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Posts Tagged ‘John Molo’

The Wheel – A Musical Celebration of Jerry Garcia | Pics

Images by: Susan J. Weiand

The Wheel – A Musical Celebration of Jerry Garcia :: 12.04.10 :: The Fillmore :: San Francisco, CA

Last Saturday, The Rex Foundation held a special concert entitled The Wheel – A Musical Celebration of Jerry Garcia with a lineup that included David Nelson & Friends (Barry Sless, Robin Sylvester, John Molo and Mookie Siegel), Jesse McReynolds, Peter Rowan Bluegrass Band and many others. Blair Jackson has a great review of the night over at Dead.net and we present Ms. Weiand’s fabulous shots for your edification.

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Jackie Greene | 30th Birthday Concert | S.F. | Pics

Images by: Jay Blakesberg

Last Saturday night Jackie Greene celebrated turning 30 with a bunch of his very talented friends, including a Skinny Singers set with pal Tim Bluhm. Later, Phil Lesh, Mark Karan, John Molo and others came up to rock out his natal day festivities. Lucky for us, Jay Blakesberg was on the scene to bring us this sweet assortment.

Setlist

Set 1 – Jackie Greene Band: Gone Wanderin’ (Jackie solo), Don’t Let The Devil Take Your Mind, I’m So Gone, Medicine, A Moment of Temporary Color, Spooky Tina,
Shaken, Tell Me Mama, Tell Me Right, Like A Ball And Chain

Set 2 – Skinny Singers: Going Home Again, Where The Rain Don’t Go, Heroes, Hear Me, Infinity Blues, Stick With Me

Set 3 – Jackie Greene, Phil Lesh and “Friends”: After Midnight, Highway 61, Waiting for The Man, Hollywood > Tomorrow Never Knows > Taxman, Scarlet Begonias, New Speedway Boogie > Bird Song > Speedway, Sugaree, Help on the Way / Slipkot / Franklin’s Tower

E: Sweet Somewhere Bound (Greene solo)

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”1″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=177″);}); 11/27/10 – Jackie Greene @ The Fillmore (San Francisco, CA) View Photos

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Handijam 2010: Big Brother, Moonalice, David Nelson

SPECIAL FOUR SHOW BENEFIT TOUR STARTS TOMORROW IN TEANECK, NJ


Big Brother and the Holding Company

A special run of shows is taking place this weekend, September 23-26, to benefit Handijam. Founded in 2000 by
Charlene Raco, Handijam for Handicapped, Inc. is a not-for-profit organization that serves the terminally ill,
mentally, physically and emotionally challenged in Staten Island. Its main purpose is to provide entertainment for
those who get only their basic necessities met.

David Nelson, the heart of
the New Riders of the Purple Sage and
longtime friend and music partner of The
Grateful Dead
‘s Jerry Garcia, is headlining a run of concerts of his all star eponymous band to benefit
the cause.

The band features Barry Sless (Phil Lesh and Friends) on lead and pedal steel guitar, drummer John
Molo
(Phil Lesh, Bruce Hornsby, John Fogerty), bassist Pete Sears (Jefferson Starship, Hot Tuna, Rod
Stewart), and keyboardist Mookie Siegel (Phil Lesh,Donna Jean and The Tricksters). Sless,Siegel and Molo
also lend their instrumental wizardry to opening act Moonalice at these benefits.

Sharing the bill is the classic band Big
Brother & The Holding Company
, best known for their famed lead singer, the late great Janis
Joplin
. Rounding out the bill is New Riders’ bassist Ronnie Penque with his own band.

