-Actress and socialite Zsa Zsa Gabor, 93, was rushed to the hospital over the holiday weekend complaining of pain from a severe blood clot that’s prompted doctors to consider amputating the lower half of the dame’s right leg. Though she’s battling the onset of gangrene, MDs are trying their best to save Zsa Zsa’s leg. [...]
Posts Tagged ‘Kentucky’
Monday Crumbs: Toni Braxton Reality Show! Mystery As Thousands Of Birds Fall From Arkansas Sky; “American Idol†Gets New Bandleader
Murder By Death: U.S. Tour
GOOD MORNING, MAGPIE OUT NOW
![]() Murder By Death |
Murder By Death have
confirmed a two-month headlining tour of the US that begins February 1 in Lexington, Kentucky at Cosmic Charlie’s
and currently wraps in Bloomington, Illinois on March 19 at the Castle Theatre. The group is touring in support of
their fifth full-length album, Good Morning, Magpie, which was released on April 6, 2010
(Vagrant). See below for all upcoming tour dates below.
Murder By Death upcoming tour dates:
Dec 31 – Lawrence, KS @ Granada (all ages)
Jan 05 – Bloomington, IN @ Russian Recording (Live on WFHB)
Jan 06 – Fort Wayne, IN @ The Brass Rail (21+)
Jan 07 – Three Rivers, MI @ Riviera Theatre (all ages)
Jan 21 – Bloomington, IN @ The Buskirk-Chumley Theater (Live From Bloomington)
Feb 01 – Lexington, KY @ Cosmic Charlie’s #
Feb 02 – Memphis, TN @ Hi-Tone Cafe #
Feb 03 – New Orleans, LA @ The Parish at House of Blues #
Feb 04 – Denton, TX @ Rubber Gloves #
Feb 05 – Austin, TX @ Red 7 #
Feb 07 – Albuquerque, NM @ Low Spirits #
Feb 08 – Tucson, AZ @ Plush #
Feb 09 – San Diego, CA The Casbah #
Feb 10 – Costa Mesa, CA @ The Detroit Bar #
Feb 11 – Los Angeles, CA @ Echoplex #
Feb 12 – San Francisco, CA @ Bottom of the Hill #
Feb 13 – Sacramento, CA @ Harlow’s #
Feb 15 – Portland, OR @ Wonder Ballroom #
Feb 16 – Seattle, WA @ Tractor Tavern #
Feb 17 – Boise, ID @ Visual Arts Collective #
Feb 18 – Salt Lake City, UT @ Bar Deluxe #
Feb 19 – Denver, CO @ Bluebird Theatre #
Feb 20 – Omaha, NE @ Waiting Room #
Feb 24 – Chicago, IL @ Subterranean ^
Feb 25 – DeKalb, IL @ The House Cafe ^
Feb 26 – Lansing, MI @ Mac’s Bar ^
Feb 28 – Morgantown, WV @ 123 Pleasant St. ^
Mar 01 – New York, NY @ Bowery Ballroom ^
Mar 02 – Philadelphia, PA @ Johnny Brenda’s ^
Mar 03 – West Chester, PA @ The Note ^
Mar 04 – Baltimore, MD @ The Ottobar ^
Mar 05 – Cambridge, MA @ Middle East Downstairs ^
Mar 07 – Norfolk, VA @ Jewish Mother Backstage ^
Mar 08 – Atlanta, GA @ The Earl ^
Mar 09 – Orlando, FL @ The Social ^
Mar 10 – Ybor City, FL @ The Orpheum ^
Mar 11 – Gainesville, FL @ Common Grounds ^
Mar 13 – Charleston, SC @ The Oasis ^
Mar 14 – Asheville, NC @ Stella Blue %
Mar 16 – St. Louis, MO @ Off Broadway %
Mar 17 – Madison, WI @ The Annex %
Mar 18 – Indianapolis, IN @ Radio Radio %
Mar 19 – Bloomington, IL @ The Castle Theatre %
# with The Builders & The Butchers
^ with Fake Problems
% support to be announced
Murder By Death
Tour Dates
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Murder By Death News
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Murder By Death
Concert
Reviews
Dec. 13, 1809: First Removal of Ovarian Tumor
1809: Dr. Ephraim McDowell, a pioneer in abdominal surgery, examines his patient and makes the decision to attempt the first surgical removal of an ovarian tumor, earning him the sobriquet “Father of Ovariotomy.”
The 45-year-old patient, Jane Todd Crawford, had been misdiagnosed as being pregnant with twins. McDowell, who ran a surgical practice in Danville, Kentucky, [...]
Josh Duhamel Kicked Off Plane After Refusing To Shut Off Blackberry!
Transformers actor Josh Duhamel was kicked off a flight from Queens to Kentucky on Thursday after refusing to turn off his cellphone. Duhamel, the husband of Black Eyed Peas singer Fergie, was on a plane at New York’s LaGuardia Airport this week when a flight attendant reportedly asked him to switch off his BlackBerry phone [...]
Scientists Confirm that Dispersants Are Increasing Contamination in the Gulf
I have repeatedly documented the detrimental impacts of dispersants on humans, wildlife and seafood safety. See this, this, this, this, this, this and this.As I noted in September, scientists from Oregon State University found elevated levels of poly…
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 [...]
Delta Spirit Tour & New EP
TOUR STARTS WITH NOVEMBER 15 IN LAWRENCE, KANSAS
![]() Delta Spirit |
Catch Delta Spirit out on
the road starting on November 15 at the Jackpot Music Hall in Lawrence, Kansas. They will be touring with Darker My Love and The Fling. Delta Spirit will release their
new EP
The Waits Room on November 16 via iTunes. Limited edition vinyl will be available for purchase
on the tour.
