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Posts Tagged ‘Jerry Joseph’

Super 400 Tour with Stockholm Syndrome

TOUR STARTS FEBRUARY 18 IN SAN FRANCISCO

Coming off multiple sold-out shows across Europe, Northeast power trio Super 400 will head west for a
string of dates with Stockholm
Syndrome
, featuring Jerry
Joseph
and Widespread Panic‘s Dave Schools. Kicking off February 18 &
19 at The Independent in San Francisco and concluding on February 26 at Boulder’s Fox Theatre, the two bands will
play eight shows in nine days. Super 400 is currently at work on its fifth studio album.

Click here to read Dennis Cook’s review of 2009′s critically acclaimed Sweet
Fist
.

Super 400 Tour Dates with Stockholm Syndrome

02/18/11 San Francisco, CA The Independent

02/19/11 San Francisco, CA The Independent

02/20/11 Reno, NV Knitting Factory
02/21/11 Park City, UT Harry O’s

02/22/11 Telluride, CO Sheridan Opera House

02/23/11 Aspen, CO Belly Up Aspen

02/25/11 Denver, CO Cervantes’ Masterpiece Ballroom

02/26/11 Boulder, CO Fox Theatre

Super 400
Tour Dates

::
Super 400 News
::
Super 400
Concert
Reviews


Jam Cruise 9 | Review | Pics

Words by: Dennis Cook | Images by: Chad Smith, Dave Vann & Chris Monaghan

Jam Cruise 9 :: 01.04.11-01.01.09.11 :: MSC Poesia :: Ft. Lauderdale, FL – Roatan, Honduras – Costa Maya, Mexico

See Chad Smith’s pics from Jam Cruise 9 here

See Dave Vann’s pics from Jam Cruise 9 here

See Chris Monaghan’s pics from Jam Cruise 9 here

Jamcruisers by Chad Smith

Ride, captain ride upon your mystery ship
Be amazed at the friends you have here on your trip
Ride captain ride upon your mystery ship
On your way to a world that others might have missed

It’s not uncommon for people to dream about Jam Cruise once they’ve attended it once. Our lives are largely made up of small movements and reliable routines and Jam Cruise is a grand scale experience, a bold and evolving vision that takes one, literally and figuratively, out of the norm and into magic, revelatory spaces. It is a music festival but that sells short the potential of this journey. It hits you as the anchor rises and the first notes slam into you that there’s something profoundly different about a festival that goes places rather than everyone settling into their tents in a stable environment. In just this basic sense, Jam Cruise is another animal from Bonnaroo, High Sierra, etc. The notion of being on an adventure is palpable as the city lights and shoreline drop away and all that’s left are the waves, open sky and the wondrous community that springs up on the ship – a shared dream with myriad faces brought to happy fruition.

All this dreaming becomes manifest even before folks have gotten on the ship, itself a massive floating city full of more nooks & crannies than anyone could possibly explore. Strangers whip up Bloody Marys at the port while people compare costumes and trade stories of cruises past. Newcomers are welcomed with open arms and gently guided through the ins & outs of Jam Cruising. Even though this was only my second time aboard, I found myself eager to make newbies feel at home and do what I could to build their confidence, and this inclination seems the rule for the veterans, who all seem to understand how unique and special Jam Cruise is. Music is the common thread that brings everyone to the ship, but there’s something deeper afoot.

Party People by Chris Monaghan

Where we might never speak to our neighbors at home, we immediately join together as a community and that sense only grows over the five days at sea. One is encouraged to pull as much pleasure and joy as they can from the trip and this goes beyond a mere “good time.” What I’ve experienced and seen happen in many others is the filters and masks we employ out of necessity in the “real world” drop away and one is revealed as they truly are. The conversations, often with folks we’ve met only moments before, dip into every corner of our lives and are met with a compassion and gentle wisdom that simply floors me. Walking around one is greeted with smiles and high-fives, a jovial, living Namaste that warms one to the core over time. The world at home, with rare exceptions, is not nearly so congenial.

It’s incredibly potent and revitalizing to see hundreds of people at perhaps the happiest they will be all year long – and to know at different spots around the ship the same scene is unfolding with different groups. The musicians, too, for the most part dig a bit deeper and open themselves up to this vibe, making themselves available in a way they might avoid elsewhere, and reveling in their own adventures – visiting foreign soil, playing with up & comers and legends, and generally rediscovering why they chose this life in the first place. Taken together, there is SO much positive energy, good will and creativity afloat on Jam Cruise that one’s faith in humanity’s potential is rekindled a bit. If we can do this then why not other great and beautiful and nourishing things?

Continue reading for Day One of Jam Cruise 9…

Tuesday, January 4

Big Sam’s Funky Nation by Dave Vann

Big Sam’s Funky Nation :: 7:00-8:30 PM :: Pool Deck
The Sail Away Party is a wonderful, unifying experience. With raised glasses and whoops, we embark together, unsure of where the next week will take us but certain we’ll be in good company wherever we wind up. The organizers have a knack for picking kick-off bands that blow the doors off the joint, and Big Sam and his tight, tough funk band were true to form. Driving everybody onto the dancefloor and showing off better moves than most of us will ever possess, the Funky Nation were a bouncing, excited tour through popular music, dropping bits of Prince (“Sexy MF”), Gnarls Barkley (“Crazy”) and many others and making time for some primo robot vocals and guest turns from Meters’ guitar legend Leo Nocentelli and JB’s trombonist Fred Wesley, who were regular sit-ins for many acts throughout the week. One left this set churned up and raring to go. Job well done!

Greensky Bluegrass :: 9:15-10:45 PM :: Zebra Bar
While many were on deck getting their Dead on with Bob Weir on the pool deck, a small group received a treat from these Michigan-based pickers, who inspired us to kick the dust up from the zebra print carpet and perhaps more importantly, simmer down to really take in what they’re laying down. Greensky can rattle and skip with the best string bands but where they truly differentiate themselves from the pack is in their meaty original songwriting and ability to work in drones and textures that recall artists like Ravi Shankar and George Harrison melded to sweet harmonies and fierce picking. I was struck by what a full sound they have despite the lack of drums, which frankly might take something away. And put in service of songs barbed with truth and drawn from introspection, their music simply lingers.

Greensky’s Paul Hoffman by Chris Monaghan

There are some downright pretty melodies and swoon-y instrumental runs, too. I also like that their soloing is always in service of the song and not just a chance to showboat. At one point singer-mandolinist Paul Hoffman said, “My only complaint about this Jam Cruise is I can’t remember what day of the week it is. I say we go to a numbers system. Saturday Number One, Saturday Number TwoÂ…Who cares what day of the week is it? You’ve got nothing to do and we’re all trapped [laughs].” Their set culminated in a jam out of a cover of the Allmans’ “One Way Out” that was full of coolly controlled power and intense soloing. And their theater set on Thursday was even more thoughtful, textured and streamlined, and included a swell cover of Traffic’s “Light Up Or Leave Me Alone” and fine guest turns from Umphrey’s Joel Cummins and artist-at-large Steve Kimock, who shined brightly on a gorgeous cover of Bruce Hornsby’s “King of the Hill.” After the second set on the Cruise, I can officially say I’m in love with Greensky Bluegrass.

Pimps of Joytime :: 11:30 PM-1:00 AM :: Zebra Bar
Damn, these cats are smooth! The PJTs have a flair and top-notch musicianship that sets them apart, not to mention memorable songwriting and ace showmanship. They’re fun to watch, and the music matches their moves. The band were a hand-in-glove fit in the pimp-ready Zebra Bar, where bodies packed together tight to sweat and grind. An undulating energy swept through the crowd, caught up in their sly smiles and catchy-as-hell choruses like, “People say I need to get my shit together/ They don’t know/ They don’t understand.” Brian J is a natural born leader who oozes buckets of charisma – babies will be made to this music – and he’s also a bloody great guitarist, twisting strings in a really unique way that really separates PJT from the Meters/JB copying hordes.

Anders Osborne Band by Chris Monaghan

Anders Osborne :: 11:45 PM-1:15 AM :: Teatro Carlo Felice
Just the look of Anders Osborne suggests wildness, an untamable spirit, and his music kinda follows suit. He unleashed a lot of gnarly, distortion rich guitar in the classy theater backed by Stanton Moore (drums), Carl Dufrene (bass), Robert Walter (keys) and for a chunk of the set Scott Metzger and Will Bernard (guitars). They produced a dense, rock-oriented noise that steered clear of Osborne’s more New Orleans fare (which he unleashed on the Pool Deck later in the week). This being my first time seeing Osborne, I was knocked sideways by his earthy demeanor, strong songs and lively, unpredictable interplay with some of the best players on the ship. Like many, I left this set determined to learn more about Anders. Can’t pay a bigger compliment than that.

Stockholm Syndrome :: 2:00-4:00 AM :: Teatro Carlo Felice
The term “super group” has been applied to Stockholm Syndrome but “like-minded musicians” may be the better descriptor. Something curious dovetails when Jerry Joseph (lead vocals, guitar), Dave Schools (bass, vocals), Eric McFadden (guitar), Danny Louis (keys) and Wally Ingram (drums) gather.

Stockholm Syndrome by Dave Vann

Different aspects of their musical minds emerge, influences hitherto unseen cropping up in the quietly combative spark with one another. Rock ‘n’ roll is in somewhat short supply on Jam Cruise, so it was a nifty treat to get such a thick dose on the first night. The band jumped off in boogie shoes before hitting the turbo thrusters, with Jerry quickly leaping into preacher mode, snarling lines like, “I’m a killer, baby. That’s what killers do!” McFadden’s use of mandolin is akin to John Paul Jones in Zeppelin, and it’s one of several echoes of Led Zep in Stockholm, who possess a similar range and ballsy density. A spectacular reading of “The Jacob Ladder” threw a bone to the many Panic fans in the audience, but it was new tunes like “Apollo,” a Pink Floyd-y simmer and the title cut from their forthcoming sophomore album, that really snagged one’s attention. However, all was not heaviness and grind with Stockholm showing colors reminiscent of Paul Simon’s African phase and classic roots rock. As usual, it’s the vast potential of this band that smacks one about and makes one curious what might happen if this were their full-time gig. Still, there are worst things than leaving people hungry for more.

Continue reading for Day Two of Jam Cruise 9…

Wednesday, January 5

Belly Dancers by Chad Smith

There may be no better spot for people watching than Jam Cruise. Nightfall brings out the capes and wings and clowns, and the days at sea bring out the sunbathers in droves. Every shape and color is represented, and all seem comfortable unlike the more body conscious world on shore. Things are just chill, aided by fruity rum drinks, an expertly planned musical lineup, sailor outfits of every stripe, rollerskaters, hula-hoopers and women so lovely they make one understand how Salome could ask for a man’s head and get it. We’re invited to relax and play in the sunshine while the many Oompa-Loompas behind the scenes keep everything running with clockwork efficiency. This last point is worth emphasis – this entire cruise/fest runs SO well. All but a few sets started right on time, and given the endless sit-ins and instruments that need to be worked into the mix, the sound and tech folks are wizards. I try to step back from my revels from time to time to applaud the staff of Jam Cruise and the MSC Poesia, who together made us feel so cared for and well tended for five days.

Sailor Gals by Dave Vann

Cornmeal :: 11:45 AM-1:00 PM :: Pool Deck
Such a reliably excellent band, and a perfect start to the first full day at sea. Cornmeal came at the music with gusto, chasing down possibilities and grinning in their interactions with one another. Their chemistry is a big part of their appeal, and it’s a pleasure to watch Wavy Dave Burlingame (banjo) and Allie Kral (violin) chase down the music in their heads. They also have a real knack for nailing classic rock on top of their twangier material, exemplified by a note-perfect take on Elton John’s “Benny and the Jets” that made one feel warmer than the orb in the sky.

Brock Butler :: 1:00-1:45 PM :: Solar Stage
The largely acoustic sets on the opposite end of the pool deck on sailing days are almost always a treat. These intimate sets are often revelations of under-appreciated talents, and Brock Butler certainly fits this bill. With echoes of Paul Simon and Richard Thompson, Butler has a charming voice with the universal appeal of, say, young Jackson Browne, drenched with feeling but still pop-ready. His grasp of popular music from the past 50 years is staggering, leaping from LCD Soundsystem to The Beatles and making it all make sense. He commanded our attention single-handed, finishing his brief set with spot-on covers of Dawes’ “Love Me Foolishly” and Simon’s “Diamonds On The Soles Of Her Shoes.” His knack for reading a crowd and giving them what they need is not to be underestimated, and he further showed off this skill in three unofficial sunrise sets on the deck with a small, smiling audience the next three mornings. As he told me in one conversation, “I feel like it’s part of my responsibility to help make special moments for people when I’m on this boat.”

Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars :: 1:45-3:00 PM :: Pool Deck
Entering off-stage in a drum line, the All Stars, dressed in colorful prints and exuding a profound joy in making music, made an immediate splash. Once assembled onstage, they hit like thunder, a sound with scraps of African High Life, roots reggae, Motown, dancehall, Nyabinghi and more. Even if one didn’t couldn’t understand the words the intent and soul of what they do permeated into one’s flesh and mind. Their leader remarked, “Music is therapy. Dance and you will get well. Dance and you will be happy. Are you happy?” The boat shook with our collective affirmation and shuffling steps.

Jen Hartswich Set by Chad Smith

Jennifer Hartswick :: 3:00-3:45 PM :: Solar Stage
Really a semi-acoustic version of Van Ghost with pals Brock Butler (guitar) and Allie Kral (violin) joining them, this set was winning from end-to-end. Hartswick is a powerhouse vocalist and sultry trumpeter with the brass oomph of past greats like Blue Mitchell, but the takeaway from this set was how great Van Ghost’s songs are and how beautifully she and Michael Harrison Berg sing together – an inviting soar akin to a silkier Emmylou and Gram. At one point the rhythm team from The New Mastersounds came out to create a full band sound, and like Butler’s set, they drew inspiration from Dawes on a churchy run through “When My Time Comes.” Van Ghost is classically minded singer-songwriter stuff delivered with great care and class, and this set made me hungry to know more about their work.

Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk :: 3:45-5:15 PM :: Pool Deck
“Dumpstaphunk is here. Can you smell it?” asked Tony Hall (bass, guitar, vocals). One thing Dumpstaphunk doesn’t lack is confidence, and they appeared ready to knock heads together from the first notes of this set. While many funk acts allow things to be loose, playing up the jam aspects, Ivan’s bunch are tight and edgy, showing more rock ‘n’ roll soul all the time with Ivan and Tony Hall doing more guitar work. Their songs also strike deeper than most, keepers all that add to the canon rather than simply regurgitating crowd-pleasers. This set kept things grimy and a little nasty, dappled by double bass battles and swerving vocal turns. Oh yeah, boys, we can smell ya!

Nigel Hall by Dave Vann

Some Cat From Japan :: 6:00-8:00 PM :: Pool Deck
This Hendrix tribute was a mess but a glorious one. Loose and fun, the Cats – Will Bernard and Scott Metzger (guitars), Nigel Hall (keys, vocals), Ron Johnson (bass) and Eric Bolivar (drums) – took an open approach to Jimi’s oeuvre, enjoying the freedom and inspiration that clings to his compositions and legacy but rarely sounding a lot like the man himself. Various folks jumped in to play, notably Eric McFadden on “Little Wing,” but the superstar in this bunch was Nigel Hall, whose sexy singing and engaging keyboard work surprisingly often generated more heat than all the guitar antics. It’s also worth noting how freakin’ excellent Ron Johnson’s playing is in this band, where his rubbery invention is more exposed and in-your-face than KDTU. Repeatedly I found myself following Johnson’s pulse and letting the rest hit me on the edges, and never did he steer me wrong.

