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The Roots Jam Session 2011

PRE-GRAMMY CELEBRATION OF LIVE MUSIC HITS 7th YEAR

The Roots

Returning on the eve of the Grammy Awards, the 7th annual Roots Jam Session is back on February 12th in Hollywood, CA. Jimmy Fallon will act as this year’s host, following in the footsteps of Don Cheadle, John Legend, Jada Pinkett-Smith and Dave Chappelle. The announcement comes on the heels of The Roots’ 6 Grammy nominations, which are split between their two 2010 releases, Wake Up! (with John Legend) and How I Got Over.

“We’re extremely proud and humbled that what began as a simple night to put the focus back on the music has become an amazing opportunity to unite both major artists and new talent in an impromptu musical collaboration unlike many other experiences in the industry today, while also providing a voice to some extremely worthwhile cause campaigns” said Ahmir “?uestlove” Thompson.

With an audience packed full of musicians and talent from every area of the entertainment industry, The Roots Jam Session is a night where unique mash-ups and groundbreaking music is created. Past performers and attendees include Jay-Z, Norah Jones, Cee-Lo, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Slash, Black Eyed Peas, Fall Out Boy, Mos Def, Beyoncè, Queen Latifah, Bill Maher, Snoop Dog, Matisyahu, Anita Baker, Queens of the Stone Age, K’naan, Corinne Bailey Rae, Elizabeth Banks, John Mayer, Chelsea Handler, Travis Barker and Prince.

In addition to the performances, however, The Roots Jam Session is annually interwoven with themes of social awareness, partnering with top organizations dedicated to creating global change. The goal is to entertain but also to utilize the power of its high-profile attendees to make an impact and educate audiences outside of the Jam. The Roots Jam Session has previously partnered with organizations from Save Darfur & Green Music Group to Rock the Vote. This year’s cause partner is OpportunityNation . Launching at the 2011 Jam, the organization will focus on the revitalization of the “American Dream” – in short, a campaign, powered by the people, to kick-start a nationwide conversation about opportunity while providing forums for those voices to be heard.


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.


Bruce Cockburn: New Album & North American Tour

NEW ALBUM OUT MARCH 8, 2011; TOUR STARTS IN MARCH


Bruce Cockburn

True North Records have announced the upcoming new album release from veteran Bruce Cockburn. On March 8,
2011, True North will release Small Source of Comfort. Small Source of Comfort will be
Cockburn’s 24th studio effort. The album is expected to contain 14 songs, with contributions by a range of guests
that include Madeleine Peyroux, Bill Frisell, Norah Jones, and Annabelle Chvostek.

After Small Source of Comfort is in the public’s hands, Bruce Cockburn will start a tour that begins in
Canada (at end of March), and will extend to the US in May. As the year progresses, the tour will likely move to
Europe and other locations. Check below for all available dates.

TOUR DATES

03/24/11 Thu Kelowna Community Theatre Kelowna, BC
03/25/11 Fri Chan Centre Vancouver, BC

03/26/11 Sat McPherson Playhouse Victoria, BC
03/27/11 Sun The Port Theatre Nanaimo, BC
03/30/11 Wed Southern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium Calgary, AB

03/31/11 Thu Eric Harvie Theatre Banff, AB

04/01/11 Fri Francis Winspear Centre Edmonton, AB

04/02/11 Sat E.A. Rawlinson Centre For The Arts Prince Albert, SK

04/03/11 Sun TCU Place Saskatoon, SK

04/05/11 Tue Burton Cummings Theater Winnipeg, MB

04/08/11 Fri The Grand Theatre Kingston, ON

04/09/11 Sat Massey Hall Toronto, ON

04/12/11 Tue Sean O’Sullivan Theatre St. Catharines, ON
04/13/11 Wed L’Astral Montreal, QC
04/14/11 Thu L’Astral Montreal, QC

04/15/11 Fri National Arts Centre Ottawa, ON

04/16/11 Sat Centre in the Square Kitchener, ON

05/03/11 Tue City Winery New York, NY

05/05/11 Thu Rams Head Live Baltimore, MD

05/06/11 Fri Keswick Theatre Glenside, PA

05/07/11 Sat Hart Theatre at The Egg Albany, NY

05/09/11 Mon Birchmere Alexandria, VA

05/11/11 Wed Boulton Center for the Performing Arts Bay Shore, NY

05/12/11 Thu Woodstock Town Hall Theater Woodstock, VT

05/13/11 Fri Calvin Theater Northampton, MA

05/14/11 Sat Berklee Performance Center Boston, MA

05/15/11 Sun Tarrytown Music Hall Tarrytown, NY

05/17/11 Tue The State Theater Ithaca, NY

05/19/11 Thu The Ark Ann Arbor, MI

05/20/11 Fri The Ark Ann Arbor, MI

05/21/11 Sat Barrymore Theatre Madison, WI

05/22/11 Sun Old Town School of Folk Music Chicago, IL

05/23/11 Mon The Cedar Minneapolis, MN

Bruce Cockburn
Tour Dates

::
Bruce Cockburn News
::
Bruce Cockburn
Concert
Reviews


Macca, Oprah Winfrey hailed at Kennedy Center Honors

Joining the race ... Oprah WinfreySir Paul McCartney was applauded at the Kennedy Center Honors, with stars including Steven Tyler, No Doubt and Dave Grohl singing tributes to the Beatles legend. The singer was honoured at the 33rd annual event, which recognises artists who have enriched American culture. “His genius as a music maker is undisputed. But Paul also has [...]

Norah Jones: Collaborations Collected On New Album

FOO FIGHTERS, TALIB KWELI, RYAN ADAMS & MORE TAP SINGER

On November 16th, Norah Jones will release …Featuring, an album of collaborations from the past decade. The 18 songs include duets with OutKast, Q-Tip, Talib Kweli and more.

“A lot of the people on this record are people I’ve worshiped since I was a kid, and some of them are younger and more my contemporaries,” says Jones. “Even though the musicians are so varied, the vibe of the songs makes sense when we put them all together.”

The tracks on …Featuring span her entire career, from one of her earliest recording sessions with guitarist Charlie Hunter in 2001 to her most recent performance, a song called “Little Lou, Ugly Jack, Prophet John” that she cut with Belle and Sebastian.

