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Posts Tagged ‘EDWARD SHARPE’

Lollapalooza Chile: The Killers, JaneÂ’s, Kanye, Fatboy

CHICAGO FEST GOES TO SOUTH AMERICA

The Killers

The lineup for the inaugural Lollapalooze Chile has been announced. 50-plus acts will perform on five stages at the two-day festival set to happen Saturday, April 2 and Sunday, April 3 in O’Higgins Park, Santiago, Chile.

“The job we did to gather these artists for 2011 was remarkable,” says fest co-organizer Perry Farrell. “Imagine gathering 60 artists while the contract ink is still wet. We put it together at a record pace as we had four months. We did not want to come to Chile with a lineup that was anything other than world-class, and my partners Marc Geiger of WME and Charles Attal of C3 have been absolutely integral to Lollapalooza Chile launching in 2011. Our selections are very animated, with much diversity. There is Chilean talent in the mix. Now that the lineup is announced here, we are going back to Chile to work on the other aspects of the festival. Our ambition is to plant a very strong seed in Chile, one that will grow over the years, and provide Santiago with an event for the ages.”

Available now for the festival are general two-day passes for $110 presale, $136 then $152; Lolla Lounge two-day VIP passes for $320 presale then $380; And beginning February 11, general admission single day tickets for $72 presale then $84 and VIP passes for $240. All passes can be purchased here.

There are also a variety of travel packages from North America available here and here.

The complete line-up for LOLLAPALOOZA CHILE is:

THE KILLERS
JANE’S ADDICTION
KANYE WEST
30 SECONDS TO MARS
YEAH YEAH YEAHS
DEFTONES
FATBOY SLIM
THE FLAMING LIPS
ARMIN VAN BUUREN
CYPRESS HILL
BEN HARPER
SUBLIME WITH ROME
311
THE NATIONAL
EMPIRE OF THE SUN
COLD WAR KIDS
CSS
LOS BUNKERS
CAT POWER
CHICO TRUJILLO
DEVENDRA BANHART
THE DRUMS
BOYS NOIZE
STEEL PULSE
FISCHERSPOONER
PERRYETTY VS CHRIS COX
MALA RODRIGUEZ
EDWARD SHARPE & THE MAGNETIC ZEROS
DATAROCK
TODOS TUS MUERTOS
BOMBA ESTEREO
GHOSTLAND OBSERVATORY
JOACHIM GARRAUD
FRANCISCA VALENZUELA
ZETA BOSIO
ANITA TIJOUX
QUIQUE NEIRA
LATIN BITMAN
DJ RAFF
TOY SELEKTAH
FRACTAL + JOE VASCONCELLOS
FOTHER MUCKERS
ASTRO
DEVIL PRESLEY
DENVER
COMO ASESINAR A FELIPES
THE GANJAS
MATANZA
ITAL
NEW KIDS ON THE NOISE
MAGICTWINS
LOS PULENTOS
ACHU
CUCHARA
MUNDANO
LOS PLUMABITS


E. Sharpe/M. Zeros’ Alex Ebert to Release Solo Album

DEBUT SOLO RECORD OUT MARCH 1 VIA COMMUNITY MUSIC


Alexander

Alexander Ebert, lead singer of LA hippie-entourage Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic
Zeros
, will be releasing his debut solo album Alexander on March 1 via Community
Music (Rough Trade will release the album in Europe on February 28). The album will include ten brand new songs
that Alexander wrote and composed entirely himself. The track-list for the album can be found below.

Alexander will play select shows in Los Angeles and at South By Southwest before returning to the studio to
complete work on the upcoming second LP from Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeroes, which will be released
later this year.

Alexander track listing:

1. Let’s Win!

2. Awake My Body

3. Truth

4. In The Twilight

5. Bad Bad Love

6. Old Friend

7. A Million Years

8. Remember Our Heart

9. Glimpses

10. Let’s Make A Deal To Not Make A Deal

Edward Sharpe
& the Magnetic Zeros
Tour Dates

::
Edward
Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros News

::
Edward Sharpe &
the Magnetic Zeros
Concert
Reviews


E. Sharpe/M. Zeros: iTunes Session

FEATURES STUDIO VERSION OF “FIRE & WATER”


Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros

A new six-song iTunes Session by Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros is now available exclusively through the popular
online music store. Recorded at EastWest Studio in Los Angeles, the session features reworked, unique versions
some of the band’s most popular songs from their debut album Up From Below. Also included in the release
is a previously unrecorded live show favorite titled “Fire & Water”.

Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros finish up 2010 by playing a handful of US shows including KROQ’s Almost
Acoustic Christmas on December 12. The band will kick off 2011 with a trip to Australia and New Zealand for Big Day
Out.

Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros – iTunes Session

1 Up From Below

2 Janglin’

3 40 Day Dream

4 Fire & Water

5 Brother
6 Desert Song

Edward Sharpe
& the Magnetic Zeros
Tour Dates

::
Edward
Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros News

::
Edward Sharpe &
the Magnetic Zeros
Concert
Reviews


Chicago Bluegrass & Blues Fest: Grace Potter, Edward Sharpe

THIRD YEAR, THREE DAYS, THREE VENUES, THIRTY FIVE BANDS


Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the
Nocturnals
and Edward
Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros
have been tapped to headline the 2010 Chicago Bluegrass & Blues
Fest
, taking place December 3-5 at the Double Door (Dec. 3), Congress Theater (Dec. 4), and Lincoln Hall (Dec.
5)
in Chicago, IL.

Other confirmed acts include David
“Honeyboy” Edwards
, The
Skatalites
, Cory Chisel &
The
Wandering Sons
, and Van
Ghost
. Click here for a complete lineup and
ticketing
information.


Virgin Mobile FreeFest: Pavement, LCD, M.I.A.

SEPTEMBER 25 AT MERRIWEATHER POST PAVILION IN COLUMBIA, MD


Pavement

Breaking from traditional festivals, the Virgin Mobile FreeFest unveiled its lineup for the award-winning
festival, selecting relevant, important and eclectic headliners to represent this year’s free show. This morning, Sir
Richard Branson, chairman of the Virgin Group, announced the lineup on Virgin Mobile Live, the company’s new
Internet music stream available on Virgin

The lineup: M.I.A., LCD Soundsystem, Pavement, T.I., Ludacris, Joan Jett, Thievery Corporation, Matt & Kim,
Jimmy Eat World, The Temper Trap, Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic
Zeros
and Yeasayer.

Dance Forest: Chromeo, Sleigh Bells, Die Antwoord, Modeselektor and Neon Indian.

Virgin Mobile FreeFest will be held Saturday, Sept. 25, at Merriweather Post Pavilion in Columbia, Md. Tickets to the
2010 Virgin Mobile FreeFest will be available to the public on www.ticketfly.com at 10 a.m. EDT on Saturday, July 24. Virgin Mobile
customers and previous Virgin Mobile Festival ticket holders from the past four years will be invited via text and e-
mail to a private “free-sale” (much like a pre-sale, except free) to be held Friday, July 23.

In addition to two main stages, a dance forest filled with inspired music, and a special second line march from stage
to stage with Trombone
Shorty
, the festival also brings attention and support to homeless youth shelters
across the country. This year, The RE*Generation, Virgin Mobile’s charitable initiative to end youth homelessness, is
encouraging fans to make a $5 donation and in return receive a 2010 Virgin Mobile FreeFest mix produced by
Rusko. The download will
mash up select bands in the lineup to create a unique 20-minute mix. The DJ
mix will be available for pre-order on Friday during the pre-sale with every $5 donated to youth homelessness.

For more details on the ticketing, including options for donating money to youth homelessness, and to sign up the
news alerts and updates, check out www.virginmobilefreefest.com


XPoNential Fest Sched: Dr. Dog, Grace Potter, Greyhound

ALEJANDRO ESCOVEDO, GRACE POTTER, ROBERT RANDOLPH, FELICE BROTHERS, &
MORE


Dr. Dog

The 2010 XPoNential Music Festival has announced details of their day by day schedule. The festival is
being held at Wiggins Park in Camden, NJ on July 16-18. Early bird tickets and three day passes are available now
through July 9. Click here for more information.

Friday

Camden County River Stage

6:50 pm Alejandro Escovedo
8:00 pm Grace Potter & the Nocturnals

9:35 pm Big Head Todd & The Monsters

JerseyArts.com Marina Stage

5:30 pm Toy Soldiers
6:10 pm Dutch
7:40 pm Ben Arnold
8:55 pm Free Energy

Saturday

Camden County River Stage
1:00 pm Harper Blynn
2:15 pm Nicole Atkins
3:45 pm The Walkmen
5:20 pm Yo La Tengo
6:55 pm Rosanne Cash
8:50 pm The Felice Brothers

JerseyArts.com Marina Stage
12:30 pm Birdie Busch
1:35 pm Bobby Long
3:00 pm Joshua James
4:35 pm Diane Birch
6:10 pm Robert Francis
8:00 pm Ben Vaughn

Sunday


Camden County River Stage
1:00 pm Blood Feathers
2:15 pm Dawes
3:45 pm Cowboy Junkies

5:20 pm Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros
6:55 pm Dr. Dog
8:45 pm Robert Randolph and the Family Band

JerseyArts.com Marina Stage
12:30 pm The Great Unknown
1:35 pm Fool’s Gold
3:00 pm The Holmes Brothers

4:35 pm These United States
6:10 pm Amy Correia
7:55 pm Earl Greyhound

Kids Corner

Saturday
1:00pm Steve Pullara & His Cool Beans Band
2:00pm Two of a Kind & The Give ‘Em A Hand Band
3:00pm Bubboon’s Tunes
4:00pm John Hadfield
5:00pm Yosi & The Superdads

Sunday
1:00pm Joanie Leeds
2:00pm Billie Kelly
3:00pm Recess Monkey
4:00pm Ham And Burger
5:00pm John Flynn


Lollapalooza Aftershows: Black Keys, Stoopid, The National

DECISIONS, DECISIONS

Just when you were getting over the awesomeness of the 2010 Lollapalooza lineup, which includes a reunited
Soundgarden, Green Day, Arcade Fire, The Strokes, Phoenix,
MGMT, The New
Pornographers
, Slightly
Stoopid
, DEVO ,
Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic
Zeros
, Chromeo, Gogol Bordello, Mumford & Sons, Deer Tick, Warpaint and others, along comes confirmation of the festival aftershows!

The aftershows feature a number of the groups playing in the actual festival. Be sure to grab tickets quickly as they are sure to sell out fast. Tickets for all
aftershows
go on sale starting Friday, June 25 at 10:00 AM CST at their respective venues.

