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Living Colour: A Lively Conversation

By: Dennis Cook

Living Colour by Bill Bernstein

Who says a jazz band can’t play dance music?
Who says a rock band can’t play funky?
Who says a funk band can’t play rock?
Oh yeah!
We’re gonna play some funk so loud
We’re gonna rock and roll around
Watch them dance, Watch them dance

Rock music is a strange sausage. Originally stuffed with blues structures, jazz energy and country compositional sensibilities, the casing continues to stretch in the wake of electric fusion, hip hop, glam and countless other ingredients. And while some revel in trying to simplify rock’s flavors there are those that savor its capacity for complexities and contradictions. Since their explosive emergence in 1988 up through their potent new album, The Chair in the Doorway (released September 15 on Megaforce), Living Colour has been a poster child for rock’s expansive nature. Their latest release presents their intrinsic diversity with an overhanging cohesiveness that suggests the band makes more sense today than ever. As continents and cultures creep ever closer, Living Colour’s disregard for borders and healthy engagement with the world as it is seems right on time.

Their first single, “Cult of Personality,” was so striking, so unique and so forceful that it knocked one on their heels. It seemed a defining sound that a band could milk for ages but not long afterward they offered something as playful and humorous as “Love Rears Its Ugly Head” as single. The sense that Living Colour – Vernon Reid (guitar), Corey Glover (vocals), Doug Wimbish (bass) and Will Calhoun – could do anything lies at their core. This is a band that has truly freed their minds enough to embrace music outside of expectations or posted restrictions. For those of us in the late ’80s who loved Bad Brains, Chic, Ornette Coleman, Pere Ubu and The Talking Heads with equal vigor, Living Colour’s arrival seemed a beacon for heavy duty diversity. And absolutely nothing has changed since the group reformed in 2003 after an eight year hiatus.

Corey Glover by Greg Styer

“We don’t live in a monolithic kind of world. We never did. We supposedly – at least they sold us the idea – live in a melting pot with all kinds of different people and things in it. Particularly for African-American and people of color, you’ve been told you’re living in somebody else’s world and you have to adapt. So, we’ve always tried to adapt our world into the world that exists, into the everyday world. So, we took from everything,” says Corey Glover. “I will listen to an Eric Dolphy record right before I listen to some Creedence. It’s all the same shit to me!”

This potentially sloppy, utterly enthusiastic embrace of wide ranging musics is what rock is all about. At its best, the genre welcomes all comers and sorts out the collisions as they occur.

“Absolutely! Some people will often look at [Living Colour] and say we’re a funk-metal band. Well, that’s very limiting in its scope. We’re more than people who just play funk and metal. If you listen to the work you’ll know that to be true. It’s not the rote idea of what rock ‘n’ roll was,” Glover observes. “Vernon and I are from Brooklyn, Crown Heights in particular, where there’s a big African-American population, a big Caribbean and Latino community, as well as Hasidic Jews. So, who’s NOT going to listen to ALL kinds of stuff coming out of people’s car radios?”

However, not everyone has their big ears and after having spent close to a decade on the sidelines, Living Colour, a band whose debut, Vivid, was a Top 10 album with four high charting singles, found that much of their audience had dissipated.

“We came back in 2003 and nobody paid attention,” says Vernon Reid, while acknowledging that the time out of the spotlight helped the revived group grow stronger creatively. “This is the point bands of our vintage make desperate attempts to regain their youth. They try to come back to what they did before or, God help us, try to become hip. I believe we sidestepped those pitfalls.”

The Chair In The Doorway is certainly their most striking outing since Vivid, and perhaps their most cohesive, together album to date, working together from end-to-end in overlapping sonics and themes. It’s the kind of record one can come back to in six months or a year and keep discovering new things as they unravel different passages.

Vernon Reid by Greg Styer

“I’m amazed at the way it turned out. Each record we’ve made has had its own circumstances, their own difficulties. I think I had the most fun making Vivid because we were riding a rush of adrenalin for even having come that far. To have gotten that far was pure gravy,” says Reid. “Now, with The Chair In The Doorway, we’re a band with history. We’ve been through a breakup. We’ve had an original member leave the group [bassist Muzz Skillings left in 1992]. We’ve had children; we’re all fathers – it’s a beautiful burden and you are dad forever whatever happens! We’ve gone through all the various emotional thingsÂ…well, I don’t want to get too grand. Nobody shot anybody or anything! Nobody slept with anybody else’s wife! There’s certain places we haven’t gone but we’ve had a pretty intense band experience, and to make this record was real work to realize it.”

