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Lollapalooza Chile: The Killers, JaneÂ’s, Kanye, Fatboy

CHICAGO FEST GOES TO SOUTH AMERICA

The Killers

The lineup for the inaugural Lollapalooze Chile has been announced. 50-plus acts will perform on five stages at the two-day festival set to happen Saturday, April 2 and Sunday, April 3 in O’Higgins Park, Santiago, Chile.

“The job we did to gather these artists for 2011 was remarkable,” says fest co-organizer Perry Farrell. “Imagine gathering 60 artists while the contract ink is still wet. We put it together at a record pace as we had four months. We did not want to come to Chile with a lineup that was anything other than world-class, and my partners Marc Geiger of WME and Charles Attal of C3 have been absolutely integral to Lollapalooza Chile launching in 2011. Our selections are very animated, with much diversity. There is Chilean talent in the mix. Now that the lineup is announced here, we are going back to Chile to work on the other aspects of the festival. Our ambition is to plant a very strong seed in Chile, one that will grow over the years, and provide Santiago with an event for the ages.”

Available now for the festival are general two-day passes for $110 presale, $136 then $152; Lolla Lounge two-day VIP passes for $320 presale then $380; And beginning February 11, general admission single day tickets for $72 presale then $84 and VIP passes for $240. All passes can be purchased here.

There are also a variety of travel packages from North America available here and here.

The complete line-up for LOLLAPALOOZA CHILE is:

THE KILLERS
JANE’S ADDICTION
KANYE WEST
30 SECONDS TO MARS
YEAH YEAH YEAHS
DEFTONES
FATBOY SLIM
THE FLAMING LIPS
ARMIN VAN BUUREN
CYPRESS HILL
BEN HARPER
SUBLIME WITH ROME
311
THE NATIONAL
EMPIRE OF THE SUN
COLD WAR KIDS
CSS
LOS BUNKERS
CAT POWER
CHICO TRUJILLO
DEVENDRA BANHART
THE DRUMS
BOYS NOIZE
STEEL PULSE
FISCHERSPOONER
PERRYETTY VS CHRIS COX
MALA RODRIGUEZ
EDWARD SHARPE & THE MAGNETIC ZEROS
DATAROCK
TODOS TUS MUERTOS
BOMBA ESTEREO
GHOSTLAND OBSERVATORY
JOACHIM GARRAUD
FRANCISCA VALENZUELA
ZETA BOSIO
ANITA TIJOUX
QUIQUE NEIRA
LATIN BITMAN
DJ RAFF
TOY SELEKTAH
FRACTAL + JOE VASCONCELLOS
FOTHER MUCKERS
ASTRO
DEVIL PRESLEY
DENVER
COMO ASESINAR A FELIPES
THE GANJAS
MATANZA
ITAL
NEW KIDS ON THE NOISE
MAGICTWINS
LOS PULENTOS
ACHU
CUCHARA
MUNDANO
LOS PLUMABITS


TV On The Radio’s Dave Sitek Joins Jane’s Addiction

NEW ALBUM SCHEDULED FOR SUMMER 2011


Dave Sitek

Jane’s Addiction have
announced that Dave Sitek of TV
On The Radio
will fill the revolving-door bass slot for the band’s upcoming album. He replaces Duff
McKagan
(Guns N’ Roses, Velvet Revolver), who left in September, and original bassist Eric Avery. A
album of
new material is tentatively scheduled for a Summer 2011 release on Capitol Records.

“Dave, Steve and I are fully immersed in the process of making modern music,” said singer Perry Farrell in
a statement. “It has been a
great experience thus far, and the results have so much potential.”

“This process has been both inspiring and incredibly freeing,” added Dave Navarro. “The events over the
last year
have proven themselves to be a necessary part of the journey as they have led us to our current creative team and
direction.”

Jane’s Addiction
Tour Dates

::
Jane’s Addiction News
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Jane’s Addiction
Concert
Reviews


Lollapalooza International: Chile ’11

Lollapalooza
2009 by Vann

Perry Farrell, in conjunction with Chile’s Lotus Producciones, and WME and C3 Presents–the promotional
partners
behind the North American Lollapalooza–will bring his carnival of all things alternative to an exciting new
destination, South America.

For the first time in its history, one of America’s most beloved music festivals lands overseas in Santiago,
Chile on Saturday, April 2 and Sunday, April 3, 2011 at O’Higgins Park as the first Lollapalooza
International
. Line-up details will be available at a later date.

