RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘Justin Vernon’

Gayngs: Tour Dates & Live Video

GAYNGS PLAY LATE NIGHT WITH JIMMY FALLON OCTOBER 4

Gayngs will be kicking off
their U.S. Tour in two weeks. Ten of the twenty-plus contributors on the Relayted album will be
there, including Justin Vernon and Mike Noyce of Bon Iver, ringleader Ryan
Olson
, Zak Coulter and Adam Hurlburt of Solid Gold. Jake Luck of
Leisure Birds, Ivan Rosebud of The Rosebuds, Brad Cook and Joe Westerlund of Megafaun, and Mike Lewis of
Andrew Bird and Happy Apple will all be there too.

They have also just released an stunning cover of The Alan Parsons Project’s “Eye in the Sky”. Click here to listen. The band also unveiled a live video for “Faded High”. Check
it out below.

They will round out their U.S. Tour in New York City with two shows at Webster Hall and Music Hall of Williamsburg
and and an appearance on Late Night With Jimmy Fallon.

TOUR DATES:

09/29/10 Milwaukee, WI – Turner Hall

09/30/10 Chicago, IL – Metro

10/02/10 Boston, MA – Paradise

10/03/10 New York, NY – Webster Hall

10/04/10 Brooklyn, NY – Music Hall of Williamsburg

10/05/10 Washington, DC – Black Cat

10/06/10 Carrboro NC – Cat’s Cradle

10/9/10 Official ACL Afterparty At Emo’s With Bear In Heaven

10/10/10 Austin, TX – Austin City Limits Festival

Gayngs
Tour Dates

::
Gayngs News
::
Gayngs
Concert
Reviews


SXSW | 03.17.10 | Austin, TX – Day 1

Words by: Kayceman | Images by: Scott Dudelson & Kayceman

SXSW :: 03.17.10 :: Wednesday :: Austin, TX

With almost 2,000 bands performing on 80 stages throughout downtown Austin, the South by Southwest Music Conference is a music marathon fueled by Lone Star Beer and tacos. Now in its 24th year, SXSW might not be about signing new bands as it once was (the internet has really changed the game in how we discover music), but it still offers the opportunity to see a shitload of bands, some of whom will be stars before long, in a short period of time. The dynamics of SXSW may have changed as the festival has grown, but one thing hasn’t changed: This long weekend in Texas can still break bands.

Kayceman’s Top 3

Lissie at Galaxy Room :: SXSW :: 03.17.10 by Kayceman

#3

First set on the first day and Lissie was awesome. Reminiscent of a more rocking Neko Case or younger, more psychedelic Bonnie Raitt, Lissie filled the room with her powerful voice and flowing golden locks. More than singing songs it often felt like Lissie was opening windows into her life. One gets the impression these are confessionals, and when she hit the big notes it sent shivers down my spine. Lissie on electric guitar was backed by a strong lead guitarist who took some searing solos and a bass player who sat on a stool and also played high-hat and kick drum (no drummer in this band), the power this three-piece cooked up was impressive. She closed her set with a soul-rock, gospel tent revival rave-up called “Little Lovin’” off her wonderful debut EP Why You Runnin’, which won over every pair of ears in the room.

#2

If you can make the hipsters dance you are doing something really special. San Francisco’s psychedelic warriors Sleepy Sun are looking more and more like a “special” band, and their set at the IODA party uncorked some seriously good times. A close cousin to bands like Brightblack Morning Light and The Black Angels, the female counter-point vocals helped ease the heaviness of the music to create a welcoming haze. Like really good drugs where you feel opened up by the experience, like your learning something unspoken, this set was deep. The unquestionable highlight occurred when they brought out the Austin Children’s Choir and finished the set with a cover of The Guess Who’s “No Sugar Tonight/New Mother Nature” that stripped the crowd of their cool and ushered in an honest to goodness dance party.

