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SFJAZZ Announces Spring Season 2011 Lineup

SPRING CONCERT SERIES RUNS FEB. 10 – JUNE. 25


Tony Bennett

Randall Kline, the Executive Artistic Director of SFJAZZ, the leading nonprofit jazz organization on the West Coast and the
presenter of the San Francisco Jazz Festival, today announced the complete artist lineup for the 12th Annual SFJAZZ
Spring Season. The unique and spectacular five-month-long concert series begins on February 10 and will continue
through June 25. The season will present over forty concerts with the most illustrious names in jazz, world and
related music.


TONY BENNETT
A NIGHT IN TREME

YOUSSOU N’DOUR & ANGELIQUE KIDJO

RANDY NEWMAN
BUDDY GUY

RICKIE LEE JONES

RAVI SHANKAR
STEVE TYRELL
HUGH MASEKELA

MAX RAABE & PALAST ORCHESTER

SFJAZZ COLLECTIVE
NIKKI YANOFSKY
MARCUS ROBERTS

DR. LONNIE SMITH
CeU

JAKE SHIMABUKURO

JOHN SCOFIELD

PATRICIA BARBER

PRESERVATION HALL JAZZ BAND
IRMA THOMAS

ELLIS MARSALIS
MARC RIBOT

LEE RITENOUR

AMBROSE AKINMUSIRE
KENNY WERNER
ELIANE ELIAS

MADELEINE PEYROUX


Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey: Three New Live Clips

THE ODYSSEY CONTINUES

Lovers of instrumental gold with a jazz soul know that Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey is a great fount of such richness. The relatively new incarnation of the quartet with double bassist Jeff Harshbarger joining Brian Haas (keys), Josh Raymer (drums) and Chris Combs (lap steel) earlier this year. The foursome has been busy building their road legs and diving into a new batch of exciting studio recordings since debuting Ludwig! this past June (JamBase review).

JFJO’s recent West Coast Tour found them recording a new album direct to lathe for a vinyl release coming next April featuring two new songs and two improvs. Next January recording will occur in the band’s native Tulsa, OK on Chris Comb’s Race Riot Suite at the legendary Church Studios with special guests Jeff Coffin, Steven Bernstein, Peter Apfelbaum and Mark Southerland. That release is due out next fall.

Jacob Fred will perform a very special New Year’s Eve show at Cain’s Ballroom in Tulsa, where they will deconstruct and Fred-i-fy the music of Lady Gaga, Beyonce and Madonna. One hopes tape will be running so those of us not fortunate enough to be in Oklahoma at the dawn of 2011 will get to experience this splendid freak show after the fact. Tickets for the NYE show are available here.

In the meantime, the band offers us a trio of fine live offerings, starting with a new B.Haas song entitled “Myers Flat to Miranda,” which is a stretch of the Avenue of the Giants in Northern California.

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


The Bad Plus: Tour & NYE Run

SIX NIGHTS AT THE VILLAGE VANGUARD IN NYC


The Bad Plus

The Bad Plus have
announced their U.S. tour in support of Never Stop, their new release on eOne Music. The tour
extends from December 2 through January 9, 2011 and includes what has become a yearly tradition: a six night New
Year’s Eve run at New York City’s fabled Village Vanguard. Featured stops along the way include Los Angeles, San
Francisco, Seattle, Chicago, Denver, Minneapolis, San Diego and St. Louis.

The Bad Plus Tour Dates:

12/2 – St. Cecilia Music Society – Grand Rapids, MI
12/4 – Herbst Theatre – San Francisco, CA
12/6 – Kuumbwa Jazz Center – Santa Cruz, CA

12/8 – Anthology Restaurant – San Diego, CA
12/9 – The Mint – Los Angeles, CA
12/10 – The Mint – Los Angeles, CA
12/11 – Dazzle – Denver, CO
12/12 – Dazzle – Denver, CO

12/14 – Dimitriou’s Jazz Alley – Seattle, WA
12/15 – Dimitriou’s Jazz Alley – Seattle, WA
12/16 – Jazz Showcase – Chicago, IL
12/17 – Jazz Showcase – Chicago, IL
12/18 – Jazz Showcase – Chicago, IL
12/19 – Jazz Showcase – Chicago, IL
12/25 – Dakota Jazz Club – Minneapolis, MN

12/26 – Dakota Jazz Club – Minneapolis, MN

12/27 – Dakota Jazz Club – Minneapolis, MN
12/28 – Village Vanguard – New York, NY
12/29 – Village Vanguard – New York, NY
12/30 – Village Vanguard – New York, NY
12/31 – Village Vanguard – New York, NY
1/1 – Village Vanguard – New York, NY
1/2 – Village Vanguard – New York, NY
1/5 – Jazz at the Bistro – St. Louis, MO
1/6 – Jazz at the Bistro – St. Louis, MO
1/7 – Jazz at the Bistro – St. Louis, MO
1/8 – Jazz at the Bistro – St. Louis, MO
1/9 – Marcus Center for the Performing Arts – Milwaukee, WI

The Bad Plus
Tour Dates

::
The Bad Plus News
::
The Bad Plus
Concert
Reviews


Kate Moss stuns fans with impromptu singing in Qatar

Gig-goers at a jazz concert in Qatar were left stunned when Brit model Kate Moss reportedly jumped on stage for an impromptu performance. The supermodel paid a brief visit to the country on her way to the Maldives for a vacation, and she enjoyed a night out at the exclusive Spice Market restaurant in Doha [...]

Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey: Ludwig Concert Video

A TASTE OF A VERY UNIQUE NIGHT OF MUSIC

On June 12, 2010, Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey joined the Bartlesville Symphony Orchestra to put a highly unique spin on Beethoven’s 3rd & 6th Symphonies. For a full report on the night pop over here, and to catch a super swell 15-minute glimpse into the event hit play below.

Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey presents LUDWIG (Promotional Short) from Jacob Fred on Vimeo.

Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey Tour Dates :: Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey News :: Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey Concert Reviews


Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey: Robots Announce Fall Tour

THOSE AUTOMATONS KNOW WHAT THEY’RE TALKING ABOUT!

Our mechanical friends can be helpful or scary and, in this instance, serious jazz heads who dig the new Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey album, Stay Gold, and plan to catch the band on the road this fall.