Similar to its Chicago home Grant Park in North America, O’Higgins Park is a gorgeous scenic locale in the middle of
a bustling urban hub. Lollapalooza International promises an eclectic lineup of top
talent from around the world, and will also partake in a “cultural exchange,” by featuring Chilean artists at
this summer’s North American Lollapalooza in Grant Park.

A Q&A with LOLLAPALOOZA’s creator PERRY FARRELL:



What inspired you to bring Lollapalooza to what many might think of as an unlikely location of a city in South
America?

PERRY FARRELL: There are a series of prerequisites when selecting a destination. Number one is space. It must be
open and lovely; scalable up to 100,000 patrons. Second is the proximity to the city. We provide the entertainment.
The city provides the culture, hotels, restaurants and clubs. Then, most important are the people. The people of
Santiago have a passion for contemporary music and lead international lifestyles. Perfect.

We understand you have made a trip to Chile and have seen the park. Can you talk about the beauty of the location?

PF: Yes, O’ Higgins Park has a gentle sloping grass viewing area with the Andes Mountains in the distance. There are
many trees for shade. One of my favorite aspects to the park is a large round discotheque that houses up to 10,000
people. It is attached to an amusement park with a roller coaster and people scream on it all day. Right now you’ll see
families spending time in the park. Little kids roaming all over.

Can music fans expect the same eclectic music that Lollapalooza is known for in America?

PF: Yes, we found that there are so many groups and artists that have never been to Chile. It’s been fun figuring out
with Lotus, C3 and WME, who will be the first to get there.

The promoter in Chile is Sebastian De La Barra of Lotus Producciones. What did you see in him that made him the
right choice to bring Lollapalooza to Chile?

PF: When first meeting Sebastian, I noted that he had a disposition reminiscent of the best promoters I have had the
pleasure to work with. He is smart, relaxed and having fun in the driver’s seat.

We understand that the festival will also feature musicians and bands from Chile. Can you elaborate on that?

PF: Local talent is essential to rounding out the experience of a Lollapalooza. Sebastian has strong opinions on who
will be best. We can not say who just yet. We are also looking to bring some of those artists out to Chicago for a
musical foreign exchange.

As with any festival in its first year, there is always a learning curve.

PF: We are confident a massive music audience is awaiting us in Santiago. What we are very interested to learn is how
widely spread the demographic will be. In Chicago we have hipsters as well as young parents with children in
attendance. It is one of the few places in the world where a generation gap doesn’t exist.


E! “Married To Rock” Series Premiere Nov. 7

E! has greenlit the premiere of the newest addition to its reality fray, Married to Rock, a documentary drama that will tackle the exploits of a group of rock star wives and girlfriends, the network announced Wednesday. Now that the long-suffering wives of the NBA — and the groupies they loathe — have infilitrated the [...]

Real Housewives of…Rockstars?

E! Network has partnered with Bunim-Murray (Keeping Up With The Kardashians, Real World) to produce a show about the wives of Hollywood’s rockers, called “Married to Rock.”
The cast features Susan Holmes McKagan, married to former Guns N’ Roses bassist Duff McKagan, who joined and left Jane’s Addiction this year; Etty Farrell, whose husband is Jane’s [...]

Duff McKagan Leaves Jane’s Addiction

BAD LUCK STREAK WITH BASSISTS CONTINUES WITH LATEST DEPARTURE


Jane’s Addiction

Five months after joining the band, bassist Duff McKagan (Guns N’ Roses, Velvet Revolver, Loaded) has left Jane’s Addiction. A statement from
the band reads:

“Hey we wanted to thank Duff for helping us write songs for our new record. We love the songs we worked on
with him – and the gigs were a blast – but musically we were all headed in different directions. From here Duff is off
to work on his own stuff so we wish him all the best.”

On his twitter account, frontman Perry Farrell
said:

“Jane’s wishes Duff much luck with his band Loaded. What a fun time we all had working together. Look out for
his record and tour this fall.”

McKagan had originally joined the band after the departure of original bassist Eric Avery in March. Avery
had rejoined the band after a seventeen year absence. The band have not yet announced a replacement bassist.

Jane’s Addiction
Tour Dates

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Jane’s Addiction News
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Jane’s Addiction
Concert
Reviews


moe.down XI: Nas & Damian Marley Lotus, The Black Keys

NAS & DAMIAN MARLEY, LOTUS, ORGONE JOIN THE BLACK KEYS, JAKOB DYLYAN & MORE AT
MOE.DOWN


moe.

moe. is very excited to
announce the final lineup of artists for their annual Labor Day weekend festival, moe.down. Joining moe. will be: The Black Keys, Nas & Damian “Jr. Gong” Marley, Mike Gordon, Lotus, Jakob Dylan, Punch Brothers, Built to Spill, Tortoise, Ryan Montbleau Band, The Macpodz, The Brew, Turbine, Sister Sparrow and The Dirty Birds, Orgone, and Monkey Wrench.

