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Posts Tagged ‘Marco Benevento’

Benevento Album Out 5/11: Between Needles & Nightfall

MARCO BENEVENTO TO RELEASE BETWEEN NEEDLES & NIGHTFALL MAY 11

Marco Benevento

Back with his third full length studio album in as many years, Brooklyn-based pianist and sound sculptor Marco Benevento delivers Between Needles & Nightfall May 11 via his label Royal Potato Family.

Between Needles & Nightfall was initially conceived at Trout Recording in Brooklyn where engineer Bryce Goggin (Pavement, Akron/Family) tracked Benevento and his trio, including bassist Reed Mathis and drummer Andrew Barr, over three days.

The material was drawn from fragments of melodies and song ideas that Benevento had been collecting over the last year. To achieve the colors he envisioned for these compositions, Benevento recorded on a baby grand piano bolstered by guitar pick-ups, amplifiers and myriad of pedals and circuit bent toys, while overdubbing Moog, Optigan, Mellotron and Farfisa. He then transferred the tracks to his home studio, taking the next two months to cut, loop and shape the pieces into full-fledged songs. Additional drum parts were added by Matt Chamberlain.

As a last step, Benevento handed off his work to three of his favorite engineers: Mell Dettmer (Sunn O, Eyvind Kang), Jesse Lauter (Low Anthem, Elvis Perkins) and Vid Cousins (Amon Tobin, Kid Koala) for final mixes. The results range from the Day-Glo electro-pop of “It Came From You” to the simply-stated lullaby “Katie’s Song” to the shimmering Arcade Fire-meets-Brad Mehldau anthem “Two Of You.”

With the release of Between Needles & Nightfall, Marco Benevento continues to define himself as one of the most prolific new voices of his era, blurring genres from song to song, and more often from measure to measure, with his own take on simple pop pleasures, dance party rave-ups and art jazz experimentation. He speaks in modern sonic tongues, all cut-and-pasted, tweaked-out and glitchy, but full of wide-eyed wonder that rejoices in the limitless horizons of sound and melody.

Marco Benevento Tour Dates available here.

For more on Marco, see our exclusive feature/interview here.


moe. | 01.22.10 | NYC

Words & Images by: Jarrod Dicker

moe. :: 01.22.10 :: Roseland Ballroom :: New York, NY

moe. :: 01.22 :: Roseland Ballroom

“Thank you, NYC, and welcome to the show,” Rob Derhak announced while smiling after the conclusion of moe.‘s second selection of the evening, “Bearsong.”

“We are extremely pumped to be here, thank you all for coming and supporting WHY [World Hunger Year],” continued Derhak. “We have a lot of guests coming out tonight and a lot of fun in store. We’re here to have a good time, but the cause is what it’s all about. So, even though we’re all enjoying ourselves up onstage and you’re all dancin’ in the crowd, just know that the money that’s spent on this show will be feeding a lot of people.”

Cheers filled the Roseland Ballroom on what was truly an evening to remember. moe.’s New York City homecoming served somewhat as a “jam band prom” for all ye’ faithful in attendance, attracting fans and performers from all over the musical spectrum.

Publicized as a WHY benefit performance, the band announced on their website that the charitable contributions would be allocated accordingly to assist Haiti after the devastating earthquake that shocked that country on January 12.

The crowd eagerly awaited the Buffalo natives to hit the stage, as well as anticipating the much-publicized guests that were scheduled to appear on the benefit’s bill. The evening’s ensemble consisted of Butch Trucks (Allman Brothers), Jeff Austin (Yonder Mountain String Band), saxophonist David Sanborn, Marco Benevento, Danny Barnes (Bad Livers) and, of course, Rob, Chuck, Al, Jim and Vinnie.

Danny Barnes w/ moe. :: 01.22 :: Roseland Ballroom

The evening, which marked the kick off of moe.’s 20th anniversary tour, began with Headseed favorite “Timmy Tucker,” performed with extreme velocity. The crowd took well to the familiar introductory track, and further applauded the in-depth jam session that inevitably followed.

“Tucker” fed into “Bearsong,” which exhibited yet another unbelievable shred session, highlighting what makes moe. moe. – the high peak and plateau riding grooves that give up little if any energy throughout.

The band then welcomed their first two guests of the night, Danny Barnes on banjo and Marco Benevento on keys, for the infamous moe. tune “Captain America,” followed by Barnes’ “Caveman,” where Jeff Austin came out to contribute mandolin.

There was talk leading up the show that the presence of all these different players onstage together might produce a confusing, jumbled mess since the entire group as a whole have never all played with one another simultaneously. As soon as “Captain America” and “Cavemen” were played, all those concerns went right out the door.

Jeff Austin w/ moe. :: 01.22 :: Roseland Ballroom

“Nebraska” was next up in the first set, followed by “Happy Hour Hero.” moe. invited David Sanborn and Butch Trucks up to assist on “Hero,” hinting with Trucks’ presence at some classic Allman tunes to come. Sanborn’s saxophone mirrored the drum and guitar lines throughout “Hero,” creating a fresh – and possibly better – version than the original with the beautiful saxophone infusion.

At the conclusion of “Hero,” Derhak grabbed the mic and said, “We got a singer? Yes.” The bass line started and Jeff Austin took hold of the microphone. The Allman Brothers’ “Whipping Post” ensued, creating absolute musical mayhem (in a good way). It is hard for guitarists (even Al and Chuck) to mimic the hammering of Duane and Dickey, and even Warren and Derek. However, the band adopted the song rather well in terms of providing a complimentary and thorough version of the gem.

Returning from set break, the group (accompanied by Benevento and Trucks) went right into Dickey Betts’ “In Memory of Elizabeth Reed.” Marco on keys was unbelievable throughout, venturing beyond back beats to engage with the wide variety of musicians onstage.

“Shoot First” came and went, followed by “Waiting for the Punchline.” During “Waiting,” Al adjusted the verse to compliment his new ‘supergroup’ bandmates: “Jeff Austin told me about the likes of you.” A hoedown jam arrived after the verses, and Rob yelled, “Jeff Austin and Danny Barnes, everybody – separated at birth!” The fusion of moe., Barnes and Austin was unbelievable, especially during this track, which fit the musicians’ instruments rather well.

moe. :: 01.22 :: Roseland Ballroom

After “Waiting,” Al said, “Mr. Marco, everybody. It’s our pleasure to get to play with Marco finally, and we get to do it with style. We’re going to play one of Marco’s songs now. He made a really cool video for this song that you can see on YouTube. It’s called ‘The Real Morning Party’ and it’s awesome!”

“The Real Morning Party” was followed by “Shake Your Hips.” Then, Austin grabbed the mic again, “So, I gotta say something. When I was first riding around playing music I met the moe. guys and they were just so nice to me. That was ten years ago and they’re still so great to me now. It’s just a pleasure to be playing with these guys. They’re just the best. So, give it up for this great band we got up here! And they wanted to learn one of my songs so we’ll play it right now.”

Austin offered lead vocals on moe.’s cover of Yonder’s “East Nashville Easter.” Benevento remained with the group through “Blue Jeans Pizza,” and then Butch came back out for the set closing “Mexico.”

All guests stepped back on the stage and assembled for the grand finale of this outrageous and unbelievable event. The guitar began, and it took the crowd less than two seconds to figure out the encore. It seemed fitting at this special event that the group closed with one from The Last Waltz. “The Weight” was performed exceptionally well, rotating vocals between members of moe., Austin and Barnes.

“Thank you very much NYC,” Rob graciously pronounced at the end of “The Weight.” “Have a great night everybody. Thank you for coming out. Let’s give a hand for the WHY Band, Marco Benevento on keyboards, Danny Barnes on banjo, Jeff Austin on mandolin and vocals, Mr. Butch Trucks on drums, Mr. David Sanborn, and the rest of you guys for making this all possible. Give yourselves a hand. Have a great night. We’ll see y’all tomorrow night.”

moe. :: 01.22.10 :: Roseland Ballroom :: New York, NY
Set I: Timmy Tucker > Bearsong, Captain America, Caveman, Nebraska, Happy Hour Hero, Whipping Post

Set II: In Memory Of Elizabeth Reed, Shoot First, Waiting For The Punchline, The Real Morning Party, Shake Your Hips, East Nashville Easter, Blue Jeans Pizza, Mexico

E: The Weight

moe. is on tour now; dates available here.

JamBase | Big Apple
Go See Live Music!


Garage A Trois | 12.19.09 | New York

Words by: Jarrod Dicker

Garage A Trois :: 12.19.09 :: Bowery Ballroom :: New York, NY

Garage A Trois

New York City was covered by snow on this Saturday night, whiting out the city landscape with an awe-inspiring touch of gray. There was no visibility beyond the foggy haze that lay within 15-feet of perception. Being on the Upper West Side, I had to be utterly insane to diagonally cross town in time for the Garage A Trois Bowery Ballroom gig… but the thing is, I am completely fanatical.

Trenching knee deep through snow, slush and city grime, I combined subway and leg work to reach my Lower East Side destination with the aid of a reliable amigo, Jack Daniels.

I trekked down the stairs and was met instantly by a sign on the foyer door stating, “Due to inclement weather Mike Dillon will not be performing tonight. The rest of Garage A Trois will be joined by Adam Deitch.”

The snow had caused Garage A Trois to slightly amend its act this evening. With percussionist Mike Dillon unable to get into New York, Lettuce‘s Adam Deitch was scheduled to play drums alongside keyboardist Marco Benevento, drummer Stanton Moore, and saxophonist Skerik.

You’d think fans would have been pissed that Dillon was unable to attend, however, observing the outrageous weather conditions present in the city that night, patrons were just relieved that the show was still on.

October 2009 welcomed the release of “Garage A Benevento’s” (the jargon name for the new-fangled version of Garage A Trois) album Power Patriot. With the recent departure of eight-string guitarist and co-founder Charlie Hunter, Garage A Trois signed on keyboardist Marco Benevento to replace Hunter’s sounds and commence a newfound fashion to the band.

Marco Benevento

As stated in Court Scott’s interview with GAT on JamBase, Benevento had previously played with Skerik and Dillon in the group Coxygen and opened for Critters Buggin for various East Coast gigs. He has also accompanied Garage A Trois sporadically since 2005. Clearly, Marco is no rookie when it comes to the naturalness and reciprocated melodies that are established by Garage A Trois.

Deitch, Skerik and Benevento kicked off as the opening act, and morphed into Garage A Trois later upon the arrival of Stanton Moore. The scene was heady, even with the torrential blizzard, and the Ballroom was nearly packed. People wanted to hear some music and GAT had every intention of giving them just that.

At 11:30, I started to speculate a reason behind the group’s belated start. The fans were becoming restless, howling towards the stage to begin the show. Something had to be brewing, as there were no announcements of delay of any kind. But unexpectedly, a Willis Reed moment took place that wouldn’t fit comfortably anywhere else but New York City.

Walking up from the downstairs bar and main entrance enters drummer Stanton Moore. Instead of coming through the back of the venue, Moore walks through the crowd with a bag on his back, hinting at his late arrival. The audience comes together in ovation, cheering as Moore waves at his subjects and moves towards the stage access stairs.

Moore’s arrival was delayed due to the commanding weather conditions, but neither rain nor snow could stop the Louisiana native from getting there. He immediately hit the stage with various crew and set up his kit. Soon after completion, Moore stepped back behind the stage.

Marco Benevento soon stepped onstage, followed by Skerik who immediately grabbed the microphone.

Skerik by Jeffrey Dupuis

“Stanton just got here, he’s going to the bathroom and then we’re going to get this thing going,” he shouts. “We’re going to pack three hours worth of material into an hour and a half!”

Any Skerik fan that has witnessed him live knows how dominant his onstage presence is, and thus his announcement impelled adrenaline throughout the waiting fans’ yearning veins.

From then on it was absolute musical mayhem (in the most awesome of ways). Moore’s drum work was brilliant as he further established himself as one of the best in the business. Skerik served as MC and saxophonist extraordinaire, slaving to Benevento’s musical aura by repeatedly gazing in awe at his bandmate.

The Mike Dillon shout-outs were nothing short of habitual. “Let’s dedicate this to our missing Mike Dillon!” or “Play it for Mike D, Stanton, play it for Mike D!” were heard repetitively by Skerik in between beautiful, melodious fusions and atop concentrated climactic collaborations.

