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Portugal. The Man: Fall Tour

Portugal. The Man Announce Headlining Tour In Support Of The Satanic Satanist


Portugal. The Man

With the release of their most recent album, The Satanic Satanist, experimental rock band Portugal. The Man has been busy on the road, appearing at festivals and small venues across the country. The momentum that the band has recently struck upon, has led Portugal. The Man to announce a new round of tour dates. The group’s headlining fall tour will carry through the end of summer tour, concluding October 22.

For Portugal. The Man’s fourth release in four years, The Satanic Satanist, the band returned to their classic form and created an album that’s both deep in instrument arrangements and lyrical craftsmanship. The relentless touring schedule that the group has been on, since the album’s release, is testament to how solid of an album the four-piece created while recording in Boston.

Tour Dates:

08/07/09 Fri Grog Shop Cleveland, OH

08/09/09 Sun Grant Park Chicago, IL

08/11/09 Tue Vaudeville Mews Des Moines, IA

08/12/09 Wed The Waiting Room Omaha, NE

08/14/09 Fri Hi Dive Denver, CO

08/27/09 Thu Crepe Place Santa Cruz, CA

08/29/09 Sat Outside Lands Festival San Francisco, CA

09/16/09 Wed Venue Vancouver, BC

09/17/09 Thu Chop Suey Seattle, WA

09/18/09 Fri WOW Hall Eugene, OR

09/19/09 Sat Roseland Theater Portland, OR

09/22/09 Tue Harlow’s Sacramento, CA

09/23/09 Wed The Independent San Francisco, CA

09/25/09 Fri The Troubadour West Hollywood, CA

09/26/09 Sat Glass House Pomona, CA

09/28/09 Mon Belly Up Tavern Solana Beach, CA

09/29/09 Tue The Clubhouse Tempe, AZ

10/01/09 Thu Schubas Chicago, IL

10/02/09 Fri Higher Ground Burlington, VT

10/03/09 Sat The b.side Lounge Boulder, CO

10/08/09 Thu Majestic Theatre Madison, WI

10/09/09 Fri Turner Hall Ballroom Milwaukee, WI

10/11/09 Sun Schubas Chicago, IL

10/13/09 Tue Magic Bag Ferndale, MI

10/14/09 Wed Horseshoe Tavern Toronto, ON

10/16/09 Fri Maxwell’s Hoboken, NJ

10/18/09 Sun Paradise Rock Club Boston, MA

10/20/09 Tue Higher Ground Burlington, VT

10/21/09 Wed Pearl Street Nightclub Northampton, MA

10/22/09 Thu Johnny Brenda’s Philadelphia, PA



All Points West | 07.31 – 08.02 | Jersey

Words by: Ron Hart | Images by: Rod Snyder

All Points West :: 07.31.09 – 08.02.09 :: Liberty State Park :: Jersey City, NJ

All Points West 2009

If there was anything that the mud, madness and mayhem of this past weekend’s All Points West confirmed – besides the fact that this writer just might be getting a little too old for this shit – is that after many years of false starts, almost-happens and never-will-go-downs, it looks as though the NYC area finally has an official contender to the large scale international three-day music festival circuit.

What promoters Goldenvoice Productions – the folks behind Coachella on the West Coast – didn’t expect, however, was that two out of their three-day concert would be mired in torrential downpours on a near-Biblical level, rendering the festival site on the otherwise beautiful, scenic landscape at Liberty State Park a veritable lake of thick, smelly mud. Thank God this one was a commuter festival and not some glorified sleep-away camp like Bonnaroo, right? Now the romantic in me could look at the events of this past weekend as a truly fitting commemoration of the 40th anniversary of Woodstock, getting soaked in the rain and trooping through muddy lands similar to the way our parents’ generation did on Yasgur’s Farm back in the summer of ’69. The pragmatist in me, however, kicked that flowery notion right to the curb after navigating around the tents and trailers of such blatantly corporate sponsors as Toyota and Sony Playstation 3, tending to swollen legs after walking what seemed like an eternity between the comedy/electronic music tent and the main stage and dealing with the stench of rain-saturated earth mixed with an unholy (and possibly toxic) combination of goose shit, lawn fertilizer and dirty feet. To be honest, I don’t know who I feel worse for, the landscapers who have to reseed that massive swath of lawn mucked up by the human traffic all weekend or the poor masses risking Paddy foot from trucking through that mess for three days straight.

Vampire Weekend :: APW 2009

Yet for all the kinks that didn’t necessarily make what one would-be comedian operating one of the festival merchandising booths hailed on a makeshift cardboard sign as “All Points Wet,” the utopian experience Goldenvoice Productions had hoped for, it did succeed in providing a busy weekend of great live music by bringing together nearly three generations of acts from all areas of interest. And seeing all the aging college rockers and new wavers there to see My Bloody Valentine and Echo & The Bunnymen coexist with the Hot Topic goth kids in attendance for Tool intermingling with the hip-hop heads amped for Jay-Z and Kool Keith in the company of the young blog rockers there to upload images of St. Vincent and Vampire Weekend to their Facebook accounts was certainly a testament to the communal powers of the music festival as a concept. And while you might think that such a wild variety of personalities could stir up a good deal of drama for the overabundance of security and police overlooking the masses, there was a minimal amount of confrontation amongst the mixed assortment of folks in attendance. Well, at least from my perspective. The morning-after posts from the online dailies found a much more hostile vibe amongst concertgoers, with many slinging digital mud at everyone from the youngsters who didn’t “show enough respect” for the likes of Echo and MBV to the concert promoters themselves.

“I know I’m going to come off as a grumpy old man here – but the APW crowd (for the most part) are a bunch of twats,” lamented an anonymous poster on Brooklyn Vegan in regards to Echo and the Bunnymen’s raggedly glorious Sunday evening set, which he felt was otherwise ignored and under-appreciated by the younger fans in attendance. “The kids there have no respect for bands like Echo – showing off their ZERO musical knowledge and their attachment to texting useless information during a great gig (and for watching something horrid like Crystal Castles why do these two have a career?). Fuck ‘em – the kids today don’t know shit.”

All Points West 2009

Elsewhere, some fans took aim at Goldenvoice Productions, chastising the company for its lack of cohesiveness in choosing the acts to play for this year’s festival. “[APW] still appears to be a random lineup shoveled together by people intent on making cash that are not music fans,” griped one reader on Billboard.com who questioned the sincerity and expertise of those in charge of putting the festival together. “Perhaps if an artist curated it a la Bowie, Morrissey, Reznor, a.k.a. someone who knows what they’re doing AND knows about music, it could be a better experience and I would be more interested in attending again while dropping hundreds of hard-earned dollars on a three-day pass.”

While the lineup seemed a little discombobulated to some, there was, in fact, some form of order to the festival, albeit in some odd Chinese arithmetic kind of way. In looking at the schedule of events prior to the weekend, one could easily surmise that Friday was the hip-hop and indie darling combo platter day, Saturday was relegated to a gloomier, heavier rock theme, and Sunday was reserved for the British. On paper it seemed like it could make sense. Yet why was it that acts who looked like they should have been on the Friday bill ended up playing Saturday and those who would have been a better fit on the Sunday lineup wound up performing on Saturday? For example, why did they put the Arctic Monkeys before the rowdy likes of My Bloody Valentine and Tool when they would have been better served to play on Sunday? And why leave Kool Keith and The Cool Kids stranded on the rock-heavy Saturday bill when they would have been much more at home playing on Friday alongside Q-Tip, The Pharcyde, Organized Konfusion and Jigga?

