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JamBase Questionnaire: The Old Ceremony

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

Smart, full of different colors, hooky as hell, Chapel Hill, North Carolina’s The Old Ceremony are everything rock should be but usually isn’t. One picks up on the same vibe that infused late period Beatles and early Tom Waits, but tempered with a pleasantly jaundiced eye and a sonic range that touches on tango, folk, sophisticated jazz, Arabic tones, punk and more. What’s more impressive is how they harness this variety into frameworks that get the job done in just a few minutes.

The group has grown from strength to strength on each successive album, with their latest, Tender Age, coalescing their many charms into a series of super catchy cautionary tales for lovers and dreamers. The curveballs come fast on Tender Age, where seemingly dark titles like “Gun To My Head” and “Ruined My Plans” are snappy love songs, one tune is sung in Chinese, and the whole thing simmers down to a gently spiritual hum that sneaks up and leaves one reflective in the best of ways. (Dennis Cook)

The Old Ceremony plays next at the Motorco Music Hall Benefit for Central Park Charter School on Friday, January 28 in Durham, NC, then on Friday, February 4 in Raleigh, NC as part of the Kings WKNC Double Barrel Benefit. After that The Old Ceremony will open a string of dates for Rooney that will hit Philly, D.C. and more Find full tour dates here.

Here’s what TOC singer-songwriter-bandleader Django Haskins had to say to our inquiries.

The Old Ceremony

Instrument of choice: Picasso guitar, barroom piano
Nicknames: “Dave”

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Breaking some eggs. The older I get, the more impatient I am with safe choices.

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
The Cars’ Heartbeat City

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
The Walkmen album You and I. It’s the aural equivalent of oversaturated 35mm film: rich, almost rotten colors bleeding into each other nostalgically with occasional bursts of sad yellow light. I lived in that album for at least a year.

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
Elvis Presley. Or Humphrey Bogart. Or a Harlem Globetrotter. I was a mixed up kid.

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
The surprising one. We always enjoy playing together, but every so often there’ll be a show that shows all the signs of being a downer before we start, but explodes into overjoydom. On nights like that, I usually can’t stop grinning at everything that happens onstage.

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
I still have all my fingers.

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
Rocky beaches. I used to wander beaches in Maine and Nova Scotia in the summers, smashing rocks down on the ground hoping that one would split and reveal a geode. Never found one, but it got out a lot of my childhood angst.

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
Bowie’s Ziggy Stardust or Rum, Sodomy and the Lash by The Pogues

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
We’ve have some great ones. Off the top of my head, I’d say Vatan, a prix fixe Indian place on E. 37th St. in NYC.
10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
The frozen foods section. And house concerts.

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
Staring listlessly at trees flying by for hours on end. And my cowboy mouth.

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
The Beatles. They actually reinvented themselves over and over. The Stones, though I love them, found one good sound and stuck with it. I prefer variety, if I have to choose only one.

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
A long distance bus ride in China that was so crowded that the only place I could stand was on top of a basket of pig parts heading to market.

The Old Ceremony – Til My Voice Is Gone from Sam Griffith on Vimeo.

The Old CeremonyTour Dates :: The Old Ceremony Tour News :: The Old Ceremony Tour Concert Reviews

JamBase | Talking Straight
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Lotus NYE in Philly

NYE IN PHILADELPHIA AT THE ELECTRIC FACTORY


Lotus

Following four straight sold-out shows to kick off the fall tour, Lotus prepares to march further,
hitting both coasts and points in between this season.

After the fall tour ends in November, two more shows go
down in Chicago just after Thanksgiving. Lotus goes out again for a short holiday run starting December 29 at the
Water Street Music Hall in Rochester, NY. They are back in Baltimore for an intimate show at the 8×10 on the 30
before their highly-anticipated return to Philadelphia’s Electric Factory for a hometown New Year’s Eve celebration
where they’re joined this year by old friends and fellow Philadelphians, Brothers Past. As a special to the fans, there
are a limited number of reduced price two-show passes for the Baltimore and New Year’s Eve shows.

The Fall Tour continues on tonight in St. Louis, with the glitch-hop drenched beats of Mux Mool along for the extent
of the tour, and continues across the country, supported by an array of local electronic artists in each city.


10/20 St. Louis, MO: The Pageant
10/21 Little Rock, AR: Revolution Music Room
10/22 Tulsa, OK: Cain’s Ballroom
10/24 Flagstaff, AZ: The Orpheum Theater
10/26 Solana Beach, CA: Belly Up Tavern

10/27 Los Angeles, CA: House of Blues

10/28 Crystal Bay, NV: Crown Room
10/29 San Francisco, CA: The Independent
10/30 Portland, OR: Roseland Theater
10/31 Seattle, WA: The Showbox at The Market
11/02 Missoula, MT: The Top Hat
11/03 Bozeman, MT: Emerson Ballroom
11/04 Salt Lake City, UT: The State Room

11/05 Denver, CO: Gothic Theater
11/06 Denver, CO: The Fillmore

11/09 Lawrence, KS: The Bottleneck
11/10 Omaha, NE: Slowdown

11/11 Milwaukee, WI: Turner Hall Ballroom
11/12 Minneapolis, MN: First Avenue

11/13 Madison, WI: Orpheum Theatre

11/14 Madison, WI: Royal Oak Theatre

11/17 Clifton Park, NY: Northern Lights

11/18 Boston, MA: House of Blues

11/19 South Burlington, VT: Higher Ground
11/20 South Burlington, VT: Higher Ground
11/21 Northampton, MA: Pearl Street
11/26 Chicago, IL: Martyrs’
11/27 Chicago, IL: Riviera Theatre
12/29 Rochester, NY: Water Street Music Hall

12/30 Baltimore, MD: 8×10
12/31 Philadelphia, PA: Electric Factory

Lotus
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The New Deal | Philly | Review | Pics | Video

Words & Images by: Jake Krolick

The New Deal :: 09.24.10 :: Electric Factory :: Philadelphia, PA

Jamie Shields by Jake Krolick

There is a music documentary that came out in 2009 called The Heart is a Drum Machine. It contains a scene in which a drummer pontificates about how the music that we connect with stems from the rhythm of our heartbeat. With that notion in mind, consider The New Deal’s drummer Darren Shearer. Whether you watch him play or simply interact with him, he epitomizes that quote as enthusiasm spills out of his internal metronome and blasts to your ears via his drum kit. The Electric Factory found Shearer, bassist Dan Kurtz and keyboard wiz Jamie Shields doing what they’ve done best over the past 12 years – dominating their own live electronic genre. The audience synced themselves to the pulse coming from the stage and the Electric Factory was alive. This new living, breathing, thriving organism – whose purpose may have had a deeper meaning – was, for the time being, solely a dance machine.

The New Deal invited Bay Area hip-hop legend Lyrics Born and his band to open their Pennsylvania and Massachusetts shows. Pimping his soon-to-be-released album As You Were, the Japanese-American rapper Tsutomu “Tom” Shimura ripped through several older songs before getting frustrated with the buzzing crowd anxious to shake-ass. I dug his freestyle joint with shout outs to our cheese steak city, but apparently, I was in the minority. When he debuted his new single, “Lies X 3,” as much of the crowd stayed fairly lackluster. From all accounts the Northampton show the next evening fared better, but it was a tough pill to swallow for a rowdy Philadelphia crowd.