This 3 day event has become known for its laid back vibe and great music, as well as its intimate and scenic setting.
With only 2 stages, bands never overlap and patrons never miss a beat!

This year, moe.down has a new home in Mohawk, NY at Gelston Castle Estate. As in the past, the price of admission
includes camping. A limited number of Early Bird Tickets are on sale now through moe.ticketing for $110.

moe.down has a history of bringing a diverse collection of artists to the festival over its 10 year history. Bands that
have played in the past include The Flaming Lips, Perry Farrell’s Satellite Party, Cake, The Roots, Method Man and
Redman, The Wailers, Ani DiFranco, Amos Lee, Medeski Scofield Martin & Wood, Yonder Mountain String Band, The
Avett Brothers and more.

moe. tour dates:

July 16 – 6th Annual Targhee Festival – Alta, WY

July 17 – Northwest String Summit North – Plains, OR
August 1 – Fuji Rock Festival – Niigata, Japan
Sept 3-5 – MOE.DOWN 11 Gelston Castle Estate – Mohawk, NY

moe.
Tour Dates

::
moe. News ::
moe.
Concert
Reviews


Jane’s Addiction: Euro Shows Live Video with Duff

NEW ALBUM DUE NEXT WINTER

Following their Cinco de Mayo performance in Los Angeles earlier this month, Jane’s Addiction will head across the Atlantic next month for two major shows in Europe. They’ll appear Sunday, June 9 at the Gelredome in The Netherlands (with Rage Against the Machine and Gogol Bordello), and then Friday, June 11 at Rock In Rio in Madrid, Spain (with Rage Against the Machine and Cypress Hill).

Meanwhile, the band – singer Perry Farrell, guitarist Dave Navarro, drummer Stephen Perkins and new member, bassist Duff McKagan – continue to write in Los Angeles for their next album, tentatively due out in the winter of 2011 on Capitol (a glimpse of the group at work above from photographer Joseph Llanes). The album will be supported by a worldwide concert tour.

The Cinco De Mayo performance at Bardot in Hollywood was their first show together with McKagan. The band recently released this performance of “Ain’t No Right” from the show.

Jane’s Addiction Tour Dates :: Jane’s Addiction News :: Jane’s Addiction Concert Reviews


Jane’s Addiction: Cinco de Mayo Show

DUFF’S FULL SHOW DEBUT

Surrounded by piñatas, sombreros and green, white and red flags in celebration of Cinco de Mayo, Jane’s Addiction threw a fiesta on Wednesday at the intimate Bardot in Hollywood, where 150 or so fans and friends squeezed together to experience the very first show by lead singer Perry Farrell, guitarist Dave Navarro and drummer Stephen Perkins with new member, bassist Duff McKagan (Velvet Revolver, Guns N’ Roses).

The band played a seven-song set that marked the debut of a new song, “Soulmate,” mixed in with the staples like “Stop,” “Mountain Song,” “Had a Dad,” “Whores,” “Ain’t No Right” and “Ocean Size.” Cheering the band on were actors Joaquin Phoenix and Danny and Chris Masterson, as well as pro-skater Danny Way, along with musician friends Tom Morello, Matt Sorum, Gilby Clarke and Fishbone’s Chris Dowd.

Writing at Rollingstone.com (5/6/10), Steve Appleford said: “Onstage with Jane’s in 2010, McKagan set a thick, watery bassline against Navarro’s speedy solo on ‘Whores’ (from 1987), and it sounded like a collaboration built to last.” Steve Baltin at AOL’s Spinner.com (5/6/10) noted: “Musically, McKagan, who is an old friend of the band and came from the same L.A. scene, slid in to the foursome as smoothly as ‘Soulmate’ made its way into the set last night.” Liam Gowing at Spin.com (5/6/10) added the evening was “Â…a chance to see the alternative rock gods play a room no bigger than a volleyball court” and took note of the “mesmerized crowd.”

Jane’s Addiction is now continuing to write for their next album, tentatively due out in the winter of 2011 on Capitol and to be supported by a worldwide concert tour.