JFJO Fall Stay Gold Tour

09/03 Chelsea’s – Baton Rouge, LA
09/04 Benies Boom Boom Room – Hattiesburg, MS
09/05 Louisiana Music Factory – New Orleans, LA (in store performance)
09/05 Blue Nile – New Orleans, LA
09/08 Anderson Auditorium – Shreveport, LA
09/10 Parish Room – Austin, TX
09/11 Boiler Room – Denton, TX
09/14 Skully’s – Columbus, OH
09/15 Canal Street – Dayton, OH
09/16 Shake It Records – Cincinnati, OH (in store performance)
09/16 The Blue Wisp – Cincinnati, OH
09/17 Hideaway Saloon – Louisville, KY
09/18 Rex Theater – Pittsburgh, PA
10/09 Jardine’s – Kansas City, MO
10/15 Tost Lounge – Seattle, WA
10/16 Mt Tabor Pub – Portland, OR
10/17 CultureWorks – Ashland, OR
10/20 Aubergine – Sebastopol, CA
10/21 Kuumbwa Jazz Center – Santa Cruz, CA
10/22 Beatnik Studios – Sacramento, CA
10/23 Cafe Du Nord – San Francisco, CA
10/28 Winston’s – San Diego, CA
10/29 The Mint – Los Angeles, CA
12/31 Cain’s Ballroom – Tulsa, OK


Clint Eastwood opens up about his love for jazz

Clint Eastwood has confessed his love for jazz music in a rare interview with musician Jamie Cullum. The Dirty Harry legend and Hollywood veteran became unlikely pals after the jazz pianist composed the main score for Eastwood”s 2008 drama Gran Torino. And the actor/director has chosen the diminutive star”s BBC Radio 2 show to talk [...]

SF Jazz Fest Lineup: Taj Mahal, John Medeski, More

EVENTS BEGIN SEPTEMBER 14 AND RUN THROUGH NOVEMBER 20


Taj Mahal

Randall Kline, the Executive Artistic Director of SFJAZZ—the leading non-profit jazz organization on the
West
Coast—today announced the complete artist line-up for the 28th Annual San Francisco Jazz Festival. The Festival
will
begin on September 14 with a celebration of the jazz bass with SFJAZZ Collective member Matt Penman. Events
continue through November 20, presenting some of the most illustrious names in music.

Performers include
Esperanza Spalding; Ravi
Shankar & Anoushka Shankar; Chucho Valdes; Taj Mahal, Toumani Diabate & Vieux Farka Toure; Yusef Lateef; Arturo
Sandoval; Omara Portuondo; Roy Haynes; Lila Downs; Henry Threadgill’s Zooid; Danilo Perez; Jon Jang; Vijay Iyer
Trio;
Ledisi; The Yellowjackets & The Jeff Lorber Fusion; Manhattan Transfer; Nikki Yanofsky; Rosanne Cash; Asleep At The
Wheel; Chris Potter Underground; Bitches Brew Revisited; Olodum; Anat Cohen & Avishai Cohen; Gretchen Parlato;
Steve
Lehman; Jose James & Jef Neve; James Carter with John Medeski; Marcus Shelby; Stew & The Negro Problem; Natacha
Atlas; Nellie McKay
and more.

“At SFJAZZ we place importance on the idea of heritage — venerated artists connect us with the fabric of music
history,”
says Kline. “We often say our festivals feature Living Legends and New Directions. This fall, we have assembled a
collection of remarkable musical talent from every point on
that vast continuum.”

For more information about the 28th Annual San Francisco Jazz Festival, please visit www.sfjazz.org


Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey | 06.12 | Oklahoma

Words by: Dennis Cook | Images by: Rachel D. Hoefling

Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey :: 06.12.10 :: OK Mozart Festival :: Bartlesville, OK

JFJO with Orchestra :: 06.12.10

Messing with Beethoven is serious business. Foundational artists like Ludwig Van test one’s mettle and force them to grabble with fundamental structures and attitudes, particularly if one wants to put their own stamp on such a codified composer. Few are better suited to the task than Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey, who took their joyously avant sensibilities right into the heart of traditionally snooty classical music by overhauling Beethoven’s 3rd & 6th Symphonies using arrangements by Noam Faingold and JFJO. A longtime coming, Ludwig had its world premiere as part of the OK Mozart Festival in Bartlesville, Oklahoma with the 50-piece Bartlesville Symphony Orchestra melding with the forward leaning jazz quartet in an experience that proved as playful, unpredictable and gently exciting as one might hope.

Brian Haas (piano), Josh Raymer (drums), Chris Combs (lap steel) and new addition bassist Jeff Harshberger looked as squeaky clean as I’d ever seen them, excited in their crisp suits and itching to jump into the fruition of a journey that began years ago. Haas has been struggling to adapt Beethoven for ages, and after a false start in Brooklyn earlier this year they found their ideal creative foils in Faingold and Bartlesville Symphony music director Lauren Green, who both grokked how JFJO isn’t like the other children, even when they are playing with a very known quantity like Beethoven. In a pre-concert discussion, Faingold said he realized some time ago that “a classical symphony with acoustic instruments could be way bigger than a metal band.” It’s this kind of outside-the-box perspective that makes him such a good fit for this particular band; though he admitted he was “initially paralyzed by [JFJO's] approach, which really pushed everyone’s boundaries.”

This last point is vitally important with Ludwig because if classical works aren’t doomed to be artifacts laboriously recreated the boundaries must be pushed. We aren’t reading by whale blubber lanterns anymore, and kings don’t decide what’s appropriate music and what isn’t. We are wireless citizens of the world with whole record collections in our pocket. As such, antiquated modes of interpretation come off as particularly dusty, like the French in Vietnam in the ’60s desperately clinging to their privileged colonial existence before the populist uprising. If Beethoven isn’t going to be a relic studied and admired under glass he needs wild creatures like JFJO to dig their nails into his hide and pull out the meat underneath.

Jeff Harshberger & Chris Combs :: 06.12.10

Amongst other changes from stoic tradition, Haas pushed for “an old-timey, early 1900s call and response” feel between the orchestra and quartet. Perhaps more so than any other symphonic performance I’ve witnessed, these pieces had the feel of a big, bold conversation, and not just with the players present but also with Beethoven and the long line that’s tried their hand at his works. JFJO always has this kind of reaching-through-time vibe in their “regular” gigs but to achieve even a fraction of that with such a large ensemble was an accomplishment in itself.

What first grabbed my attention was the level of swing infused into what can be somewhat academic music. Face it, much of the appeal of classical music is cerebral, and those that know things about this music are often prideful and disdainful of those that don’t. Beginning with the pastoral inflections of the 6th Symphony, the ensemble immediately had more hips than one usually associates with Beethoven, inspiring some gentle head-nodding with their collective gait.

As the second movement emerged, the melting notes and unruly tone of Combs’ lap steel REALLY set this performance apart. Combs’ presence and instrumentation was likely the most contentious aspect of this re-imagining to many of the OK Mozart regulars, who perhaps didn’t appreciate how wonderful a lap steel can be in the hands of an innovator like Combs. Combs’ high reaching guttural tones played nicely against Haas’ music box piano. And it was Haas who seemed the most uncharacteristic, curtailing his usual penchant for robust improvisation and serving something larger, something that required a delicacy and humility that a normal JFJO show does not. Raymer, too, exhibited real control and focus, placing each stick strike with care and caressing his cymbals like a lover. Where jazz seemed to come into play was in the general glide and individual solos, which didn’t bow to the church of violin like much classical fare.

