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Posts Tagged ‘Herman’

HBO To Air Pee-Wee Herman Broadway Special

HBO will air a special presentation of comedian Paul Reubens’ Pee-Wee Herman Broadway stageplay next year. The Emmy-winning cable network will tape a performance of Reubens’ production next month for broadcast later this winter, Deadline Hollywood scooped this week. Reubens played Pee-Wee on the Saturday Morning smash Pee-Wee’s Playhouse and in two movies — Pee-Wee’s [...]

Butch Patrick Protests “Munsters” Remake; Kristen Bell Courted For Role Of Marilyn

It’s safe to say that the proposed revival of The Munsters will not feature Butch Patrick in the role of Herman! The former child star who played kid vamp Eddie Wolfgang Munster on the smash ’60s series is publicly protesting NBC’s plans for a modern day reboot of the cult classic. In the meantime, former [...]

“The Munsters” Remake In Development For NBC

NBC is developing a revival of the ’60s sitcom The Munsters, TV tattles tell Entertainment Weekly.The Peacock has ordered a pilot of remake about the classic comedy about the clan at 1313 Mockingbird Lane. All the members of this supernatural family were derived from legendary movie monsters — except of course for “Plain Jane” [...]

Pee-Wee Herman Goes To Sturgis Motorcycle Rally [VIDEO]

Comeback Kid Pee-Wee Herman is featured in the latest side-splitting video for Funny or Die, where the former ’80s star and his famous bike travel to the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally in North Dakota. Along the way, Pee-Wee gets a tattoo, meets some new biker friends and hitches a ride with a Renegade.

Paul Reubens — Pee-Wee Herman — Maintains Innocence In 1991 Sex Scandal

Paul Reubens says he is innocent of the indecent exposure charge that derailed his career as a child entertainer nearly 20 years ago — and he hasn’t forgotten the people who poked fun at him at his lowest point. We’re looking at you, Jay Leno. Reubens — perhaps best known as his on-screen alter ego, Pee-Wee Herman [...]

Great American Taxi: “American Beauty” Video

LIFE ON THE ROAD IN THIS GREAT LAND DISTILLED IN SOUND & VISION

“Woodie Guthrie was a huge influence for us and we truly believe in the power of song,” said Great American Taxi frontman Vince Herman in a recent interview. “[Songs about hard luck times tend to] hold a man up and make him feel stronger than he is — and they make him feel good about his community. We want to address the issues appropriate to our times, while making music that gets people up and moving.”

But no one can accuse Taxi of crying the blues. Even Great American Taxi protest songs are generally up-beat, containing Cajun, calypso, and bluegrass melodies and a retro, ’70s feel — think the Grateful Dead, Wilco, and the Byrds. “We like to get as much dancing going as possible,” said Herman, who enjoys experimenting with traditional Southern boogie and swampy blues-rock sounds.

Here’s the new video from GAT’s latest album, Reckless Habits (here).

Great American Taxi Tour Dates :: Great American Taxi News :: Great American Taxi Concert Reviews


10 Most Terrifying Movie Clowns Of All Time

While children are meant to love clowns, the lurid make-up, hysterical laughter and familiar relationship with violent injuries can all be rather disquieting for the developing mind – and what you learn as a child sticks. In fact, where clowns are memorable, they are usually disturbing, whether they’re from outer space or the local asylum. [...]

Pee-Wee Herman Movie In The Works — Produced Judd Apatow

Pee-Wee Herman is hitting the road once again — this time with a little help from Judd Apatow.Paul Reubens’ beloved character is slated for a return to the big screen with Apatow set to produce, Variety said Thursday. The ’80s cult-TV star will make his way back to theaters via a collaboration with the director/producer [...]

15 Celebrities Who Lost it All

It’s everyone’s dream to have a multi-million dollar fortune with which to support themselves, their families, and all their lavish whims. Having enough money to purchase a few islands (and then some) sounds like a bottomless pot of gold. Surprisingly, the illusion can slip away just as easily as the money itself — quickly, and with devastating effects.

Evening Crunch Crumbs

-The A-Team’s Bradley Cooper talks Aniston dating rumors and being mistaken for a girl in the the July issue of Details Magazine…. “People thought I was a girl when I was little, because I looked like a girl. I was in a coffee shop once and the waitress was like, ‘What do you want, Miss?’ I [...]

Drive-By Truckers/Lucero | 04.03 | Philly

Words & Images by: Jake Krolick

Drive-By Truckers/Lucero/Langhorne Slim :: 04.03.10 :: The Electric Factory :: Philadelphia, PA

Drive-By Truckers :: 04.03 :: Philly

The workingman’s plight has long been subject matter for musicians. From Tennessee Ernie Ford’s “Sixteen Tons” to Sam Cooke’s “Chain Gang,” artists have been spilling their guts about day-to-day troubles for years. Philadelphia residents understand these lessons as well as any area in the country. Last Saturday evening, as the city sat quietly poised for Easter Sunday, a mass of working stiffs shuffled into The Electric Factory to put their work week behind them. We exchanged coffee mugs for whiskey bottles as we took in the music performed by a man from Langhorne, PA, a band from Memphis, Tennessee, and one of the most celebrated workingman’s bands ever.

Langhorne Slim‘s boundless energy and showmanship were less of a precursor to the songwriting skills of Lucero and Drive-By Truckers and more of a peek at another version of life’s struggles. Slim, born Sean Scolnick, was not just dancing and smiling during his performance. The strum of his guitar coupled with his quick vocal switches lifted his third album’s title track “Be Set Free” from a bland love story to an engaging song. Flanked by his band, The War EaglesJeff Ratner (bass), Malachi DeLorenzo (drums) and David Moore (banjo) – they formed a healthy force to reckon with. The band rattled and shook the crowd with “Restless.” Too bad so many were still getting into the venue and missed Slim’s set. The crowd finally took notice of their lively performance as Moore and DeLorenzo connected with a fury on “Cut It Down” off Electric Love Letter. They created a whirlwind with Moore’s aggressive banjo plucking and DeLorenzo’s patient yet bombastic combination of rim shots and bass kicks before Slim bent to his knees to rock “I Love You So Bad.”

It’s pretty widely known that there have been times when Lucero was too intoxicated to perform a decent show. This was not the case Saturday evening as the band demonstrated just how amazing they could be when firing on all cylinders.


Ben Nichols – Lucero :: 04.03 :: Philly

Lucero’s music chews on you like a Southern punk version of The Hold Steady with its spiral of horns and gruff sounds. Just like The Hold Steady, they sing to appease the heart and mind of the common man. Lucero is chock full of wild fellows, but the soul is singer-songwriter-bandleader Ben Nichols. He radiates outlaw grace with a voice that could influence an uprising. His songs are pushed through gritted teeth, back alley poetry about the people he lost or longed for and the lifetime of booze that he’s consumed. Nichols crooned into the microphone all evening like a less showy version of The Mighty Mighty Bosstones‘ singer Dicky Barrett. Their set was nothing short of amazing as Nichols, drummer Roy Berry and gray bearded guitarist Brian Venable looked outward and raged against the slings ‘n’ arrows of life. Lucero didn’t miss a note as they rattled off 13 songs that ran their illustrious career. The set spanned from the brick of pain “Kiss The Bottle” off The Attic Tapes to the highlight of their set, a positive, horn-filled “Smoke” that linked Todd Beene‘s pedal steel with a gaggle of huffing and puffing horn players. Simply put, they slayed their set.

The Drive-By Truckers have just released The Big To-Do (JamBase review). This album is somewhat different than previous efforts. The songs lack a certain raw feeling many have grown accustomed to, and it features many more melodic moments. However, it still contains the soul of the Drive-By Truckers and it shines in its ability to carry on where the other albums have left off. There are plenty of seedy stories of deception, strippers and cheaters, all on some form of drug or religion. Even if the music is starting to bend into a more harmonious form, the lyrical edge remains evident, as in this nugget from “This Fucking Job.”

