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Posts Tagged ‘Fritz’

New Monsoon: NYE in SF

NEW MONSOON CELEBRATES TEN YEARS AND KICKS OFF DECADE 2 ON NYE

San Francisco rock quintet New
Monsoon
has announced its plans for New Year’s Eve 2010. While ringing in the new year, New Monsoon
will also be embarking on its second decade as a band. Appropriately, on this New Year’s Eve the band will perform
a special show at the intimate venue where it all started, the cozy confines of the Connecticut Yankee at home in San
Francisco.

The show will serve as fond farewell to the past decade and welcome to the next. In the “house that Fritz built,” it
promises to be a memorable event to share with the musicians’ families and closest friends and fans. Singer-
songwriter Kate Gaffney, a good
friend of New Monsoon and frequent performer at the Yankee, will open the show with backing from members of
New Monsoon.

Doors open at 8:30 p.m. Kate will start the evening’s music at 9:00. A traditional champagne toast will be served
up at midnight, and the musical celebration will continue until 2:00 a.m. A small number of discount advance
tickets remain on sale here.

As part of this celebration of its first ten years, New Monsoon is combing its archives for rare photos and videos,
which are being posted on the band’s Facebook
page
.

New Monsoon
Tour Dates

::
New Monsoon News
::
New Monsoon
Concert
Reviews


Garrin Benfield: Winter Tour

A KILLER IMPROVISER WHO CAN ALSO WRITE A SONG!

One of the best, under-sung singer-songwriters to emerge from the Bay Area in recent years, Garrin Benfield will be hitting the road in early December. He’s also a wicked guitarist and an awful nice human being well worth your concert going dollars.

Winter Tour Dates

12.3.10 – Dolores Park Cafe – SF, CA
12.4.10 – Aroma Roasters – Santa Rosa, CA
12.15.10 – The Grape Room – Philadelphia, PA
12.16.10 – Fritz – Keene, NH
12.17.10 – On The Rise – Richmond, VT
12.18.10 – Flat Street Brew Pub – Brattleboro, VT
12.19.10 – Banjo Jim’s – New York, NY

Garrin Benfield Tour Dates :: Garrin Benfield News :: Garrin Benfield Concert Reviews


Bear Creek Fest Adds Bernie Worrell, Heavy Pets & More

SOCIALYBRIUM, DJ LOGIC, HONEY ISLAND SWAMP BAND, AQUAPHONICS ALSO ADDED; PRE-PARTY
FEATURING HEAVY PETS, HONEY ISLAND SWAMP, AQUAPHONICS & MORE

Bernie
Worrell

The Bear Creek Music and Art Festival, November 10-14 at The Spirit of the Suwannee Music Park in Live
Oak, Fl., has announced a handful of new artists. Funk pioneer Bernie Worrell and Socialybrium, DJ Logic, The Heavy Pets x 2 (Wed & Thurs),
DJ Motion Potion, Honey Island Swamp Band
(Wednesday), Billy Iuso & the Restless
Natives
(Thurs), Suenalo (Thurs), Zoogma (Wednesday), Aquaphonics (Wednesday), The Fritz (Thursday) and Artist at Large Donna Hopkins will join Umphrey’s McGee, Maceo Parker, Dumpstaphunk, Lettuce, The New Deal and many others at
this late fall festival.

Additionally, the festival is now offering a Wednesday night Pre-Pre-Party featuring The Heavy Pets, Honey Island
Swamp Band, Zoogma and Aquaphonics. Wednesday night Pre-Pre-Party Tickets will be $20 and include all music,
camping, taxes and fees. Only Thursday-Sunday ticket buyers are eligible to purchase the Wednesday night ticket.

Bear Creek early-bird tickets are $115 until June 2


The Shaky Hands: Album/Tour

THE SHAKY HANDS LET IT DIE OUT NOW ON KILL ROCK STARS, DECEMBER TOUR DATES ANNOUNCED

The Shaky Hands

This year begins a new chapter for Portland group The Shaky Hands. Former drummer Colin Anderson left in mid-2008, a few months before the band’s second album, Lunglight, was released to critical acclaim. Nick Delffs‘ brother Nathan covered percussion for a short stint at the end of last year, but ultimately the band wanted a stable drummer with whom they could connect.

