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What are YOU doing on NYE?

LET’S POP OUR CORKS TOGETHER!!!

WSP – NYE ’09 by Michael Saba

New Year’s Eve is arguably the most significant concert going night of the year. Things just feel WAY more momentous packed into a club or theatre with sound blasting, lights flashing and folks reveling in a way they probably don’t allow themselves the rest of the year. We each choose carefully where we’ll stand when that infamous 10-second countdown occurs, thinking hard about who we want at our elbow and what soundtrack we want to usher us into a brand new year. It’s when a band’s loyal tribe convenes, expecting greatness from their beloveds and usually getting it. Where most of us no longer wait up for Santa or the Easter Bunny, there comes a childlike kick inside for New Year’s Eve, where we mull over the endings of things and welcome in the fresh start a new calendar offers.

JamBase would like to know what your plans are for this New Year’s Eve and perhaps some memories of good times past. We’re going to let this open conversation roll on old school style right below. We look forward to hearing what you have to say, and moreover, we wish you the brightest, most bountiful New Year you’ve ever known. We’re about due aren’t we?

If you’re still making plans for NYE, check out our handy-dandy New Year’s Eve Guide!

Top 20 NYE Shows 2010-2011 (Based On MyJamBase Calendars)

1. Phish – Madison Square Garden – New York, NY

2. Widespread Panic – Pepsi Center – Denver, CO (w/ G. Love & Special Sauce)

3. STS9 (Sound Tribe Sector 9) – The Fillmore Auditorium – Denver CO (w/ Tipper)

4. Brothers Past – Electric Factory – Philadelphia, PA (w/ Lotus)

5. Umphrey’s McGee – The Riviera Theatre – Chicago, IL

6. The Dirty Dozen Brass Band – House of Blues – Boston, MA

7. Furthur – Bill Graham Civic Auditorium – San Francisco, CA

8. moe. – House of Blues – Boston, MA

9. Pretty Lights – Congress Theater – Chicago, IL (w/ Holy Fuck and Tobacco)

10. Railroad Earth – Ogden Theatre – Denver, CO (w/ Great American Taxi)

11. The Disco Biscuits – Tower Theater – Upper Darby, PA (w/ MartyParty)

12. The New Deal – B.B. King Blues Club – New York, NY

13. Bassnectar – The Tabernacle – Atlanta, GA (w/ ANA SIA and Paper Diamond)

14. Shpongle – Hammerstein Ballroom – New York, NY (w/ Hallucinogen, Infected Mushroom and J.Views)

15. Perpetual Groove – Variety Playhouse – Atlanta, GA

16. Gov’t Mule – Beacon Theatre – New York, NY

17. Keller Williams – Neighborhood Theatre – Charlotte, NC (w/ Larry Keel)

18. Yonder Mountain String Band – The Pageant – St. Louis, MO

19. Soulive – Paradise Rock Club – Boston, MA

20. The Black Keys – Aragon Ballroom – Chicago, IL (w/ The Greenhornes)

Some New Year’s Eve blasts from the past to get y’all in the right mood for Friday night.

Now let us hear about your NYE memories and plans for this year!


Coheed and Cambria: U.S. Tour

Coheed and Cambria Announces First U.S. Headlining Tour in Over 2 Years

Coheed and Cambria

Coheed and Cambria will embark on its first North American headline tour since fall 2007 beginning April 22, nine days following the April 13 release of its fifth studio album, Year of the Black Rainbow (Columbia).

Support for the upcoming tour will be Circa Survive and Torche.

Produced by Atticus Ross (Nine Inch Nails, Jane’s Addiction) and Joe Baressi (Queens of the Stone Age, Tool), Year of the Black Rainbow is the eagerly awaited prequel to – and likely the final installment of – The Amory Wars tetralogy chronicled on Coheed and Cambria’s four previous inter-related concept albums.

The deluxe edition of the record will include a 352-page Year of the Black Rainbow novel, penned by the band’s Claudio Sanchez and New York Times Bestselling author Peter David, as well as a “Making of” DVD featuring studio and interview footage and a Coheed and Cambria “Black Card,” providing fans early entrance to shows, discounts on band merchandise and exclusive downloads and offers.

