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Little Steven’s 2010 Roundup

COOL SONGS AND GARAGE ROCK NON-STOP

Cheap Trick

Little Steven will ring in the new year on his nationally syndicated radio show Underground Garage next week (12/31-1/2) with a look back at the highs and lows of 2010 while counting down his 13 favorite tracks of the year. Top songs from past years have included cuts by Locksley, Cheap Trick, and Foxboro Hot Tubs. Van Zandt will also discuss the best 2010 had to offer in books and films, and even read a passage from Keith Richards’ new autobiography, Life.

In addition, the Underground Garage just wrapped its fourth annual Coolest Song in the World listeners’ poll. Fans voted for their favorite track of the year from artists like The Woggles, Pete Wolf, The Breakers, and Jesse Malin & The St. Mark’s Social. Kid Leo will name the winner on January 3 when he plays all 52 of Van Zandt’s weekly Coolest Song selections from 2010 on Sirius XM’s Underground Garage channel, the Little Steven-produced satellite radio station devoted to non-stop garage rock.

Go here for a full schedule of local affiliates and air times.


Little Steven’s Underground Garage Girls of Summer Tribute

WHAT’S SUMMER WITHOUT GIRLS?

Starting July 16, Little Steven pays tribute to the girls of summer with classic songs on his nationally syndicated radio show, Little Steven’s Underground Garage. From Aerosmith’s “Girls of Summer” and The Rolling Stones’ “Lady Jane” to the Beach Boys’ “Help Me Rhonda,” Bob Dylan’s “Absolutely Sweet Marie” and beyond, Van Zandt will spin some of the most memorable songs about women in rock & roll. In addition, Van Zandt will honor the Alabama 3′s “Jacqueline” as this week’s “Coolest Song in the World.”

Go here for a full schedule of local affiliates and air times.

In the meantime, here’s one FROM some of our favorite girls of summer.


All Good Adds: Keller
Bassnectar, Garage, McCourys

14th Annual All Good Music Festival Adds:

KELLER WILLIAMS, BASSNECTAR, GARAGE A TROIS, & TRAVELIN’ MCCOURYS

Already Confirmed Performers Include FURTHUR WIDESPEAD PANIC, UMPHREY’S MCGEE, YMSB & MORE

Walther Productions has announced the following additions to the 2010 All Good Music Festival lineup. The festival will take place July 8-11 in Masontown, WV on Marvin’s Mountaintop. Over 40 bands will be featured with no overlapping sets allowing fans to see every set and every band on the lineup. The new All Good Festival artists include:

All Good 2009 by Pusey

Keller Williams & the Added Bonus

Bassnectar

Garage a Trois

The Travelin’ McCourys

Dr. Didg

Lee Boys

Confirmed 2010 All Good Music Festival Artists:

FURTHUR featuring PHIL LESH & BOB WEIR

Widespread Panic

Umphrey’s McGee

Yonder Mountain String Band

Dark Star Orchestra

George Clinton & Parliament/Funkadelic

Lotus

Femi Kuti & the Positive Force

Rebelution

Railroad Earth

The New Deal

Perpetual Groove

Cornmeal

Fort Knox Five

The Macpodz

and more to be announced

All tickets are on sale now through allgood.musictoday.com or charge by phone by at 1-800-594-TIXX. Tier 2 Early Bird 4-Day Passes (Thursday-Monday) are going fast and are currently available for $159, $65 off of the gate price.

For more on All Good see our 2009 review here.



Fusion Garage’s JooJoo Enters Full Production, Despite Lawsuit

Fusion Garage announced that its controversial JooJoo tablet PC has entered full production, with devices expected to reach consumers by the end of February. The move comes days after Fusion Garage moved to dismiss a lawsuit filed against it by TechCrunch, the publishing entity founded by Michael Arrington, which alleges that the JooJoos design is a rip-off of his unreleased CrunchPad tablet PC. The name JooJoo may be derived from Ju-Ju, a West African term for objects such as skulls possessed by spirits.
– Fusion Garage announced on Feb. 3 that its controversial
JooJoo tablet PC had entered full production, with devices expected to reach
consumers by the end of the month. That announcement came two days after Fusion
Garage moved to dismiss a lawsuit filed against it by TechCrunch, the publishing
e…


