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Posts Tagged ‘Peter Gabriel’

JamBase Questionnaire: Rubblebucket

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

New EP

Vermont-rooted, Brooklyn-based Rubblebucket is an astoundingly evolutionary creature. Since their 2008 debut, Rose’s Dream, they’ve toured aggressively, becoming one of the liveliest good times on the circuit while taking a progressive thirst into the studio. Rock-broad, jazz-smart and dub-wise, Rubblebucket’s music has whispers of Tom Tom Club, Nigerian funk, Lee Scratch Perry, Ethiopian soul, Roxy Music, Nyabinghi and The Police without kowtowing to any particular ancestor. Their sound sits along the same horizon line as Yeasayer, Akron/Family and Subtle, but unlike these peers they possess an imaginative use of horns and a lead singer, Kalmia Traver, whose tantalizing pipes soar somewhere between Dionne Warwick, Tina Weymouth and Portishead’s Beth Gibbons – a siren tug so potent you’d drink her bath water just to get a taste. Listening to Rubblebucket one feels as if they’re body surfing the edge of what’s possible in melodic yet actively experimental rock. And better still, the whole damn band can play the hell out of their respective instruments while sometimes literally leaping into an audience’s arms.

On October 19th Rubblebucket will release the Triangular Daisies EP , which includes three previously unreleased songs as well as three remastered tracks from the Came Out of a Lady Suite released this past spring. The EP is yet another wide stride forward for the band, revealing the flexibility of their material and the mindset behind it. The opening pair, the title cut and a sublime cover of The Beatles’ “Michelle,” is what radio would sound like if talent and real charm beat out the industry’s corporatized widget mentality. “Came Out Of A Lady,” a toasty little romp that whistles and skips in ways that make one glad they were born, follows, then a very different version of the same track and a fantastic remix of “Bikes” off their self-titled 2009 album that’ll have you reaching for your pocket calculator and itching to race along the autobahn. A smoky, pleasantly disorienting live version of “L’homme” captured at Higher Ground in April rounds out the set.

This is not a band that’s likely to stand still. Ever. No how. And that attitude and dedication vibrates outward from speakers and stages wherever their music plays. While still early in the game, gut instinct says Rubblebucket may one day create work as blindingly original as Radiohead’s Kid A, Tricky’s Maxinquaye or Peter Gabriel’s Security, and one doubts the intervening journey will be anything less than fascinating. (Dennis Cook)

Kicking off the Triangular Tour, Rubblebucket plays a pair of rare San Francisco shows this coming weekend – Friday, October 15 and Saturday, October 16 – at the Boom Boom Room. Afterwards, they return to the East Coast for a run that starts October 27th in Syracuse, NY and will take them into the Southeast in November, sharing stages with likeminded futurists Toubab Krewe and Pimps of Joytime on select dates. Find the full schedule here.

Here’s what trumpeter-singer Alex Toth had to say to our inquiries.

Rubblebucket – Alex in the bag, Kalmia Traver ensnared

Instrument(s) of choice: trumpet, floor tom, hyperkinetics
Nicknames: Toth, Al, GC (gargantuous cranium), boss

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Energy explosions inside the body and brain that make you want to scream. It can be helpful (in facilitating greatness) to shape those raw fiery impulses a bit.

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
Oasis’ Definitely Maybe or John Coltrane’s A Love Supreme. Pretty different ends of the spectrum. Ha ha!

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
Dirty Projectors’ new EP with Bjork, Mt. Wittenberg Orca. Holy shit! Deerhoof’s Offend Maggie got me really good, too.

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
In order from youngest to oldest: 1) a super hero that combined all the powers of Flash, Superman, the Ghostbusters (all of them at once) and Captain Planet. 2) A successful lawyer (I was really into Matlock). 3) A rock star. 4) Charlie Parker on the trumpet. The trumpeter thing is out the window to a certain extent, and now I just want to make awesome music.

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
A big awesome festival with lots of great bands. I love to be around great music and musicians. The hang can be so inspiring/uplifiting.

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
I think dub reggae is like air in its importance. I’m a lover AND a fighter. There’s a third thing but you said one thing, so I’ll stop at two.

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
Large droning vacuum/ventilation units. And wind chimes. When I’m walking down a street and I hear either of those things I instantly melt and get put into a space. I love big drone sounds in general.

