RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘Jefferson Airplane’

The Doobie Brothers: A Brighter Day

By: Dennis Cook

The Doobie Brothers 2010

When most bands hit their 40th anniversary they make a big deal about it, issuing grand statements, box sets and generally making sure folks take note. Not so with The Doobie Brothers, who hit the four decade mark this year and have chosen to focus on their first new studio album in 10 years, a European tour, festival appearances and their usual steady gigging around the States. Today’s Doobies – original members Tom Johnston (vocals, guitar) and Pat Simmons (vocals, guitar) and John McFee (guitars, various stringed things) and longtime drummer Michael Hossack – are more excited than ever to be doing their thing.

“This is just another year,” chuckles Simmons. “[Anniversaries] are often a marketing ploy for a publicist or something. We’re not interested in that.”

“I can’t remember half of the 40 years!” exclaims Johnston. “I’ll tell you one thing I have noticed is the band’s gotten better with time. Our live show’s improved vastly – everybody’s better on their instrument and people take the trouble to practice at home and work on their voices. I think our live show now is better than it’s ever been. Another big plus is the guys in the band today. John adds so many musical ideas we’d never have come up with previously. He adds whole new dimensions to the band – slide, violin, fingerpicking, any number of things. I get comments after our shows, where people say, ‘It looks like you guys are having a blast up there!’ We are. We love getting people rollin’ and rockin’.”

There’s a serious blue-collar ethic to the Brothers, where sweat, roadwork and genuine craftsmanship seriously matter. Each chapter in their history has been earned through honest labor, which imbues their music with something rich and real. After 40 years, it’d be easy enough to not put their shoulders into what they do, but that wouldn’t be the Doobie way.

“I never think about the number of years we’ve been together. What’s important is where you’re at, right here, right now. If somebody asks me what my favorite song is I say, ‘The one I’m working on right now.’ Everything else is already done,” says Johnston. “The most important thing is to move forward. I don’t think this band has ever tried to take the easy way out. We’ve always been proud of what we do, but we don’t sit around talking about it. We’re always chipping away at it, trying to make music that sounds good.”

New Album

Their new album, World Gone Crazy (released independently September 28 on HOR Records), is one of the strongest installments in a catalogue that stretches 13 studio albums deep. The record includes cameos from former Doobie Michael McDonald, Willie Nelson and Little Feat’s Bill Payne, but it’s the quality songwriting and ageless voices of Simmons and Johnston that ring out most loudly. World Gone Crazy is a fine mixture of familiar Doobies textures but it’s also unmistakably the sound of the band moving forward, trying fresh things, stretching themselves.

“I think we weren’t trying to copy ourselves or anything, but I think we knew it should sound like a Doobie Brothers record. We always just go in with the goal of making the best record we can but not this type or that type of record,” says Simmons. “We wanted to go a little further on this record than on some earlier records because we didn’t have a record company breathing down our necks. We did it with some independent funding and we’re pretty excited about it. People are responding very appropriately to the new tracks in concert. They don’t go crazy like with ‘China Grove,’ but they’re listening really attentively and clapping along. And the reaction to the new songs after we play a show has been really strong.”

“It’s not a rubberstamp version of a Doobie Brothers album, but it’s like a Doobie Brothers album because we have no limits. We took advantage of that and went some places we’ve never been before. I’m enjoying this album more than anything we’ve done in a long time,” says Johnston. “I’ve always looked at our music this way – and maybe it’s an oversimplification – we’re basically an American band. We play stuff from all genres of American music – R&B, blues, rock ‘n’ roll, things that are sort of country, some things that are almost bluegrass. We cover a lot of areas and this [new] album is a good example of that. This album’s definitely got some different stuff on it, but when people hear it they’ll know who it is.”

McDonald’s guest turn on “Don’t Say Goodbye” is one of the new album’s standouts.

“Mike is such a consummate artist, and when I was working on the track I thought he’d be perfect. When he came in, it was so effortless. He knew exactly what I wanted. He brought his own viewpoint on the melody and the cadence and where to put the accents. He just nailed it,” says Simmons. “When I started working on that track I felt it had a Steely Dan kind of vibe, and I thought how much I’d love to hear Mike’s voice with a lady’s voice like on ‘Peg’ and ‘Aja.’ So I asked his wife [Amy Holland-McDonald] to come in and sing with him to create that effect. I told him straight out, ‘I’d like it to sound like the stuff you did for Donald and Walter.’ I also had Gail Swanson at the session, who’s just great, and I had the two ladies sing with Mike, and they found the sound I’d been searching for.”

World Gone Crazy reunites the band with producer Ted Templeman, who helmed the majority of the group’s amazing run of 1970s releases.

The Doobie Brothers 2010

“Ted’s most important contribution was picking the tunes. We didn’t have a producer on our previous album, Sibling Rivalry (2000), and I wasn’t comfortable doing that. With four different singers and songs going everywhere, it’s a challenge. With [World Gone Crazy], I sat down in my studio with Ted with about 70 songs on my hard drive and he helped find the right ones,” says Johnston. “This album took about three years to make, which normally might not be a good thing but it gave me the chance to finish some songs I was ready to throw away, including ‘A Brighter Day’ [the album's lush, inviting opener]. I called Billy Payne to come play keyboards on a couple songs. In three days, he lifted ['A Brighter Day'] to a place it’d never been before, just utterly changed it and it became what I had in mind. I was just dancing around, and I did the same thing with ‘World Gone Crazy,’ where he played the piano the way I wanted to hear it, which was New Orleans style. He took it where it needed to go, and he did the same thing on ‘Young Man’s Game.’ I love his playing on anything and he’s such a great guy.”

One of the only nods to their 40th anniversary is the remake of “Nobody,” which originally appeared as the first cut on the Doobie Brothers’ self-titled debut in 1970.

“It’s definitely an upgrade. Nobody was that excited about doing it. It was the first thing we ever put out and it’s 40 years old. I told them, ‘It never got a fair shot. We have to redo it.’ On the new version we took the motor out, took the wheels off, and put in a different drum style, different bass – which is Bob Glaub, who plays on the whole album except for one song. I asked John to play a chunka-chunka guitar part over the top, and that made a big difference. And there’s an intro that was never there before. It has a groove, and it never really used to,” says Johnston. “By the time we got it done, everybody was pretty stoked with it.”

The new “Nobody” also spotlights one of the Doobie Brothers’ enduring strengths – their harmonies. The Doobies still do it the old fashioned way, unlike the majority of auto-tuned and tweaked vocals today.

“I hate that. I don’t believe in that or people doing shows where they lip-sync and don’t really sing. There’s a whole lot of stuff going on today that just annoys me. You’re just rippin’ the people off. You’re not giving them a real show when you do that. The same thing can said about auto-tune,” says Johnston. “We just do it the way we’ve always done it – sing it till you get it right or be happy with what you did get. What you hear on our albums is the way it was.”

Continue reading for Pat Simmons’ remembrances of the band’s early days in the Bay Area and more…

Cities By The Bay

In many respects, The Doobie Brothers are a quintessential S.F. Bay Area band. Though based south of the big city in their early days, they embody all the same open-minded, gutsy energy that fueled their San Fran counterparts. I asked Pat Simmons what impact being from this area has had on the band.

The Doobie Brothers Debut Album

“It’s been huge. There’s been so much music through the years out of the Bay Area. Even though we’ve had members living all over the place, we like to think of ourselves as a Bay Area band. It’s where we were founded, and I cut my teeth on music there. I grew up in San Jose and Tom was a Central Valley guy but as soon as he graduated from high school he moved to the Bay Area to go to college. We were right there during the Summer of Love [laughs knowingly]. We were the ones at the Fillmore Auditorium freaking out while the Grateful Dead played. It’s warped us to no end,” says Simmons. “We loved Moby Grape, Jefferson Airplane, Mike Bloomfield and Electric Flag, and all the music that was coming through here, the blues legends like Freddie and Albert King and John Lee Hooker.”

“We played with John Lee tons because we used to play a club in downtown San Francisco called The Keystone,” continues Simmons. “Elvin Bishop had this open-mic thing he ran on Monday nights and every weekend they had special guests, often big names in the blues in those days and some jazz players. We ended up in probably 1970 opening all these shows for John Lee there. It was a great thing for us, and it was a nice show for the audience. Nobody knew who were but we were playing pretty good. And before the night was over, he’d invite us up to jam. For weeks and weeks, we’d go in and open for John Lee Hooker, who was just amazing.”

“We did the same sort of thing over in North Beach at this place called the North Beach Revival, and that was more Latin bands. Neal Schon (Journey) had a band at the time before he joined Santana with a bunch of other Latin guys. It was Luis Gasca & Friends, which had a horn section, Neal on guitar, David Brown from Santana on bass and whoever else was around like Coke Escovedo. And again, we’d open the show for those guys with about 40 minutes and they’d finish the night. Then it got to be where we were the headliner there,” says Simmons. “They were only a few places like that around town where it was casual enough that when musicians came in they didn’t feel funny about sitting in. We were always getting guitar players. Johnny Winter would come in and ask to sit in and play the blues with us. Pete Townshend came in and sat in with us one night. You can’t do that at the Great American Music Hall or Fillmore. It’s less casual than when you play clubs.”

This mix of slots – a blues session and a gig opening for Latin rockers – is indicative of the free-roaming yet grounded nature of the Doobie Brothers’ music, whose sound very much evolved from these street level, dirt-under-the-nails live performances and then formally shaped into a studio sound that incorporated all these varied elements.