“We had a plan. The name of the record came before everything else, so each piece had to fit into that idea. That was the rubric we needed to figure out if a song worked or not for the record,” says Glover, touching on the album’s subtle interconnectedness. “That’s what the title is supposed to be. Some of my conversations with Vernon going into this had a surreal or super-real quality to them. My idea with The Chair in the Doorway was really talking about the four of us [in Living Colour], and talking about how some things are obvious to some people and not obvious to others, on the inside and the outside.”

The Chair In The Doorway is unique amongst our catalog because it’s the first record where we had the title of the album before we had any songs. During the initial recordings for Collideøscope (2003) we were putting ourselves through so much pressure, ill at ease having just come back together. In a way, 9/11 gave us something to make that record kind of about. The song ‘Flying’ is a direct result of 9/11. ‘A Question of When’ was written before 9/11 but became about 9/11,” continues Reid. “So, we had a break during recording Collideøscope and Corey and I went to see Spiderman 2. And there’s the usual bellyaching afterwards and Corey says, ‘You know, the chair is in the doorway.’ That’s one of the typical Yogi Berric type of things Corey will say. Then, later on we were in Paris doing press for Collideøscope, waiting for a photographer in this lovely courtyard, and I turned to Corey and said, ‘You know that thing you say about the chair being in the doorway? That’s the title of our next album.’”

Doug Wimbish by Greg Styer

“What I love about it is it’s the rarest of things, completely concrete – the chair is a physical thing – AND completely abstract. That’s what’s beautiful and terrible about language. That’s why political language is never to be trusted. George Orwell knew very well that language has many layers and levels. With music it’s often about who can come up with the phrase that pays,” laughs Reid. “The Chair In The Doorway spoke to me. There’s an obstruction. It’s an obvious obstruction. Who placed it there and who’s gonna get up and displace the obstruction? The chair is not supposed to be in the doorway. The chair’s supposed to be at a table or desk. The Chair In The Door is an unintended concept album. The title exerted this weird energy on the whole project. It’s so much about how we get in our own way and how something is so obviously in our way.”

A big part of the new release’s flavor is bassist Doug Wimbish, a veteran of industrial groove pioneers Tackhead, the revered On-U Sound label and former member of the Sugarhill Gang house band. His style is stealthy and lethal, a snake charmer with significant bite.

“Doug is really the catalyst for this new record. Without Doug Wimbish we wouldn’t have made the CD we did in Prague. It was Doug that codified all this music. He took all the grooves we did at sound checks and gigs and put them on a list for us to listen to and figure out what we were gonna do. Doug was the man in terms of how this record came to be what it is,” enthuses Glover. “There’s these gypsy bands that come out of the Czech Republic that takes bits of funk and rock and really mix stuff together. That’s how Doug really got involved in this scene and they introduced him to [Sono Studio in Prague, where The Chair in the Doorway was recorded]. These are people who appreciate music on all levels because this is a just-opening-up Eastern Bloc country that’s taking in everything. The guys who run the studio were a major catalyst for cool things on the new album.”

Continue reading for more on Living Colour…

 


. In a lot of ways, I think this is a good time for rock, and I think it’s going to become a better time for rock. When I look at say The Mars Volta, the complexion of what rock is has been fundamentally altered. And that’s a good thing.

-Vernon Reid

 

Race has been a pronounced issue for Living Colour since day one, but almost always coming from outside the band. Inside, these guys understand that rock is the child of multiple influences – some white, some black and some brown. The notion that black men playing rock is somehow unusual announces the ignorance of any critic speaking such nonsense. One would have to conveniently forget Arthur “Big Boy” Crudup, Buddy Guy, Sly Stone, Jimi Hendrix and countless others to utter such stupidity.