Sharon Jones at Stubb’s :: SXSW
03.17.10 by Scott Dudelson

#1

Number one slot on the first day: Stubb’s. Between another wicked set from Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings, Austin’s own Spoon, and a set by the biggest buzz band of the fest, Broken Bells, this bill was tough to beat. Only unfortunate thing was that Broken Bells (featuring Danger Mouse and The ShinsJames Mercer) wasn’t very good. They weren’t bad, and the songs are really great, but you could tell the live show was just an extension of the album’s success. There were a few high points, like opener “The High Road,” but overall the live show was a sloppy second to one of the best albums of this young year.

Sharon Jones on the other hand killed it. Her band is ridiculously tight and Jones is simply one of the best bandleaders around. Every single time I see this act I’m impressed, and at Stubb’s it was no different. Playing to the largest crowd of the night, she had the audience in the palm of her hand with songs like “100 Days, 100 Nights,” new one “She Ain’t A Child No More,” and a very cool reworking of “This Land Is Your Land.” For anyone who says the golden days of soul music are gone, I say listen to Sharon Jones. Stax, Motown and Muscle Shoals got nothin’ on Ms. Jones and her Dap-Kings.

Strange enough to keep it interesting but built on brilliant songs with inventive hooks, Spoon is a true leader in the modern rock world. Bathing in psychedelic splashes of sound at times, it felt like we were in an echo chamber, and the guest percussionist was a nice touch, too. Songs like “Written In Reverse,” “Don’t Make Me a Target” and “My Mathematical Mind” captivated the crowd with relentless rhythms and perfect precision, while “I Turn My Camera On” made a case for what disco could have been. This is a band of efficiency. No wasted notes or gratuitous solos (there wasn’t a traditional solo all night), everything serves the song. Spoon continues to dish out the goods, and seeing them on their home turf on a big night like this was reason to celebrate.

I’d love to tell you more, but there is quite literally a party with my name on it that has already started. I need to get there. Let that be a glimpse into SXSW: There’s always too much to do…

Continue reading for Sarah Hagerman’s SXSW Day 1 highlights…

Words & Images by: Sarah Hagerman

Wanda Jackson & Green Corn Revival

Wanda Jackson :: 03.17.10

SXSW is geared towards pushing what’s up-and-coming, but it also provides exciting chances to see legends in intimate settings. When the MC strolled out onto the Palm Door stage to announce Wanda Jackson – “The newest member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. The first lady of rock and roll! The queen of rockabilly!” – a gal that had roses tattooed from her wrist to her shoulder screeched in excitement and a dude with a pretty fierce wedge haircut and checkered jacket pumped his fists in the air. “I love singing to a pole!” she declared with a laugh, eyeing the rather unfortunately placed pillar smack dab in the center of the stage, before launching into “Mean Mean Man.” As Green Corn Revival laid down rough-and-ready country, with slinky steel guitars and the occasional peppy trumpet, she wailed in her high, hundred proof voice. Armed with yodels, a kick ass pink guitar and stories about dating Elvis, at 72, Jackson is one feisty firecracker in a red fringe blouse. With classics such as “I Gotta Know,” one of the first rockabilly songs ever recorded from 1956, and a killer version of “Heartbreak Hotel,” she oozed timeless rock and roll attitude. But this was no nostalgia set. With a new album produced by Jack White, Jackson is still a force to be reckoned with. During her fantastic take on Amy Winehouse’s “Trouble,” she leaned suggestively against the pole, posing and pointing to folks in the audience as she drew out the lines, “I told ya I was trouble/ You know I’m no good.” I overhead someone behind me declare, “Yeah, she’s still trouble.” I would suggest to anyone that comes to SXSW to try and catch at least one such show to realize, even in the midst of flash in the pan culture, there are artists who endure, and even stay fresh, after decades in the music industry.