Jane’s Addiction Tour Dates :: Jane’s Addiction News :: Jane’s Addiction Concert Reviews


Lollapalooza Lineup: Arcade Fire, Phoenix, Lady GaGa

Lollapalooza Lineup: Arcade Fire, The Strokes, Green Day, Lady GaGa, Soundgarden

Phoenix, MGMT, Yeasayer, Drive-By Truckers, Erykah Badu, The Black Keys, Spoon, Grizzly Bear

Lollapalooza has announced its lineup. Set to go down in Chicago’s Grant Park from August 6-8, the 2010 event will be headlined by Arcade Fire, the Strokes, Lady Gaga, Green Day, the reunited Soundgarden, and Phoenix. Complete lineup follows.

Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

2010 Lollapalooza Lineup:

* Soundgarden

* Green Day

* Lady Gaga

* Arcade Fire

* The Strokes

* Phoenix

* Social Distortion

* MGMT

* Jimmy Cliff

* Hot Chip

* The Black Keys

* The National

* Spoon

* Devo

* Cypress Hill

* Cut Copy

* The New Pornographers

* Erykah Badu

* Slightly Stoopid

* Grizzly Bear

* Gogol Bordello

* Chromeo

* Wolfmother

* Yeasayer

* X Japan

* MUTEMATH

* Metric

* Dirty Projectors

* AFI

* Mavis Staples

* Matt & Kim

* The xx

* Drive-By Truckers

* Blues Traveler

* Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros

* The Temper Trap

* Jamie Lidell

* Frightened Rabbit

* F**k Buttons

* Deer Tick

* Blitzen Trapper

* Stars

* Raphael Saadiq

* The Cribs

* Minus the Bear

* Switchfoot

* The Walkmen

* Mumford & Sons

* Wild Beasts

* Rogue Wave

* Los Amigos Invisibles

* The Big Pink

* The Dodos

* Hockey

* Cymbals Eat Guitars

* B.o.B

* Dawes

* Warpaint

* The Antlers

* The Soft Pack

* Rebelution

* Balkan Beat Box

* Wavves

* American Bang

* The Ike Reilly Assassination

* Company of Thieves

* Nneka

* Harlem

* The Constellations

* Miniature Tigers

* Mimicking Birds

* The Kissaway Trail

* HEALTH

* Javelin

* The Morning Benders

* Foxy Shazam

* Violent Soho

* Royal Bangs

* Freelance Whales

* Semi Precious Weapons

* Dan Black

* The Band of Heathens

* Dragonette

* My Dear Disco

* Shawn Fisher

* Neon Hitch

* Skybox

* The Ettes

* Jukebox the Ghost

* These United States

* MyNameIsJohnMichael

Spinning at Perry’s

* 2ManyDJs

* Empire of the Sun

* Digitalism

* Perry Farrell

* Tiga

* Felix Da Housecat

* Rusko

* Erol Alkan

* Kaskade

* Wolfgang Gartner

* Flosstradamus

* Joachim Garraud

* Mexican Institute of Sound

* Caspa

* Peanut Butter Wolf

* Dirty South

* NERVO

* Cut Copy (DJ Set)

* Beats Antique

* Steve Porter

* Didi Gutman of Brazilian Girls

* Ancient Astronauts

* Ana Sia

* Team Bayside High

* Dani Deahl

* FreeSol

* DJ Mel

* BBU

* Vonnegutt

* Only Children

* Lance Herbstrong

For more on Lollapalooza see our 2009 review here.


Duff McKagan Joins Jane’s Addiction

FURTHER COMMINGLING OF ’80S L.A. ROCK ROYALTY

Perry Farrell, Dave Navarro and Stephen Perkins officially welcomed Duff McKagan (Guns N’ Roses, Velvet Revolver) to Jane’s Addiction as their new bassist when Farrell and Navarro yesterday both Tweeted a photo of the band at a writing session. The band is now writing their next album, tentatively due out in the winter of 2011 on Capitol and to be supported by a worldwide concert tour. Photos of the band at a Hollywood rehearsal space first emerged early yesterday morning at the fan website www.janesaddiction.org, causing the site to crash several times as fans began descending on it.

Here’s a little glimpse of Duff playing with Jane’s Addiction at Perry Farrell’s birthday party.

Jane’s Addiction Tour Dates :: Jane’s Addiction News :: Jane’s Addiction Concert Reviews


Infected Mushroom: Tour Dates

INFECTED MUSHROOM ADD TOUR DATES

Infected Mushroom

Electronic-rock innovators Infected Mushroom have announced several high-profile performances and new tour dates for this spring as they continue to support their latest release Legend of The Black Shawarma (Perfecto).

For these dates, the band – Amit “Duvdev” Duvedevani (vocals), Erez Eisen (keyboards), Rogerio Jardim (drums) and Tom Cunningham (guitar) — promise an intense live show highlighting songs from the new album, plus material from their previous seven releases.

