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Furthur Festival | 05.28-05.30 | California

By: Garrin Benfield

Furthur Festival :: 05.28.10-05.30.10 :: Calaveras County Fairgrounds ::
Angel’s Camp, CA

Phil & Bobby by Susan J. Weiand

Arriving at the site of the Furthur Festival, I wondered why it had been so long
since the previous Mt. Aire gathering. The setting is classic Northern California –
rolling golden hills punctuated by groves of oak trees, miles of free form campgrounds,
and a lovely grass concert bowl. Clearly the one narrow, congested road into the grounds
could be a major temporary inconvenience to local residents, but it seems the revenue
generated by this mostly supremely mellow, polite crowd would easily offset any
frustrations. Once inside, things mostly ran like clockwork, and the 10,000 or so
gathered were treated to an intimate, bucolic weekend of rock ‘n’ roll.

Perhaps as a nod to those who thought the notion of Furthur
announcing it would perform six Grateful Dead records a bit, shall we
say, antithetical to the Dead ethos, the first night’s “sound check” featured a circuitous
setlist heavy on classics but not tied to any particular era. An inspired “Eleven” opener
gave way to one hell of a set that was dialed in from the get-go. I was struck right away
by the detail of the mix that allowed every instrumental voice to be heard with clarity
and volume. As a full moon rose over the early arriving crowd, the band patiently made
it’s way through a full one-set show, clearly surprising many who were not sure what to
expect from this first evening. Personal highlights for me included John Kadelecik
quoting Trey’s “First Tube” during a heavy “Let It Grow” and Bobby delivering a
stately “Standing On The Moon,” proving the old adage that “if at first one does not
succeed…” Satiated, we all slowly made our way back to the campgrounds, which were
still springing to life in the chilly darkness.

Dan Bern

On Saturday, I wandered over to the Acoustic Stage and caught a beautiful set by Mark Karan and
Friends
. While I was there they played an assortment of leftfield covers by
Townes Van Zandt, Randy Newman and the Dead. I had never seen Karan in this context and
he really shone, singing and playing with sensitivity and conviction – a lovely way to
ease into the day. On the Sunshine Stage, Dan Bern delivered
newer songs with his usual incisive, sardonic wit, backed by his new project, Common Rotation.
I’m happy to see Dan on the road again, and especially pleased to have his uncompromising
insights floating about the sometimes pollyana-ish jam scene. Next, James Nash, Joe
Kyle Jr.
and the rest of a temporary Waybacks lineup
brought their absolute A-game to the sweltering afternoon, pleasing those perhaps
unfamiliar with their own material with masterful versions of “Dupree’s Diamond Blues” and
“Shady Grove.” These guys are virtuosos with real heart and soul.


What was exciting me most about Furthur’s first “classic albums” sets was the tunes I’d
never seen performed live, or in some cases had never seen the light of day at all.
Oddly, the first half of the American Beauty set, comprised of songs these guys
have played hundred of times, was stiff and a bit rusty. This trend continued into the
first rarely performed song, Pigpen’s “Operator,” this time sung tentatively by
Phil. Happily things warmed up significantly with JK’s reading of “Candyman” (who
can resist “Hand me my old guitar…”) and the rest of the set was a pure joy of
monumental pieces from the dead canon, aided by Larry Campbell‘s
fiddle and guitar, and his wife Teresa Williams‘ vocals. I think for many who grew
up going to or listening to live Dead shows it will always be disorienting to hear
“Ripple” and “Brokedown Palace” in the middle of a set, but “Truckin’” brought it all home
with classic slow burn!

The Workingman’s Dead set busted out of the gates with “Uncle John’s Band” and
never let up. The band had clearly relaxed, and spent the next hour reveling in more
classic tunes that this time benefited from years of having been in the performance
repertoire. Larry Campbell’s biting Strat work lent a shimmer to “Cumberland” and
everything that followed, without impeding Furthur’s own identity and chemistry from
clearly emerging. The Anthem of the Sun set, the most anticipated by many as it
represents perhaps the pinnacle of “primal” Grateful Dead, was a monster from top to
bottom, climaxing with crushing versions of “Alligator” and “Caution.” I hope the
bruising guitar exclamations in “Caution” translate to tape, because, wow, they needed no
explanation under the rising moon!

