I have seen some really weird cases in my day for the iPhone, but this denim jacket case is one of the weirdest. The case is more like a sleeve and is sized to fit the iPhone and other smartphones. Pioneer has shipped three new high-end Blu-ray players and they all support 3D and have [...]
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Pioneer Blu-ray players support iPhone app, Genome machine with iPhone dock, denim jacket case
My Morning Jacket: Fire Still Burns
By: Dennis Cook
See a track-by-track discussion of MMJ’s debut here
See a video salute to MMJ’s debut here
See full details on MMJ’s Terminal 5 shows here
The Tennessee Fire |
1999′s The Tennessee Fire would be an auspicious debut for any band – a haunting yet happily shuffling blast of ideas woven together by strange poetry and gutbucket invention. It is what rock ‘n’ roll at its best aspires to but often gussies up too much these days. For My Morning Jacket it was the first solid footstep in a journey that’s cemented them as one of the most ceaselessly creative, fearless and engaging bands of the modern era – a group able to ascend to the heights of pop culture awareness without losing their tenacious, fiercely independent spirit that makes no concessions to trends, critics or anyone outside their ranks. One would be very, very hard pressed to find five musicians – Jim James (singer, songwriter, guitar, grand vision), Carl Broemel (guitar, sax, vox), Bo Koster (keys, vox), Tom Blankenship (bass, vox) and Patrick Hallahan (drums, percussion) – with more raw talent, obvious determination or sympathetic interconnectivity.
This week MMJ will tackle their entire catalog one album at a time at New York City’s Terminal 5 beginning tonight, October 18, with a run through The Tennessee Fire. We sat down with Tom Blankenship (aka Two Tone Tommy) to discuss their debut and the experience of preparing for the Terminal 5 shows.
JamBase: In revisiting your debut, it dawned on me that you’re the only guy besides Jim that’s been on every single album. In getting ready for the Terminal 5 shows, does it occur to you, “Yeah, I have been on this whole weird trip.”
Tom: I get reminders about it every once in a while. People will say, “Weren’t you a founding member?” I get that more & more as the years go by. It isn’t something I necessarily think about because the five of us with Carl and Bo have been together for almost seven years, which is the majority of the band’s lifespan. So, it feels like two different bands; the first three or four years we were together and then there’s this band.
JamBase: Has it been fun to explore these older records, to go back and say, “Wow, look at what we made!”
Tom: It’s really cool to go back to those records. We just spent a week in Louisville, just the five of us, rehearsing all the stuff that hasn’t been played live like “Butch Cassidy,” “If All Else Fails” and a couple other acoustic numbers from At Dawn, where Jim had done them by himself but we’d never done them as a band where we’re creating some kind of atmosphere like on the record. It’s a fun trip down memory lane. A lot of times I’m pleasantly surprised that the performance I gave are better than I remembered and some of the mistakes on the albums are now kind of charming.
I picked up on the same thing listening to The Tennessee Fire again. The tendrils of what this band would become are all already germinating in that first batch of material.
My Morning Jacket by Dave Vann |
To try and revisit those things again today is sometimes strange because sometimes when I close my eyes I have flashbacks to being onstage when the band was just a four-piece. But I quickly realize the sounds we’re making are not the same and we’re not the same people. And Jim’s voice has changed SO much from that album to today. But there’s still a piece of the feeling I had making that record, the personal connection I made to those songs, whether it was the music or lyrics. A piece of that’s still there, but it mostly feels fresh and new playing it with this lineup.
How do you find the material transforming with this lineup tackling it?
10 or 11 years ago we just played as hard as we could because we were excited to be playing live, period. So it was more raucous and us just having fun, and now it feels more moody and atmospheric. There are songs I’m playing on live that I’ve never played on before, just to beef things up here & there and give things a different kind of voicing. It’s weird to say but it feels like this very adult version of the songs.
Mature or adult are dirty words in our youth obsessed culture, especially in rock ‘n’ roll, except they aren’t really. To play music well and to evolve one’s earlier efforts are good things, and that can only happen over time. But right from the start you guys were anxious to complicate what it meant to be My Morning Jacket.
One of the reasons I’ve always liked the name is because it doesn’t sound like anything at all. Nothing comes to my mind except, “That’s kind of a weird name for a band [laughs].”
There’s some weird echoes of stuff on The Tennessee Fire but I couldn’t exactly say that you guys sounded like ANYONE else from the beginning.
I had the same impression when I first got the demo tape given to me by the drummer Jeremy maybe 6 or 8 months before I joined the band. Most of the album had already been completed. Number one: I was blown away by this guy Jim, who was the same age as me but could write these haunting yet kinda poppy sounding songs. What I loved about the album was that it had all these familiar elements that I’d never heard put together before. I couldn’t put my finger on what the sound was or how to describe.
Listening back again before this talk, I picked up on the cool Phil Spector-ish elements and echoes of vintage soul inside these strange new shells. It doesn’t play to the popular sensibilities of the era it came out in, choosing instead to seek out the classic and the enduring as its influences, something Jim does a lot in his songwriting. It’s a good trick if you can make people scratch their head and still keep listening.
Keep it interesting enough that it will take people a while to figure it out.
One thing I noticed looking at the liner notes was Sir Patrick T. Hallahan shot the photos used on The Tennessee Fire. So well before he became the drummer, he had a presence in MMJ.
The Tennessee Fire inside cover |
Oh brother, I haven’t looked at those notes in forever. I think his name appears on all the albums even if he wasn’t in the band. I love the back cover shot with all of us with the cigarettes in our mouths and the fedoras.
So, this is a band from Louisville, Kentucky but their first album is called The Tennessee Fire. Why is that?
Before I joined the band, I remember pulling up to the studio in Shelbyville. I was in a band called Winter Death Club at the time, and we’d have practice after My Morning Jacket practice. At the time MMJ was just a 3-piece of two guitars, drums and vocals. They even played a few shows with that lineup, which is how [The Tennessee Fire] was mainly recorded. I remember pulling up and hearing that Jimmy had got a record contract with Darla but he didn’t know what to name the band. I think he maybe wanted to call the band The Tennessee Fire at one time. As far as I know, that’s how it came about, that and the picture inside the album of the Tennessee fireworks store where the ‘works’ is cut off.