The psy-trance pioneers will make a momentous appearance at Awakening, a double-header bill with German electronic artist ATB February 20, at the Hollywood Palladium. The band will also head to Miami where they will perform Friday, March 26 at this year’s Ultra Music Festival.

In April, the Israel-bred, Southern California-based outfit return home for their second appearance at the Coachella Valley Music & Arts Festival. On Sunday, April 18, they’ll perform in front of thousands at the popular Sahara tent. The band is also scheduled to make stops at San Francisco’s Regency Ballroom, Hollywood Palladium in Los Angeles, the Aggie Theatre in Fort Collins, and many more on the extensive tour.

On Legend Of The Black Shawarma, Infected Mushroom continue to push sonic boundaries with their psy-trance fusion of bruising, metallic rock and unstoppable dance-floor beats to a new level and sees the pair teaming with high-profile rockers. The album’s lead single “Smashing the Opponent” features scorching vocals from Jonathan Davis of Korn fame, while Jane’s Addiction frontman and alt-rock trailblazer Perry Farrell lends his inimitable pipes to the follow-up track “Killing Time.”

Infected Mushroom tour dates available here.


Voodoo Experience | 10.30-11.01 | NOLA

Words by: Wesley Hodges | Images by: Dino Perrucci & Adam McCullough

Voodoo Experience :: 10.30.09 – 11.01.09 :: City Park :: New Orleans, LA

The New Orleans Bingo! Show – Voodoo 09 by Perrucci

“Worship the music.” It’s Voodoo Experience‘s tagline and the sentiment seemed to sum up the New Orleans festival. Referred to as Jazz Fest’s “much wilder” cousin by local WWOZ DJ and festival performer DJ Soul Sister, this year, the calendar presented a perfect storm for a spectacular freak show weekend with Halloween falling on Saturday night and All Saints Day hitting appropriately on Sunday. With a heavy lineup curated for thrill seeking rockers, featuring such delectably bizarro acts as Ween, The Flaming Lips, Jane’s Addiction, Eminem, Widespread Panic, Gogol Bordello, and KISS, even the casual fan would be hard pressed not to embrace their dark side and celebrate the spirits of the season.

City Park is an ideal natural setting, giving everything “a very beautiful and mysterious looking aesthetic,” as Soul Sister put it. The city of New Orleans has a celebrated tradition of embracing all things macabre and doesn’t really need an excuse like Halloween to throw a masquerade, but toss in a music festival with a bunch of freaky bands (and fans) and it’s on.

Friday, 10.30

The Black KeysDan Auerbach welcomed the early comers to Voodoo, appropriately telling us, “Strange times are here,” while pouring through a Thickfreakness heavy set. Day one of Voodoo Experience was an orientation of sorts. With many patrons having spent little if any time in City Park, it took a little while to hit the proverbial stride as incessant rain further incited some improvisational re-planning. The oak-laden grove seemed unbothered by the masses of people invading the lush sanctuary, and day one was far and away the most poorly attended, but you didn’t hear anyone complaining.

The Black Keys – Voodoo 09 by Perrucci

Walking in the gates, many went straight for wild child artista Janelle Monae, an exuberant and stylin’ young artist from the school of Outkast, who put on a dramatic performance as an ominous storm system approached from the western skies. Monae’s brash, bouncy style is akin to Santigold and the cosmic production was reminiscent of a Gnarls Barkley show. With her hair coifed into something of a sideways beehive, Ms. Monae didn’t look to be an earthling. Musically it would be hard to put in any kind of box, with some tunes rolling well past the six-minute mark. Guitarist Kellindo showed serious range wailing on some Hendrix flourishes while Monae melodically shouted, “Voodoo-doo-doo-doo-doo,” during the appropriate opener “Many Moons.”

As the skies turned increasingly violent, it seemed like a good idea to head to the big yellow carnival tent we spotted down at the far corner of the festival grounds to check out whoever was playing, just in order to stay dry. Sure enough, within two minutes of getting inside the Bingo! Parlor, the skies opened. Local Happy Talk Band was playing inside and most people only stuck around for a few minutes until the rains subsided. Rain or shine, it was time for The Black Keys, so we high-tailed it back up to the Playstation/Billboard.com Stage to catch the Akron, Ohio blues rock duo. Once again the rains came with a vengeance. Just like it did at Bonnaroo and Lollapalooza this year, the first day of this festival turned into a mud bowl by night’s end. Much of the crowd headed for cover as the duo blazed through the old favorites “Hard Row” and “Set You Free” to the scattered hardcore fans before bangin’ out a few tunes from their newest effort Attack and Release. Guitarist Auerbach and drummer Patrick Carney have developed a nearly unparalleled tightness over the years and manage to impress more and more on the live stage as the years go by.