US Tour Dates:
11/15/10 Jackpot Music Hall Lawrence, Kansas
11/16/10 Mojo’s Columbia, Missouri
11/18/10 High Noon Saloon Madison, Wisconsin
11/19/10 Turner Hall Milwaukee, Wisconsin
11/20/10 Legends of Notre Dame South Bend, Indiana
11/21/10 Mountain Stage Radio Show Charleston, West Virginia
11/22/10 Tralf Music Hall Buffalo, New York
11/23/10 Webster Hall New York, New York
11/26/10 Paradise Rock Club Boston, Massachusetts
11/27/10 The Met Cafe Pawtucket, Rhode Island
11/29/10 OttoBar Baltimore, Maryland
11/30/10 Brillobox Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
12/01/10 The Mad Hatter Covington, Kentucky
12/02/10 Grey Eagle Tavern & Music Hall Asheville, North Carolina
12/03/10 Mercy Lounge Nashville, Tennessee
12/04/10 Metro Chicago, Illinois
12/07/10 Fillmore San Francisco, California
12/08/10 The Music Box Hollywood, California
12/09/10 SOHO Music Club Santa Barbara, California
12/10/10 House of Blues San Diego, California
Delta Spirit
Tour Dates
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Delta Spirit News
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Delta Spirit
Concert
Reviews
Miss United States Alexandria Mills Wins Miss World Pageant
Go Team USA! Dark horse Miss United States Of America Alexandria Mills walked away with the prized tiara at the 60th annual Miss World Pageant in the Chinese city Sanya on Saturday. The 18-year-old aspiring teacher from Kentucky wore a ravishing white gown as she beat out 114 contestants from across the Globe for the [...]
Papadosio NYE in Kentucky
JAM CRUISE VOTE TO THE BOAT WINNERS CELEBRATE NYE IN KENTUCKY
![]() Papadosio |
The rapidly growing live-electronica act, Papadosio, will perform New Years Eve at Madison Theater in Covington, KY. This
artistic extravaganza, held in Greater Cincinnati’s premier live music venue, will include very special guests The Werks. As part of a longstanding
tradition when these two bands perform together, New Years revelers will experience full, contiguous sets from each
act, in addition to a Joint-Set Finale with all nine members of both Ohio-bred electro-innovators.
Tickets will be available via CincyTicket.com and at the
Madison Theater Box Office. Doors open at 8pm with The Skeetones kicking it off at 9pm. Complete details and ticketing information below.
December 31st, 2010 – NYE: Papadosio
w/ Very Special Guest The Werks and The Skeetones
Madison Theatre – 730 Madison Ave. Covington, KY
$20 in Advance at www.CincyTicket.com or at the Madison Theater Box Office
18+ Event 8pm door – 9pm show
*Ticket price day of show subject to availability.
*For your convenience, this 18+ event has ONE ticket price for all patrons purchasing in ADVANCE via CincyTicket.
NO additional fees will apply (none online, none at the door) to under 21 patrons who purchase IN ADVANCE
ONLY.
Papadosio
Tour Dates
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Papadosio News
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Papadosio
Concert
Reviews
My Morning Jacket: Fire Still Burns
By: Dennis Cook
See a track-by-track discussion of MMJ’s debut here
See a video salute to MMJ’s debut here
See full details on MMJ’s Terminal 5 shows here
The Tennessee Fire |
1999′s The Tennessee Fire would be an auspicious debut for any band – a haunting yet happily shuffling blast of ideas woven together by strange poetry and gutbucket invention. It is what rock ‘n’ roll at its best aspires to but often gussies up too much these days. For My Morning Jacket it was the first solid footstep in a journey that’s cemented them as one of the most ceaselessly creative, fearless and engaging bands of the modern era – a group able to ascend to the heights of pop culture awareness without losing their tenacious, fiercely independent spirit that makes no concessions to trends, critics or anyone outside their ranks. One would be very, very hard pressed to find five musicians – Jim James (singer, songwriter, guitar, grand vision), Carl Broemel (guitar, sax, vox), Bo Koster (keys, vox), Tom Blankenship (bass, vox) and Patrick Hallahan (drums, percussion) – with more raw talent, obvious determination or sympathetic interconnectivity.
This week MMJ will tackle their entire catalog one album at a time at New York City’s Terminal 5 beginning tonight, October 18, with a run through The Tennessee Fire. We sat down with Tom Blankenship (aka Two Tone Tommy) to discuss their debut and the experience of preparing for the Terminal 5 shows.
JamBase: In revisiting your debut, it dawned on me that you’re the only guy besides Jim that’s been on every single album. In getting ready for the Terminal 5 shows, does it occur to you, “Yeah, I have been on this whole weird trip.”
Tom: I get reminders about it every once in a while. People will say, “Weren’t you a founding member?” I get that more & more as the years go by. It isn’t something I necessarily think about because the five of us with Carl and Bo have been together for almost seven years, which is the majority of the band’s lifespan. So, it feels like two different bands; the first three or four years we were together and then there’s this band.
JamBase: Has it been fun to explore these older records, to go back and say, “Wow, look at what we made!”
Tom: It’s really cool to go back to those records. We just spent a week in Louisville, just the five of us, rehearsing all the stuff that hasn’t been played live like “Butch Cassidy,” “If All Else Fails” and a couple other acoustic numbers from At Dawn, where Jim had done them by himself but we’d never done them as a band where we’re creating some kind of atmosphere like on the record. It’s a fun trip down memory lane. A lot of times I’m pleasantly surprised that the performance I gave are better than I remembered and some of the mistakes on the albums are now kind of charming.
I picked up on the same thing listening to The Tennessee Fire again. The tendrils of what this band would become are all already germinating in that first batch of material.
My Morning Jacket by Dave Vann |
To try and revisit those things again today is sometimes strange because sometimes when I close my eyes I have flashbacks to being onstage when the band was just a four-piece. But I quickly realize the sounds we’re making are not the same and we’re not the same people. And Jim’s voice has changed SO much from that album to today. But there’s still a piece of the feeling I had making that record, the personal connection I made to those songs, whether it was the music or lyrics. A piece of that’s still there, but it mostly feels fresh and new playing it with this lineup.
How do you find the material transforming with this lineup tackling it?
10 or 11 years ago we just played as hard as we could because we were excited to be playing live, period. So it was more raucous and us just having fun, and now it feels more moody and atmospheric. There are songs I’m playing on live that I’ve never played on before, just to beef things up here & there and give things a different kind of voicing. It’s weird to say but it feels like this very adult version of the songs.
Mature or adult are dirty words in our youth obsessed culture, especially in rock ‘n’ roll, except they aren’t really. To play music well and to evolve one’s earlier efforts are good things, and that can only happen over time. But right from the start you guys were anxious to complicate what it meant to be My Morning Jacket.
One of the reasons I’ve always liked the name is because it doesn’t sound like anything at all. Nothing comes to my mind except, “That’s kind of a weird name for a band [laughs].”
There’s some weird echoes of stuff on The Tennessee Fire but I couldn’t exactly say that you guys sounded like ANYONE else from the beginning.
I had the same impression when I first got the demo tape given to me by the drummer Jeremy maybe 6 or 8 months before I joined the band. Most of the album had already been completed. Number one: I was blown away by this guy Jim, who was the same age as me but could write these haunting yet kinda poppy sounding songs. What I loved about the album was that it had all these familiar elements that I’d never heard put together before. I couldn’t put my finger on what the sound was or how to describe.
