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Posts Tagged ‘Jim James’

Alberta Cross Headlining Tour

ALBERTA CROSS TOUR IN SUPPORT OF HIGHLY ACCLAIMED DEBUT BROKEN SIDE OF TIME

HEADLINING DATES CONFIRMED FOR JANUARY/FEBRUARY

“The seismic guitars and high vocals look to My Morning Jacket, Kings of Leon and Crazy Horse… but Alberta Cross sets aside those American bands’ redemptive undercurrents of blues and gospel; instead it plunges into the very English despair of bands like Pink Floyd.” — The New York Times

“Channeling Neil Young… the sound of deliverance.” — Esquire

Alberta Cross

Alberta Cross kicks off a nationwide tour this January. Supported by San Antonio-based folk-rockers Hacienda, Alberta Cross will be headlining venues such as Bowery Ballroom in New York, Schubas in Chicago and Troubadour in Los Angeles. They are touring in support of their much-anticipated ATO Records debut, Broken Side of Time, which is receiving widespread acclaim. The New York Times applauds their “British take on Southern rock,” and NPR declares them “…familiar and refreshing …Alberta Cross has taken incredible strides to earn global recognition.” Likewise, they were recently featured as a Breaking Artist in Rolling Stone, which praises them for “combining wind tunnels of bent guitar riffs and distorted power chords with the haunting melodies of rural American music. It’s all topped by Ericson Stakee’s sweet, high-lonesome voice, which recalls both Jim James and Neil Young.”

Broken side of Time arrives on the heels of their acclaimed EP The Thief & the Heartbreaker, which earned the band U.K. touring slots with Oasis, The Shins and Bat For Lashes, and widespread critical praise, including PopMatters, which declared, “The seven-song EP is one of the best you’ll be lucky enough to pick up, resembling a full album’s quality but leaving one wanting a lot more.” It also follows a summer of festivals and U.K. dates, including noteworthy performances at Bonnaroo, Coachella, Glastonbury and more.

Tour Dates

11/25/09 Wed Gaswerk Winterthur, SWI

11/26/09 Thu Le Botanique Brussels, BEL

11/28/09 Sat Rotown Rotterdam, NL

11/29/09 Sun Magnet Berlin, GER

12/01/09 Tue Molotow Hamburg, GER

12/02/09 Wed Vox Hall Arhus, DK

12/03/09 Thu John Dee Oslo, NO

12/04/09 Fri Debaser Malmo, SE

12/05/09 Sat Debaser Stockholm, SE

12/27/09 Sun Higher Ground (Ballroom) Burlington, VT (w/ Grace Potter and the Nocturnals)

12/28/09 Mon Higher Ground (Ballroom) Burlington, VT (w/ Grace Potter and the Nocturnals)

01/11/10 Mon Casbah San Diego, CA

01/12/10 Tue Detroit Bar Costa Mesa, CA

01/14/10 Thu The Troubadour West Hollywood, CA

01/15/10 Fri Muddy Waters Santa Barbara, CA

01/16/10 Sat Bottom of the Hill San Francisco, CA

01/18/10 Mon Mississippi Studios Portland, OR

01/19/10 Tue Chop Suey Seattle, WA

01/23/10 Sat The Larimer Lounge Denver, CO

01/27/10 Wed 400 Bar Minneapolis, MN

01/29/10 Fri Schubas Chicago, IL

01/30/10 Sat The Basement Columbus, OH

02/02/10 Tue Jefferson Theater Charlottesville, VA (w/ Tea Leaf Green)

02/03/10 Wed Black Cat Washington, DC

02/04/10 Thu Bowery Ballroom New York, NY

02/05/10 Fri The Khyber Philadelphia, PA

For more on Alberta Cross see our exclusive feature/interview here.


