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Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Band | NYE | Review

Words by: Scott Horowitz | Images by Ray Proetto

Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi :: 12.31.10 :: Florida Theatre :: Jacksonville, Florida

Derek & Susan by Ray Proetto

Derek Trucks and Susan Tedeschi put their solo acts on hold in 2010 to write and make music together with a fresh new band. In April they began playing new songs, trying to find their identity. Ten months later they have evolved into a cohesive unit, putting out sets of music that flow as majestically as the nearby St. Johns River into the Atlantic Ocean. Their New Year’s Eve celebration took place near the river banks of Jacksonville, Florida.

After an opening set from Scrapmatic, the Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Band began their NYE set with “Don’t Let Me Slide” followed by my personal favorite “Midnight in Harlem,” a hopeful tune with a comforting and familiar feel. Derek & The Dominoes tune “Anyday” saw Trucks sliding up and down his guitar, evoking cheers from the attentive audience. The show took a turn down Funky Street with “Love Has Something Else to Say.” Brothers Oteil (bass, Allman Brothers Band) and Kofi Burbridge (keyboards, Derek Trucks Band) emanated fun-loving grooves from their corner of the stage all night long, making way for some patrons to sashay in their New Year’s attire up the aisles of the Florida Theatre (until being told to sit down by security).

Horn section by Ray Proetto

Kebbi Williams flowed through his saxophone across the stage, inspiring impressive leads from Oteil. Though this marked only the second show with the horn section, put together specifically for this New Year’s run, it seemed as if they had been in the band since April. Joining Williams, on trombone, was Saunders “Service” Sermons and Maurice “Mo’ Betta” Brown on trumpet.

The execution of the Eric Clapton arrangement of “Presence of the Lord” had more and more people finding their way to their feet. However, most in the audience remained unsure of what to do with themselves physically, most remaining seated and grooving cerebrally. Mike Mattison took lead vocal duties on Taj Mahal‘s “Leaving Trunk,” which made way for new blues number “That Did It”. The verses have Mattison and Mark Rivers laying down playful background vocal harmonies with Motown-esque Aah-ooh’s while Susan sings a soulful tale of heartache.

It is no secret that Susan is a world class vocalist, but on “That Did It” her guitar skills were front and center. She laid into her instrument with enough soul and power to make the ghost of Sister Rosetta Tharpe proud. Her approach to the six-string is a no-gimmick, loud and subtle reminder that she is the mother of Derek Trucks’ children.

Derek Trucks’ role as bandleader is performed perfectly. He gives everyone else onstage the space they need to become who they are musically. At times, when all eyes turn to him for a solo, he will defer the moment to someone else. Once everybody has found themselves in their given space, Trucks’ bright red Gibson SG is implied. With a meditative expression on his face, Derek tears sonic holes in the universe; each one providing grist for the mill of his spiritual journey with a guitar.

“Learn How to Love” is a thick swamp-fueled song that Derek and Susan wrote with Eric Krasno. Max Roach’s “Garvey’s Ghost” made an appearance late in the set featuring a powerful, tribal and lyrical drum solo which started with Tyler “The Falcon” Greenwell on groove duty while JJ Johnson took lead until handing it off to Greenwell, which led to both drummers playing off of each other with brilliant melody. The other band members gave the drummers their full, conscious attention during the drum solo, including Trucks, who took a knee center-stage as if to show respect for the most ancient form of musical expression.

Derek & Susan Band by Ray Proetto

The best, and rarest, quality of a good drummer is selflessness. Johnson and Greenwell pull selflessness out of each other creating a huge seamless rhythmic foundation on which the rest of the band rests upon. The end of “Garvey’s Ghost” began a cover of Joe Cocker’s “Space Captain.” which Derek and Susan recorded earlier in the year with Herbie Hancock at their backyard home studio.

The triumphant vocals at the beginning of Delany & Bonnie’s “Coming Home” started the countdown to midnight. Smiles, hugs, and kisses welcomed in the New Year as the band celebrated with Ray Charles’ “Night Time is The Right Time” and Mattison’s song “Bound for Glory”. Aretha Franklin’s “Spirit in The Dark” encored the evening and sent the North Florida faithful strutting into the night.

The band is due to release their first album in June of 2011 and has dates booked in April for Australia and New Zealand.

May the best of last year be the worst of this year.

Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Band Tour Dates :: Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Band News :: Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Band Concert Reviews

JamBase | River City Namaste
Go See Live Music!


Dark Star Orchestra: Southbound Winter Tour

TRUCKIN’ INTO DES MOINES AND POINTS BEYOND

Following their much-anticipated recreation of the Grateful Dead’s legendary 12/31/76 show on NYE (more details here), Dark Star Orchestra will embark on the Southbound Winter Tour.

DSO

Southbound Winter Tour Dates

Thu Jan 20 – Val Air Ballroom [Des Moines, IA]
Fri Jan 21 – Pabst Theater [Milwaukee, WI]
Sat Jan 22 – Vic Theater [Chicago, IL]
Mon Jan 24 – Canopy Club [Urbana, IL]
Wed Jan 26 – Majestic Theatre [Detroit, MI]
Thu Jan 27 – House of Blues Cleveland [Cleveland, OH]
Fri Jan 28 – Newport Music Hall [Columbus, OH]
Sat Jan 29 – Egyptian Room At Old National Centre [Indianapolis, IN]
Mon Jan 31 – Buster’s [Lexington, KY]
Wed Feb 02 – Music Farm [Charleston, SC]
Thu Feb 03 – Carolina Theatre [Greensboro, NC]
Fri Feb 04 – Variety Playhouse [Atlanta, GA]
Sat Feb 05 – Neighborhood Theatre [Charlotte, NC]
Mon Feb 07 – Workplay [Birmingham, AL]
Wed Feb 09 – Freebird Live [Jacksonville, FL]
Thu Feb 10 – Plaza Theatre [Orlando, FL]
Fri Feb 11 – Garlic Fest [Delray Beach, FL]
Sat Feb 12 – Ferguson Hall [Tampa, FL]

Dark Star Orchestra Tour Dates :: Dark Star Orchestra News :: Dark Star Orchestra Concert Reviews


Big Gigantic: Winter/Spring Tour

FROM FLORIDA TO TEMPE AS THE WEATHER WARMS

Big Gigantic closed their tour last Saturday night to a sold out crowd at the Brooklyn Bowl, where they welcomed old friend Adam Deitch (Pretty Lights / Break Science) to sit in on a second drum set for the duration of the show. Now, with only a few short weeks off, the band is gearing up to hit the road hard with an extensive headlining tour around the country in 2011. A new Big G EP is due out in time for Summer.

