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Posts Tagged ‘Phil’

Groundhog Day 2011 Update: Punxsutawney Phil Predicts Early Spring!

Good Morning & Happy Groundhog Day! Had enough of the harsh winter of Nor’easters and flash flood rain showers? You’re in luck: The Groundhog eyes early spring! Punxsutawney Phil, February’s Favorite Forecasting Rodent, didn’t see his shadow during the annual Groundhog Day Ceremony in Gobbler’s Knob, Pennsylvania Wednesday morning, a supposed sign that warmer weather [...]

The Rhythm Devils: License To Fly

By: Dennis Cook

Check out some audience recordings of the new lineup here and here to accompany your reading.

Rhythm Devils 2010 by Suzy Perler

The new incarnation of The Rhythm Devils is like no other in this long running project for Grateful Dead percussionists Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann. Where earlier lineups focused on a worldly exploration of percussion, the 2010 version is directly engaging with the Dead catalog and generating a goodly amount of new material, too. Joining the drum masters are Tim Bluhm of The Mother Hips (guitar, vocals), Davy Knowles of Back Door Slam (guitar, vocals), Sikiru Adepoju (talking drum) and Andy Hess (bass). An earlier tour this year had Keller Williams in place of Bluhm. In many ways, this more song-oriented ensemble is a chance for Kreutzmann and Hart to lay rightful claim to their share of the Grateful Dead legacy, and in the original spirit of that band, extend the range and possibilities of one of the most enduring, flexible and downright amazing catalogs ever produced. Whatever the underlying reasons, the Devils are at it again.

Mickey Hart by Suzy Perler

“Our name was bestowed upon us by Garcia. Jerry, one night in one of his funny moods, said, ‘You guys are rhythm devils’ [his voice taking on a deep growl]. It was said in the funniest of ways, and we were really after the rhythm that night. That’s where it all started,” says Mickey Hart. “Originally it was just about Bill and I doing our thing in the second set. It was a free space, rhythmically speaking, and we just went out into the zone and discovered what the rhythm of the day was.”

As percussionists, Hart and Kreutzmann give off a trickster vibe with a knowing playfulness that’s touched by resounding confidence and wildfire. These are not guys one is likely to see knocking out straight bebop. The way rhythm speaks to them is peculiar and touched by something organic and unique.

“We look for the moment, and when we find it we’re not afraid to go after it,” says Hart. “One of things about performance is fear or the lack of it and respect for failing or not failing, which is always there. But the idea of discovery is more important than the fear of failure in our world.”

“Each night is valuable. Everyone has equity in the moment – we own it, you own it – and it will never be repeated again. So, it’s an original. Sometimes an original is better than others but it’s still an original,” continues Hart. “You try to make it as special as you can, and you settle for whatever happens. Hopefully it’s an uplifting moment. This is moment music, and that is the goal – to create something of value that’s never to be repeated again, an original.”

The New Guys

Bill Kreutzmann by Chad Smith

While all top-notch players, the Rhythm Devils 2010 lineup isn’t something that most listeners, even serious Deadheads, would likely have come up with. It speaks to an out-of-the-box intention from the Devils’ leaders that comes with risks but also potentially great rewards.

“We’re playing the songs. It’s not like free space all night. We have structure, and then you have release. You have to have some kind of physical architecture or you’re just jamming all night, and that becomes rudderless and meaningless at times. Just noodling and twittering just to be in the moment is not the object,” says Hart. “The object is to go somewhere together and making something of value and interest not just to you but to the people listening.”

“We’re making the old music our own, and Robert Hunter is composing for us, so we have a loads of new material,” says Hart. “The band is just being born and starting to own the songs. Playing the songs is one thing – you can play them well, you can play them badly – but to own the song, to put your signature sound and feeling on it, is really the objective here. Grateful Dead songs were created with that in mind, which allows for exploration; circumnavigation, as it were. Every night I see new sights, hear new sounds, new ways of putting it together. So, the band is loosening up and becoming a band, not just six players. There’s a difference.”

Tim Bluhm by Chad Smith

“I’m just grateful to the universe for having this opportunity, but I can’t say that it’s easy. What’s cool about Billy and Mickey is they don’t do what you think they’re gonna do. I think that’s a great quality to have,” says Tim Bluhm. “I’d heard them play but had never met them. I think Bill spent a lot of time on YouTube looking for guys. I had to learn all the music, and I’m still learning. One big challenge for me is we play at least one new song each show that I’ve never heard before. I’m constantly on my toes, always on the edge of learning new stuff. You’re never done learning stuff with this band. As soon as you’ve gotten a few songs down, there’s a new batch to learn. I’m having a lot of fun onstage hearing the songs get better all the time. It’s a miracle to see what hard work can do. These guys work hard!”

“I was never a big Dead guy. I didn’t grow up listening to them. I knew who they were peripherally but I had to learn a LOT of this music and make my own sort of Grateful Dead 101 study class,” says Andy Hess. “The way I got involved was I’d met Mickey’s manager many times over the year in other situations. He thought of me, and then Bill, who I’d met a bit, was sort of a champion for me when my name came up. I told them, ‘If you’re expecting a Phil Lesh type of bass player, that’s not me.’ Bill was very supportive and said, ‘Play how you play. That’s why I pushed for you to be here.’ So, I’m trying to make it my own a bit with respect to the music. I’m such a different bassist than Phil. I really love John Paul Jones, he’s one of my heroes.”

Davy Knowles by Suzy Perler

“I absolutely have no idea whatsoever how I got this gig [laughs]. I got a call from my agent asking if I wanted to join this band for a bit of a tour. I said absolutely; it wasn’t even a decision, it was just ‘Of course.’ What an honor,” says Davy Knowles. “Suddenly I’m getting phone calls from Mickey Hart asking, ‘Do you play lap steel? Do you own one? Well, you should probably get one.’ So, I was pretty much thrown into the deep end without really knowing what was going on, which is great.”

“I wouldn’t say I was a [Grateful Dead] fan before. I’d heard stuff and had huge respect for them, but I hadn’t delved deeper into them. Now I’m just kicking myself for not doing it sooner. It’s such an amazing library of music that I’m being opened up to,” says Knowles. “What I love about them is they’re a true American band. They play real Americana – blues, country, pretty much every form of American music.”

“Bill just wanted to do it again, so we searched around for these different players that we thought were flexible enough and high-caliber enough to play together and enjoy each other – their personalities, their singing abilities, their playing abilities [were all factors],” says Hart. “I used YouTube quite a bit to study their musical habits and listened to their recordings. I did a lot of research into who they were, and we brought them all together. There’s no telling about chemistry but it worked. You just never can tell.”

Rhythm Devils 2010 by Chad Smith

“We don’t count it anymore, but the poor kids playing with us now have to count it. It’s hard for us to explain why we added two beats before you go into this other part. It just seemed like a good idea at the time,” chuckles Hart. “We just smile with it when they fumble the ball a little bit. Sooner or later, they get the pocket and hold the ball tight and they run. Bill and I don’t put any real pressure on the guitarists because they had to learn 40-plus songs. They probably thought they were going to learn a set or something and here they’ve got 40-plus songs on their plate with lyrics and chord changes and tempo changes. They study all the time. We have long sound checks where play through the songs and have transitions and see if we can find our way from this song to that song. We let ‘em know if it’s going to be faster or slower, but to just keep their ears open and play through it. And all of the sudden, we’ll wind up there! Just stay with it, kid! And all of a sudden, a little smile crosses their face when they can see the light at the end. You’re swimming deep and all of the sudden you can see the surface for a little air, something known as opposed to the unknown, chaos to order, order to chaos and somewhere in between.”

This sort of risk taking – a leap into the unknown with a grin and crossed-fingers – is indicative of how Hart and Kreutzmann have made music their whole lives. Too often, particularly in music these days, artists are unwilling to make such leaps, paralyzed by fear of failure or looking bad or some other hitch that keeps their feet planted.

“That seems like a waste of a good life,” offers Hart. “You’ve got to have musical adventure in your life. Music is life for me, at least a big part of it. It really wouldn’t be a smart idea if I played it safe at this stage in my life. So, what you do is try to find people that want to do something that’s a bit out of the ordinary, out of the box. And if they agree on doing it without having to force them into it – which is not fun – then you have something.”