Nathan Moore :: 8:00-8:45 PM :: Zebra Bar
A small crowd was blessed by Moore’s intoxicating songs and sleight-of-hand finesse at this intimate set. Engaging us in acts of soft hypnosis and prying away some of our armor with his humanizing tunes, Moore was his right & true bohemian Buddha self, showing us that the folk singer shtick can be evolved, beautifully, and introducing us to his Virginia partner in crime Bryan Elijah Smith, who accompanied him as a guest and left with his own new fans this year. The short set ended with a rousing audience fueled “I’m Good Company,” which highlighted Moore’s gift for getting people involved and away from being mere spectators.

Zebra by Chad Smith

ALO :: 9:00-10:30 PM :: Zebra Bar
Good lord, their music is catchy. I kept thinking this as ALO pumped out one audience snaggin, foot lifting number after another, and all without having to resort to their funk repertoire. Instead killers like “The Champ” just walloped one with feel-good energy, and throughout their musicianship, as always, proved some of the tautest and tastiest around. These four guys make such an irresistible sound, and it was heartening to see many first-timers bowled over alongside avowed Animal Lib fans like myself. For ALO, pop isn’t a dirty word and the notion of mass appeal loses its icky, industry taint in their hands.

God Street Wine :: 1:00-3:00 AM :: Teatro Carlo Felice
Without a doubt, this was one of the finest sets on Jam Cruise 9. After recently reuniting after 11 years apart for a handful of special shows, God Street Wine sounded, if anything, better than in their heyday. Often tagged as a “proto-jam-band,” what they really are is a rock band in the broad classic 60s/70s mold but with the instincts and sensibilities of a band that grew up in the 80s/90s.

Jamcruiser by Chris Monaghan

For many, GSW are an undiscovered country but for a portion of the crowd this was a wildly welcome return to one of the richest, catchiest catalogs to emerge in the 90s. They showed off their gift for reggae – hey, Clapton plays it, too, y’all – and a vocal blend that compares favorably with the Doobie Brothers. Even if you didn’t know their music, the sheer quality of their musicianship, singing and song craft bowled one over. While many were getting their funk on at Lettuce and Black Joe Lewis, the hundred or so in the theater were treated to a set that moved with quicksilver grace, rising to great heights and dipping down into satisfying lows. Towards the end of this set I found myself wondering how they hadn’t picked up an audience the size of Phish back when they were really pouring on steam in the 90s. There are surfaces similarities in their jam sensibilities but at the time they made better albums, sang better and had a broader mainstream appeal. However, being diverse and loving elongated live interpretations of one’s catalog isn’t always the best route to an audience, particularly before the internet solidified. On purely musical terms, God Street Wine delivered with every number, offering us fat-free jams that actually went somewhere and worked with the songs instead of outside of them, playing with obvious joy at revisiting a life the band members left behind more than a decade ago. And they got the best out of Bob Weir‘s many sit-ins, drawing some out of his 70s fieriness on “Book of Rules,” “The Race Is On,” “Dark Hollow” and “Dear Prudence.”

Interlude

Teddy Bears by Chad Smith

The sea howl and the sea yelp, are different voices
Often together heard: the whine in the rigging,
The menace and caress of wave that breaks on water,

The tolling bell
Measures time not our time, rung by the unhurried
Ground swell, a time
Older than the time of chronometers, older
Than time counted by anxious worried women
Lying awake, calculating the future,
Trying to unweave, unwind, unravel
And piece together the past and the future.

-T.S. Eliot – The Dry Salvages

For all the hubbub and chatter, there are still plenty of spots to be on one’s own on Jam Cruise. Wander away from the stages and you’ll find causeways and crannies where one can be alone with the sea, only the wind and waves and your thoughts. For all the crew and staff, there’s still a sense of the patients running the asylum, so to speak, which makes for a giddy pleasure when one finds themselves the only person along a long stretch of deck. It’s kind of amazing this is possible on such a bumptious, lively excursion but I think this opportunity for elemental quietude is also a key ingredient to Jam Cruise. With the breeze tousling one’s hair, the hiss of spray below as the boat cuts way, one hears a silent call to toss their troubles into the dark water below. Like the previous year, this feeling hit the second day of the trip after I’d been away from the gnat-like buzz of emails, texts and calls for a bit. It comes upon me suddenly, jumped by something primal and true that opens me up with a pleasant violence – a force beyond normal comprehension but tangible as any human hand. And in a moment, I feel my spirit ease, the weight slipping away, a freedom felt rather than discussed in abstracts. It’s an experience that leaves my psychic baggage a touch lighter when I return home, and I hardly think I’m the only one who experiences this sensation during this voyage.

Continue reading for Day Three of Jam Cruise 9…

Thursday, January 6

Honduras by Chris Monaghan

Another heartening difference between Jam Cruise and other cruises is how they treat the ports the ship visits. In Roatan, Honduras this day and the next day in Costa Maya Mexico, the organizers arranged concerts for school children, eco-minded excursions and brought school supplies donated by attendees to those in need. There’s a conscious effort to not be another floating ATM machine full of Westerners that come ashore, pillage goods and services and then jet away. This is still a luxury adventure, particularly for those used to sleeping bags and camp stoves, but there’s a strong infusion of compassion and humanity into what is too often just a celebration of consumption and excess.

This spirit extends to coordinated recycling bins throughout the ship and Jam Cruise’s vigorous attempt to get passengers to invest in carbon offsets with a small donation which came with the reward of a lively Everyone Orchestra performance on the final day, where Matt Butler was in particularly fine form, conducting with telepathic understanding, a true musician’s musician with the ability to draw things out of players they likely didn’t know they had in them.

While it would be easy to just eat, drink and be merry, Jam Cruise makes a real effort to be more, to connect people with the environment and the places it visits in a deeper way that makes those that pitch in better citizens of the world.

Easy Star All-Stars :: 5:30-7:00 PM :: Pool Deck
Once again, sailing away produced a happy, almost mythological churn in my belly as the lush shores of Honduras faded to the utterly on-the-money reggae of Easy Star. While the group has gotten the majority of its attention for laying some irie on Dark Side of the Moon, Sgt. Pepper and OK Computer, the originals they played this set were some of the strongest since the prime days of Marley, Tosh, et al. And their handling of rock classics is a reggae tradition that goes way back, where popular music in the West found new life in Jamaica – there would be no ska without Motown/Stax. Easy Star’s vocal blend is delicious, all the singers filled with warmth and appealing phrasing, and their ongoing presence in the jam scene has brought their individual chops as instrumentalists to the fore in a cool way. Put another way, they solo and shine in ways a lot of contemporary reggae doesn’t, perhaps stirred on by jam’s Cult of the Shredder mentality. Still, it’s the group feel that most captures one with Easy Star and gives fresh life to familiar numbers, exemplified by the yummy run from The Beatles’ “Sgt. Pepper > I Get By With Some Help From My Friends” into Pink Floyd’s “Breathe” and out into a crushingly sublime take on Radiohead’s “Lucky” that was nearly the equal of the original. This is reggae at its best that honors tradition and expands the genre with skill and style.

Zach Gill by Chad Smith

Zach Gill :: 7:30-8:15 PM :: The Atrium
In the staircase encircled ship’s main lobby sits an acrylic, clear top grand piano. It’s the kind of instrument Liberace might have kept as a backup if one of his ornate babies went out of tune, and each night a different keyboardist took a turn on it during the dinner period – The New Mastersounds’ Joe Tatton on Tuesday, Marco Benevento on Wednesday, Gill on Thursday, Widespread’s JoJo Hermann on Friday and Umphrey’s Joel Cummins on Saturday. Each had VERY different approaches but Gill perhaps captured the Piano Man heart of the instrument best. Emerging a little worse for wear in a hat snatched from M.A.S.H.‘s Hawkeye, Gill settled in lackadaisically, asking us what we wanted to hear. What we got was an inviting mixture of songs about childhood, family and hope – some originals, some well-picked covers like Billy Joel’s “My Life” and a sing-along inducing version of Elton John’s “I Guess That’s Why They Call It The Blues.” With a small wooden sailboat on top of the piano, Gill honored piano bar tradition with a touch of modern flair.

Dave Schools by Chad Smith

Stockholm Syndrome :: 9:15-11:00 PM :: Pool Deck
Anyone familiar with Stockholm would likely have been surprised by how cheery and bubbly they were at this set. Most of the dark, grizzled, politically charged material (largely drawn from Jerry Joseph’s catalog) was left aside to reveal a hitherto unknown Latin bent, a saucy cover of the Climax Blues Band’s “Couldn’t Get It Right” and more new songs that show there’s more to this band than their debut and handful of tours previously indicated. Schools looks like he’s having the time of his life, Ingram shows off his big rock drummer chops, McFadden and Joseph shred mightily and Danny Louis is exposed in a way that shows off what a wacked keyboard wizard he truly is. A punkish “Conscious Contact” was another highlight, and overall this set only amped my curiosity about what this band might produce down the line.

Big Gigantic by Chad Smith

Big Gigantic :: 11:45 PM-1:30 AM :: Pool Deck
Very rarely does a band blow me away the first time I see them. The adjustment to their vibe usually takes a time or two, but so immediate and sultry is Big Gigantic’s thang that I found resistance futile. It’s definitely dance music, but with much greater dynamics and musicality than most working a similar vein today. They don’t rely on obvious samples to get over with the crowd, instead diggin’ hard for sounds and beat configurations that will stimulate groove people. Drummer Jeremy Salken pumps blood into the machine rhtyhms andDominic Lalli is a blur of keyboards, samples, triggered beats, loops and saxophone freakiness that compares favorably to Jam Cruise vet Skerik. Big Gigantic plays to the tastes of dance music fans but expands upon them in a really nifty way.

Garage A Trois by Dave Vann

Garage A Trois :: 2:15-4:00 AM :: Pool Deck
In perhaps the most aerobic set of the Cruise (down to matching track suits), Skerik (saxophonics), Mike Dillon (vibes, marimba, percussion), Stanton Moore (drums) and Marco Benevento worked up a crazed lather as they laid down instrumental music without borders or clear precedent. They always make me feel giddily unmoored, a feeling intensified by the rockin’ of the ship. They were on their best mis-behavior in front of a totally engaged, lit-up audience eager to devour their strangeness. One gets the sense they dare one another to go beyond throughout their sets, speeding up to insane levels or working with space in a daring, uncontrolled way. Personally, this is my favorite Stanton Moore project because it most removes him from his New Orleans comfort zone. You could see him out on the edge again and again in this set, poked and prodded by the three circus lunatics in the foreground. When so much in the world is structured and ordered, it’s a joy to wallow around in such lawless sonics.

Lotus by Chad Smith

Lotus:: 2:00-4:00 AM :: Teatro Carlo Felice
I’m the first to confess that what Lotus does isn’t my first love musically but the band really unlocked for me at this set, which featured the most dramatic, empathetic light show of the cruise. What came through was what REALLY good musicians these four are, and how well they understand the ebb & flow of today’s instrumental music, which is often more about mood and texture than straight melody, though they have a good deal of that, too. Their drummer has the crack of Art Blakey in a post Aphex Twin world, forming an ever-solid center around which the others swoop and swerve. The music carries echoes of primo jazz fusion, early Tangerine Dream, Boards of Canada, Kratwerk, 70s film scores and even Dream Theater in some proggy moments. Lotus hits the same pleasure points as electronic music, stimulating synapses with real artistry, but they don’t succumb to bald repetition and pounding intensity too common with most electronic music. And it was SUCH a scene in the theater – gypsies and zebra striped kids weaving about, a group of rotund clowns working what the ringmaster gave them in the balcony. Below, glow sticks flew through the air as people sparkled and shimmied in time to the ever-changing music. A gangsta lean guest turn from Dominic Lalli didn’t hurt, and the exuberance of Lotus’ followers proved quite infectious.

Interlude Two

George Porter Jr. & Ian Neville by Chad Smith

The Jam Room is a nightly event on the ship where the musicians take over one of the lounge bars. It’s a cutting session of the highest order and a chance to see way, way too much talent on one stage. It’s where the musicians often end up after their own sets, and it’s a meeting ground for all styles, though funk/soul predominates. On this night, one of Jam Cruise’s royalty George Porter Jr. was the host – other nights were helmed by Tony Hall, Wally Ingram, Big Sam and Steve Kimock – and George was working his eager participants like sled dogs. When I walked in a bit after 4 am, the lounge was packed and the music was loud and razor sharp. This didn’t let up for hours, and once again left me flabbergasted at the stamina and invention of the players on Jam Cruise. Not everyone can hang in such an environment, sliding in and out of pieces that often come to life in the moment, but there was no lack of musical greatness to be had any hour in the Jam Room.

If one stepped outside onto the deck just outside the funky roar, they discovered Nathan Moore, Bryan Elijah Smith, Greensky’s stunning dobro genious Anders Beck and a rotating cast of musicians and passengers picking away. It was unutterably organic and lovely to see music, unplanned, unscheduled, burbling away. It was music for the pure joy of it, and it made one stomp their feet and hoot and reach for the sky in happiness. And it went on for hours, greeting the sunrise with a sing-along “You Are My Sunshine,” with the whole hootenanny happening again the next night. Nathan is one of those wonderful catalysts that brings out the song in our hearts and inspires us to open our lips and just sing it to whoever might be around. Sometimes that was Kimock, borrowing Beck’s dobro and picking Dead melodies, and sometimes it was just regular folks with a ukulele and a fractured voice, but it was always magical and a real step outside of normal life. This sort of thing happens on Jam Cruise, which creates an environment friendly to such impromptu shows of creativity, and one is just lucky to stumble across them in their rambling.

Continue reading for Day Four of Jam Cruise 9…

Friday, January 7

Cornmeal/Greensky by Dave Vann

Pickin’ Party – Rock Covers :: 5:00-6:00 PM :: Zebra Bar
Greensky Bluegrass and Cornmeal joined forces for this year’s pickin’ party, which tackled classic rock numbers with audience members playing along. The musicians would announce a basic chord structure and occasionally call out changes, and the whole thing would trundle out of the gate with ragged charm. Beginning with a bonafide gem, Grand Funk Railroad’s “We’re An American Band” (announced as one of Homer Simpson’s favorites), it would have been nearly impossible not to have fun at this set, which included a stab at Bob Seger’s “Turn The Page,” The Beatles’ “Get Back”, fine woo-hoos from the crowd on “Sympathy For The Devil” and some choice spoon and harmonica solos from audience members. While both Cornmeal and Greensky are known as string bands, this session showed off the rock ‘n’ roll souls some of us having been picking up on for ages.

Pool Deck by Chris Monaghan

God Street Wine :: 8:30-10:30 PM :: Pool Deck
Beginning with a superb cover of Van Morrison’s “Into The Mystic,” God Street Wine’s second set of the cruise rolled out with the same near-perfect execution. Once again, their jamming always went somewhere; a real group activity, conversational, motion-filled, lively. During Leo Nocentelli’s guest turn it occurred to me that Jam Cruise is a real temple to the archetypes of modern music. Just this cruise featured core members of the Grateful Dead, The Meters and James Brown’s band, all of whom enthusiastically reveled in the chance to show off their chops whenever opportunity arose. Again, even if one were unfamiliar with God Street’s music, the tunes were immediately enjoyable and a great platform for their guests like Anders Osborne, who dove in, head bobbing, eyes steely, with an expression that said, “I’m gonna get me some!” Later, Anders Beck joined them for a rollicking “Get On The Train,” a song equal to Dylan during his blazing Highway 61 Revisited period. While it’s highly unlikely these guys will ever return to full-time touring, it’s to be hoped that they make another Jam Cruise appearance along with select land-based fest gigs. The music is too good not to be shared with more people.