Big Gigantic

Big Gigantic Tour Dates

12.30 – Masquerade – Atlanta, GA (Official Bassnectar After Party)
1.4-1.9 – JamCruise – Fort Lauderdale, FL
1.11 – Common Grounds – Gainesville, FL #
1.12 – The Engine Room – Tallahassee, FL #
1.13 – State Theatre – St. Petersburg, FL
1.14 – Eve (formerly White Room) – Miami, FL
1.15 – Freebird Live – Jacksonville, FL #
1.16 – The Social – Orlando, FL
1.27 – Gothic Theatre – Englewood, CO
1.28 – Fox Theatre – Boulder, CO – SOLD OUT %
1.29 – three20south – Breckenridge, CO ^
1.30 – Ghost Ranch Saloon – Steamboat Springs, CO ^
2.02 – Belly Up – Aspen, CO ^
2.03 – Abbey Theatre – Durango, CO ^
2.04 – Fly Me To The Moon Saloon – Telluride, CO ^
2.05 – Launchpad – Albuquerque, NM ^
2.08 – Nutty’s North- Sioux Falls, SD *
2.09 – Blue Moose Tap House – Iowa City, IA
2.10 – The Waiting Room – Omaha, NE *
2.11 – The Majestic Theatre – Madison, WI @
2.12 – Lincoln Hall – Chicago, IL @
2.13 – Canopy Club – Urbana, IL @
2.15 – The Basement – Columbus, OH @
2.17 – Higher Ground Ballroom – South Burlington, VT @
2.18 – Bowery Ballroom – New York, NY @
2.19 – The Blockley – Philadelphia, PA @
2.20 – The Middle East – Boston, MA @
3.08 – Babcock Theatre – Billings, MT $
3.10 – Knitting Factory – Boise, ID $
3.11 – Crystal Ballroom – Portland, OR $
3.12 – The Fillmore – San Francisco, CA $
3.13 – The Fillmore – San Francisco, CA $
3.17 – House of Blues – Los Angeles, CA $
3.18 – House of Blues – San Diego, CA $
3.19 – Marquee Theater – Tempe, AZ $

! – w/ AmpLive & The Living Experience
# – w/ Greenhouse Lounge
% – w/ Fresh2Death & Raw Russ
^ – w/ Samples (Fresh2Death)
* – w/ Somasphere
@ – w/ Kraddy
$ – w/ Umphrey’s McGee

Big Gigantic Tour Dates :: Big Gigantic News :: Big Gigantic Concert Reviews


EOTO: Winter Tour; NYE Show in Denver

NYE FEATURING DIESELBOY, LIQUIDSTRANGER, HEYOKA & MORE


EOTO

EOTO will cap off 2010 in
the southeast after logging over 170 national live performances this year. The dynamic duo will conclude their 30+
day winter tour with stops in Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina and Florida before landing in Colorado
for their New Year’s Performance at City Hall in Denver — an event that also features some of the nation’s top DJ’s
including Dieselboy, Liquidstranger, Heyoka, NastyNasty, Nit Grit, Freddy Todd, Rumblejunkie, Jantsen,
S.P.E.C.T.R.E., and Ishe among others.

TOUR DATES:
11/30 Proud Larry’s, Oxford, MS
12/1 Zydeco, Birmingham, AL
12/2 Masquerade – Heaven Room, Alanta, GA
12/3 Music Farm, Charleston, SC
12/4 Freebird Live, Jacksonville, FL
12/31 City Hall, Denver, CO

EOTO
Tour Dates

::
EOTO News
::
EOTO
Concert
Reviews


YMSB Cabin Fever Tour

PRE-SALE TICKETING AVAILABLE NOW


Yonder Mountain String Band

Yonder Mountain String
Band
have announced dates for their annual Cabin Fever Tour. Pre-Sale Ticketing is underway now. Click
here for more info.

CABIN FEVER DATES:

01.26 Baton Rouge, LA Varsity Theatre
01.27 Birmingham, AL Workplay Soundstage
01.28 Nashville, TN Cannery Ballroom

01.29 Knoxville, TN Tennessee Theatre

01.31 Orlando, FL The Social
02.02 Gainesville, FL The Venue
02.03 Jacksonville, FL Freebird Cafe
02.04 Ft. Lauderdale, FL Revolution
02.05 St. Petersburg, FL Jannus Landing
02.09 Charleston, SC The Music Farm
02.10 Asheville, NC The Orange Peel
02.11 Asheville, NC The Orange Peel
02.12 Atlanta, GA The Tabernacle
02.13 Lexington, KY Buster’s

02.16 Charlottesville, VA Jefferson Theatre
02.17 Columbus, OH Lifestyle Communities Pavilion

02.18 Covington, KY Madison Theatre
02.19 Madison, WI Orpheum Theatre

02.20 Urbana, IL Canopy Club

Yonder Mountain String
Band
Tour Dates

::
Yonder Mountain String
Band News

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Yonder Mountain String Band
Concert
Reviews


JJ Grey & Mofro: NYE in FL & 2011 Dates

NEW ALBUM GEORGIA WARHORSE OUT NOW


JJ Grey

JJ Grey & Mofro will
celebrate the new year with three nights at Freebird Live in Jacksonville Beach, FL. The run begins December 30 and
goes through January 1. The band will begin 2011 by touring the south in January and February, going through FL,
GA, SC, NC, LA, MS, TX, and MO.

Click here to get your tickets.