Monsters of Folk | 11.13 | Texas

Words by: Sarah Hagerman | Images by: Manny Moss

Monsters of Folk :: 11.13.09 :: Stubb’s BBQ :: Austin, TX

Jim James – Monsters of Folk :: 11.13 :: Austin

“God bless you, Austin, you never let us down!” Jim James cried happily from the stage. The genuine kick that James, M. Ward, Conor Oberst, and Mike Mogis, joined by Texas’ own Will Johnson (Centro-matic) on drums, get out of playing with each other spilled over onto the audience, as a sold out Stubb’s BBQ gave James back his enthusiasm in kind for this last show on the U.S. leg of the Monsters of Folk tour.

It was a balmy Friday the 13th that in most other places would have seemed more June than November. A couple weeks shy of America’s annual celebration of football, family and tryptophan induced comas, The Monsters set a mood of gratitude early, played on to the darkness of the Stubb’s stage by William Vaughn’s “Be Thankful For What You Got” (you know, “Diamond in the back/ Sunroof top/ Diggin’ the scene with a gangster lean/ Woo-ooo-ooo”), with the word “LOVE” drawn out in green reflective tape on the side of a speaker.

I won’t pretend I came into this show unbiased. As a long-time My Morning Jacket fan, I would pay to watch James sing the Yellow Pages – hell, he could pause for a kazoo solo between “plumbing” and “plywood suppliers” and I wouldn’t complain. So yes, I was among those who let out a happy yelp at the first notes he sang on show opener “Say Please.” Meanwhile Ward is someone who took longer to work his way into my heart, and I’ve only recently come to deeply appreciate his striking imagery, sincere love of vintage sounds, and that voice that breathes gentle smoke, hovering just out of time. Plus, he’s a helluva guitarist, who sent my jaw to the floor a few times during this show. Then there’s Oberst, whose earnest Bright Eyes persona I found grating and whose recent slide into sandy-booted troubadour equally so. I went into this show with an open mind, but despite my best efforts, I found myself drifting, and the show’s momentum sagging whenever Oberst’s solo material took center stage, with the exception being a fairly rousing “Soul Singer In a Session Band,” which sounded a few whiskey shots shy of a drunken sing-along with the Monsters swaying in tandem.

Johnson & Oberst – Monsters of Folk :: 11.13 :: Austin

At three hours and 35 songs long, the show moved at a snappy pace, with the Monsters switching up instruments for each song, bounding on and off stage to accompany each other’s solo material, or just simply hanging back and taking it in out of the spotlight. Oberst would jump up and hover over Johnson’s kit, Ward would practically stick his face in the keys while he jangled, and James would throw his head back behind the mic and let that otherworldly voice pour out into the Texas night, while Mogis snaked between them all, armed with his chosen axes. During “Golden,” MMJ’s love song to humble barflies everywhere, the other Monsters huddled up behind James, circling the drum kit like it was a campfire. Oberst and Ward leaned in close with their guitars to sing, “Try as you might to fight it/ Love will get you in the end,” during Ward’s “Lullaby & Exile.” Oberst strained to meet a pitch near James when the two joined forces for MMJ’s “I Will Be There When You Die,” but it was a reminder that in the end these cats are just longtime fans of each other.

The thread tying the distinctive voices together was Mogis, whose chameleon-like instrumental skills were masterful no matter what weapon drawn, be it mandolin, lap slide or electric guitar. Masterful, but never showy, giving each song precisely what it needed. Equal props should be given to Johnson, who’s drumming was beat perfect, pumping adrenaline straight to the vein or simply slipping in the background, leaving a bass drum to tickle your toes. He even got a chance in the spotlight for his own genuinely tear jerking “Just To Know What You’ve Been Dreaming.” That’s how you win her heart, fellas. These two provided a constantly shifting foundation, and watching them work was a real joy.

