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Nacarubi Music Fest 06/25-26: Gift of Gab, Entrance Band, Soles

TWO NIGHT FAMILY FRIENDLY MUSIC FESTIVAL FEATURES LIVE PERFORMANCES AND DJ
SETS

The Entrance Band

The Nacarubi Music Fest is a two-night party and music festival being held June 25 & 26 2010 in Big Sur as part of a benefit for Big Sur schools. The festival is family friendly and open to all ages. There are 300 tickets
available
by donation in advance.

The festival will feature live sets by Lateef the Truthspeaker, Gift of Gab, Entrance Band, Mariee Sioux, Nico’s House,
Matt Baldwin, and more.
There will also be DJ sets by Jeremy
Sole
, Little John,
and others. A full list of performers is available on the Nacarubi Music Fest website.


Yo La Tengo | 03.22 & 03.23 | Tel Aviv

Words by: Kevin Schwartzbach | Images by: Goni Riskin

Yo La Tengo :: 03.22 & 03.23 :: Barby :: Tel Aviv, Israel

Ira Kaplan :: March, 2010 :: Tel Aviv, Israel

You never know quite what to expect from Yo La Tengo. With an extraordinarily diverse repertoire ranging from long-winded psychedelic jams to poppy heartfelt love ballads and everything in between, it’s impossible to predict the character of any given live show. Hell, with this Hoboken-based trio it can be hard enough to predict whose going to be playing which instrument.

What’s truly remarkable about the diversity of their music though is that there isn’t any of the pretentious artistic posturing found in so many bands labeled as “indie.” With Yo La Tengo there really is no “point” greater than the music itself. Sure they can be experimental, but not for the sake of experimentation alone. And yes they can be poetic, but not for the sake of poetry. The various roads they explore in different genres and with different elements are merely a means of self-expression. And what they lack in focus, they make up for in creativity. But despite their often seemingly disconnected discography, there’s a certain unpolished grunginess to their music that serves as a common thread – their unique artistic trademark.

It’s only fitting than that the band’s chosen venue for their two-night tenure in Tel Aviv would be the Barby, a grungy hole-in-the-wall type place located in the southern part of the city. But as the old saying goes, don’t judge a concert venue by its facade – the Barby is one of Tel Aviv’s biggest and most acoustically well-built joints.

Israeli folk-rocker Geva Alon began the first evening armed with nothing more than his voice and an acoustic guitar. Despite his limited resources, the solitary Alon managed to create a somber yet energetic aura filled with emotion that mesmerized the crowd. His deep Johnny Cash-like voice matched with his folksy guitar licks gave him a rather unique sound. And though he addressed the crowd in his native Hebrew, he managed to vividly express himself with a subtle mastery of the English language. “Lately I began to wonder/ What’s there for me around this town?/ Whose skyline shape seems like forever growing monsters/ It gets me down, so down” Alon belted out in the song “Get Closer Now” off his latest, similarly titled album Get Closer. Taking a break from his lyrical insight, Alon showed impressive guitar chops, taking a bluesy solo on top of self-provided loops.

Yo La Tengo :: March, 2010 :: Tel Aviv, Israel

From the get go, Yo La Tengo made it clear that their stay in Israel was going to be heavy on the noise, creating a wall of feedback before dropping into “Big Day Coming” to start things off. Ira Kaplan (vocals, guitar, keyboards) was quick to relinquish his spot behind his warbling keyboard, grabbing his beat up Fender Jazzmaster from the burly James McNew (bass, vocals, and occasionally keyboards, guitar, drums) to deliver the first of many noise-bending solos. Whether it be pounding indiscriminately on the keys or waving his guitar around to harness the feedback, Kaplan’s distorted, effect-laden noise improvisations seemed his favorite mode of expression.

I didn’t quite know how an Israeli crowd would take such far out sounds, but it seemed to be well received. “We were doing some interviews before the show,” began Kaplan in between songs, “and a bunch of people asked us what we expect from these shows. Well, we didn’t really have any expectations. We didn’t even know if people here know who we are.” Surprisingly, much of the crowd seemed to be well versed in Yo La Tengo’s vast material, as song names flew at the stage during every opportune moment (to which the band often obliged).