Workin’ this job is a kick in the pants
Workin’ this job is like a knife in the back
It ain’t gettin’ me further than the dump I live in
It ain’t gettin’ me further than the next paycheck


Neff & Hood – DBTs :: 04.03 :: Philly

The Electric Factory was like being in one giant black megaphone. The front row was blasted by the Drive-By Truckers vinyl-only release “You’re Woman Is A Living Thing” as we prepared for the onslaught of the louder-than-the-Lord Southern rockers. Wild-eyed enthusiasm manifested itself within leader Patterson Hood as he stepped onstage, while guitarist Mike Cooley unabashedly came out smoking a cigarette. You can see a clear difference in these two personalities that drive the band, but it’s those variations that make the Truckers click. Behind them was a floor-to-ceiling backdrop of the Wes Freed circus train that adorns The Big To-Do album cover.

They devoted the first half of the set largely to new album, and while several of the new songs haven’t quite acquired the fire of older material, Hood and Cooley ground out “This Fucking Job” in fine form. Both seemed to find a connection with the audience and showed us that they were simply not ready to let us settle for the guillotine of conformity. Hood’s Southern drawl came out strongly, and for the first time during the performance so did his nonchalant ability to make us feel better by really hanging on certain lyrics. It’s this bit of human emotion that helps us tell The Man to fuck off instead of just lining up to have our heads chopped off.

The DBTs are one of those bands that sometimes need a push to get the show in gear. Enter Cooley on “Sink Hole” and “Self Destructive Zones.” His axe work was bloody loud and awe-inspiring. As he saluted the crowd with his guitar at the edge of the stage, you could hear the band starting to turn even sweeter. Drummer Brad Morgan shook the giant bass drum to life behind Cooley. It was somewhere around this point in the show that some jackass started screaming at the sound guy because he felt that the sound was too loud for his taste, though his discomfort was more likely due to too much alcohol because a few minutes later he was involved in a melee with a group of fans and security. However, Hood was loose by this point, and if he was drinking, we damn well better be, too. He split apart “The Company I Keep” and started teasing James Taylor’s “You’ve Got a Friend” before telling us to pour ourselves a cocktail because the night was going to be long and glorious.


Drive-By Truckers :: 04.03 :: Philly

New ones “Daddy Learned to Fly” and “Birthday Boy” was a finicky back-to-back combo. You could hear a more instrumental side working its way out of the Drive-By Truckers on both songs, which probably had a lot to do with their time as a backing band for Booker T. Jones. It’s surprising how much patience they had on “Daddy Learned to Fly,” and I’d give all that timing credit to Cooley’s searing guitar work and Jay Gonzalez‘s keyboard accents. The sound combination of these two had a similarity to late ’90s Widespread Panic with Michael Houser and JoJo Herman. They built it up just enough to make our skin boil, though “Birthday Boy” didn’t translate live as well as it does on the album. No matter, the set ended on a high point with Hood crooning on a cover of Eddie Hinton’s “Everybody Needs Love.”

As with most Drive-By Truckers shows, the encore was thick and hearty. Hood had started the evening by thanking Lucero for opening for them and reminisced about how the Truckers opened for them in 1996 in Memphis. This deep adoration culminated in a six-song encore with Lucero’s Todd Beene sitting in the entire time on pedal steel. One of my favorites from The Big-To-Do kicked off the encore as bassist Shonna Tucker started “You Got Another” by herself at the piano. Her elegant take on the tale of a jilted lover destroyed all that I thought I knew about the Drive-By Truckers. Somewhere during Tucker’s soft piano beginning the song turned into a full sonic head-fuck as Beene slid off hollow notes that linked with Cooley’s squealing guitar.

The band followed this pleasing but odd choice with some boisterous fan favorites, including “18 Wheels of Love” and “Let There Be Rock,” where Hood’s preaching dominated extended versions of each. His words came off as Southern tinged Arlo Guthrie style tales. He changed the words of “Let There Be Rock” into an advertisement for their opening spot for Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers this summer. He sang about his first band, Breakdown, and substituted Tom Petty in for Molly Hatchet. But, it was John Neff who ran away with the song as he rocked us with an electric sitar. Gonzalez had us dancing to his banging piano work on Southern Rock Opera‘s “Shut Up And Get On The Plane” before Cooley ended the show in high style performing a touching rendition of “Angels and Fuselage.” With a final mighty whack of the giant bass drum, Morgan ended the show.

Lucero set list
Intro > Sounds of the City, That Much Further West, Can’t Feel a Thing, Raising Hell, Slow Dancing, Sixes and Sevens, Goodbye Again, Kiss the Bottle, Mom, Smoke, Tears Don’t Matter Much, I Can Get Us Out of Here

Drive-By Truckers set list
You’re Woman Is A Living Thing on PA, After The Scene Dies, Get Downtown, (It’s Gonna Be) I Told You So, This Fucking Job, Sinkhole, Self Destructive Zones, The Company I Keep, 3 Dimes Down, Daddy Learned To Fly, Birthday Boy, Girls Who Smoke, Eyes Like Glue, The Living Bubba, Zoloft, A Ghost To Most, Everybody Needs Love, Puttin’ People On The Moon
E: You Got Another, 18 Wheels Of Love, Zip City, Let There Be Rock, Shut Up And Get On The Plane, Angels and Fuselage

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”0″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=16″);}); Drive-By Truckers, Lucero, Langhorne Slim | Electric Factory | Philadelphia, PA On the eve of Easter Sunday, Drive-By Truckers, Lucero and Langhorne Slim celebrated the working man in Philadelphia… View Photos

Drive-By Truckers Tour Dates :: Drive-By Truckers News :: Drive-By Truckers Concert Reviews

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Pee-Wee Herman Breaks Down Conan vs. NBC Drama

In this clip from Thursday’s Tonight Show, Pee-wee Herman explains the Conan, Leno, Tonight Show mess as only he can. After reaching a $45 million deal with NBC this week, Conan will host the long-running late night program for a final time on Friday. Jay Leno will return to his post as host of The [...]

New Pee-Wee Herman Movie On The Way?

He may be a bit of a perv, but Pee-wee Herman is back and ready take the world by storm once again.
Brace yourselves…..

For those who don’t remember, actor Paul Reubens starred in the CBS kid’s show Pee-Wee’s Playhouse from 1985-1991, before he was arrested for pleasuring himself in an adult movie theater. Pee-Wee says that’s [...]

Great American Taxi To Release Reckless Habits On 03/02

GREAT AMERICAN TAXI’S SECOND ALBUM, RECKLESS HABITS

DUE OUT MARCH 2 THROUGH THIRTY TIGERS

Great American Taxi

In the past five years, Great American Taxi has become one of the best-known headliners on the jam band circuit; their uninhibited sound a swinging concoction of swampy blues, progressive bluegrass, funky New Orleans strut, Southern boogie, honky-tonk, gospel, and good old fashioned rock ‘n’ roll. That loose, anything-can-happen feel is the hallmark of Reckless Habits, the band’s second album set to be released March 2, 2010, which was recorded in Loveland, CO with producer Tim Carbone (Railroad Earth).

When banjo player Mark Vann of Leftover Salmon died of cancer in 2002, the band lost momentum. Salmon singer/guitarist/mandolinist Vince Herman had a few rough years before joining keyboardist Chad Staehly for a superstar jam to benefit the Rainforest Action Group in Boulder in March 2005. “We put together a dream band of the best local musicians for a one-off gig,” Herman recalls. “It worked so well we had to do it again, and again, and again.” Thus, Great American Taxi was born. The band’s current lineup includes Herman, Staehly, guitarists Jeff Hamer and Jim Lewin, bassist Brian Adams, and drummer Chris Sheldon.

Great American Taxi has been compared with roots rockers like New Riders of The Purple Sage, Grateful Dead, Wilco, Uncle Tupelo, The Byrds, and Little Feat. Herman finds the comparisons flattering. “We’re definitely connected to all the acts in the country/rock spectrum, as well as the spirit of Gram Parsons and Woody Guthrie,” he says. “We want to address the issues appropriate to our times, while making music that gets people up and moving.”