Anais Mitchell

Anais Mitchell currently has an ambitious project, Hadestown: A Folk Opera. Based on the Orpheus Tale and set in a post-apocalyptic, depression-era America, folks like Justin Vernon, Greg Brown, and Ani DiFranco play the roles of Orpheus, Hades and Persephone, respectively. But tonight, it was just Mitchell and her guitar. She hushed the intimate crowd at The Ale House, some of whom sat frozen on the floor, causing Mitchell to remark, “I feel like it’s story time in the library.” With the Guinness and Lone Star-soaked mayhem of 6th Street’s rage-a-thon pumping a block away, it was a welcome slice of peace, though her words touched on places that shook you to the core. For example, “Why We Build the Wall,” where Hades asks a series of rhetorical questions to a group of children living in his walled city. “Why do we build the wall?/ We build the wall to keep us free.” Freedom in this case means protection from the starving, poverty-stricken masses outside the gate. It was a bit Orwellian, and at a time where the social problems that confront us are often met with hostile indifference by those that feel entitled to clutch their piece of the pie, it hit a nerve. I couldn’t help but imagine the stark, barbaric wasteland of Cormac McCarthy’s The Road, and woke up this morning unable to escape this image below, sung by Persephone in another tune:

The earth is a bird

On a spit in the sky

How long?

How long?

How long?

Bowerbirds

Danny Barnes :: 03.17.10

You had to feel for Bowerbirds. The crew running the Brooklyn Vegan showcase at Club De Ville took over half an hour to sound check the band, and after the first song, “Silver Clouds” from their stunning album Upper Air, guitarist Phil Moore broke both his pick and one of his strings, causing keyboardist and accordion player Beth Tacular to sigh, “Disasters everywhere.” But the band took it in stride, playing a set that positively glowed, with a warm, inviting folk sound that you just wanted to join under the covers. “House of Diamonds” is Zen philosophy set to music, a reminder that true freedom exists inherently in our mind and once you open yourself to that place, you have the strong heart to let the world inside: “Yes, you own the stars/ You own the thunder/ But you have to share it all.” This is the kind of band that builds you up into something stronger and reminds you, “Hey, shit happens.” It’s all strikes and gutters, ups and downs, and all you can do is abide.

Danny Barnes & Honky

It’s a rare artist that can slip their material into different mediums and have it work just as well. But when you’ve got a set of songs as strong as the ones on Danny Barnes’ latest, Pizza Box, the work speaks for itself. Although he usually plays his solo shows with his banjo and laptop, using Ableton software to loop and create texture, this night Barnes was backed by Honky – Jeff Pinkus (Butthole Surfers) on bass and Justin Collins on drums, later joined by Bobby Rock on guitar. It was an amped-up approach that suited the songs to a tee, as Barnes’ latest work travels from the sincerely touching to the unabashedly badass. At one point, he had us all verklempt during love song “Overdue,” his banjo dancing lightly over Pinkus’ melodic low end. Later, he picked up a flying-V guitar and wailed with a beaming Bobby Rock on “Road,” his tale of a methamphetamine dealer hell bent on destruction. The latter was the perfect lead-up to an end cap of Honky songs. Running on pure diesel, where even the girls on the mud flaps would be giving you the middle finger, Honky took us for a whirlwind ride as they stretched their time to the max. There’s a dirty grind with a rough-and-tumble heart in their sound, and Barnes’ wild guitar freakouts fit perfectly. The grins on their faces and laughter as they would catch each other’s eyes said it all – these cats were having a hell of a party up there, ripping it apart for those of us left standing at the brink of 2 a.m. at The Palm Door. Although he hasn’t called Austin home for awhile, at one point a gentleman in the back cried, “Welcome home, Danny!” A true original who has never fit in anyone’s box, Barnes’ presence is certainly a welcome addition to SXSW this year.

Continue reading for more pics…

Images by: Scott Dudelson

Danger Mouse – Broken Bells at Spinner Party

James Mercer – Broken Bells at Spinner Party

Broken Bells at Spinner Party

The Asteroids Galaxy Tour at Emo’s Annex

Leo Rondeau at Club Deville

Doll and The Kicks at Emo’s Annex

Drake Bell at St. David’s Hall

Freelance Whales at Paste Party

Henry Clay People at Little Radio Party

Hollarado at Canadian BBQ Party

Javelin at Buffalo Billiards

Mando Diao at Mohawk

Will Shef – Okkervil River at Paste Party

Roky Erickson at Paste Party

Suckers at Paste Party

Titus Andronicus at Force Field Party

Trespassers William at Hilton Gardens

Visqueen at Stubb’s

Dawes at Club Deville

Check back tomorrow for more coverage of SXSW 2010…

JamBase | Texas

Go See Live Music!