The New Deal rescheduled this show several times before finally making it happen. Despite the other electronic show going down in Philadelphia’s navy yard, tND pulled a decent-sized crowd and rocked the Factory until 1:45 a.m. with two sets and a speedy encore. Having just released a new record, Live: Toronto 7.16.2009, Shearer, Kurtz and Shields were in outstanding moods as they embarked on a 21 show romp through the States.

The first set was dominated with jams, while some serious alien sounds emerged from Shields’ keyboards. His crafty, non-looped playing combined with the key changes they were doing early on made for a spirited first set. To be honest, I’m not sure they played one “song” save for a set-ending epic version of “Octobong.”

This didn’t change during the second set as Kurtz let his fingers do the walking through a wicked “Moonscraper” jam and what sounded like “Gone, Gone, Gone.” All three musicians have mastered the ability to construct moments in the music that fluctuate on strict command from low to high. If you examined the topography of Friday’s music, its horizon line was dominated by a roller coaster of peaks and valleys. This style has come to define what is somewhat-instinctive-yet-subconsciously awesome about their performances. Their music forces you to anticipate the building-driving moments and lash out in fits of dance and arm pumping.

By the show’s encore – a speedy version of “VL Tone” – the Electric Factory was in shambles. As the trio bounced notes off the walls, I realized how powerful the anticipation of a sound is as an element of music. The New Deal excel at stirring this kind of hungry desire in audiences, offering just the right balance of foreplay and release, like a good live band should.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”23″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=137″);}); 9/24/10 – The New Deal @ Electric Factory (Philadelphia, PA) View Photos

The New Deal Tour Dates :: The New Deal News :: The New Deal Concert Reviews

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Hank Baskett, Kendra Wilkinson’s Husband, Dropped From Philadelphia Eagles For Second Time In 12 Months

Kendra Wilkinson’s man is having a little trouble holding down a job! The future of Hank Baskett’s career as an NFL wide receiver is up in the air after the sportsman was cut from the Philadelphia Eagles this week, leaving Baskett riding the bench on the sidelines for the second time in 12 months. We [...]

Lotus NYE Show in Philly

LOTUS RETURNS TO THE ELECTRIC FACTORY IN PHILADELPHIA
FOR ANOTHER NEW YEAR’S EVE
CELEBRATION


Lotus

Lotus returns to
Philadelphia’s own Electric Factory for another New Year’s Eve celebration. With the success of last year’s sold-out
show at the illustrious venue, they are looking forward to counting down to 2011 in their hometown once again.

Tickets are on sale now through Lotus Fanclub ticketing, and public onsale begins September 7
through Ticketmaster—more information is available at the Electric Factory website

Lotus
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My Morning Jacket | Summer Tour Closer | Philly

Words & Images by: Jake Krolick

My Morning Jacket :: 08.29.10 :: River Stage at Great Plaza :: Philadelphia, PA

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”11″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=120″);}); 8/29/10 – My Morning Jacket @ Great Plaza @ Penn’s Landing (Philadelphia, PA) View Photos

On a normal day it’s hard to top a My Morning Jacket concert, but it becomes extra special when it’s the closing show of their summer tour. Filling shoes much bigger than maybe you or I had ever imagined, My Morning Jacket finds itself at the top of an ever-changing landscape of American rock bands. These travelers from Kentucky set Philadelphia’s River Stage at Great Plaza ablaze as they crushed their way through 22 glorious songs that made the evening feel like it was over in two minutes not two hours.

The venue sits on the banks of the Delaware River between the Ben Franklin and Walt Whitman Bridges. Hundreds of steps cascade down to the water’s edge and are separated with manmade waterfalls and pathways. It slays that parking lot venue, the Festival Pier , to bits. Place My Morning Jacket on the stage during sunset and it’s one heck of a show.

A slightly shaggier than normal Jim James made us Philadelphians feel extra special as he warmly thanked opener Scott McMicken from local favorite Dr. Dog. McMicken’s own set was quite moving, and he sprinkled in several acoustic versions of Dr. Dog tunes including a tender version of “Jackie Wants a Black Eye” off Dr. Dog’s latest, Shame Shame. His backdrop was a stellar homemade home façade complete with a suitcase, curtains, shelves and even a hole in the faux-wall for a mouse. Whether he plucked the banjo or strummed the guitar, his songs seemed to compliment the evening.

My Morning Jacket crept on stage through a haze of a manmade mist ready to produce a setlist that was packed with almost their entire catalog. The first half of the set grew superbly and got the blood flowing as we heard the band sink their teeth into “Mahgeetah,” “Golden,” a rare “Honest Man” and a new lavish, down tempo song called “Circuital.” The new tune has tons of potential and is destined to take its royal place in the MMJ catalog. James demonstrated his ability to get loose on an acoustic guitar and started to really flex his vocals on the new tune.

During “I’m Amazed,” bassist Tom Blankenship, guitarist Carl Broemel and Jim James huddled in front of Patrick Hallahan’s green star covered drum kit. This has become the standard mode of operation for the group as they break out into wild undulations, fanatical changes, and some good old-fashioned head banging. The rest of the band played while James pulled a rubber donkey mask over his head to sway through the song’s finish. He was super animated before going into the center cut of the show, which slowed for “Tonight I Want to Celebrate With You,” “Steam Engine” and “Smokin’ from Shootin.” This trio gave the band time to play with the melodies and jam on some of the finer, softer moments. These calm songs offered a wonderful window to peek at this band’s great depths.

The encore was loose and wild as MMJ rocked “Wordless Chorus,” which took James’s beatific voice to a whole new level. “Highly Suspicious” was an excuse to dance as James donned his black cap and channeled his inner Phantom of the Opera. James gave quite a show as he did a bevy of his best famous rockers imitations while heaving himself back and forth across the stage. The finale was the oh-so-fitting “One Big Holiday.” Its swelling build and remarkable release left the entire venue in a state of exhilaration as they staggered toward the exits.

My Morning Jacket will play each of their records straight through over five nights in October. I’d say those five nights in New York City are going to be one tough ticket to come by but so worth doing everything in your power to acquire.

Setlist
Rollin Back (intro), The Way That He Sings, Gideon, Anytime, Mahgeetah, Golden, Circuital (NEW), It Beats 4 U, Honest Man, I’m Amazed, Easy Morning Rebel, Tonite I Want to Celebrate With You, Steam Engine, Smokin From Shootin, (end of) Run Thru, Touch Me I’m Going To Scream Pt.2, (end of) Lay Low
E: Wordless Chorus, Touch Me I’m Going To Scream Pt.1, Highly Suspicious, Off The Record, One Big Holiday

My Morning Jacket Tour Dates :: My Morning Jacket News :: My Morning Jacket Concert Reviews

JamBase | East Coast
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The New Deal: 6/26 Philly Show Rescheduled

ALL TICKETS WILL BE HONORED AT E-FACTORY SHOW ON SEPTEMBER 24


The New Deal

Due to circumstances beyond their control, The Electric Factory must postpone The New Deal show this Saturday, June 26, 2010. The show has been rescheduled at the E-Factory for Friday, September 24, 2010 and all tickets will be honored.