“The band is a true democracy,” Staehly adds. “We tinkered with the tunes on the road, with everybody having input. In the studio, Tim would suggest ideas to make them sound bigger and brighter.” Carbone brought in the Black Swan Singers — Sheryl Renee, CoCo Brown and Shelly Lindsey — to add gospel flavored backing vocals. He also brought the Peak to Freak Horns — Justin Jones, sax; Nathan Peoples, sax; Dan Sears, trumpet; and Dave Stamps, trombone — for some New Orleans-style brass accents, as well as pedal steel player Barry Sless (Dane Nelson Band, Moonalice) and banjo man Matt Flinner.

The 13 tracks on Reckless Habits gleefully stretch the boundaries of American roots music with a nod to both tradition and the future. The title track, for instance — Staehly’s salute to Gram Parsons — is as country as it is rock, a rousing honky-tonk tune with Carbone’s fiddle and Sless’ pedal steel kicking up the sawdust on a Saturday night dance floor. The titles of several other Parsons songs appear in the lyrics, and there’s a definite Cosmic Cowboy vibe to the band’s expansive playing.

Staehly’s “American Beauty” tips its hat to the Grateful Dead, and features an extended jam. Herman’s “Cold Lonely Town” is a slow R&B tune that describes life during long Colorado winters. The Black Swan Singers add smoky doo-wop asides to Herman’s poignant vocals. Carbone has described its swampy laid-back vibe as “‘A Day in the Life’ meets Gram Parsons in the high desert.”

The CD will be housed in a die-cut package designed by artist Greg Carr, who designed Steve Martin‘s The Crow. “Greg has a picture of nuns smoking on the cover, wearing Reckless Habits,” Herman explains. “We want to give people something unique, so they won’t just burn it and pass it on.”

And finally, the band’s cryptic name refers to Herman’s unique skiing style. “A friend of mine once said I came downhill looking like a great American taxi — a large, lumbering object that’s totally out of control and coming downhill towards you faster and faster. It seemed to fit the band’s m.o., so we adopted it.”

Great American Taxi is currently on tour; dates available here.


Nov. 30: A St. Andrew’s Day Salute to Scottish Inventors

Nov. 30: It’s St. Andrew’s Day, the national day of Scotland. So we offer a toast to the great inventors who have applied Scottish ingenuity to their work over the years, helping craft the modern world in the process.
Some, like Alexander Graham Bell and James Watt, are well-known.
Others, like Arthur James Arnot — a Scot [...]

Belgian PM Herman Van Rompuy appointed first EU President

Belgian Prime Minister Herman Van Rompuy has been elected as the first President of the European Union, while Britain’s European Trade Commissioner, Baroness Ashton, is the new foreign minister of the council.
Poet-economist Van Rompuy is almost unknown outside Belgium.
A staunch advocate of European integration, he has backed policies including a European-wide tax on all [...]

Leftover Salmon: 20 Years Down River

By: Nancy Dunham

Editor’s Note:

In honor of Leftover Salmon’s historic 20th anniversary, we’re working with the band to offer fans a unique look back at their legendary career. Pop in an old tape (yup, we’ve still got our Maxells), catch the band at a festivaaaaaal, or take a look around JamBase and Leftover Salmon’s influence on the live music scene(s) we cover and care for so deeply is clear and present. In fact, we’re proud to say that Leftover Salmon helped water the very soil that JamBase has grown out of. Maybe you feel the same way.

Yet, as we celebrate what Salmon has given the music world, they want to give us just a little bit more. Leftover Salmon is well aware that they’d never be celebrating 20 years if it weren’t for the fans and they want to say thank you. We’re honored to partner up with them on this opportunity to bring you two albums worth (28 tracks total) of mostly never-before released live Leftover Salmon that covers the band’s entire career. It’s packed with special guests, classics, covers, and it tells as much of the band’s story as the words you’re about to read. And they’re all free, like a proper thank you should be. At the end of this story you’ll find a track listing, link and more info on Part 1 of our four part free live album download, but you can get started and Download Leftover Salmon Celebrating 20 Years Disc 1 now. You can also stream the first installment with the nifty little audio player to the right. And keep an eye out for the second batch of songs coming soon.


Leftover Salmon vintage press shot
Emmitt, Vann, Garrison, Herman, McKay, Martinez

Ben Kaufmann‘s life was changed by Leftover Salmon. The Yonder Mountain String Band bass player knew he wanted to be a musician, but it wasn’t until he was 19 and saw the Boulder-based “Polyethnic Cajun Slamgrass” band at The Wetlands in New York that he had a view of what musical path to take.

“From the minute they took the stage, their music blew me away,” said Kaufmann. “I never heard anything like them before. As soon as the show ended, I went over to the VW bus with the merch table and bought the CD and listened to it and said, ‘Where does this music come from?’ That’s what encouraged me to move to Boulder.”

Stories about how Leftover Salmon affected various lives abound in all quarters of the music community. Kaufmann recalls that once YMSB formed, Leftover Salmon was instrumental in getting them gigs in the Denver area.

The impact of Salmon is even more interesting when you consider the fact that when the band formed in 1989 – when members of the Salmon Heads joined forces with the Left Hand String Band – it occurred by happenstance.

“Last night I watched [Martin Scorsese's film about The Rolling Stones] Shine A Light and those guys are so much like us,” said Leftover Salmon co-founder Drew Emmitt, the group’s mandolin player. “It’s not that we’re like The Rolling Stone but they’re just a ragtag bunch of maniacs like us.”

In the film, Mick Jagger talks about forming the band in 1962 and thinking he’d try it one year and see if it worked out. If so, Jagger said he’d re-up for another year. Of course, the band is still going strong.

“That’s just like us,” said Emmitt. “There was no preconceived notion. We never thought we’d go out and play and travel the country. We just wanted to go out and play and have fun.”

Looking Back On Leftover Salmon

“Their music is unique. It just makes you feel good,” said Wavy Gravy, an activist, comic and all around friend to musicians since the 1960s. “There is nothing like them, with their incredible buoyancy and joy. That’s what they do – they make joy.”

Drew Emitt & Vince Herman – Leftover Salmon by Eric Abramson

That joy must have been what the fates had in mind when they brought the core of the band together.

Drew Emmitt grew up in Tennessee just outside Nashville. Although his family was musical and artistic – his dad was a writer, his mom a playwright – the family feared that Emmitt wouldn’t be able to make a living in music. But Emmitt was hooked from a young age, having grown up on influences that ranged from Gordon Lightfoot to Muddy Water to The Allman Brothers Band and Black Sabbath.

“I was exposed to classic music, rock & roll, and the blues. It was coming from all sides,” Emmitt said of his parents and siblings.

At about the same time, Vince Herman was growing up in Pittsburgh where Motown and doo-wop sounds prevailed.

“My first influence, though, was actually polka,” said Herman. “I was convinced you couldn’t get married without an accordion. I still have a weakness for the accordion.”

In high school, Herman became a fan of Southern rock and bluegrass, and those influences deepened when he was in college in Morgantown, West Virginia, where he got into the “bluegrass and old timey scene.”

Vince Herman – Leftover Salmon by Eric Abramson

“That really made me want to do that for a living,” said Herman, who put his dream on hold after he got married. “I did every kind of work imaginable, from working on fishing boats to construction. I tried the real jobs but they just weren’t for me.”

Emmitt, whose family moved to Boulder when he was about 10, also tried various jobs – most notably working with children in a daycare center, which he enjoyed – but found himself more and more caught up in the city’s music scene.

“In Boulder in the ’70s, it was a little more folk. Pure Prairie League, Stephen Stills, and Dan Fogelberg were always around,” said Emmitt. “But it was when I saw Hot Rize that everything totally changed for me. I was totally bit by the bluegrass bug.”

Although he was in garage bands in high school, the atmosphere surrounding the bluegrass scene was a strong pull for Emmitt.