Here’s a neat list of all aftershows (courtesy of Consequence of
Sound
)

Thursday, August 5th:
Devo w/ Dirty Projectors @ Congress Theater 7:30pm
Slightly Stoopid w/ Collie Buddz @ House of Blues 8pm
New Pornographers w/ Dodos @ Metro 8pm
Big Pink w/ Night Gallery @ Lincoln Hall 8pm
Cymbals Eat Guitars w/ Young Galaxy @ Schubas 8pm

Friday, August 6th:
MGMT @ House of Blues 10pm
Cut Copy w/ Dragonette @ Metro 10pm
The Walkmen w/ Warpaint @ Double Door 10pm
Edward Sharpe & Magnetic Zeros w/ Freelance Whales @ Lincoln Hall 10pm
Wild Beasts – Empty Bottle @ 10pm
Rogue Wave w/ Gamble House @ Schubas 10pm

Saturday, August 7th:
Precision Guided Musicians featuring Hot Chip (Live), Rusko, Steve Porter, Ancient Astronauts, and Perry Farrell @
Congress Theatre 10pm
The National w/ Antlers @ House of Blues 10pm
The Black Keys w/ Morning Benders @ Metro – 10pm
Minus the Bear w Miniature Tigers @ Double Door – 10pm
Blitzen Trapper w/ Avi Buffalo @ Lincoln Hall 10pm
Gogol Bordello @ Subterranean – 10pm
Wavves w/ Harlem @ Empty Bottle – 10pm
The Soft Pack w/ Royal Bangs @ Schubas – 10pm

Sunday, August 8th:
Phoenix w/ Toro Y Moi @ House of Blues 10pm
Health @ Reggies Rock Club 10pm


Bonnaroo: Words & Photos

The 2010 Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival is now in the history books!

Enjoy our reverse chronological run-down of this past weekend below, or skip directly
to a day by using these handy links:


Thursday,
6/10
::
Friday,
6/11
::
Saturday,
6/12
::
Sunday,
6/13

Words by Wesley Hodges,
Photos by Dave Vann

Sunday, June 13 – Day Four

“We had the best time at your party” -Ween


John Butler Trio by Dave Vann

The final day at Bonnaroo was all about survival as temperatures neared 100 degrees by
midday and produced a fairly subdued Sunday crowd just trying to stay vertical and manage
to catch many of the can’t-miss acts closing down the fest (and, as per usual, conflicting
with one another). Bonnaroo veterans John Butler Trio
opened a technically flawless set on the What Stage with “Used to Get High,” and the
Aussie frontman graciously thanked the early crowd for braving the oppressive heat to
check out his set.

Next, it was off to The Other Tent for Blues Traveler,
where a crowd member challenged John Popper to a harmonica duel with a handmade
sign after “Run-Around,” to which Popper replied that they would need to take it outside
after the set. This was the band’s second appearance at Bonnaroo (first since 2003) and
the set was both well received and well attended in the smaller Other Tent. After an
interesting, dubbed-out reading of Radiohead’s “Creep,” it was time to head on back over
to What Stage, where John Fogerty was making his Bonnaroo debut.


John Fogerty by Dave Vann

The 65-year old still has the same vocal talents that accented Creedence Clearwater
Revival’s signature swamp rock sound in the early ’70s. The legend showed off his often
overlooked chops on “Green River” and ran through a mix of the CCR catalogue as well as a
number of tunes from his most recent solo record, The Blue Ridge Rangers Rides
Again
, which I strongly recommend.

Listening to the bare bones, stripped down Kris
Kristofferson
performance while laying in the grass in front of the tent was a
fairly transcendent way to spend a lazy Sunday. After seeing John Prine on Saturday, it’d
be hard to pick a favorite between the two monster talents of the songwriting universe.
There was something very raw and exceptionally soothing about listening to one man slowly
play his guitar and sing into the mic after seeing so many varied musical displays
throughout the weekend. Sometimes less is truly more.


Ween by Dave Vann

Next, things heated up over at Ween, who highlighted the final day of this year’s ‘Roo, while
deservedly playing in front of a large Which Stage midday crowd after a few previous
Bonnaroo appearances in the smaller tents. We arrived just in time after a short stop at
the aggressive Dropkick Murphys set to catch “Roses Are Free,” “Voodoo Lady,”
“Your Party,” a bangin’ “Buckingham Green,” and an excellent cover of David Bowie’s “Let’s
Dance.” You could tell the band recognized the opportunity to win over hordes of fans in
the crowd unfamiliar with their music, and they didn’t hold back on busting out the big
guns while playing a set with added gusto.

Medeski Martin &
Wood
had a fun little sit-in by Bonnaroo scenester and unofficial mascot Beatle Bob, who was
goofily gettin’ down and playing one of Billy Martin‘s many percussion toys during
a dark, heavy improv exercise. Travel arrangements caused for an early departure, but not
before catching Phoenix‘s set in front of an enormous crowd comparable to Weezer’s
the previous day. It was a cool early evening scene with a colorful, picturesque sunset
and numerous red and black balloons floating around at the front of the audience. The
band’s most intricate arrangement from the Grammy-winning album Wolfgang Amadeus
Phoenix
, “Love Like a Sunset,” was appropriately placed in the set just as dusk was
beginning to sweep across the Manchester skies and was a beautiful way to cap off the
weekend.

The cultural phenomenon that is Bonnaroo once again produced an amazing four days of
diverse artistic offerings, and for the fifth or sixth year in a row, the weather wasn’t
too much of an issue (once you get over the heat part). Here’s looking forward to the
10th Annual Bonnaroo festival in 2011!

Top 5 Shows of the Weekend
1. Jay-Z
2. LCD Soundsystem
3. The Flaming Lips with Stardeath and White Dwarfs performing Dark Side of the
Moon

4. Dr. Dog
5. The Melvins

Favorite Random Artist of the Weekend
Nortec Collective presents: Bostich and Fussible

Best Day
Saturday. Getting to see Stevie Wonder, Jay-Z, John Prine, Steve Martin, Thievery
Corporation, Jeff Beck, The Melvins, Jimmy Cliff, and Conan O’Brien in the same day was
exceptional, even for Bonnaroo.

What This Year’s Bonnaroo Will Be Remembered For

1. 80,000 hands moving along with Jay-Z
2. The diversity of talent on display, balancing Bonnaroo’s free spirited neo-hippie vibe
with sounds of the present
3. Excellent weather
4. Conan O’Brien MC’ing What Stage throughout the weekend
5. A legendary Saturday
6. The addition of the annoying Lunar Stage
7. The absence of a Panic, Phish or a Dead-related headliner
8. Stevie Wonder’s long overdue debut appearance at the festival.

Who would YOU like to see headline in 2011 at Bonnaroo’s 10th Anniversary? Share your
thoughts in our comments section. Never know what happens when you dream aloud!

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Bonnaroo Music Festival
(Manchester, TN) – 6/13/10
View
Photos

Saturday, June 12 – Day Three


Conan O’Brien by Dave Vann

In a word, Bonnaroo Saturday was legendary. With appearances by Jimmy Cliff,
The
Melvins
, John Prine, Jeff Beck, Stevie Wonder, and
Jay-Z on
the docket for the day, there wasn’t much time for any of the numerous non-musical
activities in Centeroo, or downtime in general. Despite only a few hours of sleep on
Friday, we managed to check out 16 different artists on Saturday, ranging from small
gatherings in the Latin-themed Other Tent to the 75,000 strong love fest at Jay-Z. As was
the case on Friday, scorching temperatures baked the farm in the early afternoon before
overcast skies brought a cool air of relief to lobster-red-sunburned patrons. All in all,
it should be noted that the weather this weekend was abnormally excellent, if you don’t
mind a little heat.

Nortec
Collective
presents: Bostich and Fussible
was one of the more unique bands I’ve come across
anywhere. The group consists of a tuba, accordion, guitar, an iPad, and a NASA-looking
control center with various electronic capabilities. The songs had a campy Latino/polka
feel with dance floor undertones and the 300 or so gathered to check it out all seemed to
be perplexed and ultimately impressed. Plus, in a three-minute span, I got to see the
best accordion, tuba and iPad solo I’ve ever seen.

Next, it was over to Dave Rawlings Machine to hear “This Land Is Your Land,” “Ruby” and
“To Be Young (Is To Be Sad, Is To Be High)” before a quick jaunt over to see one of Isis‘ final shows
of their farewell tour. As very threatening skies loomed overhead, Jimmy Cliff
sang his seminal hit “I Can See Clearly Now,” and he must’ve had some kind of
meteorologist insight because the almost sure thing electrical storm narrowly skirted by
the farm without causing any problems. A good many people seemed to be hiding out until
the late afternoon, as notably small crowds at many of the daytime tent sets allowed for
ample space and some great vantage points, even for artists like John Prine and The
Melvins. After Cliff, it was over to The Avett
Brothers
for a bit to check out “January Wedding” and a host of other new tunes
off last year’s breakthrough I And Love And You.


Jack White by Dave Vann

The surprising show of the weekend for me was undoubtedly over at The Melvins, who
zoned us in, causing a cancellation of our Mumford & Sons
plans. Largely unfamiliar with their music (although aware of the band’s huge influence
on bands like Nirvana), it was a wholly epic display of guitar heavy, hard rock, grunge-
tinged badassery. These old men still got it. Don’t miss your chance to see them if you
haven’t before it’s too late.

The Dead
Weather
was a bit of a disappointment at What Stage and provoked a little more
‘Prine Time’ then planned, which was a treat to see the master songsmith at work. Jeff
Beck
wowed a decent-sized crowd, but more impressive was Beck’s bass player, a
diminutive in stature, but larger-than-life female bass player with some serious
talent on the slap bass and some shockingly bluesy vocals. It was reported to me after we
left that Beck blew through an amazing array of cover tunes including “A Day In The Life”
and “Somewhere Over the Rainbow.”


Weezer by Dave Vann

Weezer
played to a MASSIVE crowd at Which Stage, and gave the masses what they wanted, busting
out the big guns with a Blue Album heavy set and a bust-out cover of “Kids (MGMT) >
Poker Face (Lady Gaga).” Frontman Rivers Cuomo could not be contained, singing
from backstage, on speakers, jumping on trampolines, and finding every conceivable reason
to animate the performance and rile the enormous crowd. Weezer wrapped in time for us to
head over to What Stage to take in my first Stevie Wonder concert. As he had done
throughout the weekend, Conan O’Brien played main stage MC and introduced Stevie, saying
that he was genuinely thrilled to be within 500-feet of the man. Wonder came out, keytar
in hand, and busted the funk early and often. The crowd showed Stevie a great deal of
love and provided some booming backing vocals on a few call-and-response verses. Wonder
was an excellent choice for a Saturday night headliner, but what occurred next ultimately
overshadowed all other performances before and after on this third day of Bonnaroo.


