RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘Paul Simon’

Hangout Fest 2011 : P. Simon, Foo, WSP, MMJ, Primus, Lips, Keys

UMPH, WEEN, KELLER WILLIAMS, PRETTY LIGHTS, GIRL TALK, BASSNECTAR, SLIGHTLY STOOPID, DRIVE-
BY TRUCKERS, G. LOVE, WARREN HAYNES BAND, GALACTIC, MMW


Paul Simon

The Hangout Music Festival is thrilled to
announce its 2011 lineup featuring Paul Simon, Foo Fighters, Widespread Panic, The Black Keys, My Morning
Jacket, Flaming Lips, Cee Lo Green, Primus, Michael Franti & Spearhead, Pretty Lights, Bassnectar, Girl Talk, Ween,
Matisyahu
and dozens more. The festival takes place May 20 – 22 on the beaches of Gulf Shores, Alabama –
just minutes from the Florida border. Tickets go on-sale this Wednesday at 9 am CST. A confirmed lineup is listed
below. More bands, amenities and activities will be announced in the coming weeks.

A limited quantity of festival tickets will be available for $159 and will go on-sale Wednesday, February 2 at 9 am
CST at www.hangoutmusicfest.com through Front Gate Tickets and at The Hangout Restaurant in Gulf Shores, AL.
Once tickets at the $159 price level are sold-out, tickets will then go on-sale for $174. VIP ticket packages and
travel packages start at $525 and are also available online or by phone at 1-888-512-SHOW.

CONFIRMED ARTISTS:

Paul Simon
Foo Fighters
Widespread Panic

The Black Keys

My Morning Jacket

Flaming Lips

Cee Lo Green
Primus

Michael Franti & Spearhead

Pretty Lights

Bassnectar

Girl Talk
Ween

Matisyahu

Warren Haynes Band
Umphrey’s McGee
Slightly Stoopid

Drive-By Truckers

Amos Lee

Old Crow Medicine Show

G. Love & Special Sauce

Medeski, Martin & Wood

Keller Williams

Galactic

Xavier Rudd

Minus the Bear

Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue

Portugal. the Man

Beats Antique

Dead Confederate

Jonathan Tyler & Northern Lights
Easy Star All-Stars

Mariachi El Bronx
Truth & Salvage Co

Kristy Lee
Civil Twilight

Rich Aucoin

A Thousand Horses
Jon Black

Cas Haley

Roman Street


JamBase Questionnaire: Tom Hamilton

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from The Old Ceremony.

It takes an uncommonly open-minded musician to really grok the internal logic of utterly modern, untz-savvy rock and classic singer-songwriter fare, but Tom Hamilton is an uncommonly gifted cat. As the guiding light behind Brothers Past and American Babies, Hamilton shows a range of gifts – warmly charming singer, sharp songwriter, memorable guitarist, keen eared producer – seeming utterly at home in the post-Radiohead atmosphere of Brothers Past as he is plying pop-rock veins akin to Paul Simon and Wilco in the Babies. Hamilton always seems game to explore, be it in his own projects or collaborating with the likes of Younger Brother or The Disco Biscuits, all of which seems to fuel more colors and textures in each new chapter of his evolution.

A new American Babies album arrives later this year, and Brothers Past is currently experiencing a resurgence with active gigging and the monthly Everything Must Go live download series (check it out here), which just issued its fourth volume, a swinging, switched-on post-Phish gig from 2004 (available for the catering economy price of just $5 bucks!) that includes a boss cover of The Cure’s “Fascination Street” and other softly mesmerizing moments. Listen to it here.

What stands out about Hamilton’s work, wherever it crops up, is a totally engaged, often joyful engagement with the world and his craft. His music sends out tendrils into the void and what connections it makes can’t be predicted, only that new ties will be formed. (Dennis Cook)

Brothers Past plays live throughout February and March. Find full tour dates here. A special hometown show is planned for March 26 at the TLA in Philadelphia, PA.

Here’s what Tom Hamilton had to say to our inquiries.

Brothers Past by Dave Vann

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Sincerity

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
The first cassette I bought was Ozzy Osbourne’s Blizzard of Oz and the first CD I purchased was Led Zeppelin III.

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
Arcade Fire’s The Suburbs

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
Funny you should ask! When I was in sixth grade I had to write an autobiography and I recently found it. Each page was about different assigned subjects with the last one asking to talk about what I wanted to do with my life. I said I wanted to be a musician. Not bad….

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
The small market gig where the stage is shitty, the sound system is questionable at best, and there doesn’t seem to be a chance in hell anyone will be there. T hen by 11 pm the club is packed and you’re covered in sweat with people 10-inches away from you going nuts.

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
I enjoy privacy.

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
Jerry Garcia’s guitar in 1973

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
The Beatles’ Revolver

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
Some sushi place by The Independent in San Francisco.

10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
Colorado

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
I have a particular brand of humor, some might say “inappropriate.” Any internal filter I may have been born with has been completely wiped out from being on the road.

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
How this is even still a question boggles my mind. The Beatles. It’s not even fair to ask. They’re mark on music is unparalleled, pushing the boundaries of every aspect of song craft, production and album art. They were responsible for new technologies in recording so George Martin and his engineers could keep up with their artistic needs. The Beatles inspired Bob Dylan to go electric, and they didn’t just change music but pop culture as a whole.

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
A drug dog piss itself at the Canadian border as it searched my van.


Brothers Past Dates :: Brothers Past Tour News :: Brothers Past Tour Concert Reviews

American Babies Tour Dates :: American Babies News :: American Babies Concert Reviews

JamBase | Wide-Open
Go See Live Music!


Solomon Burke, “Everybody Needs Somebody To Love” Crooner, Dies At Amsterdam Airport

Robust soul singer Solomon Burke — dubbed “The King of Rock and Soul” during a career that spanned five decades — died Sunday at an airport in Amsterdam airport. He was 70. A spokeswoman for Schiphol Airport confirmed that Burke, a Grammy Award winner, died but could not say whether he had died during his [...]

JamBase Questionnaire: Cochemea Gastelum

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from These United States.

Whether searing the fat off jam music in Robert Walter’s 20th Congress, lighting up a Broadway stage as part of the Fela! band, keeping soul music soulful with Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings, getting deep with Archie Shepp or blazing a session with the likes of Amy Winehouse and Paul Simon, NYC fixture Cochemea Gastelum is the living embodiment of “coming correct.” His crisp, lethal, adventurous sax and flute playing find the sweet spot in whatever type of music he’s involved in, and unlike many horn players, he never overstays his welcome, playing just what’s needed and leaving listeners hungry for more. Though clearly well grounded in the work of his predecessors, Gastelum synthesizes honking 50s big band rumble, 60s modal moves, 70s electricity, New Orleans slink and more in a way that simply announces a man in total command of his instrument, free of other’s fingerprints and ready to engage in whatever comes his way.

Gastelum’s long-awaited debut as bandleader, The Electric Sound of Johnny Arrow (released July 20 via MOWO! Inc.), unfurls an intoxicating array of sounds, tapping into On The Corner Miles-isms, vintage Fania salsoul, warm Brecker Brothers-esque excursions, the Latin pop of War and El Chicano, and the charged, forward thinking feel of late 60s/early 70s jazz, particularly the electric sax work of Eddie Harris and the impossible-to-place groove of Phil Woods’ European Rhythm Machine. Co-produced by Gastelum and Mocean Worker, the album rolls along layered percussion and a controlled, powered-up energy – a flowing inducement to move, to swing, to sway, aided by guest turns from Joe Russo, Brian Jordan, Zak Najor, Chris Stillwell and more.

It’s bloody sexy music, and executed so smoothly that it’s only upon further inspection that one realizes how much is actually going on. Yet, The Electric Sound of Johnny Arrow never feels overstuffed or confusingly diverse. Like Gastelum’s playing, it is exactly what it needs to be and a fantastic snapshot of a rich musical mind in full flight. (Dennis Cook)

Here’s what Gastelum had to say to our inquiries.

Cochemea Gastelum by Greg Aiello

Nickname: “Cheme” pronounced /tchem-ay/

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Listening, letting go, and in the immortal words of Fred Wesley, playing like you don’t give a fuck.

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
Charlie Parker’s “Hot House

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
Orchestre Poly-Rythmo De Contou’s “Echos Hypnotiques”

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
A drummer

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
A sweaty dance party

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
There are moments when I may seem detached or distant, but I just like to be quiet and watch sometimes.

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
The ocean

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
Sly & The Family Stone’s There’s A Riot Going On

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
Au Virage Lepic in Paris

10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
Unexpected places

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
Eating late night junk food!

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
Hmmm, probably The Beatles. My mom used to play their records all the time growing up, and I always seem to go back to their songs for some inspirado. Been on a big Stones kick lately, though.

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
Ornette Coleman having a jam session in his apartment.

Cheme will perform perform the entire solo album in its entirety on September 10th in New York City at 92Y Tribeca with ten piece band, including members of Antibalas and Budos Band.