As the flier stated, Adam Deitch was set to join the other three members. This, understandably, was not meant to be taken literally because his participation was very minimal. When he did appear onstage, the drummer would position himself to the left of Benevento and offered flattering firework-like electro-rhythmic explosions to compliment the already sonic fueled partnership GAT was exhibiting.

While Mike Dillon was most certainly missed during the track, “Electric Doorbell Machine” (where Dillon is notorious for playing his instrument aka the Electric Doorbell Machine), the trio improvised well, and in fact, capitalized on it skillfully. Skerik, Moore and Benevento played their hearts out and channeled the funk/rock/hip hop/jazz fusion that GAT is so very well know for.

I’ve read album reviews of Power Patriot, and while all primarily flattering, I read one that claimed Moore’s drumming was not “front and center” as usually is the case when he is involved in a project. This may be the case on the actual record, but it is nothing but the contrary in the live setting, with Moore bouncing from seated to standing throughout the tenure of the show, demonstrating key backbeats and solos, while also driving the songs as he worked on top of Benevento’s bass-like rhythms.

Stanton Moore by Chad Smith

So now the big question: How is the group progressing without Charlie Hunter?

It seems that the function and philosophy are the same. Benevento replaces Hunter particularly well and supplies bass lines and other familiar Hunter-esque responsibilities. It was an outstanding idea to bring in a Hammond organist, as it complements the group exceptionally well. Having the keyboards, organ and a dissimilar approach to the bass, this sound circuit creates a heavier constituent that was lacking in previous albums. Benevento truly brings the heavier rock and roll edge to Garage A Trois.

The band performed songs from the new album (“Rescue Spreaders”), some old tunes (“Five 2 Survive”) and covers. Skerik led an audience accompanied, slow escalating chant, starting with a simmered “Deerhoof… Deerhoof,” that eventually amplified to a crowd engaged, “DEERHOOF! DEERHOOF!” This consequently led the trio into the song “Twin Killers” by Deerhoof, covering it with stunning eagerness and accuracy.

The other cover was unveiled towards the end on the night. Benevento began with a long, heavy organ solo that made even the most tripped out GAT fans coil into serene psychedelia, just long enough for a quick cut in to the recognizable and beyond legendary “No Quarter” by Led Zeppelin.

And what would a Garage A Trois show be without a little Critters Buggin? The familiar and often played “sorta-cover” “Punk Rock Guilt” finalized the performance, making it a New York City wintry whiteout to remember.

In later news, the Garage A Trois’ Philadelphia gig on Sunday was cancelled due to weather conditions. So what does the band do? Mike Dillon gets to New York and they perform at the Brooklyn Bowl that Sunday night instead. Damn, now that’s a supergroup in every sense of the word.

JamBase | NYC
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Sat Eye Candy: Professor Longhair

HAPPY FREAKIN’ BIRTHDAY, FESS!!!

As a college student eking out a living at long defunct Cymbaline Records in Santa Cruz, one of our regulars was New Age music superstar George Winston. His albums December and Winter Into Spring were the definition of textural piano bliss, and every jerk-water in a cardigan came in with their little yap dog to buy copies in the late 1980s. Given the character of his music one might assume the dude was majorly mellow but what Winston mainly came by to do was special order rare Japanese CDs of boogie woogie jazz and jump blues. And his main obsession was Professor Longhair, who stirred a hot coal fire inside George that warmed every damn employee up to the New Orleans great. We’d put on his records in the store and the way music flowed through his fingers, the way an 88 purred and kicked beneath his touch, well, it hit one like lightning and made you dance around like a puppet with tangled strings. And that sensation has never diminished for me, and I’m guessing Mr. Winston, too.

Born Henry Roeland Byrd in 1918, the man who became known as Professor Longhair, or just Fess for short, took what the other stride and jump pianists were doing and just made it weird. And just plain wonderful, too. There’s a crazed pleasure and simmering sense of possibility inside his signature numbers “Go to the Mardi Gras,” “Tipitina,” “No Buts – No Maybes” and “Big Chief.” But, open up his admittedly sparse recorded output – given that he started his career in 1948 and died in 1980 there should be more – and there’s all kinds of strange crags and wicked journeys to be found. Often joyful, there’s an angled difference to Fess’ playing and compositional sense that to this day sets him apart, though one picks up some of his peculiar frequencies in Marco Benevento, John Medeski and Brian Haas; not the New Orleans flavor (see Dr. John for that prescription) so much as his joie de vivre and in-the-moment ability to curve into unexpected spaces. He will always be associated and identified with his New Orleans focused material – and rightly so – but there’s so much more to Professor Longhair than Mardi Gras, and we cheat ourselves as listeners by limiting our perspective on one of the defining piano voices of the 20th century. To watch him in action was to see music itself come to life, flowing and playing through his entire body as it came into being. Such a beautiful sight.

Fess would have been 91-years-old if he were still with us today. I know for sure I miss him, and I betcha his piano does, too. Happy birthday, sir, the angels are gonna get a hell of a concert tonight. (Dennis Cook, JamBase Associate Editor)

We begin our Fess focused Eye Candy with The Meters backing him on a venerable blues staple. He could take even the well worn and give it a fresh twist, not the least in his wholly unique, impossible to duplicate phrasing and vocal style.

Here he is with pals Allen Toussaint and Tutts Washington in the 1982 documentary Piano Players Rarely Play Together.

Toussaint discusses the Professor’s style and innovations.

Proof that Fess’ music has traveled everywhere: Japanese club act Nikki & Cup performing a credible cover of his “Doin’ It”!

Now, a wicked fun version of “Tipitina” from a particularly copacetic Dr. John and Johnny Winter. They also get into the Lincoln Chase’s 1950s hit “Such A Night” in this clip.

Appropriately, we give the last word to the good Professor, with three more killers from the man himself.


Surprise Me Mr. Davis/Land of Talk | 11.21

Words by: Kyle Weingart

Surprise Me Mr. Davis/Land of Talk :: 11.21.09 :: Mercury Lounge :: New York, NY

Surprise Me Mr. Davis by John Chapman

It’s 10:30 p.m. on Saturday night and outside the classic venue Mercury Lounge in Manhattan’s Lower East Side the energy is starting to build. Crowds of smokers are straddling the curb watching the city chic walk by on their way to barstools, dance floors, and comedy clubs while preparing for the sold out Surprise Me Mr. Davis/Land of Talk show that is set to begin at 10:45. Inside, the narrow front bar is packed and the intimate stage in the back room is starting to fill up to capacity. Among the crowd is Surprise Me Mr. Davis (SMMD) guitarist and vocalist Brad Barr talking to a friend before hitting the stage. For those that don’t know, SMMD consists of folk troubadour Nathan Moore (vocals, guitar), Slip members Brad Barr, Marc Friedman (bass) and Andrew Barr (drums and percussion), and Marco Benevento (piano). Sadly, Benevento will not be playing with SMMD tonight because he is in Austin, Texas playing The Parish with Garage A Trois.

At 10:45 sharp the band takes the stage wearing crisp suits and their Sunday finest. The three members of The Slip gather around a microphone and begin harmonizing while Moore begins a beautiful rendition of his song “Tombstone” that Brad Barr accompanies with a ukulele. After a couple of mellow songs, including the poetic “Summer of My Fall,” the band breaks into the upbeat “I’m No Good At All,” which sounds like something The Bowery Boys would listen to while getting into a barroom brawl. This really gets the crowd moving, especially when Brad and Nathan begin rubbing their guitars together and working the audience. Riding this wave of energy the set continues with a soulful “When a Woman” and a classic “I Hate Love.”

B. Barr & Moore by John Chapman

Next, the band slides into ’50s R&B mode with “That’s the Way” and then a little protest funk with “Sissyfus.” At this point, Moore shows off his magic tricks with a little sleight of hand while dancing around the stage to the rhythm of the beat while the crowd watches in amazement. The set slows down with the heart wrenching “Joelle” featuring some impressive guitar work that wins over some new fans in the audience. At this point Brad mentions that a few of the new songs they have been playing can be found on their new demo that can be purchased at the merch table (you can also hear some of these songs on the band’s website). However, he laments that they only have four to sell. The hour-long set finishes off much as it began with the a cappella “As the Crow Flies,” which once again showcases the amazing vocals of Brad Barr and extraordinary range of the band. Though a great set, SMMD seemed hesitant to relinquish the stage just as they were about to really explode.

After witnessing this performance it’s easy to say that the music of Surprise Me Mr. Davis defies categorization. From tender ballads to thrilling funk to classic R&B, the band traveled in and out of several genres while effortlessly maintaining the groove, which is no surprise considering the band’s pedigree. In fact, the only surprise is that they are still playing shows at small intimate venues like the Mercury Lounge. As Moore said at the end of the show, “We have big things planned for 2010. We will be back with Marco Benevento.” I for one will be there.

Elizabeth Powell – Land of Talk from myspace.com/landoftalk

After a short set break Canada’s Land of Talk takes the stage a little after midnight to about the same size audience as SMMD. Frontwoman Elizabeth Powell (vocals, guitar) grabs the mic and exclaims, “We’re happy to be here,” before ripping into “Corner Phone” and a high-energy, uptempo set propelled by the rhythm section and her beautiful voice. Staying behind the drum kit is SMMD’s Andrew Barr joined on bass by Joe Yarmush on some songs and Michael Felber on others.

Throughout the set Powell pounds out notes on her guitar while she gleefully jumps around the stage and grins knowingly at both Andrew and Yarmush when things really click. After having vocal problems over the past year, she is happy to be back in the thick of it, though she is a bit more modest about using the full power of her vocal range. The set includes tunes from Applause Cheer Boo Hiss, Some are Lakes, and the new EP, Fun and Laughter. Highlights included “Gimme Back My Heart Attack,” “Some are Lakes,” and “It’s Okay.” The combination of Land of Talk and Mr. Davis proved a potent double-bill, and one could only sit in awe of Andrew Barr as he double dipped. Throw Benevento into the mix and we’d have one hell of a tour… 2010 is calling.

JamBase | Surprise Land
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Sullivan Hall 2 Year Ann Slip, Benevento, Martin

Sullivan Hall 2 Year Anniversary Celebration with The Slip, Benevento, Martin

The Slip

On January 2, 2010, NYC’s Sullivan Hall will celebrate its two year anniversary with The Slip, Marco Benevento Trio featuring Billy Martin and more.

Tickets go on sale Tuesday December 1 at ticketweb.com.


Bear Creek Music Festival | 11.13-11.15 | FL

Words by: B. Getz | Images by: Allison Murphy & Rob Chapman

Bear Creek Festival :: 11.13.09 – 11.15.09 :: Spirit of the Suwannee Music Park :: Live Oak, FL

Bear Creek 2009 by Chapman

The Spirit of The Suwannee Music Park is a celebrated venue amongst Southern festivalgoers‚ and what transpired at the Bear Creek Music Festival 2009 was the funkiest assemblage of artists and audience I can remember in some time – a sonic gumbo of epic proportions. The festival channels the spirit of New Orleans’ Jazz and Heritage Festival mixed with the High Sierra Music Fest, both of which influenced Bear Creek curators Paul Levine and Lyle Williams to develop this fertile scene for all things funk, swamp boogie, jazz‚ and rock. The distinctly Southern Gothic hinterland, complete with boggy lakes and miles of towering pine and oak trees swathed in a fuzzy moss, provides a certifiably invigorating atmosphere. With magical surroundings filled with crazy costumed freaks and dirty, bass-laden rhythms, the place was really happening.

If Levine’s vision set an agenda for Bear Creek at its inception three years ago, then the senseless 2008 murder of native Tallahassee funkateer Rachel Morningstar Hoffman gave the gathering its sense of purpose and its Ner Tamid (Eternal Light). Rachel’s fuzzy, purple top hat is omnipresent on the festival site, and in its collective heart. This great Floridian bash serves as a commemoration of her special life. These disparate energies, juxtaposed, have birthed a jamboree cut from righteous cloth.

Toubab Krewe :: BC09 by Chapman

Levine’s motivated staff assembled another phenomenal collection of musicians for 2009. The festival has always been a carnival of funk, but this year Bear Creek upped the ante. The lineup was littered with a who’s who of the NOLA/NYC/Bay Area funk scenes, with an assortment of live electronic artists, roots music favorites, and whoever else seemed to fit on the bill.

The Bear Creek Music Festival 2009 began Thursday night, with a small lineup scheduled to play indoors as campers got settled and the festival underway.

