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Posts Tagged ‘Mavis Staples’

Over The Rhine: Spring Tour

TOUR STARTS FEB 20 IN NASHVILLE


Over The Rhine

Over The Rhine is ready to
make waves in 2011 with a new release and spring tour dates that will take them to theaters throughout the Midwest
and the East Coast. The Long Surrender, the new studio album from the southern Ohio-
based
husband-and-wife team of multi-instrumentalist/vocalist Linford Detweiler and vocalist/multi-
instrumentalist Karin
Bergquist
, is set to be released February 8, 2011 on OTR’s own Great Speckled Dog label (named for the
couple’s
Great Dane, Elroy). It’s the result of a collaboration between the couple and producer Joe Henry
(Mavis Staples, Elvis Costello, Solomon Burke, Loudon Wainwright III), whose songs they’ve long admired.

OVER THE RHINE TOUR DATES

Sun., Feb. 20 NASHVILLE, TN 3rd & Lindsley
Mon., Feb. 21 LEXINGTON, KY WoodSongs

Fri., March 25 BOSTON, MA The Red Room @ Cafe 939 (Berklee)

Sat., March 26 NEW YORK, N.Y. Highline Ballroom

Sun., March 27 ALEXANDRIA, VA/WASHINGTON, DC Birchmere

Tues., March 29 PHILADELPHIA, PA World Cafe Live

Fri., April 1 PITTSBURGH, PA Mr. Small’s

Sat., April 2 AKRON, OH Musica

Tues., April 5 ANN ARBOR, MI The Ark
Thurs., April 7 MILWAUKEE, WI Turner Hall
Fri., April 8 CHICAGO, IL Lincoln Hall
Sat., April 9 MADISON, WI Majestic Theater
Sun., April 10 MINNEAPOLIS, MN Cedar Cultural Center

Over The Rhine
Tour Dates

::
Over The Rhine News
::
Over The Rhine
Concert
Reviews


Steven Tyler, Dave Grohl Honor McCartney at Kennedy Center

DAVE GROHL, STEVEN TYLER, JAMES TAYLOR,
NO DOUBT, NORAH JONES PAY TRIBUTE TO
SIR PAUL

On December 5, Paul
McCartney
was honored at the Kennedy Center Honors
2010
alongside Merle Haggard, Bill T. Jones,
Jerry
Herman,
and Oprah Winfrey. Last night, the program aired on CBS.

Check out the clips below to watch No Doubt, Dave Grohl, Norah Jones, Steven Tyler, James
Taylor,
and Mavis Staples, as they each performed songs by written by McCartney.


Bluesfest 2011 Sideshows

FEATURING TRUCKS & TEDESCHI, ROBERT RANDOLPH,
BLIND BOYS OF ALABAMA, MAVIS STAPLES,
IRMA
THOMAS


Mavis Staples

Bluesfest today announced its first run of
festival sideshows for Sydney, Melbourne and Adelaide based audiences. And, what an electrifying array of musical
delights it is, featuring some of the best world-class blues, roots, gospel, and soul talent announced so far for
Bluesfest 2011.

For the first show, Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Band will be ably supported by the amazing funk
soul pedal-steel master guitarist Robert Randolph and the Family Band in Sydney on April 21 at the Enmore Theatre,
and Melbourne on April 22 at the Palace Theatre.

This next show is ‘A Gospel Celebration!’ with Blind Boys of Alabama featuring Aaron Neville. Opening proceedings
will be none other than Rock & Roll Hall of Famer and legendary vocalist Mavis Staples. The dates are April 20 in
Melbourne at The Palais and April 25 in Sydney at the Opera House.

The third festival sideshow will include Irma Thomas. The soul queen of New Orleans will be traveling down under
for her first ever Australian tour. This “N’awlins Soul Sister No 1” is responsible for cutting some of the finest ever
soul music in the history of New Orelans music including “Time Is On My Side” later recorded by the Rolling Stones,
and “Ruler Of My Heart” which was changed to “Pain In My Heart” and recorded by Otis Redding. This sideshow is
scheduled for April 21 at The Factory in Sydney.

Click here for all information related to Bluesfest 2011
in Byron Bay, New South Wales, Australia.


Rally to Restore Sanity: Tweedy & Staples, The Roots, Sheryl Crow

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30 AT NOON;
SEVERAL UNANNOUNCED MUSICAL
GUESTS


Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear

On Saturday, October 30, Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert will hold their “Rally to Restore Sanity
and/or Fear” in Washington D.C. The National Park Service only approved the permit for the rally today, and the 60-
page-plus document reveals some information regarding the musical guests.

The festivities kick off at Noon with a 40 minute performance by The Roots. After entrances from
Stewart and Colbert and readings from actors Sam Waterston and Don Novello, Jeff Tweedy and Mavis Staples will play a 10 minute
set. At 2:15, Sheryl Crow
will
perform for five minutes.

The schedule includes several slots for unannounced musical guests and speakers. Click here to check it out. (via The Daily Swarm)


Mavis Staples & Jeff Tweedy On The Colbert Report

A SOUL LEGEND AND AN INDIE ROCK ICON

Last night, Mavis Staples and
Wilco‘s Jeff Tweedy stopped by The
Colbert Report
for an interview with Stephen Colbert and a performance of the title track off Staples’ new album
You Are Not Alone, produced by Tweedy. Check out both clips below. (via The Audio Perv)


Late Night TV Musical Guests: 10/4-10/10

Late Night TV Music Lineups



Can’t make it to any shows this week? We’ve got you covered. Check out our weekly schedule of late night talk show musical guests…

David Letterman Musical Guests


Mon, October 4 – Will.i.am and Nicki Minaj
Tue, October 5 – Mavis Staples and Jeff Tweedy
Thu, October 7 – Gorillaz
Fri, October 8 – Antony & The Johnsons


Jay Leno Musical Guests


Tue, October 5 – KT Tunstall
Wed, October 6 – Toby Keith
Thu, October 7 – Meat Loaf
Fri, October 8 – OneRepublic


Jimmy Kimmel Musical Guests


Mon, October 4 – Trace Adkins (Repeat)
Tue, October 5 – Phoenix (Repeat)
Wed, October 6 – Band of Horses (Repeat)
Thu, October 7 – Primus (Repeat)
Fri, October 8 – Maroon 5 (Repeat)


Craig Ferguson Musical Guests


Mon, October 4 – Rosanne Cash
Wed, October 6 – Julie Gribble
Thu, Octboer 7 – Toby Keith


Jimmy Fallon Musical Guests


Mon, October 4 – GAYNGS
Tue, October 5 – Trace Adkins
Wed, October 6 – Fistful of Mercy
Thu, October 7 – Pete Yorn


Carson Daly Musical Guests


Mon, October 4 – Janelle Monae (Repeat)
Tue, October 5 – Jimmy Eat World
Wed, October 6 – Weezer
Thu, October 7 – Tift Merritt


Saturday Night Live Musical Guest


Sat, October 9 – Bruno Mars


Lollapalooza | 08.06-08.08 | Chicago

By: Cal Roach

Lollapalooza :: 08.06.10-08.08.10 :: Grant Park :: Chicago, IL

Official Lollapalooza 2010 Photo Gallery
Lollapalooza 2010 Video Clips
Lollapalooza 2010 Setlists

Perry Farrell

Perry Farrell and the organizers of Lollapalooza get a D+ this year. They stretched the grounds out by several blocks, presumably allowing them to sell lots more tickets, but since the masses still clog the same main stages it’s a net loss for fans. Sound problems plagued the main stage on the north end for the entire weekend, sabotaging several otherwise great sets. The least impressive bunch of headliners possibly in the fest’s history (with one huge exception) didn’t bode well, either. But festivals are about shaking off logistical failures and immersing yourself in the music and collective spirit, and by these measures Lolla was an unqualified triumph.