Cochemea Gastelum Tour Dates :: Cochemea Gastelum News :: Cochemea Gastelum Concert Reviews

JamBase | Dark City
Go See Live Music!


Phosphorescent Sittin’ Down In Heaven

By: Dennis Cook

Matthew Houck by Sebastian Mynarski

Hard to place but unmistakable, there’s a profound resonance to the music of Phosphorescent, the recording moniker of Matthew Houck. With tendrils reaching back to the golden West Coast ’70s rock explosion, the grounded feel of classic Nashville, and further afield into the timeless elsewhere of Megafaun, Hiss Golden Messenger and other slippery contemporaries, Phosphorescent is deep stuff yet hardly unapproachable. One of the first descriptions I hit on for Houck’s work was that it had “a stratospheric reach that suggests a new fangled kind of country-gospel that just might reach all the black clad sad sacks who obsessively listen to Elliott Smith and Iron & Wine” (see rest of review here).

In the years since that impression his music has grown simultaneously denser and more accessible – a mighty rare dichotomy that creates an appealing push-pull for the listener, who’s made comfortable and oddly uncomfortable by turns. One floats along his stream only to bump into truthful logs and other psyche poking flotsam. Put another way, Houck makes you hum AND think, two things he excels at on Here’s To Taking It Easy (released May 11 on Dead Oceans). Abetted by his touring band – Scott Stapleton (piano), Jeffrey Bailey (bass), Christopher Marine (drums), Jesse Anderson Ainslie (guitar) and Ricky Ray Jackson (pedal steel) – the new album possesses an ease and gently tugging forward motion befitting the title, but also dustier, less polite elements than the indie rock ghetto Houck and his crew are often lumped into. Your average skinny jean wearing mope isn’t capable of pulling off lines like, “If I’m talking to you, mister, then you best be writing down what I say/ If you’re talking to me like that then you best be quickly walking away/ I can’t stand for none of this bullshit/ I came here to play.”

A few more clues to the band’s ethos and wit come from their MySpace page, which contains the slogan “Turn it On. Turn It Up. Turn Me Loose” and the description “Experimental / 2-step / Gospel.” These are the same guys who cut one of the finest tribute albums of the past decade last year, To Willie (JamBase review), a confident saunter through the Willie Nelson catalog that never genuflects too deeply and was good enough to attract the attention of the Redheaded Stranger himself, who invited them to play last year’s Farm Aid. Seeing Houck on the same stage as Willie, Neil Young, Jeff Tweedy and the other big guns behind Farm Aid just made perfect sense. That’s the strata this guy operates in, steadily turning out one quality album after another and earning his stripes in barrooms and concert halls worldwide.

JamBase had the good fortune to snag a few minutes of Matthew Houck’s time while he and his band were waiting on a flat tire. The show must go on but sometimes one does need a fresh wheel to make it happen.

JamBase: The new album has such a great title. It’s one of those cool phrases that one wonders how nobody else got to it before you.

Matthew Houck: You’re right [laughs]. I like it, too.

JamBase: It immediately, before you’ve heard a note, settles your brain into a place, and titles don’t always do that. Often they’re puzzles to be unlocked and this is a handshake that puts you at ease before you put the needle down.

Matthew Houck: I’m really glad it comes across like that because that was the title from the beginning. It was the very first thing I wrote down even before we started recording these songs. But you know how these things go, when it came to actually title this record after it was all done I, of course, spent a couple of days knocking around different themes present on the album thinking the very first thing I wrote down couldn’t possibly be the title of the album. But as it turns out, there was no question, that’s the title.

Phosphorescent Band by Miss Martha Jewelle

It situates you right away in a mindset that says this is not to be rushed; it’s to be eased into. In ways you’ve modernized the vibe of early Crosby, Stills & Nash or solo Paul Simon. You’ve found that groove but in a contemporary, non-derivative way.

There’s nothing I dislike more than throwback, regurgitated, genre-specific exercises, where people write songs like they were written in the 1920s or something. There was a specific effort – I produced it and did a lot of the engineering – to study all those records from the late 70s/early 80s. Those records have a sonic quality that’s absent from most records today, and I thought it’d be a good thing to aim for that sound, though obviously without access to all that gear.

One of the things you nail is you can actually hear the instrumentation on this album, which is something that’s been lost in much modern production, which tends to blur sounds into one mass. It’s pleasing to hear the crack of a snare drum or someone shaking bells or string strikes. It often gets shorthanded as ‘warmth’ but I don’t think that’s all that it is.

Exactly. It’s not actually warmth. I’ve gotten really enamored with engineering and the way you capture sounds. It does get shorthanded a lot as warmth but it’s not. It’s hard to explain, but there’s a separation of things and an expansion of each one of those things so they fill up the space.

I think it’s a word people are wary to use, but there’s a grandeur to those records that’s largely missing from rock ‘n’ roll these days.

I totally agree, and there’s something special about those records. There was one album I referenced a lot when thinking of the sonic universe of [Here's To Taking It Easy], and that’s Ron Wood’s [I've Got My Own Album To Do]. It is a monster of a record. There’s parts of it where the only that’s happening is an acoustic guitar, a bass and maybe a drummer pattering away, but that’s it, just three instruments, yet somehow it sounds massive. How they were able to do that is a super fascinating trick to me right now.

It’s a room filling sound, and there’s a sense of place. The music doesn’t seem disengaged from the world, it’s made somewhere tangible, which is strikingly different to modern production which makes music sound like it was done in a cleanroom. Where did you record Here’s To Taking It Easy?

We recorded the whole record with the exception of “Hej, Me I’m Light” as a band in three days at Headgear Studios in Brooklyn with this guy Alex Lipson (The Jealous Girlfriends) engineering. So, we tracked everything live and I took those tracks to my studio and used those sessions as sort of blank tape to build the actual record. So, they got manipulated and recorded over and worked on for about six months.

One thing you’ve always done well, and again on this record, is your use of the human voice. You seem to be interested in the potential of what you and others can do with vocals. You play with your voice in interesting ways and I don’t think you have a sound, per se.

Phosphorescent live

You don’t think so? I disagree. I think the human voice thing has been the common thread – to me, anyway – that makes a Phosphorescent record a Phosphorescent record.

Maybe what I mean is say as much as I love Bon Iver, a lot of the time he’s hitting one groove, whereas I think you have a lot more variety even as distinctive as your vocals are.

Sure, I can agree with that, and I think it’s only gonna get a little more diverse given the new songs that have been popping out. But I do think the vocals are the common thread to all Phosphorescent songs. They do a lot of different things to songs. They may not exactly go together from record to record but the singing is a link.

With so many artists it’s really easy to trace their lineage – this band plus this songwriter plus this band equals the sum total. I dig that I can’t do that with you.

For me, it’s really hard to trace things backwards like that. I’m not aware of any specific influences from inside [myself]. I’m drawn to music that has that one little extra thing inside it. Unique isn’t the word because uniqueness isn’t that important, but heart or something. You can just kinda tell when something’s doing that one extra thing.

You frequently capture emotion and heartfelt intent on tape. It’s clear through your singing and the general atmosphere of your music that “one extra thing” is present. It’s ineffable but it’s certainly tangible and often most apparently in your vocals.

I think I’ve learned a lot about singing over the years. At some point, even as much as you’ve stubbornly ignored it, you learn ways to control your voice and little techniques from playing and touring so much.

However, your vocal style and production in general presents challenges to adapting the songs to the live setting.

There’s no challenge because by and large we let go of the recorded versions and the live versions are what they are. Very rarely do we even try to reproduce something from a record. When I’d tour solo there’s only so much you can do by yourself, so I’d fall back to the core and play with various effects pedals and the like. But now with this band – who are seriously some of the best musicians alive, in my opinion – we generally toss the recorded versions aside and just see what we can do live. It’s a moment and we’re in it.

Phosphorescent performs tonight at the Bottom of the Hill in San Francisco with J Tillman and Little Wings. Find full Phosphorescent tour dates here.

Phosphorescent Tour Dates :: Phosphorescent News :: Phosphorescent Concert Reviews

JamBase | Here, Taking It Easy
Go See Live Music!


The Jonas Brothers Cover The Beatles “Drive My Car” [VIDEO]

You know you’ve made it big in showbiz, when music icon Sir Paul McCartney personally asks you to play a song by The Beatles at an exclusive event at The White House. (Unless you’re Justin Bieber, in which case you’ll know you’ve hit the “Big Time” when you can’t set foot in any mall in America [...]

Paul Simon, Art Garfunkel show up in person at Central Park tribute

Singer songwriter duo Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel showed up in person at a Central Park, New York tribute concert where they performed with celebrity fans.
The tribute concert on June 8 saw more than 30 artists showing up and performing.
Brendan Benson, Ben Gibbard, St. Vincent, Joan Osborne, Marc Cohn and Shawn Colvin played Simon & [...]

