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Posts Tagged ‘rock’

Elton John Nelly Furtado Duet “Crocodile Rock” ["Gnomeo & Juliet" Movie]

Nelly Furtado and Elton John will perform duet of The Rocket Man’s 1973 hit “Crocodile Rock” for the upcoming animated ensemble comedy Gnomeo & Juliet, a project that is being produced by John’s longtime beau David Furnish. Elton’s already agreed to lay down vocals with pop sensation Lady Gaga for the movie’s theme song, “Hello, [...]

Greyson Chance “Waiting Outside The Lines” Song World Premiere

The wait is over, Music World: Pop lovers have been given their first taste of Greyson Chance. On Tuesday, Chance premiered his first-ever single, a piano-fused pop track titled “Waiting Out The Lines.” Displaying heavy hints of Greyson’s vocal prowess and his nifty fingerwork on the ivorys, industry bigwigs are hoping the single will not [...]

Beastie Boys Album Details

BEASTIE BOYS SWITCH ONE ALBUM FOR ANOTHER


Beastie Boys

In what can only be described as a bizarre coincidence, following an exhaustive re-sequence marathon, Beastie Boys have verified that their
new album Hot Sauce Committee Part 2 will be comprised of the same 16 tracks originally slated
for inclusion on Hot Sauce Committee Part 1. The record (part 2 that is) will be released as
planned in spring 2011 on Capitol.

The tracks originally recorded for Hot Sauce Committee Part 2 (which now are actually back on Part
1
) have now apparently been bumped to make room for the former Hot Sauce Committee Part 1
material. Wait, what?

“I know it’s weird and confusing, but at least we can say unequivocally that Hot Sauce Committee Part 2 is
coming out on time, which is more than I can say about Part 1, and really is all that matters in the end.” says
Adam “MCA” Yauch. “We just kept working and working on various sequences for part 2, and after a year
and half of spending days on end in the sequencing room trying out every possible combination, it finally became
clear that this was the only way to make it work. Strange but true, the final sequence for Hot Sauce Committee
Part 2
works best with all its songs replaced by the 16 tracks we originally had lined up in pretty much the same
order we had them in for Hot Sauce Committee Part 1. So we’ve come full circle.”

Hot Sauce Committee Part 2 marks Yauch, Mike “Mike D” Diamond, and Adam “Ad Rock”
Horovitz
‘s first full length effort since 2007′s Grammy winning all-instrumental The Mix-Up. The new
track listing of the album is now as follows:

1. Tadlock’s Glasses
2. B-Boys In The Cut

3. Make Some Noise

4. Nonstop Disco Powerpack
5. OK

6. Too Many Rappers (featuring NAS)
7. Say It
8. The Bill Harper Collection
9. Don’t Play No Game That I Can’t Win (featuring Santigold)
10. Long Burn The Fire
11. Funky Donkey
12. Lee Majors Come Again
13. Multilateral Nuclear Disarmament
14. Pop Your Balloon

15. Crazy Ass Shit

16. Here’s A Little Something For Ya

Beastie Boys
Tour Dates

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Beastie Boys News
::
Beastie Boys
Concert
Reviews


R.I.P. Gregory Isaacs

JULY 15 1951 – OCTOBER 25 2010

Reggae legend Gregory
Isaacs
passed away this morning at his home in London after a year-long battle with lung cancer. He was
59 years old.

A prolific artist for almost forty years, Isaacs helped pioneer the smooth style of reggae known as “Lovers Rock,” all
while
scoring hit after hit and appearing in the 1978 film Rockers alongside Burning Spear, Robbie
Shakespeare
, Big Youth, and Jacob Miller. He is perhaps best known for his 1982 hit
“Night Nurse” off the album of the same name, as well as the 1988 smash “Rumours,” although he had a number of
hits throughout each decade as he continued to adapt to
changing styles in reggae music. His most recent album was 2008′s Brand New Me

“Gregory was well-loved by everyone, his fans and his family,” said his wife Linda. “He worked really hard to make
sure he delivered the music they loved and enjoyed.”

Check out the videos below as we remember The Cool Ruler.


The Black Eyed Peas Go Back To “The Beginning” With “Dirty Dancing”-Fused Single “The Time (The Dirty Bit)”

Heads up, Music Stans: Fergie, Will, and the rest of the gang from The Black Eyed Peas are back for the release of the group’s sixth album — The Beginning — dropping Nov. 30. With a little help from one of the most recognizable tunes of the ’80s. The Peas are getting back into the [...]

Treasure Island Music Fest 2010 | S.F. | Review | Pics

Words by: Eric Podolsky | Images by: Josh Miller

Treasure Island Music Festival :: 10.16.10-10.17.10 :: Treasure Island :: San Francisco, CA

Check out Josh Miller’s fab photo gallery here.

Treasure Island Fest ’10 by Josh Miller

As far as urban music festivals go, the Bay Area has got it made when it comes to gorgeous, out-of-the-way-yet-accessible locations to stage big parties. Now in its fourth year, Treasure Island Music Festival takes the cake for most unique location, situated right on the shoreline of the man-made island, a few miles offshore from SF. As there was no parking on the tiny island, a brigade of upscale buses provided free shuttle service to and from the island from downtown SF, which proved to be convenient, comfortable and efficient. Once inside the fairly small festival grounds, we were greeted to gorgeous views of the SF cityscape across the bay. Unfortunately, our luck ran out with the weather, as the Bay Area was bombarded with cold, clouds, wind and its first rains in months, right in time for festival weekend (after highs in the 80s earlier in the week). This took Saturday’s under-dressed crowd by surprise, and many were seen huddled against the Bay’s whipping winds, which swept across the exposed festival grounds.

