Phish :: 07.30.09 :: Red Rocks Amphitheatre :: Morrison, CO
Phish :: 07.30 :: Red Rocks Amphitheatre
Colorful Colorado. So much Phishtory has happened here over the years. From the first-ever “official,” non-Northeast shows for the band documented in Colorado ’88 to the funk-era ragers of Denver in ’97, there has been no other venue in the state that has inspired the band to play more historic shows than Red Rocks.
From ’93-’96, Phish played a total of nine shows at this truly breathtaking, one-of-a-kind, natural amphitheatre, where the stage sits between two giant slabs of red earth that serve as a center for some cosmic and energetic interactions and results. I also know why everyone in Colorado is in such good shape because everything here is an uphill hike.
However, since some trouble in the little town of Morrison during the four nights in ’96 with fans and police, Phish has simply not been allowed to return for a number of reasons. And, with the venue holding maybe 8 or 9 thousand people, they simply outgrew it. I, like many others, never, ever expected Phish to return here and was floored when the announcement came. That also made these tickets harder to score than any of the return shows yet. It also made it a perfect choice to open the second leg of their summer tour with a statement – a four-night stand.
Trey :: 07.30 :: Red Rocks Amphitheatre
Opening with the very first song they ever played here in ’93, “The Divided Sky,” Trey Anastasio and company soared through this intricate and appropriate number and nailed it. Next up was the catchy “Ocelot,” a tune slated for the upcoming, September release, Joy, which many of the newer fans seem to really like.
“The Wedge,” another tune played in the first set of the ’93 show, features the line “take the highway to the great divide,” and boy, oh boy, is Red Rocks such a place. In fact, this was the first time in a long time that most of my night was spent admiring the scenic beauty and intricacies this venue has to offer rather than simply being fixated on the band and stage.
A funky, Fishman driven “Moma Dance” was above average and gave way to “Horn,” yet another Rift-era tune that had me thinking that the band was truly excited to be back on hallowed ground. But, the surefire highlight in set one was an atypical “Stash,” which saw some loose jamming and more twists and turns than the snakes outside in the surrounding park. It was led at different stages by all four and featured Fishman all over the skins. It was exploratory, yet not as dark as normal, and made for a great ride.
Set two began with some Trey banter introducing Mike Gordon before launching into “Mike’s Song,” and it seemed that immediately the energy of the band for set two was higher than earlier and we were poised for a sharp second effort. Again, Fishman took charge and pounded “Mike’s” into oblivion before landing in the beautiful middle portion of the “Mike’s Groove” trilogy, “I Am Hydrogen.” The beautiful segue was closed proper by a slamming “Weekapaug Groove” that saw great interplay between Trey and Page, while Fish and Gordon held down the beat.
Phish :: 07.30 :: Red Rocks Amphitheatre
Another of the night’s highlights was “Ghost,” which conjured up memories of the lauded, super funky, 11.17.97 Denver version. It bubbled up loose and funky, featuring some rock & roll licks by Anastasio, and finally landed in another funktastic number, “Wolfman’s Brother.” This two-song onslaught was a solid half hour of booty shaking and loose, yet inspired playing and jamming. At this point, the first set was a mere footnote in my mind.
The first “Billy Breathes” since the summer of ’03 was another nod that just about anything was possible during this four-night run. A song that does not always translate well live, this version did, slowing things down for a moment for all to soak in the power of this venue. “The Squirming Coil” was spot-on and saw McConnell, who was extremely impressive throughout set two, play his baby grand piano, which made hearts swoon at the end of this number and made me think it was the show closer.
That was until Fishman hit the familiar high-hat intro signaling “David Bowie.” This version was standard, yet sharp, and capped off a solid night one. Set two was super and continued with the encore of “Loving Cup.” A rocker that led the masses out to the trails and natural stairs of Red Rocks, it truly was a “beautiful buzz” to close out Night One.