Taylor Swift honoured at BMI Pop Music Awards

Taylor Swift has won yet another accolade as she was honoured at the BMI Pop Music Awards in Beverly Hills on Tuesday – the ‘Song of the Year’ award.
This makes Swift the youngest recipient of the award, which she won for her song ‘Love Story’ – just one day after she received the Artist of [...]

7 Stars of the 60s and How they Look Now

In their heyday, they had it all: looks, fame, money, talent. Now, no one can take away their genius (however faded), often their purses have grown fat with royalties, and though their fame may have wavered at times, they’re still household names. As for their looks, well that’s another story. Rock n roll lifestyles, creeping [...]

Vampire Weekend | 03.20 | Colorado

Words by: Justin Gillett | Images by: Stewart Oksenhorn

Vampire Weekend :: 03.20.10 :: Downtown Aspen :: Aspen, CO

Ezra Koenig – Vampire Weekend :: 03.20 :: Aspen, CO

Opting to further pursue its characteristic sound, rather than totally reinvent itself, Vampire Weekend has managed to come fully realized with its recent sophomore effort Contra (JamBase review). After the band dropped its eponymous first album, everyone scrutinized the group and couldn’t stop comparing the band’s sound to Graceland-era Paul Simon and the Talking Heads. But with Contra, the band has managed to rise above the myriad of other New York-based indie rock acts out there and define itself with a representative sound that’s well polished, undoubtedly from time on the road.

During the band’s westward jaunt on its tour in support of the new album, the Columbia University educated four-piece stopped off in Aspen, Colorado for a Bud Light sponsored free show in the heart of the town’s downtown district. Seeing the band perform in freezing temperatures, during winter months, was an interesting way to see the group, and even though all four guys were obviously cold as hell, they stuck it out and played a rowdy show.

The band started off with “White Sky,” an upbeat number that perfectly encapsulates the best elements off Contra. The group’s penchant for Afrobeat style rhythms was imminently apparent with the pulsating kick drum, and it definitely inspired a livid reaction amongst the crowd. Not paying a dime for admission, as well as the show being an all ages event, created a festival atmosphere and people were getting crowd surfed from the first note played to the last.

Feeling the bitter chill of the Rocky Mountain air and energy of the rambunctious audience, lead singer Ezra Koenig quipped, “Perfect weather for an outdoor show, huh?” Then, before falling into the polyrhythmic friendly tune “Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa,” he said, “If this next song is a little sloppy, it’s because our fingers are frozen.” The band was clearly feeling the strain of the 20-degree temperatures, but they soldiered on, playing admirably and keeping the audience’s attention. The slightly botched and unrefined instrumental solos created a more noisy sound that seemed to rile-up the crowd and work to the band’s advantage.

Chris Tomson – Vampire Weekend :: 03.20 :: Aspen, CO

After tearing through a few high-energy songs, the band shifted direction and opted to cover the Ben E. King soul standard “Stand by Me.” The doo-wop style song gave the audience an opportunity to breath, and by the second verse the ballad had turned into a sing-along between the band and the crowd.

Picking things back up with “Diplomat’s Son,” it became apparent after watching each member contribute a unique tribal style chant to the song, that every dude in the band is more than capable of pulling his own weight. Koenig is the obvious chieftain with his lead guitar playing and quasi-falsetto voice, but Rostam Batmanglij demonstrated his diversity as a musician as he switched between carefully calculated keyboard arpeggios and delicate rhythm guitar arrangements, while Chris Baio kept up the bottom end on his bass, and drummer Chris Tomson added rhythmic flourishes and impressive one-man syncopation quirks. Playing together, these musicians really complement each other and it’s nice not to see one of them hog the spotlight or blatantly call attention to themselves.

The band closed out its set with one of the most accessible songs off Contra, “Giving Up The Gun,” but Vampire Weekend seemed cold, tired and worn out by this point, and the tune didn’t really live up to the grandiose quality of its studio version. Besides not hitting his marks on guitar, Koenig’s voice seemed jarred and off kilter. The song came off very poorly and when all four members hit their last note, they left the stage with the audience questioning the strength of the band.

Luckily, the band mustered enough courage to brave the elements a little longer and got back onstage, thanking the crowd and saying, “This is by far the coldest show we’ve ever played.” The three-song encore was highlighted by “Oxford Comma,” one of the group’s best known songs and a tune that has become a sort of anthem for the band. Though there were rousing cheers, Vampire Weekend was clearly stoked to get out of the bitter cold, and when the band left the stage, the audience seemed just as excited as the musicians to retreat from the piercing chill.

Vampire Weekend Tour Dates :: Vampire Weekend News :: Vampire Weekend Concert Reviews

JamBase | Rocky
Go See Live Music!


Snoe.down Photos & Review | 03.26-03.28 | VT

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”0″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=10″);}); moe. | Snoe.down 2010 | Rutland, VT moe. celebrates Snoe.down 2010 in Rutland, VT with Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings, The Bridge, Moonalice, The McLovins and more… View Photos

Words by: Bill Clifford | Images by: Rob Chapman

Snoe.down :: 03.26.10-03.28.10 :: Killington Resort & Spartan Arena :: Rutland, VT


Sharon Jones and The Dap-Kings

Live music fans celebrated the arrival of spring in New England with the return of Snoe.down, a winter sports and music festival, hosted by
moe., at Killington Ski Resort. A glorious weekend full of inspiring artist and the wonders of nature, for many this was the start of festival season.

Friday, March 26

The Bridge was the second act to perform on Friday at Bear Mountain. This mid-Atlantic band has been garnering quite a following over the last several years at festivals large and small, and I come away more impressed with each performance. Guitarist and lead singer Chris Jacobs has a sultry, honeyed voice that carries some of Lowell George’s soul. Fans were getting down to the New Orleans boogie of “Old White Lightning 95,” led by Mark Brown‘s ivory tickling. And the Southern jazz of “Bury My Bones In Baltimore” featured the horn of Patrick Rainey. Once again, The Bridge proved to be one of the most alluring yet under appreciated bands on the circuit.

Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings were the opening act at Spartan Arena on Friday night and played to a thin crowd that slowly sauntered in. The Dap-Kings, an eight-piece ensemble, took the stage sans Jones and warmed up the crowd with some instrumentals. But the show really got hot when Jones, a stout, fiery performer, lit up the stage. She promenaded from one wing of the stage to the other, enticing the crowd to sing along with her. When raising her powerful, gospel voice, she sang with deep emotion, writhing and contorting her body. Jones and the Dap-Kings are reviving the classic sounds of Motown and Stax recording artists, and Jones is clearly a leader of the scene.

moe. is currently celebrating its twentieth anniversary and have been performing shows filled with classic moe. songs since Halloween. Friday night’s first set was a bit by the numbers; not boring but nothing really stood out. “Mexico” made a fine opener, warming up both the crowd and the band as vocalist/guitarist Al Schnier‘s fingers raced up and down the neck of his guitar. Bassist Rob Derhak‘s pop nugget “Captain America” was played in a faster time signature than normal, but then slowed for a long, improvised segue into “Four,” a meandering dirge. The set closed with an upbeat note on “Shoot First,” featuring percussionist Jim Loughlin on MalletKat. That found its way into fan favorite “Moth,” with guitarist Chuck Garvey‘s searing notes drawing an ovation from the arena, about three quarters full.


Chuck Garvey – moe. :: 03.26 :: Snoe.down 2010

Set two had a bit more to offer the average moe. fan. The lovely ballad “Faker” began slow and mellow but picked up the tempo later, led by Garvey’s lead guitar bending notes. It then busted into a rarely played verse of the song, an upbeat, funky interlude that featured triple vocal harmonies from Garvey, Derhak and Schnier. Another bust out was their cover of James Bouchard’s “Cape Cod Girls,” played here with a slow, rumbling bass line and the cadent drumming of Vinnie Amico, which rolled right into “Water,” highlighted by Garvey’s mercurial guitar solo. As “Hector’s Pillow” bounced seamlessly into “Timmy Tucker,” the crowd sensed a set closer and began to sway and sing along in the high point of the evening. Mid-song, moe. brought the tempo to a lull, giving both the band and the fans a moment to breath, and then led back into a rousing peak by Loughlin’s MalletKat. The two-song encore of “She Sends Me” and “Spine of a Dog” was played short and sweet due to the curfew.


Saturday, March 27

I began Saturday at the K1 Lodge, with vaulted ceilings, exposed beams, stunning views of the slopes, and The McLovins onstage. The Saturday crowd was noticeably larger than the previous day, and the barroom was at standing room only capacity as the band began with “Milktoast Man.” The musical growth in this teen trio was evident immediately. “Deep Monster Trance” was announced as a new song on the band’s upcoming full-length CD, and is every bit as up and down in tempo as its title suggests. A long, improvised guitar solo from Jeff Howard, with languid notes drawn out on a whammy bar stirred the crowd. The McLovins also premiered their cover of Paul Simon’s “Diamonds on the Soles of Her Shoes,” which enticed the crowd to shake their butts and move their feet. These youngsters have come a long way in a short time.


