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JamBase Questionnaire: Tom Hamilton

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from The Old Ceremony.

It takes an uncommonly open-minded musician to really grok the internal logic of utterly modern, untz-savvy rock and classic singer-songwriter fare, but Tom Hamilton is an uncommonly gifted cat. As the guiding light behind Brothers Past and American Babies, Hamilton shows a range of gifts – warmly charming singer, sharp songwriter, memorable guitarist, keen eared producer – seeming utterly at home in the post-Radiohead atmosphere of Brothers Past as he is plying pop-rock veins akin to Paul Simon and Wilco in the Babies. Hamilton always seems game to explore, be it in his own projects or collaborating with the likes of Younger Brother or The Disco Biscuits, all of which seems to fuel more colors and textures in each new chapter of his evolution.

A new American Babies album arrives later this year, and Brothers Past is currently experiencing a resurgence with active gigging and the monthly Everything Must Go live download series (check it out here), which just issued its fourth volume, a swinging, switched-on post-Phish gig from 2004 (available for the catering economy price of just $5 bucks!) that includes a boss cover of The Cure’s “Fascination Street” and other softly mesmerizing moments. Listen to it here.

What stands out about Hamilton’s work, wherever it crops up, is a totally engaged, often joyful engagement with the world and his craft. His music sends out tendrils into the void and what connections it makes can’t be predicted, only that new ties will be formed. (Dennis Cook)

Brothers Past plays live throughout February and March. Find full tour dates here. A special hometown show is planned for March 26 at the TLA in Philadelphia, PA.

Here’s what Tom Hamilton had to say to our inquiries.

Brothers Past by Dave Vann

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Sincerity

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
The first cassette I bought was Ozzy Osbourne’s Blizzard of Oz and the first CD I purchased was Led Zeppelin III.

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
Arcade Fire’s The Suburbs

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
Funny you should ask! When I was in sixth grade I had to write an autobiography and I recently found it. Each page was about different assigned subjects with the last one asking to talk about what I wanted to do with my life. I said I wanted to be a musician. Not bad….

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
The small market gig where the stage is shitty, the sound system is questionable at best, and there doesn’t seem to be a chance in hell anyone will be there. T hen by 11 pm the club is packed and you’re covered in sweat with people 10-inches away from you going nuts.

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
I enjoy privacy.

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
Jerry Garcia’s guitar in 1973

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
The Beatles’ Revolver

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
Some sushi place by The Independent in San Francisco.

10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
Colorado

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
I have a particular brand of humor, some might say “inappropriate.” Any internal filter I may have been born with has been completely wiped out from being on the road.

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
How this is even still a question boggles my mind. The Beatles. It’s not even fair to ask. They’re mark on music is unparalleled, pushing the boundaries of every aspect of song craft, production and album art. They were responsible for new technologies in recording so George Martin and his engineers could keep up with their artistic needs. The Beatles inspired Bob Dylan to go electric, and they didn’t just change music but pop culture as a whole.

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
A drug dog piss itself at the Canadian border as it searched my van.


Brothers Past Dates :: Brothers Past Tour News :: Brothers Past Tour Concert Reviews

American Babies Tour Dates :: American Babies News :: American Babies Concert Reviews

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JamBase Questionnaire: The Old Ceremony

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from Roots of Creation.

Smart, full of different colors, hooky as hell, Chapel Hill, North Carolina’s The Old Ceremony are everything rock should be but usually isn’t. One picks up on the same vibe that infused late period Beatles and early Tom Waits, but tempered with a pleasantly jaundiced eye and a sonic range that touches on tango, folk, sophisticated jazz, Arabic tones, punk and more. What’s more impressive is how they harness this variety into frameworks that get the job done in just a few minutes.

The group has grown from strength to strength on each successive album, with their latest, Tender Age, coalescing their many charms into a series of super catchy cautionary tales for lovers and dreamers. The curveballs come fast on Tender Age, where seemingly dark titles like “Gun To My Head” and “Ruined My Plans” are snappy love songs, one tune is sung in Chinese, and the whole thing simmers down to a gently spiritual hum that sneaks up and leaves one reflective in the best of ways. (Dennis Cook)

The Old Ceremony plays next at the Motorco Music Hall Benefit for Central Park Charter School on Friday, January 28 in Durham, NC, then on Friday, February 4 in Raleigh, NC as part of the Kings WKNC Double Barrel Benefit. After that The Old Ceremony will open a string of dates for Rooney that will hit Philly, D.C. and more Find full tour dates here.

Here’s what TOC singer-songwriter-bandleader Django Haskins had to say to our inquiries.

The Old Ceremony

Instrument of choice: Picasso guitar, barroom piano
Nicknames: “Dave”

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Breaking some eggs. The older I get, the more impatient I am with safe choices.

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
The Cars’ Heartbeat City

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
The Walkmen album You and I. It’s the aural equivalent of oversaturated 35mm film: rich, almost rotten colors bleeding into each other nostalgically with occasional bursts of sad yellow light. I lived in that album for at least a year.

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
Elvis Presley. Or Humphrey Bogart. Or a Harlem Globetrotter. I was a mixed up kid.

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
The surprising one. We always enjoy playing together, but every so often there’ll be a show that shows all the signs of being a downer before we start, but explodes into overjoydom. On nights like that, I usually can’t stop grinning at everything that happens onstage.

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
I still have all my fingers.

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
Rocky beaches. I used to wander beaches in Maine and Nova Scotia in the summers, smashing rocks down on the ground hoping that one would split and reveal a geode. Never found one, but it got out a lot of my childhood angst.

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
Bowie’s Ziggy Stardust or Rum, Sodomy and the Lash by The Pogues

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
We’ve have some great ones. Off the top of my head, I’d say Vatan, a prix fixe Indian place on E. 37th St. in NYC.
10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
The frozen foods section. And house concerts.

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
Staring listlessly at trees flying by for hours on end. And my cowboy mouth.

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
The Beatles. They actually reinvented themselves over and over. The Stones, though I love them, found one good sound and stuck with it. I prefer variety, if I have to choose only one.

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
A long distance bus ride in China that was so crowded that the only place I could stand was on top of a basket of pig parts heading to market.

The Old Ceremony – Til My Voice Is Gone from Sam Griffith on Vimeo.

The Old CeremonyTour Dates :: The Old Ceremony Tour News :: The Old Ceremony Tour Concert Reviews

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JamBase Questionnaire: Roots of Creation

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from The Steepwater Band.

new live album

Southern New Hampshire isn’t the first spot folks start looking for high-octane modern reggae, which is too bad since Roots of Creation are one of the most exhilarating, rules breaking units blowing up right now. With of ample dousing of gnarly, rock-flavored guitars and a healthy blip logic that shows more than a passing familiarity with contemporary electronica, RoC join the shortlist of young bands – UK-based Soothsayers, New Zealand’s The Black Seeds and fellow U.S. acts John Brown’s Body and Groundation – moving reggae forward into the 21st century.

You can hear their highly engaging, forward pushing sound in action on RoC Live, Vol. 2 (released on October 26 on Harmonized Records). Culled from performances from 2009 and 2010, including songs recorded during sets at the Wormtown and Nateva Music Festivals, The Paradise Rock Club in Boston and more, Live Vol. 2, the band’s fourth album, features the engaging single “Policy, ” a bouncing cover of Talking Heads’ “This Must Be The Place” and a barnstorming finale take on Tom Petty’s “You Don’t Know How It Feels,” that reinvents the tune. Elsewhere, unpredictable, heavy duty instrumental “Mammoth” and originals “Dubby Conqueror” and “Searchin’” hint at good things to come from RoC. The album was mixed by engineer Pete Peloquin (Pixies, Dave Matthews, OAR) and co-mixed by the group’s live sound engineer Cooper Leafe, giving the set an immediacy and clarity that mixes the best traits of home listening and live sound.

Roots of Creation formed in 2000 while attending college together and began touring seriously in 2004. Today the band is comprised of original members Brett Wilson (lead vocals, guitar), Tal Pearson (keyboards) and Mike Chadinha (drums), and they are currently touring with bassist Brandon Downs and second guitarist Jay McGuinness. Based on the evidence of Live Vol. 2, this is a lethal live act with a promising drive and open minds. Can’t ask for more than that, particularly in a genre that often plays too heavily to tradition. In RoC’s hands, reggae is both relevant and exciting. (Dennis Cook)

Roots of Creation will play New Year’s Eve at Middle East Upstairs in Cambridge, MA, followed by a January 1st show at Crotched Mountain in Bennington, NH.

Here’s what Brett Wilson and Tal Pearson had to say to our inquiries.

Brett Wilson of RoC

Instrument(s) of choice:

Brett: Vocals / Guitar – DeArmond Starfire & Ibanez Artcore Hollowbody through a Fender Amp with lots of pedals

Tal: Keys. Right now having lots of fun with my Roland SH-201. It’s good for Whomping.