Stevie Wonder by Dave Vann

As in 2006, there was a bit of a skepticism expressed after it was revealed that Jay-
Z
would headline the Roo, especially in light of the 2008 Kanye West
debacle (unfit to print spray paint tags still dominate the Bonnaroo walls devoted to the
much-maligned – in these parts at least – rapper). Nevertheless, HOVA picked up the
festival and put it on his back, taking a crowd as far as the eye could see on a two-hour
feel good journey through his catalogue, sampling and performing just about every
conceivable hit song from the rapper’s storied career (eleven #1 albums, surpassing even
Elvis Presley for top honors). Standing on the hill stage and peering out over the
audience with 80,000 hands moving together was an image that will forever remain
emblazoned in my memory bank – what a sight!

On Saturday, Mr. Carter was all about fostering a vibe of positivity and love and is
perhaps the only artist I’ve seen on such a big stage with the ability to make his
performance feel profoundly personal to each and every fan out there. One of the neatest
elements of the performance occurred when Jay-Z hollered at about 50 different audience
members (“I see you in the Bob Marley shirt,” followed by a verse from “Three Little
Birds;” then, “I see you in the Charles Oakley jersey,” “I see you with the Brooklyn
flag,” etc.) and then made a gal named Maggie the happiest girl on earth by pulling her
onstage and getting the crowd to serenade her with “Happy Birthday.” The vibe created by
Jay-Z was exactly the kind that Bonnaroo organizers have always strived for, and they hit
the nail on the head with the choice of Jay-Z to take over the festival. Carter was
nearly moved to tears at one point as he thanked each and every audience member for the
support, not only on this night but throughout his career. He shouted out to Jack
White
, mentioned that he couldn’t wait to tell his mama that Stevie Wonder was taking
in his set, and gave love to the fallen rappers that influenced his music, shouting out
Tupac, Biggie Smalls, Pimp-C and many more.


Jay-Z by Dave Vann

After being crowned the king of Coachella by most critics, I’ll gladly give him the title
for this weekend as the rapper didn’t slip up at any point throughout the peerless
performance and his beaming, genuine personality was a nice change from the Friday
night headliners. It was arguably the most important and best headlining performance I’ve
seen in 8 years (the toss-up being Radiohead at the ‘Roo) and one of the best anywhere.
Bonnaroo was the center of the musical universe on Saturday night – it felt like possibly
the world at the time – and if you could’ve bottled and sold the youthful energy flowing
across the field you’d be a rich man. This perhaps marked another sea change in the
Bonnaroo landscape, and if Jay-Z’s performance is any indication of what’s to come in the
future of Bonnaroo, things are looking better than ever for the 2011 10th Anniversary
edition of the festival.

As was the case last year after Phish‘s Friday late night headlining performance last year, everything
after Jay-Z seemed secondary and hard to zone into. The show had been stolen, the
spotlight remained on Jay-Z, and even The Disco BiscuitsMarc Brownstein noted at the beginning of
their show just how amazing the night had been, saying, “This is so fucking sick,”
referring to the opportunity to see Stevie, Jay-Z and Thievery
Corporation
in the same night. Barber said he wanted to see some sun by
the time they were through.

GWAR put on
a hilarious show that fit right into to the zany atmosphere that usually emanates on
Bonnaroo Saturday, as patrons try to soak in one last big night at the farm. All in all,
one of the best days on the whole I’ve had at the festival. Bonnaroo has outdone
themselves again by programming one of the more diverse and star-studded lineups yet. On
Sunday, we’ll check out John Fogerty, Ween, Dropkick Murphys,
Phoenix, and at long last, my first Medeski, Martin, & Wood show. Please
don’t ask how that’s possible that a JamBase writer hasn’t seen them (it’s embarrassing, I
know).

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Bonnaroo Music Festival (Manchester, TN) – 6/13/10 View
Photos

Continue reading for more coverage from Friday’s Bonnaroo and check back later today
for words & photos from Sunday…

Friday, June 11th—Day Two


Bonnaroo by Dave Vann

Overwhelming heat was the modus operandi of the festival’s first full day of music as
temperatures hit an apex near the triple digit mark by mid-day. A beautiful day of music
and comedy awaited those ready and able to brave the sun’s wrath and thousands made it out
early to watch Conan O’Brien’s first career festival stand-up appearance in the small
Comedy Tent, which luckily (for us), was being simulcast on the new Lunar Stage. Walking
to join Team Coco, we got a chance to check out New Orleans youngest star
Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue running through a “When the Saints Go Marching In
> Fire on the Bayou > When the Saints Go Marching In” medley on Which Stage. It was great
to see Conan’s familiar face again after several months in obscurity.

Conan (whose birth name is apparently Jet Blaze) jokingly reminisced about being beat up
by Tori Amos with a hairbrush at Lilith Fair, gained the audience’s approval
for his new bearded look (saying he looked like the Brawny paper towel guy after a bone
marrow transplant), and noted that the Legally Prohibited From Being Funny on
Television
tour was the first time anyone’s paid to see him perform. The appropriate
jabbing at NBC came early and often, and Conan even gave us a spot-on Leno impression,
which he sarcastically pointed out, for legal reasons, was actually an impression of
rapper Ludacris. Truly a one-of-a-kind occurrence to see the legend at work, and as
Conan chanted, “It was sorta worth it” to check it out.


Bonnaroo by Dave Vann

String bands were the thematic trend over in That Tent and Carolina Chocolate
Drops
, Hot Rize and the excellence of Steve Martin and the Steep Canyon
Rangers
carved out a grassy scene throughout the day. The communal Edward Sharpe
and the Magnetic Zeros
connected with the audience from the get-go, opening with the
familiar “Janglin” from last year’s debut record and harkening up comparisons to
Polyphonic Spree.

The oppressive heat finally subsided in time for the day’s highlighting set by Dr.
Dog
, in coincidence with the band performing “The Breeze”, off 2008′s Fate
album. Lyrically, there are few better current bands out there than these Philly vintage
rockers. The set was heavy on tunes from this year’s Shame, Shame and Fate
including the excellent new tune “Where Does the Time Go” and “Hang On”. The band’s third
appearance at Bonnaroo was a chills-inducing (even in the heat) performance and set the
tone for the rest of Bonnaroo Friday as a smokin’ and stretched out rendition of “The
Rabbit, The Bat, and the Reindeer” closed down this heater of a set.


Tenacious D by Dave Vann

Sweet Zooey Deschanel and M. Ward make up She & Him and a female-
heavy crowd took in their vibin’ folky display in This Tent. Just a likable duo altogether
and Zooey was only one of many Hollywood stars we came across throughout the day.
Performances by Steve Martin, Conan O’Brien, Jack Black and a run-in with Superbad’s
Christopher Mintz-Plasse at Tenacious D marked the star-studded day. The
National
made believers in the unusually scant crowd at Which Stage with their heady
brand stern and directed rock music. Surprisingly, the band’s lead singer took a few trips
out into the audience and was far less serious and more animated than I’d of guessed after
listening to their somber new record High Violet. Tenacious D was hilarious
and bandmate Kyle Gass quit the band after Jack Black received a phone call mid-set
telling him that a sequel for The Pick of Destiny was in the works and Gass would
be replaced with the guy from Paul Blart: Mall Cop.

Kings of Leon aren’t my cup of tea but credit should be given to the band for
digging deep into their catalog for the career-making headlining set highlighted by
“Molly’s Chambers”, and a cover of the Pixies’ “Where is My Mind?”. KoL was also
the first band to rise through the Bonnaroo ranks from the smallest tent to the main stage
and I think we’re looking at the American U2, as the largest U.S. arena rock band,
for better or worse. After a run-in with a loose-talkin Caleb Followill in
Nashville on Wednesday night, it was funny to watch the man at work on what may have been
the most important night of the band’s career.


The Flaming Lips by Dave Vann

It’s no secret that Bonnaroo doesn’t really start until midnight on Friday and we
arrived just in time for the spectacle of the chaos-embracing Flaming Lips on Which
Stage. Wayne Coyne told JamBase how the idea to play Dark Side at the Roo came to
fruition, saying “we didn’t really know if anyone would care when we thought to record the
cover album.” Bonnaroo approached the Lips, asking the simple request “Why don’t you do
something weird” to which the Lips responded “Why don’t we play Dark Side of the
Moon
and the rest is now history after the last night’s incredible display. As always,
the visual element was top-notch with loads of confetti, dancing girls, lasers and a semi-
circular LED wall behind the band taking the massive crowd to some far away places during
“The W.A.N.D.” and especially during the Floyd set. Few people can do Dark Side
right (although many try), and the Lips put a unique spin on the classic album,
with a more gritty, raw and hard rockin’ version of songs like “Any Colour You Like” and
the absolute burn-down-the-house, hide-the -children closer “Brain Damage > Eclipse”. As a
huge Floyd fan, I was admittedly skeptical (although excited) and the Lips delivered the
best Bonnaroo set of their career (also performed in ’03 & ’07). A short trip to the
sparsely attended Galactic show was a nice change of scenery from the Lips brain-
frying visual display before we were lured over to the party scene at LCD
Soundsystem
.

Largely unfamiliar with LCD until the release of their ultra-hyped newest record This
Is Happening
, I had no idea what we were getting into. Comparisons to the Talking
Heads
and <Duran Duran can be made, and frontman James Murphy is an odd
bird. At one point he curiously asked the crowd, “Why are you throwing things” and
concluded that “This is a weird job, it’s weird, thanks” before lyrically improv-ing his
way through the set. Their performance closed with a stunning and slow “New York (not sure
if that’s the name)” replete with a verse from Jay-Z’s monstrous hit “Empire State
of Mind”, serving as a nice transition towards Saturday, which will feature Jay-Z’s first
performance at the fest on the main stage this evening at 11:30 p.m.