Fusion Garage Moves to Dismiss CrunchPad Tablet Lawsuit

Fusion Garage filed a legal motion to dismiss a lawsuit filed against it by TechCrunch founder Michael Arrington, who insists that the company ripped off the design for his never-released CrunchPad for its JooJoo tablet PC. In the filing, Fusion Garage describes the legal action between the two entities as the fallout of a failed merger. Arrington originally intended for the CrunchPad to be a cheap, open-source device retailing for around $200. The announcement of the Apple iPad has superheated the tablet PC space lately, with a number of companies planning competing devices.
– Fusion Garage filed a motion on Feb. 1 to dismiss the lawsuit
filed against it by TechCrunch, the publishing entity founded by blogger Michael
Arrington, which alleges that Fusion Garages JooJoo tablet PC is a rip-off of
Arringtons never-released CrunchPad.

The legal action continues a saga t…


Garage A Trois | 12.19.09 | New York

Words by: Jarrod Dicker

Garage A Trois :: 12.19.09 :: Bowery Ballroom :: New York, NY

Garage A Trois

New York City was covered by snow on this Saturday night, whiting out the city landscape with an awe-inspiring touch of gray. There was no visibility beyond the foggy haze that lay within 15-feet of perception. Being on the Upper West Side, I had to be utterly insane to diagonally cross town in time for the Garage A Trois Bowery Ballroom gig… but the thing is, I am completely fanatical.

Trenching knee deep through snow, slush and city grime, I combined subway and leg work to reach my Lower East Side destination with the aid of a reliable amigo, Jack Daniels.

I trekked down the stairs and was met instantly by a sign on the foyer door stating, “Due to inclement weather Mike Dillon will not be performing tonight. The rest of Garage A Trois will be joined by Adam Deitch.”

The snow had caused Garage A Trois to slightly amend its act this evening. With percussionist Mike Dillon unable to get into New York, Lettuce‘s Adam Deitch was scheduled to play drums alongside keyboardist Marco Benevento, drummer Stanton Moore, and saxophonist Skerik.

You’d think fans would have been pissed that Dillon was unable to attend, however, observing the outrageous weather conditions present in the city that night, patrons were just relieved that the show was still on.

October 2009 welcomed the release of “Garage A Benevento’s” (the jargon name for the new-fangled version of Garage A Trois) album Power Patriot. With the recent departure of eight-string guitarist and co-founder Charlie Hunter, Garage A Trois signed on keyboardist Marco Benevento to replace Hunter’s sounds and commence a newfound fashion to the band.

Marco Benevento

As stated in Court Scott’s interview with GAT on JamBase, Benevento had previously played with Skerik and Dillon in the group Coxygen and opened for Critters Buggin for various East Coast gigs. He has also accompanied Garage A Trois sporadically since 2005. Clearly, Marco is no rookie when it comes to the naturalness and reciprocated melodies that are established by Garage A Trois.

Deitch, Skerik and Benevento kicked off as the opening act, and morphed into Garage A Trois later upon the arrival of Stanton Moore. The scene was heady, even with the torrential blizzard, and the Ballroom was nearly packed. People wanted to hear some music and GAT had every intention of giving them just that.

At 11:30, I started to speculate a reason behind the group’s belated start. The fans were becoming restless, howling towards the stage to begin the show. Something had to be brewing, as there were no announcements of delay of any kind. But unexpectedly, a Willis Reed moment took place that wouldn’t fit comfortably anywhere else but New York City.

Walking up from the downstairs bar and main entrance enters drummer Stanton Moore. Instead of coming through the back of the venue, Moore walks through the crowd with a bag on his back, hinting at his late arrival. The audience comes together in ovation, cheering as Moore waves at his subjects and moves towards the stage access stairs.

Moore’s arrival was delayed due to the commanding weather conditions, but neither rain nor snow could stop the Louisiana native from getting there. He immediately hit the stage with various crew and set up his kit. Soon after completion, Moore stepped back behind the stage.

Marco Benevento soon stepped onstage, followed by Skerik who immediately grabbed the microphone.

Skerik by Jeffrey Dupuis

“Stanton just got here, he’s going to the bathroom and then we’re going to get this thing going,” he shouts. “We’re going to pack three hours worth of material into an hour and a half!”

Any Skerik fan that has witnessed him live knows how dominant his onstage presence is, and thus his announcement impelled adrenaline throughout the waiting fans’ yearning veins.