Another thing that came up for me listening back to the Morning Jacket catalog recently is how sly and darkly funny Jim is. There are traces of that right from this first slab. Despite his whole rep of being this serious artiste, he’s never failed to bust me up each time we’ve spoken.
Anyone that’s met him in real life sees that he’s constantly joking. The first time I met him we were playing in a storage garage in Lexington, Kentucky, his band Month of Sundays and Winter Death Club. I arrived early and Jim was sound checking by himself and he kept playing “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On,” but he didn’t know any of the lyrics. He just kept saying, “Whole lotta shakin’ goin’ on,” for what felt like 15-20 minutes. He did it so much that eventually everyone had to laugh. His humor has always been if you say it enough eventually people will laugh. They might hate you in between but they’ll come around to see the humor.
Finally, how are you feeling about tackling the entire catalog in the space of a few days? That’s a daunting task for any band.
Above all else, it’s been a bit stressful. But Carl put it into perspective. He said, “The morning you wake up for that show all you need to worry about are the songs for that night. And you can tackle the other nights as they come.” If you compartmentalize it like that it’s not too bad. It’s been fun to revisit covers from each era. It’s been cool because we were doing songs I can’t believe we ever did! Hopefully people will feel like they got a unique experience.
Continue reading for Tom’s track-by-track commentary on MMJ’s debut album…
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My Morning Jacket bassist Tom Blankenship’s reflects on the band’s 1999 debut, The Tennessee Fire.
Heartbreakin Man
I don’t think I even had a full band version of this when I first heard it. It was Jim on a 4-track with all those crazy vocal harmonies laid on top of each other. It was so different from the finished product, and the whole vibe of it was haunting, like ghosts flying over your head and some of them were laughing at you and some were there to help you out. Some of the spirit of that made it to the final version. I think it’s a great start to the record, where you hear that ka-shhh and then the band crashes in.
They Ran
It’s just predominantly bass ‘n’ drums. I thought “Heartbreakin’ Man” was a great intro to Jim’s vocals but the treatment of his vocals and the harmonies and the way they layer themselves one after another at the beginning of “They Ran” is the perfect showcase of what Jim is capable of vocally. All those vocals are his and still sound distinctly different. I think he’s always been really good at making up characters that he does vocally song-to-song, especially on the last album [2008's Evil Urges]. But even in a subtle way like “They Ran,” each harmony has a different feel to it.
The Bear
It has that perfect Motown intro. That drumbeat has probably been used on hundreds of songs, yet it’s still one of my favorite intros to any song we’ve done. We’ve done some pretty rockin’ versions of it live, too..
Nashville to Kentucky
I don’t why I’ve always had this image in my head of Jim literally driving from Nashville to Kentucky, and it is one of the most boring drives EVER to go from Louisville to Nashville. You’re just on 65 pretty much the whole way and there’s really not a lot to see. There’s Dinosaur World about halfway, a Corvette manufacturing plant with a museum, and not much else. I imagine that it’s at night and completely dark and he can barely pick up any radio stations – just the reality of it.
Old Sept. Blues
When I first got the demo tape I listened to “Evelyn” and “Old Sept. Blues” on repeat, just those two songs over & over & over again. So, it’s always been one of my favorite songs. It’s just a perfectly crafted nugget, where all the fat’s been trimmed off.
If All Else Fails
Oh man, I’m gonna have to skip this one.
The Tennessee Fire |
It’s About Twilight Now
It’s the most rock song on Tennessee Fire, which is funny because it has no bass on it at all. I think it’s just the two guitars, drums and vocals. It takes me back to that studio in Shelbyville where everything was done on ¼-inch tape. It’s the sound you’d get there if you were trying to be really raucous like we were in the punk hardcore bands we were in before [MMJ]. That was the way drums and everything would blow up on tape. I always loved that song and thought it was going to have a different life. It became such a different piece when played live. It was still raucous but it was so brutal. At the end we’d slow down and it was like stoner rock.
Evelyn Is Not Real
I think it’s the hook that gets me. That guitar line is definitely a hook, and it’s kind of a take on the country tradition of mourning the loss of a love or a love that isn’t real. In a way, it’s always felt a touch tongue in cheek but sincere at the same time. We’re kind of poking fun at the genre but doing so with love. I don’t know if that was ever Jim’s intention but that was the way I first felt about this song. It’s kind of like that song “Faraway Eyes” by The Rolling Stones, where it’s a great song but it’s also grinning at convention.
War Begun
I always loved this bass line. I think John played bass on it. Listening back to it now, it reminds me of JJ Cale, where the guitar solo is kind of tiny sounding but still powerful. And the lyrics are brilliant – “Whenever your war gets out of hand I’ll take it on.” Everything about it I just loved. It gets requested a lot and it’s kind of a substitute for “Lay Low” or anything like that.
Picture of You
It’s got this lyric, “I’ve got a house in a court” but then, “I’ve got a car and a door and a big left arm.” That’s one of the strangest lyrics ever [laughs]. The lyrics all over this song are brilliant – “You don’t say I’ll wait up” and “You know I’m sorry/ You know I’d give you anything on a dime.”
I Will Be There When You Die
The original version of it sounds like a chair is being knocked over and a tape recorder is being walked through a room. Jim’s in one corner of the room playing and it’s like the tape recorder is coming to him. I love any recording where you get a sense of the room it was recorded in and the time and place. So, the original version I had on the demo tape had about a minute long intro where it was just guitars on top of guitars and chairs falling and this craziness. That was THE song when we first started touring Europe. I think there were a couple nights when Jim played it twice. He’d always step away from the mic and sing it in the crowd. Everybody would be dead silent, and a couple of us would take our smoke break during this song. There was something so beautiful about rolling a cigarette and smoking and experiencing the song the exact same way the crowd was. You didn’t really feel like a band member at that point; you’re just another member of the audience. You try not to search out these kinds of moments because you can’t force them, but it’s hard not to think, “How can I get back to this place?”