TOUR DATES:

11/16/10New Earth Music HallAthens, GA

11/17/10Jefferson TheaterCharlottesville, VA

11/18/10The State TheatreFalls Church, VA

11/19/10Mr. Small’s TheatrePittsburgh, PA

11/20/10 World Cafe Live Philadelphia, PA

11/23/10 Port City Music Hall Portland, ME

11/24/10 Paradise Rock Club Boston, MA

11/26/10 Brooklyn Bowl Brooklyn, NY

11/27/10 Brooklyn Bowl Brooklyn, NY

11/28/10 Pearl Street Nightclub Northampton, MA

11/30/10 The Intersection Grand Rapids, MI

12/01/10 The Ark Ann Arbor, MI

12/02/10 Vogue Nightclub Indianapolis, IN

12/03/10 Knuckleheads Saloon Kansas City, MO

12/04/10 George’s Majestic Fayetteville, AR

12/30/10 Freebird Live Jacksonville Beach, FL

12/31/10 Freebird Live Jacksonville Beach, FL

01/01/11 Freebird Live Jacksonville Beach, FL

01/14/11 Culture Room Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/15/11 Skipper’s Smokehouse Tampa, FL

01/16/11 Skipper’s Smokehouse Tampa, FL

01/19/11 Lincoln Theatre Raleigh, NC

01/20/11 Visulite Theatre Charlotte, NC

01/21/11 The Music Farm Charleston, SC

01/22/11 Variety Playhouse Atlanta, GA

01/25/11 Varsity Theatre Baton Rouge, LA

01/27/11 House of Blues Houston, TX

01/28/11 La Zona Rosa Austin, TX

01/29/11 Granada Theater Dallas, TX

02/03/11 The Handlebar Greenville, SC

02/04/11 Lyric Theatre Oxford, MS

02/05/11 The Pageant St. Louis, MO

04/16/11 Rhythm & Ribs Festival

JJ Grey & Mofro
Tour Dates

::
JJ Grey & Mofro News
::
JJ Grey & Mofro
Concert
Reviews


Galactic Announce Winter Dates

FEATURING SPECIAL GUESTS COREY GLOVER, CYRIL NEVILLE, COREY HENRY &
MORE


Galactic

Galactic is loading up on
special guests to join the band as they barrel through the country on a wild and rocking Winter Tour 2010. Galactic
will spread the New Orleans flavor, throwing down the Mardi Gras spirit starting in Asheville on February 9 before
hitting Nashville on the 10th and ATL on February 12.

Lead singer Corey Glover (of Living
Colour
) will join the band on the road for the first time, bringing his amazing vocals and energy for the first
starting with Jamcruise and including Chicago on February 18. Cyril Neville (of the Neville Brothers) will join for select dates
and Corey Henry (of Rebirth Brass
Band
) will be on board throughout bringing his real deal NOLA brass trombone sound to the party.

Corey Glover and Cyril will both join along with the High and Mighty Brass Band plus a VERY special surprise guest
for the NYC Terminal 5 Mardi Gras north celebration on February 26. Orgone and The Bridge will support some
dates. Click here for
more details.


11/02/10 Fayetteville, AR George’s Majestic Lounge

11/03/10 Lafayette, LA Grant Street Dancehall
11/04/10 Birmingham, AL Workplay Theatre

11/06/10 Mobile, AL Soul Kitchen

01/4/11 – 01/9/11 departs Ft. Lauderdale, FL Jamcruise 9
01/19/11 Jacksonville, FL Freebird Live

01/20/11 Tampa, FL The Ritz Ybor

01/21/11 Lake Buena Vista, FL House of Blues (Orlando)

01/22/11 Ft. Lauderdale, FL Revolution

02/09/11 Asheville, NC Orange Peel
02/10/11 Nashville, TN Mercy Lounge
02/11/11 Charleston, SC Music Farm
02/12/11 Atlanta, GA Variety Playhouse
02/13/11 Cincinnati, OH 20th Century Theater

02/16/11 Minneapolis, MN Cabooze

02/17/11 Madison, WI Majestic Theater
02/18/11 Chicago, IL Park West

02/19/11 Cleveland, OH Beachland Ballroom

02/20/11 Pittsburgh, PA Mr. Small’s Theater

02/23/11 Philadelphia, PA Trocadero
02/24/11 Washington, DC 9:30 Club

02/25/11 Boston, MA Paradise

02/26/11 New York, NY Terminal 5

02/27/11 Charlottesville, VA Jefferson Theater
03/17/11 St. Louis, MO The Pageant
03/18/11 Lawrence, KS Granada
03/19/11 Denver, CO The Fillmore

03/20/11 Salt Lake, City, UT The Depot

03/22/11 Billings, MT Babcock Theatre
03/23/11 Missoula, MT Wilma Theatre
03/25/11 Seattle, WA Showbox
03/26/11 Portland, OR Crystal Ballroom
03/27/11 Crytal Bay, NV Crystal Bay Club
03/29/11 Santa Cruz, CA Moe’s Alley

03/30/11 Solana Beach, CA Belly Up Tavern

03/31/11 Los Angeles, CA El Rey Theatre
04/01/11 San Francisco, CA The Fillmore
04/02/11 San Francisco, CA The Fillmore

Galactic
Tour Dates

::
Galactic
News

::
Galactic
Concert
Reviews


Iron & Wine: Tour Dates & New Album

TOUR STARTS NOVEMBER 13; NEW ALBUM OUT IN JANUARY


Iron & Wine

Iron & Wine
will release
their first album since 2007, Kiss Each Other Clean, in January 2011. To
support the record, a
string of dates have been announced beginning November 13 at The Pageant in St. Louis, MO.
After that, they will
hit the road in February 2011 for an extensive European tour. Check out all the dates
below.

Iron & Wine 2010 Tour Dates:

11/13 – St. Louis, MO @ The Pageant
11/14 – Memphis, TN @ Minglewood Hall
11/15 – Asheville, NC @ The Orange Peel
11/16 – Atlanta, GA @ Variety Playhouse

11/17 – Jacksonville, FL @ Florida Theatre

11/18 – Miami Beach, FL @ Fillmore Miami Beach
11/19 – Tallahassee, FL @ The Moon

11/20 – New Orleans, LA @ House Of Blues

11/21 – Houston, TX @ Fitzgeralds

Iron & Wine 2011 Tour Dates:

02/02/11 Debase rStockholm, SE

02/03/11 Rockefeller Oslo, NO

02/04/11 Tradgardsforeningen Gothenburg, SE

02/05/11 Vox Hall Arhus, DK

02/06/11 Vega Copenhagen, DK

02/07/11 Fabrik Hamburg, GER

02/08/11 Berghain Berlin, GER

02/09/11 Gloria Theater Cologne, GER

02/10/11 Wuk Vienna, AUS

02/11/11 Freiheiz Munich, GER

02/12/11 Locomotiv Bologna, IT

02/13/11 El Lokal Zurich, SWI

02/14/11 Mousonturm Frankfurt, GER

02/15/11 The Paradiso Amsterdam, NL

02/16/11 Ancienne Belgique Brussels, BEL

02/17/11 Alhambra Paris, FRA

03/08/11 Roundhouse London, GB

03/09/11 Corn Exchange Brighton, GB

03/10/11 Birmingham Town Hall Birmingham, GB

03/11/11 HMV Picture House Edinburgh, GB

03/12/11 Royal Liverpool Philharmonic hall Liverpool, GB

03/14/11 Olympia Theatre Dublin, IR

03/15/11 Academy 2 Manchester, GB

03/16/11 The Sage Gateshead, GB

03/17/11 Metropolitan University Leeds, GB

Iron & Wine
Tour Dates

::
Iron & Wine News
::
Iron & Wine
Concert
Reviews


Fraud Caused the 1930s Depression and the Current Financial Crisis

Robert Shiller – one of the top housing experts in the United States – says that the mortgage fraud is a lot like the fraud which occurred during the Great Depression. As Fortune notes:Shiller said the danger of foreclosuregate — the scandal in whic…

