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Posts Tagged ‘EDWARD SHARPE’

Bonnaroo Adds: Ween Umphrey’s, Galactic, Butler

BONNAROO MUSIC AND ARTS FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES ADDITIONAL ARTISTS FOR 2010 LINEUP

WEEN, GALACTIC, UMPHREY’S McGEE, JOHN BUTLER TRIO, THE GOSSIP AND MORE CONFIRMED

Superfly and A.C. Entertainment have announced that the Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival has added several artists to the 2010 event. Updates include Bonnaroo veterans Ween, Galactic and Umphrey’s McGee as well as gifted singer/songwriter Brandi Carlile and the genre-bending, post-punk trio The Gossip.

For more on Bonnaroo, check our extensive coverage of the 2009 event here.

Bonnaroo 2009 by Snyder

BONNAROO 2010 ARTISTS:

Dave Matthews Band

Kings of Leon

Stevie Wonder

Jay-Z

Tenacious D

Weezer

The Dead Weather

Damian Marley & Nas

Phoenix

Norah Jones

Michael Franti & Spearhead

John Fogerty

The Flaming Lips performing Dark Side of the Moon featuring Stardeath and White Dwarfs

Regina Spektor

Jimmy Cliff

Ween

LCD Soundsystem

The Avett Brothers

Thievery Corporation

Galactic

Rise Against

Tori Amos

The National

Zac Brown Band

Les Claypool

John Prine

Umphrey’s McGee

The Black Keys

Steve Martin & the Steep Canyon Rangers

Jeff Beck

Dropkick Murphys

She & Him

Against Me!

Deadmau5

Daryl Hall & Chromeo

Jamey Johnson

Clutch

Bassnectar

Kid Cudi

The Disco Biscuits

Kris Kristofferson

Medeski Martin & Wood

Brandi Carlile

The xx

John Butler Trio

GWAR

Dan Deacon Ensemble

Tinariwen

Wale

Baaba Maal

The Melvins

The Gaslight Anthem

Miike Snow

Nitty Gritty Dirt Band

The Gossip

Dr. Dog

They Might Be Giants

Punch Brothers featuring Chris Thile

Isis

Blitzen Trapper

Blues Traveler

Miranda Lambert

Calexico

OK Go

Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue

Martin Sexton

Lotus

Baroness

Dave Rawlings Machine

Mayer Hawthorne and the County

Japandroids

Jay Electronica

Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros

Ingrid Michaelson

The Dodos

Manchester Orchestra

The Temper Trap

Cross Canadian Ragweed

Big Sam’s Funky Nation

Carolina Chocolate Drops

Needtobreathe

Tokyo Police Club

The Entrance Band

Local Natives

Mumford & Sons

Rebelution

Diane Birch

Monte Montgomery

Fanfarlo

Julia Nunes

The Postelles

Lucero

Here We Go Magic

Hot Rize

Neon Indian

B.O.B

Tickets and complete festival information for the 2010 event are available at Bonnaroo.com.


Sasquatch! Lineup: Pavement, MMJ, Ween, MGMT

SASQUATCH! MUSIC FESTIVAL LINEUP FEATURES:

PAVEMENT, MASSIVE ATTACK, MY MORNING JACKET, WEEN, VAMPIRE WEEKEND, MGMT AND MORE

MAY 29-31 (MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND) AT THE GORGE

The 2010 Sasquatch! Music Festival will proudly feature 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. With “The Office’s” Craig Robinson and “The Daily Show’s” Rob Riggle, this year’s Sasquatch! Festival also presents the best in up-and-coming comedic acts. Please see below for the complete festival lineup and ticket information.

Sasquatch! returns to The Gorge in Quincy, WA May 29-31 (Memorial Day Weekend) following early sellouts and rave reviews the past several years. Festival tickets are available at sasquatchfestival.com and Ticketmaster.com. 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. Tickets go on sale Saturday February 20 at 10 a.m. PST.

2010 SASQUATCH! FESTIVAL LINEUP:

Sasquatch 2009 by Nelson

My Morning Jacket

Massive Attack

Pavement

Ween

Vampire Weekend

MGMT

Band of Horses

The National

LCD Soundsystem

Tegan & Sara

Broken Social Scene

Passion Pit

Deadmau5

She & Him

Public Enemy

Nada Surf

The New Pornographers

The Hold Steady

The xx

Dirty Projectors

OK Go

Drive-By Truckers

Kid Cudi

The Long Winters

Minus the Bear

The Mountain Goats

Quasi

Camera Obscura

Fruit Bats

Brother Ali

Midlake

Dr. Dog

Caribou

Simian Mobile Disco

City & Colour

No Age

The Temper Trap

Vetiver

Miike Snow

Portugal. The Man

Telekinesis

Mayer Hawthorne

Why?