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Bonnaroo Music Festival – 6/11/10 (Manchester, TN) View
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Continue reading for Thursday’s recap and photos and stay tuned for more from Bonnaroo
tomorrow…

Be sure to check out our real-time Bonnaroo updates at http://www.jambase.com/bonnaroo

Bonnaroo Day One: Thursday, June 10th

Walking into Centeroo on Thursday is always a re-orientation of sorts
and it was nice to see the kindly Which Stage bobbleheads
decked out in World Cup jerseys and regalia for the big weekend.
Multiple inches of Wednesday and early Thursday rain created a muddy
environment, making veterans of the festival feel strangely at home.
As much as things change in Centeroo, notably, with the addition of
the bumpin’ new Lunar Stage, the vibe and layout of the
festival’s power center remains largely the same.

Bonnaroo 2010 got off to a roaring start as per usual on Thursday
afternoon with threatening skies clearing up just in time for
Baroness who brought their gritty refined brand of jam metal,
inflicting some bruise-inducing mosh madness at The Other Tent. These
guys look to be in it for the long haul and delivered a powerfully
gnashing set that was arguably the day’s best.

Miike Snow was unfortunately placed before dusk, but regardless an early club scene
thrived amongst the youthful crowd. With numerous
dance artists performing in the wee hours (where they belong), this
time placement may have been Bonnaroo’s biggest head scratcher of them all.


Blitzen Trapper by Dave Vann

Local Natives’ harmonic indie pop was lost in the mix and
failed to meet expectations, especially after producing one of
the year’s finest albums (Gorilla Manor) earlier this year. An
unplanned (but expected) break in the action caused your faithful writer to miss out
on The Temper Trap, but we made it back in time to see
Blitzen Trapper crank things up, opening with “Black River
Killer” and “Wild Mountain Nation” to a crowd mostly unfamiliar with
the young band’s work. Blitzen gave people a delectable
array of tunes (including the set’s highlight “Furr”), spanning the
band’s varied catalogue and treating the Bonnaroo crowd to a few new
tunes off the band’s three-day old album Destroyer of the Void. A quick trot over
to the packed Lunar Stage was a trip to
take in, as thousands blew it out with the future sounds beaming from
the decent-sized stage newly situated between The Other Tent and That
Tent.


Lotus by Dave Vann

Lotus stirred up a familiar air in the Bonnaroo
night, giving us Bonnaroo vets a taste of good ole jam flavor with a
surprisingly juiced up rock set. Night One as always introduced the
masses to a host of new bands and gave jam the band a long
overdue chance to perform for a large Roo late night crowd.

This
morning, festivarians were awakened to Primus’ “My Name Is Mud” from
the What Stage’s absurdly powerful P.A. system. How appropriate, Day
Two is underwayÂ…

p.s. As I’m typing this Dr. Dog is giving us media folks a
special acoustic set. Very, very appropriate lyrics flowing:

What a strange day, maybe I was dreaming, nothing seemed entirely
awake. What a strange night, it’s dancing with a candle, the atmosphere is
scandalous. We’re all in this together, as we all fall apart

Truer words never spoken? Happy Bonnaroo 2010!

JamBase | Manchester, TN

Check out our full Thursday Bonnaroo Photo Gallery below and keep up with the real-time
chatter on our Bonnaroo Page!

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Bonnaroo 2010 Preview

By: Wesley
Hodges


Bonnaroo 2009 by Snyder

Like the festivals that helped inspire its unique existence (Jazz Fest and Glastonbury),
the Bonnaroo Music
& Arts Festival
has so much more to offer than just the music. This year’s 9th annual
event takes place
from June 10-13 in Manchester, TN in Great Stage Park, and will once again draw 70-80,000
of the biggest music
fiends you’ll find anywhere. Hell, you have to be half-crazy to pay money to endure this
kind of heat, but
coming from someone who’s been to all but one Bonnaroo, I can tell you that this year’s
king of American music
festivals, like all previous editions, will be well worth the trip. Let JamBase tell you
why with our list of
12 Must-See-Daytime-Bands, a run-down of late-night suggestions, and a few hints as to who
to see and what to
do in many of Centeroo’s smaller cafes and activity centers.

As in 2006, the event promoters have shaken things up with the event’s first real
rap headliner (Jay-Z), the
youngest band to ever
headline (Kings of
Leon
), as
well as a certain well-coiffed red-headed (unemployed) comedy icon MC’ing one of the main
stages and the
welcome addition of an all-night Lunar Stage devoted entirely to electronic
music.

On paper, the 2010 edition reads like a synthesis of the last eight years with no musical
styling or amenity
unturned. Although one might not exactly be boiling over with excitement about some of
the bands at the top of
the bill, as always, there are infinitely more bands and activities than one could
physically be there to
enjoy. That right there is what makes a festival on the scale of Bonnaroo so enjoyable.
The phrase “to each
his own” captures the pioneering spirit of the Bonnaroo fan, and this festival is every
bit as much about
that person who makes it down to the front row to join the ruckus at The Melvins as it
is for that dude
hundreds of feet away getting chills at his first Stevie Wonder show or the girl who drags her boyfriend kicking and
screaming out of the
tent to catch the early Ingrid
Michaelson
show (and that guy then tells his girl, off-the-record, of course, that
he kinda dug it).
The beauty of it all is that these people all get to coexist in a bizarro escapist utopia
and live out their
musical dreams amongst friends. So, saddle up and take our suggestions at face value,
because after all, as a
wise spray painter once tagged, “The Roo You Take = The Roo You Make.”

Thursday, June 10

Over the course of four days and some very late nights on two big stages, three decent
size tents, and several
smaller cafe like settings, a movie theatre and a comedy tent, Bonnaroo will feature
around 160 artists. This
list can’t even begin to cover a fraction of the talent on display this weekend, but it is
our hope that
artists highlighted here help you uncover a lesser-known, an up-and-comer, or perhaps help
you make a tough
decision at a certain time slot. Instead of giving love to well known headliners we adore
like Stevie
Wonder
, Jeff Beck or The Flaming Lips, we’re going to direct your
attention to a few bands
you weren’t perhaps planning to see. You can check out the entire Bonnaroo schedule here.

1. Baroness ::
5:45-6:45 pm :: The
Other Tent

For those set up to get down early, these ferociously sharp South Georgia metal warriors
might just blow your
mind wide open right from the first licks of “A Horse Called Golgotha”. The band’s highly
acclaimed Blue
Record
has brought them into the limelight, and with a stop at Coachella this year
already under their
belt, you’ll be seeing a lot of these guys on the festival circuit for years to come.

2. Local
Natives
:: 7:00-8:00 pm ::
That Tent

Gorilla Manor may be the strongest, most accessible indie rock album to come out in
the last year, and
these guys made a name for themselves after wowing the masses at this year’s SXSW. Local
Natives should be a
nice change of pace for those who check out Baroness, and the lustrous vocal harmonizing
should beam out nicely
under the setting Tennessee sun. Those not familiar with the band should check out their
cover of the Talking
Heads “Warning Sign” that made it on the band’s debut album, along with the excellent “Sun
Hands”.

3. Miike Snow
:: 7:30-8:30 pm. ::
This Tent

A little baffled that this one didn’t get a slot after sunset, but nonetheless the DJ duo
has made a name for
themselves under the moniker of Miike Snow and this one will likely be the first of
several hot, raucous and
youthful get-downs at this year’s festival.

Other Suggestions

If you arrive before the music gets cracking in the main tents, don’t miss dexterously-
gifted Australian guitar
wunderkind Joe
Robinson
(age
19), who is playing as well as attending his first Bonnaroo. Robinson told JamBase, “I
can’t wait for the
always fun challenge of winning over a new audience.” Having already wowed over the likes
of Steve Vai and the
late great Les Paul with his uniquely outstanding talent, we can confidently say that a
trip down to the
Troo Music Lounge at 1:00 p.m. would be the perfect way to start the weekend. For
those who can’t make
it, Robinson told us he’d be picking with his buddies, the Nashville jam band Elmwood on
Saturday in the Troo Music
Lounge.

Also, Thursday night has always been the best night to go exploring all this ephemeral
Tennessee utopian
acreage has to offer. So, spread your wings, grab a comfortable chair, meet your
neighbors, and set up shop
for a big weekend.

Continue reading for JamBase’s recommendations for Friday…

Friday, June 11

1. Dr. Dog ::
4:00-5:15 pm :: The
Other Tent

The prolific Philly-based vintage rockers just released their sixth excellent full-length
album in less than
ten years back in April. Shame, Shame is a little more polished production-wise,
and the boys bring the
guitars to the forefront this go-round following 2008′s harmony-heavy Fate. A
summertime day set with
these festival scene staples should be nothing short of spiritual and will likely summon
those “Shadow People”
out from the woodworks that bassist/vocalist Toby Leaman sings about on the band’s
new tune. With the
new album peaking at #44 on the Billboard charts, these guys are finally getting the
recognition they’ve
deserved for a few years now.

2. Edward Sharpe &
The Magnetic
Zeros
:: 2:30-3:30 pm :: The Other Tent

Founded by vocalist Alex Ebert previously of the late-90s L.A. pop band Ima Robot,
these guys flew onto
the radar in a big way with the commercial success of their single “Home” and the recent
appearance of
“Janglin’” in a Ford commercial. The folk-psych tunes and communal vibe of the ensemble
(boasting 10-plus
members at any given time) will hopefully bring back a little taste of the Old
Bonnaroo
, even if just
for an hour.

3. Trombone Shorty
& Orleans Avenue

:: 12:00-1:00 pm : Which Stage

At the age of 24, Troy “Trombone Shorty” Andrews is already a well-known artist in large
part to his recent
appearances on the hit HBO show Treme (where he plays himself) and vocal approval
by the likes of Bono.
Born and raised in the Treme, Andrews has been entertaining fans in the Big Easy since
he’s been barely old
enough to walk. Andrews and his band is more than your standard New Orleans jazz show.
We highly recommend
you start your Friday at the Which Stage (you know, the one with the bobble heads).

Friday’s Late Night Picks

The Black Keys
:: 12:00-1:30 am ::
That Tent / Galactic :: 2:00-3:30 am. :: The Other Tent

Lots and lots of great choices on what is generally the apex of the weekend. On Friday,
you’ve still got fresh
legs and the ability to go all night long and this year’s late-night lineup is as stacked
across the board as
it’s ever been, and with The Flaming Lips doing Dark Side, Daryl Hall & Chromeo and the
dance party that will
surely ensue at LCD
Soundsystem
,
you can’t go wrong anywhere. But our pick is to check out The Black Keys playing in That
Tent and then head on
over to Galactic down at The Other Tent. Galactic’s legendary 2005 epic late night
Krewe de Carnivale
indicated what these guys are capable of when given the limelight of the after midnight
show. Even though
these guys have been out on the road for about 15 years now, they proved this year during
Mardi Gras at
Tipitina’s that they can still make magic well past the break of dawn. Bassist Robert
Mercurio gave JamBase an
idea of what’s in store for the Galactic set.