The New Deal are firm believers that the show must always go on. This Saturday, June 26, the band will perform a rare intimate show at The Note in West Chester, PA for their beloved Philly fans. This special performance will feature 4+ hrs of music, including DJ Sets by all three members of tND, fan-requested covers, band giveaways, and for the first time, live vocals. Please arrive early as a sell-out is expected.

All tickets Purchased for the E-Factory show will be honored for the special 6/26 performance at The Note –OR– the rescheduled E-Factory show (Friday, Sept 24, 2010). If you are a ticket holder for the postponed show, please stop by the Merchandise booth at The Note for a complementary gift from tND.

“An Evening with The New Deal”

$20 Online and Day of Show
www.thenote.tickets.musictoday.com/TheNote/calendar.aspx

The New Deal
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Drive-By Truckers/Lucero | 04.03 | Philly

Words & Images by: Jake Krolick

Drive-By Truckers/Lucero/Langhorne Slim :: 04.03.10 :: The Electric Factory :: Philadelphia, PA

Drive-By Truckers :: 04.03 :: Philly

The workingman’s plight has long been subject matter for musicians. From Tennessee Ernie Ford’s “Sixteen Tons” to Sam Cooke’s “Chain Gang,” artists have been spilling their guts about day-to-day troubles for years. Philadelphia residents understand these lessons as well as any area in the country. Last Saturday evening, as the city sat quietly poised for Easter Sunday, a mass of working stiffs shuffled into The Electric Factory to put their work week behind them. We exchanged coffee mugs for whiskey bottles as we took in the music performed by a man from Langhorne, PA, a band from Memphis, Tennessee, and one of the most celebrated workingman’s bands ever.

Langhorne Slim‘s boundless energy and showmanship were less of a precursor to the songwriting skills of Lucero and Drive-By Truckers and more of a peek at another version of life’s struggles. Slim, born Sean Scolnick, was not just dancing and smiling during his performance. The strum of his guitar coupled with his quick vocal switches lifted his third album’s title track “Be Set Free” from a bland love story to an engaging song. Flanked by his band, The War EaglesJeff Ratner (bass), Malachi DeLorenzo (drums) and David Moore (banjo) – they formed a healthy force to reckon with. The band rattled and shook the crowd with “Restless.” Too bad so many were still getting into the venue and missed Slim’s set. The crowd finally took notice of their lively performance as Moore and DeLorenzo connected with a fury on “Cut It Down” off Electric Love Letter. They created a whirlwind with Moore’s aggressive banjo plucking and DeLorenzo’s patient yet bombastic combination of rim shots and bass kicks before Slim bent to his knees to rock “I Love You So Bad.”

It’s pretty widely known that there have been times when Lucero was too intoxicated to perform a decent show. This was not the case Saturday evening as the band demonstrated just how amazing they could be when firing on all cylinders.


Ben Nichols – Lucero :: 04.03 :: Philly

Lucero’s music chews on you like a Southern punk version of The Hold Steady with its spiral of horns and gruff sounds. Just like The Hold Steady, they sing to appease the heart and mind of the common man. Lucero is chock full of wild fellows, but the soul is singer-songwriter-bandleader Ben Nichols. He radiates outlaw grace with a voice that could influence an uprising. His songs are pushed through gritted teeth, back alley poetry about the people he lost or longed for and the lifetime of booze that he’s consumed. Nichols crooned into the microphone all evening like a less showy version of The Mighty Mighty Bosstones‘ singer Dicky Barrett. Their set was nothing short of amazing as Nichols, drummer Roy Berry and gray bearded guitarist Brian Venable looked outward and raged against the slings ‘n’ arrows of life. Lucero didn’t miss a note as they rattled off 13 songs that ran their illustrious career. The set spanned from the brick of pain “Kiss The Bottle” off The Attic Tapes to the highlight of their set, a positive, horn-filled “Smoke” that linked Todd Beene‘s pedal steel with a gaggle of huffing and puffing horn players. Simply put, they slayed their set.

The Drive-By Truckers have just released The Big To-Do (JamBase review). This album is somewhat different than previous efforts. The songs lack a certain raw feeling many have grown accustomed to, and it features many more melodic moments. However, it still contains the soul of the Drive-By Truckers and it shines in its ability to carry on where the other albums have left off. There are plenty of seedy stories of deception, strippers and cheaters, all on some form of drug or religion. Even if the music is starting to bend into a more harmonious form, the lyrical edge remains evident, as in this nugget from “This Fucking Job.”

Workin’ this job is a kick in the pants
Workin’ this job is like a knife in the back
It ain’t gettin’ me further than the dump I live in
It ain’t gettin’ me further than the next paycheck


Neff & Hood – DBTs :: 04.03 :: Philly

The Electric Factory was like being in one giant black megaphone. The front row was blasted by the Drive-By Truckers vinyl-only release “You’re Woman Is A Living Thing” as we prepared for the onslaught of the louder-than-the-Lord Southern rockers. Wild-eyed enthusiasm manifested itself within leader Patterson Hood as he stepped onstage, while guitarist Mike Cooley unabashedly came out smoking a cigarette. You can see a clear difference in these two personalities that drive the band, but it’s those variations that make the Truckers click. Behind them was a floor-to-ceiling backdrop of the Wes Freed circus train that adorns The Big To-Do album cover.

They devoted the first half of the set largely to new album, and while several of the new songs haven’t quite acquired the fire of older material, Hood and Cooley ground out “This Fucking Job” in fine form. Both seemed to find a connection with the audience and showed us that they were simply not ready to let us settle for the guillotine of conformity. Hood’s Southern drawl came out strongly, and for the first time during the performance so did his nonchalant ability to make us feel better by really hanging on certain lyrics. It’s this bit of human emotion that helps us tell The Man to fuck off instead of just lining up to have our heads chopped off.

The DBTs are one of those bands that sometimes need a push to get the show in gear. Enter Cooley on “Sink Hole” and “Self Destructive Zones.” His axe work was bloody loud and awe-inspiring. As he saluted the crowd with his guitar at the edge of the stage, you could hear the band starting to turn even sweeter. Drummer Brad Morgan shook the giant bass drum to life behind Cooley. It was somewhere around this point in the show that some jackass started screaming at the sound guy because he felt that the sound was too loud for his taste, though his discomfort was more likely due to too much alcohol because a few minutes later he was involved in a melee with a group of fans and security. However, Hood was loose by this point, and if he was drinking, we damn well better be, too. He split apart “The Company I Keep” and started teasing James Taylor’s “You’ve Got a Friend” before telling us to pour ourselves a cocktail because the night was going to be long and glorious.