“I realized there was a whole culture attached to it,” he said. “I loved that whole scene of people getting together around the campfire and playing. That’s what really got me.”

The first time Herman was fully exposed to the bluegrass scene was in about 1977 at a festival at the University of Pittsburgh.

“I had been playing music for years at that point but that’s really when I found my musical niche,” said Herman. “What a great way to socialize and enjoy music.”

Continue reading for more on Leftover Salmon…

 


Their music is unique. It just makes you feel good. There is nothing like them, with their incredible buoyancy and joy. That’s what they do – they make joy.

-Wavy Gravy

 

The Right Place

Drew Emmitt – LoS by Abramson

Musical aspirations and intentions are one thing, making it big quite another. Both Emmitt and Herman said that there are large doses of luck that factor into the equation.

“It has to be the right people for sure,” said Emmitt. “We happened upon it. There are so many great musicians in the world that really deserve to be famous [but don't make it]. It’s all about timing and finding the right people.”

Sam Bush remembers watching the young band when they were first performing as Leftover Salmon.

“One of the things that kind of set them apart was their versatility,” said Bush, “to be able to play electric music [with] fiddle, mandolin. It’s not surprising they found such a large audience. I love all their influences – the newgrass, the rock, the reggae. It really caught my attention.”

Herman said the deep roots of Leftover Salmon can be traced to the musical experimentation he and the other members of the band have explored since they were young.

“Getting your brain wrapped around one thing allows you to speak the language, and once you speak the language it is kind of like entering a culture,” he said. “In Boulder there was a player named Buck who was instrumental in uniting people. He called this thing he put together – before the Internet – Buck’s List, and there were probably 100 people on it. If you wanted to have a picking party or throw together a band, that’s where you started.”

Of course following a musical dream isn’t that easy to do when you have bills to pay. Herman remembers all to well the struggles he faced while working his way up in the business.

“It requires a lot of faith,” he said. “I have a 22-year-old who’s now trying to decide what to do, and I’d hate to see him live as close to poverty for as long as I did. But if that’s what leads to happiness, that’s the way you have to go.”

Emmitt recalls how his parents both fretted about his musical aspirations.

Mark Vann by Abramson

“They always wanted me to have something to fall back on. Unfortunately, they passed away before they got to see me do this,” Emmitt said. “That’s a big regret in my life. They’d be so surprised to see the kind of life I lead.”

Of course that didn’t happen right away. After years of kicking around in music scenes, fate took hold in 1985. That’s when Herman left West Virginia to move to Colorado influenced, like Emmitt, by Hot Rize.

“I was looking for a place to move that had different bluegrass,” said Herman. “I drove to Boulder, walked into a bar that said bluegrass was playing, and that’s where I first met Drew. It’s kind of weird to get out of your car, walk into a place, and find someone you will play with the next 25 years.”

That friendship deepened as they got to know each other through the Boulder music scene. Then, fate stepped in again one year at the Telluride Bluegrass Festival when Herman’s band, The Salmon Heads, was playing. Emmitt was at the fest just hanging out, walking through the compound when he heard “just incredible banjo playing and walked over.” That’s when he met banjo player Mark Vann, who eventually became the third co-founder of Leftover Salmon. The three formed a fast friendship at Telluride while continuing to play in their own bands and competing in a series of silly contests.

“Mark and I were in two different bands. Vince and I definitely had a chemistry going,” said Emmitt. “I thought something cool would happen.”

After the festival ended the three new friends walked up to Bear Creek Falls and sat on a cliff talking until the sun rose.

“You could feel the energy among the three of us,” said Emmitt. “You could really feel it going on.”

As the sun rose in all its splendor, Vann suddenly yelled, “Down in front,” referring to a large mountain that partially obscured their view. All three men started laughing.

“That was what sealed the deal for me,” said Herman. “That was great.”

Starting Leftover Salmon

Figuring out their new band’s name was pretty easy. The three new friends and their buddies who would fill out the group just started playing with the names of the two main bands they were in, and Herman finally coined Leftover Salmon.

Deciding on what music to play was almost as simple.

Leftover Salmon at Telluride Bluegrass Fest by Abramson

“We really just said, ‘Let’s take bluegrass, crank it up, add drums, and that will be Leftover Salmon,’” said Emmitt.

“I really thought it’d last one gig,” quipped Herman.

Not only has it lasted 20 years and counting, but that first gig will be celebrated on December 28 when the band plays The Eldo, the site of their first show. They’ll follow with shows at the Boulder Theater on December 30 and New Year’s Eve.

“It’s not a very large place; I think it seats about 225 people,” said Emmitt of The Eldo, “but after all we’ve done, all the large venues, it’s a way to come full circle.”

In a way, that small club filled with friends from the area is what gave Leftover Salmon the all-important push it needed to launch its career.

“You pick up energy from the audience,” said Emmitt. “You discover people really want you to succeed, and you take that energy and you run with it. You stop worrying about it and you get up there and do your thing and give out energy and get it back.”

The energy Leftover Salmon found reached higher levels the more old string band tunes they added.

“Those would get people really fired up,” said Herman. “It was what really struck a chord with the whole slamgrass thing. People got real rowdy.”

Both Emmitt and Herman admitted to being more than a bit concerned when slamgrass first began, but they say people weren’t overly aggressive, just fun loving. That’s almost the same way the signature sound of Leftover Salmon developed.

Continue reading for more on Leftover Salmon…

 


One of the things that kind of set them apart was their versatility, to be able to play electric music [with] fiddle, mandolin. It’s not surprising they found such a large audience. I love all their influences – the newgrass, the rock, the reggae. It really caught my attention.

-Sam Bush

 

“We took a few different influences and put them all together,” said Herman. “That’s how we called it Polyethnic Cajun Slamgrass. We took all our favorite influences, mixed them together, and that’s what it became.”

Del McCoury, Bush, Emmitt, Vann by Abramson

And other musicians and fans loved it, packing Leftover Salmon’s shows and clamoring for more. One of the early devotes was Paul Barrere of Little Feat.

“Vince and Drew were two of the best young bluegrass pickers I heard in a long time,” said Barrere. “The way that they incorporated rock & roll into the music was just brilliant. Their impact on the jam band scene is huge.”

Musician Ronnie McCoury had first seen the band at Telluride in the early 1990s and was hooked by the eclectic sound and the members’ energy.

“No one really does what they do,” said McCoury. “Personally, I don’t even know how they create that sound, but that’s why they have such a great following that will stick with them forever.”

There were certainly disbelievers, though, when the band started. Emmitt remembers one friend telling him the newly purchased electric mandolin was “cool but all those electric mandolins went out in the ’70s.” Still, the bandmates wouldn’t be dissuaded.

“It really seemed like the smartest thing to do [to develop our sound],” said Emmitt. “You had bluegrass and you had rock, and in that respect there wasn’t much happening. You had the [Nitty Gritty] Dirt Band and others with drums and stuff, but they were more country. We took it to a different place. We played with a lot more abandon.”

Herman talks about the television show America’s Got Talent and the parade of genres and categories showcased.

“I watch that and think we could be contenders in all the categories,” he said. “We saw a window of opportunity and we combined all those categories.”

Losing A Brother

Mark Vann by Abramson

The band was rolling along and life was sweet when suddenly everything changed. Mark Vann, the brilliant banjo player, became ill and was diagnosed with cancer. He died on March 4, 2002.

The time of his diagnosis was an odd time for the entire country because it occurred just prior to the September 11 terrorist attacks. Not only was the band without Mark but they also played a few gigs without a drummer because Jose Martinez was in Seattle. A native of Venezuela, he was concerned about trying to get on a commercial airline flight so soon after the attacks, so he rode a Greyhound bus from Seattle to Texas to rejoin the band.

“Walking onstage that first time without Mark was one of the toughest things I’ve ever done in my life,” said Emmitt.

The pain didn’t ease for years. Even now, raw emotion floods the voices of Emmitt and Herman when they discuss their former bandmate.