Listening back again before this talk, I picked up on the cool Phil Spector-ish elements and echoes of vintage soul inside these strange new shells. It doesn’t play to the popular sensibilities of the era it came out in, choosing instead to seek out the classic and the enduring as its influences, something Jim does a lot in his songwriting. It’s a good trick if you can make people scratch their head and still keep listening.
Keep it interesting enough that it will take people a while to figure it out.
One thing I noticed looking at the liner notes was Sir Patrick T. Hallahan shot the photos used on The Tennessee Fire. So well before he became the drummer, he had a presence in MMJ.
The Tennessee Fire inside cover |
Oh brother, I haven’t looked at those notes in forever. I think his name appears on all the albums even if he wasn’t in the band. I love the back cover shot with all of us with the cigarettes in our mouths and the fedoras.
So, this is a band from Louisville, Kentucky but their first album is called The Tennessee Fire. Why is that?
Before I joined the band, I remember pulling up to the studio in Shelbyville. I was in a band called Winter Death Club at the time, and we’d have practice after My Morning Jacket practice. At the time MMJ was just a 3-piece of two guitars, drums and vocals. They even played a few shows with that lineup, which is how [The Tennessee Fire] was mainly recorded. I remember pulling up and hearing that Jimmy had got a record contract with Darla but he didn’t know what to name the band. I think he maybe wanted to call the band The Tennessee Fire at one time. As far as I know, that’s how it came about, that and the picture inside the album of the Tennessee fireworks store where the ‘works’ is cut off.
Another thing that came up for me listening back to the Morning Jacket catalog recently is how sly and darkly funny Jim is. There are traces of that right from this first slab. Despite his whole rep of being this serious artiste, he’s never failed to bust me up each time we’ve spoken.
Anyone that’s met him in real life sees that he’s constantly joking. The first time I met him we were playing in a storage garage in Lexington, Kentucky, his band Month of Sundays and Winter Death Club. I arrived early and Jim was sound checking by himself and he kept playing “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On,” but he didn’t know any of the lyrics. He just kept saying, “Whole lotta shakin’ goin’ on,” for what felt like 15-20 minutes. He did it so much that eventually everyone had to laugh. His humor has always been if you say it enough eventually people will laugh. They might hate you in between but they’ll come around to see the humor.
Finally, how are you feeling about tackling the entire catalog in the space of a few days? That’s a daunting task for any band.
Above all else, it’s been a bit stressful. But Carl put it into perspective. He said, “The morning you wake up for that show all you need to worry about are the songs for that night. And you can tackle the other nights as they come.” If you compartmentalize it like that it’s not too bad. It’s been fun to revisit covers from each era. It’s been cool because we were doing songs I can’t believe we ever did! Hopefully people will feel like they got a unique experience.
Continue reading for Tom’s track-by-track commentary on MMJ’s debut album…
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My Morning Jacket bassist Tom Blankenship’s reflects on the band’s 1999 debut, The Tennessee Fire.
Heartbreakin Man
I don’t think I even had a full band version of this when I first heard it. It was Jim on a 4-track with all those crazy vocal harmonies laid on top of each other. It was so different from the finished product, and the whole vibe of it was haunting, like ghosts flying over your head and some of them were laughing at you and some were there to help you out. Some of the spirit of that made it to the final version. I think it’s a great start to the record, where you hear that ka-shhh and then the band crashes in.
They Ran
It’s just predominantly bass ‘n’ drums. I thought “Heartbreakin’ Man” was a great intro to Jim’s vocals but the treatment of his vocals and the harmonies and the way they layer themselves one after another at the beginning of “They Ran” is the perfect showcase of what Jim is capable of vocally. All those vocals are his and still sound distinctly different. I think he’s always been really good at making up characters that he does vocally song-to-song, especially on the last album [2008's Evil Urges]. But even in a subtle way like “They Ran,” each harmony has a different feel to it.
The Bear
It has that perfect Motown intro. That drumbeat has probably been used on hundreds of songs, yet it’s still one of my favorite intros to any song we’ve done. We’ve done some pretty rockin’ versions of it live, too..
Nashville to Kentucky
I don’t why I’ve always had this image in my head of Jim literally driving from Nashville to Kentucky, and it is one of the most boring drives EVER to go from Louisville to Nashville. You’re just on 65 pretty much the whole way and there’s really not a lot to see. There’s Dinosaur World about halfway, a Corvette manufacturing plant with a museum, and not much else. I imagine that it’s at night and completely dark and he can barely pick up any radio stations – just the reality of it.
Old Sept. Blues
When I first got the demo tape I listened to “Evelyn” and “Old Sept. Blues” on repeat, just those two songs over & over & over again. So, it’s always been one of my favorite songs. It’s just a perfectly crafted nugget, where all the fat’s been trimmed off.
If All Else Fails
Oh man, I’m gonna have to skip this one.
The Tennessee Fire |
It’s About Twilight Now
It’s the most rock song on Tennessee Fire, which is funny because it has no bass on it at all. I think it’s just the two guitars, drums and vocals. It takes me back to that studio in Shelbyville where everything was done on ¼-inch tape. It’s the sound you’d get there if you were trying to be really raucous like we were in the punk hardcore bands we were in before [MMJ]. That was the way drums and everything would blow up on tape. I always loved that song and thought it was going to have a different life. It became such a different piece when played live. It was still raucous but it was so brutal. At the end we’d slow down and it was like stoner rock.
Evelyn Is Not Real
I think it’s the hook that gets me. That guitar line is definitely a hook, and it’s kind of a take on the country tradition of mourning the loss of a love or a love that isn’t real. In a way, it’s always felt a touch tongue in cheek but sincere at the same time. We’re kind of poking fun at the genre but doing so with love. I don’t know if that was ever Jim’s intention but that was the way I first felt about this song. It’s kind of like that song “Faraway Eyes” by The Rolling Stones, where it’s a great song but it’s also grinning at convention.
War Begun
I always loved this bass line. I think John played bass on it. Listening back to it now, it reminds me of JJ Cale, where the guitar solo is kind of tiny sounding but still powerful. And the lyrics are brilliant – “Whenever your war gets out of hand I’ll take it on.” Everything about it I just loved. It gets requested a lot and it’s kind of a substitute for “Lay Low” or anything like that.