Justin Vernon & Steve Kimock | 01.21 | NY

Words by: Ryan Dembinsky | Images by: Greg Notch

Justin Vernon & Steve Kimock :: 01.21.10 :: Merkin Concert Hall :: New York, NY

Justin Vernon :: 01.21 :: NY Guitar Fest

A day trip out to the Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria would provide the ideal prerequisite for the New York Guitar Festival’s Silent Films/Live Guitars series. The delightful multimedia museum hosts a particularly relevant hands-on exhibit, whereby visitors pony up to computer editing stations where they are given the opportunity to experiment with well known movie scenes by selecting between various musical selections to set the feeling for the scene.

The lesson comes across, clear as day, that while the scene remains the same, by applying soundtracks from vastly different musical genres, the tone and overall feel of the scene changes dramatically. Interestingly, what each amateur music supervisor quickly discovers is that there really exists no right or wrong in selecting the music for movies. To an extent, it can be said that a chase scene, for example, requires a composition with some degree of tension and up-tempo driving beat, but this can be as effectively conveyed via bluegrass or percussion and sparse keyboards as with gritty, hard-charging rock.

To that end, the New York Guitar Festival presents brilliant programming whereby they invite prominent guitarists to compose entirely original, custom scores to accompany timeless silent films. In essence, this makes for an interesting study in how different musicians – and different minds in general – interpret the feelings that a film evokes.

This particular week of the month-long series at Merkin Concert Hall played host to two virtual polar opposites in Steve Kimock (accompanied by his son John Morgan Kimock on drums) and Justin Vernon of Bon Iver (accompanied by Chris Rosenau, his longtime mentor and bandmate from Volcano Choir). As expected, both duets took wildly different approaches to their scores, but interestingly, both refrained almost entirely from playing the cartoonish, reactionary, sound effect-laden type of playing – a la Batman – that we might expect given the slapstick nature of the subject matter, with Kimock accompanying Buster Keaton‘s Cops and Vernon holding court for Charlie Chaplin‘s One A.M. and Easy Street.

Steve & John Morgan Kimock :: 01.21 :: NY Guitar Fest

To begin the performance, John Schaefer from WNYC’s Soundcheck introduced Steve and John Morgan Kimock, followed by a brief Q&A session with Steve, whereby he elaborated on his approach to the piece. As expected, Kimock professed that he and John Morgan planned to take a more improvisational approach to the subject matter, having pre-composed some general themes and segments but coming at it largely without a net.

The most convincing parts of the Kimock segment came via the bookend music that began and ended the film, where John Morgan played a simple melodica melody alongside a Wes Montgomery-esque jazz piece by Steve that resulted in a mood-setting French jazz theme. For the rest of the roughly 20 minute film, Steve stuck with a chord-based jazz guitar feel, altering his tempos and offering the occasional departure based on plot events, but for the most part John Morgan took care of the action, offering comical crashes, thuds, and thumps to reflect Buster Keaton’s mishaps.

By contrast, Justin Vernon and Chris Rosenau explained that they composed and wrote out their piece, collaborating for over a year on their particular scores. Musically, they took a wholly different route, opening up the first of their two films with Rosenau employing an EBow – a guitarist plaything that utilizes vibrations to emulate the bow of a stringed instrument – to create a snake-charming Middle Eastern theme to set the tone. From there, they kept their heads down and created sonic lasagna, layering heaps of effects, harmonics, looping violin plucks, and sweeping ambient chord progressions. Beautiful.