The Pnuma PA set was delivered by bassist/production virtuoso Alex B and Pnuma Trio drummer Lane Shaw, and was a very strong start. Manipulating sounds and beats behind an array of synths, laptops, gadgets, and wielding a bass guitar, Alex B worked the crowd over with a mixture of glitchy tech-step, psilocybin G-funk, and stutter-step beat-science. The duo traversed terrains sensual and sadistic. The highlight for this writer was a crippling remix of the Clipse/Pharrell anthem “Mr. Me Too.

South Florida jammers The Heavy Pets have been a band on steep ascent, and Bear Creek showcased how far the quintet has come in a short couple of years. Thursday’s set at the Music Hall was bursting with force. Guitarists/vocalists Jeff Lloyd and Mike Genius left strong impressions, early and often, and Jim Wuest‘s velvety keyboard flourishes complemented the axe-work. A lengthy, intricate “So Thank You Music” opened new eyes and ears to THP, the reggae-tinged opus bouncing off the hall’s walls, Lloyd’s bug-eyed vocal plump and convincing. The intense, open-ended jam out of “Sleep” knocked a few people over, as in literally off their feet.

A prodigious world-beat collective of players hailing from Asheville, NC, Toubab Krewe blessed early birds with a tremendous performance to close the Music Hall Thursday night. With their huge, swirling psychedelia and intercontinental instrumentation, the rapidly growing crowd was whipped into a whirling dervish during highlight “The Tacomba.”

Friday, 11.13

Bonerama :: BC09 by Murphy

Celebrating their Billboard #1 Roots Album, Bonerama dropped a boisterous set at the big stage, mid-afternoon on Friday. Opening with “21st Century Schizoid Man,” then bringing out Fred Wesley on “Shake Your Regulator,” the lively ensemble even debuted a new tune, “Funky Brown Shorts.” The Meters medley was definitely a favorite, and they closed with a Pigpen-styled “Lovelite” with Skerik and Mike Dillon in full effect. This set was obviously led by the stellar brass section, but was also filled with heavy B3 organ. The funky drums were courtesy of Eric Bolivar, who is also touring with another Bear Creek secret, Pimps of Joytime.

This is where the Royal Family throwdown began. Though this crew would assemble variably throughout the weekend, Chapter 2 announced that the Northeast was most definitely in the building. Led by Eric Krasno, joined by Adam Deitch, Nigel Hall, and bassist Louis Cato, Chapter 2 mixed Meters-style funk, Cosmic Slop black rock, and thick jazz grooves for over an hour.

“Be Alright” saw Kraz get really loose, more demonstrative onstage than I ever remember him being. After a few tunes, the core four was joined by Fred Wesley, Kofi Burbridge, Skerik, and The Shady Horns. Throughout their late afternoon set, Chapter 2 delivered monster versions of classics. A thoroughly reworked “Manic Depression” (which appears on Kraz’s new solo CD) absolutely CRUSHED, and displayed even further colors from Kraz, Hall and Deitch. The Beatles’ “Get Back” sounded like late ’60s Blue Note rare groove on roids. Nigel Hall’s absurd Moog/synth game was on full display throughout Chapter 2′s hour of chaos. The set ended with a choice surprise Tears for Fears cover, “Everybody Wants to Rule the World,” which teased Kanye’s “All Falls Down” throughout.

Skerik :: BC09 by Murphy

Skerik and Mike Dillon, both artists-at-large for the weekend, dropped a duo set mid-afternoon Friday. The Frog Brigade freaks mixed drum n’ bass, D.C.-go-go, jazz, punk, and metal. Skerik augmented Dillon’s maniacal rhythms with dubbed out horn chants that recalled Lee Perry’s Arkology. This set was a precursor of things to come.

Other artists-at-large for the weekend included The Shady Horns (Ryan Zoidis and Sam Kininger), and Kofi Burbridge (flute, keys, percussion, and whatever else he saw laying around the stage). These players could be found sitting in with various performers throughout the weekend, making for a NOLA-esque vibe all weekend.

Dubconscious‘ Friday set in the circus tent was unfortunately marred by sound issues and tensions within the band, however, they still impressed many in attendance. Word traveled throughout the festival that their Sunday set would be their final show.

Toubab Krewe picked up where they left off Thursday, wowing everyone with melodies derived from various cultural traditions. Toubab introduced many to their diverse instrumentation, which incorporated kora (a 21-string harp-lute), kamelengoni (a 12-string harp-lute), and soku (a Malian horsehair fiddle), all juxtaposed against two electric guitars, electric bass guitar, trap drum set, and African percussion. This made for two thoroughly enjoyable sets from a band on the rise.

Telepath arrived in Live Oak by way of Philadelphia via Asheville, and though the trio were dressed for a night out in Tel Aviv, their music was ideal for Bear Creek. Initially skeptical, the big block rocking beats and coalition of electronica and arena rock sold this writer early on their late afternoon set. Triggering samples of Arabic vocal chants, tranquil flute loops, and Afrobeat horn stabs, Telepath’s execution and confidence was on point. Curt Heiny‘s rotund bass lines strutted alongside Michael Christie‘s alluring synth loops, all unleashed over Mike B‘s electro-tribal undercurrent. Telepath left the stage to a roar from the Purple Hat Tent massive.

Trombone Shorty :: BC09 by Murphy

Greenville, SC trio The Malah, three time Bear Creek alum, delivered their spacey mid-tempo electronica to rabid ravers twice this weekend. A psychedelic crystallization of youth and technology, this trio expanded on last year’s campsite sonic horizons, channeling the likes of Massive Attack and Orbital while developing their own sound to fantastic response. Both sets this year garnered rave reviews.

New Orleans lady killer Trombone Shorty brought his razor-sharp band Orleans Avenue to the Uncle Charlie Stage, delivering a high energy gig heavy on brass with a vast bottom end. Shorty and Co. mixed today’s pop music trends with classic R&B themes, all the while keeping things NOLA to the core. Shorty fancies himself a sex symbol, overtly playing to the ladies, and this day was no different. He played various instruments besides trombone and bounced around the stage with vigor. Aggressive funk begat sultry crooning all steeped in the sound of a Second Line running down the street. Troy Andrews piloted his jubilant troupe with a brashness that was infections.

In the circus tent, Philadelphia’s Lotus bestowed a mind blowing set of organic drum & bass, live breakbeat, and dark, distorted jamming. Often the bass took a backseat to the music’s melodic enterprises. Jazz poked its head in a few places, particularly when Lotus slowed the tempos. There was a distinct jamming element throughout their set, and it felt as if the band at times was trying to service different audiences simultaneously, which occasionally bogged things down. Mike Greenfield (formerly of The Ally), more than ably filled in on drums, rolling away with reckless abandon, bringing that Philly jump-up. Jesse and Luke Miller on bass and guitar, respectively, unleashed torrid assaults. The Millers built tension/release in an economic fashion. Luke also employed emotive guitar solos, flaunting disparate styles like flamenco and shred-metal. Percussionist Chuck Morris navigated this tightrope at a feverish pace. The collective Lotus sound was extremely dynamic, utilizing complex layering, underneath accessible melodies. Highlights included “Suitcases and Sandwiches” (with the studio intro) and the closing “Hammerstrike” and “Spiritualize” with distinct Fleetwood Mac teases.

Robert Walter :: BC09 by Murphy

Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe‘s first appearance at BC09 was Friday night at the Big IV Stage, and the entire set included guest percussionist Mike Dillon, who toured with KDTU for over two years. The band ran through a strong set, mixing older rarities like “Make it a Cosmopolitan” with newer material from the recently released Brother’s Keeper. Denson welcomed Greyboy Allstars bandmate Robert Walter on organ for a scorching “The Answer,” and local guitar prodigy Matt Grondin came up for the Afrobeat inspired “Freedom.” A rearrangement of classic KDTU track “Fallin’” was unveiled to mixed results. One of the more robust new tunes was the reggae-tinged “Mighty Rebel,” with its lover’s rock tempo and Dean Fraser style horns. KDTU teased a taste of the funkiness to come with a stock cover of the immortal Jackson 5 track “Dancing Machine.”

One of the more low-profile performances of the weekend was the Friday night set from 3rd Stone, a Gainesville-area reggae/funk/rock group. The young phenoms, joined by Fred Wesley and keyboardist Bernie Worrell, delivered a choice cover of Worrell-era Talking Heads tune “Crosseyed and Painless.”

The producer/live drummer electro duo Break Science, with Adam Deitch on drums and Borahm Lee on laptop and keys, produced a performance designed as a live hip hop mix tape. Deitch and Lee plays the roles of producer, programmer, and composer, unveiling sonic layers that run circles around many of the other electronic artists that permeate the scene. Break Science effortlessly navigated neck-snapping boom-bap, glitch, broken-beat, dub, drum & bass and hip hop. Deitch seized the moment and, with Lee in tow, put on a colossal display of sonic eruption. Lee mixed and matched samples and synths wedded to Deitch’s wicked breaks. No doubt the highlight of this set, “Cycletron/Harmonic” was a dark, sinister break that featured the late, great Notorious B.I.G. rhyming over superb production from Lee and filthy Deitch.

Lettuce :: BC09 by Chapman

Speaking of Deitch, one of the most anticipated sets of the weekend was Friday’s Lettuce late set. Needless to say, my memory is a little fuzzy on this one, and my chicken scratch notes weren’t much help. Dropping standout tracks from last year’s impressive Rage, Lettuce may have been down a couple members (Adam Smirnoff is on tour with Lady Gaga, Sam Kininger missed his flight and arrived Saturday, and E.D. Coomes was M.I.A.) but the Beantown/NYC clan more than made up for it with sit-ins from percussionists Chuck Prada and Mike Dillon, as well as a star-powered turn from superstar Nigel Hall. This man channels the spirit of James Brown like no other performer I have ever witnessed. His jolt of energy and stage presence transforms the band and the room; he is announced with grandeur and takes the stage draped head to toe in all white. When leading the crowd through a Curtis Mayfield medley, the man was a picture of glory. Several more Godfather-of-Soul grooveathons ensued, with Deitch doing his best Big Man Clyde as keyboardist Neal Evans pummeled with vicious left-handed organ-bass, rocking pedals and drawbars like a madman. Louis Cato filled in capably on rhythm guitar, and The Shady Horns stepped up with big ol’ JB’s horn breaks. The shit was ON! Think a couple thousand freaks wylin’ out at BC09′s first late night show, everybody onstage with big chips on their shoulders and the chops to match, and consider the Deitch factor. It was basically 75-plus minutes of four-to-the-floor funk n’ brass that exploded through the circus tent roof and into the heavens.

As the campers descended into the Suwannee woods, parties sprung up all over the campsites. Jacksonville Beach’s dubstep scientists Greenhouse Lounge erected a stage and huge tent deep in the forest and raved to throngs of revelers till nearly 7 a.m. The Heavy Pets’ bassist Justin Carney sat in for almost two hours of continual breakbeat insanity. GHL bassist Dave McSweeney and his Greenhouse cohorts would also play a music hall set later in the weekend.

Continue reading for Saturday’s coverage of Bear Creek…

Saturday, 11.14

Bear Creek 2009 by Chapman

Fashionable folk-rocker Ryan Montbleau got things started Saturday with a breezy set of acoustic driven rock, blue-eyed soul, and bluesy Americana. Poetic and personal, Montbleau delivered sets twice over the weekend, with Saturday’s highlighted by originals “Grain of Sand,” “75 and Sunny,” and an arrangement of The Beatles’ “Tomorrow Never Knows.”

KDTU drummer John Staten unveiled his solo project On The One early Saturday to those who were up and about. The performance featured tracks from their debut record, Love Addiction.

Zach Deputy seemed to be playing somewhere at all times. A regional mainstay, Deputy performed at the Campsite Stage as well as during changeovers in the Purple Hat Tent. Deputy is a huge part of the Bear Creek experience, and his trademark ‘hoot’ loop could be heard reverberating throughout the woods all weekend. Deputy’s falsetto, looped-up tropical flavors, and sharp acoustic guitar patterns earned him even more fans at BC09.

Austin, Texas veteran Papa Mali is always a favorite in the swampy confines of the Suwannee. On this afternoon Mali would be backed by a crack-band of Galactic‘s Stanton Moore and Robert Mercurio, as well as Fred Wesley, Bernie Worrell, and The Shady Horns. Exploiting these riches, Mali let loose with his countrified, backwoods-blues and a little Cajun-fried Texas tango for the funk n’ jammers sprawled across the lawn.