“We’re bringing in some extra production lighting-wise. It’s gonna be our most
extravagant light show and
stage set-up that we’ve ever done. We really just decided that we’re gonna go over-the-
top this year. We’re
excited to see it, too; we haven’t really seen it either,” laughs Mercurio. “Our Lighting
Director has been
working hard on it and programming it and it should be really a spectacle beyond what
you’ve ever seen from a
Galactic show. We’ll have Corey Henry
and Cyril Neville
with us at the
Bonnaroo show like we’ve had on the entire Ya-Ka-May tour.”

Other Suggestions For Friday

Go see Steve
Martin
& the Steep Canyon
Rangers
tear it up at the
acoustic-based Sonic Stage from 2:15-2:45 p.m.

If you are rolling along towards the break of dawn, head down to the Lunar Stage where a
bumpin’ club scene
will be spinnin’ wild from 2-6 a.m. at Crystal Method and Lee Burbridge.

Continue reading for JamBase’s recommendations for Saturday…

Saturday, June 12

1. Dave Rawlings
Machine
:: 3:15-
4:30 pm :: That Tent

Most are probably familiar with Dave’s wife and Bonnaroo veteran Gillian Welch,
but this flat-picking
lyrical genius is finally getting his day in the sun with the long overdue release of his
debut A Friend of
A Friend
last year and a nice mid-afternoon slot at this year’s ‘Roo. Rawlings has
played guitar in
Welch’s band for years and the roles are being reversed this time. The energetic, free-
wheeling live shows are
always full of surprises and the only time I got the chance to see him Norah Jones stopped
in for a tune and
the show closed with an impromptu “Friend of the Devil > Just Like Heaven > Friend of the
Devil” that I think
even left the musicians themselves a little surprised. Definitely got that wholesome
Carter-and-Cash kind of
good feelings vibe.

2. Mumford &
Sons
:: 5:00-6:00 pm
:: That Tent

With Mumford following Dave Rawlings Machine and John Prine following them, one could just camp out by That Tent
for the afternoon and
do just fine. These Londoners have quickly made a name for themselves in 2010 with a
reputation for incredible
live performances following them around the globe. After hearing their excellent album
Sigh No More,
we’re hopeful this will still be a well-kept secret (if there is such a thing at Bonnaroo)
and a great chance
to get a decent spot up front. Also, we have a feeling that “Dustbowl Dance” is gonna
stir up the crowd in a
big way.

3. Jimmy Cliff :: 3:30-5:00 pm :: Which Stage
Even though he’s a world-renowned, generation-spanning artist, Cliff seems to fly under-
the-radar with a lot of
twenty-somethings and younger. That’s a shame because Cliff is one of the most soulful
foundational reggae
artists ever. In most circles, Cliff is best known for his 1975 hit single “The Harder
They Come” and a cover
of “I Can See Clearly Now” from the Cool Runnings soundtrack, but there’s far more
to this legend than
those soundbites. Come see for yourself.

Saturday’s Late Night Picks

Thievery
Corporation
:: 12:00-2:15
a.m. :: That Tent

The downbeat international collective headed by the production duo of Eric Garza
and Eric Hilton
bring their ethereal club grooves to the Manchester late night scene for the first time
and it’s a mystery why
it took this long to happen. These guys reportedly stole the show at 2006′s one-off Echo
Project and dropped a
fire late night show at the House of Blues at last year’s Lollapalooza. This one’s a
can’t miss pick.

GWAR :: 2:30-3:45 a.m. :: The Other Tent

Sometimes there are no words to sufficiently express a thing. Just watch the clip below
and imagine yourself
on the front lines of this craziness.

Other Suggestions For Saturday

They’ll be showing the World Cup opening match between the good ole Red, White, & Blue vs.
England at the Lunar
Stage starting at 1:30 p.m. Enormously important soccer game at a music festivalÂ…things
could get rowdy.

The snide, fast-talking Aziz Ansari of Funny People and Parks and
Recreation
notoriety
will be doing stand-up in the Comedy Theatre from 6:00-7:15 p.m. Shouts of
“RAAAAAAAAAAAANNNNDY” will be not
be in short supply. Ansari’s recent comedy album Intimate Moments for a Sensual
Evening
even included a
track called “Bonnaroo,” so you know he’s been around this block before.

The Silent Disco: First made popular in the European club scene, be sure to hit up the
Silent Disco over near
The Other Tent at any point of the day or night, for any amount of time, and you’ll be
glad you stopped in at
this fun mashup club scene. Always an invigorating AND disorienting experience.

Continue reading for JamBase’s recommendations for Sunday…

Sunday, June 13

1. Worst Conflict of the Week :: 4:00-6:30 pm :: What, Which, This, That & The
Other Stages

It happens every year, and 2010 is no different, at one point there will be at least two,
three, or even four,
must-see acts playing at the same time, and this year there are FIVE! This weekend, the
crossover occurs late
Sunday afternoon. Creedence Clearwater Revival frontman/60s icon John Fogerty
(What Stage :: 4:00-5:30
p.m.) has still got it, and his familiar voice still sounds like its beaming out of
an AM radio. This
year he’ll be making his Bonnaroo debut on the main stage (he’s also an extremely
underrated guitar player).
Also, from 5:00-6:30 p.m., Ween
will be playing over on Which Stage. We don’t have to tell you to at least stop in. The
set which should
perhaps spark the most curiosity out of this quintet would have to be aggressive Boston
rockers Dropkick Murphys
(This Tent :: 5:00-
6:15 p.m.), who have promised to scare off the hippies with their aggressive, bag-piping
brand of punk rock.
Should be interesting to see a band even try to get a dog-tired Bonnaroo crowd riled up on
late Sunday
afternoon. Next, the all-time great tunesmith Kris Kristofferson will be in That Tent from 4:30-6:00 p.m., and
things will likely get
legendary. Finally, you’ve got the campy, cheeky post-punk rockers They Might Be
Giants
over in The Other
Tent from 4:30-5:45 p.m. to make the decision even tougher. Guess there could be worst
choices to make.

2. Phoenix ::
7:15-8:45 pm :: Which
Stage

One of better live acts currently touring, if there is one band that can bring back the
crowd-surfing, sing-
along, Glastonbury-type scene one last time before DMB closes it out it’s these Versailles
rockers who
established themselves in 2009 as a force to be reckoned with in popular music with the
release of the aptly-
named Grammy-winning album Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix. Phoenix’s brilliantly crafted
rock songs are as
catchy as they are sophisticated, and a lot of up-and-coming synth-y indie bands should
take note of Phoenix’s
subdued usage of the synthesizer – just the right amount in just the right places without
overdoing
it
.

3. Medeski Martin &
Wood
:: 6:15-
7:45 pm :: The Other Tent

Kinda weird, but also kinda nice to see MMW playing at the festival’s smallest of the
major venues. Those
looking to get a head start on the traffic out before the Dave Matthews Band are gonna
wanna stick around for
one last blowout with these uber-talented jazz pioneers and who, along with Les Claypool,
DJ Logic, Umphrey’s
McGee, John Butler Trio, Galactic, Ween and Norah Jones, make up the returning alumni from
the Bonnaroo charter
class of 2002.

No one lucky enough to attend the inaugural Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival in 2002
could’ve foreseen the great
transformation and amazing growth that the event has undergone in its first nine years.
However, the seed for
growth and constant evolution was planted in the early planning stages of the first
edition of the festival.
The early focus of the event was centered mostly on musically boundless genres, with
programming largely
revolving around improvisational jam bands, bluegrass, jazz, DJ’s, funk and New Orleans
music. The creators
had a simple mission and that was to recreate the round-the-clock experience of Jazz Fest
with the late night
shows, food, and lagniappe, but instead of requiring hotels, the vision of Bonnaroo was to
create a small,
sustainable city for four days in the middle of nowhere in the dead of summer and invite
the world’s finest
bands to master the ceremonies. The crazy thing is that thus far the wildly risky
experiment has paid off in
spades, producing some of the most indescribably enjoyable times most folks will ever
have. Bring an open
mind, see at least one act you’ve never heard of each day, and be kind to your camping
neighbors and they’ll do
the same. Good luck and good times on the good road to Bonnaroo 2010!

Continue reading for Wesley Hodges’ special Bonus Feature of Bonnaroo “A Timeline
Through The Years”…

A Timeline Through The Years

2002: The inaugural festival sells out 70,000 tickets well in advance without the
use of traditional
advertising methods, relying on word-of-mouth and far exceeding the promoters’
expectations. Widespread Panic
plays one of its final
concerts with late guitarist Michael Houser. Galactic‘s Robert Mercurio described the first ‘Roo as having
“something special
about it, because people questioned how you can get 80,000 people in the woods and no one
get hurt. It was
unprecedented to have anything like that in the U.S.” moe. plays a marathon late night set featuring special guests from
The String Cheese
Incident
, Umphrey’s McGee, The Disco Biscuits,
and Robert Randolph
.
They would later be
recognized for the show with a Jammy Award for “Concert of the Year”.

2003: James Brown, Bob
Dylan
and Neil Young & Crazy Horse appear at the festival. Stages and
tents renamed What,
Which, This, That, and the Other, confusing Bonnaroo attendees ever since.

2004: Two vicious electrical storms followed by an abnormally cold summer night at
The Dead‘s set
blow through Manchester causing several delays and turning Centeroo into a mud pit. Sets
by Steve
Winwood
, a late night Umphrey’s McGee set, David Byrne and the
resurgence of the The
Dead
were highlights of the fest.

2005: Temperate weather and amazing late night sets by Galactic and Sound Tribe Sector
9
highlighted the
’05 edition. The Cinema Tent debuts showing Mike Tyson’s embarrassing 7-round TKO loss to
Kevin McBride as
chilled-out festival patrons enjoy the tent’s air conditioning.

2006: Mysterious smoke rings begin appearing in the Manchester skies and a turning
of the tides begins.
At the time, the addition of the iconic Radiohead was seen as a huge transition for the previously jam-
centric festival, but
this was just the beginning of a new era. Radiohead would play the longest show of their
career and one that
Thom Yorke still considers to be perhaps the band’s best. G.R.A.B. (Trey,
Mike & The Duo) are
the surprise Superjam late night act and are joined by Phil Lesh for a few songs,
including “Going Down
the Road Feelin’ Bad.”