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
Gosh, that’s tough. Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band (The Beatles) and/or Bitches Brew (Miles Davis) come to mind, but both for VERY different reasons. Other candidates: Physical Graffiti (Led Zeppelin), Odelay (Beck), Electric Bath (Don Ellis Orchestra), Pet Sounds (Beach Boys), Remain in Light (Talking Heads) or Thriller (Michael Jackson). After Bathing At Baxter’s (Jefferson Airplane) was big for me at one point in my life.

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
A condo in Idaho. We got fresh fish and greens and potatoes and rice and cooked the most fantastic ‘homemade’ tour meal ever. Since we tour with nine people on the road, to save money we used to bring a Coleman stove and make our own meals at the venue. I remember a particularly good one we made at Quixote’s in Denver. Sooooo much healthier and more delicious than most venue food (no offense).

10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
Costume. The coolest, most raging, interactive, crowd-surfingest audiences seem to always have people in costume in their midst – not the whole audience but just a person here or there. A sprinkling of costumed people makes for a vibrant, uninhibited, amazing time it seems.

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
Going to bed really, really late and drinking every night. But I kicked the drinking so, hmmm, maybe not flossing or not ironing my clothes. I often show up late to meetings, even if it’s just a couple minutes. Did the road do that?

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
The Beatles. Way more versatile and less easy to put in a box.

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
A moonrise. A large, orange, beautiful, quick moonrise on the horizon. Either that or two large busses half hanging off a highway overpass in Seattle during an ice storm in the winter of 2008 when I was on tour with John Brown’s Body. Freaky.

Rubblebucket Tour Dates :: Rubblebucket News :: Rubblebucket Concert Reviews

JamBase | New Born
Go See Live Music!


West Beach Music Fest | Pics | Review

Words & Images by: L. Paul Mann

West Beach Music Festival :: 09.24.10-09.25.10 :: Santa Barbara, CA

Day 1

WBMF Grounds 2010

Despite a slew of seemingly insurmountable roadblocks thrown up by the Santa Barbara City Council, the fourth annual West Beach Festival went off without a hitch the last weekend of September. Music fans were greeted with some of the first hot, sunny weather after one of the coldest, foggiest summers in Coastal California’s history. The scaled back festival was actually moved to Santa Barbara’s East Beach, along a palm lined grassy field that made for the perfect backdrop to the warm weather. Among the city’s restrictions, the festival was scaled back from three days to two and attendance was limited to half of last year’s record 14,000 people. The city also limited in and out privileges, sound levels and alcohol consumption (4 drinks per person per day). But despite all the restrictions, there were nothing but smiles all around on happy music fans throughout the grounds.

Twin Productions has been able to create a unique festival over the last four years, built around their core interest in reggae and beach music. Most of the acts booked are carefully selected world music artists, flying just under the radar of pop music fame, with a few headliners thrown in to add broader credibility to the event. Although most of the acts playing the main stage share reggae roots, the fest’s unique approach and vast cultural differences create a smorgasbord of sounds. West Beach Festival probably has more in common with Peter Gabriel s’ 30 year old WOMAD Festival than any other event. WOMAD was the first pop music festival to feature all types of bands from across the globe. West Beach also adds an electronic music stage into the mix to keep young techno fans dancing. A beautiful sunny day greeted early bird music fans for day one of the festival. Here are some of highlights.

Vancouver-based Red Eye Empire rocked the main stage early on. Their funky reggae infused sound is reminiscent of G Love & Special Sauce, and the band, in fact, has toured with G Love several times. Through The Roots were up next with the beach party oriented California sound. Hawaiian singer Anuhea (a cool breeze of the heavenly rose) brought a mellow island vibe during their sweltering afternoon set, with the crowd lounging on beach blankets during this set.

Over on the electronic music stage, Oakland-based rappers Zion I were the first act to draw a sizable crowd of enthusiastic, young fans on Saturday. Next, as the hot afternoon sun began to fade, Rey Fresco greeted a refreshed audience in front of the main stage. The Ventura, CA-based band is a veritable world music jam encapsulated in one group. Hailing from Fiji, lead singer Roger Keiaho offers a distinctive vocal style. Blonde surfer Andrew Jones not only plays the drums but manufactures them as well. Bassist Shawn Echevarria brings a Latin rhythm to the band. Finally, harpist Xoco Morazo adds a unique touch to the group, playing a variety of custom harps built by his father.