JFJO with Orchestra :: 06.12.10

As pleasant and refreshing as the 6th was, it was the boldly reconfigured 3rd Symphony that really showed the merits of this collaboration. Neither as bombastic or stiff as many interpretations, this struck at the heart of Beethoven’s disappointment in Napoleon declaring himself emperor, a great man lost to vanity and power’s madness. It was a dramatic and highly playful new vision for the 3rd filled with glorious double bass work from Harshberger that conjured gail force winds and light breezes depending on how his thick fingers or bow touched the strings. Perhaps the most invisible guy up there, he was all the more effective for the lack of spotlight, moving in and around the music with the skill of someone who doesn’t need attention to be great at what they do.

I’d hazard a guess that this is the most rim-shots and hard snare taps the 3rd has ever experienced, not to mention the uniqueness of the strong samba flavors in the 2nd movement, which brought to mind Antonio Carlos Jobim and film composer Bernard Herrmann, and made the symphony dance in a new, alluring way. Sexy stuff.

The third movement was a wondrous sandbox of ideas for everyone to toy with, moving things around from pomp to romp. Classical music is rarely funny, except in perhaps a very dry, droll way. Here, the players delighted in tickling the audience, tossing notes into the air in a manner that suggested a childlike rediscovery of what had drawn them to this music in the first place. This infectious feeling carried the symphony to an honestly rousing conclusion where the faces of JFJO and their collaborators signaled their awareness that they’d pulled off something significant.

Beethoven’s writing – like most classical music – has a mathematical logic to it but this felt closer to today’s theoretical mathematics and its string theories and quantum logic. Instead of being locked away by the culture police, Beethoven got to stretch his legs a good bit. Ludwig has the potential to connect with younger audiences who wouldn’t know Dvorak from Devo. Ludwig will likely be refined as big city orchestras take a shot at it and Haas and company tweak it further, but in the moment one could be sure they were present at the birth of something lovingly crafted and deeply felt.

JFJO released their swell new studio album Stay Gold on June 22. Find out more here.

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

JamBase | Oklahoma
Go See Live Music!


Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey Ludwig Premiere, New Album

YOU GOT FRED ALL OVER MY BEETHOVEN!!!

Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey is less than a week away from the world premier of Ludwig, their project reinterpreting Beethoven’s 3rd & 6th Symphonies using arrangements by Noam Faingold & JFJO. The project premieres with the 50 piece Bartlesville Symphony Orchestra on Saturday, June 12, kicking off the 26th annual OK Mozart Festival in the gorgeous PAC at the Bartlesville Community Center. Tickets are still available and can be purchased here.

Here’s Brian Haas discussing the project and the Fred rehearsing with the full orchestra.

This special performance will be extensively recorded in its entirety for a full release on JFJO’s Tulsa-based record label Kinnara Records. JFJO has partnered with Kickstarter to help raise funds for the video production of the event. Click here for more information on how you can help make the documentation of this historic evening possible.

A few days after the Ludwig premiere, JFJO begins their album release tour in support of their 20th album, Stay Gold, available from Kinnara Records as CD & double gatefold vinyl on June 22. here to watch a video featuring the title track and click here to pre-order the album.

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


Frenchy, Scramble & Kreutzmann Paint at Jazz Fest 2010

MALLETS, PAINT AND MUSIC INSPIRED ART, OH MY!!!

Words by: John Prinzo | Images by: Bob Compton

Beyond the stellar line-up of performances, this year’s New Orleans Jazz Fest saw the convergence of two great talents working in unison to record the magic of the music on canvas. Legendary performance painter and New Orleans mainstay Frenchy worked side-by-side with Colorado by-way-of-Orlando artist Keith “Scramble” Campbell. These two artists share a similar style, which stirs rumors of bitter rivalry in art circles, but it is quite the contrary. Frenchy and Scramble are long-time colleagues and friends and they worked in concert throughout the entire festival to collectively produce nearly 50 paintings that captured the vibe of the festivities.

Frenchy has painted and attended Jazz Fest since 1988, and in 2010 had his first opportunity to actually work on stage and add to the overall performance of Trombone Shorty and another native Nawlins band, The Radiators. Among many others, Frenchy was able to paint jazz trumpeter Kermit Ruffins and rock titans Pearl Jam. You can see all the Jazz fest collection from Frenchy at his Oak Street gallery or online at the Frenchylive Website

Scramble Campbell was also painting at an astonishing rate for the duration of the festival. Inspiration seemed to be in abundance as the two artists produced a prolific run of paintings. Throughout the festival, Scramble displayed his artwork at Frenchy’s New Orleans gallery. Scramble’s works from the festival can be seen and purchased on his website.

In the impromptu spirit of jazz, legendary Grateful Dead drummer Bill Kreutzmann popped his head in Frenchy’s Oak Street gallery to say hello to his close friend. Before he left, the casual visit evolved into a collaboration with Frenchy and Scramble to seize the essence of the festival on canvas. Together they danced and grooved to the Dead’s 1973 classic “Eyes of the World,” all while dousing and splaying paint in a stream-of-conscious frenzy of inspiration and improvisation. Like jazz masters, Frenchy and Scramble weave their visual notes of shape and color in and out of each other while Kreutzman adds rhythm and texture with his paint soaked mallets. This was a stunning confluence of thought, expression, talent, creativity, and chance, which sums up this storied city and whimsical event.


Jazz Pianist, Hank Jones Dies at 91

Hank Jones passed away in the Cavalry Hospital Hospice, Bronx at the age of 91. His death was announced by his manager, Jean-Pierre Leduc and Mr. Jones had lived in his Manhattan residence and also owned a home in Hartwick, New York.
His career was mostly shaped in the background and he almost spent 35 years [...]

Hangout Fest: Donates All Profits Adds Preservation Hall Jazz Band

NEW FESTIVAL PUTS SPOTLIGHT ON RECENT ENVIROMENTAL DISASTER
DONATES ALL PROFITS TO REGIONAL COASTAL CLEANUP

Preservation Hall Jazz Band

The Hangout Beach Music and Arts Festival has officially announced that environmental activists Erin Brockovich, Kathleen “Kick” Kennedy and Sierra Club Board President Allison Chin will participate in public panel discussion and press conferences at the festival on Saturday, May 15 at 3 p.m. and Sunday, May 16 at 2:30 p.m.