“Rock was an amalgam of so many things. It was mutt music to begin with. It was a little bit of gospel, a little bit of country music, a little bit of classical, a little bit of everything just thrown in there and all of a sudden here’s this new thing. That’s the only way innovation occurs. Something new is born of several different mothers and fathers,” says Glover. “The fact that we didn’t come directly from the blues, that a lot of it came from fusion jazz, maybe set people back a bit. Unfortunately, I read a lot of blogs, and the so-called metal blogs think we’re a metal band. We’re not a metal band. There’s aspects of metal music to it – we play HARD – but we’re in no way a metal band. There’s no particular category that suits us well. You couldn’t say we’re a jazz band or a complete rock band because we play elements of R&B. So, what are you going to say? We’re a band. Leave it at that.”

Will Calhoun & Corey Glover
by Greg Styer

Modern music culture has become very comfortable labeling things. It’s easier to market and sell that way, but music itself is fluid and hard to contain. It is, by nature, liquid stuff.

“It should be fluid! Do you listen to your iPod that way? You’re not going to go the ‘Rock’ category and just listen to rock songs. No, you hit play and whatever comes up you’re surprised and delighted by because it’s all the music that you love,” says Glover. “The other day I was listening to [69 Boyz'] ‘Tootsee Roll’ and then something real dark like the Swans came on afterwards and it worked!”

Realizing that he wasn’t alone in his struggles, in 1985 Vernon Reid co-founded the Black Rock Coalition, an organization formed in “reaction to the constrictions that the commercial music industry places on Black artists.” The Coalition continues to this day and Reid is suitably proud and excited about the current generation of artists of color reshaping rock and popular music.

“Now we have great bands like TV on the Radio, Santigold and Earl Greyhound on the scene. And there’s Afro-punk, which is kind of the snarky little brother to the Black Rock Coalition,” says Reid. “I’ll tell you what’s really got me jazzed right now. A really good friend of mine, William DuVall, is the new singer in Alice In Chains and I’m so happy for him. I had a solo record, This little room, that was going to be the follow-up to Mistaken Identity (1996) and William sings on two of the songs on that (unreleased) record. In a lot of ways, I think this is a good time for rock, and I think it’s going to become a better time for rock. When I look at say The Mars Volta, the complexion of what rock is has been fundamentally altered. And that’s a good thing.”

“One of the things I love about The Mars Volta is I don’t get it! I listen to it and it’s weird. It’s partly in Spanish but it’s prog. I love the fact that I didn’t already know where it was going,” continues Reid. “So much rock is a lifestyle, a factory produced thing. Led Zeppelin was still tied to the blues in a fundamental way, but the idea behind Led Zeppelin was still this experimental thing. You hear these bootlegs where they played ‘The Battle of Evermore’ for a half hour! There’s this whole notion that they were the beginning of cock rock – and in a way it is – but there’s so much more to it.”

Will Calhoun by Bill Bernstein

One characteristic that runs throughout Living Colour’s catalog is a pronounced love of interesting sounds. Beyond the stellar musicianship and compositional edge, their albums overflow with cool noises and interesting digressions. This passion extends to a breathless enthusiasm for old gear like Mellotrons.

“You’re singing my song right there! There’s something about an instrument, because of the nature of what it is, that lends an air of instant nostalgia to anything you do with it,” offers Reid. “Hearing the sound of strings that sound like they’re from an old movie instantly transports you. Psychedelia wouldn’t have been possible without the Mellotron. The sound of those Beatles records is justÂ…[Reid trails off into a sigh of pure delight].”

“We recorded The Chair In The Door in a very different way. With all the other records we’d been hitting the tunes and playing and playing them in front of people. With this record we did overdubs with live skeletons, and a lot of this record was broken down into parts and components, which in a sense is how things are done now. There’s parts of this record that are very live. You can tell that ‘Bless Those’ is just recorded live. There’s a lot of tunes that are very dense, and what I like about ‘Bless Those’ is it’s very stripped down, very rock ‘n’ roll band. We went 360-degrees with that tune, where one take was too bar-bandy, etc. At the end of the day it was right the first time,” says Reid. “Other pieces like ‘Behind The Sun’ were found digging through an archive of things we’d done. I heard it and said, ‘Oh, that’s that crazy tapping riff!’ We wound up getting into it and it evolved, like the whole project. I think album concept still has merit as an organizing principle. I think sequencing matters. I think having a body of songs that pertain to something – a real song cycle – matters. I think the fact that you can release a single song and not be tied to an album is cool, but people say the album is over or irrelevant and I don’t believe that. Further on the convergence of various technologies are going to take the notion of albums and the experiential objects therein and change them.”