M. Ward – Monsters of Folk :: 11.13 :: Austin

Most of the material from the Monsters’ record grew some real legs live. Despite the co-writing credits, I think it’s fairly obvious whose fingerprints are all over the candlestick for most of those tunes; for good – album opener “Dear God (Sincerely M.O.F.),” which is driven by the spiritual soul man James – or ill – “Man Named Truth,” whose title alone signals that it’s an overwrought Oberst effort. “The Right Place” is the kind of country jangler made for a raucous show environment, if for nothing else but to evoke cheers and backslaps when the band asks, “Do you like where you’re living?” Looking around at my fellow Austinites, there was no way to answer but, “Hell yes!” The molasses of “Slow Down Jo,” features Ward’s choice words to a drug-addled friend, as James slipped behind his dreamlike vocals with ninja precision. It fell flat on the record for me, but live it had room to stretch. “Whole Lotta Losin’” reminds me a bit of “Walk of Life” by Dire Straits, but that’s hardly a bad thing, and it was muscular enough to wrap itself around my brain for a good few hours after our collective gravel bounce ended. The closer, also the last song on the record, “His Master’s Voice,” was stunning, beginning in a shimmer, building to a squall, and ending on skitters, skatters and spaceship squeals before the Monsters slipped out behind the stage smoke, back into the shadows.

At various times during the show, James introduced each member as “my son,” and the show was indeed more a display of familial love than shrapnel from stars colliding. It was refreshing to see the enthusiasm that the three songwriters displayed as the show slipped into each other’s worlds. It will be interesting to see if this project, years in the making as is, evolves from here, but for now I just remain struck by how this felt like the most intimate show I’ve seen at Stubb’s Outdoors. It could have something to do with the simple but rich light show that illuminated the whole crowd like we were huddled in an indoor theater. It could have been the crystal clear sound, even when I found myself at the farthest flung back corner bar at one point, which I think had something to do with the Monsters bringing extra equipment to beef up Stubb’s system.

Ultimately, it was the easy nature that the group reverberated, the feeling that no matter where you’ve come from in the wide geographies these three songwriters have drawn, you’re welcome at their family table. Casting a glance around the diverse crowd drove that feeling home, as I basked in the glow of a spacious, stripped-down rendition of “At Dawn,” and in that moment you can bet I was thankful.

Monsters of Folk :: 11.13.09 :: Stubb’s BBQ :: Austin, TX

Say Please, The Right Place, Soul Singer in a Session Band, Slow Down Jo, Man Named Truth, Lullaby & Exile, We Are Nowhere and It’s Now, A Song to Pass the Time, I Will Be There When You Die, Golden, Vincent O’Brien, Ahead of the Curve, Wonderful (The Way I Feel), One Hundred Million Years, Chinese Translation, Smoke Without Fire, At Dawn, Baby Boomer, Dear God (Sincerely M.O.F.), Temaxcal, To Save Me, Kathy with a K’s Song, Goodway, Just to Know What You’ve Been Dreaming, Bermuda Highway, Look At You, One Life Away, Map of the World, The Sandman, The Brakeman and Me, Smokin’ From Shootin’, Losin Yo Head, At the Bottom of Everything, Whole Lotta Losin’, Another Traveling Song, His Master’s Voice

Continue reading for more pics of Monsters of Folk in Austin…

JamBase | Deep In The Heart
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Monsters of Folk: Video Madness

“SAY PLEASE” VIDEO UNVEILED, VIDEO CONTEST FOR “DEAR GOD (SINCERELY M.O.F.)”

Monsters of Folk

Following a first-ever U.S. fall tour and unabashed praise for their self-titled debut album, Monsters of Folk (Conor Oberst, Jim James, M. Ward, Mike Mogis) are moving full-steam ahead with the unveiling of their new video for their brilliant single, “Say Please.”

Shot by acclaimed cinematographer Lance Acord, renowned for his work on celebrated films by directors Sofia Coppola and Spike Jonze, the video features a frontier town, World War II soldiers, and roller-skating. The gorgeous video can be seen now here. Additionally, the broadcast premiere of the “Say Please” video will air November 17, on the Independent Film Channel at 9 p.m. EST/PST. It can also be seen here.

