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Posts Tagged ‘Providence’

Pink Glove Dance Spreads Breast Cancer Awareness [VIDEO]

A video on YouTube that was created to get more people thinking about breast cancer has become a viral sensation. More than 200 hospital staff at Providence St. Vincent Medical Center in Oregon volunteered to wear pink gloves and show off their best moves in a video set to Jay Sean and Lil Wayne’s “Down.” [...]

The Willowz: New Album/Tour

THE WILLOWZ ANNOUNCE FIRST TOUR IN SUPPORT OF EVERYONE

GIVE SNEAK PEAK INTO MAKING OF THE NEW ALBUM

The Willowz

Soulful garage rockers The Willowz are hitting the road in support of their latest full-length album, Everyone, which is available now digitally and hits stores December 15 via Dim Mak Records/Downtown Records. The band’s 2007 album, Chautauqua, made Rolling Stone‘s 50 Best Albums of the Year list, was OC Weekly‘s #1 Rock Album of the Year, and was Nominated for LA Weekly‘s Rock Band of the Year. The Willowz have also been featured on the soundtracks to Michel Gondry’s award-winning films Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind and The Science of Sleep.

The band also pulls back the curtain for a taste of how Everyone was made, in a Making Of featurette about the album. Watch it here.

Download the mp3 for “Repetition” here.

The Willowz Tour Dates
12/11/09 Fri Cafe Bourbon St Columbus, OH

12/12/09 Sat Radio Radio Indianapolis, IN

12/13/09 Sun Empty Bottle Chicago, IL

12/14/09 Mon The Middle East Cambridge, MA

12/15/09 Tue Lee’s Palace Toronto, ON

12/17/09 Thu The M Room Philadelphia, PA

12/19/09 Sat Jerky’s Providence, RI

12/20/09 Sun Mercury Lounge New York, NY


IBM, Brown Build Largest Supercomputer in R.I.

The IBM supercomputer at Brown University is 50 times more powerful, six times more energy efficient and can hold 70 times more memory than the system it’s replacing. Researchers and scientists across the region will have access to the supercomputer, which will have a peak performance of more than 14 teraflops. The supercomputer includes IBM’s iDataPlex and holds 1,440 microprocessors. The Marine Biological Laboratory, in Woods Hole, Mass., will be one of the first users.
– IBM has built a multimillion-dollar
supercomputer at Brown University
in Rhode Island that will help
researchers there and throughout the region tackle a host of computational
projects. The center opened Nov. 20.
The supercomputer at the Providence, R.I., university’s Center for
Computation an…


Themselves: Winter Tour

BAY AREA HIP HOP PROVOCATEURS RISE ANEW

Themselves

Seven months after the release of theFREEhoudini – the celebrated mixtape that announced Themselves‘ return (for more pop over here) – Doseone and Jel dropped CrownsDown, a careful and vicious exhibition of mastered rap tactics and sampling ethics, on October 27 on Anticon. Themselves’ third album proper has been gestating in the gut of this seminal group for some time. It’s both a return to form and a honing of what’s come before (Subtle, cLOUDDEAD, Deep Puddle) – both the opus that these lionhearted two were always meant to make, and the album that their hip-hop-obsessed teenaged selves always hoped to hear.

Themselves hits the road next week to bring the live incarnation of their rag ‘n’ bone genius to the stage.

Themselves Tour Dates

11/19 Austin, TX Highball #
11/20 Denton, TX Hailey’s #
11/21 Baton Rouge, LA Spanish Moon #
11/22 New Orleans, LA The Parish Room – HOB #
11/23 Atlanta, GA 529 #
11/24 Chapel Hill, NC Local 506 #
11/25 Washington, DC Rock and Roll Hotel #
11/27 Brooklyn, NY Knitting Factory #
11/28 Cambridge, MA Middle East Downstairs #
11/29 Providence, RI Jerky’s Live Music Hall #
12/01 Toronto, ONT El Mocambo #
12/02 Ann Arbor, MI Blind Pig #
12/03 Chicago, IL Reggie’s #
12/04 Minneapolis, MN Varsity #
12/05 Milwaukee, WI Cactus Club #
12/11 Salt Lake City, UT Kilby Court
12/12 Salt Lake City, UT Urban Lounge

# = w/ Eyedea & Abilities


Meteor impacts may have cooked up life on Earth

A new research by scientists has confirmed that the organic matter needed for the origin of life could have been delivered to Earth through meteoritic impacts early in Earth’s history.
Studies have shown that most of the delivered organics would have decomposed through shock heating or aerodynamic interaction with the ambient atmosphere.
However, Seiji Sugita from the [...]

Hip Hop Legend Rakim: New Album

Hip Hop Legend RAKIM Drops New Single “Walk These Streets”

Long Awaited Album THE SEVENTH SEAL In Stores November 17, 2009

Rakim

On October 27, 2009, the man many call The God MC, Rakim Allah, or just Rakim, released “Walk These Streets,” (peep it below) the new single off of his much anticipated new album The Seventh Seal. Produced by Needlz for Dry Rain Entertainment, “Walk These Streets” features Maino and Tracey Horton. Additional guest artists featured on The Seventh Seal, which drops November 17, 2009, include Busta Rhymes, Jadakiss, Styles P, and others, including Destiny Griffin, Rakim’s own daughter. The artist’s Ra Records shares the imprint in a joint venture with Tuscan Villa and SMC Recordings and is distributed through Fontana/Universal Music Group. Rakim is currently on the road previewing the album and testing out new material at intimate venues across the United States.

Since its release, the album’s set-up single “Holy Are You” (stream below) has won praise from critics and fans alike. USA Today states, “The God MC previews his long-awaited The Seventh Seal with a lyrically adept reminder of how he earned the name,” with Billboard proclaiming “Rakim is in top form, richly merging self-mythologizing reflections on his legacy with religious imagery.”

His first full album of new material in almost a decade, The Seventh Seal is Rakim’s contemporary observation of the hip hop culture he helped define. While staying loyal to his New York roots, Rakim has created a body of work that encompasses the very best of regional, underground and mainstream styles that are reformed and delivered through his intricate lyricism and the seemingly effortless flow for which he is revered.