“The [new album] was inspirational to me. When they heard me sing something new or in a different way it helped inspire us to do more stuff. I tried to get at things the best I could,” says Glover. “Technically, I’d been schooled constantly by the time we got the studio because I’d been touring with Jesus Christ Superstar [playing Judas Iscariot] for two years (2006-2008). So, my voice was ready to go when it was time to hit play because I haven’t stopped singing for two years! My vocal coach gave me a lot of good ideas if you want to keep doing this. You need to have a personal routine but also growth, because if there’s no growth it becomes boring and uninteresting. The singer is the emotional interpreter of the song. If he’s not able to tell you what the emotions are that the band is playing then it doesn’t make any sense. It’s just not worth doing if you don’t throw your personality into it. It’s the bravado or the angst or the melancholy of whoever is singing and those they’re singing with. And with an uncategorized band it’s going to be different every time.”

Living Colour by Bill Bernstein

Regardless of anything else they may do, Living Colour will likely always be best known for “Cult of Personality,” simply one of the great moments in late 20th century music. It’s a piece that will be knocking skulls together and making folks question the celebrity driven nature of modern culture long after all of us are resting ashily in our urns. The song has become so ubiquitous – Guitar Hero anyone? – it’s become part of the contemporary background noise through no fault of its own.

“What I really didn’t want to be were the people I was singing about [laughs]. At a certain point it kinda got that way, but that’s not what I was saying. There’s a certain thing that goes on. Just watch the Sonia Sotomayor hearings to see it,” says Glover. “What’s funny about it is it’s a phenomenon that occurs in every aspect of life. There’s an insurance salesman that every other insurance salesman talks about. What we were talking about is rock stars. And I’m not a rock star. Mick Jagger isn’t a rock star. Barack Obama IS a rock star! I’m not the one who can stop traffic. Michael Jackson is the biggest star in the worldÂ…next to Barack Obama [laughs].”

“I read a book a while back that said that what people do to their betters is raise them up, bring them down and then raise them up again. And it’s only after their death that they truly raise them up and the reality of their impact can be assessed. It’s what happened with Elvis. He was the biggest thing in the world, then they said he was kind of corny and then he died and he was the greatest thing in the world again,” comments Glover. “It’s going to happen to every person of any note everywhere in the world. It happened to Bill Clinton. It happened to Ed Koch. It happens to your local community board member, who once seemed so new and young and hip. Look at John Travolta’s career! That’s the way it works. That’s how [culture] manifests itself. You’re hot shit one minute and then you’re out. Like Frank Sinatra said, ‘That’s life’ [laughs].”

“As long as there’s a forum for social commentary – whether it comes from music or the arts or life itself – there’s always going to be a conversation to be had. There’s always going to be a conversation to what’s considered infantile or sophomoric. There’s going to be a real conversation about the world we live in. That’s what philosophy is, and that’s how these things come apart. That’s how we deal with our music,” says Glover. “This conversation is one we’re trying to have with our audience. Of course, some people would love to hear Living Colour do ‘Back In Black’ and we’d love to get out there and do that, too [laughs].”

Living Colour is on tour right now. Dates available here.

JamBase | Saturated
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Jordan set for boxing match against cage-fighter boyfriend Alex Reid

Former model Katie Price, a.k.a. Jordan, is set for a showdown with her cage-fighter boyfriend Alex Reid, and will be facing him in a boxing match.
Jordan, 31, will be fighting Reid in an “extreme sports” combat bout.
“She’s got all the moves – Alex will have to watch out,” the Daily Star quoted Jordan’s boxing trainer [...]

Katie Price jets off to Spain with cage-fighter lover

Former glamour model Katie Price aka Jordan, is said to have jetted off to Spain with her new cage-fighter lover Alex Reid.
Jordan, 31, was spotted at a Spanish airport with Reid, 34, before they sped off to a private villa in Puerto Banus, near Marbella, where they stayed at the whole day.
The mother-of-three had even [...]