Venerable New Orleans performers the Preservation Hall Jazz Band will appear at the Hangout. Huka Entertainment, producer of the Hangout, and Rehage Entertainment, producer of Gulf Aid and Voodoo Experience, have tapped New York City-based television network Fuse TV to film the band’s experiences traveling across Louisiana and Alabama for the “Concerts for the Coast” documentary project. On the tour, the band will visit establishments along the Gulf Coast interviewing residents affected by the oil spill. The tour will arrive at the Hangout on Friday, May 14, where The Preservation Hall Jazz Band will join Hangout headliners Trey Anastasio and TAB, Zac Brown Band, Alison Krauss & Union Station feat. Jerry Douglas and The Black Crowes.

In light of the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill affecting the Gulf Coast, the Hangout Beach Music and Arts Festival will be donating all profits to regional coastal cleanup and preservation. In an effort to expand awareness and increase donations, The Hangout, along with New Orleans producer Stephen Rehage, will expand the Concert For The Coast to New Orleans. This two-city concert experience features The Hangout Music Festival in Gulf Shores, Alabama and a one-day concert event on Sunday, May 16th in downtown New Orleans. Preservation Hall Jazz Band will be on hand at both events.

The Hangout Beach Music and Arts Festival takes place Friday, May 14 – Sunday, May 16 at 101 East Beach Boulevard, Gulf Shores, Alabama (The Southern End of AL-Hwy 59). Tickets are $159 Three-Day Pass / $79 Day Passes.

Confirmed Artists: Trey Anastasio and TAB, Zac Brown Band, John Legend, Ben Harper and Relentless7, The Black Crowes, Alison Krauss and Union Station featuring Jerry Douglas, Gov’t Mule, The Roots, Ray LaMontagne, Jakob Dylan and Three Legs feat. Neko Case and Kelly Hogan, Grace Potter and the Nocturnals, Michael Franti and Spearhead, Robert Randolph and The Family Band, Rodrigo Y Gabriela, Funky Meters, Blind Boys of Alabama, Matisyahu, Girl Talk, Guster, Brett Dennen, Keller Williams, Jerry Jeff Walker, Papa Mali & Friends, North Mississippi Allstars Duo, ALO, The Whigs, Ozomatli, OK Go, Orianthi, Davy Knowles & Back Door Slam, Pnuma Trio, Black Joe Lewis and the Honeybears, Toubab Krewe, Needtobreathe, Jeff Austin & Friends feat. Larry Keel, Matt Hires, A.A. Bondy, Rachel Goodrich, Moon Taxi, El Cantador, Kristy Lee, Roman Street, Kirsten Price, Honey Island Swamp Band, Wild Sweet Orange, Rustlanders, Ben Arthur, Hightide Blues, Jon Black, The Cary Laine Band, and Rollin’ in the Hay.


Jazz Fest After Dark | 04.29-05.02 | New Orleans

Words by: B. Getz | Images by: Casey Flanigan

Jazz Fest Night Shows :: 04.29.10-05.02.10 :: New Orleans, LA

The wise superhero SuperDee once told me, “Judge your Jazz Fest not by what you saw, but what you were forced to miss.”

Those who have been to Jazz Fest know that it’s extremely difficult to decide what shows to see. Head-to-head, there is simply so much incredible music, and rare treats, to indulge in over the course of ten days. Therefore, there will be plenty of fantastic music NOT covered in these dusk til’ dawn highlight. This is simply one boy’s second weekend journey to the musical Mecca that is Jazz Fest… After Dark.

Thursday, April 29

KDTU :: 04.29 :: Tipitina’s

No better way to start Fest then Dauphine and Lesseps in the Bywater, Thursday night at Vaughn’s. Though we arrived too late for his BBQ, Kermit Ruffins & the Barbecue Swingers welcomed us to town like only they can. A joyful mixture of brassy jazz, sultry R&B swagger and modern day braggadocio, Ruffins’ band mixed The Isley Brothers with Gnarls Barkley, with some Mystikal to boot.

Backbeat Foundation hosted another HBO star/brass band alum session at the Blue Nile, where Trombone Shorty & Orleans Ave seized their star turn, tearing down the Quarter for nearly three hours of nonstop NOLA stomp. His crack band, expanded for the occasion, more than ably laid a local foundation for Troy Andrews to delve deep into the Treme, unleashing blistering cuts from new album Backatown. Shorty cooked up a jambalaya of choice local brass anthems with a crunk-rock edge; a mammoth Marvin Gaye cover brought the house down.

Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe‘s Thursday late night show is always the place to be at Fest. The first in five years (and only KDTU Jazz Fest booking) was no different. Playing Tipitina’s Uptown until sunrise, Denson reminded us all of why he remains the King of Late Night Jazz Fest. The Tiny Universe dropped mammoth sets, balancing older favorites “Family Tree,” “Make it a Cosmopolitan” and “Because of Her Beauty” with blazing new joints like the blaxploitation banger “Brother’s Keeper Pt..II,” a lengthy dub-drenched take on “Mighty Rebel,” and an otherworldly keyboard battle between Robert Walter on Hammond B3 and Marco Benevento on Fender Rhodes.

Howlin Wolf held a benefit for the New Orleans Musicians’ Clinic, a huge post-Panic party with keyboardist Jojo’s Mardi Gras Band as the hosts. “Down on the Bayou II” included WSP bandmates Sunny Ortiz and John Bell (highlighted by a brief Panic set). Grateful Dead drummer Bill Kreutzmann and NOLA monarchs George Porter Jr., Anders Osborne, John “Papa” Gros, Papa Mali, Jon Cleary, Big Chief Bo Dollis, and Alfred “Uganda” Roberts all lent their skills. Gov’t Mule‘s Warren Haynes, Jorgen Carlsson and Danny Louis joined hard hitting local skinman Russell Batiste Jr. for an exciting short set.

Friday, April 30

Pretty Lights :: 04.30 :: Republic

The new frontier of live electronic music was on display throughout Friday night, a tribute to both the evolution of the genre and the breadth of the Jazz Fest palette. With respect to the Rusko/Big Gigantic party that went late the night before, for this writer, Friday was about pulsating beats. With a new take on dubstep delivered Live PA style, Uprise Dub kicked things off with proper wobble at Dragon’s Den; dark drum & bass deep in the Quarter. A progressive minded dubstep swagger with Bukem-informed jazzy jungle, Paul Knight is a breakout waiting to happen. Big t’ings in store for this rumbling conglomerate.

Pretty Lights set it off substantially at Republic. With the sold out massive getting crazier by the song, kids were crowd surfing and bouncing off walls; absolute bedlam as dancing spilled into the street. Mixing bombastic originals with seriously dirty reinterpretations, Derek Vincent Smith knows how to rock a crowd. “More Important than Michael Jordan” ignited the fuse, but the set closing “Rumpshaker” remix was a five alarm fire.