Phish :: 07.30.09 :: Red Rocks Amphitheatre :: Morrison, CO
Set I: The Divided Sky, Ocelot, The Wedge, Poor Heart, The Moma Dance, Horn, Stash, The Horse > Silent in the Morning, Possum
Set II: Mike’s Song > I Am Hydrogen > Weekapaug Groove, Ghost, Wolfman’s Brother, Limb By Limb, Billy Breathes, The Squirming Coil, David Bowie
Phish perform again tonight at Red Rocks. Check back
for live Tweets, setlists, pics and full reviews. Complete Phish tour dates available here.
Just like Leg I of Phish’s Summer Tour, JamBase will be at every stop with more coverage than you’ll find anywhere! Keep up to speed with all things Phish at jambase.com/phish.
Continue reading for more pics of Phish at Red Rocks Night 1…
Though certainly excited at the prospect of a new disc from Assembly of Dust (AoD), I was both dubious and curious upon learning the recording, Some Assembly Required (released July 21 on Rock Ridge Music) (JamBase review here), has at least one guest musician on each of the album’s 13 tracks. Other bands, including Galactic and Keller Williams have done similar projects with From the Corner to the Block and Dream, respectively, and were met with mild skepticism by critics and fans alike.
A flurry of thoughts: This is only AoD’s second studio album; is it too soon to take on a project like this? The band’s last release was 2007′s Recollection (JamBase review here), and prior to that, a live recording called The Honest Hour in 2004. Would the new album be focused enough to sound like the band, or will each guest’s bold signature sound overwhelm the quartet? Also, if a band’s sound and songs are their brand, does hosting a guest per track detract from their image, their message? And if I’m honest, in my cold, dark heart I wondered, “Is this a marketing ploy to sell more units?” To gain insight into the band’s writing, recording and thinking processes, AoD’s main songwriter and vocalist Reid Genauer and drummer Andy Herrick were each good enough to drop me a line and share their impressions with me.
Initially formed as a quintet in 2002, but now short one keyboardist and down to four members, AoD got together after Genauer departed from Strangefolk. Fans and critics alike have heralded AoD, who are respected for their consonant, tuneful songwriting bolstered by meaningful, smart lyricism. AoD, I agree, are poised to crossover to the mainstream and recorded over two years, the songs on Some Assembly Required stoke and utterly reaffirm that opinion. Seven of the 13 tracks have been made available on the band’s website since early June. Released each Tuesday leading up to the release date, the band used this approach to reward fans and give an audio teaser to casual or unfamiliar listeners.
Musically, AoD has drawn comparisons to The Beatles and The Band, which no doubt is due in great part to the songwriting duo of Genauer and former keyboardist and current co-producer Nate Wilson‘s shared understanding of songcraft and appreciation for the history of American roots music. Many of the songs had been marinating for years, explains Genauer, most having been written by himself, some with the help of Wilson. The bulk of the material was about three years old, but a 16-year-old Genauer wrote the oldest 20 years ago. “It was written when I still dreamed of being in a band. It was THE first song I wrote that moved out of the first position on a guitar neck.” As far as the song selections on Some Assembly Required go, each track is a perfect snapshot from lives intertwined, varying from the frustratingly mundane to unabashedly proud to achingly devastating, all clever ruminations paired with well arranged, sparsely orchestrated, home-baked, hooky tunes.
Genauer by Susan J. Weiand
The collection of songs on Some Assembly Required were primarily unreleased, and were more therapeutically written than purposefully so. “It wasn’t about writing songs for a specific album,” says Genauer. “We just had some songs recorded, some we played in a live setting, and some were just sitting in a bucket in a dark corner. Generally, those songs are the ones we worked with.” Herrick tells me the album was recorded over four days in late summer of 2008. Genauer notes with a hint of pride that as he wrote the songs he became more comfortable “trying on” different characters, writing from different point of view. “[The songs] are time capsules that reflect a specific process and times in my life, some are autobiographical some are from other perspectives. There are different characters I interact with.”