2007: The polarizing psychedelic hard rockers Tool are invited to headline, perplexing/angering Bonnaroo
veterans and hippies. Many
of these same fans go to the show and most become Tool fans. The Flaming Lips
Wayne Coyne
lands his spaceship, distributes thousands of laser pointers and waxes on about the war in
Iraq to thousands of
starry-eyed fans. The String Cheese Incident play Which Stage late Friday as part
of their Farewell
Tour.

2008: “FUCK KANYE” becomes a rallying cry after rapper Kanye West
lobbies to get his “Glow in
the Dark Tour” headlining set rescheduled to 2:45 a.m. and subsequently doesn’t take the
stage until 4:30 a.m.
amidst twilight and boos. My Morning
Jacket
plays a cover-heavy set in the driving rain and almost no one leaves until
the show’s completion
at 4:00 a.m. MMJ are joined by Jeff Coffin, Kirk Hammett and Zach
Galifianakis
, among
others. “Best show ever” is a common sentiment amongst attendees (including yours
truly).

2009: A dream fest for many, Phish finally headlines the festival playing a late night show on
the main stage on
Friday and closing out the festival on Sunday with Bruce Springsteen joining the band for “Mustang Sally,” “Bobby
Jean”and “Glory Days.”
Nine Inch Nails, moe., Yeasayer,
and MGMT
highlight one of the
best late nights in the festival’s history on Saturday.

Join JamBase next week when we’ll have pictures and insights from the ‘Roo!

JamBase | Manchester
Go See Live Music!


Sasquatch! Festival | 05.29-05.31 | Washington

Words by: Mike Bookey | Images by: Kyle Johnson, Christopher Nelson & Jackie
Kingsbury

Sasquatch! Music Festival:: 05.29.10-05.31.10 :: The Gorge :: George,
WA

It’s about two hours before sunset on Sunday night on the massive green hillside that is
The Gorge when someone
starts a conga line. There’s nothing particularly groundbreaking about a conga line –
except for when it, like this one, involves maybe 300 people and is performed to music
performed live by LCD Soundsystem. This is what happens on day two of the
Sasquatch! Music Festival, and it’s a moment that seems to encapsulate the indie-
heavy and mostly youthful explosion of sound and culture that’s been taking place on the
banks of the Columbia River since 2002.


The Gorge by Christopher Nelson

So, this conga line heads up the hill and away from the main stage as LCD’s James
Murphy
continues to belt out “I Can Change,” just one of the excellently danceable
numbers from LCD’s recently released disc, This Is Happening, only to return, its
members – many of them with faces painted neon and feathers in their hair, the chosen
party uniform of the weekend – clapping in rhythm above their heads and coming to a stop
along the main concourse. Thousands of people join in, waving their hands, stripping down
to underwear, and most noticeably, dancing as if Betty White’s life depended on it. And
that, for the most part was Sasquatch.


Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros by Kyle Johnson

There was plenty more to the festival, which began with fans lining up late Friday night
and early into Saturday morning to reach the fabled Gorge campgrounds – the mowed field
that for the next three days would be a spot to relax after 12-plus hours of music and a
multi-acre spread for others to create their own personal round-the-clock discos. By
early afternoon on Saturday, fans were trickling into the music venue (separate from the
campgrounds) by way of a heavy pat down gate search to arrive in time for early
performances, including those by Seattle hip hop innovators Shabazz Palaces on the main stage and the
folk-driven grooves of Mumford & Sons on the secondary Bigfoot Stage.

As the crowds grew and the nine-dollar beers flowed, Edward Sharpe & the
Magnetic Zeros
took the Bigfoot Stage and drew a sizeable hoard of curious
onlookers who soon became fans of the gang of freak folk weirdos and their dynamic
namesake leader. By the time they got to their hit, “Home,” the place was bouncing,
making for the first big moment of the festival.


The Hold Steady by Christopher Nelson

With the sun setting, The Hold Steady jogged onto the Bigfoot Stage, with bespectacled,
well-groomed front man Craig Finn looking more like someone late for his kid’s
soccer game than the leader of one of most party-friendly rock bands on the touring
circuit. The band delivered a set full of fan favorites like “Chips Ahoy,” but also some
cuts from the new Heaven is Whenever album. Crowds soon gravitated toward the main
stage, where Vampire Weekend was about to go on. Ezra Koenig‘s overly
emotive face blown up on the massive vertical video screen may have been frightening, but
hits like “Oxford Comma” got feet stomping and hands waving en masse.

Closing out the night, as they have at so many festivals over the years, was My Morning
Jacket
, who came out amidst darkness and cranked out a wall of feedback before the
lights came up enough to reveal Jim James in what appeared to be skeleton moon
boots playing the intro to “One Big Holiday.” By the time MMJ closed down the stage,
they’d jumped through their catalogue, playing a reverb-drenched “Off the Record” and a
crowd-pleasing “I’m Amazed” before sending fans off to chill/party/build a teepee in the
campground, or check out a wildly lit set from party purveyor Deadmau5.


Jim James of My Morning Jacket by Kyle Johnson

By noon on Sunday, Sasquatch! was shifting back into gear with early sets from Langhorne Slim, Midlake and Local Natives, to
name a few. One of the youngest bands on the lineup, Avi Buffalo
dished out an impressive set of quirky folk-inspired, Fleet Foxes-ish pop rock on the
smaller Yeti Stage, playing their breakout song “What’s In It For” to an appreciate and
equally young audience. From there, it was a sprint – Sasquatch’s close stage setup
allows for such act-to-act darting – to catch the end of Kid Cudi‘s super-
charged hip hop, and then a fill-in set by the bombastic and excellently named indie
rockers of Mt. St.
Helens Vietnam Band
before settling down at the main stage to see the end of Tegan & Sara and
prepare for the aforementioned LCD Soundsystem extravaganza.

Long after the conga line had dissipated, Pavement – a band
many at the festival had come specifically to see – took the stage and announced that it
was Stephen Malkmus‘ birthday, then said something about how much champagne LCD had
backstage. The beginning of the set was full of screwups, but “Cut Your Hair” proved
excellently nostalgic, and also, who cares if Pavement sounds sloppy? They’re supposed to
be sloppy – they’ve made an awesome career out of it.


Pavement by Kyle Johnson

From there it was over to the Bigfoot Stage to settle in for Public Enemy as
night fell and a few sprinkles dripped down. Public Enemy eventually came on stage,
complete with military escorts and busted into “911 Is a Joke” with Chuck D having
hardly lost a step and Flava Flav, well, being Flava Flav.

The night finished with Massive Attack, who rolled out their patented trip-hop stylings,
complete with a ridiculously huge screen behind them that listed one digital number after
another – things like the number of deaths that resulted from Hurricane Katrina and the
national debt. Intense? Absolutely. When that concluded it was either off to the late-
night Booka
Shade
set or off to the campgrounds to sleepÂ…or make announcements on megaphones
all night.

Monday was almost completely void of the last day-of-the-festival sort of vibe that often
shadows over big events like this. Sure, there were some indications that the fun was
ending, like the two college-aged girls who walked through the festival with a sign that
read: Our ride lost his mind on acid. We need a ride back to Eugene, Oregon.
Yikes. There was still fun to be had on Monday, which began with soulful sets from The Heavy and
smooth talking cheeseball-in-a-suit Mayer Hawthorne
on the main stage. Then, there was a dance rock show from Phantogram on the
Yeti Stage right before the dusty, dirty, bloody Southern rock of Drive-By
Truckers
, who seemed like they might end up proving out of place amidst the hipsters,
but were appreciated in the end as Patterson Hood‘s growl echoed down the canyon
walls.


Band of Horses by Jackie Kingsbury

Dr. Dog
proved that their sound isn’t relegated to Beach Boys-esque harmonies by turning plenty of
their numbers into high-flying, loud-as-hell rockers, even though most of the festival was
across the hill dancing to Passion Pit. With the day wearing on and time running out on the
festival, She & Him’s Zooey Deschanel ran onto the stage and wasted no time busting
out plenty of the band’s sunshiney pop numbers, with M. Ward looking
cool (as always) in his shades and nonchalant demeanor. The main stage stayed packed for
the rest of the night, with Band of Horses playing in their typical booming style, followed
closely by MGMT‘s dance-your-ass-off jamboree.

Ween closed
things down in their typical zany, impossibly eclectic style, and then Sasquatch was over
- except in the campgrounds, where there was still at least eight hours of partying and
megaphone announcements to be found. And hopefully those two girls made it back to
Eugene. We may never know.

JamBase | Bigfootin’
Go See Live Music!


The Gorge by Christopher Nelson


Bumbershoot 2010 Lineup Dylan, Weezer, Decemberists

ANOTHER CRAZY COOL MIX OF MUSIC IN SEATTLE

The Decemberists by Steven Walter

Bumbershoot 2010 is set to take place September 4-6 at the Seattle Center in Seattle, WA. The multi-stage festival will be headlined by Bob Dylan, Mary J. Blige, Weezer, Hole, Rise Against, Neko Case, The Decemberists, J. Cole and one more special guest to be announced soon. In addition, there’s this donkey choking array of talent hitting the stage this year:

LMFAO / Billy Bragg / Ozomatli / Angelique Kidjo / Solomon Burke / The Dandy Warhols / Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros / Jenny and Johnny (featuring Jenny Lewis and Johnathan Rice) / Jamie Lidell / The Raveonettes / Balkan Beat Box / Motion City Soundtrack / The Thermals / Ra Ra Riot / The English Beat / Justin Townes Earle / Booker T. / Surfer Blood / The Bouncing Souls / Japandroids / Bob Schneider / Anvil / Bomba Estereo / Jay Electronica / Aterciopelados / Baroness / James Cotton “Superharp” Blues Band / David Bazan / Meat Puppets / Crash Kings / This Providence / Brian Auger’s Oblivion Express / The Moondoggies / The Whigs / Greg Laswell / Civil Twilight / Trampled By Turtles / The Clientele / Atlas Sound / Laura Veirs & The Hall of Flames / The Budos Band / Bobby Bare Jr. / Horse Feathers / Vienna Teng Trio / HEALTH / Plants and Animals / Georgia Anne Muldrow & Declaime / Wheedle’s Groove / Hey Marseilles / Kings Go Forth / Sweet Water / Delorean / JEFF the Brotherhood / Chris Pureka / Shawn Lee’s Ping Pong Orchestra / Garotas Suecas / The Maldives / The Constellations / Coryell, Auger, Sample Trio / Grynch / Visqueen / Victor Shade / Star Anna & The Laughing Dogs / Fresh Espresso / Pete Molinari / Sista Monica’s “Singin in the Spirit” / Lay Low / Unnatural Helpers / Idiot Pilot / The Round / Wild Orchid Children / The Cute Lepers / Feral Children / Fences / Caspar Babypants / The Tripwires / Fatal Lucciauno / Loch Lomond / The Physics / THEESatisfaction / School of Rock All Stars / See Me River / Zoe Muth and The Lost High Rollers / People Eating People / Eldridge Gravy & The Court Supreme / Brent Amaker & The Rodeo / Born Anchors / Slender Means / BOAT / McTuff Trio / Parlour Steps / The Redwood Plan / Helladope / Lisa Dank / Greta Matassa Quartet / The Lonely H / Matt Jorgensen Quintet / Becki Sue & Her Big Rockin’ Daddies! / Great Waves / Brian Vogan / Johnny Bregar with more to come, including comedy, performing arts, film, literary and visual arts.