Lollapalooza 2010 MVP: Mother Nature. Lolla’s usually worth suffering through 90-degress-and-humid Chicago in August, but nobody dares to hope for low-to-mid-80s and breezy. Plus, there was the new Sony Bloggie Stage, a tree-lined refuge from the sun. The planners got something right, at least. Please reserve this stage next year for all the awesome bands that only I know about.

Yer Elders Could Learn Ya A Thing or Two: My fest began with 71-year-old Chicago native Mavis Staples, and she set the bar high for class and energy. Her crack, ramshackle soul band evoked the hungry anxiety of green youngsters, and her own gracious enthusiasm and resilient, deep, smoky voice rang true as she announced, “You ain’t seen the last of me!” Hometown boy Jeff Tweedy joined the band for two songs he wrote for Staples’ forthcoming album, You Are Not Alone (due September 14 and produced by Tweedy).

Later in the day, Devo provided what would’ve been the most costume changes by an artist at any festival not also hosting Lady Gaga. It goes by a lot of different tags today, but New Wave killed every other 80s genre in sustained longevity, and here is a band sticking to a vintage sound and still coming off as futuristic. “It’s 2010,” Mark Mothersbaugh declared, “and we are here to fucking whip itÂ…AGAIN!” They were so good. I find it hard to imagine that they could’ve been that much better in their heyday.

Then, for the penultimate set on Friday, there was Jimmy Cliff. I wanted to be there just to experience Cliff’s godfatherly presence, but it was almost beyond words. Here is a man who has lost all pretension. He bleeds good will, and it’s like having spiritual peace injected into the crowd. His 62-year-old voice is impossibly clear and bright and full, and his band reached levels of soulful abandon akin to P-Funk at its peak. A couple songs fell flat (particularly “Vietnam,” which was retooled as “Afghanistan”), but Cliff is a sage with the power to expose the profundity in cliche, and the heights he and his band and the crowd hit during this set were as glorious as anything all weekend.

Lady Gaga

May or May Not Even Exist: Lady Gaga. Plenty of garish behavior: check. Gaga has a potty mouth: check. I don’t even have a comment on whether her theatricality undermines or enhances her music, or if it’s even worthwhile music at all. After just seeing something as pure and moving as Jimmy Cliff’s set, Lady Gaga’s performance was completely meaningless to me. I couldn’t relate to a single thing she said or sang or did. But I was happy for all the people who danced and exorcised demons and whatever else they were all doing.

Worst-Kept Secret: Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros. This side-stage set demanded more crowd room, as love junkies were climbing trees to get a glimpse of their cult leader (nee Alex Ebert). Straight outta Frisco circa 1969, the familial vibe extended as far as the ear could hear, and Jade Castrinos‘ powerful voice was reminiscent of Grace Slick in her prime. The Zeros cater specifically to their hardcore fans, but the experience is loose and appealing enough to entice outsiders to dip a toe in. The crowd interaction was infectious, the melodies were catchy, and the band provided at least a couple of wow moments, but the bottom line is you’re going to have to delve in whole-heartedly if you want to understand and fully enjoy this show. Looks like more fun and less creepy than The Polyphonic Spree, at least.

Best Scottish Band: Frightened Rabbit. Are there any bad Scottish bands? Shut up, Nazareth rules! Frightened Rabbit is ensconced in essential Celtic bittersweetness but not a slave to it. The set had an intimate feel, like that first big personal history conversation after you’ve just met someone. Like a folkier, less dramatic cousin of Glasvegas (one of last year’s Lolla highlights), FR plays subtle and noisy with equal aplomb, but frontman Scott Hutchison keeps things light-hearted when need be, so you end up with a varied but cohesive journey through song.

Biggest Sound Mix Casualty: Yeasayer. This should have been one of the best sets of the weekend. Too bad all we could hear were the bass, drums and occasionally, vocals. By the end of the set, Anand Wilder started to scat his keyboard hooks in “Ambling Alp,” obviously aware that nobody could hear the instrument. The band was killing it for much of the set anyway, with an intense, creepy jam to end “Rome” and a brilliant yelping dance groove climax of “Sunrise,” but they seemed justifiably frustrated in the end, as it was clear the crowd had given up. Epic-est fail of the weekend.

Metric

Best Wildlife-Themed Band: Grizzly Bear. Great bands sometimes let their audience fill in some of the subtleties in order to broadcast the raw power of the songs. These guys know how to adapt their best-experienced-indoors show to a big outdoor stage, and it’s a testament to the tunes as well as the versatile creativity of the players. Outdoor GB is much more bombastic and raucous, which actually improves some of the slightly stuffy material from last year’s Veckatimest. Highlights were “Fine For Now,” “Two Weeks” and “Ready/Able,” which was almost unrecognizable at first, turned into a woozy, upbeat stumble.

Best Broken Social Scene Offshoot: Metric. BSS underwhelmed at Pitchfork a couple weeks ago, but there’s no doubting the individual talents of its members. Emily Haines fronts Metric in a completely different guise than her relatively demure BSS persona. She brings to mind a slightly more brash Debbie Harry, and the Blondie metaphor continues into the music, a modern sound but essentially stadium-sized New Wave with a touch of sweetness.

Hey, Remember the 90s?: The last time I saw Green Day, the show ended abruptly after about 45-minutes when Billie Joe Armstrong halted the band, berated a security guard for roughing up a fan, threw his mic stand at the guard, and stormed off stage. It would’ve made a great last memory, but after 16 years, I got curious about the very different band that Green Day is now. It turns out that Billie Joe has become a cross between Dave-Grohl-as-Gene-Simmons and Zoo TV Bono, tossing out more ‘hey-o’s’ than a Sting show and generally hamming it up like a bonafide Hollywood rock star. I may not be a purist when it comes to punk, but sticking guitar solos in “Paper Lanterns” and “2000 Light Years Away” (the only pre-Dookie tunes of the night) and telling us to do the hippie hand wave smacks of disrespectful de-punking, or a desperate attempt to not be nostalgic. Still, halfway through I surrendered to the rock and roll circus and enjoyed the show, complete with oldies medleys and rote versions of the greatest hits, tons of fireworks, hauling kids up onstage, and the acoustic serenade to end the encore. It was another big spectacle, about as genuine and universal as Lady Gaga, but this time I knew the songs.

