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Posts Tagged ‘Izabella’

Hot Buttered Rum Headed To Africa To Study, Record, Film

HBR AND MEMBERS OF IZABELLA AND POOR MAN’S WHISKEY HEAD TO GHANA
TO REALIZE A DREAM AND YOU CAN HELP!

Though very much an American string band, San Francisco’s Hot Buttered Rum has long had roots in African music, mingling the original Motherland inspirations with their modern take on acoustic music. Now the band is making a full leap into learning and recording in Africa early in 2011. In January, Nat Keefe and his comrades and friends will assemble in Ghana. To find out more about this exciting adventure (and perhaps donate the much-needed funds to make it all happen) pop over here.

Here’s a mission statement from Keefe:

Nat Keefe by Josh Miller

A decade ago I traveled to Ghana, West Africa and found the missing piece of my musical education. In studying drums, xylophone, palmwine guitar, dancing, and singing, I found the roots of, and a new perspective on, some of my favorite music. Oldtime banjo, Stravinksy, James Brown, Radiohead, all of this music has roots still resonating in West Africa.

It was an “a-ha” moment for me, which has changed everything since. I wrote symphony, choir, and percussion ensemble pieces based on Ghanaian rhythms. I returned to Ghana and filmed a documentary and recorded a disc of field recordings. I started a benefit project for an orphanage in Accra. With my brothers in Hot Buttered Rum, I created a fresh approach to American string band music. Things have not been the same for me since my trip to Ghana!.

This January I am returning to Ghana to record an album with Ghanaian musicians and American musicians from Hot Buttered Rum, ALO, Poor Man’s Whiskey, Elephant Revival, and Izabella. This will be a masterwork of sorts for me, bringing together music, community and service. Let me explain the scope of the trip. There are three phases:.

First, I’ll spend the first part of January alone in Ghana paying respects to old friends and making arrangements for the rest of the trip. Then, on January 18 my American colleagues are arriving in Accra. This will include Erik Yates, Lucas Carlton, Eli Jebidiah, Bonnie Paine, Audio Angel and Murph Murphy. I invited each of these artists to come for a week of workshops, cultural exchange, and service. Together we’ll learn music and dance from Ghanaian masters, and share our own music with people in the capital city of Accra and the beach village Keta. The group will do service projects in each city and music sharing in schools. The week will be filmed and made into a movie by Eli Jebidiah..

After our workshop, we’ll record for several days in Accra. I’ll also do some more recording when I’m back in California. I’m going to produce an album of shining collaboration with American and African musicians that can stand beside any great music. I’ve got the songs, the vision, and the organizational skill to put the pieces together. It will be passionate, accessible, fun music that will find an audience in and beyond the Hot Buttered Rum world.

This album will bring together elements of Ghanaian music and Bluegrass music, all tied together with my Americana-style songwriting. It will bring together luminaries from Ghana and the States alike. It has taken a decade of experience to be in a place to do this, and I’m going to work tirelessly to bring it to fruition.

All of the workshop participants are paying their own way. I am paying for my travel expenses. The place I need support is in the production of the album. While all these elements are aligned, I want to be able to do things right and produce the project with tools in my hand. I don’t have the resources myself to make this happen. So I’m asking for people who believe in this idea to help make it happen, in a variety of ways.

Once again, if you would like to help bring this dream to fruition head over here and share what you can.

Hot Buttered Rum Tour Dates :: Hot Buttered Rum News :: Hot Buttered Rum Concert Reviews


10 Most Notorious Womanizers in History

Don Juan may be the original lady-killer, whose breeches no woman could resist, but he was a fictional lothario whose exploits were bound to the stage, or the libretto, or the page; or, perhaps, if we can find ourselves once again in this post-feminist, enlightened age, to the reveries of women desirous of a little… [...]

New Monsoon/Izabella | 02.06 | S.F.

Words by: Dennis Cook | Images by: Susan J Weiand

New Monsoon/Izabella :: 02.06.10 :: Great American Music Hall :: San Francisco, CA

Talent will out.

New Monsoon :: 02.06 :: San Francisco

It’s an expression I adore because it basically says that one’s gifts will shine through regardless of the hardships, disregard and other flotsam hurled at anyone brave enough to put their passion and art in the public eye. Frequently, riches, as defined by the culture at large, will elude even the most talented folks. It’s just one of the cruel facts of life, where less-than-half-talents tapped by the corporate machine thrive and real artists chip away in their rag-and-bone way. However, there are rewards in this life far greater than a sack of silver, and following one’s vision and fully exploring one’s craft offer some pretty sweet satisfaction.

Such were my thoughts during this wholly enjoyable, musically dense evening inside one of San Francisco’s most storied venues as two of the most consistently satisfying, sonically lush bands in Northern California plied their trade. I’ve known most of the members of New Monsoon for close to a decade, and the rhythm section of Izabella for close to the same, and yet each time I see both acts play they’re all just a bit better – generally sharper, moving with greater group fluidity, full of a seemingly endless supply of solos that remind one why such spotlights flip our switch so thoroughly. And this long, happy night at the Great American Music Hall had an even more pronounced sense that every dude onstage was exactly where the universe meant them to be. An ebullient positivity permeated the room. I almost want to kick my own ass writing something so saccharine but there was no denying that being in this space, awash in this music, one felt slightly scrubbed and returned to the outside world a touch better. What drains the sap from the positive edge both bands possess is an insistence that reality be acknowledged and massaged into their compositions. Thus, one finds sounds that give them wings but have a very human weight, which may make it harder to achieve liftoff but make it all the more rewarding when one hits open air.