Picture of You
It’s got this lyric, “I’ve got a house in a court” but then, “I’ve got a car and a door and a big left arm.” That’s one of the strangest lyrics ever [laughs]. The lyrics all over this song are brilliant – “You don’t say I’ll wait up” and “You know I’m sorry/ You know I’d give you anything on a dime.”
I Will Be There When You Die
The original version of it sounds like a chair is being knocked over and a tape recorder is being walked through a room. Jim’s in one corner of the room playing and it’s like the tape recorder is coming to him. I love any recording where you get a sense of the room it was recorded in and the time and place. So, the original version I had on the demo tape had about a minute long intro where it was just guitars on top of guitars and chairs falling and this craziness. That was THE song when we first started touring Europe. I think there were a couple nights when Jim played it twice. He’d always step away from the mic and sing it in the crowd. Everybody would be dead silent, and a couple of us would take our smoke break during this song. There was something so beautiful about rolling a cigarette and smoking and experiencing the song the exact same way the crowd was. You didn’t really feel like a band member at that point; you’re just another member of the audience. You try not to search out these kinds of moments because you can’t force them, but it’s hard not to think, “How can I get back to this place?”
The Tennessee Fire inside cover |
The Dark
This has always been one of my favorites to play live. We used to start shows with this song for years and years. It’s got some pretty funny lyrics in it as well. The whole tinkling on the cymbals and the spaced out guitar in the intro has an incantation vibe to it.
By My Car
We always joked that we were going to put a sticker on At Dawn that said, “From the band that brought you ‘By My Car.’” Not that it was an unremarkable song at all, but we thought it was funny because it was one of the last songs on the record and we’d only played it live a few times. Again, this has some great lyrics in it. I love Jim’s hilariously violent lyrics and I think that started with this song. This has the line about wanting to kick his head in but it’s said with a sincerity that makes you wonder how serious he is. You just don’t know.
Butch Cassidy
I’m really excited to play this live. It’s always been one of my favorites, and I don’t think I’ve heard Jim play it until we were doing the rehearsals [for the Terminal 5 shows]. It has one of my favorite lyrics, not just by Jim, but of all-time: “‘Cause a soldier’s death is so much better than defeat just hanging around.” That’s such a gorgeous line, and like the best songs on this record, the song is just haunting and dark but done in a way that doesn’t feel like total despair. There’s still a little bit of hope.
I Think I’m Going to Hell
This brings back a memory of one of the first shows we played. It was outside on a hillside at a college campus, and we ended that show, like a lot of shows at that time, with this song. And there’s that line, “Lovers and children beware, devils and demons are coming to take me to hell.” And in the field beyond the crowd was this little girl skipping through the field with a kite tied to her hand. And I remember how fucked up and evil it was that Jim was screaming these lyrics with this little girl out there. That’s always stuck in my brain ever since. This song feels like Halloween.
While much of the Terminal 5 run is sold out, a handful of tickets remains for The Tennessee Fire and At Dawn performances. Find tickets here.
My Morning Jacket Tour Dates :: My Morning Jacket News :: My Morning Jacket Concert Reviews
JamBase | Aflame With Rock ‘n’ Roll
Go See Live Music!
Nicole Scherzinger felt uncomfortable in Pussycat Doll outfit
Nicole Scherzinger has revealed that in her initial days she felt uncomfortable in her Pussycat Doll outfit- because the band”s racy stage costumes were a far cry from her own “conservative” wardrobe. The girl group originated as a burlesque dance troupe, known for its members” sexy outfits. But lead singer Scherzinger admits she”d never seen [...]
Zac Brown Band: Play The Road
By: Dennis Cook
Zac Brown Band |
Success often makes new listeners wary of a band. Too many hits too fast and one may wonder if an artist is a flash in the pan and unworthy of a serious music fan’s attention. However, sometimes a truly talented, hard working group breaks through and the world is simply wise enough – for a rare change – to recognize a good thing when it lands in their lap.
In 2008 it seemed the Zac Brown Band came out of nowhere to pulverize the country charts, racking up four number one singles and double platinum album sales for what many thought was their debut, The Foundation. But, two self-released albums preceded this first major label release, along with a tour schedule that had kept the band away from home for as many as 200 gigs a year since 2002. All that wood shedding and club humping rings out in the confidence and craftsmanship of The Foundation, and the past two years where they’ve become a major headlining draw and a fixture on CMT and country radio shows in the utterly confident, absolutely winning follow-up You Get What You Give (released September 21 on Southern Ground/Atlantic), which opens with a scene full of hippie-esque wisdom played out over chord-skipping acoustic guitar and playful fiddle that ride a shuffling beat.
Spent the night with a friend of mine and a handle of good whiskey
Picked guitars and talked about how the glory days went missing
It didn’t take too long to find the truth inside that bottle
Cast a-sea so long ago was a message from my father
You keep your heart above your head and your eyes wide open
So this world can’t find a way to leave you cold
No, you’re not the only ship out on the ocean
Save your strength for things that you can change
Forget the ones you can’t
You got to let it go
You Get What You Give is a record with a huge potential audience, not just the country establishment that’s already embraced them. Within this talented bunch lays many points of connection for jam band aficionados (high level musicianship, broad cover tune sensibilities, a 420-friendly attitude, shifting setlists), Americana purists (dead solid songwriting, twang that’s stretched into interesting new forms) and straight-up mainstream rock fans.
ZBB @ Bonnaroo ’09 by Dave Vann |
“We realize that country radio and TV is the way they’re selling this music and the way we’re connecting with our fans but only during 4 or 5 songs in our live set do we even think we’re a country band,” says multi-instrumentalist Clay Cook. “I think we’re more concerned with songs than genre. Sure, we’re telling stories in our songs but it’s more of a southern approach than a strict country one.”
Like the best southern bands in the modern era, ZBB scoops up a wide array of influences and gives them a below-the-Mason-Dixon accent. Ronnie Van Zant-era Skynyrd did this well, as do contemporaries like JJ Grey & Mofro and Hill Country Revue, both of whom have more in common with the Zac Brown Band’s general vibe than most of what’s coming out of Nashville today. At the core of this group is one of the strongest emerging songwriting teams out there, namely Zac Brown and lyricist Wyatt Durrette, who possess a Tom Petty-like populist feel that’s VERY hard to resist.
“The way Zac approaches performing songs is so much different than anything I’ve been involved with before. You just really believe every word he says with the way he sings it,” says Cook. “I feel very lucky to be where I am in this band, especially because of the way we connect with audiences, and that stems from Zac.”