Dirty Projectors

Biggest Pleasant Surprise: I was pretty dead set on seeing Dirty Projectors, a breathtaking live act on their best nights, but found out I’d be seeing them headline a theater show in a couple months, so a friend’s advice led me to Fuck Buttons. I expected the massive walls of sound, but the subtle, sweet melodic layers inside were endlessly engaging. If you take modern Animal Collective, nix the vox and crank the distortion and BPM, you’ll come out with something like Fuck Buttons. Intricate and mesmerizing music, and you can dance to it!

Biggest Unpleasant Surprise: There’s no shortage of glowing reviews of Drive-By Truckers‘ live show, so this was a top priority of the weekend. It’s one thing to have an off night, but this set exuded less energy than The xx, for chrissakes. Maybe the band members got in a fight before the set, or were running on no sleep, or were on drugs, but if you can’t fake it for an hour at a big-name festival that’s not a good sign for your future.

No Surprise At All: The best set of a festival is rarely the last one, but that’s just what happened when Arcade Fire closed out Lolla. The band’s new album, The Suburbs, just came out, but it’s obvious that the band has been playing the tunes for a while. “Rococo” and “Sprawl II” were mid-set highlights, and the climax came with a version of “Month Of May” that verged on post-metal, ten times heavier and more dynamic than the album version. Of course, “Neighborhood #3 (Power Out)” yielded the most intense jam of the entire weekend. “Crown Of Love” was incredibly powerful, dug out as a special dedication to The National (who played a choice set just prior). But really, there wasn’t a dull second. Win Butler seems to have learned the Thom Yorke lesson a bit sooner, toning down the bitter self-righteousness without losing the fervor for the cause, so the overall good will of the music shines that much brighter for it. This is a stadium rock band with the perfect balance between agenda and affirmation, and this felt like a busting-out party. Those who still hadn’t jumped on board certainly did tonight, and the resonant chant from set-closer “Wake Up” was kept alive by the exiting crowd all the way to Michigan Avenue. Could not have orchestrated a more perfect end to the fest.

JamBase | Windy City
Go See Live Music!


Life is good Festival Ben Harper, Dr. Dog, Ziggy Marley

DO IT FOR THE KIDS!!!

The 2010 Life is good Festival at Blue Hills is set to take place September 11-12 at Prowse Farm in Canton, MA, a suburb of Boston. The multi-faceted event combines world-class headliners, popular developing bands and the top children’s artists working today. With a wide range of entertainment options including games, interactive art activities and a nationally-known circus company, this one-of-a-kind festival aims to raise $1 million for kids facing life-threatening challenges through the Life is good Kids Foundation.

Ben Harper & Relentless 7

Confirmed Lineup
Jason Mraz
Ben Harper & Relentless7
Guster
Ziggy Marley
Corinne Bailey Rae
Galactic
Ozomatli
Dr. Dog
Grace Potter & the Nocturnals
OK Go
Brett Dennen
Mavis Staples
Donavon Frankenreiter
Sierra Leone Refugee Allstars
Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue
Toubab Krewe

Good Kids Stage
The Laurie Berkner Band
Dan Zanes and Friends
They Might Be Giants
Big Apple Circus
The Sippy Cups

The two-day, multi-stage music festival hosted by Life is good, a Boston-based company that spreads good vibes through its colorful collection of apparel and accessories, will take place at historic and picturesque Prowse Farm at the foot of the Blue Hills, just minutes from Boston. To ensure an exceptional festival experience, Life is good has partnered with Superfly Presents, nationally recognized producers of the iconic Bonnaroo and Outside Lands festivals.

Tickets for the 2010 Life is good Festival at Blue Hills went on-sale on June 17. Adult single-day tickets are $50, and $90 two-day tickets are also available. Tickets for children ages 6-12 are available for $10 in a limited supply, and children 5 and under are free.

“The 2010 Life is good Festival at Blue Hills is a one-of-a kind event. No other festival in the country can offer the talent and entertainment experience that families and music fans alike will find at the 2010 Life is good Festival – all while helping to raise funds for kids facing life-threatening challenges,” said Bert Jacobs, Chief Executive Optimist for Life is good. “We have some of the very best performers coming together and we are going to have a great time while we raise more than $1 million dollars for the Life is good Kids Foundation.”

While most festivals have their fair share of VIPs who enjoy special privileges, Life is good will only offer these experiences to VGPs — Very Good People. Every festival attendee will have the opportunity to access exclusive hospitality, preferred viewing, artist meet and greets and other prizes by achieving fundraising goals or making a donation to help kids in need. The top fundraisers, known as VGPs, will have a once-in-a-lifetime concert experience, enjoying special perks and privileges throughout the event.

Through its nationally-known festivals, Life is good has raised over $3 million for children in need since 2003. All public donations, including individual fundraising prior to the event, will be directed to the foundation. The Life is good Kids Foundation is a registered 501(c)3 nonprofit committed to helping children overcome life-threatening challenges such as violence, illness, natural disaster and extreme poverty. Its Playmakers initiative provides training, resources and support to the adults dedicated to caring for these children so that all involved lead healthier, more joyful lives.


Jeff Tweedy Talks New Mavis Staples LP

SOUL/GOSPEL LEGEND RETURNS WITH NEW LP SEPTEMBER 14


Mavis Staples

This past winter iconic singer Mavis
Staples
joined Jeff
Tweedy
in Wilco‘s
Chicago studio, The Loft, where Tweedy wrote two new songs for the soul/gospel legend and produced her
forthcoming album You Are Not Alone, out September 14 on Anti-Records.

“I have almost everything she’s ever recorded, and I dug back through very thoroughly when I was given this job to
do,” says Tweedy. “I thought that if I refreshed myself about where she’s been, it would help her figure out where
she wanted to go. I wanted to be sure that we were making a record that she really wanted to make.”

“You Are Not Alone,” the title track, was written by Tweedy. This is a very personal song for Mavis, as she shed some
tears singing it. Though the ballad can be sung for anyone (a lover, a sibling, a friend, a child), Mavis had her father,
Pops Staples in mind when she belted out the emotional lyrics. Mavis also pours her soul into the other Tweedy
composition, “Only the Lord Knows.” “That was our political song,” she says “You talk to this one, listen to that one,
pick up the paper, but you can’t get any answers. The White House, the church–I can’t get any straight answers to
the things I want to know. So for now, we’re on our own, and we have to go to the Lord. He’s the only one who
knows.”

This summer Mavis Staples will play the Toronto Jazz Fest on June 30, Lollapalooza on August 6, and the Wilco-
curated Solid Sound Festival at Mass MoCa on August 14, with additional US and European tour dates to be
announced soon.