Nicknames:

Brett: “Bdubs” & “Wilson”

Tal: “The mantis”

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Brett: Inspiration, originality, chemistry, passion, pain, and my buddies Sauza and Mary Jane.

Tal: Inspiration. Vibes. A feeling in the room.

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
Brett: Ten cassette tapes for a penny from Columbia House. Favorite one was the Grateful Dead.

Tal: Dookie by Green Day

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
Brett: Rebelution’s “Feelin’ Alright”

Tal: Mumford and Sons’ Sigh No More

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
Brett: A movie reviewer or comic book illustrator.

Tal: Still not really sure.

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
Brett: When we turn a club into an arena and a late night festival slot into a house party.

Tal: When you can feel the venue shaking because everyone is dancing so much! And I love it when the crowd is responsive to different things, like the music changing or the lights getting intense.

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
Brett: Gingers DO have soul!

Tal: I really do have good taste in music!

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
Brett: Wookies WHOMPing

Tal: HUGE bass in the speakers!

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
Brett: Beck’s Midnight Vultures

Tal: Band of Horses’ Everything All The Time

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
Brett: Green Mountain College, all the vegetarian food and breakfast cereal you could ever want. Plus they recycle, compost, and are super nice.

Tal: Probably a giant breakfast somewhere with everything – eggs, bacon, French toast, sausage, home fries, soda, andÂ…American Cheese! Don’t remember where exactly.

10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
Brett: Smaller cities, festivals and colleges, especially in MI, NC, CO, NH, and the West Coast

Tal: Music festivals.

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
Brett: Pizza and a Smartphone addiction.

Tal: Sleeping til 1 pm.

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
Brett: The Stones. Beatles = great songs, but the Stones were bad ass and have raw energy – the epitome of rock ‘n’ roll. Plus, Mike Jagger kicked it with Peter Tosh and Keith Richard’s new roots reggae albums are great!

Tal: I’ve always gone with The Beatles on this one. I think their music is much more interesting, and that they had a greater influence on the sounds of rock and roll to come.

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
Brett: Tie between playing a guerilla set at Rothbury on shakedown to a literal sea of people and my picture in High Times – January 2011 issue on page 108 of the 420th issue – playing at Nateva with a SSDP shirt on.

Tal: The catering areas of big music festivals are always sort of surreal to me because you’re eating lunch next to people you’ve listened to and watched for a long time! I remember at Rothbury in 2009, casually eating some delicious food next to the guys from Soulive and then Willie Nelson happened to wander by. Surreal.


Roots of Creation Tour Dates :: Roots of Creation News :: Roots of Creation Concert Reviews

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JamBase Questionnaire: The Steepwater Band

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from Brian Haas.

The Steepwater Band by Daniel Bartel

Listening to Live At The Double Door (released October 19 on Diamond Day) it’s hard to fathom how Chicago’s The Steepwater Band isn’t a longtime staple on the festival and theatre circuit. Lean, menacing toughness infuses a mixture of electric blues, country flavors and gloriously faded denim classic rock, all delivered in a way that seizes one rather than wait for the listener to tiptoe in.

Anyone who’s ever swooned over North Mississippi Allstars, The Black Crowes, Buddy Guy, Hound Dog Taylor, Savoy Brown and other similar certified greats will feel their blood bubble happily as snarling opener “Indiana Line” leads into killer after killer captured at Chi-town’s finest lil’ juke joint, the Double Door, in a single night this past May. You can practically smell the sweat pouring down the walls as TSB drag blues rock back to the same craggy, longhaired territory where early Zeppelin had their way with it. However, unlike a lot of blues based outfits, the songwriting here is thoughtful and sharp enough to draw blood and the arrangements pop and swing with prizefighting intensity. Crank Live At The Double Door up LOUD and this shit will crawl right into the meat of you, and you won’t be sorry for the reminder of your basic incarnation and carnality – real music that stirs lizard brain level satisfaction while offering a tickle to the superego.

This live set follows a 12 year run for Jeff Massey (vocals, guitar), Tod Bowers (bass) and Joe Winters (drums) that’s only seen the band grow stronger every year, tightening and toning their music to produce a sound that’s utterly full yet utterly uncluttered. While it’s a treat to finally have a concert document that does the trio justice, there’s also a string of excellent studio work behind them. The latest single (which also features a bang-up cover of Tom Petty’s “Honey Bee”) is “The Stars Look Good Tonight,” a skipping corker that’s found some inroads on AOR radio, and it’s preceded by 2008′s Marc Ford produced Grace And Melody (JamBase review), where the maturity of TSB’s tunes and playing marked the full arrival of a great contemporary rock band whose roots proudly show but whose style echoes the blessed, befuzzed pounding of The Who and The Small Faces in their youthful prime. (Dennis Cook)

The Steepwater Band play tonight, December 10, at The Voodoo Lounge in Burbank, IL and next Thursday, December 16, at RIBCO in Rock Island, IL. TSB will also open for Robert Randolph & The Family Band and North Mississippi Allstars on New Year’s Eve at the House of Blues in Chicago.

Here’s what the Steepwater guys had to say to our inquiries.

Jeff Massey

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Tod Bowers: Mistakes

Joe Winters: A groove

Jeff Massey: Inspiration and Southern Comfort

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
Tod Bowers: Thriller (if I don’t count Star Wars soundtracks)

Joe Winters: Motely Crue’s Theatre of Pain

Jeff Massey: Led Zeppelin IV

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
Tod Bowers: The Black Keys’ Brothers

Joe Winters: Fistful of Mercy

Jeff Massey: Neil Young’s Le Noise. Just Neil and some angry fuzzed out guitar.

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
Tod Bowers: Football player

Joe Winters: A professional baseball player

Jeff Massey: Very tall

Tod Bowers

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
Tod Bowers: Loud

Joe Winters: A medium size, roots-y rock and roll joint

Jeff Massey: One outside with 70-degree temperatures, a kickin’ sound system and a mob of crazy rock fans!

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
Tod Bowers: I can make a mean batch of turkey tacos.

Joe Winters: I realize every day that love is the most important thing in the world.

Jeff Massey: I make some mean steamed salmon.

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
Tod Bowers: My tubes turning on and getting all toasty warm.

Joe Winters: Opening the first can of Diet Coke of the morning.

Jeff Massey: Semi-trucks passing by on the expressway. Ya know, the sound George Lucas used for the tie-fighters in the original Star Wars movie.

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
Tod Bowers: The Faces’ A Nod Is as Good as a WinkÂ…to a Blind Horse

Joe Winters: Muddy Waters’ Hard Again

Jeff Massey: Led Zeppelin’s Physical Graffiti

Joe Winters

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
Tod Bowers: Rib-eye steak dinner at the Dinosaur BBQ

Joe Winters: In Switzerland. Our tour manager’s parents made dinner for the band on a raclette grill. It was fantastic.

Jeff Massey: The giant hot dogs provided by Bon Jovi’s personal chef when we opened for them.

10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
Tod Bowers: Â…toxicated. Kidding, kind of. Actually, Spain has the coolest non-pretentious rock fans in the world, and they’re excited and full of energy.

Joe Winters: Spain

Jeff Massey: Spain. They have too much fun to be pretentious. They do not fear the act of applause.

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
Tod Bowers: Playing bass in a rock ‘n’ roll band.

Joe Winters: Having to ride “shotgun” all the time in the vehicle.

Jeff Massey: A heavy addiction to spicy Cheez-It’s.

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
Tod Bowers: Depends on the day, but usually the Stones.

Joe Winters: Stones, because of Charlie Watts. Enough said.

Jeff Massey: The Stones…because the Stones wrote “Can’t Ya Hear Me Knocking.”

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
Tod Bowers: It’s a long story but it involves a brightly lit room, a guitar icon and giant bolts. It’s not Marc.

Joe Winters: Spending four hours backstage with Eddie Van Halen in Detroit, MI in 2007. Not enough room here to even scratch the surface.

Jeff Massey: Eddie Van Halen doing pushups in front of me and then throwing his guitar across the room to prove its durability.

The Steepwater Band Tour Dates :: The Steepwater Band News :: The Steepwater Band Concert Reviews

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JamBase Questionnaire: Brian Haas

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from The New Up.

Odysseys are a tricky business. By nature, they are circuitous and fraught with sirens calling one towards the rocks and angry, jealous gods tossing stones in one’s pathway. The long, winding road of Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey handily reflects the mythological origins of their name, with myriad lineup changes and stylistic shifts over their many years. But one element remains constant – though perhaps bobbing his head wildly – and that’s Brian Haas, who is hands down one of the finest keyboardists of his generation, a player for the ages who continues the line begun by Earl Hines, Chick Corea and John Medeski.