The artist states, “The Seventh Seal is my own revelation… my way of taking the best of what hip hop has to offer, what we as a culture and a community have to offer, putting my stamp on it and leading us forward while constantly respecting what we’ve already accomplished. When you’ve been blessed with a career like mine, you develop a deep relationship with the music, and that love is recognized by the true heads that share it with you. You’ll see us keep building as we break through each Seal… showing the best of what I can do in many forms, bringing the energy and having fun, but first I’m laying that foundation and give my longtime fans the conscious fire they expect.”

U.S. TOUR 2009:

November 3 House of Blues Houston, TX

November 4 Emo’s Austin, TX

November 6 House of Blues New Orleans, LA

November 9 Amo’s Charlotte, NC

November 11 Music Farm Charleston, SC

November 12 Lincoln Theater Raleigh, NC

November 13 Hat Factory Richmond, VA

November 14 Dragonfly Harrisburg, PA

November 15 Black Cat Washington, DC

November 17 Toad’s Place New Haven, CT

November 18 Lupos Providence, RI

November 19 BB Kings New York, NY

November 21 Asylum Portland, ME

November 22 Paradise Boston, MA


The Low Anthem: Rounding The Bases

By: Mike Bookey

The Low Anthem

Jeff Prystowsky is on his way to the airport to catch a flight to Dublin, but it’s not his band, The Low Anthem, or that band’s month-long tour of Europe that he’s talking about. The multi-instrumentalist is discussing baseball. And he knows a thing or two about the game.

Before founding The Low Anthem while a student at Brown University, Prystowsky played baseball along with the band’s other founder, Ben Knox Miller. Also, Prystowsky is a legitimate baseball scholar and taught baseball history at the high school level. He’s still very much a student of the game, watching as much as he can while on the road and monitoring his fantasy team. After discussing the fact that Miller is an unapologetic Baltimore Orioles fan, Prystowsky offers a correlation to the position of his band and the life of a professional baseball player.

“What we’re doing is similar to what minor league baseball players go through: trying to make the big leagues, travelling around, playing for scouts, trying to get their average up, hitting for power, working on their base running,” says Prystowsky before slowly trailing off. It’s plain to see that he’s thought about this analogy before, but it’s also clear that he’s continually realizing the connection.

If The Low Anthem was a ball player, it probably wouldn’t be a minor leaguer. It’s more a rookie pitcher who’s been called up toward the end of the season and catches the attention of everyone from opposing hitters, scouts and sportswriters right before the playoffs roll around. The music world has come to know The Low Anthem recently and there seems to be a great deal of curiosity about the band and its album Oh My God, Charlie Darwin.

It’s been a year in which they’ve gone from a band with so much buzz surrounding it as to be dubbed the best unsigned band in America from Rolling Stone to taking the stage at high-profile music festivals. The trio has become a rock & roll powerhouse on the touring scene, despite the fact that they are not, and probably never will be, an actual rock band. The Low Anthem, rather, is a folk collective comprised of 25-year-old Ivy League grads that seem to care little about the aforementioned buzz but care a whole hell of a lot about making good music.

The Low Anthem

Since graduating from Providence, R.I.’s Brown University three years ago, The Low Anthem has lived on the road, putting together two records, 2007′s What the Crow Brings and Oh My God, Charlie Darwin, which was actually recorded in January of 2008 but gained national and international acclaim this summer when it was re-released on Nonesuch Records.

The band was the product of Miller and Prystowsky’s friendship (and the two’s mutual love for baseball, of course) and initially included another friend, Dan Lefkowitz, a founding member who left the band to live in a yurt in rural Arkansas, where he’s been, according to Prystowsky, blacksmithing and making wooden spoons, among other things. The band recently announced that Lefkowitz was joining the band for its current European tour and may contribute to the band’s next record.

Rounding out the lineup is Jocie Adams, who can play a clarinet like nobody’s business but shifts to any number of other instruments when needed. She’s a science major who spent a stint as a NASA researcher before coming on board full time with The Low Anthem. Prystowsky seems grateful of her decision to join the band.

“She was a friend of ours from the music department and knew the band pretty well. She graduated and was thinking about what to do and we put out an offer and she took it and she’s been playing with us for a few years now,” he says.

The Low Anthem

On Charlie Darwin, The Low Anthem rolls out a scattered array of choral tunes, raucous folk rockers, and solid Americana ballads that somehow fit well together. The throwback vibe of The Low Anthem rings loud, but Prystowsky insists that his band isn’t a folk revival act. “We’re not revivalists! We’re writing our own songs” he says, “we’re just using older instruments.” And he’s right about this. The band does, in fact, write masterful songs, many of which are quintessentially modern, it just so happens that the trio of multi-instrumentalists has a hankering for old gear and the old-timey sounds that come along with them.

“We play instruments that might even be relics or museum instruments now, but we’re bringing them back slowly. Who knows what we’ll do next. Maybe we’ll ride out onstage in a wagon with horses or make music with butter churners and things of that sort,” says Prystowsky, laughing his way through that last sentence.

Funny thing, though, give a listen to Charlie Darwin and there are a couple occasions during which you just might think about horses or wagons or both, but you’ll probably, or at least you should, forget about this when you remember that these musicians were born in the mid-1980s. Not to hang up on their age, but the musical sensibilities of Prystowsky, Miller, and Adams are beyond what we’ve come to expect out of most young bands. The song “Charlie Darwin,” which kicks off the album, is a delightfully haunting number that relishes in its own simplicity, reminding us that there are still good songs being made. There are several videos of the three singing this cut that will make your scalp tingle. The track is also reprised at the end of the album, and that, too, might produce the same effect.

Continue reading for more on The Low Anthem…

 


What we’re doing is similar to what minor league baseball players go through: trying to make the big leagues, travelling around, playing for scouts, trying to get their average up, hitting for power, working on their base running.

-Jeff Prystowsky

 

The Low Anthem isn’t really a rock band, but they can and do rock. “The Horizon is a Beltway” is a surging, almost-punk romp that brings to mind the sound of Low Anthem friend Langhorne Slim or perhaps The Avett Brothers. When they choose to rock, they do it masterfully with the power of Miller’s voice shifting from sailboat to steamroller. The band is versatile yet thematic on their albums and engaging onstage. Yes, the band loves folk but their show is hardly a sit-down affair.