Tour Schedule:
THUR, SEPTEMBER 23
Mexicali Live
1409 Queen Anne Rd

Teaneck, NJ

FRI, SEPTEMBER 24

Wonderbar

5th & Ocean
Asbury Park,NJ

SAT, SEPTEMBER 25
Kaplan’s Farm
“The Barn”
Millerton, NY

SUN, SEPTEMBER 26
Ukrainian Church

60 N. Jefferson Rd.
Whippany, NJ


Jay Lane Leaves Furthur

DRUMMER RETURNS TO PRIMUS

Jay Lane

Last week news broke that drummer Jay Lane was leaving Furthur to begin playing with his old band Primus. Like many folks, JamBase heard the news from fine site Welcome To Now. While there’s been no official announcement from the Furthur camp, Phil Lesh hit the PhilZone message boards with the following:

“Over the past year, both Jill and I have come to know and love Jay for the great guy that he is. At the end of our tour he rode back on Bob’s bus and informed Bob that he had an opportunity to play drums with Primus. He and Bob discussed it, and they decided that the logical time to make the change would be after the birthday show. I only found out about this the day before the show; as their relationship goes back a long way, I told them both then that I support any decision they might make. I will miss Jay’s enthusiasm and ebullience; he’s a great guy to hang and play music with.”

Speculation currently predicts that Furthur will continue with a single drummer, stick maestro Joe Russo, though some conjecture that John Molo may fill Lane’s empty seat.

Furthur Tour Dates :: Furthur News :: Furthur Concert Reviews


Furthur & Friends | 03.12 | San Francisco

Words by: Garrin Benfield | Images by: Dave Vann

Furthur & Friends :: 03.12.10 :: Bill Graham Civic Auditorium :: San Francisco, CA

Lesh & Robinson – Furthur :: 03.12 :: San Francisco

It’s safe to say I wouldn’t have been anywhere on March 12 other than with the guys ushering in the last Golden Age of the Grateful Dead. Furthur, the latest (and possibly greatest) reincarnation of The Boys, gathered for a tour-closing three set show at Bill Graham Civic to celebrate Phil Lesh’s 70th Birthday and to raise money for Haitian Earthquake relief. And though this was a benefit for the Unbroken Chain Foundation, the preeminent concern was throwing a party with and for one of the most important musicians in rock ‘n’ roll, and certainly one of the Bay Area’s most celebrated exports.


Ironically, Lesh has become more of a household name in the outside world since Jerry Garcia died, as various groups under the name “Phil Lesh and Friends” have relentlessly toured the country and become a staple at summer festivals. But Lesh’s contribution to popular (and weird!) music was felt early. Soon after he taught himself to play electric bass in The Warlocks, he quickly established a singular, linear approach to what was traditionally an instrument strictly reserved for a support role.

It would not be an exaggeration to include Lesh in a list that includes towering figures of the low-end like Charles Mingus, James Jamerson, and Jaco Pastorius, in terms of the indelible imprint he has left on the possibilities of his instrument. Phil’s approach and tone are unmistakable once you are familiar with them: a chunky, flat-picked attack that relentlessly propels, cloaked in an EQ wave that somehow allows for both the richest low end “bombs” conjurable and the treble necessary to cut through dense aggregations like the one we witnessed on this night.

Furthur & Friends :: 03.12 :: San Francisco

Like the other members of the Grateful Dead, Phil has a deserved reputation as possibly one of the coolest geeks in rock, a reputation aided by his interest in modern 20th century symphonic and experimental music, and involvement with such out-there projects as Seastones with composer Ned Lagin. But Phil always had deep groove and soul, and though some stories suggest the contrary, he was a great ally and supporter of Pigpen and has always gone out of his way to keep the R&B roots of the Dead alive. On this night alone, Phil chose to play three songs associated with Pig: the rare “Two Souls in Communion,” “Easy Wind” and “Hard to Handle,” a clear nod to the formative days of this band that began stretching out their limited repertoire at long, four-set shows in the mid-sixties and accidentally birthed a new genre of music.