Another facet of an odyssey is surprise around each turn, and one need only press play on Stay Gold, the latest JFJO studio joint (released June 21 on Royal Potato Family), and they’re whisked into brightly hued fresh spaces dappled with Chris Combs’ lap steel (and growing compositional acumen) and Haas’ ever-potent piano. The atmosphere of opener “The Sensation of Seeing Light” touches on Jacob Fred’s existing gift for capturing elemental qualities in song, but it’s followed by “Trampoline Phoenix,” which shifts and explodes in a patient, intense way for a vibe that’s genuinely new. This vibe – a little Okie, a little funky, a little classical – continues on the superb “Hanby’s Window,” which burns and jumps with giddy life. A lovely melodic sense infuses this set, with the entire quartet using conscious control and playing to the shared sensibilities of each piece. So, as usual, instrumental music is given a gift when JFJO gathers, particularly in the flowing, gorgeous piano work of Haas on Stay Gold.

Jacob Fred plays NYE in their native Tulsa, Oklahoma – tackling, perhaps literally, the music of Madonna, Beyonce and Lady Gaga – and then a special NYC Winger Jazz Fest gig in NYC at Le Poisson Rouge on January 8 (late night – starting at 1 am), but Mistah Haas squirreled away a few moments to answer our questions. (Dennis Cook)

Brian Haas by Josh Miller

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Risk

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
Thriller.

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
Wooden Arms by Patrick Watson

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
A rock star

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
A relaxed, peaceful, exuberant celebration

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
I stopped wishing a long time ago – I create.

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
Birds, the ocean, the wind in the trees and my breath.

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
John Coltrane’s A Love Supreme

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
A friend’s house

10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
Europe

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
An addiction to driving.

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
The Beatles. John Lennon.

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
A naked man wearing shoes run through an alley in West Hollywood and approach a black Chevy Suburban. An arm came out of the Suburban window and the naked man received fast pleasuring. This happened 100 feet away from a large group of us. The man said nothing. He ran off and the Chevy drove away. We cheered.

JFJO Tour Dates :: JFJO News :: JFJO Concert Reviews

JamBase | Tied To The Mast
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JamBase Questionnaire: The New Up

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from Cody Dickinson of Hill Country Revue.

The New Up by Dave Vann

Modernity is a mercurial thing to capture in music. While almost any band wants to be relevant, capturing the zeitgeist of an age is easier said than done. Better still is when a band is able to encapsulate the surface tensions of an age and then lay them over more timeless musculature. San Francisco’s The New Up do just this, building a new monster with parts borrowed from Radiohead, Interpol, Patti Smith Group, Metric, Bauhaus, the artier end of Duran Duran and other forward arching predecessors. But unlike many contemporaries, The New Up sheds the all-too-common black clad gloominess, excavating something shinier, a chunk of dark earth flecked with light – the musical equivalent of Jung’s Modern Man In Search of a Soul. While far from “sunshine and lollipops,” The New Up is both boldly honest and guardedly hopeful, a sound that holds out a sliver of faith for humanity despite the overwhelming evidence of our dumbness, smallness and intractable self-interest.

Gold (released September 28) is their startlingly appealing new full-length and the happy fruition of a sound that’s been evolving over the past few years, glimpsed in drabs on a series of fine EPs and even more so on live stages, where the band further differentiates itself from many other young acts by absolutely killing it in concert time & again. Rarely has spelunking the modern psyche been more seductive than Gold, which shimmies through emotional minefields, arms outstretched to anyone brave enough to love with the full force inside them. That notion – no half measures – is central to The New Up, who always seems to be reaching just a bit further in all regards. Gold – akin to antecedents like Faith No More’s Angel Dust, Tricky’s Maxinquaye and Cold War Kids’ Loyalty To Loyalty – asks that we look around and assess how we are with one another today. It’s an uncomfortable question but their clarity and rough-edged determination to find big truths and real comfort makes the inquiry well worth one’s time, particularly when the guitars echo with metallic depth and the groove lubricates one’s limbs delightfully. It also doesn’t hurt that they’ve got one of the finest lead singers in modern rock and a sonic curiosity that seems positively endless. (Dennis Cook)

The New Up performs at a special concert next Wednesday, December 1st, at San Francisco’s The Independent. The Silver Ball features some of the most smoking hot talent in the Bay Area right now, with the Up being joined by Bernadette, Crackerjack Highway and M80 Mailbox (Sean Leahy, Tea Leaf’s Josh Clark and ALO’s Dave Brogan). Get out your finest silver finery and pick up tickets here.

Here’s what ES Pitcher (lead vocals, guitar) and Noah Reid (lead guitar, vocals) had to say our inquiries.

The New Up by Josh Miller

ES Pitcher
Nicknames: Emily (ha), Emmers Man, Lady Emmers, the band calls me Chef A.D.D. (I burn stuff) and Narco (short for narcoleptic).

Instrument(s) of choice: The first instrument ever – the voice – then guitar. Would love to play bass but singing and playing bass does not come easy for me. I’ve read interviews with Sting and Kim Deal and they don’t see what the big whoop is. Have you heard Meshell Ndegeocello? I just found out that she is a bass player. I think you’re more or less born with that combination.

Noah Reid
Nicknames: Loofa Chops, Big Spoon

Instrument(s) of choice: Guitar

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Noah: A great melody. Even a great hook can get on your nerves if you hear it too often, but a great melody will inspire time and time again. Think “All I Need” from Radiohead’s In Rainbows versus The Knack’s “My Sharona.”

Emily: Feeling. Whether it is despair, joy, or anger, it has to come from the heart in order to really touch others.

Space. The music needs to breathe the way we do. When you become more conscious of your breath it truly helps to bring you to the present moment-music is at it’s best when it’s present in the moment. The beauty can often be found in the space between the notes.

Listening to each other (if you aren’t a solo artist). When performing as a group or ensemble, it’s imperative to connect and listen to each other in order to reach and connect with the audience.

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
Noah: I never had enough money to buy music when I was growing up, so I always got it second hand, which makes it kinda hard to remember the first album I actually bought, but I think it was Off the Wall by Michael Jackson.

Emily: The Doors’ 13. I bought it for my sister for Christmas but then I just listened to it all the time (that was part of my strategy). I think I was in 3rd grade. I have four older sisters and the one closest to me in age is five years older, so I was fortunate to be exposed to music that I still listen to today. I would listen to their albums (even though it pissed them off). They all had such great collections and being a crappy kid in grade school without any money, this came in pretty handy.

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
Noah: Broken Bells, but my wig is flipped so often that this changes day to day. Others that have recently flipped my skirt up are The Gorillaz new album, Crystal Skulls newest album (new to me), the newest Phoenix album and My Dick by Mickey Avalon.

Emily: “Strangers” by The Kinks. I had to choose “song” because I have recently fallen in love with this amazing piece of work. When I read the lyrics online while listening to it for the umpteenth time, my eyes filled with tears. What a beautiful song in every way.

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
Noah: An astronomer. I kind of still have that deep inside me somewhere, but there’s too much math involved.

Emily: A dancer, a Broadway musical star, a person that helped the homeless. I really liked the speech teacher in kindergarten that came into our classroom every few weeks. At the time, two guys that worked for my parent’s phone business taught piano and drumming in the back of the store. I clearly remember in kindergarten saying that I wanted to be a speech teacher AND a drummer.

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
Noah: A party, no question. There’s a much looser vibe and people are there because they want to have a good time first and listen to music second. There’s something sort of boring about playing a regular show where you stand there and watch the band. I want people to be incessantly partying while we’re performing as much as possible. I guess it makes me feel more of a kinship with the crowd. Festivals are great cause that’s basically what they are – one big party.

Emily: The one that is an “event” where the line between the audience and performers are blurred. I feel it transcends into more of a magical night when the audience feels just as much a part of it all, just as much of a contributor to the energy and creative spirit of the show.

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
Noah: I don’t fit into any category and I probably never will. I’m part artist, part business person, part freak, part workaholic and a wild range of other things.

Emily: That I live for a sense of humor and cannot stand pretentiousness, especially in any creative veinÂ…I work really, really hardÂ…I believe you can be successful in the music industry without being an asshole-in fact you can be an exceptional, giving person and an artistÂ…I put a lot of energy toward collaboration between artists – there could always be more of thatÂ…Nature and the universe blow me away.

The New Up by Dave Vann

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
Noah: The ocean or a river flowing. There’s something soothing about that. I like the sounds of millions of bugs in the middle of nowhere, too. It reminds you of how much is going on out there that is not related to what you’re doing, and it brings a nostalgia for the sense of freedom and expansiveness associated with places that usually have that sound. I’m pretty fond of the sound of a can of beer or soda opening as well. It sounds so refreshing.

Emily: A babbling brook and ocean waves, really any form of water in motion. It feels as though my eardrums are getting a massage.

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
Noah: Yoshimi by The Flaming Lips. I’m not even really the biggest Lips fan, but there’s a futuristic quality to that album that adds to the fact that it’s just a great album from cover to cover, and I’d love to make something that has all the right hooks and melodies but also sounds ahead of its time.