In other video news, Monsters of Folk have announced an incredible “make-our-video” contest for the song “Dear God (Sincerely M.O.F.),” a stand-out track from the album. Sponsored by Apple/Quicktime and Death + Taxes Magazine, Monsters of Folk are inviting their fans to create their very own visual interpretation for “Dear God.” The winning video will be chosen from a list of finalists, and will be posted on the homepages of the Monsters of Folk, Apple/Quicktime, and Death + Taxes Magazine web sites. The contest winner will also receive $5000, a Gibson guitar signed by the band, and a copy of the new Final Cut Studio software. Five runners-up will receive a signed vinyl album. For more information, please go here.

Monsters of Folk – “Say Please”

Praise for Monsters of Folk:

“…a folky, harmony-ridden gem.” – Rolling Stone

“…the harmonies are groundbreaking. Goosebump territory. The amalgam of their voices mixed with the musical breathing room creates an intimacy not heard since Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. It’s a stunning record – cohesive and consistent and ambitious for how much ground it covers.” – Esquire

“…rich with details that feel worn-in like the corners of a beloved book.” – Los Angeles Times

Monsters of Folk are currently on tour in Europe; dates available here.


Monsters of Folk Do Kiss Watch The Video Here

Monsters of Folk Do Kiss For Halloween!

Monsters of Folk (Jim James, Conor Oberst, M. Ward, Mike Mogis) celebrated Halloween at Louisville Palace in Louisville, KY by busting out Kiss. Painted to perfection and dressed like the real deal, the band tore through “Detroit Rock City” and “Rock and Roll All Nite” with James proving to be a wonderful Gene Simmons. Check the video:


Monsters of Folk are on tour now; dates available here.


Monsters of Folk | 10.17 | Oakland

Images by: Dave Vann

Monsters of Folk :: 10.17.09 :: The Fox Theater :: Oakland, CA

Say Please, Dear God, Temazcal, Whole Lotta Losin’, The Right Place, Baby Boomer, Man Named Truth, Slow Down Jo, Map of the World, Sandman, the Brakeman, and me, His Master’s Voice, sad, sad song, Vincent O’Brien, Outta My Head, To Save Me, Poison Cup, Paul’s Song, Lime Tree, Another Travelin’ Song, Soul Singer in a Session Band, At the Bottom of Everything, We Are Nowhere And It Is Now, Smoke Without Fire, The Big Picture

Monsters of Folk are Jim James (My Morning Jacket), M. Ward, Conor Oberst, Mike Mogis (Bright Eyes), and tour drummer Will Johnson (Centro-matic).

Monsters of Folk are currently on tour. Find dates here.

JamBase | Monstrous

Go See Live Music!


Monsters of Folk: Free MP3

“SUPER GROUP” OFFERS UP FIRST TASTE OF STUDIO COLLABORATION

Folk Monsters

Monsters of Folk – comprised of Bright EyesConor Oberst and Mike Mogis, My Morning Jacket‘s Jim James and M. Ward – will release their self-titled studio debut album on September 22. But, the band is currently offering a free MP3 download of the song “Say Please.” Pop over to their website and type in “please” in the password box. It’s a sweet little, summery number.

Monsters of Folk began as folklore of sorts, when James, Oberst, Ward and Mogis did their first run of shows together in 2004. Like the musical revue shows that went town to town when rock ‘n’ roll was newly born, the tour was called “An Evening With: Bright Eyes, Jim James and M. Ward,” although amongst friends and crew, it became affectionately known as the “Monsters of Folk Tour.” While entertaining audiences coast to coast with gorgeous acoustic melodies and world-weary tales, the foursome vowed to make their way to a studio at some point after the tour’s completion. While individual albums and other distractions delayed their plans, they kept their promise and when downtime presented itself they convened in the studio multiple times over two years, with Mogis at the helm of their first recorded effort.