Drive-By Truckers :: 04.03 :: Philly

New ones “Daddy Learned to Fly” and “Birthday Boy” was a finicky back-to-back combo. You could hear a more instrumental side working its way out of the Drive-By Truckers on both songs, which probably had a lot to do with their time as a backing band for Booker T. Jones. It’s surprising how much patience they had on “Daddy Learned to Fly,” and I’d give all that timing credit to Cooley’s searing guitar work and Jay Gonzalez‘s keyboard accents. The sound combination of these two had a similarity to late ’90s Widespread Panic with Michael Houser and JoJo Herman. They built it up just enough to make our skin boil, though “Birthday Boy” didn’t translate live as well as it does on the album. No matter, the set ended on a high point with Hood crooning on a cover of Eddie Hinton’s “Everybody Needs Love.”

As with most Drive-By Truckers shows, the encore was thick and hearty. Hood had started the evening by thanking Lucero for opening for them and reminisced about how the Truckers opened for them in 1996 in Memphis. This deep adoration culminated in a six-song encore with Lucero’s Todd Beene sitting in the entire time on pedal steel. One of my favorites from The Big-To-Do kicked off the encore as bassist Shonna Tucker started “You Got Another” by herself at the piano. Her elegant take on the tale of a jilted lover destroyed all that I thought I knew about the Drive-By Truckers. Somewhere during Tucker’s soft piano beginning the song turned into a full sonic head-fuck as Beene slid off hollow notes that linked with Cooley’s squealing guitar.

The band followed this pleasing but odd choice with some boisterous fan favorites, including “18 Wheels of Love” and “Let There Be Rock,” where Hood’s preaching dominated extended versions of each. His words came off as Southern tinged Arlo Guthrie style tales. He changed the words of “Let There Be Rock” into an advertisement for their opening spot for Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers this summer. He sang about his first band, Breakdown, and substituted Tom Petty in for Molly Hatchet. But, it was John Neff who ran away with the song as he rocked us with an electric sitar. Gonzalez had us dancing to his banging piano work on Southern Rock Opera‘s “Shut Up And Get On The Plane” before Cooley ended the show in high style performing a touching rendition of “Angels and Fuselage.” With a final mighty whack of the giant bass drum, Morgan ended the show.

Lucero set list
Intro > Sounds of the City, That Much Further West, Can’t Feel a Thing, Raising Hell, Slow Dancing, Sixes and Sevens, Goodbye Again, Kiss the Bottle, Mom, Smoke, Tears Don’t Matter Much, I Can Get Us Out of Here

Drive-By Truckers set list
You’re Woman Is A Living Thing on PA, After The Scene Dies, Get Downtown, (It’s Gonna Be) I Told You So, This Fucking Job, Sinkhole, Self Destructive Zones, The Company I Keep, 3 Dimes Down, Daddy Learned To Fly, Birthday Boy, Girls Who Smoke, Eyes Like Glue, The Living Bubba, Zoloft, A Ghost To Most, Everybody Needs Love, Puttin’ People On The Moon
E: You Got Another, 18 Wheels Of Love, Zip City, Let There Be Rock, Shut Up And Get On The Plane, Angels and Fuselage

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”0″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=16″);}); Drive-By Truckers, Lucero, Langhorne Slim | Electric Factory | Philadelphia, PA On the eve of Easter Sunday, Drive-By Truckers, Lucero and Langhorne Slim celebrated the working man in Philadelphia… View Photos

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Grateful Dead Bring Philly 1989 Show To Big Screen

GRATEFUL DEAD BRING PHILADELPHIA SHOW FROM 1989 TO THE BIG SCREEN

Screenings Of Upcoming Crimson, White & Indigo Set Scheduled To Begin April 13

3-CD/1-DVD Set Of The Dead’s Previously Unreleased July 7, 1989 Philadelphia Concert
At JFK Stadium Available April 20 From Grateful Dead/Rhino

Jerry Garcia by Blakesberg

The Grateful Dead were enjoying a late-career renaissance in 1989 when the band steamed into Philadelphia on one of the hottest days of the summer to play the last concert ever at John F. Kennedy Stadium. The July 7 show in the City of Brotherly Love highlights the band’s exuberant resurgence, a peak that rivals any that came before it.

Prior to the upcoming release of this show as a 3-CD/1-DVD set, several screenings of the live performance are set to take place at theaters across the country, beginning with a screening at the Ambler Theater in Philadelphia on April 13. See below for full screening schedule.

Rhino salutes life, liberty, and the pursuit of “hippieness” with a collection that includes every note from this epic show on three CDs and one DVD. The DVD captures the entire concert, shot from an amazing multi-camera perspective by the same crew that shot the legendary Truckin’ Up To Buffalo DVD. CRIMSON, WHITE & INDIGO: PHILADELPHIA, JULY 7, 1989, will be available April 20 from Grateful Dead/Rhino at all retail outlets, including Dead.net, for a suggested list price of $39.98. A digital version featuring all of the audio content will also be available.

The 19 tracks on 3 CDs – all but one previously unreleased-were mixed from the 24-track analog master tapes, enhanced using the latest audio engineering technology and presented here in HDCD. The set comes packaged with a booklet of rare photos and an essay by Steve Silberman, who co-produced the Grateful Dead’s boxed set of previously unreleased recordings, So Many Roads (1965-1995).

The Philadelphia concert offers a snapshot of the Dead’s 1989 tour, where the band played to some of its biggest audiences ever, a result of the group’s only Top 40 hit, “Touch Of Grey” from 1987′s In The Dark. During this tour, the band was recording the follow-up to that album, Built To Last, which is an important reason why the jamming heard here is particularly fluid and concise. In fact, the band played a pair of songs from the upcoming album, the aching ballad “Standing On The Moon” and the poignant
“Blow Away,” a song co-written by keyboardist Brent Mydland, who sadly died a year later.

The band helped raze the aging stadium, thundering through “Hell In A Bucket,” “Little Red Rooster,” and Bob Dylan’s “Stuck Inside Of Mobile With The Memphis Blues Again.” Many sitting at the north end of the open-air stadium recall the concrete bleachers trembling during Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann‘s drum duet in the second set. The show closed with another Dylan cover, “Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door,” the last song ever performed at JFK.

When this show was recorded, the band included guitarist Jerry Garcia, drummers Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann, bassist Phil Lesh, keyboardist Brent Mydland, and guitarist Bob Weir.