From then on it was absolute musical mayhem (in the most awesome of ways). Moore’s drum work was brilliant as he further established himself as one of the best in the business. Skerik served as MC and saxophonist extraordinaire, slaving to Benevento’s musical aura by repeatedly gazing in awe at his bandmate.

The Mike Dillon shout-outs were nothing short of habitual. “Let’s dedicate this to our missing Mike Dillon!” or “Play it for Mike D, Stanton, play it for Mike D!” were heard repetitively by Skerik in between beautiful, melodious fusions and atop concentrated climactic collaborations.

As the flier stated, Adam Deitch was set to join the other three members. This, understandably, was not meant to be taken literally because his participation was very minimal. When he did appear onstage, the drummer would position himself to the left of Benevento and offered flattering firework-like electro-rhythmic explosions to compliment the already sonic fueled partnership GAT was exhibiting.

While Mike Dillon was most certainly missed during the track, “Electric Doorbell Machine” (where Dillon is notorious for playing his instrument aka the Electric Doorbell Machine), the trio improvised well, and in fact, capitalized on it skillfully. Skerik, Moore and Benevento played their hearts out and channeled the funk/rock/hip hop/jazz fusion that GAT is so very well know for.

I’ve read album reviews of Power Patriot, and while all primarily flattering, I read one that claimed Moore’s drumming was not “front and center” as usually is the case when he is involved in a project. This may be the case on the actual record, but it is nothing but the contrary in the live setting, with Moore bouncing from seated to standing throughout the tenure of the show, demonstrating key backbeats and solos, while also driving the songs as he worked on top of Benevento’s bass-like rhythms.

Stanton Moore by Chad Smith

So now the big question: How is the group progressing without Charlie Hunter?

It seems that the function and philosophy are the same. Benevento replaces Hunter particularly well and supplies bass lines and other familiar Hunter-esque responsibilities. It was an outstanding idea to bring in a Hammond organist, as it complements the group exceptionally well. Having the keyboards, organ and a dissimilar approach to the bass, this sound circuit creates a heavier constituent that was lacking in previous albums. Benevento truly brings the heavier rock and roll edge to Garage A Trois.

The band performed songs from the new album (“Rescue Spreaders”), some old tunes (“Five 2 Survive”) and covers. Skerik led an audience accompanied, slow escalating chant, starting with a simmered “Deerhoof… Deerhoof,” that eventually amplified to a crowd engaged, “DEERHOOF! DEERHOOF!” This consequently led the trio into the song “Twin Killers” by Deerhoof, covering it with stunning eagerness and accuracy.

The other cover was unveiled towards the end on the night. Benevento began with a long, heavy organ solo that made even the most tripped out GAT fans coil into serene psychedelia, just long enough for a quick cut in to the recognizable and beyond legendary “No Quarter” by Led Zeppelin.

And what would a Garage A Trois show be without a little Critters Buggin? The familiar and often played “sorta-cover” “Punk Rock Guilt” finalized the performance, making it a New York City wintry whiteout to remember.

In later news, the Garage A Trois’ Philadelphia gig on Sunday was cancelled due to weather conditions. So what does the band do? Mike Dillon gets to New York and they perform at the Brooklyn Bowl that Sunday night instead. Damn, now that’s a supergroup in every sense of the word.

JamBase | NYC
Go See Live Music!


Has Open Source finally moved out of your parents Garage? Posted By : Ali Momin

One of the ironies that afflict open source software is the consumer mindset: If its free, its probably not reliable and secure.

TechCrunch Founder Arrington Files Suit Against JooJoo, Fusion Garage

TechCrunch founder Michael Arrington filed on Dec. 10. a much-threatened lawsuit against Fusion Garage, a startup that he claims stole his idea for the long-awaited CrunchPad tablet PC. Fusion Garage began taking preorders for the $499 JooJoo tablet, which features a 12.1-inch touch screen and can primarily be used to surf the Internet, on Dec. 11. In addition to the lawsuit, Arrington posted on the TechCrunch blog describing what he termed a pattern of deceit on Fusion Garage’s part. The matter will be settled in court.
– Michael Arrington, founder of popular tech blog TechCrunch, announced that
he had filed a lawsuit Dec. 10 against Singapore-based Fusion Garage, formally
alleging that the latter company’s JooJoo tablet PC is a rip-off of Arrington’s
never-released CrunchPad.
The JooJoo, a 12.1-inch touch scree…