Papa Mali & Moore :: BC09 by Chapman

Jacksonville Beach buzz band Saltwater Grass delivered their sun-baked Southern redneck boogie to faithful local devotees and first timers alike. A blend of early Panic and Stevie Ray Vaughn spiced with surfer slack attitude, the boys applied a jazzy sensibility to their Southern rock in the Music Hall.

The Heavy Pets returned to the stage on Saturday with a blistering set of aggressive jam-rock and progressive material that clearly shows how far the band has grown from its humble beginnings. Highlights included the infectious opener “Help Me Help You,” “Kavorka,” and “Holy Holy.” The future looks bright for these Broward County young’ins.

Robert Walter‘s acrobatic handiwork propelled the 20th Congress through diverse original material culled from various 20th Congress and solo/trio efforts. The reemergence of former RW20 percussionist Chuck Prada beefed up their sound and added a healthy dynamic to the West Coast boogaloo. But the player who complemented Walter most was his longtime foil Cheme Gastelum, whose bright saxophonics and cool-is-back vibe were a welcome departure from the intensity found in other sets. RW20 was a perfect afternoon jam.

Steve Kimock Crazy Engine was another refreshing breather from the uncompromising funk and electronica. Kimock’s set was perfect for a heavenly autumn afternoon. Ably augmented by Jerry Garcia Band organist Melvin Seals and son John Morgan Kimock, Kimock unveiled an arsenal of guitars with such harmonious tones that Crazy Engine delved into 75 minutes of transcendental bliss. Highlights of the midday set included “A New Africa,” an animated “That’s What Love Will Make You Do,” “Three Days More,” and set closer “Crazy Engine,” the latter featuring pedal steel guitarist Roosevelt Collier of The Lee Boys.

Steve Kimock Crazy Engine :: BC09 by Chapman

It was barely approaching dusk when Garage a Trois set about blowing the roof off the Purple Hat Tent, the site of many incredible performances. Now thoroughly comfortable with his role, keyboardist extraordinaire Marco Benevento took the lead early and often. Benevento was operating primarily on Hammond B3 organ, with Rhodes, Wurlitzer, and a laptop amongst his arsenal of weaponry. Drummer Stanton Moore glued things together; the lone cool, calm, and collected band member. Skerik dug deep into his demonic persona, unleashing a myriad of frenetic solos, colors, and echoes, while Mike Dillon went for broke with punked-up percussion and staggering vibraphone runs. The GAT set was comprised primarily of songs from their newest CD, Power Patriot, as well as a couple selections from Marco’s solo offerings. New track “Fat Redneck Gangster” could not have been more apropos for an inland Northern Florida audience, and was a riotous display of spastic limbs. Garage a Trois is boldly getting back to the cacophony of their early Tipitina’s Uptown days. Moore then bottled up this rambunctious energy and toted it over to the Uncle Charlie Stage for the first of two Galactic sets.

After the Kimock set Roosevelt Collier could be found sitting in with Galactic, along with Mike Dillon on percussion and Robert Walter on organ. The Galactic boys reached back to yesteryear with older favorites “Crazyhorse Mongoose,” “Garbage Truck,” and “Baker’s Dozen.” More recent numbers like “Boe Money” displayed the crew’s recent development. Corey Henry, (trombonist of Rebirth Brass Band) has been touring with Galactic for over a year; on this day Henry stole the show. He led Second Line chants, comically introduced band members, and covered Rakim’s “Paid in Full” verbatim. Henry could be found climbing speakers and stage-diving throughout both of Galactic’s sets, as well as battling sax player Ben Ellman every other song. Galactic answered the bell at Bear Creek, squashing any talk about the ‘Galactic Prophylactic’ falling off in any way.

Corey Henry – Galactic :: BC09 by Murphy

About this time, things got really hairy in terms what to see versus what to miss. At their first set of the fest, Dumpstaphunk began with “Living in a World Gone Mad” and “Meantime,” and got Dirty South down from the jump. During their set, there were seemingly endless sit-ins, most notably Derek Trucks, Kofi Burbridge, The Shady Horns, and Skerik. Nigel Hall got his Mick Jagger on, fittingly, with a primo cover of The Rolling Stones’ Some Girls classic “Miss You,” perhaps the funkiest song the Stones ever dropped.

At this juncture, your humble narrator made what can only be described as an executive decision: I left the Big IV Stage amidst the aforementioned parade of champions. Despite how hot the jam was getting, it was a bit similar to the epic collaborations of Bear Creek ’08.

As he left the stage after their PA set Thursday night, Pnuma Trio‘s Alex B gregariously promised lots of entirely new music for Saturday’s Purple Hat Tent set. The proclamation was full of unadulterated enthusiasm, a decision made of sound mind.

“We haven’t really played as Pnuma Trio in Florida for quite awhile,” Alex B explained, “and recently [with] so much new music, both from me personally, and us as a group, I am really trying to decide what material is right for the band and our newer directions, and what I will use for my project, Lipp Service, or whatever. Even though Bear Creek is primarily a funk festival, I/we felt that the massive/crowd/audience is so cultured and open-minded [that] it was a perfect opportunity to deliver a full taste of what Pnuma has in store for 2010.”

The now Boulder-based trio kicked things off with a volcanic “More Samples,” and the Pnuma massive was deeply ensconced from jump-street, like one large tribal ritual. Soon “Variations” gave way to “Spain,” which in turn led to a brand-new Alex B conception. The band let loose emphatically behind his new creations, and seamlessly oozed into “When I’m Leaving,” yet another slice of fresh fruit from the Botwin/Hazelgrove tree. “Off-Balance,” from their latest release, Character, manifested a rumbling roller, with Shaw roaming a jungle landscape with joyful recklessness and Alex B’s bass lines, triggers, and synthesized juno-rolls rumbling beneath as Ben Hazelgrove‘s textures wove an electric afghan of sonic color.

Derek Trucks w/ Lettuce :: BC09 by Murphy

With a nod to their roots, Pnuma reached back for the seminal “Bufkins Tank,” a number that showcased their formerly jazzy, experimental origins. Mostly, Pnuma Trio’s set was brimming over with sampler-processed vocals, deep dub bass lines, oscillating elements of broken beat and blip-hop; in short, a synchronicity of ethereal soundscapes that achieved particular resonance. Far and away, the single most impressive electronic music performance of the weekend.

Lettuce also delivered a bombastic Saturday evening set at the Big IV Stage, this time calling out an army of guests to sit-in and wow an already impressed Bear Creek massive. Unlike their Friday show, Dumpsta’s Ian Neville joined Lettuce on guitar for the entire set, but unfortunately bassist E.D. “Jesus” Coomes was conspicuously absent again. Neal Evans handled bass duties on organ with his vicious left hand. Opening with the colossal trifecta of Rage-era tracks “Salute,” “Last Suppit,” and “Sam Huff’s Flying Ragin’ Machine,” Lettuce came out the gate swingin’ like late ’80s Mike Tyson. Adam Deitch’s drumming during this particular opening stretch was, to put it plainly, absolutely disgusting. The kid is just inhuman at times; he made the sea of heads bob like emergency brakes. A touching Dilla tribute, “Mr. Yancey,” featured great horn layering, fat-ass synth-bass and organ from Evans, and a critical beatdown from Deitch on the kit.

To close the performance, Lettuce welcomed friends Kofi Burbridge and Derek Trucks onstage to reprise last year’s epic collaboration, with the now-swollen band playing “Make My Way Back Home,” which was highlighted by a steamy axe-duel between Kraz and Trucks. At one point, I counted twelve players onstage, including those mentioned already plus John Staten and Rashawn Ross; apparently nobody wanted to miss out on the rage! Nearly everyone knew what was on deck when Nigel Hall was ushered onstage to scores of screams, hoots, and hollers. Again freshly dipped in white on white, Hall proceeded to croon the Curtis Mayfield tandem “We’re a Winner” > “Move on Up,” with Trucks’ slide wailing soulfully away, his sweet tones mellifluous and joyful.

B. Barr – The Slip :: BC09 by Chapman

Though I had anticipated becoming reacquainted with The Slip, their set time was difficult to catch due to the host of other performers who were simultaneously onstage elsewhere. This Jazz Fest-esque conundrum unfortunately cost me nearly all of The Slip’s performance on Saturday. Mixing songs from their two most recent studio efforts, Eisenhower (2006) and Angels Come on Time (2002), The Slip’s reemergence was long overdue, but unfortunately the slotting made it difficult to reconnect with the avant-indie trio.

The New Mastersounds final U.S. dates of 2009 landed the Brits in Live Oak for two shows, and they continued to impress Americans with their clean, pure, and faithful rare-grooves. From the opening number, “Coming Up Roses,” the band was firing on all cylinders with their vintage Blue Note sound. With a style that would make Rudy Van Gelder proud, the Mastersounds broke it down to basics with a simplistic approach to improvisational music seldom chosen today. Guitarist Eddie Roberts displayed a Grant Green-esque virtuoso as he and B3 bully Joe Tatton torched the Uncle Charlie Stage. Trombonist Fred Wesley hopped up for a tune, and later Skerik displayed his jazz roots and joined in on the fun with sparkling sax solos. The road-weathered lads brought it all back home with the walloping caboose of “One Note Brown, Parts I and II.” Festivalgoers could be overheard all weekend singing the praises of these prodigal U.K. sons.

Initially billed as a Saturday night mystery set, Soulive took the tent stage just after 11 p.m. Drummer Alan Evans had flown in from New York just before showtime. The Brothers Evans and Kraz donned their trademark dark suits, with the guitarist ditching his trademark Kangol for a fedora, and assumed their positions. A throbbing “Steppin” opened the festivities. Immediately, Neal Evans’ left hand commandeered the ship. Seemingly awoken from their lengthy slumber, the trio tore through classics “Uncle Junior” and “So Live,” vintage Soulive tracks recalling their Velour period. To say the band had not sounded this inspired, loose, and downright nasty in six or seven years would not be an exaggeration.

Soulive :: BC09 by Chapman

The Shady Horns soon got involved – Sam and Zwad toured with the 2002 Soulive Revue – and the big horn leads atop an enthralling “El Ron” shifted things into another gear entirely. The Evans brothers stomped and strutted along, as Kraz ripped sweet hollow-body leads. A neck-snapper break propelled the gluttonous outro jam that saw Kininger, Zoidis, and Kofi Burbridge get busy as the grandiose climax closed “El Ron” with authority. The superstar Mr. Nigel Hall was again introduced to much fanfare. He took the stage with swagger and owned that shit immediately. Soon, Hall had the entire tent eating out of the palm of his hand with his incredibly soulful voice and powerful stage presence. A screaming “Too Much,” the Hall/Soulive collabo, dripped ’68 JB’s. When the horns came in on the one with razor sharp precision the funk was simply too much to stand! What followed was a NOLA-meets-go-go cover of the ageless MAZE classic “Joy & Pain” (yep, the EZ-Rock/Rob Base sample), which pushed many over the edge. For a moment there I was transported to the Congo Square Stage with Frankie Beverly & Co. sweating in the Crescent City heat.

Hall then cozied up to the mic stand like the Godfather himself, half-open stance, one knee quivering along with the hi-hat. With a gangsta lean, trademark James Brown gesticulations, spastic squeals, Hall’s Godfatherisms had military precision. This was the Dark Star Orchestra of a James Brown experience. “Licking Stick” > “There Was A Time” > “Goodfoot” > “I Feel Alright” was an eight-plus minute relentless throwdown. Hall was even calling out the hits, the stops, and signals with little more than a shrug or a twitch. It’s safe to say that after Reggie Watts and later Toussaint, Soulive has finally found a frontman.

The Duo :: BC09 by Chapman

Nigel Hall, the Shady Horns, Kofi, and Dubconscious trombonist John Lloyd relinquished the stage back to the trio for a triple encore. And what an encore it would be. First it was more Beatles with a rearranged “Eleanor Rigby” done jazzy drum and bass, breakbeat style with clean, emotional licks from Kraz. That banger segued directly into another timeless Fab Four cover, a crunchy, distortion-laden, Band of Gypsys styled “She’s So Heavy (I Want You),” which saw the same aggressiveness Kraz brought to “Manic Depression” a day earlier. The set could have ended right there, but the trio graciously invited Karl Denson onstage for a tenor sax workout, another harbinger for the funk still to come. At this moment I caught a glimpse of fest curator Paul Levine in full Bill Graham mode, side stage, viewing the carnival he had so masterfully created with an enormous grin.