Emily: OK Computer by Radiohead, Abbey Road by The Beatles, Exile on Main Street by The Rolling Stones, Kind of Blue by Miles Davis, Dark Side of the Moon by Pink Floyd, Mutations by Beck, Songs in the Key of Life by Stevie Wonder.

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
Noah: There’s this restaurant in the heart of San Diego State University, I forget what it was called, but it was right at University and 30th (I think) and they had the most amazing vegetarian food. They used some kind of mushroom as a meat substitute and it was unbelievably good. They had a million vegetarian choices on the menu, they stayed open until 4 am and the service had tons of character and our server was truly one of a kind.

Emily: The park in Bend, Oregon. It was a perfectly crisp fall day and we were next to this river with a palette of changing leaves all around us. We cooked in the park and had this amazing meal with chard, sauteed onions and peppers, white beans and tofu. It was so fresh and warm at the same time, which is hard to get on the road. We try to cook as much as possible – it just feels better.

10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
Noah: The Midwest. People are mad about music there. I think it’s because they’re landlocked or just that it’s so cold, or maybe that they all drink too much, but they love their live music there.

Emily: San Francisco, Chicago, Portland, and Knoxville.

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
Noah: Smoking. It’s horrible, but smoking and being on the road are like peanut butter and jelly or butter and mashed potatoes. Make no mistake, though, there are more than enough habits to be picked up from being on the road all the time.

Emily: Not taking care of myself. You are eating out more and this country has a lot of crappy food. I’m also a vegetarian, so this is considered alien-like in certain parts of the U.S. It’s difficult to exercise because you are in the van a lot of the time getting to the next gig. I do move around a great deal when performing and try to leave everything on stage. I’m always drenched in sweat after every show, but it’s not as detoxifying as you might think because I definitely drink more beer when on the road.

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
Noah: The Beatles. I’ve had this debate several times. I think the songwriting of The Beatles is a little more diverse and cerebral, not to mention, they all had good voices and they were all good writers. Great harmonies compared to the Stones, too. Don’t get me wrong, though, I’m a huge Stones fan as well.

Emily: This is a really tough one for me because I am obsessed with both bands. I always say that The Beatles were playing when I came out of the womb. Their evolution as a band and their musicianship in general is unbelievable. Their earlier stuff (pre-drug years) was a bit more derivative. The “drug years” definitely became a genre within itself. The Beatles created their own sound and their roots grew into something that was completely their own.

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
Noah: Africa. The whole thing. It’s beyond crazy and indescribable. People live in ways that you can’t imagine and they are inextricably tied to the fate of the land. It’s like seeing what life was like 10,000 years ago.

Emily: Seeing a person right after he was shot. I lived in Chicago (my hometown) and I was coming home on the “L” (Chicago’s public trans) from a dance rehearsal. I was seeing this liquid from the platform all the way down the stairs when I got off the train. When I reached the sidewalk, I saw the man with only the outer edges of his shirt still white, the rest was drenched in blood. I realized then that the liquid was his blood. There was complete chaos surrounding him and for one second we made eye contact. I’ll never forget the look in his eyes – they looked like the eyes of a child. The police were rushing people out of the way, and my gut feeling is that he didn’t make it. I used to hear gunshots regularly when I lived in Chicago but that was the worst I actually saw. It’s a reminder of how lucky we are to live in a place that’s hasn’t been in a war for years on end.

The New Up Tour Dates :: The New Up News :: The New Up Concert Reviews

JamBase | Golden
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JamBase Questionnaire: Hill Country Revue

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from Charlie Hunter.

Southern music is a many-splendored thing. Its roots go so deep and long that it infuses every aspect of the culture, popular and otherwise. Encapsulating even a portion of that depth in a single album is a challenge, yet one the Hill Country Revue accomplishes handily on Zebra Ranch (released October 12 on Razor & Tie).

The group’s sophomore effort builds on the boffo, stripper-ready blues-rock of their debut, revealing a greater reach and wider range that taps into prime Dickey Betts style instrumentals (“Second Street”), 38 Special-esque pop savvy (“Idyll”) and expertly handled covers (Stones’ “Wild Horses’). The writing is shared around the very talented group in a really appealing way that shows off their varied interests, running hot ‘n’ smooth by turns, but all of it redolent of the South’s deep skill at soul, blues, country and pop forms. What’s striking is how well much of this could slot in on commercial radio if programmers had more guts. Nothing is loss in terms of the barroom energy of their debut, but the refinements are hooky as hell. Lead singer Daniel Robert Colburn shows off a cool, confident range, the production is bold and on-point, and there’s an intertwined quality to the instrumentation that sucks the listener quickly cut after cut. In a nutshell, this is just well made, broadly appealing music with a below the Mason Dixon accent, played with flowing, invigorating skill. (Dennis Cook)

Even though Cody Dickinson (guitar, drums, washboard, vocals) is incredibly busy with Hill Country Revue and his other affiliations (North Mississippi Allstars, The Word, Cody Dickinson Project, 30db, NMA DUO LUCO), he took time to answer our inquiries.

HCR’s Chris Chew & Cody Dickinson by Josh Miller

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Hard work and dedication – practicing, writing, rehearsing, performing, recording. Overnight success is a myth.

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
Thriller. As kids, my brother and I used to argue about who was cooler, Michael Jackson or Eddie Van Halen. We listened to 1984 constantly, which is an awesome record, no doubt. My point was that Eddie guested on “Beat It,” not the other way around. I win.

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
“Pull The Plug” by Dethklok. Metalocalypse has changed my guitar playing forever. I practice scales with a metronome everyday now, just hoping to one-day shred as hard as Squizgar. Brutal. I think I have discovered the bridge between death metal and jam music, and it could be dangerous. I’m afraid the government is watching me now.

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
A musician – careful what you wish for. The truth is music has always just made sense to me. I have made a living out of my art, which is a blessing. The music business is challenging. The secret is to stay active. Every successful musician I know is constantly busy with new projects, small gigs, huge gigs, whatever. I have other interests, but they are nothing more than hobbies.

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
Usually in the most unexpected place and at the strangest time. I like to play on stage first thing after taking a nap. Sometimes I get in this dreamy zone that seems to tap into my subconscious. I think it is easier to access while I am still half asleep. There is nothing like being fresh and well rested.

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
I love reading autobiographies. Biographies are lame – why read about someone, but not in their own words? It’s like smoking swag – life is too short.

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
My girlfriend’s laugh. It is intoxicating and contagious.

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
Electric Ladyland. I think I came damn close with Hill Country Revue’s new record Zebra Ranch. I feel like a gangsta rapper right now – shameless self promotion.

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
In Italy. Any meal in Italy is the best one.

10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
College towns. I love a good festival, but overall the kids are where it’s at.

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
Being wasted all the time. I regret every gig I ever played drunk and/or hungover. I wish I could take them back and refund every fan a buck off the ticket. I quit drinking over six months ago and I have never felt better. I wake up early and have energy in the morning. I even run a mile or two sometimes. It’s amazing. I forgot that isn’t normal to feel like crap everyday and cringe at sunlight.

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
The Stones – hands down. I watched the new Exile documentary recently. So goodÂ…Por que? What’d you call me?

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
Lightning striking a telephone pole, right in front of Kirk Smithhart and me, driving from the airport recently. I later broke a mirror on Friday the 13th. What’s next?

Hill Country Revue Tour Dates :: Hill Country Revue News :: Hill Country Revue Concert Reviews

JamBase | Heavy Rollin’
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JamBase Questionnaire: Charlie Hunter

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from Soulive.

Solo guitar performance is one of the oldest, grandest traditions in the blues and jazz fields. It’s a brave, exposed display of talent that works as an intimate conversation between the musician and listeners. It’s been 10 years since Charlie Hunter stripped down to his 7 & 8-string skivvies, and Public Domain (released September 14 on Reapandsow) finds the fleet-fingered picker tackling copyright free chestnuts like “Danny Boy,” “Ain’t We Got Fun” and “Alexander’s Ragtime Band” alongside more obscure offerings like “Low Bridge Song (15 Miles On The Erie Canal)” and “Cielito Lindo.” The dedication to “Blind Blake, Joseph Spence, Joe Pass, Ted Greene and Tuck Andress” goes a long way in capturing the vibe of Public Domain, with Andress’ feel coming through the strongest in the atmosphere and mercurial arrangements. “This album,” says Hunter, “is really about the songs and how rhythms work together. It’s not about anything flashy.” In the end, Public Domain is a modernist take on the music that folks once “enjoyed listening to on crank-up Victrolas and on tube radios many decades ago” (as per the intro inscription from Hunter’s grandfather Sidney Greenman). (Dennis Cook)

Here’s what Hunter had to say to our inquiries.

Charlie Hunter by Susan J. Weiand

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Un component sociale

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
Original Dixieland Jazz Band

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
Blind Blake

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
A woman

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
One with people!

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
I collect glass animals

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
Cat fights

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
Why Is There Air?