Girls

Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros

Wale

The Lonely Forest

Japandroids

Boys Noize

Yacht

Freelance Whales

Laura Marling

Patrick Watson

Past Lives

Cymbals Eat Guitars

The Low Anthem

The Very Best

Phantogram

Neon Indian

Nurses

The Tallest Man on Earth

Fresh Espresso

Mumford & Sons

Jets Overhead

tUnE-YarDs

Shabazz Palaces

Fool’s Gold

Morning Teleportation

Z-Trip

Dam-Funk

Hudson Mohawke

The Middle East

Local Natives

Avi Buffalo

Booka Shade

A-Trak

Yes Giantess

Craig Robinson

Rob Riggle

Garfunkel & Oates

Luke Burbank

…and more to come!

For more on Sasquatch! check out 2009 review here.


Bonnaroo Lineup: DMB Jay-Z, KOL, Biscuits, Wonder

BONNAROO ANNOUNCES 2010 LINEUP

FEATURING: DAVE MATTHEWS BAND, KINGS OF LEON, STEVIE WONDER, JAY-Z, WEEZER, THE DEAD WEATHER

FLAMING LIPS PERFORMING DARK SIDE OF THE MOON, PHOENIX, AVETT BROTHERS, THE BLACK KEYS

MICHAEL FRANTI, LES CLAYPOOL, THE DISCO BISCUITS, TORI AMOS, JEFF BECK, THIEVERY CORP AND MORE

The 2010 Bonnaroo lineup saw a rather interesting release on Tuesday (February 9). Pouring slowly out of the festival’s MySpace page and appearing in videos like the one The Avett Brothers debuted on JamBase, fans learned one-by-one which of their favorite artists will appear at the event. More acts will be announced in the coming weeks.

The Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival will go down June 10-13 in a huge field near Manchester, TN. Tickets are on sale now at bonnarootickets.com.

For more on Bonnaroo, check our extensive coverage of the 2009 event here.

Artists Confirmed for Bonnaroo 2010:

Bonnaroo 2009 by Snyder

Dave Matthews Band

Kings of Leon

Stevie Wonder

Jay-Z

Tenacious D

Weezer

The Flaming Lips with Stardeath and White Dwarfs perform Dark Side of the Moon

The Dead Weather

Damian Marley & Nas

Phoenix

Norah Jones

Michael Franti & Spearhead

John Fogerty

Regina Spektor

Jimmy Cliff

LCD Soundsystem

The Avett Brothers

Thievery Corporation

Rise Against

Tori Amos

The National

Zac Brown Band

Les Claypool

John Prine

The Black Keys

Steve Martin & the Steep Canyon Rangers

Jeff Beck

Dropkick Murphys

She & Him

Against Me!

The Disco Biscuits

Daryl Hall & Chromeo

Jamey Johnson

Clutch

Bassnectar

Kid Cudi

Baaba Maal

Kris Kristofferson

Medeski Martin & Wood

The xx

GWAR

Dan Deacon Ensemble

Tinariwen

Wale

Deadmau5

The Melvins

Gaslight Anthem

Miike Snow

Nitty Gritty Dirt Band

Dr. Dog

They Might Be Giants

Punch Brothers

Isis

Blitzen Trapper

Blues Traveler

Miranda Lambert

Calexico

OK Go

Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue

Martin Sexton

Lotus

Baroness

Dave Rawlings Machine

Mayer Hawthorne and the County

Japandroids

Jay Electronica

Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros

Ingrid Michaelson

The Dodos

Manchester Orchestra

The Temper Trap

Cross Canadian Ragweed

Big Sam’s Funky Nation

Carolina Chocolate Drops

Tokyo Police Club

The Entrance Band

Local Natives

Brandi Carlile

Mumford & Sons

Rebelution

Diane Birch

Monte Montgomery

Julia Nunes

The Postelles

Lucero

Here We Go Magic

Hot Rize

Neon Indian

B.O.B

Needtobreathe


Alison Krauss & Union Station To Play Telluride Bluegrass

ALISON KRAUSS AND UNION STATION TO PLAY TELLURIDE BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

Alison Krauss & Union Station

Planet Bluegrass has announced the addition of Alison Krauss & Union Station featuring Jerry Douglas to the lineup for the 37th Annual Telluride Bluegrass Festival, June 17-20 in Telluride, CO. This festival performance will be one of a very select number of 2010 shows for the band and among their first full-length sets since 2007.