Famous Nakesakes Reality Show — “The Same Name” — Headed To CBS

Betty White from Boston, Massachusetts, Justin Bieber from Jacksonville, Florida, and other Average Joes and Janes who boast the distinction of sharing their names with some of the most -noteworthy pop culture icons of our time are getting their moment in limelight, thanks to a new reality soap. CBS has teamed up with 51 Minds, [...]

Mortgages Were Fraudulently Pledged to Multiple Buyers at the Same Time

Bank of America alleged in a court filing this June:It appears as though many loans and other mortgage-related assets have been double and even triple-pledged to various constituencies. Boa Answ…

Cold War Kids: New Album & Tour Dates

NEW ALBUM OUT JANUARY 25 2011; TOUR STARTS NOVEMBER 5


Cold War Kids

Cold War Kids have
announced their new album, Mine is Yours, scheduled for release January 25, 2011. This will be
their first album since 2008′s Loyalty to Loyalty.

The band will be heading out for two weeks in
November
and December, beginning with Pomona, CA at The Glass House on November 5. The rest of the dates are below.

Click here to read Dennis Cook’s
review of Loyalty to
Loyalty
.


11/05 – Pomona, CA @ The Glass House
11/06 – Pioneertown, CA @ Pappy & Harriet’s Palace
11/08 – Visalia, CA @ Cellar Door

11/09 – Santa Barbara, CA @ SOHO Music Club

11/11 – Sacramento, CA @ Harlow’s

11/12 – Oakland, CA @ The New Parish
11/13 – Big Sur, CA @ Fernwood Resort

12/02 – Charlottesville, VA @ Jefferson Theater

12/03 – Knoxville, TN @ Bijou Theatre
12/04 – Asheville, NC @ The Orange Peel
12/06 – Athens, GA @ 40 Watt Club
12/07 – Charleston, SC @ The Music Farm
12/08 – Jacksonville, FL @ Freebird Live

12/10 – Birmingham, AL @ WorkPlay Theater

12/11 – Memphis, TN @ Minglewood Hall

Cold War Kids
Tour Dates

::
Cold War Kids News
::
Cold War Kids
Concert
Reviews


David Jacobs-Strain Tour Dates

TOUR STARTS OCTOBER 9 IN OXFORD, NEW YORK

David Jacobs-Strain is
heading out on tour for a string of dates beginning October 9 in Oxford, NY. From there, he will travel up and down
the East Coast and the South before heading over to the West Coast for a few dates. The full itinerary is available
below.


Oct 9 Oxford NY – 6 on the Square
Oct 11 New York NY – Rockwood Music Hall
Oct 14 Frederick MD – Cafe Nola
Oct 15 Newtown Square PA – Burlap & Bean
Oct 16 Barto PA – Landhaven B & B

Oct 17 Hudson NY – Club Helsinki Hudson
Oct 18 Baltimore MD – house concert
Oct 19 Vienna VA – Jammin’ Java
Oct 21 Saluda NC – The Purple Onion
Oct 23 Savannah GA – Savannah Folk Soc
Oct 24 Tybee Island GA – Tybee Post Theater
Oct 28 Sarasota, FL – WSLR Concert Series
Oct 29 Fernandina Bearch – Dog Star Tavern
Oct 30 Jacksonville FL – European St Cafe
Nov 12 Calgary, AB – Jack Singer Concert Hall – open for Ruthie Foster
Nov 13 Edmonton, AB – McDougall United Church – open for Ruthie Foster

Nov 19 Auburn CA – Auburn Placer PAC – with Joe Craven

Nov 20 Ahwahnee CA – Coolwater Ranch
Nov 26 Bend OR – Silver Moon Brewing
Nov 28 Eugene OR – house concert
Dec 3 Cottage Grove OR – Axe & Fiddle

David Jacobs-Strain
Tour Dates

::
David Jacobs-Strain News
::
David Jacobs-Strain
Concert
Reviews


Ozzy Announces Second Round Of North American Dates

NORTH AMERICAN TOUR STARTS NOVEMBER 12;
SECOND LEG KICKS OFF JANUARY
16


Ozzy

Ozzy Osbourne, who will
kick off his fall North American arena tour November 12 in Victoria, B.C, has now announced a second leg of U.S.
dates which will get underway January 16, 2011 in Omaha, NE. The six-week 2011 trek, part of the multi-
platinum
Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductee’s in-progress 18-month world tour, will include a pair of intimate shows: January
26 at the Dodge Theater in Phoenix and Feb 1 at the Gibson Amphitheatre in Los Angeles.

Ozzy’s longtime
friend
and musical collaborator Slash will
open all the concerts on the second leg. Tickets for the Live Nation-produced tour go on sale beginning Friday,
October 15. For the most up-to-date on sale information, please visit Ozzy.com or LiveNation.com.