The Low Anthem

Prystowsky rattles off a few of the band’s influences, and also a list of the music they’ve been listening to on tour and, not surprisingly, the list doesn’t include many buzz indie rock bands. Bob Dylan and Leonard Cohen top the list, joined soon after by Joe Pug, the Chicago folkie that opened shows for The Low Anthem this spring.

“[Dylan and Cohen] are the guys we’ve been listening to a bunch right now. I thought I was really on top of things a few months ago and we come back and our manager is talking about all these new bands and I’d never heard of them,” says Prystowsky.

This unawareness of the “next big thing” doesn’t seem to result from arrogance, it’s just that Prystowsky and company are students of their craft and are continually studying, without getting distracted by buzz bands. Maybe that’s the sort of intellectual curiosity a musician gleans from an Ivy League education, who knows. But it’s also worth noting that these guys and gal have been busy this year. They went from a much-talked-about unsigned act that hit some big festival stages and opened for the likes of Ray LaMontagne to one with a wide-released album that will almost certainly end up on some “Best of 2009″ lists come year’s end.

“We were trying to tour and make a living, and to make a living you have to be able to play however many shows and draw enough people and sell enough merchandise that you can go home and pay your rent. We weren’t really interested in a label because at the time we were making enough money,” says Prystowsky of the band’s time as a happily unsigned act.

The Low Anthem

Nonesuch Records has allowed for Charlie Darwin to reach the masses, but doesn’t seem to have hampered the band’s autonomy. The Low Anthem is preparing to record its next album this winter and think they just might do it in Amsterdam, a city they’ve visited with their tours and have fallen increasingly in love with. The out-of-the-way location is nothing new for the band – they recorded Charlie Darwin in a cabin on Block Island, RI. They might produce the new effort themselves, Prystowsky says, or they might bring on some help. They might include some friends they’ve met on the road to play on the album, and they might just try to tie the new record to the themes in Charlie Darwin.

“We’re not planning to make an electronica record completely out of left field. It will be relevant,” says Prystowsky, laughing again.

The world seems to be The Low Anthem’s oyster, if you’ll pardon the cliche. But such is the life of a rookie ace. (Side note: The Low Anthem wouldn’t be a flamethrower, but rather a Jamie Moyer-style finesse pitcher, or maybe a knuckleballer — effective, fundamentally sound, but not flashy.) The league is chatting about you and all you can do is do things the way you know how, and in the case of The Low Anthem, it’s make folk music.

Prystowsky doesn’t go too crazy on the baseball analogy, but defends he and Miller’s love for the game – a love that bandmate Adams, and likely some reading this, might not fully understand.

“No, it makes total sense,” Prystowsky says. “We’re a couple of American boys and we grew up with it and we played it all through our lives.”

The Low Anthem is on tour now; dates available here.

JamBase | Batter Up

Go See Live Music!


The Low Anthem Free MP3 & West Coast Debut

THE LOW ANTHEM RETURN TO THE U.S. FOR TOUR AND WEST COAST DEBUT

OFFER COVER OF BOB DYLAN’S “DIGNITY” FOR FREE MP3 DOWNLOAD

The Low Anthem

After returning from an extensive European tour last week, Rhode Island trio The Low Anthem are preparing to continue on in the U.S. in support of their Nonesuch debut, Oh My God, Charlie Darwin. After a performance at Austin City Limits, and a homecoming show at the beautiful Avon Cinema in Providence, the band will be making their west coast debut with Portland group Blind Pilot, before finishing out the end of the year with Josh Ritter.

In celebration of their return to the states, the band is offering a cover of Bob Dylan‘s “Dignity” on their website for FREE mp3 Download in exchange for people joining their mailing list. The song “Dignity” was first released on Greatest Hits Volume Three. The band played it often during soundcheck, finally recording it in at a studio in Amsterdam for a radio show.

Direct from http://lowanthem.com/music.html



JOIN THE MAILING LIST – GET A SONG


Dear friends, dear web surfers, if you would like to be on the cutting edge, and I mean reallyplugged in to the what’s hip hopping in the now, join our mailing list. It costs nothing, it doesn’t pester you unreasonably, and it’s generally a bastian of witicism and rock solid, trustworthy information. We’ve worked hard to earn your trust over the years. That’s why our mailing list has earned rave four star reviews from major publications such as “Horse and Hound” and “Modern Tubist.” TheSchmaltzWithinYou.com calls our web-blasts “sincere and informative.” And heres the deal breaker. When you sign up now, you will receive freely our cover of Bob Dylan’s “Dignity,” which we recorded at Studio Le Roy in Amsterdam, NL. All that value! What are you waiting for?

The Low Anthem has spent the greater part of the year touring with acts such as Elvis Perkins In Dearland, Joe Pug, Ray LaMontagne, Josh Ritter, and Langhorne Slim in support of their highly praised Nonesuch debut, Oh My God, Charlie Darwin. Their tours have taken them through a number of prestigious festivals, including Bonnaroo, Glastonbury, Lollapalooza, and the recent 50th Anniversary of the Newport Folk Festival, where they had humble beginnings working as recycling crew. This time around they got to share the stage with some of their heroes, including Pete Seeger, Arlo Guthrie, and Gillian Welch during a group sing-along.

Paste has named Oh My God, Charlie Darwin one of the best albums of 2009 so far, the album was a New York Times Critic’s Pick, and NPR’s Bob Boilen coined the song “Charlie Darwin” the best of the year so far.