Mavis Staples
Tour Dates

::
Mavis Staples News ::
Mavis Staples
Concert
Reviews


Life is Good Festival: Ben Harper, Guster, Galactic, More

MAVIS STAPLES, ZIGGY MARLEY, OZOMATLI, SIERRA LEONE’S REFUGEE ALL-STARS,
TROMBONE SHORTY
& MORE ROUND OUT FESTIVAL LINEUP


Ben Harper and the Relentless 7

The official line-up for the 2010 Life is Good festival has been announced. Confirmed
artists include Ben Harper and the
Relentless 7
,
Guster,
Galactic, Jason Mraz, Grace Potter and the
Nocturnals
,
Dr. Dog,
Trombone Shorty & Orleans
Avenue
, Sierra Leone’s
Refugee All Stars
, Ziggy
Marley
, Ozomatli,
& more.

They Might Be
Giants
,
The Laurie Berkner
Band
,
The Sippy
Cups
, and others
will be performing on the “Good Kids” stage.

The 2010 Life is Good festival takes place on September 11-12 on Prowse Farm at the Blue
Hills in Canton, MA. For
complete line-up and
additional information, please click below.


Lollapalooza Lineup: Arcade Fire, Phoenix, Lady GaGa

Lollapalooza Lineup: Arcade Fire, The Strokes, Green Day, Lady GaGa, Soundgarden

Phoenix, MGMT, Yeasayer, Drive-By Truckers, Erykah Badu, The Black Keys, Spoon, Grizzly Bear

Lollapalooza has announced its lineup. Set to go down in Chicago’s Grant Park from August 6-8, the 2010 event will be headlined by Arcade Fire, the Strokes, Lady Gaga, Green Day, the reunited Soundgarden, and Phoenix. Complete lineup follows.

Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

2010 Lollapalooza Lineup:

* Soundgarden

* Green Day

* Lady Gaga

* Arcade Fire

* The Strokes

* Phoenix

* Social Distortion

* MGMT

* Jimmy Cliff

* Hot Chip

* The Black Keys

* The National

* Spoon

* Devo

* Cypress Hill

* Cut Copy

* The New Pornographers

* Erykah Badu

* Slightly Stoopid

* Grizzly Bear

* Gogol Bordello

* Chromeo

* Wolfmother

* Yeasayer

* X Japan

* MUTEMATH

* Metric

* Dirty Projectors

* AFI

* Mavis Staples

* Matt & Kim

* The xx

* Drive-By Truckers

* Blues Traveler

* Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros

* The Temper Trap

* Jamie Lidell

* Frightened Rabbit

* F**k Buttons

* Deer Tick

* Blitzen Trapper

* Stars

* Raphael Saadiq

* The Cribs

* Minus the Bear

* Switchfoot

* The Walkmen

* Mumford & Sons

* Wild Beasts

* Rogue Wave

* Los Amigos Invisibles

* The Big Pink

* The Dodos

* Hockey

* Cymbals Eat Guitars

* B.o.B

* Dawes

* Warpaint

* The Antlers

* The Soft Pack

* Rebelution

* Balkan Beat Box

* Wavves

* American Bang

* The Ike Reilly Assassination

* Company of Thieves

* Nneka

* Harlem

* The Constellations

* Miniature Tigers

* Mimicking Birds

* The Kissaway Trail

* HEALTH

* Javelin

* The Morning Benders

* Foxy Shazam

* Violent Soho

* Royal Bangs

* Freelance Whales

* Semi Precious Weapons

* Dan Black

* The Band of Heathens

* Dragonette

* My Dear Disco

* Shawn Fisher

* Neon Hitch

* Skybox

* The Ettes

* Jukebox the Ghost

* These United States

* MyNameIsJohnMichael

Spinning at Perry’s

* 2ManyDJs

* Empire of the Sun

* Digitalism

* Perry Farrell

* Tiga

* Felix Da Housecat

* Rusko

* Erol Alkan

* Kaskade

* Wolfgang Gartner

* Flosstradamus

* Joachim Garraud

* Mexican Institute of Sound

* Caspa

* Peanut Butter Wolf

* Dirty South

* NERVO

* Cut Copy (DJ Set)

* Beats Antique

* Steve Porter

* Didi Gutman of Brazilian Girls

* Ancient Astronauts

* Ana Sia

* Team Bayside High

* Dani Deahl

* FreeSol

* DJ Mel

* BBU

* Vonnegutt

* Only Children

* Lance Herbstrong

For more on Lollapalooza see our 2009 review here.


Lollapalooza 2010 Lineup Revealed

Great news for music fans: the lineup for Lollapalooza 2010 was formally announced on Tuesday and the rumors have turned out to not be rumors after all – Lady Gaga, Soundgarden, and Green Day are among the headlines set to rock Chicago’s Grant Park this summer! Other acts expected to hit the stage for the [...]

Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars U.S. Tour To Help Refugees

SIERRA LEONE’S REFUGEE ALL STARS PARTNER WITH

THE INTERNATIONAL RESCUE COMMITTEE ON U.S. TOUR TO RAISE AWARENESS OF REFUGEES’ NEEDS

BAND’S NEW ALBUM RELEASED TO ACCLAIM MARCH 23

Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars

In keeping with the theme of their acclaimed new album, Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars are
partnering with the International Rescue Committee (IRC) on their extensive U.S. tour, which begins next week
in Vermont. (See dates below.) The shows, which aim to raise awareness about the needs of refugees, will feature
material from the All Stars’ new album, Rise & Shine.

The All Stars first formed and performed in refugee camps in Guinea where the IRC managed school programs,
health clinics and other critical services for tens of thousands of Sierra Leoneans who escaped civil war at home. Since then, in electrifying live performances and recording experience with the likes of Aerosmith and Mavis Staples, the All Stars have
been establishing an identity based as much on skill, imagination and charisma as on their undeniably touching
story (The Los Angeles Times). The band’s remarkable journey was documented in the multi-award winning
documentary Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars, by Zach Niles and Banker
White
.

“Amid their shared experience of living as refugees [the All Stars] found a common cause to play beautiful music,
bring cheer and hope to refugees who fled a brutal war and help them forget the horrors they left behind,” says International Rescue Committee spokeswoman Melissa Winkler. “Their music became an antidote
to the misery, monotony and uncertainty that Sierra Leonean refugees faced each day, and their music continues to
be an inspiration to refugees around the world.”

On the upcoming tour, concertgoers will be encouraged to donate $5 to IRC programs by texting REFUGEE to 25383. The donations will help Sierra Leonean and other refugees given sanctuary in the United States to recover and
rebuild their lives here. The All Stars and Cumbancha are also donating $2 to the IRC’s global humanitarian aid
programs for each copy of Rise & Shine sold through this link: www.theirc.org/shop-irc-market.

Rise & Shine is the follow up to the All Stars’ debut, Living Like a Refugee, which garnered
the band international acclaim and high profile fans such as Keith Richards, Sir Paul McCartney, Angelina Jolie
and Ice Cube. On the new
album, produced by Steve Berlin (Los
Lobos
, Angelique
Kidjo
, Rickie Lee
Jones
, Michelle
Shocked
, Alec
Ounsworth
, Jackie
Greene
), Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars have realized a unique and seamlessly coherent sound: a fusion
of traditional West African music and roots reggae, inflected with New Orleans styles.