Jake Morris, of fellow Portland band The Joggers, joined in January 2009, shortly before The Shaky Hands left for a two-week tour with The Meat Puppets. On the road, the band and Morris clicked almost immediately, and found that Morris was exactly what they wanted in a drummer and band mate. The addition of the new drummer set the wheels in the motion for The Shaky Hands to begin writing their third album; evolving their style to match the changes they’d undergone as a band.

Following the tour with The Meat Puppets, Delffs packed his bags and went to live in India for a month and a half, leaving behind his guitar and embarking on a fast from Western music. He sang in the temples and wrote lyrics for the new album, which the band had already started writing, but took the longest break he’d ever taken from playing in a band. This journey, which culminated with a 23-hour plane ride leading directly into a 37-hour drive to Austin for SXSW, altered the direction of the new record — although perhaps not in the most obvious way.

“I feel like my trip to India had a profound effect on the album,” Delffs explains. “Because I wasn’t playing music with anybody and I was having this break, I ended up thinking about it a lot, on the verge of obsessing over things. A lot of the planning and lyrics were done out there, finishing some of the songs. I was really inspired by Indian music and I feel like it changed me, but I wasn’t inspired to make it. It almost inspired me to make straight forward rock for some reason.”

Delffs launched back into the rock scene immediately, playing SXSW and touring back up to Portland. The band spent nearly two months on the road with The Thermals in spring of 2009, where they wrote and developed songs, allowing the new tracks to attain lives of their own each night. After the tour, at Morris’ recommendation, the band went into Jackpot! Studios with producer Jay Pellicci (Deerhoof, Erase Errata). There they spent ten days recording the songs they’d written and practiced, mostly in one or two takes. “It turned out to be the perfect experience for recording the album,” Delffs says. “This was the first time I really trusted someone else to produce and mix everything. We were there for ten days and somehow we made that small amount of time work out perfectly. We never labored over any performances. We really wanted to get the essence of the live band. And generally the first or second take had the most feeling and captured the song the best.”

The finished album, Let It Die, is a collection of eleven organic, impassioned rock songs that are happily unpolished and grounded. This disc is split into Side A and Side B to compliment the varying styles the songs on the record embrace. Side A collects more raucous, upbeat tracks while Side B offers hushed, mellower numbers. The standout, for Delffs, is the compelling “Allison and the Ancient Eyes,” a song he feels embodies both sides and their corresponding feelings. “We had specific little things that we agreed on and talked about a lot,” Delffs says. “We wanted it to be really bare bones and have it extremely simple. I think we all just knew the songs pretty well and how they should go. We didn’t want to over talk it.”

The Shaky Hands Tour Dates

11/12/09 Thu Dachstock Bern, SWI

11/13/09 Fri Treibhause Fest Luzern, SWI

11/14/09 Sat Swamp Club Freiberg, GER

11/15/09 Sun NBI Berlin, GER

11/16/09 Mon Molotow Hamburg, GER

11/19/09 Thu Garage Bergen, NO

11/20/09 Fri BLA Oslo, NO

11/21/09 Sat Fritz’s Corner Stockholm, SE

11/23/09 Mon Loppen Copenhagen, DK

11/26/09 Thu Tsunami Club Cologne, GER

11/27/09 Fri Le Guess Who Utrecht, NL

11/28/09 Sat Patronaat Haarlem, NL

12/08/09 Tue Mad Hatter Covington, KY

12/09/09 Wed Off Broadway St. Louis, MO

12/10/09 Thu The Conservatory Oklahoma City, OK

12/11/09 Fri Emo’s Alternative Lounge Austin, TX

12/12/09 Sat The Cavern Dallas, TX

12/14/09 Mon Rhythm Room Phoenix, AZ

12/15/09 Tue Bootleg Theater Los Angeles, CA

12/16/09 Wed Bottom of the Hill San Francisco, CA

The band’s new video for “Already Gone” can be seen here.

Praise for The Shaky Hands:

“Drowning pop compositions in jittery poly-rhythms is indie rock’s move du jour, but the Shaky Hands aren’t trendy; they make fine-boned, classic rock & roll in the Strokes’ vein.” -Pitchfork

“Prodded by clattering drums and scraping guitars, frontman Nick Delffs often sounds desperate, moaning and muttering like someone who’s torn between leaping into the abyss and clinging to hope.” -Spin


Sen. Fritz Hollings: The Solution

The administration now says it underestimated the severity of the economic downturn. But the truth is it overestimated the effect of stimulation.