GRATEFUL DEAD – CRIMSON, WHITE & INDIGO: PHILADELPHIA, JULY 7, 1989

Screening Schedule:

4/13

Philadelphia, PA

Ambler Theater

TBD

Gloucester, MA

Cape Ann Community Cinema

7:30pm

4/15

Rochester, NY

Little Theatre

7:00pm

New York, NY

City Winery

10:00pm

San Francisco, CA

Balboa Theatre

7:30pm

Encino, CA

Laemmle Town Center

7:30pm

Pasadena, CA

Laemmle Playhouse

7:30pm

Los Angeles, CA

Laemmle Sunset

7:30pm

Columbus, OH

The Gateway

7:00pm

Portland, ME

Patriot Cinemas; Nickelodeon

8:00pm

4/16

New York, NY

City Winery

10:00pm

Washington, DC

Atlas Performing Arts Center

8:00pm

Ft. Lauderdale, FL

Cinema Paradiso

TBD

St. Petersburg, FL

Beach Theater

TBD

Deland, FL

Athens Theatre

7:00pm

Newport, RI

Jane Pickens Theatre

9:00pm

4/17

Encino, CA

Laemmle Town Center

11:00am

Pasadena, CA

Laemmle Playhouse

11:00am

Los Angeles, CA

Laemmle Sunset

11:00am

Palm Beach, FL

Mos’ Art Center

6:00pm

Deland, FL

Athens Theatre

7:00pm

Lake Worth, FL

Lake Worth Playhouse

TBD

Shreveport, LA

Robinson Film Center

5:00pm

Wilmington, DE

Theater N

9:00pm

4/18

Encino, CA

Laemmle Town Center

11:00am

Pasadena, CA

Laemmle Playhouse

11:00am

Los Angeles, CA

Laemmle Sunset

11:00am

Wellfleet, MA

Wellfleet Harbor Actor’s Theatre

TBD

Portland, ME

Patriot Cinemas; Nickelodeon

8:00pm

4/19

Washington, DC

Atlas Performing Arts Center

8:00pm

Bellingham, WA

Pickford Film Center

7:30pm

4/20

San Jose, CA

Camera 3 Cinema

7:30pm

Cleveland, OH

Cedar Lee Theater

7:00pm

Oberlin, OH

Apollo Theater

7:00pm

Three Rivers, MI

Riviera Theatre

TBD

Telluride, CO

Michael D. Palm Theatre

7:00pm


New Deal Postpone 4/24 Philly Team up with Bisco for Show in AC

The New Deal Postpone 4/24 Philly Show

The New Deal had announced that their April 24 show in Philadelphia, PA has been postponed. Please stay tuned for an announcement of a makeup date. Tickets can be refunded at point of purchase.


On this date, The New Deal will play with The Disco Biscuits at House of Blues in Atlantic City, NJ (Saturday, April 24, 2010). Please enjoy this opportunity to see TND + TDB destroy AC’s historic boardwalk.

Tickets for The New Deal in Washington, DC at the 9:30 Club are going fast, and will likely sell out.

The New Deal will soon announce their full summer schedule, including old favorites, a few new stops, and some exciting festivals plays.

Stay tuned for the complete summer tour announcement next week.

Fore more on The New Deal see our recent feature/interview here.

The New Deal Tour Dates :: The New Deal News :: The New Deal Concert Reviews


Grateful Dead: ’89 Philly Release

Grateful Dead Complete July ’89 Show Due in Three CD/One DVD Set

Grateful Dead

The Grateful Dead were enjoying a late-career renaissance in 1989 when the band steamed into Philadelphia on one of the hottest days of the summer to play the last concert ever at John F. Kennedy Stadium. The July 7 show in the City of Brotherly Love
highlights the band’s exuberant resurgence, a peak that rivals any that came before it.

Rhino salutes life, liberty, and the pursuit of “hippieness” with a collection that includes every note from this epic show on three CDs and one DVD. The DVD captures the entire concert, shot from an amazing multi-camera perspective by the same crew that shot the legendary Truckin’ Up To Buffalo DVD.

Crimson, White & Indigo: Philadelphia, July 7, 1989, will be available April 20 from Grateful Dead/Rhino at all retail outlets, including Dead.net, for a suggested list price of $39.98. A digital version featuring all of the audio content will also be available.

The 19 tracks on three CDs – all but one previously unreleased – were mixed from the 24-track analog master tapes, enhanced using the latest audio engineering technology and presented here in HDCD. The set comes packaged with a booklet of rare photos and an essay by Steve Silberman, who co-produced the Grateful Dead’s boxed set of
previously unreleased recordings, So Many Roads (1965-1995).

The Philadelphia concert offers a snapshot of the Dead’s 1989 tour, where the band played to some of its biggest audiences ever, a result of the group’s only Top 40 hit, “Touch Of Grey” from 1987′s In The Dark. During this tour, the band was recording the follow-up to that album, Built To Last, which is an important reason
why the jamming heard here is particularly fluid and concise. In fact, the band played a pair of songs from the upcoming album, the aching ballad “Standing On The Moon” and the poignant “Blow Away,” a song co-written by keyboardist Brent Mydland, who sadly died a year later.

The band helped raze the aging stadium, thundering through “Hell In A Bucket,” “Little Red Rooster,” and Bob Dylan’s “Stuck Inside Of Mobile With The Memphis Blues Again.” Many sitting at the north end of the open-air stadium recall the concrete bleachers trembling during Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann’s drum duet in the second
set. The show closed with another Dylan cover, “Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door,” the last song ever performed at JFK.

When this show was recorded, the band included guitarist Jerry Garcia, drummers Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann, bassist Phil Lesh, keyboardist Brent Mydland, and guitarist Bob Weir.

Track Listing:

CD 1
“Hell In A Bucket”
“Iko Iko”
“Little Red Rooster”
“Ramble On Rose”
“Stuck Inside Of Mobile With The Memphis Blues Again”
“Loser”
“Let It Grow”
“Blow Away”

CD 2
“Box Of Rain”
“Scarlet Begonias”
“Fire On The Mountain”
“Estimated Prophet”
“Standing On The Moon”
“Rhythm Devils”

CD 3
“Space”
“The Other One”
“Wharf Rat”
“Turn On Your Lovelight”
“Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door”


State Radio | 01.30 | Philly

Words by: Bobby Coleman | Images by: Rod Snyder

State Radio :: 01.30.10 :: Electric Factory :: Philadelphia, PA

Chad Urmston – State Radio :: 01.30 :: Philly

State Radio‘s bio on MySpace reads like a manifesto: “For generations of American songwriters, the music and the message have been inextricably linked. Word and deed are one in the same, and the only thing more moving than the rousing call to action is the song that transports the words like a shell casing.” The band, whose members include, Chad Stokes Urmston (guitar, lead vocals and previously a member of Dispatch), Chuck Fay (bass) and Mike Najarian (drums), is genuinely trying to change the world with its music.

But they don’t just talk the talk, they walk the walk. Onstage they mix indie rock with reggae and socially conscious lyrics that inspire ever-growing crowds to create change and fight injustice. Off stage they pull their weight as well. On State Radio’s current tour, the band is engaging in community service projects before shows. On this day they spent three hours painting murals with fans at a recreation center in the Germantown section of Philadelphia. Last year they logged 3,000 hours with their fans doing projects like these, as well as bringing attention to election reform, removing invasive plants in California, partnering with Oxfam America to help protect Sudanese women from violence, and working with Amnesty International to expose injustice in the legal system.

“Wage Peace” was written on the stage backdrop in the center of a radiating mandala and the band’s coordinated light show was nothing short of amazing. But underneath the pretty colors and beautiful harmonies were songs of pain and turmoil. With a packed house and a pristine sound, the energy level was astounding. The crowd shouted lyrics and Urmston didn’t stop jumping off the amp stack for the first 15 minutes of the show.

Midway though the concert they played “Doctor Ron the Actor.” Based around a ska beat, the band showed a lighter side by breaking into a humorous prerecorded answering machine message set against sharp rhythm precision. Other highlights included “Calling All Crows,” which is not only a song title but the name of State Radio’s organization that mobilizes musicians and fans to promote human rights, and a very well played “Bohemian Grove.”

