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Posts Tagged ‘Keith’

First Look: Keith Urban Nicole Kidman Baby Faith Margaret

Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban aren’t the types to flash their babies’ faces on the cover of celebrity weeklies – so this super-cute, but grainy image, is all we’re gonna see of their new daughter Faith Margaret for now. Proud dad Keith showed off a cellphone snap of his baby girl to camera crews during [...]

Alec Baldwin To Replace Keith Olbermann On MSNBC?

Is Alec Baldwin the next face of MSNBC? Execs at the left-leaning cable network have reportedly expressed interest in signing lifelong liberal Alec Baldwin — the Emmy-winning star of NBC’s 30 Rock — to a deal to host his own political talk show on the cable network, replacing controversial commentator Keith Olbermann, who abruptly announced [...]

Keith Olbermann For Senate? Online Campaign Wants Olbermann To Replace Lieberman As Connecticut Senator

Senator Keith Olbermann? An online campaign calling for former MSNBC political pundit Keith Olbermann to take over Joe Lieberman’s soon-to-be vacated Connecticut Senate seat is gaining momentum on the Interwebs. On Friday, Olbermann abruptly quit his popular cable series, Countdown with Keith Olbermann, just a month after he was briefly suspended for making political contributions. [...]

Keith Olbermann Leaving MSNBC — “Countdown With Keith Olbermann” Host Quits After Seven Years

Olbermann Out! On Friday, controversial, left-leaning newsman Keith Olbermann signed off as host of MSNBC’s Countdown with Keith Olbermann for the final time. Olbermann is leaving the cable network — effective immediately. The flame-tempered Olbermann had hosted Countdown since 2003. Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy In a statement [...]

Kidman nicknames daughter ‘raccoon’

Nicole KidmanAustralian actress Nicole Kidman and husband Keith Urban have nicknamed their daughter Sunday Rose “the raccoon”. The “Rabbit Hole” actress and her country singer husband are amused by the inquisitive two-year-old Sunday Rose’s habit of stopping to investigate everything she sees. But the couple don’t think she will always be so curious about her surroundings, [...]

Keith Urban Nicole Kidman Welcome Baby Daughter Faith Via Surrogate

Country star Keith Urban and his Oscar-winning wife Nicole Kidman are parents again in a surrogacy plot that may have been the best-kept secret in Tinseltown. The couple quietly used an anonymous surrogate, who gave birth to Faith Margaret Urban — Keith and Nicole’s biological daughter — at Centennial Medical Center in Nashville on Dec. [...]

OFF! | NYC | Review

By: Ron Hart

OFF! :: 10.22.10 :: Generation Records :: New York, NY


OFF!’s debut, The First Four EPs, is out digitally worldwide. iTunes has the exclusive bonus track “Zero Hour” and eMusic has the exclusive bonus track “Sexy Capitalists.” The vinyl box set and cassette versions of The First Four EPs will be released on December 14th.

OFF! by Dan Monick

For a guy who collects vinyl, having to wait in line for a show in the basement of one of your favorite record shops instead of thumbing through the racks is a practice in restraint no crate digger worth his weight in wax should be required to endure. But when the concert you are waiting to see is an intimate performance from former Black Flag/Circle Jerks frontman Keith Morris’ new California punkcore supergroup OFF!, it is well worth the torture.

Formed by Morris in 2009 and rounded out by guitarist Dimitri Coats of Burning Brides, Rocket from the Crypt drummer Mario Rubalcaba and Steven McDonald of Red Kross fame on bass guitar, the band is a total throwback to the days when punk rock was a bloodsport, a time that Morris fondly recalled several times over the course of OFF!’s half-hour set.

In fact, right when we walked down the steps of Generation Records’ nugget-rich used section that comprises the basement, Morris was in the middle of a yarn about his old bandmate in Black Flag, Robo, making extra money in the old days allegedly digging ditches for a snuff film operation before OFF! tore into an uncompromising mini-set that featured select tunes from the band’s excellently brief 7-inch box set The First Four EPs. As records by Iggy Pop, AC/DC, David Bowie and The Who adorned the wall behind them, the quartet played loud, fast and fearless, tearing through minute-long songs like “Darkness,” “Killing Away” and “Fuck People” with the tenacity of a far younger band, interspersed with Morris musing on everything from the capitalist practices of his former peers on the L.A. scene like the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Gwen Stefani to meeting guitarist McDonald when he was just an 11-year-old Black Flag fan who used to sneak into shows.

However, the most poignant moment of the evening came when Morris performed a stirring, ferocious tribute to his old pal, the late Jeffrey Lee Pierce of western punk icons The Gun Club, and with whom Keith was in the early stages of working on a musical collaboration before Pierce tragically succumbed to a brain hemorrhage in 1996.