NMS w/ Jen Hartswick by Chad Smith

The New Mastersounds :: 11:15 PM-1:15 AM :: Pool Deck
NMS do it clean and sharp. There’s nothing flabby about their approach to instrumental funk ‘n’ soul, and it inspires others to keep it neat and tight, too. While Robert Walter, Roosevelt Collier from The Lee Boys, Jennifer Hartswick, Mike Dillon and Zach Deputy played with hordes of others on this trip, they turned in some of their most concise, pointed playing with the Mastersounds at this set. But that’s just gravy for the core playing of this quartet, particularly the lightning fast guitar of Eddie Roberts (who also beats a tambourine with the possessed verve of a Baptist choir member) and the luxurious, feel-first bass work of Pete Shand, who proved my personal favorite of all the very gifted bassists on JC 9. The guy just crawls inside the musculature of a groove and lives there. So bloody satisfying!

Bill Kreutzmann by Chad Smith

The Rhythm Devils :: 2:00-4:00 AM :: Pool Deck
The new lineup of Bill Kreutzmann and Mickey Hart‘s long running project was a real rock ‘n’ roll beast. Though playing a number of Grateful Dead numbers, this band – comprised of the drummers, Tim Bluhm (guitar, vocals), Davy Knowles (guitar, vocals), Andy Hess (bass) and Sikiru Adepoju (talking drum) with Steve Kimock joining them on the Cruise – moves along a MUCH different current. One recognizes the melodies and words but the feel is quite different. For one thing, Bluhm and Knowles are have much stronger voices than Weir or Garcia. Hey, I love Jerry and Bob as much as the next guy, but there’s something really cool about hearing powerful, dexterous vocalists tackle pieces like “Ship of Fools,” “U.S. Blues” and “Ripple.” This isn’t said to be disrespectful but to simply point out a key difference. Mickey and Billy didn’t choose these guys casually, and the difference is really felt in the new originals, where the drummers even lay down their version of a straight backbeat on a couple poppier pieces.

Rhythm Devils by Dave Vann

This group also cooked on classics like “Cumberland Blues” and “Uncle John’s Band,” breathing air into the familiar. I think it helps that Knowles, Hess and Bluhm weren’t tie-dyed-in-the-wool Deadheads before joining up. This music is largely new to them and thus comes across to our ears with a freshness that’s exciting. Hess is especially striking in how he converses with the drummers, finding a tough, harmonious groove that’s worlds away from Phil Lesh. He listens really hard, responding and adapting in the moment, and always coming out the other side right in tune with Kreutzmann and Hart. The finale of “Good Lovin’” included a nice chant of “Turn this boat around/ ‘Cause we don’t want to go home” led by Bluhm, who came into his own by set’s end. For however long this band lasts, they’re making arguably the most interesting Dead music happening right now.

Continue reading for Day Five of Jam Cruise 9…

Saturday, January 8

Pool Deck by Dave Vann

Pimps of Joytime :: 11:30 AM-12:45 PM :: Pool Deck
A wake-up call in several respects, PJT burned hot as the opener to the final day before we arrived back in Florida. Thankfully, they didn’t pull any punches despite being on at a time when many were nursing hangovers and simply trying to muster the energy for a final day of revels. PJT’s voices blended especially well under open skies and their playing threw off serious sparks over lock-tight rhythms. The PJT sound is one with the power to reintroduce musician-made funk to hip-hop kids, a sound both classic and contemporary. Leo N was incendiary on “Janxta Funk!” and other guests included Ivan Neville, Nigel Hall and Big Chief Monk Boudreaux, all of whom seemed to bestow a much deserved ancestral blessing on PJT. “We’re a very lucky band today,” said Brian J. “ You can tell everyone else when they wake up that they missed all this.”

Nathan Moore & Bryan Elijah Smith :: 12:45-1:30 PM :: Solar Stage
Appearing as a duo, the pair gave off a strong Everly Brothers vibe, their voices joined in empathetic harmony in service of plain ol’ good songwriting. Standouts included the title track from Smith’s latest album Pour On Me and a brand new tune the boys had written early in the cruise that began, “Look, ma, no hands/ I’m on a ship far from land.” And underneath it all was Moore’s unforced grace, a gentle hand that reaches into the depths of us and loosens feelings, haunting us with lines like, “I know it isn’t true but it doesn’t go away.” His understanding of the human condition is profound and his songs vibrate with his found wisdom. And Smith has a decent measure of the same mojo, too. After the Pimps, it was just the cooling tonic one needed.

ALO :: 1:30-2:45 PM :: Pool Deck
If there’s a better band to enjoy in bright sunlight on a cruise ship deck I can’t come up them. ALO turned on the charm and rejuvenated the flagging energies of the afternoon risers. They have a gift for producing positivity, a charge that eases tensions and lifts spirits, and that gift was on full display this set, which included a saucy extended “Hot Tub” with a Zach friendly shaman rap, some cheeky Gilligan’s Island theme song quotes from Lebo, and a sit-in from Living Colour’s Corey Glover on “Glamour Boys.” There was also a kundalini loosening “Shapeshifter” and a sweet cameo from Tim and Nicki Bluhm, who sang the new Nicki tune “Stick With Me.” A late in set cover of Steely Dan’s “Reelin’ In The Years” made me wonder why I’d never thought of the Dan as an ALO ancestor before. As with the rest of the set, it was pitch perfect and a pleasure.

David Gans by Dave Vann

David Gans :: 2:45-3:30 PM :: Solar Stage
One of the more intense, intimate sets despite a setting where people were bouncing beach balls and chattering away. If you focused in, Gans offered up rich tunes in a timeless voice full of soil and sky and underpinned by some really lovely picking. His POV is that of a vet of the scene who’s witnessed the good and the bad and tells it like it is with clarity and great skill. His Garcia ode “Who Killed Uncle John?” targeted all the right things and moved with the circular logic of 60s Dylan. At times his playing recalled the late Michael Hedges, full of space and ringing rightness, mixed with a touch of Jerry. His darker eye came as a nice contrast on the boat, with one original about festival life built around the refrain of “Go down to the river and drown” as a metaphor for the sometimes outrageous and dangerous behavior one encounters at fests. Gans concluded with one of the prettiest versions of “Brokedown Palace” since Garcia passed, cementing his place as a premiere interpreter of the Dead catalog. But the takeaway from this set is how well formed and unique his original work is and how much more attention it deserves than it has received up to this point.

Anders Osborne :: 3:30-5:00 PM :: Pool Deck
Describing this set from the stage as “a Tuesday night at the Maple Leaf,” Osborne sunk deep into his New Orleans roots, this time backed by the uber-amazing rhythm section of George Porter, Jr. and Johnny Vidacovich. Leo Nocentelli murdered his old classic “People Say” with them, and the whole set Osborne’s guitar was just ferocious, moving from whisper soft single string strikes to a raw growl that might just unleash the hounds at Hell’s gate. At one point, Bill Kreutzmann leaned in to play a cymbal and floor tom over Johnny V’s shoulder, drawn in by the music and unable to restrain himself. This feeling seems to infect even the most jaded musicians once they settle into Jam Cruise, and it was on display a lot at this set, which secured Anders place as one of this year’s standouts.

Wyllys & Joel Cummins by Chad Smith

Brock Butler & Wyllys :: 5:00-5:45 PM :: Solar Stage
Butler showed off his rangy electric guitar chops alongside slamming DJ Wyllys in a set that raised energy levels and woke up the dancers on deck. At every turn, these two gave the ear something interesting to grab onto. They were aided by Joel Cummins with some wicked Moog action on a few numbers, and even made time to bring up some friends for a little salute to Phish and the search for sanity that clearly moved a lot the crowd.

Maceo Parker Super Jam :: 5:45-7:15 PM :: Pool Deck
Maceo was one of the classiest, coolest dudes on the boat, and this set showed how well his fellow musicians love him, too. One of THE godfathers of funk took an all-star cast including Karl Denson, Skerik, Fred Wesley, Pee Wee Ellis, Robert Walter and countless others through their paces, offering a brief history lesson in how jazz turned into soul and soul into funk. The climax of “Pass The Peas” had the entire space humming, leaping and pretty much willing to do Maceo’s bidding. Jam Cruise gives a grandmaster like Maceo the spotlight and mass appreciation he deserves and in turn he turned the mother out hard.

Maceo Parker by Chris Monaghan

The Rhythm Devils :: 9:15-11:15 PM :: Teatro Carlo Felice
Like the previous night, the Devils dived right in, skipping the usual aimless Dead jam, everyone riding the utterly unique rhythm that Mickey and Billy produce, which, as Tim Bluhm pointed out in our recent feature, may be the most distinctive musical trait in the Dead’s sound. Even a staple – predictable in its way – like “Fire On The Mountain” sounded fresh in their hands and neatly tucked into “Scarlet Begonias” in the tail end, Kreutzmann casting a wicked grin as they band hit on all cylinders and really started to swing. Billy honestly seems to experiencing a real resurgence with thes Devils and 7 Walkers, and it’s glorious to see one of the greatest drummers of all-time dancing in his stool again. The line “strangers stopping strangers just to shake their hand” got a massive roar and had people turning to those around them to exchange a shake or hug like it was the Passing of the Peace at a church service. Kimock was more fun at this set, throwing in Garcia-y accents but also sparking off the differences in this lineup. “Friend of the Devil” had a nice country twang in Bluhm’s handling, and new one “Voodoo Zombies” turned things back to rock territory with a thick groove and some the best lyrics Hart’s ever penned. The “Drums” spotlight led into a biting “The Eleven,” a tune this band does better than any I’ve heard since Jerry passed. Davy Knowles sang lead on an exquisite “So Many Roads” that got a lot of us choked up. They countered that feeling with a “New Speedway Boogie” that emphasized the boogie and had Bluhm complete soaring on the vocals over a chunky new rhythm structure and Knowles’ blues guitar accents. In their hands, this music is exciting, particularly the songs they’ve developed together, which is a striking difference to the many seances going on that seem focused on bringing back something that left this world with Garcia. The Rhythm Devils are focused on the far horizon, even when playing old favorites, and that’s nothing but a good thing.

Epilogue

Jamcruisers by Chad Smith

A gathering of angels appeared above my head,
They sang to me this song of hope and this is what they said,
They said come sail away, come sail away, come sail away with me lads.

The remainder of my last night aboard was spent wandering, letting my subconscious soak up all the wonderful random beauty and strangeness happening all over the ship, fuel for my dreaming in the days before the next Jam Cruise. And there was so much to draw from, even at the end: Hemp kids high-steppin’ to Cornmeal as the last zebra people ran wild in the halls; people doing The Robot to “Axel F” at the The New Mastersounds’ dance-off; a porno clown with gigantic, glittering cock giggling as he menaced the laughing staff with his member; sweet, tired drifters shambling aimless and already mourning the end; folks spinning and throwing the last glow sticks as Lotus carved happiness in sound waves before a meditative, lovely denouement; the true partiers sucking all the marrow out of life in the disco and Jam Room; the crew that seemed a little sad to see us go; all the clever, funny door and hallway decorations (a fave: a sign that read “Don’t worry and pet the fuzzy rug” on top of a plush brown rug hung in a hallway) and more and more and more. Everywhere one turned, life seemed to explode. To call it evocative would be to sell it far short.

Porno Clowns by Chad Smith

The “jam” in the Cruise’s name is not some genre or record label tag. It’s an upfront pronouncement that folks can mix it up here and that the usual rules don’t apply. Jam Cruise is a open environment that brings out the child within, the one eager to play, the one open to new experiences and eager to make new friends. Out of necessity we cannot live like this on shore. The world is too sharp and dangerous to walk around like that, but for a brief time we can can live this way in what is an undeniable Mecca for music lovers. It’s tough to imagine someone not being turned on by the music on this boat, regardless of their tastes. Sure, a little light on metal and heavier stuff, but I think there’s ways they could incorporate that into the mix if they wanted to – they already bump shoulders with it allowing Mike D and Skerik to hold court. Add to this 24-hour food, cabins with your own bed and shower, satellite TV if you want to see what’s happening on the planet elsewhere (or watch the daily dose of photos and set excerpts from the previous days on Jam Cruise TV), a spa, hot tubs, endless bars and many more amenities and Jam Cruise comes out as something worth saving for, even forgoing other pleasures, other fests, if music holds a central place in your life. It’s a journey one should take at least once but don’t be surprised if you find yourself powerless to resist when the next one starts booking. Simply put, it’s a bit of a paradise with an absolutely monster soundtrack.

Jamcruisers by Dave Vann

Oh, the dreams started the first night I returned and always leave me smiling when I awake.

Here are our thoughts, voyagers’ thoughts,
Here not the land, firm land, alone appears, may then by them be said,
The sky o’erarches here, we feel the undulating deck beneath our feet,
We feel the long pulsation, ebb and flow of endless motion,
The tones of unseen mystery, the vague and vast suggestions of the
briny world, the liquid-flowing syllables,
The perfume, the faint creaking of the cordage, the melancholy rhythm,
The boundless vista and the horizon far and dim are all here,
And this is ocean’s poem.

-Walt Whitman – In Cabin’d Ships at Sea

Continue reading for a few more tidbits on Jam Cruise 9…

Jam Cruise 9 All-Stars

There was no lack of talent on the boat, in fact, it’s nothing but pros and future pros. But over their many guest turns these three musicians showed themselves to be a reliable source of inspiration to their compatriots in multiple, varied setting on top of being hugely able soloist and massive talents due an extra measure of props this year. One trait they all shared is the gift of under-playing when all around them noodled mightily. I raise my glass to all three and promise to buy their first drink if we wind up on the boat together again.

1. Nigel Hall
Pipes from Heaven, major keyboard kung-fu and a nice chap to boot. When you see Nigel step up you know it’s about to get good, every single time.

2. Jennifer Hartswick
Pipes also from Heaven, charming stage presence, trumpeter extraordinaire. She’s someone you want on your team no matter what game you’re playing.

3. Anders Beck
He makes the dobro sing and cry, weaving into spaces missed by other musicians, stirring strong feelings without a single word. Time will likely show him to be an advancer of his instrument, someone who pioneered new possibilities for the dobro and inspired others to take the path less traveled.

10 Thematic Cover Song Suggestions For Jam Cruise 10

Cover tunes are a big thing on the boat. Bands break out new ones especially for JC, and sea/ocean themed numbers always go over great. With that in mind, here’s a few ideas for artists to tackle next time.

1. Roger McGuinn’s “Jolly Roger”
2. Procol Harum’s “A Salty Dog”
3. Bob Dylan’s “Boots of Spanish Leather”
4. Styx’s “Come Sail Away”
5. Robert Plant’s “Ship of Fools”
6. Little Feat’s “Sailin’ Shoes”
7. Kansas’ “Point of No Return”
8. The Blues Image’s “Ride Captain Ride”
9. Jefferson Airplane/Crosby, Stills & Nash’s “Wooden Ships”
10. Fred Neil’s “The Dolphins”

5 Humble Lineup Suggestions For Jam Cruise 10

1. Clutch
A bit outside of JC’s usual comfort zone but actually a superb fit given their range into dub, psych and blues. Clutch would provide a welcome splash of heaviness, and they could also do a set as their jazz-inflected instrumental alter-ego The Bakerton Group, which dovetails nicely with prior JC vets like Garage A Trois and Go-Go Jungle. I think they would be a major surprise for Jamcruisers.

2. Living Colour
Lead singer Corey Glover was on the boat with Galactic this year and dug the heck out of the cruise. Next step is to bring him back with his own band, who are playing better than ever, to flip lids. Who doesn’t want to see Vernon Reid in the Jam Room?

3. 7 Walkers
Bill Kreutzmann clearly had a great time this year and George Porter Jr. is a staple of the cruise. That just leaves Papa Mali and Matt Hubbard. This quartet is stunning live, working some of the best lyrics Robert Hunter has written in 20 years and weaving a deeply Southern kind of voodoo.