Garage A Trois 2.0

By: Court Scott

Garage A Trois

When a member of a music group decides to leave and the remaining band continues, it can be risky and the results can be unpredictable. Fortunately, though, Garage A Trois is a band built on risk taking, unpredictability, and capricious malleability. When guitarist and founding member, Charlie Hunter, decided to pursue other projects, the group added keyboardist Marco Benevento, seeing it as an opportunity to prolong the vision and embrace new chemistry and sound. The latest incarnation of Garage A Trois is still a genre-bending juggernaut. With the release of their new album, Power Patriot (10/26/09 via The Royal Potato Family), drummer Stanton Moore (Galactic), keyboardist Benevento, vibraphone player and percussionist Mike Dillon (Les Claypool), and saxophonist Skerik each took the time to share their impressions with JamBase about the revamped lineup, the new disc, the December tour, and their vision of Garage A Trois’ future.

Garage A Trois formed in 1998 around the recording of Moore’s All Kooked Out! album and was indeed a trio born from an impromptu jam session with Moore, Hunter, and Skerik. In 2000, Dillon joined the group adding softness and warmth – showcasing his vibraphone and percussive skills. He became a high-energy brother-in-arms whose percussive trickery is often point-counterpoint to Skerik’s punchy squonks, hypnotic loops, and reedy squeedles. Yet Moore and Hunter, too, shared a symbiotic relationship.

“The chemistry between Stanton and Charlie was beyond deep,” Dillon says. “Charlie had studied organ trios, jazz, Afro-Cuban, and other styles; he was not messing around. And Stanton’s got years of New Orleans knowledge and experience.”

The sound was instrumentally driven jazz-funk-rock; New Orleans strut, swagger and groove with alternately tropical melodies and fuzzed-out, looped saxophone riffs swirled with vibraphone and cross-cultural percussive elements.

Original Garage A Trois by Zack Smith

A favorite band during Jazz Fest and other party-centric celebrations, due to the members’ beyond-busy schedules, Garage A Trois’ tours were few and far between, and in 2007 Hunter decided to move on.

“He’d completed what he wanted to do [with Garage A Trois],” says Dillon. Moore echoes this sentiment, “He wanted to focus on his trio [The Charlie Hunter Trio] and his family.” “It was like if he was gonna tour, it would be with his band,” agrees Skerik.

Yet, due to the eight-stringed prowess he displayed on his Novax, a signature instrument that allowed him to simultaneously play bass lines and lead guitar, Hunter’s departure effectively left the band without a bass and another instrument to define chord structure.

Knowing that they didn’t want to disband fully – “We really liked playing music together,” Skerik says – the remaining members played gigs with Robert Walter, John Medeski, and, says Dillon, “a bunch of other freaks.”

“But we were not playing our own material; it was mostly stuff Charlie had written. Marco was used to playing bass a lot with The Duo [Benevento and Joe Russo], and they played great music, so we thought it was a perfect fit,” says Skerik. “We didn’t want someone who wrote in any one genre, and Marco even takes it a step further. He’s such a great writer and does these lush, super-cool chord progressions.”

Marco Benevento

“There was great chemistry and it quickly became apparent this was our guy,” Stanton agrees. “We’d known each other for so long and knew each others’ playing styles. During that first session with Marco, we all felt really comfortable, like this was the next step.”

“We all got along well from the beginning” says Benevento, who’d previously played with Skerik, Dillon, and Joe Russo in Coxygen and had opened for Critters Buggin’ on the East Coast. “I like to think I create freshness; the change in style is heavy. With Charlie, there was more funk and groove oriented stuff.”

“There was no preconceived change in direction,” says Moore, “but the darker, more aggressive sound we feel works well.”

While not as loose limbed and easy to slip into as previous endeavors, Power Patriot is a cohesive, deeply textured effort. Tunes are atmospheric with the melodies painted in strong, broad strokes. A couple of the tracks are angular and contracted like a muscle, others tender and warm. The blend of organic instrumentation and synthetic electronic sounds creates an interesting, unpredictable balance. While Moore’s playing sways from highly excitable rock drummer to deep in the pocket jazz, he drives each track with casual certainty. Skerik says of Moore, “Man, he’s so great. He can take you to New Orleans and other places with just one song.”