New Album

Tracklist
1. The Little Willies – “Love Me”
2. The Foo Fighters feat. Norah Jones – “Virginia Moon”
3. Sean Bones feat. Norah Jones – “Turn Them”
4. Willie Nelson feat. Norah Jones – “Baby It’s Cold Outside”
5. Norah Jones and Sasha Dobson – “Bull Rider”
6. Dirty Dozen Brass Band feat. Norah Jones – “Ruler of My Heart”
7. El Madmo – “The Best Part”
8. Outkast feat. Norah Jones – “Take Off Your Cool”
9. Q-Tip feat. Norah Jones – “Life Is Better”
10. Talib Kweli feat. Norah Jones – “Soon the New Day”
11. Belle & Sebastian feat. Norah Jones – “Little Lou, Prophet Jack, Ugly John”
12. Ray Charles feat. Norah Jones – “Here We Go Again”
13. Norah Jones feat. Gillian Welch and David Rawlings
14. Ryan Adams feat. Norah Jones – “Dear John”
15. Norah Jones feat. Dolly Parton – “Creepin’ In”
16. Herbie Hancock feat. Norah Jones – “Court & Spark”
17. Charlie Hunter feat. Norah Jones – “More Than This”
18. Norah Jones feat. M. Ward – “Blue Bayou”

Norah Jones Tour Dates :: Norah Jones News :: Norah Jones Concert Reviews


Joe Wright’s wedding with Anoushka Shankar leaves his ex devastated

Indian musician Anoushka Shankar’s wedding with Hollywood movie director Joe Wright has left the director’s ex Rosamund Pike devastated. Rosamund, whose wedding to Wright was called off at the last minute, is said to be shocked with the news that Wright has secretly married – and is expecting a child with his new wife. Wright, [...]

Belle & Sebastian: Write About Love

FIRST ALBUM SINCE 2006′S THE LIFE PURSUIT

Back after a 5-year hiatus doing solo projects, soundtracks and more, Glasgow’s Belle and Sebastian have returned
with their new album, Write About Love.

The album features duets with Norah
Jones
and actress Carey Mulligan (An Education) and, like their last album, was recorded with full orchestration
with Tony Hoffer at the Sound Factory in Los Angeles.

Write About Love comes out October 12 on Matador Records.

TOUR DATES:

9/30 Brooklyn, NY Williamsburg Waterfront

10/02 Las Vegas, NV Matador @ 21

10/03 Los Angeles, CA Hollywood Palladium

10/05 Los Angeles, CA Hollywood Forever

10/11 Chicago, IL Chicago Theatre

10/12 Toronto, ON Massey Hall

10/14 Washington, DC DAR Constitution Hall

10/15 Boston, MA Wang Theatre

10/17 San Francisco, CA Venue Treasure Island Music Festival

10/19 Portland, OR Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall

10/20 Seattle, WA City Arts Music Festival – Benaroya Hall

Belle & Sebastian
Tour Dates

::
Belle & Sebastian News
::
Belle & Sebastian
Concert
Reviews


Late Night TV Musical Guests: 8/30-9/5

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, August 30 – Ryan Bingham & the Dead Horses
Tue, August 31 – Merle Haggard
Thu, September 2 – Karen Elson


Jay Leno Musical Guests


Mon, August 30 – Cyndi Lauper with Jonny Lang
Tue, August 31 – Norah Jones
Wed, September 1 – Goo Goo Dolls
Thu, September 2 – Herbie Hancock
Fri, September 3 – Sara Bareilles


Jimmy Kimmel Musical Guests


Mon, August 30 – The Swell Season (Repeat)
Wed, September 1 – Ozzy Osbourne (Repeat)
Thu, September 2 – T.I. (Repeat)
Fri, September 3 – Five Finger Death Punch (Repeat)


Craig Ferguson Musical Guests


Mon, August 30 – Chief


Jimmy Fallon Musical Guests


Tue, August 31 – Black Mountain
Wed, September 1 – Yo Gabba Gabba
Thu, September 2 – Heart
Fri, September 3 – never shout never


Carson Daly Musical Guests


Mon, August 30 – Phoenix (Repeat)
Tue, August 31 – Surfer Blood (Repeat)
Wed, September 1 – Kate Nash (Repeat)
Thu, September 2 – B.o.B (Repeat)
Fri, September 3 – Never Shout Never (Repeat)


Wonder and Jay-Z to Perform at Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival

Wonder and Jay-Z became the two biggest acts that performed at the Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival. It closed on Sunday night with the Dave Matthews Band. The two stars took the stage on Saturday, due to them the festival crowd was full of energy.
Actually, each performance was remarkable. Jay-Z performed solo with his band, [...]

Happening Now: Bonnaroo

TWEETS AND TWITPICS FOR YOU AND BY YOU!

Entrance Band

Even if you’re not headed to Manchester, TN this weekend for the 2010 edition of
Bonnaroo, you can keep up with the progress of people’s filthy feet and catch
glimpses and clever comments direct from the dusty/muddy fields via JamBase’s Bonnaroo Twitter Feed.

Music is already pumping in the Troo Music Lounge and other smaller bar/tent venues and
the main stages fire up at 4:15 pm, EST, with The Postelles and
Fanfarlo
and The Entrance
Band
at 4:30 pm. And some enterprising Lotus fan should
be uploading thoughts and images from their late night set by the time it wraps around 1
am tonight.

Be safe out there. Drink LOTS of water. Bring your umbrellas and rain ponchos (dark
clouds are looming over the fest presently). And most importantly, check back with
JamBase for fresh photos from the intrepid Dave Vann and Wesley Hodges’ on-site commentary
with a full recap next week.

In the meantime, those at Bonnaroo or waiting in traffic to get through the gates and
check out our 2010
Bonnaroo Preview
for helpful suggestions on how to maximize their ‘Roo.

For those not fortunate enough to make it to this year’s Bonnaroo, fear not as select
performances will be webcast on YouTube and NPR.