Following in the footsteps of heroes like Guthrie, Dylan, Rage Against the Machine, Michael Franti and so many more, State Radio use their music as a tool to evoke the change they want to see. Rarely is revolution so much fun.

State Radio is on tour now; dates available here.

Continue reading for lots more pics of State Radio in Philadelphia…

JamBase | Broadcasting Loud ‘n’ Clear
Go See Live Music!


New Zappa Live Disc: Philly ’76

VAULTERNATIVE RECORDS RELEASES FRANK ZAPPA’S DOUBLE CD CONCERT SET PHILLY ’76

Frank Zappa

On December 21, which would have been Frank Zappa‘s 69th birthday, Vaulternative Records released Philly ’76, a double CD concert recording. The new release continues the Zappa Family Trust’s mission to celebrate and protect the legacy of Frank Zappa.

Recorded October 29, 1976, at the Philadelphia Spectrum, the thrilling Philly ’76 is the only 16-track recording from this lineup, which features Zappa (guitar/vocals), Bianca Odin (keyboards/vocals), Ray White (guitar/vocals/cowbell), Eddie Jobson (keyboards/violin), Patrick O’Hearn (bass/vocals), and Terry Bozzio (drums/vocals).

The album includes liner notes from Gail Zappa and a first person account from Odin (who now goes by Lady Bianca) about her “apprenticeship with a genius.” She writes, “So many beautiful one-time-thing performances – I scarcely had time to actually think or look back on them. I am glad that he taped our shows.”

In commemoration of the bicentennial year in which the Philly ’76 concert was recorded, and the city where this country’s founding document was signed, the album liner notes also include a reproduction of the Declaration of Independence – with a twist. Many of the claims against the King of Great Britain made in the original document are highlighted here, showing how history is indeed apt to repeat itself.


Drug Bunny Holiday Party | 12.16 | Philly

Words & Images by: Jake Krolick

The Drug Bunny Holiday Party
Featuring: G. Calvin Weston, Billy Martin, Jamaaladeen Tacuma, Jeff Lee Johnson
12.16.09 :: The Trocadero :: Philadelphia, PA

Johnson & Martin :: 12.16 :: Philly

Hidden away on a cold December night sat a small room in the back of the second floor of Philadelphia’s Trocadero. This cozy, dilapidated nook was the perfect place for local promoter The Drug Bunny to throw down some dirty funk at their annual holiday party. The jazzy soiree was wrapped up with tinsel and bass and an all star one-night-only band whose sole purpose was ruling one’s face. All the heavy cats were out to play, including four of the slyest jazz funk pioneers alive today. Billy Martin was there and so were G. Calvin Weston, Jamaaladeen Tacuma and Jeff Lee Johnson. As the children lay tucked in bed dreaming of St. Nick, the tapers, dancers, prancers and vixens all jumped down the rabbit hole in search of funky musical fixings.

A neighborly, cross-cultural vibe grew as onlookers sat on any surface they could find. The floor was transformed into a haphazard living room, with puffy winter coats becoming makeshift cushions. Various elixirs from the bar and some tempting aromas lulled us into a state of relaxed euphoria as several warm-up acts tossed us treats, including an early searing cover of Parliament Funkadelic‘s “Maggot Brain.” NYC’s Whatever exemplified a Miles Davis state of mind as M.J., their expressive guitarist, played back and forth across the stage in a chicken walk and knee-bending display of funky melodious communication.

There was more than just an electrical buzz and hum to the air as the headliners plugged in and loosened up. Host Jay Michael Harrison, of WRTI fame, introduced the main act as if he was welcoming James Brown to the stage for a final performance. I lost track of how many times he made the crowd applaud for each artist. They each deserved the accolades and perhaps more as their collective resumes would be as long and impressive as Santa’s List. These were gods among men who pushed us directly into the deep end, offering no sympathy for those who could not tread their heavy waters. Unlike other combinations of jazz and funk, this session was delightfully easy to ingest. It was a testament to each of their individual talents. No matter where their free form jams went there was always a danceable groove waiting around the next turn. Fans of all degrees were lit up like proverbial kids on Christmas morning. The gifts were hidden within the intricately built music that spanned the globe of funk and jazz.

Johnson, Weston & Tacoma :: 12.16 :: Philly

It’s no secret that G. Calvin Weston is a legend in Philadelphia. His list of friends is almost as long as his list of achievements. So, when Weston and Martin teamed up for this holiday spectacular folks should have taken notice. But when The Drug Bunny tossed in all stars Tacuma and Johnson, one’s blood should have boiled and nothing should have stopped them from seeing this quadruple threat. Tacuma and Johnson, the two elder statesmen from the jazz-funk scene, were so hip and dangerous with their instruments that an air of respect and jaw dropping adoration was required in their presence. They eased in with a funky three-part number that began with a light but engaging sprinkle of notes. Each was gaining a feel for the other men onstage. Quickly, Tacoma and Johnson hooked up as they transitioned the simple jam into a battle of bass and shredding guitar. It was as if they had been sizing each other up for years and this was the schoolyard fight that would settle it all. Tacoma attacked as his eight-chord progression increased in speed and depth as he worked notes deeper into the pocket. Johnson retaliated with high-pitched whines and cries brought on with a heavy dose of whammy bar. In the rear of the ornate stage, Martin and Weston sat content as they laid down a steady drizzle of flourishes and beats. Their splendid backdrop of rhythm allowed for an exploratory depth seldom achieved with such listener appeal. Our numbers shouted out appreciation to the radically diverse acrobatic twists and turns that Johnson was playing.

It’s no wonder Martin and Weston complemented each other so well; they had sparked their brotherly bond over two decades ago in John Lurie’s Lounge Lizards. The two have created magic together since as the duel percussionists and drummers on a handful of albums including Live at Houston Hall and For No One In Particular with DJ Logic. But, it wasn’t their recorded work that had us excited as they filled the air with different beats that miraculously fit together in a complex jigsaw puzzle of synchronicity between four sticks and four feet. The pair explored ethnic percussion and free jazz, with Weston adding poignancy as he employed a trumpet several times throughout the performance. In our tight quarters their explosive twin bass drums maintained a pulsing beacon from which Tacoma and Johnson could easily steer the complex jams back as they packed each moment with funky thoughts and searing expressions.

Billy Martin :: 12.16 :: Philly

Chances are you’ve never seen guitarist Jeff Lee Johnson or bass player Jamaaladeen Tacoma, but I’d bet you’ve heard some of their playing. Johnson is well known as a session musician, playing with everyone from pop stars like Aretha Franklin and Billy Joel to Paul Shaffer‘s house band for David Letterman. His guitar work is something you don’t normally get treated to because he rarely plays away from the studio. His plaid pants and green axe were alive with motion, and his constant key changes were like watching an experiment in sound that recalled everyone from Vernon Reid to Sonny Sharrock. During certain sections he would roam deeply into the jam and just when you thought he would be lost forever in a sea of his own notes, he would pull the reins by holding one hand on the neck of his guitar as his fingers subtly tapped out the rhythm of the song and pulled him back in line with the groove being laid down by the others. The night’s music was so hot that he had to take a seat just to finish the last few songs.

