Sprint announced the first of several planned international 4G roaming agreements. In Jamaica and Taiwan, Sprint customers can now roam on host 4G networks with $15 day passes. – Sprint
customers now have access to 4G networks when travelling in Taiwan and Jamaica,
the carrier announced Jan. 31. Through new partnerships with Digicel in Jamaica
and Global Mobile in Taiwan, Sprint customers with Sprint 4G devices that
feature the Sprint SmartView Connection Manager will be…
Posts Tagged ‘Jamaica’
Sprint Offering 4G Roaming in Jamaica, Taiwan
The Doors Respond To Florida’s Pardon Of Jim Morrison
40 YEARS AFTER MEDIA AND COURT CIRCUS, THE DOORS SPEAK OUT
![]() The Doors |
In the wake of Florida’s decision to issue a pardon to Jim Morrison of The Doors more than 40 years after
his alleged obscene acts on a Miami stage, his bandmates Ray Manzarek, John Densmore and Robby
Krieger issued this statement:
“In 1969 the Doors played an infamous concert in Miami, Florida. Accounts vary as to what actually happened on
stage that night.
Whatever took place that night ended with The Doors sharing beers and laughter in the dressing room with the Miami
police, who acted as security at the venue that evening. No arrests were made. The next day we flew off to Jamaica
for a few days’ vacation before our planned 20-city tour of America.
That tour never materialized. Four days later, warrants were issued in Miami for the arrest of Morrison on trumped-
up charges of indecency, public obscenity, and general rock-and-roll revelry. Every city The Doors were booked into
canceled their engagement.
A circus of fire-and-brimstone “decency” rallies, grand jury investigations and apocalyptic editorials followed – not
to mention allegations ranging from the unsubstantiated (he exposed himself) to the fantastic (the Doors were
“inciting a riot” but also “hypnotizing” the crowd).
In August, Jim Morrison went on trial in Miami. He was acquitted on all but two misdemeanor charges and sentenced
to six months’ hard labor in Raiford Penitentiary. He was appealing this conviction when he died in Paris on July 3,
1971. Four decades after the fact, with Jim an icon for multiple generations – and those who railed against him now
a laughingstock – Florida has seen fit to issue a pardon.
We don’t feel Jim needs to be pardoned for anything.
His performance in Miami that night was certainly provocative, and entirely in the insurrectionary spirit of The Doors’
music and message. The charges against him were largely an opportunity for grandstanding by ambitious politicians
- not to mention an affront to free speech and a massive waste of time and taxpayer dollars. As Ann Woolner of the
Albany Times-Union wrote recently, “Morrison’s case bore all the signs of a political prosecution, a rebuke from the
cultural right to punish a symbol of Dionysian rebellion.”
If the State of Florida and the City of Miami want to make amends for the travesty of Jim Morrison’s arrest and
prosecution forty years after the fact, an apology would be more appropriate – and expunging the whole sorry
matter from the record. And how about a promise to stop letting culture-war hysteria trump our First Amendment
rights? Freedom of Speech must be held sacred, especially in these reactionary times.
Love,
The Doors
The Morrison Family
Praxis: New Album w/ Iggy Pop, Serj Tankian, Mike Patton
JANUARY 25 U.S. RELEASE OF JAPANESE ONLY IMPORT
On January 25, the eclectic, experimental hard rock project Praxis (Buckethead,
Bill Laswell, Brain) will release their latest
creation, a bone-crunching new album titled Profanation: Preparation for a Coming Darkness.
The new album finds the trio once again collaborating with various musicians, this time with the spotlight clearly on
lead vocalists. Among them are Iggy Pop, System Of A Down’s Serj Tankian, Mike
Patton, RAMM:ΣLL:ZΣΣ, Doctor Israel, Wu-Tang protege Killah
Priest and
Jamaica-born toaster Hawk.
The US release of Profanation comes with two live bonus tracks not included in the rare, Japan-only import.
The album is also one of the last recordings to feature the gothic futurist RAMM:ΣLL:ZΣΣ, an
incredibly multi-talented
visual artist, hip hop icon, performance artist, and one of the most unique humans to patrol this planet.
Click below to listen to
the new track “Furies” (Feat. Iggy Pop).