As the Grateful Dead stretched its wings in the hugely inspired period that spilled over into the early-70s, however, it became clear that Jerry was Phil’s true musical brother. Together, on a nightly basis, they wove the single note improvisations that seared the band’s identity into our cultural consciousness. At my second Dead show in the mid-80s, I recall hearing a passing Head say, “When Phil’s on, the band’s on,” a phrase that intrigued me but I did not fully compute then. The rumbling, sometimes sub-sonic importance of Phil’s playing might be the last musical element to filter into a new listener’s head – especially at a questionably mixed stadium show – but once it’s in there, there is really no substitute (even Alfonso Johnson, who subbed for Phil in The Other Ones, comes to mind). Phil literally had to conceive and build the bass that could accomplish what he heard in his head, and for that he should also always be acknowledged as a progenitor of the modern, active pickup electric bass. And though never particularly celebrated for his singing (maybe an understatement), he still managed to compose one of the enduring classics of the country/folk rock period, the lilting, gorgeous “Box of Rain,” a song that elicits rich memories and emotions from people who were alive to hear it drifting from dorm room windows in 1970 and those who first encountered it on hissy third-generation bootleg cassettes.

Furthur & Friends :: 03.12 :: San Francisco

How fitting then that Phil chose to open his birthday show with a gentle acoustic set that included three of the towering pieces of the Hunter/Garcia catalog that he has long publicly admired: “Ripple,” “Brokedown Palace” and the stunning “Attics of My Life.” Bobby sang/whispered “Ripple” with genuine, time-worn sensitivity, Jackie Greene paid perfect respect to “Brokedown,” and all the vocalists, including Chris Robinson (The Black Crowes), “the girls” (Zoe Ellis and Sunshine Garcia Becker) and John Kadlecik seemed to breathe with “Attics” until the room had truly unified. Phil’s beautiful take on “Mountains of the Moon” was also a highlight – it seems years of attempts at getting this song right have finally paid off, with Phil not forcing the vocal but rather very calmly allowing it to happen. With the new arrangement of “Mountains,” Phil has accomplished quite a feat, as the slow psychedelic dirge feels ancient in its roots and quite contemporary in its delivery. The forethought that went into this acoustic set clearly portended very good things for the night and also immediately thrust us into a contemplative state usually reserved for late in a second set. It was almost as if we were experiencing the normal emotional arc of a show in reverse. Disorienting and wonderful.

The electric segment of the evening began with a stand-alone “Scarlet Begonias,” sung by Jackie and driven by drummer Joe Russo in his first appearance of the evening. During the jam, Kadlecik revealed that over the past few months with Furthur he has been allowed, possibly for the first time in his professional career, to truly search for his own voice on lead guitar. The results were refreshingly un-Garcia like, including some microtonal bends that I associate more with Indian classical music than psychedelic rock. Weir followed with a surprise “New Minglewood Blues,” from which he has extracted the normal blues turnaround that we are so used to hearing. It’s so unexpected that the band still seems to struggle with it a bit. It was akin to the strange effect of Weir adding extra bars between verses of a song that you are used to hearing straight. This muscular version proved itself worthy of this important second set slot, though, and the rest of this long set got raunchy, bluesy and occasionally sloppy, and included so many twists and turns as to be pretty disorienting at times. “Viola Lee Blues,” the signature Furthur jam vehicle so far, was broken up into three separate appearances. Chris Robinson screamed mightily during “Hard to Handle,” and the set came to a joyous, if severely mid-tempo conclusion with “Like A Rolling Stone” and “Sugaree.” I tend to like my Dead humble and fragile, but if you lean towards the dark, heavy blues that emerges with this many people onstage, this set was for you.

Furthur & Friends :: 03.12 :: San Francisco

At just after midnight, the band casually reassembled onstage and broke into a very groovy “Not Fade Away” jam, led by Phil and the drummers (John Molo was now onstage) and decorated by the guitarists. As three floats festooned with Mardi Gras-like decorations slowly made their way across the floor, the band jammed on, but did not sing “Not Fade Away.” Instead, where the vocals would have begun, everyone broke into “Happy Birthday” for Phil and hundreds of balloons dropped onto the floor. The band resumed the Bo Diddley jam for another four minutes or so then just sort of stopped. I’m really not sure what happened at this point, but Bobby said, “Well, we’re going to take another short break, but this one’s going to be truly short.” The packed hall was vocal in its confusion, as some momentum had definitely been established, but then just laughed it off and chalked it up to one more strange Dead moment.