The band doesn’t hesitate to place their originals next some of the finest songwriting of the past 50 years, regularly covering tunes from The Band, Bob Marley, Van Morrison, Ray LaMontagne and other heavy hitters, with the company they keep reflecting the larger ambitions of the band. One also sees this in the high powered patronage of certifiable icons like Jimmy Buffett, Dave Matthews and Kid Rock, who’ve taken the band under their wing and welcomed them as openers and kindred spirits.
“When we’re picking covers we pick things we want to play, the songs we’re listening to on our iPods. This is the music we love. It’s stuff we’re intimately familiar with and huge fans of. We feel like it’s our duty to do a good job,” says Cook. “We’ve been playing Bob Dylan’s ‘I Shall Be Released,’ and I can’t tell you how many other versions are out there. But when we get onstage to play that song, I feel like we’re only the second or third band to ever attempt it, just by how we love it SO much. It’s a weird feeling, but we think we do that with certain songs, really live inside them and make them somewhat our own. Otherwise, we’ll play a song once and never again.”
Zac Brown Band |
On the Deluxe Edition of You Get What You Give, they do a fantastic cover of Ryan Adams’ “Oh My Sweet Carolina” (off Ryan’s solo debut Heartbreaker).
“It’s a live version and we did it in Louisville. And it was one of those situations where everyone felt so good about it, even though it was only the second or third time we’d attempted it in two or three years,” says Cook. “The only reason we played it in Louisville is it’s got a line that goes, ‘I miss Kentucky and I miss my family.’ Zac said, ‘Let’s just play this one!’ and we did and it was just beautiful. We had somebody mix it and throw it on the Deluxe Edition.”
The band mixes up their song selections nightly very much in the spirit of the never-repeat-yourself ethos of the jam scene.
“We kinda have to but the lighting and video guys really wish we’d stick to the same setlist [laughs]. But if we did the same setlist three nights in a row, by the third night we’d be fit to be tied. We’d be ready to do something different or even change [the arrangements of] songs up if we couldn’t change the setlist, changing up sections of songs as we’re playing them,” says Cook. “It forces you to be creative in different ways. We’ve had to feed from our record that’s been out there for a while. It’s been two years since The Foundation came out, and we have to play stuff from it because that’s why people bought tickets to see us. At least half the people in the audience have never seen us before and don’t know they’re going to see a real live show. And then hopefully the other half of the show is new stuff and covers. Unless we have three hours to play, we really have a hard time boiling down what we want to play every night.”
“At this point, we have six songs that are singles and that’s half an hour already. You have to play those songs. Then you have a few covers you’ve been playing that are working, so you have to play those because if we feel good about them at the moment we want to capitalize on that feeling. And the next time we come around [to a city] we’ll have a whole new set of covers. Then you want to play the stuff off the new record, and we also have special guests on this tour. Like Robert Randolph is opening for us, so we want to play a song with him. So, pretty soon the two-and-a-half-hours for our setlist is pretty full. It’s actually easier to write a three-hour setlist than a two-hour setlist.”
Zac Brown @ Bonnaroo ’09 by Dave Vann |
“A pop artist just wants to play their hits and get off the stage. They want to play a 90-minute set and anything more than that is unbearable to them. I remember talking to this country group Lady Antebellum, who came up to us at one of the awards shows. They just released their second album earlier this year, and they heard we were playing three and four hour shows and said, ‘Why are you doing this to us?’ They’ve only got about 90-minutes of material without covers, and that’s only if they play everything off both records. I said, ‘Well, we’re not a country band.’ We’re a live experience mainly.”
One area they excel at, live and in the studio, is in their rich harmonies. The overlap of voices, not just Brown’s own powerful, flexible pipes, is a lovely alternative to the Clean Room pristine quality of most of today’s auto-tuned, Pro-Tools enhanced “singing.”
“When they did the harmonies on the previous record [before Clay Cook joined ZBB], they had to work really hard on the vocals. And that record was cut almost four years ago with two of the vocalists that are here now and one that’s gone. Now, we sing SO much that I don’t think it took two days to get the background harmonies on [You Get What You Give]. We were just knocking them out. It was almost comical at one point when we realized that a great deal of these harmonies were done in one take,” says Cook. “We didn’t spend a lot of time in the studio tracking [anything on the new record]. A lot of the time spent was between gigs, where we’d go a month without doing anything because we’d be on the road. When we were off the road everybody wanted to go home for two or three days, so we couldn’t jump right back into the studio. And then we were on the road again!”
“We’ve taken measures to fix that on the next record. We’re building a studio in Zac’s backyard,” reveals Cook. “I think we’re gonna try to do this next record live, the solos and everything except maybe the vocals. We care a lot about the vocals and it’d suck to get all the way through an awesome take as a band and discover that two of the vocalists were a little bit off. At worst, we’ll record the entire band live and go back and capture the vocals, OR we’ll be just as gutsy as I hope we’ll be and just capture EVERYTHING live in the studio.”
Perhaps the best way to think of the Zac Brown Band is as the next generation of Great American Music bands in the spirit of the Grateful Dead, Little Feat and Goose Creek Symphony, where the inflection of their music can lean one way or another but the language they’re ultimately speaking is their own. What separates Zac Brown and his collaborators from these ancestors is an almost unerring knack for sinking deep into the pop vernacular. Spin You Get What You Give for almost anyone, regardless of their primary listening habits, and by the last track there’s bound to be one or more cuts that float their boat. It’s a broad, readily appealing reach that hints at a future cult following the likes of which Buffett, Rock and the Dave Matthews Band enjoy.
Zac Brown Band Tour Dates :: Zac Brown Band News :: Zac Brown Band Concert Reviews
JamBase | Giving
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Conyers and Kilpatrick Demand Lenders Extend Housing Foreclosure Moratorium to Michigan; No More Foreclosures Until Fraudulent Paperwork is Resolved
Sent to me by a friend on the Hill.From the office of: Fourteenth District, MichiganCongressman John Conyers, Jr.Chairman, House Judiciary CommitteeDean, Congressional Black CaucusPress ReleaseConyers and Kilpatrick Demand Lenders Extend Housing Forecl…
Six dead after killing spree in Kentucky
A U.S. man has killed himself after shooting dead five people, including his wife and stepdaughter, in an argument about his breakfast. Stanley Neace, 47, went on the killing spree in a trailer park in Jackson, rural Breathitt County, Kentucky.