With two closely situated stages sharing one field and no overlapping sets, this festival was a marvel of convenience that made it easy to expend as little effort as possible to catch your favorite bands. There were no half-mile walks from stage to stage, only leisurely strolls within the field’s confines. The icing on the cake was the inclusion of the Silent Disco this year, which offered the crowd a headphone-dance-party alternative to the main acts throughout the day. DJ Motion Potion‘s set really got my Saturday evening going right, as he induced a big headphone-funk dance party under a canopy of lit-up trees.

This year’s lineup was as indie as ever, and with the two days distinctly separated into “electro-dance-DJ day” and “sentimental-indie-rock-collective day” you may as well been at two different festivals over the course of the weekend. Saturday’s sold-out raver crowd swelled throughout the day, reaching a saturation point for Deadmau5‘s Daft-Punk-scale house music extravaganza. The electro beats of band after band carried the neon island party into the night before we were forced to board the buses, which deposited us back into the real word of downtown San Francisco.

Sunday was a different animal altogether, as cold and rain hit early in the day, putting a damper on affairs early on. Fortunately, the rain disappeared around 2 pm, and the rest of the day went along smoothly, and we were serenaded with the finest indie music around. Lovely harmonies, huge bands and well-crafted songs dominated the day, and the noticeably subdued and smaller crowd was all smiles, with many a couple seen making out all over the place.

The separation of each day into a general musical genre proved to be a smart decision that paid off for everyone, as people were able to choose which day to attend based on their musical tastes. Overall, even with lousy weather, the bands delivered in a big way, and the setting was naturally breathtaking and surreal. What more could you want from a festival?

Continue reading for Saturday highlights…

Treasure Island Saturday Highlights

LCD’s James Murphy by Josh Miller

1. LCD Soundsystem :: 9:35-10:50 :: Bridge Stage

After the straight house music barrage of Deadmau5 whipped the crowd into a manic frenzy with larger-than-life beats, headliner James Murphy and Co. took the stage and built their set organically with a mighty patience, letting the music breathe, swell and build to epic heights. Decked out in a brilliant white suit, Murphy was a straight crooner on this night, singing to us with a confidence and clarity I haven’t heard from him before. He had the crowd in the palm of his hand at every moment, and he knew it. Opening quietly with the slow-burner “Dance Yrself Clean,” Murphy forced us to lean into the music right off the bat, even before the song exploded into the dance party we were all waiting for. From there, Murphy led us through his infectious catalog of ass-shaking analog dance-rock, putting special emphasis on dynamics. His well-oiled band cranked out song after song of finely crafted, polyrhythmic grooves, and it was awe-inspiring. Many things blew me away about this set, most of all the sonic perfection of the mix. Every instrument came through bright and clear, and the band’s big, spacious sound filled the festival space perfectly. With drummer Patrick Mahoney driving the groove with his incessant pocket, the masterful maturity of this band shone through in the ever-urgent, slow builds of “Daft Punk Is Playing At My House” and “Tribulations,” which peaked in epic fashion before the band closed with the happy sing-along groove “Home.” My favorite set of the weekend.

2. Die Antwoord :: 3:00-3:45 :: Bridge Stage

It’s safe to say that this set left the entire crowd with their jaws on the ground. Storming out the gate on their first U.S. tour, South African MCs Ninja and pint-sized lady Yo-Landi Vi$$er blew our fucking minds with their over-the-top stage presence and lewd gestures, and backed it all up with some of the best MC skills I’ve ever witnessed. Presenting themselves as unabashedly white trash gangsta, it was easy to laugh at their weird haircuts and ridiculous braggadocio, but as soon as Ninja started rapping, his incredible skills more than justified any antics. Simply put, the set was pure, blazing hip-hop. Ninja speed-rapped with amazing clarity over minimal slice-and-dice beats, and it was off the charts awesome. Running around the stage in his boxers, shaking his dick around and sneering, he spat dirty sex rhymes and amazing freestyles, and blew us all away with pure MC skillz. Throughout the set, Yo-Landi Vi$$er acted as a sort of Joe C to Ninja’s Kid Rock, for lack of a better analogy. Her otherworldly, little-girl delivery complimented the songs, but mostly she was all attitude and sexuality, grabbing her chest with a snarl and mooning the crowd a couple of times. An truly tremendous concert experience.

3. !!! :: 4:35-5:25 :: Bridge Stage

I’ve known about these guys for a while, and was excited to see them for the first time. This band was one of the first to patent the now-widespread dance-rock movement a number of years back, and they still deliver live. Theirs is a dirty-punk groove approach, with Tyler Pope‘s funky, deep-fuzz basslines driving the songs forward. The band themselves was fantastic, but I couldn’t say the same for vocalist Nic Offer, whose breathy, low delivery didn’t compliment the band very well. At times it seemed like he wasn’t trying very hard, and it was often hard to hear his mediocre voice above the consistently engaging grooves. When the band decided to get instrumentally serious and jam a bit, it was fabulous, bass-bombing psychedelic dance-rock, complete with electro-glitch bloops and bleeps. The band’s horn section seemed under-utilized to me, as they were used more for sonic color than anything else. I danced my butt off anyway.