Preservation Hall Stars – Voodoo 09 by Perrucci

The washy sound coming from the Voodoo Stage certainly didn’t help, but Silversun Pickups bored the hell out of me, synthesizing ’90s rock into a homogenized, boiled down sound for the lowest common denominator. Bassist Nikki Monninger looked ready for prom night in a flowing green dress flanking lead singer Brian Aubert in a leather jacket, whose smoky voice kind of just bothered me. Maybe the rains had temporarily dampened my spirits, but I found myself asking, “What decade is this?” and “Where are we?” Confused and befuddled, it was time to head elsewhere.

The vendor street is the backbone and spinal center of the Voodoo Experience, adding some local color and the “Voodoo Eats” area was an olfactory overload of Cajun goodness beckoning the streaming crowds to come sample. Nearby local bluesman Little Freddie Davis was preaching about a bad women who done him no good, so we dropped in for a minute. In a 180 you could only pull off at a festival, after a few minutes singing the blues with Little Freddie, it was time to leave the Preservation Hall Tent to check out the Euro club scene ensuing at Justice. With lots of smoke and a surprisingly stripped down stage set up (No LED screen, video board, lasers or anything you’d expect at a DJ set) featuring four turntables, the French duo got the weekend going at full speed with “D.A.N.C.E.” as massive white balloons bounced around amongst crowd surfers in the notably youthful crowd.

Back at Preservation Hall DJ Soul Sister was spinning classic vinyl, heavy on the Jackson 5, as her Booty Patrol raved on. The nearby WWOZ Stage was affected the most by the rain and was operating on over a half-hour delay. Unfortunately, as a result, Ween did not go on well before Eminem as planned, and the sounds of “3 AM” beckoned us over to catch Shady’s first full concert performance in over four years at the Voodoo Stage before Ween had a chance to start.

Fleur De Tease
Voodoo 09 by Perrucci

Rap shows are inherently a hit or miss thing, so it was great to see Mathers flanked by a full band, all dressed in skeleton jumpsuits, rocking around the hi-tech video walls as he spit his way through a hits heavy set spanning his ten year career. His sardonic, acerbic manner is what has made him such a controversial and popular figure throughout his career, and he seemed genuinely grateful to be playing for the good people of New Orleans on the eve of Halloween. D12 supplemented all guest rap spots from the records and contrasted well with Mathers’ intense, rebellious style. Shady skipped a lot of verses and let the P.A. do a decent portion of the work, but you gotta know to take a rap concert with a grain of salt, throw your hands up, and just dig it for an hour or so. His presence itself was electrifying and the crowd joined in, rapping along to “Without Me” and bouncing along to a medley of D12 songs. Say what you want about the man, but he’s an incredible talent and proved it on this night, showing us who The Real Slim Shady is. After a brief exit, the skeletal band returned to the stage to close down the show with a spectacular apex encore moment, doing an aggrandized version of “Lose Yourself,” with a tension buildup before dropping into the intense track, Mathers’ most commercially successful single of his still young career.

You better lose yourself in the music, the moment
You own it. You better never let it go
You only get one shot. Do not miss your chance to blow
This opportunity comes once in a lifetime

Luckily, Eminem’s set ended about 15 minutes early, affording some time to catch the tail end of Ween’s set. The sounds of “Roses Are Free” reverberated through the grove and fans sloshed through the mud hurrying to catch a peek. The band legged this one out towards the end and for a moment Ween connected us with the people in Indio at Festival 8, playing their classic that Phish has helped popularize. A cheeky “Fiesta” sent us packing and you could tell fans and band alike both wanted more, but the local ordinance prohibited anything past 11, so it was time to close the books on day one.

More photos from Friday at Voodoo available here.

Continue reading for Halloween coverage at Voodoo…

Saturday, 10.31

Patterson Hood (DBTs)
Voodoo 09 by Perrucci

“All your sanity and wits they will all vanish/ I promise, it’s just a matter of time.” As Gogol Bordello frontman Eugene Hutz puts it best in “Start Wearing Purple,” this Halloween Saturday would be a time to check normalcy at the door and take the day as it comes.

I made sure to head down early to catch K’naan, only to find that he had cancelled last-minute and subsequently axed an upcoming tour with Maroon 5 due to fatigue. I took the schedule change as an opportunity to wander around the vendor avenue, where a huge marching band was coursing through, and do some quality Halloween costume watching; I spied lots of banana costumes, green men, an Old Gregg, milkmaids, and male cross-dressing burlesques among other things.