Rebelution @ WBMF ’10

A fired up crowd was ready for the next main stage act, San Diego-based Mike Pinto. Originally from Philadelphia, this roots rocker is far more at home playing beachy surf music. He already has a big following in many Pacific islands like Guam and Hawaii.

As dusk fell, one of the most well received bands of the festival truly brought the growing crowd alive. Katchafire, hailing from New Zealand, is comprised of indigenous Maori musicians playing lush roots reggae with their own cultural sounds in the mix.

Collie Buddz brought his unique mix of dance hall, Soca and hip hop to the main stage as night fell. Born in New Orleans and raised in Bermuda, his style is truly his own.

Saturday’s headliner was Santa Barbara’s own Rebelution. The band’s popular Cali-reggae sound has recently exploded in popularity and the group has been headlining large venues across the country. The band was greeted by a smoky, smiling, gyrating crowd. At the same time, electronic music wizards Savoy were closing out the electronic music stage in front of a younger crowd of enthusiastic fans. The Boulder, CO trio, including a live drummer, merges a mash up of styles from European house to 70s and 80s dance music to create their fresh new sound. As day one of West Beach Festival 2010 wound down, smiling music fans could be seen from one end of the venue to the other.

Day 2

Lime Riders @ WBMF ’10

Sunday at the West Beach Music Festival started bright and early with blazing sunshine and music on all stages by 12 noon. Cuervo, which came on board as a last minute corporate sponsor and helped save the event from early termination, produced a giant playground for young adults with the Cuervo Pavilion. It came complete with an artificial rock wall, where volunteer teams from the audience would compete for prizes while being doused with gallons of water. Other games featured a giant mechanical lime that participants could ride like a mechanical bull. A few bikini-clad girls ended up with minor bloody noses, but were still smiling nevertheless. Most of the games featured some sort of water dousing, which became very inviting as the temperature in Santa Barbara soared to over 90-degrees.

While some fans frolicked at the games, others danced to their favorite bands on the multiple stages. Giant Panda Guerilla Dub Sound played an early set in the sweltering midday sun. The New York-based band plays experimental dub reggae but also takes a page from jam bands like Phish by never playing the same set twice and improvising extensively live. Indeed, the band played two entirely different sets in Santa Barbara on this day. The West Beach Fest set sounded like traditional reggae and created a mellow tone in line with the mood of a sweltering early crowd. At the after-show later in the evening at the Soho nightclub, the band played a much more upbeat dub drenched set. The sound was reminiscent of The Clash when they began to experiment with reggae. Giant Panda has built a loyal following by playing over 500 shows in the last three years. The band offers free downloads of their music at LivePanda.com.

Central Coast band Still Time hit the main stage next with a blues-drenched set of upbeat tunes. This relatively young band has become a regional favorite, playing up and down the coast for the last five years. Their unique, bluesy style has been compared to music masters like Dave Matthews and Ben Harper. The band was the perfect lead-in to the next main stage act, JJ Grey & Mofro. The funky blues boogie band from Jacksonville, FL has been a staple on the festival circuit for nearly a decade. Mofro brought a sweltering mid-afternoon crowd to their feet for a shuffling dance extravaganza.

UB40 @ WBMF ’10

As the relentless afternoon sun began to subside, Australian new-roots reggae sensation The Beautiful Girls hit the stage. Led by charismatic lead singer Matt McHugh, the band had bikini clad girls screaming and dancing in front of the West Beach crowd. Another unique new hybrid group, their sound has been compared to bands as diverse as The Police and Ben Harper.

As a spectacular sunset fell over the festival grounds, the most anticipated band of the festival exploded onto the stage in a spectacular blazing light show. UB40, one of the veterans of the English ska and reggae movement, has sold over 70 million records since they got together in the late 70s. The band did not disappoint, offering a larger-than-life live show featuring animated dance routines and lively solo performances from many of the more than one dozen jamming musicians onstage.

At the same time, electronic music duo Pretty Lights had a smaller crowd of younger fans in a dancing frenzy in front of the electronic music stage. As the second night of the West Beach Music Festival wound to a close, bands like Soja and The Easy Star All-Stars had music fans grooving and smiling till the 10 p.m. curfew brought the 2010 festival to a close.

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JamBase | Irie
Go See Live Music!