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
Some grandma’s home in Kiev

10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
Everywhere

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
Reading

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
Beatles…duh?!?!

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
Little Richard

Charlie Hunter Tour Dates :: Charlie Hunter News :: Charlie Hunter Concert Reviews

JamBase | Strummed
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JamBase Questionnaire: Soulive

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from Rubblebucket.

New Album

Jazz has been mulling over The Beatles since the Fab Four first started cranking out hits. But unlike other forms of pop opportunism in the genre, The Beatles provided sexy grist for robust jazz musicians, providing the launching pad for some of the most enjoyable excursions ever from George Benson, Booker T & The MGs, Jimmy Smith and others. Today, The Beatles are no less relevant or present, with their story filling up books, video games and last year’s remastered catalogue. So, the time seems ripe for Soulive, three of today’s shreddiest, most sophisticated players, to wrap their talents and fertile imaginations around what Paul, John, George and Ringo wrought.

Rubber Soulive (released September 14 on Soulive’s own Royal Family Records) is a total keeper on par with 60s gold like The Other Side of Abbey Road and McLemore Avenue. Like those landmark releases, Rubber Soulive finds Eric Krasno (guitar), Neal Evans (organ) and Alan Evans (drums) truly inhabiting the music, sounding equally at home on ballads “In My Life” and “Something” as they do on burners “Tax Man” and “Drive My Car.” Rather than tackle the Rubber Soul album as implied by the title, Soulive’s outing cherry picks Beatles tunes that fit the trio like a glove. The three longtime partners shine in this stripped down setting, too, showing off the chops and interplay that first brought them to folks’ attention a decade ago. Soulive are stunning collaborators able to incorporate vocals, horns and much more, but there’s something really satisfying about hearing the clean, crisp lines these three primo musicians draw together. Hearing them move inside songs that reach across our culture is to hear new passages and possibilities open up even as we get that sweet Beatles hit. Rubber Soulive is as fine a pairing of rock and jazz as anyone has ever produced, but one expects nothing less from top flight cats like Soulive. (Dennis Cook)

Soulive is currently in the midst of their fall Rubber Soulive Tour, which stops at the fan favorite Bear Creek Festival this Saturday before heading to Chicago on Friday, November 19. Find the full schedule here.

Here’s what Soulive had to say to our inquiries.

Neal Evans by Rob Chapman

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Eric Krasno: Vibe. Not to sound cheesy but the best music is made when the people making it are friends and respect one another.

Neal Evans: Great ideas and great expectations.

Alan Evans: Inspiration

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
Eric Krasno: I think it was Led Zeppelin 2. That band made me want to play music. Their albums completely blew me away as a kid; I would listen over and over.

Neal Evans: The Jackson 5′s Going Back to Indiana, on vinyl!

Alan Evans: First album I bought with my own money was Men At Work’s Business As Usual, and I still have it!

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
Eric Krasno: The song “Everlasting Light” by The Black Keys. I love the sound of their records – hard, gritty and his voice sounds great on that track.

Neal Evans: Veckatimest by Grizzly Bear. Absolutely one of the best albums I’ve ever heard from top to bottom.

Alan Evans: “Sin’s A Good Man’s Brother” by Grand Funk Railroad

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
Eric Krasno: A hybrid of Jimi Hendrix and Jimmy Page

Neal Evans: Probably a lot of things I don’t remember, but I did want to be a football player at one point before realizing my stature and pain threshold was much better suited for musicianship.

Alan Evans: Professional basketball player

Eric Krasno by Chad Smith

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
Eric Krasno: I love festivals like Bear Creek where I get to see other good music and hang with friends. It’s like a show and a reunion at the same time.

Neal Evans: A packed room of people that are hyped and ready to throw down. I feed off of the crowd’s energy; it’s the best performance fuel imaginable.

Alan Evans: When I’m not thinking, it’s just happening.

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
Eric Krasno: That I was actually a bass player before guitar (get me on the gig!!)

Neal Evans: I make a mean fish taco.

Alan Evans: I never really thought of myself as a drummer

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
Eric Krasno: A 60s Fender Precision Bass with old Flatwound strings on it.

Neal Evans: A great vintage drum set.

Alan Evans: My children laughing. Nothing tops that.

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
Eric Krasno: Stevie Wonder’s Fullfillingness’ First Finale

Neal Evans: Michael Jackson’s Off the Wall

Alan Evans: Marvin Gaye’s What’s Going On

Alan Evans by Rob Chapman

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
Eric Krasno: A restaurant on the top floor of my hotel overlooking Tokyo, Japan. We had our own personal chef. It was ridiculous!!!

Neal Evans: Hugo’s in Portland, Maine

Alan Evans: I can’t even come close to answering that one.

10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
Eric Krasno: Japan. I love the States but in Japan they really know how to listen and appreciate the dynamics in a performance. We get spoiled performing over there.

Neal Evans: Cities that I’m playing for the first time. I feel that I have to work harder to prove myself and express that what I’m trying to do musically is well worth the audience’s time and attention.

Alan Evans: NYC

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
Eric Krasno: Eating after the show. I’ve been recently cutting that out and exercising in the morning on tour, which makes a big difference.

Neal Evans: Eating food that I know is really unhealthy, especially late night after gigs.

Alan Evans: Honestly, I don’t have any bad habits from the road.

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
Eric Krasno: That’s a tough one. The Beatles are the best studio band ever in my opinion. The Stones are one of the best live bands and have been around for over 40 years. If I have to pick I’d have to say I’m more of a Beatles guy myself because I love them so much as songwriters.

Neal Evans: The Stones, reason: “I Love Rock N Roll.” -Alan Merrill

Alan Evans: Way too hard to answer. I’m not touching that one.

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
Neal Evans: When the second plane hit the second world trade center tower on September 11, 2001.

Alan Evans: Stevie Wonder standing right next to me on stage playing with us.

Soulive Tour Dates :: Soulive News :: Soulive Concert Reviews

JamBase | So Heavy
Go See Live Music!


JamBase Launches Android App

Go See Live Music… On The Go!


We are very excited to introduce the new JamBase Android App!

Modeled after our highly regarded iPhone
App
, JamBase’s Android App
enables all live music fans to quickly stay in tune with their favorite artists
while out on the town.


Find the JamBase Android App in the Android Market today!

Connect to The World’s Largest Concert Database
- Find upcoming shows in your area for all your favorite artists.
- Browse artist pages with full itinerary, photo & biographies.
- Tap into event pages with venue info, map, ticket links & artist lineup.
- Search by artist, venue or location & radius.

Find Music Playing Just Around the Corner
- Using the built-in GPS functionality, find all the shows near you.
- Traveling? Search for shows happening in your destination.

Personalize Your Showgoing Experience
- Register or login to your My JamBase account directly from the app.
- Track all your favorite artists and save shows to your My JamBase calendar.
- Quickly view all your tracked favorite artists and shows in your calendar.

Never Miss Another Show! Get it all now, FREE!

Find the JamBase Android App in the Android Market today!


The New Deal: Tour Diary The Shearer Report: Episode 2

JAMBASE’S EXCLUSIVE REPORT FROM THE ROAD CONTINUES

Drummer-filmmaker Darren Shearer of The New Deal returns with more tales from the band’s Ginormous Fall Tour (currently in progress – find dates here). This week’s installment of The Shearer Report offers snow-capped mountains, Colorado crowds, Brothers Past, and intro to The New Deal crew and Shearer’s first Phish show!

If you missed Episode 1 you can check it out here.

The New Deal performs next at the Old Rock House in St. Louis, MO tonight, October 13, and tomorrow at the Majestic Theatre in Madison, WI. Full tour schedule below.

The New Deal Tour Dates :: The New Deal News :: The New Deal Concert Reviews


JamBase Questionnaire: Rubblebucket

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from Big Gigantic.

New EP

Vermont-rooted, Brooklyn-based Rubblebucket is an astoundingly evolutionary creature. Since their 2008 debut, Rose’s Dream, they’ve toured aggressively, becoming one of the liveliest good times on the circuit while taking a progressive thirst into the studio. Rock-broad, jazz-smart and dub-wise, Rubblebucket’s music has whispers of Tom Tom Club, Nigerian funk, Lee Scratch Perry, Ethiopian soul, Roxy Music, Nyabinghi and The Police without kowtowing to any particular ancestor. Their sound sits along the same horizon line as Yeasayer, Akron/Family and Subtle, but unlike these peers they possess an imaginative use of horns and a lead singer, Kalmia Traver, whose tantalizing pipes soar somewhere between Dionne Warwick, Tina Weymouth and Portishead’s Beth Gibbons – a siren tug so potent you’d drink her bath water just to get a taste. Listening to Rubblebucket one feels as if they’re body surfing the edge of what’s possible in melodic yet actively experimental rock. And better still, the whole damn band can play the hell out of their respective instruments while sometimes literally leaping into an audience’s arms.