‘Fake UK sites’ trick consumers

By Brian Milligan
Business reporter, BBC News

Matthew Brown

Trading Standards officers say that consumers are being tricked into buying fake goods on the internet by companies pretending to be based in the UK.

The websites are often based in China, but use "co.uk" as part of their domain name, giving shoppers a false sense of security, they say.

It is thought that there could be as many as 480,000 websites which carry "co.uk", but which are not UK based.

The sites sell a range of goods from trainers to hair straighteners.

‘Taken in’

Matthew Brown was taken in by a website called trainers9.co.uk.

"As soon as I opened the box I realised they were fake trainers," he said.

"There doesn’t need to be a UK link"

Paul Miloseski-Reid, trading standards officer

But the fact that delivery was promised in less than three days, together with the apparently British address, convinced him that the site was genuine.

"It also had the safe purchase certificates at the bottom. So I was taken in by all that really."

Open to abuse

Trading standards officer believe the "co.uk" suffix is lulling consumers into a sense of false security.

In fact it offers no protection whatsoever, and certainly does not mean the site is operated by a UK company.

Anyone prepared to give their name and address, and pay £5, can buy a co.uk domain name for a two-year period.

In total about 6% of registrations for "co.uk" domain names come from foreign companies, mostly based in China.

"There doesn’t need to be a UK link," says Paul Miloseski-Reid, a trading standards officer based in Richmond, Surrey.

"So it’s really open to abuse by criminals who want to pretend they’re local, when they’re selling unsafe, counterfeit goods."

In a survey of 52 countries, trading standards found that most countries have far tougher rules than the UK.

Usually they demand some sort of link with the country whose domain name they are adopting.

Vigilance

Nominet, which is responsible for giving out domain names in the UK, is unrepentant.

It is proud of the fact that eight million "co.uk" addresses are now in existence, and that the UK operates one of the most liberal internet regimes in the world.

We ask Nick Wenban-Smith, the legal counsel for Nominet, whether consumers are being hood-winked by the "co.uk" name.

"Maybe," he replies tentatively. "People need to be vigilant."

If consumers are unsure about the origins of a website, the advice is to use the "Whois" tool, onNominet’s website.

Options

Using that tool, we traced Matthew Brown’s fake Nike trainers to Fuzhou, in Western China.

When we contacted the company, trainers9.co.uk, they did promise to carry out an internal investigation.

But practically speaking, Matthew has few options.

Neither Paypal nor his credit card company are prepared to accept any responsibility.

His only option is to post his trainers back to China, and ask for a refund.

But he does not think that option is worth trying. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Assembly of Dust: Required Listening

By: Court Scott

Assembly of Dust by C. Taylor Crothers

Though certainly excited at the prospect of a new disc from Assembly of Dust (AoD), I was both dubious and curious upon learning the recording, Some Assembly Required (released July 21 on Rock Ridge Music) (JamBase review here), has at least one guest musician on each of the album’s 13 tracks. Other bands, including Galactic and Keller Williams have done similar projects with From the Corner to the Block and Dream, respectively, and were met with mild skepticism by critics and fans alike.

A flurry of thoughts: This is only AoD’s second studio album; is it too soon to take on a project like this? The band’s last release was 2007′s Recollection (JamBase review here), and prior to that, a live recording called The Honest Hour in 2004. Would the new album be focused enough to sound like the band, or will each guest’s bold signature sound overwhelm the quartet? Also, if a band’s sound and songs are their brand, does hosting a guest per track detract from their image, their message? And if I’m honest, in my cold, dark heart I wondered, “Is this a marketing ploy to sell more units?” To gain insight into the band’s writing, recording and thinking processes, AoD’s main songwriter and vocalist Reid Genauer and drummer Andy Herrick were each good enough to drop me a line and share their impressions with me.