4. Chris Robinson Band
With The Black Crowes taking a long hiatus, Chris is embarking on a solo band in 2011. They plan to stick to the West Coast for the most part so it would be a treat for folks to catch them on JC 10. Chris thrives in environments like Jam Cruise. As he said to me at last year’s High Sierra, “If there’s a bunch of loose, barefoot people getting down to my music then I’m in the right place.”

5. Chuck Brown
A late night chat with Robert Walter this year brought up the idea of some quality D.C. Go-Go for the boat, and who better than “The Godfather of Go-Go”? I foresee many hands in the air with Chuck making the pool deck bounce.

Continue reading for Chad Smith’s Jam Cruise 9 photo gallery…

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Continue reading for Dave Vann’s Jam Cruise 9 photo gallery…

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”35″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=224″);}); 1/4/11 – 1/9/11 @ Jam Cruise (Fort Lauderdale, FL) View Photos

Continue reading for Chris Monaghan’s Jam Cruise 9 photo gallery…

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Stockholm Syndrome Tour in Feb

SAN FRAN TO BOULDER IN TWO WEEKS!

Stockholm Syndrome will release their sophomore album, Apollo, on February 15, followed by a series of shows in the West. The band – comprised of Widespread Panic bassist Dave Schools (who also produced the record), Jerry Joseph (vocals, guitar), Eric McFadden (guitar), Gov’t Mule keyboardist Danny Louis and drummer Wally Ingram – produce a sound unlike any of their other projects, a thick, intoxicating rock spell that’s definitely more than the sum of its parts, especially live.

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Dates

2.18-19 San Francisco, CA – The Independent
2.20 Reno, NV – Knitting Factory
2.21 Park City, UT – Harry O’s
2.22 Telluride, CO – Sheridan Opera House
2.23 Aspen, CO – Belly Up
2.25 Denver, CO – Cervante’s Masterpiece Ballroom
2.26 Boulder, CO – Fox Theatre

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Dates :: Stockholm Syndrome News :: Stockholm Syndrome Concert Reviews


Jerry Joseph & Wally Ingram | Salt Lake City | Review | Pics

Words & Images by: Phil Santala

Jerry Joseph & Wally Ingram :: 12.12.10 :: The State Room :: Salt Lake City, UT

Jerry Joseph and the Jackmormons begin a three-night run in Portland, OR tonight. Amazing, under-sung American rock greats Richmond Fontaine open for the Jackmormons on NYE. For full show details pop over here.

Jerry Joseph by Phil Santala

What ever you do, don’t call it a comeback or anything new. Jerry Joseph has been absolutely on fire the last few years. Not matter who he is touring with – the Jackmormons, Denmark Veseys, Stockholm Syndrome, or just with percussionist Wally Ingram – his shows, as of late, almost never cease to amaze me. The State Room show in Utah was no exception.

Bold words considering this summer saw me walking away from three nights in Virginia City, MT at Bandito’s shaking my head in wonderment. That run itself just gets better and betterÂ…but enough about the past. We gathered in Salt Lake City, one of Jerry’s former residencies, to partake in some pre-holidays shenanigans, Jerry Joseph Style.

Jerry came out, hulking onto the stage in big heavy boots. Some in the crowd responded by shouting, “Show us your feet!” It was clear that those in attendance were not just casual fans. The core had turned out for this event, and the duo did not disappoint. Jerry seemed to be in high spirits, joking to the crowd before “Wisconsin Death Trip” that, “Wally and I, when I was a kid, we used to sing this around the Christmas tree at Wally’s house, eating Christmas koogle.” Jerry also jested after the Vic Chestnutt song “Flirted With You All My Life” that the song was about “holidays and good times. You feeling any better?” Vic, he said, “fucking nailed it” with that song. The Christmas spirit was certainly making Jerry’s heart grow three times its size that day.

Local Jackmormons bassist JR Ruppel joined Jerry and Wally for much of the second half of the set. The encore, which was especially moving and heartfelt, found Joseph stepping out from the mike to shout and sing directly to the crowd: “Ring ‘em up, tell ‘em that you love ‘em. CALL THEM NOW AND TELL THEM THAT YOU LOVE THEM!” It was a plea, a call, a cry of passion. Hold on, hold onto those around you, those you care for, those you hurt and neglect through your selfishness, those that never left you in the dark on your own no matter how you tried to push them away and no matter how many times your vices came between you and them. Ring ‘em up, and tell them Jerry Joseph said hi. Better yet, why don’t you all come out to the next Jerry Joseph show and see what the buzz is really all about?

Setlist
White Dirt, Jump, LAX, Flirted With You All My Life, Fur, Cochise, Two Balloons> Time the Revelator> Two Balloons. Muscles*, Radio Cab*, Paper Planes*>Climb to Safety*(slow)> Train Detective rap> Midnight Rambler rap> Climb to Safety*> Paper Planes*

Encore: Ring ‘em Up*> Good Sunday*>We Fall Down*> Good Sunday*

*w/ JR Rupple.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”5″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=201″);}); 12/12/10 – Jerry Joseph & Wally Ingram @ The State Room (Salt Lake City, UT) View Photos


Stockholm Syndrome: Apollo

FIRST NEW STUDIO ALBUM SINCE 2004; BAND TO TOUR IN 2011


Stockholm Syndrome

Response Records has announced the upcoming release of Apollo, the hugely anticipated new
album from Stockholm
Syndrome
. The album – which follows the band’s 2004 debut, Holy Happy Hour – arrives
everywhere on February 15, 2011.

Stockholm Syndrome is the collaborative brainchild of two gifted musicians, Widespread Panic bassist Dave
Schools
and singer/songwriter Jerry Joseph. Initially conceived as a side project, the alliance soon
became a full-fledged band, with the able accompaniment of guitarist Eric McFadden, keyboardist
Danny Louis, and drummer Wally Ingram.

Apollo sees Stockholm Syndrome building upon its initial outing by distilling a distinctive sound fueled by
freewheeling creativity and incendiary rock power. Songs like “Finding” and the epic title track showcase the band’s
virtuosic interplay and genre-blurring ingenuity, all centered by Jerry Joseph’s creative, cathartic lyricism.

Produced
by Dave Schools in a converted chicken coop at Cotatai, California’s Prairie Sun Recording, with additional recording
at the famed Compass Point Studios in Nassau, Bahamas – Apollo places Joseph’s soulful vocals and
songwriting gifts at the forefront, all the while confirming Stockholm Syndrome’s remarkable ability to bridge sonic
styles spanning pop, psychedelia, and full-on rock ‘n roll.

In January, Stockholm Syndrome will herald the release of Apollo by taking to the open sea on Jam
Cruise
9
, the 2011 installment of the annual ocean-faring music festival – for full details, please click here. The band will will also tour in 2011 in support of
Apollo.

Stockholm Syndrome
Tour Dates

::
Stockholm Syndrome News
::
Stockholm Syndrome
Concert
Reviews


Jerry Joseph NYE Run; Tour Dates w/ Wally Ingram

NYE IN PORTLAND, OREGON;
WINTER DATES WITH WALLY INGRAM


Jerry Joseph

The details for the Jerry Joseph & the
Jackmormons
New Year’s Eve Run in Portland, Oregon have been revealed. Single show tickets and a 4
night
package are on sale now. Click here for more information.

Jerry Joseph & Wally Ingram
are going to hit the road again this winter. New tour dates have been announced for December that will take the
duo to Colorado, Utah, Montana & Idaho.

Jerry Joseph & Jackmormons New Year’s Eve Run:

12/29/10 @ Alberta Rose Thtr w/ Blue Skies For Black Hearts
12/30/10 @ Mt Tabor Theater w/ Hillstomp
12/31/10 @ Mt Tabor Theater w/ Richmond Fontaine

1/1/11 @ White Eagle

Jerry Joseph & Wally Ingram November/December 2010 Tour Dates:

11/9/10 * Raleigh, NC * Pour House Music Hall

11/10/10 * Charleston, SC * Pour House
11/11/10 * Athens, GA * Melting Point
11/12/10 * Atlanta, GA * Smith’s Ole Bar
11/13/10 * Birmingham, AL * Zydeco

12/1/10 * Eugene, OR * Sam Bond’s Garage (JERRY SOLO)

12/4/10 * Flagstaff, AZ * Green Room (JERRY SOLO)

12/5/10 * Tempe, AZ * The Sail Inn (JERRY SOLO)
12/08/10 * Vail, CO * Samana Lounge

12/10/10 * Grand Junction, CO * Mesa Theater
12/11/10 * Steamboat, CO * Old Town Pub

12/12/10 * Salt Lake City, UT * The State Room

12/14/10 * Victor, ID * The Knotty Pine

12/15/10 * Butte, MT * Silver Dollar Saloon

12/16/10 * Livingston, MT * The Mint – MT
12/17/10 * Livingston, MT * The Mint – MT
12/18/10 * Missoula, MT * The Palace

Jerry Joseph and The
Jackmormons
Tour Dates

::
Jerry Joseph and
The Jackmormons News

::
Jerry Joseph and The
Jackmormons
Concert
Reviews


Blackwoods Fest: Jerry Joseph

THREE DAY CAMPING CONSORTIUM FEATURING JERRY JOSEPH AND THE
JACKMORMONS


Jerry Joseph and The Jackmormons

What: 1st Annual Blackwoods Festival featuring Jerry Joseph and the Jackmormons

Where: Mercersberg, PA

When: September 17-19 2010

Supporting Performances by:

- Hexbelt

- June Star
- The Moderate

And Special Guest Appearances by:
- Mookie Siegel (David Nelson Band, Ratdog, Kingfish, Phil Lesh & Friends)

- James “J-Pat” Dalton
- Craig Greenberg
…more to follow!

The purchase of the weekend pass gets you in on three nites of music & camping, an awesome comemorative poster
and codes to download the shows! Click here for tickets.


Stockholm Syndrome: September Tour Dates

TOUR BEGINS SEPTEMBER 1 IN ATHENS, GA


Stockholm Syndrome

In anticipation of their upcoming studio album, tentatively titled Apollo, Stockholm Syndrome have
announced ten dates beginning in Athens, GA at the 40 Watt Club. Fan club tickets go on sale soon, including an
option to purchase a 10″ including 2 tracks from the forthcoming new studio album.

Stockholm Syndrome is Dave
Schools
, Jerry
Joseph
, Eric
McFadden
, Danny
Louis
and Wally
Ingram
.

Tour Dates:

September 1 Athens, GA 40 Watt Club

September 2 Atlanta, Georgia Buckhead Theatre

September 3 Asheville, NC The Orange Peel
September 4 Charleston, SC Music Farm
September 5 Wilmington, NC Greenfield Lake Amphitheater

September 8 Raleigh, NC Lincoln Theatre

September 9 West Chester, PA The Note
September 10 Richmond, VA The National
September 11 Baltimore, MD The 8×10

September 12 Brooklyn, NY The Brooklyn Bowl

Stockholm Syndrome
Tour Dates

::
Stockholm Syndrome News ::
Stockholm Syndrome
Concert
Reviews


Jerry Joseph & Wally Ingram: New Album & Tour

CIVILITY DUE OUT IN MAY 2010; SPRING/SUMMER TOUR DATES ANNOUNCED

Jerry Joseph

Guitarist/vocalist/songwriter Jerry
Joseph
and drummer Wally
Ingram
, both of Stockholm
Syndrome
and various other projects, have a new album and tour due in 2010.

The Jerry Joseph & Wally Ingram Duo will release Civility in May 2010. Meanwhile, the
duo is currently on the road for a number of spring and summer dates.

Upcoming Jerry Joseph & Wally Ingram 2010 Tour Dates:

4/16/10 * Chicago, IL * Schubas Tavern
4/18/10 * New York, NY * The Shrine
4/21/10 * New York, NY * Living Room
4/23/10 * Raleigh, NC * Pour House Music Hall
4/24/10 * Raleigh, NC * Pour House Music Hall
5/13/10 * San Diego, CA * Winston’s
5/14/10 * Los Angeles, CA * The Mint
5/15/10 * Joshua Tree, CA * Joshua Tree Music Festival
6/5/10 * Hunter, NY * Mountain Jam Festival
7/2/10 * Quincy, CA * High Sierra Music Festival

Civility Track Listing:
1. “Civility”

2. “Muscle”
3. “Paper Planes”
4. “Shooting Up the Neighborhood”
5. “Furr”
6. “Good Sunday”

7. “White Dirt”

The Civility CD pre-sale will begin soon, but for now you can stream the audio for free
HERE.

Stockholm Syndrome Tour
Dates
:: Stockholm
Syndrome News
:: Stockholm
Syndrome Concert Reviews


Jerry Joseph | 03.25-03.27 | Big Sky Run

Words & Images by: Phil Santala

Jerry Joseph & The Jackmormons :: 03.25.10 :: Knotty Pine :: Victor, ID

Jerry Joseph & The Jackmormons:: 03.26.10-03.27.10 :: Whiskey Jack’s :: Big Sky, MT

Jerry Joseph :: 03.26 :: Big Sky, MT

In a barnstorming blitz of ski towns Jerry
Joseph & The Jackmormons
returned to the greater Yellowstone area in promotion of their new live album, Badlandia. Fresh off the heels of a successful Stockholm Syndrome tour (see JamBase’s raves here), Jerry came out guns blazing, and firing on all cylinders.

Vince Herman of Leftover Salmon/Great American Taxi once called the Teton Valley the cultural center of the universe. The hub of that center would have be the Knotty Pine in Victor. “Fury” > “Frost Heaves” was a fitting combo for those of us who have lived in the valley and combated the deteriorating road conditions on Teton Pass this winter. But, it was the heavy handed “Hammer” followed later by “Soda Man” with an extended drum riff building the middle stanzas during the second set that really blew the hair back of those in attendance.

Just a few hours up the road, along a drive Jerry said he has enjoyed making much of his life, is where the band really hit their stride. Whiskey Jack’s at the base of Lone Peak is just a few miles (as the crow files) from Bandito’s, where Badlandia was recorded live last August. There must be something in the air or water in these parts that really gets the Jackmormons’ gears a-grinding. The Friday show was electrifying, and the Saturday show absolutely blew the roof off of the place.

The pace in Big Sky was set early with the third song Friday night, “Drive,” which often shows up in the tail end of a set, and typically a second set at that. I was able to witness a unique exchange during the “Altar in a Box” > “North” > “Altar in a Box.” As Jerry led the bloodthirsty crowd into “North,” chairs were practically bouncing off the walls. “Ask me if I give a…,” cried out Jerry, as “…FUCK!” wailed back from the majority of the audience. The two guys in front of me were absolutely floored by this exchange. “Wow,” one said to the other, “that’s not the kind of sing-along you get at Phish!”


Jerry Joseph :: 03.27 :: Big Sky, MT

The treat Friday evening was the “Brother Michael” > “Big Sky Country” > “Presence of the Lord/Rama Cita jam” > “Brother Michael” combo. “Big Sky Country” is a song by Chris Whitley, whom Jerry Joseph toured with in 2002. Whitley, who passed away in 2005, was a big influence on Jerry, and the nod was appreciated by the audience. The locals know that Montana is “Big Sky Country,” at least according to the state propaganda machine and our license plates. Hardcore Jerry Joseph fans from out of the area were also quick to point out that the song had not been played before to their knowledge, and if it had been covered, none in attendance had witnessed it. Another cover, Bob Marley’s “One Drop,” truly hit us from leftfield, rounding out Friday night nicely and propelling us ravenously into Saturday.

