RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘ELVIS COSTELLO’

Dawes: Winter Tour NPR‘s Song Of The Day

DAWES CONFIRMS WINTER TOUR

“WHEN YOU CALL MY NAME” NPR‘s SONG OF THE DAY TODAY, 1/13

Dawes

ATO Records is thrilled to announce that Dawes has confirmed a co-headlining winter tour with Cory Chisel and The Wandering Sons. The dates will kick off on February 5 at the Crepe Place in Santa Cruz, CA, and loop around the country, culminating with a show in the band’s hometown of Los Angeles, CA, on March 11.

Additionally, NPR made the Dawes song, “When You Call My Name” their song of the day on Wednesday January, 13. You can listen to it here.

Dawes has spent the past several months on the road, as they’ve been celebrating the release of their debut record, North Hills. Musician and producer Jonathan Wilson (Elvis Costello, Jenny Lewis) produced the album, which was recorded in his cottage studio.

For more on Dawes see our recent feature/interview here.

Dawes Tour Dates

02/05/10 Fri Crepe Place Santa Cruz, CA

02/06/10 Sat Rickshaw Stop San Francisco, CA

02/08/10 Mon Mississippi Studios Portland, OR

02/09/10 Tue Tractor Tavern Seattle, WA

02/12/10 Fri Triple Rock Social Club Minneapolis, MN

02/13/10 Sat University of Wisconsin Madison, WI

02/14/10 Sun Turner Hall Ballroom Milwaukee, WI

02/15/10 Mon Rock Island Brewing Co. Rock Island, IL

02/16/10 Tue Double Door Chicago, IL

02/17/10 Wed Rumba Cafe Columbus, OH

02/18/10 Thu Beachland Ballroom/Tavern Cleveland, OH

02/19/10 Fri Bowery Ballroom New York, NY

02/20/10 Sat Great Scott Allston, MA

02/23/10 Tue Iota Arlington, VA

02/24/10 Wed Johnny Brenda’s Philadelphia, PA

02/25/10 Thu The Southern Charlottesville, VA

02/26/10 Fri Zanzabar Louisville, KY

02/27/10 Sat The Mercy Lounge Nashville, TN

02/28/10 Sun Eddie’s Attic Decatur, GA

03/02/10 Tue Sticky Fingerz Chicken Shack Little Rock, AR

03/03/10 Wed The Conservatory Oklahoma City, OK

03/04/10 Thu The Cavern Dallas, TX

03/05/10 Fri Rudyard’s Pub Houston, TX

03/06/10 Sat Emo’s Alternative Lounge Austin, TX

03/09/10 Tue Rhythm Room Phoenix, AZ

03/10/10 Wed The Loft La Jolla, CA

03/11/10 Thu The Troubadour West Hollywood, CA


Simon & Garfunkel To Play First Weekend of Jazz Fest

Simon & Garfunkel to Play Jazz Fest 2010

Simon & Garfunkel

“We are proud to announce that American music icons Simon & Garfunkel will be making their first-ever appearance at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival presented by Shell,” Jazz Fest organizers said today. The Saturday, April 24, performance by Simon & Garfunkel will be the only chance to see the legendary duo in the U.S. this year. The Festival is scheduled for April 23 – May 2, 2010.

“Over the years I’ve always enjoyed performing at Jazz Fest,” said Paul Simon. “Everyone connected with the Festival, and in particular Quint Davis, has created an atmosphere that is both musical and enjoyable. I am looking forward to the opportunity to perform with my old friend Art Garfunkel at this year’s Festival.”

Simon & Garfunkel join previously announced artists Pearl Jam, Aretha Franklin, Van Morrison, The Neville Brothers, Lionel Richie, Allman Brothers Band, Anita Baker, My Morning Jacket, Widespread Panic, Imagination Movers, B.B. King, Jeff Beck, Darius Rucker, Irma Thomas, Gipsy Kings, The Dead Weather, Elvis Costello & the Sugarcanes, The Black Crowes, Drake, Teena Marie, Keely Smith, Jonny Lang, Band of Horses, Allen Toussaint and hundreds more at the 41st edition of the beloved Festival. (A complete weekend-by-weekend schedule is available at www.nojazzfest.com. Jazz Fest’s day-by-day schedule will be announced Wednesday, January 27.)

Tickets for the Festival, which takes place at the Fair Grounds Race Course, are on sale now through Ticketmaster.


Carolina Chocolate Drops: Genuine Negro Jig & Tour

CAROLINA CHOCOLATE DROPS’ GENUINE NEGRO JIG OUT 2/23

Carolina Chocolate Drops

Nonesuch Records is set to release Genuine Negro Jig, the label debut of North Carolina-based string band the Carolina Chocolate Drops on February 23. The album was produced by critically acclaimed recording artist and songwriter Joe Henry (Allen Toussaint, Elvis Costello, Solomon Burke).

Genuine Negro Jig features string band interpretations of Blu Cantrell‘s beat-box driven R&B single “Hit ‘Em Up Style” and Tom Waits‘ “Trampled Rose,” as well as a pair of original compositions, alongside traditional tracks such as “Cornbread and Butterbeans” and “Trouble in Your Mind.”

It is the band’s second record; their 2007 release, Dona Got a Ramblin’ Mind, was praised by Paste for “bravely and expertly reclaiming the string band tradition for modern African-American culture,” while NPR‘s Weekend Edition calls the band “the hottest thing to hit the old-time music community in decades.” The band is touring in advance of the album’s release, dates below.

The Carolina Chocolate Drops formed after band members Dom Flemons, Rhiannon Giddens and Justin Robinson met at the Black Banjo Gathering in Boone, NC in 2005, and have toured continuously since the band’s inception. All three trained in the Piedmont banjo and fiddle musical tradition under the tutelage of Joe Thompson, who, at age 90, is believed to be the last living performer from the Piedmont string band heyday. While old-time Southern string music is often associated with Caucasian musicians from Appalachia, Giddens pointed out in a recent NPR interview that “it seems that two things get left out of the history books. One, that there was string band music in the Piedmont, period. (And that) black folk was such a huge part of string tradition.” The Carolina Chocolate Drops seek to not only correct this misunderstanding, but to keep the centuries-old string music tradition alive and developing.

The members of Carolina Chocolate Drops all come from diverse musical backgrounds, sharing singing duties and swapping instruments throughout their sets. Flemons has immersed himself in the music of the past, with a prodigious record collection and an immense knowledge of the different playing styles of the blues, country, and string band traditions. In addition to her work with Joe Thompson, Giddens — a Piedmont native — studied opera at Oberlin Conservatory, performs with a Celtic band and is also an avid contra dancer and caller. Robinson, the group’s main fiddler, also plays banjo; he grew up in a house full of musicians—his mother is a classically trained opera singer and cellist, his sister a classical pianist and his grandfather a harmonica player.

Carolina Chocolate Drops Tour Dates
01/08/10 Fri Melting Point Athens, GA

01/10/10 Sun The Pour House Charleston, SC

01/14/10 Thu Dartmouth College Hanover, NH

01/15/10 Fri Dartmouth College Hanover, NH

01/16/10 Sat Dartmouth College Hanover, NH

01/18/10 Mon Birchmere Alexandria, VA

01/19/10 Tue Rams Head On Stage Annapolis, MD

01/21/10 Thu Venue Music Bar Freeport, ME

01/22/10 Fri Iron Horse Music Hall Northampton, MA

01/23/10 Sat Somerville Theatre Somerville, MA

01/30/10 Sat Derby University Derby, GB

01/31/10 Sun Memorial Hall Sheffield, GB

02/03/10 Wed St. Georges Bristol, GB

02/04/10 Thu Bush Hall London, GB

02/05/10 Fri Arlington Arts Centre Newbury, GB

02/06/10 Sat The Met Bury, GB

02/25/10 Thu Royal Art Theater Danville, IN

02/26/10 Fri Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis St. Louis, MO

02/27/10 Sat Fitzgerald’s Berwyn, IL

02/28/10 Sun Schubas Chicago, IL

03/01/10 Mon Down by the Riverside Rochester, MN

03/02/10 Tue Down by the Riverside Rochester, MN

03/03/10 Wed Down by the Riverside Rochester, MN

03/04/10 Thu Down by the Riverside Rochester, MN

03/05/10 Fri Down by the Riverside Rochester, MN

03/06/10 Sat Mayo Civic Center Rochester, MN

03/09/10 Tue Calvin College Grand Rapids, MI

03/13/10 Sat Stone Mountain Arts Center Brownfield, ME

03/14/10 Sun Bowery Ballroom New York, NY

05/01/10 Sat Schomburg Center For Research In Black Culture New York, NY

05/22/10 Sat Ohio River Valley Folk Festival Madison, IN

05/28/10 Fri Montpelier Cultural Arts Center Laurel, MD

06/13/10 Sun Spoleto Festival Charleston, SC


Best of 2009 JamBase Staff List

Kayceman

Aaron Kayce (Kayceman) – Editor-in-Chief

Albums

1. Alberta Cross – Broken Side of Time

2. Danger Mouse and Sparklehorse – Dark Night of the Soul

3. Built to Spill – There Is No Enemy

4. Mastodon – Crack The Skye

5. Elliott Brood – Mountain Meadows

Shows

1. Them Crooked Vultures | 11/19/09 | Fox Theater Oakland, CA

2. Widespread Panic | 11/13/09 | Fox Theater Oakland, CA (review)

3. The Mars Volta | 08/29/09 | Outside Lands Festival, San Francisco, CA (review)

Dennis Cook

Dennis Cook – Associate Editor

Albums (no particular order)
1. Mastodon – Crack The Skye
2. Akron/Family – Set ‘Em Wild, Set ‘Em Free
3. Todd Snider – The Excitement Plan
4. Grizzly Bear – Veckatimest
5. The Black Crowes – Before The Frost…After The Freeze

Shows
1. The Black Crowes | 12.01-12.02 & 12.04-12.06.09 | The Fillmore | SF, CA (review)
2. AC/DC | 09.02.09 | HP Pavilion | San Jose, CA (review)
3. Dr. Dog | 04.16.09 | The Fillmore | San Francisco, CA (review)

Close runners-up: Bruce Springsteen at HP Pavilion (04.01), Mastodon at San Jose Events Center (11.21), Flowmotion at Summer Meltdown (08.15), Tom Jones at Outside Lands (08.28), and Bon Iver/Megafaun at Fillmore (09.22).

Andy Gadiel

Andy Gadiel – JamBase Founder & President

Albums (no particular order)
1. Fun – Aim & Ignite
2. The Avett Brothers – I and Love and You
3. Jerry Garcia Band – Let It Rock – Keystone ’75
4. Nathan Moore – Folk Singer
5. Corinne West – The Promise

Shows
1. Phish | 03.08.09 | Hampton Coliseum
2. Big Light and Nathan Moore at JamBase offices | 06.04.09
3. CounterClarkWise | 02.20.09 | Connecticut Yankee | San Francisco, CA

David Rosenheim

David Rosenheim – CEO

Albums
1. Polvo – In Prism
2. The Avett Brothers – I and Love and You
3. Neko Case – Middle Cyclone
4. The Mother Hips – Pacific Dust
5. Bat for Lashes – Two Suns

Shows
1. Sonic Youth | 08.03.09 | The Independent | San Francisco, CA
2. Jenny Lewis | Wanderlust Festival | Lake Tahoe, CA
3. Ben Harper and the Relentless 7 | 02.17.09 | Highline Ballroom | New York, NY

Tanner Wyer

Tanner Wyer – Sales Associate

Albums
1. Phoenix – Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix
2. Grizzly Bear – Veckatimest
3. Miike Snow – self-titled
4. Mother Hips – Pacific Dust
5. Portugal. The Man – Satanic Satanist

Shows
1. Phish | 07.31.09 | Red Rocks | Morrison, CO
2. Dr. Dog | 10.05.09 | Haunted Brookdale Lodge | Brookdale, CA
3. Hall and Oates | 09.04.09 | Mountain Winery | Saratoga, CA

Mason Blake

Mason Blake – Lead Engineer

Albums
1. The Mother Hips – Pacific Dust
2. Phoenix – Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix
3. Alberta Cross – Broken Side of Time
4. Passion Pit – Manners
5. Animal Collective – Merriweather Post Pavillion

Shows
1. Go Home (featuring Ben Goldberg, Scott Amendola, Charlie Hunter, Ron Miles) | 02.07.09 | Freight & Salvage | Berkeley, CA
2. Akron/Family | 03.07.09 | Hemlock Tavern | San Francisco, CA
3. All of SXSW, specifically Delta Spirit, Bobby Bare Jr., Mother Hips, Jason Isbell, Dr. Dog, Gary Louris & Mark Olson, Efterklang, M. Ward, Heartless Bastards | March 2009 | Austin, TX

Patty Kaufman

Patty Kaufman – Information Coordinator

Albums
1. Alberta Cross – Broken Side of Time
2. The Avett Brothers – I and Love and You
3. Phoenix – Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix
4. Animal Collective – Merriweather Post Pavilion
5. Iron and Wine – Around the Well

Shows
1. Phish | 07.31.09 | Red Rocks Amphitheatre | Morrison, CO
2. Bon Iver | 09.22.09 | The Fillmore | San Francisco, CA
3. Monsters of Folk | 10.17.09 | Fox Theatre | Oakland, CA

SuperDee

Deanne Herman – Web Producer & Designer

Albums
1. The Avett Brothers – I And Love And You
2. Phish – Joy
3. Wilco – Wilco (The Album)
4. The Lonely Island – Incredibad
5. Nathan Moore - Folk Singer

Runners-up: Umphrey’s McGee’s Mantis and Lily Allen’s It’s Not Me, It’s You

Shows
1. Phish | 11.24.09 | Wachovia Center | Philadelphia, PA
2. Erykah Badu | Bonnaroo
3. Ryan Adams & The Cardinals | 02.22.09 | Wellmont Theatre | Montclair, NJ

Geoff Harrison

Geoff Harrison – Sales Director and Biz Dev

Albums
1. Erin McKeown – Hundreds of Lions
2. Marco Benevento – Me Not Me
3. Cracker – Sunrise in the Land of Milk and Honey
4. Band of Skulls – Baby Darling Doll Face Honey
5. Brendan Benson – My Old, Familiar Friend

Shows
1. Jeff Beck | 04.09.09 | Irving Plaza | New York, NY
2. The Hold Steady | SXSW | Mohawk | Austin, TX
3. The Roots with Angelo and Living Colour | 08.10.09 | Highline Ballroom | New York, NY

Leah Elton

Leah Elton – Accounting Manager

Albums
1. IAMX – Kingdom of Welcome Addiction
2. Manic Street Preachers – Journal for Plague Lovers
3. John Vanderslice – Romanian Names
4. The Horrors – Primary Colours
5. Bat for Lashes – Two Suns

Shows
1. Dean & Britta (13 Most Beautiful Songs for Andy Warhol’s Screen Tests) | 02.03.09 | Palace of Fine Arts | San Francisco, CA.
2. Living Things | 06.08.09 | Slim’s | San Francisco, CA
3. Manic Street Preachers | 09.24.09 | The Fillmore | San Francisco, CA

Matt Tice

Matt Tice – Sales

Albums
1. Dirty Projectors – Bitte Orca
2. Phoenix – Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix
3. Grizzly Bear – Veckatimest
4. Elbow & The BBC Concert Orchestra – The Seldom Seen Kid
5. Fever Ray – self-titled

Shows
1. David Byrne | 06.26.09 | Greek Theatre | Berkeley, CA
2. Elbow | 07.22.09 | The Wiltern | Los Angeles, CA
3. Green Day | 04.08.09 | DNA Lounge | San Francisco, CA

Jennifer Zeghibe

Jennifer Zeghibe – Sales

Albums
1. Levon Helm – Electric Dirt
2. Dan Auerbach – Keep It Hid
3. J.J. Cale – Roll On

Shows
1. Old Crow Medicine Show | 08.07.09 | Electric Factory | Philadelphia, PA
2. Earl Scruggs | 10.04.09 | Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival | San Francisco, CA
3. Garaj Mahal | 01.07.09 | Yoshi’s | San Francisco, CA

Honorable Mention:
Greensky Bluegrass | 11.05.09 | Mission Rock | San Francisco, CA

Jamie Piazza – JamBase Web Producer & Designer

Albums
1. Passion Pit – Manners
2. Grizzly Bear – Veckatimest
3. The Avett Brothers – I and Love and You
4. Animal Collective – Merriweather Post Pavillion
5. Dirty Projectors – Bitte Orca

Crystal Carlson – JamBase Information Coordinator

Albums (no particular order)
1. Monsters of Folk – self-titled
2. The Avett Brothers – I and Love and You
3. The Decemberists – The Hazards of Love
4. Umphrey’s McGee – Mantis
5. The XX – self-titled

Shows

1. Phish | 03.06.09 | Hampton Coliseum
2. Bon Iver | 09.22.09 | The Fillmore
3. Ween | 08.30.09 | Outside Lands

Continue reading for Best of 2009 lists from JamBase Writers, Friends and Associates…

Brian Bavosa – JamBase Contributor

Albums
1. Brock Butler – Lately Here Though
2. Jay-Z – The Blueprint 3
3. Phish – Joy
4. Monsters of Folk – self-titled
5. The Flaming Lips – Embryonic

Shows

1. Phish | 10.31.09 | Festival 8 | Indio, CA
2. Phish | 7.31.09-08.01.09 | Red Rocks | Morrison, CO
3. Phish | 12.02.09-12.04.09 | Madison Square Garden | New York, NY

Basically, Phish is back!!!