Initially formed as a quintet in 2002, but now short one keyboardist and down to four members, AoD got together after Genauer departed from Strangefolk. Fans and critics alike have heralded AoD, who are respected for their consonant, tuneful songwriting bolstered by meaningful, smart lyricism. AoD, I agree, are poised to crossover to the mainstream and recorded over two years, the songs on Some Assembly Required stoke and utterly reaffirm that opinion. Seven of the 13 tracks have been made available on the band’s website since early June. Released each Tuesday leading up to the release date, the band used this approach to reward fans and give an audio teaser to casual or unfamiliar listeners.

Musically, AoD has drawn comparisons to The Beatles and The Band, which no doubt is due in great part to the songwriting duo of Genauer and former keyboardist and current co-producer Nate Wilson‘s shared understanding of songcraft and appreciation for the history of American roots music. Many of the songs had been marinating for years, explains Genauer, most having been written by himself, some with the help of Wilson. The bulk of the material was about three years old, but a 16-year-old Genauer wrote the oldest 20 years ago. “It was written when I still dreamed of being in a band. It was THE first song I wrote that moved out of the first position on a guitar neck.” As far as the song selections on Some Assembly Required go, each track is a perfect snapshot from lives intertwined, varying from the frustratingly mundane to unabashedly proud to achingly devastating, all clever ruminations paired with well arranged, sparsely orchestrated, home-baked, hooky tunes.

Genauer by Susan J. Weiand

The collection of songs on Some Assembly Required were primarily unreleased, and were more therapeutically written than purposefully so. “It wasn’t about writing songs for a specific album,” says Genauer. “We just had some songs recorded, some we played in a live setting, and some were just sitting in a bucket in a dark corner. Generally, those songs are the ones we worked with.” Herrick tells me the album was recorded over four days in late summer of 2008. Genauer notes with a hint of pride that as he wrote the songs he became more comfortable “trying on” different characters, writing from different point of view. “[The songs] are time capsules that reflect a specific process and times in my life, some are autobiographical some are from other perspectives. There are different characters I interact with.”

Having an abundance of material allowed for a new freedom in the studio, according to Genauer, because in addition to the songs themselves, they had greater time to create and tinker with arrangements and production. “This time we had time to write as we [went]. Sometimes we would create while the mics [were] running,” explains Herrick about his time in the studio with Genauer, guitarist Adam Terrell and bassist John Leccese. Where the material on previous AoD albums had been “road tested,” played and recorded in live rotation and allowed to shape-shift over time, this album came into its own in the studio.

Gordon & Leccese (AoD) by Britt Nemeth

Genauer likened the alternate, unhurried approach to grocery shopping. “Sometimes you just buy the same things day in and day out. But some days you crave different flavors, textures, or tastes,” he says. “We went into the studio with that in mind.” Further, because each song and its parts was able to distill better and in using songs that hadn’t been played live, AoD didn’t have to “untangle or un-bake” songs that fans had already become familiar with. Instead, the band was able to infuse the tracks they decided would be on the album with other creative input and different genetics in the form of multiple guests.

The entire list of guests is comprised of musicians Genauer has long respected and with whom he’s hoped to work in some capacity. Even the album’s title is a play not only on the band’s name but a nod that each track is an assembly of musicians. The resulting roster boasts some of the finest players in their generation. Richie Havens, David Grisman, Bela Fleck, Alison Krauss, Jerry Douglas, Mike Gordon, John Scofield, Martin Sexton and more each add their signature sound in a supporting capacity.

Continue reading for more on AoD…

&nbsp;


I tried to select instrumentalists who were complimentary to each song, someone who could change the texture. I had to think about who would make sense, who I aspired to play with and who had similar musical aesthetics. It was possible to imagine but impossible to know what they’d add.

-Reid Genauer

&nbsp;

Photo by: C. Taylor Crothers

“It was awesome,” says Herrick of recording with the various guests. “[Each musician made their respective piece] stronger, added more of a flavor than affected the overall taste of the track,” he continued, unaware that Genauer, too, fancied discussing the project in culinary terms.

Assembly of Dust

Most of the songs were written and their structure didn’t deviate radically from the original by the time they were recorded, Genauer says. “The songs are skeletons [when we go into the studio], and the band delivered the flesh and muscle to the songs.” Herrick continues, “Reid and Nate would make rough tapes which demonstrated the direction and feel they wanted songs to take, because they know what they want. I think one that ended up different was ‘Leadbelly’ [with Jerry Douglas and Alison Krauss]. Some songs had several slightly different versions at the end of the day, but we always record [different] versions to support the story Reid tells. We [the rest of the band] use texture and feel to best support his words.”