“It absolutely devastated us,” said Herman. “It was hard to consider going on and playing again after he passed, but that’s what we do. We would have loved to have canned the whole thing. Drew and Mark and I together, it was a spiritual thing that led it along. But none of us had savings accounts and we had to keep going. And we did. It was definitely one of the hardest things I have ever done. Playing music is so spiritually connected with well being and to go onstage and look at the empty spot where Mark used to stand was brutal.”

Friends, including Sam Bush and banjo player Reverend Jeff Mosier, played with the band and helped ease some of the pain.

Herman & Vann – Leftover Salmon by Eric Abramson

“The Rev. Mosier was really the perfect person to go out with us as the first banjo player,” said Emmitt. “He is a very witty, very funny, very energetic person, and also very spiritual, and it made sense to have someone who was called Reverend be with us at that point. He made us laugh at a time when it was really hard to find laughter anywhere.”

In a way, music became a salvation for the band members. Playing, which had been a pure joy, became a form of healing for them.

“The music is going to be different but the music comes out of you and you need to express it just as much,” said Herman. “Those gigs were really hard but they were also incredibly therapeutic. Music goes on.”

At the end of 2004, the band announced it would take a hiatus. Until they reunited in 2007, many doubted they would ever return.

“I think we were like a three-legged beast walking on two,” said Herman. “We had never quite gotten that balance back, and it was a struggle just changing personnel. We had never taken a break after he passed and we just said at one point it was time to give it a rest. It was too spiritually taxing. It had run its course.”

When the band reunited in 2007 for performances at High Sierra Music Festival, All Good Festival, and, of course, the Telluride Bluegrass Festival, Herman and Emmitt were quick to dismiss notions that Leftover Salmon was back. Yet when they were announced at Telluride as “Drew Emmitt and Vince Herman and Friends,” Jeff Austin of Yonder Mountain String Band said, “We all know what’s going on here.”

Leftover Salmon 2009

It is true? Is Leftover Salmon really back?

“We are in an interesting place,” said Emmitt. “We were a reunion band at that time and we’ve done reunion shows and festivals. It’s hard to say where we are, but it really works well this way. It is awesome. One of the greatest things that ever happened to me personally is putting this band back together because it’s very fresh and enriched because of our solo work.”

Emmitt, Herman, and the other members each support the other’s solo projects that allow them to reach into needed creative areas, knowing they can always return to Leftover Salmon.

“It’s comfortable to be back in this place,” said Herman. “It’s a great repertoire of music and it’s very comfortable to dive back in. I don’t know where it will go but we’ll keep playing music and having fun.”

That, said Bush, is really all their friends and family should ask right now.

“It left a big heartbreaking hole for them to lose Mark,” Bush said. “They really loved Mark; we all did. If anything, since Mark’s demise we are all thankful that they are back and pickin’ together again. If anything maybe helps them all, it’s that they played somewhat separately for a time. That gives them – and us – an appreciation to get them back.”

Continue reading to download the first part of our free Leftover Salmon live double-album…

As part of celebrating Leftover Salmon’s 20 year anniversary, we’re giving away a double-album full of 28 live tracks starting in 1991 and taking us right up to 2009. Selecting, mastering and organizing the material fell largely on the shoulders of Leftover Salmon manger John Joy, who along with band archivist Chad Staehly and Eric Abramson, who did the Leftover Salmon Years In Your Ears DVD, narrowed it down from hundreds – if not thousands – of songs to bring this live compilation to life. Special thanks is also due to James Tuttle who mastered the final selections at Airshow Mastering.

“It sure has been a trip!” said Vince Herman about listening back to the first eight songs we’re offering, all from 1991-1994. Surprised by how rock & roll the young band sounded, Herman explained that, “It just seemed like the places we were playing and the crowds we were playing to, it was more of a rock & roll kind of crowd in the early days, and bluegrass was something kind of new to ‘em, in the bar scene anyways. So I guess we probably leaned a bit more towards the rock & roll than straight ahead bluegrass like we played in the Left Hand String Band or the jug band and the Cajun stuff of the Salmon Heads.”

Vince Herman was interviewed about the 20 Year compilation by Cal Roach.

You can download Part 1 of the Leftover Salmon Celebrating 20 Years Sampler HERE.

Track Listing for Part 1 of the Leftover Salmon Celebrating 20 Years Sampler

1. Blister in the Sun 3:59 – 05/04/1991 McCabe’s Boulder, CO

Band: Vince Herman, Drew Emmitt, Mark Vann, Gerry Cavagnaro, Michael Wooten, Rob Galloway

Songwriter/Composer Credits: Violent Femmes

2. Just Before The Evening 4:02 – 05/04/1991 McCabe’s Boulder, CO

Band: Vince Herman, Drew Emmitt, Mark Vann, Gerry Cavagnaro, Michael Wooten, Rob Galloway
Songwriter/Composer Credits: Drew Emmitt – Leftover Salmon

3. Whiskey Before Breakfast/Over The Waterfall 3:47 – 05/04/1991 McCabe’s – Boulder, CO

Band: Vince Herman, Drew Emmitt, Mark Vann, Gerry Cavagnaro, Michael Wooten, Rob Galloway

Songwriter/Composer Credits: Traditionally arranged by Leftover Salmon

4. Who Stole My Monkey 4:42 – 05/25/1991 Stage Stop – Rollinsville, CO

Band: Vince Herman, Drew Emmitt, Mark Vann, Gerry Cavagnaro, Michael Wooten, Rob Galloway

Songwriter/Composer Credits: Zachary Richard

5. Mystery 4:19 – 10/02/1993 – Fox Theater – Boulder, CO

Band: Vince Herman, Drew Emmitt, Mark Vann, Michael Wooten, Tye North, Joe Jogerst

Songwriter/Composer Credits: Mark Hallman

6. Weights 3:53 10/02/1993 – Fox Theater – Boulder, CO

Band: Vince Herman, Drew Emmitt, Mark Vann, Michael Wooten, Tye North, Joe Jogerst

Songwriter/Composer Credits: Drew Emmitt – Leftover Salmon

7. Dance On Your Head 4:12 – 10/19/1994 Music Farm – Charleston, SC

Band: Vince Herman, Drew Emmitt, Mark Vann, Michael Wooten, Tye North

Songwriter/Composer Credits: Vince Herman / Mark Vann – Leftover Salmon

8. Head Bag 5:34 10/19/1994 Music Farm – Charleston, SC

Band: Vince Herman, Drew Emmitt, Mark Vann, Michael Wooten, Tye North

Songwriter/Composer Credits: Vince Herman – Leftover Salmon

Check back for Part 2 of our Leftover Salmon 20 Year Celebration featuring a bunch more free music!

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The Flaming Lips: Melt Your Head Again

By: Nancy Dunham

The Flaming Lips

For all the cool things that can be said about Wayne Coyne, perhaps the coolest is that he just doesn’t take himself that seriously.

At a recent concert outside of Washington, D.C., the frontman and founder of The Flaming Lips spent 20 minutes or so working with the band’s roadies to set up equipment before the show. And with his help, one of the typical Lips high-energy extravaganzas was underway.

“I love it. I love it like I love my wife and my family and my dogs,” said Coyne of his band and its music, “but I am completely untrustworthy – a fanatic. I don’t climb mountains or shit like that. So, I put my energy into music and I act like it’s the most important thing in the world. But I know it’s not. Everybody should love the things they do in their lives, the people in their lives, more than [they love] some stupid rock band. I know that.”

Let’s face it, you don’t hear many rockers who have won three Grammy Awards plus a multitude of critical and commercial kudos dissuading people from obsessing over the music they create. Yet perhaps that self-effacing manner is why Coyne, who in 1983 started the psychedelic rock band that has morphed into something of a cultural phenomenon, is so much more successful than many of his peers. While the majority of his contemporaries in other groups have long since disbanded or are now relegated to shows at small venues and state fairs, Coyne and his bandmates still play amphitheatres and have fans pining for new material.