YouTube Webcast
Schedule

Friday, June 11th:
Julia Nunes: 12: 15 pm – 1:15 pm
Neon Indian: 1:15 pm – 1:45 pm
Carolina Chocolate Drops: 1:45 pm – 3:00 pm
The Temper Trap: 3:00 pm – 3:30 pm
The Dodos: 3:30 pm – 4:00 pm
Damian Marley & Nas: 4:00 pm – 5:30 pm
Mayer Hawtorne and the Country: 5:30 pm – 5:45 pm
The National: 5:45 pm – 7:15 pm
Tori Amos: 7:15 pm – 8:00 pm
Michael Franti & Spearhead: 8:00 pm – 9:30 pm
Tenacious D: 9:30 pm – 11:00 pm

Saturday, June 12th:
Punch Brothers ft. Chris Thile: 12:30 pm – 1:30 pm
Gaslight Anthem: 1:30 pm – 2:30 pm
Norah Jones: 2:30 pm – 4:00 pm
Trombone Shorty: 4:00 pm – 5:00 pm
Mumford & Sons: 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm
The Dead Weather: 6:00 pm – 7:30 pm
Umphrey’s McGee: 7:30 pm – 7:55 pm
Jimmy Cliff: 7:55 pm – 9:25 pm
LCD Soundsystem: 9:25 pm – 10:55 pm
Kings of Leon: 10:55 pm – 11:30 pm
Jay -Z: 11:30 pm – 1:30 am

Sunday, June 13th:
The Avett Brothers: 12:30 pm 1:45 pm
John Butler Trio: 1:45 pm – 3:00 pm
Regina Spektor: 3:00 pm – 4:00 pm
John Fogerty: 4:00 pm – 5:30 pm
Weezer: 5:30 pm – 6:30 pm
Zac Brown Band: 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm
Ween: 8:00 pm – 8:30 pm
Rise Against: 8:30 pm – 9:00 pm
Dave Matthews Band: 9:00 pm – 11:30 pm

Visit http://www.youtube.com/bonnaroo
for more webcast information.


Austin City Limits Music Festival: Phish, The Eagles, Muse


Phish


Eagles


Muse


The Strokes


Flaming Lips


Spoon


Norah Jones


Spoon


Monsters of Folk


Band of Horses

Austin City Limits Music Festival, taking place October 8-10 at Austin’s Zilker Park, has announced their 2010 Lineup.

Artists include Phish, Eagles, Muse, The Strokes, Flaming Lips, Spoon, Vampire Weekend, Norah Jones, LCD Soundsystem, Monsters of Folk, Band of Horses, Broken Bells and over 100 others performers.

Single-day tickets go onsale today, Tuesday, May 18th, at 10am Central Time. Three-day tickets are completely sold out. VIP tickets and Travel packages are still available at CID Entertainment.

For complete information, please visit http://2010.aclfestival.com/

2010 Austin City Limits Music Festival Lineup

The Eagles
Muse
Phish
The Strokes
M.I.A.
Flaming Lips
LCD Soundsystem
Spoon
Vampire Weekend
Norah Jones
Band of Horses
Monsters of Folk
Deadmau5
Sonic Youth
Gogol Bordello
The National
Robert Earl Keen
The Black Keys
Broken Bells
Slightly Stoopid
Yeasayer
Pat Green
Rebelution
Beach House
The Sword
Matt and Kim
The XX
Portugal. The Man
The Temper Trap
Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeroes
Girls
Ryan Bingham & The Dead Horses
Local Natives
Gaslight Anthem
Lucero
Devandra Barnhart
Blues Traveler
The Soft Pack
Gayngs
Amos Lee
Robert Randolph & The Family Band
Ozomatli
Richard Thompson
Martin Sexton
Manchester Orchestra
The Almighty Defenders
Miike Snow
Mountain Goats
Bear In Heaven
Mayer Hawthorne
Midlake
Foals
Switchfoot
Cage The Elephant
JJ Grey & Mofro
Kinky
Angus & Julia Stone
The Morning Benders
Hockey
White Rabbits
David Bazan
Asleep at the Wheel
Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue
Nortec Collective
The Very Best
Beats Antique
Blind Pilot
GIVERS
Dawes
Band of Heathens
Charlie Mars
Two Door Cinema Club
Lissie
Sarah Harmer
Constellations
T. Bird and the Breaks
Chief
Frank Turner
Those Darlins
Carolyn Wonderland
Kings Go Forth
The Relatives
The Ettes
Qbeta
Mynamisjohnmichael
Basia Bulat
Balmorhea
Dan Black
The Jane Shermans
The Kicks
Ponderosa
Two Tons of Steel
Caitlin Rose
SPEAK
Run With Bulls
Maxim Ludwig
Gospel Stars
Heavenly Voices
Wesley Bray & The Disciples of Joy
Jones Family Singers
Ashley Cleveland & Kenny
Greenberg
Buddy & The Straight Way
Travelers
Ruby Jane Smith
Verve Pipe
Frances England
Jellydots
Elizabeth Mitchell
Okee Dokee Brothers
Tom Freund
School of Rock
Q Brothers


“Good Morning America” Summer Concert Series 2010 Lineup

Rihana, Miley Cyrus, The Black Eyed Peas, and Lady Antebellum are among the artists who will invade New York City’s Rumsey Playfield (Central Park) when ABC’s Good Morning America sets the stage for its annual Friday summer concert series on May 21.The Jonas Brothers and Demi Lovato will perform ahead of the premiere of [...]

Rihanna Lilith Fair 2010 Performance Salt Lake City July 12

Give it up for Girl Power: Rihanna will make a special appearance at Lilith Fair’s Salt Lake City date on Monday, July 12.
The pop queen will take a brief break from her recently announced “Last Girl On Earth” Summer Tour to join the prestigious lineup of all-female singers for a one night only [...]

Albums of the Week: March 19 – March 25 Beck, Truckers, Liars

JamBase Albums of the Week | March 19-March 25, 2010

Dennis’ Pick of the Week
Shooter Jennings & Hierophant: Black Ribbons (Rocket Science)