Sarah Hagerman – JamBase Contributor

Albums
1. Danny Barnes – Pizza Box
2. Elliott BROOD – Mountain Meadows
3. Sometymes Why – Your Heart is a Glorious Machine
4. Akron/Family – Set ‘Em Wild, Set ‘Em Free
5. The Felice Brothers – Yonder is the Clock

Shows

1. Yonder Mountain String Band | 07.18.09 | Horning’s Hideout | Northwest String Summit | North Plains, OR

2. Bad Livers | 07.17.09 | Horning’s Hideout | Northwest String Summit | North Plains, OR

3. Butthole Surfers w/ Peaches | 10.31.09 | Stubb’s BBQ | Austin, Texas

Jake Krolick – JamBase Contributor

Albums
1. Dan Auerbach – Keep It Hid
2. The Heavy – The House That Dirt Built
3. The Mother Hips – Pacific Dust
4. Edward Sharpe and The Magnetic Zeros – Up From Below
5. Floating Action – Floating Action

Shows

1. Surprise Me Mr. Davis | 07.03.09 | High Sierra Music Festival | Quincy, CA
2. The Roots | 06.06.09 | The Roots Picnic | Philadelphia, PA
3. Widespread Panic/The Allman Brothers Band | 08.21.09 | Sesquehanna Bank Center | Camden, NJ

Susan J. Weiand – Photographer, JamBase Contributor

Albums
1. Phish – Joy
2. Umphrey’s McGee – Mantis
3. The Derek Trucks Band – Already Free
4. Chick Corea & John McLaughlin Five Peace Band – Five Peace Band, Live
5. Jimmy Herring Band – Lifeboat

Shows

1. Will Bernard/Andy Hess/John Medeski/Stanton Moore | 03.20.09 | Great American Music Hall | San Francisco, CA

2. Derek Trucks Band with Carlos Santana | 04.15.09 | The Grand | San Francisco, CA
3. Jimmy Herring Band | 06.18.09 | The Grand | San Francisco, CA

Josh Miller – Photographer, JamBase Contributor

Albums
1. The Mother Hips – Pacific Dust
2. Phoenix – Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix
3. The Black Crowes – Before The FrostÂ…
4. The Dead Weather – Horehound
5. The Flaming Lips – Embryonic

Shows
1. Phish | 03.06.09 | Hampton Coliseum | Hampton, VA
2. Widespread Panic | 11.14.09 | The Fox Theater | Oakland, CA
3. The Black Crowes | 12.06.09 | The Fillmore | San Francisco, CA

Ron Hart – JamBase Contributor

Albums
1. Raekwon – Only Built 4 Cuban Linx Part II
2. Elvis Costello – Secret, Profane and Sugarcane
3. Iggy Pop – Preliminaires
4. Flaming Lips – Embryonic
5. Dam-Funk – Toeachizown

Shows
1. Bruce Springsteen| 10.08.09 | Giants Stadium | East Rutherford, NJ (second Born To Run show)
2. Paul McCartney | 07.17.09 | Citi Field | Flushing Meadows, NY
3. Elvis Costello and the Sugarcanes | 06.10.09 | Beacon Theatre | New York, NY

Steven Walter – Photographer, JamBase Contributor

Albums
1. Grizzly Bear – Veckatimest
2. Phoenix – Wolfgang Amadeus
3. The Felice Brothers – Yonder is the Clock
4. Animal Collective – Merriweather Post Pavilion
5. J. Tillman – Year in the Kingdom

Shows
1. Radiohead | 08.21.09 | Frequency Festival | St. Polten, Austria
2. White Lies | 08.12.09 | Sziget Festival | Budapest, Hungary
3. Fleet Foxes | 04.24.09 | The Fillmore | San Francisco, CA

Andrew Bruss – JamBase Contributor

Albums
1. Animal Collective – Merriweather Post Pavilion

2. Mastodon – Crack The Skye

3. Raekwon – Only Built For Cuban Linx Pt. II

Shows
1. My Morning Jacket At Madison Square Garden on NYE 2008.

Technically the second set was this year and it was the best musical performance I saw this year.

2. Phish at Fenway Park

3. Animal Collective at the House Of Blues in Boston, MA 5/14

Wesley Hodges – JamBase Contributor

Albums
1. Passion Pit – Manners
2. Alberta Cross – Broken Side of Time
3. Phoenix – Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix
4. Atlas Sound – Logos
5. Dinosaur Jr. – Farm

Shows
1. Nine Inch Nails | 06.13.09 | Bonnaroo | Manchester, TN
2. Phoenix | 09.30.09 | Tipitina’s Uptown | New Orleans, LA
3. Futurebirds & The Interns (post-fireworks house party ft. Glynn County Police) | 07.04.09 | St. Simons Island, GA

B Getz – JamBase Contributor

Albums
1. Jerry Garcia Band – Let It Rock – Keystone ’75
2. Mos Def – The Ecstatic
3. Jay-Z – The Blueprint 3
4. (tie) Raekwon – Only Built 4 Cuban Linx…Pt. II/Wu-Tang Clan – Chamber Music
5. (tie) Lil Wayne No Ceilings (official mixtape)/Clipse – Til the Casket Drops

Shows
1. The Royal Family (Eric Krasno & Chapter 2, Break Science, Lettuce, Dr. Claw, and Soulive) | Bear Creek Music Festival
2. Steely Dan | 06.18.09 | St. Augstine, FL
3. Phish | 06.06.09 | Camden, NJ

Cal Roach – JamBase Contributor

Albums
1. Animal Collective – Merriweather Post Pavilion
2. Minsk – With Echoes In The Movement Of Stone
3. BLK JKS – After Robots
4. Themselves – CrownsDown
5. Krallice – Dimensional Bleedthrough

Shows
1. Phish | 11.20.09 | U.S. Bank Arena | Cincinnati, OH
2. U2 | 09.13.09 | Soldier Field | Chicago, IL
3. Secret Chiefs 3 | 05.23.09 | Summer Camp | Chillicothe, IL

Casey Flanigan – Photographer, JamBase Contributor

Albums
1. Phish – Joy
2. Bassnectar – Cozza Frenzy
3. Jay-Z – Blueprint 3
4. Phoenix – Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix
5. Green Day – 21st Century Breakdown

Shows

1. Phish | 06.12.09 | Bonnaroo Music Festival | Manchester, TN
2. U2 | 10.25.09 | Rose Bowl | Pasadena, CA
3. Furthur | 09.19.09 | Fox Theater | Oakland, CA

Court Scott – JamBase Contributor

Albums
1. Pearl Jam – Backspacer
2. The Black Crowes – Before the FrostÂ…Until the Freeze
3. N.A.S.A. – Spirit of Apollo
4. Them Crooked Vultures – self-titled

Shows:
1. Nine Inch Nails | 5.24.09 | The Gorge | George, WA
2. Phish | 08.14.09 | Hartford, CT
3. Garage A Trois | 12.08.09 | Seattle, WA

Eric Podolsky – JamBase Contributor

Albums
1. Monsters of Folk – self-titled
2. Return to Forever – Returns
3. Steve Martin – The Crow: New Songs For The 5-String Banjo
4. The Black Crowes – Before the Frost… After the Freeze
5. Vetiver – Tight Knit

Shows
1. (tie) Phish | 08.07.09 | The Gorge and Phish | 10.31.09 | Festival 8
2. The Derek Trucks Band with Carlos Santana | 04.15.09 | Grand Ballroom | San Francisco, CA
3. Allen Toussaint | 10.04.09 | Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival | San Francisco, CA

JC Mcilwaine – JamBase Contributor

Albums
1. Pretty Lights – Passing By Behind Your Eyes
2. Blitzen Trapper – Black River Killer
3. White Rabbits – It’s Frightening
4. Phoenix – Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix
5. Soulsavers – Broken

Shows
1. Phish | 10.31.09 | Festival 8 | Indio CA
2. Black Star | 05.30.09 | Nokia Theater | New York, NY
3. Sufjan Stevens | 10.05.09 | Bowery Ballroom | New York, NY

Kevin Schwartzbach – JamBase Contributor

Albums
1. Grizzly Bear – Veckatimest
2. Super Furry Animals -Dark Days/Light Years
3. Jim O’Rourke – The Visitor
4. Wilco – Wilco (the Album)
5. Rodrigo y Gabriela – 11:11

Shows
1. Phish | tie between Burgettstown and Darien Lake
2. Hiromi’s Sonicbloom | 11.14.09 | Hangar 11| Tel Aviv, Israel
3. Five Peace Band | 04.28.09 | Place des Arts | Montreal, QC

Zack Sampsel – Photographer, JamBase Contributor

Albums
Jay-Z – The Blueprint 3
Dâm-Funk – Toeachizown
Pantyraid – The Sauce
Drake – So Far Gone
Neon Indian – Psychic Chasms

Shows
1. Q-Tip | 08.28.09 | Outside Lands Music Festival | San Francisco, CA
2. Phish | 08.07.09 | The Gorge Amphitheatre | George, WA
3. Major Lazer | 06.27.09 | Electric Daisy Carnival | Los Angeles, CA

Ryan Dembinsky – JamBase Contributor

Albums
1. Fanfarlo – Reservoir
2. The Avett Bros – I and Love and You
3. Devendra Banhart – What We Will Be
4. Alec Ounsworth – Mo Beauty
5. Bela Fleck – Throwdown Your Heart

Shows
1. Phish | 03.06.09 | Hampton Coliseum | Hampton, VA
2. The Avett Brothers | 09.29.09 | Private Album Release Party | New York, NY
3. Trey Anastasio with NY Philharmonic | 09.12.09 | Carnegie Hall | New York, NY

Norman Sands – Photographer, JamBase Contributor

Albums
1. Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers – Anthology
2. AC/DC – Backtracks
3. Mark Karan – Walk through fire
4. Tea Leaf Green – Coffee Bean Brown Comes Alive
5. Cornmeal – Live

Shows
1. Eric Clapton/Steve Winwood | 06.13.09 | United Center
2. Billy Joel/Elton John | 07.16.09 | Wrigley Field
3. Cornmeal | Electric Christmas 2009

Andy Tennille – BLURT & JamBase Contributor

Albums
1. Dan Auerbach – Keep It Hid
2. Dave Rawlings Machine – Friend Of A Friend
3. Heartless Bastards – The Mountain
4. Monsters of Folk – self-titled
5. Alberta Cross – The Broken Side of Time

Shows
1. Dave Rawlings Machine | November 2009 | Cat’s Cradle | Carrboro, NC
2. The Big Surprise Tour | August 2009 | Cary, NC
3. Bruce Springsteen | Bonnaroo 2009

Fred Mills – BLURT Managing Editor & JamBase Contributor

Albums
1. Flaming Lips – Embryonic
2. Reigning Sound – Love & Curses
3. Doveman – The Conformist
4. Jason Isbell & the 400 Unit – self-titled
5. The Avett Brothers – I And Love And You

Shows
1. Leonard Cohen | 11.01.09 | Thomas Wolfe Auditorium | Asheville, NC
2. King Khan & the Shrines | 03.12.09 | Orange Peel | Asheville, NC
3. Beastie Boys | 06.10.09 | Orange Peel | Asheville, NC
4. Sonics | 03.20.09 | Emo’s | Austin TX
5. Rodriguez | 01.10.09 | The Grey Eagle | Asheville, NC

Justin Gillett – JamBase contributor

Albums
1. Pretty Lights – Passing Before Your Eyes
2. Grizzly Bear – Veckatimest
3. Big Gigantic – Fire it Up
4. Eliot Lipp – Peace Love Weed 3D
5. Neon Indian – Psychic Chasms

Shows
1. STS9/Pretty Lights/Pnuma Trio/Daedelus | Day Out of Time | 07.25.09 | Red Rocks | Morrison, CO
2. Phish | Festival 8 | 10.31.09 | Indio, CA
3. The Dead Weather | 08.30.09 | Outside Lands | San Francisco, CA

Lindsay Colip – JamBase contributor

1. Grizzly Bear – Veckatimest
2. Phoenix – Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix
3. Vetiver – Tight Knit
4. White Lies – To Lose My Life
5. Animal Collective – Merriweather Post Pavilion

Shows
1. Phoenix | 07.18.09 | Melt Festival | Ferropolis, Germany
2. Bon Iver | Sasquatch Festival | The Gorge | George, Washington
3. Fleet Foxes/Blitzen Trapper | 04.14.09 | The Fillmore | San Francisco, CA

Alex Borsody – JamBase contributor

Albums
1. Gov’t Mule – By a Thread
2. Garage a Trois – Power Patriot
3. Math Head – Stab City
4. Mastodon – Crack The Skye
5. Greensky Bluegrass – Five Interstates

Shows
1. Lettuce and Derek Trucks | 11.14.09 | Bear Creek Music Festival | Live Oak,
FL
2. The Roots | 07.08.09 | Brooklyn Bowl | Brooklyn, NY – 07.08.09
3. Krasno/Russo/Hess/Deutsch | 02.28.09 | Sullivan Hall | New York, NY

Mike Bookey – JamBase contributor

Albums
1. Monsters of Folk – self-titled
2. Pearl Jam – Backspacer
3. The Avett Brothers – I and Love and You
4. Dusty Rhodes and the River Band – Palace and Stage
5. The Decemberists – Hazards of Love

Jeff Terich – JamBase Contributor, Editor at www.treblezine.com

Albums
1. Grizzly Bear – Veckatimest
2. Animal Collective – Merriweather Post Pavilion
3. The Antlers – Hospice
4. Phoenix – Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix
5. Baroness – Blue Record

Shows
1. Grizzly Bear | 10.21.09 | Belly Up Tavern | Solana Beach, CA
2. Baroness | 12.04.09 | Casbah | San Diego, CA
3. St. Vincent | 05.30.09 | Casbah | San Diego, CA

Tim Dwenger – JamBase contributor

Albums
1. Smoove, Turrell – Antique Soul
2. M Ward – Hold Time
3. Everest – Ghost Notes
4. The Decemberists – The Hazards of Love
5. Animal Collective – Merriweather Post Pavilion

Shows
1. Levon Helm’s Midnight Ramble | 08.08.09 | The Barn | Woodstock, NY
2. M Ward (Solo) | 08.16.09 | The Folks Festival | Lyons, CO
Yo La Tengo | 10.10.09 | Ogden Theatre | Denver, CO

J Gibson – reapandsow

Albums
1. Flaming Lips – Embryonic
2. Alberta Cross – Broken Side of Time
3. Mastodon – Crack the Skye
4. Animal Collective – Merriweather Post Pavilion
5. Big Rock Candy Mountain – self titled

Shows
1. Them Crooked Vultures | The Fox Theater (Best Venue on the West Coast ) | Oakland, CA
2. The Mars Volta | Outside Lands | San Francisco, CA
3. Yo La Tengo | Treasure Island Festival | San Francisco, CA

Top Tracks
1. “Here to Fall” by Yo La Tengo
2. “These are my twisted words” by Radiohead
3. “Broken Side of Time” by Alberta Cross

Best Music Industry Article
“Smashing the CD… to Bits” by Paul Resnikoff (Digital Music News)

Jonathan Zwickel – Music Writer At Large

Albums
1. The Dirty Projectors – Bitte Orca
2. The Yeah Yeah Yeahs – It’s Blitz!
3. Animal Collective – Merriweather Post Pavilion
4. The Avett Brothers – I and Love and You
5. The Heliocentrics with Mulatu Astatke – Information Inspiration Vol. II

Shows
1. Gossip | 08.23.09 | Showbox | Seattle, WA
2. Ponytail | 03.22.09 | Club de Ville | Austin, TX
3. The Maldives/The Moondoggies | 06.28.09 | Tractor Tavern | Seattle WA

Melissa Adair – Elevation Group

Albums
1. The Mother Hips – Pacific Dust
2. Monsters of Folk – self-titled
3. The Dead Weather – Horehound
4. The Avett Brothers – I and Love and You
5. Nicki Bluhm – Toby’s Song

Shows
1. Phish | Hampton Coliseum | Hampton, VA
2. Wolfmother | The Fox | Oakland, CA
3. Green Day | The Independent | San Francisco, CA
4. The New Mastersounds | House of Blues | New Orleans, LA (4-hourr set!)
5. ALO | SoHO | Santa Barbara, CA

Jonathan Fordin – Camp Bisco Promoter, MCP Management

Albums (in no order)

1. MGMT – Oracular Spectacular

2. Jay-Z – Blueprint 3

3. Kid Cudi – Man on the Moon

4. Muse – The Resistance

5. Kings of Leon – Only by Night (Technically 2008 but tour was 2009)

Shows

1. U2

2. Muse (Opening for U2)

3. Camp Bisco – Nas and Damian Marley

Mike Greenhaus – Relix

Albums
1. Levon Helm – Electric Dirt
2. Passion Pit – Manners
3. Phish – Joy/Party Time
4. The Pains of Being Pure at Heart – self-titled
5. The Black Crowes – Before the FrostÂ…
6. The Avett Brothers – I and Love and You

Shows
1. Dark Was The Night | 05.03.09 | Radio City Music Hall | New York, NY

2. Phish | 11.24.09 & 11.28.09 | Wachovia Center/Times Union Center | Philadelphia/Albany

3. Allman Brothers Band w/ John Hammond, Bonnie Bramlett & Susan Tedeschi | 03.16.09 | Beacon Theater | New York, NY

Ted Kartzman – IODA, reapandsow

Albums
1. Dawes – North Hills
2. The Mother Hips – Pacific Dust
3. Built To Spill – There Is No Enemy
4. Alberta Cross – Broken Side of Time
5. The XX – self-titled

Shows
1. TV on the Radio | 05.22.09 | Fox Theater | Oakland, CA
2. Dr. Dog | 10.05.09 | Haunted Brookdale Lodge | Brookdale, CA
3. Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band | 04.01.09 | HP Pavilion | San Jose, CA
4. Hall and Oates | 09.04.09 | Mountain Winery | Saratoga, CA
5. Metallica | 12.12.09 | HP Pavilion | San Jose, CA

Please use the Comments Section to tell the world what your top albums and shows are from 2009.