While they’ve always had a proclivity for the experimental, what makes Yo La Tengo’s music so interesting is the juxtaposition of this experimentation with more conventional elements. It’s no surprise that they’re often compared to 1960′s avant-garde rock groups such as The Velvet Underground. VU’s influence on YLT was clear in Kaplan’s Lou Reed-like voice as well as the droning guitars. Kaplan’s wife Georgia Hubley‘s (drums, vocals and occasionally guitar) voice too has a certain Nico-like grace to it. And like Maureen Tucker, Hubley is one of the few noteworthy female drummers in rock.

Georgia Hubley :: March, 2010 :: Tel Aviv, Israel

Hubley came out from behind her kit to play some guitar and sing for us on Electr-O-Pura‘s “Decora” and “When It’s Dark” from their latest release Popular Songs. Both nights saw all three members moving from instrument to instrument showing a rare level of musical versatility.

In typical Yo La Tengo fashion the trio effortlessly shifted genres over the course of the evening, keeping the crowd on edge. From the trudging post-rock crescendo of “More Stars Than There Are in Heaven” to the swinging minor blues progression of “Periodically Double or Triple” to the power-pop edginess of “Sugarcube,” they really managed to cover all their bases. The mostly instrumental “Pass the Hatchet, I think I’m Goodkind” closed off the first night’s set with their trippiest display yet in a lengthy psychedelic exploration. Over McNew’s steady bass line, Kaplan switched back and forth between demonic noise solos and (slightly) more conventional guitar solos.

The second night bore much similarity to the first. Geva Alon opened up again, playing a nearly identical set to the night before. The Jersey natives began with the jazzy “Our Way to Fall.” Like the first night, the second night was a healthy mix of noise solos and more straight ahead pop and rock tunes, but also saw a few wholly instrumental songs like “And the Glitter is Gone.”

James McNew :: March, 2010 :: Tel Aviv, Israel

Though most of the second night consisted of songs we’d yet to hear, they opted to repeat a few tunes from the night before such as “If It’s True” and “When It’s Dark” among others in support of the new album – a bit disappointing given the band’s enormous repertoire and limited opportunity to see them here. As promised from the night before, “Autumn Sweater,” one of their more popular numbers, came out early in the set and was one of the highlights of the evening.

The band’s personalities seemed to shine through much more brightly on the second night, as Kaplan more often took breaks between songs to banter with the crowd in a joking manner. Their quirkiness and geekish connoisseurship of obscure music manifested itself in several choice covers including Sun Ra’s odd “Nuclear War,” during which Kaplan jumped into the crowd, gathering a few people to help him repeat Sun Ra’s hilariously dire proposed consequences of a nuclear fallout. In honor of their stay in Israel they ended their first of two encores with a song by a Jewish artist, Jeffry Ross Hyman – better known as Joey Ramone. Taking a moment to get into character, they charged right into “Sheena Was a Punk Rocker” rocking out in a way that would have made the punk legend proud.

Few bands can pull off what Yo La Tengo does during live shows, jumping from song to song with a complete disregard of defined genre boundaries. But a genuine artistic drive gives this gifted trio the ability to go in just about any direction; what makes them so compelling is that they take the audience with them.

Setlists

03.22.10 :: Barby :: Tel Aviv, Israel

Big Day Coming, More Stars Than There Are in Heaven, Tears Are in Your Eyes, Stockholm Syndrome, Here to Fall, If It’s True, Mr. Tough, I’m On My Way, Decora, When It’s Dark, Periodically Double or Triple, Deeper Into Movies, Nothing to Hide, Sugarcube, Pass the Hatchet I Think I’m Goodkind

First Encore: From A Motel 6, The Kid With The Replaceable Head (Richard Hell cover), Can’t Forget

Second Encore: Big Sky (The Kinks cover), You Can Have It All (KC and the Sunshine Band cover)

03.23 :: :: Barby :: Tel Aviv, Israel

Our Way to Fall, And the Glitter is Gone, Little Eyes, Autumn Sweater, Periodically Double or Triple, The Weakest Part, Here to Fall, If It’s True, I’m On My Way, Black Flowers, When It’s Dark, More Stars Than There Are in Heaven, Cherry Chapstick, Tom Courtenay, Nothing to Hide, Blue Line Swinger

First Encore: Nuclear War (Sun Ra cover), Last Days of Disco, Sheena Is a Punk Rocker (Ramones cover)

Second Encore: Griselda (The Holy Modal Rounders cover), Take Care (Big Star cover)

Yo La Tengo Tour Dates :: Yo La Tengo News :: Yo La Tengo Concert Reviews

JamBase | Israel
Go See Live Music!