The McDonald Days

“I don’t know that we’ve ever compromised the music. If we were playing a blues place, sure, we played the blues but everything we played wasn’t the blues. We also played a lot of rock ‘n’ roll, which was different for the blues audiences. In some ways, people liked it because they knew they were going to hear some blues later, so why not some rock ‘n’ roll first? That enabled us to bridge a wide variety of music,” says Simmons.

In some ways this diversity speaks to the Doobies’ character as sophisticated hippies.

“I think you got the hippie part right but I’m not sure about the sophisticated part [laughs]. When Mike [McDonald] joined the band everything changed. The opportunities to try things we’d never done before opened up,” says Simmons. “We did some odd stuff early on, but if we were stretching out it was more like Loggins & Messina or the Allman Brothers, where later on with Mike – and I almost hate to say this – we did some almost Frank Zappa-esque stuff. That was kind of ‘oops’ and my fault really. It wasn’t Mike’s idea so don’t blame him.”

“It enabled me to do some stuff that I really wanted to try, and unfortunately I had Jeff Baxter to egg me on! He and I were kinda crazy guitar player nuts. Jeff was pretty cutting edge at the time, getting into guitar synthesizers. And coming out of Steely Dan, he identified a bit with bebop. I think we were able to come together in our love of Zappa,” continues Simmons. “Mike also brought a fusion edge to things. He’s kind of a cool jazz guy, and I think he really admired Ray Charles and brought that in for all of us to key off of. And also coming from Steely Dan, he admired what Donald Fagen was doing and brought elements of that into things. It certainly enabled us to go a little further, though we probably weren’t the sophisticates we thought we were [laughs].”

Rockin’ Down The Highway

The main priority for the Doobies right now is getting folks to listen to an album they’re justifiably proud of, and of course, continuing to play music in front of audiences anywhere they can.

“We change up the setlists regularly. Of course, you have to play the chestnuts because the response is always positive and good. But, for instance, when we played Wolf Trap we worked up a full acoustic set that utilized deep album cuts like ‘Rainy Day Crossroad Blues’ and ‘Snake Man,’” says Johnston. “Right now, it’s pure energy from end-to-end, no ballads, which a few people have complained about.”

While their live shows lean heavily on hits and longstanding audience favorites, the Doobie Brothers have a huge catalog full of great tunes that might be less familiar to casual listeners but are terrific nonetheless. For hardcore followers, the chance to hear gems “Clear As The Driven Snow,” “Song To See You Through,” “White Sun” or a primo instrumental like “Steamer Lane Breakdown” would be a dream come true. And Simmons confirms that we’re not the only ones dreaming along these lines.

The Doobie Brothers 2010

“We’re very conscious of the need to entertain the people that come to see us, but I’m always interested in going further. I want people to cry,” says Simmons with resounding sincerity. “We need to revisit our b-sides and album tracks more in the future. I’m only speaking for myself, but I’d like to be able to play [new song] ‘Far From Home’ because I think it’s different. The song means a lot to me and I love the way it came out. So, songs like that I’d like to be able to perform, but it requires people sitting and listening and not jumping around and clapping. Everyone has to be prepared for that in the band, and that’s part of my job to prepare them.”

“When you get in your stride, there’s nothing you can’t do. But, when you’re doing things like that it’s taking a chance. It’s being ready to step out and be a little self-conscious,” continues Simmons. “There are people in our band with social phobias. They feel a little uncomfortable in crowds and they get a little tongue-tied when they get on a microphone and have to be extemporaneous. You have to be able to do that sort of stuff in order [to play quieter, more listener-attentive material]. It’ll be a challenge but one I’m interested in pursuing.”

So, with the younger generation perhaps unaware of the cultural basis of the word doobie, what does it mean to the guys in this band to be a Doobie Brother in 2010?

“It means the same thing to me it always did [laughs]. As a band name, it was kind of an accident,” says Simmons. “The very first thing on the DVD in the Deluxe version of World Gone Crazy sort of answers the question of our name pretty well.”

“It’s always just been a name, not a moniker of our lifestyle or anything,” says Johnston. “We didn’t have a name and nobody in the band came up with that name. A guy that lived in the house I was in on 12th St. in San Jose came up with the name. We were going to a gig and needed a name, and he said, ‘Why don’t you call yourselves the Doobie Brothers?’ And it stuck around [laughs].”

“We just feel we’re fortunate to be able to do what we do,” says Simmons. “I can’t say enough about how lucky we’ve been. We love music SO much. Everybody in this band loves to play. Through the years, people have come and gone, and this particular group of guys [now] is so deep into playing, writing and recording. It’s still our hobby and our job. Getting onstage is the best part of our day when we’re traveling around. No matter what else you’ve gone through that day, when you get on that stage it’s, ‘Whooo, finally, we made it!’”

Doobie Brothers Tour Dates :: Doobie Brothers News :: Doobie Brothers Concert Reviews

JamBase | Keepin’ Runnin’
Go See Live Music!


Grace Potter and the Nocturnals | Secret Show Review

By: Shayna Hodkin

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals :: 08.19.10 :: Bryant Park :: New York, NY

Grace Potter by Dino Perrucci

“Where else would we rather be? Nowhere.” Grace Potter wasn’t the only one who felt this way last Thursday night. The audience was full of fortunate people, feeling like winners, who were all incredibly lucky to be where they were.

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals‘ last-minute Thursday night show, hosted by The Artist’s Den, was packed. An announcement about ticketing for the secret show was released Tuesday by Relix Magazine, where fans were able to submit their names all day Tuesday and Wednesday to a free ticket raffle and the winners were emailed the event details on Wednesday night. The announcement soon ended up all over Twitter and music blogs, and by Wednesday’s end, hundreds of names had been submitted for a tight guest list. Showtime Thursday proved Potter’s popularity in New York with a line that stretched for three blocks, moving into the rest of the park and its surrounding area.

The show kicked off with the fitting “Hot Summer Night.” Bassist Catherine Popper and drummer Matt Burr threw down a funky rhythm section until Potter, looking like a goddess with her white dress and long hair, jumped on stage with her hands in the air and her voice bringing everyone all over the park to their feet. The band then moved into some older material, with a kickin’ “Ah, Mary” that set the tone for what Potter described as “the saddest happy breakup song,” “Goodbye Kiss,” from the band’s self-titled album released this past June on Hollywood Records.

The selection of old and new material, along with some narration by Potter, established a pretty clear theme for the setlist, namely heartbreak that is always followed by a strong return. “That Phone”, “Apologies” and “Low Road” highlighted not only Potter’s incredibly soulful chops but also her ability to engage a crowd; Potter’s banter with the band is always witty, and her choice of stories is always relatable. New Yorkers can be a tough crowd, but you would never guess Potter was from anywhere else. She loves New York, even though sometimes there’s dog poop on stage, a problem the band faced Thursday night with good humor. Only in New York, Popper lamented, will you get dog poo on your shoes when you’re onstage at your own concert.

Nocturnals by Dino Perrucci

The enthusiasm of Grace Potter and the Nocturnals is undeniable. Though the show was scheduled from 7:30-8:45, the music didn’t stop until closer to 9:30. The band was having a great time, and the audience was sucked in; the venue stayed full from long before the band took the stage until the end of the encore’s fourth and final song. The eagerness and love of everyone onstage was contagious, and there was no way to avoid catching some of their energy.

“Sexy” is the word that most accurately describes everything about Grace Potter and the Nocturnals. Even when she isn’t making out with Catherine Popper onstage – although it’s definitely a plus when she is – she and the band pour a passion into the show that leaves the audience a sweaty, exhausted, fulfilled mess. Songs like “Paris,” “Oasis,” “Medicine” and “Nothing But The Water” highlight Potter’s unapologetic confidence, while also spurs the rest of the band to showcase their own talents and extremely good looks. When it came time for the drum jam, the whole band intertwined over the drum kit, and the sheer amount of physical attractiveness onstage was slightly overwhelming. Somehow all six band members won the genetic lottery, so their live show is a pleasure even for the deaf.

The spirit of Grace Potter and the Nocturnals brought a breath of country air to a stagnant New York City summer. The surprise, secret nature of the show lent a VIP feel to a great venue and consistently incredible live act. If summer has to end, this is a great way to blow it out.

Setlist:
Hot Summer Night, Ah, Mary, Goobye Kiss, Only Love, Tiny Light, Apologies, One Short Thing, Low Road, That Phone, Oasis, White Rabbit (Jefferson Airplane cover),
Paris (Ooh La La), Medicine > Drum Jam. E: Heart of Glass (Blondie cover), Stop the Bus, Big White Gate, Nothing But the Water Part I > Nothing But the Water Part II > Drum Jam

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals Tour Dates :: Grace Potter and the Nocturnals News :: Grace Potter and the Nocturnals Concert Reviews

JamBase | Big Apple
Go See Live Music!


Jefferson Airplane: Four Live Albums Out 10/26

JEFFERSON AIRPLANE TAKES OFF


Jefferson Airplane

The argument rages on, but for many music fans in the ’60s, the best live band from the Bay Area was Jefferson
Airplane
. The Airplane featured three master instrumentalists (Jorma Kaukonen, Jack Casady and
Spencer Dryden) and three vocalists: Grace Slick (replacing original singer Signe
Anderson
in 1966), Marty Balin and Paul Kantner. The Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall of Fame inductees
made a total of eight studio albums and released a smattering of live albums including 1969′s Bless Its Pointed
Little Head
.