Praxis
Tour Dates
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Praxis News
::
Praxis
Concert
Reviews
Scarlett Johansson jets to Jamaica to escape divorce drama
After announcing her marriage split, Scarlett Johansson was spotted in Jamaica with a group of friends. The 26-year-old allegedly initiated the split of her two-year marriage to Ryan Reynolds, 34, after the stress of being apart all the time became too much for her to take. And now it looks as if she is escaping [...]
Extreme Inequality Helped Cause Both the Great Depression and the Current Economic Crisis
It is clear that when banks become too big, it harms the economy. Economist Steve Keen says that “a sustainable level of bank profits appears to be about 1% of GDP”, and higher bank profits lead to a Ponzi economy and a depression.But most mainstre…
Sugababe Keisha Buchanan dreaming of Prince Harry
Kate Middleton’s relationship with Prince William has led former Sugababes singer Keisha Buchanan to believe that she may have a chance with his brother. “It”s all about Prince Harry now. He is so sexy. He’s my favourite royal, hands down,†the Telegraph quoted her as saying. Buchanan, 26, who is proud of her working-class roots [...]
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.
JJ Grey & Mofro Tour Dates :: JJ Grey & Mofro News :: JJ Grey & Mofro Concert Reviews
JamBase | Hottest Spot In Hell
Go See Live Music!
7 Musicians Who Died Whilst on Stage
Singers not only lead exciting but also dangerous lives as the many deaths on stage show.
Kourtney Kardashian Moving To NYC — And She’s Bringing “Kourtney & Khloe†With Her
Reality socialite Kourtney Kardashian is reportedly leaving her roots in sunny Calabasas, California in the dust for a future with wayward baby daddy Scott Disick (aka The Real-Life Patrick Bateman) in his native New York — and we hear Kourt’s rumored move could mean big changes are ahead for E!’s hit summer soap, Kourtney & [...]
Mayan Holidaze Adds 30db, Album Leaf, Bonobo
JANUARY 20-24 ON THE MAYAN RIVIERA IN MEXICO
![]() 30db |
The Album Leaf, Bonobo, 30db (Austin/Bayliss Acoustic Set),
Emancipator and Orchard Lounge have been added
to
the lineup of the Mayan Holidaze Festival 2011.
As previously announced, The Disco
Biscuits, Umphrey’s McGee, and
STS9, in conjunction with Cloud 9
Adventures, have announced Mayan Holidaze 2011, taking place January 20-24 on the gorgeous Mayan Riviera in
Mexico. The event is sold out but a waiting list is currently available. Please visit www.mayanholidaze.com to sign up.
For more on Holidaze, see our 2009 coverage from Jamaica here.
Gov’t Mule: Island Exodus II
JANUARY 27-31 AT BREEZES GRAND IN NEGRIL, JAMAICA
![]() Gov’t Mule |
Gov’t Mule will host Island
Exodus II. The event will take place over four nights from January 27-31, 2011 at Breezes Grand in Negril, Jamaica.
According to the Island Exodus website, Gov’t Mule will play 3 shows and Warren Haynes will play a sunset solo
show. Guest musicians including Ron
Holloway (and more to be announced shortly) will sit in. The band is also offering a 6 night package, January
27-February 2 which will include a very unique “locals only” show in Negril on Tuesday February 1. All 6 night
packages will include tickets and round trip shuttle to this show.
Activities such as the Poster Signing, Danny Louis’ Golf Outing and Matt Abts’ Drum Clinic will also return alongside
new activities to be announced shortly.
All additional information can be found at www.mule.net/islandexodus.
Gov’t Mule
Tour Dates
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Gov’t Mule News ::
Govt’ Mule
Concert
Reviews
Evening Crunch Crumbs: July Is National Ice Cream Month; Nick Jonas Signs Up For More Les Miserables; Party With Ryan Seacrest & The Cast Of “Jersey Shoreâ€
-The walking STI known as Tila Tequila is tapping into her inner video ho. Miss Tila — or whatever she calls herself nowadays — is featured in Oh My God’s new music video, “My Own Adventure.” (Thanks Kevin!) -Did you know that July is National Ice Cream Month? Former President Ronald Reagan proclaimed the special month [...]