Continue reading for 2009 Stats!

Top Searched Bands of the Year

  • Phish
  • Pretty Lights
  • STS9 (Sound Tribe Sector 9)
  • The Disco Biscuits
  • Widespread Panic
  • The Dead
  • Umphrey’s McGee
  • Yonder Mountain String Band
  • moe.
  • Keller Williams
  • Radiohead
  • Dark Star Orchestra
  • EOTO
  • Lotus
  • The Allman Brothers Band
  • Railroad Earth
  • Bassnectar
  • Gov’t Mule
  • The New Deal
  • Furthur

Bands with the Most Shows

  • The World Famous Platters 436
  • Circle B Cowboy Supper Music 352
  • The Platters 307
  • Bill Medley 292
  • Roy Rogers Jr. 287
  • The Jim Stafford Show 260
  • Redhead Express 255
  • SIX 249
  • Fab Four Live 237
  • Baldknobbers Jamboree 235
  • The Marvelettes 234
  • Stacy Mitchhart 228
  • Zach Deputy 216
  • Joanna Connor 211
  • Passafire 204
  • Shinedown 203
  • Celtic Woman 198
  • Lightnin’ Malcolm & Cedric Burnside 198
  • A Skylit Drive 198
  • The Rankin Brothers 196

Venues with the Most Shows

  • Kingston Mines Chicago IL 627
  • Circle B Theater Branson MO 422
  • The Starlite Theatre Branson MO 414
  • B.B. King Blues Club New York NY 387
  • Jazz Alley Seattle WA 360
  • Le Poisson Rouge New York NY 345
  • Birchmere Alexandria VA 343
  • Mercury Lounge New York NY 329
  • 9:30 Club Washington DC 323
  • The Jazz Standard New York NY 317
  • Highline Ballroom New York NY 313
  • The Masquerade Atlanta GA 310
  • Bowery Ballroom New York NY 309
  • Beachland Ballroom/Tavern Cleveland OH 309
  • Jim Stafford Theatre Branson MO 304
  • Iridium Jazz Club New York NY 300
  • The Independent San Francisco CA 300
  • Emo’s Alternative Lounge Austin TX 288
  • World Cafe Live Philadelphia PA 288
  • The Roy Rogers Theater Branson MO 287
  • JamBase | San Francisco

    Go See Live Music!


    Girls | 12.05 | Hollywood

    Words by: Ryan Torok

    Girls :: 12.05.09 :: The Troubadour :: West Hollywood, CA

    Girls by Sandy Kim

    Beautiful, reckless-seeming, tragic-appearing and probably heartbroken, Christopher Owens probably doesn’t give a shit, but his band Girls are fucking hot right now.

    They have just wrapped up the first leg of their U.S. tour. Since November, they’ve been packing clubs around the U.S. in support of their debut album, the creatively and awesomely titled, Album.

    The five-piece band from San Francisco probably doesn’t even agree, but they could be seen as gay hipster rock (in a really great way, think David Bowie back in the day). Near the conclusion of Girls’ 70-minute set at The Troubadour in West Hollywood, somebody in the largely young, stylish and homosexual audience yelled out to Owens, “You blow my mind!”

    “Yeah, you blow my mind,” responded Owens, smiling. “Let’s all blow each other.”

    Then Owens and his four merrily deranged bandmates launched into “Lust for Life,” the catchiest and most upbeat song off their debut (check the racy video here). If any Girls song ever achieves radio-play, it will be “Lust for Life.” For now, the garage rock sing-along was a show highlight. “I wish I had a boyfriend,” sang Owens in a vocal style that is reminiscent of Elvis Costello and Robert Smith from The Cure – except, Owens rocks much harder than both of them. While Costello’s brightness is irritating and Smith is just too much of a fucking mope, Owens is simultaneously ratty, snarling and sunny.

    The longhaired Owens also showed off his awesome wardrobe sense. He was wearing an oversized ’90s Bush tour t-shirt that hung off his lanky, emaciated frame, and red leggings tucked into white sneakers. His tights were shiny as stars. Owens looked like Peter Pan, like a Lost Boy. He looked like a Hanson brother. Girls’ guitarist Ryan Lynch also looked like a Hanson brother. He was wearing a Hawaiian shirt the color of fruit punch.

    The crowd was bobbing, thrashing around and letting inhibitions float away with the harmonies. Midway through the punchy, two-and-a-half-minute “Lust For Life,” Owens jumped in the air. Electric guitar dangling from his neck, he did a front-kick, ninja-style.

    Owens’ schizo stage persona and lovesick lyrics reek of damaged goods. This is partially what made him so compelling to watch. If his back-story is true, he should be commended for not being worse off than he is.

    Apparently, he was raised in a cult.

    Apparently, his father was M.I.A.

    Apparently, this cult forced Owens’s mother to prostitute herself.

    Apparently, Owens became a homeless kid in Texas.

    Apparently, a Texas millionaire took Owens in.

    Girls by Kayceman

    If all this is indeed how it happened, Owens deserves a shit ton of praise for his optimism. Even if it’s not all true, his lyrics still resonate. They convey a suffering soul that isn’t ready to give up on life, and isn’t that the case with most of us? During the translucent, mid-tempo “Hellhole Ratrace,” over Girls co-founder Chet JR White‘s mellow and intricate bass-work, Owen sang, “I don’t want to die… So come on, come on, come on, come on, dance with me.”

    The nearly seven-minute bedroom-pop epic was the first song anybody heard by Girls. Before Album was released, “Ratrace” caught fire in the blogosphere. It demonstrates Owens’ knack for clever songwriting, which translated live.

    The emotional core of the set, “Ratrace” built up to a hazy and dramatic conclusion before crash-landing into a cyclone of duel-psychedelic guitars, heavy bass, and tumbling tom drums. Without stopping, the band segued into “Morning Light.” It was their first noise-rock number of the night. Rash, angry, aggressive, bolstered by Garett Godard‘s rapid drum rolls and pounding of the snare, the tune recalled Sonic Youth and Kevin Drew of Broken Social Scene. Owens fed off his band’s and the audience’s energy. He climbed onto his PA and knocked over his microphone stand.

    The remainder of the night, Owens traded off between electric and acoustic guitar. Only during the final song of the set did he play anything else. During “Solitude,” which isn’t on Album, he played harmonica. He played well enough to make for a poignant moment.

    Girls

    The audience demanded an encore. Not two minutes later, they got one. It didn’t seem like the band had planned for it, which of course made it more special.

    “We don’t know what we’re going to play,” Owens said.

    For not knowing, they did a pretty damn good job. They broke out into a concise, rollicking and spunky rendition of their surf-rocker “Big Bad Mean Motherfucker.” The Beach Boys would’ve been proud.

    Afterward, the band left Owens alone. It was just Owens and the transfixed audience. It was pretty cool. It was like he was just hanging out.

    “I have more songs, but I just have to figure out how to play them,” Owens said, sheepishly.

    All eyes were on him – they had been all night. It was the perfect send-off.

    My friend Showghy accompanied me to the show. Drunk to the point of being blacked out, he became a part of the show, frequently talking to Owens from his place in the crowd. He gave Owens a high-five. He told Owens not to worry about the one instance of rude assholes talking in the crowd.

    “Yeah, I know,” said Owens, grinning at Showghy.

    During a small window of time, Showghy and Owens became buddies. Maybe it was Showghy’s sleazy mustache that attracted Owens. Maybe they were just feeling each other’s vibe.

    One thing is for sure: Everybody was feeling Owens’s vibe. Everybody.

    Girls tour dates available here.

    JamBase | Hollywood Nights
    Go See Live Music!


    Jazz Fest: 2010 Lineup/Dates

    PEARL JAM, MMJ, CROWES, WSP, ARETHA AND MORE!

    Jazz Fest ’09 by Adam McCullough

    The usual dizzying assortment of musical talent will descend on New Orleans for the 41st New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival. The first weekend takes place April 23-25, 2010, and the second week is April 29-May 2, 2010. The lineups thus far are clustered below.

    APRIL 23 – 25 (1st WEEKEND)

    Lionel Richie, Allman Brothers Band, My Morning Jacket, Anita Baker, Dr. John, Darius Rucker, The Black Crowes, Steel Pulse, Jonny Lang, Band of Horses, The Levon Helm Band, Drake, Keely Smith, Baaba Maal, George Clinton and Parliament/Funkadelic, Imagination Movers, Ledisi, King Sunny Ade & His African Beats, Better Than Ezra, Blind Boys of Alabama, Elvin Bishop, funky Meters, Sax for Stax featuring Gerald Albright, Kirk Whalum, and Jeff Lorber, Marcia Ball, Shawn Colvin, Pastor Smokie Norful, Terence Blanchard, Cowboy Mouth, The Campbell Brothers, Chocolate Milk, Sam Bush, The Voice of the Wetlands Allstars, Joe Lovano Us Five, Donald Harrison, Lena Prima, Tab Benoit, Big Chief Monk Boudreaux & the Golden Eagles, Rockin’ Dopsie Jr. & the Zydeco Twisters, Big Sam’s Funky Nation, Bonerama, Irvin Mayfield & the New Orleans Jazz Orchestra, Deacon John, Walter “Wolfman” Washington & the Roadmasters, Davell Crawford and One Foot in the Blues with special guests Dr. John and Jon Cleary, The Bounce Extravaganza feat. Big Freedia, Sissy Nobby, Katie Redd, Magnolia Shorty, and DJ Poppa, Bob French & the Original Tuxedo Jazz Band 100 Year Anniversary Celebration, Jon Cleary: Piano, Bass & Drums, Irma Thomas’ Tribute to Mahalia Jackson, The Wonderful World of Louis Armstrong feat. Wycliffe Gordon, James Andrews, and Victor Goines, Papa Grows Funk, Terrance Simien & the Zydeco Experience, Theresa Andersson, Jewel Brown with the Heritage Hall Jazz Band, Joe Krown Trio feat. Walter Washington & Russell Batiste, New Orleans Klezmer Allstars, The Radiators–Pre-War Blues, Wayne Toups & Zydecajun, Grayson Capps, Kenny Neal, Treme Brass Band, Dr. Michael White & the Original Liberty Jazz Band feat. Thais Clark, Jeremy Davenport, Maurice Brown Effect, James Andrews & the Crescent City Allstars, Storyville Stompers Brass Band, Glen David Andrews, Nathan & the Zydeco Cha Chas, Roddie Romero & the Hub City Allstars, Honey Island Swamp Band, OTRA, Leah Chase, Bill Summers & Jazalsa, Savoy Center of Eunice Saturday Cajun Jam, Mia X, Cheeky Blakk, and Ms. Tee, Wayne Toups & Zydecajun, Bruce Daigrepont Cajun Band, Rotary Downs, The New Orleans Bingo! Show, Little Freddie King Blues Band, Andrew Duhon & the Lonesome Crows, Rumba Buena, Spencer Bohren, Johnny Sketch & the Dirty Notes, Louisiana LeRoux with Tab Benoit, Curley Taylor & Zydeco Trouble, Red Stick Ramblers, Guitar Slim, Jr., Kipori Woods, Kim Carson Band, Ivoire Spectacle feat. Seguenon Kone, The Revealers, Shades of Praise, Lionel Ferbos & the Palm Court Jazz Band, Sammy Rimington, The Electrifying Crownseekers, Tribute to Juanita Brooks feat. Betty Shirley, Germaine Bazzle, and Leah Chase, The James Rivers Movement, Leo Jackson & the Melody Clouds, Susan Cowsill, David Egan, Panorama Jazz Band, George French & the Storyville Jazz Band, New Orleans Night Crawlers, Midnite Disturbers, Ninth Ward Navajo Mardi Gras Indians, Dwayne Dopsie & the Zydeco Hellraisers’ Tribute to Rockin’ Dopsie, Sr., Frankie Ford, Lost Bayou Ramblers, Reggie Hall & the Twilighters, Gal Holiday & the Honky Tonk Revue, Mas Mamones, Lil’ Buck Sinegal Blues Band, Jesse McBride presents the Next Generation, Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz Septet, Michael Ward, Bleu Orleans, Mahogany Brass Band, Untouchables, Furious Five, and Big Steppers Social Aid & Pleasure Clubs, Creole Wild West and Golden Star Hunters Mardi Gras Indians, Mark Braud’s New Orleans Jazz Giants, Gospel Soul Children, Blessed, Watson Memorial Teaching Ministries, Louisiana Repertory Jazz Ensemble, Clive Wilson’s New Orleans Serenaders feat. Butch Thompson, N.O.C.C.A. Jazz Ensemble, Judy Spellman, Leroy Jones, Olympia Aid, New Look, and The First Division Social Aid & Pleasure Clubs, Golden Comanche, Golden Blade, and Wild Mohicans Mardi Gras Indians, Free Agents Brass Band, The Wiseguys, Jambalaya Cajun Band, Jeffery Broussard & the Creole Cowboys, D.L. Menard & the Louisiana Aces, The Revivalists, Rockie Charles, Robert “1 String” Gibson, Beth Patterson, Patrice Fisher & the Honduran Connection, Original Dixieland Jazz Band, Tommy Sancton Quintet, UNO Jazz Allstars, Smitty Dee’s Brass Band, Comanche Hunters, Semolian Warriors, and Black Feathers Mardi Gras Indians, Willis Prudhomme & Zydeco Express, Goldman Thibodeaux & the Lawtell Playboys, Marc Stone Band, Betsy McGovern & the Poor Clares, Alexis Marceaux, Julio y Cesar, Sonny Bourg & the Bayou Blues Band, Chris Clifton, Miss Sophie Lee, June Gardner, The Guitar Woodshed feat. Steve Masakowski, Todd Duke, and Jake Eckert, Mount Hermon BC Mass Choir, Tonia Scott & Anointed Voices, Resurrection Baptist Church Mass Choir of Schertz, TX, Brass Bass Ensemble, Jai Reed, Loyola University Jazz Ensemble, Real Untouchables Brass Band, Divine Ladies, Dumaine Gang, and Ladies of Unity Social Aid & Pleasure Clubs, Young Pinstripe Brass Band, Johnette Downing, Kat Walker Jazz Combo, Guardians of the Flame, Single Ladies, Keep N it Real, and Nine Times Men Social Aid & Pleasure Clubs, Voices of Distinction, Nineveh BC Mass Choir, Kevin Thompson & the Sensational Six, Red Hot Brass Band, Lindsay Mendez, God’s House Westbank Cathedral Choir, The Gospel Stars, Da Souljas Brass Band, Single Men, Family Ties, and Big Nine Social Aid & Pleasure Clubs, Delgado Community College Jazz Ensemble, Natasha Richard of Canada, Culu Children’s Traditional African Dance Ensemble, Jacquelyn Mayfield, Golden Voices Community Choir, John Lee & the Heralds of Christ, Greater Antioch Full Gospel Mass Choir, Black Mohawks, Seminoles, and Red, White & Blue Mardi Gras Indians, Archdiocese of New Orleans Mass Gospel Choir, The Bester Singers and the Dynamic Smooth Family Gospel Singers, New Orleans Young Traditional Brass Band with the Heel to Toe Steppers, Franklin Avenue Baptist Church Mass Choir, Carrollton Hunters Mardi Gras IndiansÂ…