Daily Schedules

Bumbershoot Tickets


Austin City Limits Music Festival: Phish, The Eagles, Muse


Phish


Eagles


Muse


The Strokes


Flaming Lips


Spoon


Norah Jones


Spoon


Monsters of Folk


Band of Horses

Austin City Limits Music Festival, taking place October 8-10 at Austin’s Zilker Park, has announced their 2010 Lineup.

Artists include Phish, Eagles, Muse, The Strokes, Flaming Lips, Spoon, Vampire Weekend, Norah Jones, LCD Soundsystem, Monsters of Folk, Band of Horses, Broken Bells and over 100 others performers.

Single-day tickets go onsale today, Tuesday, May 18th, at 10am Central Time. Three-day tickets are completely sold out. VIP tickets and Travel packages are still available at CID Entertainment.

For complete information, please visit http://2010.aclfestival.com/

2010 Austin City Limits Music Festival Lineup

The Eagles
Muse
Phish
The Strokes
M.I.A.
Flaming Lips
LCD Soundsystem
Spoon
Vampire Weekend
Norah Jones
Band of Horses
Monsters of Folk
Deadmau5
Sonic Youth
Gogol Bordello
The National
Robert Earl Keen
The Black Keys
Broken Bells
Slightly Stoopid
Yeasayer
Pat Green
Rebelution
Beach House
The Sword
Matt and Kim
The XX
Portugal. The Man
The Temper Trap
Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeroes
Girls
Ryan Bingham & The Dead Horses
Local Natives
Gaslight Anthem
Lucero
Devandra Barnhart
Blues Traveler
The Soft Pack
Gayngs
Amos Lee
Robert Randolph & The Family Band
Ozomatli
Richard Thompson
Martin Sexton
Manchester Orchestra
The Almighty Defenders
Miike Snow
Mountain Goats
Bear In Heaven
Mayer Hawthorne
Midlake
Foals
Switchfoot
Cage The Elephant
JJ Grey & Mofro
Kinky
Angus & Julia Stone
The Morning Benders
Hockey
White Rabbits
David Bazan
Asleep at the Wheel
Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue
Nortec Collective
The Very Best
Beats Antique
Blind Pilot
GIVERS
Dawes
Band of Heathens
Charlie Mars
Two Door Cinema Club
Lissie
Sarah Harmer
Constellations
T. Bird and the Breaks
Chief
Frank Turner
Those Darlins
Carolyn Wonderland
Kings Go Forth
The Relatives
The Ettes
Qbeta
Mynamisjohnmichael
Basia Bulat
Balmorhea
Dan Black
The Jane Shermans
The Kicks
Ponderosa
Two Tons of Steel
Caitlin Rose
SPEAK
Run With Bulls
Maxim Ludwig
Gospel Stars
Heavenly Voices
Wesley Bray & The Disciples of Joy
Jones Family Singers
Ashley Cleveland & Kenny
Greenberg
Buddy & The Straight Way
Travelers
Ruby Jane Smith
Verve Pipe
Frances England
Jellydots
Elizabeth Mitchell
Okee Dokee Brothers
Tom Freund
School of Rock
Q Brothers


Coachella | 04.17.10 | Day 2 Photo Gallery

Images by: Steven Walter & Scott Dudelson

Coachella Day 2

04.17.10 :: Saturday :: Empire Polo Grounds :: Indio, CA

Saturday in Indio featured another wildly diverse day of music. Headliners Muse, Faith No More and Tiësto played alongside Les Claypool, The Dead Weather, MGMT, Girls, The xx, DJ Z-Trip, Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros, Gossip, Beach House and many more.

Be sure to check back soon for Sunday’s photos from Coachella…

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”0″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=25″);}); Coachella Music Festival Day 2 | Empire Polo Grounds | Indio, CA The JamBase photo gallery from the second day of Coachella 2010 features Les Claypool, MGMT, DJ Z-Trip, Tiesto, Hot Chip, Portugal. The Man, Girls, Beach House, Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros, The xx, White Rabbits, Band of Skulls, Camera Obscura, Corinne Bailey Rae, The Dead Weather, Devo, Gossip, Old Crow Medicine Show, Porcupine Tree, Shooter Jennings, The Temper Trap, The Raveonettes, Tokyo Police Club and more… View Photos

See JamBase’s “9 Must-See Band At Coachella” here.

See photos from Friday of Coachella here.

See photos from Sunday at Coachella here.

JamBase | Indio

Go See Live Music!


Lollapalooza Lineup: Arcade Fire, Phoenix, Lady GaGa

Lollapalooza Lineup: Arcade Fire, The Strokes, Green Day, Lady GaGa, Soundgarden

Phoenix, MGMT, Yeasayer, Drive-By Truckers, Erykah Badu, The Black Keys, Spoon, Grizzly Bear

Lollapalooza has announced its lineup. Set to go down in Chicago’s Grant Park from August 6-8, the 2010 event will be headlined by Arcade Fire, the Strokes, Lady Gaga, Green Day, the reunited Soundgarden, and Phoenix. Complete lineup follows.

Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

2010 Lollapalooza Lineup:

* Soundgarden

* Green Day

* Lady Gaga

* Arcade Fire

* The Strokes

* Phoenix

* Social Distortion

* MGMT

* Jimmy Cliff

* Hot Chip

* The Black Keys

* The National

* Spoon

* Devo

* Cypress Hill

* Cut Copy

* The New Pornographers

* Erykah Badu

* Slightly Stoopid

* Grizzly Bear

* Gogol Bordello

* Chromeo

* Wolfmother

* Yeasayer

* X Japan

* MUTEMATH

* Metric

* Dirty Projectors

* AFI

* Mavis Staples

* Matt & Kim

* The xx

* Drive-By Truckers

* Blues Traveler

* Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros

* The Temper Trap

* Jamie Lidell

* Frightened Rabbit

* F**k Buttons

* Deer Tick

* Blitzen Trapper

* Stars

* Raphael Saadiq

* The Cribs

* Minus the Bear

* Switchfoot

* The Walkmen

* Mumford & Sons

* Wild Beasts

* Rogue Wave

* Los Amigos Invisibles

* The Big Pink

* The Dodos

* Hockey

* Cymbals Eat Guitars

* B.o.B

* Dawes

* Warpaint

* The Antlers

* The Soft Pack

* Rebelution

* Balkan Beat Box

* Wavves

* American Bang

* The Ike Reilly Assassination

* Company of Thieves

* Nneka

* Harlem

* The Constellations

* Miniature Tigers

* Mimicking Birds

* The Kissaway Trail

* HEALTH

* Javelin

* The Morning Benders

* Foxy Shazam

* Violent Soho

* Royal Bangs

* Freelance Whales

* Semi Precious Weapons

* Dan Black

* The Band of Heathens

* Dragonette

* My Dear Disco

* Shawn Fisher

* Neon Hitch

* Skybox

* The Ettes

* Jukebox the Ghost

* These United States

* MyNameIsJohnMichael

Spinning at Perry’s

* 2ManyDJs

* Empire of the Sun

* Digitalism

* Perry Farrell

* Tiga

* Felix Da Housecat

* Rusko

* Erol Alkan

* Kaskade

* Wolfgang Gartner

* Flosstradamus

* Joachim Garraud

* Mexican Institute of Sound

* Caspa

* Peanut Butter Wolf

* Dirty South

* NERVO

* Cut Copy (DJ Set)

* Beats Antique

* Steve Porter

* Didi Gutman of Brazilian Girls

* Ancient Astronauts

* Ana Sia

* Team Bayside High

* Dani Deahl

* FreeSol

* DJ Mel

* BBU

* Vonnegutt

* Only Children

* Lance Herbstrong

For more on Lollapalooza see our 2009 review here.


Lollapalooza 2010 Lineup Revealed

Great news for music fans: the lineup for Lollapalooza 2010 was formally announced on Tuesday and the rumors have turned out to not be rumors after all – Lady Gaga, Soundgarden, and Green Day are among the headlines set to rock Chicago’s Grant Park this summer! Other acts expected to hit the stage for the [...]

Edward Sharpe & Magnetic Zeros Announce Headlining U.S. Tour

PSYCHEDELIC FOLK COLLECTIVE WILL PLAY COACHELLA, SASQUATCH, BONNAROO

TELLURIDE BLUGRASS AND OTHER FESTIVALS THIS SUMMER

Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros :: 08.06 by Krolick

Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic
Zeros
, known for their joyous, euphoria-inducing live show, will hit the road for a two-month run of
headlining tour dates. The tour kicks of April 15 in Solana Beach, CA and ends June 22 in Tempe, AZ. Presale
tickets will be available at: www.edwardsharpe.tickets.musictoday.com. Dawes will be opening all the
headline
dates.

Along the way, the band will stop in Indio, CA for a performance at the renowned Coachella Valley Music and Arts
Festival on April 17. Other festivals at which the band will be appearing include the Sasquatch! Festival in George,
WA on May 29, Bonnaroo in Manchester, TN on June 11 and Telluride Bluegrass Festival on June 19. Click below for
tour dates
below.

Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros, with its ever-evolving cast of musical characters, has been traveling the U.S.
and the world and winning over audiences for more than a year, in support of their debut album Up From
Below
. Their exuberant live show and collection of infectious psych-folk anthems have drawn ample praise
from the likes of Rolling Stone, NPR, JamBase, Daytrotter, The Aquarian Weekly, Under The Radar, LA Times, GQ and many
others.