2010 MTV Video Music Awards List Of Winners; Lady Gaga Crowned Queen

The Lady Gaga juggernaut steamrolled the competition at this weekend’s 2010 MTV Video Music Awards. The odd pop queen was crowned queen of the MTV Video Music Awards on Sunday, winning eight coveted Moonmen — including Video of the Year for her hit futuristic clip “Bad Romance.” The viral sensation was revered for its skin-baring [...]

SCI: Rhythm of the Road New Archive Series

BRAND NEW CLASSIC ARCHIVAL SERIES WITH RHYTHM OF THE ROAD VOLUME 1, INCIDENT IN
ATLANTA – 11.17.00
OUT 11.09.10; TICKETS TO HULAWEEN OCTOBER 29 & 30 AT HAMPTON COLISEUM ON
SALE NOW


The String Cheese Incident

The String Cheese Incident
announces a brand new live archival series with Rhythm of the Road: Volume 1, Incident in Atlanta –
11.17.00
. Available 11.09.10 in celebration of the historic show’s ten year anniversary, this will be the
first offering in SCI’s new series Rhythm of the Road which will be highlighting many of the band’s most
celebrated
concerts with remastered limited edition releases.

Rhythm of the Road: Vol. 1 includes special guest Tony Furtado on banjo for several songs and features
covers of Led Zeppelin, Talking Heads, John Coltrane, Peter Rowan, and Peter Gabriel, as well as bluegrass standards
and a host of SCI originals. The show is the perfect way to kick off The String Cheese Incident’s archival series
Rhythm of the Road.

Incident in Atlanta features the entire 11.17.00 performance, lovingly remastered from the original 24-bit multi-
track master tapes and made available on CD, download (MP3, FLAC) and, an SCI first, 24-bit FLAC download. It will
be released on November 9 in stores, through SCI Merchandise, and www.LiveCheese.com.

Track List:

Set 1: Smile, Joyful Sound > Orange Blossom Special*, Barstool, Pygmy Pony,
Missing Me > Ramble On
Set 2: Outside And Inside, Impressions > Glory Chords Jam > Midnight
Moonlight*, This Must Be the Place (Naive Melody) > Miss Brown’s Teahouse,
Wake Up, Black Clouds*
Encore: The Old Home Place*, Shenandoah Breakdown*, Shakin’ the Tree*

The band will conclude the year with an epic Halloween weekend at Virginia’s Hampton Coliseum. “Hulaween 2010”
will feature special guests The Disco
Biscuits
on Friday, October 29 and Saturday, October 30 will offer a three-set evening with The String Cheese
Incident. A limited amount of tickets are still available, please visit www.stringcheeseincident.com for additional information.

The String Cheese Incident
Tour Dates

::
The String Cheese Incident
News

::
The String Cheese Incident
Concert
Reviews


Hindus laud Sheryl Crow for promoting school kids yoga

Grammy winner musician Sheryl Crow has contributed towards a CD to raise funds for providing in-school kids yoga programs, according to reports. Titled “Yoga Revolution”, its other contributing artists include Sarah McLachlan, Sting, Ziggy Marley, Peter Gabriel, Seal, Michael Franti, Krishna Das, Anjelique Kidjo, Guru Singh, Donna De Lory, and Anoushka Shankar. Hindu statesman Rajan [...]

Michael Jackson “Thriller” Named “Most Influential Music Video Of All Time”

No arguments here! Almost two decades after it revolutionized the world of music videos, Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” still has viewers spellbound. The video for MJ’s 1983 hit “Thriller” has been named the “Most Groundbreaking Video Of All Time.” The 14-minute zombie epic, directed by London filmmaker John Landis, topped a poll of MySpace users (what’s left [...]

Saturday Eye Candy: Willie Nelson

HAPPY 77TH BIRTHDAY, RED HEADED STRANGER!!!

Willie Nelson is a treasure, pure and simple. One of the strongest, coolest voices to ever emerge from the country world, Nelson is also a ferociously talented guitarist, top notch songwriter, tireless performer and an inspired interpreter of other’s material on par with greats like Ella Fitzgerald and Frank Sinatra. Yesterday, Willie turned 77-years-old and we couldn’t let the occasion pass without tipping our hat to him. In his honor, we’ve rolled up a sampling of some choice moments in his long, long career. Damn, we’re glad we’ve shared this past near-century with you, mister!

We begin with a smoking version of one of Willie’s most beloved songs.