“Electric Door Bell Machine,” one of the strongest tunes on the album finds Moore laying down a slick beat, building the skeleton for Dillon’s fantastic, imaginative mallet-work, which adds shimmer and light. Benevento’s playing and effects – swirlies, video arcade effects, and quirky sonics – create layers of interest and add to the compositions’ musculature. Similarly, Skerik’s playing is as cerebral as it is wild, and he often seems most focused in the middle of a Benevento-Dillon electrical storm. The more hardcore, low-end-electro-jazz-meets-stratospheric-rock vibe is undeniably fun, and this writer quickly found Power Patriot on heavy rotation. But this change in their sound doesn’t sit well with all fans.

“People have said to me, ‘You’re trying to turn Stanton into a rock drummer,’” says Benevento, “but that’s not the case. We’re just trying new things and it’s an interesting blend of half swing.”

Garage A Trois by Greg Aiello

While Hunter’s melodic, mellifluous playing was often in contrast to the rhythm section, Benevento’s playing, though sometimes raw, better compliments the rest of the group and is in sync with Dillon and Skerik’s penchant for less warm, minor chords and expanded use of the saxophone.

“I try to stay out of the way,” says Skerik. “I want to play a less traditional role. I love playing chords and not a straight melody. I don’t want to be obvious. I’ve tried to redefine the role of the sax. I never want there to be an overemphasis on obviousness!”

Indeed, the saxophone’s presence has been dialed down and the minimalism is used to create atmosphere and texture with layered effects and captured loops. “People want more saxophone, but I want them to leave a show wanting more,” Skerik explains. “You should never play everything you know. You’ve got to hold back. It’s all part of the tension and release.”

With Power Patriot the lineup, sound, and style are not only different, but the approach to recording the album differs from previous Garage A Trois efforts. The initial band’s debut, Mysteryfunk, was comprised of spontaneous Moore, Hunter, and Skerik jam sessions. In 2003 GAT released Emphasizer, and in 2005 they recorded the may-or-may-not-have-been-a-soundtrack, Outre Mer, which was both live and acoustic. Power Patriot was recorded over two sessions at two different studios, and prior to its release was tweaked and massaged by Benevento.

Continue reading for more on Garage A Trois…

 


[Next time] you steal music, I’ll be there, while you sleep, pissing on your face. But seriously, that’s evil. That’s taking money from me and other musicians.

-Skerik

 

Photo by: Michael Weintrob


Initial recording was done in New Orleans at Galactic’s studio space, Number C, over two days in December 2007. When the material was in the can, Benevento explains, “We sat with it for a while. We weren’t sure we had enough material and we didn’t have a label to put it on.”

Garage A Trois at Bear Creek 2009 by Amada Kaschkarow

“We shopped it around for over a year. It was frustrating because there are no more labels because everyone uses BitTorrent and people no longer go to record stores. [Next time] you steal music, I’ll be there, while you sleep, pissing on your face,” laughs Skerik. “But seriously, that’s evil. That’s taking money from me and other musicians.”

Frustrated but not deterred, Marco and publicist Kevin Calabro decided to put Power Patriot – an album, according to Skerik, named after a sexually aggressive bull once owned by Dillon’s dad – out on their home-cooked label, The Royal Potato Family. In order to have enough material for the release, the band went back into the studio for a secondary session to record the coruscating ’70s synth-rock track “Computer Crimes.”

“I think records shouldn’t be too long. Vinyl had built-in limitations, but CDs had 74 minutes to work with and it created a bad precedent,” says Skerik of the roughly 48-minute disc. “We subscribed to the ‘less is more’ school of thought.”

Garage A Trois finished the final track at the Studio in the Country, a recording industry relic in Louisiana.

“It was such a badass studio,” says Benevento, “It’s where Stevie Wonder, Kansas, and Willie Nelson have recorded. They had all this pimped out gear and over the day we recorded a bunch of extra tape.”

Mike Dillon

“As soon as you walk through the doors, it’s 1976,” adds Skerik. “It is one of my favorite studios in the world.”

After that session, the group again let the material marinate a bit as they hammered out the release plan. Benevento, ever the tinkerer, would later go back in his “Bat Cave” and fiddle with the final mix and track order. “A couple of the tunes, like ‘Rescue Spreaders,’ were sketches and didn’t feel finished, so I finished them after the fact at home,” says Benevento.

Given the different approach to this album and the different roster and new dynamic, how did the songwriting duties and process break down?

“Most of the songs came to the studio pretty fully realized so the initial process was pretty straightforward and easy,” says Moore of the ten tunes on the album. “The compositions were really strong; all instrumentally driven.”