My Morning Jacket | Summer Tour Closer | Philly
Words & Images by: Jake Krolick
My Morning Jacket :: 08.29.10 :: River Stage at Great Plaza :: Philadelphia, PA
var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”11″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=120″);}); 8/29/10 – My Morning Jacket @ Great Plaza @ Penn’s Landing (Philadelphia, PA) View Photos
On a normal day it’s hard to top a My Morning Jacket concert, but it becomes extra special when it’s the closing show of their summer tour. Filling shoes much bigger than maybe you or I had ever imagined, My Morning Jacket finds itself at the top of an ever-changing landscape of American rock bands. These travelers from Kentucky set Philadelphia’s River Stage at Great Plaza ablaze as they crushed their way through 22 glorious songs that made the evening feel like it was over in two minutes not two hours.
The venue sits on the banks of the Delaware River between the Ben Franklin and Walt Whitman Bridges. Hundreds of steps cascade down to the water’s edge and are separated with manmade waterfalls and pathways. It slays that parking lot venue, the Festival Pier , to bits. Place My Morning Jacket on the stage during sunset and it’s one heck of a show.
A slightly shaggier than normal Jim James made us Philadelphians feel extra special as he warmly thanked opener Scott McMicken from local favorite Dr. Dog. McMicken’s own set was quite moving, and he sprinkled in several acoustic versions of Dr. Dog tunes including a tender version of “Jackie Wants a Black Eye” off Dr. Dog’s latest, Shame Shame. His backdrop was a stellar homemade home façade complete with a suitcase, curtains, shelves and even a hole in the faux-wall for a mouse. Whether he plucked the banjo or strummed the guitar, his songs seemed to compliment the evening.
My Morning Jacket crept on stage through a haze of a manmade mist ready to produce a setlist that was packed with almost their entire catalog. The first half of the set grew superbly and got the blood flowing as we heard the band sink their teeth into “Mahgeetah,” “Golden,” a rare “Honest Man” and a new lavish, down tempo song called “Circuital.” The new tune has tons of potential and is destined to take its royal place in the MMJ catalog. James demonstrated his ability to get loose on an acoustic guitar and started to really flex his vocals on the new tune.
During “I’m Amazed,” bassist Tom Blankenship, guitarist Carl Broemel and Jim James huddled in front of Patrick Hallahan’s green star covered drum kit. This has become the standard mode of operation for the group as they break out into wild undulations, fanatical changes, and some good old-fashioned head banging. The rest of the band played while James pulled a rubber donkey mask over his head to sway through the song’s finish. He was super animated before going into the center cut of the show, which slowed for “Tonight I Want to Celebrate With You,” “Steam Engine” and “Smokin’ from Shootin.” This trio gave the band time to play with the melodies and jam on some of the finer, softer moments. These calm songs offered a wonderful window to peek at this band’s great depths.
The encore was loose and wild as MMJ rocked “Wordless Chorus,” which took James’s beatific voice to a whole new level. “Highly Suspicious” was an excuse to dance as James donned his black cap and channeled his inner Phantom of the Opera. James gave quite a show as he did a bevy of his best famous rockers imitations while heaving himself back and forth across the stage. The finale was the oh-so-fitting “One Big Holiday.” Its swelling build and remarkable release left the entire venue in a state of exhilaration as they staggered toward the exits.
My Morning Jacket will play each of their records straight through over five nights in October. I’d say those five nights in New York City are going to be one tough ticket to come by but so worth doing everything in your power to acquire.
Setlist
Rollin Back (intro), The Way That He Sings, Gideon, Anytime, Mahgeetah, Golden, Circuital (NEW), It Beats 4 U, Honest Man, I’m Amazed, Easy Morning Rebel, Tonite I Want to Celebrate With You, Steam Engine, Smokin From Shootin, (end of) Run Thru, Touch Me I’m Going To Scream Pt.2, (end of) Lay Low
E: Wordless Chorus, Touch Me I’m Going To Scream Pt.1, Highly Suspicious, Off The Record, One Big Holiday
My Morning Jacket Tour Dates :: My Morning Jacket News :: My Morning Jacket Concert Reviews
JamBase | East Coast
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Goose On The Lake | 06.04-06.05 | Kentucky
Words by: Dennis Cook | Images by: Mareo Speedwagon
Goose On The Lake Festival :: 06.04.10-06.05.10 :: Settle Lake :: Allegre, KY
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Most festivals are pleasant distractions from our normal life, opportunities to check out multiple bands, get a little loaded, dance some and then depart with a commemorative t-shirt. But some fests are experiences that strike to the core of us, reminding us what’s good about human beings, especially creative ones that make the air vibrate with song. Goose On The Lake offered two days where kindness and happiness reigned and our better angels winged carefree and delighted.
Very quietly, this small gathering on a private farm in rural Kentucky has evolved into one of the coolest secrets in the summer festival season. Built around an annual celebration of country rock pioneers Goose Creek Symphony, this is a place where real musicians find audiences receptive and attentive to whatever is dished out because it’s done with real heart, blister-won skill and raw talent. And beyond the offerings onstage, Goose On The Lake had the chillest, wonderfully mature group of freak flag waving free spirits you’d ever want to find. Taken together, the music, bucolic setting and primo companionship carved out a little piece of heaven on earth.
Lloyd Settle |
“I have the same dream all the old hippies have. I’m just doing something about it,” said Lloyd Settle, the host to Goose On The Lake along with Donna Settle, two of most hospitable folks on the planet. Weeks of land clearing and organizing go into making their farm ready for the 800 or so folks that roll in during the first weekend in June.
This year marked the fest’s 15th year, and Goose Creek Symphony’s 40th anniversary as a band. Diehards who’ve been rolling on the Creek since the early ’70s mingled with youngsters who likely picked up on them from their parents or perhaps one of the many shout outs from heavily influenced descendents like Yonder Mountain String Band, Railroad Earth, String Cheese Incident, Uncle Tupelo, Great American Taxi and many, many others. Goose Creek gives more codified critics’ darlings Gram Parsons and The Byrds a run for their money in terms of originality, vision and plain old execution. In their early days they opened for the likes of Stevie Wonder, Cheech & Chong and other ’70s luminaries, but despite denting the charts a few times, Goose Creek has remained largely a cult affair, though a fierce, exceedingly dedicated cult that includes numerous top flight musicians like Sam Bush, Vince Herman and Tim Carbone. There’s a strong sense of family and instant fellowship at the Lake simply because of the band that serves as its foundation. Super cool things tend to beget more super cool, copacetic things, and Goose Creek is as copacetic and super cool as they come – survivors and innovators to this day, music makers driven first by the music in their blood and everything else secondary behind it.