The new album is garnering considerable critical praise, including:

“It is simply great songwriting with incredible production. None of their message – unity, cultural celebration, spiritual salvation – is lost, and so much is gained.”
-The Huffington Post

“Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars have tapped into the music’s transformative powers… Rise & Shine is a testament to the unbreakable human spirit.”
-Relix

Sierra Leone’s Refugee
All Stars Tour Dates
:: Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars News :: Sierra Leone’s Refugee
All Stars Concert Reviews


Newport Folk Fest: Helm, Yim, Bird, Avetts

George Wein’s NEWPORT FOLK FESTIVAL RETURNS TO ITS SEASIDE HOME JULY 30 – AUGUST 1

Newport Folk Fest 2009 by Brueckner

The spirit of an open-hearted, old-fashioned family reunion is being summoned to life for this year’s 51st edition of George Wein’s Newport Folk Festival®, which begins July 30 at the International Tennis Hall of Fame at Newport Casino and continues July 31 and August 1 at Fort Adams State Park in Newport, Rhode Island.

Tickets go on sale worldwide on Friday, March 26, at 10 a.m. at www.newportfolkfest.net.

George Wein’s New Festival Productions continues to build on the festival’s historic past by featuring emerging young artists alongside some of folk music’s most venerable names. This year’s festival features Levon Helm‘s Ramble on the Road, John Prine, Steve Martin & Steep Canyon Rangers, Yim Yames (of My Morning Jacket), The Swell Season, Andrew Bird, The Avett Brothers, Brandi Carlile, Doc Watson & David Holt, Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros, Preservation Hall Jazz Band, Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings, Calexico, Blitzen Trapper, Richie Havens, Sam Bush, The Low Anthem, Tim O’Brien, The Felice Brothers, Justin Townes Earle, Tao Seeger Band, AA Bondy, Chris Thile’s Punch Brothers, Dawes, Nneka, Horse Feathers, Pokey LaFarge & the South City Three , Ben Sollee & Daniel Martin Moore, Sarah Jarosz, Cory Chisel & the Wandering Sons, O’Death and Liz Longley. More artists will be announced at a later date.

Many of these musicians have performed and recorded together or crossed paths along the musical highway and they see this storied festival as being so steeped in cultural and historic importance that they liken it to “coming home” to the very roots of the folk-music tradition.

Wein has, since 1959, found Newport a scenic and hospitable venue for presenting the very best of this country’s blues, roots, gospel, country, bluegrass, Cajun and traditional folk music. Last year’s 50th anniversary edition paid tribute to the great performers who wrote the proud history of this festival, notably co-founder Pete Seeger, Joan Baez, Judy Collins, Ramblin’ Jack Elliot, Arlo Guthrie and Mavis Staples.

“Newport is like a second home to me and I always look forward to the next visit,” said Wein. “After celebrating the 50th anniversary with Pete and 17,000 fans, I can’t wait to see the magic unfold over the three days.”

“There is something so perfect about being in Newport near the water and that old stone fort – all gathered in to sing with family and friends – that keeps me wanting to come back year after year,” said Yim Yames. “It’s like the walls of the fort are arms, and I feel secure when I am near them, protected by the spirits there – past, present, and future. And, I like to hear our voices bouncing off those old stone walls as my eye drifts to the sailboats on the seashore and the people just smiling and taking it all in.”

All tickets for George Wein’s Newport Folk Festival go on sale Friday, March 26, at 10:00 a.m. online, by phone and by mail. General admission tickets (single-day passes only) also can be purchased in person at the Newport Visitor Information Center, located at 23 America’s Cup Avenue.

A partial list of performers for George Wein’s 2010 Newport Folk Festival:

FRIDAY, JULY 30 ~ 8:00 p.m.

International Tennis Hall of Fame, 194 Bellevue Avenue

Steve Martin & The Steep Canyon Rangers

Tim O’Brien

Sarah Jarosz

SATURDAY, JULY 31 ~ 11:30 am – 7:00 p.m.

Fort Adams State Park, Harrison Avenue

John Prine

Andrew Bird

Brandi Carlile

The Low Anthem

Yim Yames of My Morning Jacket

Doc Watson & David Holt

Calexico

Dawes

Nneka

O’Death

Liz Longley

Blitzen Trapper

A.A. Bondy

Sam Bush

Horsefeathers

and more

SUNDAY, AUGUST 1 ~ 11:30 am – 7:00 p.m.

Fort Adams State Park, Harrison Avenue

Levon Helm’s Ramble on the Road

The Swell Season

The Avett Brothers

Sharon Jones & the Dap Kings

Richie Havens

Justin Townes Earle

Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros

The Preservation Hall Jazz Band

Punch Brothers with Chris Thile

The Felice Brothers

Tao Seeger Band

Cory Chisel & The Wandering Sons

Ben Sollee & Daniel Martin Moore

Pokey LaFarge & the South City Three

and more


For more on the Newport Folk Festival see our 2009 coverage here.


Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings: New Album Pre-Order

15% of Sales to be Donated to Doctors Without Borders
Fans Quick to Order to Receive Freebies

“It’s hard, maybe even impossible to upstage Sharon Jones, who fights her way through I Learned the Hard Way and channels the drama boldly and candidly.” – Pitchfork

new album

I Learned The Hard Way, the highly anticipated new album from Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings is now available for pre-ordering direct from Daptone Records.

The band and label are proud to announce that 15-percent of all pre-order sales from Daptone’s online store will be donated to Doctors Without Borders‘ Emergency Relief Fund, which will directly contribute to relief efforts in Haiti.

And making this even more special for SJDK fans are special offers for those among the first to pre-order the album. The first 1000 orders of the CD or LP will receive a FREE bonus 45 rpm single featuring the track “When I Come Home” (unreleased from the I Learned The Hard Way sessions) plus an instrumental b-side. The first 100 orders of the LP will be autographed, and all LP copies will come with a coupon to download the entire album in high-quality MP3 format. In addition, ALL pre-orders will arrive to the consumer at least one day before the official street date of April 6.

Fans can go here to purchase the album in the format of their choosing.

I Learned The Hard Way was produced by Bosco Mann and recorded on an Ampex eight-track tape machine by Gabriel Roth in Daptone Records’ House of Soul studios. The record drips with a warmth and spontaneity rarely found since the golden days of Muscle Shoals and Stax. Sharon’s raw power, rhythmic swagger, moaning soulfulness and melodic command set her firmly alongside Tina Turner, James Brown, Mavis Staples and Aretha as a fixture in the canon of soul music. From the lush Philly Soul fanfare that ushers in “The Game Gets Old” at the top of the record to the stripped down Sam Cooke-style “Mama Don’t Like My Man” at the tail, the Dap-Kings dance seamlessly through both the most crafted and simple arrangements with subtlety and discipline. I Learned The Hard Way is the “Daptone Sound” at it’s finest.