The Early Years

What started as something of a lark for Coyne, his brother Mark and bass guitarist Michael Ivins – who has said that rampant drug use as kids is what led them to make “weird music” – has developed into one of the most influential bands of the day. The Lips could even be considered role models for alt-rockers with Coyne serving as the wise elder statesman. But it wasn’t always that way, and the path has been long and twisted.

The Flaming Lips circa 1989

After releasing its self-titled debut in 1985 with Hear It Is following in 1986, the band played a Buffalo, New York show supporting the Butthole Surfers. That show resulted in Coyne meeting Jonathan Donahue who later became the group’s sound technician and guitarist.

Despite what Coyne and Ivins call a more cohesive feel to their sound, it wasn’t until 1991 that the Lips signed to Warner Brothers. The Lips’ major label debut, Hit to Death in the Future Head, was released in 1992 and was quickly followed by Donahue’s departure to focus on his other band, Mercury Rev.

It took several more years – where the band appeared everywhere from MTV’s annual Spring Break broadcast to a lip-synched performance on Beverly Hills 90210 – for the band to build buzz. Of course, that was helped by a bit of PR when 90210 cast member Ian Ziering – in the role of Steve Sanders – said, “You know, I’ve never been a big fan of alternative music, but these guys rocked the house!”

The band flirted with commercial success at various times only to stumble and land back in cult status. In 1996, it seemed the Lips would implode due to an array of injuries and odd accidents. Then various strange musical experiments, including 1997′s Zaireeka, a set of four discs designed to be played simultaneously, created the impression that Coyne and his band were just plain odd.

“Sometimes you want everything to be like it was with your first album where everything is new and anything is possible,” Coyne said. “If you have enough experience you always know everything involved. We have made about 12 records by now and you get in these quagmires. It can be difficult.”

The Flaming Lips

But, according to Ivins, a brotherhood of sorts is what has always keeps the band moving ahead musically.

“I would hope that in the big picture that we have arrived at this point that we are making Flaming Lips music, our own sound,” said Ivins. “It’s odd to look back at ourselves. I think for a while we were making record collection music and stumbling accidentally on twists and turns in music. We never actually sounded like we wanted to sound. At points earlier in our career we thought that birthday party stuff sounds cool and then we got it wrong and had some weird songs. Since the late 1990s, we were able to make or break or at least get a handle on how to really use the language of music – the melodies and lyrics – and put them together in a way that made sense.”

That language of music, according to Coyne, isn’t always easy to grasp but you simply have to keep trying. Because even when difficult, it’s often through the process of doing it, of just going into the studio and working, that meaning can be found and magic can happen.

“The worst thing that happens – I think it happens with all things – is you walk in there and you think you have this great song or great ideas and you record them and they are just boring,” Coyne said, “and they are not thrilling you, they are not thrilling [others] and you don’t even pursue them. What we have learned is that is going to happen but you still have to work through them anyway and keep going. I think you just have to keep fighting and if something hits you, you have to have the imagination and energy and make something happen.”

Continue reading for more on The Flaming Lips…

 


Sometimes you have to make music really at the edge of what you’re comfortable with. We aren’t one of those groups that want to make the same song over and over.

-Wayne Coyne

 

Having A Ball

Confetti, lasers and balloons are just some of the props that have engaged audiences since the band was quite young. And to the delight of fans, including Vince Herman, founding member of Leftover Salmon, Coyne doesn’t show any signs of stopping.

The Flaming Lips :: Coachella 2004 by Jay Blakesberg

“[We saw The Flaming Lips] a few years back and at one point Wayne gets up, sings and [the floor] starts to dissolve. Then suddenly we look down the eight-story atrium and he’s laying there with what looks like blood pouring out,” said Herman of a classic Coyne theatrical stunt he began in various forms almost 20 years ago. “It was amazing. I am a huge fan.”

Such antics are what sets the band apart from others, according to Ivins.

“When you start out in a band there is a general level of insecurity that you have to overcome to forge your way,” said Ivins. “We just kept going on and doing things. In a lot of ways, people compare us with Pink Floyd in that sort of way. That is something we have always tried to aspire to. You come to see The Flaming Lips show and you walk into a different world.”

The band first began entering that “different world” with wild New Year’s Eve parties, but soon realized every night could be New Year’s Eve if you played it right.

“We always upped the ante [every NYE], threw more stuff in to make it more exciting,” said Coyne. “Then we started thinking that we should do this every night. Why not make our shows a celebration every time, make these things permanent parts of the show?”

The band shoved personal insecurities and self-consciousness aside and began to bring massive numbers of balloons, buckets of confetti and other props into the shows until they struck the tone they wanted.

The Flaming Lips

“Think of New Year’s Eve and these other cliched markers in people’s minds,” said Coyne. “Regardless of where you were – at a hotel, some boring party – when you got home you turned on the television and watched the ball drop in Times Square and wished you were there.”

In thinking through the musicians that made the biggest impact on them – The Beatles, Pink Floyd, and others of that ilk – the Lips realized that those groups mirrored culture which, of course, made them even more relevant.

“Everything about it is an art form – the way you stand, where you stand, how you play,” said Coyne. “People don’t come to rock shows just to hear the music. You don’t go and say, ‘I heard the Rolling Stones.’ It is an event that really goes beyond listening. There may be purists out there that think the show can overwhelm the music, but I’d think not many. I always think about a Pete Townshend quote – who was never about just playing music – [where he] said he never lets the music get in the way of the show.”

Ivins goes even further, noting that The Flaming Lips’ concerts are beyond a “show” classification.

“It is a performance so it should be big and exciting and bombastic and not a bunch of guys just standing playing instruments,” said Ivins. “Plenty of bands do that. We aren’t all that interested in that. We are into being able to do everything with video screens and confetti and balloons, making [the concerts] New Year’s Eve and birthday parties and a celebration every night. We are out here celebrating life and are able to let the audience know it’s all right not to worry, to just uncoil at this time and jump around and have a good time.”

And what about that giant plastic ball that Coyne climbs into and launches so that he can roll around on top of the audiences?

“That image of me in the bubble,” said Coyne reflectively, “you never know the thing you are doing that is going to capture some unique essence. The space bubble thing I did at a Coachella show, I did it and I don’t even know when we were doing it or why. You fear you will do something like that and pick up the reviews the next week or the next morning, and people will think it’s a dumb gimmick. With that, we played this giant festival with Radiohead and The Cure and I picked up the paper the next day and I was on the front page of the paper in that giant bubble. That’s what people remember at the shows. I think you just get lucky and you capture something people love.”

Behind The Music

The innovative stage shows and ever changing music of the Lips has led journalists and fans alike to consistently wonder what master plan Coyne and his bandmates follow to keep their music fresh. On October 13, the band will release their twelfth album, the 18-track Embryonic, that’s already garnered a plethora of chatter for being edgier and more psychedelic than anything since 2002′s breakout Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots.

Wayne Coyne

“I’m glad to hear when people enjoy it,” Coyne said. “We never know what to think. We have embraced recording with computers. It’s a fascinating, strange way to make music, sort of piecemealing things together, sound by sound.”

In a way, this new album was perhaps more experimental than most in their catalog as it was born from an impromptu session between band member Steven Drozd and Coyne.

“Steven’s a great drummer and I’m not a good bass player but we still said, ‘Let’s get some stuff out and just bang around, see what develops.’ We didn’t know what would come of it and we were surprised by things that happened,” said Coyne. “You do stumble upon these little accidents, these grooves that are exciting when you find yourself moving in some direction that you weren’t prepared for. There are all these cliches about recording that [say] musicians instinctively go where [the music] takes you. That’s bullshit. That’s why you have the same people making the same song over and over and over again.”

Yet Coyne said with experience comes a form of intuition, which guides many musicians through rough patches, prying their holds off certain parts of songs so they can move on and develop more artistically.