Both Herrick and Genauer used the word “satisfying” often, almost as much as they used the word “pride,” and this being at peace with the songs and the recording comes across on the album. The resulting disc opens strong with “All That I Am Now,” a wide-open, anthemic stomp with Genauer sharing vocal and guitar duties with ’60s icon and Woodstock opening act Richie Havens. The clarity and power of Genauer’s voice is reflected and complimented by the overall grand, reverby tones and texture of the song. The third track, “Cold Coffee,” featuring David Grisman’s plaintive mandolin, is met by Genauer’s soft articulation of heartache, depression and self-doubt, making this coupling perfect. Similarly, “Second Song” with Keller Williams is AoD’s answer to John Mellencamp’s “Jack and Diane” or Steve Miller’s “The Joker,” a short story about dreams, realities and a lack of resources stacked against poppy, rolling melodies. Bela Fleck’s rollicking, distinctive plucking on “Edges” make it a standout, with the banjo’s phrasing saying as much as any words.

If a band’s sound and songs are unique, then their sound and their words are as big a part of their brand as, say, their trademarked logo, name or live reputation. It is what makes a band almost instantly identifiable, so I was intrigued about how AoD would maintain their signature sound with so many guests.

Reid Genauer by C. Taylor Crothers

“I tried to select instrumentalists who were complimentary to each song, someone who could change the texture,” Genauer says. “I had to think about who would make sense, who I aspired to play with and who had similar musical aesthetics. It was possible to imagine but impossible to know what they’d add.”

Genauer calls the experiences in the studio “extremely poignant and meaningful” because his heroes became his colleagues. It is an endorsement and affirmation of the personal risks taken by Genauer.

A majority of the songs sound and feel natural with soft, acoustic stringed instruments, but it is the weighted delivery of both “Pedal Down,” a rangy, loose-limbed Southern rocker featuring Cincinnati’s Brothers Gabbard of the Buffalo Killers and the straightforward chugging rock of “Arc of the Sun,” about the birth of Genauer’s son, that add an edge to the album. Though “Arc” has been played live and is not necessarily new to fans, the album version is anchored by Mike Gordon and his swirling, fuzzed-out bass solo. Also featured on “High Brow,” another rockin’ track is moe.‘s Al Schnier who helps inflate the band into something more aggressive and edgy, a sound that completely works.

How this all shakes out live, without the benefit of the guests, is something fans are curious to see and hear. When I asked Genauer if he was concerned about the lack of the guests during a live performance he replied, “Sometimes it’s harder to recreate songs in the studio because the energy and excitement in a live setting can’t be recreated. In this case the guests are that x-factor, and they created the energy usually created by the audience. The audience will do the same without guests, and also, the songs may grow and evolve. I look forward to what they become.”

AoD will be touring throughout the summer and through the end of October, gaining momentum and working to build on their already solid assembly. While I was initially concerned that each guest would overwhelm the band, in retrospect I would have liked AoD to augment their guest’s signature sounds a little more – boost them in the mix, extend a solo – but each guest did exactly what the band hoped they would do and that is what matters. They added a slightly foreign accent on an otherwise unmistakable voice and accomplish this without pretense. The strong writing and subtle arrangements definitely make this masterful Assembly of tunes Required listening.

Assembly of Dust tour dates available here, Reid Genauer solo dates here.

JamBase | Dusty
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Ed Wins “The Bachelorette” Finale — “The Bachelorette” Jillian Picks Ed

Jillian Harris, a 29-year-old Canadian, chose 29-year-old technology consultant Ed Swiderski on Monday night’s season finale of The Bachelorette — but not before a emotional castoff tested Jillian’s strength right until the last moment of her decision.

In a shocking twist, just as Jillian was awaiting Ed, newly eliminated contestant Reid — the 30-year-oold real [...]