Rosenau & Vernon :: 01.21 :: NY Guitar Fest

The Vernon and Rosenau performance came across particularly astonishing given the nature of the narrative found in Charlie Chaplin films. One A.M., for example, highlights as Vernon joked, “Something we are both intimately familiar with,” namely struggling to make it to bed after an evening of inebriation. The plotline essentially consists of Chaplin falling down the stairs repeatedly and bumbling endlessly with a Murphy bed. Clearly, the natural temptation would be to cater to these mishaps by including playful trills and comical wah-wahs to acknowledge Chaplin’s repeated failures at achieving the most basic of tasks. Instead, the pair composed a beautiful song that could easily find a home on a Built to Spill or Pavement album. One chase scene did cater entirely to the action, delivering a wonderfully tense and action-packed segment that proclaimed, “You better run, man!”

Despite his reclusive nature since his rapid ascent to indie royalty, Justin Vernon came across as the nicest of guys, offering sincere thanks to everyone who came out to see this unique event. The pair clearly took a lot of enjoyment from working on such a fresh project, noting “how crazy we must have looked when anyone walked in to see us sitting right up in front of the TV with all of our guitar gear watching silent movies.”

Hopefully for Bon Iver fans, material of this ilk makes its way into the catalog – or perhaps that Bon Iver fans seek out some Volcano Choir – as folks who know Vernon more for his strum-oriented folk guitar playing will be amazed by his technical proficiency, specifically his skill with a pedal board.

The joy of the New York Guitar Festival came only in part from seeing two of today’s preeminent musicians in an intimate setting, but more so from taking the opportunity to think about the ways people convey different emotions with music, and ultimately thinking about how you yourself would approach it. This New York Guitar Festival program marks one of the truly fresh ideas in live music today, and frankly, it’s addictive. The post-show conversations with friends that come from seeing music in this context earn the price of admission alone. Visitors one week will no doubt want to return the following week, and the following week, and the week after that.

More information on the New York Guitar Festival, including the remaining schedule, can be found at newyorkguitarfestival.org.

Continue reading for more pics of the New York Guitar Festival…

Steve Kimock

Steve & John Morgan Kimock

Steve & John Morgan Kimock

Chris Rosenau

Chris Rosenau & Justin Vernon

JamBase | Inspired
Go See Live Music!


NY Guitar Festival’s 2nd Week

THE NEW YORK GUITAR FESTIVAL ADDS ARTISTS TO LINEUP

James Blackshaw

The New York Guitar Festival announced two additional performances in its 2010 offerings, both at Le Poisson Rouge. January 26 welcomes an evening of exquisite finger-style guitar featuring music by James Blackshaw, Max Ochs, Ben Hall, and Nick Jonah Davis, while February 2 serves up Marc Ribot’s Ceramic Dog and Skeleton$.

The New York Guitar Festival launched its 10th event with a free opening night performance at World Financial Center’s Winter Garden by Slide guitarist Debashish Bhattacharya. Among India’s most esteemed musicians, Bhattacharya lured the packed house with music both soulfully serene and frenetically ferocious. Catch a glimpse here.


The festival boasts over 30 exceptional guitarists of jazz, classical, rock, traditional, and avant garde styles. Participating venues include Merkin Concert Hall, The 92nd Street Y, The World Financial Center’s Winter Garden, Le Poisson Rouge and Barbes.

Concerts range from an all-day Guitar Marathon interpreting the music of J.S. Bach and his contemporaries, (featuring, among other internationally-famous musicians, the Brazilian Guitar Quartet, Paul O’Dette, Ana Vidovic, Eliot Fisk, Paul Galbraith and Nigel North) to the Hindustani slide guitar music of Bhattacharya.

The festival also has a history of commissioning remarkable original works, and the 2010 season breaks yet more new ground by presenting ten classic silent films (seven by Chaplin, one by Keaton and two by Harry Smith) accompanied by original scores performed live by a spectacularly rich and varied coterie of guitarists: Gyan Riley, Alex de Grassi, Justin Vernon (of Bon Iver), Steve Kimock, David Bromberg and the members of Chicha Libre.