“Not all the songs were written specifically for Garage A Trois. Actually ‘Dugout’ was a Go-Go [Jungle] tune and “Germs” was originally for the [Hairy] Apes,” says Dillon. And it’s fortunate that “Dugout” was brought to Garage A Trois’ table because Benevento absolutely kills it. “You know, it’s easier to write in New Orleans,” Dillon continues. “It’s pretty simple. I make a cup of coffee, go for a run, and play music all day. The songs just come up. With ‘Computer Crimes’ and ‘[Electric] Door Bell Machine,’ they were already written and I was hoping they’d work.”

Garage A Trois at Bear Creek 2009 by Amada Kaschkarow

Skerik is of a similar school of thought. “If I know a certain band is going into the studio, whenever I’m practicing at home – if I’m working on a certain scale or time signature – during that process, I’ll be flushing out every variable and I’ll record what I think has promise, what could be the base of a song,” he says. Skerik is perhaps most effective on this album in the creation of the standout title track; a futuristic romp with glitchy effects and a punchy, syncopated beat interspersed with dense squall. My only concern is Skerik and Dillon’s synergistic creativity is evident not only with Garage A Trois, but in Critters Buggin’ and Dead Kenny Gs, and though not redundant, the style can be a touch specific.

Benevento says of his contributions, “Hearing The Duo gives you a pretty good idea of my go-to song style. Lately I’ve been into epic rock like the Arcade Fire, My Morning Jacket, and [David] Bowie. I’m into lots of melodic songwriting.”

A fantastic example of this is “Fragile,” featuring a low-end fuzz and lovely melody reminiscent of Morphine. “Radiohead and Grizzly Bear are using interesting harmonies and expanded instrumentation, which I like,” offer Skerik.

The compositions on Power Patriot, for the most part, reflect this ethos. While I immensely enjoyed and appreciated the Garage A Trois from the first half of this decade, I honestly feel this lineup and sound is what Garage A Trois was meant to be and what will take them to the next level. While the former Garage A Trois’ sound felt more rooted in cross-cultural, past musical traditions, the new sound feels current and even futuristic. Even with Hunter, recent albums had incorporated more studio effects and experimentation with technology, and not technologies designed to make a mediocre artist sound good but those designed to make great music sound awesome.

So what can fans expect now that the band has found the collective time to tour?

Garage A Trois by Greg Aiello

“Oh man, the shows have been off the hook!” says an excited Skerik about the first three shows in Louisiana and Texas in mid-November. “The new songs are just so much fun to play. It’s great to get in the process of perfecting them and to get it out there.”

“You know, we’re still high energy!” Moore assures us.

“We’ll play songs off the record and call tunes as we play them – some of our older repertoire, new sounds, different song types. It’ll be less monochromatic [than the album] with more colors,” adds Benevento. “Last weekend at Bear Creek [Music Festival], we did cover tunes and improv. There was a lot of room for changes.”

“You know, the songs are just a jumping off point,” says Dillon. “Sometimes Skerik and Marco have gone to another planet with a song and there’s no coming back. That’s just how it goes.”

“Skerik is fearless,” Moore concurs, “but those are large risks that often pay off musically. It’s fresh.”

It is ultimately the chemistry of the players and the sonic vision of the band that determine its success. Forced to risk altering their sound with new players, Garage A Trois has succeeded by using less traditional approaches to an instrument’s role and technology to excite the instrumentation. Strong compositional skill and understanding of one another’s strengths has been paramount and a firm belief in exploring the unknown a prerequisite. You can see them on both coasts through the end of the year and Japan at the end of January.

Garage A Trois is on tour now; dates available here.

JamBase | Greased Up
Go See Live Music!


Fusion Garage Announces JooJoo, Refuting TechCrunch Claims

Tech startup Fusion Garage CEO Chanda Rathakrishnan announced the upcoming debut of the JooJoo, a tablet PC with a 12.1-inch touch screen, during a Dec. 7 Web conference. Fusion Garage will likely be sued by Michael Arrington, founder of popular technology blog TechCrunch, who insists that Fusion Garage stole the concept and designs for his CrunchPad tablet and used that to manufacture the JooJoo.
– Tech startup Fusion Garage announced that it will debut the JooJoo, a
tablet PC with a 12.1-inch touch screen, on Dec. 11 at a price point of $499.
Whether or not the device, announced by Fusion Garage CEO
Chandra Rathakrishnan during a Web conference on Dec. 7, actually meets that
launch date, …