APW was hardly the cultural event that Woodstock has grown into, both in intention and dimension. However, despite some of the rather large generational gaps in the audience, the unity of such a diverse array of people stuck together in the mud and the rain could definitely be seen as a tribute of sorts to the communal spirit of the granddaddy of all rock festivals. That is, of course, if Woodstock had a tent sponsored by H&M that served shitty-tasting tap water and Toyota Priuses shuttling people to and from the site. Nevertheless, this year’s All Points West was certainly an upgrade from last year’s festivities and, given some pretty amazing performances from not only the headliners but the dozens of acts that outweighed the sorrows of soaked heads and sore feet, here’s hoping next year will bring us Metro area folks another weekend of summer sounds. Now if I can only get that stink out of my nose…

Friday, 07.31

Fleet Foxes :: APW 2009

Ominous thunderclouds hovered above Liberty State Park on Friday afternoon like a bad head cold that’s about to turn into a full-blown case of swine flu. And while they were staved off enough for the likes of Ra Ra Riot and Seasick Steve to enjoy relatively dry sets in the early afternoon, once Fleet Foxes arrived on the main Comet Stage and kicked into the Crosby, Stills, Nash and Dennis Wilson-isms that have made them such media darlings, the sky ripped open right in the middle of a particularly fervent rendition of “White Winter Hymnal.” Thanks for bringing some of that Seattle weather over here to the East Coast, fellas.

Brooklyn-by-way-of-Cincinnati’s The National followed them on the main stage and enjoyed a soggy but inspired 50-minutes of the kind of rainy day rock that perfectly fit the climate. There was even a moment when frontman Matt Berninger went into the crowd to soak in the weather and the adoration of his fans. The storm, however, hit its climactic crescendo during the legendary Queens-based underground rap duo Organized Konfusion‘s first live show together in over a decade. But the rain didn’t put a damper on the reunited duo of Prince Po and Pharoahe Monch‘s fiery and unforgettable set peppered with material from all three of the group’s classic albums (1991′s Organized Konfusion, 1994′s masterful Stress: The Extinction Agenda and 1997′s The Equinox), highlighted by an appearance from longtime friend and fellow under-appreciated rhyme hero OC of the DITC Crew, who is said to be officially joining the group in 2009 alongside the group’s other new member, the mighty DJ Boogie Blind of the new X-Ecutioners crew. For the modest legion of true underground hip-hop heads in attendance at APW, this particular set proved to be one of the great highlights of the entire festival.

Karen 0 – Yeah Yeah Yeahs :: APW 2009

In spite of the driving rain, Vampire Weekend, NYC’s most loveable Afro art poppers since Talking Heads, maintained positive vibes throughout their fun-filled set jam-packed with such hits as “Cape Cod Kwasa Kwasa,” “Oxford Comma,” “M79″ and “Walcott.” “Beautiful park, New York City behind us, it’s not so bad,” enthused frontman Ezra Koenig before debuting a new song, “White Sky,” which presumably will be featured on the group’s forthcoming sophomore album, which is rumored to come out later this year.

A long trek across the festival site from the main stage to the comedy/electronic tent was well worth the screaming kankles as we walked in on Los Angeles abstract hip-hop young blood Flying Lotus deep in the mix of a kinetic set. Fans who were expecting to hear the heady Madlib-meets-Aphex Twin grooves that helped to make FlyLo’s Warp debut, Los Angeles, one of 2008′s finest moments were greeted with a more dance-heavy blend from Alice Coltrane’s grandnephew with snippets of Snoop Dogg and dialogue from WarGames tossed into the chopper for good measure. Hearing the tit-for-tat between the WOPR and Matthew Broderick about chess and global thermal nuclear war ride atop skittering tech-hop beats was certainly well worth missing half of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs set, although Karen O and co. certainly were doing their thing quite impressively as we were walking back and caught images of guitarist Nick Zinner looking quite funny sporting some sort of reverse Kate Gosselin haircut on the giant jumbotrons on the horizon.

Q-Tip :: APW 2009

As the sky cleared up, New York City’s garage punk-cum-new wave dance mavens were steady rolling through a stream of crowd favorites, including some great choice cuts from their pop-tastic new album, It’s Blitz!, like “Heads Will Roll” and “Zero” intermeshed with old fan favorites like “Y Control” and a beautiful reading of “Maps,” which Karen, wearing a white arm band in his honor, dedicated to Adam “MCA” Yauch, whose recent cancer diagnosis forced the Beastie Boys to cancel their headlining performance on Friday.

Q-Tip, delivering that low end theory he does so well on the smaller Bullet Stage with an amazingly talented band in tow, also paid homage to MCA by performing a snippet of his verse from “Get It Together,” Tip’s collaborative hit from the B-Boys’ 1994 masterpiece Ill Communication. “That’s my family right there,” Tip proclaimed before going into the Midnight Marauders gem “Sucka Nigga” followed by a cover of Michael Jackson’s “Human Nature” in homage to the fallen King of Pop.

The most poignant tribute to Yauch, however, came from the man who pinch-hit for the absent Beasties on Friday night. Flanked by a full band on par with the likes of Prince and D’Angelo, Jay-Z kicked off his set with a genuinely rockin’, verse-for-verse version of “No Sleep Till Brooklyn.” “Born and bred in the U.S.A., they call me Adam Yauch but I’m MCA,” Jigga lovingly proclaimed to a sea of adoring fans dancing in the mud like they didn’t care before setting fire to the Comet Stage with a 28-song performance spanning the entire length of Mr. Carter’s 15-year career in hip-hop, on his very first appearance at a U.S. music festival.

“I want to dedicate this show to Adam,” said Jay-Z prior to delivering an expertly executed set featuring such classic Hov anthems as “Blue Magic,” “I Just Wanna Love U (Give It 2 Me)” (which featured a shout out to Michael Jackson with the reconfigured line, “Ladies love me long time like MJ’s soul”) and “Dirt Off Your Shoulder.” Jigga announced, “Y’all are pioneers. One of the reasons I’m on this stage is because of y’all.”

Jay-Z :: APW 2009

For over 90 minutes, Jay and his band blasted through the Brooklyn MC’s catalog with the breathless pace of a Green Lantern mixtape, delivering knockout punches with heated renditions of his Reasonable Doubt gem “Can I Live,” a brassy cruise through “Roc Boys” and his latest heater “D.O.A. (Death of Auto-Tune),” which saw images of bling and boxes of the notorious voice manipulating computer program exploding into pieces like the Death Star at the end of Star Wars.

Jigga also took time to contemplate some major cultural turning points as well. Following a soulful run through his Vol. III: The Life and Times of Sean Carter anthem “Izzo (H.O.V.A.),” Jay’s DJ played the song’s source sample, The Jackson 5′s “I Want You Back” as images and footage of Michael Jackson and his brothers filled the jumbotrons to the delight of verklempt fans still reeling from the Gloved One’s sudden death in July. “If you take one thing from this concert, remember this,” an emotional Hov declared, “we don’t mourn death, we celebrate life.”

When Jay reemerged for the encore, he offered up an a capella preview of a verse from his upcoming Blueprint 3 album before literally pummeling the crowd with a sprint through some of his biggest hits, including “Big Pimpin’,” “99 Problems,” “Can I Get A…” and “Hard Knock Life.” Then, following an extended thank you that saw him shouting out random people in the crowd (“I see you Guido,” for some reason, had me howling with laughter), the Jigga man hopped into an awaiting Maybach backstage and jetted as quickly as he emerged.