Alison Krauss & Union Station featuring Jerry Douglas has been credited with raising the profile of bluegrass music around the world, bringing modern sophistication to the genre while respecting its traditions.

This 2010 performance marks the group’s 12th appearance at Telluride Bluegrass, beginning with their festival debut in 1989, and Douglas will be celebrating his 26th year on the Telluride stage.

Says Grammy-winning Union Station vocalist Dan Tyminski, “I have spent a lifetime going to festivals and can easily say that no other has the splendor of Telluride.”

Union station bassist Barry Bales agrees, reflecting on the significance of Telluride Bluegrass: “As an aspiring young musician growing up in East Tennessee, it was an almost unattainable goal to even attend the Telluride Bluegrass Festival. So it was truly a monumental moment in my life to experience the festival for the first time not from the audience, but on stage for one of my very first shows upon joining Alison almost 20 years ago.”

37th Telluride Bluegrass Festival Initial Lineup

June 17-20, 2010

Town Park, Telluride, CO

-Alison Krauss & Union Station

- Sam Bush Band

- Bela Fleck, Zakir Hussain, Edgar Meyer

- Yonder Mountain String Band

- Telluride House Band featuring Sam, Bela, Jerry, Edgar, Bryan & Stuart

- Del McCoury Band

- Hot Rize

- Leftover Salmon

- Tim O’Brien

- Jerry Douglas

- Josh Ritter

- Punch Brothers featuring Chris Thile

- Peter Rowan

- Carolina Chocolate Drops

- John Cowan Band

- Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros

- Imelda May

- Cadillac Sky

- Mumford and Sons

- The Drepung Monks

- Sarah Jarosz

- The Hillbenders

And many more…

Tickets for Telluride are available here.

For more on Telluride Bluegrass Festival see our 2009 coverage here.


Telluride Bluegrass 2010: Salmon, Yonder, Béla, Bush, More

COLORADO’S SEMINAL MUSIC FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES INITIAL LINE UP FOR 2010

Sam Bush

Planet Bluegrass today announces the preliminary lineup for the 37th annual Telluride Bluegrass Festival; including Sam Bush, Yonder Mountain String Band, Bela Fleck, Zakir Hussain & Edgar Meyer, Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros, and many others. The venerable roots music festival is held the weekend closest to the summer solstice, June 17-20, in the rugged San Juan Mountains of southwestern Colorado. Tickets and camping go on sale at 9 a.m. MST, on Wednesday, December 9 here, or over the phone at 800-624-2422.

Camping passes for the festival’s longest-running campground, Town Park, sold out in November using an online lottery with entries from 47 different US states and many foreign countries. A limited number of holiday-priced 4-day passes ($30 discount) will be available beginning December 9. These discount passes typically sell-out within several weeks.

37th Telluride Bluegrass Festival Initial Lineup

June 17-20, 2010

Town Park, Telluride, CO

- Sam Bush Band

- Bela Fleck, Zakir Hussain, Edgar Meyer

- Yonder Mountain String Band

- Telluride House Band featuring Sam, Bela, Jerry, Edgar, Bryan & Stuart

- Del McCoury Band

- Hot Rize

- Leftover Salmon

- Tim O’Brien

- Jerry Douglas

- Josh Ritter

- Punch Brothers featuring Chris Thile

- Peter Rowan

- Carolina Chocolate Drops

- John Cowan Band

- Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros

- Imelda May

- Cadillac Sky

- Mumford and Sons

- The Drepung Monks

- Sarah Jarosz

- The Hillbenders

And many more…


Treasure Island Fest | 10.17 & 10.18 | CA

Word by: Chris Clark & Kayceman | Images by: Steven Walter

Treasure Island Music Festival :: 10.17 & 10.18 :: Treasure Island :: San Francisco, CA

Treasure Island Fest 2009

Truly a tale of two very different days, the third annual Treasure Island Music Festival was quintessential San Francisco. Served up on a small strip of manmade land sitting between S.F. and Oakland, the two-day weekend event was once again split between dance/hip hop on Saturday and indie rock on Sunday. With only two stages set about 100 yards from each other and all the food, beer, shopping, Ferris Wheel, etc. adjacent, walking is minimal and with no overlapping sets, it was difficult to not hear every note all weekend long.

Saturday was hot, in the 80s, and people were wearing close to nothing. A much younger, shinier (lots of neon spandex and ironic accessories) and hopped-up crowd, got down and dirty on a balmy, beautiful October evening featuring one of the most beautiful sunsets the Bay has seen all year. Sunday was windy and chilly, down to the 50s by the time the city skyline came to life, but patches of sun and the pristine, loud sound system kept the older, hairier, and more subdued rock fans in the game for the duration. Sunny and 82 one day, foggy and cold the next; cuties in skimpy skirts grinding to beats here, bearded dudes in hoodies head-nodding to guitars there – welcome to San Francisco.