The Mother Hips

I soldiered on and caught sets by three great bands on Sunday prior to Furthur. The
biggest surprise discovery of the weekend was the towering psychedelic progressive rock of
Carney.
Led by a fantastic and charismatic vocalist/guitarist and the most passionate, fiery band
I witnessed all weekend, Carney’s music seemed to fall in the Jeff Buckley meets Radiohead
universe, a welcome change of pace from the mostly Americana proceedings on the side
stages. The always-great Mother Hips were joined on the main stage by Jackie Greene,
who proved himself more than able on organ. The Hips designed their set for a gentle
afternoon and stuck mostly to their sunny Pacific stylings, save for the odd time changes
and riffage of their mid-nineties classic, “Magazine.” I wouldn’t have missed Electric Hot Tuna,
who were next up on the main stage, for the world. Stalwarts of blues, garage rock,
massive riffs and some of the original diplomats of the Haight-Ashbury, Jorma and
Jack have been playing together for 52 years. I was moved not just by their gnarly
set, but also by their longevity and by the Dead organization’s insistence on their
presence at this Festival. Loyalty does exist in the music business!

Hot Tuna

Initially I thought we were being thrown for a loop when Furthur came out and did not bust
into the expected “Help on the Way” to begin their Blues For Allah set. Instead,
the band leapt into one of those “same tempo as the next song but in a different key” jams
before beginning perhaps the Dead’s most progressive and esoteric collection. “Help >
Slip > Franklin” was pretty happening but not earth shattering. Far more moving was the
intense detail and thunder of “King Solomon’s Marbles,” which I’d vote for most welcome
comeback of the songs Furthur has reintroduced over the last year. “Music Never Stopped”
featured some searing runs by JK, and he delivered “Crazy Fingers” beautifully. Weir’s
dense but lovely “Sage and Spirit” was saved by Jeff Chimenti, who appeared to be
the only person who knew it that well. The “Blues for Allah” suite was a thrill to hear
live, but if you want to hear the only (?) other live version, you might be better off
checking out One From The Vault, as this well-intentioned attempt was gauzy and
confused around the transitional moments. Still, who’s complaining? Standing there
watching these guys try this stuff out and letting these songs wash over me was a thrill.
Joe Russo really distinguished himself deep in this second night with momentum and
focus, as Phil and Bobby seemed to show some wear and tear. There’s more than one reason
to hire a young, talented drummer, right?

Jackie Greene

After a wonderfully trippy set break that allowed some of the evening mist to begin
seeping into the amphitheater, the band returned and brought us back further in time with
a complete performance of Aoxomoxoa, the record that includes perhaps some of the
least performed Dead material of all. After a typically awesome “St. Stephen” (though I
would argue this might be the most over-performed song of the post-Jerry years), JK segued
right into a “Dupree’s” that also featured Larry Campbell on fiddle. For me, the two most
significant tunes that followed were Phil’s reading of Jerry’s “Rosemary” and the 11-
minute, genuinely psychedelic “What’s Become of the Baby?” which asked the pressing
question clearly on everyone’s mind: “Where is the child that played with the sun chimes
and chased the cloud sheep to the regions of rhyme?” Teresa Williams’ vocal wails and
white gown perfectly embodied the acid-queen-diva-goddess on this excursion. “Cosmic
Charlie” brought us home, and almost sadly, to the precipice of the last set of the
weekend.

Mark Karan

Despite mild exhaustion setting in, the Terrapin Station set rocked. To segue from
the set break music, Radiohead’s In Rainbows to a 14-minute “Estimated Prophet” was
perfect. (As a side note, all weekend the house music was very inspired, from Beck at
sunset to James Brown and Billy Preston! Yeah!) “Dancin’ in the Streets” was given its
full disco treatment (minus the convoluted outro jam of the celebrated ’77 versions),
“Passenger” was spot on, and Bobby really rallied for “Samson.” The last awesome surprise
was Teresa Williams returning for a song most people in attendance had surely never seen
performed, the Jerry-penned Donna Gauchaux showcase “Sunrise.” I felt a real affection in
the crowd for this one, a deep track that those of us who spent a few years scouring Dead
records before entering the tape trading community remember fondly. Teresa received a
real ovation before we glided into the B-side of this record, the entire 26-minute
“Terrapin Station” suite. What a way to bring it home!