But what most fans don’t know is that there are vast reserves of never-released live material by Jefferson Airplane
capturing key moments in their history. On October 26, 2010, Collectors’ Choice Music Live will release four
previously
unreleased live albums: Live at the Fillmore Auditorium 10/15/66 Late Show — Signe’s Farewell, Live at the
Fillmore Auditorium 10/16/66 Early & Late Shows — Grace’s Debut, Live at the Fillmore Auditorium 11/25/66 &
11/27/66 — We Have Ignition</b
, and Return to the Matrix 2/1/68.

Taken together, the four releases confirm that at its best, when Jorma was soaring, Jack rumbling and the three
voices
joining in ecstatic melisma, no other band could ascend to the heights attained by the Airplane. Hand-picked by a
team of devotees and featuring rare photos inside handsome digi-packs, these concerts distill and express the
dream
and promise of the Haight-Ashbury scene.


50 Unsung Classics of the 2000s (Pt. 2)

By: Dennis Cook

As the comments for Part 1 showed, there’s WAY more than 50 Unsung Classics from the past decade. We couldn’t agree more, and have been delighted to see readers sharing their own passionate picks. Keep it up, you never know who you might influence to latch onto one of your faves.

This article was never intended to be comprehensive. It’s merely a stroll through some of the lesser-known jewels (or lesser known around these parts – despite multi-million album sales, Christina Aguilera isn’t exactly red meat at JamBase) I’ve come across in my first decade covering music professionally. Despite the mythology that says talent will rise to the top, there’s a much more subterranean, arcane pathway to success that involves agents, labels, promoters, club owners, DJs, and more. What we try to do at JamBase, to some degree at the very least, is put all music on a level playing field. Oh, we have our star players and we honor them regularly, but we also try to carve out a space for emerging talent, deserving veterans and regional groups worthy of a bigger audience. It’s a bit of a cause for us, and lists like this are another way to make sure that great music finds listeners. Wander through and see if you can’t find a happy surprise or three amongst this wide-ranging assortment.

50 Unsung Classics of the 2000s (Pt. 2)

26. Comets On Fire: Blue Cathedral (2004)

Tumultuous, vulgarly creative, an elemental force – Oakland’s Comets On Fire is all of these, and their teeter-tottering balance of refinement and chaos hit a fever pitch on Blue Cathedral. There’s the roar of things being born here, or perhaps a spinal tap into some powerful, primordial nervous system that convulses and sighs at their touch. Facile comparisons to Pink Floyd, Neu, Hawkwind, etc. scratch the surface but nothing quite captures the full gale blast of opener “The Bee and the Cracking Egg” or the tangible pleasure when they ease off the throttle and let prettiness settle in. While 2006′s Avatar – currently the last Comets album to date – may be the more refined work, Blue Cathedral takes the prize for its inspired audacity and unpasteurized vision. One hopes the stars align for Ethan Miller (Howlin Rain), Ben Chasny (Six Organs of Admittance), Noel Von Harmonson, Ben Flashman and Utrillo Kushner (Colossal Yes) to create another corrugated, blood churning masterpiece one day.

27. Neon Neon: Stainless Style (2008)

This collaboration between Super Furry AnimalsGruff Rhys and onomatopoetically perfect producer Boom Bip is the blow fueled Odyssey of anachro-future electronica albums, full of punishingly cool beats and squiggly vintage synths fueling a tale of hubris and blind glee inspired by auto mogul John DeLorean. Drug trafficking, fast cars and the lifestyle to match are all great grist in a song cycle that’s both strobe light ready and a touch introspective, understanding that all powder fueled good times still leave us standing alone in front of the mirror in the dawn light. The general atmosphere is what one imagines Prince’s bedroom circa 1984 might have been like – a carnal miasma full of head-snapping drums, ass tickling keys, slinky-as-hell vocals, pheromones dripping off the walls and the creeping isolation inherent to celebrity and great wealth.

28. Explosions In The Sky: The Earth Is Not A Cold Dead Place (2003)

Some titles offer a succinct inducement to live, engage, and reject the creeping cynicism of our age. Without a single word uttered, Explosions In The Sky do all this. The Austin-based quartet creates instrumental music with an emotional richness and cinematic soul that most of their peers simply can’t approach. While many modern instrumentals can sometimes feel icy or even inhuman, Explosions’ music, particularly on The Earth Is Not…, has a flushed, achingly alive charge. Patience is required but the dynamic payoffs are well worth the wait, and ultimately one discovers their patient pilgrim’s progress reminds them of the richness of the journey and not just the destination.

29. Roger: This Is The Shit (2004)

Exclaiming, “Goddamn! We’re higher than a spaceship!” these U.K./Detroit modern funkateers did their damndest to kick start a new Motor Booty Affair doused in glam rock ooze and springing around on big, crunchy beats. Full of braggadocio and sing-along trash talking, This Is The Shit is a really good time that doesn’t much care what you or anyone thinks of it. Every nook and cranny is filled with a pimp’s chattering confidence, a gold lame mythology with titles like “Ramm It Home,” “Hot Fuddge” and “Clapp Your Fockin’ Hands.” Not exactly complex, but also not too dumb, Roger is one of the funk sleepers of the 2000s.

30. Bob Frank & John Murry: World Without End (2006)

This set of ten extraordinary death songs full of ragged bullet holes, frozen flesh and even colder hearts represents some of the purest, deepest American songwriting in recent years. S.F. talent John Murry and veteran Bob Frank carve scenes in fantastic detail, and each piece smartly arranged and presented with appropriate croak and lack of sentimentality. Life is both dear and cheap in their tales – as it is in this mean old world – but managing this gray area with verisimilitude is a real achievement. Graveyards, the afterlife and lonely hours of reflection haunt World Without End, an addictive, insightful listening experience that carries folk’s death song tradition forward a few good miles.

31. Drunk Horse: Adult Situations (2003)

Sometimes the best approach is to just dig your fingers in and get down to it. Subtlety is swell – and there’s more than a smidgen going on below the surface here – but Oakland’s Drunk Horse understands that the best hard rock plows with animal intensity, unafraid to drool and flail a bit. While 2005′s In Tongues is the more accomplished, sophisticated album, there’s something rut-tastic about Adult Situations that makes it their (thus far) definitive work. From the bait ‘n’ switch cover shot through grandly single-entendre titles like “Lube Job” and “National Lust,” this grinds with real gusto. They’re really good musicians who choose to sculpt in this boogieing, blunt force way, so one shouldn’t be too surprised when they throw you for a loop every now and again. On Adult Situations, Drunk Horse plays like men whose nurseries blasted AC/DC, MDC, Grand Funk Railroad and Black Flag on a loop, imprinting the charred wisdom of their ancestors upon these bang-up, true rock warriors.

32. David Torn: Prezens (2007)

Avant jammers like MMW, Scofield and Bill Frisell have a solid presence in the jazz, jam and experimental fields, but there’s a whole cadre of just-about-as-talented folks plying similarly unclassifiable waters that are far less well known. NYC left field mainstay David Torn has been carving out his unique guitar and compositional styles since the early ’80s, though there’s never been as compact an introduction to his zeitgeist as Prezens, which features Torn alongside longtime foil Tim Berne (saxophones), Craig Taborn (keys) and Tom Rainey (drums). Atmospheric ballads mix with cataclysmic rumble and some of the most daring improvisation heard in the past decade. There’s a heated freedom to Prezens, where the players don’t hesitate to employ new technology, tossing in loops and samples as the spirit moves them. In basic terms, one picks up a bit of Robert Fripp’s feel in Torn’s guitar, but there’s a mischievousness that tightly wound Rob just can’t muster. Prezens is Torn’s best showing since his last gem for the same label, ECM Records, in 1987, Cloud About Mercury, which featured the former King Crimson rhythm team of Bill Bruford and Tony Levin along with trumpeter Mark Isham.

33. Michael Penn: Mr. Hollywood Jr., 1947 (2005)

Hands-down, one of the most underrated singer-songwriters of the past 25 years, Penn should be mentioned in the same breath as his wife Aimee Mann, Elliott Smith, Matthew Sweet and others who’ve craftily carried on The Beatles tradition. Perhaps it was Penn’s early commercial success with his debut, 1989′s March, that’s cost him critical props, but Mr. Hollywood Jr., his fifth album, arrived with virtually no fanfare. Years of label juggling and soundtrack work (Boogie Nights) took him out of the spotlight, but what he built in those shadows is probably his most coherent, well conceived set. Penn may be more wistful than any man alive, and one feels the world’s weight squarely on his shoulders here. Like all his albums, the full measure of his talents takes time to sink in. The interlocking themes and cross-talking ideas on Mr. Hollywood Jr. are delivered by Penn’s emotionally vibrant voice in a way that catches us up in his search for meaning below all the mistakes and missed signals human beings endure. Rumor has it there’s a Part Two to this tale. We’ll be lucky to hear it.

