogden Theatre in Denver, Colorado starting
Wednesday, December 29 through Friday December 31. Purchase RRE tickets through RRE Ticketing.

WED 12.29.10 – FRI 12.31.10
Denver, CO
Ogden Theatre
Age restrictions: 16+

Address: 935 East Colfax Ave

Venue phone: (303) 832-1874

Railroad Earth
Tour Dates

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Railroad Earth News
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Railroad Earth
Concert
Reviews