The Tennessee Fire inside cover |
The Dark
This has always been one of my favorites to play live. We used to start shows with this song for years and years. It’s got some pretty funny lyrics in it as well. The whole tinkling on the cymbals and the spaced out guitar in the intro has an incantation vibe to it.
By My Car
We always joked that we were going to put a sticker on At Dawn that said, “From the band that brought you ‘By My Car.’” Not that it was an unremarkable song at all, but we thought it was funny because it was one of the last songs on the record and we’d only played it live a few times. Again, this has some great lyrics in it. I love Jim’s hilariously violent lyrics and I think that started with this song. This has the line about wanting to kick his head in but it’s said with a sincerity that makes you wonder how serious he is. You just don’t know.
Butch Cassidy
I’m really excited to play this live. It’s always been one of my favorites, and I don’t think I’ve heard Jim play it until we were doing the rehearsals [for the Terminal 5 shows]. It has one of my favorite lyrics, not just by Jim, but of all-time: “‘Cause a soldier’s death is so much better than defeat just hanging around.” That’s such a gorgeous line, and like the best songs on this record, the song is just haunting and dark but done in a way that doesn’t feel like total despair. There’s still a little bit of hope.
I Think I’m Going to Hell
This brings back a memory of one of the first shows we played. It was outside on a hillside at a college campus, and we ended that show, like a lot of shows at that time, with this song. And there’s that line, “Lovers and children beware, devils and demons are coming to take me to hell.” And in the field beyond the crowd was this little girl skipping through the field with a kite tied to her hand. And I remember how fucked up and evil it was that Jim was screaming these lyrics with this little girl out there. That’s always stuck in my brain ever since. This song feels like Halloween.
While much of the Terminal 5 run is sold out, a handful of tickets remains for The Tennessee Fire and At Dawn performances. Find tickets here.
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State Theatre in Portland Maine Re-Opening after Four Years
MY MORNING JACKET ON FRIDAY, MOE. ON SATURDAY, FREE OPEN HOUSE ON
SUNDAY
![]() My Morning Jacket |
The State Theatre in Portland, Maine is re-opening
after four years and a $1.5 million renovation that includes new lights, paint, carpet, seating, and sound equipment.
The theatre picks up with a sold out performance by My Morning Jacket on Friday, October 15, followed up with a show by moe. the next night. Sunday will be a free
open house showcasing local bands from 1PM – 9PM.
In an article for The Portland Press Herald, General Manager
Lauren Wayne says she hopes to bring around 80 shows a year to the theatre, with 20 already lined up
between now and the end of the year.
“We hope people notice a lot of what’s been done,” said Wayne. “It was really a collaboration to get the theater up to
this point.”
Sat Eye Candy: My Morning Jacket’s The Tennessee Fire
FIRST PART OF OUR LOOK BACK AT THE FIRST STEP IN MMJ’S JOURNEY
Next month My Morning Jacket has a five night stand at NYC’s Terminal 5, where they will perform each of their studio albums in its entirety [details here]. While the shows focused on their most recent work are long sold out, there remains a handful of tickets for opening night, Monday, October 18, when they will tackle their 1999 debut The Tennessee Fire (as well as a few tix for sophomore follow-up At Dawn on October 19). Likely the least explored chapter of MMJ’s rich catalog, The Tennessee Fire possesses a strikingly unique character few bands manage their first time at bat, and within it lay the rudiments of what this incredible band would grown into (not to mention some charms all its own which remain lodged in that particular time). Gut instinct says this is likely to be one of the more interesting installments in this run. Even though many songs remain in setlist circulation, this lineup has never tried to wrap itself around the entirety of this striking record, and what emerges should be another unique, memorable MMJ live experience. As an added bonus, JamBase faves Dungen open the Tennessee Fire show. Tickets are available here.
JamBase will be talking about MMJ’s debut at length next month with bassist Two Tone Tommy (or Tom Blankenship to those shunning nicknames). In the meantime, here’s an assortment of takes on tracks from The Tennessee Fire to highlight just how good this band was right out of the gate. (Dennis Cook)
And one for the openerÂ…
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My Morning Jacket | Summer Tour Closer | Philly
Words & Images by: Jake Krolick
My Morning Jacket :: 08.29.10 :: River Stage at Great Plaza :: Philadelphia, PA
var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”11″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=120″);}); 8/29/10 – My Morning Jacket @ Great Plaza @ Penn’s Landing (Philadelphia, PA) View Photos
On a normal day it’s hard to top a My Morning Jacket concert, but it becomes extra special when it’s the closing show of their summer tour. Filling shoes much bigger than maybe you or I had ever imagined, My Morning Jacket finds itself at the top of an ever-changing landscape of American rock bands. These travelers from Kentucky set Philadelphia’s River Stage at Great Plaza ablaze as they crushed their way through 22 glorious songs that made the evening feel like it was over in two minutes not two hours.
The venue sits on the banks of the Delaware River between the Ben Franklin and Walt Whitman Bridges. Hundreds of steps cascade down to the water’s edge and are separated with manmade waterfalls and pathways. It slays that parking lot venue, the Festival Pier , to bits. Place My Morning Jacket on the stage during sunset and it’s one heck of a show.
A slightly shaggier than normal Jim James made us Philadelphians feel extra special as he warmly thanked opener Scott McMicken from local favorite Dr. Dog. McMicken’s own set was quite moving, and he sprinkled in several acoustic versions of Dr. Dog tunes including a tender version of “Jackie Wants a Black Eye” off Dr. Dog’s latest, Shame Shame. His backdrop was a stellar homemade home façade complete with a suitcase, curtains, shelves and even a hole in the faux-wall for a mouse. Whether he plucked the banjo or strummed the guitar, his songs seemed to compliment the evening.