Tim Bluhm & Davy Knowles by Suzy Perler

“It’s absolutely terrifying, but a real education. I can’t see any other way I’d have gotten this education. It’s such a unique experience. Perhaps the most terrifying thing was Mickey wanted to hear the renditions I was doing with these songs. He asked me to record MP3s of me doing Jerry songs with Robert Hunter lyrics and send them back to him. You can imagine how terrifying it was to record these songs, send them to a Grateful Dead member and wait for a reply. I was quivering,” says Knowles. “I have a whole new respect for Jerry Garcia. What an incredible musician, not just a guitar player. Just amazing.”

“Garcia was such an accomplished guitarist and songwriter, but even more than that, he seems like such a benevolent spirit. I respect him and the material so much. You can’t go too wrong if you approach it that way,” says Bluhm. “It’s like a rock band with these moments of trance. Both Davy and I have learned a lot about playing that kind of Africanized trance rock ‘n’ roll. It’s so fun to play with [Billy and Mickey] because they have that thing that only the Dead had. In some ways, it’s almost more distinctive than what Phil and Bobby brought to it. There’s no mistaking them for anyone else.”

Finding a bassist with the flexibility and quickness to follow two utterly idiosyncratic percussionists like Hart and Kreutzmann is no simple task. But Andy Hess, with a CV that includes Gov’t Mule, The Black Crowes and John Scofield, possesses the sort of fluid open-mindedness necessary to complete the low-end in the Devils.

Andy Hess by Chad Smith

“I’ve sort of been a lifelong sideman who’s played with a lot of people. When I played with Gov’t Mule for five years that was the longest I’ve been in a band,” says Hess. “I’m a very supportive kind of player. I’ve done a lot of different things, and I’ve always liked a lot of different kinds of music. I’ve been in New York City for 20 years, and there’s a lot of great players there. In order to make a living sometimes I have to do different stuff. I may not always be totally into it but I try to be open to it. It’s a constant work in progress. Every time I go onstage I think, ‘Okay, here’s an opportunity.’ Some nights are good and other nights are terrible. It’s so intangible, but it’s humbling to get to do this for a living.”

“Mickey has soooo much energy and he can really inspire you. He’s always saying, ‘Let’s do this and let’s do this,’ and it keeps going. Oh my god, this guy is 25 years older than me and he’s all over the place!” says Hess. “He cares and he’s a lot of fun. He’s got a strong personality. He’s cool and respectful to us all. Even though he wants to get what he wants out of all of us, he’s appreciative and he’s a smart guy.”

Knowles had the pleasure of playing guitar and singing with Keller Williams and Tim Bluhm, two very distinctive players and singers with almost nothing in common. How did this go over in the Devils?

“It’s wonderful both ways. They’re both incredible musicians and it’s been an honor and a privilege to work with both of them and get to know their styles and even rob parts of their styles, too. That’s what playing with other people is all about really,” says Knowles. “Keller is kind of a hyper solo musician and all his tempos are really quick – he’s the first to say that – and it’s kind of awesome. He’s so used to playing by himself, whereas Tim Bluhm is sort of the definition of laid-back California. He’s just an unbelievable guitar player, but he seems a bit shy about it. The one thing I love about Tim is his tone and touch. He doesn’t have to play a lot of notes. He’s drenched in soul, and his playing is just fantastic.”

Mickey Hart by Suzy Perler

As for bandleader Hart’s assessment of this newest bunch:

“This is not telepathic yet, so you have to lead a little bit more and you have to be a bit more on top of things to give these signals to the rest of the band, who aren’t intuitive yet,” says Hart. “Being intuitive means being in the groove for hundreds of hours to be able to move and pulse and throb as one. The goal, eventually, is to go there together instantly. There are so many possibilities and how are they going to know where to go without some leading. They can’t read each other’s minds like Bill and I can with just body language, just a wink or a nod. Moving forward a quarter of an inch can mean everything. Even just in thinking I can crawl around in his mind. It’s not a pretty thought [laughs]. We’d do that with Phil or Bob or Jerry, too. Our conversations were non-verbal on a musical and personal level.”

“[With the current Rhythm Devils lineup], we don’t know these guys. We haven’t done everything in the world with them, and those life experiences carry over into the music. We haven’t lived together as a band as we did with the Grateful Dead, so we have to be a bit kinder to them in how we approach the music,” says Hart. “Actually, instructive is a better word. We need to give them something to grab onto, some invisible thought process as we learn to mind-meld with each other. Each night it gets to that place of mind-meld in places, and they gain more confidence and you gain more confidence in them and they gain more confidence in you and slowly you grow and become an organism.”

Continue reading for much more from Mickey Hart and the other fresh Devils…

Bill Kreutzmann & Mickey Hart by Chad Smith

Lessons In The Dead

The palpable in-the-moment quality of the Grateful Dead was often most visible in the interplay of Kreutzmann and Hart, whose faces and bodies often conveyed a joyful daring-do that infected others, tapping into the primal, childlike need to bang on things until cool noises leap out. Their relationship often feels like we’re getting to eavesdrop on a very long, involved exchange that’s still a blast for both parties.

“We practiced a lot in the early days – thousands of hours personally, alone – to be able to throw it away and be fluid onstage. It’s not something that just happens. We worked at it,” says Hart. “We think of it more as a conversation. So, this conversation has lasted 40-odd years now, and it’s still interesting because we’ve never really totally codified things. We never talk about what we’re going to talk about. We never say, ‘You play that and I’ll play this.’ We never do that. We just search around until we find a combination that works and then settle into it. When we listen back to tapes on the bus we might say, ‘See, that thing you did there was really cool.’ And if the other person thinks it was cool, too, they’ll do it again. There’s still a learning curve on what works. We don’t do things different every night just to be different. It’s a constant state of morph and fluxing that’s about change in the right direction, not just change for change sake.”

Mickey Hart by Suzy Perler

“I like a lot of processing and space and delays and reverb and all kinds of instruments unborn. I like to find new sounds and new spaces every night that just amaze me. I’m certainly a hunter. I stalk the groove. I’m a stalker [laughs]. I work really hard to be able to do that,” continues Hart. “I warm up every night and rehearse the band to be able to relax enough to be able to go after the good, the rare, the thing that shines and makes you want to go back again the next night. Being a musician is not easy. You go from city to city, you set up, you play a few hours and you tear down. Unless you really want to do it don’t bother because it’s not really that comfortable mentally, physically and so on.”

The mythology of the Grateful Dead has long acknowledged that the audience is part of the music, inexorably threaded into what the musicians do, for good or bad.

“At its best moments, you get a full circle, a round trip, if you will, where the audience is feeding the band, the band is feeding the audience and neither can do it without the other,” says Hart. “It truly becomes a musical moment that’s shared as opposed to someone’s listening and someone’s giving. There’s a blurring of the lines between the stage and the audience. The better it is, the more cathartic it is, with many crashing, enlightening and uplifting moments throughout the evening.”

However, Grateful Dead Music requires both this audience-band synergy and a high level of musicianship to pull off. Within these powerful unfolding moments, there are still the practical issues of following the music in tandem, hitting the right keys and segues and so on.

Bill Kreutzmann by Suzy Perler

“You have to have trust,” says Hart. “It’s a little heroic, and sometimes you have to go into a place you’ve never been. It feels very euphoric when you find it but you have to let go, and letting go in front of thousands of people isn’t easyÂ…at first. Then, it becomes easier. It becomes your style, and the expectations people bring with them to a show are realized and courted. When that happens it’s a successful night, a successful moment, but you have to believe you’re going to find your way out of this dark alley you find yourself in. It’s a seemingly dead-end street and you find yourself at the end of it. So, how are you going to get out of this dark alleyway or super light alleyway or whatever it might be? How are you going to travel? It’s the way of going that’s important.”