Sharon Jones and The Dap Kings Tour Dates :: Sharon Jones and The Dap Kings News :: Sharon Jones and The Dap Kings Concert Reviews


Sharon Jones: New Album 5/4

SHARON JONES AND THE DAP KINGS ANNOUNCE NEW ALBUM, OUT 5/4

Sharon Jones and The Dap Kings

Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings are already well known as one of the most exciting acts in the nation for both their explosive live shows and their prolific output of gritty studio recordings. Their breakout release, 100 Days, 100 Nights, sold over 150,000 copies worldwide. On Jones’ birthday this year, the band will release I Learned the Hard Way, their fourth full-length on Brooklyn’s independent Daptone Records. The record marks a bold step forward for a band who almost single handedly stewarded today’s return of soul music to its more traditional sound.

I Learned the Hard Way was produced by Bosco Mann and recorded on an Ampex eight-track tape machine by Gabriel Roth in Daptone Records’ House of Soul studios. The record drips with a warmth and spontaneity rarely found since the golden days of Muscle Shoals and Stax. Sharon’s raw power, rhythmic swagger, moaning soulfulness, and melodic command set her firmly alongside Tina Turner, James Brown, Mavis Staples, and Aretha Franklin as a fixture in the canon of soul music.

From the lush Philly-Soul fanfare that ushers in “The Game Gets Old” at the top of the record, to the stripped down Sam Cooke-style “Mama Don’t Like My Man” at the tail, the Dap-Kings dance seamlessly through both the most crafted and simple arrangements with subtlety and discipline. I Learned the Hard Way is the Daptone Sound at its finest.

I Learned The Hard Way Track Listing

1. The Game Gets Old

2. I Learned The Hard Way

3. Better Things

4. Give It Back

5. Money

6. The Reason

7. Window Shopping

8. She Ain’t A Child No More

9. I’ll Still Be True

10. Without A Heart

11. If You Call

12. Mama Don’t Like My Man


Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars New Album Due 03/23

SIERRA LEONE’S REFUGEE ALL STARS TO RELEASE RISE & SHINE MARCH 23, 2010

Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars

Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars started playing music together in West African refugee camps while their homeland was racked by years of bloody warfare. Since then, audiences around the world have embraced the band and their utterly extraordinary story. On their forthcoming album, Rise & Shine, the All Stars’ sound, as well as their biography, evolves further; the music finds them “…establishing an identity based as much on skill, imagination and charisma as on their undeniably touching story” (The Los Angeles Times). Cumbancha will release the album on March 23, 2010.

For the follow up to their acclaimed debut, Living Like a Refugee, the band began recording in their hometown of Freetown, Sierra Leone then traveled to New Orleans, Louisiana to work with the highly accomplished producer Steve Berlin (Los Lobos, Angelique Kidjo, Rickie Lee Jones, Michelle Shocked, Alec Ounsworth, Jackie Greene) at Piety Street Recording. The All Stars immediately felt at home in New Orleans, not only because the hot climate and spicy food reminded them of Africa, but also because the residents of the Crescent City have firsthand experience with the bitterness of exile and the redemptive power of music. The local musicians who contributed to the record (including favorites Troy “Trombone Shorty” Andrews, Bonerama, and Washboard Chaz) lend it an infectious spirit of celebration and optimism in the face of struggle.

Rise & Shine reflects how far the band has come in the past few years, after multiple international tours and recording experience with the likes of Aerosmith and Mavis Staples. With an expert producer at the helm, Sierra Leone¹s Refugee All Stars have realized a unique and seamlessly coherent sound: a fusion of traditional West African music and roots reggae, inflected with New Orleans styles. The album’s 13 tracks embrace the wide array of musical influences the All Stars have encountered on their rise to international fame.

The band members are broadly diverse in age and character, although they possess a strong bond forged through common experiences and values: they all know war and have struggled to survive in one of the world¹s poorest countries, and they share an unwavering belief in the transformative power of music. The current lineup of the band was cemented when Reuben M. Koroma, the sage songwriter and guiding light of the group, returned home from the refugee camps, joined by Black Nature, an orphaned teenaged rapper; Mohammed Bangura, who suffered amputation at the hands of rebels; and Francis John Langba. Back in Sierra Leone, they reunited with family, friends and former band mates Ashade Pearce, Jah Son Bull, and Makengo Kamara (many of whom they believed not to have survived the violence).

The band’s journey (which culminated in the All Stars’ first recording in a studio) was documented in the multi-award winning documentary Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars, by Zach Niles and Banker White. The resulting album, Living Like A Refugee, garnered the band international acclaim and high profile fans such as Keith Richards, Sir Paul McCartney, Aerosmith, Angelina Jolie, and Ice Cube.

Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars deliver electrifying and uplifting live performances and will tour the U.S. in Spring 2010. They have already appeared at some of the most prestigious music festivals worldwide including Bonnaroo, Montreal Jazz, Fuji Rock in Japan, Central Park SummerStage, and Celebrate Brooklyn.


Newport Folk Festival | 08.01 & 08.02 | RI

Words by: Bear Connelly | Images by: Jim Brueckner

Newport Folk Festival :: 08.01.09 & 08.02.09 :: Fort Adams State Park :: Newport, RI

Newport Folk Fest 2009

The Newport Folk Festival is one of the longest running music festivals in America, and this year she celebrated her 50th anniversary (the festival did not take place from 1971-1985) with a huge array of artists spanning generations, countries and languages. The deep historical context of the festival resonates highly with the artists that play here, making it quite a destination for musicians and fans of the greater folk world. Dylan went electric here and Joan Baez played the first ever festival in 1959. NWFF is located at Fort Adams State Park, a defunct Naval base nestled in the harbor of the sailing mecca of Newport, Rhode Island. The festival has three stages, the main stage sitting right in front of the fort overlooking a huge lawn that leads to the ocean, and two tents containing smaller stages also along the water. Thousands of people attend each year, setting up blankets and lawn chairs and basking in the sunshine and music for two days every August. Due to the location, boats are encouraged to pull up close and drop anchor and listen to the music while swimming and playing in the water. This is truly a festival you need to see once in your life, if not many times.

As always there were so many great bands playing that I kind of felt like a chicken running around with his head cut off in order to see them all. For some artists, I only caught a couple songs, like folk legends Baez (whose voice has sadly lowered in register over the years) and Arlo Guthrie (who is an amazing storyteller) to Joe Pug (a young working class, Dylan-esque folkie from Chicago belting tunes like “My Father’s Drugs” with a Midwest snarl). With a festival as diverse as Newport – acts range from Mavis Staples to Brett Dennen, 23-year old John McCauley (Deer Tick) to 90-year old Pete Seeger – there was something for everyone.

Here are some of the highlights from this year’s event, and you can also listen to all these sets at npr.org.