This blows in from a future time when “the battery is fading and the light is dying” and “the last breath of free speech will blow itself out,” and what takes its place is the “wind of thought control.” The groundbreaking, thoroughly cool pairing of Shooter and Stephen King (the voice of Americanized Greek chorus DJ Will O’ The Wisp) offers us a dystopian concept album in the vein of Terry Gilliam’s Brazil stirred with ’70s sci-fi flicks like Logan’s Run and Rollerball (plus the synth beds under Wisp’s bohemian holy roller “mic breaks” are pure John Carpenter), and the damn thing rocks on top of it! We’re all dealing with the fallout of eight years of White House thugs who spit on laws and ideals while convincing (some) folks that torture and abandonment of core principles are fine under some circumstances AND that wearing a flag pin means you’re a patriot. Each of us grieves and heals in his or her own way, but Shooter and King have done so in a particularly brilliant, satisfying manner. By envisioning the end game of the “Bush Years” run rampant, they’ve unleashed hot creative lead that hits every target true (and even slips in a few hearty laughs and idealistic romance to boot). This is COMPLETELY unlike anything Jennings has done previously, and he’s all the better for it. The unrestricted reach of this material – spanning bar anthems, punky NYC delights, breezy ballads, Pearl Jam-y angst, psych-funk, Zeppelin-esque pomp and more – and “future” dappled feel of the production and instrument choices usher in a whole new chapter for Jennings, who seems to have found his true voice here, a powerful, insightful outburst entirely free of his father’s shadow and the country industry as a whole. Strange, gutsy, defiant and rabblerousing, Black Ribbons (released March 2) might just be a masterpiece – never wise to make such pronouncements in the first month of a record’s release. For sure, it’s one of the strongest, most inspired albums of 2010, and one that will likely make many people reevaluate Shooter Jennings in a wholly positive way. (Dennis Cook)

Ron’s Pick of the Week
Beck and Friends: Oar (Record Club)

On paper, Beck’s Record Club series, where he invites a group of famous friends to collaborate with him in the recording of an influential album in a single day, later posted on the club’s website, sounds awesome. But the end results of the first two installments, which saw Mr. Hansen get together with such trendy pals as MGMT, Devendra Banhart and Andrew Stockdale (Wolfmother), among others, to tackle The Velvet Underground & Nico and Songs of Leonard Cohen, were beyond unlistenable to the point of painful. Such is not the case for the third club entry, a version of Moby Grape guitarist Alexander “Skip” Spence’s 1969 solo masterpiece Oar, long considered one of the most storied outsider rock LPs of all time, particularly given its back story of being crafted during Spence’s fabled six-month stint at New York’s notorious Bellevue Hospital. Bringing together an ace lineup this time around – Warp Records soulman Jamie Lidell, the entire current lineup of Wilco (including Jeff Tweedy’s tween son Spencer on drums), Leslie Feist, longtime producer pal Nigel Godrich and legendary Motown session drummer James Gadson, to name but a few – the way this ragtag team re-imagines Oar with such cohesion and harmony is astounding. Some of the tracks are played faithfully, notably the iconic opening number “Little Hands,” the mournful country ballad “Broken Heart,” and a great quasi-a capella run through “All Come To Meet Her.” Elsewhere, however, songs like “Cripple Creek” and “Weighted Down” are given drastic makeovers, sounding more like outtakes from Odelay than staunch versions of the original Spence performances. But the real mind blowers are “Books of Moses,” originally a 2:41 rainy day meditation that’s expanded into a seven-odd-minute bump funk throwdown, as well as the album’s nine-and-a-half-minute brain-frying closer “Grey/Afro,” which gets shortened here by two minutes yet is somehow made into more of an epic freakout than the original (thanks to the top-notch playing from the Wilco boys, who turn in some of their most Teutonic jamming since “Spiders (Kidsmoke)”). The Record Club Oar is the best thing Beck has done since Sea Change. As a longtime fan disillusioned with Hansen’s output as of late (with the sole exception of his excellent production work on the new Charlotte Gainsbourg album), the only thing I can do is rest my laurels with the assumption that this creative renaissance will carry over to his next proper solo joint and the Record Club’s forthcoming redux of INXS’s 1987 pop-gasm Kick, which features Beck alongside St. Vincent, Liars and Os Mutantes. (Ron Hart)

Drive-By Truckers: The Big To-Do (ATO)

Calling something “reliable” can seem a small compliment, but in the case of the Truckers it’s actually a massive high-five. The Big To-Do (released March 16) is a juicy affirmation of rock & roll’s relevance – a day-to-day conduit for our troubles and dreams that wrestles with our worries and darker thoughts while simultaneously defusing them and uplifting us. It’s a tall order, especially if you still want the music go hand-in-hand with beer swilling and sweaty mischief n’ dancin’. DBT has it ALL covered on their ninth album. Hard won strength, lack of sentimentality and a lean, sharp edged vibe inform this baker’s dozen filled with skinned up revelations, jaded good time girls, bloated corpses, abandonment’s dull ache, and stinkin’ secrets brought into open air. Some tracks are missives from the road, lingering on the vagabond life, but never slipping into cliches; their lyrics get at what calls one home, what centers a life, even as a fresh breeze beckons one to take the highway again. The playing, arrangements and production are completely on-point; this band is just SO together, so beautifully overlapping and thunderous and goddamn enjoyable right now. The recorded debut of now fully integrated keyboardist Jay Gonzalez is a happy revelation filled with accents and muscle that find him keeping up with DBT’s massive guitar roar, which rages harder here than they have in a spell. Addictively listenable and easily one of the finest overall sets of their career, The Big To-Do shows, once again, that if one seeks reliably phenomenal, truth-telling, balls-out rock they need look no further than the Drive-By Truckers. (DC)

Autechre: Oversteps (Warp)
Autechre unplugged? Sounds impossible, but on Oversteps (arriving March 23), the celebrated British IDM duo get as close as they’ve ever have to achieving a natural sound through most unnatural means, while continuing to explore the mellow terrain they touched upon with 2008′s brilliant Quaristice. Though these 14 tracks are devised from purely synthetic means and retain the aleatoric element that has been the MO of Sean Booth and Rob Brown for two decades, there is an emotional strand that weaves throughout Oversteps, giving otherwise standard alien Autechre sounds the warm feel of acoustic instrumentation, church organs and tubular chimes atop some of the mellowest beats these guys have crafted yet, especially on “Known (1),” “O=0″ and the gorgeous “Krylon.” Also of note is album closer “Yuop,” which sounds like a vintage John Carpenter film score. People are calling this Booth and Brown’s best work to date, and I just might have to agree. (RH)

Liars: Sisterworld (Mute)

Not many bands consistently make one ask, “What is this?” From jump, Sisterworld (released March 9), announces that five albums in Liars still have us guessing as this bold, singular creative entity continues evolving. Part boatman’s dirge, part noise explosion, part newfangled spiritual, opener “Scissor” sets things off-kilter (in the best way), quickly followed by the whisper painted, downtempo groove of “No Barrier Fun” (perhaps the score to some fictional, disease free connection?), and the Link Wray-esque guitars, murder mystery strings, reverberant George Harrison echoes (which continue throughout) and waterfall vocal poetry of “Here Comes All The People.” And Sisterworld never quits swinging; a most fascinating, palpably disturbing, keenly gorgeous album that appears different each time under the microscope. Not that any of their earlier albums slouches in terms of originality or artistic fire, but Sisterworld offers readier entry into Liars’ alternate universe, where “reality” morphs and bubbles, scars and seduces, catalyzes and soothes – genuinely dangerous ground that’s simply too intense and compelling to resist exploring. It will be quite some time before cartography is completed, even for the most zealous, attentive mapmakers. (DC)