Tour Dates

3/23/2010 – Harro East Theatre & Ballroom – Rochester, NY*
3/24/2010 – The Westcott Theater – Syracuse, NY (SOLD OUT)*
3/25/2010 – Northern Lights – Clifton Park, NY*
3/26/2010 – Higher Ground Ballroom – Burlington, VY (SOLD OUT)*
3/28/2010 – Port City Music Hall – Portland, ME (SOLD OUT)*
3/29/2010 – Webster Theater – Hartford, CT (SOLD OUT)*
3/30/2010 – Hardware Bar (formerly Tinks) – Scranton, PA (SOLD OUT)*
3/31/2010 – Music Hall of Williamsburg – Brooklyn, NY (SOLD OUT)*
4/17/2010 – Coachella Valley Arts and Music Festival – Indio, CA
4/22/2010 – The Fillmore – Charlotte, NC^
4/23/2010 – Tabernacle – Atlanta, GA^
4/24/2010 – House of Blues – Lake Buena Vista, FL^
4/25/2010 – Revolution – Fort Lauderdale, FL^
4/27/2010 – Warehouse Live – Houston, TX^
4/28/2010 – Stubb’s Waller Creek Outdoor – Austin, TX^
4/29/2010 – Palladium Ballroom – Dallas, TX^
4/30/2010 – Cain’s Ballroom – Tulsa, OK^
5/01/2010 – Diamond Ballroom – Oklahoma City, OK^
5/03/2010 – Marquee Theatre – Tempe, AZ^
5/04/2010 – Fox Theatre – Pomona, CA^
5/05/2010 – The Warfield Theatre – San Francisco, CA^
5/07/2010 – Roseland Theater – Portland, OR^
5/08/2010 – Showbox SoDo – Seattle, WA^
5/10/2010 – Murray Theater – Salt Lake City, UT^
5/11/2010 – Ogden Theatre – Denver, CO^
5/13/2010 – First Avenue – Minneapolis, MN^
5/14/2010 – Congress Theater – Chicago, IL ^
5/15/2010 – Royal Oak Music Theatre – Royal Oak, MI^
5/17/2010 – House of Blues – Boston, MA^
5/18/2010 – Metropolis – Montreal, QC^
5/19/2010 – Sound Academy – Toronto, ON^
5/22/2010 – Electric Factory – Philadelphia, PA^
5/23/2010 – Rock on the Range Festival – Columbus, OH
5/26/2010 – Rumsey Playfield, Central Park – New York, NY^
5/27/2010 – 9:30 Club – Washington, DC^

* with Earl Greyhound
^ With Circa Survive, Torche

Coheed and Cambria Tour Dates :: Coheed and Cambria News :: Coheed and Cambria Concert Reviews


Steel Train: Tour, New Album

Steel Train on Tour with Tegan & Sara; Announces New Album

Steel Train has announced a new album and North American tour with Tegan & Sara.

The eight-week tour that began in Massachusetts on February 12 will give Steel Train a chance to debut new songs from their upcoming summer release (on a soon to be announced record label). The premiere track from the band’s new album will be Turnpike Ghost.

Steel Train will also be performing at this year’s Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival on Saturday, April 17.

Steel Train

Tour Dates:

2/20/10 – Tampa Theatre – Tampa, FL*
2/21/10 – Sunset Cove Amphitheatre – Boca Raton, FL*
2/23/10 – Variety Playhouse – Atlanta, GA*
2/24/10 – Tipitina’s Uptown – New Orleans, LA*
2/25/10 – Palladium Ballroom – Dallas, TX*
2/26/10 – Bass Concert Hall – Austin, TX*
2/27/10 – The Warehouse – Houston, TX*
3/02/10 – House of Blues – Las Vegas, NV*
3/03/10 – Copley Symphony Hall – San Diego, CA*
3/05/10 – Fox Theatre – Oakland, CA*
3/07/10 – Downtown Brewing Company – San Luis Obispo, CA #
3/09/10 – The Clubhouse – Tempe, AZ #
3/11/10 – The Launchpad – Albuquerque, NM #
3/13/10 – McAllen Creative Incubator – McAllen, TX #
3/16/10 – White Rabbit – San Antonio, TX
3/17/10 – SXSW
3/18/10 – SXSW
3/19/10 – SXSW
3/20/10 – SXSW
3/23/10 – The Waiting Room – Omaha, NE #
3/24/10 – Orpheum Theatre – Minneapolis, MN*
3/25/10 – Riverside Theatre – Milwaukee, WI*
3/26/10 – Aragon Ballroom – Chicago, IL*
3/27/10 – Royal Oak Music Theatre – Royal Oak, MI*
3/28/10 – Lakewood Civic Auditorium – Lakewood, OH*
3/30/10 – PromoWest Pavilion – Columbus, OH*
3/31/10 – Ryman Auditorium – Nashville, TN*
4/02/10 – The Pageant – St. Louis, MO*
4/03/10 – Uptown Theatre – Kansas City, MO*
4/04/10 – Ogden Theatre – Denver, CO*
4/06/10 – In The Venue – Salt Lake City, UT*
4/08/10 – Keller Auditorium – Portland, OR*
4/09/10 – Chop Suey – Seattle, WA*
4/17/10 – Coachella – Indio, CA*
4/21/10 – Club 156, Boulder, CO#
4/30/10 – Meadowlands/Hoodwink Festival – East Rutherford, NJ
5/02/10 – Meadowlands/Bamboozle – East Rutherford, NJ