On October 19th Rubblebucket will release the Triangular Daisies EP , which includes three previously unreleased songs as well as three remastered tracks from the Came Out of a Lady Suite released this past spring. The EP is yet another wide stride forward for the band, revealing the flexibility of their material and the mindset behind it. The opening pair, the title cut and a sublime cover of The Beatles’ “Michelle,” is what radio would sound like if talent and real charm beat out the industry’s corporatized widget mentality. “Came Out Of A Lady,” a toasty little romp that whistles and skips in ways that make one glad they were born, follows, then a very different version of the same track and a fantastic remix of “Bikes” off their self-titled 2009 album that’ll have you reaching for your pocket calculator and itching to race along the autobahn. A smoky, pleasantly disorienting live version of “L’homme” captured at Higher Ground in April rounds out the set.

This is not a band that’s likely to stand still. Ever. No how. And that attitude and dedication vibrates outward from speakers and stages wherever their music plays. While still early in the game, gut instinct says Rubblebucket may one day create work as blindingly original as Radiohead’s Kid A, Tricky’s Maxinquaye or Peter Gabriel’s Security, and one doubts the intervening journey will be anything less than fascinating. (Dennis Cook)

Kicking off the Triangular Tour, Rubblebucket plays a pair of rare San Francisco shows this coming weekend – Friday, October 15 and Saturday, October 16 – at the Boom Boom Room. Afterwards, they return to the East Coast for a run that starts October 27th in Syracuse, NY and will take them into the Southeast in November, sharing stages with likeminded futurists Toubab Krewe and Pimps of Joytime on select dates. Find the full schedule here.

Here’s what trumpeter-singer Alex Toth had to say to our inquiries.

Rubblebucket – Alex in the bag, Kalmia Traver ensnared

Instrument(s) of choice: trumpet, floor tom, hyperkinetics
Nicknames: Toth, Al, GC (gargantuous cranium), boss

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Energy explosions inside the body and brain that make you want to scream. It can be helpful (in facilitating greatness) to shape those raw fiery impulses a bit.

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
Oasis’ Definitely Maybe or John Coltrane’s A Love Supreme. Pretty different ends of the spectrum. Ha ha!

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
Dirty Projectors’ new EP with Bjork, Mt. Wittenberg Orca. Holy shit! Deerhoof’s Offend Maggie got me really good, too.

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
In order from youngest to oldest: 1) a super hero that combined all the powers of Flash, Superman, the Ghostbusters (all of them at once) and Captain Planet. 2) A successful lawyer (I was really into Matlock). 3) A rock star. 4) Charlie Parker on the trumpet. The trumpeter thing is out the window to a certain extent, and now I just want to make awesome music.

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
A big awesome festival with lots of great bands. I love to be around great music and musicians. The hang can be so inspiring/uplifiting.

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
I think dub reggae is like air in its importance. I’m a lover AND a fighter. There’s a third thing but you said one thing, so I’ll stop at two.

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
Large droning vacuum/ventilation units. And wind chimes. When I’m walking down a street and I hear either of those things I instantly melt and get put into a space. I love big drone sounds in general.

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
Gosh, that’s tough. Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band (The Beatles) and/or Bitches Brew (Miles Davis) come to mind, but both for VERY different reasons. Other candidates: Physical Graffiti (Led Zeppelin), Odelay (Beck), Electric Bath (Don Ellis Orchestra), Pet Sounds (Beach Boys), Remain in Light (Talking Heads) or Thriller (Michael Jackson). After Bathing At Baxter’s (Jefferson Airplane) was big for me at one point in my life.

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
A condo in Idaho. We got fresh fish and greens and potatoes and rice and cooked the most fantastic ‘homemade’ tour meal ever. Since we tour with nine people on the road, to save money we used to bring a Coleman stove and make our own meals at the venue. I remember a particularly good one we made at Quixote’s in Denver. Sooooo much healthier and more delicious than most venue food (no offense).

10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
Costume. The coolest, most raging, interactive, crowd-surfingest audiences seem to always have people in costume in their midst – not the whole audience but just a person here or there. A sprinkling of costumed people makes for a vibrant, uninhibited, amazing time it seems.

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
Going to bed really, really late and drinking every night. But I kicked the drinking so, hmmm, maybe not flossing or not ironing my clothes. I often show up late to meetings, even if it’s just a couple minutes. Did the road do that?

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
The Beatles. Way more versatile and less easy to put in a box.

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
A moonrise. A large, orange, beautiful, quick moonrise on the horizon. Either that or two large busses half hanging off a highway overpass in Seattle during an ice storm in the winter of 2008 when I was on tour with John Brown’s Body. Freaky.

Rubblebucket Tour Dates :: Rubblebucket News :: Rubblebucket Concert Reviews

JamBase | New Born
Go See Live Music!


JamBase Questionnaire: Big Gigantic

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from Trampled By
Turtles
.

There’s an undeniable warmth to Big
Gigantic
that sits in happy contrast to electronica’s general machined coolness. While one has no
problem imagining some PYT gettin’ limber under strobe lights to bangers like “Step Up” or “Breaking Point” off BG’s
bumptious new joint A Place Behind The Moon (released September 1 on 1320 Records),
there’s something pleasantly human inside their music, a heartbeat and breath often expressed through Dominic
Lalli’s
sinewy saxophone, which recalls David Sanborn at his gliding, melodic best. Joined by drummer
Jeremy Salken, the pair is awash in analog sequencers and other technological touches that they coat with
muscle and sweat, the neon-edged chrome & glass feel enlivened by their strong playing and compositional smarts.
Big Gigantic snares the energy of a late-night club and moves it into a bright dawn, stars giving way to sunrise,
champagne reverie infused with coffee consciousness. (Dennis Cook)

Big Gigantic kicks off a fall tour of the South and Midwest on October 19. Find full dates here.

Here’s what Dominic had to say to our inquiries.

Big
Gigantic

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Listening. When everyone is listening, the magic starts happening.

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
I’m pretty sure it was either The Beastie Boys’ License To Ill or Run DMC’s Raising Hell.

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
Miike Snow. Their self-titled release
is insane and has a really great mix of pop and electronic music. I feel like there is something for everyone on that
album. It’s just plain, good music.

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
A pro basketball player. I played basketball growing up and all throughout high school. I wasn’t really that greatÂ…
ha ha.

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
A gig with lots of people. The more people, the more energy being thrown around out there. It transfers back and
forth, on and off the stage. It’s really an incredible feeling.

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
I’m a huge straight ahead jazz fan. I listen to quite a bit of John Coltrane, Wayne Shorter, Herbie Hancock, Branford
Marsalis, Brad Meldau, MilesÂ…That music really influences all the different projects I’m involved with and all the
different music I make. I’m always trying to dig deep into my musical roots.

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
Something totally new, something fresh, that really turns heads.

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
Three different albums in different genres: Branford Marsalis’ Requiem, Radiohead’s Kid A and Lil’
Wayne’s Tha Carter IIII.

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
Trio at The Four Seasons in Austin, TX. Amazing!

10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
Festivals. That’s where everyone comes to throw it down hard.

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
Not eating right. It’s hard to eat solid meals out there. Ya gotta kinda eat when you can, wherever you can.

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
The Beatles. Their music speaks to me in so many ways and they really just pushed the envelope in terms of music
and popular music. Their music is timeless.

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
Tons of naked people running around with fire at the late night at the Oregon Country Fair. Wow!!!

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

JamBase | Embiggened
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JamBase Questionnaire: Trampled By Turtles

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from Greensky Bluegrass.

Blinding fast or molasses slow, Minnesota’s Trampled By Turtles are resoundingly convincing. While lazy listeners might categorize them as simply a nu-grass or speedgrass, what truly differentiates this ambitious, deadly serious acoustic quintet from their peers – and hints that TBT might be next in line for the kind of enduring fan bases that have sustained Leftover Salmon and Yonder Mountain String Band – is the fine bone structure beneath the flying fingers and ringing strings.

Primary songwriter and guitarist Dave Simonett is serious business, penning material born of quality rumination and a real dedication to crafting music that reaches into deep water where so many stick to the shallows. Spend a little time with Simonett and you’ll see him studying every last thing around him, digesting it and logging lines for future stanzas. When he talks to you there’s a similar focus and intensity, lights flashing behind his bright eyes but pausing momentarily before he offers up what he’s thinking, and then only in small bursts, like he’s saving the good stuff for his songs. Call it considered wisdom and it’s all over Trampled By Turtles’ music, which breathes and runs with powerful, sympathetic musicianship that one encounters at every show and on the group’s excellent 2010 release Palomino (JamBase review). But, as fine and promising as this band is right now, it feels like they’re just getting started. (Dennis Cook)

Trampled By Turtles is currently on the road with the Infamous Stringdusters on the “Fly Palomino Tour,” but will be playing some headlining shows this weekend. Find full dates here.

Here’s what Simonett had to say to our inquiries.