And nothing was cooler than seeing this whole thing go down at Generation, a place where so many NYC punk fans discovered the dreadlocked trail of inspiration, influence and energy Keith Morris has blazed for over 30 years and continues to do so as a 55-year-old creating some of the most incendiary sounds of the 21st century.

JamBase | Pissed Off
Go See Live Music!


Keith Olbermann vs. Bristol Palin

You can call Bristol Palin a bad dancer or even a bad influence on young girls, but call the former teen mom the “Worst Person in the World” and all Hell breaks loose. Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy Palin is striking back against the outspokenly-liberal MSNBC host Keith [...]

The English language has been Americanised, complains Penelope Keith

The Good Life star Penelope Keith is furious about the poor use of the English language in modern Britain. The actress believes our lives are diminished by poor elocution and grammar, reports the Telegraph. Real conversation has been replaced by text messages and social networking websites and television pampers to our thirst for public humiliation, [...]

Keith Richards attacks Swedish journo in Paris

Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards allegedly attacked a Swedish journalist during an interview in Paris. Spinner reported that Richards was furious over Markus Larsson, a music critic, who writes in Swedish paper Aftonbladet and gave Stones a bad rating in 2007. A few minutes into their interview, which was part of a publicity tour for [...]

Keith Olbermann Returns To MSNBC Tuesday

So much for a lengthy punishment! MSNBC Countdown host Keith Olbermann will be back in the anchor’s chair on Tuesday night just days after the politico was placed on indefinite suspension (without pay, so there) for making donations to Democratic political campaigns ahead of last week’s midterm elections. The outspoken liberal was benched Friday, shortly [...]

Keith Olbermann Suspended From MSNBC Over Political Donations

MSNBC anchor Keith Olbermann has been suspended indefinitely — without pay — after the network learned that the journalist made contributions the the political campaigns of three Democratic candidates, NBC President Phil Griffin announced on Friday. “I became aware of Keith’s political contributions late last night. Mindful of NBC News policy and standards, I have [...]

Keith Richards Dropped From “Pirates Of the Caribbean IV?”

When Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides, the fourth instalment in Disney’s wildly-popular Pirates Of The Caribbean franchise, hits theaters next summer, it may be missing one noteworthy castmember — Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards. We hear Richards has been axed from the hotly-awaited family flick after bosses at The Mouse took offense with [...]

The String Cheese Incident: Halloween Thoughts

By: Dennis Cook

Tickets for SCI’s October 29th are still available but Ticketmaster currently experiencing problems with date. Tickets for the October 30th show can be purchased here.

Moseley as SRV :: Halloween ’02
By Todd Radunsky

The String Cheese Incident hasn’t played a Halloween run since 2006 in Las Vegas. Hunger for a fresh All Hallows’ Eve Incident amongst their faithful, ever-colorful flock has been strong for years, and the band will soon feed that appetite on October 29-30 at the fabled Hampton Coliseum in Hampton, VA.

We snagged bassist-singer Keith Moseley to discuss the upcoming show, what the holiday means to SCI, the band’s new archival Rhythm of the Road series, and the group’s future plans.

JamBase: When did Halloween become such a big deal with you guys?

Keith: I think probably from the beginning we’ve always tried to make Halloween something special with the idea of being costumed and throwing in a bunch of fun cover tunes we don’t ordinarily do. We’ve often run with a theme and had special guests, but it’s always been about getting a little wacky and doing something special for the fans on Halloween.

JamBase: Is it fun for you to get into costume? It’s not something one does at most gigs.

Keith: We love it! It’s a chance to get silly and break from the norm. I’m thinking back to the year we did the Shrine in L.A. and did the dead rock star theme. I did Stevie Ray Vaughan and Kang did Hendrix and Travis was Freddie Mercury. When else do you get Travis up front with fake buck teeth and tights singing Freddie Mercury? It’s always a blast to do that kind of thing.

Travis as Freddie :: Halloween ’02
By Todd Radunsky

Has it become a challenge at this point to keep coming up with new angles for Halloween?

A little bit but there’s a huge library of fun tunes to cover and we’re pulling in some fun ones this time for sure. It’s always fun to prepare a special event and we don’t seem to have run out of creative ideas yet. We still have some fresh ones this year!

What is it like to preside over a giant size event like this, with enormous balloons and acrobats and so on? What is it like to be onstage making music while all this wildness goes off around you?

It’s super cool. We get to be the party hosts for the coolest gig in town, wherever we are, be it a Halloween show at Hampton or a New Year’s event. It’s pretty amazing to get to host that sort of event and know we’re blowing peoples’ minds over & over again with a fantastic show.

What’s the level of fan involvement in these sorts of shows? There’s no question that String Cheese has one of the most loyal, engaged fan bases out there.