Edward Sharpe
& The Magnetic Zeros Tour Dates
:: Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros News :: Edward Sharpe &
The Magnetic Zeros Concert Reviews


Sasquatch! Sells Out Lineup & Day Schedule Finalized

SASQUATCH! MUSIC FESTIVAL SELLS OUT IN RECORD TIME

LINEUP AND DAY SCHEDULE FINALIZED WITH THE ADDITION OF AZIZ ANSARI, THEY MIGHT BE GIANTS AND MORE

Sasquatch 2009 by Nelson

The 2010 Sasquatch! Music Festival is now sold out, with the highest amount of tickets sold in the quickest time since the festival’s inception. Proudly featuring the recently reunited Pavement, Massive Attack, My Morning Jacket, Ween, Vampire Weekend, MGMT, Kid Cudi, LCD Soundsystem, The National, Band of Horses and many others, the festival confirms its final lineup and stage schedule while adding comedian Aziz Ansari, They Might Be Giants and more.

Sasquatch! returns to The Gorge in Quincy, WA May 29-31 (Memorial Day Weekend) and is completely sold out. Known for its bucolic location as well as its programming zeitgeist, the Sasquatch! Festival marks its ninth year at The Gorge, a concert venue built in the Columbia River Gorge and offering spectacular views of the river canyon.

2010 SASQUATCH! FESTIVAL LINEUP

Saturday, May 29

My Morning Jacket

Vampire Weekend

The National

Broken Social Scene

Deadmau5

OK Go

Wale

Minus the Bear

Brother Ali

Shabazz Palaces

Public Enemy

The Hold Steady

Miike Snow

The Posies

Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros

Portugal. The Man

Mumford & Sons

Why?

The Lonely Forest

Patrick Watson

The Middle East

Nurses

Fool’s Gold

Morning Teleportation

Aziz Ansari

Garfunkel & Oates

Nick Kroll

Moshe Kasher

Z-Trip

Dam-Funk

The Very Best

Sunday, May 30

Massive Attack

Pavement

LCD Soundsystem

Tegan & Sara

Kid Cudi

They Might Be Giants

Midlake

Caribou

Nada Surf

Dirty Projectors

Girls

The xx

City & Colour

Cymbals Eat Guitars

The Tallest Man on Earth

Local Natives

Fruit Bats

Vetiver

Freelance Whales

Avi Buffalo

tUnE-YarDs

Jets Overhead

Martina Topley Bird

Mike Birbiglia

Rob Riggle

Luke Burbank

Rory Scovel

Booka Shade

Simian Mobile Disco

A-Trak

Yacht

Monday, May 31

Ween

MGMT

Band of Horses

She & Him

Passion Pit

Drive-By Truckers

The Temper Trap

Mayer Hawthorne

The Heavy

The New Pornographers

Camera Obscura

The Mountain Goats

Dr. Dog

Quasi

Yes Giantess

Jaguar Love

No Age

Japandroids

Telekinesis

Fresh Espresso

Phantogram

Past Lives

Shadow Shadow Shade

Craig Robinson

Bobcat Goldthwait

Todd Barry

Hannibal Buress

Boys Noize

Neon Indian

Hudson Mohawke

For more on Sasquatch! check out 2009 review here.


Newport Folk Fest: Helm, Yim, Bird, Avetts

George Wein’s NEWPORT FOLK FESTIVAL RETURNS TO ITS SEASIDE HOME JULY 30 – AUGUST 1

Newport Folk Fest 2009 by Brueckner

The spirit of an open-hearted, old-fashioned family reunion is being summoned to life for this year’s 51st edition of George Wein’s Newport Folk Festival®, which begins July 30 at the International Tennis Hall of Fame at Newport Casino and continues July 31 and August 1 at Fort Adams State Park in Newport, Rhode Island.

Tickets go on sale worldwide on Friday, March 26, at 10 a.m. at www.newportfolkfest.net.

George Wein’s New Festival Productions continues to build on the festival’s historic past by featuring emerging young artists alongside some of folk music’s most venerable names. This year’s festival features Levon Helm‘s Ramble on the Road, John Prine, Steve Martin & Steep Canyon Rangers, Yim Yames (of My Morning Jacket), The Swell Season, Andrew Bird, The Avett Brothers, Brandi Carlile, Doc Watson & David Holt, Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros, Preservation Hall Jazz Band, Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings, Calexico, Blitzen Trapper, Richie Havens, Sam Bush, The Low Anthem, Tim O’Brien, The Felice Brothers, Justin Townes Earle, Tao Seeger Band, AA Bondy, Chris Thile’s Punch Brothers, Dawes, Nneka, Horse Feathers, Pokey LaFarge & the South City Three , Ben Sollee & Daniel Martin Moore, Sarah Jarosz, Cory Chisel & the Wandering Sons, O’Death and Liz Longley. More artists will be announced at a later date.

Many of these musicians have performed and recorded together or crossed paths along the musical highway and they see this storied festival as being so steeped in cultural and historic importance that they liken it to “coming home” to the very roots of the folk-music tradition.

Wein has, since 1959, found Newport a scenic and hospitable venue for presenting the very best of this country’s blues, roots, gospel, country, bluegrass, Cajun and traditional folk music. Last year’s 50th anniversary edition paid tribute to the great performers who wrote the proud history of this festival, notably co-founder Pete Seeger, Joan Baez, Judy Collins, Ramblin’ Jack Elliot, Arlo Guthrie and Mavis Staples.

“Newport is like a second home to me and I always look forward to the next visit,” said Wein. “After celebrating the 50th anniversary with Pete and 17,000 fans, I can’t wait to see the magic unfold over the three days.”

“There is something so perfect about being in Newport near the water and that old stone fort – all gathered in to sing with family and friends – that keeps me wanting to come back year after year,” said Yim Yames. “It’s like the walls of the fort are arms, and I feel secure when I am near them, protected by the spirits there – past, present, and future. And, I like to hear our voices bouncing off those old stone walls as my eye drifts to the sailboats on the seashore and the people just smiling and taking it all in.”

All tickets for George Wein’s Newport Folk Festival go on sale Friday, March 26, at 10:00 a.m. online, by phone and by mail. General admission tickets (single-day passes only) also can be purchased in person at the Newport Visitor Information Center, located at 23 America’s Cup Avenue.

A partial list of performers for George Wein’s 2010 Newport Folk Festival:

FRIDAY, JULY 30 ~ 8:00 p.m.

International Tennis Hall of Fame, 194 Bellevue Avenue

Steve Martin & The Steep Canyon Rangers

Tim O’Brien

Sarah Jarosz

SATURDAY, JULY 31 ~ 11:30 am – 7:00 p.m.

Fort Adams State Park, Harrison Avenue

John Prine

Andrew Bird

Brandi Carlile

The Low Anthem

Yim Yames of My Morning Jacket

Doc Watson & David Holt

Calexico

Dawes

Nneka

O’Death

Liz Longley

Blitzen Trapper

A.A. Bondy

Sam Bush

Horsefeathers

and more

SUNDAY, AUGUST 1 ~ 11:30 am – 7:00 p.m.

Fort Adams State Park, Harrison Avenue

Levon Helm’s Ramble on the Road

The Swell Season

The Avett Brothers

Sharon Jones & the Dap Kings

Richie Havens

Justin Townes Earle

Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros

The Preservation Hall Jazz Band

Punch Brothers with Chris Thile

The Felice Brothers

Tao Seeger Band

Cory Chisel & The Wandering Sons

Ben Sollee & Daniel Martin Moore

Pokey LaFarge & the South City Three

and more


For more on the Newport Folk Festival see our 2009 coverage here.


Telluride Bluegrass Festival: Single Day Schedule

Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros
By Jake Krolick

The 37th Telluride Bluegrass Festival has announced the single-day lineups for this year’s festivities.

Thursday, June 17, 2010
Tim O’Brien Band | Alison Krauss & Union Station featuring Jerry Douglas | Del McCoury Band | Josh Ritter & The Royal City Band | Punch Brothers featuring Chris Thile | Keller & the Keels | Sarah Jarosz

Friday, June 18, 2010
Leftover Salmon | Lyle Lovett | Court Yard Hounds | Hot Rize | Peter Rowan | Cadillac Sky | John Cowan Band | Ben Sollee

Saturday, June 19, 2010
Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros | Sam Bush Band | Bela Fleck, Zakir Hussain & Edgar Meyer | Telluride Troubadour | Yonder Mountain String Band | Imelda May | Jerry Douglas, Omar Hakim & Viktor Krauss | The Hillbenders

Sunday, June 20, 2010
Telluride House Band featuring Sam, Bela, Jerry, Edgar, Bryan & Stuart | Dave Rawlings Machine | Mumford & Sons | Brandi Carlile | Carolina Chocolate Drops | Väsen | The Drepung Monks

Four-day passes, single-day tickets, and camping are available now at shop.bluegrass.com
or 800-624-2422.


High Sierra Adds: WSP Crowes, Lotus, Hips, Joseph

High Sierra Adds: Widespread Panic, Black Crowes, Lotus, Mother Hips, Jerry Joseph & More

Set to take place July 1 through July 4, 2010 at the Plumas-Sierra County Fairgrounds in Quincy, CA, the High Sierra Music Festival made some very substantial additions to their 20th Anniversary lineup today. The following acts have all officially been announced:

HSMF 2009 by Krolick

Widespread Panic

The Black Crowes

Lotus

Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros

The Mother Hips

Jerry Joseph & The Jackmormons

The Radiators

The Pimps of Joytime

Truth & Salvage Co.

Coryell, Auger, Sample Trio

New Fangled Wasteland

Orgone

Chris Chandler & Paul Benoit

Living Folklore

These artists come as additions to the following already announced acts:

The Avett Brothers

Ozomatli

Femi Kuti and Positive Force

Railroad Earth

Bela Fleck, Zakir Hussain, and Edgar Meyer

Dr. Dog

Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe

Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue

Cornmeal

Blitzen Trapper

The New Mastersounds

March Fourth Marching Band

Nels Cline Singers

The Infamous Stringdusters

Surprise Me Mr. Davis

The Slip

BLVD

Beats Antique

Telepath

Carolyn Wonderland

Darol Anger’s Republic Of Strings featuring Sharon Gilchrist

Great American Taxi

Nathan Moore

Johnny Vidacovich, Robert Walter Duo

Big Light

Trampled By Turtles

Zach Deputy

and many more to come!

Discounted 4-day passes for the High Sierra Music Festival are $175 and are on sale now here.

Fore more on High Sierra see our coverage of the 2009 event here.