    APRIL 29 – May 2 (2nd WEEKEND)

    Pearl Jam, Aretha Franklin, Van Morrison, Widespread Panic, The Neville Brothers, B.B. King, Jeff Beck, Irma Thomas, Gipsy Kings, The Dead Weather, Elvis Costello & the Sugarcanes, Teena Marie, Allen Toussaint, Gov’t Mule, Average White Band, Jose Feliciano, Steve Martin with the Steep Canyon Rangers, Maze feat. Frankie Beverly, Kirk Franklin, Wayne Shorter Quartet, Gil Scott Heron, Kenny Wayne Shepherd, Clarence Carter, Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Band, Tye Tribbett, Juvenile & DJ Mannie Fresh, Take Six, Sugarfoot’s Ohio Players, Galactic, Stanley Clarke Band feat. Hiromi, Old Crow Medicine Show, Richie Havens, Marcus Miller, Sierra Leone Refugee All Stars, Pete Fountain, The Radiators, Blues Traveler, Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue, Anders Osborne, Kermit Ruffins & the Barbecue Swingers, Rebirth Brass Band, Sonny Landreth, Elvis Perkins in Dearland, Martin Sexton, Bernard Allison, Ruthie Foster, Jimmy Johnson Band, Dirty Dozen Brass Band, Cyril Neville & Tribe 13, Dee Dee Bridgewater – A Celebration of Lady Day, Ellis Marsalis, Buckwheat Zydeco, Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk, Clarence “Frogman” Henry, Louis Prima, Jr., Henry Butler, The Roots of Music Marching Crusaders, Selvy Singers of Arkansas, Aaron Neville, Chris Thomas King, Dala, Brian Blade & the Fellowship Band, The Davell Crawford Singers, BeauSoleil avec Michael Doucet, Inspirational Souls of Chicago, Preservation Hall Jazz Band, John Mooney & Bluesiana, subdudes, Iguanas, DJ Captain Charles, The Dixie Cups, Sherman Washington & the Zion Harmonizers, The Jon Batiste Band, Nicholas Payton, The Four Freshman, Amanda Shaw & the Cute Guys, Russell Batiste & Friends feat. Jason Neville, Pine Leaf Boys, Eric Lindell, C.J. Chenier & the Red Hot Louisiana Band, Shamarr Allen & the Underdawgs, Banu Gibson with Swing Out & Tap!, Tribute to Juanita Brooks feat. Wanda Rouzan, Barbara Shorts, and Topsy Chapman, John Boutte, Delfeayo Marsalis & the Uptown Jazz Orchestra, Steve Riley & the Mamou Playboys, Luther Kent, Astral Project, Germaine Bazzle, Soul Rebels, New Birth Brass Band, Big Chief Bo Dollis & the Wild Magnolias, Cedric Watson & Bijou Creole, PJ Morton, New Orleans Spiritualettes, The Johnson Extension, Orange Kellin’s New Orleans Deluxe Orchestra, Bobby Lonero’s Tribute to Louis Prima, Don Vappie & the Creole Jazz Serenaders, The Allen Toussaint Jazzity Project, Charmaine Neville, MyNamesIsJohnMichael, Kirk Joseph’s Backyard Groove, Paul Sanchez & the Rolling Road Show, Bobby Lounge, Big Al Carson, Lynn Drury, Vivaz!, Nova NOLA feat. Sasha Masakowski, Topsy Chapman & Solid Harmony, Coco Robicheaux & the Swamp Monsters, Fredy Omar con su Banda, Loose Marbles, Heavenly Melodies, Betty Winn & One A-Chord, Kent Jordan, Shannon Powell’s Organ Combo feat. David Torkanowsky and Charlie Gabriel, Forgotten Souls, Geno Delafose & French Rockin’ Boogie, TBC Brass Band, Westbank Steppers, Valley of Silent Men, and Pigeon Town Steppers Social Aid & Pleasure Clubs, Apache Hunters, Wild Red Flame, and Mohawk Hunters Mardi Gras Indians, Jockimo’s Groove feat. War Chief Juan and Billy Iuso, Elysian Fieldz, Feufollet, Creole Zydeco Farmers, The Hadley J. Castille Family & the Sharecroppers Band, GROUPA – Nordic Folk Fusion, Tin Men, R. Scully Rough 7, Creole String Beans, Ernie Vincent & the Top Notes, Margie Perez, Jumpin’ Johnny Sansone & the XL Band, Kristin Diable, Jimmy Robinson, Kenny Bill Stinson & the ARK-LA-Mystics, Mem Shannon & the Membership, Bamboula 2000, Kora Konnection feat. Morikeba Kouyate of Senegal and Thierno Dioubate of Guinea, Papa Blue Viking Jazz Band of Sweden, Onward Brass Band, Dukes of Dixieland, Tim Laughlin, Val & the Love Alive Fellowship Choir, Jo “Cool” Davis, Zulu Male Ensemble, Phillip Manuel, Roderick Paulin, SUBR Jazzy Jags, Pinstripe Brass Band, Original Prince of Wales and Original Lady Buckjumpers Social Aid & Pleasure Clubs, New Orleans Indian Rhythm Section, Fi Yi Yi & the Mandingo Warriors, 101 Runners, Evan Christopher & Tom McDermott, New Leviathan Oriental Foxtrot Orchestra, Pfister Sisters, Walter Payton with Snapbeans and File Gumbo, Brother Tyrone, Driskill Mountain Boys, Sunpie & the Louisiana Sunspots, Thomas “Big Hat” Fields, Mark Adam Miller, Benny Grunch & the Bunch, J. Monque’D Blues Band, Mia Borders, Lars Edegran & the New Orleans Ragtime Orchestra, Classie Ballou & the Family Band, John Rankin, Jonny Frishberg & Bayou DeVille, DJ Soul Sister, Zion Trinity, AsheSon, Los Po-Boy-Citos, Kumbuka African Drum & Dance Collective, Donnie Bolden, Jr. & the Spirit of Elijah, Ebenezer Mass Choir, Keith Frank & the Soileau Zydeco Band, Chubby Carrier & the Bayou Swamp Band, Voices of Peter Claver, Sean Johnson & the Wild Lotus Band, Mario Abney Quintet, Lady Rollers, Original C.T.C. Steppers, and Nine Times Ladies Social Aid & Pleasure Clubs, Baby Boyz Brass Band, Geronimo Hunters, 7th Ward Creole Hunters, and Young Magnolias Mardi Gras Indians, Lafayette Rhythm Devils, Joe Hall & the Cane Cutters, Eddie “ChopChops” Paris, Hot Club of New Orleans, Connie Jones & the Crescent City Jazz Band, Young Tuxedo Brass Band, Lady Jetsetters Social Aid & Pleasure Club, Ladies Sing the Blues feat. Gina Brown, Angela H. Bell, and Tereasa B., Julliard Jazz Ensemble, Craig Adams & Higher Dimensions of Praise, McDonogh #35 High School Gospel Choir, O. Perry Walker Charter High School Gospel Choir, Warren Storm, Willie Tee & Cypress, McMain High School Gospel Choir, Blodie’s Jazz Jam, Xavier University Jazz Band, Tulane University Jazz Ensemble, Pinettes Brass Band, Scene Boosters, Ole & Nu Style Fellas, and Secondline Jammers Social Aid & Pleasure Clubs, New Wave Brass Band, Red Hawk, Black Seminoles, and Black Eagles Mardi Gras Indians, Dwight & Connie Fitch with the St. Raymond/St. Leo the Great Choir, N’Fungola Sibo West African Dance Company, Marisa y Mariachi Agave, Grupo Sensacion, Dee-1, Lucky 7, Franklin IV, Mardi Gras Indian Orchestra, Ray Abshire, Bonsoir, Catin, Dillard University Jazz Ensemble, Jamil Sharif & the Jazz Professors, Rocks of Harmony, Some Like it Hot, Kid Simmons’ Local International Allstars, The Wright Brothers, Tyronne Foster & the Arc Singers, St. Joseph the Worker Music Ministry, Heritage School of Music Band, New Generation, Undefeated Divas, and VIP Ladies Social Aid & Pleasure Clubs, Highsteppers Brass Band, Trouble Nation and Wild Apaches Mardi Gras Indians, David & Roselyn, Paulin Brothers Brass Band, Morning Star BC Mass Choir, Arthur Clayton & Purposely Anointed, Gloria Bell & the Revelation Gospel Singers, First Emmanuel Baptist Church Choir, White Cloud Hunters and Wild Tchoupitoulas Mardi Gras Indians, Tornado Brass Band, Lyle Henderson & Emmanuel, Pastor Terry Gullage & the Greater Mount Calvary Voices of Redemption Choir, Gospel Inspirations of Boutte, Ayla Miller, Original Four, Original Big 7, and Bon Temps Roulez Social Aid & Pleasure Clubs, Golden Sioux and Cherokee Hunters Mardi Gras Indians, Nashville Children’s Choir, Claudia Baumgartner, Saltimbanqui Puppet Theater of Mexico, Stephen Foster’s Foster Family Program, Hazel & the Delta Ramblers, N’Kafu African Dance presented by Young Audiences, O. Perry Walker Kuumba Players, Jazz Fest Residency Showcase feat. Seva Venet and KIDSmARTÂ…


    She & Him To Release Volume Two On 03/23

    SHE & HIM WILL RELEASE VOLUME TWO MARCH 23, 2010

    She & Him

    She & Him will release their sophomore album, Volume Two, on March 23, 2010 via Merge Records. Written by Zooey Deschanel (She) and produced by M. Ward (Him), Volume Two is the highly anticipated follow up to the duo’s critically acclaimed debut, Volume One.

    Volume Two makes good on Volume One‘s musical promise and then some. With eleven original tracks and two covers – “Ridin’ In My Car” by NRBQ and Skeeter Davis‘ “Gonna Get Along Without You” – Volume Two is bigger, bolder and more beautiful than its predecessor; the vocal arrangements, courtesy of Zooey, are dynamic, and show the singing heroine expanding her range in gorgeous ways, while the string arrangements, courtesy of M., are perfectly placed musical moments. Remaining constant are M.’s reverb-tinged guitar lines, a signature sound in all of his recordings, and Zooey’s incredible voice, sounding like a relic from the past and like nothing you’ve ever heard before.

    She & Him created one of 2008′s most memorable recordings in Volume One, an album packed full of endlessly brilliant, effortlessly charming pop songs. Upon release, the record was met with the deafening roar of praise, a testament to M.’s sun-soaked instrumentation and Zooey’s incredible knack for writing pitch-perfect choruses. The duo assembled a live band to fill out their sound on the stage, and hit the road together for the first time, selling out shows from coast to coast. They performed on television shows from Elvis Costello‘s Spectacle to Late Night with Conan O’Brien, and dominated year-end lists. Following in the footsteps of duos like The Carpenters and Nancy Sinatra and Lee Hazelwood before them, She & Him very quickly established themselves amongst pop’s finest two-piece collaborators.

    Their work together also served to complement their individual talents. Indeed, the last year has been full of exciting endeavors for She and for Him: in addition to contributing vocals to Jenny Lewis‘ album, Acid Tongue, Zooey dazzled movie goers in this summer’s hit film (500) Days of Summer (She & Him actually covered a pivotal song in the film – The Smiths‘ “Please, Please, Please Let Me Get What I Want” – for the soundtrack), while M. Ward released his fifth lauded solo album, Hold Time, and collaborated with friends Conor Oberst, Mike Mogis, and Jim James under the moniker Monsters of Folk. Yet, when the pockets of downtime appeared, Zooey and M. jumped on them, working in studios in Los Angeles and Portland whenever they could to bring the newest batch of songs Zooey had written to fruition.

    Described by Zooey as a “feel-good album,” Volume Two is bolstered by rich harmonies, sweet-as-sugar melodies and Brill Building choruses. From sweeping opener “Thieves” and first single “In the Sun” (featuring guest vocals by Tilly and the Wall), to the tempo and mood shifts of “Home,” and the vocals-only, hymn-like closer “If You Can’t Sleep,” Volume Two shimmers from start to finish.

    Volume Two Track List
    1. Thieves

    2. In The Sun
    3. Don’t Look Back

    4. Ridin’ In My Car
    5. Lingering Still

    6. Me And You
    7. Gonna Get Along Without You

    8. Home
    9. I’m Gonna Make It Better

    10. Sing
    11. Over It Over Again

    12. Brand New Shoes
    13. If You Can’t Sleep


    “Elvis Costello With…” Bono, Toussaint, The Boss, More

    BONO, ALLEN TOUSSAINT, BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN AMONG GUESTS IN SEASON TWO OF
    SUNDANCE CHANNEL’S “SPECTACLE: ELVIS COSTELLO WITH…”

    Elvis Costello

    Sundance Channel will launch the second season of its critically acclaimed music/talk original series “Spectacle: Elvis Costello with…” on Wednesday, December 9, 2009 at 10:00 p.m. et/pt with an episode featuring U2‘s Bono and The Edge. “Spectacle: Elvis Costello with…” combines the best elements of talk and music television and lets viewers in on intimate conversation and performances with host Costello and his guests, who range from legendary performers to promising new artists.

    The series, executive produced by Sir Elton John, includes one-on-one interviews, unprecedented pairings and group discussions, as well as extraordinary performances, from impromptu “illustrative” moments to full band (and even multi-band) productions. Among the confirmed guests for the seven-part season are: Bono, The Edge, Bruce Springsteen, Sheryl Crow, Lyle Lovett, John Prine, Ron Sexsmith, Neko Case, Jesse Winchester, Ray LaMontagne, Nick Lowe, Levon Helm, Richard Thompson, and Allen Toussaint.

    “We’re thrilled to launch a second season of ‘Spectacle’ on Sundance Channel,” said Sundance Channel EVP and GM, Sarah Barnett. “The series offers viewers unusually close access to artists through its mix of candid conversations and exciting musical performances. This season’s A-list lineup is a testament to the tremendous respect that artists feel for Elvis Costello as a musician and entertainer.”

    “I am delighted that we can continue where we left off–making intelligent, and informative music programming,” said Sir Elton John, one of the series’ executive producers. Elvis Costello commented: “In the words of the great Joe Strummer, ‘Let’s rock again!’”

    The program’s eclecticism and depth reflect its uniquely qualified host. Costello is a Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee; a Grammy and Ivor Novello Award-winning (and Oscar®-nominated) songwriter and performer comfortable in almost every genre imaginable; a musicologist of formidable breadth and knowledge; a contributor to Vanity Fair magazine; and a noted wit whose stint as guest host on The Late Show with David Letterman won rave reviews.

    “Spectacle: Elvis Costello with…” is taped in front of a live audience at Harlem’s world famous Apollo Theater in New York City and The Masonic Temple in Toronto, Canada. The series will also air on CTV in Canada.

    You can find more information on Spectacle, including video, here.


    Norah Jones: 2010 Tour Dates

    NORAH JONES ANNOUNCES 2010 U.S. TOUR DATES IN SUPPORT OF HER ACCLAIMED NEW ALBUM THE FALL

    Norah Jones

    Multiple Grammy Award-winning singer and songwriter Norah Jones has announced U.S. tour dates in support of her critically-acclaimed new album The Fall, which was released by EMI’s Blue Note Records on November 17. The 36-city tour will kick off March 5, 2010. All tour dates listed below. A select number of shows will go on sale beginning Friday, December 4. Ticketing information is available here.

    Jones is also premiering several remixes from The Fall this week. On December 1, RCRD LBL presented “That’s What I Said (The NYC Remix by Adrock and Mike D).” On December 2, Stereogum presented “Chasing Pirates (Santigold and Snotty Remix).” On December 3, Artist Direct will present “Chasing Pirates (Droogs Remix),” which was created by a remix collective that included Beck. The remixes will be released digitally and on vinyl on January 12, 2010.