We do, and Halloween, as far as fan involvement, has traditionally been that they come dressed. Put on your funnest costume and be ready to have a good time. A huge majority of the fans in attendance are in costume, so it becomes a larger than life event. At Hampton to have 10-12 thousand people in costume plus what the band throws out there, well, you can’t go wrong. It’s a guaranteed good time.

I’ve talked to a lot of musicians about this and the consensus is that there’s something different about playing to a costumed crowd. You can’t do your normal show when there are ghouls and devils and fairies riding the rail.

It just ups the fun factor. The crowd gets into a headspace where they want the band to be different and take chances. At least for us, they definitely expect something different and maybe silly or risky from the band. And we won’t disappoint. We’re not afraid to laugh at ourselves on Halloween. We’re all about high entertainment value.

Is it freeing as a musician to have a space like this, where you can think, “Well, I might fall on my face but I’ve always wanted to try this musical idea.”

Sure. For us, on Halloween anything goes. We’ve covered Nirvana to Queen to Phish to The Doors. It definitely ups the fun for everyone.

SCI Halloween Show :: Vegas ’05 :: by John Smirtic

How is it playing as String Cheese now that you’re only performing together a handful of times each year as compared to years & years of being road dogs?

It’s kind of fresh and exciting to have taken a break from the Cheese and then come back to prepare for Red Rocks and the Horning’s run. And we’ve been in rehearsal for a couple weeks now for the Halloween run. It feels great because nobody’s burnt out. At this point, we’ve reestablished a large part of our catalog from the tunes we played this summer and we’re reeling in even more of the tunes for this Halloween run, which will feature even more tunes we didn’t this past summer. So, it’s been great to feel we have a handle back on a lot of the catalog. And that coupled with the new tunes for Halloween, it just feels really fresh and exciting.

From what footage I’ve seen of the Cheese’s recent performances, I’ve picked up on a palpable sense of brotherhood onstage when you’re together now. There’s something going on in the way you look at each other, and you all seem very grateful that this experiment you started a long time ago is still going.

Absolutely. There’s nothing like taking some time off to give you some perspective on what you have. We’ve gotten out of the grind of being out on the road and playing a 100-plus shows a year and being away from our families. Now we’re at a really unique place where we’re able to just do select events with lots of prep time for the shows. I think we do look at each other onstage like, “Wow, I’m really excited to be part of this, to be part of such a great scene and great band.” Since December ’93 when we first started doing this, we do look back and think, “Wow, look how far we’ve come. Isn’t a treat to still be together and hosting events like this.”

It’s gotta be a kick in the ass to think you’re staring down 20 years of this thing.

It really is cool. In the beginning we only dreamed it would be something like this, that it’d be a career that would span this many years, this many shows and so many friendships along the way and incredible memories. It’s something you dream for and to realize it makes us feel super thankful and appreciative of what we’ve got.

The flipside of that is we absolutely know we have to come out and deliver now. There’s absolutely no room to play a bad show or have an off night. We know that by only doing select dates we have to come out and hit it out of the park every night. So, we’re trying our best to do that.

Kang Halloween Show :: Vegas ’05
By John Smirtic

This situation also provides the band a chance to reflect on what’s come before. I just listened to the first installment of the new Rhythm of the Road series. It’s gotta be fun to look back and decide what shows you want to represent you as a band.

Right, right. That one’s the Tabernacle from Atlanta in 2000, and that was has always been a fan favorite in terms of older shows. I had heard that and when I went back and listened to it as we mixed and mastered it, I realized there was a LOT of energy in that show. I can see why it is a fan favorite and I’m proud to put it out. That was 2000 and we were breaking into some bigger venues. My wife Kristen and I had just had our first kid, and that was her first show coming back after retiring from being the merch lady. So, I was really excited to see her again. We had our buddy Tony Furtado sitting in. We’ve been friends with Tony forever and he can really bring it! I think there’s a lot of obvious enthusiasm and energy to that show and I think people are gonna love having a chance to revisit it.

What do you see as the studio future for the band? I think the past couple studio albums by the Cheese are easily your best thus far.

I do, too. I think we’re all just maturing as musicians and songwriters, so the last couple albums have been really satisfying for us. I’m hopeful we’ll be able to get into the studio in 2011 and do a release. We do have new material. We featured a couple new songs this summer and we’ll continue to work new material into the repertoire. We’re all excited about bringing in new material and working it up.

You guys have a real nose for good material lately, the kind of tunes you’ll be able to play with and evolve over a long period of time.

That’s just part of the maturation process. When you’ve been doing it as long as we have you naturally begin to filter things out and you learn what you like and don’t like and maybe get more of an ear for a crafty pop hook or what’s likely to make a great jam. It’s exciting to bring new stuff in and see what the band do with it.

The String Cheese Incident Tour Dates :: The String Cheese Incident News :: The String Cheese Incident Concert Reviews

JamBase | Creepin’ ‘Round
Go See Live Music!


