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Posts Tagged ‘My Way’

Lady Gaga “Born This Way” Lyrics

The much-anticipated return of Lady Gaga is upon us and the gurl certainly wasn’t exaggerating when she promised that her new album would be filled with gay anthems. To the glee of all the Little Monsters impatiently waiting for her the release of her album this May, on Thursday, Gaga released the full lyrics to [...]

Wanee Festival | 04.15-04.17 | Florida

Words by: Frank Etheridge | Images by: Ian Rawn

Wanee Festival :: 04.15.10-04.17.10 :: Spirit of the Suwanee Music Park :: Live Oak, FL


Herring & Bell – Widespread Panic at Wanee 2010

The instantaneous and non-sourced information available to us in our constantly chattering culture should, of course, be taken with a grain of salt.

Just one week ago, in the more hysterical corners of social-media networks, Wanee 2010 was deemed a disaster in the making. Anonymous histrionics and hypochondriacs matter-of-factly declared that the addition of Widespread Panic and the aggressive marketing of promoter Live Nation had bludgeoned this once sere scene into an oversold clusterfuck of brown-acid-at-Woodstock proportion.

In reality, Wanee 2010 was far removed from these dire predictions. Yes, this year was bigger, no doubt; younger and rowdier, too. Feeling the shoulder-to-shoulder squeeze at George Clinton and Parliament-Funkadelic Thursday night at the Mushroom Stage, or a simple glance at the sprawling crowd covering the entire Peach Stage field, was proof enough that the crowd was roughly double the size of last year.

Yet, blessed with beautiful spring weather, graced with an incredible lineup and handled with superb logistical skill that kept big-crowd headaches and hassles to a minimum, Wanee 2010 was a success on all fronts. Inseparable from the festival experience was a long weekend of camping in one of the most beautiful places on Earth and partying with the festival circuit’s most eclectic mix of like-minds, a crazed commune that is equal parts biker rally and magic carpet ride, camo and tie-dye, Bud tall boy and heady green tea.

So, if you don’t have fun at Wanee, you just ain’t doing it right.


Wanee 2010

In light of all the superlatives that could apply, this year’s festival will be summed up by a “Best of Wanee” approach, and we encourage you to post your own favorites!

Best Surprise Shredding: Godfather to the Southern jam scene, Col. Bruce Hampton fittingly held court Thursday afternoon on the Mushroom Stage as Wanee kicked into high gear. Yet, Quark Alliance guitarist Perry Osborn stole the show, ripping his way through the improvised madness typical of a Hampton show, shining especially brightly on “I’m So Glad.”

Best Reason to Put a Moratorium on Grateful Dead Covers: Though this is clearly an Allman Brothers festival, the Grateful Dead’s spirit and music permeated everything, and covers of the band were performed by seemingly every act. But, is this a good thing? Anyone that endured the cringe-inducing vocals of Papa Mali on “Wharf Rat” would argue it is not.

Best Way to Shake a Hangover: Jumping in the beautiful, brisk black water of the Suwanee River mid-morning will take one’s headache – and breath! – away.

Best Song Sandwich: Gov’t Mule‘s late night set closing sequence of “Mule” > “Whole Lotta Love” > “Mule” was a thrill, and Panic‘s flawless segues in “Chilly” > “Pleas” > “Chilly” were pure sickness, but when considering that the Allman Brothers opened their festival with “Mountain Jam” Friday AND finished the classic marathon instrumental on Saturday night, we have to give top honors to the Brothers.


Ivan Neville & JoJo Hermann at Wanee 2010

Best Black Crowe Sighting: Has Luther Dickinson morphed into Chris Robinson?

Best Tease: The aforementioned Mule medley also included a deft touch of “Loser,” but this Wanee award goes to ABB/Rolling Stones/Sea Level alum Chuck Leavell, a Southern gentleman and leading conservationist to boot. In a rollicking set featuring Randall Bramblett on horns, Leavell moved his band through “Dead Flowers,” “Rip This Joint” and “Here Comes the Sun” (dedicated to “Brother George”) before sailing into “Southbound,” where he worked the 88s for a few rolls of the Allmans’ instrumental “Jessica.”