Saturday, 10.17

By: Chris Clark

Crown City Rockers :: 12:40-1:15 p.m.

CCR’s well-known, high-octane live performances are always something to witness. The Oakland-based quintet fuses full band arrangements with ferocious hip hop from Raashan Ahmad and crew. What Treasure Island got was 35 minutes full of balls-to-the-wall, rocking hip hop with a sliver of Fender Rhodes funk, earning early day crowd-pleaser status.

Murs :: 1:20-2:05 p.m.

10.17 :: TI 2009

For years Murs has been bringing his positive, sometimes political message to an increasingly diverse crowd. Clearly, the festival wanted to add that extra little touch of flavor by having Murs take the stage to keep the party going. While it wasn’t the most amazing hip hop performance I’ve ever seen, he clearly got the crowd interacting and swaying their arms to the beat, so at the end of the day, Murs was a success. Murs for President tracks abound, and the crazy, dreaded underground icon did a quality job of working up the crowd’s energy and getting them ready for the music ahead.

Federico Aubele :: 2:05-2:45 p.m.

Offering a decidedly more mellow show than most at TI, Federico Aubele did however provide a deliciously sophisticated set of stylish salsa with a dollop of acoustic flare. Playing at the side or Tunnel Stage, I sat back and watched as a growing crowd of onlookers gathered for an act many probably hadn’t heard of before but will surely be downloading soon. What I liked best about Aubele was how at ease he seemed to be onstage. Performing 40 minutes of straight baby making music, he had a substantial amount of young ladies gazing up at him as he sang songs of seductive romance.

Passion Pit :: 2:50-3:35 p.m.

I would venture to say for many this was the best set of the day. Unless you’ve been hiding somewhere or haven’t spent one bit of time in today’s music scene, you’ll surely be familiar and quite possibly be in love with Passion Pit. If there was any doubt of their talent or ability to rock a crowd, that doubt is now evaporated. While young in age, the band takes a unique spin on the indie-electronic combination and turns it into a dance friendly, fiery mix that’s only getting more refined as they go. Everywhere I looked, the crowd at the Bridge Stage was throwing a dance competition for Passion Pit, as hipsters flocked in droves to shake their rabbit tails and pop a button on their skinnies from excessive movement.

Dan Deacon :: 3:35-4:20 p.m.

The Streets :: 10.17 :: TI 2009

This was kind of odd. Electro-pop, freak show, performance art wildness performed by a 15-piece percussion ensemble is an apt description but I’m not sure it really captures the essence of Deacon and his massively colorful band. Performing live is right up his alley and the direction he took his set was something of organized chaos, where just when you think it’s about to fall apart, everything comes together melodiously and life is grand. I’d never caught him live before and was glad to witness such a bombastic musical and visual experience. He was also playing Mezzanine late night, this likely would have been a much better setting to catch Deacon’s brand of multi-layered, elaborate performance.

The Streets :: 4:25-5:15 p.m.

The Streets’ set came off as rather drab and boring. 30 minutes of attempting to sing/rap ala Drake that didn’t do much for me, or most of the crowd either. There was a time a while back where I thought The Streets was kind of cool, but after seeing him live again I’ll gladly go in another direction.

DJ Krush :: 5:15-6:00 p.m.

Brazilian Girls :: 10.17 :: TI 2009

This was clearly one of the best sets of the day. Krush has always killed the break beats and electronic melodies and been able to cross over to crowds of varying degrees. After 11 albums and countless tours, Krush has honed and refined his jazz-heavy textures, creating such a lush soundscape of samples, live touches, and beats that watching him play live is something of a marvel. Not one of the step-on-stage-and-press-a-button DJs (I’ll get to that in a bit), Krush is instead a master live manipulator, performing everything on the fly, and nowhere was that more apparent than his TI set. Never before have I heard him drop so much bass-heavy, chest-pounding dub step. Obviously a nod to San Francisco and our burgeoning dub step culture, he came out flying, dropping some of the heaviest beats I’ve heard in some time. If that’s the direction he’s going now, I’ll be his biggest advocate.

Brazilian Girls :: 6:05-6:55 p.m.

Normally, the trio kills the festival sets, playing an eclectic balance of mellow grooves and deep bangers. Well, at Treasure Island we were treated to much more of the mellow, enough so to bore me straight to the bathrooms. While I always enjoy the lyrics in different languages and the cultural, worldly vibe put forth by Brazilian Girls, this set seemed out of place and contrasting to the overall vibe being built.