Jay-Z Setlist
No Sleep Till Brooklyn, Brooklyn Go Hard, Say Hello, D.O.A. (Death Of Autotune), U Don’t Know, Blue Magic, My President Is Black (Remix), Beware Of The Boys, I Just Wanna Love U (Give It 2 Me), Show Me What You Got, Diamonds From Sierra Leone (Remix), Roc Boys (And The Winner Is), Izzo (H.O.V.A.)/I Want You Back, Can I Live, Swagga Like Us, Jigga My Nigga, Jigga What, Jigga Who, Public Service Announcement (Interlude), Dirt Off Your Shoulder, Run This Town

Encore: A verse from The Blueprint 3, Medley: Money Ain’t A Thing/La La La (Excuse Me Miss Again)/Fiesta(Remix)/Where I’m From/”Feelin’ It, Can I Get A…, 99 Problems, Big Pimpin, Hard Knock Life (Ghetto Anthem), Encore

Continue reading for Saturday’s coverage of APW…

Saturday, 08.01

All Points West 2009

Though Saturday’s attendance was sparse compared to Friday’s, those who made the second day of All Points West benefited from the beautiful, sunny weather even though the heat and dryness wasn’t enough to harden the mud, which still proved to be a messy issue throughout the day. But the festival certainly did not get any more diverse or freewheeling than it did on Saturday. My day, personally, really kicked off in the comedy tent during comedian and 30 Rock star Judah Friedlander‘s hilarious stand-up set where he played up his “World Champion of the World” routine to maximum funny, talking about kicking Tool’s ass backstage and riffing on the absurdities of Facebook and Twitter.

The Cool Kids were, in fact, anything but, as their attempt to deliver “that old school rap” fell flat in comparison to all of the great hip-hop performances on Friday. However, Kool Keith, who has been laying low for a while after his overexposure in the late ’90s/early ’00s, made a comeback for the ages on an estrogen-heavy Bullet Stage. Sensitive fans who may have been saving their spaces for St. Vincent and Neko Case were surely mortified by the rap legend’s raunchy performance, as he and his entourage (augmented by a surprise appearance from his Analog Brother running buddy, gangsta icon and superstar TV cop Ice-T, who dubbed himself “the world’s most expensive hypeman”) barreled through every aspect of Keith’s 25-year career in the game, highlighted by gems dating back to his Ultramagnetic MCs days like “Two Brothers With Checks” to his Dr. Octagon psychedelic anthem “Blue Flowers” to the golden shower-loving title track off his 1997 XXX classic Sex Style to the Black Elvis/Lost In Space deep nugget “In Your Face.” Even at 45, Keith can still swing the non-linear swagger like nobody else.

Eugene Hutz – Gogol Bordello :: APW 2009

One-time indie guitarist for hire Annie Clark and her band St. Vincent proved to be a jarring juxtaposition with the porned-out antics of Kool Keith on the Bullet Stage, but she nevertheless dazzled her fans with her uncanny skills on the six-string, setting fire to tracks from her new album, Actor, like “The Strangers” and “Laughing with a Mouth of Blood” with her Robert Fripp-like scale techniques. She even stumped some of the novice Beatles fans in the crowd with a quixotic cover of the deep Let It Be cut “Dig A Pony,” where she managed to play both John Lennon’s and George Harrison’s guitar parts at the same time.

Meanwhile, on the Comet Stage, England’s Arctic Monkeys flexed the darker side of their otherwise chirpy Brit-pop by showcasing material from their harder-edged third album, the Josh Homme-produced Humbug, highlighted by a particularly caustic rendition of the new album’s opening track “My Propeller.” Lower East Side gypsy punkers Gogol Bordello seemed completely out of place nestled between the Monkeys and My Bloody Valentine on the big stage, but from the fun that Eugene Hutz and co. seemed to be having, it made no matter. As someone who never quite got into Gogol before seeing them on Saturday, I personally have to say that after watching the group’s Clash-meets-Klezmer dance party up on that massive stage – reaching its crescendo during a high energy run through their fan favorite rabble rouser “Start Wearing Purple” – they most certainly won me over in spades. A most amazing performance, to say the least.

Kevin Shields – My Bloody Valentine :: APW 2009

The most controversial set of the day, however, certainly came from the recently-reunited shoegaze icons My Bloody Valentine, whose near-hour of pure, concentrated layers of chaotic squalls of guitar feedback polarized the audience standing before them in a way I have never seen in all my years of concert-going. Oh, the blogosphere was set afire on Monday morning with old school alt-rockers defending their longtime heroes and the unorthodox union of lunkheaded Tool junkies and precocious Pitchfork fanboys (and girls) waging a Tweeting war over the group’s performance, which literally had some folks walking away with middle fingers in the air while chanting “Tool! Tool! Tool!” Yet for every hater there was a diehard noise monger blissfully entranced by the twin guitar attack of Kevin Shields and a rather lovely looking Bilinda Butcher that could be described as the sound of an atomic bomb going off on Manhattan Island as the roar of one thousand 747s departing simultaneously from JFK and LaGuardia flew overhead. It was that loud, and, as a fan of noise I found it bloody glorious. And the way the band just stood their ground so stoically as they created a sonic apocalypse around them was really just a sight to behold, especially during the group’s final song, the 12-minute “You Made Me Realise”, which I am certain gave people on the other side of the East River some serious 9/11 flashbacks.

And then there was Tool.

Tool :: APW 2009

These Los Angeles art metal linchpins are one of the most creative and celebrated bands creating music today. Though they only have four full-length albums and one amazing EP to their name, each title is a classic in its own right. They have created a wholly unique sound that picked up where fellow California luminaries Jane’s Addiction left off in 1991 and brought the sound into deeper, darker and more distant territory, essentially replacing the Bauhaus influence with that of King Crimson. The last time I saw Tool was in 1997. They had The Melvins opening up for them at the Mid-Hudson Civic Center in Poughkeepsie, New York, and they were, simply put, fucking phenomenal in every sense of the word. Maynard Keenan, covered in fluorescent black light blue was brilliantly and challengingly backed by guitarist and videographer Adam Jones, bassist Justin Chancellor and drummer Danny Carey, whose firm belief in the ways of Sacred Geometry dictate the patterns by which he performs. Playing songs off their two best albums, Ænima and Undertow, the group sounded hungry, eager to crawl inside our brains and shake things up from the homunculus on out.

Seeing them 12 years later headlining Saturday night at All Points West, I did not get that same sense of wonderment that I did in Poughkeepsie back in ’97 nor at Lollapalooza ’93 in New Jersey’s Waterloo Village. Instead, I got the same feeling I did when I saw Pink Floyd during their Division Bell Tour. On this night, Tool felt as though they were phoning it in. Sure, on a technical level, the band’s performances of such favorites as “Stinkfist,” “Schism” and “Ænima” were spot-on and skillfully played, no doubt, but the feeling didn’t seem there at all. They really did sound like they were going through the motions, right down to the almost same tired setlist from their 10,000 Days tour. I know this is going against type here, as most everyone who saw Tool on Saturday night and wrote about it just couldn’t stop singing their praises, but I gotta keep it real, and it was a little bit of a snooze, right down to the non-Adam Jones video art they put on display compared to the amazing visuals they had going 12 years ago, where they literally made their outstanding album art come to life. This time the stuff they were projecting beyond their videos looked like something you’d see in a commercial for a graphic design school on a Saturday afternoon commercial break. Yes, they really did play great, especially the stuff off 10,000 Days which sounded phenomenal, especially “Rosetta Stoned,” but overall a pale shadow of their sound and presence back in the day.