* with Tegan & Sara
# headlining


Sonic Youth | 07.31 | Denver

By: Cal Roach

Sonic Youth :: 07.31.09 :: Ogden Theatre :: Denver, CO


Sonic Youth by Steven Friederich

The scene outside the Ogden Theatre at show time was chaotic. Shady asshats were trying to squeeze fans for 80 bucks a ticket, and there were tons of out-of-luck stragglers. I’m told that artists often underestimate the size of the ticket buying public in Denver, so I guess this wasn’t out of the ordinary. It was a pleasant surprise to discover that despite the demand, the venue didn’t seem oversold; it was packed, but not like a sardine tin. The mood of the crowd was energetic enough for a stadium, though, with the roar that went up when Thurston Moore lumbered onto the stage, you’d have thought he was a rock star or something.

I wasn’t expecting “Stereo Sanctity” as the opener, but it really worked, Moore establishing his unmistakable six-string howl immediately, a musical presence that is simply unparalleled. The last time I’d seen Sonic Youth had been an almost somber experience. They played Daydream Nation in its entirety, and the landmark album confined them like a straightjacket, while the encore of the new Rather Ripped material was clearly what their hearts were into. Thus, it shouldn’t have been a surprise that they played all but one song from the brand new album, The Eternal (released June 9, 2009 by Matador Records), and that the band was explosive compared with the nostalgia trip I’d witnessed two years ago.


Thurston Moore by Steven Friederich

To begin with, Thurston was jumping around like a crazy person, clearly feeling it, rather than his forbidding, wooden performance of 2007. You can talk about other guitarists “shredding” but this is a guy who brings visual and sonic clarity to that term, just as acutely on the new material as ever before. Creative yet concise, he tore apart “Sacred Trickster,” and then it was Kim Gordon‘s turn to take the spotlight, screeching with a freakish sexuality on the monstrous “Calming The Snake.” This song achieved instant classic status as I witnessed it live, the epitome of prog-punk, a searing blast of spontaneous emotion contained within a flawless composition. “Anti-Orgasm” was busted down into its metal essence then taken to its most perversely melodic extreme before swelling in a swathe of tension and exploding, absolutely incredible. “Poison Arrow” was King Crimson-meets-The Velvet Underground plus a dash of Germs, and “Malibu Gas Station” was downright Nirvana-esque (yes, it’s okay to be influenced by your offspring), but each song was instantly recognizable as just one band.

Apart from the new stuff, the obvious highlights were the liberated Daydream tracks (the two albums covered all but two songs of the set). “Hey Joni” was perfectly executed geekpop, and “Silver Rocket” was half ’80s hardcore, half shoegaze progenitor, Thurston & Co. taking their time with the occasionally-rhythmic noise jam, then slamming the song home con brio. And after a picturesque take on the elegant “Massage The History” ended the set proper, we got an absolutely unbeatable combo: “The Sprawl,” sounding as modern and fresh as any Pitchfork darling of today, and “‘Cross The Breeze,” the “Stairway To Heaven” of indie rock, frightening in its precision and passion. With the pristine sound in the Ogden, you could hear jaws drop.

The only lull in the entire show was “Walkin’ Blue,” which sucked a little energy out of the room following “Orgasm,” but just-as-ballady “Antenna” flowed naturally out of “Rocket,” and “What We Know” made a pop-perfect second encore until the avant-growl of “Death Valley ’69,” complete with a Moore/Lee Ranaldo guitar fencing match, reminded us with authority how prescient this band was even in 1984. They were innovators; this is incontestable. Judging by this show, they still are, pushing and/or ignoring boundaries, evolving their songs night after night, bringing scenes together, refining their songcraft, and retaining their inimitable essence.

Sonic Youth tour dates available here.

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