Though their Saturday night time slot left a bit to be desired, the Benevento/Russo Duo made the most of their appearance at Bear Creek. The North Jersey bred wrecking crew laid down extensive, mind-bending arrangements of tracks from their vast catalog. Cacophonous compositions like the seminal “Becky” saw drummer Joe Russo get busy on his wooden percussion boxes near his trap set. Marco Benevento was a mad scientist, spinning between a Hammond B4 plug-in, Fender Rhodes, and a laptop containing samples of many toys he has accumulated through the past few years. When “The Three Question Marks” segued perfectly into “Impact,” The Duo shattered any sense of categorization that one may be tempted to apply to their art.

Next, the long awaited return of the late night funk champ and his posse was upon us. After some nagging sound issues (one of few complaints for the entire weekend; it seemed sound issues dogged every third band in the tent), KDTU took the late night stage and ran thru a stout boogaloo that served as de facto soundcheck and allowed the crowd to prepare for the forthcoming onslaught. Suddenly, the lights went out and familiar synth chords unveiled “Thriller.” The vast, crowded, and dank circus tent grew dark and the costume-clad freaks got dirty. “Thriller’s” lengthy outro-jam was a raucous hoedown, as Chris Stillwell, Staten, Brian Jordan, and keyboardist David Veith laid down the Quincy Jones base while Denson and Chris Littlefield got their King of Pop on, video dance moves and all. The Tiny Universe didn’t come up for air, diving headfirst into a gigantic version of Band of Gypsys’ “Power of Soul,” a longtime set staple that kept the energy level at a fevered pitch. Brian Jordan was wailing away on a green Gibson SG, while Staten channeled his inner Buddy Miles, the hard-hitting skins steering the vessel.

Karl D :: BC09 by Murphy

And the haymakers just kept on flying from the stage, first with more Michael Jackson with a spunky, harmonious “Pretty Young Thing (PYT),” which segued flawlessly into the flute-driven title track of Denson’s 2002 Blue Note solo album, Dance Lesson #2. An exercise in dexterity, this number shifted the KDTU paradigm back towards jazz; only to have Denson direct the troops back to finish “PYT.” A succulent “Cool Is Back” brought back the plump West Coast boogaloo at its finest, with Veith’s bubbling B3 washing Stillwell’s nimble bass lines. Denson, Littlefield, and Jordan passed the jam around the horn during this unadulterated acid jazz showing.

At this juncture, Karl D dropped the bomb. “Groove On” has long been the anchor of this band, a Jazz Fest anthem harking back to halcyon late night shows deep in the Quarter. Subtle accents and communal focus has always been a hallmark of the Tiny Universe, and Staten added a certain flair with electro handclaps during the verses, while Littlefield chimed in falsetto vocal harmonies on each bridge (“even giants…)”. Brian Jordan’s funky chicken scratch guitar strutted along, paced perfect for skanking. At this moment, as the magical brass head atop the “Groove On” outro-jam soared skyward, the Purple Hat Tent detonated. I mean it exploded! For the very first time since Karl Denson reformed his squadron nearly a year ago, the heavyweight champs of the late night funk finally reached the nasty disposition that had first crowned them kings many Jazz Fest moons ago. The lucky Bear Creek ’09 faithful were again treated to something special – the reawakening of a giant.

“Rumpwinder,” Denson’s saucy update of the Lee Morgan chestnut “The Sidewinder,” was rotund rare-groove that served as shelter from the atomic bomb that preceded it. The Dance Lesson #2 track was a playful romp that showcased fine trumpet work from Littlefield, clean hollow-body axe-manship from Jordan, and superb flute from Denson.

KDTU briefly left the stage at quarter till 4 a.m., but swiftly returned to deliver a two song encore. “Shake it Out,” also played on Friday, was a slice of adult-contemporary R&B. Disappointing, but short. But we all know that Denson would “neva go out like that, out like a sucka” (EPMD), and he did no such thing at BC09. For a grand finale, KDTU unleashed a colossal rendition of the title track to their new record, Brother’s Keeper. “Part I” called to mind Earth, Wind & Fire with stirring vocal harmonies on the chorus wedded to brilliant brass leads for a intoxicating mix. “Brother’s Keeper Part II” was chock-full of pimp-slappin’ swagger, KDTU’s rugged funk calisthenics on torrid display. Jordan’s dirty minor chords and Staten’s tent-quaking thump directed the chunky groove, and Karl D blessed us with one final majestic throw down. Have mercy!

As he left the stage and headed for the tour van, I grabbed Chris Littlefield and asked him what he thought about the festival and their performance.

“This shit is off the hook yo! Off. The. Hook,” said Littlefield.

Continue reading for Sunday’s coverage of Bear Creek…

Sunday, 11.15

Dubconscious :: BC09 by Chapman

Avis Berry’s Soul Revue was a great Sunday sermon, with gospel tinged blues and soul. Berry is a magnanimous singer, and she was joined by The Shady Horns, Skerik, Burbridge, and Scott Campbell. The highlight was a sharp cover of the Stevie Wonder/Rufus gem “Tell Me Something Good.”

Dubconscious took the stage to a thunderous ovation Sunday afternoon, and bandleader Adrian Zelski announced that this would be the band’s final performance. An original ingredient to the Bear Creek stew, this news was met with tears from many in the audience and backstage. A powerful version of their strongest original, “Serious Times,” and a vintage Gladiator’s tune were the vehicles Solomon Wright, James Keane, John Lloyd and Zelski rode off into the sunset with. At Bear Creek, and all over the Southeast, Dubconscious will be missed. Namaste.

Like Zach Deputy the day before, Nathan Moore warmed up the circus tent stage between artists all afternoon. Mixing folk tunes and acoustic prowess with measured poetics, Moore made many new fans during his weekend at the ‘Wanee. Moore also performed a set with The Slip as the collaborative Surprise Me Mr. Davis, where all four members dressed in black tie garb and delivered potent, emotive indie-folk to those who needed a breather from the funk assault.

Surprise Me Mr. Davis :: BC09 by Murphy

Galactic took to the Big IV Stage on a beautiful Sunday afternoon. In between New Orleans Saints chants, Ellman and Henry worked Drew Brees (Saints QB) cheers into and between songs. Stanton Moore was fiery behind the kit, standing on his stool and creating his patented syncopated bop beneath the rumblings of bassist Rob Mercurio and guitarist Tim Raines. The band welcomed Dubconscious trombonist John Lloyd to the stage, and he promptly engaged in a bone-battle with Corey Henry. Later, Raines and Moore could be found slaying Led Zeppelin’s “Whole Lotta Love” while keyboardist Rich Vogel channeled the lyrical Robert Plant melodies. The NOLA stalwarts then brought out JJ Grey of Mofro for a spirited rendition of “Sympathy for the Devil.” The band closed things out for their weekend with a little help from NOLA royalty Ivan Neville on set closer “Hercules.”

Dr. Claw was the penultimate scheduled performance for Bear Creek 2009, and like last year’s appearance, was certainly a highlight of the weekend. The all star collective is an amalgam of NOLA and NYC, including bassist Nick Daniels and Ian Neville of Dumpstaphunk, Adam Deitch, Nigel Hall and Eric Krasno of Lettuce, as well as Kofi Burbridge in for Big Sam. This collaboration usually occurs at Jazz Fest or in NYC, but Paul Levine makes it happen each year right here at Bear Creek. Needless to say, the performance was littered with guests, and had several moments of grandeur, not the least of which was a Daniels led march thru Stevie Wonder’s “Higher Ground” so wicked it would have made Flea blush. The Dr. Claw set ended with possibly the finest song performed over the entire weekend. Joined by The Shady Horns, Skerik, John Lloyd, and a few others, Dr. Claw uncorked a colossal take on the Head Hunters’ opus “Hang Up Your Hang Ups.” No superlative that I could possibly apply would do justice to this malevolent creation. Filthy, sordid drums from Deitch laid an undercurrent for Nigel to get his Herbie on proper, with Nick Daniels nailing the Paul Jackson bass mechanics with vigor. A cadre of turgid, grandiose horns rose to levels previously unattained this weekend. To the eyes and ears of your humble narrator, this very song was the zenith of Bear Creek 2009.

Dumpstaphunk :: BC09 by Murphy

Dumpstaphunk actually had to take the stage after Dr. Claw and close the festival. If there was anybody up for the challenge, it is the Neville family and their cohorts. Ivan, Ian, and the rest of D-Phunk did their best to move things along, and “Turn This Thing Around” was quite enjoyable. JJ Grey emerged for the Sly Stone chestnut “Thank You (Fa Lettin Me Be Mice Elf Agin)” and the scene turned into a family affair. Apparently applying the credo, “If you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em,” D-Phunk invited the remaining members of the Royal Family onstage for one more incestuous romp through James Brown classics, this time finding Nigel belting out a powerful “Soul Power” and a hedonistic “Superbad.” Superstardom is on the horizon for Mr. Nigel Hall.

As the Festival wound down, Mr. Levine had one last treat in store for those of us who had stuck around until late Sunday night: The annual staff and artists party at the Treehouse, a veritable residence built into the side of a bunch of oak trees, with a stage and large fenced in yard. After Tallahassee Southern rockers Stillwood played a set, Levine arranged for a conglomerate of hangers-on to take the stage for a final jam. Again, Eric Krasno, Adam Deitch, and Nigel Hall took command, grooving out the final stretch alongside the likes of John Lloyd, The Slip’s Brad Barr, and a host of others.

While the Sweetwater kegs, good vibes, and tears of joy flowed, I took some time to reflect on both the magic and the madness. The dark Florida night turned icy cold, the wind whipped as campfires crackled and slowly burned to soot, but the Spirit of the Suwannee, Bear Creek, and the inimitable “Purple Hatter” was never as heart-warming as on this autumn Sunday night.

I give the final word to Paul Levine, the man behind what makes this fest so incredibly special.

“The reason Bear Creek works and flows so well is because of our dedicated and experienced staff. This team, which has been together now for a number of years, loves each other and the music scene as a whole, and understands how to work together for a common goal,” said Levine. “The Bear Creek family takes pride in doing an exceptional job. No one wants to let each other, the artists, the fans, or the community down. This type of dedication, love, and teamwork translates into a very warm and creative environment.”

JamBase | Florida
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Marco Benevento News: Baby, DVD, Trio, Duo, Garage

Marco Benevento Welcomes Baby, DVD, Trio, Duo and Garage A Trois

Marco Benevento

In addition to all the touring, recording, and writing, Marco Benevento has also welcomed his second daughter into the world earlier this month. Never one to slow for a moment, he’s also welcoming the DVD release of Marco Benevento & Friends (Live In NYC: The Sullivan Hall Residency) on November 10. Directed by Karina Mackenzie, the 2-plus hour DVD documents Marco’s 2008 residency at Sullivan Hall, including performances and interviews with Andrew Barr, Brad Barr, Billy Martin, Bobby Previte, Dave Fiuczynski, DJ Olive, G. Calvin Weston, Joe Russo, John Ellis, Jonas Hellborg, Kaki King, Marc Friedman, Reed Mathis, Skerik, Stanton Moore and Steven Bernstein. More than just a project about Marco, it captures a scene of artists and musicians who are clearly some of our generation’s giants.

Click here to pre-order from The Royal Potato Family. Get it before November 10 and you’ll receive a link to download five unreleased bonus clips.

In other new release news, the long awaited Garage A Trois album Power Patriot was released earlier this week. It’s available in record stores and online pretty much everywhere, including Amazon.


And finally, tour dates, a bunch of them. Marco Benevento Trio just began a four night West Coast jaunt that includes a special Halloween show in San Francisco, The Duo have dates as does Garage A Trois.