Tool Setlist
Jambi, Stinkfist, Forty-Six & 2, Schism, Rosetta Stoned, Flood, Ænema, Lateralus,
Vicarious

Continue reading for Sunday’s coverage of APW…

Sunday, 08.02

All Points West 2009

As a make-good for attendee’s troubles in sitting through their concert in the pouring rain on Friday, Goldenvoice announced, via Ezra Koenig of Vampire Weekend, that their tickets for Friday would be good for reentry for either Saturday or Sunday. This was news that certainly made my fiance very happy, as she is a hardcore Coldplay fan and was hoping to get miracled into the Sunday show to see them in some form or another. However, what nobody expected for the last day of the APW weekend was how bad the rain would return. If Friday was bad in terms of weather, what we woke up to Sunday morning was nothing short of a storm of near-hurricane proportions. It was so bad, in fact, that APW promoters were forced to delay the start of sets until later in the afternoon, causing the cancellation of the early part of the day’s festivities, including the performances of such acts as The Gaslight Anthem and the retro country outfit Kitty Daisy & Lewis. As fans began to arrive to the festival site, they were greeted by a denial of entry, causing a huge, cattle-like line of angry people looking to get in and start their day. Chants of “bullshit” grew with every minute the overzealous security refused to open the gates until they eventually succumbed to the growing crowd agitation and started letting people in.

Those who were looking forward to seeing comedians Dave Barry, Christian Finnegan and Janeane Garofalo in the comedy tent were treated to truncated 10-minute performances from each, the majority of which were finished just as people were getting settled in.

Seth Olinsky – Akron/Family :: APW 2009

Meanwhile, on the Bullet Stage, Akron/Family was gearing up for an amazing Sunday afternoon performance that was mostly culled from the reconfigured Brooklyn band’s latest, Set ‘Em Wild, Set ‘Em Free (JamBase review here), a brimming combination of hippie rock warmth and free jazz cool that is one of the finest releases this year. Live, the group is much more animated than their music suggests, and they played their set with maximum urgency and passion.

On the Comet Stage, British rockers Elbow delivered a fine sense of English charm and wit to the day, doing shots on stage and delivering stunning renditions of songs that are far more popular on their side of the pond than ours, including “Grounds for Divorce” and “The Bones of You.” Back on the Bullet Stage, Scotland’s Mogwai certainly made a much lovelier wall of noise than their Irish neighbors My Bloody Valentine did the night before, delivering a set of some of their most beloved rackets, including “Hunted by a Freak,” “I’m Jim Morrison, I’m Dead” and the epic “Mogwai Fear Satan.”

The Black Keys, also on the Bullet Stage, never cease to amaze at just how two men can create the sound of four, as guitarist/vocalist Dan Auerbach and drummer Patrick Carney, who broke four sticks during the duo’s set, delivered a raucous, bluesy 50-minute show loaded with cuts from their five-album catalog.

Echo & the Bunnymen :: APW 2009

For the elderly of the alternative nation, however, the highlight of Sunday came when British post-punk legends Echo & the Bunnymen took the stage. The group sounds much more rugged and ragged on stage than they do on record, giving their sound a more classic rock edge than their synth-heavy studio endeavors may suggest. As the group tore through their most beloved singles, including “Lips Like Sugar,” “Bring on the Dancing Horses,” “The Killing Moon” and “The Cutter,” one can easily hear the sizeable chunk of their sound that U2 took a bite from and spun into platinum. The band also made nods to their own influences as well, working in The Doors’ “Roadhouse Blues” during “Villiers Terrace” and weaving in Lou Reed’s “Walk on the Wild Side” in the middle of “Nothing Lasts Forever.” The group even debuted a new song, the promising “I Think I Need It Too,” from their forthcoming new album, The Fountain, which is scheduled to come out October 12.

Now, I’m not sure how blasphemous it is to say that I actually enjoyed Coldplay more than Tool but I’m not gonna lie. Having seen them three times prior with my girl, the Brit-pop demigods continue to impress me with their strong stage presence and tremendous sound live. Though you will certainly not catch me with any of their studio albums on my stereo any time soon, hearing these songs live is quite enjoyable and the group certainly delivered one of the strongest sets of the weekend.

Chris Martin – Coldplay :: APW 2009

“As four people who grew up in the mud and the rain, we take off our proverbial hats to you,” proclaimed Chris Martin to the crowd before blasting into “42″ off the band’s latest, Brian Eno-produced album, Viva La Vida or Death and All His Friends. Their 90-minute set played out like a greatest hits package come to life, as they barreled through such beloved anthems as “In My Place,” “Yellow” (complete with giant yellow balloons tossed into the crowd), “Clocks,” “Fix You” and “Politik.” Not to be outdone by his new BFF Jay-Z, Martin staged his own tribute to Adam Yauch by delivering a piano ballad rendition of “Fight For Your Right (To Party).” Cheesy, yes, but the passion with which Martin sang, “Your mom threw away your best porno mag,” was both funny and endearing all at once.

In a move nicked right from the playbook of their most direct inspiration, U2, Coldplay went into the crowd and trucked through the mud onto a small stage on a catwalk in the middle of the audience a la the “Zoo TV Tour” to deliver an acoustic set highlighted by a stunning version of Michael Jackson’s “Billie Jean,” which beats Chris Cornell’s tired take by a country mile. The Viva La Vida songs sounded great live, especially the title track, which saw guitarist Jonny Buckland do the job of an entire string orchestra as drummer Will Champion pounded on his drums as though his life depended on it during the uplifting “Lovers in Japan.”

“You probably won’t be seeing us again for a while, which is probably good news for some of you,” joked Martin towards the end of the group’s set before launching into “The Scientist,” not only the band’s greatest song but one that continues to grow more beautiful with every listen.

As we left the festival grounds to the pulsing sounds of French house maven Etienne de Crecy, eager to clean the mud off our legs and plunge our sore tootsies in a bath of Epsom salts, we could only hope aloud that Mother Nature will be kinder to the All Points West Festival when it comes back around in the summer of 2010.

Coldplay Setlist
Life In Technicolor, Violet Hill, Clocks, In My Place, Yellow, 42, Fix You, Strawberry Swing, God Put A Smile Upon Your Face, You Gotta Fight (Chris on piano – Beastie Boys cover) Viva La Vida, Lost!, Green Eyes (acoustic), Death Will Never Conquer (acoustic, sung by Will) Billie Jean (acoustic – Michael Jackson cover), Viva La Vida (remix interlude), Politik, Lovers In Japan, Death And All His Friends

Encore:
The Scientist, Life In Technicolor ii, The Escapist

Continue reading for more pics of APW 2009…

Friday, 07.31

Heartless Bastards

The Knux

Seasick Steve

Seasick Steve

Telepath

Ra Ra Riot

Ra Ra Riot

Fleet Foxes

The National

The National

Xavier Rudd

Q-Tip

Vampire Weekend

Yeah Yeah Yeahs

Yeah Yeah Yeahs

Yeah Yeah Yeahs

MSTRKRFT

MSTRKRFT

Jay-Z

Jay-Z

Jay-Z

Continue reading for more Saturday pics of APW 2009…

Saturday, 08.01

Cage the Elephant

White Rabbits

Electric Touch

The Cool Kids

Kool Keith

St. Vincent

St. Vincent

Arctic Monkeys

Gogol Bordello

…And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead

…And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead

My Bloody Valentine

My Bloody Valentine

Tool

Tool

Tool

Tool

Tool

Continue reading for more Sunday pics of APW 2009…

Sunday, 08.02

Akron/Family

Mogwai

Silversun Pickups

Elbow

The Black Keys

Echo & the Bunnymen

MGMT

MGMT

Coldplay

Coldplay

Coldplay

Coldplay

Coldplay

JamBase | Jersey
Go See Live Music!