“When you have group-mind, then you depend on that. Everyone just listens intently and is really sprightly in their work – moving quickly or slowly as the case may be – but listening and reacting and updating based on miniscule times. The time frames are tiny when you’re improvising and you have to make your decisions in a split second or else you’re behind. It becomes more intuitive instead of thinking,” continues Hart. “Once it becomes a body, the music takes on a whole other aspect. Once you develop that group-mind you move differently. Instead of moving a sea tanker where you have to go real slow, you can cut and run on a dime. It’s kind of a license to fly once everybody understands how high and fast they can fly individually and as a group. Then you become a group, and the rush of group melody, rhythm and harmony becomes intuitive rather than thinking, ‘Where do I go now?’ And obviously, the better in tune you are with yourself and the group, the more successful you are at jamming.”

Cracking The Songbook

Andy Hess & Bill Kreutzmann by Suzy Perler

The organic malleability of the Dead catalog is perhaps the heart of its enduring viability and the reason so many hands and voices can handle it while still creating something of their own.

“There’s certain signature things you have to have to make it the song, but we couldn’t remember what we did the night before, so a method was born [laughs]. We didn’t do this on purpose,” says Hart. “I remember one day there was an incident where Bob was supposed to do something and he didn’t do it and we came down on him. And it was so sad and we thought, ‘We can’t do this forever. If we’re gonna play this music forever we can’t go into the blame game.’ So, we dropped that and let it happen and it worked out. It wasn’t that kind of child; it didn’t have discipline in that respect. You could whip it into shape and discipline it and make it do what you wanted it to do OR you could let it go and just see it grow.”

“No one really tried to commit most things to memory. Some things we had to so people would recognize the songs,” continues Hart. “Things were going from one thing to another, just morphing and morphing, and there weren’t really any songs, there was just music. Then we tried to make songs out of it, and the songs grew. Robert Hunter started writing words to our music as we were playing it. He’d sit there and just write words. ‘Uncle John’s Band’ came out of a jam, most of ‘Dark Star’ and ‘The Other One’ were just moments we went through and Hunter just heard the words. And we never really codified or crystallized a lot of this. We never said this is the way it has to be. It was made to be explored, so everybody had some kind of personal freedom to explore on a daily or nightly basis. And it was okay to change things, and even when things became signatures we could still play with that signature riff because we birthed them. So, that’s the way it is in the Grateful Dead musical lexicon.”

“It’s fun and it’s getting better,” says Hess. “This music is all a great melting pot. It’s also really loose. I’ve also played in a lot of bands where it’s about being tighter, and this floats here and then floats into the next song. It’s a different approach that they’ve mastered over the years. That’s been challenging to me to let go of a stricter time thing. Mule was loose in a lot of ways and improvisational, but I come from groove music where there’s a lot of repetition. I’m trying to bring myself into this music and make the songs work.”

Davy Knowles by Suzy Perler

“My ultimate favorite is ‘So Many Roads.’ I think it’s absolutely perfect. If you can find a better definition of music, I’d like to hear it. It’s achingly beautiful. The lyrics are beautiful and the melody is incredible. It’s a road song without being cheesy. It’s just correct and so stunning,” says Knowles, who’s also enjoying the Dead’s old blues chestnuts. “I’m really digging the Pigpen-era stuff. And ‘Easy Wind’ is such a great blues track. It’s a different kind of blues. I’m very happy it’s not a 12-bar. It’s something else entirely. I figure if you to hear a 12-bar blues why not put on a Freddie King or Albert King record because they can do it a lot better than I ever will. The idea is to take those influences and make something of your own out of them. I’m 23-years-old and I don’t want to play 12-bar blues the rest of my life. I want to pay tribute to it, but there’s a lot of people that came before me that do a much better job at it. If you want to hear that, then go put it on. It’s important to try something which is why I like songs like ‘Easy Wind.’”

“The blues crowd is incredibly faithful but sometimes it feels like you can’t do anything outside the blues or they’ll lynch you. And the craziest thing is the blues came from black people being oppressed in these just evil times, and suddenly the blues market is all white, middle-aged guys with long hair trying to wear zoot suits. You think, ‘Wow, the white guys have kind of taken over again,’” says Knowles. “It’s very strange how upside down it is. If you’re a white kid who plays the blues but doesn’t play them like Freddie King or Albert King or one of the legendary black blues guys, then they say you’re not playing blues no more.”

“Probably [the most difficult song to learn has been] ‘Uncle John’s Band.’ There’s bars of three and suddenly it goes from 4/4 to 3/7. And my timing is pretty rubbish. I’ve played with 4/4, maybe 6/8 or 3/4 now and again, for so long and that’s about it. So, my timing needs a lot of work and suddenly it’s, ‘Oh crap!’ and I need to come in at precisely the right place,” says Knowles. “And these guys [Mickey and Billy] don’t know all the timing. They’ve played them for so long that they just know them. I’d ask if there was a bar of three and they’d say, ‘I don’t know. That’s just how it goes.’ Arrgh! What do I do? Help! Help!”

Tim Bluhm & Andy Hess by Suzy Perler

“I think the things that are working the best for me so far are the Dead ballads like ‘Brokedown Palace,’ which are right in my comfort zone,” says Bluhm. “Davy does a great ‘So Many Roads’ and I get to sing harmonies on that. He kills – he just rules it. I’m enjoying playing with him, but he’s definitely pushing me. I’m playing more guitar solos in this band than with the Hips. I saw the same thing happen with Jackie [Greene], where he learned more about big guitar playing when he was out with Phil. You learn what equipment works and what will cut through. I can’t really see it from inside but I know I’m growing when I think about it.”

Making music, on some level, is an act of regurgitation – what comes out after one has digested tradition. But it’s often a snake eating its tail, where music often sounds like mere variations on a theme instead of moving into fresh territory. This is one of the crucial differences in Grateful Dead music, which formed its own language since nothing previous quite got the message across in the right way for them. Make no mistake what Hart, Kreutzmann and their compatriots forged is a true American original distinct from anything before its arrival.

“That’s why I thought I could do this the rest of my life, this kind of music, and I was right,” says Hart. “It allows for growth. When you have this kind of architecture it’s not inhibiting to your creativity, as opposed to playing the song the exact same way every night, which is really the death knell for creativity. Playing songs really well is a wonderful art, but it’s not ours. Not to put that down at all, to play a song with all its nuances intact, but for us it would be creative suicide.”

“You gotta be like a warrior in a way, a road dog, and desperate in a way to bring your music to the people or else you shouldn’t do it, you shouldn’t take up the wand. I wouldn’t recommend it for most people,” says Hart. “It’s a very intense kind of life, and you have to balance it with family and a home life. People pay good money to see us and I try to reward that with an effort, to go to that place that will make them charmed. That’s my responsibility to them. If you go out and don’t deliver what you’re capable of then you’re ripping them off, and I don’t like that, brother. It’s a rip off if you don’t put in everything you have into it that night. Even if you fail it’s okay as long as you try real hard.”

The Rhythm Devils will perform next on Jam Cruise on January 7-8, and then a post-cruise show at Revolution Live in Fort Lauderdale, FL on January 9. Check out setlists from this past year along with a list of new tunes being performed here.

The Rhythm Devils Tour Dates :: The Rhythm Devils News :: The Rhythm Devils Concert Reviews

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Taylor Lautner Meets Girlfriend’s Dad, Singing Legend Phil Collins

Taylor Lautner won the heart of actress Lily Collins after meeting the beauty, 21, on the set of his upcoming thriller Abduction four months ago. Now the bulked-up young millionaire has turned his efforts to impressing his co-star-turned-galpal’s doting dad, Genesis legend Phil Collins. “He’s pretty tough on the guys Lily introduces him to,” gum-flapping [...]

Phil Ochs Doc Out 01/05/11

ADVANCED SCREENINGS IN NEW YORK

First Run Features is pleased to invite you and a guest to a special advance screening of Phil Ochs: There But
For Fortune
, the new film by acclaimed filmmaker Kenneth Bowser (Easy Riders, Raging Bulls &
Live From New York, SNL in the 70s) about one of the most iconic folk music heroes and political agitators in
American history.