“It’s interesting to see if we have any intuitive skills,” said Coyne. “A lot of [Embryonic] is almost a first take. Perhaps a section of the songs we lock in and then it gets intense, or whatever the word would be. When people say, ‘We like it,’ we say, ‘Oh, good,’ because sometimes you have to make music really at the edge of what you’re comfortable with. We aren’t one of those groups that want to make the same song over and over.”

Coyne is modest about his music, saying that a combination of luck and timing made his band move from “not very good” to a powerhouse while changing their sound. Coyne and Ivins both indicate that the Lips are the opposite of many other bands that took solid music and developed a stage show. For the Lips the show, in a way, came before the solid musical footing of the band. Now that the band members have been in the business more than 20 years, they feel more comfortable than ever letting experimentation lead the way musically.

“That’s our style,” said Coyne. “We would do a lot of things in the computer that didn’t sound the way we expected. We would go to great lengths to make sounds sound spontaneous and real. That gives it an air of authenticity. Sometimes we want to take everything and make it perfect. Everyone can take a sloppy drumbeat and throw it in a machine and make it perfect, but ‘better’ isn’t always in time, it isn’t always perfect.”

The Flaming Lips tour dates are available here.


<td style='padding:2px 1px 0px 5px;' colspan='2'The Flaming Lips – Convinced of the Hex
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Pee-Wee Herman “The Jay Leno Show” VIDEO (09/22/09)

Pee-Wee The Pervert’s back. Pee-Wee Herman, a Saturday Morning staple in the 1980s, brought his “Playhouse” to the stage of The Jay Leno Show on Tuesday night. Actor Paul Reubens appeared in full character as his odd alter ego, complete with gray suit, white wingtips, and red bowtie.

Pee-Wee was on-hand to promote his upcoming stage [...]

Allman Brothers/WSP | 09.01 & 02 | Chicago

Words & Videos by: Herschel Concepcion | Images by: Norman Sands

Allman Brothers Band/Widespread Panic :: 09.01.09 & 09.02.09 :: Charter One Pavilion :: Chicago, IL

Widespread Panic :: 09.02 :: Chicago, IL

I remember the rush of excitement I felt when the Allman Brothers/Widespread Panic co-bill tour was first announced. It was last spring, and I was giddy like a schoolgirl with the latest gossip, calling all of my friends and sharing the news with anyone who would listen, and why not? Here were two of my favorite bands that between them boast three of the top five guitarists out there today, and they would be playing right here in Chicago – two nights – and I would be damned if anything could stop me from witnessing this historic tour.

Needless to say, it would be a long summer for me as I counted down the days until what I believed would be the best shows the city would see all year. Of course, there was plenty of good music to tide me over in the meantime – String Cheese at Rothbury was one of the most intense musical experiences I’ve ever had, and Phish at Alpine wasn’t too shabby either – but when it comes down to it, it’s true blue rock & roll that really stirs my blood. And when it comes to that, the Allmans and Panic are two of the best.

Tuesday, 09.01

Charter One Pavilion is my favorite venue in the city. It’s a temporary structure, taken down every fall and reassembled in the spring. One of the few outdoor venues in the city, it sits on a little peninsula, bordered to the west by Burnham Harbor and beyond that by Soldier Field. The Field Museum sits to the northwest, the Shedd Aquarium to the north, and to the east, the great stretch of water that is Lake Michigan, a vast expanse of rippling waves that glittered under the evening sun that day.

Haynes & Trucks – Allman Brothers :: 09.01 :: Chicago, IL

Chicago would be the final stop of the first leg of the tour, with Panic set to close the first night and the Allman Brothers the second. Each act was scheduled to play a full two-hour set with no set breaks (except for between bands), for a total of eight straight hours of music over the two-day period.

The Allmans hit the ground running, blasting out “Done Somebody Wrong” and “Don’t Keep Me Wonderin’” before getting real bluesy with a “Woman Across the River” that saw lead guitarists Warren Haynes and Derek Trucks playing off each other tastefully. After a deep solo by Gregg Allman on the keys, Trucks launched into one of his trademark screaming slide runs. Never one to sit back long, Haynes got mean and heavy with his response, and by the end of the song he and Trucks were firing off licks back and forth. It was downright filthy, real dirty, gritty stuff – and exactly what we’d come here for.

The Brothers were hot now, and it would only get better from there. After the pounding instrumental “Hot’Lanta,” featuring the percussive talents of Marc Quinones, and some more of Trucks’ aching slide on “Stand Back,” the band turned out a great rendition of the always uplifting “Revival” to lighten the mood a bit, and there were more than a few smiles in the crowd as the song took effect.

Ortiz & Schools :: 09.01 :: Chicago, IL

Traffic’s Dave Mason then took the stage, adding guitar and vocals to “Only You Know and I Know” and an extra funky “Feelin’ Alright.” After a jazzy, extended “Dreams” it was time for the second surprise guest of the night as Chicago’s very own Buddy Guy joined the Allmans for “The Sky Is Crying” and “You Don’t Love Me.” It was a bit surreal to watch this combination of jam and blues legends all on one stage, like witnessing a piece of history that one might’ve seen 40 years ago. And these guys clearly still have it, rocking out harder than most men half their age. This was definitely no nostalgia act.

After fan favorite “In Memory of Elizabeth Reed,” the Allmans closed out their set with a double encore featuring “Melissa” and “Trouble No More.” The “Melissa” was particularly sweet, and began with some poignant soloing by Haynes as the band filtered back onstage with Gregg on rhythm guitar, his gentle but rough, blues-hardened voice as soulful and true as ever.

Not to be outdone, Widespread Panic took full advantage of their first closing spot of the tour, taking the stage 15 minutes earlier than their scheduled set time and jumping right into “Disco” and “Henry Parsons Died.” After a heavy “Bears Gone Fishin’,” the band brought up Derek Trucks for a 15-plus minute, jammed out “Ride Me High.” “Angels On High” was followed by the band’s first-ever rendition of Bob Dylan’s “Just Like A Woman” that found Gregg Allman on his Hammond B3, trading lyrics with Panic’s John Bell.

Allman stayed onstage as Haynes came on to add some six-string work to a highly charged version of the Grateful Dead’s “Turn On Your Lovelight,” a great and welcome surprise to the lucky audience who had already been enjoying a night of great music and guest appearances. But the sit-ins were far from over as Trucks came back out to the stage, where he would remain for the rest of the set.

Widespread Panic :: 09.01 :: Chicago, IL

One of the highlights of the night was a “Papa’s Home” sandwich that featured some terrific interplay between Trucks and Panic’s very own guitar wizard Jimmy Herring. After a nice drums session by skins man Todd Nance and percussionist “Sunny” Ortiz came an extra elevated “Climb to Safety,” followed by a “North” that brought out Haynes, who stayed for the encore – a down home and dirty “Bowlegged Woman” that saw the band play for 15 minutes past their allotted set time. Combined with their early start, that’s a total of 30 minutes of extra music.

With the first night officially a success, there was actually some apprehension expressed by a few fans. “How can you top that?” they asked. “That shit was incredible.” Silly hippies, I thought. This ain’t their first rodeo and these super-pros always know how to up the ante.

The Allman Brothers Band:

Jam > Done Somebody Wrong, Don’t Keep Me Wonderin’, Woman Across The River, Hot ‘Lanta, Stand Back, Revival, Only You Know and I Know*, Feelin’ Alright**, Dreams, The Sky Is Crying***, You Don’t Love Me***, In Memory of Elizabeth Reed

E: Melissa, Trouble No More

* w/ Dave Mason

** w/ Dave Mason & JoJo Herman

*** w/ Buddy Guy

Widespread Panic:

Disco > Henry Parsons Died, Bear’s Gone Fishin’ > Ride Me High* > Diner > Angels on High, Just Like A Woman** > Turn On Your Love Light***, Papa’s Home* > Drums > Climb To Safety* > Papa’s Home* > North****

E: Bowlegged Woman****

* w/ Derek Trucks on guitar

** w/ Gregg Allman on organ

*** w/ Gregg Allman on organ, Warren Haynes on guitar

**** w/ Derek Trucks on guitar, Warren Haynes on guitar

[Only "Just Like A Woman." Last "Turn On Your Love Light" - 09/24/97, 971 shows]

Continue reading for Wednesday’s coverage of The Allman Brothers Band and Widespread Panic…

Wednesday, 09.02

Herring, Hermann, Bell – WSP :: 09.02 :: Chicago, IL

Wednesday’s weather was just as beautiful as Tuesday, albeit with an added electricity in the air. Both bands’ performances had been stellar the night before, and now it was time for round two.