Ralph Towner/Paolo Fresu: Chiaroscuro (ECM)

Multi-instrumentalist Ralph Towner is just as essential to the fabric of the ECM jazz idiom as the likes of Keith Jarrett, John Abercrombie and Jan Garbarek. For his 20th release on the legendary imprint, the Northwest great introduces an intriguing new dichotomy to the duo format with this gorgeous collaboration for trumpet and guitar with master Sardinian horn player Paolo Fresu. With Towner playing classical, 12-string and baritone guitars alongside Fresu on trumpet and flugelhorn, Chiaroscuro (released March 16) offers ten haunting compositions, including a rendition of Miles Davis’ Kind of Blue standard “Blue in Green” and revisions of two older Towner numbers, “Zephyr,” written for his celebrated acoustic jazz band Oregon featured on their 1987 album Ectopia, and “Wistful Thinking” from 1992′s solo LP Open Letter. This is late night modality at its finest, and an early candidate for jazz record of the year. (RH)

Rogue Wave: Permalight (Brushfire)

Jaunty, jaundiced and jubilant, the latest from Oakland, CA’s Rogue Wave is a strangely happy (emphasis on the strange) affair. Even if “the future ain’t what it used to be” (as they declare on “Good Morning”), this puts the spotlight on the now, finding comfort inside the folds of a lover’s hair or other pinpoint examples of all there is to taste and feel around us. Birthed from the pains brought on by a serious 2008 health scare for main man Zach Rogue, Permalight (released March 2) is pop with brains that doesn’t diminish what one must struggle through to find their smile. Musically, Rogue and creative partner multi-instrumentalist Pat Spurgeon have never sounded more curious or well rounded, and the tunes seep into one like cool water on dry soil. Like Crowded House (or really anything Neil Finn touches), today’s Rogue Wave makes one shake & bop without feeling dirty about the grin & skip they’ve just been given. (DC)

Archie Bronson Outfit: Coconut (Domino)
One of the most slept-on bands in English rock makes a bold return in 2010 after a four-year hiatus with its biggest, best record to date. Produced with love by Tim Goldsworthy (UNKLE, Cut Copy, The Rapture), Coconut (arriving March 23) finds the DFAlink text czar adding a gratuitous amount of programmed beats and loops to the chaotic cool of the Wiltshire trio’s acid garage blues flavor, giving much of the album a feel akin to the sound of A Certain Ratio had when they signed to Touch & Go instead of Factory Records. Then, all of a sudden, you have a song like “Hunt You Down,” which just drops out of the sky amidst the cacophony to offer a scraggy loveliness that recalls something straight out of Village Green Preservation Society as performed through the amp of Thurston Moore. A welcome return, Coconut is definitely is NOT your daddy’s British blues rock. (RH)

The Whigs: In The Dark (ATO)

“Shock me into town/ Everybody wants to take me down/ White light in my brain/ If they want to make me sane.” There’s a bunch of winning chips on The Whigs’ shoulders; an innate defiance and rough fingered sexual grip that strongly ties them to rock’s earliest days. However, the presentation here, helmed by producer Ben H. Allen (Animal Collective, Gnarls Barkley), is slicker and more upfront than predecessor Mission Control. This saps some of their primal character but also sets them up for wider discovery outside the constant giging and musical chairs tour partners they’ve experienced in the past couple years. In The Dark (released March 16) is insanely listenable and particularly enjoyable at high volumes, and there’s no shortage of killer, foundational rockers (“Someone’s Daughter,” “In The Dark”) and curious curves (“Dying,” “Naked”) lurking in the folds. While this feels overall less distinct than Mission Control, it’s still a better rock block than most of their peers can muster. (DC)

Daughters: Daughters (Hydrahead)

On their excellent eponymous third full-length (released March 9), these Providence, RI noisecore upstarts move further away from the chaotic grind of their earlier efforts and closer to something more song-oriented but no less brutal. The sound here is closer to the feel of classic Unsane or the nervy heaviness of such great ’80s acts as Rapeman and Scratch Acid, as guitars scale up walls of relentless, fuzzed-out rhythms like centipedes and frantic melodies can be heard beneath the din of caustic riffs that stop, start and explode with the calculated precision of vintage post-punk. These Daughters will definitely keep your van rockin’ all night long. (RH)

jj: jj nº 3 (Secretly Canadian)

How music can be elusive and intoxicating all at once is a mystery but one Sweden’s jj have mastered. jj nº 3 (released March 9) is R&B from a distant future stripped of mainstream bombast, a sincerely lovely mingling of electronica’s disembodied swoon, a more benign My Life In The Bush of Ghosts and the precise execution and romance of early rock ‘n’ roll vocal groups like The Platters. It’s a pretty dizzying quiet storm, and it makes total sense that jj is currently sharing stages with fellow lower case advocates The xx. (DC)

cliffordandcalix: Lost Foundling (Aperture)

Attention fans of IDM (intelligent dance music): Behold! Lost Foundling (released March 16) is a collection of songs stemming from the creative partnership of Warp acts Mark Clifford from the recently reunited London glitch-gaze outfit Seefeel and former label publicist-turned-digital chanteuse Mira Calix. Recorded over several hangout sessions during the height of the IDM phenomenon (1999-2004), these recently rediscovered songs exhibit an excellent marriage, where Clifford’s airy guitar lines blend into Calix’s tiny laptop symphonies. It’s crazy to think these were just casual sketches nearly lost on ancient computer technology, and the fact these tracks have now been made available for public consumption is reason to celebrate. (RH)

The Bird and The Bee: Interpreting The Masters Volume 1: A Tribute To Daryl Hall and John Oates (Blue Note)