2010 DATES:

Sat Oct 30 Voodoo Experience (City Park) New Orleans, LA

Fri Nov 12 Save On Foods Memorial Centre Victoria, BC

Sun Nov 14 Rogers Arena Vancouver, BC

Tue Nov 16 Pengrowth Saddledome Calgary, AB

Thu Nov 18 Rexall Place Edmonton, MB

Sat Nov 20 MTS Centre Winnipeg, MB

Tue Nov 23 Bell Centre Montreal, QC

Thu Nov 25 Scotiabank Place Ottawa, ON

Sat Nov 27 Air Canada Centre Toronto, ON

Mon Nov 29 1st Mariner Arena Baltimore, MD

Wed Dec 01 Madison Square Garden Arena New York, NY

Fri Dec 03 Izod Center E Rutherford, NJ

Sun Dec 05 Quicken Loans Arena Cleveland, OH

Tue Dec 7 Van Andel Arena Grand Rapids, MI

Sun Dec 12 Target Center Minneapolis, MN

2011 DATES:

Sun Jan 16 Qwest Center Omaha, NE

Tue Jan 18 Toyota Center Houston, TX

Thu Jan 20 American Airlines Center Dallas, TX

Sat Jan 22 Sprint Center Kansas City, MO

Mon Jan 24 AT&T Center San Antonio, TX

Wed Jan 26 Comerica Theatre Phoenix, AZ

Fri Jan 28 Mandalay Bay Resort Las Vegas, NV

Tue Feb 01 Gibson Amphitheatre Los Angeles, CA

Thu Feb 03 HP Pavilion San Jose, CA

Sat Feb 05 Tacoma Dome Tacoma, WA

Tue Feb 08 Pepsi Center Denver, CO

Thu Feb 10 BOK Center Tulsa, OK

Sat Feb 12 The Palace of Auburn Hills Detroit, MI

Sun Feb 14 i wireless Center Moline, IL

Tue Feb 16 Bridgestone Arena Nashville, TN

Fri Feb 18 St Pete Times Forum Tampa, FL

Sun Feb 20 BankAtlantic Center Fort Lauderdale, FL

Tue Feb 22 Jacksonville Veterans Mem. Arena Jacksonville, FL

Ozzy Osbourne
Tour Dates

::
Ozzy Osbourne News
::
Ozzy Osbourne
Concert
Reviews


Meet The Other Justin Bieber, A 35-Year-Old Man From Jacksonville, Florida

This Just In: There’s more than one Justin Bieber in the world. Like this one….Meet Justin Bieber of Jacksonville, Florida, a 35-year-old self-professed “arcade geek” whose famous name is making for some very noisy nights. For nearly a year, Mr. Bieber has been contending with a constantly ringing telephone, mountains of fanmail, and voicemails from [...]

Mark Karan: Florida Tour in Nov; Free Download, Guitar Pedal

NEW GUITAR PEDAL WITH HARTMAN ELECTRONICS; FREE ARCHIVE DOWNLOAD


Mark Karan

Mark Karan has announced
a string of dates in Florida, Georgia and South Carolina in November with The Roy Jay Band, who will open all the
shows on this run. All dates are below.

Karan also recently co-designed an envelope filter with Hartman Electronics. The pedal is a classic 70′s Mutron III
sound optimized for tone, flexibility, and ease of use. More info here. Fans can get $50
off by clicking here to purchase.

Karan, Robin Sylvester, Mookie Siegel and Billy Lee Lewis will perform a very unique show to
celebrate Deborah Grabien‘s new book London Calling. The performance will be on
Sunday, October 10 at Book Passage in Corte Madera,
CA. The reception and reading is from 3-5 PM and the performance is from 5-6 PM.

Jemimah Puddleduck will perform at
Brewtopia in The Compound Grill in Phoenix, AZ on October 15. They will also hit The Mint in Los Angeles on
October 16. Click here for an archive of past shows.

TOUR DATES

WED, 11/3 – Pour House, Charleston, SC

THUR, 11/4 – Jack Rabbits, Jacksonville, FL

FRI, 11/5 – Funky Buddha Lounge, Boca Raton, FL

SAT, 11/6 – Play, Ybor City, FL (Tampa)

TUE, 11/9 – The Atlantic, Gainesville, FL

WED, 11/10 – Social, Orlando, FL

THUR, 11/11 – Smith’s, Atlanta, GA

FRI, 11/12 -Local 662, St. Petersburg, FL

Mark Karan and
Jemimah Puddleduck
Tour Dates

::
Mark Karan and
Jemimah Puddleduck News

::
Mark Karan and
Jemimah Puddleduck
Concert
Reviews


Drake Fan Attack! Rapper & Bodyguard Send Fans To Hospital

Wheelchair Jimmy isn’t in Degrassi anymore. Canadian child star-turned-hip-hopster Drake has lost a pair of fans in Jacksonville, Florida after the rapper and his bodyguard allegedly attacked the autograph seekers at nightclub in the sunny city last Thursday night.Jeremis Soriano says he and his pal just wanted to say “Hello” to the Grammy-nominated Young Money soldier, [...]

JJ Grey & Mofro: True Warhorses

By: Dennis Cook

JJ Grey by Darren Jackinsky

Maybe it’s the pounding soul of “All,” the slinky strut of “Diyo Dayo,” the synth-dappled, switchback funk of “Hide & Seek” or perhaps the crack-your-heart-open tenderness of “King Hummingbird” but something gonna get you on JJ Grey & Mofro‘s new slab, Georgia Warhorse (released August 24 on Alligator Records). Grey and his shifting ensemble specialize in ‘getcha music,’ the sort that runs its fingers through your hair, leaves lipstick on your collar and sometimes lifts your wallet and cell phone to run up a crazy bar tab and make calls to the other side of the world. Grey’s songs are earthy in all respects – lusty and impetuous yet rooted in soil tilled with the blood & sweat of generations. And he when he steps to the mic you’ll swear Otis Redding has an illegitimate white son. There are also echoes of the young Paul Rodgers who ignited Free and Bad Company – Grey shares his knack for slow burners and ability to make rock sound magisterial – not to mention a dash or two of Grey’s personal idols like Tony Joe White and Toots Hibbert. Put it all together and one’s body and soul warms when Mofro plays.

Hibbert along with Derek Trucks guests on Georgia Warhorse, helping make it the single strongest release in a catalog without a single dud. Without reinventing the wheel – as we’ll discuss in this chat – Grey and his collaborators, particularly producer-sidekick Dan Prothero, have crafted an album that sits up straight ‘n’ proud next to anything that came out of Muscle Shoals in its heyday. More impressive than Mofro’s gift for capturing the feel of Wilson Pickett, Otis, et al. is how they make it seem like that music never went away and has been growing up right along with Grey and his boys.

Grey is man enough to declare, “Hell no, I ain’t going down on my knees,” yet enough of a dreamer to ache out loud on simmering killers like “Gotta Know,” grind passionately like a Grade-A lover man on “Slow, Hot & Sweaty” or throw his whole being open on Georgia Warhorse‘s shattering closer “Lullaby.” In short, Grey is a grand revival shaman reuniting rock ‘n’ soul in a holy orgy for common folk.

JamBase: One of the things you’ve done from the beginning – and the new record certainly does it – is remember that rock ‘n’ roll has hips, which has been forgotten by a lot of your contemporaries. Soul music used to be a real close relative.

JJ Grey by Melanie Martinez

JJ Grey: Right, right, right. I want it to have the energy to rock and I want it to groove so you can dance to it. And I can’t dance worth a shit so I better find the funkiest players I can so I can get my groove on! These are all cats I’ve looked up to and I’m just lucky to get to play with them. They all understand my arrangements and the essence of what I’m trying to get musically. And with these kinds of guys playing, it’s easy. All I gotta do is show up.