Sir Joe Russo by Susan J. Weiand

After Phil thanked the crowd for being at our “family picnic,” he generously mentioned all
the people who worked so hard to make the festival happen, which received the largest
cheer of the weekend, hands down. Deadheads can be a wonderfully gracious bunch. The
appreciation was heartfelt, though. The whole weekend had that inescapable quality of
people fully absorbing the music, the scene, the memories, the personal connections, and
the uniqueness of a phenomenon that is not going to last forever. As I listened to the
weave of “Lady with a Fan”, convinced the band had intended this to be a sonic response to
the ecological tragedy unfolding in the Gulf of Mexico, I closed my eyes and said my own
thank you. Thanks, San Francisco! Thanks, Grateful Dead! Now what are we gonna do with
this energy?

JamBase | Awakened
Go See Live Music!


Sasquatch! Festival | 05.29-05.31 | Washington

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

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

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


The Gorge by Christopher Nelson

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


Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros by Kyle Johnson

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

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


The Hold Steady by Christopher Nelson

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

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


Jim James of My Morning Jacket by Kyle Johnson

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

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


Pavement by Kyle Johnson

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

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

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


Band of Horses by Jackie Kingsbury

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

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

JamBase | Bigfootin’
Go See Live Music!


The Gorge by Christopher Nelson


Head Jamz Music Festival Emmitt-Nershi, Dumpstaphunk

SWEET JAMZ OVER LABOR DAY WEEKEND OUTSIDE NASHVILLE

Ivan Neville by Chad Smith

The 2nd Annual Head Jamz Music Festival will take place over Labor Day Weekend, September 3-5, 2010, on the banks of the Red River in Adams, TN just north of Nashville. The Head Jamz Music Festival combines quality live music and earth-conscious outdoor activities in a wooded environment. In addition, the festival features a custom designed disc golf course, canoeing, live art, vendors, light shows by Herm Productions, and campsites in the rolling hills of northern Tennessee. Adams, TN is also the location of the famed Bell Witch, whose legend has been described as “America’s Greatest Ghost Story.”

Head Jamz 2010 Lineup
Emmitt-Nershi Band
Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk
Cornmeal
Future Rock
The Twin Cats
Midwest Hype
Zoogma
Max Allen Band
Old Union
Hyryder
Captain Midnight Band
Ladymoon
Last Straw
Flea Market Hustlers
Shadyside All-Stars
New Castle All-Stars

More acts to be announced.

Tickets on sale here:
$65- June-July
$75- August
$85- At the Door


North Coast Music Festival Chem Bros, Umph, Bisco, PL

ELECTRONICALLY CHARGED SEPTEMBER DAYS IN THE PARK

Chemical Brothers

The inaugural North Coast Music Festival will take place Labor Day Weekend
(September 3-5) at Chicago’s Union Park for three days, 35+ bands and a price tag of just
$35/day.

A portion of all ticket sales will go to support Urban Initiatives, a Chicago-based
nonprofit organization that runs a health and education soccer program in fourteen Chicago
Public Schools and continues to grow.

Limited $65 3-Day Passes are available through Sunday, June 13. Monday, June 14, Single
Day Passes will be available for $35, and the 3-Day Pass price increases.

North Coast Music Festival Initial Lineup

Chemical Brothers (Live)
Nas & Damian Marley
Umphrey’s McGee
Disco Biscuits
Moby (DJ Set)
Pretty Lights
Benny Benassi
Paul Van Dyk
Cold War Kids
De La Soul
Mayer Hawthorne & the County
Jay Electronica
Boys Noize
Flying Lotus
Benga
Jakob Dylan & Three Legs
Laidback Luke
Future Rock
Dirty Dozen Brass Band
Green Velvet (Live)
Phantogram
Van Ghost
Two Fresh
The Uglysuit
Loyal Divide
Paul Kalkbrenner
Orchard Lounge


Forecastle Festival: Schedule Adds Smashing Pumpkins

OVER 100 BANDS IN LOUISVILLE IN JULY

Pumpkin Head Billy Corgan

The Forecastle Festival has announced the completion of this year’s festival lineup with the addition Smashing Pumpkins as Saturday night’s headlining act. Modern English and Scott Miller and the Commonwealth round out the acts on this year’s lineup.

The 2010 Festival will take place July 9-11 across Louisville’s 74-acre Waterfront Park. Other performers include The Flaming Lips, Widespread Panic, Spoon, DEVO, CAKE, She & Him, Drive-by Truckers, Bassnectar, Umphrey’s McGee, Against Me!, Minus the Bear, Manchester Orchestra, a reunited Cap ‘n Jazz, and rare daily/nightly performances by “Cirque Berzerk,” a Los Angeles-based circus combining aerial acrobatics and French burlesque with punk rock influences.