MARCO BENEVENTO TRIO

10.29 | The Goodfoot Lounge | Portland, OR

10.30 | Jambalaya | Arcata, CA

10.31 | San Francisco Jazz Festival | San Francisco, CA

11.01 | The Jazz School | Berkeley, CA (Workshop / 2 – 4pm)

12.03 | The Iron Horse | Northampton, MA

12.04 | Narrows Center For The Arts | Fall River, MA

12.05 | Downright Music & Art | Collinsville, CT

01.07.10 | Sculler’s | Boston, MA

02.10.10 | Duke University Coffeehouse | Raleigh, NC

BENEVENTO/RUSSO DUO

11.06 | The Note | West Chester, PA

11.07 | 8X10 | Baltimore, MD

11.09 | Boone Saloon | Boone, NC

11.10 | The Garage at Biltmore | Asheville, NC

11.11 | The Pour House Music Hall | Raleigh, NC

11.12 | The Pourhouse | Charleston, SC

11.13 | The Five Spot | Atlanta, GA

11.14 | Bear Creek Music Festival | Live Oak, FL

GARAGE A TROIS

11.14 | Bear Creek Festival | Live Oak, FL

11.19 | DBA | New Orleans, LA

11.20 | Chelsea’s | Baton Rouge, LA

11.21 | The Parish | Austin, TX

12.08 | Tractor Tavern | Seattle, WA

12.09 | Nightlight Lounge | Bellingham, WA

12.10 | Doug Fir Lounge | Portland, OR

12.11 | Red Fox Tavern | Arcata, CA

12.12 | The Independent | San Francisco, CA

12.19 | The Bowery Ballroom | New York, NY

12.20 | North Star Bar | Philadelphia, PA

12.21 | The 8X10 | Baltimore, MD


Free Album Featuring: Russo, Benevento, Dreiwitz

Radio Soap Star Opera – Free Album Featuring

Joe Russo, Marco Benevento, Stuart Bogie, Dave Dreiwitz and More

Joe Russo

Below is a link to a zip file for Radio Soap Star Opera. It is currently only available as a free download and will not be sold anywhere ever.

You can download the album for free now at:
http://www.sendspace.com/file/u86hrc

Radio Soap Star Opera was recorded in seven days over three years. The tremendous musicians include: Joe Russo (drums, percussion, glockenspiel, vocals, producer of tracks 2, 3, 5-9), Stuart Bogie (clarinet, alto saxophone, jaw harp, bass harmonica, producer of tracks 1, 4), Don Piper (lap steel, vocals, harmonica, engineer and mix), Andrew Southern (bass 2, 3, 5-9), Kevin Kendrick (vibraphone 1, 4-7, 9), Colin Stetson (tenor and baritone sax on 1), Jon Shaw (trumpet on 6), Nick Movshon (bass on 1), Dave Dreiwitz (bass on 4), Marco Benevento (organ on 2), Sean Bones (guitar on 6), Ryan Thornton (tambourine).


Krasno/Benevento/Russo | Costa Rica

By: Dave Wood & Chad Smith

Benevento/Russo Duo & Eric Krasno :: Summer 2009 :: Villa Caletas :: Costa Rica

Benevento/Russo/Krasno :: Costa Wedding

The adventure began last winter when Chris Gleason proposed to Robin Taxman on Jam Cruise 7. With all of the excitement and boogie going down on the high seas, Chris could easily be forgiven for promising a jam-oriented destination wedding and not delivering. But when he called from NOLA during Jazz Fest a few months later and said that Robert Walter was busy, but could help him with booking, I started to think he was actually serious. His daily updates from the Crescent City were intriguing, to say the least. We heard rumblings of conversations from Lotus, George Porter Jr., Marco Benevento, Galactic, Lettuce, Karl Denson, and the list went on. When he asked if I thought we could all make it down to Costa Rica at the end of July, the gig was on. Chris remained a bit secretive about the artists he was talking to but did reveal that he was trying to score the only Hammond B3 organ for hire in the entire country.

Two months later, I found myself in the San Jose airport renting a 4-wheel drive vehicle with surfboard rack to take us over the mountains to a resort outside of Playa Jaco. 57 people, including many festival veterans and jam band enthusiasts (not to mention guests aged 4 to 74), were making their way to the Pacific Coast for the event. Villa Caletas (the warm smell of?) sits on a mountaintop overlooking the ocean and a dense tropical rainforest. This was to be our venue for the Gleason-Taxman wedding. After the rehearsal dinner, some of the groomsman helped lug the rented B3 to the dining room, up the side of a mountain and 157 shallow steps, and then the band was announced. Chris had lined up the venerable Duo of Marco Benevento and Joe Russo and somehow hooked Eric Krasno (Soulive, Lettuce) to play for us. Actually, the secret had been revealed a few days before when Marco, his lovely wife Katy and their two-year-old daughter Ruby were splashing in the resort’s pool with us. The morning of the rehearsal, Krasno and the inimitable Brandi Mitchell arrived straight from the Gathering of the Vibes Fest in Connecticut, where Lettuce had played the night before. Russo and his girlfriend had also flown in that same morning.

Benevento & Krasno at Rehearsal Dinner

The rehearsal dinner show turned out to be exactly that; a rehearsal for three musicians at the top of their respective games who had not had much opportunity – a single practice session in Brooklyn – to play together prior to this gathering. With clouds streaming over the surrounding tropical jungle and the humidity adding an extra depth to every note, the three began things with a jammed out version of The Beatles’ “Taxman.” This turned out to be a theme that would be revisited throughout this night and the next. With no setlist, the musicians took turns leading and teaching each other as they explored songs by Stevie Wonder, Santana, and the Allman Brothers, to name just a few. The set was about two and a half hours long when it adjourned and we were left wondering what would be in store for us at tomorrow’s main event.

The music kicked off in the afternoon heat as the traditional Jewish wedding took place shortly after 4:00 p.m. in an amphitheatre overlooking the Pacific. Her proud father escorted the bride down the steps as Krasno and Benevento played a couple more Beatles tunes (“Something” and “All You Need Is Love”). Later, after we had stuffed ourselves on seafood and wedding cake, The Duo plus Krasno took up positions at the end of the Zephyr Palace under the light towers and smoke machines that Gleason had arranged for and kicked things off with a twist on The Meters’ “Cissy Strut.” After a few quick toasts, a long, jazzy “Come Together” signaled that we were in store for a jam heavy and deeply improvisational evening.

Hava Nagila! Hava Nagila!

Chris and Robin were hoisted overhead on chairs as the dancing grew frenetic and Benevento took us on the band’s first go at “Hava Nagila.” This “Have Nagila” was like no other. The momentum and energy just kept building and it almost felt as if we were at a rave (in a good way). Fortunately, Chris had a good grip on his chair or else he would have been launched into the soundboard.

Soul was heavily featured next with funky translations of Otis Redding’s “Hard to Handle” and Sly & The Family Stone’s “If You Want Me to Stay.” A nimble turn took us Deadheads into familiar territory with a fine, long suite of “Lovelight” > “Shakedown” > “Iko Iko.” The dancing was growing faster and some twirlers were spotted along the sides of the hall. Despite the heat and humidity which had permeated the room – the AC was definitely overmatched by this dance party – most of the revelers were still on their feet, including many of the couple’s family and friends, who had only the faintest idea of what was going on or being played. The two hour first set wound down with a concise reading of “Boogie On Reggae Woman” led by Krasno into “Get Back,” and finally a melding of the Greyboy Allstars’ and STS9′s workhorse “Nautilus.” The degree to which these three musicians were able to combine styles, communicate on the fly, and explore different themes within each song certainly gave no indication that this was one of their first gigs together. In fact, it seemed as though they had been playing together as a trio for years.

This cohesion was never more apparent than during the second set take on the Allman Brothers’ “Jessica.” This was a song they had tackled at the previous night’s aptly named rehearsal party, and while it was solidly done, there were a few rough transitions and clunky pauses. Not so at the reception get-down. Krasno channeled the lead work with a lyrical sense reminiscent of Warren Haynes’ interpretations while Russo anchored the rhythm section and Benevento filled in every other space. Was this truly only three people?

The Happy Couple’s First Swim

The second set featured some of the best elements of the Duo (with themes off of ’04s Best Reason to Buy the Sun) interwoven with Krasno’s tight riffs and rapid scales – a true amalgamation of styles. By this time, anything they chose to play was perfect with the wedding partiers, none of whom had left even this late in the game. As the night pushed on we drooped into a spacier zone with deep psychedelic takes on songs by the JBs, Paul Simon, and The Doors. Zeppelin’s “The Ocean” pounded us as fists pumped and Russo channeled Bonham’s heavy rock theme.

Another two songs (including the Duo’s own “Becky”) left us exhausted and eyeing the infinity pool just outside the doors. But first, a few last nuggets to send us off into the tropical night, including a mellow “Stir it Up” followed by a bride’s jam. Robin had hopped onto the organ bench next to Marco and randomly played the nursery rhyme “Mary Had A Little Lamb.” And why not, it was her wedding! On a night when anything was possible and everything game, our three magicians took off with it and morphed the riff into a 15-minute improv that defied description. Hot revelers with sore feet took to the pool in full clothing, just as Benevento had done after the Duo’s set on Jam Cruise 3 – a fitting ending to a perfect night of intimacy, music, and celebration. Pura Vida indeed!

Soundboard Audio available here.

Continue reading for more pics of this raging wedding…

Duck, Duck, Benevento!

Benevento & Russo

Here comes the bride…


David Kaufman (Chicago musician)

Brandi Mitchell (Krasno’s gal)

Eric Krasno

Russo & Krasno

Joe Russo

The Beneventos

Marco and Ruby

Bride, Groom and Band

Daughter and Dad Dance

JamBase | International
Go See Live Music!


Krasno/Benevento/Russo: Wedding in Costa Rica

By Dave Wood & Chad Smith

Benevento/Russo Duo & Eric Krasno :: Summer 2009 :: Villa Caletas :: Costa Rica

Benevento/Russo/Krasno :: Costa Wedding

The adventure began last winter when Chris Gleason proposed to Robin Taxman on Jam Cruise 7. With all of the excitement and boogie going down on the high seas, Chris could easily be forgiven for promising a jam-oriented destination wedding and not delivering. But when he called from NOLA during Jazz Fest a few months later and said that Robert Walter was busy, but could help him with booking, I started to think he was actually serious. His daily updates from the Crescent City were intriguing, to say the least. We heard rumblings of conversations from Lotus, George Porter Jr., Marco Benevento, Galactic, Lettuce, Karl Denson, and the list went on. When he asked if I thought we could all make it down to Costa Rica at the end of July, the gig was on. Chris remained a bit secretive about the artists he was talking to but did reveal that he was trying to score the only Hammond B3 organ for hire in the entire country.

Two months later, I found myself in the San Jose airport renting a 4-wheel drive vehicle with surfboard rack to take us over the mountains to a resort outside of Playa Jaco. 57 people, including many festival veterans and jam band enthusiasts (not to mention guests aged 4 to 74), were making their way to the Pacific Coast for the event. Villa Caletas (the warm smell of?) sits on a mountaintop overlooking the ocean and a dense tropical rainforest. This was to be our venue for the Gleason-Taxman wedding. After the rehearsal dinner, some of the groomsman helped lug the rented B3 to the dining room, up the side of a mountain and 157 shallow steps, and then the band was announced. Chris had lined up the venerable Duo of Marco Benevento and Joe Russo and somehow hooked Eric Krasno (Soulive, Lettuce) to play for us. Actually, the secret had been revealed a few days before when Marco, his lovely wife Katy and their two-year-old daughter Ruby were splashing in the resort’s pool with us. The morning of the rehearsal, Krasno and the inimitable Brandi Mitchell arrived straight from the Gathering of the Vibes Fest in Connecticut, where Lettuce had played the night before. Russo and his girlfriend had also flown in that same morning.

Benevento & Krasno at Rehearsal Dinner

The rehearsal dinner show turned out to be exactly that; a rehearsal for three musicians at the top of their respective games who had not had much opportunity – a single practice session in Brooklyn – to play together prior to this gathering. With clouds streaming over the surrounding tropical jungle and the humidity adding an extra depth to every note, the three began things with a jammed out version of The Beatles’ “Taxman.” This turned out to be a theme that would be revisited throughout this night and the next. With no setlist, the musicians took turns leading and teaching each other as they explored songs by Stevie Wonder, Santana, and the Allman Brothers, to name just a few. The set was about two and a half hours long when it adjourned and we were left wondering what would be in store for us at tomorrow’s main event.

The music kicked off in the afternoon heat as the traditional Jewish wedding took place shortly after 4:00 p.m. in an amphitheatre overlooking the Pacific. Her proud father escorted the bride down the steps as Krasno and Benevento played a couple more Beatles tunes (“Something” and “All You Need Is Love”). Later, after we had stuffed ourselves on seafood and wedding cake, The Duo plus Krasno took up positions at the end of the Zephyr Palace under the light towers and smoke machines that Gleason had arranged for and kicked things off with a twist on The Meters’ “Cissy Strut.” After a few quick toasts, a long, jazzy “Come Together” signaled that we were in store for a jam heavy and deeply improvisational evening.