34. The Blood Brothers: Young Machetes (2006)

For a brief moment before their sudden disbanding in 2007, it seemed as if rapidly evolving hardcore punks The Blood Brothers might give Mars Volta a run for their money. Not nearly as epic-minded, the Brothers nonetheless found ways to insert a crazed number of complications and nuances into mostly two-minute-and-change tunes that possessed Volta’s supercharged, uncontrollable vibe. On Young Machetes one can hear the entire band straining to delve into new territory and truly become an equal to acknowledged inspirations like Gang of Four and Drive Like Jehu. The make-or-break vocals of Johnny Whitney and Jordan Billie were like the King Ad-Rock pitched up further and given a snoot full of the ugliest hillbilly crank. If it worked for you, then it wasn’t hard to pick up on the feverish drive and lock-tight cohesion of the rest. In much the same way as Faith No More’s Angel Dust functioned as the soundtrack to early ’90s dissolution, Young Machetes scores the discontent and disillusion of the 2000s for the next generation coming up the pike, while also providing sustenance to those who suckled at The Clash or Black Flag’s teats back in the day.

35. Apollo Sunshine: Apollo Sunshine (2005)

God’s own psychedelic ragtime rock band, Apollo Sunshine, with their self-titled sophomore album, delivered pretty much every good thing about the genre – loud and soft guitars, lyrics that grow right along with you, irresistible melodies, strong but not too polished vocals, an undomesticated energy and a veil of mystery that never fully lifts despite all our peeking under the sheets. With this release Sam Cohen (guitar, pedal steel, vocals), Jeremy Black (drums), Jesse Gallagher (vocals, bass, guitar) and now departed member Sean Aylward (guitars) unleashed a sound in tune with middle period Beatles and the tripped-out ’60s without trying to emulate anything in particular. The juju inside shout-along marvels like “Phyliss” and “Lord” and gentler drifts like “God” and “Today Is The Day” is akin to a revival meeting for those of little faith. Glorious!

Continue reading for selections 36-50…

36. The Court & Spark: Hearts (2006)

Around since the late ’90s, S.F.’s Court and Spark have a slow gravity that pulls us towards the earth without clipping our wings. They draw inspiration from different wells, leaning towards John Martyn over Bob Dylan, Traffic instead of The Byrds, Terry Reid over Springsteen. There’s a whiff of Neil Young when the high-octane guitars kick in, but they always emerge into a unique, oceanic spaciousness. Hearts – possibly their final release since main man M.C. Taylor has formed the fabulous Hiss Golden Messenger – moves with poetic logic, using evocative language, entrancing melodies, and a ceaseless sonic curiosity that one doesn’t usually associate with song-based rock. Equally adept at catchy romps (“Your Mother Was The Lightning”) and oddly textured instrumentals (“The Oyster Is A Wealthy Beast”), the band never sounded more sure-footed or engaged. Taylor has a rough-hewn, world-weary vibe that infuses everything with a bittersweet sheen. When he sings, “I’ve got a wolf in my yard, and I’ve got a gun in my chest, but I don’t care,” you feel the impending doom but also the freedom such surrender can bring. Hearts is a bewitching meditation chamber for our own hearts as we wrestle with doubt on the long walk towards hope.

37. Hairy Apes BMX: Beautiful Seizure (2003)

Not a lot of musicians outside the punk world were actively slingin’ mud at the Bush Administration in 2003. And it’s a fair bet that the Apes were the only ones armed with vibraphone and the perverse insight and muscled-up moxie of Mike Dillon. Beautiful Seizure is balls out brilliant, a swirl of chopped notes, buzzing keys, rainbows missing stripes, ditties about scared little politicians and some crackled Latinismo. One minute they’re on a static punk run that’d do the Beastie Boys proud and the next finds them playing gamelan on the moon. Tofu and Thai food nourish the body while nursery rhymes herald a change in consciousness. Dillon (vibes, marimba, percussion, vocals) and Critters Buggin’ bandmate Brad Houser (sax, clarinet, guitar) are joined by J.J. Richards (bass, vocals), John Spence (drums) and T. Clarke Wyatt (keys, cello), and the ensemble spill color out in giant size paint drums, as unique a specimen as the primate family has ever produced.

38. GFE: Broken Time Machine (2008)

The “G” in their full name – Granola Funk Express – has been an ass-kicker for this hyper talented Asheville, NC hip hop unit. Folks just don’t associate the boom bap with dried berries and honey touched oats. That’s the problem with surface impressions because any fairly serious hip hop head has a treasure trove of inspired verses, shuffling beats and interesting musical turns to explore with this long running band. While one could give the nod to almost any of GFE’s previous albums or numerous solo joints, it’s Broken Time Machine that pulls it all together. It’s a fully formed love note to all things hip hop that can stand confidently next to the best work from Pete Rock & CL Smooth, Tribe Called Quest and Souls of Mischief. Each MC is a killer in his own right but GFE also keeps the torch going for classic posse cuts, passing the potato with dexterity and a fine sense of when to shut the fuck up and let the next guy preach. They excel at political jabs (“The 4th Estate,” “Sleepwalkers”), genuinely funny stuff (“Rich Prick”), party bangers that’d smoke the crapola on MTV (“Regular Basis”) and even philosophical journeys (“New Gods” “Clock Keeps Ticking”). GFE builds on hip hop’s fundamentals and keeps them invigorating, immediate and positively artful.

39. Cosmic Rough Riders: Enjoy The Melodic Sunshine (2000)

Signed to Alan McGee’s Poptones – one of the founders of the seminal ’90s Creation Records – all seemed blue skies for this English jangle sensation. In truth it would only last two more years with this ridiculously appealing lineup. On Melodic Sunshine, the Riders stirred memories of early Byrds and Buffalo Springfield but tinged with a black humor and highly modern P.O.V. that stripped the ringing guitars of some of their sugar. From the cover drawing of a vintage plane in psychedelic full flight to festival anthem “Glastonbury Revisited,” Melodic Sunshine is so, so, so easy to like and rewards listeners willing to sit a spell with their skewed lyrics, which suggest what might have happened if Morrissey had helped out the Jefferson Airplane. Modern lads in throwback clothing, it’s a pity this lineup didn’t last; nothing since has provided the same breathless listening pleasure.

40. Grayson Capps: Wail & Ride (2006)

A lot of roots rock fans have a tendency to look backwards, assured the best has already been and gone with Townes Van Zandt, Johnny Cash, Fred Neil, Gram Parsons, etc. Pity because New Orleans’ marvel Grayson Capps is alive and well and slowly building one of the most phenomenal songbooks in America today. His sophomore album, Wail & Ride, hums with quiet wisdom and unforced momentum. It grows with you over time, different facets touching a nerve depending on your own levels of sorrow and joy. It’s the kind of album that gets troubled souls through tumultuous nights where perhaps the trouble we find ourselves in is of our own making. “Poison” and “Give It To Me” should be Big Easy standards, and he’s equally gifted at tenderness and introspection here. What amazes is how Capps isn’t a household figure amongst the roots/Americana crowd in the same way Gillian Welch, Steve Earle and David Rawlings have become in recent years. If ever there were a cat primed to pick up where Lowell George and John Prine have left off, it’s Capps.

41. Bad Religion: New Maps of Hell (2007)

30 years is a long time for any group to maintain white-hot anger and constant vigilance, yet Bad Religion has managed it AND continued to evolve a core sound into arguably the sharpest, most vocally rich punk rock being made. The evidence of this rests in New Maps, which continues their mission of dethroning tyrants and ideologues. What’s especially cool about New Maps is how hooky it all is, as well as how evolved the backup vocal parts have become. No one touches Greg Graffin as a lead vocalist in punk, but the others have stepped up their game in a way that layers things unlike any of their peers. Every cut is essential Bad Religion and the three-guitar frontline is just pulverizing. There was plenty to be pissed off about in 2007 and Bad Religion offered spitting, smart catharsis with this release, the best showing from a “classic” punk band in the past decade next to Fugazi’s The Argument.

42. The Moore Brothers: Murdered By The Moore Brothers (2006)

Siblings Thom and Greg Moore are two of the best harmony singers alive, today’s equivalent to a youthful Graham Nash and David Crosby. They also happen to write and deliver songs with the infectious humanity of Simon & Garfunkel and The Carpenters… if they had considerably darker imaginations. Actually, their aesthetics hover a bit closer to moribund Joni Mitchell and prickly Tim Hardin, but the songs have an undeniable pop lilt. Listening to the Brothers Moore you may find yourself humming and tapping your foot and only later do you realize they’re talking about a painful separation or a monster’s balls poking through the kitchen table. They’re very different composers but their styles dovetail wonderfully, and their voices would sound divine reciting a menu. Murdered is a great jumping off point but don’t be shocked if you find yourself scrambling forward and backwards in their unremittingly satisfying catalog.

43. Grinderman: Grinderman (2007)

After releasing possibly the best Nick Cave and The Bad Seeds album, 2004′s hymnal to love and the Lord Abattoir Blues/The Lyre of Orpheus, Sir Nick and three Seeds – Warren Ellis (bouzouki, violin), Martyn P. Casey (bass) and Jim Sclavunos (drums) – got down to some gritty, sweaty rock. Beset by the “No Pussy Blues,” Grinderman put a guitar in Cave’s hand and landed the impromptu quartet in a sort of juke joint of the mind. From the junk-clutching monkey on the cover to Cave’s impolite growl, this feels delightfully sleazy. It’s the closest Cave and his compatriots had come in years to the electric blues so evident in their early work, and the power lines at the crossroads must have been sparkin’ because Grinderman’s atmosphere bled into the next Bad Seeds album, 2008′s fiery Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!!