Benny Skyn |
Music began on Friday afternoon with serious singer-songwriter find Benny Skyn. Standing solo with an electric guitar, a tough life written large in his body, Skyn has the lilt of vintage John Prine and the punkish feel of early Billy Bragg. Within a couple numbers it became obvious that he’s one of the most quotable, memorable lyricist to come along in a spell, dishing out doozies like, “All those intelligent things that you said won’t get this trash out of my head,” and telling black edged tales of men who get mean when you won’t take a sip of their liquor while thanking the Lord for the hard times (and meaning it, too). Skyn is a songwriter’s songwriter like Kristofferson or as he himself noted, “Singing songs written by Jesus and Tom T. Hall. Did you ever hear a Tom T. Hall song? It might make you wanna write a song, too.” Listening to Skyn made me want to pick up a guitar and find a song to thank him for the purity and grit of what he does.
Nashville’s The 5 Tones threw down a hard blues-rock gauntlet next, and the juxtaposition, like many this weekend, was sharp and exciting. There’s not a lot of acts on the bill but the quality of each cracks like a whip, drawing one’s attention quickly and continually rewarding it. Musicians are appreciated at Goose On The Lake, and that simple fact seemed to bring out the best in each performer. The sweat plastered t-shirts and contorted faces of The 5 Tones spoke volumes about the trio’s dedication to get right down to the ground water in their genre, digging ferociously with tangy harp, slicing guitar and a rhythm section that just didn’t quit. The encore cover of the North Mississippi Allstars’ “Po’ Black Maddie” is another clue to their sound, but these guys take it all the way out, separating themselves a good distance from the many who toy around in these dark waters. Kindred contemporaries include Super 400 and Rose Hill Drive, and as the next performer noted during their set, “They’ve got a Robin Trower Bridge of Sighs thing going on.” All good stuff and reasons to keep an ear bent towards The 5 Tones.
Dave Gleason |
Dave Gleason and The Golden Cadillacs nailed the California country rock sound with an inviting personality and perfect ear for ancestors ripe for resurrection. They’ve got real affection for Merle Haggard, Buck Owens, Bob Dylan and “those strange but great Waylon Jennings records.” Few have a mastery of this genre like Gleason, who really groks country’s full sweep from oldies like Webb Pierce and Lefty Frizzell to modern greats like Dwight Yoakam and Rodney Crowell and everything in between. Suited up and looking like the full pros they are, this band slathered raw rock ‘n’ roll all over twangy-ass country and the mixture is just fuckin’ delightful. Seriously, if you’re having a bad time listening to these quality weepies and boot-scootin’ jumpers then you might want to drink moreÂ…or lessÂ…or something. Gleason sings with one of the most naturally appealing voices to emerge in the past decade, and the tear in his beer seems genuine. He feels this music in a way most of Nashville has forgotten, and one can feel the difference as his music washes over you.
Friday evening’s Goose Creek Symphony set was a hopping hodgepodge of deep album cuts and rarely played numbers, with most of the heavy hittin’ fan favorites saved for Saturday night. Friday was for connoisseurs, and as a 25-year hardcore listener seeing them play live for the very first time I was in hog heaven. That word ‘heaven’ keeps popping up simply because it hangs close to this gathering. Perhaps others’ vision of paradise is different than my own, but outside of the sweltering, hellishly humid southern heat, this is a pretty nice approximation of what at least one corner of heaven looks like in my mind. And you couldn’t ask for a much better soundtrack than the Goose, who started off with a patient, phenomenal reading of “Going Down The Road Feeling Bad,” which like many songs other bands have popularized sounds utterly new in their hands.
Goose Creek Symphony |
“Think I’ll let my hair grow long, think I’ll grow a beard/ Think I’ll go out and smoke some pot and start acting weird/ ‘Cause I’ve always been a leader/ I ain’t ever been no backseater/ I’ll do anything but cut off my peter/ ’cause I want to be a rock ‘n’ roll star.” Thus begins “Number One Gravy Band,” one of many devastatingly enjoyable pieces trotted out this night.
What’s stunning is the band’s leader and chief songwriter Charlie Gearheart – as big and amazing a character as ever breathed life into this stupid, angry, rough world – is in his seventies and fellow original member/co-founder Paul “Pearl” Stradlin is no spring chicken either. The rest of the band is a mix of ages, some quite young, but all stellar players with clear dedication to knocking this music into the cosmos. Yet, Stradlin and Gearheart pitched in as hard as anyone, and neither this set nor Saturday’s were short affairs. They all seem powered by this music, which similarly eases invigorating sap into the listener. Folks looked positively lit up across the lawn as night fell, sunburnt flesh cooling as Goose Creek’s energy moved along the grass and into our limbs. Sure, strong corn liquor and pleasant smells in the air didn’t hurt, but the key ingredient was the songs and their sublime performances – subtlety is a huge factor in Goose Creek’s appeal and longevity.
Gearheart declared near the end, “We’ll end early enough for folks to get back to their tent and get some.” Afterwards, Lloyd announced, “If you think music can’t free people then take another puff!”
Backstage View by Dennis Cook |
Saturday, the smell of KP’s Smokehouse filtered into the far reaches of the farm, luring one in like a cartoon hound lifted off the ground by the smell of food. Pulled pork sandwiches, rib eyes on a bun, bologna sandwiches and more fed the masses, and all served with a big smile. One rarely failed to make a new friend or grow to adore the proprietors a little more each time they ponied up to their table to slather on finger lickin’ sauces on meat that made me glad to be an omnivore. And the warmth and grinning sweetness of KP’s extended to the merch folks, security staff and everyone else charged with keeping this enterprise moving. Really, just about the kindest, nicest folks I’ve ever encountered at a fest anywhere; absolutely on par with my West Coast fave, Las Tortugas.
Many people floated on the large, private lake during the afternoon, paddling around and sharing brews and laughter on the water. Long before music started up again with two more fantastic sets by Benny Skyn and Dave Gleason and his boys, laughter and gently splashing water provided a charming backdrop to relaxin’ in the shade.
Frank Hudson |
What drew a number of folks into the sunshine was the vintage acoustic snap of Mr. Frank Hudson, a renowned guitar picker who played with the likes of Merle Travis and learned his craft from the same old soul that taught Chet Atkins how to play. Mr. Hudson is pure class and was kind enough to let me sit at his heel earlier in the day before his set while he explained some of the nuances and history of the southern guitar style he practices. And he even offered me a pull from his small bottle of Old No. 7. Like I said, pure class. His set was like a great living jukebox full of wonderful songs like “Sunday Morning Coming Down.” It’s a deceptively simple thing he does, but the way he provides rhythm for his lead lines, in a sense accompanying himself and easing into songs with weathered grace is a wonderful thing to behold. Add in his seasoned stage patter – “Can you hear me? If you can hear me I’m playing too loud” – and Hudson proved a total crowd charmer and deservedly so.