Autolux Tour The States

Autolux Announce Nationwide Tour


Autolux

Los Angeles’ Autolux is about to embark on a national U.S. tour this fall, playing some of their first-ever headlining shows. These dates are Autolux’s first spin around the States since 2005, in support of their critically acclaimed debut album, Future Perfect. Band members Eugene Goreshter, Carla Azar and Greg Edwards plan to offer a preview of new material from their long-awaited, forthcoming album, Transit Transit.

The tour was born out of their confirmed slot at this September’s All Tomorrow’s Parties in New York, curated by The Flaming Lips. After announcing the festival date, and receiving numerous emails from fans around the country in hopes the band would book a tour soon, the three-piece felt this would be an ideal time to fill in the gaps – putting together a coast-to-coast, month-long run, which begins August 28 at the Outside Lands Festival in San Francisco.

Autolux have kept themselves busy doing other various projects throughout the making of Transit Transit. These include collaborating with UNKLE on a song for the album War Stories, composing music for an exhibit at the Museum of Natural History in Los Angeles called “Sonic Scenery,” and traveling to Russia to open for PJ Harvey. In February 2008, Carla went into the studio with PJ Harvey and John Parish to play drums on PJ Harvey’s latest album, A Woman A Man Walked By. Most recently, Autolux collaborated with Australian visual artist Kill Pixie for an installation room for his solo exhibition at the Merry Karnowsky Gallery, hosted by Tim Roth.

Autolux Tour Dates:

08/28/09 Fri Outside Lands Festival San Francisco, CA

08/29/09 Sat Berbati’s Pan Portland, OR

08/30/09 Sun Neumos Seattle, WA

09/02/09 Wed Aquarium Fargo, ND

09/03/09 Thu 7th Street Entry Minneapolis, MN

09/04/09 Fri Empty Bottle Chicago, IL

09/05/09 Sat Magic Stick Detroit, MI

09/06/09 Sun Al’s Bar Lexington, KY

09/08/09 Tue Black Cat Washington, DC

09/09/09 Wed Johnny Brenda’s Philadelphia, PA

09/10/09 Thu Paradise Rock Club Boston, MA

09/12/09 Sat Kutshers Country Club Monticello, NY

09/14/09 Mon Bowery Ballroom New York, NY

09/15/09 Tue Music Hall Of Williamsburg Brooklyn, NY

09/16/09 Wed Brillobox Pittsburgh, PA

09/17/09 Thu Beachland Ballroom/Tavern Cleveland, OH

09/18/09 Fri Pygmalion Music Festival Champaign-Urbana, IL

09/19/09 Sat Bottleneck Lawrence, KS

09/20/09 Sun The Waiting Room Omaha, NE

09/22/09 Tue Bluebird Theater Denver, CO

09/23/09 Wed Urban Lounge Salt Lake City, UT

09/25/09 Fri El Rey Theater Los Angeles, CA

09/26/09 Sat Soma San Diego, CA

09/27/09 Sun Detroit Bar Costa Mesa, CA



Eugene Celebration: Set Times
w/ HBR, Bridge, Extra Golden, Gab

The Eugene Celebration Announces Schedule For 2009 Festival

Outdoor Festival Scheduled For September 4, 5 & 6


Hot Buttered Rum

The Eugene Celebration Festival has announced the complete live music program for the Outdoor and McDonald Theatre stages during the 2009 fest in downtown Eugene.

The small scale music festival features some strong names in the jam, reggae and bluegrass scenes. Three day general admission passes are on sale for the low price of $12 and can be purchased here.

To view the current live music schedule, set times and updates, please visit eugenecelebration.com.

Following is a list of confirmed bands & stages:

KLCC Rogue Stage

-Friday, September 4: 10:30pm-Sonny Landreth; 9:00pm-The Bridge; 7:30pm-Izabella; 6:00pm-Just People.

-Saturday, September 5: 10:30pm-The Iguanas; 9:00pm-Extra Golden; 7:30pm-Thomas Mapfumo, 6:00pm-KEF, 4:30pm-Don Latarski; 3:00pm-Apropos; 1:00pm-Jessie Marquez.

-Sunday, September 6: 4:30pm-LeRoy Bell & his Only Friends; 3:00pm-Wendy Darling; 1:30pm-Blame Sally.

McDonald Theatre Stage

-Friday, September 4: 11:00pm-Woodland; 9:30pm-Scott Huckabay.

-Saturday September 5: 11:00pm-Gift of Gab; 9:30pm-Crown City Rockers; 8:00pm-Bach Remix winner.

Library Stage

-Friday, September 4: 10:30pm-Prezident Brown; 8:30pm-Reeble Jar; 7:00pm-Medium Troy.

-Saturday, September 5: 10:30pm-Melvin Seals & JGB; 9:00pm-Heavyweight Dub Champion; 7:30pm-Zepparella; 6:00pm-Black Joe Lewis; 4:30pm-Volifonix.

Broadway Stage

-Friday, September 4: 10:30pm-Studabaker John & the Hawks; 9:00pm-Ty Curtis; 7:30pm-Broh Taylor Blues Band; 6:00pm-Vicki Stevens Band.

-Saturday, September 5: 10:30-Mark Hummel & Rusty Zinn; 9:00pm-Henry Cooper & the Purple Cats; 7:30pm-Rooster AllStar Jam; 6:30pm-Walker T. Ryan; 5:45-Parade Awards; 4:30pm-Sassparilla Jug Band; 3:00pm-Casey Neil and the Norway Rats; 1:30pm-Conjugal Visitors; 12:00pm-Bad Mitten Orchestra.

-Sunday, September 6: 7:00pm-Hot Buttered Rum; 5:30pm-Hillstomp; 4:00pm-Paul Wright & Rootdown; 2:30pm-Andrew Heringer Band; 1:00pm-Swing Shift.



Lotus Pay What You Want Tour

LOTUS ANNOUNCE HUGE FALL TOUR, INCLUDING A “PAY-WHAT-YOU-WANT” WESTERN STATE RUN

THE BAND RELEASES A PAIR OF EPs ON OCTOBER 6: FEATHER ON WOOD AND OIL ON GLASS


Lotus

Lotus is about to break ground in a way that no other rock band has done prior – they are plotting a tour this fall that truly allows their legion of fans to pay-what-they-want for tickets. The “Pay-What-You-Want-Tour” featuring Lotus is an eight-night run of shows in western U.S. states, sponsored by Ticketweb, that lets the fans decide how much their show ticket will cost. At the $15.00 Pay-What-You-Want level or higher, fans receive free digital downloads of the band’s two new EPs Feather on Wood and Oil on Glass, both to be released on October 6, 2009.


The Pay-What-You-Want dates are part of Lotus’ larger Fall Tour, running from early-October through the end of the year. Big stops include performances at Denver’s Fillmore, NYC’s Terminal 5, Baltimore’s Sonar, Chicago’s Vic Theatre, and others. Lotus brings out several must-see opening acts for many of these shows, including Break Science ft Adam Deitch, The Egg (from London, U.K.), Big in Japan, and Big Gigantic. Don’t miss a few special small shows: here’s the scoop – two shows at NYC’s Mercury Lounge are being bundled with the T-5 ticket, and the same offer is available for the Denver shows (to get into Quixote’s, you must buy the Fillmore ticket).