Marco Benevento News: Baby, DVD, Trio, Duo, Garage

Marco Benevento Welcomes Baby, DVD, Trio, Duo and Garage A Trois

Marco Benevento

In addition to all the touring, recording, and writing, Marco Benevento has also welcomed his second daughter into the world earlier this month. Never one to slow for a moment, he’s also welcoming the DVD release of Marco Benevento & Friends (Live In NYC: The Sullivan Hall Residency) on November 10. Directed by Karina Mackenzie, the 2-plus hour DVD documents Marco’s 2008 residency at Sullivan Hall, including performances and interviews with Andrew Barr, Brad Barr, Billy Martin, Bobby Previte, Dave Fiuczynski, DJ Olive, G. Calvin Weston, Joe Russo, John Ellis, Jonas Hellborg, Kaki King, Marc Friedman, Reed Mathis, Skerik, Stanton Moore and Steven Bernstein. More than just a project about Marco, it captures a scene of artists and musicians who are clearly some of our generation’s giants.

Click here to pre-order from The Royal Potato Family. Get it before November 10 and you’ll receive a link to download five unreleased bonus clips.

In other new release news, the long awaited Garage A Trois album Power Patriot was released earlier this week. It’s available in record stores and online pretty much everywhere, including Amazon.


And finally, tour dates, a bunch of them. Marco Benevento Trio just began a four night West Coast jaunt that includes a special Halloween show in San Francisco, The Duo have dates as does Garage A Trois.

MARCO BENEVENTO TRIO

10.29 | The Goodfoot Lounge | Portland, OR

10.30 | Jambalaya | Arcata, CA

10.31 | San Francisco Jazz Festival | San Francisco, CA

11.01 | The Jazz School | Berkeley, CA (Workshop / 2 – 4pm)

12.03 | The Iron Horse | Northampton, MA

12.04 | Narrows Center For The Arts | Fall River, MA

12.05 | Downright Music & Art | Collinsville, CT

01.07.10 | Sculler’s | Boston, MA

02.10.10 | Duke University Coffeehouse | Raleigh, NC

BENEVENTO/RUSSO DUO

11.06 | The Note | West Chester, PA

11.07 | 8X10 | Baltimore, MD

11.09 | Boone Saloon | Boone, NC

11.10 | The Garage at Biltmore | Asheville, NC

11.11 | The Pour House Music Hall | Raleigh, NC

11.12 | The Pourhouse | Charleston, SC

11.13 | The Five Spot | Atlanta, GA

11.14 | Bear Creek Music Festival | Live Oak, FL

GARAGE A TROIS

11.14 | Bear Creek Festival | Live Oak, FL

11.19 | DBA | New Orleans, LA

11.20 | Chelsea’s | Baton Rouge, LA

11.21 | The Parish | Austin, TX

12.08 | Tractor Tavern | Seattle, WA

12.09 | Nightlight Lounge | Bellingham, WA

12.10 | Doug Fir Lounge | Portland, OR

12.11 | Red Fox Tavern | Arcata, CA

12.12 | The Independent | San Francisco, CA

12.19 | The Bowery Ballroom | New York, NY

12.20 | North Star Bar | Philadelphia, PA

12.21 | The 8X10 | Baltimore, MD


Garage A Trois: New Album/Tour

GARAGE A TROIS Featuring SKERIK, MIKE DILLON, MARCO BENEVENTO & STANTON MOORE

To Release POWER PATRIOT On OCTOBER 27 Through THE ROYAL POTATO FAMILY

Tour Dates Announced For November and December

Garage A Trois

Garage A Trois is a collaboration between four of the most visionary improvisers of the time: Skerik on saxophones, Mike Dillon on vibes, Marco Benevento on keyboards and Stanton Moore on drums. And while improvisation is at the heart of what this quartet has built its reputation on at their legendary New Orleans Jazz Fest sets and rare, but in demand, club tours, it’s the intricate sonic collages, tightly orchestrated arrangements and positively modern approach to instrumental songwriting that’s at the heart of their latest album, Power Patriot. Set for release October 27 by Brooklyn-based label The Royal Potato Family, Garage A Trois will play select tour dates to support the new recording in November and December.