Both Friday and Saturday nights, Bear Creek Presents hosted Break Science at One Eyed Jacks to teeming late revelers. Both shows kicked off at the ungodly hour of 4 a.m. Drummer wunderkind Adam Deitch knows no boundaries, and clearly the Rusko set had inspired him; Friday night’s set leaned heavily on dubstep wobble and thunderous bottom end. Saturday saw a more diverse assortment, with Borahm Lee unleashing a ridiculous array of skills amidst mountains of keyboards, samplers and laptops. Highlight: choice tribute to the late Guru, in the form of a punishing take on Gang Starr‘s “DWYCK,” demolishing of Public Enemy’s seminal “Bring the Noise” in a way that would make Hank Shocklee proud.

Saturday, May 1

Superfly Presents always provides a quintessential NOLA experience on the Creole Queen Boat Cruise; and this year’s Greyboy Allstars hoedown was the ideal soundtrack. While Kirk Joseph’s 504 Brass Band held down the deck with typical Crescent City flair, a newly recharged GBA came correct indoors. Incorporating new rare groove styles amidst a sea of classic West Coast boogaloo, the Allstars were back on their mojo. A spooky, enchanting version of “Nautilus” was the highlight for this writer.

Bear Creek Presents delivered another stellar gig at One Eyed Jacks with Dr. Klaw, a malicious conglomerate of NYC meets NOLA crunk. Nick Daniels led the boys into battle, welcoming local cats Andrew Block, Maurice ‘Mo Betta’ Brown and Clarence ‘Trixzey’ Slaughter to the fold. Eric Krasno (MVP?) wailed above the gumbo funk with reckless abandon, with Deitch and Nigel Hall grinning feverishly as they pushed the grooves along.

Backbeat Foundation hosted two killer Saturday shows at Tipitina’s French Quarter. Bonerama killed the raucous room with a smattering of funky brass and rock energy. Joined by Scott McCaughey (guitar), David Silverman (sousaphone), and R.E.M.‘s Mike Mills (bass) the troupe tore thru an Alex Chilton tribute, and spirited takes on “Cabbage Alley” and “Lovelight.” Later, the eclectic grouping Some Cat From Japan interpreted the works of Jimi Hendrix with a fresh take, and a lot of mojo. Led by Will Bernard and Nigel Hall, and ably assisted by Scott Metzger, Ron Johnson and Bonerama drummer Eric Bolivar, the spirit of Jimi was on full display with unique new vision.

Sunday, May 2

A sisterhood of cities was on display at Howlin Wolf for The Royal Family Ball. George Porter and his Running Partners, Zigaboo’s Funk Revue and Break Science held things down early for the vicious combination of Soulive and Lettuce. Soulive delivered one of the final slamming Jazz Fest performance, ripping as a trio or when rolling augmented. But quite frankly, the finest hour belonged to a reinvigorated Lettuce, whose only performance of the weekend was a rage to remember. Welcoming back Boston OG’s Adam ‘Shmeans’ Smirnoff and E.D. ‘Jesus’ Coomes, the boys tore the roof off the Wolf. As if they didn’t already have enough ammo, Ian Neville, Maurice Brown and Khris Royal joined the fray, as did Skerik for the final banger. Lettuce had conquered Jazz Fest once again, sending off the masses with relentless, colossal funk jams.

Like a whirlwind, it was over just as suddenly as it started. Jazz Fest will do that to ya. Once again, it was an epic adventure of giant proportions. Special thanks to Paulina Trujillo and the Backbeat Foundation, Megan Sabella at Newsom Management, Paul Peck and Superfly Productions, Paul Levine and Bear Creek, as well as all the venues and promoters that join together to provide these rich experiences. Most of all, a heartfelt thank you to the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival and the City of New Orleans, without whom none of this would be possible.

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JamBase | Big Easy Sunrise
Go See Live Music!


Jazz Fest 5.02 Sun | Photos & Best Of

Words by: Tom Speed | Images by: Dino Perrucci

Jazz Fest – Weekend 2 – Day 4 :: 05.02.10 :: Sunday :: New Orleans, LA

The Neville Brothers :: 05.02.10 :: Jazz Fest

The nursery rhyme goes, “Rain, rain, go away, come again another day.” Tens of thousands of people were likely chanting that little prayer, to themselves at the least, throughout the weekend. “Another Day” finally came for Jazz Fest’s second weekend on Sunday. While the weather portended rain throughout the weekend, it finally delivered on Sunday. It wasn’t severe. Just drizzles and a brief shower. And who couldn’t use a good shower after seven days of Jazz Fest? But with every cloud there’s a silver lining, and the lining on a rainy Jazz Fest day is that it keeps the fair weather festival-goers away, so the crowds were significantly thinned, and pleasantly so. In many ways, it was the best of days. The best of the best were:

Tom’s Top Three Aural

#1 The Radiators (Gentilly Stage)

For many people, the annual Jazz Fest does not officially end until the “first family of New Orleans,” The Neville Brothers, completes their closing Sunday set at the Acura Stage. For an entirely different breed of freaks, the culmination of festivities is marked by The Radiators’ annual throw-down on the Gentilly Stage. As always, it was a celebratory after party for all those who had made it through the entire 10-day fest featuring searing guitar solos and relentless groove tunes. They continue to be the preeminent progenitors of swampy, blues-based jam rock in New Orleans.

#2 Van Morrison (Acura Stage)

Van The Man earned his moniker with his mid-afternoon, rain-soaked set on the Acura Stage. Nimbly shifting between piano, guitar and saxophone, he led his sprawling band through a passionate set that touched on the most well-known songs of his catalog, with “Moondance” in particular receiving a languid, pleasant stretching out, and included a great take on “St. James Infirmary Blues,” where he stated from the stage, “We’re in New Orleans, so why not?”

#3 Los Po-Boy-Citos (Lagniappe Stage)

This Latin funk band’s set at the covered Lagniappe Stage under the grandstand during a downpour drew a crowd that was perhaps seeking shelter but left having danced away any concerns about it.

Tom’s Top Three Gustatory

#1 Crawfish Strudel

#2 Strawberry Lemonade

#3 Coors Beer

Because on the third day it was really hard to find, kind of like in Smokey and the Bandit.

Tom’s Top Three Lagniappe

#1 Treme

It’s difficult to take in the sights and sounds of New Orleans and Jazz Fest without thinking of the new HBO series Treme from David Simon, the creator of The Wire. That’s in large part due to the fact that in seeking an authentic tone, the show features many local musicians. Kermit Ruffins, Trombone Shorty, Allen Toussaint and members of Galactic were all featured prominently in the early episodes, which have shown great promise.

#2 Scoring a free, legal parking spot on Crete Street.

#3 Wondering how to schedule my Monday without the help of “cubes.”