See the full lineup of over 100 bands here, and view the detailed daily schedules here.


Crawfish Festival in New Jersey Galactic, Railroad, Taj Mahal

GOOD EATS, GOOD FOOD
JUST THE TICKET TO MAKE YOU FORGET JERSEY SHORE

Railroad Earth by Dave Vann

The 21st Annual Arnone’s Crawfish Festival takes place June 4-6 at the Sussex County Fairgrounds in Augusta, New Jersey. Besides fresh boiled crawfish, jambalaya, alligator sausage, and red beans and rice, the festival features three stages and a dance tent, as well as camping with special concerts for campers.

The music lineup includes:

Galactic
Railroad Earth
Taj Mahal
Dirty Dozen Brass Band
George Porter Jr. and the Runnin’ Pardners
Marcia Ball
Stanton Moore Trio w/ Anders Osborne
The Redstick Ramblers
Honey Island Swamp Band
Kenny Neal Band
The Iguanas
The Campbell Brothers
And many more!

For detailed schedules head over here.


Newhoma Music Fest: Sex Mob Grayson, Surprise Me, Outformation

FIRST ANNUAL FESTIVAL INCLUDES MUSIC, HIKING, YOGA, AND MORE

Surprise Me Mr. Davis

The first annual Newhoma Music and Mountain Festival is a three day event offering music, hiking, yoga,
great food and tasty beverages in Florissant, Colorado the weekend of August 20-22, 2010.

Musical acts scheduled to perform include Surprise Me Mr. Davis, Grayson Capps & the Stumpknockers, Sex Mob, Outformation, Paper Bird, Oakhurst, Yo Mama’s Big Fat Booty Band, and
more.

All information regarding tickets, complete lineup, event schedule, camping, meal plans, and hiking is available at
the Newhoma Festival website.


Catskill Chill Musical Festival Keller, Soulive, Easy Star, U-Melt

NEW JAM HEAVY FEST IN NEW YORK STATE

Soulive

Headlining the inaugural 2010 Catskill Chill Musical Festival in Hancock, NY are Soulive on Friday, September 10 and Keller Williams on Saturday, September 11. The festival will take place at picturesque Camp Minglewood, just west of the Catskill Mountain range in Hancock, New York.

2010 Catskill Chill Lineup

Keller Williams
Soulive
The New Mastersounds
Easy Star All-Stars
Particle
Toubab Krewe
Future Rock
Garaj Mahal
Brothers Past
DJ Logic
Headtronics
Passafire
American Babies
U-Melt
The Heavy Pets
Sim Redmond Bandbr>
Yarn
Jounce
Buzz Universe
Jam Stampede
Caravan of Thieves
London Souls

Through Sonicbids.com, one more band will have the opportunity to win a performance slot at Catskill Chill.

Festival attendees will have the choice of camping or renting cabins for the weekend. Cabins range from private lodges that sleep two, to large double bunkhouses that can accommodate up to 25 people.

In addition to the artists performing on the main two stages, attendees will have the opportunity to become part of the festival themselves by performing on the festival’s Open-Mic stage.

Morning Yoga classes will be offered on Saturday and Sunday mornings for those who are interested.

Tickets for the 2010 Catskill Chill Music Festival, starting at $85, go on sale Friday, May 28 at 10am EST through a secure ticketing outlet. In addition, reservations will be accepted for on-site cabins rentals, RV passes and VIP tickets.


Catskill Chill Musical Festival Keller, Soulive, Easy Star, U-Melt

NEW JAM HEAVY FEST IN NEW YORK STATE

Soulive

Headlining the inaugural 2010 Catskill Chill Musical Festival in Hancock, NY are Soulive on Friday, September 10 and Keller Williams on Saturday, September 11. The festival will take place at picturesque Camp Minglewood, just west of the Catskill Mountain range in Hancock, New York.

2010 Catskill Chill Lineup

Keller Williams
Soulive
The New Mastersounds
Easy Star All-Stars
Particle
Toubab Krewe
Future Rock
Garaj Mahal
Brothers Past
DJ Logic
Headtronics
Passafire
American Babies
U-Melt
The Heavy Pets
Sim Redmond Bandbr>
Yarn
Jounce
Buzz Universe
Jam Stampede
Caravan of Thieves
London Souls

Through Sonicbids.com, one more band will have the opportunity to win a performance slot at Catskill Chill.