Best Buckeye Shout-Out: Seemingly lost in a land of Gators, ‘Noles and Bulldawgs, a pasty fellow in an Ohio State cap, fists raised, shouted, “Akron, Ohio, baby!” during The Black Keys‘ set. While the connotation (and location) of Akron was unclear to most in attendance, and despite the fact that the town’s best-known musical act plays a hyper-modern blend of the blues that is a bit jolting contrasted to the Allmans’ innate grace, these Wanee newcomers delivered a well-received set, closing with a blistering “Till I Get My Way.”

Best Sit-In: Stiff competition in this category included WSP’s JoJo Hermann (keys) and NMA‘s Cody Dickinson (washboard) joining The Funky Meters for Professor Longhair’s “Red Beans” and Warren Haynes manhandling “North” during Panic’s Saturday set closer. But, sentimentality and craftsmanship win out in a nod to blues legend and longtime Allmans runnin’ partner Johnny Winter, who joined the ABB Saturday night for a haunting take on Elmore James’ “The Sky Is Crying.”


Gregg Allman – The Allman Brothers at Wanee 2010

Best Vocal Harmonies: Performing a set of hits by Sly and the Family Stone, one of their primary influences, Dumpstaphunk‘s Ivan Neville and Tony Hall became perfectly in sync as they nailed the vocal bass rhythm that is the defining groove on the classic Sly hit “Dance to the Music.”

Best Jam: Coming out of “Black Hearted Woman” on Friday night, the Allmans wove in the Dead’s “The Other One” jam. Building on the primal, driving rhythms of Jaimoe and Butch Trucks, the scream, wail and twirl of Haynes and Derek Trucks‘ guitars created an epic crescendo to close this set.

Best Moment: Trading verses with Haynes, WSP frontman John Bell sweetly sang of a scene sketched by one of his heroes, Van Morrison, during “And It Stoned Me” on Saturday night during ABB’s set. With imagery evocative of rainstorms, pickup trucks and fishin’ poles, the verse was perfectly set against Wanee’s magical backdrop. Add in the lines, “There were bottles, too/ One for me and you/ And he said, ‘Hey, there you are!’” and there’s no denying the soul-stirring feeling of good friends sharing great times. And for fans of Panic and the Allmans, there’s an element of unrestrained bliss that only music can create in knowing that the union between these two cherished bands is now sealed forever.

Best Performance: The Allman Brothers on Saturday night. The music was superb, from Gregg‘s powerful pipes on “Ain’t My Cross To Bear” to the frenzied guitar jams of “Nobody Left To Run With Anymore” to the surreal spaces created in “Dreams.” Yet, this set encapsulated so much more. Taking the stage twice after Widespread Panic, a headlining act that most bands would never follow, the Allmans firmly planted their flag in the quasi-terra firma of the Spirit of the Suwanee Music Park, staking their claim to a growing festival they fathered, a scene they created and a legacy they have earned. Truly, the land and the kings are one.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”83″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=28″);}); Wanee Festival 2010 | Spirit of the Suwannee Music Park | Live Oak, FL The JamBase 2010 Wanee Photo Gallery features The Allman Brothers Band, Widespread Panic, Gov’t Mule, 7 Walkers, The Lee Boys, Chuck Leavell, Randall Bramblett, Col. Bruce Hampton, George Clinton, Particle, The Word , The Black Keys, Dr. John, Derek Trucks, Susan Tedeschi Band, Dumpstaphunk, The Funky Meters and more… View Photos

JamBase | Sunshine State
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Dawes/Cory Chisel | 02.23 | Arlington, VA

Words by: Josh Klemons | Images by: Gretchen Murphy

Dawes/Cory Chisel :: 02.23.10 :: Iota Club & Cafe :: Arlington, VA

Dawes :: 02.23 :: Arlington, VA

This was a night of button-down shirts, tight pants and big shoes. This was a night of Telecaster electric guitars, rolling bass lines and rocking drums. This was a night of great vocals and solid songwriting. This was a packed house at the Iota, where Cory Chisel and the Wandering Sons played a set followed shortly thereafter by headliner Dawes.