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”8″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=48″);}); New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival Sunday Weekend 2 | New Orleans Fairgrounds | New Orleans, LA Our Second Weekend Sunday Photo Gallery features The Neville Brothers, Irma Thomas, The Dead Weather featuring Jack White, Zion Harmonizers, Davell Crawford, Preservation Hall Jazz Band, Wayne Shorter, Brian Blade, Richie Havens, the Wild Magnolias and more… View Photos

Check our Jazz Fest Survival Guide for Must See Bands, food suggestions and
more…

Check out Second Weekend Thursday coverage of Jazz Fest here.

Check out Second Weekend Friday coverage of Jazz Fest here.

Check out Second Weekend Saturday coverage of Jazz Fest here.

Check out First Weekend Friday coverage of Jazz Fest here.

Check out First Weekend Saturday coverage of Jazz Fest here.

Check out First Weekend Sunday coverage of Jazz Fest here.

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Jazz Fest 5.01 Sat | Photos & Best Of

Words by: Tom Speed | Images by: Dino Perrucci & Chad Smith

Jazz Fest – Weekend 2 – Day 3 :: 05.01.10 :: Saturday :: New Orleans, LA

Pearl Jam :: 05.01.10 :: Jazz Fest by Smith

Massive crowds swarmed the Fairgrounds Racetrack on Saturday as blustery weather whipped the track and infield into dust gusts. It didn’t deter the sea of people who lined up across the track at the Acura Stage to hear Pearl Jam and filled the Gentilly Stage area for Band of Horses and Jeff Beck. The smaller stages, too, enjoyed swelling crowds. Lots of people, lots of music, lots of food and lots of drinks. And the highlights were:

Tom’s Top Three Aural

#1 Anders Osborne (Acura Stage)

Backed by the Stanton Moore Trio (Stanton Moore on drums, Robert Walter on keyboards and Will Bernard on guitar), Anders Osborne and his prodigious beard delivered a blistering set on the main, Acura Stage Saturday afternoon, leaning heavily on his new album, American Patchwork (released 4/27/10 on Alligator Records), which features the same backing band. The set kicked off the same way as the record with shredding power rocker “Road To Charlie Parker.” It’s a meditation that includes the memorable lines, “You’re like a diamond that doesn’t shine, a Rolex that won’t tell time.”

It’s no secret that Osborne has dealt with demons in the past, and he thanked his backing band from the stage for helping him to “get my shit together.” He got it together all right. Front to back, their performance was a tour de force that included saxophonist Skerik on the reggae bounce of “I’ve Got Your Heart” and similarly bearded guitarist Pepper Keenan (who co-produced American Patchwork) for a string of heavy rockers. Osborne quipped that the pair had a ZZ Top cover band on the side.


Osborne has been a guitar slinger, a pensive songwriter, a genre-bender, a bluesman and more. While this current outing incorporates many of those elements, he’s surfaced as a rocker and is sounding as good as ever.

#2 Honey Island Swamp Band (Fais Do Do Stage)

The Honey Island Swamp is a real place. It resides near the border of Louisiana and Mississippi. It’s therefore a fitting name for this band that draws inspiration from the music of those two states. With the Honey Island Swamp Band, soul, country, R&B and blues are all on equal footing. The two man songwriting/guitarist team of Chris Mule and Aaron Wilkinson produce expressive, hook-laden tunes that honor songcraft while respecting the groove. For their Jazz Fest set at the Fais Do Do Stage, the four-piece was bolstered by a three-piece horn section, keyboards, and backing vocalists. The rousing set included material from their debut Wishing Well and forthcoming follow-up Good To You.

#3 Pinstripe Brass Band (Parade)

If you’ve ever experienced the magnetic pull that causes you to involuntarily become part of a parade regardless of where you were going before the parade reached you, then you know how much fun this was.

Tom’s Top Three Gustatory

#1 St. Charles Street Car Cocktail

This eye-opener at Restaurant Luke features St. Germain elderflower liqueur, peach vodka and champagne. Delicious.

#2 Mango Freeze

This sorbet-type treat is wonderful in its own right, but even better with some smuggled rum.

#3 Canned Coors

Because, if for no other reason, the chorus of “East Bound and Down” from Smokey and the Bandit pops to mind whenever you pop the top.

Tom’s Top Three Lagniappe

#1 Best Festival Flag: “Super Bowl Champions”

Numerous sightings. Who Dat!?

#2 Anders Osborne’s beard

It deserves its own zip code. Would also be a pretty good name for a rock band.

#3 Folk Life Village

Blacksmiths and pirogues and hand drums, oh my!

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”12″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=47″);}); New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival Saturday Weekend 2 | New Orleans Fairgrounds | New Orleans, LA Our Second Weekend Saturday Photo Gallery features Pearl Jam, Band of Horses, Jeff Beck, Anders Osborne, Galactic, Trombone Shorty and Orleans Avenue, Irma Thomas, Skerik, Johnny Sansone, Brian Blade, Aaron Neville, Pete Fountain and more… View Photos

Check our Jazz Fest Survival Guide for Must See Bands, food suggestions and
more…

Check out Second Weekend Thursday coverage of Jazz Fest here.

Check out Second Weekend Friday coverage of Jazz Fest here.

Check out First Weekend Friday coverage of Jazz Fest here.

Check out First Weekend Saturday coverage of Jazz Fest here.

Check out First Weekend Sunday coverage of Jazz Fest here.

Check back tomorrow for more coverage of the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival…

JamBase | New Orleans

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Jazz Fest 4.30 Fri | Photos & Best Of

Words by: Tom Speed | Images by: Dino Perrucci

Jazz Fest – Weekend 2 – Day 2 :: 04.30.10 :: Friday :: New Orleans, LA

Kermit Ruffins :: 04.30.10 :: Jazz Fest

The best laid plans aren’t worth a damn. Repeatedly, the ad hoc yields the sweetest fruit. Days like Friday, April 30 at the Jazz Festival reinforce this truth time and time again.

The giddiness rears its head when the cubes are published. Hours pored over scheduling increases excitement. When the day comes, it’s irrelevant. A well-planned and structured itinerary is no substitute for a day of happy accidents and splendid surprises. With the rain staying away despite the weatherman’s best attempts to doom and gloom the otherwise optimistic, a gentle fairgrounds-wide mist tent effect cast a pleasant ambiance over a day filled with brilliant unplanned pleasure. To wit:

Tom’s Top Three Aural

#1 Allen Toussaint (Acura Stage)

Allen Toussaint was a contributing factor in the best set of the day on Thursday and helmed the best set on Friday. He’s New Orleans royalty, and his mid-afternoon performance on the Acura Stage proved why. Exuding class and professionalism, Toussaint’s top-notch band (including the resplendent Theresa Andersson as one of the background vocalists) radiated confidence as they spun the sounds Toussaint helped birth many moons ago. Touching on standards and mainstays, they were at times funky, soulful, and moving. Giving “City of New Orleans” a twist that removed any sense of cliche was a mean feat that was handled adroitly, and the sprawling “Southern Nights” closer was awe-inspiring fun.