The McLovins :: Snoe.down 2010

Over at Bear Mountain, we caught the second half of Hot Day at the Zoo. Again, the bar was wall-to-wall packed. There was an absolute, insatiable energy coming from the jamgrass quartet onstage, and I was immediately struck with the string bending of the mandolin and banjo players, as well as the group’s tight harmonies. While there was no percussion player, there was enough foot stomping and guitar slapping to make up for the lack of drums. The faster and harder this band played, the more the crowd hollered and danced along. HDATZ certainly gained more than one new fan from their performance at Snoe.down.


From the lodge it was a short walk to an outdoor stage for an afternoon performance from moe. After welcoming fans to Snoe.down, Schnier quipped, “This is fantastic. It’s a whole lot better than playing in single digits on Whiteface Mountain,” referencing a frigid outdoor performance in Lake Placid at the previous Snoe.down in 2006. Today, there was a crystal blue sky above and temps were easily in the high 60s to 70s. From my vantage point ten rows back, Chuck side, I glanced upwards towards the slope at a the surreal scene: a sea of heads bobbing and shaking, fans in t-shirts and sunglasses, skiers and boarders shredding the slopes.


Amico’s rat-a-tat-tat drumming began “St. Augustine” and immediately the horde was set in motion. On the pop nugget “OkayAlright,” Derhak could be heard laughing as he sang the words, “Smoking joints in the parking lot,” bringing its usual roar from the crowd. “Akimbo” was a rare afternoon bust out. Schnier and Garvey traded lead and melody parts before Derhak stepped up for a bass solo. Not to be outdone, Amico and Loughlin hammered at their respective kits behind it all.


moe. & family :: 03.27 :: Snoe.down 2010

Derhak drew a laugh when he noted that someone had “just wiped in the half-pipe!” With dusk settling, “Happy Hour Hero” was an obligatory choice late in the set, which segued into “Seat of my Pants.” Late in the song it seemed to take on the sound of an ’80s metal band as Schnier scratched a pick along his strings while Garvey wailed. As quick as flipping a light switch, moe. moved into “Sensory Deprivation Bank,” one of its oldest songs, to close the set. Ever the family values band, moe. invited their kids to dance to the encore, “Down Boy,” where they playfully laughed and interacted with the kids and fans.


Assembly of Dust was the opening act at Spartan Arena on Saturday night, and initially took the stage to a disappointingly sparse crowd. AOD opened with the sultry “Sinner,” one of bandleader/lead singer/songwriter Reid Genauer‘s oldest songs, going back to his days with Vermont’s Strangefolk. Lead guitarist Andy Terrell‘s dulcet harmony tones stood out on “Sinner” while the band’s three-part harmony vocals shined on “Edges” and “Telling Sue,” the latter highlighting their ’60s pop influences. “Whistle Clock” was a driving rock song with lots of room for improvisation, and Terrell’s guitar cried while the rhythm section of drummer Andy Herrick and bassist John Leccese was thunderous. AOD closed where it started: “Sometimes,” another gem from Genauer’s Strangefolk days. Again, Terrell proved himself to be a versatile sideman, going from mellow and hushed to wailing when needed. The crowd had grown since the band began and gave rousing applause as AOD left the stage.


Railroad Earth followed AOD and their set was a highlight of the weekend. Opener “Mighty River” is a lovely folk melody laced with Tim Carbone‘s eloquent violin. Like many mighty rivers, the tune has a meandering yet deliberate tempo, which flowed directly into “Like A Buddha,” which featured sweet flute interludes from Andy Goessling. The gorgeous acoustic ode to breaking down walls, “Bird in a House” was filled with sweet violin and mandolin, a lovely waltz that got feet moving, and the more straight ahead rock protest song “Warhead Boogie” kept the energy at a high. The rollicking “Long Way To Go” brought the set to a rousing close, and left fans eager to get down with some moe. Lest I forget, Railroad Earth’s new bassist, Andrew Altman was stellar the whole set. You’d have never known he was a recent addition to the band based on his playing.


moe. Sunday Brunch :: 03.28 :: Snoe.down 2010

moe. saved its best for Saturday night, beginning with “Wind It Up,” featuring Loughlin’s MalletKat fills peppered throughout. He’s one of the most talented multi-instrumentalists on the scene, but I pay special attention when he tinkers away on the MalletKat. Mid-set, the band revived its cover of The Meters‘ “Cissy Strut,” not played since 2001, sandwiched inside their own “Stranger Than Fiction,” and Derhak and Amico laid down a thick funk for Garvey’s melodious guitar flourishes. This was the highlight of the first set, which then closed with a long, improvisational excursion through “Plane Crash,” a high-energy rager that left fans exhausted but eager for set two.


From that high point forward moe. never really mellowed. The second set was an upbeat run through classic moe. beginning with “Threw It All Away.” The jaunty highway song “The Road” transitioned seamlessly into the funk-rooted “Lazurus,” where Schnier’s scorching guitar swells seemed to float through the dense din of the arena crowd. Jason Huffer‘s lights illuminated the arena coming back into “The Road,” as violet, yellow and royal blues splashed on the ceiling and walls. His lighting throughout was fantastic, but one could certainly lose themselves in the dither of colors at that point.


I heard the opening guitar and bass strains to my personal favorite moe. song and moved into the horde to get lost in “Opium.” While some may find it a dark, heavy song, I love to set myself adrift, eyes shut, on the soulful, slinky groove and mellow spaces of this particular tune. Garvey’s swirling slide guitar was a purple haze and Derhak’s deeply resonating bass and passionately bellowed vocals filled the arena. Coming down, they moved seamlessly into a carousing “32 Things” to close, drawing a cheer from the crowd happy to have something to dance to again. Up close for this jam, I took notice of the interaction between Loughlin and Amico, their heads nodding in agreement as Loughlin moved from drums to shakers to tambourines, as the set ended on an emotional high. After wishing a happy birthday to Loughlin’s dad Bill, moe. encored with a soulful rendition of Little Feat‘s “Willin,’” and then ended the evening with a rambunctious run through “New York City.”


moe. closed the weekend with a 10 a.m. brunch for V.I.P. ticket holders, though, unfortunately, this critic wasn’t privy. And despite Leroy Justice and Red Rooster both being booked on Sunday afternoon, there was a long drive to Connecticut after an exhausting but joyful weekend. moe. seems to have found a wonderful new home for Snoe.down in beautiful Central Vermont, where some of the kindest folks graciously welcomed us moe.rons.

moe. Tour Dates :: moe. News :: moe. Concert Reviews

JamBase | Sloping
Go See Live Music!


Albums of the Week: February 5-11

JamBase Albums of the Week | February 5-February 11, 2010

Dennis’ Pick of the Week
Galactic: Ya-Ka-May (Anti)

These sons of New Orleans have done their city proud by honoring Armstrong, Prof. Longhair, and other innovators and crafting a distinct, resolutely modern collection that successfully incorporates ancestral elements. Less hip-hop oriented than its predecessor, 2007′s From the Corner to the Block, this announces with authority that music continues to evolve in the Big Easy, absorbing the crispness and edge prevalent on today’s charts and folding it into the city’s irresistible tub-thumping, primal swing. Ya-Ka-May (arriving February 9) differentiates itself from most other modern soul/funk by retaining a human feel, often felt in the crackling rawness of guest vocalists like Allen Toussaint, Big Chief Bo Dollis and Irma Thomas and big band largess of drum stud Stanton Moore. In these settings, the old hands school today’s chart toppers and Galactic themselves reveal what a sham the bloodless, Pro-Tools, Auto-Tuned mainstream really is. Bangers like “Liquor Pang,” “Dark Water” and “Double It” are ripe to go toe-to-toe with anything Timbaland or Lil’ Wayne serve up, except these sweat and grunt in a way that sidesteps the factory produced sterility of most mass consumption singles. One longs to see this entire assemblage tour as a massive revue that would showcase the interlocking nature of New Orleans music throughout several generations. Ya-Ka-May is a juggernaut of fat grooves and slinky sensibilities that announces that New Orleans is alive and well, at least when Galactic is the custodian of its traditions. (Dennis Cook)

Ron’s Pick of the Week
Peter Gabriel: Scratch My Back (EMI)