As prolific as he was passionate, Ochs released seven acclaimed albums and wrote hundreds of songs in his career.
His songs became anthems for the anti-war movement and still beautifully reflect the pain and the possibilities of
those turbulent times – and ours. Phil Ochs: There But For Fortune is buoyed by these anthems and
melodies –
from humorous to haunting – and throughout the film play the role of narrator, giving contextual depth to the
unfolding saga of Ochs’ complex political and personal life.

In the film, Joan Baez, Tom Hayden, Pete Seeger, Sean Penn, Peter Yarrow, Christopher Hitchens, Ed
Sanders
, and others who knew or were inspired by Ochs tell stories of political passions that were equal parts
idealism, conviction and fantasy mixed together with a big ego and often wild disorganization.

Click here to watch the trailer.

Special Advance Screenings

Magno Screening Room, 729 7 Ave, between 48 & 49 Streets, New York, NY:

Thursday, December 9 at 6:00pm
Tuesday, December 28 at 6:00pm

Goldcrest Post Screening Room, 799 Washington Street, corner of Washington and Horatio, New York, NY
Tuesday, December 14 at 7:30pm


Phil Collins Suicidal?

Paging Dr. Phil, Dr. Drew, and Dr. Oz: We think its high-time someone staged an intervention for rock legend Phil Collins. The “Another Day in Paradise” singer has sparked concern for his emotional well-being after sitting down for a cryptic chat with Rolling Stone, during which Collins admits to struggling with suicidal tendencies in recent [...]

Heather Graham won”t reprise her stripper role in ”The Hangover 2”

Heather Graham will not be reprising her role as a stripper in the sequel to ”The Hangover”. The sequel, starring Bradley Cooper (Phil), Justin Bartha (Doug), Ed Helms (Stu), Zach Galifianakis (Alan) and Ken Jeong (Leslie), apparently does not have much scope for her character Jade to be included into the script. “Unfortunately Heather won”t [...]

Phil Anselmo’s Down to Release Diary of a Mad Band CD/DVD 10/5

THREE DISC CD/DVD SET OUT OCTOBER 5


Diary of a Mad Band

New Orleans, LA’s Down is
pleased to announce three killer pre-order bundles, available for purchase now in preparation for their upcoming 3
disc (2 CD/1 DVD) release, Diary of a Mad Band, hitting stores on October 5, 2010. All pre-
orders include an instant MP3 download of ‘Stone the Crow’ live in Dublin. Click here to be directed to the webstore to purchase your bundle.

Pre-Order Bundle #1Diary of a Mad Band 3 disc (2 CD/1 DVD) set – $18
Pre-Order Bundle #2 – Copy of Diary of a Mad Band 3 disc (2 CD/1 DVD) set with limited edition
pre-
order only T-SHIRT – $30
Pre-Order Bundle #3 – Copy of Diary of a Mad Band 3 disc (2 CD/1 DVD), limited edition DOWN
3′x 5′ FLAG,
limited
edition pre-order only T-SHIRT – $45

Diary of a Mad Band features a 2 CD full concert, live in London. The DVD highlights documented footage
marking
the 2006 return of Down from the practice room through their first European tour, and a bonus behind-the-scenes
featurette entitled ‘Tyrades and Shananigans’. See below for a
complete tracklisting of the set.

A 180 Gram triple vinyl version with a bonus DVD will be available on October 26. Down features the all-star line-
up of vocalist Philip Anselmo (Pantera, Arson Anthem), guitarist Pepper Keenan (Corrosion of
Conformity), guitarist Kirk Windstein (Crowbar, Kingdom of Sorrow), bassist Rex Brown (Pantera),
and drummer Jimmy Bower (Eyehategod, Crowbar).

DVD: DIARY OF A MAD BAND

w/ BONUS DVD FEATURETTE ‘Tyrades and Shananigans’

1. Lysergic Funeral Procession
2. Lifer
3. Losing All
4. Rehab
5. New Orleans Is A Dying Whore
6. Ghosts Along The Mississippi
7. Learn From This Mistake
8. Underneath Everything
9. Temptation’s Wings
10. There’s Something On My Side
11. Hail The Leaf
12. Lies
13. The Seed
14. Eyes Of The South
15. Jail
16. Stone The Crows
17. Bury Me In Smoke

2 CD: LIVE IN EUROPE

1. Losing All
2. Lifer

3. Lysergic Funeral Procession
4. Rehab

5. Temptations Wings
6. Ghosts Along The Mississippi
7. Learn From This Mistake
8. Hail The Leaf

9. New Orleans Is A Dying Whore
10. Lies, I Don’t Know What They Say But…
11. Underneath Everything
12. The Seed
13. Eyes Of The South
14. Jail

15. Stone The Crows

16. Bury Me In Smoke

Down
Tour Dates

::
Down News
::
Down
Concert
Reviews


Auctions For Phil Lesh’s Unbroken Chain Charity

PROJECT TO BRING CLEAN AND SAFE DRINKING WATER
TO PEOPLE IN DEVELOPING
NATIONS


Phil Lesh

Phil Lesh has begun work
on his Box of Rain campaign.

To help raise more funds, Phil has put together the following auctions:

1) “The Deal Package” – A Post-Show Black Jack Tournament with Phil Lesh in
Vegas! Winner receives 2 tickets to the show, tournament entry, and the
chance to win $500 in Hard Rock chips.

2) Vegas Lover’s Package including 2 Tickets, Meet Phil, Hotel Suite,
Dinner, and more!

3) Brunch with Phil the day after the Vegas show, includes tickets.

4) VIP Tickets, Lounges, Soundcheck Access & Meet Phil at the upcoming Red
Rocks and Greek Theatre shows.

The Unbroken Chain Foundation is be working with charity:water on the Box of Rain Project to bring clean and safe drinking
water to people in developing nations. In honor of Phil Lesh’s 70th Birthday, their first goal is 7 wells for 7 decades.

The first water sourse will be in Haiti, using some of the proceeds from Phil’s 70′s Birthday show last March. The
remaining six water sources will be funded by several upcoming auction packages surrounding Furthur‘s upcoming shows in Los
Angeles, Las Vegas, and Red Rocks that include a meet and greet with Phil Lesh.

Learn more about the Unbroken Chain Foundation Box of Rain Project by clicking here. To bid now, click here.


WhiteWater Ramble : Debut Album Members of TLG, HBR, RRE Guest

LONG AWAITED DEBUT ARRIVES AUGUST 30

Whitewater Ramble

High altitude jamgrass champions WhiteWater Ramble have announced the release of their debut album, All Night Drive, produced by the highly regarded musician and producer Tim Carbone from Railroad Earth, and featuring a stellar cast of guest artists including Steve Molitz ( Particle, Phil & Friends), Josh Clark (Tea Leaf Green), Erik Yates (Hot Buttered Rum), Grant Gordy (David Grisman Quintet), and in-demand session saxman Pete Wall on saxophone.

For a band whose sound has always been steeped in psychedelic interpretations of bluegrass music, the choice of partnering up with Tim Carbone was the logical choice to helm the WhiteWater Ramble debut project.

“Tim Carbone was WWR’s captain during the recording of All Night Drive, bold and tireless in getting the right performances from the band. His encouragement and support kept morale high in otherwise stressful situations,” says WhiteWater Ramble fiddler and vocalist Adam Galblum. “His studio expertise ensured that we were getting the best sounds for this record, and we felt comfortable deferring to his artistic judgement. While respecting the already-established parameters of our band, Tim knew what he wanted from us, and was clear in communicating how he wanted it. We appreciated that.”

On the flipside, when asked to recount the highlight of working with the Colorado jam rock quintet on their latest album Carbone said, “WWR have their feet planted in more than one world. More than two if you count such things – sometimes all at the same time! No matter which world you prefer; bluegrass, rock, electronica or the myriad combinations, WWR will take you there on a fantastic ride!”

WhiteWater Ramble will perform select rocky mountain regional headlining dates with special guests in support of their new album.