4. Holy Fuck :: 1:30-2:15 :: Bridge Stage

These guys pack a sonic wallop. This instrumental band is just a rhythm section and a couple of dudes tweaking and fiddling with knobs, but they sure make a lot of sound. They crafted an eerie ambiance with their weird toys, which complimented the driving rhythm. But this wasn’t really dance music, more a soundscape of ethereal groove-noise. Vocal loops and modulators evoked Lee Scratch Perry level experimentation in a rock setting (there was even a melodica), and the audience responded warmly to the out-there results, especially considering the set was so early in the day. Hunched over their toys, these mad professors won me over with their exploratory, order-in-chaos approach to music.

Deadmau5 by Josh Miller

5. Little Dragon :: 7:05-7:50 :: Tunnel Stage

I had never heard of this Swedish band before I caught this set, and their synth-soul-pop sound really caught my ear. Sometimes evoking the icy early-80s sounds of Grace Jones or even Bowie, Little Dragon has catchy songs and an airy-cool ambiance created by well-placed synths, which serve the melodies well. Their lead singer Yukimi Nagano is soulful yet detached in the languid, catchy way that synth-pop works best. This was one set that succeeded in inspiring me to actively seek out the band’s material. Great nighttime music.

6. Deadmau5 :: 7:55-8:45 :: Bridge Stage

Having no ear for or experience in the world of house music, I was somewhat baffled at the hordes of adoring fans that came out for this guy. His fans were definitely the most visible on Saturday, and the crowd was absolutely packed for his set. As I’m mostly unable to tell house music apart from other electronic music, I can say that his was a very simple, stripped-down style of epic tension-release beats and electronic sounds meant solely to make you dance. His stage show was the most elaborate of the weekend, taking a page straight out of the Daft Punk playbook. Deadmau5, with glowing mouse head on at all times, was perched atop a giant cube, which projected various images and light displays. This all combined to be a fun, high-energy experience, though not musical in nature. Talking with a fan later, I learned that the man uses no samples in his live show and creates all sounds in the moment with analog equipment. That said, I respect Deadmau5 for what he does, but can’t say the music engages me.

Continue reading for Sunday highlights…

Treasure Island Sunday Highlights

Broken Social Scene by Josh Miller

1. Broken Social Scene :: 5:35-6:25 :: Bridge Stage

Though I was mostly unfamiliar with this Canadian musician collective before this set, I was soon converted. Their ensemble approach to playing continually surprised me, with musicians continually switching instruments after every song. The band plays a sort of alt-rock chamber music, with each musician in the eight-piece band playing a very specific role in the sound and always serving the song. The set started with four guitars jangling away, and yet the sound was lean and not overly busy. “7/4 (Shoreline)” was rocked out nicely, and the mid-tempo “Texaco Bitches” was made interesting with some bloopy synths. At times the band evoked the wide-open-spaces feel of early U2, with shimmering guitar parts and soaring vocals. But the peak of the set had to be “Anthems for a Seventeen-Year-Old Girl,” a slow-building loop of a tune which repeated itself, each band member gradually adding something new at every repetition until it built to a soaring, heartfelt crescendo. As the band peaked the song out, singer Kevin Drew successfully crowd-surfed all the way back to the soundboard – a triumphant way to end the set.

2. Superchunk :: 2:30-3:15 :: Bridge Stage

I’d never heard of these guys either, and they thoroughly impressed me with their meaty, poppy punk rock. Superchunk has influenced countless indie rockers having been around for over 20 years, and listening to them play it’s easy to tell why. They work as a unit, slugging it out with duel guitar power chords and a rockin’ female bassist, her axe slung low, to boot. Singer-guitarist Mac McCaughan was right on all set with his great voice. Their new track “Digging for Something” had me rocking hard, and included the first real guitar solo of the entire weekend, believe it or not. “My Gap Feels Weird” was also awesome, and the anthemic “Crossed Wires” had a rip-roaring, jangly guitar duel. They closed their utterly satisfying afternoon set in grand rock fashion, with thrashing guitars and windmill power chords.

3. Belle & Sebastian :: 9:05-10:20 :: Bridge Stage

Another band I haven’t given a chance, these guys closed the festival out on a cheery note with their immaculate, gorgeous pop-rock melodies. In a day filled with large ensemble bands, this group beat them all with an 11-piece band, complete with horn and string sections. Lead man Stuart Murdoch was in high spirits, bouncing around the stage while his band churned out bright, meticulously crafted pop. All the songs were light and catchy, with a high gloss production that gave them a kind of George Martin feel. Songs like “I’m A Cuckoo” were amazingly clean and precise in their sound, and the audience was all smiles and extraordinarily attentive. Indeed, in between songs, I had never heard a quieter, more well behaved audience in all my years. This allowed the band to give their music the delicacy it required, what with its lovely flute and string parts and three-part madrigal harmonies. Tunes like “Suki In The Graveyard” and “The Boy With The Arab Strap” were gleaming, radio-friendly nuggets that got people bouncing around before the epic, feel-good climax of “Sleep The Clock Around” sent us to the shuttle buses, closing out a big day of music.