“One of the breakthrough albums of 2009… A highly eventful journey into American songcraft, variously echoing Dylan, Springsteen, The Band, and Tom Waits.” – MOJO

“Really beautiful… The great music, it’s not what you play; it’s what you don’t play.” – Billy Bragg (PROJO)

THE LOW ANTHEM U.S. FALL TOUR:

October 15 Providence, RI Avon Cinema

October 17 Seattle, WA Chop Suey

October 18 Portland, OR Lola’s Room at the Crystal Ballroom

October 19 Eugene, OR WOW Hall*

October 21 San Francisco, CA Great American Music Hall*

October 23 Los Angeles, CA Troubadour*

October 24 San Diego, CA Casbah*

October 25 Tucson, AZ Plush*

October 27 Austin, TX The Parish*

October 28 Dallas, TX Granada Theater*

October 29 Houston, TX Bronze Peacock at HOB*

October 30 Baton Rouge, LA Spanish Moon*

November 2 Tallahassee, FL Club Downunder*

November 3 Orlando, FL The Social*

November 4 Atlanta, GA The Earl*

November 5 Nashville, TN Mercy Lounge*

November 6 Asheville, NC University of North Carolina*

November 7 Norfolk, VA Attucks Theater*

November 9 Carrboro, NC Cats Cradle*

November 10 Charlottesville, VA The Southern*

November 11 Washington, D.C. The Black Cat*

November 12 Boston, MA Paradise*

December 1 Washington DC 9:30 Club#

December 2 Philadelphia, PA Theatre of Living Arts#

December 3 Northampton, MA Calvin Theatre#

December 4 Burlington, VT UVM#

* with Blind Pilot

# with Josh Ritter


Emma Watson Beefs Up Security After Being Stalked By Harvard Students

Hogwarts’ own Emma Watson was left “quite shaken” after a group of Harvard students harassed and stalked her at a recent college football game, according to The New York Post.

Emma, who is a 19-year-old freshman at Rhode Island’s prestigious Brown University, journeyed to nearby Cambridge to cheer on her school only to be hassled by [...]

The Breakfast: Live Album/Tour

THE BREAKFAST RELEASE LIVE AS IS NOW AVAILABLE FOR DOWNLOAD


The Breakfast

New Haven, CT’s progressive shredders The Breakfast just released their second live album, Live As Is, on Saturday, September 12. The brand new record chronicles the band’s performance at The Field in Bridgeport, CT on February 28, 2009, and will be available FOR DOWNLOAD ONLY through the band’s website: www.thebreakfast.org. The Breakfast celebrated the new album with a day-of-release show at The Westcott Theater in Syracuse, NY and will tour the Northeast through the remainder of 2009 promoting the new disc.

The Breakfast is a hard-hitting jazz rock experimental quartet whose music ranges from progressive rock to sonic landscapes. Since the group’s inception 11 years ago the band has played over 1000 shows throughout the country and has now released seven albums to date. The Breakfast’s sound and energy are founded in the psychedelic but their music features some incredibly well-crafted song structures and melodies, showing the members’ gifts as highly talented musicians. Indeed, original members Tim Palmieri (guitar) and Adrian Tromantano (drums) provide the distinguishing characteristics the band has thrived on from the beginning. The two are able to reach near-telepathic communication onstage, ripping through progressive shredding licks and jams without missing a beat. This is held together by the sonic glue of longtime, though newly re-added, keyboardist Jordan Giangreco, and supported from beneath by the jazz sensibilities of bassist Chris DeAngelis.

THE BREAKFAST TOUR DATES:

09.18th – Sunnyview Farm – Let It Roll Fest – Ghent, NY

09.19th – Sully’s Pub – Hartford, CT

09.25th – Daniel Street Bar – Milford, CT

10.24th – The Red Square – Albany, NY

10.29 – Iron Horse Music Hall – Northampton, MA

10.30 – Higher Ground – Burlington, VT

10.31 – The Field – Bridgeport, CT :: P-Funk night!!

11.13 – Mill Street Brews – Southbridge, MA

11.14 – Jerky’s Live Music Hall – Providence, RI

11.25 – Sully’s Pub – Hartford, CT

11.28 – Crash Mansion – New York City, NY

12.04 – The Saint – Asbury Park, NJ

12.12 – Tammany Hall – Worcester, MA

12.18 – Harper’s Ferry – Allston (Boston), MA

MORE SHOWS COMING SOON!


EOTO: Fall Tour & New Album

EOTO: Fall Tour & New Album


EOTO

While the genre of live electronica is relatively new on the music circuit, few are breaking the boundaries of live producing and improvisation like EOTO. Fusing elements of live instrumentation, house music, dubstep and electro into their dance ready sound, the band will be taking the country by storm beginning in late September for their perennial fall tour, performing 33 consecutive nights in a row.

Consisting of Michael Travis and Jason Hann of The String Cheese Incident, the duo mixes the organic sounds of live drums, keyboards, vocals, bass, percussion, and guitar through a variety of programs and gadgets to create a style of music that is more likely found in a dance club, then a live music theater. What sets EOTO apart from other artists in this emerging genre is how the music is created. While some artists may spend hours pre-mixing samples and elements of music for their live show, EOTO uses nothing pre-recorded, giving them the ability to approach each song with on-the-spot spontaneity and 100% live improvisation.

Beginning in late September and performing every single night in October, EOTO will hit the road with their long-awaited studio EP, Fire the Lazers!! This eleven-track journey into dubstep, electro and house music showcases their talents and skill in a growing dimension of music. In true EOTO spirit the album was produced with nothing planned or rehearsed, capturing only the best of what makes up their original sound. The album will be available on the road and by digital download in October of 2009.