Mark Karan & Jeff Miller :: 02.06 :: San Francisco

In a nutshell, Izabella and New Monsoon are rock bands in the mold of the 60s/70s greats, where the basic character is rock but they’re unafraid to incorporate numerous other elements. So one picks up on the jazz sweep of Chicago and the Allmans, the Latin bent of Traffic and War, the street soul of the Doobie Brothers and the folk leanings of the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band and Poco, but only in the vaguest ways – like their forebears, they are doing their own thing. What amazes me, even after all these years, is how wonderfully accessible both groups are; not just approachable but active in their reaching out. They pull us from our spot on the bench and get us into the game. Even arriving to their show wicked tired or emotionally off-kilter, one soon finds themselves letting their resistance and hardness drop. I’ve experienced it countless times with their music, especially live, and dragging in after a particularly challenging working week this Saturday it happened again. From Izabella’s opening notes – a warming breeze out of a rainy day – through two magnificent sets by New Monsoon – embiggened further by periodic guest spots from RatDog‘s guitar gaucho Mark Karan and former Monsooner and tabla stud Rajiv Parikh – one felt a connective charge surge between the large crowd and the musicians. Some trips we take together, whether we realize it consciously or not, and this was one of them. Such was the enfolding nature of both band’s music, which sort of demanded smiles and cheers with its fundamental exuberance and joie de vivre.

This “review” may seem all broad strokes but neither New Monsoon nor Izabella can be easily summed up in a few words. Almost ten years on I’m still curious where they’re gonna take me and the rest of an audience. I’m still intrigued with their highly individual senses of what constitutes “rock,” and I’m continually impressed at their warmheartedness and ability to express it through song. I could wax poetic about the borderless interplay of NM’s Bo Carper‘s glassy banjo and Parikh’s heartbeat percussion, or the cool dovetailing of guitar styles with Karan and NM’s Jeff Miller – two of my all-time favorite six-stringers full of classic rock feel and jazzbo chops. I might crow to you about the bang-up new Chuck Berry style rave-up written and sung by Izabella keyboardist Sam Phelps, or perhaps the delightful shiver the Garcia covers by both bands sent through the crowd – Izabella’s “West L.A. Fadeaway” was sexy great and NM’s tackling of “Mission In The Rain” was stunning and a bittersweet reminder of the incredible gigs they did at the much missed 12 Galaxies. But this night was too sweet, too dear to be picked apart and dissected for its constituent parts. Talent will out, or at least it surely did this evening in San Francisco.

New Monsoon tour dates available here.

Continue reading for more pics of Izabella and New Monsoon in San Francisco…

Izabella

Continue reading for more pics of New Monsoon in San Francisco…

New Monsoon

with Mark Karan

Mark Karan

with Mark Karan

with Rajiv Parikh

Rajiv Parikh

JamBase | Bay Area
Go See Live Music!


Bill Kreutzmann Joins Tortugas

GRATEFUL DEAD PERCUSSION MARVEL
TO BE HONORED GUEST AT THIS YEAR’S LAS TORTUGAS HALLOWEEN WEEKEND GATHERING


Bill Kreutzmann

The 4th annual installment of Las Tortugas – Dance of the Dead, taking place October 29 – November 1 in Yosemite, CA, is very proud to announce that the legendary drummer and co-founder of the Grateful Dead, Bill Kreutzmann, will be the Honored Guest for this year’s festival. After honoring the Dead’s legacy the past two years with sizzling performances from Melvin Seals & JGB, Las Tortugas is delighted to continue the festival’s warm embrace of the roots of the jam-centric scene at the heart of this intimate, exciting festival. Kreutzmann’s innovative approach to drumming combined with his deep understanding of the power of rock ‘n’ roll and improvisation will be on display as he guests with Papa Mali at Las Tortugas. Las Tortugas is delighted to have Bill on board this year and look forward to the many surprises he’ll unleash from his voluminous trick bag!

Las Tortugas IV takes place at Evergreen Lodge in Yosemite and will feature performances from Umphrey’s McGee, Dumpstaphunk, Tea Leaf Green, Hot Buttered Rum, Bag of Tricks (Brogan, Adams & Gill of ALO), The Mother Hips, Blue Turtle Seduction, New Monsoon, Nathan Moore, Poor Man’s Whiskey, Pimps of Joytime, Papa Mali, Izabella, Big Light and more. The complete festival schedule and daily themes will be announced soon to aid folks in their holiday weekend planning for this special annual event.

Tickets for Las Tortugas are on sale now at evergreenhalloween.inticketing.com.

For more on Las Tortugas, check our coverage of the 2008 event here.


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

The Eugene Celebration Announces Schedule For 2009 Festival

Outdoor Festival Scheduled For September 4, 5 & 6


Hot Buttered Rum

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

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

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

Following is a list of confirmed bands & stages:

KLCC Rogue Stage

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

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

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

McDonald Theatre Stage

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

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

Library Stage

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

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

Broadway Stage

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

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

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



Summer Meltdown: Initial Lineup

FLOWMOTION HOSTED NORTHWEST GATHERING TO INCLUDE
JACKIE GREENE, BLVD AND IZABELLA

Flowmotion’s RL Heyer
By Josh Miller

The 9th Annual Summer Meltdown is to be held at the Whitehorse Mountain Amphitheater in the scenic Cascade Mountain Foothills near Darrington, Washington from Friday to Sunday, August 14-16. Once again, this intimate, musician-friendly regional fest will be hosted and curated by Seattle’s Flowmotion, who based on their smoking hot set at The Fillmore last night are hitting on all cylinders right now.

The Summer Meltdown is a multi day grassroots music festival hosted by Terra Roots in collaboration with Flowmotion. Terra Roots is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization cultivating social connections and a sustainable future by supporting Northwest arts.

This is the initial lineup, with many more acts to be announced:

Flowmotion
Jackie Greene
BLVD
Acorn Project
North Twin
Big Light
Izabella