Ben Kweller

The Avett Brothers :: NFF 2009

As I walked in to the festival I headed straight for the first music I could hear. I stumbled in to the Harborside Tent to find Ben Kweller playing with a stripped down version of his band. There was Ben, decked out in a sleeveless NYC t-shirt, jeans and boots (which reminded my of that classic John Lennon pic) with a drummer and a dobro/pedal steel player. Kweller cranked through tunes like “13,” which was apparently written about a night out in Block Island, an island off the coast of Rhode Island, and “Gypsy Love” with a great sense of enjoyment at being at this historical festival. He even tried out tunes that he normally plays on piano in the spirit of guitar driven folk music. The highlight of his set was a crowd sing-along version of “Falling” dedicated to Kelly, a girl who worked at the festival that asked if he would play it, despite the lack of a piano on stage.


The Avett Brothers

I haven’t really listened to The Avett Brothers but with the electricity of their live shows you don’t really need to in order to enjoy them. The North Carolina natives brought their brand of psych-emo, energetic folk-grass to the festival for the second time in as many years. The band ran through live staples such as “Paranoia in B flat Major” and “Ballad of Love and Hate,” along with new tunes off their upcoming album I and Love and You like “Kick Drum Heart” with little disparity for a newcomer. Read: their new tunes kick as much ass as their old ones.


Tom Morello/The Nightwatchman

Given the fact that Tom Morello is a Harvard educated, political junkie, effects infused shredder, I was perhaps most curious to see what he had in store for a folk festival. Morello, armed simply with a nylon string guitar (that had “Whatever It Takes” scrawled on it in black marker) and his rustic baritone voice played songs such as “Dogs of Tijuana” and “One Man Revolution.” Morello also mentioned how excited he was to play at the same festival as the legendary Pete Seeger. He dedicated his tune “The Road I Must Travel” to Seeger, who Morello believes is “a living body of justice-ness and righteousness,” and is glad that “in a world of passport carrying jackasses there are people like Seeger to balance it out.”

Gillian Welch

Gillian Welch :: NFF 2009

Fan favorite Gillian Welch delighted the main stage crowd yet again (in the three years I’ve been, she’s been there every time) with a nice mix of songs from her entire repertoire. Apparently she and her partner, Rhode Island native Dave Rawlings, had to get a police escort from Boston just to make their set after a five-hour flight delay at LAX. Welch joked that she felt “Like Mirabelli getting escorted to the Sox game in order to catch Wakey a couple years back,” referring to Red Sox catcher Doug Mirabelli’s return trip to Fenway after being reacquired mid-season. Although sleep deprived and unkempt, they didn’t let the jetlag stop them from delivering angst melting tunes like “Orphan Girl,” “My First Lover” and “Look at Miss Ohio,” the latter featuring a blistering solo from Rawlings, who is perhaps the tastiest guitarist in Americana music today. Midway through the set, she debuted her haunting version of Jefferson Airplane’s “White Rabbit” to the crowd’s enjoyment.


Mavis Staples

One of the more historical acts at the festival was the gospel stylings of Mavis Staples and her energetic band. Staples’ set included a rousing rendition of The Band’s “The Weight,” which she sang at The Last Waltz with The Staple Singers 30 years ago, and “Why Am I Treated So Bad,” her father’s song written after a conversation with Martin Luther King, Jr.


The Low Anthem

Hometown heroes number one (Deer Tick being number two) played their first set of presumably many to come at Newport after a whirlwind summer that saw them playing all over the world, including sets at Bonnaroo, Hyde Park and Roskilde Festival (read about Roskilde here). Since releasing Oh My God Charlie Darwin on Nonesuch (and Bella Union in Europe) the band has been touring relentlessly and it shows. The once awkward folkies that could barely play their secondary instruments – there is a clarinet, French horn, upright bass, drums, organ, acoustic and electric guitars and crotales on stage, with all three members rotating between them for each song – have tightened their sound to captivate the audience, which overflowed the small Waterside Tent they played in. The band played some new, unreleased tunes that held water alongside older gems like “Ballad of Broken Bones” and “To Ohio.” The highlight for me came with their take on the traditional “Don’t Let Nobody Turn You Around” that featured guitarist/singer Ben Knox Miller on drums, Jeff Prystowsky on upright bass and clarinetist Jocie Adams showing off her electric guitar chops, all of which showcased the band’s growing versatility.


Iron & Wine

Fleet Foxes :: Newport Folk Fest 2009

Sam Beam played a solo acoustic set on Saturday afternoon to a packed Harborside Tent. Beam, whose wispy vocals and percussive yet intricate guitar picking was a perfect soundtrack for a sunny afternoon on the water. He started his set off with a cover of Postal Service‘s “Such Great Heights” that quickly turned into a group sing-along after he forgot the words to the chorus. Next came the stomping “Woman King,” which induced some of the crowd (mostly seated) to dance. Beam had great stage presence, talking about how “beautiful but distracting” the view from the stage was and handling catcalls like a woman in the crowd who yelled, “I want to live in your beard… because it seems like a warm place to sit,” with a quick wit. Beam closed his set with the fan favorite (and Twilight soundtrack hit) “Flightless Bird, American Mouth,” which left the audience standing and cheering for an encore. Beam sheepishly walked back on stage to deliver “Sunset Soon Forgotten,” a wonderful finger picking tune off Our Endless Numbered Days.


Fleet Foxes

I was really interested in checking out the Fleet Foxes, one of the past two years’ biggest hype bands. I really like their harmonies and arrangements on the album and wanted to see if they could pull it off live. Well, they killed it. Unfortunately, their small discography lead to them basically playing their album and EP in their entirety. However, getting a main stage slot at Newport is quite a feat for such a young band. Songs like “White Winter Hymnal” and “Oliver James” oozed lush melodies and dispersed waves of their “baroque harmonic pop jams” amongst the festival-goers and aquatic onlookers.


The Decemberists

The Decemberists :: Newport Folk Fest 2009

Saturday’s headliner (other than Pete Seeger, who closed both nights as more of an honorary guest) brought their literary folk rock to the main stage for the first time. Armed with a plethora of vocalists and rare instruments (like the hurdy-gurdy), the band ripped through a greatest hits set – they’ve been playing their folk opera, The Hazards of Love, in its entirety most nights this tour – including “The Crane Wife Part 3″ and upbeat closer “Sons and Daughters.” Mid-set the band’s Decemberists Family Players acted out a scene from the Festival’s storied past – the day Dylan went electric. Four people represented festival founder George Wein, Pete Seeger, Bob Dylan and a squirrel to act out a scene inspired by Seeger’s famous comments after hearing Dylan go electric (“Damn it, if I had an axe, I’d cut the cable right now”) referring to shutting down the sound system.


Dave Rawlings Machine

For those of you who don’t know, David Rawlings Machine is just him and Gillian Welch but with reversed roles. They play his songs instead of hers and he sings lead vocals to her harmonies. These two are amazingly captivating with just two guitars and voices. Rawlings, known as a producer and session guitarist mostly, ran through wonderful cover songs ranging from Bright Eyes’ “Method Acting” to Dylan’s “Queen Jane Approximately,” Ryan Adams’ “To Be Young (Is to be sad, is to be high)” (which he co-wrote) to “Big Rock Candy Mountain.” The set was so fierce that the late morning crowd called for an encore, which is usually reserved for headlining acts. Dave answered the call with a foot stomping, hand clapping cover of Johnny Cash’s “Jackson.”