Having an abundance of material allowed for a new freedom in the studio, according to Genauer, because in addition to the songs themselves, they had greater time to create and tinker with arrangements and production. “This time we had time to write as we [went]. Sometimes we would create while the mics [were] running,” explains Herrick about his time in the studio with Genauer, guitarist Adam Terrell and bassist John Leccese. Where the material on previous AoD albums had been “road tested,” played and recorded in live rotation and allowed to shape-shift over time, this album came into its own in the studio.
Gordon & Leccese (AoD) by Britt Nemeth
Genauer likened the alternate, unhurried approach to grocery shopping. “Sometimes you just buy the same things day in and day out. But some days you crave different flavors, textures, or tastes,” he says. “We went into the studio with that in mind.” Further, because each song and its parts was able to distill better and in using songs that hadn’t been played live, AoD didn’t have to “untangle or un-bake” songs that fans had already become familiar with. Instead, the band was able to infuse the tracks they decided would be on the album with other creative input and different genetics in the form of multiple guests.
The entire list of guests is comprised of musicians Genauer has long respected and with whom he’s hoped to work in some capacity. Even the album’s title is a play not only on the band’s name but a nod that each track is an assembly of musicians. The resulting roster boasts some of the finest players in their generation. Richie Havens, David Grisman, Bela Fleck, Alison Krauss, Jerry Douglas, Mike Gordon, John Scofield, Martin Sexton and more each add their signature sound in a supporting capacity.
Continue reading for more on AoD…
I tried to select instrumentalists who were complimentary to each song, someone who could change the texture. I had to think about who would make sense, who I aspired to play with and who had similar musical aesthetics. It was possible to imagine but impossible to know what they’d add.
-Reid Genauer
Photo by: C. Taylor Crothers
“It was awesome,” says Herrick of recording with the various guests. “[Each musician made their respective piece] stronger, added more of a flavor than affected the overall taste of the track,” he continued, unaware that Genauer, too, fancied discussing the project in culinary terms.
Assembly of Dust
Most of the songs were written and their structure didn’t deviate radically from the original by the time they were recorded, Genauer says. “The songs are skeletons [when we go into the studio], and the band delivered the flesh and muscle to the songs.” Herrick continues, “Reid and Nate would make rough tapes which demonstrated the direction and feel they wanted songs to take, because they know what they want. I think one that ended up different was ‘Leadbelly’ [with Jerry Douglas and Alison Krauss]. Some songs had several slightly different versions at the end of the day, but we always record [different] versions to support the story Reid tells. We [the rest of the band] use texture and feel to best support his words.”
Both Herrick and Genauer used the word “satisfying” often, almost as much as they used the word “pride,” and this being at peace with the songs and the recording comes across on the album. The resulting disc opens strong with “All That I Am Now,” a wide-open, anthemic stomp with Genauer sharing vocal and guitar duties with ’60s icon and Woodstock opening act Richie Havens. The clarity and power of Genauer’s voice is reflected and complimented by the overall grand, reverby tones and texture of the song. The third track, “Cold Coffee,” featuring David Grisman’s plaintive mandolin, is met by Genauer’s soft articulation of heartache, depression and self-doubt, making this coupling perfect. Similarly, “Second Song” with Keller Williams is AoD’s answer to John Mellencamp’s “Jack and Diane” or Steve Miller’s “The Joker,” a short story about dreams, realities and a lack of resources stacked against poppy, rolling melodies. Bela Fleck’s rollicking, distinctive plucking on “Edges” make it a standout, with the banjo’s phrasing saying as much as any words.
If a band’s sound and songs are unique, then their sound and their words are as big a part of their brand as, say, their trademarked logo, name or live reputation. It is what makes a band almost instantly identifiable, so I was intrigued about how AoD would maintain their signature sound with so many guests.