Another sign that the mega-success of Norah Jones has forever altered the makeup of Blue Note Records, this tongue-half-in-cheek Hall & Oates covers collection (arriving March 23) is pleasant and sure to please those who purchase their music with a latte. The duo of multi-instrumentalist/producer Greg Kurstin and singer Inara George (daughter of the late Little Feat fireball Lowell George) manages a fair amount of sincerity here, though their slim arrangements and somewhat dated keyboard sounds often make this sound like a distaff Erasure. But, the songs are nigh indestructible, and if you like the softer side o’ pop (and Hall & Oates in particular) you’re probably gonna dig this. (DC)

Title Tracks: It Was Easy (Ernest Jenning)

Washington D.C.’s music scene has long inspired a D.I.Y mentality spanning from Duke Ellington to Fugazi’s Ian MacKaye. Barack Obama said, “Change will not come if we wait for some other person or some other time. We are the ones we’ve been waiting for. We are the change that we seek.” D.C musician John Davis seems to follow his capital city’s musical forefathers and that presidential mantra. In the last quarter century he watched two bands fold under his watch. Out of the ashes of these previous experiences has risen It Was Easy (released February 23), the debut full-length album from Davis’ new band Title Tracks. Since Davis developed a multitude of skills not only playing drums in the famed D.C. dance-punk band Q And Not U but also manning dual roles as the guitarist-singer in the softer pop band Georgie James, he moved on to writing and recording an album on his own. The results draw on Davis’ past and is filled with expertly crafted power pop that recalls the mod revival sounds of the Small Faces, as well as the vibe of mid-60s Yardbirds. One standout on It Was Easy is “Black Bubblegum,” whose upbeat anthem and catchy chorus are reminiscent of something from fellow Ernest Jenning label mates Black Hollies. Another standout is one of the album’s two covers, a slow burning duet with Tracyanne Campbell of Camera Obscura on Bruce Springsteen’s “Tougher Than The Rest.” (Jake Krolick)

The Souljazz Orchestra: Rising Sun (Strut)

Hey, I love Afrobeat as much as the next guy, but this seemingly continuous barrage of African-related releases is getting to be a little much, don’t you think? If you are like me and love the funky sounds of the Dark Continent but would like to hear it switched up a touch, look no further than the great new album from Canada’s Souljazz Orchestra. Rising Sun (released February 16) finds the Ottowa, Ontario-based septet retaining the heavy Fela vibe that punctuated their previous efforts, but accenting the polyrhythms with the deep spirituality of vintage Impulse Records acts like Pharoah Sanders and Archie Shepp, bringing their craft to a whole new plane of expressionism. (RH)

Vintage Stash Pick of the Week
Jan & Dean: Carnival of Sound (Rhino Handmade)

When Jan Berry of the famous Southern California pop duo Jan & Dean smashed his Corvette into a parked truck going around Dead Man’s Curve in 1966, he and partner Dean Torrence were in the embryonic stages of creating a new album they had dubbed Carnival of Sound. And despite Berry’s serious injuries, which included partial paralysis and a traumatic brain injury, Jan refused to give up on the LP, returning to the studio months after the crash with a batch of songs that would reflect a deeper, more experimental nature reflecting the teen idol’s post-accident mindset. Though still undeniably catchy and pure in its pop form, the music captured at these sessions, which incorporated such elements as sitar accents, backwards guitar playing, found sound effects and Wall of Sound style orchestration, reflected the psychedelic vibes of the burgeoning Sunset Strip scene that rendered the duo’s shiny, happy sounds all but obsolete. Sadly, by the time Carnival of Sound was ready for its 1969 release, the duo’s label, Warner Bros., had shelved the project, allowing it to build up its legend as one of the all-time great “lost” albums of rock ‘n’ roll. That is until now. Beautifully packaged and remastered, this definitive official version of Carnival of Sound features the complete mono album as it was intended for its initial street date, along with stereo mixes and some of Berry’s initial demos and alternate mixes of such key original tracks as “Girl, You’re Blowing My Mind” and “Laurel and Hardy.” You can really hear Jan Berry’s absolute mastery as a producer on par with the likes of Phil Spector and David Axelrod – along with his capable utilization of such legendary Hollywood studio spaces as Gold Star Studios and Western Recorders and the world famous elite session musicians known as The Wrecking Crew – on their heart-piercing version of The Five Satins’ “In The Still of the Night.” Here, Jan and Dean transplant the doo-wop classic from the streets of the Bronx to the beaches of the Pacific Ocean. It’s as if it had originated amidst a backdrop of surf and sunset all along, and unless you have a heart of ice it will stop you dead in your tracks. Any fan of pure pop music – be it The Beatles, Big Star or the Beach Boys – owes it to his or her self to look into checking out this resurrected masterpiece stat. (RH)

Damin Eih, A.L.K. and Brother Clark: Never Mind (Nero’s Neptune)

When it comes to private press psychedelia from the Vietnam era, it doesn’t quite get much trippier than Minneapolis-based sound wizards Damin Eih, A.L.K. and Brother Clark. Though they sold it as “folk,” this trio was as much folk as the Soft Machine were jazz, as their lone 1973 epic signifies. Coming off like a combination of Love’s Forever Changes without the strings and Jimmy Page’s unreleased soundtrack to Lucifer Rising, Never Mind – originally released on the tiny Seedy Records and has been remastered via two virgin copies of the original vinyl – is an oscillating, Mooged-out, electric-acoustic mind-melt of an album that’s been coveted by the world’s most discerning collectors of rare psychedelic music. Definitely worth checking out, especially if you are a frequent visitor to the ever-migrating blog of master psych rock archivist Chris Goes. (RH)

The Guess Who: So Long, Bannatyne/Rockin’ (Iconoclassic)
“Jim Morrison is a drunken buffoon posing as a poet,” proclaimed Philip Seymour Hoffman in his spot-on role as legendary rock critic Lester Bangs in Almost Famous. “Give me The Guess Who. They have the courage to be drunken buffoons, which makes them poetic.” Whether or not the actual Lester B. uttered such brilliance, truer words have never been spoken with regards to a band whose catalog goes way beyond that of “These Eyes” and “American Woman.” If you haven’t touched upon The Guess Who’s catalog beyond the obvious singles, these killer reissues of the Canadian band’s two most underrated albums ought to give you ample reason to spelunk deeper into their oft-misunderstood oeuvre. 1971′s Bannatyne, the group’s first release following the departure of guitarist Randy Bachman (who went on to form the AOR hit machine Bachman Turner Overdrive) sees frontman Burton Cummings exercising his then-obsession with the John Lennon Plastic Ono Band album to excellent effect, starkly illustrating the pain and exhaustion of a band on the brink of an implosion. 1972′s Rockin’, the group’s last with Bachman replacement guitarist Greg Leskiw, is also the GW’s heaviest set to date, combining Cummings’ love of ’50s rock with the gritty sounds of Nixon-era Camaro psychedelia, and serves as a big favorite amongst the band’s most hardcore fan base. After years of floundering in a horrible-sounding two-fer version, it’s great to see this pair of Canadian rock classics get the top-notch remastering job each so richly deserves. (RH)