44. DJ Spooky vs. Twilight Circus Dub Sound System: Riddim Clash (2004)

Through a haze of smoke and flashing lights you sense a shape and move towards it. Before you can make contact, it’s gone like a fox into the woods. You hear talking in the trees, pushing at your edges, manipulating the here and now. If one were asked to pair up two like-minded cats they’d be hard pressed to do better than this duo. Harking back to the On-U Sound Pay It All Back sound clashes, this album merges the laid-back Dutch mood of Twilight Circus with Spooky’s big city, bright size life. There’s dust storms, gamma blasts, and heavyweight style broad enough to include flutes, violin, kalimba, and dubtastic horns (King Tubby MUST be respected). Riddim Clash is everything good about the new generation of dub captains steering us towards lands that appear on no map.

45. Brand New: The Devil And God Are Raging Inside Me (2006)

Folks over 30 may not realize it but Brand New is one of THE bands for the generation snapping at their heels. And with good reason based on the emotionally eviscerating, Nirvana-esque The Devil And God Are Raging Inside Me, as loaded a title as any young band has ever hurled at the world. Rising out of various hardcore bands in the late ’90s, Brand New utilizes melody and dissonance with flair. Their music is introspective, troubled, pop culture savvy, slightly tortured and not a little poetic. Jesse Lacey‘s voice is a wild instrument, careening across a wide emotional plain and arcing upwards or digging down with a suddenness that’s sometimes unsettling. The band exhibits a rare patience in their builds, so when things do explode they’ve built a bond with the listener that creates a real payoff. Their throbbing angst would be almost unbearable if not for Brand New’s skill as players and arrangers, or the great thought that goes into each element in their thick modern rock melange.

46. Alfie: If You Happy With, You Need Do Nothing (2001)

Assembled from EP releases like the Beta Band‘s phenomenal debut, The Three EPs, Alfie had a similar British yet out-of-time quality, where the experience of them is akin to floating on a warm salt sea while pleasantly zooted. There’s a touch of shoegaze, a bit of Belle & Sebastian-y pop, and the intriguingly cobbled together feel of the aforementioned Beta Band. Flitting through it all are Lee Gorton‘s cool and cooling vocals. The world seems moist and malleable when handled by Alfie, at least on this set. None of their subsequent albums hit quite the same sustained swoon, and the group broke up in 2005. At least they left us this shimmering bit of loveliness.

47. The Dirtbombs: Dangerous Magical Noise (2003)

Wanna be reminded of a time when rock was still rebellious and a social lubricant for skin-to-skin encounters? Meet The Dirtbombs, one of Detroit’s contemporary best and a direct pipeline straight back to Little Richard’s makeup table and Chuck Berry’s ladies room peephole. Led by the curmudgeonly charismatic Mick Collins (of legendary garage punks The Gories), these cats play with a focused dedication to tap into rock’s originators while still keeping things modern and terrifically fuzzy. It’s a tough balance and most just twist themselves into knots attempting it. But not The Dirtbombs, who excel at music that feels like it just plopped out and the band is shimmying frantically on the afterbirth. Dangerous Magical Noise is littered with killers, including “I’m Through With White Girls,” “Motor City Baby,” and opening slap “Start The Party.” The whole thing is like a living exclamation point, and the CD version adds two boffo covers – Brian Eno’s “King’s Lead Hat” and Robyn Hitchcock’s “Executioner of Love” – another of The Dirtbombs’ trademarks, i.e. great taste and judgment in tackling other’s work.

48. Carla Bozulich: Red Headed Stranger (2003)

When Willie Nelson released his gnarled, complex gothic tale of a preacher who loved a woman in 1975, few likely thought it would endure (or succeed) the way it has. Rooted in American folklore (killing, pain, loss, travel), the album resists understanding like a veiled lover, cloaking hurt and black deeds whenever it can. If there’s another voice tailor made for this song cycle it’s Carla Bozulich, with her coyote howls, Meredith Monk accents, and songbird croon. She lays bare all the jagged emotion others strive to hide, and in service to Willie’s masterpiece she’s especially stunning. Bozulich assembled a stirring ensemble to explore Nelson’s twisty album in its entirety. Frequent partner in crime Nels Cline plays guitar that moves from alien transmissions to the delicacy of “Just As I Am” on to Joe Pass with a twist on “Remember Me.” One listens as much for what Cline leaves out as for what he puts in, the space between saying more than most string flurries ever can. And like Bozulich, he’s unafraid to dabble in hot noise if the emotional content demands it. Violinist Jenny Scheinman drifts like a specter throughout, and the rhythm team of Scott Amendola (drums) and Devin Hoff (bass) is a subtle marvel. As with any good crack at tradition, this encompasses country, jazz, folk, and blues. Willie clearly approved of the treatment because he guests on several cuts, including a beautiful, off-kilter duet on Hank Cochran’s “Can I Sleep In Your Arms?” This Stranger is a moving, significant reinterpretation that explicates the notion of a man “wild in his sorrow” with resonant effectiveness.

49. The New Mastersounds: Plug & Play (2008)

Most contemporary studio funk and soul albums can’t hold a candle to the pillars of the ’60s and ’70s. There’s something missing, some essential rawness or more simply, not enough attention to the details or enough chops to make things sting. With Plug & Play U.K. lions The New Mastersounds staked their claim as one of the finest purveyors of hip shaking goodness since, well, James Brown and Grant Green were new faces on the scene. It isn’t work to be swept away by the wah-wah addled seduction of “Thermal Bad” or the organ splash of “Altitude,” but even better, they never let things fall into a same-y pocket, varying their funkin’ with smart, flexible songwriting and playing touched by a churchly fervor. Cherry female vocalist Dionne Charles ladles abundant soul into her four cuts, but even when there’s not a singer the Mastersounds maintain interest with their crisp, dexterous playing and snaky, purely enjoyable tunes. In a time where far too many people think bunk like Black Eyed Peas and John Legend is soul music, The New Mastersounds are around to keep things honest and true.

50. Def Leppard: Yeah! (2006)

Go ahead and assemble your rotting vegetables to toss for including this, but before you let fly do us both a favor and actually listen to a few tracks off this fine cover tunes collection, which finds the glossiest of pop-hard-rock bands trying their hand at childhood heroes like Queen, T. Rex, ELO, Sweet, Dave Essex, Roxy Music, Thin Lizzy and Free. It’s a shockingly hip assortment and their adoration keeps them from flubbing things. Self-produced, Yeah! is less glossy than their usual airbrushed sound, with an undeniable garage aesthetic that’s too right to fight. You could try to resist their hellcat hot take on Bolan’s “20th Century Boy” or guitarist Phil Collen‘s lively lead vocal brawl with The Faces’ “Stay With Me,” but why try? This in no way redeems Leppard’s past muddle headed, hyper pandering catalog, but credit where credit’s due. Yeah! is stupidly enjoyable drivin’ music and a sincere, nicely crafted homage to the artists that inspired these Union Jacks to pile into a tour van in the first place.

For Part 1 of our 50 Unsung Classics of the 2000s feature go here.

JamBase | Ears To The Ground

Go See Live Music!


Jerry Garcia Band: Let It Rock

JERRY GARCIA BAND WILL LET IT ROCK

Double-Disc Collection Includes Rare Early Performances Of The Group’s Original Lineup
Featuring Legendary Pianist Nicky Hopkins, Recorded Live In Berkeley, November 1975

For Jerry Garcia, 1975 was a seminal year that found him splitting time between recording Blues for Allah with the Dead, directing The Grateful Dead Movie, and forming the Jerry Garcia Band – his long-running side project. JGB’s earliest days are the subject of a two-disc live collection recorded during that momentous year. THE JERRY GARCIA COLLECTION, VOL. 2: LET IT ROCK, JERRY GARCIA BAND, NOVEMBER 17 & 18, 1975, KEYSTONE BERKELEY will be available November 10 from Jerry Garcia Family/Rhino at physical retail outlets and at www.dead.net for a suggested list price of $19.98.

The Jerry Garcia Band – Garcia, his constant collaborator bassist John Kahn and drummer Ron Tutt – played its first show with Nicky Hopkins on piano in August 1975. The ultimate session player, Hopkins’ credits include work with The Beatles, The Who, The Rolling Stones, and Jefferson Airplane to name a very few. While Hopkins residency was brief with the Jerry Garcia Band, it played an important role in the group’s shift away from big jams toward song-oriented material.


In addition to being a brilliant songwriter himself, Garcia had a great ear for other people’s songs and the new band provided him an opportunity to explore others’ works. LET IT ROCK includes covers of Chuck Berry (“Let It Rock”), Little Milton (“That’s What Love Will Make You Do”) and Jimmy Cliff (“Sitting In Limbo”). It also features performances of Allen Toussaint’s “I’ll Take A Melody” and Hank Ballard’s “Tore Up Over You,” songs that would surface a few months later on Garcia’s Reflections (1976). In addition to other artists’ songs, the band dips briefly into the Dead canon for “Friend Of The Devil” and Garcia’s 1972 solo debut for “Sugaree.” Three Hopkins originals are featured as well, “Pig’s Boogie,” “Lady Sleeps,” and the curiously titled “Edward, The Mad Shirt Grinder,” a song Hopkins first performed with Quicksilver Messenger Service.