Verge Music Festival Weezer, She & Him, AFI, Cold War

COLD WAR KIDS, WEEZER, AFI, ROGUE WAVE, EAGLES OF DEATH METAL
TOP BILL OF NEW MIDWEST FEST

Weezer

The inaugural Verge Music Festival will take place Friday, June 4 (5 p.m.-midnight), and Saturday, June 5 (2 p.m.-midnight), on the Summerfest Grounds in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The preliminary lineup is as follows:

Friday, June 4

Three Days Grace
Eagles of Death Metal
Crash Kings
She & Him
Nico Vega
Reni Lane
1956
Red Knife Lottery
The Championship
The Wildbirds

Saturday, June 5

Weezer
AFI
Cold War Kids
The Raveonettes
Rogue Wave
Jaill
Figureheads
Jeri X
Pezzettino
Invade Rome
Juniper Tar
Revision Text

Tickets are limited. Purchase advance tickets now through June 3rd. Advance single day passes are $25. Advance two-day passes are $40. Every advance ticket purchased includes a FREE weekday Summerfest admission ticket. Admission at the gate is $35 per day. Buy now and with NO FEES here or through Ticketmaster starting Friday, March 12 at 10 a.m.


Thandie Newton fell in love with hubby at first sight

Actress Thandie Newton has revealed that she had to dump her ex-boyfriend because she fell in love with her future husband Ol Parker.
The ‘RocknRolla’ star said that she was head over heels in love with Parker when she met him in 1997.
“He wrote a screenplay called In Your Dreams that I filmed in 1997. It’’s [...]

Phish: Festival 8 Band To Play Last Record Alive

Phish Festival 8: Band To Play Last Record Alive

Phish‘s Festival 8 site has released a list of 99 albums of which the band will pick one to play on Halloween.

Several albums have already been “killed off” and a note on the site indicates that Phish will “play the last record alive.” See below for a complete list, including those that have already been “killed.”


Special thanks to jamtopia.com for compiling the potential albums list below.

Possible Phish Halloween Cover Albums

Phish

1.AC/DC | Back In Black

2.Aerosmith | Toys In The Attic

3.Allman Brothers Band | Eat A Peach

4.Arcade Fire | Funeral

5.Beastie Boys | Hello Nasty

6.BeeGees | Saturday Night Fever

7.Black Sabbath | Paranoid

8.Blind Faith | Blind Faith

9.Bob Dylan | Blood On the Tracks

10.Bob Dylan & the Band | The Basement Tapes

11.Bob Seger | Against The Wind

12.Boston | Boston

13.Brian Eno | Before And After Science

14.Bruce Springsteen | Born To Run

15.Chicago | The Chicago Transit Authority

16.Creedence Clearwater Revival | Green River

17.Curtis Mayfield | Superfly Soundtrack

18.David Bowie | Hunky Dory

19.David Bowie | Ziggy Stardust

20.David Bowie | Scary Monsters

21.Devo | Freedom of Choice

22.Duran Duran | Rio

23.Eagles | Hotel California

24.Elton John | Goodbye Yellow Brick Road

25.Elvis Costello (nee Declan McManus) | This Year’s Model

26.Eric Clapton | 461 Ocean Blvd

27.Firehose | Flyin’ the Flannel

28.Fleetwood Mac | Rumours

29.Frank Zappa | Apostrophe

30.Frank Zappa | Hot Rats

31.Genesis | The Lambs Lie Down On Broadway

32.Grateful Dead | American Beauty

33.Guns & Roses | Appetite For Destruction

34.Hall & Oates | Private Eyes

35.Huey Lewis And The News | Sports

36.Jane’s Addiction | Ritual de Lo Habitual

37.Jimi Hendrix | Are You Experienced?