Reid Genauer by C. Taylor Crothers
“I tried to select instrumentalists who were complimentary to each song, someone who could change the texture,” Genauer says. “I had to think about who would make sense, who I aspired to play with and who had similar musical aesthetics. It was possible to imagine but impossible to know what they’d add.”
Genauer calls the experiences in the studio “extremely poignant and meaningful” because his heroes became his colleagues. It is an endorsement and affirmation of the personal risks taken by Genauer.
A majority of the songs sound and feel natural with soft, acoustic stringed instruments, but it is the weighted delivery of both “Pedal Down,” a rangy, loose-limbed Southern rocker featuring Cincinnati’s Brothers Gabbard of the Buffalo Killers and the straightforward chugging rock of “Arc of the Sun,” about the birth of Genauer’s son, that add an edge to the album. Though “Arc” has been played live and is not necessarily new to fans, the album version is anchored by Mike Gordon and his swirling, fuzzed-out bass solo. Also featured on “High Brow,” another rockin’ track is moe.‘s Al Schnier who helps inflate the band into something more aggressive and edgy, a sound that completely works.
How this all shakes out live, without the benefit of the guests, is something fans are curious to see and hear. When I asked Genauer if he was concerned about the lack of the guests during a live performance he replied, “Sometimes it’s harder to recreate songs in the studio because the energy and excitement in a live setting can’t be recreated. In this case the guests are that x-factor, and they created the energy usually created by the audience. The audience will do the same without guests, and also, the songs may grow and evolve. I look forward to what they become.”
AoD will be touring throughout the summer and through the end of October, gaining momentum and working to build on their already solid assembly. While I was initially concerned that each guest would overwhelm the band, in retrospect I would have liked AoD to augment their guest’s signature sounds a little more – boost them in the mix, extend a solo – but each guest did exactly what the band hoped they would do and that is what matters. They added a slightly foreign accent on an otherwise unmistakable voice and accomplish this without pretense. The strong writing and subtle arrangements definitely make this masterful Assembly of tunes Required listening.
Assembly of Dust tour dates available here, Reid Genauer solo dates here.
Last week we tipped you off to Jam in the Dam 2010, today we got the official announcement, and we’re so excited about the return we wanted to share the “official word” with you. What follows is a note directly from the fine folks who put this event together.
YMSB :: Jam In The Dam 2007 by Sam Friedman
WE’RE BACK!! It is SO great to be able to send this to you all and let you
know of our plans for the 5th Anniversary of Jam in the Dam. The
festivities will ensue March 21-22-23, 2010, back ‘home’ at the Melkweg in
Amsterdam.
Our plans for 2009 hit a fairly large bump in the road, when the festival
founder Armand Sadlier finally gave in to his slowly declining lung health.
He was never a cigarette smoker, so even more a cruel blow. Luckily, he was able to go to Duke University Hospital, and received a double-lung
transplant last October. He has done extremely well thus far, and wants to
thank everyone who expressed kind wishes and said prayers. Just four months later, in February, he was able to ski in Vermont with his family. We’d like to take this opportunity to remind everyone to become an organ donor, if you aren’t already. It’s the reason Jam in the Dam still rocks on.
But let’s get back to the music! Of course Armand’s old friends Umphrey’s McGee will be there. Their career has really picked up speed since our
first show in 2005. You couldn’t find a nicer, more talented bunch of
musicians, and they truly deserve it.
Joining them is Yonder Mountain String Band, who appeared in 2007, and were a
big hit with the Europeans, who seem to love their bluegrass. Brendan Bayliss and Jeff Austin, the lead singers of UM and YMSB, have a project called db30. They actually have a recording coming out together, and will play an acoustic set during the festival.
Two years ago, we showed Electric Apricot in the cinema at the Melkweg.