The capacity crowd at Saturday’s sold out show was in for some treats, too. During the “Revelator” > “Second Skin” opener, Jerry broke a string on his well worn, workhorse, “Support Your Local Hell’s Angels” guitar. He finished the first set on a new-looking blue substitute, though the sound remained pure Jerry. “Henry” featured magical teases from Whitley’s “Big Sky Country” and The Beatles’ “Dear Prudence” in the middle of “Whatever You Got in the Basket.” But, it was the slow “Climb To Safety” that would really hold us over through set break.

Better still, the second set focused on music to get you though the night and not just a set break. The greater Yellowstone area – around Grand Teton National Park and all the surrounding mountains of Montana, Idaho, and Wyoming – is the kind of place where life is like water. That’s just how the three day run closed, too: “Kind of Place” > “Light is Like Water” > “2 Balloons” > “Light is Like Water.” The combination got our feet moving before sending us out the door knowing that “Supper’s Ready” down the “Hallelujah Trail.”

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”0″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=15″);}); 3/25/10 – Jerry Joseph and The Jackmormons @ Knotty Pine (Victor, ID) View Photos

Jerry Joseph Tour Dates :: Jerry Joseph News :: Jerry Joseph Concert Reviews

JamBase | Open Sky
Go See Live Music!


Concert For Chile Benefit On 4/11 Chris Baron, J. Joseph in Brooklyn

CONCERT FOR CHILE BENEFIT SHOW FEATURING CHRIS BARRON (OF THE SPIN DOCTORS)
JERRY JOSEPH, JONAH SMITH, CRAIG GREENBERG AND OTHERS

Chris Barron

Seeing Green Music and Two Shes Productions jointly present a concert on April 11 at Brooklyn Bowl as part of the
fundraising effort for the victims of February’s earthquake and tsunami in Chile.

The concert will feature singer/songwriter Chris Barron of the Grammy-nominated Spin Doctors, as well as
performances by notable songwriter Jerry Joseph (Stockholm Syndrome, The Jackmormons), Jonah Smith, Paula Valstein, Craig Greenberg, and more.

“Concert for Chile” was born out of the desire of NYC-based singer/songwriter Craig Greenberg, to give
back to the city of Concepcion, where he got his start performing while living there in 2002. Concepcion was the
hardest hit city in Chile in this recent natural disaster.

It is estimated that the earthquake has affected at least 1.5 million people in the area. According to the
International Red Cross, it could take between 5-7 years and billions of dollars for the area to recover.

Event Details:

Sunday, April 11
Brooklyn Bowl
61 Wythe Ave, Brooklyn, NY

Doors open at 5 p.m., Performances start at 6 p.m.

$15 suggested donation at the door in lieu of ticket sales

All proceeds will go to the AmeriCares fund for Chile relief and development.


Stockholm Syndrome | 03.05 & 03.06 | S.F.

Words by: Kayceman | Images by: Susan J. Weiand

Stockholm Syndrome :: 03.05.10 :: The Independent :: San Francisco, CA

Stockholm Syndrome :: 03.05 :: San Francisco, CA

It’s amazing how little has changed in six years. In 2004, I was in Europe with Stockholm Syndrome (read about it here). I was documenting the band’s first tour, carrying amps and selling t-shirts. While it was a great time to be around the band, watching them learn the material and wrestle their way into a hierarchy of sorts, it was not a cool time to be an American overseas. When Obama took office it became a little easier to wear your American pride outside our borders, but inside the confines of our 50 states, it’s still a shit-storm. We may have voted for change, but not much has changed.

Rock & roll is comfort food in times like these, and this band dishes it out in plentiful portions. Whether magnifying our demons on songs like “American Fork” and “Empire One” or helping us forget the pain for a minute with “Bouncing Very Well” or an uber-funky, Clav-heavy “Couldn’t Get It Right” (that sounded like it might drop into “Superstition” at one point), the power of a great song or inspired jam can medicate.

Few of us have known leaner times than today and there are few artists alive who channel struggle, pain and frustration as well as Jerry Joseph. Regardless of what configuration we find him in (Jackmormons, solo, Denmark Veseys, etc.), Jerry always charts a path to open hearts. But, he is never more affective than with Stockholm. Backed by bassist Dave Schools (Widespread Panic), drummer Wally Ingram (David Lindley, Sheryl Crow, Jackson Browne), keyboardist Danny Louis (Gov’t Mule) and the inimitable Eric McFadden on guitar, there are not many bands that can match the intensity and sheer power of SS.

Jerry Joseph :: 03.05 :: San Francisco

Mixing songs from the band’s 2004 debut, Holy Happy Hour, with new tracks off the soon-to-be-released sophomore album and Jerry’s solo work, Stockholm Syndrome also decimated a few huge covers on their first night in San Francisco. Coming out of a sprawling “Kind Of Place,” a Jerry song with a huge sing-along hook that should have charted on the radio years ago, the band closed set one with the late Vic Chesnutt‘s “Flirted With You All My Life.” A song about death by a man who recently took his own life, there is no heavier subject matter, and they paid homage by taking it into very dark terrain. But what was so remarkable about this song was the transition from pitch black despair into something with a slight reggae influence and upbeat conclusion. Together it was a musical reminder that there is light at the end of the tunnel, even if we have to cross over to find it.

The other bust-out cover came mid-way through the second set with Dylan‘s “Where Are You Tonight?” Beefed up on testosterone and delivered in classic Jerry style, they latched onto the original’s gospel roots and turned it into a rock burner. Even folks familiar with the song were scratching their heads for the first few minutes. You could almost read their minds: “I know this song… but what is it?”

More than any specific song, what makes this band so fun is watching them lock horns. Each member is a true Alpha Dog and if they don’t take some space, they won’t get any. This is what makes Danny Louis such an asset. The original keyboard player, German star Danny Dziuk, was more passive, Louis is not and he knows when to really lean in. The same could be said for McFadden. A more talented guitarist you will not find, and though he is at times overshadowed by Jerry’s massive stage presence (not to mention his often overlooked guitar work), McFadden is a powder keg ready to explode. His solos are always over-the-top, but it’s when he and Jerry rub against each other, harmonizing their guitars and weaving notes, as they did on “Ray Of Heaven” and “Conscious Contact,” that the sparks really fly.

McFadden & Schools :: 03.05 :: San Francisco, CA

Alas, one would be remiss to not make prominent mention of Dave Schools. Playing a bit more of a traditional bass role than in Widespread Panic, Schools utilizes a four-string here to devastating effect. From heavily dubbed out sections that would set Jerry up for surprisingly strong white-boy reggae (not easy, and Jerry does it better than just about anyone) to expansive bass solos, mean power rock and spot-on vocal harmonies, Schools is the not-so-secret weapon of Stockholm Syndrome.

It can be a dicey situation with Jerry Joseph as the bandleader. He can’t do it any other way. He has to be the frontman, and the more confident and loose he is, the better the performance. But this is not the Jackmormons and every player needs room to shine or they’ll grow bored (or worse, they might get angry). Finding that balance is the key to Stockholm Syndrome’s success, and longevity.

During second set standout “Shinning Path,” I couldn’t help but wonder what would happen if this band was the full-time priority for all five members. An older Jerry song about the brutal Communist Party of Peru, the band gave Jerry as much rope as he wanted, and he tied a knot around The Independent, pulling us deep into his world. A slow building, explosive rocker, when Jerry screamed, “You said that you’d die for me,” while McFadden blazed a solo and Schools dumped heavy bass over the top, it was everything rock fans dream about.

Stockholm Syndrome :: 03.05.10 :: The Independent :: San Francisco, CA

Set I: Red Lightning, Couldn’t Get It Right, These Grey Days, Sing Bird, In Your Cups, Kind Of Place, Flirted With You All My Life

Set II: Ray Of Heaven, Purple Hearts, Shining Path, Where Are You Tonight?, Friendly Fire, Bouncing Very Well, Conscious Contact

E: Wisconsin Death Trip

Continue reading for Dennis Cook’s review of the second night…

Words by: Dennis Cook | Images by: Susan J. Weiand

Stockholm Syndrome/These United States :: 03.06.10 :: The Independent :: San Francisco, CA

Stockholm Syndrome :: 03.05 :: San Francisco, CA

The best rock shows tend to carry a sense of ritual about them. It’s all fine and well for a band to play appealing songs good and loud, but if the instigators have deeper intentions – even if they’re primarily subconscious – then a gig becomes an experience, perhaps first felt in a visceral manner but followed by psychic aftershocks that keep one pondering what occurred. More simply, if musicians build a metaphorical bonfire, bang a drum and wag their talking stick in our faces we respond to the shaman’s call.

While maybe not a full blown pagan revival meeting, Stockholm Syndrome with testifying openers These United States, flirted with this sort of ontological rising tide. For sure, both bands proffer some of the sturdiest, thickest rock out there right now, but both also actively engage in questions of spirit, humanity, politics and ethics. No teenybopper tripe here, and while some of the headier notions got caught in a snarl of guitars, volcanic bass and the sweat ‘n’ heat of the moment, there was no denying we collectively surfed the edge of a deep wave. Sometimes the music held us high, staring out over an ocean, and at others pulled us down into the salt and seaweed to gasp a little.

From their reaction inspiring name through their coiled group energy and increasingly tricked out catalog, These United States long to connect – for good or bad – with any audience they face. Largely unknown to the heavily Panic slanted crowd at The Independent, TUS nevertheless delivered a raggedly right performance that leapt with such joy and happy intensity that I stood dumbfounded at the mostly motionless people around me – dear lord, how can you NOT move to this!?! Watching lead singer/frontman Jesse Elliott leap into the yawning divide between the stage and hangers-back, there was no doubting their dedication to bridging such spaces. From their foundation up, TUS is about connections, all of them – love, hate, envy, history, etc. – just so long as truthful feeling is involved. And their strong playing and cool variety in interpreting their earlier tunes shows the density of shared intentions has grown very strong with this lineup. There’s more than a touch of mid-70s Dylan to them, and their interpretation of Bob’s “Meet Me In The Morning” this night would have put a smile on Dylan’s pancake white face during the Rolling Thunder days. As with every other time I’ve seen TUS, it seemed like they left everything they had in them on the stage. To withhold from one’s calling would be a sin and these boys aren’t sinners in any but the most playful ways.

Dave Schools :: 03.05 :: San Francisco

There are a lot of “what if’s” in rock history. What if Blind Faith hadn’t been undone by ego and friction and managed to make a second or a third album? What if Robbie Robertson hadn’t pirated The Band’s fortunes and instead shared the wealth and creative control with his comrades? There are too many such seemingly brilliant combinations of talents that imploded despite the best hopes of all involved. Which brings us to Stockholm Syndrome, a supergroup of sorts, at least within the cloistered jam community. Jerry Joseph (lead vocals, guitar), Dave Schools (bass, vocals), Wally Ingram (drums), Eric McFadden (guitar, mandolin, vocals) and Danny Louis (keyboards) all have their fingers in multiple pies, some high profile (Schools’ enduring role in Widespread Panic, Louis’ anchor role in Gov’t Mule), some cultily adored (Jerry J, McFadden), some relentlessly busy (Ingram’s in-demand studio talents and hired killer status for big name acts as well as collaborator with great lesser-knowns). But, every damn time they assemble as Stockholm Syndrome we I start wishing they’d quit their day jobs and really see what Stockholm can do. It’s usually a few songs into the first set that this feeling hits me, hard, and right on time it whacked my solar plexus as Joseph roared, “I’m a killer, baby, that’s what killers do!” with McFadden prodding his ass like the devil with a new pitchfork and a luxurious, furious undercurrent of Schools, Louis and Ingram creating a rumble you felt in the meat of you.

This is not small-ball rock ‘n’ roll. Stockholm not only aspires to but achieves the dense, intermingled thickness of ’70s progenitors like Zeppelin, Deep Purple and Thin Lizzy but with Jerry’s politically and psychologically intense lyrics (which provide the lion’s share of the words thrown out) transforming them into a totally different animal than these classic rock stepping stones. And here’s where that shamanic/cosmic thing comes in. Combined with music that’s not just reaching out but actively snatching one up and slapping them around a bit, the lyrics hold a deep, dark, truthful mirror up. It’s for society in the larger sense, but also for us, personally. Slamming down drinks and numbing the working week’s disappointments, I still couldn’t escape the feeling I’d been psychically depantsed by Joseph refrains like, “It’s good to be alone,” “We see what we want to see,” and other nitty gritty couplets that hit close to home for dreamers and lovers that struggle to do either in the world as it is today.

Stockholm Syndrome :: 03.05 :: San Francisco, CA

Some sections are strong and uplifting, but even that is hard won in Stockholm’s scheme of things. The work of life, the labor of being better than our past and emerging into the best we can be, floats in their themes and stories, which sometimes offer us “crayons from our childhood/ a 64-pack set” but more often hand us a gun or torch. Personally, I freakin’ love it and welcome any chance to dive deep in this shallow world. It’s clear they won’t be satisfied in the shallows based on the new material played at this show, all of which is promising and worthy of further inspection. It’s hard to get a distinct sense of Stockholm’s catalog or where it’s going because they play together so rarely, but for guys who only gather occasionally they sure exhibit a TON of chemistry that largely overcomes the rough edges. Dressed in jeans and t-shirts, this feels like their “working band,” a project that reconnects them to the roots of their inspirations AND is a total blast to play in. None of these guys is known for oodles of smiles in their other bands, yet they can’t seem to stop grinning in Stockholm Syndrome. That alone is a powerful sign that they should invest whatever time they can in this band. Plying one’s craft with genuine pleasure is the surest way to guarantee positive end results.

The steaming, churning engine inside them was firing on all cylinders by the end of the first set with a blistering takedown of “Crime & Punishment” and especially “American Fork.” Wasting little time with a break – who could deny them a smoke after a set that left one feeling pleasantly wrecked like after good sex – they attacked the second set with enormous vigor, with the highlights, perhaps predictably, being shattering, faith affirming versions of Joseph’s signature tunes “The Jacob Ladder” and “Road To Damascus.” Now, nothing surrounding these two was any slouch, and it’s intriguing how the songs are starting to mingle and morph with this quintet. If nothing else, the relatively intimate Independent allowed one the rare opportunity to perch mere feet over Dave Schools’ shoulder and just let his technically brilliant, he-man-as-hell bass work vibrate your balls and make you feel alive. The man oozes rock power and his presence as much as his playing informs this band in totally positive ways.

Stumbling out onto Divisadero Street, I once again entertained the question that’s followed me from every Stockholm show: What if these guys made this band their priority? My gut says the possibilities are pretty limitless and that they’ve only just scratched the surface. The collective confidence and sheer talent of these five men is staggering and incredibly exciting. I just hope we get to see it come to its full fruition one day.

Stockholm Syndrome :: 03.06.10 :: The Independent :: San Francisco, CA

Set I: Tight > Empire One > Easter, Tarantula Hawk, Miranda, Crime & Punishment, American Fork

Set II: Apollo > The Jacob Ladder > Emma’s Pissed, That Which Is Coming, Spy > Road to Damascus, Light Is Like Water
E: Lick The Tears

Continue reading for more pics…

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Stockholm Syndrome Tour Dates :: Stockholm Syndrome News :: Stockholm Syndrome Concert Reviews

JamBase | In Love With Our Captors
Go See Live Music!


High Sierra Adds: WSP Crowes, Lotus, Hips, Joseph

High Sierra Adds: Widespread Panic, Black Crowes, Lotus, Mother Hips, Jerry Joseph & More

Set to take place July 1 through July 4, 2010 at the Plumas-Sierra County Fairgrounds in Quincy, CA, the High Sierra Music Festival made some very substantial additions to their 20th Anniversary lineup today. The following acts have all officially been announced:

HSMF 2009 by Krolick

Widespread Panic

The Black Crowes

Lotus

Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros

The Mother Hips

Jerry Joseph & The Jackmormons

The Radiators

The Pimps of Joytime

Truth & Salvage Co.