Dave Simonett (right) with TBT

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Honesty

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
Metallica’s self-titled “black” album

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
Neko Case’s Middle Cyclone

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
Musician

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
Opening for a band I love.

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
Not applicable

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
A river

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
Wilco’s Yankee Hotel Foxtrot

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
Citizen Kane’s in St. Louis

10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
Minnesota

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
Record store addiction

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
For me it’s the Stones. I love how raw and brilliant they are, and to me they epitomize rock ‘n’ roll

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
Our crowd breaking through a line of police at a Minnesota State Fair show.

Greensky Bluegrass Tour Dates :: Greensky Bluegrass News :: Greensky Bluegrass Concert Reviews

JamBase | Hard-Shelled
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JamBase Questionnaire: Greensky Bluegrass

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from Ryan Montbleau
Band
.

Without a lot of fanfare – as is the way of guys comfortable picking in parking lots, open fields and the back of
overstuffed vans – Greensky
Bluegrass
have released a strong contender for String Band Album of the Year. All Access, Vol. 1 (released May 4) is as pure
and satisfying an example of quality songwriting, strong, interlocking musicianship and savvy cover selection as any
group of pickers are likely produce in 2010.

Captured in a single night last Thanksgiving weekend at The Riviera Theatre in Three Rivers, Michigan, All
Access, Vol. 1
flows like a delighted river over the listener, the immediacy of the moment accentuated by the
intimacy of the unfussy production, which makes one feel present enough to inspire no small amount of involuntary
shufflin’ & swayin’. Their picks from others’ songbooks are choice – Dylan’s “When I Paint My Masterpiece,” The
Beatles’ “A Day In The Life,” Pink Floyd’s “Time > Breathe Reprise,” Bruce Hornsby’s “King of the Hill,” Townes Van
Zandt’s “White Freight Liner Blues” – but what really sticks are the fabulously sculpted, sharply honest originals, many
tinged with a shadowy truthfulness that sets them apart from many in the too-damn-chipper acoustic crowd. The
fast ones fly wonderfully but it’s when Greensky nestles into a ballad or exploratory simmer that one hears all their
carefully honed strengths emerge. And numbers like “Just To Lie,” “200 Miles From Montana,” “Nine Days,”
“Reverend” and lengthy but never dull ramble “All Four” more than hold their own against the top gun cover material,
and their vocal blend cheerfully suggests a streamlined descendent of The Band’s rough ‘n’ ready rightness. All
Access, Vol. 1
is the ideal handshake for listeners yet to explore this reliably excellent, hard working string
band. (Dennis Cook)

Greensky Bluegrass returns to the road in October, starting with a headlining performance at the Fox Theatre in
Boulder, CO on October 13, followed by more Colorado dates (10/14-10-16) and then onto Arizona, California,
Oregon, Washington and back towards Midwest. Find full tour dates here.

Here’s what Paul Hoffman, Greensky Bluegrass’ mandolinist, vocalist and lead songwriter, had to say to our
inquiries.

Paul Hoffman by Eric Kinnally

Instrument of choice: Mandolin, words
Nicknames: Noodle, Big City, phoffman

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Inspiration. From other music. From Pain. From the audience.

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
HmmÂ…probably a tape. Simpsons Sing the Blues? New Kids on the Block? Beatles? The Beatles were
probably more inspiration than the others, but who didn’t want to be bad ass like Bart? I even wore a spike for
awhile.

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
Not an album or song, but the David
Rawlings Machine
in concert totally flipped me. Love the way he phrases songs and builds solos. Check
out the free
podcast
from NPR’s Tiny Desk. Maybe Eisenhower by The Slip, too. The song arrangements are
sweet and the lyrics are real unique.

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
Who wants to grow up? A screen actor, maybe, Big Hollywood or something. Don’t think that would work now. I
really just wanted to get paid to entertain. If only I’d known. My dad always says, “A big lottery winner.” I like that,
too. Now sometimes I say, “Retired and free.”

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
The fun ones. Aren’t they all? Sort of. Sometimes there’s those factors though – great and less than great; long
drive; no fans; no dinner. The gigs that surprise me are my favorite sorts of gigs, like when we threw an
unannounced show at home and a great crowd showed up. Or when we drove from San Fran to San Diego and 13
hours later we loaded into the packed club while the opener was finishing. We just decided
to go for it and it worked out. All good at 10 am? Whew. Or maybe 6am?

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
That I’m not afraid of sentence fragments. If they’re reading. Still. The people. After all this.

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
Music. Is this a trick question? And feedback, of course. Why else would I keep trying to use delay with distortion
and an envelope filter?

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
I can. The people I admire are out of reach to me. Not in a bleak way. Records are timeless and unique in a way
that I admire more than the music itself. The idea of documenting music in a breath of its development, it’s like a
musician’s truest commitment. So, I hope mine can be as genuine as possible.

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
Until recently, The Red Iguana has been a tour favorite. Salt Lake City mole. I know people who take it home on dry
ice. Recently, we were able to eat at home on tour. Weird, right? Food Dance in Kalamazoo, MI has got to be my
new favorite – breakfast lunch or dinner – although, SLC, if you’re reading, have me back. I need some mole!

10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
The most unexpected places. I wouldn’t alienate any of our dedicated fans, who are spread all over, by being
specific. And I couldn’t. The places where I had no idea it would go off are always the coolest. Those surprise gigs.
Something so organic about them. No expectations.

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
What was your name again?

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
The Beatles all the way. I was raised that way and I’m backing it fully now. Guess I couldn’t get into the Stones’
songs. Being named after Paul didn’t hurt.

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
Ughh? Really? Who is reading this?

Greensky Bluegrass Tour
Dates
:: Greensky Bluegrass
News
:: Greensky Bluegrass
Concert Reviews

JamBase | Better Off
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JamBase Questionnaire: Ryan Montbleau Band

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from Spiritual Rez.

Being effortlessly charming and pumping out highly infectious music with a quickness seems to come easy to the Ryan Montbleau Band. For this bunch “pop” isn’t an ugly word. Montbleau’s tunes possess the sort of wide reach that lodges records in car stereos, video countdowns and beloved dorm room stashes. But for all the readily likeable traits, Montbleau’s music possesses an undisguised lustiness and clever streak that recall early Randy Newman, which hints that we’re only in the early stages of what he and his band will become.

Press play on Heavy On The Vine (released September 21) and the hooks just keep on coming, and in a wide variety of styles – pure radio fare, blue-eyed reggae, crooner territory and folksy shuffles – each delivered credibly. The whole band plays with lovely texture and the songs are ripe for live expansion, something the many miles already behind RMB have well prepared them to do. Martin Sexton‘s production accents a warm, group sound but still makes sure to let Montbleau’s crush-ready pipes stand out on every track. His voice marries Jack Johnson’s slacker drawl to Stevie Wonder’s brightness and dexterous way with a melody, and the whole album seems just one good soundtrack placement away from blowing up. Big.

In the meantime, Montbleau and his merry band will keep working clubs and theatres nationwide, as well as backing up Sexton from time to time. This weekend they’ll be in Albany, NY (9/24), Rochester, NY (9/25) and Ithaca, NY (9/26). For full tour schedule pop over here. (Dennis Cook)

Here’s what Ryan had to say to our inquiries.

Ryan Montbleau Band

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Listening. Actually, it never happens without listening.

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
Huey Lewis and the News’ Sports.

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
“Sissyfuss” by Surprise Me Mr. Davis

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
A pro baseball player

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
A quiet, listening environment, although I enjoy the others, too.

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
I just want to get better.

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
The word “book”

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
The Beatles’ White Album

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
Tim Hardiman’s catering for us in Utica, NY

10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
The smallest towns, but any show can be great; you just never know.

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
Drinking more and sleeping later

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
The Beatles. I just don’t think the Stones can even touch the amount of great songs that The Beatles wrote.

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
I don’t knowÂ…Davy Jones from The Monkees at one of our gigs in Knoxville, TN? That’s a tough one.

Ryan Montbleau Band Tour Dates :: Ryan Montbleau Band News :: Ryan Montbleau Band Concert Reviews

JamBase | Straw In The Wind
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Tea Leaf Green Webcast Today at JamBase

JOIN US FOR TEA TIME THIS AFTERNOON

San Francisco’s own Tea Leaf
Green
will be performing a very intimate acoustic webcast today, Wednesday
September 22, live from the
JamBase offices. Tune in around 4:30pm PT at http://www.jambase.com/live to watch the
performance and chat along
with other viewers.

Keyboardist Trevor
Garrod

will also be performing solo opening for Nathan Moore tonight at Ashkenaz in Berkeley, CA, and again on
Sunday, September 26,
at Cafe Du Nord in San Francisco, where Garrod will be celebrating the release of his new
solo album, Miss
Fortune
with Moore and Big
Light
‘s Fred Torphy opening for him. Find out more about this release at trevorgarrod.com.

Tea Leaf Green is preparing to embark on a West Coast tour this week that will take them
from Northern to Southern
California and into Arizona and Las Vegas.