LTJ Bukem & MC Conrad 6:55-7:40 p.m.

10.17 :: TI 2009

If you like drum n’ bass, here you go. I think the first time I caught these guys was almost 10 years ago and frankly, their set is still very similar. Looking for a ton of BPMs with some raps layered on top of it? Look no further. To me, it’s not the most memorable set, but on the flip side, I did have a blast and danced to the beats, and most around where I was surely did as well.

MSTRKRFT 7:45-8:35 p.m.

This electro duo knows how to rage a party. The Canadians Al-P and Jesse F. Keeler have taken the Toronto scene to the masses, enjoying a chain-smoking, kick ass & take names kind of reputation in clubs everywhere. Their set at TI was a mix of original material off Fist of God and Justice (“D.A.N.C.E.”) and Daft Punk (“Around the World”) mixes, which blew the crowd up beyond oblivion. It takes many bands a full set, or a good portion of it, to warm up, but that wasn’t the case for MSTRKRFT, who came out swinging and never stopped brining the electro tinged bombardment.

Girl Talk :: 8:35-9:20 p.m.

While Girl Talk, aka Gregg Gillis, claims that he’s not a DJ and says things like, “I want to be a musician and not just a party DJ,” I don’t find a lot of value in that. I’ve been seeing him perform live for the last several years and, to put it bluntly, Girl Talk is all about bringing a party atmosphere with someone else’s beats to whatever venue he’s playing at. Yes, his set was raucous and teenage girls were going crazy as the stage beside him filled up to the brim with scantily clad tennie boppers and guys trying to get with said girls. To me, he presses a button and then just dances onstage like a caveman. Take or leave it.

MGMT :: 9:25-10:40 p.m.

MGMT :: 10.17 :: TI 2009

Without a doubt the most anticipated set of the weekend was that of MGMT. After playing a somewhat-surprise show at The Independent the night before, there was a decent amount of clamoring that the Brooklyn boys should keep their tunes in the studio and not in the live setting. Back in 2008, it was MGMT’s time; “Electric Feel” and “Kids” could be heard just about everywhere you went, and even now their debut album, Oracular Spectacular, is widely rumored to be on Phish’s short list of possible albums to cover this Halloween. The kids are on fire, but can they bring that fire to the live setting?

The simple answer: No. What was cool about their TI set was the performance of Oracular Spectacular in its entirety. “Time to Pretend” was a smooth opener, but I noticed that the crowd of thousands began to dissipate rather quickly. For me, it was nice to hear them play “Electric Feel,” but live, just as I was told from the night before, MGMT was rather sloppy in both their playing and singing. The polished product of a heavily produced album just didn’t compare well when placed in the concert setting.

Continue reading for Day II at Treasure Island…

Sunday, 10.18

By: Kayceman

Spiral Stairs :: 1:55-2:25 p.m.

Vetiver/Tunnel Stage :: 10.18 :: TI 2009

Guitarist Scott Kannberg helped found seminal indie rock band Pavement with Stephen Malkmus back in 1989. But no one knows who the hell Scott Kannberg is; they know Spiral. “Everyone knows me as Spiral. It’s weird when someone calls me Scott,” he says. “I’m not sure anyone knows who Scott Kannberg is.” Scott or Spiral it doesn’t really matter, the music still sounds good with a similar ’90s lo-fi vibe, and it was especially sweet when they covered Spiral’s old band at the end of the set. Fun as it was, with Pavement getting ready to launch a reunion tour it was hard to think of this as much more than a warm-up.

Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros :: 2:30-3:15 p.m.

If you buy what Edward Sharpe (real name Alex Ebert) is selling, then this band has the potential to be awesome. If you’re a cynic who refuses to drink the Kool-Aid, it could come off as shtick. Bounding around the stage one minute and sitting the next, stripping off his shirt despite the frigid temp, conjuring a church revival sing-along before an off-key hoarse scream, and looking like a Devendra Banhart knock-off leading the Polyphonic Spree (minus the cool robes), this was the start of a theme that would proliferate Sunday: Drama. Not in a bad way, but an indie rock way that carried through The Decemberists (opera-rock drama), Beirut (European gypsy drama), Grizzly Bear (symphonic drama), The Walkmen (vocal melodrama), and The Flaming Lips (Broadway-rock drama). As tough as it was to get a bead on ole Eddie Sharpe, with the aid of his well-rehearsed nine-piece band (dig the accordion, one of several at the fest) and really strong female vocal counterpoint Jade Castrinos, he sorta won this writer over… for now.