Cory Chisel took the stage looking a bit like James Franco and a lot like an indie rocking singer-songwriter. It was quickly apparent that his small stature and unassuming nature belied his powerful voice and immense songwriting abilities. His drummer played lines that were one part Americana and one part the Killers. His bassist sat on top of his amp, looking like an excited kid in a playground. In the front, Chisel was wedged between his keyboard playing female harmony vocalist and his lead guitar player, the latter wearing a Russian styled black fur cap, large rimmed glasses and a black sport coat.


They opened the set with “See It My Way” and they never looked back. Although most in the crowd professed, when prodded, to having never seen the band before, everyone was excited, creeping towards the stage in the tiny club within the first notes of the set. Early in the show, Chisel broke a string on his guitar. He clearly was not prepared for this and had to ask if anyone had a guitar that he could borrow. Fortunately someone did. While this mystery guitar made its way forward, Chisel apologized, saying, “I didn’t expect to acoustic rock this hard.” While he was tuning his new guitar, he got his first request of the night, from a girl right up front, and with a smile, he graciously acquiesced. He played a beautiful love song, “Home in the Woods,” full of imagery of the forests of his Midwestern youth, real or imagined.

Cory Chisel & The Wandering Sons :: 02.23 :: Arlington, VA

For the next track, the band did not exit the stage, but the rhythm section relaxed and Chisel played a stunning track called “It Won’t Be Long,” in which he sings, “I’ll take you with me wherever I go/ Singing your sweet songs I know so well/ Halfway to heaven, still halfway to hell/ I’m going home to you now, home to you now/ Oh it won’t be long.” Adriel Harris sang desultory harmonies while his lead guitarist picked notes to match the melody. Then his bassist, still sitting atop his amp with his legs swinging to his own beat, took a surprisingly soulful harmonica solo. This was one of those songs that reminded you that sometimes a little can go a long way.


Later in the set, Chisel told a story about getting drunk and singing along to Bob Dylan songs, substituting his own lyrics for whatever words he could not remember. Apparently when he is drunk, that is about all of them. Harris had the foresight to write down one of these drunken substitution rants, and the world is a better place for it. The song was no drunken parody, no mere tribulation; this was pure, inspired folk rock gold. Despite the fact that only occasionally throughout the solo piece did he attempt – always successfully – to emulate Dylan (he actually sounded more like Colin Hay), he played a song that could have come straight off of a best hits album of the legendary songwriter. The refrain was, “I never meant to love you, but it’s too late now,” and it was heartbreaking while also being surprisingly fresh and funny. I guess the world can always use more freestyling, drunken Dylan impersonators.


Headliner Dawes took the stage and showed us what happened to ’70s garage rock. It got itself educated, learned how to play, and hit the road running. These guys are a force. Guitarist Taylor Goldsmith is a firecracker. When Chisel was finishing up his set, he made a comment about not knowing how Goldsmith still had a voice after weeks on the road. It took about one refrain from their opener to understand what he was talking about. Goldsmith holds nothing back. Ever. He sings with his whole self, he plays guitar like it matters, and boy can he dance. Picture something along the lines of Yosemite Sam with ants in his pants at a rodeo competing for the last beer of the night. If you can do that you’re somewhere in the vicinity. He jumps and stamps his feet and rolls around. He takes a sip of water from a bottle, and then rather than putting it down somewhere, he throws it. Not violently, simply because there is too much going on to worry about where it lands. He rocks when he sings; he shakes when he solos. The guy is a dynamo. And he is fiercely talented.


And so is his band, made up of younger brother Griffin Goldsmith, Wylie Gelber and Alex Casnoff on drums, bass and keys, respectively. Everyone but Gelber sings and they do killer harmonies. If it is immediately clear that Taylor grew up listening to Neil Young, it is equally clear that these guys schooled themselves on the ways of Crosby, Stills, Nash AND Young.