The String Cheese Incident: Halloween Thoughts

By: Dennis Cook

Tickets for SCI’s October 29th are still available but Ticketmaster currently experiencing problems with date. Tickets for the October 30th show can be purchased here.

Moseley as SRV :: Halloween ’02
By Todd Radunsky

The String Cheese Incident hasn’t played a Halloween run since 2006 in Las Vegas. Hunger for a fresh All Hallows’ Eve Incident amongst their faithful, ever-colorful flock has been strong for years, and the band will soon feed that appetite on October 29-30 at the fabled Hampton Coliseum in Hampton, VA.

We snagged bassist-singer Keith Moseley to discuss the upcoming show, what the holiday means to SCI, the band’s new archival Rhythm of the Road series, and the group’s future plans.

JamBase: When did Halloween become such a big deal with you guys?

Keith: I think probably from the beginning we’ve always tried to make Halloween something special with the idea of being costumed and throwing in a bunch of fun cover tunes we don’t ordinarily do. We’ve often run with a theme and had special guests, but it’s always been about getting a little wacky and doing something special for the fans on Halloween.

JamBase: Is it fun for you to get into costume? It’s not something one does at most gigs.

Keith: We love it! It’s a chance to get silly and break from the norm. I’m thinking back to the year we did the Shrine in L.A. and did the dead rock star theme. I did Stevie Ray Vaughan and Kang did Hendrix and Travis was Freddie Mercury. When else do you get Travis up front with fake buck teeth and tights singing Freddie Mercury? It’s always a blast to do that kind of thing.

Travis as Freddie :: Halloween ’02
By Todd Radunsky

Has it become a challenge at this point to keep coming up with new angles for Halloween?

A little bit but there’s a huge library of fun tunes to cover and we’re pulling in some fun ones this time for sure. It’s always fun to prepare a special event and we don’t seem to have run out of creative ideas yet. We still have some fresh ones this year!

What is it like to preside over a giant size event like this, with enormous balloons and acrobats and so on? What is it like to be onstage making music while all this wildness goes off around you?

It’s super cool. We get to be the party hosts for the coolest gig in town, wherever we are, be it a Halloween show at Hampton or a New Year’s event. It’s pretty amazing to get to host that sort of event and know we’re blowing peoples’ minds over & over again with a fantastic show.

What’s the level of fan involvement in these sorts of shows? There’s no question that String Cheese has one of the most loyal, engaged fan bases out there.

We do, and Halloween, as far as fan involvement, has traditionally been that they come dressed. Put on your funnest costume and be ready to have a good time. A huge majority of the fans in attendance are in costume, so it becomes a larger than life event. At Hampton to have 10-12 thousand people in costume plus what the band throws out there, well, you can’t go wrong. It’s a guaranteed good time.

I’ve talked to a lot of musicians about this and the consensus is that there’s something different about playing to a costumed crowd. You can’t do your normal show when there are ghouls and devils and fairies riding the rail.

It just ups the fun factor. The crowd gets into a headspace where they want the band to be different and take chances. At least for us, they definitely expect something different and maybe silly or risky from the band. And we won’t disappoint. We’re not afraid to laugh at ourselves on Halloween. We’re all about high entertainment value.

Is it freeing as a musician to have a space like this, where you can think, “Well, I might fall on my face but I’ve always wanted to try this musical idea.”

Sure. For us, on Halloween anything goes. We’ve covered Nirvana to Queen to Phish to The Doors. It definitely ups the fun for everyone.

SCI Halloween Show :: Vegas ’05 :: by John Smirtic

How is it playing as String Cheese now that you’re only performing together a handful of times each year as compared to years & years of being road dogs?

It’s kind of fresh and exciting to have taken a break from the Cheese and then come back to prepare for Red Rocks and the Horning’s run. And we’ve been in rehearsal for a couple weeks now for the Halloween run. It feels great because nobody’s burnt out. At this point, we’ve reestablished a large part of our catalog from the tunes we played this summer and we’re reeling in even more of the tunes for this Halloween run, which will feature even more tunes we didn’t this past summer. So, it’s been great to feel we have a handle back on a lot of the catalog. And that coupled with the new tunes for Halloween, it just feels really fresh and exciting.

From what footage I’ve seen of the Cheese’s recent performances, I’ve picked up on a palpable sense of brotherhood onstage when you’re together now. There’s something going on in the way you look at each other, and you all seem very grateful that this experiment you started a long time ago is still going.

Absolutely. There’s nothing like taking some time off to give you some perspective on what you have. We’ve gotten out of the grind of being out on the road and playing a 100-plus shows a year and being away from our families. Now we’re at a really unique place where we’re able to just do select events with lots of prep time for the shows. I think we do look at each other onstage like, “Wow, I’m really excited to be part of this, to be part of such a great scene and great band.” Since December ’93 when we first started doing this, we do look back and think, “Wow, look how far we’ve come. Isn’t a treat to still be together and hosting events like this.”