While it is not strictly speaking a complete show, THE JERRY GARCIA COLLECTION, VOL. 2 is sequenced to approximate a two-set club gig, highlighting performances recorded November 17 and 18, 1975, during a pair of intimate gigs at Keystone Berkeley in front of a hometown crowd. The shows demonstrate that this lineup was capable of collective improvisation on the same level as the Grateful Dead, says David Gans, host of the Grateful Dead Hour. “Everybody could play melody or rhythm, or both, at any time, flying in and out of formation and always in intimate relation to what the others were playing,” he writes in the collection’s liner notes.

Track Listing

Disc One

Let It Rock
Tore Up Over You

Friend Of The Devil

They Love Each Other
It’s Too Late
Pig’s Boogie
Band Introductions
Sitting In Limbo
(I’m A) Road Runner

Disc 2

Sugaree
I’ll Take A Melody
That’s What Love Will Make You Do
Lady Sleeps
Ain’t No Use
Let’s Spend The Night Together
Edward, The Mad Shirt Grinder


Blue Cheer: Harder ‘n’ Louder Than The Rest

By: Chris Pacifico

With the passing of Dickie Peterson earlier this week on October 12 after a long battle with liver cancer, we wanted to share this conversation with Peterson that took place in late 2006 as the band was firmly establishing a young, new audience. This interview has never been seen until now.

Blue Cheer

There are certain bands in the history of rock & roll that never got their proper due, yet remained pivotal in serving as the blueprint for a genre. Case in point, Blue Cheer. In the mid to early ’60s, this trio was just another pack of “crazy longhairs” that happened to form a band and go to San Francisco. Perhaps they weren’t wearing any flowers in their hair but Blue Cheer’s presence on the Haight-Ashbury scene was one louder than most of their musical peers.

Blue Cheer was amongst the first to turn their amps up to eleven. Bassist-vocalist Dickie Peterson, guitarist Leigh Stephens and drummer Paul Whaley blared out cumbersome guitar riffs with blizzards of raw, psychedelic voltage, bluesy hooks and quaking beats. Peterson, whose un-decibel friendly vocals and beefy bass was no less than lacerating, always saw himself as more of a “blues screamer” than a lead singer. They never quite morphed into a household name in part because they were a tad loud for some of the peace loving, tune in and drop out generation. Yet Blue Cheer managed to share the stage and local limelight with the who’s who of musicians in the Age of Aquarius.

In 1968 their debut album, Vincebus Eruptum, peaked at #11 on the Billboard, and their version of Eddie Cochran’s “Summertime Blues” went to #14 on the singles chart.

Their sophomore LP, Outsideinside, was just as creatively fervid, but as the ’60s wound down Blue Cheer slipped through the cracks of much deserved recognition while still cutting albums, touring and enduring a revolving door of lineup changes well into the ’80s and ’90s. Yet, it was with their first two albums that Blue Cheer became unsung heroes, with many crediting the power trio for laying down the first brick in the towering house that became heavy metal.

Dickie Peterson 2007

Many a heavy band swears by them, which in past decades has solidified them as cult heroes. “I first heard Blue Cheer in 1981 while under the spell of hardcore,” recalls Mudhoney‘s Mark Arm. “I met this kid from the Bay Area while attending college in Oregon. He was one of about five folks at the school who was even slightly into punk rock. We were all hanging out in his dorm room and he puts Vincebus Eruptum on the turntable and says, ‘Check out what these crazy hippies did back in the ’60s.’ It nearly split my head in two. Hearing Blue Cheer at that point was almost as important to me as hearing The Stooges for the first time the year before. When Mudhoney started up, Blue Cheer was definitely part of our blueprint.”

“I have a more interesting relationship with Blue Cheer’s songs than I do most people I know,” explains “psychedevangelist”/ring leader/lead singer Eddie Gieda of An Albatross. “Their music, throughout their entire catalog, is a sonic epicenter of the prolific cultural revolution of the ’60s and ’70s West Coast. Their degree of separation between virtually all of the ’60s political, musical, philosophical, and cultural figures that I deem essential in forming our country’s history is unbelievably minute. These guys are the real fucking deal and to meet them is to know that their spirit, unlike their peers, hasn’t eroded. They’re still loud and still proud.”

Prior to Peterson’s passing, Blue Cheer continued to tour with two-thirds of their original lineup, with guitarist Andrew “Duck” MacDonald taking Stephens’ place, and crossing into the shattered eardrums of a new generation of fans who like it loud and lewd. Dickie Peterson spoke with JamBase about the band’s place in history, the upheaval of their youth, and how the Grateful Dead managed to piss them off.

JamBase: In the early days of Blue Cheer you guys started out as a regular young California band just aiming to head out to the Bay Area, right?

Dickie Peterson 2006

Dickie Peterson: Yeah, everybody was just moving to San Francisco because it was such a happening music scene that was wide open. It was a really rare event in the music world since all the rules were being tossed out the window and everything was accepted.

JamBase: How did you get the attention of PolyGram Records?

Dickie Peterson: Actually, Abe “Voco” Kesh, who was our producer had a bit to do with it. He had talked to several record companies and nobody wanted anything to do with us because we were so different than anything else that was going on. We went in and we did a demo, and we took it to KPIX radio and they got so many requests for it that the record companies couldn’t ignore us.

Any sort of music style or artists that really roused you or the members of Blue Cheer to pick up the instruments and start playing?

Blues. Jimmy Reed, Howlin’ Wolf, Lightnin’ Hopkins, John Lee Hooker. These were all big influences for me, and also Little Richard. Oh, and Muddy Waters and Chuck Berry. I had the unique honor of meeting both of them.

You took your name from a strand of Owsley Stanley’s acid, right?

Yes, that and also because of the strain of music that we gravitated toward was jump blues.

I’m sure you’re aware that over the years there have been many journalists, as well as fans, that credit Blue Cheer for paving the road for what is now heavy metal.

You know I can see where people are coming from but I can’t really say if we were the first heavy metal band or the first of anything because there were a lot of bands kind of in our realm around us, such as the MC5 and Iggy and the Stooges. I think we were the first American power trio. I guess if you listen to us you’ll find elements of heavy metal, elements of grunge, elements of punk, elements of the blues, and even elements of country. You’ll find all of these in our music.

Continue reading for more on Dickie Peterson and Blue Cheer…

&nbsp;


We were aiming to become louder and more powerful than anybody else in the world. It wasn’t just limited to San Francisco.

-Dickie Peterson

&nbsp;

Coming from the musical era of the ’60s in San Francisco, Blue Cheer’s music was obviously heavier and a whole lot louder than that of your civic counterparts of the time, such as Jefferson Airplane, Country Joe and the Fish, and the Grateful Dead. At the time, were you guys intent on becoming heavier and louder than those bands or was that what just came out naturally?

Blue Cheer

Well, we were aiming to become louder and more powerful than anybody else in the world. It wasn’t just limited to San Francisco.

Blue Cheer shared the stage with the likes of the Grateful Dead, Hendrix, and Santana. Any stories from those times that you’d like to share?

Well, I know that we always had a problem with the Grateful Dead because once they walked on the stage nobody else went on. They would go on for hours and I thought that this was really unprofessional, chicken shit bullshit because all of these bands, all of us needed our stage time and they would hog it. So, we started chasing their ladies around.

What was it like the first time that you saw Hendrix play?

This was a religious experience for me. I swear to God, that night at The Fillmore the man’s feet left the ground, and I think all of these guitar players today owe him no matter how many practical skills they’ve learned. Everything they do, Hendrix did first. There has not been another Hendrix type guitarist that’s come on the scene. Perhaps he’s being born now. I don’t know.

Any bands out there today that have caught your ear?

There are several bands but I don’t really follow too much contemporary music. You get in my car and you get a lot of rhythm & blues.

The turbulence of that era obviously played a big part in the creative process of a lot of bands in the ’60s. Would you say that was accurate as far as Blue Cheer was concerned?

Blue Cheer

Oh yes, it certainly did. I don’t know that it was so much a political thing with us as much as it was a social thing.

So, the overall loudness is what evoked a semblance of the upheaval?

Yeah, I think the whole social, Vietnam, and anti-establishment protests were all things that I think helped our band.

What was it like being in a band during an American cultural revolution?

It was a time I’m sure none of us will ever forget because we were living in Haight-Ashbury, which was wide open. The Hell’s Angels were basically the police department, LSD was legal [prior to October 1966], and the stuff that I miss very deeply was that everybody was everybody else’s keeper. Everybody took care of each other. If you didn’t have a place to sleep, somebody would take you home so you could sleep and they’d feed you.

A really deep community vibe, huh?

It was an alternative culture that was really working.

It must be a bummer to see Haight-Ashbury now since all that gentrification went down and with the McDonalds and the Gap up in there.

Dickie Peterson

Sort of, but there were so many people that were around at that time that I’m disappointed in personally. I think they’re traitors to the revolution. I think they dropped the ball. They went back to selling insurance and real estate at daddy’s office, which is what we were all against. We didn’t want that but in the end I would say that the one thing that brought that era down was hard drugs.

I always saw it as kind of a cliche when people point the finger at Altamont as the single catalyst of what made it all come falling down. It was no doubt a major turning point but there is just so much more that led up to it.

I think of it in a different way. I think critics and historians want to look back at that and cite that as a reason, and it’s kind of insane. If you look at concerts these days, you’ll be lucky to walk out of them alive at some of these places. At some of these big concerts people are being crushed; there is so much going on. With Altamont, a guy got killed there and it was the first time, and now this happens all the time.