My Morning Jacket crept on stage through a haze of a manmade mist ready to produce a setlist that was packed with almost their entire catalog. The first half of the set grew superbly and got the blood flowing as we heard the band sink their teeth into “Mahgeetah,” “Golden,” a rare “Honest Man” and a new lavish, down tempo song called “Circuital.” The new tune has tons of potential and is destined to take its royal place in the MMJ catalog. James demonstrated his ability to get loose on an acoustic guitar and started to really flex his vocals on the new tune.
During “I’m Amazed,” bassist Tom Blankenship, guitarist Carl Broemel and Jim James huddled in front of Patrick Hallahan’s green star covered drum kit. This has become the standard mode of operation for the group as they break out into wild undulations, fanatical changes, and some good old-fashioned head banging. The rest of the band played while James pulled a rubber donkey mask over his head to sway through the song’s finish. He was super animated before going into the center cut of the show, which slowed for “Tonight I Want to Celebrate With You,” “Steam Engine” and “Smokin’ from Shootin.” This trio gave the band time to play with the melodies and jam on some of the finer, softer moments. These calm songs offered a wonderful window to peek at this band’s great depths.
The encore was loose and wild as MMJ rocked “Wordless Chorus,” which took James’s beatific voice to a whole new level. “Highly Suspicious” was an excuse to dance as James donned his black cap and channeled his inner Phantom of the Opera. James gave quite a show as he did a bevy of his best famous rockers imitations while heaving himself back and forth across the stage. The finale was the oh-so-fitting “One Big Holiday.” Its swelling build and remarkable release left the entire venue in a state of exhilaration as they staggered toward the exits.
My Morning Jacket will play each of their records straight through over five nights in October. I’d say those five nights in New York City are going to be one tough ticket to come by but so worth doing everything in your power to acquire.
Setlist
Rollin Back (intro), The Way That He Sings, Gideon, Anytime, Mahgeetah, Golden, Circuital (NEW), It Beats 4 U, Honest Man, I’m Amazed, Easy Morning Rebel, Tonite I Want to Celebrate With You, Steam Engine, Smokin From Shootin, (end of) Run Thru, Touch Me I’m Going To Scream Pt.2, (end of) Lay Low
E: Wordless Chorus, Touch Me I’m Going To Scream Pt.1, Highly Suspicious, Off The Record, One Big Holiday
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NIN, My Morning Jacket & Others Join Arizona Boycott
OPPOSITION GROWS AGAINST CONTROVERSIAL SB 1070 IMMIGRATION LAW
Nine Inch Nails, My Morning Jacket, Gogol Bordello, Maroon 5, Pitbull, Ben Harper, Ry Cooder, Steve Earle, DJ Spooky, and Billy Bragg, are just a few of the
artists who have recently joined the Sound Strike protest in response to the controversial immigration bill in
Arizona. Click
here for a
complete list of artists who are boycotting Arizona as part of Sound Strike.
However, opinion remains divided as to the proper response to SB 1070. Arizona promoter Charlie Levy of
Stateside Presents has written
an open letter
urging artists not to boycott the state.
Meanwhile, the Phoenix New Times has introduced a new compilation album entitled A Line in the
Sand: A Collection of Protest Songs from Arizona Artists Opposed to SB 1070. Click here
to buy the compilation.
Sound Strike architect Zack de la Rocha tells Billboard
that the
protest could culminate in a series of protest concerts in July: “In the coming weeks we are going to be organizing a
series of concerts that are respectful of the nature of the boycott in its attempts to isolate the Arizona government
but not isolate the people, and especially the organizations that are fighting this on the ground,” de la Rocha said in
a telephone interview. “Many of us have begun to plan concerts that include bands that have signed on the Sound
Strike, and make tickets available so that people within Arizona can come and see these concerts as they roll out.
These are things that are being set into motion right now – a series of concerts or maybe even one giant concert in
late July.”
Below is a video of Zack de la Rocha explaining his involvement in the Sound Strike protest:
Thanks to Pitchfork for the story.
Voodoo Experience Fest Adds My Morning Jacket
MY MORNING JACKET JOINS OZZY, MUSE, INTERPOL AT VOODOO EXPERIENCE
![]() My Morning Jacket |
My Morning Jacket will
make their return to New Orleans this Halloween weekend when they join the recently announced line-up
of this year’s Voodoo Experience, set for October 29, 30 and 31 at City Park in New Orleans. They’ll join a
bill comprised of headliners Ozzy
Osbourne, Muse and Weezer and more than 100 acts from all
genres of music. Other artists confirmed for New Orleans’ signature fall musical celebration include MGMT, Drake, Florence and the Machine, Paul van Dyk, Interpol, Hot Chip, Metric, Deadmau5, Street Sweeper Social Club, Jakob Dylan and the Three Legs , Jonsi, Eagles of Death Metal, Cage the Elephant, Minus the Bear and Janelle Monae. The full Voodoo
Experience 2010 line-up can be found at www.thevoodooexperience.com.
In addition, this year Voodoo organizers are introducing a new Voodoo EZ Pay one click button. This new option
allows concertgoers to divide their Voodoo ticket costs into three monthly payments of $57.00 each, with no
additional charges incurred to ticket buyers. The first payment is deducted now and monthly emails will notify
participants of the subsequent payments. Once the payment process is complete, each user will receive their tickets
via email.
Tickets for the Voodoo Experience can be purchased via www.thevoodooexperience.com utilizing Elevate’s easy
online shopping experience–with helpful customer service–that allows buyers to print their own tickets. For a
limited time, three-day weekend tickets are $150; LOA Lounge VIP pass are $500. This year’s VIP amenities include
tax-free tickets, reserved parking, exclusive access to the LOA front row, a raised viewing area, full bar services,
exclusive performances, with additional services and luxuries to be announced.
My Morning Jacket To Play Full Albums in NYC in Oct
ANOTHER EPIC MMJ RUN? WHY NOT!
New York City’s Terminal 5 will be presenting a historic five night run of shows in which My Morning Jacket will perform one of their full-length albums in its entirety each night, along with additional songs and covers from each album’s time period.