Festival attendees will have the choice of camping or renting cabins for the weekend. Cabins range from private lodges that sleep two, to large double bunkhouses that can accommodate up to 25 people.

In addition to the artists performing on the main two stages, attendees will have the opportunity to become part of the festival themselves by performing on the festival’s Open-Mic stage.

Morning Yoga classes will be offered on Saturday and Sunday mornings for those who are interested.

Tickets for the 2010 Catskill Chill Music Festival, starting at $85, go on sale Friday, May 28 at 10am EST through a secure ticketing outlet. In addition, reservations will be accepted for on-site cabins rentals, RV passes and VIP tickets.


Thai surprise at Cannes Film Festival

The winners at the 63rd Cannes Film Festival included French directors and a Spanish actor, Deutsche Welle reports. But the biggest surprise of the night was the film that took home the top Palme d’Or prize.

Hangout Festival | 05.14-05.16 | Alabama

Words by: Alex Borsody | Images by: Dave Vann

Hangout Beach & Music Festival :: 05.14.10-05.16.10 :: Gulf Shores, AL

Hangout Beach & Music Festival

The inaugural Hangout Beach & Music Festival was an eclectic crossroads of Southern culture and the progressive festival scene. The promoters put incredible thought into the lineup to appeal to just about everyone. The wide range of fans and artists combined with the recent events of the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, made for an interesting dynamic – ripe seeds of the green movement. Swimming in the 8-foot waves was unforgettable, but on the last day a gas station attendant showed me a tar ball that had washed up on the shore as the spill finally started to make its way to land.

Town-visitor relations could not have been better and the Southern hospitality was warm. Things ran smoothly and peacefully with the community on the white sandy beaches. The promoters pledged to donate their proceeds to the oil cleanup, a generous promise, and the political organization HeadCount was on-site leading a letter writing campaign on the issue.

As the festival went on, the crowd changed from those nearby who just came to check out the scene to more veteran live music lovers. The fans waited out an epic storm and tornado warning on Sunday and prayed for better weather. The grounds closed for a few hours and some performances were canceled, including Matisyahu, who played later that night at a free after party to the first 500 lucky fans. The sky cleared and with some schedule changes, the organizers managed to fit in some of the bigger acts on the bill in the limited time allowed. In the same pithy fashion, here are some of the highlights of the weekend.

Alison Krauss :: Hangout

Best Song Tease:
The first day of the festival featured a high percentage of the local population, with a generous 5000 tickets given out to the local community. Many were unfamiliar with the majority of acts, however, Alison Krauss & Union Station featuring Jerry Douglas appealed to a variety of different people. After a few songs, Krauss stepped off stage leaving Douglas, arguably the world’s best dobro player, to go at it solo. He coasted through a tease of the Duane Allman penned “Little Martha,” while across the beach, Girl Talk played a mash-up of the Grateful Dead’ s “Casey Jones,” creating an unplanned homage to two pioneers of the modern music experience, one from the Deep South and one from freaky San Francisco.

Best collaboration:
The Preservation Hall Jazz Band played a funky New Orleans inspired set that included the sensual charisma of Grace Potter and the superb guitar playing of Warren Haynes. They played an amazing cover of the 1929 Albert E. Brumley bluegrass standard “I’ll Fly Away” and threw Dixie Cup ice cream into the crowd. The band marched off stage through the audience, then back onstage with some enthusiastic dancers from the crowd. They then led a procession up the boardwalk and into the VIP area, where the fun for many had to halt.

Best Dose of Southern Comfort:
The Grammy Award winning Zac Brown Band brought out a sea of meaty, clean cut, good ol’ boys in golf shirts. Brown looks similar to the guitarist Zach Deputy and shares his lightning fast picking style. His lyrics are a cross section of marijuana laced party rock and patriotic southern pride – a seemingly incongruent mix that somehow works. One song even went into a long instrumental jam. Brown played a solemn version of Crosby, Stills and Nash’s “Cost of Freedom,” followed by Charlie Daniels’ “The Devil Went Down to Georgia.” The presence of the armed forces is ubiquitous in the Deep South, and Brown was cheered on as he spoke about the importance of the military and their role in preserving our way of life.