EOTO Tour Dates

09/18/09 Fri Camp Zoe Salem, MO

09/19/09 Sat Camp Zoe Salem, MO

09/20/09 Sun Cirquinox Festival Selma, OR

09/26/09 Sat Earthdance (Black Oak Ranch) Laytonville, CA

09/29/09 Tue Moe’s Alley Santa Cruz, CA

09/30/09 Wed Mission Rock Cafe San Francisco, CA

10/01/09 Thu The Red Fox Tavern Eureka, CA

10/02/09 Fri McDonald Theatre Eugene, OR

10/03/09 Sat Berbati’s Pan Portland, OR

10/04/09 Sun Nightlight Bellingham, WA

10/05/09 Mon The Palace Missoula, MT

10/06/09 Tue The Filling Station Bozeman, MT

10/07/09 Wed Aquarium Fargo, ND

10/08/09 Thu Cabooze Minneapolis, MN

10/09/09 Fri High Noon Saloon Madison, WI

10/10/09 Sat Abbey Pub Chicago, IL

10/11/09 Sun Papa Pete’s Kalamazoo, MI

10/12/09 Mon Scarlet and Grey Cafe Columbus, OH

10/14/09 Wed Mohawk Place Buffalo, NY

10/15/09 Thu The Westcott Theater Syracuse, NY

10/16/09 Fri Club Metronome Burlington, VT

10/17/09 Sat Harpers Ferry Allston, MA

10/18/09 Sun Port City Music Hall Portland, ME

10/19/09 Mon The Hi Hat Providence, RI

10/21/09 Wed Red Square Albany, NY

10/22/09 Thu Sullivan Hall New York, NY

10/23/09 Fri World Cafe Live Philadelphia, PA

10/24/09 Sat The 8X10 Baltimore, MD

10/25/09 Sun Canal Club Richmond, VA

10/26/09 Mon Attitudes Blacksburg, VA

10/28/09 Wed Old Rock House St. Louis, MO

10/29/09 Thu Bourbon Theatre Lincoln, NE

10/30/09 Fri Gothic Theatre Englewood, CO

10/31/09 Sat Granada Theater Lawrence, KS

11/27/09 Fri Granada Theater Dallas, TX

12/01/09 Tue George’s Majestic Fayetteville, AR

12/05/09 Sat Canopy Club Urbana, IL

For more on EOTO see our recent, exclusive feature/interview here.


Emma Watson Begins Studies At Brown University

It’s back to school for Hermione! Emma Watson has began her studies at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island.

Over the weekend, the 19-year-old Harry Potter star and her boyfriend, Jay Barrymore, were photographed relaxing on the steps of a building on the campus of the historic Ivy League institution. Emma appeared happy as she mingled [...]

Watson ‘makes smooth transition from actress to student’

‘Harry Potter’ star Emma Watson seems to have made a smooth transition from her glamorous life as an actress to a simple life of a student.
The 19-year-old beauty was spotted wearing a simple white T-shirt, denim shorts, and trainers in her campus at Brown University, in Providence, Rhode Island.
She apparently looked happy and relaxed [...]

Watson charms classmates with magic trick on first day of college

‘Harry Potter’ star Emma Watson had magic tricks up her sleeves to charm her classmates on the first day of her college.
She showed how from a sitting position to magically raise yourself to standing without putting your hands on the ground, reports the Sun.
The 19-year-old beauty’s friends apparently had a hearty laugh on seeing the [...]

The Low Anthem Tour Dates

LOW ANTHEM CONTINUE WORLD TOUR WITH WEST COAST DEBUT, DATES WITH BLIND PILOT


The Low Anthem

It’s been a banner year for The Low Anthem. In addition to being JamBase’s New Favorite Artist this month, the Rhode Island trio spent the greater part of the year touring with acts such as Elvis Perkins In Dearland, Joe Pug, Ray LaMontagne, Josh Ritter, and Langhorne Slim in support of their highly praised Nonesuch debut, Oh My God, Charlie Darwin, the band is gearing up for yet another stretch on the road, this time with the Portland group Blind Pilot. This run of 21 club and theater dates begins October 15 and continues through November 12 and includes the band’s West coast debut. Additionally, The Low Anthem will return to NYC for a performance at the Bell House at the end of August and travel to Europe for a month-long tour in September, where they’ve already played to much enthusiasm at Glastonbury, sold out a show at Union Chapel in London, and received stellar reviews in Uncut, Q, Mojo, NME, The Guardian, and The Independent.

The very special Avon Cinema in Providence, RI is hosting the first October U.S. tour date. The Cinema is a beautiful old movie theatre, the perfect setting for the band’s anticipated homecoming show and largest performance in Providence to date. The band will also be playing a free show on Block Island, where they recorded Charlie Darwin.

The Low Anthem’s most recent tour has taken them through a number of prestigious festivals, including Bonnaroo, Glastonbury, Lollapalooza, and the recent 50th Anniversary of the Newport Folk Festival, where they had humble beginnings working as recycling crew. This time around they got to share the stage with some of their heroes, including Pete Seeger, Arlo Guthrie, and Gilian Welch during a group sing-along.

THE LOW ANTHEM PRESS:

“Only a band since 2006, the depth of songwriting and ability to cross the dusty Americana landscape from such burdened acoustic folk songs like “To Ohio” to country barnburners, delicate three-part harmonies dripping with reverb, a Tom Waits cover, and soul-saving gospel without loosing continuity makes The Low Anthem worthy of all the hype they are sure to receive…” – JamBase

“Stately… Lyrics contemplating faith, loss, destruction and self-destruction.” – New York Times


“One of the breakthrough albums of 2009… A highly eventful journey into American songcraft, variously echoing Dylan, Springsteen, The Band, and Tom Waits.” – MOJO


“Really beautiful… The great music, it’s not what you play; it’s what you don’t play.” – Billy Bragg (PROJO)

THE LOW ANTHEM ON TOUR:

08.13 Chapel Hill, NC Local 506

08.14 Richmond, VA The Canal Club – Downstairs Lounge

08.15 Baltimore, MD Ottobar w/Langhorne Slim

08.16 Philadelphia, PA Philly Folk Festival

08.17 Pittsfield, MA Stage 2 – Word X Word Festival

08.18 Block Island, RI Captain Nick’s

08.27 Fall River, MA Narrows Center For the Arts

08.29 Plymouth, MA Plymouth Waterfront Festival

09.03 Dublin, IRELAND Gaiety Theatre w/Ray LaMontagne

09.04 Dublin, IRELAND Gaiety Theatre w/Ray LaMontagne

09.05 Stradbelly, IRELAND Electric Picnic Festival

09.06 Manchester, UK Deaf Institute

09.08 Newcastle, UK Cluny

09.09 Birmingham, UK Glee Club

09.10 Oxford, UK Bullingdon Arms

09.11 Larmer Tree Gardens, UK End of the Road Festival

09.12 Larmer Tree Gardens, UK End of the Road Festival

09.13 Isle of Wight Bestival

09.15 Munich, GERMANY Atomic Cafe

09.16 Milan, ITALY La Salumeria Della Musica

09.17 Zurich, SWITZERLAND El Lokal

09.18 Frankfurt, GERMANY Broftabrik

09.19 Koln, GERMANY Gebaude 9

09.20 Berlin, GERMANY Lido

09.21 Hamburg, GERMANY Knust

09.23 Amsterdam, NETHERLANDS De Duif

09.24 Brussels, BELGIUM Ancienne Belgique

09.25 Nijmegen, NETHERLANDS Doornroosje

09.26 Paris, FRANCE La Maroquinerie

10.02 Austin, TX Austin City Limits

10.15 Providence, RI Avon Cinema

10.17 Seattle, WA Chop Suey

10.18 Portland, OR Lola’s Room at the Crystal Ballroom

10.19 Eugene, OR WOW Hall*

10.21 San Francisco, CA Great American Music Hall*

10.23 Los Angeles, CA Troubadour*

10.24 San Diego, CA Casbah*

10.25 Tucson, AZ Plush*

10.27 Austin, TX The Parish*

10.28 Dallas, TX Granada Theater*

10.29 Houston, TX Bronze Peacock at HOB*

10.30 Baton Rouge, LA Spanish Moon*

11.02 Tallahassee, FL Club Downunder*

11.03 Orlando, FL The Social*

11.04 Atlanta, GA The Earl*

11.05 Nashville, TN Mercy Lounge*

11.06 Asheville, NC University of North Carolina*

11.07 Norfolk, VA Attucks Theater*

11.09 Carrboro, NC Cats Cradle*

11.11 Washington, D.C. The Black Cat*

11.12 Boston, MA Paradise*

*with Blind Pilot



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All Good Festival | 07.09 – 07.12 | WV

Words by: Andrew Bruss | Images by: Kenny Pusey

All Good Festival :: 07.09.09 – 07.12.09 :: Marvin’s Mountaintop :: Masontown, West Virginia

All Good 2009

While Ben Harper and Relentless7 drove through their headlining slot, Ivan Neville of Dumpstaphunk told JamBase, “All Good Festival is an absolutely wonderful festival. It’s awesome. You’ve got a fuckin’ mountainside and from what I’ve seen – we played All Good three years before – it’s one of the better festivals.” Dumpstaphunk played an appropriately scheduled slot right before Harper took the stage, and Neville couldn’t have been happier with his audience. “It’s a fucking sea of people, man, absolute music lovers and they love different genres of music. [You've got] bluegrass fans, electronica fans. It’s sick that different kinds of shit all goes down.”

Neville pinned the proverbial tail on the donkey when he called All Good one of the best festivals with a collection of devoted music fans from the greater mid-Atlantic and beyond. All Good took place on Marvin’s Mountaintop, a location of panoramic beauty on the outskirts of Masontown, WV. Although greater Masontown seemed to have been carved out of the earth with TNT, the event’s Masontown location provided nothing but ideal geography for a four-day music festival. The rolling hills gave ample room for camping and vending, with wooded areas offering more adventurous campers some extra legroom, but the icing on the cake was the stage-grounds. With no overlapping sets, two stages were set up side by side against a backdrop that Jake Cinninger (Umphrey’s McGee) called “the concert bowl.” From within the air-conditioned confines of their tour bus, he added, “I’m a huge fan of festivals that have some sort of geography. I like this, ‘I can see your house from here,’ mentality. Just sitting here on the bus, we can look 60 miles in one direction and see a bridge, and in the other direction, a city of tents.”

For as much as the grounds proved to be a major player in the weekend’s smooth production, the festival would have been nothing but a major campout without the lineup. Topping the bill, Bob Weir & RatDog shared headlining honors with Harper. Official late night sets were given to jam titan’s moe. and Umphrey’s McGee, with Bassnectar and SOJA playing abbreviated sets on the side stage while things on the main stage transitioned from headliner to late nighter.

Thursday, 07.09

All Good 2009

It seems as though every festival these days is stretching its length with an unofficial kick-off Thursday night, and All Good was no exception. While the main stage was still being erected, a smaller, more intimate performance area was set up deeper into the campgrounds. Keller Williams followed BoomBox, a DJ/guitar duo that raised the flow of blood in everybody’s veins. Without his Keels or WMD’s, Keller was left alone, performing his looped-out, one-man band shtick that won his audience over in the first place. Set highlights like “Freaker By The Speaker,” and Nirvana’s “All Apologies” demonstrated Keller’s technical proficiency, in addition to his natural talent as a performer. Throughout the set, he did some vocal soloing through the buzzing of his lips that sounded like it came from Louis Armstrong’s trumpet, and while playing an air-bass solo, he tossed his imaginary instrument into the air and caught it on the beat.

Lotus followed Keller with a set that raged well into the a.m., giving all those early birds something to keep their feet moving to. For as much fun as the glow stick wars may have been, their set left something to be desired. A great deal of All Good attendees seemed to have come from Rothbury (read our review here), where Lotus performed a “secret” late night set, and many-a-head agreed that they were having an off night.

Continue reading for Friday’s coverage of All Good…

Friday, 07.10

Stanton Moore – Galactic :: All Good 2009

Fortunately, Friday showcased a whole array of talent who brought their A-game. Hill Country Revue started the day off on the main stage with overdriven blues that brought several of its member’s fame in the North Mississippi Allstars. Jackie Greene followed with a somewhat generic set that left folks wondering where this kid would be if it weren’t for Phil Lesh’s interest in him.

Mike Silverman, aka That 1 Guy, played for twenty minutes before and after Galactic brought the Cajun funk on the main stage. Silverman may have been the second act of the weekend to work the one-man band angle, but this guy is on a different planet than Keller. He performs on his homemade “Magic Pipe,” a two-stringed bass of sorts that features various effect buttons up and down the instrument’s body, while a second pipe creates tones and various pitches based on the angle at which it’s bent. Most of the folks who were familiar with That 1 Guy beforehand most likely knew him as a regular opener for Buckethead, but after serving as the bread of a crunchy Galactic sandwich odds are many in attendance grew to appreciate him in his own right.

Galactic’s hour long set raged and boogied in all the right ways, getting bodies moving, but not too hard for a midday set under the scorching sun. Following their slot, while Robert Randolph & The Family Band performed “Billy Jean” on the main stage, Galactic’s bassist Robert Mercurio told JamBase, “It’s always tough in the middle of the day to get the same energy as a night concert, but it was great.” As for the event itself, Mercurio said, “I was talking about it with [All Good Promoter] Tim [Walther] and I was saying what I really liked about this festival is you see the lineup and you get to see every band. You have two stages next to each other that don’t overlap. It goes from one [performance] to the next. You don’t have to go anywhere. It’s just continual music. The crowd stays in one spot and instead of having to choose which band to see, they can sit and watch everything, which is unique at a festival.” Ben Ellman, the group’s sax player added, “It’s a beautiful day in a beautiful place. We’re here to have fun, so what more can you ask for?” As for his personal highlight, Ellman said without hesitation, “Getting to use the port-o-let right after they cleaned it. You have to hold it till you see them cleaning.”