JamBase: There’s been a lot of lineup changes in Mofro, and even your longest running partner, Daryl Hance, is no longer with you. How has that affected the music?

JJ Grey: Honestly, it’s always been my ship. Not to sound like an ego thing or nothing, that’s just the truth. Daryl has always supported me and now I can’t wait to help him in any way I can to help him with what he’s doing. He’s got his own tunes, like a lot of the other cats, and we will play together again. It’s hard to explain [the dynamics of Mofro] to people because it doesn’t really have an identity outside of who’s playing in it right at that moment. It’s like life – full of change.

You’ve always struck me as a road warrior. I’ve seen you a lot of times and even when you seem to be draggin’ before the show, the moment the music kicks in you spring back. Something seems to hit your bloodstream when you’re in front of a crowd.

Definitely! I tell people all the time, I never got paid a dime to play a show – all the money is just so we can get there, unload the equipment, etc. Playing the show itself is just therapy; that part’s free. Everything else is what costs us money.

Not everyone appreciates what a privilege it is to get to do what you love for living.

That’s what it’s all about, and the best way to do it is to not try to do it. Just let it happen. If you’ve got a cut it’ll heal itself if you give it time and space and let the body do what it does. It’s the same way with music. I don’t write tunes, they write themselves. I honestly can’t take credit for that. They just pop out of thin air like conversations.

I wanted to get into your longtime working relationship with Dan Prothero, who’s helmed every Mofro album with you since the start. I don’t think he gets near enough credit. Every time he works with a musician, including you, he seems to draw out the best in them.

Well, if somebody wanted to get technical about the original members of Mofro, it’d obviously be myself, Daryl and Dan Prothero. As far I’m considered, Dan is probably a bigger part of Mofro than any one individual cat that’s played with me. Luckily, Dan only wants to work with people who are 95-percent there so he only has to add about 5-percent. He wants to help you get the right sound, the right tone, and that’s what Dan’s done. It’s been great.

You’ve had this partnership over five albums. How do you think the sound has evolved? I can’t quite nail the exact differences but there’s something quite refined about the sound on Georgia Warhorse.

JJ Grey by Adam McCullough

With Blackwater [Mofro's 2001 debut] there was a lot of shoulder shruggin’ on my part and nervousness. I didn’t know what he wanted; he didn’t know what I wanted. I don’t even know how a record came out of those sessions, and that’s not because of the musicians involved. That was my fault. I wasn’t stepping up to the plate, not so much in my takes but with the whole process. And Dan was instrumental in pushing me towards my strengths and away from my weaknesses. And when I say weaknesses, I guess what I should say is pushing me towards honesty, the things that felt genuine and honest, and away from things that felt contrived or phony. He also convinced me to learn how to play instruments. I played an instrument enough to write a tune, but going on the road I couldn’t afford to bring along the kind of band I wanted to. I wanted horns and everything on the first record and tour behind it, but I just couldn’t afford it. And I’d never played and sang at the same time before and Dan said, “You just gotta do it.” He pushed me, pushed me, pushed me.

So, to go back and answer your question, I send him demos now that I’ve cut at home and it’s pretty close to how it sounds on the record, except we go into the studio and get someone who plays drums better than me [laughs]. We don’t go in as a band. I put the songs together and think of who I’d like to be on a cut, like Derek Trucks or whatever. I’m at a point where I can make that call. Derek was easy because he lives in Jacksonville, and Toots was easy, too. We just sent him the stuff down to Jamaica and he jammed on it and sent it back [laughs]. The point is that now with Dan we don’t have to go through a song critique period or nothing. We’re just ready to go in and do it and make it interesting with cool 70s synth sounds and such.

One picks up on the shared curiosity with cool sounds that you and Dan have. For all the production that’s layered on rock music these days, that inquisitive, distinctly human touch is often missing.

JJ Grey by Darren Jackinsky

Chasing rabbits down holes is always fun. I’ll tell you something else that’s cool, and don’t get me wrong, I love Pro Tools and Logic – I use those things to write with and in the process of making this record these things get used – but Dan taught me not to rely on them. When things are done in the box – the controlled, computer-based box world – it has a flatness to it. There’s no spikes, no pits. No matter how great the recording or the players, it will lose something if it’s not mixed through a console. All the [Mofro] records have been done on two-inch tape. Dan mixes down off two-inch tape as much as he can, and then dumps all that into Pro Tools and does last minute editing.

Jimmy DeVito’s Retrophonics studio, where we always record, is a museum of the best gear ever made. You move something aside and there’s something else that makes you go, “Holy shit!” So you start messing around and thinking, “This vintage ’72 keyboard would be perfect on this take!” Jimmy provides that space, and I think that’s a huge part of the sound, too – Jimmy’s two-inch tape machine, his vintage amplifier collection, his guitars, his basses.

A place like that allows instinct and inspiration to take hold in the moment. Things are too neat today. You’d never get those wonderful pushing-the-meter-into-the-red moments on the classic Aretha Franklin recordings now. But that bold, ragged rush is what those songs are all about.

That’s what I push for on every record. On all my favorite records like Tony Joe White and all that Muscle Shoals stuff, when the singer gets going the tubes start to smoke and the pre-amps sizzle and it all starts to fly apart on the heavy, high, loudest notes. I love that! That’s also when guitars changed and became distorted, when the guitar player is just playing it so hard and so loud things start to bust apart. What people like Dan and I are doing is pursuing that distortion. We’re looking for the distortion that sounds like butter, not the newer circuit board distortion, which kinda shits out and sounds awful.

It’s great to see this kind of music being made today instead of it being simply something from yesteryear. These records and this sound endures because it sounds so, so, so good.

One of the things I explain to people is volume does not translate well to tape. So, when you play live you just play louder and people can feel those huge, dynamic shifts. With studio recordings what happens is people have to turn up their stereos when you’re quiet and then turn ‘em back down when it’s too loud, which led to compression. But all those old compressors gave you a form and a feeling, whereas now a Celine Dion recording might be smashed into oblivion to the point where you look at it as a line on a computer and the block volume is massive compared to say AC/DC’s Back In Black, which has these peaks and valleys that look small, not one continuous fat block of volume. Well, we know what happens when you put both on a stereo, you’ll say the AC/DC record is louder. It just seems louder because there’s not an Amex on it. These are the things Dan has taught me. Some people will say, “That’s retro,” but I say, “No, it’s just good.” The wheel is retro. It was invented a LONG time ago but it works [laughs].