4. The National :: 7:15-8:15 :: Bridge Stage

This band is Matt Berninger. Everything about the archetypal indie rock this band plays revolves around his aching, Morrissey-like baritone and the heartbreaking lyrics it delivers. In this eight-piece band, all instruments function to serve the song, first and foremost. Strings, horns, guitars and keyboard are all complimentary color to his deeply soulful voice. Most all of his songs are about relationships and getting older, and all are tinged with melancholy. The music is always achingly beautiful, and tunes like “Apartment Story” and “Conversation 16″ make you feel more than you might expect. This was a deep show, and every now and then Berninger would freak out, as he did in “Abel,” screaming, “My mind’s not right!” His performance contrasted drastically with his funny, witty stage banter – definitely the winner for best banter of the weekend. Berninger has great stagecraft, and knows how to be a leading man to great effect. Some other lead singers from the weekend could have taken a tip or two from him…

M. Ward by Josh Miller

5. She & Him :: 4:00-4:50 :: Bridge Stage

This collaboration between M. Ward and Zooey Deschanel was a fun afternoon romp into 60s era doo-wop pop. Their band had a jukebox feel to it, with M. Ward’s soul-fried guitar work leading the band. Though Deschanel has a great voice, it was a cold, windy day, and she seemed a bit unsure onstage, and her voice didn’t fill the open field very well as a result. This would clearly be a great band to see in a small venue, but their delicate sound didn’t translate very well to a gigantic, open-air stage. Regardless, songs like “Black Hole” were fun and lighthearted, with backup singers doo-wopping it up. My favorite song had to be “This Is Not A Test,” a sunny, strummy, acoustic feel-good number. Another highlight included M. Ward leading the band through a folkified version of “Roll Over Beethoven” to close out a fun set.

6. Papercuts :: 1:55-2:25 :: Tunnel Stage

A short 30-minute set started my day off right with an introduction to Papercuts’ etheral indie-pop. Based in SF, they are led by vocalist Jason Robert Quever, whose high-pitched, quavering tenor blends with the band’s lo-fi sounds. Their songs are punctuated with strange washes of organ sounds, and are catchy if a bit generic sounding. I would definitely give them another chance, as a half hour is not much time to prove one’s worth as a band.

Continue reading for Josh Miller’s photo gallery…

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”6″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=152″);}); 10/16/10 – 10/17/10 – Treasure Island Music Festival (San Francisco, CA) View Photos

JamBase | Surrounded By Water
Go See Live Music!


Alec Baldwin Supports Gay Marriage In New York [FightBackPac PSA]

No one puts Baldwin in the closet! Alec Baldwin, Emmy-winning star of NBC’s 30 Rock, has joined The FightBackPac Campaign to speak out in support of marriage equality in The Empire State after learning that Modern Family’s Jesse Tyler Ferguson is enamored with him.

Social Distortion: New Album & Tour Dates

HARD TIMES AND NURSERY RHYMES OUT JANUARY 18 2011


Social Distortion

Rock ‘n’ roll icons Social
Distortion
have officially announced the release of their long awaited, highly anticipated new studio
album, Hard Times and Nursery Rhymes, which is set for January 18. A follow-up to their
acclaimed album Sex, Love and Rock ‘n’ Roll, Hard Times and Nursery Rhymes is the band’s seventh
studio album and first release in over six years. Fans are invited to download the first single, “Machine Gun Blues,”
via iTunes on November 9.

Social Distortion are currently on tour across the US and are expected to announce more dates in the coming weeks.

Hard Times and Nursery Rhymes Track Listing:

01. Road Zombie
02. California (Hustle and Flow)
03. Gimme The Sweet And Lowdown
04. Diamond In The Rough
05. Machine Gun Blues
06. Bakersfield
07. Far Side Of Nowhere
08. Alone And Forsaken
09. Writing On The Wall
10. Cant Take it with You
11. Still Alive

Social Distortion Tour Dates:

Oct 19 – Minneapolis, MN – First Avenue (w/Lucero & Frank Turner)
Oct 20 – Chicago, IL – Riviera (w/Lucero & Frank Turner)
Oct 21 – Detroit, MI – The Fillmore (w/Lucero & Frank Turner)
Oct 23 – Toronto, ON – Kool Haus (w/Lucero & Frank Turner)
Oct 24 – Cleveland, OH – House of Blues (w/Lucero & Frank Turner)
Oct 26 – Washington, DC – 9:30 Club (w/Lucero & Frank Turner)

Oct 28 – Clifton Park, NY – Northern Lights (w/Lucero & Frank Turner)
Oct 29 – Philadelphia, PA – The Electric Factory (w/Lucero & Frank Turner)
Oct 30 – Atlantic City, NJ – House of Blues (w/Lucero & Frank Turner)
Nov 1 – Boston, MA – House of Blues (w/Lucero & Frank Turner)
Nov 2 – Portland, ME – State Theatre (w/Lucero & Frank Turner)
Nov 4 – New York, NY – Roseland Ballroom (w/Lucero & Frank Turner)
Nov 5 – Asbury Park, NJ – Stone Pony (w/Lucero & Frank Turner)