If there is anything to be learned about Peter Gabriel in the 40-plus years he has been in the pop eye, it’s the fact that he is definitely one advanced-minded Englishman. Whether it be pushing the boundaries of rock ‘n’ roll theatre as the Fox-headed, flute playing frontman of Genesis, with his music videos in the 1980s as a solo act, or the art of the film score with his stunning soundtracks to such critically acclaimed films as The Last Temptation of Christ and Rabbit Proof Fence over the last 20 years, the man hasn’t seen a glass ceiling he didn’t want to throw a bowling ball through. So, leave it up to PG to reinvent the concept of the covers album as well, which is exactly what he’s done with the haunting Scratch My Back (arriving February 16 in the U.K. and March 2 in the U.S.), his first proper solo album since 2002′s Up. With nothing more than a piano and a string section, Gabriel handpicks a dozen songs – six from like-minded contemporaries David Bowie, Paul Simon, Neil Young, Lou Reed, Randy Newman and David Byrne, and six from some of the newer acts he admires like Radiohead, Bon Iver, Elbow, Regina Spektor, The Magnetic Fields and Arcade Fire – and by the power of his unmistakable rasp, makes every one of them entirely his own. Most of his choices fit swimmingly with the stripped down format, most notably Bon Iver’s haunting “Flume,” Young’s “Philadelphia,” Reed’s “The Power of the Heart” and surprisingly, “Listening Wind,” a deep cut from Talking Heads’ Remain In Light. But it’s his take on Simon’s Graceland hit “The Boy in the Bubble,” substituting the song’s quasi-Zydeco buoyancy with a downright somber arrangement that really brings out the paranoia in the song’s Orwellian message that seems more fitting now than it did in 1987. Following Scratch My Back is I’ll Scratch Yours, where the artists featured here have their way with the Peter Gabriel catalog. Thom Yorke is allegedly already on board and planning to record “Wallflower” from Gabriel’s 1982 album Security. And one could only hope Randy Newman comes through with a full-on Basin Street run through “Sledgehammer.” (Ron Hart)

Salvador Santana: Keyboard City (Quannum)

The label that brought us Blackalicious, Lyrics Born and other bright lights in today’s funk/hip-hop scene scores again with Santana’s solo debut, a swirling analog hot tub of muddled Latinismo (a la War), lilting disco, ’70s Herbie Hancock-isms, the brighter side of Gil Scott-Heron & Brian Jackson and video game bloops. Nuggets like “Don’t Even Care” and “This Day (Belongs To You)” are sonic sunshine and ooh, don’t it feel good. Helped out by Money Mark, Gza and Del the Funky Homosapien, Keyboard City (released February 2) is a lovingly stirred concoction that goes down as sweetly as home brewed lemonade on a thermometer poppin’ afternoon. (DC)

King Crimson: Lizard: 40th Anniversary Edition (Panegyric/Discipline Global Mobile)

The 40th anniversary remaster campaign of British progressive rock titans King Crimson, helmed with great detail by group founder and resident guitar genius Robert Fripp and self-anointed uber-fan Steven Wilson of Porcupine Tree, with the deluxe edition of Crimson’s third and most challenging album, Lizard (released January 12). In his scholarly liner notes, Fripp derides his group’s 1970 work as “unsatisfactory” and “joyless”. But thanks to the skillful care of Wilson’s loving revamp, which features bonus material and a DVD-A containing the album in lossless 5.1 surround sound stereo, he renewed the doubtful author’s faith in its unprecedented fusion of classical, free jazz and experimental rock. And if you never quite took to the most misunderstood monster of the King Crimson canon like you did with, say Red or Discipline, allow this definitive version to school you on the brilliance of this legendary band’s transitional classic. (RH)

The Wishing Tree: Ostara (Eagle)

“It’s time for eyes to open now/ It’s time to raise the dead.” Uttered by the honeyed, effervescent voice of Hannah Stobart and given further lift by Marillion guitarist Steve Rothery (who also produced and engineered), these lines are indicative of the big ideas and striking beauty of this prog-pop outing, which begs comparisons to All About Eve, Jane Siberry and frothier Peter Gabriel. Unabashedly romantic and sweetly melodic, Ostara resonates with Rothery’s Fish-era Marillion work infused with female energies. A fine, lovingly sculpted second outing by this pair (released January 19). (DC)

Pierced Arrows: Descending Shadows (VICE)

Garage punk fans the world over were rightfully shocked when Fred and Toody Cole unexpectedly put their longtime group Dead Moon out to pasture in 2006, just six months after the release of Sub Pop’s stellar two-disc anthology, Echoes of the Past (JamBase review) chronicling the Oregon mainstays’ two-decade-strong run. But as quick as they were to shoot the Moon, they returned just as quickly in the form of Pierced Arrows, whose only significant change was the replacement of longtime drummer Andrew Loomis with Portland punker Kelly Hallliburton, whose father played with Fred in the ’60s. Descending Shadows (released February 2) is the Coles’ second album under the new moniker, and finds them as visceral in their AARP years as they were when they first started rattling cages in the Pacific Northwest 20-odd years ago. (RH)

Big Smith: Roots, Shoots & Wings (Mayapple)

It’d be very easy for a group with song titles like “Toted A Load” and “My Overalls (Don’t Fit Me Anymore)” to be jokey, just another tongue-in-cheek country act like Nashville pumps out with alarming regularity. Happily, Big Smith is rootsy as hell and slathered in hot jazz technique, pinches of dissonance, an earthy vocal mix that’s part bluegrass & part The Band, and a good sense of bittersweet humor. If anything, they remind one of early killer Jimmy Buffett and the ’70s Outlaw Country gang, right down to Willy’s penchant for swing. Damn fine band, sweet lil’ album (arriving February 9). (DC)

Black Cobra: Chronomega (Southern Lord)

Though only two players deep, San Francisco’s Black Cobra play their unique brand of sludgy punk-metal with the precision and fury of the four-to-five man Bay Area thrash bands that preceded them 25 years ago. Their fourth album and Southern Lord debut shows ex-Cavity guitarist/vocalist Jason Landrian and one-time Acid King drummer Rafael Martinez can throw down their trademark Death Angel-cum-Melvins style riff attacks. Chronomega also shows how well these guys can space out a la Sunn 0))) and Earth as well. (RH)

Field Music: (Measure) (Memphis Industries)

Following a short three-year break that saw the Brothers Brewis record a pair of respective solo albums that barely held up to their work as a group, Field Music makes a momentous return to the world stage in 2010 with a magnificent double LP that explores the darker edges of the English duo’s Steely Dan-gone-indie-rock sound. (Measure) (arriving February 16) finds the Brewis boys challenging themselves by adding prog-jazz phrasing, rhythm-defying time signatures and embellishments of guitar fuzz to their effortless harmonies, all married perfectly across this 20 song thread about the human condition. Few newer bands could pull off a double album with such panache, and Field Music stay in line with the age-old tradition of making theirs a masterpiece. (RH)

Lionel Loueke: Mwaliko (Blue Note)

Following up on his 2007 star-making Herbie Hancock-produced debut Karibu, West African guitar lion Lionel Loueke pays homage to his motherland on his second Blue Note offering. Here, Loueke tests his dazzling fusion of playing, rooted in the fretwork rulebooks of Jim Hall and King Sunny Ade, against a series of intimate duets with the likes of vocalist Angelique Kidjo (who hails from the guitarist’s home nation of Benin), singer/bassists Esperanza Spalding and Richard Bona, as well as promising young jazz drummer Marcus Gilmore, the grandson of the immortal Roy Haynes. However, Mwaliko‘s true gems are three new tracks featuring his longtime trio rounded out by Massimo Biolcati and drummer Ferenc Nemeth, whose seamless interplay is unmatched in 21st century jazz. (RH)

Various Artists: Psych Bites: Australian Acid Freak Rock -1967-1974 (Vol. 1) (Past & Present)

If there is anything we learned from AC/DC, The Birthday Party and Lubricated Goat, it’s that the Australian continent shows no fear in displaying its collective ability to get loud. So it should come to no surprise that Oz’s surprisingly little-known late ’60s/early ’70s psychedelic rock scene was equally as brain melting. Compiled by master freak rock archivist Psychomania for Bevis Frond frontman Nick Salomon’s Past & Present imprint, Psych Bites (released February 2) compiles 20 super heavy, mega-rare artifacts from Australia and New Zealand’s second and third wave freak rock movements, a true collector’s bin of bands you’ve probably never heard of but should like Pirana, Long Grass, Flake, Chook, Freshwater and The Dave Miller Set, to name a few. Dig it! (RH)


Ladysmith Black Mambazo Tour

LADYSMITH BLACK MAMBAZO RETURNS TO U.S. WITH 2010 TOUR

Ladysmith Black Mambazo

Ladysmith Black Mambazo, “South Africa’s long-running musical treasure” (New York Times), returns to the U.S. in 2010, bringing the nine-man a cappella group’s high energy live show to over 40 cities nationwide, including two dates in New York City. The group will perform songs from their 2009 Grammy Award-winning album Ilembe, in addition to selections from their wide catalog.

“There is an honesty and integrity in their music that illuminates the best parts of humanity,” notes the Associated Press. “Using their majestic voices and nothing else,” adds the San Francisco Chronicle, “[Ladysmith Black Mambazo] produces a full orchestra of sound.”

The group marries the intricate rhythms and harmonies of their native South African musical traditions to the sounds and sentiments of Christian gospel music, garnering accolades worldwide and solidifying their identity as a cultural force. As Billboard explains, “Ladysmith is proof that music knows no boundaries.”