It’s gotta be a kick in the ass to think you’re staring down 20 years of this thing.

It really is cool. In the beginning we only dreamed it would be something like this, that it’d be a career that would span this many years, this many shows and so many friendships along the way and incredible memories. It’s something you dream for and to realize it makes us feel super thankful and appreciative of what we’ve got.

The flipside of that is we absolutely know we have to come out and deliver now. There’s absolutely no room to play a bad show or have an off night. We know that by only doing select dates we have to come out and hit it out of the park every night. So, we’re trying our best to do that.

Kang Halloween Show :: Vegas ’05
By John Smirtic

This situation also provides the band a chance to reflect on what’s come before. I just listened to the first installment of the new Rhythm of the Road series. It’s gotta be fun to look back and decide what shows you want to represent you as a band.

Right, right. That one’s the Tabernacle from Atlanta in 2000, and that was has always been a fan favorite in terms of older shows. I had heard that and when I went back and listened to it as we mixed and mastered it, I realized there was a LOT of energy in that show. I can see why it is a fan favorite and I’m proud to put it out. That was 2000 and we were breaking into some bigger venues. My wife Kristen and I had just had our first kid, and that was her first show coming back after retiring from being the merch lady. So, I was really excited to see her again. We had our buddy Tony Furtado sitting in. We’ve been friends with Tony forever and he can really bring it! I think there’s a lot of obvious enthusiasm and energy to that show and I think people are gonna love having a chance to revisit it.

What do you see as the studio future for the band? I think the past couple studio albums by the Cheese are easily your best thus far.

I do, too. I think we’re all just maturing as musicians and songwriters, so the last couple albums have been really satisfying for us. I’m hopeful we’ll be able to get into the studio in 2011 and do a release. We do have new material. We featured a couple new songs this summer and we’ll continue to work new material into the repertoire. We’re all excited about bringing in new material and working it up.

You guys have a real nose for good material lately, the kind of tunes you’ll be able to play with and evolve over a long period of time.

That’s just part of the maturation process. When you’ve been doing it as long as we have you naturally begin to filter things out and you learn what you like and don’t like and maybe get more of an ear for a crafty pop hook or what’s likely to make a great jam. It’s exciting to bring new stuff in and see what the band do with it.

The String Cheese Incident Tour Dates :: The String Cheese Incident News :: The String Cheese Incident Concert Reviews

JamBase | Creepin’ ‘Round
Go See Live Music!


The String Cheese Incident: Halloween Thoughts

By: Dennis Cook

Tickets for SCI’s October 29th are available here. Tickets for the October 30th show can be purchased here.

Moseley as SRV :: Halloween ’02
By Todd Radunsky

The String Cheese Incident hasn’t played a Halloween run since 2006 in Las Vegas. Hunger for a fresh All Hallows’ Eve Incident amongst their faithful, ever-colorful flock has been strong for years, and the band will soon feed that appetite on October 29-30 at the fabled Hampton Coliseum in Hampton, VA.

We snagged bassist-singer Keith Moseley to discuss the upcoming show, what the holiday means to SCI, the band’s new archival Rhythm of the Road series, and the group’s future plans.

JamBase: When did Halloween become such a big deal with you guys?

Keith: I think probably from the beginning we’ve always tried to make Halloween something special with the idea of being costumed and throwing in a bunch of fun cover tunes we don’t ordinarily do. We’ve often run with a theme and had special guests, but it’s always been about getting a little wacky and doing something special for the fans on Halloween.

JamBase: Is it fun for you to get into costume? It’s not something one does at most gigs.

Keith: We love it! It’s a chance to get silly and break from the norm. I’m thinking back to the year we did the Shrine in L.A. and did the dead rock star theme. I did Stevie Ray Vaughan and Kang did Hendrix and Travis was Freddie Mercury. When else do you get Travis up front with fake buck teeth and tights singing Freddie Mercury? It’s always a blast to do that kind of thing.

Travis as Freddie :: Halloween ’02
By Todd Radunsky

Has it become a challenge at this point to keep coming up with new angles for Halloween?

A little bit but there’s a huge library of fun tunes to cover and we’re pulling in some fun ones this time for sure. It’s always fun to prepare a special event and we don’t seem to have run out of creative ideas yet. We still have some fresh ones this year!

What is it like to preside over a giant size event like this, with enormous balloons and acrobats and so on? What is it like to be onstage making music while all this wildness goes off around you?

It’s super cool. We get to be the party hosts for the coolest gig in town, wherever we are, be it a Halloween show at Hampton or a New Year’s event. It’s pretty amazing to get to host that sort of event and know we’re blowing peoples’ minds over & over again with a fantastic show.