38.Jimi Hendrix | Electric Ladyland

39.John Lennon | Plastic Ono Band

40.Modern Lovers | The Modern Lovers

41.Journey | Escape

42.KISS | Alive II

43.King Crimson | Larks’ Tongues In Aspic

44.Led Zeppelin | I

45.Led Zeppelin | IV (Zoso)

46.Leonard Cohen | I’m Your Man

47.Love | Forever Changes

48.Manu Chao | Clandestino

49.Medeski, Martin & Wood | Shack Man

50.Metallica | Master Of Puppets

51.MGMT | Oracle Spectacular

52.Michael Jackson | Thriller

53.Michael McDonald | If That’s What It Takes

54.Miles Davis | A Tribute To Jack Johnson

55.Minutemen | Double Nickels On The Dime

56.Neil Young | Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere

57.Neil Young | Tonight’s The Night

58.Nirvana | Nevermind

59.Pavement | Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain

60.Pearl Jam | Ten

61.Peter Gabriel | So

62.Pink Floyd | Meddle

63.Pink Floyd | The Wall

64.Pixies | Come On Pilgrim

65.Pork Tornado | Pork Tornado

66.Primus | Sailing The Seas Of Cheese

67.Prince | Purple Rain

68.Queen | A Night At The Opera

69.Radiohead | Kid A

70.Rage Against The Machine | Evil Empire

71.Rolling Stones | Exile on Main Street

72.Rolling Stones | Sticky Fingers

73.Rush | Moving Pictures

74.Steely Dan | Pretzel Logic

75.T.Rex | Electric Warrior

76.Talking Heads | Fear Of Music

77.Television | Marquee Moon

78.The Band | The Band (aka Brown Album)

79.The Beach Boys | Pet Sounds

80.The Beatles | Rubber Soul

81.The Clash | London Calling

82.The Doors | The Doors

83.The Police | Ghost In The Machine

84.The Ramones | Ramones

85.The Roots | Phrenology

86.The Who | Who’s Next

87.Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers | Damn The Torpedoes

88.Tom Waits | Rain Dogs

89.U2 | Joshua Tree

90.Van Halen | Van Halen

91.Van Morrison | Astral Weeks

92.Velvet Underground | Velvet Underground And Nico

93.Violent Femmes | Violent Femmes

94.Ween | White Pepper

95.White Stripes | Elephant

96.Wilco | Yankee Hotel Foxtrot

97.X | Los Angeles

98.Yes | The Yes Album

99.ZZ Top | Tres Hombres

What album do you want them to play? Tell the world on the JamBase Forums.


The Warlocks | 08.14 | NYC

Words & Images by: Alex Borsody

The Warlocks :: 08.14.09 :: The Bowery Ballroom :: New York, NY

The Warlocks :: 08.14 :: NYC

The Warlocks have been playing for over ten years, surviving lineup changes with the one constant being frontman Bobby Hecksher. I caught the band just off the U.K./France leg of their tour, supporting their new album, The Mirror Explodes (released May 19 on Tee Pee). What’s in a name? In this case, at least, something. The Warlocks was the original name for both the Grateful Dead and The Velvet Underground, two bands which helped define 1960′s music yet existed at opposite ends of the cultural spectrum. The Velvet Underground was similar to The Doors in rejecting the hippie lifestyle, preferring a darker, more urban mystique. Brian Eno sums up their influence on modern music: “Despite hardly anyone buying this album [The Velvet Underground and Nico] on its release, everyone that did buy it seemed to have formed a band.” On the other end, the earthy Grateful Dead were equally influential, being responsible in large part for the entire jam band scene.

So, the band name The Warlocks has quite the legacy and is evocative for many people. You only need see The Warlocks perform to notice the Velvets influence; their dark sunglasses and somber expressions bring back memories of NYC’s original hipsters. Songs off this night’s setlist that were most obviously influenced by VU include “Song for Nico,” “Shake the Dope Out” and “The Dope Feels Good.” The link can be heard clearly in their live sound, which evokes the dark, bi-polar landscapes of Live at Max’s Kansas City.

The Warlocks :: 08.14 :: NYC

The Bowery Ballroom is one of NYC’s many strange and beautiful venues. There is a bar downstairs with the concert hall upstairs, and the clientele are low-key rocker types who wear a lot of black. The opening band, The Morning After Girls, put on a powerful performance, projecting a very genuine energy. The band obviously cared a lot about their live show, and the lead singer was incredibly engaged and seemed to deliver music from his own private world. The sound was a familiar indie rock formula, but darker and with greater emotion.