#2 Steve Riley and the Mamou Playboys (Fais Do-Do Stage)

The infectious zydeco groove commands your dancing, your swaying, and your shuffling. The onstage capabilities grab your respect. When the band was joined by three trombonists from Bonerama, it underscored the wide swath that the music at Jazz Fest covers and cross-pollinates at the same time.

#3 Mardi Gras Indian Orchestra (Louisiana Heritage Stage)

A loose amalgamation of Mardi Gras Indian tribesmen and various interested instrumentalists, the Mardi Gras Indian Orchestra celebrates this musical tradition with the addition of a string section and a cavalcade of participants, including Reggie and Camille of The Radiators.

Tom’s Top Three Gustatory

#1 Fried Chicken

Like playing guitar, making fried chicken is easy to do competently but takes real talent to do exceptionally. The fine folks at Jazz Fest have talent.

#2 William’s Plum Street Snowballs

The nectar cream snowball could easily be classified a Schedule IV narcotic.

#3 Coors in a can

Here’s a fun game: try to drink the whole can before the “cold activated” thingy turns from blue to gray. It’s tough in the New Orleans heat, but practice makes perfect. Or something like that.

Tom’s Top Three Lagniappe

#1 Eric Lindell

The overflowing crowd at the Blues Tent before and during Lindell’s set rendered the situation unsympathetic to mellowing out to his groovy vibe. It’s great that he’s catching on with so many new fans, but it’s well past time to put him on a main stage. Ya heard?

#2 Pinwheels

They’re a highly underrated form of entertainment. Just sayin’.

#3 Celebrating your wife’s birthday with her at Jazz Fest

Every year. It’s one hell of a birthday party.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”0″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=46″);}); New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival Friday Weekend 2 | New Orleans Fairgrounds | New Orleans, LA Our Second Weekend Friday Photo Gallery features Kermit Ruffins, Allen Toussaint, Derek Trucks and Susan Tedeschi Band, New Orleans Social Club featuring George Porter Jr., Henry Butler, Ivan Neville and Leo Nocentelli, Jonathan Batiste, Astral Project, Eric Lindell, Forgotten Souls Brass Band, John Boutte, Elvis Perkins in Dearland, Nicholas Payton and more… View Photos

Check our Jazz Fest Survival Guide for Must See Bands, food suggestions and
more…

Check out Second Weekend Thursday coverage of Jazz Fest here.

Check out First Weekend Friday coverage of Jazz Fest here.

Check out First Weekend Saturday coverage of Jazz Fest here.

Check out First Weekend Sunday coverage of Jazz Fest here.

Check back tomorrow for more coverage of Jazz Fest…

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Jazz Fest 4.29 Thurs | Photos & Best Of

Words by: Tom Speed | Images by: Dino Perrucci & Chad Smith

Jazz Fest – Weekend 2 – Day 1 :: 04.29.10 :: Thursday :: New Orleans, LA

Dave Schools – WSP :: 04.29.10 :: Jazz Fest

The opening day of Jazz Fest‘s second weekend brought with it clear skies, temperatures in the mid 70s and a slight breeze – ideal weather for an outdoor music festival. After severe rain and mud stained the first weekend, the sunshine was a welcome respite for festival faithful.

The day’s aural, gustatory and otherwise indescribable cultural delights provided a banquet of sensory inputs for the incessantly insatiable. The following is a brief but faithful recounting of some of the highlights.


Tom’s Top Three Aural

#1 Elvis Costello and The Sugarcanes (Gentilly Stage)
Every day of Jazz Fest is marked by that intangible Jazz Fest magic – a single set or experience that makes the spine tingle. Sometimes it comes as planned, but usually it comes unexpectedly. Thursday it came in the form of Elvis Costello and the Sugarcanes, his top-flight acoustic band that includes Jerry Douglas on dobro and Jim Lauderdale on guitar, along with mandolin, fiddle and bass instrumentation.


The group worked their way through a stellar set of roots rock renditions from Costello’s catalog and some choice cover selections. They nimbly navigated their way through the Grateful Dead’s “Friend of The Devil” and the Stones’ “Happy.” They breathed new life into Costello stalwarts like “Allison,” “Peace, Love and Understanding,” and a down-tempo reboot of “Every Day I Write The Book.” Costello brought out New Orleans legend and collaborator Allen Toussaint for a rousing “encore” that consisted of five songs and left the crowd in bliss. Magic.

#2 Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk (Acura Stage)

With a double bass assault, Dumpstaphunk harnesses the runaway power of decades of incessant, ferocious chugging. They serve as the torchbearers of that delightful slice of American music known as New Orleans funk. In a city and festival full of contenders to the throne, they are the kings of the hill. By the time they launched into the now-anthemic thrust of “Put It In The Dumpster” their harnessed momentum had exploded into a full-blown frenzy.


#3 Sunpie Barnes & The Louisiana Sunspots (Congo Stage)
The warm weather was the perfect backdrop for Sunpie Barnes’ soulful set of swinging zydeco.

Tom’s Top Three Gustatory

#1 Crawfish Pie
From the people that bring you the Natchitoches meat pie, this particular crawfish pie was fluffy on the outside, creamy on the inside and possessed just the right amount of spice to become a new favorite.

#2 The Ruby Slipper
Though it’s often inadvisable to eat before entering the Fairgrounds racetrack, an early breakfast at this local mid-city joint provided a much needed and well-spiced Bloody Mary, not to mention a delicious take on Eggs Benedict that incorporated a grilled tomato. It was the perfect prelude to a great day at the fest.

#3 Coors
Because the banquet beer will do in a pinch.

Tom’s Top Three Lagniappe

#1 Field Trips
The sight of numerous middle school groups roaming the festival grounds on field trips gave reason to believe in an oft-maligned local school system that was imparting an undeniably unique life lesson on regional heritage and a serious steeping in the arts.

#2 Funny Hats
Big, small, wide, pointy, colorful, floppy, majestic, droopy. You gotta love a hat party, and Jazz Fest is among the biggest and best in the world.

#3 Chance Encounters
You know those people that you only kinda know, and if you’re bad with names (raise your hands!) you know them only by face and not necessarily by name, but it doesn’t matter. They’re at Jazz Fest, and it’s great to see them.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”0″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=44″);}); New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival Thursday Weekend 2 | New Orleans Fairgrounds | New Orleans, LA Second weekend of Jazz Fest kicks off with Widespread Panic, Gov’t Mule, Elvis Costello, Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk, Steve Martin, Blues Traveler, Kirk Joseph, Preservation Hall Jazz Band, Sunpie Barnes and the Louisiana Sunspots, Dr. Klaw, Soul Rebels Brass Band, 101 Runners, Martin Sexton, Dee Dee Bridgewater and more… View Photos

Check our Jazz Fest Survival Guide for Must See Bands, food suggestions and
more…

Check out First Weekend Friday coverage of Jazz Fest here.