Tea Leaf Green Tour Dates

09/23 – Petaluma, CA – Mystic Theatre
09/24 – Chico, CA – El Rey Theatre
09/25 – Santa Cruz, CA – Moe’s Alley
09/28 – Sacramento, CA – Harlow’s
09/29 – Visalia, CA – Cellar Door
10/01 – San Diego, CA – Sound Wave – Free Show
10/02 – Los Angeles, CA – Troubadour
10/03 – Hermosa Beach, CA – Saint Rocke
10/06 – Las Vegas, NV – Hard Rock Cafe (w/ Cornmeal)
10/07 – Phoenix, AZ – Compound Grill
10/08 – Tucson, AZ – Plush
10/09 – Flagstaff, AZ – Green Room

A couple sips to quench y’all till this afternoonÂ…

Tea Leaf Green Tour
Dates
:: Tea Leaf Green News
:: Tea Leaf Green Concert
Reviews


JamBase Questionnaire: Spiritual Rez

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from Cochemea Gastelum.

new album

“There’s no need for introduction/ To make your body move is our function.” This inviting ‘handshake’ open “Rollin’ Dutches,” just one of numerous infectious modern reggae numbers on Nexus, the latest release from Boston-based Spiritual Rez.

The Rez sing sweet songs of lioness ladies and groovy ganja but skirt the jokiness that so often infects lighter-spirited reggae. This band possesses an abundantly inviting energy that taps into the brighter side of Bob & Ziggy Marley but also more soul & horn-infused progenitors like Johnny Nash with significant rock crunch in spots. As evidenced by Nexus, they excel at easy to like, positivity infused music, and they’ve been sharpening their skills on the touring circuit for half a decade, laying down roots everywhere they can so they might grow as strong and free as the Spaceship Tree that adorns the cover of their latest release. (Dennis Cook)

The band is on tour now and plays tonight, September 10, at Funk N Waffles in Syracuse, NY, then tomorrow at the Backwoods Pond Fest tomorrow. Next week they are at the Stone Church in Newmarket, NH on Thursday, September 16, and The Paradise in Boston with Bernie Worrell on Friday, September 17. Find full tour dates here.

Spiritual Rez is currently in competition for Jam Cruise 9′s “Vote To The Boat” contest. You can vote for them here until September 20.

Here’s what Spiritual Rez drummer Ian Miller had to say to our inquiries.

Spiritual Rez

Instrument of choice: Orange Country drums & percussion
Nickname: “Meat”

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Fulfilling live energy. Too often I see groups on stage not getting the crowd off simply because they aren’t getting themselves off..

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
Bloodhound Gang’s One Fierce Beer Coaster, shortly followed by Foo Fighters’ The Colour and Shape.

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
Easy Star All-Stars’ cover album Radiodread – ha ha ha, I’ve been jamming that pretty constantly.

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
My first answer was fireman but that moved quickly to astronaut.

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
One that involves all-ages. The whole band loves playing for children – goes back to question 1. Fulfilling. Energy. AWESOME!

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
Come say hi and find out in person!

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
The huge flapping tarp outside our apartment’s window.

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
Pink Floyd. In my opinion it took them a few tries to get there, but damn could they meld.

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
Rhumb Lines in St. John, U.S. Virgin Islands. They really know how to treat the band there. We’ve played there three springs running and I believe this year it was the surf & turf for me – nothing but the most premium!

10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
Festivals, usually. Everyone is there for the music! Well, most everyone.

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
Diet. Diet. Diet. Diet.

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
The Beatles. They just wrote better albums. Works as answer for question 8 as well.

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
The storm cell in Kansas, which almost drove our van and trailer off the freeway with a small tornado. That sky had life and it was attempting to feast upon us! Experience + Beauty = 100 points.

Spiritual Rez Tour Dates :: Spiritual Rez News :: Spiritual Rez Concert Reviews

JamBase | Sippy
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JamBase Questionnaire: Cochemea Gastelum

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from These United States.

Whether searing the fat off jam music in Robert Walter’s 20th Congress, lighting up a Broadway stage as part of the Fela! band, keeping soul music soulful with Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings, getting deep with Archie Shepp or blazing a session with the likes of Amy Winehouse and Paul Simon, NYC fixture Cochemea Gastelum is the living embodiment of “coming correct.” His crisp, lethal, adventurous sax and flute playing find the sweet spot in whatever type of music he’s involved in, and unlike many horn players, he never overstays his welcome, playing just what’s needed and leaving listeners hungry for more. Though clearly well grounded in the work of his predecessors, Gastelum synthesizes honking 50s big band rumble, 60s modal moves, 70s electricity, New Orleans slink and more in a way that simply announces a man in total command of his instrument, free of other’s fingerprints and ready to engage in whatever comes his way.

Gastelum’s long-awaited debut as bandleader, The Electric Sound of Johnny Arrow (released July 20 via MOWO! Inc.), unfurls an intoxicating array of sounds, tapping into On The Corner Miles-isms, vintage Fania salsoul, warm Brecker Brothers-esque excursions, the Latin pop of War and El Chicano, and the charged, forward thinking feel of late 60s/early 70s jazz, particularly the electric sax work of Eddie Harris and the impossible-to-place groove of Phil Woods’ European Rhythm Machine. Co-produced by Gastelum and Mocean Worker, the album rolls along layered percussion and a controlled, powered-up energy – a flowing inducement to move, to swing, to sway, aided by guest turns from Joe Russo, Brian Jordan, Zak Najor, Chris Stillwell and more.

It’s bloody sexy music, and executed so smoothly that it’s only upon further inspection that one realizes how much is actually going on. Yet, The Electric Sound of Johnny Arrow never feels overstuffed or confusingly diverse. Like Gastelum’s playing, it is exactly what it needs to be and a fantastic snapshot of a rich musical mind in full flight. (Dennis Cook)

Here’s what Gastelum had to say to our inquiries.

Cochemea Gastelum by Greg Aiello

Nickname: “Cheme” pronounced /tchem-ay/

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Listening, letting go, and in the immortal words of Fred Wesley, playing like you don’t give a fuck.

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
Charlie Parker’s “Hot House

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
Orchestre Poly-Rythmo De Contou’s “Echos Hypnotiques”

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
A drummer

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
A sweaty dance party

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
There are moments when I may seem detached or distant, but I just like to be quiet and watch sometimes.

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
The ocean

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
Sly & The Family Stone’s There’s A Riot Going On

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
Au Virage Lepic in Paris

10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
Unexpected places

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
Eating late night junk food!

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
Hmmm, probably The Beatles. My mom used to play their records all the time growing up, and I always seem to go back to their songs for some inspirado. Been on a big Stones kick lately, though.

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
Ornette Coleman having a jam session in his apartment.

Cheme will perform perform the entire solo album in its entirety on September 10th in New York City at 92Y Tribeca with ten piece band, including members of Antibalas and Budos Band.

Cochemea Gastelum Tour Dates :: Cochemea Gastelum News :: Cochemea Gastelum Concert Reviews

JamBase | Dark City
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JamBase Questionnaire: These United States

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from Dead Confederate.

Mortality is a simple fact of life. If you’re reading this you will be dust one day, and anything that makes us acutely aware of the preciousness of each day is a gift, a solid for humanity that chips away at waste, worry and all the other ways we diminish our time. A near-death experience forms the undertow of These United States‘s fourth offering, What Lasts (released July 20 on United Interests), but the song cycle claws towards the light, breaking surfaces and pushing against what drives us downward. The urgency of things rides in the bloodstream of TUS’ latest, which also finds them refining their Americana informed jangle, putting polish in the right places and leaving the rough patches where they should to be. As with earlier efforts, What Lasts feels vaguely torn from its creators, music that needs to be made more than just another record because someone could. What’s cool is how TUS makes this spongy ontology release all the spring and moisture inside. The subject matter might be heavy but they find what skip and hop there is, shaking loose a crooked legged dance that helps one duck the Grim Reaper’s scythe as they limbo towards tomorrow’s uncertainties, finding occasional grace and a lil’ affection along the way. (Dennis Cook)

Here’s what These United States’ singer-songwriter Jesse Elliott had to say to our inquiries.

TUS’ Jesse Elliott

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Timing

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
MC Hammer’s 2 Legit 2 Quit on cassette tape.

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
Cotton JonesTall Hours in the Glowstream

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
A roller coaster engineer and/or John Paxson

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
One I see from the audience.

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
My genuine love of words, not just verbal cleverness.

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
Water, any form, any speed, anywhere.

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
An M.C. Escher.

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
The Friendly Toast in Portsmouth, New Hampshire

10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
Young kids. And Denver.

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
Being on the road all the time.

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
The Beatles, for going further.

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
See it here

The Important Thing from These United States on Vimeo.

These United States Tour Dates :: These United States News :: These United States Concert Reviews

JamBase | Waving Not Drowning
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