Downloads of both new EPs will be bundled with advance ticket purchases for select Fall Tour dates including the three New York City shows, two Denver shows, both Boston shows and a few other shows to be determined. The material on both Feather on Wood and Oil on Glass can be directly traced back to Lotus’ 2008 full-length release, Hammerstrike. A number of songs were recorded that didn’t find their way onto Hammerstrike (either they hadn’t been finished by deadlines or they weren’t coalescing with the sound of that project), but after finishing the album, Lotus decided to revisit these tracks, and the results are extraordinary. Feather on Wood is sunnier with a laid-back vibe, yet not afraid of big rock beauty, while Oil on Glass is darker in character, with more head-nodding tempos.


Listing of forthcoming Lotus tour dates (and who will be opening each show):

09.04 Bottom Line Nagoya, JP

09.05 Metamorphose Festival Tokyo, JP

09.06 Drunkard’s Stadium Kashiwa, JP

09.18 Mercury Lounge New York, NY

09.19 Mercury Lounge New York, NY

10.02 Aces Lounge Austin, TX

10.03 Aces Lounge Austin, TX

PAY-WHAT-YOU-WANT Dates (10.06 – 10.14)

10.06 The Roxy Hollywood, CA w/ Break Science ft Adam Deitch

10.07 The Independent San Francisco, CA w/ Break Science ft Adam Deitch

10.08 McDonald Theatre Eugene, OR w/ Break Science ft Adam Deitch

10.9 The Showbox Seattle, WA w/ Break Science ft Adam Deitch

10.10 Crystal Ballroom Portland, OR w/ Break Science ft Adam Deitch

10.11 The Nightlight Bellingham, WA w/ Break Science ft Adam Deitch

10.13 Knitting Factory Boise, ID w/ Break Science ft Adam Deitch

10.14 Murray Theater Salt Lake City, UT w/ Break Science ft Adam Deitch

10.15 Belly Up Aspen, CO

10.16 Quixote’s Denver, CO

10.17 The Fillmore Denver, CO

10.20 Granada Theatre Lawrence, KS

10.21 The Old Rock House St. Louis, MO w/ The Egg

10.22 Slowdown Omaha, NE w/ The Egg

10.23 First Avenue Minneapolis, MN w/ The Egg

10.24 Turner Hall Ballroom Milwaukee, WI w/ The Egg

10.26 Copper Dragon Carbondale, IL w/ The Egg

10.27 Bluebird Nightclub Bloomington, IN w/ The Egg

10.28 Bogart’s Cincinnati, OH w/ The Egg

10.29 House of Blues Cleveland, OH w/ The Egg

10.30 The Town Ballroom Buffalo, NY w/ The Egg

10.31 Sonar Baltimore, MD w/ Big In Japan & The Egg

11.04 Higher Ground Burlington, VT w/ The Egg

11.05 Paradise Rock Club Boston, MA w/ The Egg

11.06 Paradise Rock Club Boston, MA w/ The Egg

11.07 Revolution Hall Troy, NY

11.10 Is Venue Charlottesville, VA w/ Big Gigantic

11.11 Cat’s Cradle Carrboro, NC w/ Big Gigantic

11.12 Variety Playhouse Atlanta, GA w/ Big Gigantic

11.13 Bear Creek Music & Arts Festival Live Oak, FL

11.14 Orange Peel Asheville, NC w/ Big Gigantic

11.27 Vic Theatre Chicago, IL

11.28 Terminal 5 New York, NY



Brother Ali Tour, MP3 &:Album w/ Chuck D & Ant

Brother Ali Announces New Album And North American Tour


Brother Ali

Brother Ali‘s last album, the critically acclaimed, The Undisputed Truth, was an album of bold statements and social awareness without being preachy. Ali’s new album, Us, Street Date September 22, has turned his gaze inward and starts to examine the human condition from the outside in. A profound, personal glimpse into a vulnerability seldom seen or heard in music, Us touches on the strengths and flaws of the human condition, exploring drug abuse, divorce, homophobia and many more topics that most people are scared to touch in their own lives, much less on an album for the world to see.

As with previous endeavors, the beats here are courtesy of Ant (of Atmosphere), whose production work seems to be getting more soulful and lush by the minute. The guest appearances only accentuate Brother Ali’s strengths, with Chuck D, Freeway, Joell Ortiz and Stokley Williams of Mint Condition making strong appearances.

In support of the new album, Ali is embarking on a North American tour of epic proportions, enlisting the help of labelmates and collaborators Evidence (of Dilated Peoples), BK One and Toki Wright.

Peep the video for the fist single “Us,” it’s pretty dope. And you can download “Us” for free here:

Tour Dates:

09/07/09 Mon Neumos Seattle, WA

09/22/09 Tue Pizza Luce Duluth, MN

09/23/09 Wed What’s Up? Lounge Mankato, MN

09/24/09 Thu The Industry Iowa City , IA

09/25/09 Fri Nutty’s North Sioux Falls, SD

09/27/09 Sun Granada Theater Lawrence, KS

09/29/09 Tue Ogden Theatre Denver, CO

09/30/09 Wed Fox Theatre Boulder, CO

10/01/09 Thu Black Sheep Colorado Springs, CO

10/02/09 Fri In The Venue Salt Lake City, UT

10/03/09 Sat The Venue Boise, ID

10/04/09 Sun The Badlander Missoula, MT

10/06/09 Tue The Boulevard Spokane, WA

10/07/09 Wed Neumos Seattle, WA

10/08/09 Thu Element Victoria, BC

10/09/09 Fri Venue Vancouver, BC

10/10/09 Sat Nightlight Bellingham, WA

10/11/09 Sun Hawthorne Theatre Portland, OR

10/12/09 Mon WOW Hall Eugene, OR

10/14/09 Wed Humboldt State University Arcata, CA

10/15/09 Thu New Oasis Sparks, NV

10/16/09 Fri The Catalyst Santa Cruz, CA

10/17/09 Sat Slim’s San Francisco, CA

10/18/09 Sun Avalon Nightclub Sacramento, CA

10/20/09 Tue El Rey Theater Los Angeles, CA

10/21/09 Wed Canes Bar and Grill San Diego, CA

10/22/09 Thu Club Red Tempe, AZ

10/23/09 Fri Club Congress Tucson, AZ

10/24/09 Sat Sunshine Theater Albuquerque, NM

10/26/09 Mon The Foundation Lubbock, TX

10/27/09 Tue Granada Theater Dallas, TX

10/28/09 Wed Emo’s Alternative Lounge Austin, TX

10/29/09 Thu Warehouse Live Houston, TX

11/01/09 Sun The Social Orlando, FL

11/04/09 Wed Cat’s Cradle Carrboro, NC

11/05/09 Thu Ottobar Baltimore, MD

11/06/09 Fri First Unitarian Church Philadelphia, PA

11/07/09 Sat The Fillmore at Irving Plaza New York, NY

11/08/09 Sun Paradise Rock Club Boston, MA

11/09/09 Mon Higher Ground Burlington, VT

11/10/09 Tue The Asylum Portland, ME

11/11/09 Wed Pearl Street Nightclub Northampton, MA

11/13/09 Fri Grog Shop Cleveland, OH

11/14/09 Sat Skully’s Columbus, OH

11/15/09 Sun Uncle Pleasants Louisville, KY

11/17/09 Tue The Blind Pig Ann Arbor, MI

11/18/09 Wed Metro Chicago, IL

11/19/09 Thu Barrymore Theatre Madison, WI

11/20/09 Fri First Avenue Minneapolis, MN


Kyle Hollingsworth Album: And Tour w/ Zach Gill

KYLE HOLLINGSWORTH BAND ANNOUNCES FALL TOUR DATES

INCLUDING WEST COAST SHOWS WITH ZACH GILL

HOLLINGSWORTH RELEASES SECOND SOLO ALBUM, THEN THERE’S NOW, ON SEPTEMBER 15

Kyle Hollingsworth

For more than a decade, as keyboardist for Colorado’s beloved String Cheese Incident, Kyle Hollingsworth has consistently proven one of the most innovative and virtuosic musicians on the American jamband scene. Now, with the September 15 release of Then There’s Now (SCI Fidelity Records), his first album since the band announced a hiatus in 2007, Hollingsworth extends his reach into areas that will both delight longtime admirers and lock in countless new ones. Emphasizing his considerable songwriting skills and incorporating a plethora of surprises, Then There’s Now marks the true emergence of Kyle Hollingsworth as a solo artist.

Kyle Hollingsworth Band (featuring Dave Watts of The Motet – drums, Garrett Sayers of The Motet – bass, and Dan Schwindt – guitar) tours Midwest and West Coast states this fall in support of Hollingsworth’s new album release. Brushfire Records recording artist Zach Gill (ALO, Jack Johnson) joins Hollingsworth for the October run of West Coast dates and Colorado’s Euforquestra returns home to support the September’s Midwest dates. A limited number SCI Fan Club tickets will be available through pre-sale at www.kylehollingsworth.com beginning Wednesday, July 29 at 10 a.m. PDT. General on sale begins Saturday, August 1 at 10 a.m. PDT at www.kylehollingsworth.com and at respective venues.

Check out kylehollingsworth.com/thentheresnow for videos, audio and lots more info.

Kyle’s complete list of fall tour dates is as follows:

09.10 Majestic Theatre Madison, WI w/ Euforquestra

09.11 Iowa City Yacht Club Iowa City, IA w/ Euforquestra

09.12 Martyrs’ Chicago, IL w/ Euforquestra

09.13 The Water Bowl Muncie, IN Wuhnurth Music Festival

09.17 Camp Zoe Salem, MO

09.18 Mishawaka Bellvue, CO co-bill w/Jeff Austin & Friends

09.19 Fox Theatre Boulder, CO CD release party

Following Dates are co-billed with Zach Gill:

10.07 Winston’s Beach Club San Diego, CA

10.08 The Mint Los Angeles, CA

10.09 SOhO Santa Barbara, CA

10.10 The Independent San Francisco, CA

10.11 HopMonk Tavern Sebastopol, CA

10.13 The Red Fox Tavern Eureka, CA

10.14 WOW Hall Eugene, OR

10.15 The Triple Door Seattle, WA

10.16 Wild Buffalo Bellingham, WA

10.17 Mississippi Studios Portland, OR

For Hollingsworth, who has recently been more prolific than ever before, the title of Then There’s Now offers the first clue as to where he stands today. Then There’s Now undeniably draws on Hollingsworth’s past affiliation with “The Cheese,” using his previous work as a jumping off point-yes, there are some intoxicating, if more concise, jams to be savored. But the album’s “now” component-irresistible melodies, poignant lyrics and fine-tuned song construction, plus a willingness to infuse the tunes with elements of pop, jazz, electronica, hip-hop and more-transports Hollingsworth into musical realms he’s never before explored at length.


Taking Woodstock Soundtrack

Soundtrack To Ang Lee’s New Comedy Taking Woodstock

About The Road To The 1969 Event Includes Unforgettable Songs By
The Artists Who Played Woodstock

Taking Woodstock the new film directed by Oscar winner Ang Lee was inspired by the memoirs of Elliot Tiber, who with his family inadvertently played a role in making the Woodstock Music and Arts Festival into the famed happening it was, 40 years ago this summer. The Taking Woodstock soundtrack, with songs from many of the artists who performed at the festival, reflects a joyous moment in time when everything seemed possible. The soundtrack and score, composed by Danny Elfman, will be available August 25.

The Taking Woodstock soundtrack begins with Richie Havens, who opened the festival on August 15, 1969. For the movie Havens recorded a new version of “Freedom,” the song he played to close his set at Woodstock. The soundtrack contains songs from a number of 1960s musical icons who performed at the festival, including Grateful Dead, Janis Joplin, Jefferson Airplane and Crosby, Stills & Nash – who played only their second show in front of the crowd, which was estimated at 500,000 strong.

Focus Features will release the movie Taking Woodstock nationwide August 28. The film stars Demetri Martin, Dan Fogler, Henry Goodman, Jonathan Groff, Eugene Levy, Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Imelda Staunton, Emile Hirsch and Liev Schreiber. For more information about the film, visit takingwoodstockthemovie.com.

Taking Woodstock Soundtrack
Track Listing:

1. “Freedom (2009)” – Richie Havens
2. Taking Woodstock Titles*
3. “Wooden Ships” – Crosby, Stills & Nash
4. “China Cat Sunflower” (Live) – Grateful Dead
5. “Maggie M’Gill” – The Doors
6. Elliot’s Place*
7. “Coming Into Los Angeles” (Live) – Arlo Guthrie
8. “I-Feel-Like-I’m-Fixin’-To-Die Rag” (Live) – Country Joe McDonald
9. “Going Up The Country” (Live) – Canned Heat
10. “Try (Just A Little Bit Harder)” (Live) – Janis Joplin
11. A Happening (Office #2)*
12. “The Red Telephone” – Love
13. “Beautiful People” (Live) – Melanie
14. “I Shall Be Released” (Live) – The Band
15. “Perspective Extended*
16. “One More Mile” – The Paul Butterfield Blues Band
17. “Volunteers” – Jefferson Airplane

*Score written and produced by Danny Elfman


Anis Shivani: CHEAP IS EXPENSIVE: THE ETERNAL SEARCH FOR A BARGAIN AND WHAT IT HAS DONE TO US

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Beats Antique: New EP

Beats Antique New EP: Contraption Vol. 1


Beats Antique

Growing like wildfire under the canopy of live electonica and world roots music comes Beats Antique, a masterful merge of modern technology, live instrumentation and seductive performance. After only two and half years performing as a cohesive force, the group has just self released their third album, Contraption, Vol.1 which marks the first in a two-part EP series.

The EP can be downloaded here.

The seven-track dance floor ready EP is infused with orchestral textures and a worldly flare that has fans clamoring for more. Using only word-of-mouth marketing, Beats Antique’s new tracks have over 700 paid downloads and 20,000 plays on the EP in the first week of their self-release. There’s no doubt that the merge of old world instruments and live producing is on the rise and Beats Antique is helping leading the way.

For those who are unfamiliar with Beats Antique’s sound, the band combines the tones of the Middle East with the styles of hip-hop, brass band, downtempo, glitch and dub-step in a new collage of music that is mixed and broken down with clever breakbeats for an adept international flair. Beats Antique is producing an un-charted style of music by adding live horns, accordion, glockenspiel, viola, string quartets, kalimba, clarinet and various unusual instruments to their big beat arrangements.

Born of Oakland, CA, the musical trio consists of producers, David Satori, Sidecar Tommy and world-renowned belly dance performer/producer Zoe Jakes, who helped inspire the thematic Middle East tempo of the band.