Panic opened their set with a trifecta off their 1991 self-titled album, “Send Your Mind,” “Walkin’ (For Your Love)” and “Makes Sense to Me.” Then came the classic “Pigeons,” which showcased more of Herring’s always plentiful, incendiary guitar work. Honestly, the guy’s a god on his instrument. One of the most technically proficient guitarists out there, Herring can shred an entire song and not play the same lick twice. And he does it with feeling, too, one of the few musicians who can make my head feel like it might explode when he plays.

Panic brought Derek Trucks back out once again, unleashing him on “Mercy” and “Rock.” “Love Tractor” brought the dance party back and featured some more intense soloing by Herring. A fat, funky bass line by Dave Schools – who’s got one of the best tones of any bassist I’ve ever heard – laid down the groundwork for a lead-in to “Barstools and Dreamers,” with Schools plucking away as Herring tore it up and “JoJo” Hermann worked the keys.

Haynes stepped onstage to join Panic for the last two songs of their set, “Me and the Devil Blues” and a downright nasty cover of Neil Young’s “Last Dance” that consisted mostly of Herring and Haynes showing a wide-eyed Charter One crowd exactly what the electric guitar was made for. By the end of their set, Panic played every song off 1991′s self-titled sophomore effort, most of them in order. With the additions of “Last Dance” and “Me and the Devil,” this was truly a remarkable show.

Gregg Allman – Allman Brothers :: 09.02 :: Chicago, IL

With what I’d seen up to this point, it raised the question: how do you top two straight nights of A-grade performances? Easy, just deliver an A+ performance. The Allman Brothers were up for the challenge, and with their final set of the two-night Chicago run they showed the Windy City why they are still one of the greatest rock bands on the planet.

They exploded as soon they hit the stage with the hard-driving “Statesboro Blues,” an opener often reserved for special nights full of heated jams and powerful song selection. “One Way Out” pushed the crowd into a dancing fit, and “Ain’t Wastin’ Time No More” slowed the tempo a bit before the band brought it down even more with some low, loose jamming that eventually melted into a full-blown “Rocking Horse.” This is where the show really took off. Haynes started out with some smooth soloing and built it up to where his guitar was just screaming, a visceral collage of meaty tones and piercing notes blasting from the stage. “Midnight Rider” is always good to hear, and “Leave My Blues At Home” featured some nice guitar work from Trucks and Haynes, but it was the cover of Van Morrison’s “And It Stoned Me,” featuring Panic’s John Bell, that really hit home. Bell stayed onstage as fellow bandmate JoJo Hermann came up for a sit-in on Bob Dylan’s “It Takes A Lot to Laugh, It Takes A Train to Cry,” one of the best versions I’d ever heard.

What happened next I can’t really put into words. That was when – after it appeared we couldn’t get any higher – the Allmans took it to the proverbial next level. After achieving liftoff with an outrageously rockin’ “Black Hearted Woman,” the band brought JoJo, Schools and Herring out for an absolutely ridiculous “Southbound” that completely blew away the version I’d seen them play last year with the North Mississippi Allstars’ Luther Dickinson. The guitar work on this one was fierce and charged with an energy that only the most talented of musicians can dream of channeling.

The Allman Brothers Band :: 09.02 :: Chicago, IL

Herring stuck around and played the blues on “Stormy Monday” before the Allmans, who have never shied away from pushing their own limits, began with the rolling drum work of Jaimoe Johanson and Butch Trucks that would soon evolve into “Mountain Jam.” This is the song I’d come hoping to hear. An epic instrumental tour de force, I recognized it immediately. I felt that giddy schoolgirl anticipation building up again, a burst of exhilaration that shot through me as soon as I heard the signature riff. Once again, hearing this song was an experience that I can’t quite put into words, and I’m not sure how the Allmans do it, but “Mountain Jam” is one of those rare melodies that puts many people, including this writer, in a state of pure euphoria every time they play it.

How do you top that? How can you possibly go any higher? Well after the melodic, spiritually uplifting performance I’d just witnessed, there was only one direction to go. We needed something heavy, something solid to ground us. We needed “Whipping Post,” and though I was still floored by the “Mountain Jam,” I think deep down I knew this was the only option for a closer, the only thing that would tie it all together and bring proper closure to the night. And the version we got was vicious; it tore at my heart and soul. Interspersed in the song were a few minutes of beauty that resonated in the very depths of my being, then the return to wickedness, a fierce explosion of screaming guitar that shook me and pierced me and rattled my bones.

I am still confounded by the memory of what I experienced that night, and when I think back and try to make sense of it all, I can’t. I shake my head and say nothing; a slight chill runs through my body. That is not an exaggeration – it was that good. No show can touch a night with both the Allman Brothers and Widespread Panic. And if you don’t believe me, go see for yourself. Me, on the other hand, I just might head down to Charlotte next month for another taste of the most powerful double bill I have ever experienced.

Widespread Panic:

Send Your Mind, Walkin’ (For Your Love) > Makes Sense To Me, Pigeons, Mercy* > Rock*, C. Brown > Love Tractor, Weight Of The World, I’m Not Alone > Barstools and Dreamers, Proving Ground > The Last Straw, Me And The Devil Blues**, Last Dance**

* w/ Derek Trucks on guitar

** w/ Warren Haynes on guitar

The Allman Brothers Band:

Statesboro > One Way Out, Ain’t Wastin’ Time No More, Rockin’ Horse > Midnight Rider, Leave My Blues At Home, And It Stoned Me*, It Takes A Lot To Laugh It Takes A Train To Cry** > Other One Jam > Black Hearted Woman, Southbound***, Stormy Monday****, Mountain Jam > Drums & Bass > 3rd Stone From The Sun Jam > Mountain Jam

E: Whipping Post

* w/ John Bell

** w/ John Bell and JoJo Herman

*** w/ Dave Schools, JoJo Herman, Jimmy Herring

**** w/ Jimmy Herring

Continue reading for videos and more photos of The Allman Brothers and Widespread Panic in Chicago…

Tuesday, 09.01
The Allman Brothers Band

Widespread Panic

Widespread Panic with Derek Trucks

Continue reading for even more photos of The Allman Brothers and Widespread Panic in Chicago…

Wednesday, 09.02
Widespread Panic

Widespread Panic with Warren Haynes

The Allman Brothers Band

Continue reading for videos of The Allman Brothers and Widespread Panic in Chicago…

The Allman Brothers Band at Charter One – 09.01.09 – “Feelin’ Alright” (ft. Dave Mason)

The Allman Brothers Band at Charter One – 09.01.09 – “The Sky Is Crying” (ft. Buddy Guy)

Widespread Panic at Charter One – 09.01.09 – “Ride Me High” (ft. Derek Trucks)

Widespread Panic at Charter One – 09.01.09 – “Bowlegged Woman” (ft. Warren Haynes and Derek Trucks)

Widespread Panic at Charter One – 09.02.09 – “Pigeons”

Widespread Panic at Charter One – 09.02.09 – “Last Dance” (ft. Warren Haynes)

Allman Brothers Band at Charter One – 09.02.09 – “Southbound” (ft. Dave Schools, Jimmy Herring, and JoJo Hermann)

Allman Brothers Band at Charter One – 09.02.09 – “Whipping Post”

The Allman Brothers Band and Widespread Panic return to the road on October 3 in Charlotte, NC. Complete dates available here.

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