What’s the level of fan involvement in these sorts of shows? There’s no question that String Cheese has one of the most loyal, engaged fan bases out there.

We do, and Halloween, as far as fan involvement, has traditionally been that they come dressed. Put on your funnest costume and be ready to have a good time. A huge majority of the fans in attendance are in costume, so it becomes a larger than life event. At Hampton to have 10-12 thousand people in costume plus what the band throws out there, well, you can’t go wrong. It’s a guaranteed good time.

I’ve talked to a lot of musicians about this and the consensus is that there’s something different about playing to a costumed crowd. You can’t do your normal show when there are ghouls and devils and fairies riding the rail.

It just ups the fun factor. The crowd gets into a headspace where they want the band to be different and take chances. At least for us, they definitely expect something different and maybe silly or risky from the band. And we won’t disappoint. We’re not afraid to laugh at ourselves on Halloween. We’re all about high entertainment value.

Is it freeing as a musician to have a space like this, where you can think, “Well, I might fall on my face but I’ve always wanted to try this musical idea.”

Sure. For us, on Halloween anything goes. We’ve covered Nirvana to Queen to Phish to The Doors. It definitely ups the fun for everyone.

SCI Halloween Show :: Vegas ’05 :: by John Smirtic

How is it playing as String Cheese now that you’re only performing together a handful of times each year as compared to years & years of being road dogs?

It’s kind of fresh and exciting to have taken a break from the Cheese and then come back to prepare for Red Rocks and the Horning’s run. And we’ve been in rehearsal for a couple weeks now for the Halloween run. It feels great because nobody’s burnt out. At this point, we’ve reestablished a large part of our catalog from the tunes we played this summer and we’re reeling in even more of the tunes for this Halloween run, which will feature even more tunes we didn’t this past summer. So, it’s been great to feel we have a handle back on a lot of the catalog. And that coupled with the new tunes for Halloween, it just feels really fresh and exciting.

From what footage I’ve seen of the Cheese’s recent performances, I’ve picked up on a palpable sense of brotherhood onstage when you’re together now. There’s something going on in the way you look at each other, and you all seem very grateful that this experiment you started a long time ago is still going.

Absolutely. There’s nothing like taking some time off to give you some perspective on what you have. We’ve gotten out of the grind of being out on the road and playing a 100-plus shows a year and being away from our families. Now we’re at a really unique place where we’re able to just do select events with lots of prep time for the shows. I think we do look at each other onstage like, “Wow, I’m really excited to be part of this, to be part of such a great scene and great band.” Since December ’93 when we first started doing this, we do look back and think, “Wow, look how far we’ve come. Isn’t a treat to still be together and hosting events like this.”

It’s gotta be a kick in the ass to think you’re staring down 20 years of this thing.

It really is cool. In the beginning we only dreamed it would be something like this, that it’d be a career that would span this many years, this many shows and so many friendships along the way and incredible memories. It’s something you dream for and to realize it makes us feel super thankful and appreciative of what we’ve got.

The flipside of that is we absolutely know we have to come out and deliver now. There’s absolutely no room to play a bad show or have an off night. We know that by only doing select dates we have to come out and hit it out of the park every night. So, we’re trying our best to do that.

Kang Halloween Show :: Vegas ’05
By John Smirtic

This situation also provides the band a chance to reflect on what’s come before. I just listened to the first installment of the new Rhythm of the Road series. It’s gotta be fun to look back and decide what shows you want to represent you as a band.

Right, right. That one’s the Tabernacle from Atlanta in 2000, and that was has always been a fan favorite in terms of older shows. I had heard that and when I went back and listened to it as we mixed and mastered it, I realized there was a LOT of energy in that show. I can see why it is a fan favorite and I’m proud to put it out. That was 2000 and we were breaking into some bigger venues. My wife Kristen and I had just had our first kid, and that was her first show coming back after retiring from being the merch lady. So, I was really excited to see her again. We had our buddy Tony Furtado sitting in. We’ve been friends with Tony forever and he can really bring it! I think there’s a lot of obvious enthusiasm and energy to that show and I think people are gonna love having a chance to revisit it.

What do you see as the studio future for the band? I think the past couple studio albums by the Cheese are easily your best thus far.

I do, too. I think we’re all just maturing as musicians and songwriters, so the last couple albums have been really satisfying for us. I’m hopeful we’ll be able to get into the studio in 2011 and do a release. We do have new material. We featured a couple new songs this summer and we’ll continue to work new material into the repertoire. We’re all excited about bringing in new material and working it up.

You guys have a real nose for good material lately, the kind of tunes you’ll be able to play with and evolve over a long period of time.