Tickets for the shows go on pre-sale on June 14th, with 5-show ticket packages available to fans. The individual shows will go on sale to the public on Friday, June 18th. For ticket and show information, click here.
Performance Schedule
Monday, October 18: The Tennessee Fire
Tuesday, October 19: At Dawn
Thursday, October 21: It Still Moves
Friday, October 22: Z
Saturday, October 23: Evil Urges and beyond!
A little taste to whet the appetite…
My Morning Jacket: August Tour
A CHARITABLE AUGUST IN WORLD OF MMJ
MMJ by Dave Vann |
My Morning Jacket will be headlining new U.S. Tour dates this coming August. The dates will begin in San Diego on August 11 and include a slot at the Mile High Festival, dates supporting Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers, and will conclude in Philadelphia on August 28. Avi Buffalo will support the band on their San Diego and Los Angeles dates.
Once again the band will be donating $1 from every ticket sold to a local charity. See below for the full list of organizations. Tickets for the shows will go on sale beginning this coming Friday, May 21.
MMJ August Tour Dates Thu, 8/12 Los Angeles, CA The Greek Theater Sun, 8/15 Denver, CO Mile High Festival
Tue, 8/17 Chicago, IL Charter One Pavilion Wed, 8/19 Boston, MA Comcast Center (w/ Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers)
Fri, 8/20 Burlington, VT Champlain Valley Lawn Sat, 8/21 Boston, MA Comcast Center (w/ Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers)
Tue, 8/24 East Rutherford, NJ Izod Center (w/ Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers)
Wed, 8/25 Holyoke, MA Mountain Park Fri, 8/27 Pittsburgh, PA Station Square Amphitheater Sat, 8/28 Canandaigua, NY CMAC 8/29 Philadelphia, PA Great Plaza
Wed, 8/11 San Diego, CA SDSU Outdoor Theater
Charity: San Diego Coast Keeper
Support: Avi Buffalo
Charity: School On Wheels
Support: Avi Buffalo
Charity: Mercy Home
Charity: Combat Paper Project
Charity: WomanShelter
Charity: Just Harvest
Charity: Finger Lakes Land Trust Sun
Charity: Greensgrow Philadelphia Project
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My Morning Jacket | 04.30 | North Carolina
Words by: Nick Todaro | Images by: Lane Flexner
My Morning Jacket :: 04.30.10 :: Koka Booth Amphitheatre :: Cary, NC
MMJ :: 04.30 :: North Carolina |
It was four songs into My Morning Jacket‘s first North Carolina set in three years that Jim James demonstrated how charismatic of a guy he actually is. Drunken concertgoers had been pelting the band with glow sticks following an explosion of them during “Gideon.” Relentlessly, a few bumptious audience members decided to make the band members’ faces targets for the plastic luminaries. Rather than acting annoyed or frustrated by the behavior, Mr. James took it in stride by picking up an orange one he had managed to dodge and placing it in his mouth. As the band roared into “Off The Record,” James continued gnawing on the stick as if he were a dog chewing his favorite bone.
For the group’s show at Cary’s beautiful Koka Booth Amphitheatre, this incident summed up the theme of the night: try to make a bad situation enjoyable. Neither Jacket or the Preservation Hall Jazz Band contributed to the atypical circumstances surrounding the show, it was completely out of their hands. As a matter of fact, the Preservation Hall Jazz Band, who went on just before sundown and had Jim James join them onstage for two songs, had spirits high throughout their signature performance of NOLA classics. Unfortunately, both the sound quality and the crowd atmosphere seemed to have been in the gutter on what could have been a monumental My Morning Jacket show.
A complaint about this particular venue frequently voiced within the Triangle music scene is that the sound is way too low during performances. This is mostly due to the amphitheatre park being surrounded by neighborhoods that like to complain. Being third row at a concert should mean that you’re engulfed in a sea of sound, not struggling to hear the lyrics to your favorite song. Working against this was also the rowdy, talkative crowd. Packs of overly intoxicated – and most likely fraternity – “bros” made the pit situation even worse by persistently shoving and taunting fans that would not allow them closer access to the stage. Constantly, threats of violence echoed out down in the pit as if it were a battle between Jacket fans and the kids treating the experience as a keg party.
If any of these conditions affected My Morning Jacket, there was no way of telling. The setlist featured a number of specialties that had some fans overwhelmed. Following the opener, “Tonight I Want To Celebrate With You,” twilight had struck the grounds, providing the perfect scenic conditions for a spine tingling “At Dawn.” With twinkling specks of light reflecting off the lake positioned to the left side of the venue, the song had a genuine feel to it while acting as a gift to the folks hoping to hear anything off of At Dawn.
Watching Jim James’ onstage antics also helped make up for the horrible atmosphere. Sporting a gun holster with a toy revolver and a Nintendo Duck Hunt gun inside, Jim showed off his slinging capabilities during “What A Wonderful Man” and “Touch Me Pt. 2.” “Wordless Chorus” further displayed James’ playful nature with the singer donning a cap and joyfully posing as a superhero. Remarkably, none of this distracts the rest of the musicians in the group. Bo Koster, Patrick Hallahan and Tom Blankenship all seemed to be feeding off the vibes James created throughout the night by gradually increasing the intensity of their playing.
Guitarist Carl Broemel was notably front and center for a good portion of the show, too. Between his feverish guitar solo on “Steam Engine” and dulcet display of saxophone playing on “Dondante,” he had the chance to sing lead vocals on a new track, “Carried Away.” Premiering at the band’s recent Nashville stop, the tune finds MMJ going back to their It Still Moves days with a twangy, Southern feel.
Another highlight of the evening was the encore portion accented by the Preservation Hall Jazz Band. For the second time this tour, the group busted out “Dancefloors” with the boys from NOLA backing them up. Having this and “Move On Up” – a Curtis Mayfield cover that premiered as the opener to MMJ’s New Year’s Eve show at Madison Square Garden in 2008 – being played at a regular Jacket stop felt absolutely sensational. With any luck, this tour will be the first in a long history of collaborations between the two ensembles.