JJ Grey & Mofro are currently on tour. They play The Compound in Phoenix, AZ (9/22), Belly Up Tavern in Solano Beach, CA (9/23), The Fillmore in San Francisco, CA (9/24) and the West Beach Music & Arts Festival in Santa Barbara, CA (9/25). Find full tour dates here.

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Lynyrd Skynyrd Namesake, Gym Teacher Leonard Skinner, Dies

Leonard Skinner, a tough-as-nails Florida gym teacher whose firm stance against boys with long hair inspired the name of the famous Southern rock band Lynyrd Skynyrd, died Monday. Skinner, who had Alzheimer’s Disease, died in his sleep at a nursing home in Jacksonville. He was 77.Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the [...]

Futurebirds: Yur Not Ded

Words by: Wesley Hodges | Images by: Duke Street Blog

Futurebirds by Kevin Kaim

Athens, GA’s Futurebirds are one of the hardest working, best live acts out on the road today, but they aren’t traveling to places like Ybor City, FL or Tucson, AZ (a long way from the familiarity of Georgia) because they’ve established sizable followings in those places. Instead, Futurebirds believe in their product, embrace the chaos of life on the road and share the time-honored notion (along with many of the bands highlighted here on JamBase), that if you book it, they will come. Musically, Futurebirds can be compared with the raw sound of early My Morning Jacket with a nod to the more recent litany of folked-up, reverb-heavy psych-rock out there. But, don’t let their haggard appearance or carefree attitudes fool you though – these Birds fly a very unique, peculiar pattern musically.

The high, lonesome twang on the killer opening track “Johnny Utah” on the band’s full-length debut Hampton’s Lullaby (released July 27 on Autumn Tone) is evidence of a well-read traditional country appreciation, where banjo and pedal steel are essential pieces to the puzzle and not simply added elements. Despite this nod to the past, Futurebirds are markedly forward thinking, and songs like the cinematic, peak-happy “Yur Not Ded” bathe front porch melodies in a psychedelic dreamscape of heavy reverb, lustrous harmonies and soaring guitars of every shape, size and color. The Birds jibe well with the past, but offer a splendid peak into the future of roots rock. With all the pillars in place for success with the support system of a label, the booking expertise of the Progressive Global Agency (who handle Widespread Panic, R.E.M., Dead Confederate and more), and some of the more rabid and vociferous fans around, the Birds are primed and ready to ascend the ranks, building themselves from the bottom up the only way they know how: By playing with reckless intensity whether they’re doin it for 3 or 3,000 people.

JamBase recently caught up with two of the guitar birds Thomas Johnson and Carter King on a rare break from the road to talk about Hampton’s Lullaby and their experiences headlining a national tour for the first time this year.

JamBase: Before things get too otherworldly, out-of-hand and ridiculous, can you just start by talking about Hampton’s Lullaby and how you guys ended up getting set up on Autumn Tone Records and the ultimate recording process?

Carter King: Autumn Tone came along after we had decided to record the album. We paid for it ourselves and ended up doing that anyway. Through the help of our good friend and guiding light Dawson Morris (Dead Confederate’s manager) played [Autumn Tone's] Justin Gage our EP, he really liked it and it kind of developed from there. They were really cool about the whole thing, very laid back and not trying to get anything out of us, just trying to help us along.

Futurebirds by Kevin Kaim

JamBase: So, you guys got the experience that every new, young band should by self-releasing an album on your own dime before the benefit of a supporting record label came along?

Thomas Johnson: They never really offered any input and didn’t pay for it, so they couldn’t really have too much say. It’s also really cool we get to own the masters, which is a great way to not get fucked. They put a lot of trust in thinking that whatever we did was gonna be cool, and luckily they still think it is. For the album, we went up to [pedal steel] Dennis Love‘s lake house up at Lake Burton and recorded 20 or something demos of us playing in the bottom floor of his house. [Producer] Drew Vandenburg went up there with us and did all the vocal set-ups. A lot of those were goofy cover songs that we were jammin’ on late at night didn’t make it but a lot of the stuff that made it onto the record came including the last track on the record “Hampton’s Lullaby,” which was recorded at about 4 in the morning.

What exactly is “Hamptahn’s Lullaby”? Is that an original Futurebirds lullaby? Or is there a story behind the title?

Thomas: It’s actually a song that Womack and I wrote about a landlord we had where we lived in this house/ski lodge, which was actually advertised as the “Ski Chalet.” So, we wrote this song about this redneck that after everything he would say would end the sentence with, “If ya know what I mean?” The song is pretty much a series of his ridiculous quotes and then, “Ya know what I mean?” and us responding, “We know what you mean!”

There seem to be a lot of stories on this album about the last few years about your final years of college and the first couple years starting up as a band. Without being completely insulting, it’s kind of got that unshaven, un-showered, raw feeling that goes with the territory.

Carter: You callin’ us unshaven or un-showered?

Thomas: You are treading the line between offensive and not offensive.

Is this sound more of a reflection of your touring hygiene and haggard looks or is it more of a reflection of the personal musical style you’re trying to capture?

Carter: [Laughs] Probably a little of both.

What kind of stuff were y’all listening to when you made the record?

Thomas: I dunno. I that was like two months ago!

Carter: I didn’t really listen to music until about two months ago [laughs]. Everyone is always listening to a bunch of different stuff and when you’re in close quarters with people you try to listen to everyone’s music. It was a wide range of different stuff. Then when you get done after a few weeks, you get in your car, go home and you don’t want to listen to music for awhile.

Thomas: I would say there’s generally a country influence to the things.

Carter: I was really into the inspirational tunes. Those really were there to help me get through the darker times.

“Yur Not Ded” is a standout and may be the least musically emo song ever, but the lyrics have a little bit of a emotional feel in the verses. Tell me where that song came from.

Carter: [Laughs] Definitely the most emo song lyrically. I started thinking about writing the song when we were out on a boat in Jacksonville and we were trying to come back to land. A real dark, powerful, freaky storm raged in, and it was one of those scary moments where you also really feel very alive. It was a great adrenaline rush. It made me think about a lot of people just going through the motions in life, and I guess it’s kind of directed towards them.

Just because you walk, doesn’t mean that you’re not dead

Just because you talk, doesn’t mean something’s been said

The Road

Tell me about the Futurebirds traveling armada. I heard the other day that Lady Gaga rolls with like 23 semi-trucks. Is that similar to what you’re working with or is it a little more subdued?