Check out First Weekend Saturday coverage of Jazz Fest here.

Check out First Weekend Sunday coverage of Jazz Fest here.

Check back tomorrow for more coverage of Jazz Fest…

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Jazz Fest 4.25 Day 3 | Photo Gallery & Best Of

Words by: Kayceman | Images by:
Dino
Perrucci

Jazz Fest Day 3 :: 04.25.10 :: Sunday :: New Orleans, LA

Crystal clear blue skies and a steady breeze set the stage for an idyllic Sunday
experience at Jazz Fest. Patrons were decked out in fancy hats and kids danced along with
second line parades and Mardi Gras Indians. During one set at the main stage, a woman
shared her tray of chocolate covered frozen strawberries with strangers while a young
gentleman got out of his chair and insisted that the older lady standing near him have a
seat. The communal spirit was in full bloom on Sunday, and it seemed as if everyone from
the artists to the vendors to the crowd could feel it.

Kayceman’s Top 3

#1 Levon Helm
Band

Legendary drummer Levon Helm and his outstanding band, featuring guitarist Larry Campbell,
played a wonderful set that included Band classics like “Chest Fever” and “The Weight” as
well The Grateful Dead’s “Tennessee Jed.” A healthy dose of special guests, including
Dr. John,
Allen
Toussaint
, Ivan Neville and Stanton Moore, all
graced the stage during this quintessential Jazz Fest show.

#2 Blind Boys of
Alabama

The Blind Boys of Alabama in the Gospel Tent on Sunday is a special experience. Soul-
stirring harmonies filled the open air tent as people were visibly moved, raising hands
high towards the sky. Curtis Mayfield’s “People Get Ready” was coupled with “Spirit In
The Sky,” The Wire theme song “Way Down in the Hole” (originally written by Tom
Waits), and a beautiful rendition of “Amazing Grace” that reminded us all why they call
this God’s music.

#3 The Allman
Brothers Band

The Allman Brothers Band is playing some of its best rock & roll since Duane died, and
their First Weekend Festival concluding set was yet another reminder of their enduring
power. Guitarist Derek Trucks used crutches to get on and off stage and sat for the
entire show, but the injury didn’t affect his incredible slide work in any way. Long jams
with spiraling guitars and burning leads from guitarist Warren Haynes
were punctuated with classic Gregg Allman vocals and the never-ending propulsion of the three-
piece percussive unit. The entire set was full of hits and every song was someone’s
favorite, but the crowd responded most enthusiastically to “Whipping Post,” “Soulshine”
featuring saxophonist Jay Collins, and “One Way Out.” But nothing seemed to define the
weekend better than the beautiful rendition of Van Morrison‘s “And
It Stoned Me” sung by Haynes.

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New
Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival Day 3 | New Orleans Fairgrounds | New Orleans, LA

Day 3 of our New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival photo galleries includes Levon Helm,
Stanton Moore, The Allman Brothers Band, Big Chief Monk Boudreaux, James Andrews,
Preservation Hall Jazz Band, Jim James, Terence Blanchard, Voice of the Wetlands All-
Stars, Theresa Andersson and more… View
Photos

Check our Jazz Fest Survival Guide for Must See Bands, food suggestions and
more…

Check out Friday’s coverage of Jazz Fest here.

Check out Saturday’s Coverage of Jazz Fest here.

Check back next Thursday for the start of our Second Weekend Jazz Fest
coverage…

JamBase | New Orleans

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Jazz Fest 4.24 Day 2 | Photo Gallery & Best Of

Words by: Kayceman | Images by: Dino Perrucci

Jazz Fest Day 2 :: 04.24.10 :: Saturday :: New Orleans, LA

Despite weather reports of rain, hail, floods and maybe even a tornado, not once did water fall from the sky, helping make Saturday an amazing day at the Fairgrounds. And by the time the headliners took the stage (My Morning Jacket and Simon & Garfunkel), it was gorgeous outside with blue skies and glorious sun.

Kayceman’s Top 3

#1 – My Morning Jacket

I have seen Jim James bring rain to Bonnaroo when Tennessee needed it, and now I’ve seen him bring sun to Jazz Fest when New Orleans needed it. A powerful, moving performance by the Jacket, they touched on all facets of their catalog including Curtis Mayfield’s “Move On Up” to close the set. But what made this show so special was the inclusion of New Orleans legends Al “Carnival Time” Johnson singing “Carnival Time” and the Preservation Hall Jazz Band on a wicked version of “Highly Suspicious” that had this writer wondering if we might be witnessing the start of a horn relationship for MMJ similar to what Widespread Panic has developed with NOLA’s Dirty Dozen Brass Band.

#2 The Funky Meters

Rain seemed imminent. The sky was a mean color of gray and you could feel the thick water in the air. And then The Funky Meters played “The World Is a Little Bit Under the Weather” and the sun broke free for the first time all weekend and the crowd erupted. Jazz-funk can get predictable and even boring, but not with this crew. They keep it deep in the pocket, grinding out raunchy NOLA grooves that are impossible to deny. A truly wonderful set by local legends.

#3 Guitar Woodshed featuring Steve Masakowski, Todd Duke and Jack Eckert

A rotating cast of three guitarists shared the stage with a bangin’ B-3 player and stud drummer Johnny Vidacovich. The highlight was when Vidacovich’s Astral Project bandmate, seven-string guitar genius Steve Masakowski, took control, alternating between streams of flowing jazz-fusion and slinky funk grooves that felt sophisticated yet sexy. The set ended with all three guitarists taking on Wes Montgomery.

Bonus Coverage: Late Night My Morning Jacket with Preservation Hall Jazz Band at Preservation Hall

The late night ticket of the weekend, this show was the stuff of legend. Roughly 60 or so people were allowed into the famous, tiny Preservation Hall for over two hours of spirit-channeling music. Acoustic Jacket with the Preservation Hall Jazz Band both starting the show and sitting in, this was a special, special event that those lucky enough to witness will likely never forget.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”1″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=36″);}); New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival Day 2 | New Orleans Fairgrounds | New Orleans, LA Day 2 of our New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival photo galleries includes My Morning Jacket, Preservation Hall Jazz Band, Treme Brass Band, Bonerama, The Funky Meters, Cowboy Mouth, Harry Shearer, Davell Crawford, Dr. John, Jon Cleary, George Porter Jr., Art Nevill, Midnite Disturbers, Skerik, Stanton Moore, The New Orleans Bingo Show and more… View Photos

Check our Jazz Fest Survival Guide for Must See Bands, food suggestions and more…

Check out Friday’s coverage of Jazz Fest here.

Check back tomorrow for coverage of Sunday at Jazz Fest…

JamBase | New Orleans

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