Vetiver :: 3:15-3:55 p.m.

Grizzly Bear :: 10.18 :: TI 2009

Playing a song he “wrote about a bar in the Mission,” bandleader Andy Cabic‘s homage to local S.F. joint El Rio received a huge cheer. With a relaxed vibe and peaceful tone, Vetiver’s earthy indie-folk brought a bit of campfire warmth to the cooling afternoon crowd. “Sister,” with its hypnotic calypso beat, had folks grooving in time, while an electric mid-set jam with jazzy drums had a bit of a Tulsa trance, JJ Cale playing “Spoonful” feel. A strong showing by a true local gem.


Grizzly Bear :: 5:30-6:20 p.m.

If the Beach Boys didn’t just dip their toes into psychedelic waters and instead dove eyes open into the heavy stuff for years, then sobered up in Brooklyn circa 2000-something, this very well may be what they’d sound like. The layers of impeccable vocal harmonies, dynamic songs with multiple parts, and various unique instruments were captivating and inspiring without ever feeling forced or pretentious. Beautiful songs danced from indie-pop sing-along gold to airy flute interludes to dramatic crests of crashing drums, horns, and distorted guitars. Somehow fully inviting yet absolutely boundary-pushing experimental, what perhaps proved most impressive was the rich tone and delicate execution amidst blustering winds on an outdoor stage. A set like this should secure these Bears time in grand theaters built to accentuate such genius.

Bob Mould :: 4:45-5:25 p.m.

It was a big week for Bob Mould. The former singer, guitarist, and songwriter for alt-rock heroes Husker Du and Sugar celebrated his 49th Birthday last Friday (though he joked that he “just turned 39 again”), swapped bass players mid-tour due to a birth, and moved to San Francisco. Clearly happy to be playing what he called his “first true local gig,” Mould sounded remarkably strong, mean, and virile. Playing with stellar Superchunk drummer Jon Wurster, as he has for a while, and Athens, GA legend David Barbe (who was in Sugar) subbing on bass last minute, Mould took fans right back to the relentless alt-punk days of yore he helped create. Full of sludge-rhythms, viscous guitar, and that unmistakable growl, it was like 1992 all over again.


Beirut :: 5:30-6:20 p.m.

Beirut :: 10.18 :: TI 2009

With horns, stand-up bass, and accordion, at times Beirut sound like an Eastern European carnival, at others a funeral procession from another time. It’s all very pretty and Zach Condon (from Brooklyn by way of New Mexico) clearly has a vision; it’s just not a very easy one to relate to. When not looking for a pet monkey or wondering if we slipped into some Old World wormhole, the gypsy jazz showed a folk heart and had folks singing along by the end. Not one thing wrong with it, but like the name, Beirut proves rather uninviting.

The Walkmen :: 6:20-7:05 p.m.

Taking their post-punk rock out of the garage with keyboard flourishes (they prefer piano on record) and a new song featuring a country/Americana waltz feel, The Walkmen continue to evolve with each passing album. Led by the gruff, emotionally-saturated vocals of Hamilton Leithauser, the quintet proved just as comfortable at Muse style stadium bombast as they did mid-tempo lounge rock. Without one proper guitar solo and a locked-in rhythm section, the emphasis is on compositions, but it’s the passionate execution and delivery that make it work. The highlight came at the end with a sticky swamp jam fueled by a swarming horn section that sat-in for a few of the better songs.

The Decemberists :: 7:10-8:10 p.m.

Yo La Tengo :: 10.18 :: TI 2009

The Decemberists have created their own little world. Big movements with lush orchestration and vintage charm support Colin Meloy‘s distinct vocals and vivid tales with a Shakespearean appeal. It’s impressive stuff and proved particularly engaging when the players dug in and turned out a few squalls of distorted rock & roll. But, it can also be a hard world to jump into. There’s a lot of nuance and history with the material, and at a fest for casual fans it’s easy to get lost staring at the lights twinkling in the skyscrapers across the bay. That is until the angelic female harmonies fit for a church wash upon the shores, pulling eyes and minds back to the incredibly tight ensemble onstage. The indie-drama soared at the end with a beautiful lap-steel and organ song propelled by a male-female vocal dynamic that made the cool night feel warm for just a moment.

Yo La Tengo :: 8:10-9:00 p.m.