Over its forty-year career, Ladysmith Black Mambazo has earned three Grammy awards and received over 15 Grammy nominations, in addition to a Tony Award, and even an Oscar nomination. They’ve performed for kings, queens, presidents and popes. They accompanied Nelson Mandela when he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, and also recorded with Paul Simon, Stevie Wonder, Michael Jackson, Dolly Parton, Melissa Etheridge, Sarah McLachlan, Josh Groban, among many others.

Tour Dates:

01/31/10 Sun Hill Auditorium Ann Arbor, MI

02/03/10 Wed Highline Ballroom New York, NY

02/04/10 Thu B.B. King Blues Club New York, NY

02/05/10 Fri Colonial Theater Bethlehem, NH

02/06/10 Sat Sanders Theater Cambridge, MA

02/07/10 Sun Mahaiwe Theater Great Barrington, MA

02/10/10 Wed Western Illinois University macomb, IL

02/11/10 Thu West Side Theatre Gary, IN

02/12/10 Fri McAninch Arts Center at College of DuPage Glen Ellyn, IL

02/13/10 Sat Old Town School of Folk Music Chicago, IL

02/14/10 Sun Sheldon Concert Hall St. Louis, MO

02/16/10 Tue Jesse Auditorium Columbia, MO

02/18/10 Thu Bethel College Newton, KS

02/19/10 Fri Mccain Auditorium Manhattan, KS

02/20/10 Sat Walton Arts Center Fayetteville, AR

02/23/10 Tue Finney Chapel Oberlin, OH

02/24/10 Wed Akron Civic Theater Akron, OH

02/25/10 Thu Goodnight Theater Franklin, KY

02/27/10 Sat Avalon Theatre Easton, MD

02/28/10 Sun Byham Theater Pittsburgh, PA

03/02/10 Tue Mahaffey Theater at the Progress Energy Center for the Arts St. Petersburg, FL

03/04/10 Thu Winston-Salem State University Winston-Salem, NC

03/05/10 Fri Strathmore North Bethesda, MD

03/06/10 Sat Washington PAC Olympia, WA

03/08/10 Mon Benaroya Hall Seattle, WA

03/10/10 Wed Montalvo Arts Center Saratoga, CA

03/11/10 Thu Congregation Sherith Israel San Francisco, CA

03/12/10 Fri Beckman Auditorium Pasadena, CA

03/13/10 Sat Anthology San Diego, CA

03/14/10 Sun Centennial Hall Tucson, AZ

03/16/10 Tue Newman Center for the Performing Arts Denver, CO

03/17/10 Wed Lincoln Center Performance Hall Fort Collins, CO

03/18/10 Thu Popejoy Hall | UNM Albuquerque, NM

03/19/10 Fri Avalon Theatre Grand Junction, CO

03/20/10 Sat Peerys Egyptian Theater Ogden, UT

03/23/10 Tue Emerson Center for the Arts Bozeman, MT

03/24/10 Wed University Theatre Missoula, MT

03/25/10 Thu Bing Crosby Theatre Spokane, WA

03/26/10 Fri Broadway Center for the Arts Tacoma, WA

03/27/10 Sat McIntyre Hall Mount Vernon, WA

03/28/10 Sun Ross Ragland Theater Klamath Falls, OR

03/30/10 Tue John G. Shedd Institute for the Arts Eugene, OR

Ladysmith Black Mambazo perform “Homeless” at the Nobel Peace Concert:


Albums of the Week: January 15-21

JamBase Albums of the Week | January 15-January 21, 2010

Spoon: Transference (Merge)

Three years following the so-so Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga, Spoon return triumphantly with what could very well go down as the best album of their careers. With Transference (arriving January 19), the Austin, TX-based band chose to produce themselves, resulting in a piano-driven classic that perfectly pitches frontman Britt Daniel‘s presumed desire to transplant Joe Jackson’s debonair new waver into Ray Davies’ Waterloo sunset. From the odd time signatures of opener “Is Love Forever?” to the Rundgren-esque balladry of “Goodnight Laura” to the Amy Heckerling teen dream rave-up “Got Nuffin,” this is a brilliant zigzag through one of the most genius minds in modern pop songwriting executed by some of indie rock’s most reputable elder statesmen. (Ron Hart)

Dave Rawlings Machine: A Friend of a Friend (Acony)

Gently massaged modern folk comes no better than this solo debut from longtime Gillian Welch foil. Rawlings has a pure, incisive voice similar to Johnny Irion, a lil’ on the sweet side, perfect for the material, which includes a heartrending “Cortez The Killer” melded to Conor Oberst’s “Method Acting” and a pile of rib-sticking originals. This taps into the bounce and innate gentility of folk music, pouring out music that’s cooling, refreshing, and quite satisfying, if somewhat orthodox. (Dennis Cook)

Vampire Weekend: Contra (XL)

Who would have thought that it would take the music of four well-to-do, boat-shoed preps from NYC to make the sounds of Paul Simon’s 1987 yuppie, world pop classic Graceland cool in the eyes of today’s indie rock youth brigade? For the follow-up to their heavily hyped 2007 debut, VW doesn’t stray from its successful formula so much as improve upon it. Songs like “Horchata” and “White Sky” smack of a band bristling with growth and experience without losing their distinct flavor. However, when these guys do take a few left-turns, particularly within the context of the surfed-out post punk of “Cousins” and the warm utilization of Auto-Tune on frontman Ezra Koenig‘s vocals on the dancehall-inflected “California English,” it goes to show these dudes aren’t one trick ponies, either. (RH)

Jim Campilongo: Orange (Blue Hen)

Simply stunning – an album instrumental music fans will likely quickly salute as a classic. Touching on the streams unleashed by Roy Buchanan, Les Paul, Jeff Beck, Wes Montgomery and Jimmy Bryant, Campilongo shows why he’s one of the most revered six-stringers alive here. The flexible, wholly engaging core trio of Campilongo, Stephan Crump (acoustic bass), and Tony Mason (drums) is cleanly captured by producer Anton Fier, and Leah Siegel offers fab vocal turns on inspired covers of The Stooges’ “No Fun” and the Stones’ “No Expectations.” Orange (arriving February 16) bursts with succulent playing and juicy compositions, an ear-snagging winner in every regard. (DC)

Gilded Palace of Sin: You Break Our Hearts, We’ll Tear Yours Out (Central Control)

England’s Gilded Palace of Sin might harbor a name that recalls the hazy California country rock of the classic album it was christened after, but once you dig into the gothic dustbowl dirge of this promising trio, you will hear far more Death Valley than Laurel Canyon. You Break Our Hearts, We’ll Tear Yours Out (released January 12), Gilded’s debut album on former Magazine/Bad Seeds bassist Barry Adamson’s Central Control imprint, harbors a flavor born of Nick Cave’s fixation with the American West and old Sergio Leone films, coupled with an arsenal of instruments including banjo, Theremin, glockenspiel, jaw harp, ukulele, music harp and computers underscoring a din of anthemic electric guitars. The results are akin to a UK version of Black Heart Procession, and offer promising signs of things to come from this exciting new band. (RH)

Goose Creek Symphony: Head For The Hills (Bo Records)

Long before there was slamgrass, nu-grass, etc. there was Goose Creek Symphony. Celebrating their 40th anniversary in 2010, these free spirited, under-sung folk-rock/Americana pioneers continue to introduce their sweet catalog to a new generation with this reissue of a 1975 ace. Goose Creek’s ability to weave together bardic threads with something slippery, earthy and lysergic is on full display on Hills, which offers up some of their best originals alongside clever takes on “Goin’ Down The Road” and “Will The Circle Be Unbroken.” The word “timeless” is used too liberally but this music feels as vibrant today as when it was cut. (DC)

Kanye West: VH-1 Storytellers (GOOD-Def Jam)

If it had aired in its entirety, Kanye West’s memorable performance on VH1′s Storytellers would have clocked in at three hours, which saw the Chicago rap wunderkind ramble on like a swaggered out Lou Reed circa Take No Prisoners and riffing on everything from God to Chris Brown to Radiohead. The CD version (released January 5) of this event whittles down the already truncated 90 minute broadcast (made available on the DVD portion of this two-disc set) to a solid hour. But luckily, the final track list concentrates heavily on material from Kanye’s vastly misunderstood 2008 existential Auto-tune masterpiece 808s and Heartbreak, which was still in the process of being recorded around the time of this show’s taping. Say what you will about this guy, but few entertainers in pop music today can spin this kind of gold out of their own emotional complexities quite like Kanye. (RH)

Corey Harris: blu.black (Telarc)