Best Southern Picking:
Jeff Austin & Friends, including Larry Keel, wowed the crowd with a power trio bluegrass combination. The band played complicated bluegrass with fast picking and complex modulation. The Honey Island Swamp Band gets a honorable mention for some solid electric slide guitar.

Trey Anastasio Band :: Hangout Beach & Music Festival

Best Opportunity to Hook Up with a Southern Belle:
John Legend played soulful tunes until curfew, evoking a young Marvin Gaye. Each song was steamier than the next, set amidst the backdrop of crashing waves and a starry sky. He ended with a soulful, yet somber version of Bob Marley’s “Redemption Song.”

Best New Jam:
Nashville natives Moon Taxi played the JamBase Stage before it closed on Sunday due to weather. The high energy and virtuosity of this band is not to be missed.

Best Dose of Culture Shock:
Kathleen Kennedy was brought on to introduce the Zach Brown Band. Dressed in the height of hipster fashion, she began talking about preserving the environment, an issue difficult to oppose. Somehow Kennedy managed to ruin a very clear, beautiful message with the pompous attitude of an MTV VJ crossed with a royal bloodline. As she got booed and subsequently escorted off the stage, there were actually two sides of the coin that became apparent. It was appalling and shocking to see Americans so ignorant and uncaring about an issue as vital as clean beaches, yet here was this famous, twenty-something jetting down to Flora-Bama and lecturing folks with not a bit of humility in her voice.

Best Dose of Psychedelia:
Trey Anastasio and Classic TAB opened with a solid version of “Gotta Jibboo” and the set hit its climax early with “The Devil Went Down to Georgia.” The Phish tune “Alaska” was subdued but featured the horn section creatively. The set was mostly slow and steady carried by bass player Tony Markellis‘ groove. Trey announced that when he and Tom Marshall found out about the festival, they wrote a song just for the occasion. The fruit of this was a reggae tune called “Sailboat Man.” The song was written in the most common rock arrangement of 1-4-5 (think “Stir It Up” or “Chalk Dust Torture”) and it sounded like it was written in five minutes, but nevertheless, was a thrill.

The set closed with slightly higher energy, including a beautiful version of “Drifting” and Led Zeppelin’s “Black Dog.” The choice of “First Tube” for an encore was exciting, but nothing for the record books. Fireworks were set off behind the stage, with bombs bursting in air giving those who traveled just for this show an over the top Southern send off.

For more pics of the Hangout Music Festival go here.

JamBase | Alabama
Go See Live Music!


Superchunk: Live Dates

NEW ALBUM IN THE WORKS, NEW SONGS PREVIEWED THIS SUMMER

Superchunk

Superchunk has festival dates planned this summer and East Coast dates in September. Details are emerging about their long-anticipated new album, Majesty Shredding, and fans can definitely expect to hear new songs live this summer.

Superchunk Tour Dates

5/21 Carrboro, NC – Cat’s Cradle
5/27 Barcelona, ES – Primavera Sound Festival (w/Pavement and The Fall)
6/19 Denver, CO – Westword Music Festival
6/20 Chicago, IL – Taste of Randolph Street Festival (w/The Love Language)
7/24 Omaha, NE – MAHA Music Festival
9/17 Washington, DC- 930 Club
9/18 New York, NY – Bowery Ballroom
9/19 Brooklyn, NY- Music Hall of Williamsburg
9/21 Boston, MA- Royale
9/22 Philadelphia, PA- Trocadero

Superchunk – Cast Iron / The First Part from Merge Records on Vimeo.

Superchunk Tour Dates :: Superchunk News :: Superchunk Concert Reviews


Furthur Play Whole Dead Albums At Furthur Festival

UNPRECEDENTED LIVE PRESENTATION OF CLASSIC ALBUMS IN THEIR ENTIRETY

Phil & Bob in Furthur by Susan J. Weiand

Furthur will perform six classic Grateful Dead albums at Furthur Fest, taking place May 28-30 at the Calaveras County Fairgrounds in Angels Camp, CA. The schedule is:

Saturday – Set I – American Beauty
Saturday – Set II – Workingman’s Dead
Saturday – Set III – Anthem of the Sun
Sunday – Set I – Blues For Allah
Sunday – Set II – Aoxomoxoa
Sunday – Set III – Terrapin Station

In an ongoing series of videos discussing these Grateful Dead albums, the latest installment features Phil Lesh and Bob Weir, along with kindred spirit-turned-intrepid-interviewer Jackie Greene and longtime Grateful Dead road manager Rock Scully, talking about the creation of Workingman’s Dead. The quality of the songs Jerry was bringing to the table, along with the influence of Crosby, Stills and Nash, are revealed as two of the biggest inspirations behind the 1970 classic. Check out the video and the earlier discussion of American Beauty here.