Mates of State provided a great opportunity to lay in the grass for a moment and take in the likeable husband and wife drums-and-keys duo’s chill midday set before easing on over to catch a bit of Irvin Mayfield. Mayfield was cruising through a heavily improvisational version of the Miles classic “So What,” allowing each member to take center stage for some impressive soloing. Still obviously peeved over last year’s cancellation (festival producers dropped the ball and forgot to provide Mayfield with a grand piano as requested in his rider), Mayfield used the chance to take a cheap shot at producers Rehage Entertainment, sarcastically thanking them for providing a piano this time.

Perhaps the surprise of the weekend, local band MuteMath showed off some serious chops, especially bassist Roy Mitchell-Cardenas, who was dropping some chunky runs on the stand-up during “Armistice” that would’ve made Colonel Claypool proud. Their brooding synth-heavy sound was well received and the band clearly felt right at home playing in City Park. Lead singer Paul Meany dedicated “Reset” to his recently deceased grandfather, who had joined the band onstage at previous Voodoos, and MuteMath delivered an inspired version in his honor.

MuteMath – Voodoo 09 by McCullough

Gypsy punk warriors Gogol Bordello followed on the Billboard Stage. Always embracing and encouraging chaos, wild man Eugene Hutz rambled around the stage while the uber-talented caravan blasted through “Ultimate” to kick off the dub-heavy set. The set’s apex was reached during “Start Wearing Purple,” Hutz’ anthemic bi-lingual anthem, working the crowd into a mosh-happy frenzy. This is a remarkably talented band that needs to be experiences up close and person to truly appreciate.

After arguably the most fun set of the weekend, it was time to see the new and improved proto-metal revivalists Wolfmother, who were rockin’ through the familiar “Woman” when we rolled in. The nocturnal “White Unicorn” got straight Sabbath and gave Andrew Stockdale a chance to showcase his much improved guitar talent. The new songs weren’t particularly mind bending, but the band’s eponymous debut is a tough act to follow. People were going bananas as the band played “Joker and the Thief.”

As the sun set on Halloween, hordes of fans packed into the park by the time Jane’s Addiction hit the stage. Dave Navarro‘s visceral power riffs contrasted in an odd way with Perry Farrell‘s flamboyant, attention-starved style. Farrell managed to connect with the people of New Orleans, sharing a story about an unfortunate spider bite incident and riling up the crowd talking about the undefeated Saints. Metallic on the edges and danceable at its core, Jane’s Addiction put on an aggressive and memorable show that proved somewhat similar to previous festival appearances this summer.

Gene Simmons – Kiss – Voodoo by Perrucci

Back at the WWOZ Stage, George Clinton‘s noisy space funk collective tore the roof off while the weathered legend groaned into the mic during “Red Hot Mama.” It was a sight to behold seeing a band where every member’s sole mission is to get funky with it, and the crowd was gettin’ down and dirty in the mud pit in front of the stage. Before long, commotion in the distance and bright lights shining in the sky meant it was time for KISS.

It is a truly surreal experience to watch KISS in concert for the first time. I’d always viewed them as one of those iconic, canonized bands that only existed in the movies (and on reality TV) until this show. Perhaps the most appropriate band to ever close Halloween night, the Detroit rock heroes didn’t disappoint, with their stage production highlighted by the word “KISS” blazing behind them in big white lights and a generous pyrotechnics display. The band looked great in their classic face paint and leather, though the music was fairly secondary and hard to focus on amongst everything else transpiring onstage. However, the fist pumping ensued as KISS played the hits and laughably played into just about every possible rock cliche with their stage banter. But, I would expect, and hope for, nothing less from my first KISS concert.

More photos from Halloween at Voodoo available here.

Continue reading for Sunday’s coverage of Voodoo…

Sunday, 11.01

Widespread Panic – Voodoo 09 by McCullough

At 2:15 p.m., The Pogues‘ lead singer Shane MacGowan looked like he still hadn’t turned in from Halloween night. Slurring, incomprehensible and unabashedly brash, MacGowan’s drunkenness dragged down the rest of the band and had people in the crowd laughing and confused (“What’s wrong with him?” “Is he okay?”). While they pressed on through such songs as “Thousands Are Sailing” and “If I Should Fall From Grace With God,” MacGowan took about 10 cigarette breaks, sat down during and between songs, and looked about to incite an inter-band altercation at one point. The closer was appropriate and sadly autobiographical as MacGowan slurred the lyrics of “The Sick Bed Of Cuchulainn,” spitting out, “There’s devils on each side of you, with bottles in their hands,” before calling it a set.