Various Artists: Brazilian Guitar, Fuzz Bananas: Tropicália Psychedelic Masterpieces 1967-1976 (Tropicália in Furs)

Brazilian Tropicália is one of the most beloved and revered psychedelic movements to emerge from the late 1960s. And underneath the din of such titans of this historic art movement as Tom Ze, Os Mutantes, Gilberto Gil and Caetano Veloso was a whole underground bubbling with the funkiest, freakiest offshoots of the genre. Compiler Joel Stones’ Brazilian Guitar Fuzz Bananas (released February 23) is a South American version of Lenny Kaye’s Nuggets, in a way, as it brings together 16 of Tropicália’s rarest 45s loaded with distorted, wah-wah drenched guitars, phaseshifting organs and a sampler’s smorgasbord of nasty breakbeats, including some wild covers of The Beatles’ “I Wanna Be Your Man”, The Rolling Stones’ “The Lantern” and the theme to the Batman TV show. Anyone who ever wanted to get into Tropicália but was turned off by the flowery circus music vibe will definitely want to peel into these fuzzed-out Bananas. (RH)

Oops, We Missed It!
Killer Releases From 2009 That Somehow Slipped By Us

All Smiles: Fall Never Fell (Small Aisles)

The succinctness of a good EP can rival a good full-length simply by leaving us hungry for more of what we’ve just gobbled down. This five-pack (released November 17, 2009) carries wonderful echoes of ’60s gentle pop and primo ’80s New Zealand jangle, each given fresh intimacy and bedroom immediacy by Jim Fairchild. This set is the ideal score for wistful, post-romance thinking and bucolic summer afternoon drives. All Smiles is one of the few acts producing music on par with vintage Bee Gees, though this swoon is his own and not some homage. The title tune is perfection itself, despite the EP ending studio chatter to the contrary. Fall Never Fell is destined for mix tapes people give to one another to show they understand a few things and still want to put their hand in yours. (DC)


Lilith Fair 2010: Artists Announced For 8 Cities

DETAILS FOR PORTLAND, SEATTLE, CHICAGO AND MORE

“Lilith Fair: Seriously, you might wanna go to this…” – USA Today

Sarah McLachlan

The 2010 Lilith Fair Tour has officially announced dates, venues and artists for eight of the 36 North American cities the summer festival will hit this summer. At the same time, Las Vegas, Cleveland and Kansas City were revealed as the final three additions to the 36-city run. Tickets for initial shows will go on-sale to the general public beginning Saturday, March 27.

Much like the original Lilith Fair, there will be 11 artists on each date, with only two consistencies per show: the Lilith Local Talent Search Ourstage.com winner who starts the day and headliner Sarah McLachlan. The remaining acts on the line-up are constantly rotating from among more than 80 acts.

The following is the list of dates that go on-sale on Saturday, March 27. For the specific lineup at each of the eight announced dates go to Lilith Fair website.

Lilith Fair 2010 Dates with Lineup/Venue Details

Fri, Jul 2 Portland, OR The Amphitheatre at Clark County
Sat, Jul 3 George, WA The Gorge Amphitheatre
Sat, Jul 17 Chicago, IL First Midwest Bank Amphitheatre
Tues, July 20 Indianapolis, IN Verizon Wireless Music Center
Sat, Jul 24 Toronto, ON Molson Canadian Amphitheatre
Tues, July 27 Cleveland, OH Blossom Music Center **
Sun, Aug 8 Atlanta, GA Aaron’s Amphitheatre
Tues, Aug 10 W. Palm Beach, FL Cruzan Amphitheatre

(**Tickets go on-sale April 3)

Full list of artists announced so far:
A Fine Frenzy, Anjulie, Ann Atomic, Anya Marina, Ash Koley, The Bangles, Beth Orton, Brandi Carlile, Butterfly Boucher, Cat Power, Ceci Bastida, Chairlift, Chantal Kreviazuk, Colbie Caillat, Corinne Bailey Rae, Court Yard Hounds, Donna Delory, Elizaveta, Emmylou Harris, Erin McCarley, Erykah Badu, Frazey Ford, The Go-Go’s, Gossip, Grace Potter and The Nocturnals, Heart, Ima, Indigo Girls, Ingrid Michaelson, Janelle Monae, Jennifer Knapp, Jesca Hoop, Jill Hennessy, Jill Scott, Julia Othmer, Kate Miller-Heidke, Kate Nash Katzenjammer, Kelly Clarkson, Ke$ha, La Roux, Lights, Lissie, Loretta Lynn, Lucy Schwartz, Marina & The Diamonds, Martina McBride, Mary J. Blige, Meaghan Smith, Melissa McClelland, Metric, Miranda Lambert, Miranda Lee Richards, Missy Higgins, Nikki Jean, Nneka, Norah Jones, Priscilla Renea, The Rescues, Rosie Thomas, Sara Bareilles, Sarah McLachlan, Serena Ryder, Sheryl Crow, Sia, Sugarland, Susan Justice, Suzanne Vega, Tara MacLean, Tegan and Sara, Toby Lightman, Vedera, Vita Chambers, The Submarines, The Weepies, Ximena Sarinana, Zee Avi

Full list of cities revealed so far:
Atlanta, Austin*, Birmingham, Boston, Calgary, Charlotte, Chicago, Cleveland, Dallas, Denver, Detroit, Edmonton, Hartford, Houston, Indianapolis, Kansas City*, Las Vegas, London, Los Angeles, Minneapolis*, Montreal, Nashville*, New York, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Portland, Raleigh, Salt Lake City, San Diego, San Francisco, Seattle, St. Louis, Tampa, Toronto, Vancouver, DC and West Palm Beach


Janelle Monáe: Debut Album w/ Big Boi, Saul Williams, Diddy

Janelle Monáe Releases Debut Album The ArchAndroid

Janelle Monáe

Wondaland Arts Society/Bad Boy recording artist Janelle Monáe has announced the release of her debut album. The ArchAndroid will arrive in stores and at all DSPs on May 18.