Coryell, Auger, Sample Trio

New Fangled Wasteland

Orgone

Chris Chandler & Paul Benoit

Living Folklore

These artists come as additions to the following already announced acts:

The Avett Brothers

Ozomatli

Femi Kuti and Positive Force

Railroad Earth

Bela Fleck, Zakir Hussain, and Edgar Meyer

Dr. Dog

Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe

Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue

Cornmeal

Blitzen Trapper

The New Mastersounds

March Fourth Marching Band

Nels Cline Singers

The Infamous Stringdusters

Surprise Me Mr. Davis

The Slip

BLVD

Beats Antique

Telepath

Carolyn Wonderland

Darol Anger’s Republic Of Strings featuring Sharon Gilchrist

Great American Taxi

Nathan Moore

Johnny Vidacovich, Robert Walter Duo

Big Light

Trampled By Turtles

Zach Deputy

and many more to come!

Discounted 4-day passes for the High Sierra Music Festival are $175 and are on sale now here.

Fore more on High Sierra see our coverage of the 2009 event here.


Mountain Jam Adds: Levon Helm Truckers, Potter, Dog, NMS

Mountain Jam Announces Latest Additions to Lineup

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Originally conceived as a celebration for Radio Woodstock’s 25th anniversary, Mountain Jam has grown into an annual stop for some of the biggest names in live music. The 2010 event has confirmed that Levon Helm & Friends, Drive-By Truckers, Grace Potter & The Nocturnals, Dr. Dog, The Whigs, The New Mastersounds, Jay Farrar (of Son Volt), Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue, The Duke & The King, Justin Townes Earle, Jerry Joseph & Wally Ingram, The Bridge, Zach Deputy, The Brew, Simone Felice, Gandalf Murphy & The Slambovian Circus of Dreams and Van Ghost have all joined the sixth annual Mountain Jam Music Festival’s growing lineup.

Mountain Jam will return to New York’s Hunter Mountain from Friday, June 4 – Sunday, June 6, 2010, featuring performances by Gov’t Mule, Michael Franti & Spearhead, Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Band, The Avett Brothers, Les Claypool, Yonder Mountain String Band, Toots And The Maytals, Matisyahu, Dark Star Orchestra, and Dave Mason, along with dozens of other bands and a full Awareness Village. Gov’t Mule, who has headlined Mountain Jam each year since its inception, will play two full headlining shows. Ticket information and a full list of confirmed acts are available at mountainjam.com.

Confirmed Artists (more to be announced)

Gov’t Mule (two nights)
Levon Helm & Friends
Michael Franti & Spearhead
Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Band
The Avett Brothers
Les Claypool
Yonder Mountain String Band
Drive-By Truckers
Matisyahu
Toots and the Maytals
Dark Star Orchestra
Grace Potter & The Nocturnals
Dr Dog
Dave Mason
Lettuce
ALO
The Whigs
The New Mastersounds
Jay Farrar (of Son Volt)
Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue
The Duke & The King
Justin Townes Earle
Jerry Joseph & Wally Ingram
The Bridge
Zach Deputy
The Brew
Simone Felice
Gandalf Murphy & The Slambovian Circus of Dreams
Van Ghost
The London Souls
These United States
Elmwood
Jonathan Tyler & the Northern Lights
Mojo Miles Mancuso
Dean Batstone
IS
Kari Spieler


Stockholm Syndrome: Live EP Tour Starts 2/24

STOCKHOLM SYNDROME LIVE EP OUT 2/16, ANNOUNCE TOUR

Stockholm Syndrome

Stockholm Syndrome (featuring Wally Ingram, Jerry Joseph, Eric McFadden, Dave Schools and Danny Louis) will release a seven song Live EP February 16; recorded at Streetlight Records in Santa Cruz, CA last September, and includes four previously unreleased tracks.

A new, full length studio album is also in the works, with details coming soon.

The band will also be on tour this February and March in the Western U.S., including stops in Denver, Seattle and two nights at San Francisco’s Independent.

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Dates

02/24/10 Wed Vail Village Vail, CO

02/25/10 Thu Sheraton Ballroom Steamboat Springs, CO

02/26/10 Fri Fox Theatre Boulder, CO

02/27/10 Sat Bluebird Theater Denver, CO

02/28/10 Sun Harry O’s Park City, UT

03/02/10 Tue The Crystal Ballroom Portland, OR

03/03/10 Wed Neumos Seattle, WA

03/04/10 Thu McDonald Theatre Eugene, OR

03/05/10 Fri The Independent San Francisco, CA

03/06/10 Sat The Independent San Francisco, CA

03/08/10 Mon The Roxy Theatre West Hollywood, CA

03/09/10 Tue Belly Up Tavern Solana Beach, CA

03/10/10 Wed Orpheum Theater Flagstaff, AZ

03/12/10 Fri Telluride Conference Center Telluride, CO

03/13/10 Sat Belly Up Aspen, CO

03/14/10 Sun Black Sheep Colorado Springs, CO

For more on Stockholm Syndrome see our behind the scenes feature: A Band Is Born.


Stockholm Syndrome Tour

Stockholm Syndrome Announce Tour

Stockholm Syndrome

Stockholm Syndrome, featuring Dave Schools (Widespread Panic), Jerry Joseph (Jackmormons), Eric McFadden, Wally Ingram and Danny Louis (Gov’t Mule), has announced a string of tour dates in support of their forthcoming new studio album, which will be available in 2010.

In related news, Jerry Joseph is performing a free show tonight (01/07) at the House of Blues – Foundation Room in Boston, MA. There are no tickets on sale but fans must be put on the guest list to attend. In order to get a guest spot please email: bostonguestlist@jerryjoseph.com.

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Dates

02/24/10 Wed Vail Village Vail, CO

02/25/10 Thu Sheraton Ballroom Steamboat Springs, CO

02/26/10 Fri Fox Theatre Boulder, CO

02/27/10 Sat Bluebird Theater Denver, CO

02/28/10 Sun Harry O’s Park City, UT

03/02/10 Tue The Crystal Ballroom Portland, OR

03/03/10 Wed Neumos Seattle, WA

03/04/10 Thu McDonald Theatre Eugene, OR

03/05/10 Fri The Independent San Francisco, CA

03/06/10 Sat The Independent San Francisco, CA

03/08/10 Mon The Roxy Theatre West Hollywood, CA

03/10/10 Wed Orpheum Theater Flagstaff, AZ

03/12/10 Fri Telluride Conference Center Telluride, CO

03/13/10 Sat Belly Up Aspen, CO

For more on Stockholm Syndrome see our behind the scenes feature: A Band Is Born.


Most Important Shows of The Decade

JamBase’s Most Important Shows Of The Decade

Everything changed over the last decade. Never mind the political, social and economic upheaval, musically everything changed. Ten years ago we didn’t own iPods or Smart Phones; we rocked a Discman and in some cases an old yellow Walkman. We didn’t download tracks or stream shows; we bought albums and traded live Maxell tapes. Then technology set us free and the record industry collapsed. After peaking in 2000, CD sales have plummeted by more than 50-percent, dropping further into oblivion every year. Meanwhile, digital sales continue to rise and free music (both pirated and authorized) is everywhere, flooding hard drives like never before. Surely this trend will continue for the foreseeable future.

The old model is dead. It’s a new game and the rules are still being defined. One thing, however, is for sure, the music industry needed a colossal change and it’s getting it. The days of boy bands selling 2 million units in a week are gone. And for that, you can thank the digital download. Online music is on the way to making radio irrelevant and no one seems sure if MTV even plays music anymore. It’s not that people listen to or want less music. The way we get it has simply evolved. We no longer need anyone to spoon-feed us lowest common denominator crap. Now we’ve got a billion ways to get turned on to the latest thing, and with advancements in how music is made there’s more to choose from than at any other time in history.

But one thing didn’t change in the past ten years. We still go see live music. As album sales fell through the floor, live music revenue has grown by 150-percent. Here at JamBase, we’ve always known the live experience is where it’s at, and now that all bands (not just the ones this site was founded upon) are forced to survive on touring dollars, the rest of the music world is catching on. That’s one change we’re happy to embrace.

At the beginning of the decade, JamBase was just starting to really take form. Surviving the dot-com bubble burst, we were a small team working out of an even smaller house in Mill Valley, California. Soon we sprouted legs, and as our vision and team evolved, we moved into a real office South of Market in downtown San Francisco, where we’ve been since 2003. Now JamBase has the most complete tour date information anywhere in the world, providing concert listings for AOL, Billboard, Spin, Rhapsody and many more, and our content has evolved into a leading source for live music editorial. Part of our mission has always been to use technology to help you get to the show and we know today’s music fan is often on the move, that’s why we created our lauded iPhone App that puts all our concert info straight into your pocket.

Even a cursory look at the articles on this website over the past decade indicates great change. From the way we look to what we cover, change has perhaps been the only constant at JamBase. Clearly, we report on more than just jam bands now (we like to think we cover the live music scene as a whole, with no genre being off limits), but if we go back to our roots and look at the band that started it all for JamBase (which grew out of Andy Gadiel’s Phish Page), we’re reminded that change is an essential part of life. It’s often hard, but almost always exciting, and if you aren’t changing and evolving, you’re probably dying.


In the past decade Phish quit (2000), came back (2002), quit again (2004), and finally got it right and resurfaced with purpose in 2009. For the most part, this was a messy decade for Trey, Mike, Page and Fish. With personal struggles taking center stage and the music falling off, when the band finished their final set at Coventry in 2004, in many ways, things couldn’t have been worse. The muddy fields were a metaphor for the state of the band and the sloppy performances an indication of just how bad it had gotten. But they overcame their challenges, and that’s certainly part of why we love them. Who amongst us hasn’t made poor decisions and paid the price? And if there’s one thing Americans love it’s a comeback story. During the ’90s this band dominated. The pressures of fame brought stress unlike anything they’d experienced, and in the 2000s they fell hard. But as we close the book on this decade, Phish is back on top in a major way. No band’s comeback has made a bigger impact on our world this decade than Phish, and we couldn’t be happier to have chronicled every step of their triumphant return.

But there’s more to Phish than just sick jams and transcendent rock shows. The ups and downs experienced by the band in many ways mirrored America’s path this decade. Coming out of the ’90s, everything appeared peachy. Mainstream music desperately needed help, but economically and politically, America was mostly doing great. September 11, 2001 thrust change upon us in ways we may never fully understand. Our collective psyche shattered, we’ve been at war ever since. Our economy has collapsed, and we’re facing a rising environmental crisis. Like Phish, America had a rough decade, but hopefully we can grab the strands of hope we’re starting to see and rise to the occasion like our favorite bands seem to do.

While it’s not likely that Phish’s trajectory had any tangible affect on our nation, it definitely affected the music scene. Phish’s hiatus (especially the first one) opened the door for a plethora of talent to flourish. With no one band filling the void, a wide array of acts like The String Cheese Incident, Umphrey’s McGee, STS9, The Disco Biscuits, Keller Williams, and many others were able to rapidly gain new fans and separate themselves from the pack as the premier new crop of jam bands.

Michael Jackson

The changing scene and lack of a clear improvisational concert king also allowed a host of bands hovering on the borders of jam to emerge more prominently in the live music space. With the help of festivals like Bonnaroo, websites like JamBase and open-minded fans like you, artists such as My Morning Jacket, Jack White, Drive-By Truckers, The Hold Steady, Arcade Fire, and The Mars Volta all experienced incredible breakthroughs.

But, that didn’t mean the pillars of the jam scene crumbled in the 2000s. The granddaddy of ‘em all, The Grateful Dead found ways to reform, reinvent and move on after Jerry Garcia’s death in 1995. moe. proved to be one of the most consistent acts of the decade, Gov’t Mule survived the death of Allen Woody, and Widespread Panic managed to find new life with Jimmy Herring after Michael Houser passed away in 2002.

Though we lost some legends, including Johnny Cash, James Brown, George Harrison, Vic Chesnutt and Michael Jackson, we did get a bunch of reunions and even a few rebirths this past decade. Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, Cream, The Police, Van Halen, The Pixies, Dinosaur Jr., Polvo, Meat Puppets, Smashing Pumpkins, Gang of Four, Rage Against the Machine, Leonard Cohen and The Stooges all returned to the stage, and all were in consideration (some more than others) for this feature.

In fact, there were pages upon pages of possibilities pored over while creating this list. Trying to determine 10 shows that stood out in a decade packed with powerful performances proved daunting, and we’re sure we left off something critical, which is why we’d love to see you set the record straight by sharing your own list in the Comments Section. But this is our list. After serious internal debate, discussions with artists and industry insiders, and careful consideration of your comments and emails, these are JamBase’s Most Important Shows of The Decade, presented to you in chronological order. It all starts with a special night in Florida that many fans spent the next decade reminiscing about or wishing they’d attended. (Kayceman)

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Phish | 01/01/00

Big Cypress | Seminole Indian Reservation | Everglades, FL

Photo of Phish at Big Cypress by Danny Clinch

The decade began with Phish performing for over seven straight hours from midnight until sunrise in the middle of the Florida Everglades. The band arrived on stage riding their trademark giant Hot Dog as it paraded through the audience to a recording of their song “Meatstick.” As they took to their instruments and finished the tune, the final moments of the ’90s came to a close and an audience over 85,000 strong was led in a Millennium Countdown before the band launched into their anthemic “Down With Disease.” About an hour later, “Heavy Things” (cheesecake!) would be telecast live on ABC Nightly News‘ special New Year’s Eve coverage from around the world to over 100 million people.