Dawes :: 02.23 :: Arlington, VA

Others songs played, both new and old, included “If I Wanted Someone,” “Love Is All I Am,” “Time Spent in Los Angeles” and the hauntingly beautiful “So Well,” the tale of a women who could save the different male protagonists in the story, but only for a short while.


At times Taylor sounded like Jeff Tweedy, at others Robert Earl Keene. At one point, he took on the Warren Haynes southern rocker persona and did it well. On the last track of the set, he suddenly yelled, “Sing it!” and the audience jumped right in on “When My Time Comes,” a song that is part rocker and part Irish drinking song. The audience knew the words and they gave Taylor’s voice a rest, if only for a moment. Then the set was over and the band walked to the side of the room, as there was no backstage.


They came back up, with plenty of prompting from the capacity Tuesday night crowd that was still ready to dance, and opened the two-song encore with a cover of Warren Zevon’s “Lawyers, Guns and Money.” During the song, people started throwing rolled up dollar bills at the band and telling them to take it off. It was late and the crowd was still in on the fun of the night. Dawes clearly did not expect such a turnout on a Tuesday and they were vocally and visibly excited to see so many friendly faces so far from home. The final track, “Peace in the Valley,” began with just the brothers playing guitar/vocals and sparse drums. Then the band came in and closed out the song, and the night, with gusto.

Dawes Tour Dates :: Dawes News :: Dawes Concert Reviews

JamBase | Virginia
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Leonardo DiCaprio has no plans of playing Frank Sinatra

Leonardo DiCaprio has said he has no plans of playing Frank Sinatra in Martin Scorsese’’s new film.
Rumours have been abuzz that the ”Titanic” star is set to portray the ”My Way” hitmaker’’s in the upcoming biopic.
However, DiCaprio has denied them.
“There are no plans to do that (portray Sinatra) as of yet,” the Daily Express quoted [...]

South Memphis String Band Home Sweet Home On 01/19

SOUTH MEMPHIS STRING BAND’S DEBUT ALBUM HOME SWEET HOME OUT JANUARY 19

South Memphis String Band

When South Memphis String BandLuther Dickinson, Alvin Youngblood Hart and Jimbo Mathus – got together to make music, it certainly wasn’t out of commercial consideration. This troika of roots-imbued musical pros coalesced through a shared vision and consuming passion for the music of their forebears, most notably the Mississippi Sheiks, Memphis Jug Band, Gus Cannon’s Jug Stompers, and other practitioners of pre-blues era roots sounds.

Home Sweet Home, the group’s first album, out on Memphis International January 19, showcases their passion for the old timey tradition that is underscored by their name. South Memphis, of course, is that rough and tumble area of the Bluff City extending from downtown to the Mississippi border, and beyond. It’s where Stax Records as well as literally hundreds of churches thrived. The sacred and profane, holy rolling and dice rolling, were cheek by jowl in old South Memphis and its modern day namesake reflects that ecumenicism quite brilliantly. For Luther, Alvin, and Jimbo, South Memphis is more of a musical state of mind than a specific geographical location.

They’ve been called a “regional roots music supergroup,” but the alliance of Dickinson (North Mississippi AllStars, The Black Crowes), Hart, and Mathus (Squirrel Nut Zippers) is more like three good friends just putting it down in a very traditional way. Mathus explained, “Luther, Youngblood Hart and myself have been musical co-conspirators for over a decade. It is only fitting that we should come together with acoustic instruments and perform Mississippi music.”

Michael Hoinski, writing in the Austin American-Statesman witnessed what’s so special about SMSB at a recent performance noting, “The American experience is the main unifier of this slap happy yet sureshot trio… Each player is principally a bluesman but also well-schooled in country, folk and gospel. When asked about the subject matter of SMSB’s repertoire, Alvin responds without hesitation, “Natural disasters, bushwackers, train songs…”

Whether you hold a degree in ethnomusicologist or are just a person who is moved by authentic acoustic American music, Home Sweet Home speaks your language, in beautifully measured tones. As Jimbo notes, “We decided the South Memphis String Band will never be in a hurry.”