The track listing for Power Patriot is:

1. Rescue Spreaders

2. Fragile

3. Dory’s Day Out

4. Electric Doorbell Machine

5. Power Patriot

6. Dugout

7. Fat Redneck Gangster

8. Purgatory

9. Germs

10. Computer Crimes

Upcoming Garage A Trois tour dates are:

November 14 | Bear Creek Festival | Live Oak, FL

November 19 | DBA | New Orleans, LA

November 20 | Chelsea’s | Baton Rouge, LA

November 21 | The Parish | Austin, TX

December 8 | Tractor Tavern | Seattle, WA

December 9 | Nightlight Lounge | Bellingham, WA

December 10 | Doug Fir Lounge | Portland, OR

December 11 | Red Fox Tavern | Arcata, CA

December 12 | The Independent | San Francisco, CA

December 19 | The Bowery Ballroom | New York, NY

December 20 | North Star Bar | Philadelphia, PA

December 21 | The 8X10 | Baltimore, MD


Cleaners in clear over woman injured in spider shock

Female garden spider (Araneus diadematus)

A German woman who fell down and broke her wrist after being confronted by a big spider has failed in her attempt to sue her cleaners for negligence.

A court in Karlsruhe was told that she lost her balance in her garage when the spider appeared in front of her face.

She had sought 6,000 euros (£5,190) in compensation, claiming the cleaners were responsible for her injuries.

But the court ruled that spiders were an everyday risk and that they could creep in through windows at any time.

"Even the regular adherence to the monthly duty of clearing away cobwebs could not guarantee that no spiders would appear," the court’s ruling said.

"What happened here was an everyday risk, for which the defendant should not be held responsible," the court concluded.

The cleaners were contracted to clean the garage and sweep away cobwebs once a month.

In May 2008, the woman opened her garage door and was confronted by the spider. The shock caused her to jump backwards suddenly, after which she fell and suffered a bruised right pelvis, bruises to the right side of her face, and a complicated break of the right wrist, the court heard.</p


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

The Dead Weather:Horehound

By: Brian Gearing

The last word from Jack White was that the next album from the White Stripes was still in the works, and that was before The Dead Weather came along. For those who hold Meg’s place on the drum stool as sacrosanct, Jack’s newest project is either pure heresy or the next best thing. Rather than filling Sister White’s place with another luminary to round out his new supergroup, Jack picks up the sticks himself and pounds the skins with a ferocity and proficiency that might send little sis to her room to soak her pillow. Horehound (released July 14 on WEA/Reprise) rocks more raw power than anything he’s done since Elephant and his sexy swagger is back after his turn with The Raconteurs‘ pop-geek boys club.

Maybe it’s something to do with having a woman around. Along with Queens of the Stone Age‘s Dean Fertita and The Raconteurs’ Jack Lawrence, The KillsAlison Mosshart joins White, and he’s gentlemanly enough to share the mic, though their voices are so similar one wonders about the health of his ego. Psychobabble aside, the two compliment each other so well it’s hard to imagine why they would have chosen “Hang You from the Heavens” as the first single. It’s a decent enough introduction, but rather than pound you into submission like the rest of the record, it jerks you around like a rag doll, and though Mosshart’s voice stands on its own, it stands taller on White’s shoulders.

The two come together on “I Cut Like a Buffalo,” which sways around like a dominatrix stripper on 4-pound, 5-inch platforms, and the hip hop stomp of “Treat Me Like Your Mother” knocks the garage door off its chain. Though The Dead Weather’s two main vocalists draw the spotlight at center stage, the other half provides the voltage. Guitarist and keyboardist Fertita hangs around the basement with bassist Lawrence and White’s right foot and only lets the guitars out to screech through a few wailing garage solos.

Aside from “Rocking Horse” and “Bone House,” which fill in the space between, most of the album alternates between the aforementioned heavy blues tracks (including a genius reworking of the obscure Dylan song “New Pony”) and the slow, haunting, deep cut Zeppelinism of opener “60 Feet Tall” and the instrumental “3 Birds.” Not every track is a home run, but Horehound notches another one in the win column for Jack White. And if The Dead Weather can pick the second single better than the first, their debut is likely to win over a few classic rock listeners who shied from The Raconteurs’ pop edge or the White Stripes’ garage slop. That Jack White can continue to produce superior work in such a variety of settings is a testament to his talent and evidence that whatever direction he may choose it will always be forward. Sorry, Meg.

JamBase | Jack’s Beanstalk
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