Significant for its timing, location and endurance, the show featured some of the most powerful and definitive versions of the band’s staple songs including “You Enjoy Myself,” “Slave to the Traffic Light,” “Reba,” “Sand,” and “David Bowie.” They also showcased several beloved covers including The Velvet Underground’s “Rock and Roll,” Talking Heads’ “Crosseyed and Painless,” The Who’s “Drowned,” and Ween’s “Roses Are Free.” The set was so powerful for the band that after leaving the stage at sunrise they opted not to return for an encore, instead leaving it to Mother Nature and a recording of The Beatles’ “Here Comes The Sun” to send the audience on their way. This ultimate “long gig” left those in attendance satiated, awe struck, and thankful that the world (Y2K) did not come to and end. (Andy Gadiel)

Setlist (courtesy of Phish.net)

Meatstick > Auld Lang Syne, Down with Disease > Llama, Bathtub Gin, Heavy Things, Twist > Prince Caspian > Rock and Roll, You Enjoy Myself, Crosseyed and Painless, The Inlaw Josie Wales, Sand > Quadrophonic Toppling, Slave to the Traffic Light, Albuquerque, Reba, Axilla, Uncle Pen, David Bowie, My Soul, Drowned > After Midnight Reprise, The Horse > Silent in the Morning, Bittersweet Motel, Piper > Free, Lawn Boy, Hold Your Head Up > Love You > Hold Your Head Up, Roses Are Free, Bug, Also Sprach Zarathustra > Wading in the Velvet Sea, Meatstick


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Phil & Friends | 12/31/00

Henry J. Kaiser Auditorium | Oakland, CA

Photo of Gordon, Herring, Lesh & Haynes on NYE 2000 in Oakland by Dave Vann

In no small way, this night was the relaunch of The Grateful Dead NYE tradition. Despite the fact that RatDog had been playing December 31st since 1998, after numerous lineups, Phil Lesh & Friends settled into a stunning aggregate in 2000 that happily reminded many diehards why this music endures. The Dead tribe had set their calendars for decades around where the band would land on key dates like NYE, Mardi Gras, etc. and the buzz leading up to this evening had the same run-away-to-the-circus, butterflies-in-the-tummy vibe that The Grateful Dead always engendered. “The Quintet,” as they came to be known, of Lesh (bass, vocals), Warren Haynes (guitar, vocals), Jimmy Herring (guitar), Rob Barraco (keys, vocals) and John Molo (drums) attacked this music like it was alive – rangy and unruly like days of old – and that in turn put the electrodes to this beloved catalog. For perhaps the first time since Jerry Garcia passed, it felt like there was a real tomorrow for this music. The heightened atmosphere was further elevated by the recent passing of Allen Woody, putting the future of Gov’t Mule in question and leaving Haynes and Matt Abts to open the night as an acoustic duo. Toss in several guest turns by Mike Gordon, which poignantly reminded one that Phish was not holding their annual NYE festivities, and you had a gathering that directly and indirectly grappled with death and rebirth in stirring ways. (Dennis Cook)

Setlist

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The Concert for New York City | 10/21/01

Madison Square Garden | New York, NY

With the World Trade Center attacks of 9/11 still stingingly fresh in our collective memory, Paul McCartney gathered together The Who, Bon Jovi, Macy Gray, John Mellencamp, Backstreet Boys and more, plus film and political luminaries like Adam Sandler, Billy Crystal, Tom Daschle and Harrison Ford for a benefit concert that was a defiant affirmation of the United States’ ability to endure almost anything and thrive. Where most events of this sort truck in near-somber sincerity, The Concert for New York City welcomed in laughter and entertainment, both of which were in short supply for the many NYC firefighters and policemen and their families in attendance. Though studded with stellar turns like Eric Clapton and Buddy Guy doing “Hoochie Coochie Man” and Mick Jagger and Keith Richards getting gospel on “Salt of the Earth,” the pinnacle of the night might be Billy Joel‘s one-two punch of “Miami 2017 (Seen The Lights Go Out On Broadway)” and “New York State of Mind,” where MSG exploded as he punched lines like, “They turned our power down and drove us underground, but we went right on with the show,” with an emotion impossible to duplicate. An incredible example of where the worst in human beings can sometimes be a catalyst for the very best in us. (Dennis Cook)

Full Lineup and Songs Played

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Widespread Panic | 04/28/02

Oak Mountain Amphitheatre | Pelham, AL

Photos of Widespread Panic at Oak Mountain on 04/28/02 by Jackie Jasper

As far as anyone knew, this was it. By all accounts, Sunday, April 28, 2002 at Pelham, Alabama’s Oak Mountain Amphitheatre appeared to be Widespread Panic lead guitarist and co-founder Michael Houser‘s last concert. It was the final night of a brief eight-show spring tour that felt like, and in many ways was, the “Goodbye Houser Tour.” Although not an official word had been uttered, most fans knew that Houser had contracted pancreatic cancer, and one could tell just by looking at him up close onstage that his time was drawing near. Although he would bravely perform seven more shows as he began the spring tour two months later, at this point, Sunday at Oak Mountain looked like the final one.

The venue, set in the heart of Panic Country, was packed with 10,000 serious fans and there was a tension and energy hanging in the humid Alabama air unlike anything I have personally ever experienced. The band rose to the occasion; from song selection (there wasn’t a dry eye during the “Trouble” encore) to execution to the Jerry Joseph guest appearance, it was nearly flawless and one of the best shows of the band’s legendary career. But it was more than just that. It was the way the weather coincided with the music, making it feel like bandleader John Bell had created rain during “Cortez The Killer.” It was the undeniable sense of community. It was the bittersweet, sad-yet-grateful feeling for the opportunity to say goodbye properly and rage it one more time. It was the weight of it all. Standing at Oak Mountain, bitter tears and warm rain washing over one’s face, wrapped in arms from friends both old and new, truly believing this was the final Houser jam, it felt like we were part of history on that day. (Kayceman)

Setlist

Stream this show for free at Panicstream.com

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Bonnaroo Music Festival | 06/21/02 – 06/23/02

Manchester, TN

Photo of Phil Lesh and Friends with Bob Weir at Bonnaroo 2002 by Dave Vann

Selling out 70,000 tickets in advance to an untried mega-festival in the Tennessee hills with roots in the jam scene would have been accomplishment enough, but the inaugural Bonnaroo had ripples far beyond great sales. In no small way, Bonnaroo put this subculture on the larger cultural map, joining Coachella and Lollapalooza as one of few festivals covered by MTV and other mainstream outlets. However, from the start Bonnaroo has embraced tradition and heritage artists AND cutting edge talent in a way no other super-sized fest had, putting the likes of Blind Boys of Alabama and the Del McCoury Band right next to Ween and Les Claypool. In going big from the get-go, Bonnaroo established itself overnight as a destination for music lovers worldwide. Using the abundant energy and vast subterranean network of live music loving jam fans, the organizers launched something part intrinsically “jam” that was also something much, much larger in scope and vision. While subsequent years have found the likes of Tool, Bruce Springsteen and Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers headlining, for some ‘Roo vets there’s perhaps no more enduring, moving set than Widespread Panic performing one of their final shows with Michael Houser this first year, a pulsating, powerhouse display that included “Testify” with Dottie Peoples, where Dave Schools says he looked out over the crowd and they were “levitating.” In an age where small ideas and limited expectations prevail Bonnaroo actively reaches for grandeur and all those involved are encouraged to stretch beyond their normal limitations and ways of seeing. (Dennis Cook)

2002 Bonnaroo Artist Lineup: Widespread Panic
* Trey Anastasio
* Ben Harper
* The String Cheese Incident
* Phil Lesh and Friends (w/Bob Weir)
* Bela Fleck & Edgar Meyer
* Galactic with Trombone Shorty and Corey Henry
* Gov’t Mule
* Jack Johnson
* Norah Jones
* Jurassic 5
* Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe
* Les Claypool
* moe.
* Ween
* Keller Williams (WMD’s)
* Acoustic Syndicate
* The Big Wu
* Blind Boys of Alabama
* Blackalicious
* John Butler Trio
* Campbell Brothers
* Colonel Claypool’s Bucket of Bernie Brains
* Cut Chemist
* The Del McCoury band
* Dirty Dozen Brass Band
* The Disco Biscuits
* Gabe Dixon Band
* Donna The Buffalo
* Dottie Peoples
* Drums & Tuba
* Gran Torino
* Col. Bruce Hampton & The Code Talkers
* Corey Harris
* Lil’ Rascals Brass Band
* Llama
* DJ Logic
* Mofro
* North Mississippi Allstars
* Old Crow Medicine Show
* Particle
* RANA
* Soulive
* Amon Tobin
* Umphrey’s McGee
* Jim White
* Vinroc
* Z-Trip
* Mark Eddie
* Mike Birbiglia
* Vic Henley

JamBase Show Review

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Gov’t Mule – The Deepest End | 05/03/03

Saenger Theatre | New Orleans, LA

Photo of Haynes, Abts, Newsted and Louis at Gov’t Mule’s “The Deepest End Concert” on 05/03/03 in New Orleans by Michael Weintrob

If one ever needed proof that Gov’t Mule was a band adored by their fellow musicians, then “The Deepest End Concert” in New Orleans should provide all the evidence one needs. The culmination of three years of recording and mourning the loss of founding bassist Allen Woody, this five-and-a-half-hour marathon performance found this contemporary classic rock unit joined by some of the finest bassists in the world – Jason Newsted (Metallica, Ozzy, Voivod), George Porter Jr. (The Meters), Dave Schools (Widespread Panic), Victor Wooten (Bela Fleck), Rob Wasserman, Paul Jackson Jr., Mike Gordon (Phish), Roger Glover (Deep Purple), Jack Casady (Hot Tune, Jefferson Airplane), Conrad Lazano (Los Lobos), Les Claypool (Primus), and then Mule regular Greg Rzab. If that weren’t enough, the night also had guest turns from Ivan Neville (Dumpstaphunk), Dirty Dozen Brass Band, Karl Denson and more. A largely unrehearsed affair, the show was rich in what Mule leader Warren Haynes calls “spontaneous composition.” The range of material was off the chain, including Sabbath covers with Jason Newsted, Purple’s “Maybe I’m A Leo” with Glover, and a blinding version of Herbie Hancock’s “Chameleon” with studio whiz Paul Jackson Jr. whipping the low end every which way. The art of focused, meaty improvisation has rarely had a finer showing than this gig, which also served to highlight what a ridiculously diverse bunch Gov’t Mule is – a big tent capable of holding just about anything if these cats (and their collaborators) put their backbone into it. (Dennis Cook)

Setlist

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New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival

04/28/06-04/30/06 & 05/05/06-05/07/06

Fair Grounds Race Course | New Orleans, LA

Photo of Bruce Springsteen at Jazz Fest 2006 in New Orleans by Michael Weintrob

Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans and the Gulf Coast. One of the worst natural disasters to ever hit the United States, around 2,000 people died with several hundred more declared “missing.” When the levees broke on August 29, 2005 water covered 80-percent of the Crescent City. With the pathetic, disorganized response from our government and the days of bedlam that followed, it appeared that America’s most unique, most culturally significant city (giving birth to jazz is often considered this country’s crowning artistic achievement, not to mention the food!) might be gone forever, submerged under six feet of water never to return. And that’s why eight months later when the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival celebrated its 37th year it was much more than just another Jazz Fest.

No one was sure if the organizers would even be able to make the event happen, and there were serious questions about if anyone would come. What transpired was an emotional celebration that marked a critical point in our nation’s history. It was a symbol of hope and a statement of purpose from the city, the musicians and the fans. 4,000 artists performed on ten stages over the two-weekend event, with headliners including Bruce Springsteen, Dr. John, Dave Matthews, Lionel Richie, Paul Simon, Elvis Costello and Allen Toussaint. It was a stake in the ground that said, “We won’t let New Orleans die.” The massive surge of tourist dollars clearly helped, but what New Orleans needed even more was the knowledge that we cared, that despite our government’s lack of commitment, the American people valued New Orleans and we would help bring her residents home. And while there is still so much more that needs to be done, we learned that no flood could drown New Orleans. Music is the blood of the city (and those who flock there), and Jazz Fest 2006 jumpstarted her heart and began the long, slow, still ongoing recovery of New Orleans. All you needed to do was step foot on the Fairgrounds that spring to know it was happening. The smell of crawfish Monica wafting in the air and the sound of The Boss singing, “We Shall Overcome” to hordes of weeping, dancing masses was enough to make us believe again. (Kayceman)

JamBase Show Review

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Daft Punk | 04/29/06

Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival | Indio, CA

Photo of Daft Punk at Coachella 2006 by Casey Flanigan

Daft Punk built a pyramid of lights and broke down walls. Thomas Bangalter and Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo were hardly the first act to blur genre lines, but what they did at Coachella in 2006, their first U.S. appearance since 1997, shattered the boundaries of electronica. Transformed into robots and perched inside a 40-foot shape-shifting LED covered pyramid, the French duo manipulated the crowd’s movements (serious dance party) and emotions (laughter and tears were both common) with brilliant super anthems like “Around The World,” “Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger” and “One More Time.” It was pop music, but smart, funny and designed to make you think as well as move. It brought elements from the dance world into stadium rock and the over-the-top production felt like a Broadway play from the distant future. And the fact that two guys not playing any traditional instruments could be this completely captivating was revolutionary. When that pyramid touched down in Indio, all of a sudden music made by machines was for everyone. Rockers pumped their fists, hip hop enthusiasts bounced, teenage girls screamed, doubters instantly became believers and everyone was blown away by the most elaborate, intricate and arguably greatest light show ever put together. It was a life-affirming experience that brought every person to the table, and no one has come close to duplicating it since. (Kayceman)

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Radiohead | 06/17/06

Bonnaroo Music Festival | Manchester, TN

Photo of Radiohead’s Thom Yorke on 06/17/06 at Bonnaroo by Dave Vann

Few bands are more un-hippy than Radiohead, so their Saturday night headlining slot at Bonnaroo ’06 signaled a sharp turn towards modernity for the festival. It was hardly the first time these Glastonbury vets had played for mud flecked, long haired masses, but there’s something resolutely non-jammy about Radiohead and attendees were pretty evenly split between those thrilled to have arguably the greatest rock band in the world serenade them and those who genuinely thought they were a duck out of water at the ‘Roo. However, once they started playing their hyper-alive sound and permeating depth swiftly gathered up the packed crowd. A young, dreadlocked, peasant skirt wearing String Cheese fan told us before the show that she’d never heard a note by Radiohead but was curious based on their rep. A few songs in, having been splendidly tousled by “There There,” “2+2=5″ and a pre-In Rainbows “15 Step,” she bellowed from the back of the huge field, “I like your music!” It was a succinct, heartfelt exclamation and serves to illustrate how intensely moving Radiohead’s music can be. And the band appeared to be just as smitten with the Bonnaroo audience, with frontman Thom Yorke giving as good as he got in a glow stick war and shimmying like a jellyfish that’d just been hit with a car battery. The first encore was almost a second set with eight songs, including a blistering early “Bodysnatchers,” and the second encore delivered us to the celestial plateau of “Everything In Its Right Place.”

Afterwards, Yorke told BBC Radio, “We did this festival called Bonnaroo. We did 2.5 hours. And there’s 80,000 people, admittedly they’ve been smoking the sticky green all day – probably wouldn’t go anywhere anyway. It was just amazing. We played loads of new stuff. We did whole sections of quiet piano songs and it sounds like the most grotesque, self-indulgent nonsense, but it probably is my favourite gig for years and years and years.” (Dennis Cook)

Setlist

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My Morning Jacket | 12/31/06

The Fillmore | San Francisco, CA

Photo of My Morning Jacket on 12/31/06 at The Fillmore by Dave Vann

There have been many epic My Morning Jacket shows over the past decade – their “coming-of-age” afternoon set in the rain of Bonnaroo 2004; their marathon late night set there four years later; the hometown party in Louisville at Waterfront Park in August 2008; and the huge NYE gig a few months later at Madison Square Garden. Any of these concerts could have made our list, but it was MMJ’s New Year’s Eve 2006 run at The Fillmore that takes the cake. The band was experiencing huge growth, both musically and in terms of ticket sales and would soon be dubbed “America’s best live band” by Rolling Stone, LA Weekly and many JamBase writers to name a few. This show put them on one of the most famous stages in the world on the biggest night of them all and they killed it.

The three-night extravaganza culminated in a sprawling NYE celebration that included an ambitious theatrical element inspired by the old video game The Oregon Trail. The mood was built upon a “Donner Party meets Little House On The Prairie” theme with the band dressed as settlers and native Americans, and the spirits came to life with a number of well executed skits that eventually found bassist Two-Tone Tommy coming back from the dead and killing his bandmates in retribution for eating him earlier in the show (food was scarce on the trail). And that was just the backdrop for a night of extremely well played classic Jacket tracks mixed with rare nuggets and a slew of covers including AC/DC’s “Highway to Hell,” Kool & The Gang’s “Celebration,” Lionel Richie’s “All Night Long,” Wham’s “Careless Whisper” and Prince’s “I Could Never Take The Place Of Your Man.” The show was an instant classic. But like most of the bands that really stick with us, a Jacket concert is more than just a rock show. It’s big, heady stuff and has the ability to open us up and help us feel and connect. It’s an experience, and on NYE 2006 My Morning Jacket seized the moment and created something special. What The Fillmore run announced was a world class band with ambitions beyond just performing their songs well. (Kayceman)

Setlist

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Widespread Panic | 11.13 | Oakland

Word by: Kayceman | Images by: Josh Miller

Widespread Panic :: 11.13.09 :: Fox Theater :: Oakland, CA

Widespread Panic :: 11.13 :: Oakland

It had been over two years since perennial road warriors Widespread Panic played a non-festival show in the Bay Area. Shacking up at the gorgeous Fox Theater in Oakland, CA for a three-night run, it was the second show on Friday the 13th that stuck out as special. There was nothing wrong with Thursday or Saturday’s shows, other than being perhaps a bit flat, but Friday’s concert was a reminder of why this band has one of the most dedicated fan bases in all of music and it was a prime example of why these fans continue to drop it all and chase Panic around the country. During the band’s peak, somewhere between 1997 and 2002, shows like this popped up frequently, and for many seasoned touring vets, Friday’s show was one of the better since band co-founder Michael Houser passed away.