GM reborn after 40 bankruptcy days

‘Business as usual is over at GM,’ said CEO Fritz Henderson

America’s biggest carmaker, General Motors, won a second chance to prove itself as a profitable motor manufacturer today as it emerged from bankruptcy at lightning speed after a remarkably swift, smooth financial restructuring.

After just 40 days under court-supervised protection from its creditors, GM was resurrected as a solvent business shortly after 6.30am when lawyers, completing an all-night paperwork session, signed over its factories, stocks, equipment and intellectual property to a new entity controlled by the US government.

GM’s chief executive, Fritz Henderson, pledged to pay back $50bn (£30.9bn) of public loans well in advance of a deadline of 2015 and promised that the streamlined company would be a nimbler, less bureaucratic and more decisive organisation. GM will focus on four vehicle brands – Chevrolet, Cadillac, Buick and GMC.

“Business as usual is over at GM,” said Henderson at a press conference in Detroit. “Today, we take the intensity, decisiveness and speed of the past several months and transfer it from the triage of the bankruptcy process to the creation and operation of a new General Motors.”

He continued: “We recognise that we’ve been given a rare second chance at GM, and we are very grateful for that. And we appreciate the fact that we now have the tools to get the job done.”

The US government owns 60.8% of the new GM, while Canada’s government holds 11.7% and a union-controlled pension fund has 17.5%. Creditors of the old company, who were owed $27bn (£16.67), were compensated with a stake of just 10% to the dismay of Wall Street bondholders who fought a short, unsuccessful battle for a larger slice.

President Obama had initially predicted that reforming GM would take 60 to 90 days. But creditors’ objections were decisively thrown out by a New York bankruptcy judge, Robert Gerber, in a resounding win for the administration’s auto restructuring taskforce.

“This is a major victory for the Obama administration over Wall Street,” said Aaron Bragman, a motor industry analyst at IHS Global Insight in Detroit. “The government really put the screws on bondholders and enforced a deal on them that it thought was suitable.”

After swapping loans for equity, the new GM has debt of $48bn (£29.6bn), compared to the $170bn (£105bn) burden when it filed for chapter 11 protection. But the transformation has been painful for thousands of employees, parts suppliers and car dealers.

Once cutbacks are complete in 2011, GM is likely to have just 38,000 blue-collar factory workers in the US, compared to 113,000 three years ago. The number of GM plants will fall from 47 to 31 and, through a clear-out of senior management, GM’s executive team will shrink by 35%.

The firm, which was once the largest corporation in America, is in the process of selling international names including Saab, Vauxhall, Opel and Hummer as part of its downsizing. In Britain, the decision to offload GM’s European operations has cast a cloud of uncertainty over 5,500 jobs at Vauxhall factories in Luton and Ellesmere Port, Cheshire.

Henderson said GM’s emergence from the bankruptcy courts would allow “every employee, including me, to get back to the business of designing, building and selling great cars and trucks”.

He insisted that GM could shake off its reputation for uninspirational designs and slow-moving bureaucracy.

“Einstein’s definition of insane is doing the same thing over and over again, expecting different results,” said Henderson. “We know we have to change.”

Among GM’s priorities will be the development of environmentally-friendly vehicles such as the electrically powered GM Volt, which is due to be launched by the end of next year. GM executives have even reportedly mulled changing the company’s distinctive blue logo to a green hue, although Henderson said he did not plan to do this.

New initiatives include a joint venture with the website eBay to explore ways of auctioning cars online, and a forum called ‘Ask Fritz’ in which customers will be able to share suggestions with the chief executive.

But financial experts warned that the company faces challenges in winning back the trust of customers and the financial community.

“The legacy costs are gone. The challenge in the future is how to approach a marketplace that has been burned by GM,” said Pete Hastings, a credit analyst at Morgan Keegan.

Along with its rival Chrysler which also recently went through bankruptcy, GM has been hit by the worst slump in US vehicle sales since the second world war. The company has struggled to cope with high petrol prices, a change in tastes towards smaller, more fuel-efficient vehicles and fierce competition from Asian rivals. It has lost its title as the world’s leading carmaker to Japan’s Toyota.

A new chairman, former AT&T boss Edward Whitacre, will preside over GM’s board. He told reporters: “For 100 years, General Motors was among the world’s greatest companies. It deserves to be there again and it will be there again.”

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