    “We decided to have people I admire do some remixes,” Jones recently told Entertainment Weekly. “[Adrock and Mike D of] Beastie Boys did one, and Beck, and Santigold.” Jones first collaborated with Beastie Boys during the 2008 presidential election when they recruited her for their Get Out The Vote concerts, which also included Santigold. Jones also appeared in the season finale of 30 Rock this past May along with Mike D and Adrock. Jones and Beck first met when they performed together on KCRW’s holiday concert in 2002.

    The Fall finds Jones experimenting with a new set of collaborators, including Jacquire King, a noted producer and engineer who has worked with Kings of Leon, Tom Waits, and Modest Mouse among others. Jones enlisted several songwriting collaborators, including Ryan Adams and Okkervil River‘s Will Sheff, as well as her frequent partner Jesse Harris. King also helped Jones put together a new group of musicians to perform on the album, including drummers Joey Waronker (Beck, R.E.M.) and James Gadson (Bill Withers), keyboardist James Poyser (Erykah Badu, Al Green), and guitarists Marc Ribot (Tom Waits, Elvis Costello) and Smokey Hormel (Johnny Cash, Joe Strummer).

    Norah Jones Tour Dates
    12/15/09 Tue The Tonight Show with Conan O’Brien Burbank, CA

    12/16/09 Wed Jimmy Kimmel Live Los Angeles, CA

    03/05/10 Fri Brady Theater Tulsa, OK

    03/06/10 Sat Midland Theatre Kansas City, MO

    03/07/10 Sun Orpheum Theatre Omaha, NE

    03/09/10 Tue Civic Center Des Moines, IA

    03/11/10 Thu EJ Thomas Performing Arts Hall Akron, OH

    03/12/10 Fri Whitney Hall Louisville, KY

    03/13/10 Sat The Murat Theatre Indianapolis, IN

    03/15/10 Mon Overture Center for Arts Madison, WI

    03/19/10 Fri Riverside Theater Milwaukee, WI

    03/20/10 Sat The Chicago Theatre Chicago, IL

    03/25/10 Thu Wang Center Boston, MA

    03/26/10 Fri MGM Grand Theatre at Foxwoods Mashantucket, CT

    03/27/10 Sat WaMu Theater At Madison Square Garden New York, NY

    03/30/10 Tue Lyric Opera House Baltimore, MD

    04/01/10 Thu The Paramount Theater Charlottesville, VA

    04/02/10 Fri Warner Theatre Washington, DC

    04/03/10 Sat Tower Theater Upper Darby, PA

    04/18/10 Sun Paramount Theatre Seattle, WA

    04/19/10 Mon Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall Portland, OR

    04/21/10 Wed The Fillmore San Francisco, CA

    04/23/10 Fri Orpheum Theatre Los Angeles, CA

    04/24/10 Sat Spreckels Theater San Diego, CA

    04/25/10 Sun Dodge Theatre Phoenix, AZ

    04/28/10 Wed Kiva Auditorium Albuquerque, NM

    04/29/10 Thu Plaza Theater El Paso, TX

    05/01/10 Sat Stubb’s BBQ Austin, TX

    05/04/10 Tue Majestic Theatre Dallas, TX

    05/05/10 Wed Verizon Wireless Theater Houston, TX

    05/06/10 Thu Saenger Theatre Mobile, AL

    05/08/10 Sat Orpheum Theater Memphis, TN

    05/09/10 Sun Alabama Theatre Birmingham, AL

    05/11/10 Tue Thomas Wolfe Auditorium Asheville, NC

    05/12/10 Wed Ovens Auditorium Charlotte, NC

    05/14/10 Fri Ryman Auditorium Nashville, TN

    05/15/10 Sat Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre Atlanta, GA

    Praise for The Fall

    “Jones is standing tall on The Fall… A terrific batch of songs that smartly address her recent romantic travails.” — USA Today

    “Jones sounds more confident and stretches her songwriting muscle… Her continued growth as a writer, not just as singer, brings another exciting dimension to The Fall.” — Associated Press

    The Fall has been billed as Norah Jones’ rock album. In fact, it’s something even more surprising: a hot-blooded soul record.” — SPIN


    Williams, Krauss, Tedeschi & More at Janis Joplin Tribute

    LUCINDA WILLIAMS DEBUTS SONG AT ROCK HALL’S AMERICAN MUSIC MASTERS JOPLIN TRIBUTE

    Lucinda Williams

    The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum and Case Western Reserve University celebrated Janis Joplin during the 14th annual American Music Masters series, entitled Kozmic Blues: The Life and Music of Janis Joplin, Sunday night to a near-capacity audience at the State Theater in Playhouse Square. The concert lineup consisted of Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees Ray Benson, Guy Clark, Roky Erickson, Nick Gravenites, Nona Hendryx, Bettye LaVette, Country Joe McDonald, Bob Neuwirth, Powell St. John, Susan Tedeschi, Lucinda Williams, Carolyn Wonderland, and Santana co-founders Gregg Rolie and Michael Carrabello.

    Artists performed heartfelt and rousing tributes throughout the nearly three hour concert culminating with Lucinda Williams debuting a yet-to-be titled song written in honor of Janis.

    The evening’s tribute, through photographs, video and song, wove a narrative of Joplin’s life and groundbreaking art that broke down barriers for women in rock and roll. Highlights included Bettye LaVette’s soulful take on “Piece of My Heart,” which she recorded in 1969, Susan Tedeschi’s powerful interpretation of “Kozmic Blues,” Guy Clark’s poignant “She Ain’t Goin’ Nowhere,” Nick Gravenites’ “Buried Alive in the Blues” – a song Joplin was due to record the week that she died – and Bob Neuwirth’s inviting the Joplin Family onstage to join him to sing “Mercedes Benz.”

    Terry Stewart, president and CEO of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum presented Joplin’s brother and sister, Michael and Laura with an American Music Masters Award to close the show.

    Kozmic Blues: The Life and Music Of Janis Joplin Setlist:

    House Band
    “Combination of the Two”

    Ray Benson
    “Silver Threads and Golden Needles”

    Guy Clark
    “Trouble in Mind”
    “She Ain’t Goin’ Nowhere”

    Roky Erickson
    “You’re Gonna Miss Me”
    “Oh My Soul”

    Country Joe McDonald
    “Easy Rider”
    “Janis”

    Powell St. John
    “Bye Bye Baby”

    Carolyn Wonderland
    “Down on Me”

    Nick Gravenites
    “Buried Alive in the Blues”

    Gregg Rolie And Michael Carabello
    “No One to Depend On”
    “Evil Ways”

    Susan Tedeschi
    “Try (Just a Little Bit Harder)”
    “Kozmic Blues”
    “Tell Mama”

    Nona Hendryx
    “Nightbird”
    “Move Over”

    Bettye LaVette
    “A Woman Left Lonely”
    “Piece of My Heart”

    Bob Neuwirth
    “Good Intentions”
    “Mercedes Benz”

    Lucinda Williams
    “Me and Bobby McGee”
    “Ball and Chain”
    Debuted Yet-to-be titled song

    Please visit the official Rock Hall site for additional information about the concert, the weeklong series of events, and for more information about Janis Joplin.

    About the American Music Masters Series
    The American Music Masters series, a co-production of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum and the Baker-Nord Center for the Humanities at Case Western Reserve University, celebrates the lives and careers of artists who changed the shape and sound of American culture. Drawing together experts, artists, fans and friends, the series provide new perspectives on the most beloved and influential musicians of the past century.

    The tribute concert brings together a diverse mix of artists and musical style and, as a result, many magical moments have taken place over the years. In 2004, Robert Plant and Alison Krauss performed onstage together for the first time to honor Lead Belly. This year the pair was awarded the highest honors of Album of the Year for Raising Sand and Record of the Year for “Please Read the Letter” at the 51st annual Grammy awards. Honoree Jerry Lee Lewis, who was not scheduled to perform at the 2007 concert, was moved to take the stage at the end of the show. Lewis tenderly played the piano and sang “Somewhere Over the Rainbow”. At the first American Music Masters tribute concert, Bruce Springsteen set the bar high and performed in honor of Woody Guthrie. The most star-studded and unique performance by a trio was Aretha Franklin, Solomon Burke, and Elvis Costello paying tribute to Sam Cooke in 2005. Last year, a 93-year-old Les Paul took the stage with his trio and then led an epic jam with some of rock and roll’s greatest guitarists, from Jennifer Batten to Slash.


    Scaring The Children | 10.09 | Brooklyn

    Words by: Alex Borsody | Images by: Rob Chapman

    Scaring The Children :: 10.09.09 :: The Brooklyn Bowl :: New York, NY

    Scaring The Children :: 10.09.09 :: Brooklyn

    Scaring the Children, the trio formed by Bob Weir in the mid ’90s right after Jerry Garcia passed, consisted of Rob Wasserman on bass and Jay Lane on drums. This trio evolved into what is now Weir’s current band, RatDog. Jay Lane stayed with RatDog, while Wasserman continued on to do work with the likes of Lou Reed, Van Morrison and Elvis Costello. This reunion at Brooklyn Bowl, one of the nation’s best new music venues, was another shot of high grade American rock into the heart of Williamsburg.

    The shirts on the security guards read “welcome,” and the acoustics are exceptional. The sound is loud and clear, while it is still possible to hear the person next to you speak. The venue is directly next door to Brooklyn Brewery and has all of their beer on tap. I had their Belgian wheat beer, which was so good I will never be able to drink Blue Moon again. As the Dead fans descended upon the posh neighborhood of Williamsburg, the locals were certainly in the minority. Shady behavior was kept to a minimum, partly due to proper planning in the venue’s layout. There is an outside area were the community can meet up, talk and share but no reentry once someone leaves. This lets people enjoy being outside in front of the venue, while limiting certain forms of questionable profiteering that can go on in the street.

    The trio took the stage a little late due to the Yankees game. Weir came out with an acoustic and Wasserman with his upright bass. They opened with Bob Dylan‘s “Maggie’s Farm,” and then nailed The Beatles’ “Blackbird.” “Desolation Row” was the second Dylan song of the night and lent itself well to Weir’s dramatic vocals. Weir then switched from his acoustic to a hollow body, tobacco sunburst and sang Dylan’s classic “When I Paint My Masterpiece.” Though this is an old favorite, this version seemed special and sent a strong emotional feeling throughout the crowd.

    Bob Weir – Scaring The Children :: 10.09

    The second set included another Beatles cover and the trio was joined by Joe Russo on the drums for the rest of the night. Russo is a Brooklyn local and the man behind some of the best collaborations in live music right now. An energetic, jazz powerhouse, Russo is the backbeat of Weir’s Furthur project, where he plays with Grateful Dead bassist Phil Lesh. The musicians closed with the Dead’s rocking version of the traditional “Going Down the Road Feeling Bad.” The jam was high energy, as usual, and had the entire crowd singing along. Weir played his signature bluesy licks and pulled off a solid solo during the climax. Taking a full throttle solo is rare for the largely rhythm guitarist, but he nailed it on this occasion.

    Photographer Robert Chapman is a machine. He can go for hours without sleep to serve the music. After the show Chapman suggested we go to Sullivan Hall to hear Bonerama, who are in the midst of a Friday residency. There were some interesting guests on the bill, including Eric Krasno, Nigel Hall and The Colin Brown Band. I only first heard of Bonerama this year from a flier for the Bear Creek Music Festival. They are a New Orleans band who have actually been around for some time and are currently touring the North East.

    Krasno was playing out of a Marshal Stack on a Gibson that looked very similar to Weir’s semi-acoustic, but it was a solid body. I arrived just in time to see Nigel Hall and Krasno sitting in with Bonerama, along with members of the Colin Brown Band and RatDog’s saxophonist Kenny Brooks, who was playing a tiny saxophone. They played an instrumental of The Beatles’ “Get Back,” one of Krasno’s signature tunes, and a rendition of The Allman Brothers‘ “Whipping Post.” The four horns from Bonerama played the part of what would be Gregg Allman’s passionate vocals, with the brass set loose in the New Orleans style.

    Heading out of Sullivan Hall with a peace sign and star stamped on my hand, I pondered the evening and how I got into this mess. The arrival of Brooklyn Bowl on the scene is certainly a game changer for the musical topography of Brooklyn, and as goes NYC so does the country. Perhaps with The Bowl fortifying good music in the city, improvisational rock will regain its proper place in the hearts and minds of urban Americans everywhere.

    Scaring The Children :: 10.09.09 :: Brooklyn Bowl :: Brooklyn, NY

    Set I: Maggie’s Farm > Easy Answers > Loose Lucy, Blackbird > Victim Or The Crime > Desolation Row, When I Paint My Masterpiece > Even So

    Set II: October Queen > The Deep End > The Other One > Bass/Drums* > Dear Prudence* > GDTRFB*

    * – with Joe Russo

    Continue reading for more images of Scaring The Children in Brooklyn…

    JamBase | Tip o’ Things
    Go See Live Music!


    Phish: Festival 8 Band To Play Last Record Alive

    Phish Festival 8: Band To Play Last Record Alive

    Phish‘s Festival 8 site has released a list of 99 albums of which the band will pick one to play on Halloween.

    Several albums have already been “killed off” and a note on the site indicates that Phish will “play the last record alive.” See below for a complete list, including those that have already been “killed.”


    Special thanks to jamtopia.com for compiling the potential albums list below.

    Possible Phish Halloween Cover Albums

    Phish

    1.AC/DC | Back In Black

    2.Aerosmith | Toys In The Attic

    3.Allman Brothers Band | Eat A Peach

    4.Arcade Fire | Funeral

    5.Beastie Boys | Hello Nasty

    6.BeeGees | Saturday Night Fever

    7.Black Sabbath | Paranoid

    8.Blind Faith | Blind Faith

    9.Bob Dylan | Blood On the Tracks

    10.Bob Dylan & the Band | The Basement Tapes

    11.Bob Seger | Against The Wind

    12.Boston | Boston

    13.Brian Eno | Before And After Science

    14.Bruce Springsteen | Born To Run

    15.Chicago | The Chicago Transit Authority

    16.Creedence Clearwater Revival | Green River

    17.Curtis Mayfield | Superfly Soundtrack

    18.David Bowie | Hunky Dory

    19.David Bowie | Ziggy Stardust

    20.David Bowie | Scary Monsters

    21.Devo | Freedom of Choice

    22.Duran Duran | Rio

    23.Eagles | Hotel California

    24.Elton John | Goodbye Yellow Brick Road

    25.Elvis Costello (nee Declan McManus) | This Year’s Model

    26.Eric Clapton | 461 Ocean Blvd

    27.Firehose | Flyin’ the Flannel

    28.Fleetwood Mac | Rumours

    29.Frank Zappa | Apostrophe

    30.Frank Zappa | Hot Rats

    31.Genesis | The Lambs Lie Down On Broadway

    32.Grateful Dead | American Beauty

    33.Guns & Roses | Appetite For Destruction

    34.Hall & Oates | Private Eyes

    35.Huey Lewis And The News | Sports

    36.Jane’s Addiction | Ritual de Lo Habitual

    37.Jimi Hendrix | Are You Experienced?

    38.Jimi Hendrix | Electric Ladyland

    39.John Lennon | Plastic Ono Band

    40.Modern Lovers | The Modern Lovers

    41.Journey | Escape

    42.KISS | Alive II

    43.King Crimson | Larks’ Tongues In Aspic

    44.Led Zeppelin | I

    45.Led Zeppelin | IV (Zoso)

    46.Leonard Cohen | I’m Your Man

    47.Love | Forever Changes

    48.Manu Chao | Clandestino

    49.Medeski, Martin & Wood | Shack Man

    50.Metallica | Master Of Puppets

    51.MGMT | Oracle Spectacular

    52.Michael Jackson | Thriller

    53.Michael McDonald | If That’s What It Takes

    54.Miles Davis | A Tribute To Jack Johnson

    55.Minutemen | Double Nickels On The Dime

    56.Neil Young | Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere

    57.Neil Young | Tonight’s The Night

    58.Nirvana | Nevermind

    59.Pavement | Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain

    60.Pearl Jam | Ten

    61.Peter Gabriel | So

    62.Pink Floyd | Meddle

    63.Pink Floyd | The Wall

    64.Pixies | Come On Pilgrim

    65.Pork Tornado | Pork Tornado

    66.Primus | Sailing The Seas Of Cheese

    67.Prince | Purple Rain

    68.Queen | A Night At The Opera

    69.Radiohead | Kid A

    70.Rage Against The Machine | Evil Empire

    71.Rolling Stones | Exile on Main Street

    72.Rolling Stones | Sticky Fingers

    73.Rush | Moving Pictures

    74.Steely Dan | Pretzel Logic

    75.T.Rex | Electric Warrior

    76.Talking Heads | Fear Of Music

    77.Television | Marquee Moon

    78.The Band | The Band (aka Brown Album)

    79.The Beach Boys | Pet Sounds

    80.The Beatles | Rubber Soul

    81.The Clash | London Calling

    82.The Doors | The Doors

    83.The Police | Ghost In The Machine

    84.The Ramones | Ramones

    85.The Roots | Phrenology

    86.The Who | Who’s Next

    87.Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers | Damn The Torpedoes

    88.Tom Waits | Rain Dogs

    89.U2 | Joshua Tree

    90.Van Halen | Van Halen

    91.Van Morrison | Astral Weeks

    92.Velvet Underground | Velvet Underground And Nico

    93.Violent Femmes | Violent Femmes

    94.Ween | White Pepper

    95.White Stripes | Elephant

    96.Wilco | Yankee Hotel Foxtrot

    97.X | Los Angeles

    98.Yes | The Yes Album

    99.ZZ Top | Tres Hombres

    What album do you want them to play? Tell the world on the JamBase Forums.