Clocking in at around an hour and a half, the lengthy first set featured Bob Dylan (“Solid Rock”), Tom Waits (“Goin’ Out West”), Neil Young (“Don’t Be Denied”), and Jerry Joseph (“Light Is Like Water”). The tone was set immediately with Jimmy Herring‘s ominous guitar bleeding the dark notes to first song “Junior” and before long it was Jojo Hermann‘s dirty Clavinet that pushed the song into surprisingly funky terrain. Hermann would prove to be the catalyst throughout the night, leaning on his keys, tempting a Friday the 13th “Superstition” (which never surfaced) and creating spacey interludes so that the momentum rarely slowed.

John Bell :: 11.13 :: Oakland

During old school instrumental “Happy,” Herring was channeling vintage Garcia as he pulled notes from the sky and showed incredible control of his warm tone. Frontman John Bell grabbed hold of the crowd during “Pigeons,” belting out some of the most poignant lyrics in rock: “We’ve all been waiting/ Wondering, will we ever know the truth/ What it’s like washing windows when you know there are pigeons on the roof.” The world is a harsh, unforgiving place and we all know it. We wake up and struggle to find a moment of peace, we wash the windows of our life only to turn around and find shit caked all over them once again. But we push on. We clean up and fight another day. It’s all we can do.


Another old gem, “Walkin’” was a revelation. Taking the loping tempo and twisting the notes until they were unrecognizable, Panic landed in one of the night’s longest and most impressive jams that may have been influenced by the recent tour with the Allman Brothers. With bassist Dave Schools working overtime to keep the wheels glued on, Herring and Hermann were free to fly loose and light, dancing around one another, dipping into fast-paced duels and spacious feather-weight cascades.


If the set ended there it would have been a great first set, but then emerged one of the most emotional songs in the band’s repertoire, Neil Young’s “Don’t Be Denied.” With strong parallels to Panic’s history, as JB sang, “Pretty soon I met a friend who played guitar,” the Fox erupted. One look at the capacity crowd and it was clear many were feeling it. Tears were forming, arms were wrapped around shoulders, and if you stared long enough, maybe you could still see Mikey Houser sitting up there on the stage.

Clearly this had to be the end of the set. “Don’t Be Denied” is generally a first, last or encore song. Wrong again. Out comes Jerry Joseph for a blistering “Light Is Like Water.” They’ve previously only played the song eight times and it had been over a year since it last showed up. A meaty middle section featured a three guitar attack with Herring, JB and Joseph winding around each other, and then Schools and JB doing back-up harmony for the Reverend Jerry Joseph in a raucous church revival moment as he screamed, “Whatever gets you through the night!” It was a big way to end a massive first set that left many out of breath with eyes glassed over.

Ortiz & Schools :: 11.13 :: Oakland

When they came back out with “Tie Your Shoes” > “Blight” > “All Time Low” > “Blight” it was clear that Panic was not letting up on this evening. Set two never stopped and never slowed down. Every song bled into the next and they turned the Fox into a sweaty soup of gyrating bodies and flailing limbs.

“Tie Your Shoes” was played at a frantic pace with notes folding over one another and everyone somehow staying off each other’s toes. “Blight” was slow and dark, allowing fans the rare chance to hear Schools sing lead. With a heavy delay on his vocals, Schools was improvising about “green shoots popping up everywhere,” and when JB sang back-up, Schools followed by blurting out “spooky” before they did some of the finest vocal harmonizing of the run. The fact that they went out of “Blight” and back into it for a brief moment after “All Time Low” sent the hardcore fans reeling.


Set two found Dave Schools out front, and when he dropped the bombs to signal The Meters‘ “Just Kissed My Baby” (which hadn’t been played since 2006) the dance party went into overdrive. Fully equipped with the JB “Night People” rap, Jimmy Herring’s fire-starter lead and percussionist Wally Ingram adding color, things opened wide during this section.

Herring & Hermann :: 11.13 :: Oakland

One could wax poetic about every song played: the strong “C. Brown;” the heavenly, delicate jam out of “Wonderin’;” the slow, methodical, long “Porch Song” that erupted at the end, reminding fans of the late ’90s; and the “Love Tractor” that closed the set. But it was “Arleen” > “Red Hot Mama” that turned a great show into the stuff of legend.


The dirty disco funk of “Arleen” came on hot and heavy and sent backs breaking and knees popping. Everyone – band and fans alike – were fully lubricated at this point and there was no looking back. It didn’t matter if this was your 150th Panic show or your first; everyone felt it and it appeared that all had given themselves over to the groove. Jojo was hammering the Clav, locked-in deep with Schools, and JB was loose, adlibbing about the neighbor girl (“her face look good but her body not ready”) and tossing in a brief moment of “Junior,” adding to the story he’s been crafting for decades. It all built to a mean crescendo with that little neighbor girl’s daddy coming out with his gun locked and loaded as the band fell in step, turning out the final jam before Schools teased Sugar Hill Gang‘s “Rappers Delight” with a bit of “Hotel motel Holiday Inn.”

At this point all bets were off, and when they blasted into Parliament/Funkadelic‘s “Red Hot Mama” it was a blur of funky keys, growling guitars, heavy bass, and grinding ass funk. For this writer, “Arleen” > “Red Hot Mama” (and the entire second set for that matter) was as good as anything he’s seen all year.

John Bell :: 11.13 :: Oakland

“We’re glad we came to work tonight,” declared JB before the encore. It was a big show felt just as much by the band as the fans, and when they closed with JB on mandolin for a tender “End Of The Show” it was the perfect way to send us off into the night, feeling just a bit lighter than when we walked in.

There’s transcendence in these songs. Dancing with eyes closed and screaming along with old friends you rarely see and new ones you’ve yet to make, there’s community here. There’s a shared experience that stretches far beyond the concert hall. Widespread Panic is a true blue workingman’s rock & roll band. They aren’t singing of fantastical places or imaginary moments, this is salt of the earth stuff and as Americans we need it more than ever. Life is hard right now and we’re carrying a lot weight. People are losing jobs, houses, and lives, and many aren’t sure how they’re gonna pull through. A rock concert might not save us from tomorrow, but it sure feels nice to let it all slide off our shoulders and roll down our backs, even if it’s just for three hours on a Friday night.

Widespread Panic :: 11.13 :: Fox Theatre :: Oakland, CA

Set I: Junior, Solid Rock, Happy > Goin’ Out West, Big Wooly Mammoth, Pigeons, Crazy, Walkin’ (For Your Love) > Don’t Be Denied, Light Is Like Water*

Set II: Tie Your Shoes > Blight > All Time Low > Blight > Just Kissed My Baby**, C. Brown** > Wondering > Porch Song > Arleen > Red Hot Mama > Love Tractor

E: End Of The Show
* with Jerry Joseph on guitar/vocals

** with Wally Ingram on percussion

You can stream and/or download this show for free now at panicstream.com.

Widespread Panic is on tour now; dates available here.

Continue reading for more pics of Widespread Panic at The Fox in Oakland…

Images by: Casey Flanigan

JamBase | Liberated
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Craig Greenberg Band in NYC

CRAIG GREENBERG PERFORMS WITH A FULL BAND AT NYC’S SULLIVAN HALL NOVEMBER 18

Craig Greenberg

New York City-born and based artist Craig Greenberg performs his first show with a full band in over three years at Sullivan Hall, next Wednesday, November 18 at 9:30 p.m. Joining Craig will be local musician Scott Garapolo on drums, and James Preston on bass.

Craig will be playing a combination of new and old material, including the new song “The Thought Of You,” which recently was named Runner Up in the Relix magazine Songwriting Jam Off Contest for the Dec/Jan issue.

In addition to being a singer-songwriter, Craig has performed or worked with many other acts, including Jackson Browne, Jerry Joseph, Eric McFadden, and members of Parliament Funkadelic.

Craig Greenberg and Band
Where: Sullivan Hall, 214 Sullivan St., New York City
When: November 18, 2009, 9 p.m.
Cost: $10


Jerry Joseph | 08.28 – 08.30 | Montana

Words & Images by: Phil Santala

Jerry Joseph and the Jackmormons :: 08.28.09 – 08.30.09 :: Banditos :: Virginia City, MT

Jerry Joseph :: Banditos 2009 :: Montana

It had been over a year, two weeks over to be exact, since Jerry Joseph and the Jackmormons brought their signature “Way Too Loud” sound to Virginia City, Montana’s Banditos. For the fifth annual event the band had a few tricks up their sleeves, including a new soundman, plans to record a live album and a guest artist ta boot.

The soundman was Jeff Lord-Alge, who is no stranger to Jerry’s sound. Jeff has mastered the sometimes-confounding aspects of a Jackmormons show with brilliance. Songs like “War At the End Of The World” and “What I Lived For” really shined through and allowed the full range of Joseph’s singing to be appreciated. Even the rig Jeff packed in blew Banditos owner Scott Kelly away. “You should see the size of the fucking rig he hauled in here,” Kelly exclaimed on Friday night. The lights that Jeff also runs add just the right accents and textures to the setting. One might think that this contributes very little to the sound at the show, but Jerry seemed to appreciate the lighting. He even commented that “the lights sound great” between songs. Maybe it is a quid pro quo of sorts, where the lighting can ramp up the audience, and the audience can definitely ramp up the performers.

As an added treat for the live album, fans were blessed to have drummer Steve Drizos‘ wife Jenny Conlee-Drizos sitting in on keys for all three nights. Jenny was on loan to the Jackmormons from her main gig with The Decemberists. At times bassist JR Ruppel turned towards Jenny, walking her through some of the changes in a song.

Jerry Joseph and The Jackmormons :: Banditos 2009 :: Montana

A year ago they debuted a new song here, “Wisconsin Death Trip,” as an acoustic number, and as they ripped the holy crap out of it with an electric version on Friday they showed just how far the song, and perhaps even the band, has come. Don’t take this the wrong way, but I haven’t always been a Jackmormons fan. I saw them several times between 1999 and 2002, including the Irish Times show that produced Mouthful Of Copper. After that I was definitely a fan. My extended “retirement” from concert attendance ended with a Jackmormons show in 2005. Between 2005 and 2006 I saw just under a dozen Jerry Joseph shows, and at times I felt as if I was just hanging on. Whatever they were doing then, it just wasn’t doing it for me. That all changed December 14, 2007, when I saw Jerry Joseph and Friends perform at Stella Blue in Ashville, North Carolina. I have consistently been impressed since then. No matter where he’s at or how big the crowd is, Jerry is not only pouring his heart and soul out onstage, but he seems to be enjoying himself, at times. It works and it works well with Stockholm Syndrome , with the Jackmormons, with The Denmark Veseys and even solo. Through songs about hurt and pain some catharsis seems to be taking place, some joy seems to be growing out of the pain. Jerry joked on Sunday, “When I think of weddings and babies I always play this song,” before “Ten Killer Fairies” which recounts the true story of a family being slaughtered by drug lords in Mexico.

When talking about the direction of the band Steve Drizos said, “Sometimes you can’t even drive it; you just hang on for the ride.” Joseph has become a master of melody, and his melodic evolution finds Jerry tinkering with his songs and enjoying himself more onstage.

Jerry Joseph and The Jackmormons :: Banditos 2009 :: Montana

Last year, listening to some of Jerry’s songs was like hearing a static filled AM radio station. Friday’s songs were tight and concise. The solos were there, a cover of Widespread Panic‘s “Second Skin” was played and “Crime and Punishment” was slow, yet so moving. Still, it felt like Jerry was holding back the mad ramblings from various cover songs that he usually interjects into setlists. After the show I thought perhaps it had to do with licensing agreements for the live album or some such legal nonsense.

Saturday opened with “War At The End Of the World.” Fitting, since for some people Virginia City is as close to the end of world as one can get. Cell phones don’t work here. Internet? Just forget about it; even the hotel doesn’t have reception. “Pumpkin Time” may have been spurred by the placement of a wayward flip-flop by Jerry’s monitor, an event that caused some joking among the band. Closing out the second set was a recently added combination, “Chainsaw City” followed by The Cure‘s “Fascination Street.” The band preformed this pairing for the first time just after New Years 2008, and the combination works beautifully, with Jerry’s revision of The Cure tune not be missed.

“Spin City” > “North” > “Spin City” contained Saturday’s only example of the aforementioned “master of melody” approach with Lou Reed’s “Walk on The Wild Side” chorus being lightly inserted. The end of the second set was time for them to start rolling out the big guns. “North” turned into an all out slugfest. “Ask me if I give a FUCK,” barked the audience, drowning out even the reverberating amps. The pauses in this song have begun to take on a life of their own. They occur with greater frequency in more and more of the versions of “North.” Very few things represent a well-oiled band than a nice good old fashioned pause in the middle of a song. Panic’s “Walkin’” or “Good People” spring to mind as obvious comparisons.

Jerry Joseph :: Banditos 2009 :: Montana

Sunday was a different beast entirely. While the first two songs were slow, they contained more energy than the rest of the first set. A noticeably strapped down “Light Is Like Water” opened the evening, and I can only hope and pray that this version makes it on the live album. Goose-bumps rose on my arms as the song ended, just in time for the intro to “Alter In a Box” to send chills down my spine. The faintest, ghostly echoes of “All Along the Watchtower” ran along the extended intro to and resurfaced several time throughout. Rain and thunder began to poor down outside as lighting began to shoot out of amps. In a scene reminiscent of Jerry’s “Cortez The Killer” with Panic at Oak Mountain in 2002, I choose to dance in the rain. Maybe that is the sign of really good music – its ability to transport our thoughts back to long forgotten battlefields. Oak Mountain, for those who were there, was just such a place.

The final highlights of another “Good Sunday” in Virginia City were an all out mash-up in the second set. The rants during “New Psychology of Love” gave way to The Rolling Stones’ “Beast Of Burden” – a fitting combination to say the least. “Way Too Loud,” a Jerry original written with a little help from Bloodkin‘s Danny Hutchens was augmented with U2′s “Mysterious Ways.” “It’s alright, it’s alright, it’s alright,” coxed Jerry as he led us into a pockmarked, bone jarring, high speed race down the “Road to Damascus.” Closing out the second set, we slowed down a little for a sandwich of Neil Young’s “Comes A Time” with a “Mohawk” right down the middle. Finally, Jerry closed the cover laden Sunday performance with “Both Of You” split open with a very heavy rendition of the chorus of Eric Clapton’s “Let It Grow.”

The album is tentatively titled Live @ Banditos and will be Jerry’s sixth live album. It will be the second live album that the Jackmormons have recorded in Montana, Mouthful Of Copper being the first, back in 2002 at the now defunct Irish Times bar in Butte. While issues such as who will release it and when it will be released are still very much up in the air, one thing’s for sure: three nights in Virginia City provided more than enough material for a double (or triple?) disc release.

Jerry’s riding the crest of a high and beautiful wave between Stockholm Syndrome, his solo work and the Jackmormons. And those of you who did not make it to Virginia City this time, you’re running out of excuses. Virginia City, Banditos Bar and Jerry Joseph are a trifecta not to be missed. Walking around the bar before the show I overheard people discussing fly fishing on the Madison, and I bagged three 10,500 foot peaks that day. So, if you got to start budgeting now to head on up “North” and start “Shooting Up the Neighborhood” next year in Virginia City, DO IT!

Jerry Joseph and The Jackmormons tour dates available here.

Continue reading for more pics of Jerry Joseph and The Jackmormons in Montana…

JamBase | Montana
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