That’s just part of the maturation process. When you’ve been doing it as long as we have you naturally begin to filter things out and you learn what you like and don’t like and maybe get more of an ear for a crafty pop hook or what’s likely to make a great jam. It’s exciting to bring new stuff in and see what the band do with it.

The String Cheese Incident Tour Dates :: The String Cheese Incident News :: The String Cheese Incident Concert Reviews

JamBase | Creepin’ ‘Round
Go See Live Music!


The String Cheese Incident: Halloween Thoughts

By: Dennis Cook

Tickets for SCI’s October 29th are still available but Ticketmaster currently experiencing problems with date. Tickets for the October 30th show can be purchased here.

Moseley as SRV :: Halloween ’02
By Todd Radunsky

The String Cheese Incident hasn’t played a Halloween run since 2006 in Las Vegas. Hunger for a fresh All Hallows’ Eve Incident amongst their faithful, ever-colorful flock has been strong for years, and the band will soon feed that appetite on October 29-30 at the fabled Hampton Coliseum in Hampton, VA.

We snagged bassist-singer Keith Moseley to discuss the upcoming show, what the holiday means to SCI, the band’s new archival Rhythm of the Road series, and the group’s future plans.

JamBase: When did Halloween become such a big deal with you guys?

Keith: I think probably from the beginning we’ve always tried to make Halloween something special with the idea of being costumed and throwing in a bunch of fun cover tunes we don’t ordinarily do. We’ve often run with a theme and had special guests, but it’s always been about getting a little wacky and doing something special for the fans on Halloween.

JamBase: Is it fun for you to get into costume? It’s not something one does at most gigs.

Keith: We love it! It’s a chance to get silly and break from the norm. I’m thinking back to the year we did the Shrine in L.A. and did the dead rock star theme. I did Stevie Ray Vaughan and Kang did Hendrix and Travis was Freddie Mercury. When else do you get Travis up front with fake buck teeth and tights singing Freddie Mercury? It’s always a blast to do that kind of thing.

Travis as Freddie :: Halloween ’02
By Todd Radunsky

Has it become a challenge at this point to keep coming up with new angles for Halloween?

A little bit but there’s a huge library of fun tunes to cover and we’re pulling in some fun ones this time for sure. It’s always fun to prepare a special event and we don’t seem to have run out of creative ideas yet. We still have some fresh ones this year!

What is it like to preside over a giant size event like this, with enormous balloons and acrobats and so on? What is it like to be onstage making music while all this wildness goes off around you?

It’s super cool. We get to be the party hosts for the coolest gig in town, wherever we are, be it a Halloween show at Hampton or a New Year’s event. It’s pretty amazing to get to host that sort of event and know we’re blowing peoples’ minds over & over again with a fantastic show.

What’s the level of fan involvement in these sorts of shows? There’s no question that String Cheese has one of the most loyal, engaged fan bases out there.

We do, and Halloween, as far as fan involvement, has traditionally been that they come dressed. Put on your funnest costume and be ready to have a good time. A huge majority of the fans in attendance are in costume, so it becomes a larger than life event. At Hampton to have 10-12 thousand people in costume plus what the band throws out there, well, you can’t go wrong. It’s a guaranteed good time.

I’ve talked to a lot of musicians about this and the consensus is that there’s something different about playing to a costumed crowd. You can’t do your normal show when there are ghouls and devils and fairies riding the rail.

It just ups the fun factor. The crowd gets into a headspace where they want the band to be different and take chances. At least for us, they definitely expect something different and maybe silly or risky from the band. And we won’t disappoint. We’re not afraid to laugh at ourselves on Halloween. We’re all about high entertainment value.

Is it freeing as a musician to have a space like this, where you can think, “Well, I might fall on my face but I’ve always wanted to try this musical idea.”

Sure. For us, on Halloween anything goes. We’ve covered Nirvana to Queen to Phish to The Doors. It definitely ups the fun for everyone.

SCI Halloween Show :: Vegas ’05 :: by John Smirtic

How is it playing as String Cheese now that you’re only performing together a handful of times each year as compared to years & years of being road dogs?

It’s kind of fresh and exciting to have taken a break from the Cheese and then come back to prepare for Red Rocks and the Horning’s run. And we’ve been in rehearsal for a couple weeks now for the Halloween run. It feels great because nobody’s burnt out. At this point, we’ve reestablished a large part of our catalog from the tunes we played this summer and we’re reeling in even more of the tunes for this Halloween run, which will feature even more tunes we didn’t this past summer. So, it’s been great to feel we have a handle back on a lot of the catalog. And that coupled with the new tunes for Halloween, it just feels really fresh and exciting.

From what footage I’ve seen of the Cheese’s recent performances, I’ve picked up on a palpable sense of brotherhood onstage when you’re together now. There’s something going on in the way you look at each other, and you all seem very grateful that this experiment you started a long time ago is still going.