Nov 6 – Baltimore, MD – Rams Head Live! (w/Lucero & Frank Turner)
Nov 8 – Asheville, NC – The Orange Peel (w/Lucero & Frank Turner)
Nov 9 – Knoxville, TN – Valarium (w/Lucero & Frank Turner)
Nov 10 – Atlanta, GA – Tabernacle (w/Lucero & Frank Turner)
Nov 12 – St. Petersburg, FL – Jannus Live (w/Lucero & Frank Turner)
Nov 13 – Miami Beach, FL – Fillmore Miami Beach (w/Lucero & Frank Turner)
Nov 14 – Orlando, FL – House of Blues (w/Lucero & Frank Turner)
Nov 16 – New Orleans, LA – House of Blues (w/Lucero & Frank Turner)
Nov 18 – Austin, TX – Stubb’s Waller Creek Amphitheatre (w/Lucero & Frank Turner)
Nov 19 – Houston, TX – House of Blues (w/Lucero & Frank Turner)

Nov 20 – Dallas, TX – House of Blues (w/Lucero & Frank Turner)
Nov 22 – Tucson, AZ – Rialto Theatre (w/Lucero & Frank Turner)
Nov 23 – Tempe, AZ – Marquee Theatre (w/Lucero & Frank Turner)
Nov 24 – Tempe, AZ – Marquee Theatre (w/Lucero & TBA)

Socia Distortion
Tour Dates

::
Social Distortion News
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Social Distortion
Concert
Reviews


Widespread Panic | Oakland | Pics

Images by: Susan J Weiand

Widespread Panic :: 10.17.10 :: Fox Theater :: Oakland, CA

This past weekend Widespread Panic played a three-show run at Oakland’s fabulous Fox Theater. Fab shooter Susan J. Weiand was there for the final night.

Setlist
Set I: Thought Sausage > Travelin’ Light, Solid Rock > Pigeons, Casa Del Grillo, Space Wrangler, Disco, Proving Ground > Impossible > Proving Ground
Set II: True To My Nature, Better Off, Big Wooly Mammoth > Jam > Mercy > Use Me*, Down, Airplane > Papa’s Home > Drums > Papa’s Home, Give
E: Old Joe, The Shape I’m In, Mr. Soul

* with Wally Ingram on percussion

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Widespread Panic Tour Dates :: Widespread Panic News :: Widespread Panic Concert Reviews

JamBase | Girthy
Go See Live Music!


Jerry Lee Lewis Memoir

Rock ‘n Roll pioneer Jerry Lee Lewis — as famous for his fiery temper and personal exploits — as he is for his rock classic has entered a deal to pen his memoir in cooperation with It Books, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers. “I have spent my life listening to those who know so little [...]

Spiritual Rez: Tour Dates

THE NEXUS OUT NOW


Spiritual Rez

Spiritual Rez have
announced some more dates in support of their new album, The Nexus. This weekend, the band
will perform at the LEAF Fest in Black Mountain, NC before heading down to Alabama, Georgia, and Florida for a
string of dates. Details are below.

Click here to read the JamBase Questionnaire with
Spiritual Rez

October

14 Clemson, SC Club 356
15-16 Black Mountain, NC LEAF Fest

18 Birmingham, AL Zydeco

20 Huntsville, AL Humphrey’s

21 Atlanta, GA Smith’e Olde Bar w/ Zach Deputy
22 Auburn, AL Quixote’s

23 Tuscaloosa, AL Mellow Mushroom
25 Birmingham, AL Zydeco
28 Ft. Lauderdale, FL Halloween Festival @ Snyder Park
29-31 Key West, FL Green Parrot

November

3 Miami, FL Transit Lounge
4 Ft. Lauderdale, FL Dive Bar
5 Palm Beach, FL Nick & Johnnie’s

6 Orlando, FL Rock For Hunger Festival @ Plaza Theatre (day)

6 New Smyrna Beach, FL Beachside Tavern (night)
7 Sebastian, FL Hiram’s
10 Augusta, GA Surrey Tavern

11 Black Mountain, NC Pisgah Brewing Company

13 Live Oak, FL Bear Creek Music Festival
14 Orlando, FL Plaza Theatre w/ John Brown’s Body

17 Charleston, SC Charleston Pourhouse
18 Asheville, NC Mo Daddy’s
20 Boone, NC Boone Saloon

Spiritual Rez
Tour Dates

::
Spiritual Rez News
::
Spiritual Rez
Concert
Reviews


Rihanna “Only Girl (In The World)” VIDEO Premiere

It’s here! A highly-anticipated video from pop princess Rihanna surfaced on the Interwebs on Wednesday! The video premiere for “Only Girl (In The World)” has made its debut just weeks after Rihanna unveiled the smash hit single that will lead the release of the singer’s forthcoming fifth studio album, Loud, premiering in November. Rock It [...]

E! “Married To Rock” Series Premiere Nov. 7

E! has greenlit the premiere of the newest addition to its reality fray, Married to Rock, a documentary drama that will tackle the exploits of a group of rock star wives and girlfriends, the network announced Wednesday. Now that the long-suffering wives of the NBA — and the groupies they loathe — have infilitrated the [...]

Real Housewives of…Rockstars?

E! Network has partnered with Bunim-Murray (Keeping Up With The Kardashians, Real World) to produce a show about the wives of Hollywood’s rockers, called “Married to Rock.”
The cast features Susan Holmes McKagan, married to former Guns N’ Roses bassist Duff McKagan, who joined and left Jane’s Addiction this year; Etty Farrell, whose husband is Jane’s [...]