Bob Weir – RatDog :: All Good 2009

Although Les Claypool fans didn’t really appreciate it, veteran singer-songwriter Todd Snider performed a brief set of his socially conscious tunes on the side stage before the bass virtuoso got freaky on the main stage. The highlight of Snider’s set was a pseudo-spoken word song about Columbine and violence in America that brought to mind Arlo Guthrie‘s “Alice’s Restaurant” through the almost-goofy, drawn out method of storytelling.

As for Claypool, he fucking nailed it, plain and simple. As he stomped on his monitor to the rhythm, while making goofy faces at his stagehands, Claypool hammered out lick after lick of the funky, mind-altering bass that made this once-metal icon an adopted idol of the jamband community. Much like the attendees, plenty of the acts on the bill have found themselves returning to All Good year after year, effectively building on the communal vibe a festival already delivers. Hence, Claypool roared into his mic, “Here we go again, All Good!” and his packed audience roared right back.

Bob Weir‘s headline slot gave him a solid two hours of time to dish out old Dead tunes, as well as a few of the covers he’s been known to perform over the years. Every armchair Deadhead in the house was able to sing along to “Truckin’,” which made it an ideal set opener. Weir followed with the first half of “Tomorrow Never Knows,” the last track on The Beatles’ Revolver, which he finished up later in the evening. It’s easy to hate on Bob Weir, Phil Lesh or any of the remaining members of the Dead for continuously touring the country behind songs they wrote damn near 40 years ago, but the triple threat closer of “Morning Dew” into “China Cat Sunflower” > “I Know You Rider” puts these arguments to rest. Truth be told, you’re not likely to hear anything written within the past twenty years at a RatDog concert (outside of the originals on their sole studio release, 2000′s Evening Moods), but when the back catalog is full of trans-generational material, judging Weir over the freshness of the songs is irrelevant.

Although moe.‘s set felt stale and far from trans-generational, the Bassnectar set between Weir and moe. was a weekend highlight. Fans were packed in front of the side stage, cheering for Bassnectar before Weir even finished his set. Every time Bassnectar, born Lorin Ashton, poked his head out from the side of the stage, the crowd went nuts. His set packed the most energy and produced the craziest glow stick wars of the weekend, and when his time was up moe. failed to take the stage, so Bassnectar announced that he was just going to keep playing and until someone told him not to.

Continue reading for Saturday’s coverage of All Good…

Saturday, 07.11

Big Nazo :: All Good 2009

Saturday, early sets by Fear Nuttin Band and Cornmeal were far from packed, and it seemed like lots of folks were counting on seeing The Bridge during their Sunday set rather than Saturday. However, while The Bridge was doing their thing, Big Nazo shocked and awed an audience in all the right ways on the early arrival stage Keller rocked previously in the weekend. To a relatively wholesome crowd with kids on their parent’s shoulders, Big Nazo, hailing from Providence, Rhode Island, came out decked in giant costumes that were just one of the many factors that make their performance so much more than just a concert. Fusing theatrics, sketch comedy and killer tunes, Big Nazo turned a crowd onto a whole type of concert experience they’d never seen before. The folks behind Big Nazo have spent years making costumes for Gwar, but the stuff they make for Gwar is nothing by comparison. The group’s frontman came out as a giant rat-man before stripping down to a mad professor outfit that made it easier for him to cover Gary Wright’s “Dream Weaver.” Later on in their half hour set, we were told that narcs were going to arrest us unless we took an experimental hallucinogen that was already in our system. After being told we’d been dosed, one of the more human looking characters took off his head to reveal an alien face that could have had the most sober of attendees tripping their balls off.

Although it didn’t receive top billing, one highly anticipated set was a half hour performance by Jeff Austin (mandolin, vocals) of Yonder Mountain String Band and Brendan Bayliss (guitar, vocals) of Umphrey’s McGee. The two acts have crossed paths more times than can be counted, and Bayliss even commented that they’ve got an album coming out that’s been nine and a half years in the making. The material leaned towards bluegrass, an obvious comfort zone for Austin, but Bayliss held his own and even fused in some metal riffage in between the Appalachian grooves.

Buckethead :: All Good 2009

After the bromance that was Austin/Bayliss came to a close, All Good was treated to a set by a cult of personality unlike any other on the bill. Buckethead took the stage amidst technical difficulties but after the sound decided to play nice he had the audience wrapped around his finger. As he nunchucked and breakdanced across the stage from behind his mask, the guitarist born Brian Carroll weaved between funk and speed metal in no time at all. With no back-up band, Buckethead opted to perform with a pre-recorded track. Although this makes you wonder how much a Buckethead setlist can truly vary from night to night, it demonstrated a remarkable sense of rhythm and near-perfect memory as he tapped and shredded his audience’s faces off. His white Les Paul has two customized toggle buttons that seemed to have been taken right off an arcade consol, and in his gigantic hands, his guitar looked like a videogame controller to be manipulated for his own enjoyment.

Assembly of Dust and Yonder Mountain both kept things string-heavy before a sunset slot by Sound Tribe Sector 9 took things to another level. They took the stage with the sun at their backs, as the five-strong electronica act started things on a mellow note. As time went on and the sun slowly set, STS9 gradually began adding layers onto their existing jams, heightening the intensity while making the transitions barely noticeable to their audience. Although it seemed like most folks had used up their glow stick supply during the previous night’s Bassnectar set, STS9′s lowdown throwdown was by far one of the highest energy sets of the weekend.

Ben Harper and Relentless7 :: All Good 2009

Dumpstaphunk was nice and gritty from the first note, with dueling bassists Nick Daniels and Tony Hall bringing the low end to the forefront and Ivan Neville, a member of the first family of New Orleans funk, leading his band through a set of grooves that were tight musically while informal on stage.