Beneath the braids and clouds of smoke, Nelson can be one smooth character. He draws from Brazilian and tango strains on this number, which features Emmylou Harris.

No salute to Willie would be complete without this one, but we’re gonna let his friend and fellow Highwayman handle this one. Nifty, slightly melancholy reading.

The man really sings about drinking very, very well.

Willie has done his part to keep the tradition of cowboy songs alive. Here he is with pal Johnny Cash singing one of the finest trail tunes ever.

It’s not just for Muppets anymore! This is the sort of thing that makes Willie an adored icon across MANY generations.

Here’s “The Lost Highwaymen” – Keith Richards, Hank Williams III, Ryan Adams and Willie – doing a Stones classic.

Willie has done duets with nearly every noteworthy singer of the past 50 years. He seems to live and breath when entwining his voice with another’s, but as far afield as he’s roamed, this pairing with Sinead O’Connor on Peter Gabriel’s tune couldn’t have been predicted.

Nelson has made a number of films but this is the only one with Morgan Fairchild.

We wrap with a little ditty that Patsy Cline made famous but Willie penned. Classic stuff, but one can say that about a lot of things with Willie.

Willie Nelson Tour Dates :: Willie Nelson News :: Willie Nelson Concert Reviews

JamBase | U.S.A.

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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)


Peter Gabriel: New Blood Tour

PETER GABRIEL TO PLAY SELECT VENUES WITH FULL ORCHESTRA

Peter Gabriel

Peter Gabriel will visit select cities and venues beginning in March, billed as The New Blood Tour. Gabriel will be accompanied by an orchestra only, foregoing drums and guitars entirely.

The ensemble is now known as the Scratch My Back experience; named after the title of Gabriel’s forthcoming studio album, released in the U.K. on January 25 (Virgin).

Individual show information, including ticket options, is available here.

Scratch My Back was recorded at George Martin‘s Air Lyndhurst Studios and the Real World Temple. Gabriel then did further editing and mixing at his own Real Worlds Studios in Wiltshire. Full album details available here.

Peter Gabriel Tour Dates

03/22/10 Mon Bercy Paris, FRA

03/24/10 Wed O2 World Berlin, GER

03/25/10 Thu O2 World Berlin, GER

03/27/10 Sat O2 Arena London, GB

03/28/10 Sun O2 Arena London, GB

04/28/10 Wed Bell Centre Montreal, QC

05/02/10 Sun Radio City Music Hall New York, NY

05/03/10 Mon Radio City Music Hall New York, NY

05/07/10 Fri Hollywood Bowl Los Angeles, CA


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)


Space’s First Clown Reaches ISS

Billionaire Cirque du Soleil founder Guy Laliberte arrives at the International Space Station and — true to form — dons a clown nose. During his brief tourist trip to the ISS, Laliberte plans to coordinate from the ISS a 120-minute, 14-city show on Earth featuring former U.S. Vice President Al Gore, Peter Gabriel and U2.
– Guy Laliberte, the billionaire founder of Cirque du Soleil, arrived at the International Space Station Oct. 1 and to no one’s surprise slapped on a clown nose and began yukking it up with crew members of the space station. Laliberte is the seventh paying (reportedly $35 million) space tourist to tra…


Guy Laliberte Takes Clown Act to ISS

Cirque du Soleil founder Guy Laliberte blasts off for the International Space Station aboard a Russian spacecraft for what he calls a poetic social mission. In addition to a weightless juggling show, Laliberte is planning to coordinate from the ISS a 120-minute, 14-city show on Earth featuring former U.S. Vice President Al Gore, Peter Gabriel and U2.
– Wearing a large, red clown nose, Guy Laliberte
took off early Sept. 30 for the International Space Station in a Russian Soyuz
capsule accompanied by cosmonaut Maxim Surayev and American astronaut Jeffrey
Williams. When the spacecraft entered orbit minutes after blasting off from the
Baikonur lau…