Upcoming WhiteWater Ramble Shows

08/07/10 Adobe Bar Taos, NM
08/08/10 Larimer County Fairgrounds Loveland, CO
08/13/10 Nomad Theater Boulder, CO
08/15/10 Oskar Blues Lyons, CO
08/17/10 Aggie Theater Fort Collins, CO (feat: Steve Molitz, Tim Carbone, Pete Wall)
08/18/10 Bluebird Theater Denver, CO (feat: Grant Gordy, Steve Molitz, Pete Wall)

While the debut isn’t available nationally until August 30, fans can pick up an advance copy for FREE at one of these three CD release parties:

Aug 13 – The Nomad Theatre – Boulder, CO
Aug 17 – The Aggie Theatre – Fort Collins, CO
Aug 18 – The Bluebird Theatre – Denver, CO

WhiteWater Ramble Tour Dates :: WhiteWater Ramble News :: WhiteWater Ramble Concert Reviews


Gathering of the Vibes Preview

By: Dennis Cook
JamBase Associate Editor

Gathering of the Vibes :: 07.29.10-08.01.10 :: Seaside Park :: Bridgeport, CT

Once again the pilgrimage to the Vibes begins as folks gather along the Connecticut shoreline to enjoy headliners including Primus, Furthur, Robert Randolph & The Family Band and Damian “Jr. Gong” Marley & Nas. With Wavy Gravy as colorful MC, this weekend is filled with two stages packed with some of the best the jam world has to offer. Here’s five recommendations beyond the big names to consider if you’ll be Vibin’ it in the days ahead.

1. Hot Day At The Zoo :: Thursday :: 12:45-2:00 PM :: Green Vibes Stage

Put directly, Hot Day is one of the best string bands out there. Full of feisty energy, wicked chops, increasingly together songwriting and a good nose for covers, New England-based HDATZ offer a slightly sophisticated take on country comfort with no small measure of individual personality to boot. Well worth having your campsite set up early so you can attend and fully get into it with the Zoo.

2. Leroy Justice :: Thursday :: 4:15-5:30 PM :: Green Vibes Stage

One of NYC’s finest, classic-minded outfits should be the perfect score to get your first solid drunk on for the weekend. There’s something raw ‘n’ real about Leroy Justice that makes a person want to bend an elbow and get down into the muck with ‘em. Anyone with a sweet tooth for Black Crowes style meat ‘n’ taters rock – especially from guys who write way above par original material and deliver it with significant muscle and flair – are in for a treat this Thursday. Leroy Justice also put out one of the great sleepers of 2009 called The Loho Sessions, which was produced by mixing board maestro John Siket. Read the JamBase rave here.

3. Jackie Greene :: Friday :: 1:40-3:10 PM :: Main Stage

Bay Area boy Greene is on a pretty hot roll right now. His new album, Till The Light Comes (see review here), is an end-to-end corker, his band is tight, he’s grown into one of the strongest interpreters of the Dead catalog around, and his beard is coming in nicely. Greene is quality bang for your buck, and with Furthur on the festival grounds the same day chances of a Phil sit-in are pretty decent.

4. Assembly of Dust :: Saturday :: 2:40-4:10 PM :: Main Stage

AOD’s tunes have the quality of fantastic lost singles – easy to dig right away and better loved with repetition – and the band plays with a level of care and technical dexterity that’s rare today. Assembly’s whole aura draws one in and reminds one of an era when real musicians with genuine artistry made pop music. If radio weren’t the corporate wasteland it is then AOD’s music would already be bumping shoulders with Tom Petty, Sheryl Crow and the other mainstays on the FM dial. However, folks can enjoy their craftsmanship on a sunny Saturday at the Vibes and imagine how much better the airwaves would be with AOD on them.

5. Martin Sexton with the Ryan Montbleau Band :: Sunday :: 3:25-4:40 PM :: Main Stage

Sexton’s new album, Sugarcoating, is perhaps his most tuneful and readily appealing song cycle to date. So it makes a certain cosmic sense for him to hook up with Montbleau and his populist leaning crew. What’s in store is an hour and change filled with fleshed out, nicely rockin’ pop with tasty covers from the likes of Zeppelin and The Beatles. And by Sunday afternoon this might be just the ticket to get you to the finish line for Vibes 2010.

Gathering of the Vibes Music Schedule

Gathering of the Vibes Directions

Gathering of the Vibes Official Site

JamBase review of 2009 Gathering of the Vibes

JamBase | Seaside
Go See Live Music!


Dr. Phil House For Sale $16.5 Million

If you’ve got $16.5 million laying around and a lifestyle that can fill up an 8-bedroom hideaway, has Dr. Phil got an offer for you.The small screen shrink and his wife Robin McGraw listed their Beverly Hill mansion for sale this week. With an asking price of $16.5 million, the sprawling Meditteranean villa boasts [...]

PETA Wants Psychic World Cup Octopus Oracle Freed

Paul The Octopus has done it again! The German-based seawater soccer soothsayer correctly predicted that Germany would beat Argentina in Saturday’s World Cup match in South Africa, meaning he has correctly called the outcome of all the matches for his home country. But Paul has correctly called his last World Cup match, if the animal rights [...]

“Uncle Phil” James Avery Furious Over Twitter Death Hoax

Uncle Phil is alive and kicking, thank you very much! Sadly he’s getting a cruel lesson in one of the oldest principles of The Cyber Age: “You’re nobody ’til somebody kills you on the Internet.”Former Fresh Prince of Bel-Air star James Avery is fuming a hoax that flooded Twitter with reports that he’d died last weekend, [...]

Morin’ Crunch Crumbs

– A stand-up comedienne, a loan collector, and an aspiring actress are competing for the chance to co-star with perky Progressive pitchwoman Flo in a series of national commercials….. -Uncle Phil is going to be a Transformer! -Al Roker shares his struggles with weight loss…. -Have heard about Rock Soap Opera, the web’s leading daily soap opera starring [...]

Furthur Festival | 05.28-05.30 | California

By: Garrin Benfield

Furthur Festival :: 05.28.10-05.30.10 :: Calaveras County Fairgrounds ::
Angel’s Camp, CA

Phil & Bobby by Susan J. Weiand

Arriving at the site of the Furthur Festival, I wondered why it had been so long
since the previous Mt. Aire gathering. The setting is classic Northern California –
rolling golden hills punctuated by groves of oak trees, miles of free form campgrounds,
and a lovely grass concert bowl. Clearly the one narrow, congested road into the grounds
could be a major temporary inconvenience to local residents, but it seems the revenue
generated by this mostly supremely mellow, polite crowd would easily offset any
frustrations. Once inside, things mostly ran like clockwork, and the 10,000 or so
gathered were treated to an intimate, bucolic weekend of rock ‘n’ roll.

Perhaps as a nod to those who thought the notion of Furthur
announcing it would perform six Grateful Dead records a bit, shall we
say, antithetical to the Dead ethos, the first night’s “sound check” featured a circuitous
setlist heavy on classics but not tied to any particular era. An inspired “Eleven” opener
gave way to one hell of a set that was dialed in from the get-go. I was struck right away
by the detail of the mix that allowed every instrumental voice to be heard with clarity
and volume. As a full moon rose over the early arriving crowd, the band patiently made
it’s way through a full one-set show, clearly surprising many who were not sure what to
expect from this first evening. Personal highlights for me included John Kadelecik
quoting Trey’s “First Tube” during a heavy “Let It Grow” and Bobby delivering a
stately “Standing On The Moon,” proving the old adage that “if at first one does not
succeed…” Satiated, we all slowly made our way back to the campgrounds, which were
still springing to life in the chilly darkness.

Dan Bern

On Saturday, I wandered over to the Acoustic Stage and caught a beautiful set by Mark Karan and
Friends
. While I was there they played an assortment of leftfield covers by
Townes Van Zandt, Randy Newman and the Dead. I had never seen Karan in this context and
he really shone, singing and playing with sensitivity and conviction – a lovely way to
ease into the day. On the Sunshine Stage, Dan Bern delivered
newer songs with his usual incisive, sardonic wit, backed by his new project, Common Rotation.
I’m happy to see Dan on the road again, and especially pleased to have his uncompromising
insights floating about the sometimes pollyana-ish jam scene. Next, James Nash, Joe
Kyle Jr.
and the rest of a temporary Waybacks lineup
brought their absolute A-game to the sweltering afternoon, pleasing those perhaps
unfamiliar with their own material with masterful versions of “Dupree’s Diamond Blues” and
“Shady Grove.” These guys are virtuosos with real heart and soul.