Ben Harper and Relentless7 tore into a powerful set that packed a lot more punch than his work with the Innocent Criminals ever did. In addition to Harper and his slide licks, Relentless7 rolled with a guitarist, bassist and drummer, who all sounded heavily influenced by Led Zeppelin. “Shimmer and Shine,” the first single off the group’s studio debut, featured Bonham-esque drums and bass drops that landed someplace in between John Entwistle and John Paul Jones. And in case the Zeppelin in their sound wasn’t clear enough, they sealed the deal with a cover of “Good Times, Bad Times.”

Umphrey’s McGee was another major festival highlight, and it would be hard to imagine things any other way. These guys know when to noodle, when to shred, and they always rise to the occasion. During a chat on their tour bus, keyboardist Joel Cummins commented, “For us, what’s most important is if we start at one in the morning, we have to do something to keep peoples’ attention after they’ve been on their feet for ten hours.”

Umphrey’s McGee :: All Good 2009 by Bruss

While multitasking between giving JamBase sound bytes and watching the Phillies/Pirates game (as the only vocal Pirates fan of all the Pittsburg attendees), bassist Ryan Stasik said, “This is our fourth time playing All Good, and the places we come to the most often we try not to repeat the same songs when people are likely to have been there. We want people to see us play as many tunes as possible.”

They did, in fact, switch it up, and dished out a killer setlist that would make any Umphreak’s mouth water. The group opened with “40′s Theme,” but it wasn’t until the dueling lead guitar licks of “All In Time” (clocking in near the 25 minute mark) that the group really stretched their legs. On stage, Bayliss comes off as the sexy rock star, while the group’s other technically-gifted guitarist, Jake Cinninger, has a bit of a schoolboy thing going on, backwards baseball cap and all. As tight as Bayliss is on a six-string, Cinninger shone the brightest. During the peak of “All In Time” he ran his fingers up and down the neck of the guitar with his eyes closed, head tilted back, with a look on his face that seemed like he’d just broken out of a deep meditative state. Another major set highlight was a hyper-accurate cover of Pink Floyd’s “Shine On You Crazy Diamond.” They closed out the formal chunk of their set with “Bright Lights,” their humorous ode to rock stardom, which Stasik teased with a closing bass lick from “Thriller.”

Continue reading for Sunday’s coverage of All Good…

Sunday, 07.12

All Good 2009

Sunday’s schedule was by far the mellowest of the weekend, and as disappointing as it looked on paper, the crowd needed it. Donna The Buffalo rang out Johnny Cash’s “Ring Of Fire” on the main stage while many All Good attendees simply packed up and left early. The last two acts on the schedule were BK3, the latest project from Bill Kreutzmann of the Grateful Dead, and the Grateful Dead Tribute act Dark Star Orchestra. Kreutzmann told JamBase before his set that unlike Bobby and Phil, he tries to take a more creative approach to doing Dead tunes, and with Tara Nevins of Donna The Buffalo on vocals, he gave the old tunes a more modern voice.

With all the neo-hippies long gone, the half sized crowd left to witness Dark Star was more Deadhead than Bisco Kid. It was fun getting to hear Dark Star Orchestra play Dead tunes as accurately as they do, and to be honest, Dark Star’s “Bobby” sounded more like Weir on the studio tracks than Weir did himself on Friday night. But there was something off about Dark Star that felt stuck in nostalgia. Even with their own solos, one couldn’t help but feel as though there wasn’t anything remotely spontaneous about the performance, which, as any Deadhead knows, is the at the core of “Dead Music.” That said, if it floats your boat then get after it. While it might not be the most adventurous take on the Grateful Dead, it is certainly a very accurate account, and for anyone who has yet to learn the power of “Dead Music” or just simply wants to relive the glory of days gone by, well, DSO certainly fills that void.

All Good 2009

Dark Star provided a mellow end to a sunny weekend that was expected to yield thunderstorms galore. Good weather, great production, and heaps of talented artists made All Good another big success. Unfortunately, certain ghosts of the event’s past continued to haunt in 2009. Drug arrests and overdoses have led to a more active role of drug enforcement agents on site, and while varying accounts may differ, it seemed as though 2009 was a cleaner, more peaceful event with less of the dirty-nasty, but it was not void of this element.

Regardless of the activity on Shakedown, the amount of unsupervised children wandering the lot (including a prepubescent doing nitrous and one “mother” leading her son around on a leash made of caution tape) was negligent at best and criminal at worst. Plenty of parents opted for the family camping and had their kids in the tent by sundown and there were clearly plenty of families that had a wonderful weekend, but not everyone was so responsible. Too many children under the age of ten were left entirely unattended in an environment riddled with very adult activities, and in a crowd of over 15,000 you’re more than likely to have at least one unsavory individual looking to cause harm. This type of commentary is rare in the recap of a musical event – especially one that was overwhelming positive like All Good – but some things need to be noted. A Jersey based bouncer named Cornelius “Corney” Ealman said that he wasn’t opposed to festival drug use as long as you weren’t “pushing kilos,” but when asked what he would want people to know about the event, he said plain and simple, “Don’t bring your little kids. It’s just not a good environment for little kids to be in.”

Although the weekend did have its shadier moments, they were easy to avoid and anyone looking to take care of themselves and have a good time likely did just that and then some. Whenever you get a big crowd of party people together there will always be a few bad apples, but at the 2009 event, from logistics to weather to crowd to a familiar-yet-eclectic lineup, All Good once again does the name justice.

Continue reading for more pics of All Good 2009…

Images by: Kenny Pusey

Brendan Bayliss & Jeff Austin

Brendan Bayliss

Jeff Austin

Assembly Of Dust

Buckethead

Buckethead

Buckethead fans

Buckethead fans

That 1 Guy

Jackie Greene

Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk

Tony Hall – Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk

Nick Daniels & Ian Neville – Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk

Allie Kral – Cornmeal

Fear Nuttin Band

Ben Ellman & Corey Henry

Ben Ellman – Galactic

Steve Kimock

Lake Trout

Les Claypool

Les Claypool

Sam Bass – Les Claypool

Mike Dillon – Les Claypool

Mike Dillon

Ben Harper

Big Nazo

Big Nazo

Big Nazo

Yonder Mountain String Band

Robert Randolph

Bob Weir

Dave Murphy – STS9

Hunter Brown & Jeffree Lerner – STS9

STS9

STS9 fans

JamBase | Mountaintop
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