“Playin’ In The Band” was a good way to launch into new territory, establish a whole new direction, and erase any confusion from the last segment. The jam out of “Playin’” was dense, with three lead guitarists in Weir, Greene and Kadlecik trying to accommodate one another, and doing so quite well. Weir, in particular, demonstrated such a welcome hospitality all night to his fellow players, not indulging in any of the confusing hand signals or last minute cues we’ve come to expect from him at some of these high profile shows. “St. Stephen” began a show ending sequence of classic tunes that culminated in an inspired, unexpected choice for the ballad slot, “Comes a Time,” sung with real heart by Chris Robinson. It felt a bit off-kilter to have Kadlecik play a tearful, flanged-out solo, but then not resume the lead vocal. It occurred to me at this point in the show how little he had sung at all, in fact. (“Lazy River Road,” which he handled with grace, seemed like eons ago, being the second song of the night.) The last true surprise of the show came next, a breakneck “Cream Puff War,” played with all its mid-60s impatience and bluster intact, and accompanied by two female go-go dancers on either side of the stage. I actually heard some grousing from some Heads about this clearly ironic, showbiz move. I thought it was perfectly good-natured, especially since the song lasted all of two minutes. That’s gotta be a record for brevity for these guys!

“Franklin’s Tower” literally jumped out of “Cream Puff War” and signaled the end of an inspired night. And though the band frequently tests audience stamina these days, the huge, show ending ovations these guys have been getting attest to the feeling that few are anxious to see them go anywhere. It’s as if we are taking this opportunity to really express how lucky we feel to have been a part of this music, and how surreal it is that it’s still rumbling forward, and right here in the center of San Francisco no less, the place of its inception. Phil seemed genuinely humbled before the encore, saying, “Thank you for making this, I would have to say, THE most special birthday of my life.” The response? Another thunderous round of applause. Thank you, Phil!

Phil’s 70th Birthday :: 03.12.10 :: Bill Graham Civic Auditorium :: San Francisco, CA

Set I Acoustic without Russo and with Jackie Greene, Steve Molitz & Chris Robinson:

Ripple, Lazy River Road, Fennario, Two Souls in Communion, Brokedown Palace, A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall, They Love Each Other, Mountains of the Moon, Attics of My Life

Set II without Lane and with Jackie Greene & Chris Robinson:

Scarlet Begonias, Minglewood Blues, Easy Wind > New Speedway Boogie, Viola Lee Blues > High Time > Caution Jam > Viola Lee Blues > Hard To Handle, Viola Lee Blues > Like A Rolling Stone > Sugaree

Set III without Lane and with Jackie Greene, Steve Molitz & John Molo:

Not Fade Away Jam* Float Parade, Happy Birthday Phil!*, Balloon Drop, Not Fade Away Jam >
Playing in the Band > Jam > St. Stephen > The Other One > Elevator > Unbroken Chain, Comes a Time > Cream Puff War* with dancers > Franklin’s Tower

Encore: Johnny B. Goode

Setlist courtesy of phillesh.net

Continue reading for more pics…

Furthur Tour Dates :: Furthur News :: Furthur Concert Reviews

JamBase | California

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Furthur Celebrate Phil’s 70th w/ Robinson, Greene, Molitz, Molo

Furthur Celebrate Phil’s 70th Birthday with

Chris Robinson, Jackie Greene, Steve Molitz, John Molo

Phil Lesh

On Friday night, March 12, Phil Lesh celebrated his 70th Birthday at the Bill Graham Civic Auditorium in San Francisco, CA. The evening featured Lesh’s current band, Furthur, as the house act for the night with a number of special guests from Lesh’s previous bands sitting in. Guests included The Black CrowesChris Robinson, Jackie Greene, Steve Molitz and John Molo. The concert was an Unbroken Chain Foundation Benefit For Haitian Earthquake Relief.