    Lollapalooza | 08.07-08.09 | Chicago

    Words by: Wesley Hodges & Cal Roach | Images by: Dave Vann & Chad Smith

    Lollapalooza :: 08.07.09 – 08.09.09 :: Grant Park :: Chicago, IL

    Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

    It’d be hard to find a better-suited urban environment to host such an ambitious and enormous multi-day music festival than Grant Park. Set in a large, albeit slender, plot of land about a mile long and a couple hundred yards wide sandwiched between Lake Michigan and the stunning Chicago skyline, there is something inherently unique about this festival, and its influence on other alternative American music festivals is undeniable. As The Knux‘s Kentrell “Krispy Kream” Lindsey told JamBase, “Lollapalooza was the first of its kind, having something from almost every genre and fathering in the groundbreaking style of festival that all present day fests have followed since Lollapalooza’s conception.” Karla Muench, a Chicago public school teacher told JamBase that the best thing about Grant Park as a concert venue is “the view all around. You look one way, you see the lake, look the other and you see the skyline, look another way and you see Soldier Field.”

    No other American music festival of this scale is as easily accessible within a major metropolitan area. Krispy Kream also mentioned, “Most festivals are in rural areas that are very hard to access and Lolla is in Chicago, one of the biggest cities in the U.S.” With public transportation all around, top-notch restaurants, clubs and music venues all within earshot of the park and enough history to write an epic about, Lollapalooza truly is a one-of-a-kind, albeit ephemeral, urban utopia. With enough quality bands to please the most fickle of music fans and after hours shows in just about every venue each night, there was little time to sleep this weekend and JamBase was more than happy to sacrifice some shut eye to soak it all in and give our beloved readers a full report. (WH)

    Friday, 08.07

    The Knux – 1:00-1:45 p.m., Citi Stage

    Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

    Day one was a challenge for even the most road-hardened of music fans as unrelenting rain blanketed the early Lolla crowds for the first five hours of the festival. Unfazed, we headed on over to the Citi Stage to check out The Knux. Early in the weekend the fans were riled up and still light on their feet as Krisp asked the youthful crowd, “Who’s ready to see some amazing music?” Getting hands up early, the rap duo’s rabble rousing, humorously irreverent style, reminiscent of N.E.R.D. was the perfect party starter for what would be a marathon weekend of world-class music. (WH)

    Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears – 1:00-2:00 p.m., vitaminwater Stage

    Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears tried to get booties shaking early on with their generic ’70s funk, but they lacked three key ingredients for success in this field – a singer not blatantly impersonating James Brown, a seriously distinctive guitarist or other instrumentalist, and a cache of standout original songs. I guess they were playing their own songs, but they were in a singles bar cover band zone. (CR)

    The Builders And The Butchers – 1:45-2:30 p.m., BMI Stage

    I was able to duck out to the north for a bit to catch The Builders And The Butchers, a party band with a much more original sound. They blend rhythm-driven folk styles heavy on the mandolin with hip-hop and punk inflections, sort of like a high-speed urban bluegrass. What I saw was fun and engaging, and I wished I could stay under the shelter of the trees at the BMI Stage all weekend. Friday featured a nagging drizzle that fluctuated through all levels of annoying almost the whole day, and none of the main stages are near any reasonable shelter. (CR)

    The Gaslight Anthem – 2:00-3:00 p.m., Chicago 2016 Stage

    Perry & Etty Lau Farrell (wife)
    Lollapalooza 2009 by Smith

    New Brunswick’s The Gaslight Anthem did get on my nerves initially. It seems there’s a new Springsteen imitator springing up every day, and Brian Fallon is more blatant than most. Plus, the band’s whole sound struck me as just a little too Hold Steady-meets-Kings-Of-Leon. So, how did it end up winning me over? I think it was the earnest empathy from Fallon, who seems too green for rock star contrivance, and an edgy depth to the songs that tempered the soaring ambition just enough. “Boomboxes And Dictionaries” was a particularly raw dose of soulful rock, and closer “The Backseat,” with a “Lost In The Supermarket” quote sandwiched inside, amounted to a perfect working-class nugget. (CR)

    Perry’s Dance Area Introduction and Dark Wave Disco – 2:45-3:45 p.m., Perry’s

    My crew headed northward towards Bon Iver, but not before making our first stop at Perry’s, an impressive venue entirely devoted to dance music that Lollapalooza founder Perry Farrell described to JamBase as “a hybrid area with the ability to accommodate 10,000 people. It’s not a dance tent, we like it under trees. It’s a custom built DJ Tower that has LED screens, new DJ software with fresh capabilities so that the young people that are producing this music and creating their own videos will be able to do all this and work their machinery on stage.”

    The party atmosphere was emanating from Perry’s as DJ Trancid managed to encapsulate the entire vibe of Lollapalooza past, present and future in the first three minutes by sampling Nirvana’s “Smells Like Teen Spirit” seamlessly into a slowed down, pitched up twist on MGMT’s “Kids” as a horde of young fans formed a tribal dance circle while passing around a shoe (much like “The Conch” in Lord of the Flies) signifying the leader of the makeshift dance troupe. The realm of dance music has undoubtedly bled into the mainstream as evidenced by such popular artists as Santigold, MGMT and the huge crowds at Perry’s throughout the weekend providing further evidence of the burgeoning acceptance of the medium. (WH)

    Bon Iver – 3:00-4:00 p.m., Playstation Stage

    Bon Iver :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

    Bon Iver took the stage for an ill-timed set as the rain continued to pour down. Justin Vernon‘s glowing, pastoral harmonies weren’t enough to keep the audience’s attention as many people only stuck around for a few songs after hearing the band’s surprise underground hit “Skinny Love” in the early portion of the set. The North End of the park contains two stages, with the larger main Budweiser Stage backed up to the end of the park and the Playstation Stage tucked in the area’s opposite corner making for a quick and easy scoot to the other stage to see Mr. Folds. (WH)

    Heartless Bastards – 3:00-4:00 p.m., vitaminwater Stage

    Clearly, the Heartless Bastards weren’t about to get the dance party started in earnest; so, for me, this was the most unfortunate scheduling choice of the day. I’ll give singer Erika Wennerstrom some credit for coming off a lot like Chan Marshall, but with actual stage presence. She is the clear focal point of the band, the first of many charismatic, intriguing female artists on this year’s Lolla stages. The other two guys were another story, either confined within the droney constraints of the songs or just not able to assert themselves. In another setting, this could have been an hour of pastoral dirtiness, harnessing the crawling beauty of old My Morning Jacket, but in the middle of an afternoon of mostly uptempo music, amidst a dreary rainstorm, this set just lost me. (CR)

    STS9 – 4:00-5:00 p.m., Chicago 2016 Stage

    STS9 :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

    STS9 was poised to be the antidote to the Bastards. An opening combo “Shock Doctrine” and “Atlas” popped and crackled, getting at least the actual Sound Tribe fans moving, although much of the soaked crowd seemed pretty lethargic. The flow did hit somewhat of a lull in the middle, but in the end it was a very well planned set. “EHM” began to build the momentum back up, “Rent” was the comfort food that everyone was waiting for, and “The Unquestionable Supremacy of Nature” blew the roofs off the porta-potties, an earth-shaking bomb that also seemed to acknowledge our weather-themed predicament for the weekend. (CR)

    Ben Folds – 4:00-5:00 p.m., Budweiser Stage

    Ivory wunderkind Ben Folds took the Budweiser Stage to a largely sedate crowd and unfortunately had some problems with the sound mix early on. Always the showman, Folds managed to keep the audience engaged with his dazzling flourishes on the piano and unabashedly poppy lyrical hooks running through his staple cover of Dr. Dre’s “Bitches Ain’t Shit” (always cracks me up to see the sideburned Folds summoning his inner ’90s rapper) and new single “You Don’t Know Me” before closing the set with the always enjoyable “Army,” a song about the soul searching quarter-life period of living. Rain and music festivals are rarely a good mix and their was no end in sight as forecasts called for heavy rain and thunderstorms throughout the evening. (WH)

    Crystal Castles – 5:00-6:00 p.m., vitaminwater Stage

    Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

    What STS9 does with instruments (i.e. get people dancing), Crystal Castles continued to do with buttons and keys, without the jamming but with the added attraction of Canadian fireball Alice Glass. I was enthralled for the first 20 minutes or so. Ethan Kath kept the beats coming, never boring or too homogeneous, but Glass’ jumping around and shrieking went from exciting to annoying after it became apparent that her shtick wasn’t really going to vary much and it was impossible to understand any of the actual words (if there were any). Still, overall the music was good enough to offset the antics. (CR)

    Fleet Foxes – 5:00-6:00 p.m., Playstation Stage

    One of the biggest indie rock success stories of the decade (playing SNL only months after releasing their debut LP on Sub Pop), Fleet Foxes were one of the most anticipated shows of the weekend and the “beard rockers” (see Band of Horses, My Morning Jacket, and Bon Iver for other examples of this growing sub-genre) showered the poncho-wearing audience with their shimmering vocal harmonies and intricately arranged pastoral folk jams. Tunes like “Ragged Wood” had the crowd doing their best to sing-along with the gifted young band. The lighthearted banter between songs was a welcome diversion during tuning as drummer Josh Tillman offered to sublet his beard on Craigslist for the rest of the summer. In perhaps an attempt to part the clouds and end the relentless rainfall, the band opened their set with a pair of tracks off their debut Sun Giant EP, starting with the title cut before playing “Sun It Rises,” a couple of lustrous tunes that couldn’t conjure a break in the clouds. The Foxes’ chills-inducing brand of folk rock reached its apex at the end of the set with the trio of “He Doesn’t Know Why,” the jaw-dropping “Mykonos” and “Blue Ridge Mountains” as the rain shockingly subsided for the remainder of the day, much to the relief of the sold out crowd in Grant Park. (WH)

    Thievery Corporation – 6:00-7:00 p.m., Chicago 2016 Stage

    Kevin Barnes – of Montreal :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Smith

    Next came my first real Thievery Corporation set, and I was very quickly bummed that I’d missed the pre-party Thursday night. It wasn’t just the impeccable grooves – you can get those on any of Thievery’s records – or the talented guest singers (led by the seductive Emilíana Torrini) or the photogenic Rob Myers on sitar. It was the aura of awareness and positivity emanating from the stage and the juxtaposition of downtempo music and a rebellious bent that just caught me up in its swell. That’s not to downplay the beats, and the infectious smiles on stage were reflected in the happy, dancing crowd, and the music never really stopped. So, even amidst rants against racial injustice and war, it was a joyous celebration at the Chicago 2016 Stage, and the highlight of the day for me. (CR)

    Peter Bjorn & John – 6:30-7:30 p.m., Citi Stage

    I was anxious to catch a little bit of Peter Bjorn & John’s set and headed down to the Citi Stage to check out the Swedish indie pop trio. Some far out vocal effects translated well on stage for the live reading of “Objects of My Affection,” then we drifted on down to the vitaminwater Stage for of Montreal. (WH)

    of Montreal – 7:00-8:00 p.m., vitaminwater Stage

    Andrew Bird :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

    The first of several glam rockers to appear at the fest over the weekend arrived in a dizzying array of colors and flamboyant feathered costumes to deliver a noise pop heavy set amidst the ongoing circus on stage. Not hiding their obvious influences, the band covered David Bowie’s “Moonage Daydream,” a tune that had frontman Kevin Barnes shrilling, “Freak out in a moonage daydream, oh yeah!” The crowd responded best to the gimmicks (smoke, confetti hoses, masks and lots of random dancers), but even people unfamiliar with the band were able to recognize and appreciate “Wraith Pinned to the Mist and Other Games,” a song and melody synonymous with Outback Steakhouse and their delicious Bloomin’ Onion. Androgynous, psychedelic and vaudevillian, of Montreal is guaranteed to bring something different to the table with each performance and they certainly left an impact on hordes of casual fans with this particular freak show rave up. (WH)

    Andrew Bird, 7:00-8:15 p.m., PlayStation Stage

    Kings of Leon :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

    The dance party continued with of Montreal, but I had to check out native son Andrew Bird on the other end of the lengthy park. Bird has been evolving his songs on an almost daily basis for years now, although he has virtually abandoned everything he did prior to The Mysterious Production Of Eggs, his 2005 breakthrough album. As his quest for the perfect pop song has intensified, his live shows have often picked up the slack in instrumental dynamics, and he has definitely earned his second-to-last slot at the fest, but you wouldn’t know it from this display. The energy simply wasn’t there from any of the players, and the improv seemed like more of an intellectual exercise than a performance. I wouldn’t say I’m losing faith in the guy, but unless this set was an anomaly, he is in real danger of at least temporarily disappearing up his own ass. (CR)

    Kings Of Leon, 8:15-10:00 p.m., Budweiser Stage

    I have to say I think Bird topped Kings Of Leon, though. Okay, I confess I was not a huge fan prior to this show, but I went out there with love for at least a couple of their songs and a real desire to be converted by their headlining set. But as usual, the overbearing impression I got from this band, intrusively from singer Caleb Followill in particular, is a suffocating need to be admired – rock star bravado without the substance to back it up. These guys write solid pop music that for some reason sounds like it’s from England, no doubt about it. They also play that music competently on stage. I simply don’t believe these emotions they’re trying to project, the ones that produce the combustible sex. I hoped I’d feel like pumping my fist or banging my head or at least clapping rapturously at some point, but I was just bored.