Tacoma was all business as his bolo hat bounced in time to his menacing thumps. His connection to Weston is from three decades ago during the Ornette Coleman days of Prime Time. Each time I see him he has seemingly gotten more vibrant and more vicious in the pocket. He whipped his bass around as he wrapped up each jam with a funky bow. Tacoma’s slogging marches turned to solos as he demonstrated his diverse repertoire by adding in classical sounding, finger plucked runs that could have been danced to by sugar plum fairies one moment and screwed to by an aging porn queen the next. Unlike Johnson, as the show wore down Tacoma only gained steam as he bounced along with a little extra holiday cheer in his dance.

The hour and a half romp finished with a massive flowing jam that brought the house down as Weston’s classic screams of delight bubbled over because of the spirited interplay. The Drug Bunny had cometh and it brought together the legends of jazz and funk past and present. G. Calvin Weston, Billy Martin, Jamaaladeen Tacoma and Jeff Lee Johnson. Remember those names, because they are both naughty and nice. And to all you freaky people, a funky good night.

Continue reading for more images of The Drug Bunny Holiday Party…

JamBase | Down The Rabbit Hole
Go See Live Music!


Pearl Jam | 10.31.09 | Philly Spectrum

Images by: Joe Roman

Pearl Jam :: 10.31.09 :: Wachovia Spectrum :: Philadelphia, PA

Pearl Jam celebrated Halloween by performing the final show ever at the legendary Philadelphia Spectrum. Completed in 1967, the Spectrum was home to both the 76ers and Flyers and also housed a plethora of rock concerts. The Grateful Dead played 53 shows there (the most of any band), The Doors, The Who, Pink Floyd, Genesis, KISS, Aerosmith, U2, Bruce Springsteen, Jimi Hendrix and scores of others all played the hallowed venue.

On the final show of a four-night run, Pearl Jam, with the help of opening act Bad Religion, closed the doors on the Spectrum with a massive three-and-a-half hour Halloween show featuring several never before played songs, the Philadelphia String Quartet, and they even donned Devo costumes. It was a historic night by a legendary band.

Main Set: Why Go, Last Exit, Corduroy, Severed Hand, The Fixer, Elderly Woman Behind The Counter In A Small Town, You Are, Amongst The Waves, Even Flow, Pilate (first since 10.25.00), Unthought Known, Daughter, Johnny Guitar, Rats, I’m Open, I Got Shit, Glorified G, Out Of My Mind (first since 04.06.94), Black/We Belong Together, Insignificance, Life Wasted

Encore 1: Just Breathe (w/ Philadelphia String Quartet), The End (w/ Philadelphia String Quartet), Low Light, Speed of Sound, Jeremy (w/ Philadelphia String Quartet), Inside Job, Bugs (w/ Philadelphia String Quartet, first time live), Spin The Black Circle, Porch

Encore 2: Whip It! (Devo, first time live), Got Some, Crown of Thorns, Satan’s Bed, Sweet Lew (first time live), Do The Evolution/Betterman, Save It For Later, Smile, Alive, Rockin’ In The Free World, Yellow Ledbetter/Star Spangled Banner

Bad Religion

Bad Religion

Bad Religion

Bad Religion

Bad Religion

Pearl Jam tour dates available here.

JamBase | Spectrum

Go See Live Music!


Lotus: NYE in Philly

RINGING IN THE NEW YEAR WITH BROTHERLY LOVE

Lotus

Today Lotus announced a New Year’s eve run in Pennsylvania that will culminate with an epic New Year’s Eve show with MSTRKRFT at Philadelphia’s Electric Factory. Leading up to the big night, the band will stop at Mr. Small’s Theatre (Pittsburgh, PA) on December 29 and The Note (West Chester, PA) on December 30, both with support act Tigersapien.

The New Year’s Eve announcement comes as Lotus prepares to hit the road for a full season of touring. Lotus will break ground in a way that no other rock band has done prior – they are plotting a tour this fall that truly allows their legion of fans to pay-what-they-want for tickets. The Pay-What-You-Want-Tour (Oct 6 – Oct 14) featuring Lotus is an eight night run of shows in western U.S. states, sponsored by Ticketweb, that lets the fans decide how much their show ticket will cost. At the $15.00 Pay-What-You-Want level or higher, fans receive free digital downloads of the band’s two new EPs Feather on Wood and Oil on Glass, both to be released on October 6, 2009.

The Pay-What-You-Want dates are part of Lotus’ larger Fall Tour, running from early-October through the end of the year. Big stops include performances at Denver’s Fillmore, NYC’s Terminal 5 (w/ support acts RJD2 and Junior Boys DJ set), Baltimore’s Sonar, Chicago’s Vic Theatre, the Electric Factory in Philly for New Year’s Eve and others. Lotus brings out several must-see opening acts for many of these shows, including Break Science feat Adam Dietch, The Egg (from London, UK), Big in Japan, Big Gigantic, RJD2, Junior Boys, and more. Don’t miss a few special small shows: here’s the scoop – the Denver Fillmore show is being bundled with the Quixote’s show (to get into Quixotes, you must buy the Fillmore ticket), and also, for New Years, Lotus presents another “bundled” show at The Note in West Chester, PA (to purchase a ticket for The Note, you must purchase a bundled Electric Factory ticket).

Downloads of both new EPs will be bundled with advance ticket purchases for select Fall Tour dates including the two Denver shows, both Boston shows and the New Year’s run. The material on both Feather on Wood and Oil on Glass can be directly traced back to Lotus’ 2008 full-length release, Hammerstrike. A number of songs were recorded that didn’t find their way onto Hammerstrike (either they hadn’t been finished by deadlines or they weren’t coalescing with the sound of that project), but after finishing the album, Lotus decided to revisit these tracks, and the results are extraordinary. Feather on Wood is sunnier with a laid-back vibe, yet not afraid of big rock beauty, while Oil on Glass is darker in character, with more head-nodding.

Find full tour dates for Lotus here.


Gov’t Mule: Halloween In Philly

GOV’T MULE – 10.31.09 – TOWER THEATRE IN PHILADELPHIA

Gov’t Mule returns to one of its favorite venues – The Tower Theatre in Upper Darby (Philadelphia), PA on Saturday October 31. Following in the tradition of 2007′s “Holy Haunted House” and last year’s Pink Floyd spectacular, the band, once again, has something very special planned for the occasion. Pre-Sale Tickets will be available through Mule Ticketing on Tuesday August 18 at Noon Eastern. The band will also be offering you the opportunity to purchase the show poster for what will be a memorable night of music with your pre-order tickets. More October Tour dates will be announced shortly.