Yo La Tengo may have turned in the best set of the day. Playing the final slot on the smaller Tunnel Stage, the legendary experimental rock trio could have easily taken the main Bridge Stage at an earlier time, but probably benefited from the darkness of night. It started with an abusive keyboard blast that called John Medeski to mind before a dark, patient, slow building groove emerged over aching guitar. Mixing the heavy, dissonant, way-out-there jams with a Pink Floyd Animals-inspired section, quirky indie-pop, and a jazzy number from the new album, Popular Songs, their ability to shift styles and kick genres in the teeth kept fans hanging on every dangling guitar note. Crawling from the depths of a deep slow burn emerged a massive guitar meltdown. Hunched over his instrument, Ira Kaplan looked to be feeding the music through his body into his guitar as drummer/wife Georgia Hubley knocked out room for her husband to fill with distortion. Kaplan wrestled with his instrument for at least ten minutes, swinging it over his head, harnessing the feedback, and forcing it into submission with expert use of space, tone, and distortion. If you’re into that sorta thing, it was hard to beat and I’m not sure anyone did.

The Flaming Lips :: 9:05-10:35 p.m.

The Flaming Lips :: 10.18 :: TI 2009

The Flaming Lips are forever tied to drugs. They are a psychedelic band with trippy albums and a far out live show – UFOs, fake blood, bunnies, Santas, weird camera angles, naked people, confetti-filled balloons, a giant hamster ball rolling atop the crowd with the lead singer in it, and lots of other really cool shit is common place at their shows/celebrations. They currently have a giant video screen that features a naked woman with a vagina that pulses in time with the music and eventually opens up for the band to walk out before they play “Race for the Prize” to start the set. It’s pretty cool even if you’ve seen it. Along with the psychedelic shock of rare gem “Enthusiasm for Life Defeats Existential Fear,” the Lips played favorites like “Fight Test” and “Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots Pt. 1,” which were both slowed down and maybe a little flat. “The W.A.N.D.” and “She Don’t Use Jelly” relit the crowd, but it was the only two songs from the new album, “Silver Trembling Hands” and “Convinced of the Hex,” that seemed to bring the most excitement to the band.


Yup, The Flaming Lips are like drugs. And as drugs go – even really good ones – you’ll never get as high as that first time. The Lips are still cool, genuine, and absolutely giving it their all every time you see them, but knowing all the punchlines and most of the special gags takes its toll, and after that initial rush some of the excitement is simply lost forever. But this doesn’t mean it’s not still great and necessary. The Lips are constantly writing cool, new material (this latest batch in particular), and Wayne Coyne is hard to resist. You don’t always need to get blasted or freak out to have a good time; it can be pretty damn nice to just take a hit and kick back. Turns out The Flaming Lips are a worthy companion no matter what your trip might be.

Continue reading for more pics of Treasure Island 2009…

Saturday, 10.17

The Streets

The Streets

DJ Krush

Brazilian Girls

LTJ Bukem feat. MC Conrad

MSTRKRFT

MSTRKRFT fans

Girl Talk

Girl Talk

MGMT

MGMT

MGMT

Continue reading for more Sunday pics of Treasure Island 2009…

Sunday, 10.18

Vetiver

Grizzly Bear

Grizzly Bear

Grizzly Bear

Grizzly Bear

Bob Mould

David Barbe with Bob Mould

Jon Wurster with Bob Mould

Beirut

Beirut

The Decemberists

The Decemberists

Yo La Tengo

Yo La Tengo

The Flaming Lips

The Flaming Lips

The Flaming Lips

The Flaming Lips

The Flaming Lips

The Flaming Lips

The Flaming Lips

JamBase | Bay Area

Go See Live Music!


Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros: Up From Below

By: John Smrtic

There is something grand, brilliant and beautiful about Up From Below (Vagrant Records), the jaw-dropping first offering from Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros. Like an intriguing page-turner that becomes more enthralling by the chapter or a movie that becomes more engrossing with each passing scene, Up From Below is air-tight from the first to the last track, drawing the listener into this emotionally evocative musical journey as an active participant.

The album has a sweeping, cinematic feel in its sound and scope. The lyrics, mood, and musical stylings move effortlessly and coherently from haunting to ecstatic, moving to triumphant, freaky to folksy, and even orchestral to acoustic. Other times a ’60′s psychedelic pop sound emerges, like on “Carries On.” A few tracks sound like they were crafted for a Quentin Tarrantino or Robert Rodriguez movie, particularly the emboldened Mariachi-esque vibes on “Kisses Over Babylon” and “Simplest Love.” Accentuated by whistling, handclaps, tambourines, shouting and chanting, sweet female backing vocals, and brilliantly placed horn lines, the album is slick in its production and nearly-flawless in its execution.