Hava Nagila! Hava Nagila!

Chris and Robin were hoisted overhead on chairs as the dancing grew frenetic and Benevento took us on the band’s first go at “Hava Nagila.” This “Have Nagila” was like no other. The momentum and energy just kept building and it almost felt as if we were at a rave (in a good way). Fortunately, Chris had a good grip on his chair or else he would have been launched into the soundboard.

Soul was heavily featured next with funky translations of Otis Redding’s “Hard to Handle” and Sly & The Family Stone’s “If You Want Me to Stay.” A nimble turn took us Deadheads into familiar territory with a fine, long suite of “Lovelight” > “Shakedown” > “Iko Iko.” The dancing was growing faster and some twirlers were spotted along the sides of the hall. Despite the heat and humidity which had permeated the room – the AC was definitely overmatched by this dance party – most of the revelers were still on their feet, including many of the couple’s family and friends, who had only the faintest idea of what was going on or being played. The two hour first set wound down with a concise reading of “Boogie On Reggae Woman” led by Krasno into “Get Back,” and finally a melding of the Greyboy Allstars’ and STS9′s workhorse “Nautilus.” The degree to which these three musicians were able to combine styles, communicate on the fly, and explore different themes within each song certainly gave no indication that this was one of their first gigs together. In fact, it seemed as though they had been playing together as a trio for years.

This cohesion was never more apparent than during the second set take on the Allman Brothers’ “Jessica.” This was a song they had tackled at the previous night’s aptly named rehearsal party, and while it was solidly done, there were a few rough transitions and clunky pauses. Not so at the reception get-down. Krasno channeled the lead work with a lyrical sense reminiscent of Warren Haynes’ interpretations while Russo anchored the rhythm section and Benevento filled in every other space. Was this truly only three people?

The Happy Couple’s First Swim

The second set featured some of the best elements of the Duo (with themes off of ’04s Best Reason to Buy the Sun) interwoven with Krasno’s tight riffs and rapid scales – a true amalgamation of styles. By this time, anything they chose to play was perfect with the wedding partiers, none of whom had left even this late in the game. As the night pushed on we drooped into a spacier zone with deep psychedelic takes on songs by the JBs, Paul Simon, and The Doors. Zeppelin’s “The Ocean” pounded us as fists pumped and Russo channeled Bonham’s heavy rock theme.

Another two songs (including the Duo’s own “Becky”) left us exhausted and eyeing the infinity pool just outside the doors. But first, a few last nuggets to send us off into the tropical night, including a mellow “Stir it Up” followed by a bride’s jam. Robin had hopped onto the organ bench next to Marco and randomly played the nursery rhyme “Mary Had A Little Lamb.” And why not, it was her wedding! On a night when anything was possible and everything game, our three magicians took off with it and morphed the riff into a 15-minute improv that defied description. Hot revelers with sore feet took to the pool in full clothing, just as Benevento had done after the Duo’s set on Jam Cruise 3 – a fitting ending to a perfect night of intimacy, music, and celebration. Pura Vida indeed!

Continue reading for more pics of this raging wedding…

Duck, Duck, Benevento!

Benevento & Russo

Here comes the bride…


David Kaufman (Chicago musician)

Brandi Mitchell (Krasno’s gal)

Eric Krasno

Russo & Krasno

Joe Russo

The Beneventos

Marco and Ruby

Bride, Groom and Band

Daughter and Dad Dance

JamBase | International
Go See Live Music!


Garage A Trois: New Album/Tour

GARAGE A TROIS Featuring SKERIK, MIKE DILLON, MARCO BENEVENTO & STANTON MOORE

To Release POWER PATRIOT On OCTOBER 27 Through THE ROYAL POTATO FAMILY

Tour Dates Announced For November and December

Garage A Trois

Garage A Trois is a collaboration between four of the most visionary improvisers of the time: Skerik on saxophones, Mike Dillon on vibes, Marco Benevento on keyboards and Stanton Moore on drums. And while improvisation is at the heart of what this quartet has built its reputation on at their legendary New Orleans Jazz Fest sets and rare, but in demand, club tours, it’s the intricate sonic collages, tightly orchestrated arrangements and positively modern approach to instrumental songwriting that’s at the heart of their latest album, Power Patriot. Set for release October 27 by Brooklyn-based label The Royal Potato Family, Garage A Trois will play select tour dates to support the new recording in November and December.

The track listing for Power Patriot is:

1. Rescue Spreaders

2. Fragile

3. Dory’s Day Out

4. Electric Doorbell Machine

5. Power Patriot

6. Dugout

7. Fat Redneck Gangster

8. Purgatory

9. Germs

10. Computer Crimes

Upcoming Garage A Trois tour dates are:

November 14 | Bear Creek Festival | Live Oak, FL

November 19 | DBA | New Orleans, LA

November 20 | Chelsea’s | Baton Rouge, LA

November 21 | The Parish | Austin, TX

December 8 | Tractor Tavern | Seattle, WA

December 9 | Nightlight Lounge | Bellingham, WA

December 10 | Doug Fir Lounge | Portland, OR

December 11 | Red Fox Tavern | Arcata, CA

December 12 | The Independent | San Francisco, CA

December 19 | The Bowery Ballroom | New York, NY

December 20 | North Star Bar | Philadelphia, PA

December 21 | The 8X10 | Baltimore, MD


Mike Gordon | 09.08.09 | Brooklyn

By: Brian Bavosa

Mike Gordon :: 09.08.09 :: Music Hall of Williamsburg :: Brooklyn, NY

Mike Gordon by Dino Perrucci

Coming off the recent, wildly successful Phish Summer Tour, Mike Gordon had no trouble getting in sync with his solo band when they kicked off their own tour at Brooklyn, NY’s Music Hall Of Williamsburg last week. Joined by guitarist Scott Murawski (Max Creek), Todd Isler (drums), Tom Cleary (keys) and Craig Myers (percussion), Gordon was in a loose, jovial mood, repeatedly citing how much fun he’s had with this band over the past year.

The evening began with local boy Marco Benevento performing solo on piano. A rare talent, Benevento’s understated, tasteful efforts and strong jazz chops proved the perfect way to get the juices flowing.

Wasting little time, Gordon and company took the stage and jumped immediately into “Dig Further Down” and the bubbly bass-led “Radar Blip,” both off of his 2008 release, The Green Sparrow. However, the real treat of the early part of the show was a cover of Lynyrd Skynyrd‘s “Swamp Music.” When this tune starts, it sounds exactly like Phish’s “Possum,” which rumor has it, Phish co-founder and “Possum” composer Jeff Holdsworth used as inspiration for the tune. It was funky, feisty and truly allowed the band and audience to settle into a solid – and eerily familiar – groove.

Gordon originals “What Things Seem” and “Can’t Stand Still” both made their debuts, with the latter feeling particularly appropriate for this very laid-back Tuesday night tour opener in the hipster capital of the universe. Benevento and Duo partner Joe Russo, Gordon’s sometime tour mates, sat in for “Sarala,” a Craig Myers original where Russo went off on the kit in his unique slash and burn style, and Desmond Dekker’s “Intensified” which showcased Benevento’s organ abilities. As they segued into show closer “Traveled Too Far,” The Duo left the stage for the Mike Gordon Band proper to wrap things up with this rocking number.

The encore offered another surprise with an “Andelmans’ Yard” sandwich around “15 Steps,” a debut Radiohead cover that pleased the Brooklyn masses. “Andelmans’ Yard” is arguably Gordon’s best and most well liked solo tune, but it was not enough to salvage a loosey-goosey and at times sloppy tour opener.

Overall, it was a fun Tuesday that never seemed to click 100-percent, but rather felt like a free-from jam session in a cozy venue to kick off a solo tour. This might be Gordon’s side project and no one expects it to trump his other band, but that isn’t stopping Mike from having the time of his life.

Mike Gordon :: 09.08.09 :: Music Hall of Williamsburg :: Brooklyn, NY

Dig Further Down, Radar Blip, Swamp Music*, What Things Seem**, Can’t Stand Still**, Voices, The Field^, Couch Lady, Sarala#, Intensified^^ > Traveled Too Far

Encore: Andelmans’ Yard > 15 Steps*** > Andelmans’ Yard


* Lynyrd Skynyrd cover
** Mike original, first time played

^ Scott Murawski original
# Craig Myers original, with Craig on N’goni and Joe Russo on drums (Todd on percussion) & Marco Benevento on organ (with Tom on Keyboard)
^^ Desmond Dekker cover, with Joe Russo on drums (Todd on percussion) & Marco Benevento on organ (with Tom on Keyboard)
*** Radiohead cover, first time played

Mike Gordon is on tour now; dates available here.

JamBase | NYC
Go See Live Music!


Surprise Me Mr. Davis/Low Anthem | 08.27

Words by: Bear Connelly | Images by: Jim Brueckner

Surprise Me Mr. Davis/The Low Anthem :: 08.27.09 :: The Narrows Center for the Arts :: Fall River, MA

Surprise Me Mr. Davis :: 08.27 :: MA

Have you ever been somewhere and thought to yourself, “There is no place in the world I would rather be than right here?” I live for those moments and was fortunate enough to have one in Fall River, a mid-sized city in southeastern Massachusetts that is home to Lizzie Borden, aging relics from America’s textile manufacturing heyday and one of the best venues around, the Narrows Center For The Arts, where Surprise Me Mr. Davis and The Low Anthem concocted a night of community, storytelling, virtuosic musical prowess and good old fashioned rock & roll for an attentive crowd of around 200.

The Low Anthem started the night with a very mellow mix of songs from their latest album, Oh My God Charlie Darwin, including “To the Ghost Who Write History Books” and “Ticket Taker” with Ben Knox Miller confessing into the microphone while sitting on a stool with his hat brim slung low. The Low Anthem has had a whirlwind year, after being signed by Nonesuch (U.S.) and Bella Union (Europe) they have toured both continents extensively. However, this night was special to them and even with Miller’s road weary voice and the rest of the band’s fatigue they weren’t going to let anything stop them from giving the crowd their all. Why so special, you ask? Number one, because the Narrows was the first club that ever booked them outside of their home base of Providence, RI and secondly because Surprise Me Mr. Davis was the first band that ever took them on the road; so they got to pay their respects to some huge catalysts in their career.

The Low Anthem :: 08.27 :: MA

With only three people onstage and about a dozen instruments (including wind instruments, crotales and a pump organ) at their disposal it’s interesting to hear how the band picks the arrangements for each song. I can just imagine them learning a new tune and trying to decide what to play on it. Despite the heavy tour schedule negatively affecting Miller’s voice, it has drastically improved their musicianship. The horns aren’t flat anymore, clarinetist Jocie Adams can play bass and guitar and most importantly, Miller and (usual) bassist Jeff Prystowsky have learned to keep a steady beat on the drum kit. Upbeat songs are no longer their weak link, which is exemplified by the bluesy growl of Blind Willie McTell’s “Don’t Let Anybody Turn You Around” or their arrangement of “Home I’ll Never Be” (a Tom Waits cover adapted from a poem by Jack Kerouac).

After some rockers, The Low Anthem’s set distilled down to what they do best – honest, simple, organic folk music. After starting out the night with newer songs, The Low Anthem finished their set with some oldies like “This God Damn House,” which saw Miller bust out his cell phone trick where he whistles into two cell phones that have called each other in order to create a brilliant, ghostly feedback effect, and “Senorita,” a sweet ballad about a beauty with dust brown skin and her admirer that follows her around Spain with offerings of “cheap liquor if I can’t afford a feast.” With only two albums under their belt and 100-plus shows a year it’s no secret that the Anthem plays these songs all the time. During “Ballad of the Broken Bones” I was wondering if Miller thinks about the lyric, “I have been all over the whole goddamn world and over the world am I,” any differently now that he’s not only been around but also probably played that song while he was there.