Shortly after The Pogues finished, Widespread Panic picked up where they left off in Austin the previous two nights, playing the kind of to-the-point, no frills rock show fans have come to expect from the Georgia boys. This was not your typical, phone-it-in, jam band festival set, and the guys showed no signs of a post-Halloween letdown at any point. After finishing their marathon Halloween show in Austin a mere sixteen hours earlier and bussing it to NOLA, it would’ve been understandable if WSP showed weariness, but these guys are consummate professionals and no strangers to the road and festival circuit. Having seen Panic countless times around the country in various arenas, festivals, and theaters, it was extra special to see them playing a midday outdoor set on a beautiful Sunday afternoon. From the first notes of “Thought Sausage” it was clear that Panic was in their mid-tour stride. Songs like the lustrous “Blue Indian” were extra powerful in this setting as the sun beamed down on the band and Voodoo faithful.

Tab Benoit’s Swampland – Voodoo 09 by Perrucci

Jimmy Herring added some extra muscle to the always epic Vic Chesnutt cover suite “Protein Drink/Sewing Machine.” The overall blue ribbon for the day would have to go to keyboardist JoJo Hermann for tearing through “Greta” on the upper deck synthesizer and delivering a tasty “All Time Low.” The final forty minutes or so of the show were particularly heated with a “Driving Song” > “Diner” > “Pilgrims” > “Driving Song” combo followed by a couple vintage Panic covers to close down a monster set. Playing an inspired and fresh-sounding cover is perhaps what Panic does best and their spin on Dr. John’s “I Walk On Guilded Splinters” was another example of Panic killing someone else’s song while making it all their own. Robert Randolph could be seen watching from the side of the stage towards the end and fans hoped he’d come sit-in for a tune. Also, one of the band crew’s three-year-old son added extra entertainment value bobbin’ up and down and spinning out of control during “North” in a way-oversized WSP shirt. Finally, the set closed with “Fixin’ to Die” as the sun fell on the final day of Voodoo.

With Panic in the books and The Flaming Lips circus about to unfold across the lawn, we took the short walk across the field to the nearby Billboard Stage to see what Mr. Wayne Coyne had in store for us this time. As usual, Coyne floated around the crowd in his hamster ball underneath a full moon, and you could tell that for a large portion of the crowd this was their first Lips experience as evidenced by the sheer number of dropped jaws and “WTFs?!” being uttered around the grounds.

The Flaming Lips – Voodoo 09 by McCullough

Returning to stage, Coyne and the Lips blasted off into a particularly inspired “Race for the Prize,” the crown jewel of the band’s now-legendary 1999 album The Soft Bulletin as confetti rained throughout City Park for the second straight night. As he’s done before, Coyne took a great deal of time to preach and talk to the crowd, whether trying to incite people to “go fucking crazy,” sharing a story about chatting with Gene Simmons backstage (who he described as “not usually a very nice person”) or continuing to lambaste the 43rd President about Katrina, the war, or whatever else was on his mind. New tune “Silver Trembling Hands” from the Lips’ latest release, Embryonic, came shortly thereafter and one of the dancing wild thing chicks stripped down to her birthday suit to dance with Wayne for a moment. The slowed down sing-along “Fight Test” was a snoozer miss, and the same goes for “Yoshimi,” as the weary Sunday crowd was not playing along for the most part. It was a shame to not hear the full effect of these two songs, and the stripped down versions just didn’t do it for most. It was not until “Pompeii am Gotterdammerung” that the music finally fit in with the spectacle. Coyne genuinely looked moved to the verge of tears while graciously thanking the organizers of Voodoo for having them back. “Do You Realize” was a fitting closer and undoubtedly the most powerful moment of the 75-minute set.

Dog-tired, we walked out of the gates as Lenny Kravitz played a beautiful version of “It Ain’t Over ’til It’s Over.” It would’ve been nice to stick around for Kravitz as his lights display was amazing and the band sounded great, but it was simply time to hit the dusty trail. Voodoo Experience was a like a three-day vacation in one of our nation’s finest cities, and I’m already looking forward to seeing what’s in store for 2010. The Big Easy was the place to be for Halloween, and the Voodoo organizers did an admirable job of assembling a wildly diverse, bizarre lineup that’ll stick out in the ole memory bank for years to come as one of the zanier, most rockin’ Halloweens ever.

More photos from Sunday at Voodoo available here.

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