Phish: Festival 8 Band To Play Last Record Alive

Phish Festival 8: Band To Play Last Record Alive

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

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


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

Possible Phish Halloween Cover Albums

Phish

1.AC/DC | Back In Black

2.Aerosmith | Toys In The Attic

3.Allman Brothers Band | Eat A Peach

4.Arcade Fire | Funeral

5.Beastie Boys | Hello Nasty

6.BeeGees | Saturday Night Fever

7.Black Sabbath | Paranoid

8.Blind Faith | Blind Faith

9.Bob Dylan | Blood On the Tracks

10.Bob Dylan & the Band | The Basement Tapes

11.Bob Seger | Against The Wind

12.Boston | Boston

13.Brian Eno | Before And After Science

14.Bruce Springsteen | Born To Run

15.Chicago | The Chicago Transit Authority

16.Creedence Clearwater Revival | Green River

17.Curtis Mayfield | Superfly Soundtrack

18.David Bowie | Hunky Dory

19.David Bowie | Ziggy Stardust

20.David Bowie | Scary Monsters

21.Devo | Freedom of Choice

22.Duran Duran | Rio

23.Eagles | Hotel California

24.Elton John | Goodbye Yellow Brick Road

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

26.Eric Clapton | 461 Ocean Blvd

27.Firehose | Flyin’ the Flannel

28.Fleetwood Mac | Rumours

29.Frank Zappa | Apostrophe

30.Frank Zappa | Hot Rats

31.Genesis | The Lambs Lie Down On Broadway

32.Grateful Dead | American Beauty

33.Guns & Roses | Appetite For Destruction

34.Hall & Oates | Private Eyes

35.Huey Lewis And The News | Sports

36.Jane’s Addiction | Ritual de Lo Habitual

37.Jimi Hendrix | Are You Experienced?

38.Jimi Hendrix | Electric Ladyland

39.John Lennon | Plastic Ono Band

40.Modern Lovers | The Modern Lovers

41.Journey | Escape

42.KISS | Alive II

43.King Crimson | Larks’ Tongues In Aspic

44.Led Zeppelin | I

45.Led Zeppelin | IV (Zoso)

46.Leonard Cohen | I’m Your Man

47.Love | Forever Changes

48.Manu Chao | Clandestino

49.Medeski, Martin & Wood | Shack Man

50.Metallica | Master Of Puppets

51.MGMT | Oracle Spectacular

52.Michael Jackson | Thriller

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

54.Miles Davis | A Tribute To Jack Johnson

55.Minutemen | Double Nickels On The Dime

56.Neil Young | Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere

57.Neil Young | Tonight’s The Night

58.Nirvana | Nevermind

59.Pavement | Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain

60.Pearl Jam | Ten

61.Peter Gabriel | So

62.Pink Floyd | Meddle

63.Pink Floyd | The Wall

64.Pixies | Come On Pilgrim

65.Pork Tornado | Pork Tornado

66.Primus | Sailing The Seas Of Cheese

67.Prince | Purple Rain

68.Queen | A Night At The Opera

69.Radiohead | Kid A

70.Rage Against The Machine | Evil Empire

71.Rolling Stones | Exile on Main Street

72.Rolling Stones | Sticky Fingers

73.Rush | Moving Pictures

74.Steely Dan | Pretzel Logic

75.T.Rex | Electric Warrior

76.Talking Heads | Fear Of Music

77.Television | Marquee Moon

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

79.The Beach Boys | Pet Sounds

80.The Beatles | Rubber Soul

81.The Clash | London Calling

82.The Doors | The Doors

83.The Police | Ghost In The Machine

84.The Ramones | Ramones

85.The Roots | Phrenology

86.The Who | Who’s Next

87.Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers | Damn The Torpedoes

88.Tom Waits | Rain Dogs

89.U2 | Joshua Tree

90.Van Halen | Van Halen

91.Van Morrison | Astral Weeks

92.Velvet Underground | Velvet Underground And Nico

93.Violent Femmes | Violent Femmes

94.Ween | White Pepper

95.White Stripes | Elephant

96.Wilco | Yankee Hotel Foxtrot

97.X | Los Angeles

98.Yes | The Yes Album

99.ZZ Top | Tres Hombres

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


Sat Eye Candy: Rush

HOW CAN THREE GUYS MAKE ALL THAT SOUND?

Since the early 1970s Rush has served as an effective gateway into high level musicianship and smart rock construction. Long before most of us heard Return To Forever, Miles Davis or even Phish, we likely heard the hard rock majesty of “Limelight” or “Tom Sawyer,” which, like most of their canon, broaden the parameters of rock ‘n’ roll considerably. Part prog, part heavy rock, part fusion, Rush – Geddy Lee (bass, keys, vocals), Alex Lifeson (guitars) and Neal Peart (drums, percussion) – work as the perfect introduction to the expansive power of extremely talented, dedicated musicians hell-bent on making art rather than simple product. That they also inspire head banging and bong loading is crucial to 35-year and counting popularity. Always happy to celebrate jam’s forefathers, we present this small salute to one of the most enduring, intelligent rock acts ever.