Amy Winehouse forming new band
British singer Amy Winehouse is teaming up with hip-hop band The Roots” drummer Questlove and guitarist Raphael Saadiq to form a new band. According to Questlove, real name Ahmir Thompson, the unnamed band is finding it difficult to take out time to record any tracks due to the Back to Black singer”s ongoing visa problems. [...]
Michael Franti & Spearhead: New Album in August
MICHAEL FRANTI & SPEARHEAD SET TO RELEASE THE SOUND OF SUNSHINE ON AUGUST
24
![]() Michael Franti & Spearhead |
Michael Franti & Spearhead
return with The Sound Of Sunshine on August 24. The Sound Of Sunshine is Michael Franti & Spearhead’s seventh studio
album and the follow-up to 2008′s All Rebel Rockers.
The Sound Of Sunshine was conceived after Franti was hospitalized for a ruptured appendix in August
2009. “Music is sunshine. It gives us new energy and a stronger sense of purpose. You can’t hold it in your hands,
smell it, taste it or even see it, yet somehow just coming together and feeling these little vibrations that tickle our
eardrums can somehow lift us all up out of our most difficult moments in life to unimaginable heights,” says
Franti.
The band began recording in Jamaica with legendary producers Sly & Robbie as well as in Franti’s home in
Bali and hometown of San Francisco. With the record still not complete, Franti decided to bring a mobile studio on
the road with him while he toured with John Mayer this past winter. The album was finished in dressing rooms and
hotel rooms along the way with Franti playing songs he had recorded earlier in the day to the audience that evening.
Franti & Spearhead will be touring throughout the summer.
Michael Franti & Spearhead
Tour Dates
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Michael Franti &
Spearhead News ::
Michael Franti & Spearhead
Concert
Reviews
Drug lord Coke captured in Jamaica
Jamaican police say they have captured alleged drug kingpin Christopher “Dudus” Coke on the outskirts of Kingston.
Coke is wanted for extradition to the United States to face drug- and arms-trafficking charges.
A Good African tale
An African entrepreneur struggles for recognition in rich-country markets
“IT USED to be a badge of pride that we were the only African coffee brand in British supermarkets. Now I see it as shameful,” says Andrew Rugasira, the founder of Good African. He is bemoaning the fact that other African firms—in coffee and many other lines of business—have struggled to follow the trail blazed by Good African since it was founded in 2003.
Mr Rugasira created the firm with the goal of creating a distinctly African coffee brand, by carrying out some of the value-added parts of the supply chain, such as roasting and packaging, in Africa, instead of just shipping raw coffee berries abroad to be processed—rather like Jamaica has done with its Blue Mountain coffee. Since persuading Waitrose, an upmarket British supermarket chain, to stock his coffee in 2005, Mr Rugasira has won round its rivals. Last month Sainsbury’s became the latest to place an order. Good African coffee will soon be available in America, too, though initially only online, not in shops. The firm also has ambitious plans to start marketing Good African tea and Good African chocolate. …
Mayan Holidaze STS9: Disco Biscuits & Umphrey’s
|
The Disco Biscuits, Umphrey’s McGee, and STS9, in conjunction with Cloud 9 Adventures, have announced MAYAN HOLIDAZE 2011, taking place January 20-24 on the gorgeous Mayan Riviera in Mexico.
Complete details on the weekend will be announced on Wednesday, May 5 and early bird all-inclusive rooms will go on sale Wednesday, May 12. Please visit www.mayanholidaze.com for all event info as it’s announced!
For more on Holidaze, see our 2009 coverage from Jamaica here.
“Serbia counting on Jamaica’s supportâ€
FM Vuk Jeremić says Belgrade can count on the continued support of Jamaica for preserving the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Serbia. “We are entering a crucial phase in our diplomatic and legal efforts in the fight for new negotiations for Kosovo,†Jeremić said after meeting with Jamaican officials.
Jeremić on two-day visit to Jamaica
Serbian Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremić will embark on a two-day bilateral visit to Jamaica this Monday, the MFA announced. Jeremić will confer with Jamaican Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade Kenneth Baugh and Speaker of the House of Representatives Delroy Chuck.





JJ Grey by Darren Jackinsky
JJ Grey by Melanie Martinez
JJ Grey by Adam McCullough
JJ Grey by Darren Jackinsky/default/artist250.jpg)