What was exciting me most about Furthur’s first “classic albums” sets was the tunes I’d
never seen performed live, or in some cases had never seen the light of day at all.
Oddly, the first half of the American Beauty set, comprised of songs these guys
have played hundred of times, was stiff and a bit rusty. This trend continued into the
first rarely performed song, Pigpen’s “Operator,” this time sung tentatively by
Phil. Happily things warmed up significantly with JK’s reading of “Candyman” (who
can resist “Hand me my old guitar…”) and the rest of the set was a pure joy of
monumental pieces from the dead canon, aided by Larry Campbell‘s
fiddle and guitar, and his wife Teresa Williams‘ vocals. I think for many who grew
up going to or listening to live Dead shows it will always be disorienting to hear
“Ripple” and “Brokedown Palace” in the middle of a set, but “Truckin’” brought it all home
with classic slow burn!

The Workingman’s Dead set busted out of the gates with “Uncle John’s Band” and
never let up. The band had clearly relaxed, and spent the next hour reveling in more
classic tunes that this time benefited from years of having been in the performance
repertoire. Larry Campbell’s biting Strat work lent a shimmer to “Cumberland” and
everything that followed, without impeding Furthur’s own identity and chemistry from
clearly emerging. The Anthem of the Sun set, the most anticipated by many as it
represents perhaps the pinnacle of “primal” Grateful Dead, was a monster from top to
bottom, climaxing with crushing versions of “Alligator” and “Caution.” I hope the
bruising guitar exclamations in “Caution” translate to tape, because, wow, they needed no
explanation under the rising moon!

The Mother Hips

I soldiered on and caught sets by three great bands on Sunday prior to Furthur. The
biggest surprise discovery of the weekend was the towering psychedelic progressive rock of
Carney.
Led by a fantastic and charismatic vocalist/guitarist and the most passionate, fiery band
I witnessed all weekend, Carney’s music seemed to fall in the Jeff Buckley meets Radiohead
universe, a welcome change of pace from the mostly Americana proceedings on the side
stages. The always-great Mother Hips were joined on the main stage by Jackie Greene,
who proved himself more than able on organ. The Hips designed their set for a gentle
afternoon and stuck mostly to their sunny Pacific stylings, save for the odd time changes
and riffage of their mid-nineties classic, “Magazine.” I wouldn’t have missed Electric Hot Tuna,
who were next up on the main stage, for the world. Stalwarts of blues, garage rock,
massive riffs and some of the original diplomats of the Haight-Ashbury, Jorma and
Jack have been playing together for 52 years. I was moved not just by their gnarly
set, but also by their longevity and by the Dead organization’s insistence on their
presence at this Festival. Loyalty does exist in the music business!

Hot Tuna

Initially I thought we were being thrown for a loop when Furthur came out and did not bust
into the expected “Help on the Way” to begin their Blues For Allah set. Instead,
the band leapt into one of those “same tempo as the next song but in a different key” jams
before beginning perhaps the Dead’s most progressive and esoteric collection. “Help >
Slip > Franklin” was pretty happening but not earth shattering. Far more moving was the
intense detail and thunder of “King Solomon’s Marbles,” which I’d vote for most welcome
comeback of the songs Furthur has reintroduced over the last year. “Music Never Stopped”
featured some searing runs by JK, and he delivered “Crazy Fingers” beautifully. Weir’s
dense but lovely “Sage and Spirit” was saved by Jeff Chimenti, who appeared to be
the only person who knew it that well. The “Blues for Allah” suite was a thrill to hear
live, but if you want to hear the only (?) other live version, you might be better off
checking out One From The Vault, as this well-intentioned attempt was gauzy and
confused around the transitional moments. Still, who’s complaining? Standing there
watching these guys try this stuff out and letting these songs wash over me was a thrill.
Joe Russo really distinguished himself deep in this second night with momentum and
focus, as Phil and Bobby seemed to show some wear and tear. There’s more than one reason
to hire a young, talented drummer, right?

Jackie Greene

After a wonderfully trippy set break that allowed some of the evening mist to begin
seeping into the amphitheater, the band returned and brought us back further in time with
a complete performance of Aoxomoxoa, the record that includes perhaps some of the
least performed Dead material of all. After a typically awesome “St. Stephen” (though I
would argue this might be the most over-performed song of the post-Jerry years), JK segued
right into a “Dupree’s” that also featured Larry Campbell on fiddle. For me, the two most
significant tunes that followed were Phil’s reading of Jerry’s “Rosemary” and the 11-
minute, genuinely psychedelic “What’s Become of the Baby?” which asked the pressing
question clearly on everyone’s mind: “Where is the child that played with the sun chimes
and chased the cloud sheep to the regions of rhyme?” Teresa Williams’ vocal wails and
white gown perfectly embodied the acid-queen-diva-goddess on this excursion. “Cosmic
Charlie” brought us home, and almost sadly, to the precipice of the last set of the
weekend.

Mark Karan

Despite mild exhaustion setting in, the Terrapin Station set rocked. To segue from
the set break music, Radiohead’s In Rainbows to a 14-minute “Estimated Prophet” was
perfect. (As a side note, all weekend the house music was very inspired, from Beck at
sunset to James Brown and Billy Preston! Yeah!) “Dancin’ in the Streets” was given its
full disco treatment (minus the convoluted outro jam of the celebrated ’77 versions),
“Passenger” was spot on, and Bobby really rallied for “Samson.” The last awesome surprise
was Teresa Williams returning for a song most people in attendance had surely never seen
performed, the Jerry-penned Donna Gauchaux showcase “Sunrise.” I felt a real affection in
the crowd for this one, a deep track that those of us who spent a few years scouring Dead
records before entering the tape trading community remember fondly. Teresa received a
real ovation before we glided into the B-side of this record, the entire 26-minute
“Terrapin Station” suite. What a way to bring it home!

Sir Joe Russo by Susan J. Weiand

After Phil thanked the crowd for being at our “family picnic,” he generously mentioned all
the people who worked so hard to make the festival happen, which received the largest
cheer of the weekend, hands down. Deadheads can be a wonderfully gracious bunch. The
appreciation was heartfelt, though. The whole weekend had that inescapable quality of
people fully absorbing the music, the scene, the memories, the personal connections, and
the uniqueness of a phenomenon that is not going to last forever. As I listened to the
weave of “Lady with a Fan”, convinced the band had intended this to be a sonic response to
the ecological tragedy unfolding in the Gulf of Mexico, I closed my eyes and said my own
thank you. Thanks, San Francisco! Thanks, Grateful Dead! Now what are we gonna do with
this energy?

JamBase | Awakened
Go See Live Music!


Phil Lesh, Blues Traveler Guest On Warren Haynes Benefit CD

WARREN HAYNES PRESENTS: THE BENEFIT CONCERT VOLUME 3 OUT JUNE
8


Warren Haynes

Warren Haynes, frontman
for Gov’t Mule, guitarist for
the Allman Brothers and The Dead, assembled a
remarkable array of guests for the historic concert that comprises Warren Haynes Presents: The Benefit Concert Volume 3, a double CD release our June 8 on Evil Teen. It was
recorded at Haynes’s 13th Annual Christmas Jam on December 21, 2001. Featured guests include Blues Traveler, Drivin’ N Cryin’,
Gov’t Mule and Phil Lesh & Friends.

Fans of The Dead will particularly enjoy three tracks from a previously unreleased recordings of Phil Lesh & Friends (Jimmy Herring, John Molo, Warren Haynes, Rob
Barraco
)
on Volume 3, including “Night Of A Thousand Stars,” “Loose Lucy” and “Tennessee Jed.”