Heaven & Hell: Neon Nights Live CD/DVD

FINAL RECORDED PERFORMANCE WITH RONNIE JAMES DIO


Heaven and Hell: Neon Nights

On November 16, Eagle Rock will unveil Heaven & Hell: Neon Nights. This DVD and CD release
captures the historic four-man army performing at the Wacken Open Air Festival on July 30, 2009. [MSRP $14.98 for
DVD, $13.98 for CD, Pre-book Order Date: October 22]

On this hot summer night, vocalist Ronnie James Dio, guitarist Tony Iommi, bassist Geezer
Butler
, and drummer Vinny Appice commanded the stage, transcending the mere concept of a heavy
metal concert. The strength and veracity of Dio’s delivery, which has inspired three generations of metal vocalists,
wrapped itself around each and every audience member. Butler’s declarative bass lines, Iommi’s legendary riffing,
and Appice’s unrelenting fills provide the forceful heartbeat behind anthems “Mob Rules,” “Die Young,” “Neon
Knights,” and namesake tune “Heaven and Hell.”

The DVD also boasts 30th anniversary interviews with all four band members as a bonus feature. Personal one-on-
one’s are conducted with Ronnie, Tony, Geezer, and Vinny as they reflect on the making of their Heaven And Hell
album. Additionally, the Neon Nights DVD has newly recorded personal tributes from Iommi, Appice, and Butler in
memory of Dio.

DVD:
1.) E5150
2.) The Mob Rules
3.) Children of the Sea
4.) I
5.) Bible Black

6.) Time Machine
7.) Fear
8.) Falling Off The Edge of the World
9.) Follow The Tears
10.) Die Young
11.) Heaven and Hell
12.) Encore: Country Girl
13.) Neon Knights

CD:
1.) The Mob Rules
2.) Children of the Sea

3.) I
4.) Bible Black
5.) Time Machine

6.) Fear

7.) Falling Off the Edge of the World
8.) Follow The Tears

9.) Die Young
10.) Heaven and Hell
11.) Neon Knights


JamBase Questionnaire: Rubblebucket

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

New EP

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

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

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

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

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

Rubblebucket – Alex in the bag, Kalmia Traver ensnared

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

JamBase | New Born
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Plastic Ono Band w/ Lady Gaga | L.A. | Review

Words & Images by: L. Paul Mann

Plastic Ono Band :: 10.02.10 :: Orpheum Theatre :: Los Angeles, CA

Yoko Ono & Lady Gaga by L. Paul Mann

The Plastic Ono Band, formed in 1971 by John Lennon and Yoko Ono, was one of the first rock super-groups, claiming a Rock and Roll Hall of Fame revolving lineup that included Eric Clapton, George Harrison, Ringo Starr, Keith Moon, Alan White (Yes), keyboardists Billy Preston and Nicky Hopkins and more. In 2009, Yoko revived the group and released Between My Head and the Sky to overwhelming positive reviews. When recently interviewed about the origin of the band’s name, Yoko recounted, “As I was asked to do a show in Berlin before John and I got together, I wanted to use four plastic stands with tape recorders in each one of them as my band. I told that story to John and he immediately coined the phrase Plastic Ono Band ” (as quoted from her Twitter page).

The new version of the band features Yoko, her son Sean Lennon, Cornelius and Yuka Honda (Cibo Matto) as the core, with a multitude of guest performers joining in. On October 1st and 2nd, the Plastic Ono Band played a rare pair of sold out performances at Los Angeles gem the Orpheum Theatre. The ornate, old opera house was the perfect backdrop for the 77-year-old performance art veteran to create her pop art vision, honoring her late husband’s 70th birthday. The entire fashion district that surrounds the Orpheum is Orwellian portion of old downtown Los Angeles. Facades of scores of ornate old theaters lay abandoned or repurposed as cheap tourist trinket storefronts. Towering above this scene are some of the most beautiful architectural wonders in the entire United States. Tall skyscrapers like the old Eastern Building are artistic marvels adorned with bronze and gilded ornaments and intricate stone carvings. Some have been converted to condos for adventurous young souls wanting to live in the bowels of the city, while others lay boarded up and abandoned like an eerie science fiction movie. Homeless locals with their shopping carts piled high walk shoulder to shoulder with Fashion District business patrons in Armani suits.

Plastic Ono Band ’10 by L. Paul Mann

Inside the Orpheum, a curious audience gathered early to crowd the venue’s numerous bars. As the lights went down, a short biographical film began, though many lackadaisical patrons seemed more interested in pursuing a conversation and drink in the lobby. But for some in the audience, the film was just the first of many emotional moments throughout an evening performance that brought many to the verge of tears. As the film ended, Yoko appeared from behind the curtains dressed in black with a big, red military style hat. She sang a song with her trademark guttural wail, but a surprisingly strong and pleasant singing voice emerged between the solemn wails. Then an explosion of sound awakened the sleepy crowd and the curtains parted to reveal the new Plastic Ono Band. Led by Sean, who switched off between bass and lead guitar, the group broke immediately into a post-punk wall of rock. The hard driving band went on to swerve into diverse territory like experimental jazz and electronica, but for the most part laid down a hard driving beat any rock singer would be happy to have backing them. A surprisingly limber Yoko pranced about the stage and belted out impressive harmonies. In fact, her hour-long opening set was probably the most mainstream and least avant-garde part of the evening’s repertoire.