The New York Guitar Festival, a not-for-profit arts organization, was founded in 1999 by musician and producer David Spelman, who serves as its Artistic Director. The Festival’s goal is to broaden the public’s appreciation for the guitar by fostering emerging talent, supporting innovative collaborations among outstanding artists, and commissioning new works. In addition to producing eclectic concerts and radio broadcasts, its Guitar Harvest series of recordings supports outreach programs in New York City public schools.

View the entire festival schedule here.


Dawes: North Hills

By: Dennis Cook

Given the iconic nature of certain albums it’s easy to forget that they were once simply new releases, a fresh sound that refurbishes what we thought old and worn. In 2009 we forget that The Band’s Music From Big Pink and Big Star’s #1 Record were just the initial spark of young men determined to craft music for the ages. An admirable goal, especially within a genre noted for its ephemeral nature, and it usually doesn’t take long when the needle hits the groove for one to figure out who’s the real deal and who’s a chart chasin’ chump. I’ll put money down that North Hills (released September 29 on ATO), the debut from SoCal’s Dawes, is a future classic waiting to happen.

Opener “That Western Skyline” emerges with the patience and split open honesty of Manuel/Dylan’s “Tears of Rage.” Delivered in voices cracked by loss and painful reflection, the song moves deliberately and brilliantly towards a church-like release in its final stretch, where their harmonies grasp at the sky and heart with stirring efficiency. The opening verse paints a scene in a manner that oddly recalls Steely Dan, with Dawes sharing that band’s knack for miniature cinematic touches throughout this debut:

I’d like to let you know
That I do not feel welcome
All the birds, the trees, the falling snow
No, they were not made for me
Oh, and this is where her heart resides
We met in California
She saw the city’s promise reaching through my eyes
And she turned herself away

Part of Dawes appeal is the live-in-your-ears feel of this set. Close your eyes and you can easily conjure up Taylor Goldsmith (guitar, vocals), Tay Straithairn (piano, keys), Griffin Goldsmith (drums) and Wylie Gelber (bass) huddled close in a small room working up these tunes. North Hills is gorgeously and warmly produced by one of Los Angeles secret weapon, Joanthan Wilson, and the sense of music being made by human hands, free from overt manipulation and focused on songwriting and well honed musicianship, permeates the proceedings.

These tunes are infinitely quotable, too, and chock-a-block with everyday wisdom well beyond their age. But shit, some are born with eyes to see and we’re fools to refuse insight when it lands in our laps. A few choice examples:

“You can judge the whole world on the sparkle you think that it lacks/ You can stare into the abyss but it’s staring right back.”

“The only thing that’s scarier than dying is not dying at all.”

“Oh, my dreams did not come true, no, they only came apart.”

“Love is not convenient/ It does not cease at your command.”

“Anybody who makes something new only breaks something else.”

“There’s so many days in a year/ And there’s so many years in my head.”

The music itself matches these sentiments with an emotional candor and an execution that suggests these songs live in their muscles after long hours of woodshedding. Small, inspired touches pepper each track – a well timed uptick in tempo or a heavenly group harmony – and Taylor Goldsmith belts ‘em out in a voice with all the potency of Justin Vernon (Bon Iver) or the Grizzly Bear dudes but with far less affectation. And while they’re sublime when they sink into meditative terrain, they’re equally compelling when they get to shuffling like “When You Call My Name” and “My Girl To Me,” which shimmies like the offspring of Crazy Horse’s “Come On Baby Let’s Go Downtown,” or burning things down with splendid heaviness on closer “Peace In The Valley.”

Dawes joins the small but sweet ranks of Everest, The Moondoggies, These United States, Maplewood and a handful of other new bands returning to the aesthetics and craftsmanship of the ’60s/’70s artists that have endured, evolved and enriched the world with their work. What sets this bunch apart is their refusal to be copyists. Yes, ancestors float in Dawes’ notes. There’s no denying the strong echoes of the Eagles, Poco, Neil Young, et al. but what Dawes has wrought continues the line so the arrow points to the future instead of the past. Like their forebears, this music addresses the things that endure, actively probing around our lives of quiet desperation and endless dreaming. Dawes gets how most of us live bittersweet existences and has crafted an album of stunning resonance, strong feeling and unforced wisdom that’s also a joy to listen to.