Home Sweet Home Track List
1. Jesse James
2. Deep Blue Sea
3. Old Hen

4. Worry ’bout Your Own Backyard

5. Things Is ‘bout Coming My Way
6. Let Your Light Shine On Me
7. The Carrier Line
8. Bloody Bill

9. Eighteen Hammers
10. Bootlegger’s Blues
11. Dixie Darling
12. Home Sweet Home


U2 | 09.12 & 09.13 | Chicago, IL

Images by: Chad Smith

After touring Europe, U2 debuted their massive “360° Tour” tour at Chicago’s Soldier Field over the weekend. Taking the “in the round” idea and going huge with it, this tour features a rotating stage, 360-degree screen, planks that lead into the crowd, a giant claw-like centerpiece and all kinds of lights. Like they say, a picture is worth a thousand words and JamBase was on the scene both Saturday and Sunday night to bring you the story.

U2 :: 09.12.09 (Saturday) :: Soldier Field :: Chicago, IL

U2 :: 09.12.09 :: Soldier Field :: Chicago, IL

Breathe, No Line On The Horizon, Get On Your Boots, Magnificent, Beautiful Day / Blackbird (snippet), Elevation, I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For / Stand By Me (snippet), Stuck In A Moment You Can’t Get Out Of, Unknown Caller, The Unforgettable Fire, City Of Blinding Lights, Vertigo, I’ll Go Crazy If I Don’t Go Crazy Tonight, Sunday Bloody Sunday / Oliver’s Army (snippet), Pride (In The Name Of Love), MLK, Walk On / You’ll Never Walk Alone (snippet), Where The Streets Have No Name, One, Bad / Fool To Cry (snippet) / 40 (snippet)

Encore: Ultra Violet (Light My Way), With Or Without You, Moment of Surrender

Continue reading for pics and setlist from Sunday night at Soldier Field…

U2 :: 09.13.09 (Sunday) :: Soldier Field :: Chicago, IL

U2 :: 09.13.09 :: Soldier Field :: Chicago, IL

Breathe, No Line On The Horizon, Get On Your Boots, Magnificent, Beautiful Day / King Of Pain (snippet) / Blackbird (snippet), I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For, Elevation, Your Blue Room, Unknown Caller, Until The End Of The World, Stay (Faraway, So Close!), The Unforgettable Fire, City Of Blinding Lights, Vertigo, I’ll Go Crazy If I Don’t Go Crazy Tonight / I Want To Take You Higher (snippet), Sunday Bloody Sunday / Rock The Casbah (snippet), MLK, Walk On, One / Amazing Grace (snippet), Where The Streets Have No Name / All You Need Is Love (snippet)

Encore: Ultra Violet (Light My Way), With Or Without You, Moment of Surrender
Comments: Live debut of Your Blue Room, 14 years after it was recorded
Pride is dropped from the set for the first time since 28 August 2001

Setlists courtesy of u2setlists.com. Catch the “360° Tour” now, dates available here.

JamBase | Chicago

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Ross Robertson: Perspectives on Integral Ecology: A Dialogue

Integral Ecology draws on the expertise of many disciplines and offers comprehensive, far-sighted, flexible solutions for the environment, which honor animals and people.

Anthony Papa: My Return to Sing Sing Prison: The Agony and The Ecstasy

I swore to myself I would never return. But over a decade later, here I was, back at the maximum security prison where I served a 15 years for a non-violent drug crime under the Rockefeller Drug Laws.

Hustler Lindsay Lohan Porn Parody “Untrue Hollywood Stories: Lindsay Lohan”

Hot on the heels of the success of 2007’s skin flick hit Lindsay HoHan: Get The Fuck Out Of My Way!, Hustler has hit the market with a Lindsay Lohan porn spoof of its own. Hustler’s X-rated Untrue Hollywood Stories: Lindsay Lohan features adult film star Scarlett Fay as the sometimes redhead, sometimes bottle blonde [...]