How does it feel to be playing to a new generation of fans?

We’re so humbled by the fact that all these young people come out to our shows. Every night I can look down in front of my microphone and there’s somebody much younger than me who knows all the words to the songs. We’re very humbled by this, and it means more than I can actually put into words. I’m trying to figure out how to write a song about it. We not only crossed over to younger people but we bridged generation gaps. At any of our shows there are fathers and sons and daughters that come, and some people that say, “Hey man, I’ve been listening to your music since I was six hours old.” It’s humbling. It’s not anything that we tried to do, it just happened.

JamBase | Blue
Go See Live Music!


Music occupies an important place in our life

Music occupies an important place in our life. We can’t live without it. Actually people have different musical tastes depending on their age, education and even mood. Some people like classical music, others prefer rock, pop or jazz, but nobody is indifferent to it. Popular Music refers to the kind of music that appeals to [...]

40 years on

In August 1969, an estimated 400,000 young people converged on a dairy farm in upstate New York for a music festival that would leave a legacy that endures today.

Rainstorms failed to dampen the spirits of the revellers, whose good behaviour over the four days inspired Joni Mitchell to write her classic song ‘Woodstock’.

With the help of some of those who were there, take a nostalgic look back at the festival.

Music by Canned Heat; Country Joe and The Fish; Woodstock audience; The Band; Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young;
Joni Mitchell; Jimi Hendrix; Jefferson Airplane. Images courtesy AP, Getty Images and Rex Features.

Includes archive interview material with Woodstock organiser Joel Rosenman, festival-goers Tom Law and Duke Devlin,
author Joel McKower, and Joni Mitchell. Slideshow production by Paul Kerley. Publication date 14 August 2009.


More audio slideshows

The Island story

Man on the Moon

The Information Revolution


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Newport Folk Festival | 08.01 & 08.02 | RI

Words by: Bear Connelly | Images by: Jim Brueckner

Newport Folk Festival :: 08.01.09 & 08.02.09 :: Fort Adams State Park :: Newport, RI

Newport Folk Fest 2009

The Newport Folk Festival is one of the longest running music festivals in America, and this year she celebrated her 50th anniversary (the festival did not take place from 1971-1985) with a huge array of artists spanning generations, countries and languages. The deep historical context of the festival resonates highly with the artists that play here, making it quite a destination for musicians and fans of the greater folk world. Dylan went electric here and Joan Baez played the first ever festival in 1959. NWFF is located at Fort Adams State Park, a defunct Naval base nestled in the harbor of the sailing mecca of Newport, Rhode Island. The festival has three stages, the main stage sitting right in front of the fort overlooking a huge lawn that leads to the ocean, and two tents containing smaller stages also along the water. Thousands of people attend each year, setting up blankets and lawn chairs and basking in the sunshine and music for two days every August. Due to the location, boats are encouraged to pull up close and drop anchor and listen to the music while swimming and playing in the water. This is truly a festival you need to see once in your life, if not many times.

As always there were so many great bands playing that I kind of felt like a chicken running around with his head cut off in order to see them all. For some artists, I only caught a couple songs, like folk legends Baez (whose voice has sadly lowered in register over the years) and Arlo Guthrie (who is an amazing storyteller) to Joe Pug (a young working class, Dylan-esque folkie from Chicago belting tunes like “My Father’s Drugs” with a Midwest snarl). With a festival as diverse as Newport – acts range from Mavis Staples to Brett Dennen, 23-year old John McCauley (Deer Tick) to 90-year old Pete Seeger – there was something for everyone.

Here are some of the highlights from this year’s event, and you can also listen to all these sets at npr.org.

Ben Kweller

The Avett Brothers :: NFF 2009

As I walked in to the festival I headed straight for the first music I could hear. I stumbled in to the Harborside Tent to find Ben Kweller playing with a stripped down version of his band. There was Ben, decked out in a sleeveless NYC t-shirt, jeans and boots (which reminded my of that classic John Lennon pic) with a drummer and a dobro/pedal steel player. Kweller cranked through tunes like “13,” which was apparently written about a night out in Block Island, an island off the coast of Rhode Island, and “Gypsy Love” with a great sense of enjoyment at being at this historical festival. He even tried out tunes that he normally plays on piano in the spirit of guitar driven folk music. The highlight of his set was a crowd sing-along version of “Falling” dedicated to Kelly, a girl who worked at the festival that asked if he would play it, despite the lack of a piano on stage.


The Avett Brothers

I haven’t really listened to The Avett Brothers but with the electricity of their live shows you don’t really need to in order to enjoy them. The North Carolina natives brought their brand of psych-emo, energetic folk-grass to the festival for the second time in as many years. The band ran through live staples such as “Paranoia in B flat Major” and “Ballad of Love and Hate,” along with new tunes off their upcoming album I and Love and You like “Kick Drum Heart” with little disparity for a newcomer. Read: their new tunes kick as much ass as their old ones.


Tom Morello/The Nightwatchman

Given the fact that Tom Morello is a Harvard educated, political junkie, effects infused shredder, I was perhaps most curious to see what he had in store for a folk festival. Morello, armed simply with a nylon string guitar (that had “Whatever It Takes” scrawled on it in black marker) and his rustic baritone voice played songs such as “Dogs of Tijuana” and “One Man Revolution.” Morello also mentioned how excited he was to play at the same festival as the legendary Pete Seeger. He dedicated his tune “The Road I Must Travel” to Seeger, who Morello believes is “a living body of justice-ness and righteousness,” and is glad that “in a world of passport carrying jackasses there are people like Seeger to balance it out.”

Gillian Welch

Gillian Welch :: NFF 2009

Fan favorite Gillian Welch delighted the main stage crowd yet again (in the three years I’ve been, she’s been there every time) with a nice mix of songs from her entire repertoire. Apparently she and her partner, Rhode Island native Dave Rawlings, had to get a police escort from Boston just to make their set after a five-hour flight delay at LAX. Welch joked that she felt “Like Mirabelli getting escorted to the Sox game in order to catch Wakey a couple years back,” referring to Red Sox catcher Doug Mirabelli’s return trip to Fenway after being reacquired mid-season. Although sleep deprived and unkempt, they didn’t let the jetlag stop them from delivering angst melting tunes like “Orphan Girl,” “My First Lover” and “Look at Miss Ohio,” the latter featuring a blistering solo from Rawlings, who is perhaps the tastiest guitarist in Americana music today. Midway through the set, she debuted her haunting version of Jefferson Airplane’s “White Rabbit” to the crowd’s enjoyment.


Mavis Staples

One of the more historical acts at the festival was the gospel stylings of Mavis Staples and her energetic band. Staples’ set included a rousing rendition of The Band’s “The Weight,” which she sang at The Last Waltz with The Staple Singers 30 years ago, and “Why Am I Treated So Bad,” her father’s song written after a conversation with Martin Luther King, Jr.


The Low Anthem

Hometown heroes number one (Deer Tick being number two) played their first set of presumably many to come at Newport after a whirlwind summer that saw them playing all over the world, including sets at Bonnaroo, Hyde Park and Roskilde Festival (read about Roskilde here). Since releasing Oh My God Charlie Darwin on Nonesuch (and Bella Union in Europe) the band has been touring relentlessly and it shows. The once awkward folkies that could barely play their secondary instruments – there is a clarinet, French horn, upright bass, drums, organ, acoustic and electric guitars and crotales on stage, with all three members rotating between them for each song – have tightened their sound to captivate the audience, which overflowed the small Waterside Tent they played in. The band played some new, unreleased tunes that held water alongside older gems like “Ballad of Broken Bones” and “To Ohio.” The highlight for me came with their take on the traditional “Don’t Let Nobody Turn You Around” that featured guitarist/singer Ben Knox Miller on drums, Jeff Prystowsky on upright bass and clarinetist Jocie Adams showing off her electric guitar chops, all of which showcased the band’s growing versatility.


Iron & Wine

Fleet Foxes :: Newport Folk Fest 2009

Sam Beam played a solo acoustic set on Saturday afternoon to a packed Harborside Tent. Beam, whose wispy vocals and percussive yet intricate guitar picking was a perfect soundtrack for a sunny afternoon on the water. He started his set off with a cover of Postal Service‘s “Such Great Heights” that quickly turned into a group sing-along after he forgot the words to the chorus. Next came the stomping “Woman King,” which induced some of the crowd (mostly seated) to dance. Beam had great stage presence, talking about how “beautiful but distracting” the view from the stage was and handling catcalls like a woman in the crowd who yelled, “I want to live in your beard… because it seems like a warm place to sit,” with a quick wit. Beam closed his set with the fan favorite (and Twilight soundtrack hit) “Flightless Bird, American Mouth,” which left the audience standing and cheering for an encore. Beam sheepishly walked back on stage to deliver “Sunset Soon Forgotten,” a wonderful finger picking tune off Our Endless Numbered Days.


Fleet Foxes

I was really interested in checking out the Fleet Foxes, one of the past two years’ biggest hype bands. I really like their harmonies and arrangements on the album and wanted to see if they could pull it off live. Well, they killed it. Unfortunately, their small discography lead to them basically playing their album and EP in their entirety. However, getting a main stage slot at Newport is quite a feat for such a young band. Songs like “White Winter Hymnal” and “Oliver James” oozed lush melodies and dispersed waves of their “baroque harmonic pop jams” amongst the festival-goers and aquatic onlookers.