Neko Case

Neko Case :: Newport Folk Fest 2009

Also known in the indie world for her work with the New Pornographers, Neko Case has been churning out great alt-country albums on her own for years. Supporting her latest, critically acclaimed album, Middle Cyclone (JamBase review here), Case played the main stage on Sunday. She barreled through songs from her whole repertoire including “Wish I Was the Moon,” “Hold On Hold On” and her roaring new single “This Tornado Loves You.” Not only does Case have one of the best lovesick howls in the business but her backing singer Kelly Hogan (who has also sung with Andrew Bird, The Minus 5 and Edith Frost) provided a nice layer on which Case could stray more and show off her pipes. After a standing ovation from the crowd, who spent her set in lawn chairs, Case ripped through a stellar version of The Shangri-La’s “The Train from Kansas City” as an ode to female groups of yesteryear.


Deer Tick

The second hometown favorite of the festival was the fast-rising Deer Tick. The band took the stage while leader John McCauley III stated, “I don’t know what an acoustic guitar is. Give me one and I’ll try to plug it in. Let’s do it like Dylan did!” before launching into the raucous “Easy” off the band’s latest album, Born on Flag Day. Before their second tune, “Little White Lies,” a fan from the mostly seated crowd asked, “Can we stand up? We just want to dance.” After the okay from security, chairs were moved out of the way and the littlest tent of the festival gave birth to its biggest dance party. Deer Tick plowed through their songs showcasing new, full band arrangements to previously mellow acoustic songs on their albums. Even when the solo song “A Song About A Man” was played the rest of the band sang three-part harmonies, where the last time I saw them they just left the stage. After a guest spot from singer Liz Isenberg on “Friday the XIII” and a cover of John Prine’s “Aimless Love,” the band brought down the house with a rockin’ take on “La Bamba,” which seemed very genuine and relevant despite coming from a 23-year-old white kid from North Providence, RI.


Elvis Perkins in Dearland

Pete Seeger :: NFF 2009

Playing the festival for the second time, the singer-songwriter and his energetic, multi-instrumentalist band (they all play horns and some other primary instrument) closed down the Harborside Stage on Sunday. Half the band attended Brown University and his bassist was from Newport, so there was kind of a homecoming vibe to Dearland’s set. Despite suffering some tragedies within his own family (his dad, actor Anthony Perkins died from AIDS, while his mom was on board one of the planes that hit the World Trade Center), he is able to sing positive, “live in the moment” style songs that shine bright lights on to the dark zones of the human mind. Perkins, who understands the gravity of playing at such a storied festival, treated the crowd to his own gems like “Chains Chains Chains” and “Shampoo” while mixing in covers like “Weeping Mary” and “Four Strong Winds.” Set closer “Doomsday” had Elvis singing: “Man, I went wild last night…/ I don’t let doomsday bother me/ Do you let it bother you?”


Pete Seeger

It’s a rare opportunity to see a living legend these days. I felt this way when I saw Ray Charles. Pete Seeger IS folk music. Marking both his 90th birthday and the 50th anniversary of the festival he helped create, Seeger treated the crowd to a sing-along set that started with the help of his grandson Tao Rodriguez-Seeger. Pete played “Turn Turn Turn” and “Midnight Special,” saying the lyrics before each line was to be sung so no one in the crowd had an excuse to not sing. It was great to hear the stories behind all these songs – this man knows who wrote the songs we all know as “traditional”! Midway through his sunset set, Seeger invited “every musician who played today” on stage for huge group versions of “Guantanamera,” “If I Had a Hammer” and the obvious closer, “This Land is Your Land.” Never again will I see Colin Meloy singing with Tom Morello, Ben Kweller sharing a mic with The Low Anthem’s Jocie Adams or Seeger himself singing with Gillian Welch and Ramblin’ Jack Elliot. It’s moments like these that make the kinship, history and stature of this festival what it is today.

Final Song led by Pete Seeger featuring everyone!

Continue reading for more pics of Newport Folk Festival 2009…

Joan Baez

Arlo Guthrie

Sam Beam – Iron & Wine

Del McCoury

Brett Dennen

Campbell Brothers

Guy Clark

Dala

The Low Anthem

Joe Pug

Tom Morello/The Nightwatchman

Dave Rawlings Machine

Deer Tick

Elvis Perkins in Dearland

Tao Rodriguez-Seeger

Final Song led by Pete Seeger featuring everyone!

Final Song led by Pete Seeger featuring everyone!

Final Song led by Pete Seeger featuring everyone!

JamBase | Rhode Island
Go See Live Music!



NPR Free Music Samplers

NPR Offering Music Samplers That Feature Bands Playing The Newport Folk And Jazz Festivals


Sam Beam – Iron & Wine

In the interest of providing music lovers with free music, NPR Music is currently offering two free 12-song samplers for download. The samplers feature artists performing at this year’s Newport Folk Festival and Jazz Festival in August. NPR Music is covering both Jazz and Folk festivals with webcasts and broadcasts in addition to the music samplers.

The 12-song folk sampler features current indie favorites and folk luminaries, including a track from The Avett Brothers‘ new album, and songs from Fleet Foxes, Iron & Wine, Deer Tick, Gillian Welch, Pete Seeger, Joan Baez and Mavis Staples.

The jazz compilation also boasts a mix of contemporary and classic with music from The Bad Plus, Esperanza Spalding, Branford Marsalis, and Dave Brubeck among others.

Full details about the samplers and instructions on downloading them from iTunes are available here.

Folk at Newport – 50 Years Sampler:
“I and Love and You” by The Avett Brothers
“I Keep Faith” by Billy Bragg
“Easy” by Deer Tick
“Chains, Chains, Chains” by Elvis Perkins in Dearland
“Mykonos” by Fleet Foxes
“Look at Miss Ohio” by Gillian Welch
“Belated Promise Ring” by Iron & Wine
“God Is God” by Joan Baez
“Freedom Highway (live)” by Mavis Staples
“Shenandoah” by Pete Seeger
“Richland Women Blues” by Ramblin’ Jack Elliott
“To Ohio” by The Low Anthem

Jazz at Newport 2009 Sampler:
“Jabberwocky” by Branford Marsalis Quartet
“Brother Mister” by Christian McBride & Inside Straight
“Tulum” by Claudia Acuna
“Summer Song” by Dave Brubeck
“Precious” by Esperanza Spalding
“Spirit of the Moment” by Michel Camilo
“Penta” by Miguel Zenon
“James” by Roy Haynes & The Fountain of Youth Band
“Apti” by Rudresh Mahanthappa’s Indo-Pak Coalition
“Radio Cure” by The Bad Plus
“Macaca Please” by Vijay Iyer