It’s alright for Harris to use the phrase, “The blacker the berry, the sweeter the juice,” but most of us should probably refrain. This highly Afrocentric release continues Harris’ Motherland thrust but in a less academic way than recently. These might be the most sugary tunes about slavery and social disconnection ever penned or produced. Harris has embraced his inner Soul Man (who dances with African, Jamaican and Americana partners here), and the results are surprisingly effective, though you may find yourself pulled out of the groove periodically if you’re a honky like myself. White guilt is a bitch. (DC)

Spacemen 3: The Perfect Prescription (Fire)

One of the great albums of the late 1980s gets the definitive edition it so richly deserves courtesy of UK imprint Fire Records as part of its critically acclaimed reissue series of the Spacemen 3 catalog. 1987′s The Perfect Prescription, long considered to be the influential English band’s finest hour, is presented here in a gorgeous LP-style package that tacks on a pair of instrumental b-sides to the original nine-song tracklist, along with a rich remastering job that really brings out the hallucinogenic pulchritude of the album, whose sound is said to have been constructed to parrot the cerebral highs and lows of an ecstasy trip. Any Spiritualized fans out there looking to get into Spacemen 3 for the first time, your best bet would be to start off with this marvel, which rings closest to the style Jason Pierce took with him to construct the massive beauty of his celebrated space rock outfit. (RH)

Major Stars: Return to Form (Drag City)

Boston’s premier psychedelic rockists turn a textbook music critic cliche into a monolith of electrifying riffery with their seventh album. The group’s second release (arriving January 26) since signing to Drag City and employing former LA Drugs frontwoman Sandra Barrett finds them streamlining their sound to craft their most accessible effort to date. Barrett’s blues mama howl provides the perfect foil for the group’s massive triple-guitar assault, which really comes into the fray on cuts like the near-eight-minute “Black Point” and the ferocious, UFO-esque “Run From Me Devil.” This is hard rock the way it was meant to be heard – hot, heavy and flanked by an uncompromising, foxy lady who can sing. (RH)

Oh No: Dr. No’s Ethiopium (Stones Throw)

Madlib‘s little brother might not be the hottest MC to rock the mic, but as a producer Oh No is closely gaining on the elder Jackson in his family as a talented beatsmith in his own right. As the follow-up to his 2007 instrumental effort, Dr. No’s Oxperiment, which saw the young Stones Throw lion pilfering grooves from old ’60s and ’70s psych albums from the Middle East, Dr. No’s Ethiopium finds the producer mining rare soul, jazz, funk, folk and acid rock from Ethiopia. He wound up with 36 tracks that find Oh No challenging both himself and the listener with intriguing blends and segues that blur the lines between urban and indigenous. Anyone looking for some new instrumental hip hop to bump on their desktop or in their car would be wise to invest in this eclectic mix, which puts a different spin on the indie world’s current fascination with the Dark Continent. (RH)


Simon & Garfunkel To Play First Weekend of Jazz Fest

Simon & Garfunkel to Play Jazz Fest 2010

Simon & Garfunkel

“We are proud to announce that American music icons Simon & Garfunkel will be making their first-ever appearance at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival presented by Shell,” Jazz Fest organizers said today. The Saturday, April 24, performance by Simon & Garfunkel will be the only chance to see the legendary duo in the U.S. this year. The Festival is scheduled for April 23 – May 2, 2010.

“Over the years I’ve always enjoyed performing at Jazz Fest,” said Paul Simon. “Everyone connected with the Festival, and in particular Quint Davis, has created an atmosphere that is both musical and enjoyable. I am looking forward to the opportunity to perform with my old friend Art Garfunkel at this year’s Festival.”

Simon & Garfunkel join previously announced artists Pearl Jam, Aretha Franklin, Van Morrison, The Neville Brothers, Lionel Richie, Allman Brothers Band, Anita Baker, My Morning Jacket, Widespread Panic, Imagination Movers, B.B. King, Jeff Beck, Darius Rucker, Irma Thomas, Gipsy Kings, The Dead Weather, Elvis Costello & the Sugarcanes, The Black Crowes, Drake, Teena Marie, Keely Smith, Jonny Lang, Band of Horses, Allen Toussaint and hundreds more at the 41st edition of the beloved Festival. (A complete weekend-by-weekend schedule is available at www.nojazzfest.com. Jazz Fest’s day-by-day schedule will be announced Wednesday, January 27.)

Tickets for the Festival, which takes place at the Fair Grounds Race Course, are on sale now through Ticketmaster.


20th Tibet House Benefit Show: Patti Smith, Baaba Maal, More

TIBET HOUSE U.S. ANNOUNCES 20th ANNUAL BENEFIT CONCERT AT CARBEGIE HALL

Philip Glass

Tibet House U.S. will hold its 20th Annual Benefit Concert at Carnegie Hall on Friday, February 26. Philip Glass, the concert’s Artistic Director, once again brings together an original lineup of contemporary artists including Patti Smith, Jesse Smith, Michael Campbell, Baaba Maal, and Pierce Turner with more performers being confirmed soon. Tickets will go on sale December 24, 2009.

For twenty years, the annual concert has assembled some of the biggest names in music and offers audiences a mix of unprecedented musical collaborations and solo offerings. Past unforgettable concerts have featured such talents as David Bowie, Paul Simon, Sheryl Crow, Moby, Sigur Ros, Bright Eyes, R.E.M., The National, Natalie Merchant, Rufus Wainwright, Vampire Weekend, Emmylou Harris, Live, Ray Davies and Damien Rice, among many others.

The Tibet House U.S. Benefit Concert commemorates the Monlam Prayer Festival traditionally held at the time of the Tibetan New Year. The festival drew vast numbers of monks, citizens, and pilgrims from all over the country who gathered to pray for world peace and prosperity. Tibet House U.S. is a non-profit organization founded in 1987 at the behest of His Holiness the Dalai Lama that serves as a center for the preservation and presentation of the endangered Tibetan culture.

Carnegie Hall is located at 881 Seventh Avenue (at 57th Street). Concert tickets are $35 to $85 and can be purchased by calling Carnegie Charge at 212.247.7800 or in person at the Carnegie Hall Box Office (57th Street and Seventh Avenue). Tickets go on sale December 24. Tickets to the concert and a fundraising reception with the event’s Honorary Chairpersons and artists (following the performance) are available through Tibet House U.S.

Please note: Concert only tickets are not available through Tibet House U.S. For more information or to reserve tickets for the concert and reception call Tibet House U.S. Monday – Friday, 10 a.m. – 5 p.m. at 212.807.0563 or visit the Tibet House website here.


Peter Gabriel Covers Radiohead Young, Bowie, Heads, Bon Iver

Peter Gabriel Covers Radiohead, Neil Young, David Bowie, Talking Heads, Bon Iver
And More On New Album, Scratch My Back, Due January 25

Peter Gabriel

Peter Gabriel has announced the track list for his new album, Scratch My Back, due January 25, 2010. This is the first album in a series that will find Gabriel and various other musicians covering each others’ material.

Gabriel is working with John Metcalfe to re-imagine the compositions. Metcalfe had this to say:



“I have been busy working closely with Peter Gabriel on his Scratch My Back project. This is a song swap with some of the world’s most legendary artists and is due for release in the Spring. My role has been to re-interpret the music of the song’s he has chosen to cover – quite honerous as some of the songs are among the best known in the last 40 years. The album will be acoustic, using only orchestral instruments (no guitars, drums or world instruments) and range in size from sparse chamber music to a much fuller orchestral sounds. We recently recorded the orchestra at Air Lyndhurst studios (George Martin’s studio) in London which was an enormous thrill hearing my arrangements performed by some of the best performers in the U.K. The producer of the album is Canadian legend Bob Ezrin who has recorded dozens of classic albums including Pink Floyd’s The Wall. We performed one of the songs, Paul Simon’s ‘Boy In The Bubble’ at Womad back in July. I have been working a lot down at Real World studios editing and mixing and will be continuing with that in the Autumn and it’s been a huge privilege to work with the great man.”

Scratch My Back Track List

Heroes (David Bowie)

The Boy In The Bubble (Paul Simon)

Mirrorball (Elbow)

Flume (Bon Iver)

Listening Wind (Talking Heads)

The Power Of The Heart (Lou Reed)

My Body Is A Cage (Arcade Fire)

The Book Of Love (The Magnetic Fields)

I Think It’s Going To Rain Today (Randy Newman)

Apres Moi (Regina Spektor)

Philadelphia (Neil Young)

Street Spirit (Radiohead)


Hamsa Lila, Airto Moreira: S.F. Green Fest After Party

CHART-TOPPING WORLD MUSIC BAND HAMSA LILA TO PERFORM WITH AIRTO MORIERA
FOR OFFICIAL GREEN FESTIVAL AFTER PARTY BENEFITING COMMON VISION

Hamsa Lila

World music band Hamsa Lila will be returning to the San Francisco Bay area after a three year hiatus to headline a gala event benefiting Common Vision and featuring the legendary Brazilian drum master Airto Moreira. The event is an official Green Festival SF After-Dark event at the renowned Regency Ballroom on Saturday, November 14, 2009.