    As a partial concession to KoL, maybe I was just feeling the dance party that day. I caught the tail end of Crookers‘ set and thought it killed, and then Kid Cudi came on quickly and kept Perry’s bumpin’ for another half hour to close out my Friday. It was a welcome pick-me-up; I couldn’t let the first day end in a nosedive. (CR)

    Depeche Mode – 8:00-10:00 p.m., Chicago 2016 Stage

    Depeche Mode :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Smith

    A show many Stateside fans were anxiously awaiting, Depeche Mode took the stage just as of Montreal played their final notes to an uproarious and eager audience. The New Wave legends’ influence on music is immeasurable – lead singer Petter Ericson Stakee of the British rock band Alberta Cross told JamBase that DM was probably the band’s biggest influence and described lead singer Dave Gahan as “a god on stage.” Live sampling and electronic dub segments have become so prevalent in mainstream rock music and much of that can be traced to Depeche Mode and their international popularity. As for the show, the band opened with a trio of new songs from Sounds of the Universe with “In Chains,” the single “Wrong” and “Hole to Feed.” Every headliner of the weekend had their own stunning visual display and DM’s video wall fit their style well. For “In Chains” the screen featured an old white man’s face next to a young black boy’s face. As the song progressed, the faces slowly transformed until the old white man was the young black boy and vice versa. (WH)

    The crowd dynamic was something I had only previously witnessed watching videos of Glastonbury as the entire audience swooned with their hands in the air as DM poured through their vast catalogue with hit songs like “Enjoy the Silence,” “Personal Jesus,” “Policy of Truth” and “A Question of Time” rousing the crowd to their highest levels of euphoria. Gahan’s voice has a commanding power from the lower register that billows out clear as a bell all the way to the back of the field. Industrial strength drum lines and synth-ed out keyboards are Depeche’s modus operandi and seeing it unfold in the flesh is something I would have never imagined if they hadn’t been brought to the Lollapalooza stage. That’s the beauty of an event like Lollapalooza, as Perry Farrell told us the Monday before the fest when asked what his favorite thing was about music festivals, simply offering, “Everyone wins, the musicians win, [the fans] get to hear the music that they’ve been listening to on their iPods or online all year. They get to actually see them perform. Everybody at the festival wins.” (You can read the entire Perry Farrell interview here.) (WH)

    Continue reading for Saturday’s coverage of Lollapalooza…

    Saturday, 08.08

    The Low Anthem – 12:00-12:45 p.m., vitaminwater Stage
    Living Things, 12:45-1:30 p.m., Chicago 2016 Stage

    Lollapalooza 2009 by Smith

    Friday’s rain gave way to a scorching weekend, but Saturday was still mostly tolerable. The Low Anthem seemed like it would be the perfect mellow start to the day, but I needed a bit more of a jumpstart than this set. Even the bursts of energy were of the lazy variety, which isn’t inherently bad, just not terribly motivating. Living Things were not doing it either; they reminded me of latter-day INXS but even more generic, but I only stuck around for a few songs before walking to the Citi Stage for Constantines, the first major surprise of the weekend. (CR)

    Delta Spirit – 12:30-1:30 p.m., Budweiser Stage

    Delta Spirit is no stranger to the road or the festival circuit. Having cut their teeth opening for Cold War Kids, Dr. Dog and currently for The Shins, Matthew Vasquez and his bandmates seem at home on big stages as a result of their experiences traversing the country for 150-200 shows a year since forming in 2005. Vasquez commented on how great it was to play to such a huge early crowd saying, “We usually play for 200 people, so this is amazing.” Delta Spirit’s uplifting jangle soul rock and percussive backbeats were just the thing to get the early birds going as Vasquez beckoned the crowd shouting, “If you’re feelin’ what I’m feelin’ come on/ All you soul-searching people c’mon!” Midway through the set, Vasquez took the mic and explained that it was his brother’s wedding day and that he was supposed to be the best man so he decided to give him a call from the stage and get the crowd to help out with his unique wedding day gift by screaming, “Congratulations, Travis,” into the phone. But seriously, what kind of brother gets married when his little brother is playing at Lollapalooza? No respect. The anthemic “Trashcan” was sandwiched between a short solo cover of Mark Dvorak’s “The Streets of Old Chicago” and a loungy cover of Louis Armstrong’s “St. James Infirmary” before the always rousing ’60s style political plea “People, Turn Around” to close a brilliant set. (WH)

    Constantines – 1:00-1:45 p.m., Citi Stage

    Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

    No prefixes or gimmicks or flash required; sometimes all you need for a great rock show is some good fucking songs, and Constantines have a bunch of those. Frontman Steve Lambke has a definite Joe Strummer/Roger Daltrey hybrid going on, and the band as a whole seems to have taken a lot of The Who‘s best qualities and updated them for the new millennium; “Young Offenders” could’ve been a modern day “Young Man Blues,” and “Nighttime/Anytime (It’s Alright)” felt like the sort of dubious rallying cry Pete Townshend used to come up with all the time. The set in a nutshell: solid songcraft plus tight, balls-out performance equals a kick-ass rock show. (CR)

    Ida Maria – 2:15-3:00 p.m., Citi Stage

    Possibly the “it” girl of the weekend, but unfortunately, what comes off as endearingly bratty pop on record becomes a tad obnoxious when she sings it live. It was still kinda fun, especially for the first few songs, but it began to grate pretty quickly. I suddenly realized that I’d become that guy, just waiting to hear the “Naked” song, so I took off. (CR)

    Los Campesinos! – 2:30-3:30 p.m., Budweiser Stage

    I figured I’d walk by Perry’s en route to Los Campesinos! and see if Animal Collective‘s DJ set grabbed me. It didn’t, but you can’t help but be grabbed by the Welsh band with the Spanish name. These guys are nothing if not in your face. They are like electro-Vaselines; just as cute, but not cuddly. They have a lot of really good songs, but they all strike me as a bit sterile, like a bunch of clever jokes they don’t think the audience gets. Maybe I just haven’t let LC! sink in enough yet, but only “You! Me! Dancing!” really connected with me during this set. Major hipster points for covering Pavement‘s “Box Elder,” though. (CR)

    Atmosphere – 2:30-3:30 p.m., Chicago 2016 Stage
    DJ Kaskade – 1:30-2:30 p.m., Perry’s
    Langhorne Slim – 1:45-2:30 p.m., BMI Stage

    Atmosphere:: Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

    Heading to the south side of Lolla, the trance beats of local DJ Kaskade were bumpin’ through the trees in Perry’s dance area and the train continued down to the shadiest little corner of the festival, the scantily attended BMI Stage, to briefly check out Langhorne Slim, a minstrel show style old-time folk rock trio in a similar vein as The Avett Brothers. The shade and foot-stomping music were a nice break before heading south again. Tongue-in-cheek hip-hop artist Atmosphere commented that his friends and critics don’t take him seriously and then proceeded to tell us, “The only guarantee in life is a life worth dying for,” before ad-libbing, “Now let’s go make some smores.” Equal parts social commentary and humor-driven rap, Atmosphere is a likeable, genuine hip-hop artist looking to have a good time on stage with a knack for making people laugh along the way. (WH)

    Joe Pug – 3:00-3:45 p.m., BMI Stage

    I had to catch a bit of Pug’s set, and, as it turned out, it was the solo portion of the show, so the burgeoning Dylan parallels were acutely apparent. Yes, in lyrics, voice and harmonica, Pug is an awful lot like Dylan, but he does have something Bob always lacked – warmth. Besides, who wouldn’t want to be called Chicago’s new Dylan for the 21st century? Pug’s songs, particularly the lyrics, are occasionally that good. (CR)

    Gomez – 3:30-4:30 p.m., vitaminwater Stage

    Gomez :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

    British jamband veterans Gomez took the vitaminwater Stage as Atmosphere was still rambling and delivered a mediocre mix of older material and songs from their equally middling latest effort, A New Tide. Most notable from the new LP was “Win Park Slope,” a swampy romp that translated beautifully on this sunny afternoon. “Win Park Slope” segued into the “Bone Tired,” as it does on the record, and many fans, including yours truly, scurried up the hill to the Citi Stage as a siren-like call beamed from the area where Chairlift was performing. (WH)

    Chairlift – 3:30-4:30 p.m., Citi Stage

    Like a less dancey, airy version of the Brazilian Girls, Chairlift is an interesting trio that mostly delivers dreamy soundscapes that would fit in perfectly on some tripped-out, foggy sunrise nature video with starlet lead vocalist Caroline Polachek‘s intoxicating voice zoning the listener into the material. My preconceived notions of this band prior to the weekend could not have been any further removed from reality, and I’m thankful at the opportunity to have seen them twice this weekend (I also caught their set at The Apple Store on Thursday with Passion Pit). (WH)

    Coheed And Cambria – 4:30-5:30 p.m., Chicago 2016 Stage

    I finally got to witness the phenomenon that is the Coheed And Cambria music factory. You know, it’s a shame when such talented musicians devote their talents to such derivative, corny pursuits. Some maddeningly cool shit sometimes happened in the proggy interplay between the instruments, but as long as Claudio Sanchez is up there singing and playing his Satriani-on-steroids guitar, there’s no escaping the cheese. And who was clamoring for a power metal makeover of The Church‘s “Under The Milky Way?” I couldn’t help shuddering. (CR)

    Arctic Monkeys – 4:30-5:30 p.m., Budweiser Stage

    Arctic Monkeys :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

    A huge crowd congregated around the Budweiser Stage for the still very young Brit rockers Arctic Monkeys, who had no problem matching the spirit of their fervid audience with an intensely raw brand of no frills rock & roll. The crowd-surfing and mosh pitting commenced as the Monkeys thrashed through fan favourites “The View from the Afternoon” and “I Bet You Look Good on the Dancefloor” before putting a cool spin on Nick Cave’s “Red Right Hand,” a tune about the tempting business enterprises presented to impoverished inner city teens. It was refreshing to see an alternative rock band in this day and age still content with delivering a balls-to-the-wall, freewheeling set of old-fashioned rock music sans electronic overkill. (WH)

    Santigold – 5:30-6:30 p.m., Playstation Stage

    The huge crowd migrated ever so slightly over to the Playstation Stage to catch a glimpse of the ceaselessly protean Brooklynite Santigold, one of the most exciting new artists on the scene in 2009. In full command of the late afternoon crowd, little Ms. White entertained us, delivering “L.E.S. Artistes” and “Say Aha” early on as her robotically syncopated dancer/background singers flanked her. Tough to categorize as she moves from ska-punk to diva pop to electro rock with ease, Santi declared boastfully, “I’ve got to be unstoppable,” amongst the stickiest of beats, and judging by her ever-growing fanbase and affable charm we’ll probably be seeing her around for years to come. Go see Santigold. (WH)

    No Age – 5:00-6:00 p.m., Citi Stage
    Glasvegas – 5:30-6:30 p.m., vitaminwater Stage

    Santigold :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

    The nice thing about shitgaze as a genre is that when you see it live you can just pretend the P.A. system sucks. In that light, I thought No Age’s set rocked, because the band has such good songs that would really sound great if it weren’t so hip for them not to. It’s all in good fun with these guys, who’d be equally at home hobnobbing with Deerhunter or The Dead Milkmen. What you can make out in these songs is kind of intricate tunesmithery for such brief blasts of punkish noise, but it really works, especially live. I couldn’t tear myself away, which meant I missed some of Glasvegas, which may have been a mistake but I’ll never know. These Scots impressed me more with each song. Singer James Allen has the Celtic gravel of Elvis Costello and the anthemic howl of Eddie Vedder, and he and the rest of the band play with the shimmering determination of Mogwai. Their version of the oft-covered Korgis track “Everybody’s Got To Learn Sometime” was the best take on the song I’ve ever heard. The set was simply stunning.(CR)

    Lykke Li – 6:30-7:30 p.m., Citi Stage

    It would’ve been tough for anybody to really top Glasvegas, yet Lykke Li somehow pulled it off. She came out almost unassumingly, and the peculiar, immaculate songs began to speak for themselves. I wasn’t really expecting her to have this amazingly tight band behind her, but these guys shifted between hi- and lo-fi textures, from busy to minimal, with precision and grace. And that voice! She’s even more engrossing live, and I couldn’t even see her half the time. It was an hour of perfect, haunting, intoxicating pop music, and I was mesmerized. (CR)

    Animal Collective – 7:30-8:30 p.m., vitaminwater Stage

    Lykke Li :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Smith

    So, as if expectations weren’t already high for Animal Collective, the band’s sets seem to either be masterpieces or trainwrecks, and I had no idea how the music would translate under the big open sky. Then, the journey began with the unreleased “What Would I Want Sky.” If you recorded this set, I pity your attempts at tracking it; songs melted into each other like rainbow sherbet for the next hour, and songs that actually have been released resembled their studio counterparts only fleetingly. The vocal improv in the middle of “Guys Eyes” was just on a different plane than what other bands do. “Daily Routine” crept out of “Bleed” like they were parts of the same song, a pulsing lucid dream sequence. “Fireworks” sprung from the nebulous “Lablakely Dress,” which went on an insane tribal glitch jam with Avey Tare on guitar. How they were able to rein it in and return to the song I will never know, but it was breathtaking. “Brother Sport” hit similar highs just before its coda, and might’ve taken us all away in its supersonic ending loop jam had not Tool started playing precisely at 8:29 p.m. You know how Maynard Keenan is always writing songs where he pretends to be a meathead, but he’s really trying to point out how idiotic that bullyish attitude is? Hey, maybe Tool didn’t know AC was still on or the big security guard forced Maynard on stage; I just thought it was interesting. I mean, Tool has been playing the same setlist for like four years now; couldn’t they have made up those five minutes somehow, so AC could’ve finished the song? (CR)

    Animal Collective – 7:30-8:30 p.m., vitaminwater Stage

    BEWARE OF RANT: For the second time this summer, I attended an Animal Collective festival set with high expectations and once again, like their Bonnaroo set, I walked away simply not being able to wrap my head around the hype that has been building for years. Likeminded music fans, blogs, and websites can’t seem to get enough of these dudes these days, yet their set of swirling cacophony rarely resembled any kind of coherent melodic thought at any point. I consider myself accepting of all kinds of music and always eager to find new sounds but I just don’t get the appeal about this group as a live band. On record these guys show great potential, but I have found their performances to be aimless and desultory as they meander through languid walls of noise and cacophonous yelping. To wrap up this rant, I want to like this band, and as I said, there are several songs on record that lead me to believe there is hope for a “click” moment; I just haven’t gotten there yet. The only thing I will likely remember from this show were the two kids who passed out cold within twenty feet of me and within three-minutes of each other. Scary. (WH)

    Yeah Yeah Yeahs – 8:30-10:00 p.m., Budweiser Stage

    Karen O – Yeah Yeah Yeahs:: Lollapalooza 2009 by Smith

    I had to skip across the grounds for Yeah Yeah Yeahs. The people who try to claim that this band is an unfit substitute for the Beastie Boys are really barking up an imaginary tree; I can understand people being pissed about buying a one-day ticket and not being able to get their money back when the Beasties canceled, but YYYs deserve that spotlight as much as any of the non-veteran headliners, if not more. Karen O convinced me that she is not just a great singer but one of the great performers of our time. She was really able to inspire this crowd, and there were some true fanatics around. Still, there were some awkward aspects of the set. Some of the little electronic interludes seemed extended just to make the set longer, and they were especially skeletal compared to what AC had just been creating. And a song like “Maps,” with all the women in the crowd singing along, certainly felt like a happening I wasn’t privy to, but it’s moments like this that can intrigue legions of potential new fans. Besides, after that the band closed with its most exhilarating tracks of the night, “Y Control” and “Date With The Night.” Guitarist Nick Zinner came alive with some searing, Thurston-like guitar work, and Karen gave every drop of sweat she had. I can’t say it ever blew me away, but it was an occasionally thrilling, ultimately satisfying end to the night. (CR)

    Tool – 8:30-10:00 p.m., Chicago 2016 Stage

    Tool once again pulled back the curtain to the theater of the morose and despicable, unleashing their visceral fury on Grant Park to close down night two. Vocalist-frontman Maynard James Keenan commented on the incredible gulf between the two bands headlining Saturday night in the most sarcastic of tones: “The only shame is that we had to miss the Yeah Yeah Yeahs,” which was met with a smattering of laughter.

    Tool :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

    The visual element of a Tool show is as important as the music itself, helping to further the distinctly dark, skin crawling discomfort that goes hand-in-hand with their music. Thematically the images are based around torturous zombie-like androgynous bodies in various undesirable situations mostly involving some form of repulsive mutilation. Not for the faint at heart, Keenan’s lyrics are both intellectually robust and darkly perverse, addressing the underbelly of the universe, as on “Ænema” when he sings “Some say end is near/ Some say we’ll see Armageddon soon/ I certainly hope we will cuz I sure could use a vacation from this.” Their genre-bending style beams across the spectrum, meshing progressive metal with art rock in such a seamlessly intricate way that they exist in a space all their own. Musically fluid and brain-jarring with perhaps the most dexterous, rhythmically sound drummer on the music scene today, Danny Carey, who serves as the lightning rod and backbone for the band’s sound as Maynard’s silhouette creepily sways back-and-forth like an arachnid figure against the dark stage lights and terrifying imagery.

    The crowd for the Tool set was aggressive and anyone with any intention of getting out from the front of the ruckus had to be crowd-surfed out. Intense but respectful, most fans were simply too entrenched in the music to cause a bother. Whether you like them musically or not, these guys bring a certain kind of passion and production to festival main stages that is hard to find anywhere else.