Beats Antique Tour Dates:
07/31/09 Fri Faerie Worlds Eugene, Oregon
08/15/09 Sat Beloved Festival Tidewater, Oregon
08/31/09 Mon Burning Man Blackrock City, Nevada
09/12/09 Sat Monolith Festival Red Rocks, CO
09/19/09 Sat Symbiosis Gathering Yosemite National Park, CA
09/13/09 Sun Red Rocks Amphitheatre Morrison, CO


Obama hails Apollo 11 astronauts

US President Barack Obama has praised the "heroism" of the astronauts who made first landing by man on the Moon, marking 40th anniversary of the event.

Mr Obama said the nation continued to draw inspiration from Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins.

"I think that all of us recall the moment in which mankind finally was untethered from this planet," he said.

Earlier, Mr Aldrin and Mr Collins called for renewed efforts to send a manned mission to Mars.

Neil Armstrong, the first man on the Moon, said the race to get to the Moon had been the ultimate peaceful contest.

He said it was an "exceptional national investment" for the US and ex-USSR.

He spoke at an event at Washington DC’s National Air and Space Museum to mark 40 years since their mission.

"Sometimes I think I flew to the wrong place. Mars was always my favourite as a kid and it still is today"

Michael Collins
Apollo 11 crew

Shortly afterwards the three astronauts met Mr Obama at the White House.

Mr Obama – who was seven years’ old when Mr Armstrong and Mr Aldrin took mankind’s first steps on the lunar surface – said it was "wonderful" to be in the company of the three history-makers.

"The moment in which we had one of our own step on the moon and leave that imprint… is there to this day," Mr Obama said.

He praised the astronauts for the "heroism, the calm under pressure, the grace" with which they operated.

Their achievement, Mr Obama said "was somehow able to lift our sights, not just here in the United States but around the world".

‘Great symbol’

The American space industry wants the Obama administration to agree to send Nasa crews back into space, first to the Moon and then to Mars, reports the BBC’s Kevin Connolly, in Washington.

A decision could be due later this year, although there is no guarantee Mr Obama will make funds available, our correspondent says.

HAVE YOUR SAY

"Man’s first crossing to the Red Planet should be undertaken as a team effort"

Yvonne Miranthis, Cyprus

Send us your comments

Speaking at the museum, Mr Armstrong said the Moon race was a "diversion" in the Cold War battle between the US and the USSR.

"Eventually, it provided a mechanism for engendering co-operation between former adversaries. In that sense, among others, it was an exceptional national investment for both sides."

Fellow astronaut Mr Aldrin praised President John F Kennedy’s bold decision to pronounce that the US would land men on the Moon before the end of the 1960s.

"Apollo 11 is a symbol of what a great nation and a great people can do if we work hard, work together and have strong leaders with vision and determination," he said.

But he also pushed for a mission to Mars: "The best way to honour and remember all those who were part of the Apollo programme is to follow in our footsteps; to boldly go again on a new mission of exploration."

Mr Collins, who circled the Moon alone while Mr Armstrong and Mr Aldrin walked on it, said Mars was more interesting than the Moon.

"Sometimes I think I flew to the wrong place. Mars was always my favourite as a kid and it still is today."

"My glass has been half empty for three decades at least. Hopefully, we can turn that around because what we did then is do-able again"

Eugene Cernan, former Nasa astronaut

He urged further exploration, saying Mars was a "much more worthwhile destination".

Other Nasa astronauts gave a news conference at Nasa headquarters in Washington DC on Monday.

Eugene Cernan, who was the last astronaut to step off the Moon, in 1972, concurred with the Apollo 11 astronauts urging a new focus on Mars.

"We need to go back to the Moon, we need to learn a little bit more about what we think we know already, we need to establish bases, put new telescopes there, get prepared to go to Mars. The ultimate goal, truly, is to go to Mars," he told journalists.

"I think the next major goal is not to spend three days, or three weeks or three months on the Moon, but to have you folks, or your kids, or your grand-kids sit here and talk to a group of guys who can tell you what it was like to go to Mars."

But Mr Aldrin disagreed with the view that astronauts should test capabilities for a long-duration flight on the Moon before attempting a journey to Mars.

"Why go to the most difficult place to do that Why not do it on the International Space Station," he said.

Mr Aldrin added: "One day, we are going to send some people to the surface of Mars. And if we think we’re going to send them there for a year-and-a-half and then bring them back, and then send another group there for a year-and-a-half and bring them back, Washington will find another way to spend that money.

"That’s unless we have declared our objective is an increasing, permanent space settlement."

The US space agency’s currently stated aim is to return astronauts to the Moon by 2020. But that vision is under review, along with the space vehicles that would get them there.

Nasa is due to retire its space shuttles next year and replace them with the Orion spacecraft, an Apollo-like capsule that would launch on a new rocket called Ares 1.

Another rocket, Ares V, would have the capability to launch heavy payloads – service and cargo modules – that would be needed to service Moon missions.

</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

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Blue Turtle Seduction:16 States Tour

LAKE TAHOE BOYS HIT OKLAHOMA, WISCONSIN, MINNESOTA AND MORE

Blue Turtle Seduction

Blue Turtle Seduction is no stranger to the road – and now their “16 States, 13 Floors Tour”, which kicked off yesterday in Sparks, Nevada, leads them across 16 states in support of their digital release of 13 Floors (JamBase review). The bluegrass, folk, hip-hop and rock ensemble will make their way through Oklahoma, Arkansas, Missouri, Wisconsin, Minnesota and several other states before heading back west with a finale in Dunsmuir, CA, at Sengthong’s Blue Sky Room on May 16, less than a month after the tour kicks off.

Featuring Jay Seals (guitar, vocals) Glenn Stewart (harmonica, pan flute, vocals), Christian Zupancic (violin, mandolin, vocals), Stephen Seals (bass) and Adam Navone (drums), the band met while working at a resort in South Lake Tahoe. Several highlights on this tour include the Norman Music Festival and the Hemp Hoe Down, as well as sharing bills with Oakhurst, That 1 Guy, Madahoochi, 56 Hope Road and Pert’ Near Sandstone.

16 States Tour Dates:

04/21 – Urban Lounge – Salt Lake City, UT
04/23 – Hodi’s Half Note – Ft. Collins, CO
04/24 – Bottleneck – Lawrence, KS
04/25 – Norman Music Festival – Norman, OK
04/28 – The Deli – Norman, OK
04/30 – Juanita’s Cantina – Little Rock, AR
05/01 – The Old Rock House – St. Louis, MO
05/02 – High Noon – Madison, WI
05/03 – Nomad World Pub – Minneapolis, MN
05/05 – Vaudeville Mews – Des Moines, IA
05/07 – Hemp Hoe Down – Sturgis, SD
05/08 – Filling Station – Bozeman, MT
05/09 – John’s Alley – Moscow, ID
05/10 – Tractor Tavern – Seattle, WA
05/12 – The Goodfoot Lounge – Portland, OR
05/13 – Sam Bond’s Garage – Eugene, OR
05/14 – The Applegate Lodge – Applegate, OR
05/15 – Humboldt Brews – Arcata, CA
05/16 – Sengthong’s Blue Sky Room – Dunsmuir, CA


washingtonpost.com’s Political Browser Uses the News Judgment of Journalists to Filter the Political Web

washingtonpost.com has launched a new politics page called Political Browser, which features, wait for it… links to the most important and interesting political news around the web. That’s right, the Washington Post, one of the paragons of original political reporting, has dedicated a page to help you find the best of OTHER news organization’s political [...]