Hamsa Lila blew up the West Coast world music scene with their hypnotic world fusion sounds back in 2004, when their album Gathering One went to number two on both U.S. and Canadian world music charts. Their infusion of West and North African influences, and multi-lingual, trance-inducing songs had crowds dancing like never before at festivals like Earthdance, Sierra Nevada World Music Festival, and High Sierra Music Festival, as well as packing concert venues like The Fillmore and The Independent. Hamsa Lila’s unique blend of traditional instruments and influences along with modern electronic elements brought them international acclaim as a pioneering band in the world fusion genre, who’s membership have played with the likes of Paul Simon, Sting, Michael Franti, Ozomatli, Hugh Masekela, Mickey Hart, and many others.

The Brazilian musical legend Airto Moreira will be heralded as the super-star special guest, leading a group of world drum masters (TBA) in a rhythmic ceremony to kick off the evening, and then performing alongside Hamsa Lila throughout their set. Airto is a multi-instrumentalist/percussionist who has worked with some of the world’s all time greats like Miles Davis, Quincy Jones, Herbie Hancock, Santana, Paul Simon, Smashing Pumpkins, Chick Corea, and a host of others. He’s recorded numerous albums over a stellar career that spans four decades, and his recent release entitled Life After That (Narada – Virgin/EMI) has helped to win him the title as the best jazz/fusion percussionist of 2009 by DRUM! magazine.

Common Vision is a 501 (c) 3 organization that works with inner city schools planting fruit trees, traveling throughout California in bio-diesel powered coach buses and teaching young people about growing food and taking care of the Earth. To date the organization has worked with over 50,000 kids, and planted tens of thousands of fruit trees all over the state. Learn More about Common Vision here.

This special evening will be packed with guests, including Bill Rasaki, King Sunny Ade’s Master Talking drummer for 25 years. Rasaki will be performing an opening set with Airto called Planetary Pulse. Additional Master Drummers will be announced soon.

Other acts to perform include Lynx & Janover, DJ Jef Stott (6 Degrees), and DJ Dragonfly.

The evening will also include visual projections by master artists and VJs and the world renowned National Geographic South American photographer Sebastian Belaustegui will be showcasing his African’s in the Americas exhibit as well.

Tickets are on sale now here and here. Tickets are $22 in advance, $28 day of show, and $50 for special VIP passes.


moe. | 10.31.09 | Albany, NY

Words by: Bill Clifford | Images by: Heather Ainsworth

moe. :: 10.31.09 :: The Washington Avenue Armory :: Albany, NY

Al Schnier – moe. :: 10.31 :: Albany, NY

moe. always goes the extra mile for its fans. This Halloween was no different, as the band held its Democracy Rules themed Halloween party in New York’s capital city. The evening’s setlist was chosen by fans through an online poll and was a tightly kept secret until the performance. There were a few well-worn moe. classics as well as an older moe. original that hasn’t been heard in several years, but the real tricks and treats came with the surprise covers, several of which were first time plays for the band.

moe. opened fittingly with “TGORM” (The Ghost Of Ralph’s Mom). It was a high speed, high energy romp that sparked the packed crowd into a dancing frenzy, with many still making there way into the venue. The thundering bass crush of the Blue Oyster Cult classic “Godzilla” chased everyone into The Armory, a former basketball arena, and the gymnasium floor was a sea of bobbing heads and pumping fists. Guitarist Al Schnier‘s vocals echoed off the walls and shell shaped arena ceiling, while Rob Derhak‘s looming bass and percussionist Jim Loughlin‘s rhythmic bongos hovered in the dark dissonance.

The first surprise bust out of the night saw Loughlin, still sporting his skull mask, step to the front of the stage to rap on “Farmer Ben,” which the band last performed in 2005. The rumbling funk got the crowd moving and the mid-song teases of “Frankenstein” > “Werewolves of London” > “Munsters Theme” drew huge cheers and had many singing along.

moe. :: 10.31 :: Albany, NY

Schnier continues to impress as a multi-instrumentalist. On Paul Simon‘s “You Can Call Me Al,” he held his own on trumpet with a jazzy interlude, which drew a huge ovation. Derhak’s bellowing alto and the slower tempo turned the Hanna Montana/Miley Cyrus pop nugget “We Got The Party” into a moody and ominous flashback for many of the younger fans, while “George” was the first real jam vehicle of the night, with some pretty serious guitar dueling from Chuck Garvey and Schnier.

The set one closer was a trippy reading of Pink Floyd‘s “Echoes.” Dark, atmospheric and psychedelic, this mantra was well suited to musicians of moe.’s caliber. The dual vocals of Garvey and Derhak were eerily evocative of Waters/Gilmore. Lighting director Jason Huffer made use of each and every tube available, splashing vivid violets, reds, cobalt blues, and gorgeous greens not only on the stage but also around the entire arena. Paper mache trees on the stage and a harrowing backdrop of a fog-flooded forest complemented the hallucinatory vibe, which finally ended in a caterwauling din of ecstatic feedback as the band left the stage.

The long, improvisational jams continued throughout the second set. With Phish spending the weekend out west, moe. procured a little bit of the sticky, green stuff and offered to share their “Stash” with fans. Garvey took on the lead vocals and handled them with confidence. An arena of fans sang along on the chorus and took delight in clapping to the breaks. While in this case it was not a spot-on rendition of the jam classic, Loughlin’s malletKAT made a fine addition to this long time favorite.

moe. :: 10.31 :: Albany, NY

A little moe. does a body good, and they followed up “Stash” with their own jam rocket, “Meat.” It was hard driving arena rock, with Schnier’s searing guitar tearing through the air. It mellowed and meandered under the lead of Loughlin’s malletKAT, and then gently eased into The Grateful Dead‘s “Eyes Of The World.” Schnier’s nasal twang couldn’t ever be mistaken for the graceful Garcia, but it was easy to close your eyes and get lost listening to the duel guitars of Schnier and Garvey. The lovely ebb of “Eyes” moved effortlessly into a reprisal of “Echoes.”

Ardent moe. fans argue that there are songs the band plays far too often, but what would a moe. performance be without “the queen of the briny deep”? For anyone who decided to walk outside for some fresh air or a smoke during “Rebubula,” you might have missed what made this evening’s performance truly special, as the song morphed into The Grateful Dead’s “Dark Star” then reprised “Rebubula.” Again, dead on (pardon the pun) arrangements and renditions weren’t really the point here. We heard Garvey’s interpretation of Bob Weir’s guitar; he’s truly a guitar virtuoso, whether performing his own material or someone else’s. And to witness such a timeless song work so beautifully with their own compositions speaks volumes about moe.’s collective talent.

With Schnier on acoustic guitar and Garvey on vocals, fans were treated to a sweet, “Fuck Her Gently,” a Tenacious D cover, as the first part of the encore. There was absolute catharsis in singing along with an arena of fans to this sweet ode. An extended run through their “Don’t Fuck With Flo” and “Crab Eyes” brought the show to a close with several moe. classics.

The Amory, a poorly ventilated gymnasium not designed with acoustics in mind, may not have been the ideal venue, but when all is said and done, moe. gave power to the people by putting the setlist in the hands of its fans on Halloween. Several choices were to be expected, but they gave us plenty of surprises as well. moe. kept it close to home this Halloween, and all us East Coast moe.rons couldn’t have been happier.

moe. :: 10.31.09 :: The Washington Avenue Armory :: Albany, NY

Set I: TGORM, Godzilla (Blue Oyster Cult cover), Farmer Ben, You Can Call Me Al (Paul Simon cover), We Got the Party (Miley Cyrus cover), George, Echoes (Pink Floyd cover)

Set II:
Stash (Phish cover), Meat, Eyes Of the World (Grateful Dead cover) > Echoes (Pink Floyd cover), Rebubula > Dark Star (Grateful Dead cover) > Rebubula

Encore: Fuck Her Gently (Tenacious D), Don’t Fuck With Flo, Crab Eyes, Al.nouncements

Download or stream this show at archive.org.

Continue reading for more images of moe. on Halloween…

JamBase | New York State
Go See Live Music!


moe. Halloween Setlist & Vids Phish > Floyd > Dead > Cyrus

moe. Perform Wicked Set Full of Covers for Halloween

moe. :: 10.31.09 :: Washington Ave Armory :: Albany, NY

Set I: TGORM, Godzilla (Blue Oyster Cult cover), Farmer Ben, You Can Call Me Al (Paul Simon cover), We Got the Party (Miley Cyrus cover), George Echoes (Pink Floyd cover)

Set II:
Stash (Phish cover), meat, Eyes Of the World (Grateful Dead cover) > Echoes (Pink Floyd cover) Rebubula > Dark Star (Grateful Dead cover) > Rebubula

Encore: Fuck Her Gently (Tenacious D), Don’t Fuck With Flo, Crab Eyes, Al.nouncements

Download or stream this show at archive.org.

Check back for a full review of this show soon.