As the saying goes, if you don’t like something change it; and if you can’t change it, change the way you think about it. In this case, the show should be remembered for the consequential value of premier musicianship by one of America’s best live bands. No matter how obnoxious some spectators may have been, they can never take that away from My Morning Jacket.
My Morning Jacket :: 04.30.10 :: Koka Booth Amphitheatre :: Cary, NC
Tonight I Want To Celebrate With You, At Dawn, Gideon, Off The Record, What A Wonderful Man, I’m Amazed, Mahgeetah, Touch Me Pt 1, Golden, Steam Engine, The Way He Sings, Wonderful (The Way I Feel), Carried Away^, Dondante, Smokin From Shootin, (End Of) Run Thru, Touch Me Pt 2, One Big Holiday
E: Wordless Chorus, Dancefloors*, Highly Suspicious*, Carnival Time*, Move On Up*
^ Carl On Lead Vocals
* w/ Preservation Hall Jazz Band
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My Morning Jacket Video
My Morning Jacket “One Big Holiday” Video
It’s no secret that JamBase digs My Morning Jacket. Our first review came back in 2003. Our first feature/interview a few months later. In 2008 we crowned them our “Band of The Year”. JamBase’s Editor Aaron Kayce recently pulled every string he had to get a spot inside the tiny Preservation Hall last weekend during Jazz Fest to witness the magic. Some might say we’re slightly obsessed. If you have any questions as to why, just watch this video of “One Big Holiday” from last night (4/28/10) in Charleston, SC.
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My Morning Jacket at Preservation Hall Photos
Words by: Kayceman | Images by: Erika Goldring
My Morning Jacket with Preservation Hall Jazz Band
04.24.10 :: Preservation Hall :: New Orleans, LA
After performing part of their set with Preservation Hall Jazz Band earlier in the day at their Saturday headlining Jazz Fest slot (read about it here), My Morning Jacket teamed up with the local New Orleans legends later that night on their home turf at the tiny New Orleans institution, Preservation Hall. It was an intense, intimate evening that had the 100 or so attendees completely enthralled with every note and word. The show featured the Preservation Hall Jazz Band starting the night off solo then welcoming singer Amy LaVere and MMJ’s Jim James, both of whom appear on Preservation Hall Jazz Band’s new benefit album Preservation. Following the Prez Hall portion, MMJ took the stage for an incredible acoustic set that concluded with the Preservation Hall Jazz Band parading through the French Quarter with My Morning Jacket.
You can read more about this show in our Jazz Fest coverage here.
My Morning Jacket | 04.24.10 | Preservation Hall | New Orleans, LA
At Dawn, Golden, The Way That He Sings, Knot Comes Loose, Wonderful (The Way I Feel), Dondante, Smokin From Shootin, Mother In Law (Allen Toussaint)*, Highly Suspicious*, Carnival Time (Al Johnson)*, Move On Up (Curtis Mayfield)*
* with Preservation Hall Jazz Band
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Check our Jazz Fest Survival Guide for Must See Bands, food suggestions and
more…
Check out First Weekend Friday coverage of Jazz Fest here.
Check out First Weekend Saturday coverage of Jazz Fest here.
Check out Fist Weekend Sunday coverage of Jazz Fest here.
Check back next Thursday for the start of our Second Weekend Jazz Fest
coverage…
My Morning Jacket Tour Dates :: My Morning Jacket News :: My Morning Jacket Concert Reviews
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My Morning Jacket Tour Opener Setlist and Audio
My Morning Jacket Tour Opener on 4/20
My Morning Jacket |
My Morning Jacket performed their first show in over a year last night (4/20) at the Alabama Theatre in Birmingham, AL. Preservation Hall Jazz Band opened the show as they will be for all of the Jacket’s currently scheduled dates. MMJ frontman Jim James sat in with the legendary New Orleans act for “Louisiana Fairytale” and “St. James Infirmary,” both of which he sings on the recently released Preservation Hall Jazz Band benefit album entitled Preservation: An album benefiting Preservation Hall and the Preservation Hall Music Outreach Program.
The My Morning Jacket show was a burner as always. Here’s the setlist and audio (thanks to Hidden Track for hipping us to the archive.org link):
My Morning Jacket :: 04.20.10 :: Alabama Theatre :: Birmingham, AL
One Big Holiday, Gideon, The Way That He Sings, Off the Record, It Beats 4 U, Mahgeetah, Lay Low, Losin’ Yo Head (Monsters of Folk), I’m Amazed, Golden, Friends Again (new), Touch Me I’m Going to Scream Pt. I, Thank You Too!, Dondante, Smokin’ from Shootin’, Run Thru, Anytime, Touch Me I’m Going to Scream. Pt II
Encore: Wordless Chorus, Evil Urges (w/ Preservation Hall Jazz Band), Highly Suspicious (w/ Preservation Hall Jazz Band), Move On Up (Curtis Mayfield) (w/Preservation Hall Jazz Band), Mother-in-Law (Ernie K-Doe) (w/ Preservation Hall Jazz Band),
Carnival Time (Al Johnson) (w/ Preservation Hall Jazz Band)
Thanks to http://insomniactivity.wordpress.com for setlist.
My Morning Jacket Tour Dates :: My Morning Jacket News :: My Morning Jacket Concert Reviews
Akshay’s missing jacket cancelled the Action Replay’ shoot
Vipul Shah had to seize his shoot for ‘Action Replay’ sequence song with Akshay when the actor’s leather jacket was found missing.
The song inspired by John Travolta’s ‘Saturday Night Fever’ features Akshay Kumar and Aishwarya Rai. Now the director Vipul Shah has no other option than to wait till the jacket gets replaced.
Talking about a [...]
Phish, Lesh, DMB & More Offer Free Bonnaroo Tracks
NRDC Action Fund and HeadCount Give Away Best of Bonnaroo Compilation to Drive Action on Climate Change
Pearl Jam, Dave Matthews Band, Phish, Phil Lesh and many more provide tracks for free download
Pearl Jam, Dave Matthews Band, Phish, Jack Johnson and other top artists are donating their music to encourage Americans to speak out on climate change. Organized by the Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival, HeadCount and the NRDC Action Fund, this collaboration marks the first time free music has been used to prompt Americans to contact their elected officials.