The Decemberists

The Decemberists :: Newport Folk Fest 2009

Saturday’s headliner (other than Pete Seeger, who closed both nights as more of an honorary guest) brought their literary folk rock to the main stage for the first time. Armed with a plethora of vocalists and rare instruments (like the hurdy-gurdy), the band ripped through a greatest hits set – they’ve been playing their folk opera, The Hazards of Love, in its entirety most nights this tour – including “The Crane Wife Part 3″ and upbeat closer “Sons and Daughters.” Mid-set the band’s Decemberists Family Players acted out a scene from the Festival’s storied past – the day Dylan went electric. Four people represented festival founder George Wein, Pete Seeger, Bob Dylan and a squirrel to act out a scene inspired by Seeger’s famous comments after hearing Dylan go electric (“Damn it, if I had an axe, I’d cut the cable right now”) referring to shutting down the sound system.


Dave Rawlings Machine

For those of you who don’t know, David Rawlings Machine is just him and Gillian Welch but with reversed roles. They play his songs instead of hers and he sings lead vocals to her harmonies. These two are amazingly captivating with just two guitars and voices. Rawlings, known as a producer and session guitarist mostly, ran through wonderful cover songs ranging from Bright Eyes’ “Method Acting” to Dylan’s “Queen Jane Approximately,” Ryan Adams’ “To Be Young (Is to be sad, is to be high)” (which he co-wrote) to “Big Rock Candy Mountain.” The set was so fierce that the late morning crowd called for an encore, which is usually reserved for headlining acts. Dave answered the call with a foot stomping, hand clapping cover of Johnny Cash’s “Jackson.”

Neko Case

Neko Case :: Newport Folk Fest 2009

Also known in the indie world for her work with the New Pornographers, Neko Case has been churning out great alt-country albums on her own for years. Supporting her latest, critically acclaimed album, Middle Cyclone (JamBase review here), Case played the main stage on Sunday. She barreled through songs from her whole repertoire including “Wish I Was the Moon,” “Hold On Hold On” and her roaring new single “This Tornado Loves You.” Not only does Case have one of the best lovesick howls in the business but her backing singer Kelly Hogan (who has also sung with Andrew Bird, The Minus 5 and Edith Frost) provided a nice layer on which Case could stray more and show off her pipes. After a standing ovation from the crowd, who spent her set in lawn chairs, Case ripped through a stellar version of The Shangri-La’s “The Train from Kansas City” as an ode to female groups of yesteryear.


Deer Tick

The second hometown favorite of the festival was the fast-rising Deer Tick. The band took the stage while leader John McCauley III stated, “I don’t know what an acoustic guitar is. Give me one and I’ll try to plug it in. Let’s do it like Dylan did!” before launching into the raucous “Easy” off the band’s latest album, Born on Flag Day. Before their second tune, “Little White Lies,” a fan from the mostly seated crowd asked, “Can we stand up? We just want to dance.” After the okay from security, chairs were moved out of the way and the littlest tent of the festival gave birth to its biggest dance party. Deer Tick plowed through their songs showcasing new, full band arrangements to previously mellow acoustic songs on their albums. Even when the solo song “A Song About A Man” was played the rest of the band sang three-part harmonies, where the last time I saw them they just left the stage. After a guest spot from singer Liz Isenberg on “Friday the XIII” and a cover of John Prine’s “Aimless Love,” the band brought down the house with a rockin’ take on “La Bamba,” which seemed very genuine and relevant despite coming from a 23-year-old white kid from North Providence, RI.


Elvis Perkins in Dearland

Pete Seeger :: NFF 2009

Playing the festival for the second time, the singer-songwriter and his energetic, multi-instrumentalist band (they all play horns and some other primary instrument) closed down the Harborside Stage on Sunday. Half the band attended Brown University and his bassist was from Newport, so there was kind of a homecoming vibe to Dearland’s set. Despite suffering some tragedies within his own family (his dad, actor Anthony Perkins died from AIDS, while his mom was on board one of the planes that hit the World Trade Center), he is able to sing positive, “live in the moment” style songs that shine bright lights on to the dark zones of the human mind. Perkins, who understands the gravity of playing at such a storied festival, treated the crowd to his own gems like “Chains Chains Chains” and “Shampoo” while mixing in covers like “Weeping Mary” and “Four Strong Winds.” Set closer “Doomsday” had Elvis singing: “Man, I went wild last night…/ I don’t let doomsday bother me/ Do you let it bother you?”


Pete Seeger

It’s a rare opportunity to see a living legend these days. I felt this way when I saw Ray Charles. Pete Seeger IS folk music. Marking both his 90th birthday and the 50th anniversary of the festival he helped create, Seeger treated the crowd to a sing-along set that started with the help of his grandson Tao Rodriguez-Seeger. Pete played “Turn Turn Turn” and “Midnight Special,” saying the lyrics before each line was to be sung so no one in the crowd had an excuse to not sing. It was great to hear the stories behind all these songs – this man knows who wrote the songs we all know as “traditional”! Midway through his sunset set, Seeger invited “every musician who played today” on stage for huge group versions of “Guantanamera,” “If I Had a Hammer” and the obvious closer, “This Land is Your Land.” Never again will I see Colin Meloy singing with Tom Morello, Ben Kweller sharing a mic with The Low Anthem’s Jocie Adams or Seeger himself singing with Gillian Welch and Ramblin’ Jack Elliot. It’s moments like these that make the kinship, history and stature of this festival what it is today.

Final Song led by Pete Seeger featuring everyone!

Continue reading for more pics of Newport Folk Festival 2009…

Joan Baez

Arlo Guthrie

Sam Beam – Iron & Wine

Del McCoury

Brett Dennen

Campbell Brothers

Guy Clark

Dala

The Low Anthem

Joe Pug

Tom Morello/The Nightwatchman

Dave Rawlings Machine

Deer Tick

Elvis Perkins in Dearland

Tao Rodriguez-Seeger

Final Song led by Pete Seeger featuring everyone!

Final Song led by Pete Seeger featuring everyone!

Final Song led by Pete Seeger featuring everyone!

JamBase | Rhode Island
Go See Live Music!



Techs and the city

Lab by lab in and around San Francisco

SAN FRANCISCO conjures up images of hippies and of free love, the psychedelic 60s and leftist politics. A member of Jefferson Airplane, a rock band, described it as “49 square miles surrounded by reality”. It has always had that air. In a letter written in 1889, Rudyard Kipling wrote of “a mad city, inhabited for the most part by perfectly insane people.” …

Taking Woodstock Soundtrack

Soundtrack To Ang Lee’s New Comedy Taking Woodstock

About The Road To The 1969 Event Includes Unforgettable Songs By
The Artists Who Played Woodstock

Taking Woodstock the new film directed by Oscar winner Ang Lee was inspired by the memoirs of Elliot Tiber, who with his family inadvertently played a role in making the Woodstock Music and Arts Festival into the famed happening it was, 40 years ago this summer. The Taking Woodstock soundtrack, with songs from many of the artists who performed at the festival, reflects a joyous moment in time when everything seemed possible. The soundtrack and score, composed by Danny Elfman, will be available August 25.

The Taking Woodstock soundtrack begins with Richie Havens, who opened the festival on August 15, 1969. For the movie Havens recorded a new version of “Freedom,” the song he played to close his set at Woodstock. The soundtrack contains songs from a number of 1960s musical icons who performed at the festival, including Grateful Dead, Janis Joplin, Jefferson Airplane and Crosby, Stills & Nash – who played only their second show in front of the crowd, which was estimated at 500,000 strong.

Focus Features will release the movie Taking Woodstock nationwide August 28. The film stars Demetri Martin, Dan Fogler, Henry Goodman, Jonathan Groff, Eugene Levy, Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Imelda Staunton, Emile Hirsch and Liev Schreiber. For more information about the film, visit takingwoodstockthemovie.com.

Taking Woodstock Soundtrack
Track Listing:

1. “Freedom (2009)” – Richie Havens
2. Taking Woodstock Titles*
3. “Wooden Ships” – Crosby, Stills & Nash
4. “China Cat Sunflower” (Live) – Grateful Dead
5. “Maggie M’Gill” – The Doors
6. Elliot’s Place*
7. “Coming Into Los Angeles” (Live) – Arlo Guthrie
8. “I-Feel-Like-I’m-Fixin’-To-Die Rag” (Live) – Country Joe McDonald
9. “Going Up The Country” (Live) – Canned Heat
10. “Try (Just A Little Bit Harder)” (Live) – Janis Joplin
11. A Happening (Office #2)*
12. “The Red Telephone” – Love
13. “Beautiful People” (Live) – Melanie
14. “I Shall Be Released” (Live) – The Band
15. “Perspective Extended*
16. “One More Mile” – The Paul Butterfield Blues Band
17. “Volunteers” – Jefferson Airplane

*Score written and produced by Danny Elfman


Former “American Idol” Contestant Alexis Cohen Killed (Hit-And-Run)

A 25-year-old former American Idol contestant was struck and killed by a hit-and-run driver off the Jersey Shore on Saturday.

Alexis Cohen, of Allentown, Pa., was killed early Saturday in Seaside Heights, NJ, The Ashbury Park Press reports.

Deputy Chief Michael Mohel of the Ocean County Prosecutors Office says she suffered chest, head, and abdominal injuries [...]