Furthur will do an “Open Aire Soundcheck” on Friday, May 28. The full Furthur Stage schedule for the weekend can be found here, and the schedule for the daytime Sunshine Stage is here. The schedule for the acoustic Dark Hollow Stage, curated by Larry Campbell and Teresa Williams has not been set, but the late night set for Friday will be an All-Star Jam Session and on Saturday night it’s Galactic at what the fest has dubbed the “Frogtown Fillmore.”

Furthur Tour Dates :: Furthur News :: Furthur Concert Reviews


Hangout Music Festival Photo Gallery

The Hangout Beach & Music Festival brought scores of fans to the Gulf Shores of Alabama to bask in the sun, some rain, raise money for Gulf relief and enjoy a ton of great music…

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Hopscotch Festival Adds Raekwon, Dungen, Bowerbirds

THE TRIANGLE GETS EVEN FULLER IN SEPTEMBER

Dungen

The inaugural Hopscotch Music Festival has announced the addition Raekwon, Dungen, Bowerbirds, Woods and Locrian to the lineup. Scheduled for September 9-11, 2010, in downtown Raleigh, Hopscotch will present 120 bands in 10 venues over three days.

“These new acts reflect the approach we’ve taken from the beginning – we want diverse and noteworthy people to play Hopscotch, whether they’re from here or outside the Triangle,” says Hopscotch director Greg Lowenhagen. “The artists represent a variety of musical genres and do it as well as anyone. As fans first and organizers second, that was essential to us.”

Hopscotch is also adding a strong pool of local acts to its inaugural lineup. Raleigh rockers Bright Young Things will play, as will Chapel Hill’s In the Year of the Pig. Asheville’s Floating Action and Chapel Hill’s Bellafea complete the lineup additions.

Raekwon will join 9th Wonder of Durham, NC on Friday, September 10 at Lincoln Theatre for a showcase curated by 9th Wonder. Nearly a dozen local groups will join that bill, including Actual Proof, The Away Team, Big Remo, Kaze, K-Hill, Rapsody, The Remix Project, Skyzoo and Tyler Woods.

COMPLETE LINEUP
9th Wonder, Active Child, Actual Proof, Akron/Family, All Tiny Creatures, American Aquarium, Americans in France, Aminal, Aquarelle, Atlas Sound, The Away Team, Balmorhea, Bear in Heaven, Bellafea, Best Coast, Big Remo, Birds of Avalon, Black Congo NC, Bowerbirds, DJ George Brazil, Bright Young Things, Broken Social Scene, Brutal Knights, Richard Buckner, Burning Star Core, Cannabis Corpse, Caitlin Cary’s Small Ponds with Tres Chicas, Collections of Colonies of Bees, Cults, Greg Davis, Dex Romweber Duo, Double Dagger, Double Negative, Dungen, The Dynamite Brothers, EAR PWR, ExMonkeys, First Rate People, Floating Action, Followed by Static, Ben Frost, Fucked Up, Future Islands, Golden Boys, The Golden Filter, Goner, Gray Young, Ryan Gustafson, Hammer No More the Fingers, Harlem, Harvey Milk, Horseback, John Howie Jr. & The Rosewood Bluff, In the Year of the Pig, I Was Totally Destroying It, Javelin, Jeb Bishop Trio, Juan Huevos, Kaze, K-Hill, Kill the Noise, The Kingsbury Manx, Kooley High, Kylesa, The Light Pines, Locrian, Lonnie Walker, The Love Language, Lucero, Luego, Max Indian, Erin McKeown, Megafaun, DJ Merlin, Midtown Dickens, The Moaners, The Monologue Bombs, Motor Skills, Mountains, Jon Mueller, Marissa Nadler, No Age, NOMO, Ocean, Old Bricks, Panda Bear, Pattern Is Movement, Pictureplane, Plague, Pontiak, Public Enemy, Raekwon, Rapsody, The Remix Project, The Rosebuds, Ned Rothenberg, DJ Sami Automatic, Schooner, Sightings, Sleepy Sun, spcl gst, Spider Bags, Thien, Tigercity, Tortoise, Treasure Fingers, Tyler Woods, US Christmas, Sharon Van Etten, Veelee, Vincent Black Shadow, War on Drugs, Washed Out, Weedeater, Wet Mango, Whatever Brains, Keith Fullerton Whitman, Woods, Yip-Yip.