Paul Burch & The WPA Ball Club were another surprise winner following Hudson, bringing in oodles of swing into country, folk and jazz inflected songs that touched on both American and English traditional music and then snatched it by the arm into modernity. Accordion, fiddle and Burch’s guitar danced continually, creating a much fuller sound than one might expect from a trio. With an inviting voice and a big songbook full of quality material, Burch and the WPA evoked the past in a way that makes it new.
Wanda Jackson |
They were followed by a short set from Nashville’s Heath Haynes & The Hi-Dollars, who took us back to ’50s ground zero rock with real aplomb. A blur of happy energy, they came on with an 88-key, unruly guitar assault anchored by a rhythm section so tight it wouldn’t leak a drop. Bar band staples like “That’s All Right, Mama” and “Six Days On The Road” bucked with life when they played ‘em, and then they transformed into the backing band for Saturday’s other headliner, Wanda Jackson.
“Keep listening and eventually we’ll play one you like,” the vintage rock queen declared, and they pretty much walked the line throughout their enjoyable, oldies rich set. Jackson arrived in the 1950s with one of the most distinctive voices to ever hit rock ‘n’ roll, and she’s largely maintained it, though it sometimes took a bit to warm up or cracked occasionally. So be it; she’s rock royalty and still offered up good times decked out in the most fringe I’ve ever seen on one shirt and a simply classic wig. When she let out a still-girlish squeal on monsters like “Fujiyama Mama” and “Riot In Cell Block No. 9″ it raised your pulse a bit and reminded one how essential sex is to rock, which oddly didn’t jar against the welcome gospel pieces and Jesus-saved-me rap also included in her set.
The main attraction for most, based solely on the sheer numbers on the lawn and their hooting enthusiasm, was Goose Creek‘s fest closing set. Without exaggeration, this performance ranked with the best I’ve seen by any band, every bit the equal to the transcendent experiences I’ve had with the Grateful Dead, Radiohead, The Black Crowes and other giants. What Goose Creek share with this bunch is the same undeniable originality, sheer talent and resounding conviction. One can play music to entertain and shake a coin out of folks’ pockets, but for some it’s a calling and a privilege to get up on stages and make music. A strong sense of ritual infused this show, with sage burning and a low, percussion driven ‘ohm’ building into the first song proper, a stunning reading of “These Hills” from 2002′s I Don’t Know album followed by their theme song, “Welcome To Goose Creek.” In just two numbers one was struck by a sound forged over a lifetime, a music born from craggy, private places but delivered in a way that makes people dance away their troubles and rejoice in the now.
Goose Creek Symphony |
The sensation of being present at a real happening only intensified as the set continued. “It looks like a good night out there. Might as well be,” quipped Gearheart, a master of verbal sleight of hand peppered with wisdom you can use. And all six guys up there with him exuded the same heartfelt dedication to creating something good and useful and sweet for folks. By set’s end I was certain that Goose Creek Symphony ranks amongst the best outfits rock has ever given us. They’ve got the chops, diversity and songbook to rival the mighty Grateful Dead, plus their harmonies are way better and they’re a whole lot less self-important about what they do (especially these days). ‘Down to earth’ is a common expression but this bunch really is earthy and blue collar as a tattered, beloved pair of Levi’s. But they’re also pretty goddamn brainy and culturally savvy, and there are sections that nail some of the same magic one finds in The Beatles or Pink Floyd – two obvious influences that Goose Creek weaves into their own music masterfully, as in the Wish You Were Here like rendition of “I Don’t Know” this night. The Goose can also get funky as fuck, and the low end generally swerves and pops with an unpredictable but right on time cadence. And somehow the fiddle fits into all of it. That’s a neat trick.
Watching the sweaty, dazed young faces along the rail it was clear this isn’t some nostalgia kick. This music has the power to directly connect to real music people, the sort open to the kind of blackly humorous, intricately woven yet rowdily delivered music that Goose Creek Symphony lays down. There were plenty of gray hairs like myself – freakin’ as well as our bodies allow – but the younger fans reveal the huge potential for this music to light up myriad lives. It’s right in front of us, waiting to lift your heels and twist your brain. And thankfully so is Goose On The Lake. Here’s to Year 16 in 2011 and many more for Goose Creek themselves.
See many more pics from this wonderful festival here.
JamBase | Kentucky
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Conan O’Brien & Jack White: Live Vinyl Recording
SPOKEN WORD 7″ ALSO TO BE RELEASED IN THE NEAR FUTURE
When Conan O’Brien stopped by Jack White‘s Third Man Records Studios for a live performance
to 300 people last Thursday night, few could have expected that the evening would be turned into a live vinyl
recording available to the
general public! Click here for all the details.
The evening included renditions of songs performed during Conan’s “Legally Prohibited from Being Funny on
Television Tour” and some songs they’d never performed before like “20 Flight Rock,” on which Jack White also sat in.
Setlist: (courtesy of Consequence of Sound)
Blue Moon of Kentucky
Rock This Town
Polk Salad Annie
On the Road Again
Monkey Business
King Creole
Seven Nation Army
The Weight
20 Flight Rock *
Forty Days *
* = w/ Jack White
Third Man Records has also announced
that Conan has recorded a spoken word 7″ due to be released on
Third Man in the near future.
MTV “Jersey Shore†Southern Spinoff “Party Down South†Now Casting
Italian-American stereotypes are soooo 2009. The casting geniuses behind MTV’s breakout reality smash Jersey Shore are looking for a couple good ol’ boys and girls to live up to any and all cliches about Southerners on a new reality show called Party Down South — a “Snooki Meets Larry The Cable Guy-style” docu-soap headed to [...]







The Tennessee Fire
My Morning Jacket by Dave Vann
The Tennessee Fire inside cover
Zac Brown Band
ZBB @ Bonnaroo ’09 by Dave Vann
Zac Brown Band
Zac Brown @ Bonnaroo ’09 by Dave Vann
Goose Creek’s Charlie Gearheart
Lloyd Settle
Benny Skyn
Dave Gleason
Goose Creek Symphony
Backstage View by Dennis Cook
Frank Hudson
Wanda Jackson
Goose Creek Symphony