Track Listing

Disc 1:

1. “Mama Don’t Allow” – Alvin Youngblood Hart
2. “Devil Got My Woman” – Alvin Youngblood Hart & John Popper
3. “That Sign On The Door” – Edwin McCain, Oteil Burbridge, Jimmy Herring, John Popper & Danny Barnes
4. “Alone” – Edwin McCain, Oteil Burbridge, Jimmy Herring, John Popper & Danny Barnes
5. “Broken Hearts And Auto Parts” – Drivin’ N Cryin’
6. “Fly Me Courageous” – Drivin’ N Cryin’ w/Audley Freed

7. “Straight To Hell” – Drivin’ N Cryin’ w/Audley Freed & Edwin McCain
8. “Carolina Blues” – Blues Traveler
9. “Slow Change” – Blues Traveler
10. “Mountains Win Again” – Blues Traveler w/Warren Haynes
11. “New York Prophesie” – Blues Traveler

Disc 2:
1. “Loose Lucy” – Phil Lesh & Friends
2. “Tennessee Jed” – Phil Lesh & Friends

3. “Night Of A Thousand Stars” – Phil Lesh & Friends

4. “Blind Man In The Dark” – Gov’t Mule w/Rob Barraco & Dave Schools
5. “Sco-Mule” – Gov’t Mule w/Oteil Burbrdige & Rob Barraco
6. “Almost Cut My Hair” – Gov’t Mule w/Rob Barraco, Dave Schools & Robert Randolph
7. “Masters of War” – Warren Haynes
8. “Rockin’ In the Free World” – Gov’t Mule w/Rob Barraco, Dave Schools, Kevn Kinney & Audley Freed

Warren Haynes
Tour Dates

::
Warren Haynes News ::
Warren Haynes
Concert
Reviews


Phillip Taylor and Kate Walsh Broke up

The blossom romance was one of the hot topics of The Apprentice last year. But things are different for Phillip Taylor and Kate Walsh as the couple decided to split.
The first time when Kate and Philip saw each other was on the BBC show in 2009. They say that the main reason of the couple’s [...]

Weekend Setlist Roundup

Memorial Day serves as a day to honor all U.S. men and women killed or missing in action
in war. It is their sacrifice that allows us to speak, live and freak freely. It also
signifies the un-official start of Summer, and with it comes a flurry of live music
activity. Here is a smattering of setlists curated from shows and festivals around the
country that you might enjoy.


Furthur

Furthur, Angels Camp, CA

5/27: Soundcheck Jam
Space > Eleven > Eyes of the World > Dark Star > Bird Song > Loose Lucy, Dear Mr. Fantasy,
Scarlet Begonias > Fire on the Mountain, Let It Grow, Unbroken Chain, Standing on the
Moon, Playing in the Band > Dark Star
E: Donor Rap, Going Down the Road Feeling Bad

5/28 Furthur Fest, Angels Camp, CA
I: American Beauty: Box of Rain, Friend of the Devil, Sugar Magnolia, Operator,
Candyman, Ripple > Brokedown Palace, Til the Morning Comes, Attics of my Life, Truckin
II: Workingman’s Dead: Uncle John’s Band, High Time, Dire Wolf, New Speedway
Boogie, Cumberland Blues, Black Peter, Casey Jones
III: Anthem of the Sun: Cryptical Envelopment > The Other One > New Potato Caboose
> Born Cross Eyed, Alligator, Caution
E: Donor Rap, New Song, One More Saturday Night

5/28 All Star Late Night Jam
*Viola Lee Blues (V1), *New Speedway Boogie, *#Fennario (Peggy-O), *#Tennessee Jed,
*%Viola Lee Blues (V2), *$Sugaree $$, *%@Death Don’t Have No Mercy, *%@I Know You Rider,
*%@Viola Lee Blues (V3)
* Phil (bass), Larry Campbell (guitar), Jackie Greene (guitar), Jeff Chimenti (keys), Joe
Russo (drums)
# with Teresa Williams (vocals), Larry Campbell on fiddle
% with Bob Weir (guitar), Jackie Greene (bass)
$ with Mark Karan (guitar)
@ with Jorma Kaukonen (guitar), Jack Casady (bass), Jackie Greene (keys), Bob Weir, Joe
Russo

5/29, Furthur Fest, Angels Camp, CA
I: Blues For Allah: Help on the Way > Slipnot! > Franklin’s Tower, King’s Soloman’s
Marbles, Music Never Stopped, Crazy Fingers, Sage & Spirit, Blues for Allah, Sandcastles
and Glass Camels, Usual Occurrences in the Desert

II: Aoxomoxoa: St. Stephen, Dupree’s Diamond Blues, Rosemary, Doin’ That Rag,
Mountains of the Moon, China Cat Sunflower, What’s Become of the Baby, Cosmic Charlie

III: Terrapin Station: Estimated Prophet, Dancing in the Street, Passenger, Samson
and Delilah, Sunrise, Lady With a Fan > Terrapin Station > Terrapin > Terrapin Transit >
At a Siding > Terrapin Flyer > Refrain, Donor Rap

E: Not Fade Away

Setlist Sources: PhilZone.com & #furthur



The Disco Biscuits

The Disco Biscuits

5/27/10 Boulder Theater, Boulder, CO
I: Flash Mob, Rivers, Story Of The World1> Aceetobee> Boom Shanker> Aceetobee
II: Save The Robots, The Very Moon> Digital Buddha> Lunar Pursuit> Digital Buddha
Encore: Spy

1 unfinished

5/28/10 Ogden Theater, Denver, CO
I: Voices Insane> Run Like Hell1> Voices Insane, The Bridge2, Jigsaw Earth
II: Spectacle, Air Song, Basis For A Day1> Rock Candy> Tricycle> Rock Candy
E: Once The Fiddler Paid

1 Unfinished, 2 1st time played

5/29/10 Red Rocks Amphitheatre, Morrison, CO
Bisco Inferno
Other acts include The Crystal Method, Booka Shade, Aeroplane, The Pnuma Trio and The
Glitch Mob
I: Hot Air Balloon> Gangster> Portal To An Empty Head1, Mindless Dribble> The Great Abyss>
Hot Air Balloon
II: House Dog Party Favor, On Time, M.E.M.P.H.I.S.1> Minions> Basis For A Day2, Magellan
Encore: Home Again

1 with Chris Michetti (RAQ) on guitar, 2 completes 5/28 version

Source: Phantasy Bisco

Bisco
Inferno Photo Gallery



moe.

moe.

5/28/10 Summer Camp 2010, Three Sisters Park, Chillicothe, IL
I: Rebubula, She Sends Me, All Roads Lead to Home, Day Dreaming*, Zed Nought Z, Rise>
Happy Hour Hero**, Mexico
II: Late Night in the Barn: George, Cissy Strut, Big World > Ricky Marten > Recreational
Chemistry, Brent Black > Interstellar Overdrive > Brent Black
E: Johnny Lineup
* New song, first time played (Rob)
** w/ Ivan Neville on keys

5/29/10 Summer Camp 2010, Three Sisters Park, Chillicothe, IL
I: Akimbo > Sensory Deprivation Bank, Haze# > Wormwood > St Augustine, McBain > Skrunk,
Waiting For The Punchline*
II: Dr. Graffenberg > Buster, 32 Things**, Billy Goat## >(nh) Moth > Low Spark Of High
Heeled Boys JAM > Farmer Ben
Encore: Lazarus
# FTP – new al. song
* w/ Danny Barnes
** w/ Brendan Bayliss
## FTP – new rob. song

5/30/10 Summer Camp 2010, Three Sisters Park, Chillicothe, IL
I: Bearsong >(nh) Timmy Tucker, One Life#, Deep This Time, Not Coming Down, Wind It Up,
San Berdino* > {moe. / ZPZ bandswitch} > Muffin Man
II: Crab Eyes > Threw It All Away > Crab Eyes, Okayalright, Blue Jeans Pizza**, Puebla##
>(nh) The Road > The Pit > The Road
Encore: Down Boy > Seat Of My Pants
{# FTP – new chuck. song
* w/ Dweezil Zappa
** w/ Kyle Hollingsworth
## FTP – new al. song}

Setlist Source: Phantasy moe. & Hidden
Track



Umphrey’s McGee

Umphrey’s McGee

5/28/10 Summer Camp 2010, Three Sisters Park, Chillicothe, IL

I: Rocker Part 2, Walletsworth, Turn & Dub > The Linear > Hajimemashite > Plunger, Gulf
Stream, Lisztomania