The ArchAndroid is an “Emotion Picture” brought to you by Janelle Monáe and the Mad Minds of the Wondaland Arts Society. The star-studded cast includes the legendary Big Boi of OutKast, renowned poet Saul Williams, psychedelic dance-punk troupe Of Montreal, punk prophets Deep Cotton, and the Wondaland Arch Orchestra.

The album was recorded at Wondaland Studios in Atlanta, but written all over the world, including but not limited to Moscow, Prague, Istanbul, Berlin, Amsterdam, New York, and the Palace of the Dogs. The ArchAndroid was inspired not only by the energy of these places, but by such revolutionary musicians and artistic visionaries as Salvador Dalí, Walt Disney, OutKast, Stevie Wonder, Octavia Butler, David Bowie, Andy Warhol, and John Williams. The album was Executive Produced by Nate Wonder, Chuck Lightning, Janelle Monáe, and Sean “Diddy” Combs, with Co-Executive Production from Big Boi of OutKast.

The ArchAndroid follows the Grammy Award-nominated artist’s two acclaimed EPs, 2008′s Metropolis: The Chase Suite (Special Edition) and Metropolis: Suite I of IV.

Monáe is set to join this summer’s much anticipated 2010 Lilith Tour, joining a star-studded array of female artists including Sarah MacLachlan, Norah Jones, Mary J. Blige, Loretta Lynn, Tegan & Sara, Sara Bareilles, Colbie Caillat, and many others.

Tour Dates

3/15/10 – Black Cat – Washington, DC
3/17/10 – Johnny Brenda’s – Philadelphia, PA
3/18/10 – Johnny Brenda’s – Philadelphia, PA
3/21/10 – Cafe Du Nord – San Francisco, CA
3/22/10 – Cafe Du Nord – San Francisco, CA
3/23/10 – The Viper Room – Los Angeles, CA
3/24/10 – The Viper Room – Los Angeles, CA
3/29/10 – Schubas Tavern – Chicago, IL
3/30/10 – Schubas Tavern – Chicago, IL
3/31/10 – Varsity Theater – Minneapolis, MN

4/02/10 – St. Andrews – Detroit, MI

4/05/10 – Smith’s Olde Bar – Atlanta, GA

4/06/10 – Smith’s Olde Bar – Atlanta, GA

4/09/10 – Joe’s Pub – New York, NY
4/10/10 – Joe’s Pub – New York, NY


Metric: Tour Dates

Metric Announce New Headlining U.S. Tour Dates

Metric

In continued support of Fantasies, Metric has announced that they will hit the road for a short run of headlining dates, beginning March 17 in Tempe, AZ and wrapping up March 27 in San Diego, CA.

This summer, Metric will tour as a part of the traveling Lilith Fair, which will make stops nationwide. Also participating in the renowned festival are Mary J. Blige, Norah Jones, Tegan & Sara and Sheryl Crow, among many others.

Tour Dates

3/17/2010 – Tempe Beach Park – Tempe, AZ

3/21/2010 – Showbox – Seattle, WA

3/22/2010 – Roseland – Portland, OR

3/24/2010 – Fox Theatre – Oakland, CA

3/25/2010 – House of Blues – Las Vegas, NV

3/26/2010 – Hollywood Palladium – Los Angeles, CA

3/27/2010 – Indiefest at North Park – San Diego, CA

Complete Metric tour dates available here.


No sitar for Norah Jones

Norah Jones has no plans of mastering the sitar as the instrument has left her father Ravi Shankar and half-sister Anoushka Shankar with twisted backs.
The multiple Grammy Award winner revealed that she once took sitar lessons from Anoushka but later realized it wasn’t her cup of tea, reports Contactmusic.
She says, “It was fun, but you [...]

Beyonce Sets Grammy Record

Beyonce made history at this weekend’s 2010 Grammy Awards, according to The Associated Press.
The singing temptress set a Grammy record for most wins by a female artist in one night after collecting six trophies – including Song of the Year for her anthem “Single Ladies (Put A Ring On It)” — at Sunday night’s ceremony [...]

Randall Bramblett: The Meantime

RANDALL BRAMBLETT TO RELEASE THE MEANTIME MARCH 9

Randall Bramblett

On March 9 Blue Ceiling Records will release The Meantime, the beautiful new CD from Randall Bramblett. The new recording marks a departure for the highly acclaimed multi-instrumentalist who is best known for his contributions on saxophone with Steve Winwood, Traffic, Levon Helm, Sea Level (with Chuck Leavell), Gregg Allman, Widespread Panic and more.

The CD was produced by Bramblett, who performs primarily on acoustic piano, organ, and lead vocals. The CD features 12 original tracks, including some of Bramblett’s earliest songs such as “Sacred Harmony,” “Witness For Love,” and “One More Rose” as well as newer, unreleased compositions. A sultry blend of ambient folk, jazz, traditional piano and seductive vocals, the music on The Meantime is downright romantic and mesmerizing in the vein of Norah Jones or The Blue Nile.

On this recording Bramblett is accompanied by Gerry Hansen on drums and percussion and Chris Enghauser on upright bass. Special guests include Andy Carlson (violin and viola), Cora Kuyvenhoven (cello), Adam McKnight (backing vocals on “Driving to Mongomery”), Betsy Franck (backing vocals on “In the Meantime”), Tom Ryan (baritone sax), and Kevin Hyde (trombone). Strings were written and arranged by renowned producer/composer, Steve Dancz.

Bramblett will tour in support of The Meantime, including a listening party performance at The Rialto Room in Athens, GA, on Saturday, February 13. The show will benefit the University of Georgia Music Business Program.

Randall Bramblett Tour Dates

01/30/10 Sat Bradfordville Blues Club Tallahassee, FL

02/13/10 Sat The Rialto Room Athens, GA

03/06/10 Sat Historic Myrtle Beach Train Depot Myrtle Beach, SC

03/19/10 Fri The White Mule Columbia, SC

04/09/10 Fri Number Sixteen Montgomery, AL

04/16/10 Fri Wanee Festival (Spirit of the Suwannee Music Park) Live Oak, FL

04/17/10 Sat The Old Opera House Hawkinsville, GA

05/15/10 Sat Hoopee Jam Norristown, GA

08/21/10 Sat Sundilla Concert Series Auburn, AL