JamBase | Hill Country
Go See Live Music!


Steve Kimock Crazy Tour:
Kimock Designs New Guitar

Steve Kimock Crazy Engine Hits The Road This Fall

Kimock To Join The Chris Berry Trio For Select Dates


Steve Kimock Crazy Engine

Steve Kimock is a busy guy. In between a seemingly endless touring schedule, Kimock has somehow managed to design an electric guitar with legendary guitar-smith Scott Walker, compose a score to a 1920′s silent film, plan for a three-show stint with world music guru Chris Berry and still muster enough strength to cross the country with the Crazy Engine.

Starting in 2007, Scott Walker and Steve Kimock began discussing the ergonomics of a perfect guitar. How it sits in the lap, how it hangs on the shoulder, how the strings present themselves, etc. The guitar player and craftsman came up with a design that offers both a unique look and sound. For more info on this collaborative guitar creation visit scottwalkerguitars.com.

As the New York Guitar Festival celebrates its 10th anniversary this January, a series of special shows at Manhattan’s Merkin Concert Hall on Thursday nights will showcase an artist or ensemble scoring an early classic film. On January 21, the festival will present Kimock playing to Buster Keaton’s classic silent film Cops. That same night, Bon Iver‘s Justin Vernon will provide the sonic backdrop to Charlie Chaplin’s The Gold Rush.

As an artist known to bring together many genres, Kimock will play a string of dates in September with the Chris Berry Trio. The Trio will also feature Michael Kang (The String Cheese Incident) and drum and bass from the Brazilian Girls.

Kimock Dates With Chris Berry Trio:
09/10/09 Thu Le Posson Rouge New York City, NY
09/11/09 Fri Pearl Street North Hampton, Ma
09/12/09 Sat Mexicali Live Teaneck, NJ

Steve Kimock Crazy Engine Tour Dates:
08/14/09 Fri The Stone Pony Asbury Park, NJ

08/15/09 Sat Bears Picnic Laurelton, PA

10/01/09 Thu Mexicali Live Teaneck, NJ

10/02/09 Fri Recher Theatre Towson, MD

10/03/09 Sat Canal Club Richmond, VA

10/09/09 Fri Riverview Music Festival South Elgin, IL

10/23/09 Fri Camp Zoe Salem, MO

10/24/09 Sat Granada Theater Lawrence, KS

10/27/09 Tue Humboldt Brews Arcata, CA

10/28/09 Wed El Rey Theater Chico, CA

10/29/09 Thu Stillwater Ashland, OR

10/30/09 Fri McDonald Theatre Eugene, OR

10/31/09 Sat Aladdin Theater Portland, OR

11/06/09 Fri Bearsville Theater Woodstock, NY

11/08/09 Sun Fairfield Theatre Stage One Fairfield, CT

11/11/09 Wed Carrboro Arts Center Carrboro, NC

11/13/09 Fri The Pour House Charleston, SC

11/14/09 Sat Bear Creek Music and Arts Festival Live Oak, FL

11/16/09 Mon Visulite Theatre Charlotte, NC

11/17/09 Tue Smith’s Olde Bar Atlanta, GA

11/19/09 Thu The Rev Room Little Rock, AR

11/20/09 Fri George’s Majestic Fayetteville, AR

11/21/09 Sat George’s Majestic Fayetteville, AR

12/18/09 Fri The Fillmore San Francisco, CA

12/19/09 Sat Crystal Bay Club Casino Crystal Bay, NV

01/03/10 Sun Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/04/10 Mon Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/05/10 Tue Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/06/10 Wed Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/07/10 Thu Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/08/10 Fri Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

For more on Steve Kimock check our recent feature/interview here.