Brad Barr – Surprise Me Mr. Davis :: 08.27 :: MA

Following The Low Anthem’s stellar set there was a short break before Surprise Me Mr. Davis hit the stage. Now a five-piece, SMMD continued the mellow vibe of the night with an organ accompanying a mostly a cappella version of Nathan Moore‘s new tune “Tombstone” (off his recent solo Folk Singer EP) before launching into danceable stomper “If You Knew.” After the song Moore mentioned how “he forgot it was a sit down show” and perhaps they should change the setlist to reflect that (i.e. less rockers), but the crowd demanded a continuance of danceable numbers and slowly people started to rise from their church pews, which is the offered seating in the Narrows. The band obliged with a hot one-two punch of the scarcely played “Emily Green” and “Sissyfuss.” The former is about a man who has a newfound, uncontrollable excitement in his life because he’s “seen Emily Green and that changes everything.” The latter is a song for the workin’ man about standing up for laborer and civil rights with classic lines like, “I ain’t pushin’ no stone up no hill, just to watch it roll back down,” and, “I ain’t picking those peaches, no, not for a dollar a day/ But I’ll have one of those peaches though and I’ll be on my way/ I will always be free.” “Sissyfuss” has a storied tradition in both spelling (normally “Sisyphus”) and arrangements in The Slip and Nathan Moore repertoires. The current incarnation is a rousing funk number with a Meters-esque bass and guitar lick that features blistering solos by all members of the band, including frequent guest, keyboardist extraordinaire Marco Benevento, who showed off his melodica and piano skills. Benevento joined the band after sitting in with them on their California mini-tour last July and is a very welcomed addition by both the band and fans. Relegated to more of an atmospheric position, Marco shows off his chops during solos but otherwise uses his keyboard arsenal to unleash amazing soundscapes to fill out the band’s songs. This allows electric guitarist Brad Barr to concentrate on his poignant, colorful licks and not rhythm in his guitar playing, and acoustic guitarist Nathan Moore is able to focus more on singing and crowd banter.

Ben Knox Miller w/ Surprise Me Mr. Davis :: 08.27 :: MA

Highlights of the set included “Nowhere From Here To Go” and “Rubber Ball” – both were staples of Moore’s recently dormant band ThaMuseMeant and have been given makeovers by Surprise Me. “Nowhere” is a slow acoustic tune about a man contemplating his next move after a long life’s journey to what may be nowhere. Lyrics like, “I sat by while the burning man burned/ I rode by the houses and it was never my turn,” and “I just laid down beside one too many women who’ll never know me at all/ Now I leave as lonely as autumn leaves fall,” provide a glimpse into a man who completely pours himself into his music. Moore is not afraid to write about confessing, celebrating, mourning or pondering life in his lyrics, a wellspring of deep emotions that strike a chord with all of us. A sea of feedback, chromatic shifts and chaotic looping started the onomatopoeiatic “Rubber Ball,” which evolved into the only real jam of the night, with Nathan walking off stage and letting the others deconstruct and devour the two chord middle section, including a drum/bass breakdown by Marc Friedman and Andrew Barr before a mounting jam supported by Benevento’s broad chord voicings.


After a great version of “As Long As There’s One of Us Standing,” in which the members of The Low Anthem trickled onstage, the bands played a three-song mini set together. The mini-set kicked off with The Low Anthem’s new tune “Sally Where’d You Get Your Liquor From” before segueing into the classic anti-amorous SMMD sing-along “I Hate Love.” The show closer was an inspiring take on a classic comedic number from the 1940′s. Written by Tim Spencer and popularized by Red Ingle (and even played on The Muppet Show by Peter Sellers), “Cigareets, Whuskey and Wild Wild Women” is a foreboding warning to the pitfalls of vices. The song has a familiar chord progression but with eight musicians adding little parts, including Jocie Adams’ belted harmonies and Benevento’s mysterious melodica, proved to be a sum greater than its parts. As the chorus – “Cigareets, Whuskey and Wild Wild Women/ they’ll drive you crazy/ they’ll drive you insane” – slowly faded out the crowd kept hooting and hollering and floor stomping for more, so much so it recalled the sound of a pep rally echoing off wooden gymnasium walls. There was no way we weren’t getting an encore.

Surprise Me Mr. Davis & The Low Anthem :: 08.27

At first, only Surprise Me appeared onstage and after a jazzy little jam between Benevento and Brad Barr while Moore tuned, the band launched into “Everything Must Go,” which featured thunderous hits from drummer Andrew Barr and a scorching Brad Barr solo that quoted his solo on their studio album while expanding on it further, something he is a pro at. Next came the new Slip song “England,” a slow building, ostinato adorned, two chord tune that encourages the protagonist to “keep the faith for what’s been done and said” that slowly builds and then cuts out to just vocals. Meanwhile, the crowd started to embellish the beat provided by Benevento (he switched to drums for the song) and continued to clap and stomp in time until the band decided they had to play one more. Unbeknownst to the crowd, their beat happened to be the perfect tempo for the band to seamlessly segue into “Home Away From Home,” a fairly new Davis tune about finding familiarity in the ever changing people you meet and places you go with a life on the road.

All in all, it was really a wonderful night with two bands doing what they love for people that love what they do. The amount of camaraderie and respect between the musicians and concertgoers is unrivaled within the Surprise Me Mr. Davis family tree. While The Low Anthem are still wet behind the ears, so to speak, they are maturing fast, and with a taste of new songs and reworked older songs infiltrating their repertoire it seems these guys have a lot more up their sleeve.

The Low Anthem Setlist:
To The Ghosts Who Write History Books, Ticket Taker, Charlie Darwin, new song (Vines?), To Ohio, Don’t Let Nobody Ever Turn You Around, new song (Highwire man?), Home I’ll Never Be, This God Damn House, The Ballad of Broken Bones, Senorita, Cage the Songbird, new song (Blind Walk the Blind?)

Surprise Me Mr. Davis Setlist:
Introduction > Tombstone, If You Knew, Emily Green, Sissyfuss, Sill Like a Goose, Nowhere From here To Go, Roses & Bottles, Rubber Ball, As Long As There’s One Of Us Standing^, Sally Where’d You Get Your Liquor from^, I Hate Love^, Cigareets & Whuskey and Wild Wild Women^

E: Jam > Everything Must Go, England^ > crowd clap jam^ > Home Away From Home^



^ = with all members of The Low Anthem

JamBase | Massachusetts
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Inaugural Let It Roll Festival:
Featuring Marco Benevento

Marco Benevento Trio to headline inaugural Let It Roll Festival


Marco Benevento

Pawnshop Roses and Numberline Productions are proud to announce the inaugural Let It Roll Festival. Set to go down September 18-20, join the fun for a two-day end-of-summer extravaganza featuring music, camping, and much more!

Let It Roll will take place at beautiful Sunnyview Farm in Ghent, NY (conveniently located 45 min south of Albany and 2 hrs north of NYC). Confirmed artists include Marco Benevento Trio, Pawnshop Roses, The Brew, The Breakfast, Buzzuniverse, Higher Organix, Leroy Justice, Teenage Prayers, Deja and more!

Early Bird tickets are only $40! Stop by myspace.com/sunnyviewfarm for details.

Sunnyview Farm, the proud estate of the Morris Levy family, has been known to host rock and roll royalty over the decades including the likes of John Lennon, Levon Helm, Tommy James, Ronnie Hawkins and Willie Nelson. Sitting on 1200 acres, the farm has picturesque rolling hills and, beautiful sunsets.



Red Rocks Late Night Fri & Sat: Everyone Orchestra/Conspirator

Images by: Dave Vann

Everyone Orchestra :: 07.31.09 :: Denver Marriott West Ballroom :: Golden, CO

After Phish‘s Friday show at Red Rocks (read the review here), The Everyone Orchestra played late night at the Denver Marriott West Ballroom in Golden, CO. The show featured Marco Benevento, Big Light‘s Fred Torphy, the guys from Hot Buttered Rum, Ben Baruch, Dominic Lalli of The Motet/Big Gigantic and conductor Matt Butler amongst others.

Continue reading for pics of Conspirator on Saturday night…

Images by: Dave Vann

Conspirator :: 08.01.09 :: Cervantes’ Masterpiece Ballroom :: Denver, CO

Following Phish‘s Saturday night blow out at Red Rocks (read the review here), The Disco Biscuits‘ side project Conspirator, with special guests Dave Murphy (STS9) and Lane Shaw (Pnuma Trio) played at Cervantes’ in Denver, CO.

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Post-Phish Red Rox Late Night: Motet, Marco, Conspirator

COLORADOAFTERPARTIES.COM ANNOUNCES LATE NIGHT SHOWS IN DENVER, CO JULY 30 – AUGUST 1

The Motet performs Talking Heads, and Savoy with special guest Lazer Sword just added
To lineup that already features Bassnectar, Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe, Conspirator and more

Bassnectar

Colorado After Parties, presented by Rocky Mountain Entertainment, is a special run of late night concerts from Thursday July 30 – Saturday August 1, 2009, featuring Bassnectar, Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe, Conspirator, The Motet performs the music of Talking Heads, Savoy and Lazer Sword. This exceptional collection of talent hits the stage following Phish‘s performances at Red Rocks Amphitheatre on those same dates. These shows will go late, and while there will be no alcohol served after 2 a.m., the music will continue until at least 4 a.m.

The party kicks off on Thursday July 30 at Cervantes’ Masterpiece Ballroom, with electronic sensations Savoy and friends. Savoy is known for high-energy live sets, and their multimedia-oriented shows are exactly what today’s global dance culture is looking for. Also on the bill are West Coast buzz act Lazer Sword, and the return of New Zealand’s Pitch Black. Local up & comers Passage Project and DJ Jack Flash will round out the full night of music.

On Friday July 30, RME will present three after parties across the Front Range. Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe will bring their dynamic brand of energizing funk to the Gothic Theatre for two nights: on Friday July 31 with special guests DJ Mike Relm and DJ Rootz and on Saturday August 1 with special guests the Marco Benevento Trio and DJ Rootz. At the same time across town, The Motet bring their talent and energy to the stage in a rare tribute to the art rock of Talking Heads at Cervantes’ Friday July 31. This is a rare treat for Talking Heads fans, and previous performances have sold out quickly. DJ Click One will support and keep the vibes going all evening. And in Boulder, Bassnectar returns to Colorado for a special 18+ show on Friday July 31 at the Boulder Theater, with special guests Daedelus and Mr. Projectile. Bassnectar has been consuming audiences worldwide with a collision of wobbling, perverted bass lines, hypnotic hide-and-seek adventures, and pretty much anything that strikes his fancy.

Finally, on Saturday August 1, Conspirator, a live electronic phenomenon featuring Marc Brownstein and Aron Magner of The Disco Biscuits, will play Cervantes’ Masterpiece Ballroom, with special guests David Murphy (STS9) and ‘Lil Lane (Pnuma Trio). Also on the bill are Break Science ft Adam Deitch and the Passage Project.

Tickets and further info available at www.coloradoafterparties.com.


High Sierra Additions: Salmon, Slip, AOD, DeVotchKa

ONE OF THE SUMMER’S SWELLEST GATHERINGS SWELLS

Marc Friedman (Slip/Davis) :: HSMF ’08 :: by Scott Galbraith

The 2009 High Sierra Music Festival, taking place Thursday, July 2 – Sunday, July 5, 2009 in Quincy, CA, has announced the following additions to this year’s lineup:

DeVotchKa
Leftover Salmon
Greensky Bluegrass
Delhi 2 Dublin
Orchard Lounge
Assembly of Dust
The Slip
Surprise Me Mr. Davis
These United States
Red Cortez

Big Light
Lubriphonic
Zach Gill (special kids show)
Alice DiMicele & Friends

Paper Bird
Izabella
Bourgeois Gypsies
Raina Rose
Loyd Family Players

These artists join the already announced initial lineup:

John Butler

Umphrey’s McGee

Ani DiFranco

Disco Biscuits

Galactic

The Del McCoury Band

Steve Kimock Crazy Engine feat. Melvin Seals

The Wailers

Tea Leaf Green

Ollabelle

Mike Farris and the Roseland Rhythm Revue

ALO

Vieux Farka Toure

Dr. Dog

Devil Makes Three

The Travelin’ McCourys

The Lee Boys

Cornmeal

Bonerama

Marco Benevento Trio

McTuff feat. Skerik, Joe Doria, Andy Coe & D’Vonne Lewis

Skerik will also appear as an artist-at-large

Joe Craven and Sam Bevan Duo

Joe Craven will also appear as artist-at-large and emcee

Nathan Moore

Fareed Haque and The Flat Earth Ensemble

Pretty Lights

Everest

Dusty Rhodes and the River Band

Pimps of Joytime

J-Boogie and Dubtronic Science

Poor Man’s Whiskey

Living Folklore