After a short break an even more inebriated and obnoxious audience began to trickle back to their seats. Cat calling from the crowd began almost immediately as the first act in the guest portion of the show began. Actor Joseph Gordon-Levitt began with a strange Broadway-musical-like adaptation of “Yes, I’m Your Angel” from the 1980 Lennon-Ono album Double Fantasy. The song came complete with campy dancing and a pair of showgirl angels. Next came what may have been the most musically interesting moment of the night, The neo-pop folk sensation Merril Garbus, better known as Tune-Yards, reworked Lennon’s masterpiece “We’re All Water.” The Oakland-based singer creates her own unique sound, which sometimes emulates Yoko’s early works. Throughout the rest of the evening Yoko would wander in and out of each set, introducing her friends and adding vocals into the mix here and there. Her good friend actress Carrie Fisher was the next performer, sounding and looking like a blues diva. As the feisty crowd continued to cat call, one patron from the balcony yelled, “Princess Leilah”. “It’s Leia,” a surly Fisher quipped before launching into a blues drenched rendition of Yoko’s poignant “What a Bastard The World Is.”

Then the evening, in typical Yoko fashion, turned truly experimental. First, she told a story of how she came to write the song “Mulberry.” As a child, just after World War II in Japan, her family was starving and she would go out and pick mulberries so they would have something to eat. Her song is about the beautiful landscape contrasting with her fear of hunger. The explanation somehow seemed to reinforce her lifelong plea in “The War Is Over.” Flanked by Sonic Youth‘s Thurston Moore and Kim Gordon, she launched into the song and soon began moaning in her characteristic anguished way. Moore and Gordon launched into an ear-piercing explosion of feedback from their stringed instruments. The crescendo of abstract noise seemed to be a bit much for many in the stodgy crowd and people fidgeted in their seats. The audience finally began to respond and participate for the next act. As the curtains closed, Sean and New York friend Harper Simon (son of Paul Simon) emerged out front to play an upbeat acoustic version of “Oh Yoko!” that finally got the audience to sing.

Plastic Ono Band ’10 by L. Paul Mann

The next act was truly a performance art piece, as the curtains opened to reveal Yoko and rapper RZA playing chess. The game went on amidst several minutes of awkward silence, while bewildered fans continued to heckle. Then Yoko rose from the table and began singing “See The Joy.” The Wu-Tang Clan leader added an intense rap over the frantic rock rhythm laid down by the Plastic Ono Band. As the song grew ever more tumultuous, Yoko again devolved into her trademark moan. Then after a short pause, another strange and awkward moment occurred as actor Vincent Gallo, wearing white lace fringed pants, emerged and knelt down on the stage. Someone shouted, “Fuck you, Vincent Gallo,” while another retorted, “We love you, Vincent Gallo.” He twisted a few knobs on a synthesizer and began to sing into a microphone, all whilst staring down at the floor. He did a quick rendition of “I’m Going Away Smiling” and quickly left the stage without acknowledging the audience.

The energy level then took a 360-degree turn as the band came back out fronted by Mercurial lead singer Perry Farrell. As he turned knobs on a customized PA system, he began to sing in his trademark high-pitched voice. In the back row, legendary American punk bass player Mike Watt joined in on a ferocious rendition of “Waiting for The D Train.” Watt, barely able to walk with a knee brace over an obvious leg injury, somehow managed to flail and swing his bass like a fanatical teenager at Warped Tour. Yoko emerged to do a duet wail with Farrell as the band pummeled us with one of the most ferocious backbeats of the night.

Yoko Ono & Lady Gaga by L. Paul Mann

Finally, after a short pause, the crowd began to rise to their feet in anticipation of the biggest special guest of the evening. One woman, looking and sounding a bit like a bulldog, was jealously guarding the area around her seat as a hoard of fans rushed forward armed with cell phone cameras. In an exercise of moronic futility, security guards tried in vane to enforce a no photo policy but that genie left the bottle several years ago. Then the curtains parted and a larger than life Lady Gaga stood in the center of the stage in 8-inch high heels and a silver body suit that was virtually see-through in the back end. Arguably the most successful pop star in the world currently, Gaga brought an instant credibility to the evenings festivities and was the sole reason many in the audience were there. She began with a bluesy duet with Yoko on “The Sun Is Down.” Then she moved to piano to perform an even bluesier “It’s Been Very Hard.” In an impromptu moment, Yoko climbed up on the piano and began to sing in a catlike pose. Then Gaga began playing the keyboard with her huge heels, and finally climbed on the top of the piano with Yoko and rolled around in an ecstatic duet. Cell phone cameras exploded to life to capture the historic moment.

Finally, all of the evening’s performers emerged for a sing-along of “Give Peace A Chance,” with key members rewriting an extra verse. Gaga used her line to promote the rights of gays in the military, while RZA used his, to her dismay, to extol the virtues of her exposed derriere. The night finished with Lady Gaga praising Yoko’s legacy as a true avant-garde artist and leading feminist of her time. On her Twitter page, Gaga commented, “WE ARE PLASTIC ONO. I got to sit in as a guest musician tonight, what a legendary band +mother Yoko.”