Gov’t Mule Tour Dates


Gov’t Mule

09/09/09 Wed The Depot Salt Lake City, UT

09/10/09 Thu Gallatin County Fairgrounds Bozeman, MT

09/11/09 Fri Showbox SoDo Seattle, WA

09/12/09 Sat Britt Pavilion Jacksonville, OR

09/13/09 Sun The Crystal Ballroom Portland, OR

09/14/09 Mon Van Duzer Theatre Arcata, CA

09/17/09 Thu Hawkins Amphitheater Reno, NV

09/18/09 Fri House of Blues San Diego, CA

09/19/09 Sat Fox Theatre Bakersfield, CA

09/20/09 Sun House of Blues Anaheim, CA

09/23/09 Wed Club Nokia Los Angeles, CA

09/24/09 Thu Ventura Theater Ventura, CA

09/25/09 Fri The Warfield San Francisco, CA

09/26/09 Sat The Warfield San Francisco, CA

10/31/09 Sat Tower Theater Upper Darby, PA

01/15/10 Fri Grand Lido Negril Negril, JM

01/16/10 Sat Grand Lido Negril Negril, JM

01/17/10 Sun Grand Lido Negril Negril, JM

01/18/10 Mon Grand Lido Negril Negril, JM

01/19/10 Tue Grand Lido Negril Negril, JM



The Albertans/Nouvellas | 07.12 | Philly

Words & Images by: Jake Krolick

The Albertans & Nouvellas :: 07.12.09 :: Northstar Bar :: Philadelphia, PA

The Albertans :: 07.12.09 :: Philadelphia, PA

We all dig the JamBase mantra “Go See Live Music!” It’s why we keep racing back here to see which bands are touring within striking range of our abodes. I’d love to add to that mantra with a few thoughts of my own. For instance last Sunday, despite a nagging urge to just stay couch-side for the latest offering of HBO’s True Blood, I followed a friend’s advice and went to see the Brooklyn band The Albertans. This barely year-old band of five musicians from around the states and Canada had just released their first album, The Legends of Sam Marco. They were the second of three acts on a bill filled with musicians you’ve probably never heard of. Apparently only a few others in Philly were ready to leave the company of Sookie Stackhouse and her fanged lover Bill Compton, but those that did were treated to an intimate and stirring performance of music filled with almost as many thrilling peaks as the aforementioned series.

The English bloke at the back of the bar was probably right to ask for an autograph from Jaime Kozyra, one half of the vocalists for Nouvellas. Having missed their first few songs, I’d stumbled into their set of soul dipped rock unprepared for the powerful showcase that Kozyra and Leah Fishman were offering. Having ended their original soul-power trio band, The Dansettes, the two dark-haired songstresses grappled the sounds of Motown, Aretha Franklin and others who had walked a hard-hitting soul line before them. Cradling the vocals inside funk rock, the Pierce Brothers (Andy on drums and Dennis on guitar) as well as Joseph Babic (bass) managed to throw down a shack-rattling set. Together with about four other people, we met their lively, turbulent offering with looks of surprise and more than one foot tapping. Kozyra and Fishman sang in the vein of Tina Turner meets Joan Jett as Fishman belted out the higher notes while Kozyra ground the tall heel of her shiny red shoes into the rug on stage during the lower vocals.

Nouvellas :: 07.12.09 :: Philadelphia, PA

Their music rolled over us and there was no way to stop the uplifting power that their sound captured. Nouvellas build on their old soul foundation and add some crunch and boom from guitar and bass. They spit out the savage joy of “Satisfied,” a tale of gratification that dripped with spine-tingling juice while the drumbeats kicked back in the shadows, jolting our fragile Sunday ease. There were moments of doubt as the band members looked nervously out into an empty room. The North Star was dead on Sunday night, but instead of just falling by the wayside, Nouvellas stood firm. Their performance did not go unnoticed and the sparse crowd that lingered by the bar congratulated each member after the set.

Following Nouvellas, The Albertans dealt with the same empty room. Actually Nouvellas stuck around to watch so The Albertans crowd grew by five. There were now 10 of us there to watch another Ernest Jenning Records band delight our meager numbers. The Albertans’ recoiling indie-pop melodies are the worthwhile concoctions of lead singer/guitarist Joel Bravo, Vancouver born bassist Ian Everall, two female vocalists and one wildly adept drummer.

Joel bravo – The Albertans :: 07.12 :: Philadelphia, PA

Both Bravo and Everall have been at this game for several years and their original band’s MySpace page has the simple epitaph “Bravo Silva 2003-2006.” Watching them play, it’s clear that the last few years performing heavily under different monikers has paid dividends. After moving to Vancouver in 2008, they took up the name The Albertans and, along with a few new explorers, trekked back to New York to push out this fresh pop revelation.

Unlike Nouvellas who appeared uncomfortable with the lack of numbers, Bravo joked with us saying, “We should all make money – at least just enough to tour.” Goddamn, you dream about bands that have hearts filled with such simple and wonderful ideals. As much as I wanted the room full for The Albertans, I secretly loved having a performance to myself. The band played a passionate set that was decorated with the enthusiasm pouring out between Bravo and drummer Curtis Mclean. Many bands have simply punched the proverbial performance clock on nights similar to this, an evening when the bar was barely selling drinks and would have been better off closing early to save money on power. So what did The Albertans do? They played harder.

During “Money Trees,” Mclean dropped one of his drumsticks in favor of taking massive palm swats at his snare drum while the other hand, still holding a stick, tapped on the cymbals. The deeper the song crept, the more Mclean thrashed around, eventually sending his thick, black rimmed glasses crashing into his kit. Bravo pushed out the lyrics and sent the song to its crest by bending the strings of his baby blue Fender. The Milwaukee native jumped off the rug on stage and high into the air. He leapt with all the energy he had and as he jumped he kicked his brown boots up behind him, all while wailing on the guitar heavier and harder than before. The only thing that mattered to Bravo was the music as he lost track of his surroundings and just went with the emotion.

The Albertans :: 07.12.09 :: Philadelphia, PA

The Albertans’ two female vocalists added pop touches to the dynamic and the result was unlikely, raw live music that cried out with a pedigree and hunger to be heard and talked about. After the performance Bravo thanked us for being a wonderful audience of one and shared freely that the band was excited to get back into the studio to record again. He was hungry for more and we were left with a sense that he had more than one tale left to sing about. There was something wise in his eyes, and while he performed he’d stare up into the lights and let that wisdom spill out in nuanced tones over a scar on his upper lip.

The Albertans have some room to grow, but they are making songs that should delight fans with tastes that span between a simpler Arcade Fire and poppier Neutral Milk Hotel. It’s not so much that their songs captivated me, even though the versions of “Marie” and especially “High Noon” seem to have some staying power. No, what really stuck a chord was their drive and the depth that Bravo, Mclean and company managed to find in the midst of a minuscule performance. If they can build on this latest album and capture the emotional build and release that they created on a dead night in Philly, then world watch out. This is a band well on their way to selling out club shows and moving into an opening slot for much greater things.

So as JamBase says, Go see live music! And as I said earlier I’d add to that mantra by saying, “Mix it up a bit and check out what you don’t know.” There is something amazing that pops inside when you discover the unexpected and noteworthy, when live music makes your skin tingle – isn’t that what it’s all about?

The Albertans’ tour dates available here.

JamBase | New Thang
Go See Live Music!