J.Lo burst into tears at surprise birthday bash

Singer/actress Jennifer Lopez burst into tears after she came to know that her hubby Marc Anthony had thrown a surprise birthday bash for her.
The Latino singer has turned 40 on July 24.
Anthony arranged a secret bash in New York on July 25, without his wife”’’s knowledge.
She was whisked to the event in a grey [...]

Jordan ‘wants to marry new lover’

Katie Price a.k.a Jordan has reportedly told her alleged new lover cage fighting champ Alex Reid that she wants to get married as soon as her divorce from estranged husband Peter Andre is finalised.
Pals of the glamour model are shocked by her proposal, which came after Reid took a phone call from girlfriend Marie Thornton [...]

Jordan’s alleged new lover ‘still in a relationship’

atie Price a.k.a Jordan’’s alleged new lover cage-fighting champ Alex Reid is still involved in a relationship, it has emerged.
The glamour model is said to have slept with Reid at a hotel in Liverpool last week after visiting the city for a book signing.
Reid’’s girlfriend Marie Thornton is now ‘in pieces’ after reading about the [...]

Chris Weigant: Friday Talking Points [87] — A Tale Of Two Houses

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House Dems Reach Agreement On Reining In Medicare Costs

WASHINGTON — House Democrats announced agreement Friday on far-reaching steps designed to rein in the relentless growth of Medicare, part of a concerted effort to counter the impression that President Barack Obama’s health care legislati…

Congress delays Obama’s healthcare reforms

President says he is sanguine about missed deadline but fears about $1tn plan continue to dog him

The US Congress will not meet next month’s deadline to pass sweeping healthcare reform as concerns about how to pay for the $1tn (£609m) plan continue to dog one of Barack Obama’s leading commitments.

The Senate majority leader, Harry Reid, said there will be no vote before Congress goes into recess in August as some senators complained that the speed of the reforms would produce flawed legislation.

Obama was sanguine, saying that he was not concerned so long as legislation on his plan for the government to provide health insurance was passed before the end of the year. “That’s OK. I just want people to keep on working. Just keep on working,” the president said.

But the delay is a blow because Democratic leaders had used the 7 August deadline to try to limit opposition within the party as various bills made their way through Congress.

The Republicans and sceptics will have the month-long recess to pick away at Obama’s plan by playing on voter concerns over cost and fears that the government will ration or restrict healthcare.

Obama was delivered a blow last week when the Congressional budget office director, Doug Elmendorf, said that the proposed plans could add up to $239bn to the deficit over the next 10 years.

That rang alarm bells among conservative Democrats who fear the reforms will result in higher taxes, which would anger voters.

A slew of adverts has hit US television screens from special interest groups attempting to portray Obama’s plan as likely to mean rationing of treatment and the authorities choosing people’s doctors.

Rick Scott, of Conservatives for Patients Rights, which has run adverts using the shortcomings of Britain’s NHS to campaign against the reforms, recently wrote a memo to supporters saying that delay would kill Obama’s plan.

“I am very confident, after meetings on (Capitol) Hill this week, that if Congress does not pass a healthcare bill with the public option before Labour Day [7 September], the public option is dead,” he wrote.

One of Obama’s problems is that without a detailed bill, it is difficult for him to persuade sceptical voters that they are not going to end up paying more or receiving less.

The president plans to meet Reid today and the Senate finance committee chairman, Max Baucus, in an effort to keep the legislation on track.

But the delay is clearly annoying the president. “It gets on my nerves. It frustrates me that we’d even be suggesting the status quo is the best we can do,” he said at a public meeting yesterday.

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Dan Quayle: Obama’s “Biggest Challenge” Is “Taming The Left Wing”

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Gang Of Six Centrist Senators Demands Delay On Health Care Reform

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The Bachelorette Finale Spoilers

On last night’s episode of The Bachelorette, Jillian Harris bid farewell to Reid Rosenthal, to the surprise of no one, keeping Ed Swiderski and Kiptyn Locke.
With the exception of Ed’s performance anxiety and the show’s hilarious ways of wording that situation, Monday’s episode was fairly vanilla and predictable.
But now that Reid’s gone and Kiptyn and [...]

August J. Pollak: Obama and Reid After the Nuclear Holocaust

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Chris Weigant: Friday Talking Points [85] — Roll Up! See The Show!

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