It’s a really funny movie directed by Les Claypool, and we’ve been wanting
to get Les to Amsterdam for three years. Well, we finally got it done, and
the founder of Primus will be joining the fun. This will be the first time
he has been to Europe without Primus, and he is a festival staple here in
the States. We will definitely show the movie again this year.
Rounding out the lineup will be The New Mastersounds and The Bridge. TNM are from Leeds, England and the four-piece, high-energy jazz/fusion funk band are great. We saw them at the All Good Festival last week, and they blew it up. We smell a new favorite band for some folks. The Bridge is an under-the-radar band who is huge in their hometown of Baltimore, and has a real New Orleans feel. Cris Jacobs is a great singer, and when Kenny the mandolin player starts beat-boxing with Cris on lap steel, it’s something you’ve never seen. Mike Gordon from Phish chose them as the opener for his east coast tour last fall.
As always, there will be lots of sit-ins and crazy collaborations. We are
also planning to shoot a new DVD for the 5th Anniversary. Travel packages
will be available through ConsideritDan and CS Travel sometime in August. We will be doing our annual canal boat cruises, which is THE best way to see Amsterdam. More info on those at a later date.
Tickets will go on sale Wednesday, July 29 at noon at http://jaminthedam.com. As a special treat for our most loyal fans, the first 75 people to buy tickets will get a free canal boat cruise on one of the festival days! (A $50 value which includes an open bar.) Tickets for the 2010 show will be $250 for a 3-day pass.
In Europe, http://ticketmaster.nl/ will be selling tickets for 170 euro for the 3-day pass, and 60 euro for single day tickets. Chances are, the Euro-on sale will lag a week or so behind the U.S. Music Today DOES ship tickets internationally, so anyone outside the U.S. can still try to be in the first 75. The demand here in the States is very low for single day tickets, but anyone interested in those should send an email to jitd@visionintl.com
That’s it for now! Anyone unfamiliar with the show format can stop by the
website for ‘The Scoop’ http://jaminthedam.com/Welcome.html and all your questions can be answered by others who have attended at our message board. All bands play all days, in one of the two rooms in the venue. Schedule TBA. We can’t wait to see all your smiling faces in the greatest city on Earth!
In terms of classic songcraft and upper tier musicianship, it’s tough to beat Assembly of Dust. Ably lead by singer-guitarist-composer Reid Genauer, the group’s third studio effort, Some Assembly Required (released July 21 on Rock Ridge Music) stands the greatest shot yet of busting this jam-adored cult act into the mainstream spotlight. The production is modern radio thick, the contemporary notion of what “rock” sounds like filtering into the band’s more natural old school leanings, and each cut features a guest turn from a gifted fellow traveler or two.
While this latter move can feel like a stunt in lesser hands, it pretty much works from stem to stern here, where the skyward ache of Genauer’s pipes swoops and turns with the ageless, authoritative glide of Richie Havens on typically philosophizing opener “All That I Am Now,” or the irresistible shuffle of “Cold Coffee,” a cool morning twanger where Genauer sings with smoky depth and David Grisman‘s mandolin provides golden sunlight busting through the gray. While guest star packed affairs often feel random, Assembly takes a considered approach to integrating others into their thing, choosing each for their specific talents, like say the oceanic low end oomph Mike Gordon brings to the shimmering flow of “Arc of the sun” or the dobro sparks Jerry Douglas throws out on the country float of “Leadbelly.”
As said, where past releases have pitched their tent closer to the Woodstock days of The Band or the ’70s Cali country rock heyday, Assembly resonates on a wavelength closer to Cracker, Barenaked Ladies and glossy mainstays like Sheryl Crow or even Bon Jovi (“High Brow” has all the earmarks of a Jovi hit), none of which should imply that the songs have anything to do with these folks. Genauer’s pen remains a steady, shining beacon in a frothy sea but he’s managed to encase his tunes in settings that stand a fighting chance of moving beyond the jam clubhouse and onto mainstream airwaves, where they can only do the industry some solid good. It’s not hard to imagine the same millions who shell out bucks for Jack Johnson or Jason Mraz spilling coin for the Keller collaboration “Second Song” or the acoustic-tinged skip of “Light Blue Lover,” where Grace Potter and Tony Rice help AOD create the greatest James Taylor tune not by Sweet Baby James.