Best of Bonnaroo, a compilation of 17 different live performances from the festival, is available for free at www.Musicforaction.org. Before downloading the music, visitors are asked to email their Senators, the President or their local newspapers about climate change. The music is free no matter what, but the artists hope all their fans join them in taking action on this issue.
“This generation has an opportunity to be remembered as one that confronted environmental challenges and took responsibility for the future,” said Jack Johnson, whose song “Inaudible Melodies” can be heard on the compilation. “With that opportunity comes the responsibility to speak out.”
The compilation also includes live tracks from Wilco, Death Cab for Cutie, My Morning Jacket, O.A.R. and Ani DiFranco, among others. In most cases these recordings have never before been released to the public, and were hand-picked by the musicians themselves. Other featured artists include: The Decemberists, Guster, Gov’t Mule, Raphael Saadiq, Bob Weir & RatDog, Phil Lesh & Friends, moe. and The Disco Biscuits, whose bass player Marc Brownstein is the co-chair of HeadCount. All of the featured tracks are original songs, with the exception of My Morning Jacket‘s performance of The Velvet Underground’s “Oh! Sweet Nuthin’.”
America is closer than ever to passing its first federal climate change-related legislation, but many hurdles remain. The House of Representatives approved an energy bill last June that would reduce emissions of heat-trapping gases and encourage the development of green jobs. President Barack Obama then told world leaders that the U.S. will reduce carbon emissions by 17 percent over the next 10 years (compared to 2005 levels). However, there has been little movement in the Senate, leaving one crucial step incomplete. Literally the whole planet is waiting to see what the U.S. will decide, as India and China are not likely to act without the U.S. doing the same.
With climate change legislation now at a critical juncture, several organizations teamed up to use the gift of music to inspire citizens into action. HeadCount – a nonpartisan civic engagement organization best known for registering voters at concerts – conceived the idea as a way to point new voters toward being informed and active citizens. The NRDC Action Fund – an advocacy group committed to passing legislation that jump-starts the clean energy economy and reduces pollution – stepped in with resources, research, strategic guidance and a base of 250,000 supporters.
“The musicians we work with are very passionate about this topic and have great power to drive change,” said HeadCount’s Executive Director Andy Bernstein. “Their music will serve as a soundtrack for action.”
“Forging a clean energy future means healthier kids, a safer world, and more jobs,” said Heather Taylor-Miesle, director of the NRDC Action Fund. “This is our moment to demand that Congress put us on the path to a clean energy future by beginning to address climate change. We are excited about the opportunity to work with musicians and new activists throughout the country to make it happen.”
Others involved include JamBase.com, which is actively promoting the campaign to its base of more than half a million users. Music publications Paste, Relix, and Spin are also providing marketing support. The nonprofit environmental groups Oxfam America, the Energy Action Coalition, The Worldwatch Insitute, Grist.org and 350.org are supporting the initiative as coalition partners, as is the music-oriented environmental organization Reverb, which will promote the campaign through its new Green Music Group. Reverb’s founder Adam Gardner can be heard on the compilation performing with his band Guster. “This is the exact sort of thing that Green Music Group was created to support, getting fans and musicians together around an environmental action,” Gardner said.
“There have been so many incredible performances at Bonnaroo over the years,” said Richard Goodstone, one of the founders and principals of Superfly Presents, the co-promoter of Bonnaroo. “We’re very happy that we could work with our family of artists in this way and inspire people to be active citizens. Climate change is the single biggest challenge our planet has ever faced and we all need to pitch in and be part of the solution.”
“The decisions made today will affect you and your children for many years to come,” said former Grateful Dead guitarist Bob Weir, a member of HeadCount’s board of directors who can be heard on the compilation with has band RatDog. “Whether it’s voting in an election or speaking out about issues like climate change, it’s critical that we all make enough noise so that politicians have no choice but to listen.”
Best of Bonnaroo Track List:
Wilco Bull Black Nova
Pearl Jam Animal
Jack Johnson Inaudible Melodies
Dave Mathews Band Rapunzel
Death Cab for Cutie Cath…
Ani DiFranco Fuel
Phish Kill Devil Falls
Gov’t Mule Banks of the Deep End
O.A.R. Delicate Few
moe. Not Coming Down
Raphael Saadiq 100 Yard Dash
Bob Weir & RatDog Throwing Stones
The Disco Biscuits And The Ladies Were the Rest of the Night
The Decemberists The Wanting Comes in Waves/Repaid
My Morning Jacket Oh! Sweet Nuthin’
Guster Happier
Phil Lesh and Friends Box of Rain
The Best of Bonnaroo compilation is available for free at www.Musicforaction.org. Please email your Senators, the President or a local newspaper about climate change before downloading.
My Morning Jacket on American Dad Full Episode
Watch The Full Episode of My Morning Jacket on American Dad
Last night (11/22/09) My Morning Jacket made their debut as cartoons on the hit show American Dad. You can watch the entire episode now:
And for more on MMJ, check our 2008 feature: Band of The Year – My Morning Jacket.
My Morning Jacket To Appear on American Dad
My Morning Jacket To Appear on American Dad Cartoon
On Sunday, November 22 at 9:30 p.m. on FOX, the members of My Morning Jacket will appear on the hit cartoon American Dad. The episode is titled “My Morning Straitjacket” and finds lead character Stan obsessed with the band and becoming a groupie. The members of MMJ will do their own voices.
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Mihal Freinquel: The $3 Rule
Let’s look at the things New Yorkers spend money on daily and don’t blink an eye about.
Mariah’s masculine side
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FASHION DILEMMA
Is Mariah Carey suffering from a gender identity crisis?
Some of you may wonder how it’s possible for heaven’s very own warbling angel, Mariah Carey, to pose our dilemma this week. It’s not as if she’s at the head of the fashion pack or likely to become a muse for Lagerfeld. Let’s face it, she barely manages to find clothes that fit half the time.