Absolutely. There’s nothing like taking some time off to give you some perspective on what you have. We’ve gotten out of the grind of being out on the road and playing a 100-plus shows a year and being away from our families. Now we’re at a really unique place where we’re able to just do select events with lots of prep time for the shows. I think we do look at each other onstage like, “Wow, I’m really excited to be part of this, to be part of such a great scene and great band.” Since December ’93 when we first started doing this, we do look back and think, “Wow, look how far we’ve come. Isn’t a treat to still be together and hosting events like this.”

It’s gotta be a kick in the ass to think you’re staring down 20 years of this thing.

It really is cool. In the beginning we only dreamed it would be something like this, that it’d be a career that would span this many years, this many shows and so many friendships along the way and incredible memories. It’s something you dream for and to realize it makes us feel super thankful and appreciative of what we’ve got.

The flipside of that is we absolutely know we have to come out and deliver now. There’s absolutely no room to play a bad show or have an off night. We know that by only doing select dates we have to come out and hit it out of the park every night. So, we’re trying our best to do that.

Kang Halloween Show :: Vegas ’05
By John Smirtic

This situation also provides the band a chance to reflect on what’s come before. I just listened to the first installment of the new Rhythm of the Road series. It’s gotta be fun to look back and decide what shows you want to represent you as a band.

Right, right. That one’s the Tabernacle from Atlanta in 2000, and that was has always been a fan favorite in terms of older shows. I had heard that and when I went back and listened to it as we mixed and mastered it, I realized there was a LOT of energy in that show. I can see why it is a fan favorite and I’m proud to put it out. That was 2000 and we were breaking into some bigger venues. My wife Kristen and I had just had our first kid, and that was her first show coming back after retiring from being the merch lady. So, I was really excited to see her again. We had our buddy Tony Furtado sitting in. We’ve been friends with Tony forever and he can really bring it! I think there’s a lot of obvious enthusiasm and energy to that show and I think people are gonna love having a chance to revisit it.

What do you see as the studio future for the band? I think the past couple studio albums by the Cheese are easily your best thus far.

I do, too. I think we’re all just maturing as musicians and songwriters, so the last couple albums have been really satisfying for us. I’m hopeful we’ll be able to get into the studio in 2011 and do a release. We do have new material. We featured a couple new songs this summer and we’ll continue to work new material into the repertoire. We’re all excited about bringing in new material and working it up.

You guys have a real nose for good material lately, the kind of tunes you’ll be able to play with and evolve over a long period of time.

That’s just part of the maturation process. When you’ve been doing it as long as we have you naturally begin to filter things out and you learn what you like and don’t like and maybe get more of an ear for a crafty pop hook or what’s likely to make a great jam. It’s exciting to bring new stuff in and see what the band do with it.

The String Cheese Incident Tour Dates :: The String Cheese Incident News :: The String Cheese Incident Concert Reviews

JamBase | Creepin’ ‘Round
Go See Live Music!


Jerry Hall slams Keith Richards” slur on Mick Jagger”s manhood

Sir Mick Jagger”s ex-wife Jerry Hall has brushed off Keith Richards” comments about the inadequacy of the Rolling Stones frontman”s manhood. In his explosive memoirs, ”Life,” Richards took a dig at his long-time pal and bandmate. But when asked about Jagger”s privates, the supermodel maintains her ex-partner has no problems in the trouser department. She [...]

Frontier Records 30th Anniversary: Adolescents, Keith Morris

MIDDLE CLASS WILL REUNITE FOR FIRST SHOW IN THIRTY YEARS; SOLO SET FROM RIKK AGNEW;
FLYBOYS;
AND THE PONTIAC BROTHERS ALSO CONFIRMED

Frontier Records, the independent Los Angeles-based record label founded in 1980 by Lisa Fancher, and
Part Time Punks, a weekly club that focuses on obscure and classic music from 1978 to present, will be
celebrating the 30th Anniversary of the seminal Los Angeles label with a massive blow-out show in Echo Park on
Sunday, November 7 at the Echoplex. Tickets are on sale now. Doors open at 4pm and the event is all-ages.
Tickets
are on sale and available here.

The master of ceremonies will
be legendary Circle Jerks frontman
Keith
Morris
. Check out the lineup below. Additional Frontier bands are soon to be confirmed and will be
announced in
the coming weeks.

LINEUP

The Adolescents
Middle Class (First show in 30 years)

Rikk Agnew
Flyboys
The Pontiac Brothers


Scientist offers better ways to engineer Earth”s climate to prevent global warming

A University of Calgary climate scientist has said that there may be better ways to engineer the planet”s climate to prevent dangerous global warming than mimicking volcanoes. “Releasing engineered nano-sized disks, or sulphuric acid in a condensable vapour above the Earth, are two novel approaches. These approaches offer advantages over simply putting sulphur dioxide gas [...]