In more than one way, Assembly offers cred in a variety of communities, with nods to serious jazz heads with John Scofield, the folk stratosphere with Grisman, Rice, Douglas and Bela Fleck, and the jam world with Potter, Williams, moe’s Al Schnier and David Crosby/Phil Lesh foil Jeff Pevar. But it’s the booklet inscription from Black Flag guitarist and highly copacetic jamband enthusiast Greg Ginn that perhaps adds the most new critical heft: “You may as well just glue this CD into the player for the next year or soÂ…” Assembly of Dust makes music of vastly wide appeal and the lofty, giant size production and dreamy assortment of collaborators on Some Assembly Required places them in their best position yet for wider discovery. Outside of the palpable absence of former keyboardist Nate Wilson, Assembly is a pretty perfect piece of beautifully turned rock ‘n’ roll. The smarter programmers at classic rock stations, CMT, VH1 and late night talk shows would be well advised to jump on this one so they can brag when the dumber followers figure it out down the line. Well done, again, sirs.
Mike Gordon and his band will embark on a 20-plus date Fall Tour beginning just after Labor Day in Brooklyn, NY and winding down at the beginning of October in Burlington, VT.
The headlining club tour features a return to Park West in Chicago, Barrymore Theatre in Madison, State Theatre in Falls Church, and first time stops at the Music Hall of Williamsburg in Brooklyn, Town Ballroom in Buffalo and a north-of-the-border trip to the Mod Club in Toronto, Ontario. And yes, there’s even a stop in Florida.
After two highly acclaimed runs last year touring on the release of his album The Green Sparrow, Mike returns with the same five-piece lineup, including longtime collaborator Scott Murawski on guitar, Vermonters Craig Myers on percussion and Tom Cleary on keyboards and Brooklyn drummer Todd Isler.
A limited number of tickets are available via a fan presale NOW at mikegordontickets.rlc.net. The presale ends Thursday, July 23 at 5 p.m. EST, at which point tickets will go on sale through traditional outlets.
MIKE GORDON FALL 2009 TOUR DATES
09/09/09 Wed Somerville Theatre Somerville, MA
09/10/09 Thu Port City Music Hall Portland, ME
09/11/09 Fri Bearsville Theater Woodstock, NY
09/12/09 Sat The State Theatre Falls Church, VA
09/14/09 Mon Lincoln Theatre Raleigh, NC
09/15/09 Tue Orange Peel Asheville, NC
09/17/09 Thu Variety Playhouse Atlanta, GA
09/18/09 Fri Freebird Live Jacksonville Beach, FL
09/19/09 Sat WorkPlay Birmingham, AL
09/21/09 Mon Minglewood Hall Memphis, TN
09/22/09 Tue The Mercy Lounge Nashville, TN
09/24/09 Thu Vogue Nightclub Indianapolis, IN
09/25/09 Fri Park West Chicago, IL
09/26/09 Sat Barrymore Theatre Madison, WI
09/28/09 Mon 20th Century Theatre Cincinnati, OH
09/29/09 Tue The Blind Pig Ann Arbor, MI (w/ Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey)
09/30/09 Wed Mr. Small’s Theatre Pittsburgh, PA (w/ Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey)
10/02/09 Fri Mod Club Toronto, ON (w/ Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey)
10/03/09 Sat The Town Ballroom Buffalo, NY (w/ Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey)
10/04/09 Sun Higher Ground Burlington, VT (w/ Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey)
For more on Gordo, check our exclusive feature/interview here.