We kick off this assortment with “YYZ,” a tune that lies at the core of their popularity, a wicked switchback of quick shifts, artful dropouts and showy musicianship that remains unremittingly fun regardless of all the crazy braininess.

Unleash the unicorns!

If you were a alienated, brainy teen with a love of angst riddled music in the early 1980s then you probably wore out a copy of Signals and delighted everytime MTV played this video.

The band returned to instrumental composition for the first time since 1996 with 2007′s Snakes And Arrows, including jagged keeper “Malignant Narcissim.”

Time to fulfill the “universal dream.” This one rarely fails to make even the most hardened, cynical listener lose it, just a bit and enough to remind us of rock’s power to connect and stir us.

There’s a worldly energy to “Mystic Rhythms” that compares well with Peter Gabriel’s work during the ’80s, when this track first appeared on 1985′s Power Windows.

Continue reading for more Rush videos…

2002′s Vapor Trail album and tour were a triumph on several levels for Rush. Not only was it one of their strongest releases in years, the subsequent concerts boasted a revitalized band and one of their finest productions to date. All this occurred in the sad wake of drummer Neal Peart’s extreme personal loss of his only child and wife in a 10 month period, after which he’d announced his retirement. Thankfully he returned and found solace in his craft. “One Little Victory” is Rush at their heavy, sharp best, and while the sound on this clip is a bit dodgy it does show off the amazing set and effects from this tour well.

Epic vaguely begins to cover the huge scope of “2112,” which is the very definition of “ambitious rock.” This vintage performance from 1976 was cool enough to put up with the omnipresent time code, and for those who want the full monty, Part Two can be found here.

While many, many acts that enjoyed massive success in the ’80s failed to reproduce anything like it in the ’90s, Rush retooled and has remained a stadium filling sure bet ever since. The template for this new sound was laid down by 1991′s Roll The Bones.

The slight reggae accents to “Distant Early Warning” combined with the glossy keys and slick movements create one of the band’s standout tracks. Nifty live version despite the trio looking like they got mugged by a Miami Vice stylist.

And where else could we end but up the river with “Tom Sawyer”?


Hit the spot

Spotify screengrab

By Laura Schocker

The online music streaming service Spotify has been credited with helping a small revival in the British music industry. But it’s also changing the way we listen to music.

Imagine a giant jukebox – loaded with millions of pop songs, ready to be accessed in an instant. Imagine said jukebox sitting, virtually, in your living room – to be accessed in an instant through your computer.

Big deal. What would have sounded like a far-fetched fantasy 10 years ago, is an everyday reality today. The internet is crammed with such services – from Apple’s iTunes to Amazon’s "MP3".

Peter Gabriel

Music is everywhere online, but mostly subject to one huge caveat – it costs. Those who don’t pay tend to steal it using one of the numerous unofficial file-sharing download sites. It’s a trend which has been credited with bringing the music industry to its knees.

But internet users in the UK and a handful of other European countries have been exploring a third way in recent months. The free, legal, on-demand music streaming service – the most talked about is Spotify.

Last week, music industry experts were mildly encouraged to discover that after years in decline, the overall size of the British music industry grew by almost 5% in 2008. And Spotify was one of the services credited with helping arrest the decline.

Spotify began in Sweden in 2006 as a downloadable desktop application allowing anyone with a computer to search for and then stream from a selection of about five million songs. It is available in free or paid-for versions – the former inserts a 30-second advert every few songs, while premium users get their music uninterrupted for a £10 monthly subscription. Artists receive a royalty.

It’s not the only such service available. We7, set up by pop star Peter Gabriel, has a similarly large catalogue and operates through a normal web browser. Each song is prefaced by a brief advert. Music-based social networking site LastFM, which also offers streaming, has built a big following.

Remember the album

But it’s Spotify, which has two million users in the UK, that has been grabbing the headlines of late. And, for those who have always preferred to stay on the right side of the law when it comes to music online, there’s anecdotal evidence it’s changing the way people are listening to music.