For her part, Yoko wrote on her site: “The night was hot! The whole audience gave a standing ovation to Lady Gaga from the minute she appeared onstage to when her turn was over. You can say that two of us come from one clay.” Indeed, the nearly three-hour concert highlighted more than four decades of conceptual art encompassing music, film and performance art. Sadly, few in the audience seemed to realize the historical significance of the show they were fortunate enough to witness.

JamBase | Momentous
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Ozzy Announces Second Round Of North American Dates

NORTH AMERICAN TOUR STARTS NOVEMBER 12;
SECOND LEG KICKS OFF JANUARY
16


Ozzy

Ozzy Osbourne, who will
kick off his fall North American arena tour November 12 in Victoria, B.C, has now announced a second leg of U.S.
dates which will get underway January 16, 2011 in Omaha, NE. The six-week 2011 trek, part of the multi-
platinum
Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductee’s in-progress 18-month world tour, will include a pair of intimate shows: January
26 at the Dodge Theater in Phoenix and Feb 1 at the Gibson Amphitheatre in Los Angeles.

Ozzy’s longtime
friend
and musical collaborator Slash will
open all the concerts on the second leg. Tickets for the Live Nation-produced tour go on sale beginning Friday,
October 15. For the most up-to-date on sale information, please visit Ozzy.com or LiveNation.com.

2010 DATES:

Sat Oct 30 Voodoo Experience (City Park) New Orleans, LA

Fri Nov 12 Save On Foods Memorial Centre Victoria, BC

Sun Nov 14 Rogers Arena Vancouver, BC

Tue Nov 16 Pengrowth Saddledome Calgary, AB

Thu Nov 18 Rexall Place Edmonton, MB

Sat Nov 20 MTS Centre Winnipeg, MB

Tue Nov 23 Bell Centre Montreal, QC

Thu Nov 25 Scotiabank Place Ottawa, ON

Sat Nov 27 Air Canada Centre Toronto, ON

Mon Nov 29 1st Mariner Arena Baltimore, MD

Wed Dec 01 Madison Square Garden Arena New York, NY

Fri Dec 03 Izod Center E Rutherford, NJ

Sun Dec 05 Quicken Loans Arena Cleveland, OH

Tue Dec 7 Van Andel Arena Grand Rapids, MI

Sun Dec 12 Target Center Minneapolis, MN

2011 DATES:

Sun Jan 16 Qwest Center Omaha, NE

Tue Jan 18 Toyota Center Houston, TX

Thu Jan 20 American Airlines Center Dallas, TX

Sat Jan 22 Sprint Center Kansas City, MO

Mon Jan 24 AT&T Center San Antonio, TX

Wed Jan 26 Comerica Theatre Phoenix, AZ

Fri Jan 28 Mandalay Bay Resort Las Vegas, NV

Tue Feb 01 Gibson Amphitheatre Los Angeles, CA

Thu Feb 03 HP Pavilion San Jose, CA

Sat Feb 05 Tacoma Dome Tacoma, WA

Tue Feb 08 Pepsi Center Denver, CO

Thu Feb 10 BOK Center Tulsa, OK

Sat Feb 12 The Palace of Auburn Hills Detroit, MI

Sun Feb 14 i wireless Center Moline, IL

Tue Feb 16 Bridgestone Arena Nashville, TN

Fri Feb 18 St Pete Times Forum Tampa, FL

Sun Feb 20 BankAtlantic Center Fort Lauderdale, FL

Tue Feb 22 Jacksonville Veterans Mem. Arena Jacksonville, FL

Ozzy Osbourne
Tour Dates

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Ozzy Osbourne News
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New Chelsea Handler Show “After Lately” E!-Bound

The E! Network has ordered another series starring writer/comedienne Chelsea Handler, The Hollywood Reporter said Tuesday. The entertainment network has greenlit eight episodes of After Lately, a half-hour comedy that will follow the improvised backstage hilarity on the set of Handler’s flagship E! series, Chelsea Lately, industry insiders in-the-know tell The Reporter. The show will [...]

Solomon Burke Dead at 70

GRAMMY AWARD WINNING SOUL SINGER DIES OF NATURAL CAUSES


Solomon Burke

Soul legend Solomon Burke
passed away on Sunday, October 10 at Schipol Airport in Amsterdam. He was
70 years old.

Burke was best known for classic hits like “Everybody Needs Somebody to Love” and “Cry to Me”. His songs has
been covered by The Rolling Stones, Bruce Springsteen, Wilson Pickett and Otis Redding, among others. Inducted
into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2001, his final album, Hold On Tight, is due out later this month.

From TheKingSolomonBurke.Com

“Early this morning, Sunday, October 10, 2010, the legendary King of Rock & Soul, Solomon Burke, our father,
passed away due to natural causes.

Solomon had just arrived at Schiphol Airport in Amsterdam, the Netherlands for a sold out show at Paradiso with
Dutch band, De Dijk. He was on his way to spread his message of love as he loved to do.

This is a time of great sorrow for our entire family. We truly appreciate all of the support and well wishes from his
friends and fans. Although our hearts and lives will never be the same, his love, life and music will continue to live
within us forever. As our family grieves during this time of mourning, thank you for respecting our privacy.

Family of Solomon Burke”