Neither does her window-shattering voice get us excited. In fact, there’s only one reason we’re listening to one of her songs (and if you’re of a nervous disposition, we advise you to take a few deep breaths now): the pneumatic one has had a ‘male-over’.
The singer wears a grey tracksuit, baseball cap and an abundance of facial hair in the video to her latest single, Obsessed. Drawing rapidly denied comparisons to Eminem, Mariah’s husband Nick Cannon told an MTV reporter that his wife has no beef with the rapper. He said (in what we can only describe as a truly original pun): “She’s not beefing, she’s a vegetarian”. Mariah herself tweeted, “I am NOT at any point in the video playing a specific person. I’m dressed as a ‘stalker’ in 3 different ensembles.”
Whatever she says, we think she looks exactly like a dodgy character from the streets of Baltimore. Our excitement levels peaked during the second scene when we thought that Jimmy McNulty might turn up drunk and arrest her for crimes against music. It didn’t happen, but when Mariah (in stalker guise) started dancing with a life-size cardboard cut-out OF HERSELF in a room bedecked with posters OF HERSELF we nearly got out a gun and shot the computer to hell.
Even more disturbing (it seems impossible, doesn’t it?) was Mariah’s acting ability, which made one scene so realistic that we wondered if art was imitating life. The adoring gaze that Mariah-as-doorman cast upon Mariah-as-superstar was reminiscent of the scenes between Frodo and Sam in Lord of the Rings. There was that much love. Unsubtle? Mariah? Never.
BANG ON TREND
Summer jackets
Dressing is difficult at the moment, what with the weather being hot, cold and wet, all on the same day. With no way to predict when it’s going to rain or shine, a girl needs to carry around a lightweight jacket to throw on and off as the skies dictate.
Miss Selfridge has a nice Stella-inspired blazer (in the dreaded nude shade) that will keep you cool when the sun’s out and warmish when it’s in. For £40 it’s a bargain.
For those of a sporty persuasion, we like this bright pink jacket by Bench from Republic for £39.99.
On the denim front, this jacket by Levi’s at £54 is a classic that reminds us of our school days. Wear it a lot: the more distressed it is, the better – but for God’s sake, don’t wear it with jeans. Urban Outfitters has a selection of really nice denim jackets with a twist. We especially like this military one for £55 and this batwing one for £65.
For something a little more hardwearing, but still lightweight, try Barbour’s sandstone jacket and tap into the safari trend seen on the catwalks last season. It costs £209 and is available from johnlewis.com.
We love Rick Owens’ blistered leather jacket with its gorgeous feminine silhouette. However, we will continue to love it from a distance because it costs £1,465. We’ll make do with this soft grey leather jacket from All Saints for £200.
If you need a more formal look for the office try this white M&S 125 Years Bouclé Jacket, which smacks of Jackie O glamour for a mere £69.
FASHIONISTA OF THE WEEK
Kim Kardashian
We never thought we’d see the day when self-made sex tape star Kim Kardashian would grace these webpages as Fashionista of the Week, but we love an LBD and this is a great example of one. We like it all the more because it’s from Topshop and only cost £38. The shoulders are very of the moment with their little peaks, and Kim accessorised the dress with a space-age silver necklace. Good work.
QUOTE OF THE WEEK
She comes off as genuinely sweet, sunny and slightly dim, her punkette look the thinnest candy coating over an interior filled primarily with airy, whipped pink goo and nuvo-hippie, gestalt-y wow-ness.
The New York Times’ Cintra Wilson waxes lyrical over Agyness Deyn.
FASHION GRAVEYARD
An email fell into Fashion Statement’s inbox this week. It wasn’t an invitation to the latest celebrity party, and neither was it Karl Lagerfeld asking for an interview. It was news of the worst kind: American Apparel has launched a hideous new product called the ‘Nylon Tricot Micro-Mesh Two-Sided Legging’. Effectively it’s half legging, half 10-denier tights and it’s bloody awful. If you fancy a Lady Godiva-esque jaunt through town check out the look on American Apparel’s website.
SHOPPING NEWS
Boyfriend not quite cutting it on the beach? Don’t worry, help is at hand at Debenhams. The nationwide store has just released “the wimp’s revenge” – spray-on muscles. The treatment from St Tropez costs around £30 and consists of two applications of fake tan, the second darker layer working to create an optical illusion of serious abs. Beware: it might take more than one can. Call 08445 616 161 for more details.
The word on the street is that Jil Sander’s highly anticipated collection for Uniqlo will be called +J. The range will consist of about 40 pieces for men and 100 for women, including coats, jackets, knitwear, T-shirts and accessories. The Sander trademark design features – simple, fluid lines – will carry on through into the high street collection.
OUT AND ABOUT
A new exhibition celebrating men in fashion photography opens tomorrow at The Photographers’ Gallery in London. When You’re a Boy focuses on Simon Foxton, a stylist whose career spans the last three decades. The exhibition runs until 4 October and admission is free.
Want to learn more about what you can do to help the environment? Then it might be an idea to attend the Wee Do lectures – a smaller version of the Do lectures (which take place in Wales) run by clothing brand Howies. Once a month in Howies’ Carnaby Street shop you can stop by, have a drink and be inspired by ‘doers’ like Hackney City Farm, Cooler Magazine and Respect the Mountain. Visit thedolectures.com for more information.
OFFCUTS
Hadley Freeman answers readers’ penetrating questions including: ‘Why do female models always look as if they need to go to the loo?’
Celebrate the UK release of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince by crafting a magical Daniel Radcliffe cross stitch.
Get the lowdown on Vivo Barefoot’s
latest ethical trainers.
For all the latest fashion and celebrity news, visit guardian.co.uk/fashion
News to tell us? Email rachel.holmes@guardian.co.uk




The Tennessee Fire
My Morning Jacket by Dave Vann
The Tennessee Fire inside cover

MMJ by Dave Vann
MMJ :: 04.30 :: North Carolina
My Morning Jacket