“Days of Sarajevo” to begin in Belgrade

The Days of Sarajevo festival will officially open at the Belgrade Cultural Center with an exhibition “Objectively 1” by a group of Sarajevo photographs. The festival will be open until May 23 and will be held at 15 locations. It encompasses exhibitions, performances, films, concerts as well as panel discussions about social-political issues.

Ash charms Cannes in sarree

It was the battle of traditional attire for two of the Bollywood stars in Cannes film festival. While one can not yet conclude who won the tussle, but what caught the eyeballs on the six day of the festival was the stone studded sari that Aishwarya Rai Bachhan wore. That seemed to take away the [...]

Aishwarya in Saree beats the beauties at Cannes

Bollywood stunning Diva Aishwarya Rai Bachchan finally showed her Indian beauty at Cannes and snatched the limelight to her from other beauties at the fest. On the sixth day of 63rd Cannes film festival, Ash sizzled in a beautiful stone studded sari and with minimal jewelry and simple low neck blouse designed by Sabyasachi. The [...]

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


Phish


Eagles


Muse


The Strokes


Flaming Lips


Spoon


Norah Jones


Spoon


Monsters of Folk


Band of Horses

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

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

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

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

2010 Austin City Limits Music Festival Lineup

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


Summer Meltdown 2010 Pres of the USA, Hips, HBR, EOTO

FLOWMOTION HOSTED PACIFIC NORTHWEST FEST TURNS 10!

The initial lineup for the 10th Annual Summer Meltdown Festival has been announced. The three-day camping and music festival returns August 6-8 for its fifth year at the beautiful Whitehorse Mountain Amphitheater in Darrington, Washington., nestled in the foothills of the Cascade Mountains. Celebrating its 10th anniversary this summer, Summer Meltdown has solidified its status as the largest independent camping and music festival in the Pacific Northwest. Summer Meltdown will feature over 30 acts on four stages over the weekend.

Check out JamBase’s rave for 2009 Summer Meltdown for more on this intimate festival and the Whitehorse Mountain Amphitheater setting.

Summer Meltdown ’09
by Sara Sokolowski

Scheduled performers include:

The Presidents of the United States of America
Flowmotion
Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk
The Everyone Orchestra
Hot Buttered Rum
The Mother Hips
EOTO
The Mutaytor
Delhi 2 Dublin
Michael Shrieve’s Spellbinder
McTuff
The Panda Conspiracy
Acorn Project
Vicci Martinez
Spanish for 100
Manooghi Hi
Dept of Energy
BeeCraft
Publish the Quest
Wisdom
Nicki Bluhm & The Gramblers
Levi Ware
Andrew Vait & The Eternal Fair
Robert Sarazin Blake
Ben Bruce
Be Careful
Rejoice

A preview of the 10th Annual Summer Meltdown Festival is planned for Memorial Day Weekend at the Northwest Folklife Festival at Seattle Center on the Mural Amphitheater stage. The showcase takes place on May 29 from 7 p.m. -10 p.m., and will feature Meltdown favorites such as Panda Conspiracy, Acorn Project, Yogoman Burning Band, and Flowmotion. Festival tickets will be available for purchase during the showcase. Memorial Day Weekend is the last weekend to purchase early-bird tickets, which include Thursday admission into the festival. After May 31, ticket prices jump from $90 to $120.

Festival co-producer Terra Roots Foundation brings back the Green Village this year. The Green Village promotes Sustainable Living, Responsible Action and Creating Community with exhibits like Building with Cob, Urban Gardening, the Re-Store Recycled Art Station, and spotlights on local organizations promoting sustainability, environmental education, and social outreach. The Fourth Annual Meltdown Food Drive will benefit Darrington Community Services and Food Bank, and portions of concessions revenue will be donated back in to the Darrington community.

Terra Roots is a local 501c3 charitable arts non-profit working to build and strengthen community through music and other artistic expression. In addition to hosting the Summer Meltdown, they put on several service-oriented events each year. More information on the organization can be found at www.terraroots.org.