The Warlocks took the stage around 11:30 p.m. and did not miss a single change or beat. Their sound was raw, and despite all my impulses to say otherwise, unpretentious. The singing was high energy, with tactful use of back-up harmonizing. The group had solid vocals, creating a sound that was very clean and exact, at times even giving things a studio mastered effect. The solos were experimental and unpredictable, and at one point I felt like one of the guitarists was channeling John Cale (the violinist/multi-instrumentalist for The Velvet Underground) with distorted and ambient screeching effects. Three guitarists, a bass player and a keyboardist are usually hard to keep so perfectly in sync.

The backstage area had a case of PBR on the floor across from a bottle of Makers Mark on the table – the art school combo. I asked the band why they chose their name and it seemed not to be too big of a deal for them, a simple nod to The Velvet Underground’s inspiration. I came to the show wondering if the band had known about the Grateful Dead connection but realized how narrow my taste in music had become. I had been overtaken by Phish/Dead mania and completely forgot about my childhood hero Lou Reed. The Warlock’s lead singer Bobby Hecksher is a soft spoken, androgynous character who seemed to be somewhat anxious, possibly due to the fact that he was one of the only ones not drunk in a room full of intoxicated people. As he came out from behind his dark sunglasses, I asked him if he had ever met Lou Reed. He said, “It would probably be a weird conversation.”

The Warlocks :: 08.14 :: NYC

The Warlocks and other similar sounding art rock bands are sometimes categorized as psychedelic rock. Wondering where this label came from, I asked people at the concert if they had ever done psychedelics, or if they thought that was a part of the culture surrounding the music. The resounding answer was no, so this appeared to have little to do with it. It seemed ironic on the 40th anniversary of Woodstock that a band with the Grateful Dead’s original name was billed as psychedelic rock. To top it all off I had skipped a local Phish show to see something new at this concert. The band talked about being from the West Coast, where the real hippies actually listen to art rock. Today’s psychedelic rock often sounds like U.K. pop bands from the 1960s, and the guy who coined the term “psych rock” came from Texas, so the roots of the sound are hard to pin down or understand anyway.

There was an accepting and non-egotistical atmosphere at the concert. Fans were standing around looking somber and subdued, which seemed perfectly normal. No one was jumping up and down in catharsis as a musician’s fingers began to start a fire on the fretboard. Because of this, The Warlocks, especially in their later work, have been described as shoegazers, a genre named after people who go to concerts and stare at their shoes while nodding to the rhythm. In the end, music is music, and by dividing genres and subcultures into target markets it only suppresses artistic expression.

JamBase | Loaded
Go See Live Music!


Beck: Modern Guilt Acoustic More VU Covers & Waits Interview

Beck Does Modern Guilt Acoustic, Continues Record Club with More VU Covers

And Launches “Irrelevant Topics” Interview Series with Tom Waits

Modern Guilt was released one year ago this week! For the occasion Beck is putting up acoustic versions of the entire album recorded earlier this year after returning from the Japan tour (under severe jet lag). Tracks will be released weekly starting with this rendition of “Orphans.” There will be limited EP of four tracks from the session available soon. Beck will also be putting up all the promotional videos from the album this week in the new section of his website, Videotheque.

Modern Guilt Acoustic “Orphans” from Beck Hansen on Vimeo.

Beck has also continued his Record Club project with several more tracks off The Velvet Underground and Nico:

“Venus In Furs”:

Record Club: Velvet Underground & Nico “Venus In Furs” from Beck Hansen on Vimeo.

“Femme Fatale”:

Record Club: Velvet Underground & Nico “Femme Fatale” from Beck Hansen on Vimeo.

“Waiting for My Man”:

Record Club: Velvet Underground & Nico ‘Waiting for My Man’ from Beck Hansen on Vimeo.

And finally, Beck has begun another new project for his website, Irrelevant Topics, featuring an interview with Tom Waits.

Tom Waits x Beck Hansen : Pt. 1

Irrelevant Topics in a new section featuring conversations between musicians, artists, writers, etc. on various subjects, without promotional pretext or editorial direction. For the first in this series of conversations, the legendary musician and performer, Tom Waits agreed lend an hour of his time to talk about anything and nothing in particular. Here is Pt. 1 of that conversation.


Kim Morgan: Be My Bloody Baby, Marty

I miss New York City. I miss the New York City I’ve never seen — the one I’ve only seen in movies. And after…