"Now everybody is downloading songs one by one, but Spotify has changed that because you have access to a whole album"

Spotify fan Sean Flynn

"It’s a handy tool for testing out music that you’re not that familiar with yet," says Jim Edwards, an artist from Newcastle who signed up for the free version about four months ago. "I have music on all day."

Whereas Apple’s iTunes, the biggest of the music download services, only allows users to preview a 30-second snippet of a song to decide whether or not they like it, Spotify allows users to listen to whole songs, whole albums, again and again.

Julie Wright, of London, who has been using Spotify for about two months, as a free subscriber, says it’s a useful money-saver in these straitened times.

"Because you’re watching extra spending, you want to be very careful about what you buy," she says. "You don’t want to buy an album you’ll end up hating." But she admits she has yet to covert her listening of an album on Spotify to an actual purchase.

The ability to sample at will is one of the big selling points, says Anders Sehr, Spotify communications manager.

"If you read something from a critic in the newspaper in the morning, you can go home and listen to it right away in the evening," Mr Sehr says. "This has really changed the way people can access music."

Serious holes

It’s not just new music, either – with millions of songs, listeners can rediscover old favourites. "I can get music from the past that I haven’t even thought about," says Sean Flynn, a masters student in London, who signed up about two weeks ago and uses Spotify to browse 90s rap music.

Record player groovsters

And the music isn’t the only thing that’s a blast from the past – it’s the approach, too, according to Mr Flynn. "Remember when you used to have actual CDs and you used to know every song Now everybody is downloading songs one by one," he says. "Spotify has changed that because you have access to a whole album."

Whole album, maybe, but there are some notable holes in Spotify’s catalogue. While the site is adding an average of 10,000 new tracks every day, big selling artists like Pink Floyd, Metallica and Led Zeppelin have yet to grant licensing rights to their music.

And while it may be changing listening habits, is Spotify as revolutionary as has been suggested Mark Mulligan, vice president of Forrester Research, thinks not.

"In many ways, Spotify doesn’t actually do that much which hasn’t been done before," he says. "It just delivers a really easy-to-use, good service."

A lack of design sophistication and clutter is the key to the program’s success, Mr Mulligan says. And, he adds, the basic approach allows people to search quickly for and stream free, on-demand music.

The simple design – which some users compare to the iTunes layout – is no accident, says Mr Sehr.

US lock out

"We want to focus on ease of use, simplicity and speed," he says. The name comes from the company founders’ hope to allow users to "spot" and "identify" good music.

File sharing site

"People don’t want to spend time learning new programs," says Mr Sehr, explaining that if they know how to use iTunes, catching on to Spotify is simple. "As soon as you get it up and running, you have an idea of how it’s going to work."

But changing the way people access and listen to music doesn’t necessarily mean Spotify is an easy fix for the music industry, says Mr Mulligan.

In 2007, 20 illegal tracks were swapped for every one legal track sold, according to the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry. And while sites like Spotify can help, they’re not the "holy grail", warns Mr Mulligan.

Perhaps the most basic limitation at this point is that streaming music doesn’t replace downloads that can transfer to portable music players. Though an iPhone application, announced earlier this week by Spotify and waiting on Apple approval, may allow users to download a cache of music, it’s not the same as having every track at your fingertips.

And while the ability to sample new tracks on streaming services may reduce the amount of total time spent on illegal piracy sites, Mr Mulligan says, people still want on-the-go and on-demand music delivered directly to their earbuds. "I do not think Spotify is anything near a replacement for file sharing," he says.

Another big question for Spotify is whether its business model can sustain long-term success. According to Mr Sehr, the company has yet to turn a profit, but they are hoping to do so by the end of this year or early next year.

Even with revenue from the advertising version doubling each month, Mr Mulligan says the company needs to convince users to pay the monthly subscription rate to be viable. The iPhone app, which would only be available to premium users, may just be one way to do this, says Mr Sehr.

And then there’s the US question. At the moment, the potentially huge American audience is locked out of the Spotify party, finding itself in "the unfortunate position of being the big audience," says Farhad Manjoo, technology columnist for Slate online magazine.

"It probably is easier to get licensing to do these kinds of things outside of the US."

While he’s waiting for an American Spotify, Mr Manjoo has used a proxy server to download and try out the service. Though it may not yet be meant for American ears, so far, he likes what he hears. "As far as I know, it is better than everything that is available," he says. "It’s easy to understand and easy to grasp."


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