That’s definitely what we’re going for. But those trucks are really expensive and if you don’t have anything to put in them, it doesn’t make much sense. We’re currently crusin’ around in a Yukon XL with a trailer, going six-deep. It gets really cozy in there.

You guys played 24 shows in 30 days last month. Tell me a story from out on the road or just shine some light on that experience playing some of those shows in new cities with some crowds almost wholly unfamiliar with your music.

Carter: I don’t wanna incriminate anyone butÂ…the St. Simons show on the Fourth of July was pretty out of the ordinary and ridiculous, and we’ll leave it at that. Pretty much every show we played in Florida was distinct and interesting. In general, they don’t really get our kind of music down in Florida. Not that they don’t get it, they just don’t hear a lot of bands like us down there. But, we’ve gotten a pretty good response everywhere we’ve gone.

So you’re saying that Miami isn’t your typical Futurebirds fan base?

Futurebirds by Bill Antonucci

Miami was totally different from everything. We played in this swinger’s lounge lookin’ place with $8 drinks and really modern looking couches (with pillows!). There was a grand piano in the corner, and the stage was in the middle of the room with this polar bear skin rug on top of it. The promoter was a South African dude who loved us more than anyone else. He was really into it and was trying to compliment us. He said, “You guys are like the next Eagles,” which was pretty funny. The last three shows of the tour were a nice microcosm of what this tour has been like, with three different venues. New York was packed in with low ceilings; really loud, and nasty and awesome. Charlotte was more like a mid-sized venue and we all went to the Widespread Panic show beforehand. It was sad to drag the bassist B Miles away from it; he was in his element, and it was actually my first Widespread show. After that, we played the tour closer at the Buckhead Theater, which was a bigger, nice, new venue, and we ended up having a great crowd there, too (Carter: “Like a million people”). It was just cool to play three really different types of venues back-to-back-to-back and have good responses and good crowds and feel great about the shows. I think we can adapt to any kind of venue we’re given, which is fortunate considering the various kinds of places we’re playing right now.

Since it’s you’re first time playing a lot of these cities in a lot of new clubs, it’s gotta be a trial-by-fire each night trying to react to different sounding rooms and new club owners, promoters, etc.

Carter: You don’t even knowÂ…

Thomas: It’s kinda ridiculous the bands we end up playing with on some of these bills. In Indianapolis, we were with a scream-pop band and a ska-soul band. It was a pretty good-sized crowd and at one point during “Ski Chalet” we’re raging onstage and I look up and everyone’s got their arms crossed and just looked like they were observing some sort of exhibit or something. It was a little confusing.

You guys are kind of like a living, breathing art installation piece.

Carter: I was kind of thinking more like the zoo than the museum but…

Let’s talk about the way you guys carry yourselves onstage – kind of like a bunch of reckless banshees on speed. Tell me about the injuries and property damage bills that you guys have racked up out on the road. Does that ding into the profit margins or have you been able to skip town before that became an issue?

Carter: I mean, if you break a stage it’s not like they can really do anything. If we break a stage, it’s because the stage isn’t strong enough. We’ve incurred more damage upon ourselves than anything. I landed on the corner of Dennis’ pedal steel, which left a pretty unsightly gash.

Yeah, the pedal steel, as much as it accents y’all’s sound, seems to be more of a liability and dangerous metal object than anything.

Thomas: It’s really big and has a lot of sharp, pointed metal. We usually try to put it in a strategic position for maximum safety/separation from the chaos.

When you guys move up the chain a little bit, you can do the Tommy Lee thing and suspend him above the stage.

Thomas: Maybe we can get it so Dennis could play the pedal steel from his basement in Atlanta. He could stay there all day and play a show at night without leaving and still be in a rock and roll band.

How has playing with bands like The Whigs and Dead Confederate and being a band in Athens informed you guys as a band?

Futurebirds makin’ banjo rock by Bill Antonucci

Carter: Dead Confederate knows a lot since they’ve been around the block for a little while and have dealt with the trials and tribulations of a band coming up through the ranks. As far as how we carry ourselves onstage, when you’re opening up for Dead Confederate, who is one of the hardest fucking raging bands I’ve come across, you tend to bring it a lot harder.

Thomas: Last time we did a little run of shows with them it was like we’d play an especially good set and they would come out and one up us, and back and forth. We just push each other to get better each night and it makes for a great night for all involved. Those guys are really cool. Sometimes when you don’t know a lot of musicians you don’t realize that they are just normal people like everybody else. To actually meet the people in Dead Confederate and The Whigs, well, it’s nice to see that they’re not a bunch of self-absorbed assholes like some people are. They’re just good, down-to-earth people who like to play music.

Carter: You’ll see these people in passing at night and we’ll go drink and hang out. So, we’re especially looking forward to any shows with Dead Confederate. Needless to say, the opportunity to go out on the road and play and hang out with our friends again will be awesome.

Let’s talk about the recent headlining tour to spread the word about Hampton’s Lullaby. The songs have that sort of “new car smell,” where they still feel fresh to play. How’s that different then when you guys were touring before the record came out?

Carter: It was only really the last few shows where the album was officially out, but we started selling them on the road as soon as we got them. Actually the night we released the album was kind of funny. It was a perfect storm (and Thomas’ birthday to boot). We were playing in Philly with a local band and they told us when we got there, “We’ve just been playing around here so much that we didn’t promote the show at all.” Ariel Pink was playing a sold-out show two blocks down and it pretty much left us playing a show to a handful of shadows in a nasty club.

Thomas: It’s hilarious though, because we ended up filming a promo video with a guy that approached us in Philly about doing it and it turned out pretty comical. We played a really weird, kinda funny set.

Well, I guess the crowd at the show I made it out for on St. Simons Island for the 4th of July was a little more ahead of the curve. It seemed like half the crowd up front knew all the words already, and this was three weeks before the release date.

Carter: We weren’t very intense about keeping the album in our inner circle. We wanted to obviously sell CDs but it definitely benefits us more to have our friends who knew about it and wanting to tell their friends about it and create a buzz. When you play a show and people know the words, it’s never a bad feeling, no matter the circumstances. We played a show way back when opening for Dr. Dog at Tasty World and there was a kid in front trying to sing along without knowing the words. We were playing a song off the EP that we had written like hours earlier. It was one of those things where he was trying to pick up stray words and then mumbling along the rest.

Futurebirds from lsureveille fall 2010 on Vimeo.

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