Set I Acoustic without Russo and with Jackie Greene, Steve Molitz & Chris Robinson:

Ripple, Lazy River Road, Fennario, Two Souls in Communion, Brokedown Palace, A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall, They Love Each Other, Mountains of the Moon, Attics of My Life

Set II without Lane and with Jackie Greene & Chris Robinson:

Scarlet Begonias, Minglewood Blues, Easy Wind > New Speedway Boogie, Viola Lee Blues > High Time > Caution Jam > Viola Lee Blues > Hard To Handle, Viola Lee Blues > Like A Rolling Stone > Sugaree

Set III without Lane and with Jackie Greene, Steve Molitz & John Molo:

Not Fade Away Jam* Float Parade, Happy Birthday Phil!*, Balloon Drop, Not Fade Away Jam >
Playing in the Band > Jam > St. Stephen > The Other One > Elevator > Unbroken Chain, Comes a Time > Cream Puff War* with dancers > Franklin’s Tower

Encore: Johnny B. Goode

Setlist courtesy of phillesh.net

Check back soon for complete coverage of Phil Lesh’s 70th Birthday Celebration.

Furthur Tour Dates :: Furthur News :: Furthur Concert Reviews


Moonalice Score 100K Downloads w/ “It’s 4:20 Somewhere”

MOONALICE SINGLE “IT’S 4:20 SOMEWHERE” SURPASSES 100,000 DOWNLOADS

Band with no manager, label or publicist leverages Twitter/Facebook

Moonalice

To the astonishment of an entire tribe, Moonalice‘s new single “It’s 4:20 Somewhere” has been downloaded more than 100,000 times since its introduction on November 13, 2009. Three-fourths of the downloads have been in the lossless FLAC format. Recorded, mixed, and mastered for a mere $5,000, “It’s 4:20 Somewhere” is available only on the web and only for free. The FLAC version can be found at moonalice.bit.ly/2uZpcY.

Moonalice is a San Francisco band featuring John Molo on drums, Barry Sless on lead guitar, Pete Sears on bass and keyboards, Ann McNamee on bass and keyboards, and Chubby Wombat Moonalice on bass and guitar.

To celebrate the success of the single, Moonalice will launch the “It’s 4:20 Somewhere” tour in Seattle on February 17. Some shows on that tour will be priced at $4.20, including the giant Moonalice Tribal Pow Wow at Slim’s in San Francisco on April 20.


Moonalice invented the Twittercast concert, where it shares links to songs for an entire show, either live or after the fact. Moonalice has done 67 Twittercasts (and Facecasts, as the Facebook equivalent is known) and also broadcasts a song an hour over Twitter via Moonalice radio.

Moonalice tour dates available here. For more on Moonalice see our 2009 feature/interview here.


Jemimah Puddleduck: No Molo, Nuccio & Ingram Sub

Jemimah Puddleduck Announces Replacement Drummers To Fill In For John Molo

Mark Karan and Jemimah Puddleduck must regretfully announce that, due to scheduling problems, John Molo will not be participating during the band’s August shows.

Fortunately, adequate replacements have been found: for August 6-7-8 on the East Coast, Puddleduck will welcome the amazing Carlo Nuccio, and for August 14-15 in Denver, the glorious Wally Ingram.

Carlo Nuccio has recorded with Tori Amos, Emmylou Harris and Buckwheat Zydeco, as well as just about every band that ever called New Orleans home. You get rhythm with your birth certificate in NOLA, but Carlo got several extra helpings.

Wally Ingram is the ubiquitous percussion accomplice to Sheryl Crow, Eric Burdon, Bonnie Raitt, Jackson Browne, David Lindley, Crosby, Stills & Nash – and that’s just the beginning of the list.

These guys are simply superb, and Jemimah Puddleduck is looking forward to their August shows.

Tour Dates:

08/06/09 Thu The State Theatre Falls Church, VA

08/07/09 Fri The 8X10 Baltimore, MD

08/08/09 Sat Le Poisson Rouge New York, NY

08/14/09 Fri Cervantes’ Masterpiece Ballroom Denver, CO

08/15/09 Sat Cervantes’ Masterpiece Ballroom Denver, CO