    With two days in the book and my brain sufficiently shaken from the horrid imagery of the Tool show, it was now time to head home and then to seek the familiar territory of STS9‘s late night show at House of Blues. (WH)

    Continue reading for Sunday’s coverage of Lollapalooza…

    Sunday, 08.09

    Alberta Cross – 11:45 a.m.-12:30 p.m., vitaminwater Stage

    Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

    Every once in a blue moon we get the opportunity to catch a new band and immediately get a sense that something big is in store for them. On Sunday morning a groggy and already sweaty crowd of a couple hundred got to witness one of the up-and-coming bands of the next decade. Hailing from Brooklyn by way of England, Alberta Cross has a classic look, a furiously wailing sound, an amazingly gifted lead singer and a penchant for slow-burning epic breakouts that elevate your soul with the ability to alter your mindscape for a fleeting moment. Ripping through their set, a tune called “Rise from the Shadows” was one that caught my attention with its grim sound and My Morning Jacket mind-warping jam out. Lead singer Petter Ericson Stakee‘s vocal talent alone is enough to make an impact but the entire band has enough gusto to carry these guys to the stratosphere. Commenting about the experience playing Lolla, Stakee told us, “[It was] simply amazing, I’ve been reading about this fest since I was a kid. There is so much history. This is one of the best out there, and the view of the city is amazing.” With their smoking hot full length debut album set for release on September 22 on ATO Records expect these guys (former “JamBase New Favorite Band” from back in 2007 we might add) to land on a few year-end “best of” lists. (WH)

    Ra Ra Riot – 12:30-1:30 p.m., Chicago 2016 Stage

    Hoo-boy, running on four hours of sleep with the heat index surpassing 100 degrees, this should be fun. Wait, it’s like this at every festival come Sunday… Ra Ra Riot is not a bad band at all, but it is a part of this new breed of MOR-indie that’s been made safe for the entire world by Arcade Fire and Vampire Weekend. Having violin in your rock band is no longer enough to be considered “eclectic,” and this band just doesn’t have strong enough songs yet to set itself apart. “Too Too Too Fast” came closest with its ’80s synth riff borrowed from Rush‘s “Subdivisions,” but it was the lone oddball of the set. (CR)

    Portugal The Man – 1:30-2:30 p.m., Playstation Stage

    The Airborne Toxic Event :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

    I made the hike to catch Alaska-turned-Oregon groove rockers Portugal. The Man and was a bit under-whelmed by their organ heavy style centrally based around lead singer John Gourley‘s high-pitched singing. The band exuded a great deal of talent, it just didn’t seem to mesh well on stage this time around. (WH)

    Bat For Lashes – 1:30-2:30 p.m., vitaminwater Stage

    Bat For Lashes, the stage name of Natasha Khan, started slow and never really sped up, but she did seem to ease into her comfort zone gradually and ended up in control of the initially hesitant crowd. I’d been thinking that the new Two Suns album had really made 2006′s Fur And Gold seem primitive, but I was impressed at how much stronger the old songs were now; “Trophy” and “Tahiti” seemed much richer, and “Priscilla” was a highlight of the set. She sometimes has a mournfulness that approaches PJ Harvey levels, and her voice can be similarly striking, but this cohesive set was a convincing display of Khan’s emerging talent. (CR)

    The Airborne Toxic Event – 2:30-3:30 p.m., Chicago 2016 Stage

    The “Airborne Toxic Event” might have been a description of the stench that had permeated the south end of the grounds since Saturday morning, but instead it was a band. This band is so oddly, definably Irish-rock-sounding, yet it’s from L.A. I don’t know for sure if this contributes to how contrived the songs seem, but Mikel Jollett reminds me way too much of Caleb Followill in delivery and tone, and whether or not he believes in what his band is selling, I’m not buying it. (CR)

    Kaiser Chiefs – 2:30-3:30 p.m., Budweiser Stage

    The Raveonettes :: Lolla 2009 by Smith

    Before Sunday, I only had a casual appreciation of Kaiser Chiefs, having only heard a few of their popular radio singles, but after seeing this particular shitkicker I am committed on finding out everything there is to know about this band. Kicking off their set in overdrive, their hit song “Never Miss A Beat” started a thrill ride that wouldn’t cease until the band left the stage. Quintessentially British in every way, the Chiefs have the attitude of The Clash and refined pop sensibility of Blur. Approaching a hiatus for the band, lead singer Ricky Wilson was hellbent on putting on the best performance possible. He jumped into the photo pit numerous times to do a lap around the audience, and at one point he sat on the railing facing his band and commented on how fun it was to watch the Kaiser Chiefs play. Wilson was also the only artist of the weekend I saw doing sign language with the interpreter and jump on the massive stage speakers to rev up the crowd. Conducting the crowd as his band ripped through their slew of Euro radio hits, the lead singer did his best to incite an “Angry Mob” after playing “I Predict a Riot.” The madman wasn’t content unless the crowd was clapping along, moshing, crowd-surfing or getting drunk at all times, and he did his best to play the role of facilitator. Kaiser Chiefs were able to bring the British festival atmosphere of pure pandemonium to Grant Park for their hour long set (in the scorching heat) and it was surprisingly my hands-down favorite performance of the weekend. Ricky Wilson should be given a medal of rock star honor for his service to the people of Chicago. The Rock Gods surely salute you, sirs. (WH)

    The Raveonettes – 3:30-4:30 p.m., Playstation Stage & Hollywood Holt, 3:30-4:30 p.m. Perry’s

    The Raveonettes offered a stark contrast to the music of the Kaiser Chiefs with their ethereal, droning New Wave-ish space pop coming from the North side of the park. Their sound just didn’t go over well on a big stage at a massive music festival, but it’d be cool to catch them in a smaller club environment. Moving down towards the Southside I caught my second MGMT sample of the weekend (“Time to Pretend”) in my limited time at Perry’s DJ area with Hollywood Holt. Whether you like it or not, MGMT’s music is almost unavoidable these days. Once again, the ritualistic dancing was in effect at Perry’s; this area of the park seemed to have a narcotic effect on people. (WH)

    Dan Deacon – 3:30-4:30 p.m., vitaminwater Stage

    Neko Case :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

    Shame on you, Dan Deacon! People are passing out from heat exhaustion and you want us to run around creating human tunnels and interact with each other? I know his reputation precedes him, but if you can’t get at least a little excited about a performance that truly combines sociological experimentation with overpowering goodwill and triumphant dance music you might want to question why you are going to see live music. Deacon creates an experience with his audience that every person who participates will remember forever. And his songs are damn good, too. (CR)

    Neko Case – 4:30-5:30 p.m., Budweiser Stage
    Dan Auerbach – 5:30-6:30 p.m., PlayStation Stage

    After Dan Deacon’s kind of energy, there was an inevitable lull, and Neko Case couldn’t hope to arouse much excitement at this point. She is an incredibly charming and gracious performer, and while I don’t really care for her singing, I’d thought it was because she was cold and dispassionate. I got a different impression at this set, though, where I believed every word I heard, though I still haven’t heard her quite coax the longing in her words out in her singing. Dan Auerbach also just wasn’t quite there. He can really surprise you sometimes with a hot guitar solo, kind of a Jon Spencer/Jack White style, but this blues rock genre is so limited in its scope that it has been done to death even though it remains vibrant in the right hands. Auerbach can bring it to that next level, but he just seemed lackadaisical here, so it came off a bit like store-brand Southern rock. Blame it on the heat. (CR)

    Vampire Weekend – 4:30-5:30 p.m., Chicago 2016 Stage

    Vampire Weekend fans :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

    There is little I can add about this prep school meets Paul Simon group that hasn’t been blogged about 10,000 times. However, I will comment on the mind-blowingly large crowd that was there to see Vampire Weekend. It was hard to tell if they were all there to get a good spot for Snoop Dogg (who had the largest audience of the weekend), but it was very telling of this band’s widespread acceptance. I tried and tried for a while to act like I didn’t like this band but their music is just so damn agreeable. Songs like “A-Punk” and “The Kids Don’t Stand A Chance” are just too peppy to turn your nose up at… unless you really got something against Northern prep school kids. (WH)

    Passion Pit – 5:00-6:00 p.m., Citi Stage

    Summer party heroes Passion Pit are not the band of a generation, or even 2009, by any means, but they did create possibly the most fun album this year and for that they should be commended. As a live act they haven’t quite gotten it nailed down yet, as Michael Angelakos often struggled to keep his breath during high-pitched shrills and the band hasn’t quite reached any real telepathy in their playing. Nevertheless, their synth lines and choruses are extremely infectious and their beaming attitude is constantly ecstatic. You can really tell by the smiles and joy on stage that the band is living in a dream world, floating on a cloud. The live version of “Sleepyhead” is every bit as good as it is on record, and even if “The Reeling” sounded a bit cluttered and confused it’s a damn fun song to get down to. (WH)

    Cold War Kids – 5:30-6:30 p.m., vitaminwater Stage

    Lou Reed :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

    Cold War Kids were jittering and jangling just below at the vitaminwater Stage and seemed more comfortable in their own skin than ever before while playing to an enormous late-afternoon crowd. Half of the audience was keenly engaged singing-along with the punkish “Something Is Not Right With Me,” while many were just stopping by en route to Snoop-a-Loop. The most notable song of the set was a rearranged, dubby version of “I’ve Seen Enough” that had Nathan Willett asking, “How’s it gonna feel when summer ends/ Out of money, out of friends.” Always a good show, soulful, delightfully amelodic at times and full of catchy sing-alongs, the Cold War Kids once again did not disappoint. (WH)

    Lou Reed – 6:30-7:30 p.m., Budweiser Stage

    A cranky Lou Reed, inventor of indie rock, came out five or ten minutes late, unwittingly kicking a tiny snowball down a large hill. Yeah, it was probably his fault he came on late, and who knows if he consciously or obliviously went twenty minutes past his scheduled end time. Yeah, he has that be-thankful-I-showed-up haughtiness just like Dylan, and he stumbles over his lyrics like a drunk. But, don’t you have to give some leeway to anybody who’s the ‘Godfather’ of something? Anyway, Reed’s set veered wildly between engaging grooves, screeching sax solos, walls of feedback and Lou gesticulating stubbornly as he spat out his words, but at least you could tell that they still mean something to him. Highlights were a belligerent take on “Dirty Boulevard,” the menacing and unhinged “Mad” and “Paranoia Key Of E,” which ended in an extended knob-twiddle jam before resolving into “I’m Waiting for the Man.” (CR)

    Band of Horses – 7:30-8:30 p.m., PlayStation Stage

    Snoop Dogg :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Smith

    When Lou Reed started “Walk On The Wild Side” after already cutting ten minutes into Band of Horses’ slot, some cheered and others groaned. BoH, to its credit, waited until Lou was waving goodbye to start playing. The band’s music is pretty straightforward Americana. Its success hinges largely on whether you like Ben Bridwell‘s voice or not. My only verdict is a shrug of the shoulders. I couldn’t find any fault with the music, so I’ll give the set a marginal thumbs up. The way it ended was destined to make it offensive to non-fans, but legendary for those who were singing-along. (CR)

    Snoop Dogg – 6:30-7:30 p.m., Chicago 2016 Stage

    Snoop Dogg is one cool motherfucker. There, I said it. If for no other cause, the reason he had the biggest crowd of the entire weekend at a festival occurring many years past his prime is because people like to be in the presence of cool. Sampling anything and everything, shouting out to 2Pac and demanding fans to throw up their middle fingers and say, “Fuck tha police,” Mr. Broadus may be pushing 40 but the D.O. Double G still knows how to work a crowd. (WH)

    Silversun Pickups – 7:30-8:30 p.m., vitaminwater Stage

    Silversun Pickups closed down the vitaminwater Stage for the weekend and seemed very gracious for the opportunity, thanking the crowd numerous times. There sound is straight up 90s alt rock (like the always mentioned Smashing Pumpkins or a kinder, gentler Garbage) and fits right in with the basic ideas this festival was built on. It seemed like an enjoyable show, it was just hard to get into from afar. (WH)

    The Killers – 8:30-10:00 p.m., Chicago 2016 Stage

    Silversun Pickups :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

    To close down an amazing fifth sold out installment of the new era of Lollapalooza in its permanent home in Grant Park (C3 Presents and the City of Chicago recently agreed to a 10-year extension to host the event in the Windy City), The Killers made themselves right at home, decorating the stage with fake palm trees to create a glitzy, stylized Vegas night club aesthetic. With an enormous production budget, The Killers were able to put on an impressive visual display with a high-powered light rig and a colorful LED Wall offering a stunning array of colors. And, in case you forgot who you were seeing “The Killers” would flash by on the screen every few minutes for those fans who had passed out in a THC-induced haze at Snoop and just come back to Earth. I’ve never quite understood why bands feel the need to put their band name on the video walls, but whatever.

    Opening with “Human,” a newer song that I still don’t really get, I immediately understood that although not my kind of music it is wholly necessary for this arena rock band to exist and prosper for the world to continue spinning on its axis. Their product is custom built for the Everyman rocker without the time to read music blogs or go digging through the record bins at their local music store. Their songs, image and live presentation are so agreeable that you have to wonder if the band even attempts to fight their primal artistic urges to break the boundaries and try to explore new directions. Danceable, hook-driven and mostly PG-rated, The Killers were able to do their duty as festival closers by giving tired fans an enjoyable, uncontroversial note to go out on, and appropriately played “When You Were Young” to close a long and incredible weekend of live music that provided something for everyone, and in the end, the Everyman. (WH)

    Jane’s Addiction – 8:30-10:00 p.m., Budweiser Stage

    Farrell & Navarro – Jane’s Addiction :: Lolla 09 by Smith

    Jane’s did wait until about 8:40 p.m. to come on stage; BoH made it clear that Perry Farrell is not quite as old as Lou Reed and therefore not deserving of their respect. It was ridiculous having to listen to the nebulous clatter underscore JA’s first four songs as BoH just kept playing. Jane’s did actually inve

    Music on the Tube 8/10 – 8/16

    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

    Tue, August 11 – Elvis Costello (Repeat)
    Wed, August 12 – Rob Thomas (Repeat)
    Thu, August 13 – Paul McCartney (Repeat)
    Fri, August 14 – MSTRKRFT w/ John Legend (Repeat)


    The Tonight Show with Conan O’Brien


    Mon, August 10 – Lyle Lovett
    Tue, August 11 – Cobra Starship and Estelle
    Fri, August 14 – Demetri Martin


    Jimmy Kimmel Live


    Mon, August 10 – Jewel (Repeat)
    Tue, August 11 – The Jonas Brothers (Repeat)
    Wed, August 12 – Chester French (Repeat)
    Thu, August 13 – Diane Birch (Repeat)


    Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson


    Tue, August 11 – Bonnie Raitt and Taj Mahal
    Wed, August 12 – Holly Williams
    Fri, August 14 – Liza Minnelli


    Late Night with Jimmy Fallon


    Mon, August 10 – Fall Out Boy
    Tue, August 11 – Bat For Lashes
    Wed, August 12 – Kitty Daisy & Lewis


    Last Call With Carson Daly


    Mon, August 10 – Black Kids (Repeat)
    Tue, August 11 – Green Day (Repeat)
    Wed, August 12 – Green Day (Repeat)
    Thu, August 13 – Green Day (Repeat)
    Fri, August 14 – Foxboro Hot Tubs (Repeat)


    Other Performances of Interest


    Sat, August 15 – Lollapalooza 2009 on Fuse TV @ 9PM



    Mike Ragogna: Monday Music Quarterback: Robert Francis, Gossip, Vic Chesnutt, Soulsavers, MUTEMATH, Matt Hires, Taking Woodstock soundtrack, and Sufjan Stevens’ The BQE

    As you’re recovering from the joyful overkill that was this year’s Comic-Con (by the way, Iron Man II will rock very hard, Battlestar Galactica’s The…

    “30 Rock” earned 22 Emmy nominations

    NEW YORK (AP) — Television comedy is Tina Fey’s world these days. Is there room for anybody else?
    Fey and “30 Rock,” her series about the backstage world at a late-night network show, swept both the Emmys and Golden Globes in the past year, and she’s set up to do it again at this year’s [...]

    Rosanne Cash New Album:
    w/ Boss, Elvis, Rufus, Tweedy

    ROSANNE CASH TO RELEASE HER NEW ALBUM, THE LIST, OCTOBER 6

    SPECIAL GUESTS INCLUDE ELVIS COSTELLO, BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN, JEFF TWEEDY AND RUFUS WAINWRIGHT



    Rosanne Cash

    Acclaimed singer-songwriter Rosanne Cash will release her 12th studio album, entitled The List, on Manhattan Records on October 6, 2009. The new LP features Cash’s contemporary interpretations of 12 classic songs culled from a list of essential country tunes that her legendary father Johnny gave her in 1973, filtered through her own unique, sophisticated perspective.

    Known primarily for her stellar songwriting, Cash showcases her incredible voice on The List — her first-ever covers record. As a result, the album is Rosanne Cash like you’ve never heard her before as she embraces her heritage and sings for the pure love and beauty of these songs which have shaped who she is as an artist.

    Produced and arranged by Grammy winner John Leventhal (Cash’s husband, who also contributes guitar work throughout), The List includes Cash’s covers of songs with assistance of notable musicians like Bruce Springsteen, Elvis Costello, Jeff Tweedy and Rufus Wainwright.

    The List is the first album Cash has made since she underwent surgery in 2007 for a benign brain condition, from which she has fully recovered.

    Track Listing for The List:

    1. Miss the Mississippi and You
    2. Motherless Children
    3. Sea of Heartbreak (w/ Bruce Springsteen)
    4. Take These Chains From My Heart
    5. I’m Movin’ On
    6. She’s Got You
    7. Heartaches by the Number (w/ Elvis Costello)
    8. 500 Miles
    9. Long Black Veil (w/ Jeff Tweedy)
    10. Silver Wings (w/ Rufus Wainwright)
    11. Girl From the North Country
    12. Bury Me Under the Weeping Willow