II: 40s Theme, Ocean Billy > #5, In The Kitchen > Girlfriend Is Better > Booth Love >
Glory, Ocean Billy

E: Cemetery Walk II

5/29/10 Summer Camp 2010, Three Sisters Park, Chillicothe, IL
I: Phil’s Far, Syncopated Strangers, Tribute to the Spinal Shaft, Conduit, All In Time,
Cemetery Walk*, Sledgehammer*

II: Intro, The Triple Wide, Mantis > Hangover > Mantis, Women Wine And Song*, Don’t Stop
’til You Get Enough*, Nothing Too Fancy
E: Mulche’s Odyssey
* w/ horns

5/30/10 Summer Camp 2010, Three Sisters Park, Chillicothe, IL
Afternoon Set: JaJunk, Much Obliged -> Partyin’ Peeps, The Fussy Dutchman, We’re Going to
War*, Seven Bridges Road**, Bridgeless > August > Bridgeless

*w/ Mike Rackey on steel pedal guitar
**first time played in full; last played 10.9.04

Late Night Set: Pay the Snucka > Bright Lights, Resolution*, Wappy Sprayberry** > Slacker
-> I’m On Fire# > Slacker^, Voices Inside My Head -> 1348, The Floor, ^^Pay the Snucka

*w/ Roy Ponce (Brainchild) on guitar
**w/ 25 or 6 to 4 jam
#no lyrics
^w/ Jesse (The Macpodz) on keys
^^w/ Rain Song intro


Umphrey’s McGee
5/30/10 Summer Camp 2010, Chillicothe, IL

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Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

5/29/10 Summer Camp 2010, Three Sisters Park, Chillicothe, IL
I: Out Front Jam* > Thorazine Shuffle, Railroad Boy > Trane** > Eternity’s Breath > St.
Stephen Jam > The Shape I’m In > Low Spark Of High Heeled Boys^ Steppin’ Lightly, Broke
Down On The Brazos, Loser^^ Wild Horses$, Mule > Whole Lotta Love > Mule

Notes: * With Unring The Bell Tease. ** With 3rd Stone From The Sun and Norwegian Wood
Teases. ^With Chuck Garvey. ^^With Al Schnier. $ With Danny Barnes & Jeff Austin



5.29.2010 Hookahville, Legend Valley, Thornville, OH
I: Hammer & Nails, She Said, She Said > Tomorrow Never Knows with Day Tripper Tease, Banks
Of The Deep End, Rocking Horse, Devil Likes It Slow, Feel Like Breaking Up Somebody’s Home
with Steve Sweney, Patchwork Quilt > I’m A Ram with Shakedown Street Tease

II: Broke Down On The Brazos, Blind Man In The Dark, Kind Of Bird with The Wind Cries Mary
Tease, Fallen Down > The Other One Jam > with Gimmie Shelter Tease, Drums > Any Open
Window, Inside Outside Woman Blues > Going Out West > Bang A Gong > Going Out West

E: Into The Mystic > Soulshine with Gospel Intro

Setlist Source: Mule.net, Hidden
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& Jambands.com Box Scores



STS9

STS9

5/29/10 Summer Camp 2010, Three Sisters Park, Chillicothe, IL
I: Really Wut?, Kamuy, Tooth, Beyond Right Now, Instantly, Equinox, Inspire Strikes Back,
Aimlessly, Lo Swaga

5/30/10 Summer Camp 2010, Three Sisters Park, Chillicothe, IL
Late Night Set: This Us, EHM, Rent, Move My Peeps, What is Love?, One a Day, Hi-Key, 118,
Somesing, Hidden Hand Hidden Fist, Moonsocket, Unquestionable Supremacy of Nature

E: Twilight-> Monkey Music

Setlist Source: Hidden Track & The Lowdown



Railroad Earth

Railroad Earth

5/27/10 DelFest @ Allegany County Fairgrounds – Cumberland, MD
I: 420, Walk Beside Me, Dance Around Molly – > Dandelion Wine, Elko, Happy Song, The
Hunting Song, Black Bear, Cuckoo’s Medley *, Where Songs Begin, Head, Railroad Earth
E: RV

Comment: * with Ronnie McCoury on mandolin. DelFest 2010.

5/28/10 DelFest @ Allegany County Fairgrounds – Cumberland, MD
I: Saddle of the Sun, Bread and Water, Old Dangerfield *, For Love, Colorado, Mighty River
- > Like a Buddha, Any Road, Seven Story Mountain, Long Way To Go *, Warhead Boogie – >
Hard Livin’
E: Little Rabbit

Comment: * with Ronnie McCoury on mandolin. DelFest 2010. Late Night Stage.

5/30/10 Summer Camp @ Three Sisters Park – Chillicothe, IL
I: Mighty River, Happy Song, Been Down This Road, The Forecast – > 1759, ‘Neath the Stars,
Bird in a House, New Jam (SHJ), Bringin’ My Baby Back Home

Setlist Source: Setlist.com


If you know of another noteworthy performance from the past few days, please add the
setlist to the comments below.

JamBase | Memorial Day


Saturday Eye Candy Radiohead’s Phil Selway

GIVING THE DRUMMER SOME

Though critical and fan accolades usually land on guitarists Jonny Greenwood and Ed O’Brien and the lazy-eyed genius out front, Radiohead‘s sound, especially as it’s evolved from OK Computer onward, owes just as much to drummer Phil Selway. A dead brilliant trap drummer, Selway has also explored the outer reaches of drum machine potential and carried the classlic Krautrock percussion sound into the 21st century. Tomorrow is Phil Selway’s 43rd birthday. In appreciation of his contribution to the drumming arts and modern rock in general, we offer up a smattering of prime Selway, both with Radiohead and in occasional side project 7 Worlds Collide.

We begin our natal day shout-out with Radiohead at their simmering best.

There are but a handful of drummers that could pull off the twists and turns of this one, all the while making it swing.

Selway’s a pretty fine singer-songwriter, too, as evidenced by this lovely Selway penned number, which finds him out front on guitar and vocals.

As one astute YouTube commenter put it, “That’s serious fucking drumming.” Indeed.

Selway’s drumming will often bring heft and solidity into band’s pretty, drifting numbers; a lovely juxtaposition against the ache and fragility in Thom Yorke’s voice.

Though if the Selway had wanted to be a crushing great straight rock drummer, he sure as hell had the chops and muscle right out of the gate.

Radiohead Tour Dates :: Radiohead News :: Radiohead Concert Reviews


Furthur Play Whole Dead Albums At Furthur Festival

UNPRECEDENTED LIVE PRESENTATION OF CLASSIC ALBUMS IN THEIR ENTIRETY

Phil & Bob in Furthur by Susan J. Weiand

Furthur will perform six classic Grateful Dead albums at Furthur Fest, taking place May 28-30 at the Calaveras County Fairgrounds in Angels Camp, CA. The schedule is:

Saturday – Set I – American Beauty
Saturday – Set II – Workingman’s Dead
Saturday – Set III – Anthem of the Sun
Sunday – Set I – Blues For Allah
Sunday – Set II – Aoxomoxoa
Sunday – Set III – Terrapin Station

In an ongoing series of videos discussing these Grateful Dead albums, the latest installment features Phil Lesh and Bob Weir, along with kindred spirit-turned-intrepid-interviewer Jackie Greene and longtime Grateful Dead road manager Rock Scully, talking about the creation of Workingman’s Dead. The quality of the songs Jerry was bringing to the table, along with the influence of Crosby, Stills and Nash, are revealed as two of the biggest inspirations behind the 1970 classic. Check out the video and the earlier discussion of American Beauty here.

Furthur will do an “Open Aire Soundcheck” on Friday, May 28. The full Furthur Stage schedule for the weekend can be found here, and the schedule for the daytime Sunshine Stage is here. The schedule for the acoustic Dark Hollow Stage, curated by Larry Campbell and Teresa Williams has not been set, but the late night set for Friday will be an All-Star Jam Session and on Saturday night it’s Galactic at what the fest has dubbed the “Frogtown Fillmore.”

Furthur Tour Dates :: Furthur News :: Furthur Concert Reviews