Up From Below has an old soul feel with a new world swagger thanks to the poetic musings of frontman Alex Ebert. Pain and redemption are in order on the title track as Ebert sings, “Yes I’ve already suffered/ I want you to know God/ I’m riding on Hell’s hot flames/ Coming up from below.” Meanwhile, the opening track, “40 Day Dream,” may have the most memorable lyrics: “I been sleepin’ for 60 days / And nobody better pinch me/ Bitch, I swear I’ll go crazy/ She got jumper cable lips/ She got sunset on her breath now/ I inhaled just a little bit/ Now I got no fear of death now.” Love takes the forefront on tracks like “Carries On” and “Home.” The later cut is a joyous, back and forth, male/female duet between Ebert and Jade Castrinos. As Castrinos declares, “Man o man/ You’re my best friend/ I scream it to the nothingness/ That we got everything we need,” Alex replies, “Hot and heavy/ Pumpkin pie/ Chocolate candy/ Jesus Christ/ Ain’t nothing please me more than you.”

Up From Belowis hands down one of the best albums of the year. Period. The music sweeps you up and carries you into the sometimes-bizarre yet always beautiful world of Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros.

JamBase | Rising
Go See Live Music!


Music on the Tube 8/31-9/6

Late Night Music Lineups



Can’t make it to any shows this week? Check out live music on the tube…

Late Show with David Letterman

Mon, August 31 – Dirty Projectors
Tue, September 1 – The Black Crowes
Thu, September 3 – John Fogerty
Fri, September 4 – Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros


The Tonight Show with Conan O’Brien


Mon, August 31 – Pitbull
Tue, September 1 – Cheap Trick


Jimmy Kimmel Live


Mon, August 31 – Friendly Fires (Repeat)
Tue, September 1 – DataRock
Wed, September 2 – St. Vincent
Thu, September 3 – R. Kelly
Fri, September 4 – Maxwell


Late Night with Jimmy Fallon


Mon, August 31 – Jet
Tue, September 1 – Michael Franti & Spearhead
Wed, September 2 – Smokey Robinson
Thu, September 3 – Shadows Fall
Fri, September 4 – Pet Shop Boys


Last Call With Carson Daly


Mon, August 31 – The Virgins (Repeat)
Tue, September 1 – Method Man & Redman (Repeat)
Wed, September 2 – Wale (Repeat)
Fri, September 4 – Ben Harper & Relentless7 (Repeat)



Monolith Music Fest at Red Rocks: Mars Volta, Yeahs, Ward, MSTR

Monolith Announces 2009 Lineup

Indie Rock Fest Set To Go Down September 12 & 13 at Red Rocks

The final touches are being put on the lineup of the Monolith Music Festival which includes Yeah Yeah Yeahs, The Mars Volta, Girl Talk, MSTRKRFT, Phoenix, The Walkmen, Health, and Cymbals Eat Guitars amongst others. Full lineup below.

The annual festival, which is quickly becoming one of the premier independent music festivals, will give attendees an opportunity to see over 50 bands on five different stages at one of the most awe inspiring music venues in the world. Single day passes are currently on sale for $52, while two-day passes are going for $95.

Tickets can be purchased at monolithfestival.com/tickets.

Full Lineup:

Monolith 2008 by Dwenger

Saturday, September 12

Yeah Yeah Yeahs

Girl Talk

Of Montreal

M. Ward

DOOM

The Walkmen

OK Go

Ida Maria

The Pains of Being Pure at Heart

Frightened Rabbit

Thao with the Get Down Stay Down

Hollywood Holt + Million $ Mano

Starf*cker

Thunderheist

Woodhands

These United States

Cymbals Eat Guitars

The Antlers

Cotton Jones

Gregory Alan Isakov

Lydia

Generationals

Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros

The Answering Machine

Roadside Graves

Danielle Ate the Sandwich

Speakeasy Tiger

Autovaughn

Avi Buffalo

Wendy Darling

Boulder Acoustic Society

Caitlin Rose

Sunday, September 13

The Mars Volta

MSTRKRFT

Method Man & Redman

Phoenix

The Dandy Warhols

Chromeo

The Glitch Mob

Passion Pit

WALE

The Thermals

Harlem Shakes

Monotonix

The Grates

HEALTH

Deer Tick

The Twilight Sad

The Features

Spindrift

Savoy

Bad Veins

We Were Promised Jetpacks

Beats Antique

Tigercity

French Horn Rebellion

The Pirate Signal

Neon Indian

The Knew

A Shoreline Dream

The Royal Bangs

Red Wire Black Wire

Jim McTurnan & the Kids That Killed the Man

Rachel Goodrich

Check our coverage of Monolith 2008 here.