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Voodoo Experience Preview

By: Wesley Hodges

Voodoo Experience :: 10.29.10-10.31.10 :: City Park :: New Orleans, LA

Check out the 2009 JamBase review of Voodoo here.

The calendar is aligned in rare form in 2010, giving weekend warriors five full weekends to fully enjoy the month of October, and with Voodoo fast approaching, there’s a supernatural mystic blowing through the air this week in the Big Easy. The Voodoo Experience, in its 12th year as JazzFest’s darker, funkier stepchild, will close down the month in grand fashion on Halloween night with MGMT, Deadmau5 and My Morning Jacket lighting up the City Park skies and leading a lively rousing of the spirits in New Orleans. With round-the-clock music on-site and around the city (Voodoo After Dark and Tipitina’s Uptown), there will be plenty of opportunities for fans to get their fill, starting with Friday’s dizzying array of artists slated to kick things off on the generally less crowded opening day.

As always, this year’s event offers an abundance of local fare (artists, performers and vendors dot the festival grounds) to compliment the Voodoo Eats area emanating olfactory goodness of a largely Cajun variety. Electronic fans will surely enjoy the spate of DJ’s (Paul Oakenfold, Deadmau5, Ferry Corsten and more) and bands with electronic leanings dotting the impressive lineup. Of course you’re not going to want to miss MGMT on Halloween, Ozzy or Muse headlining Night One, but we’re here to give you a heads-up on some of the lesser-known acts playing earlier in the day and a closer look at My Morning Jacket’s festival-headlining Halloween performance.

Friday, October 29

1. Stanton Moore Trio w/ Anders Osborne and Robert Walter :: Preservation Hall Tent :: 2:15-3:30 p.m.
The first of several super jams for the weekend. This set features a Swedish ex-pat swamp rocker (Osborne), a respected jazz/funk vet (Stanton Moore), and a Greyboy All-Star (Robert Walter). The diverse array of influences driving these three unique artists should make for a great show and a righteous kick-start to the weekend. It should also be noted that the same trio of Moore, Osborne and Walter made up the lineup for Anders Osborne’s impressive 2010 record American Patchwork. Stanton the scene staple, Walter the stalwart, and Osborne the rising star makes for an impressive promo poster and should be one helluva show.

2. Dead Confederate :: Voodoo Stage :: 4:30-5:30 p.m.
The dark, heavy, grunge-adelic sounds of this new-ish Georgia band should sound outstanding coming out of the main stage speakers. It will be exciting to see the band for the first time in a large festival setting. Known for their loud, ruthlessly intense live shows, this should be one of the strongest rock sets of the weekend. Dead Confederate, who are winding down a big year in support of their outstanding second album Sugar, signed on late for this one, and we’re mighty glad they did.

3. Jonsi :: Sony Make. Believe Stage :: 5:30-6:30 p.m.
The soothing and recognizable voice of Sigur Ros frontman Jonsi will prove tonic for those who make the quick turnaround after taking in the Dead Confederate set (the Voodoo Stage and Sony Stage are close to each other, set up on opposite sides of the track oval). Despite Jonsi’s main band being on hiatus this year, the Icelander has been touring fairly heavily in support of his surprisingly perky, long overdue Go album. This is potentially one of the more intriguing sets of the weekend.

ALSO: On the eve of the festival Soul Rebels Brass Band will be appearing at Le Bon Temps Roule. And Widespread Panic will be kicking off a three-night run at the UNO Lakefront Arena with Dumpstaphunk opening.

Late Night Recommendation: Galactic pulls double duty (and triple duty for drummer Stanton Moore). The locals will be playing for a half-hour before Muse takes the stage for their headlining set and then performing a late night show at Tipitina’s Uptown. The show will be recorded and released as a live record as a follow-up to 2001′s We Love ‘Em Tonight.

Continue reading for Saturday recommendations…

Saturday, October 30

1. Florence and the Machine :: Sony Make. Believe :: 6:00-7:00 p.m.
One of the few bright spots from this year’s MTV Video Music Awards, the young British rock ‘n’ soul sensation has really made a name for herself this year. Hopefully the set will include a cover of Fleetwood Mac’s “The Chain” like earlier this year at the Glastonbury Festival.


2. Street Sweeper Social Club :: Sony Make. Believe Stage :: 8:00-9:00 p.m.
A rare performance by the rap-rock supergroup featuring Tom Morello and Boots Riley. No need to elaborate further to anyone with decent taste in music.


3. Theresa Andersson :: Preservation Hall :: 5:45-7:00 p.m.
A great chance to see an intimate performance by the uber-talented multi-instrumentalist artista. For those looking to beat the larger crowd over at the main stage(s), this will undoubtedly be a dazzling, virtuosic performance in a much smaller setting. Andersson, known for her looping one-woman show a la Keller Williams, moved to New Orleans from Sweden (along with Anders Osborne) as a teenager and has been making her mark as one of the city’s essential solo artists ever since. Also, around these parts, you never know when someone special may drop by for a sit-in.


ALSO: To satiate pure curiosity and intrigue, consider checking out South African rave-rappers Die Antwoord (6:15-7:15 p.m., Le Plur), a bizarre viral act that exploded earlier this year from a non-existent scene – South African Zef(?) – in large part due to the blogosphere. For your daily brass band fix, local favorites Rebirth Brass Band will be playing a midday set from 3:30-4:30 p.m. at the SoCo/WWOZ tent. The healthier, fitter festivarians may want to consider participating in the Jazz Half Marathon on Saturday morning in support of the Children’s Hospital before heading to City Park, although we’re guessing that if you aren’t already planning on running it’s probably too late.

Late Night Recommendation: Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue late night at Tipitina’s Uptown.

Continue reading for Sunday recommendations…

Sunday, October 31. Halloween

1. My Morning Jacket :: Voodoo Stage :: 7:00-9:00 p.m.
Fresh off the weeklong, career-spanning retrospect at New York City’s Terminal 5, MMJ arrives in New Orleans (a city Yim Yames seems to be especially fascinated by in recent times) having played every single song from all five of the band’s albums proper, along with a rediscovery of a host of deep covers, b-sides and the like. What does that mean for fans at Voodoo? The chance to possibly see long-shelved, Halloween-leaning originals like “The Dark,” “I Think I’m Going to Hell,” the epic destroyer “Strangulation” and hopefully a few festive covers. Generally speaking, My Morning Jacket’s “specialty shows” have been the stuff of legend, from New Year’s Eve 2006 (one of JamBase’s Top 10 Moments of the 2000s) to the late nights at Bonnaroo in ’06 & ’08 to Prom Night at the 40 Watt in Athens, GA, these types of shows have all been career-defining performances. After five nights in New York and a homecoming show in Louisville on Friday night (first time in 2-plus years), this Voodoo performance, even with only two hours to play, is likely to be one folks will be talking about for years to come.

2. Janelle Monae :: Sony Make. Believe :: 1:15-2:15 p.m.
Yim Yames may not be the most animated, talented front-person performing at Voodoo on Halloween Sunday. After Monae’s electric midday performance summoned a thunderstorm in 2009, the festival has invited her back to City Park once again to share her talents. With the gusto of Tina Turner, the celestial weirdness of George Clinton and the experimental vision of her friends and collaborators Outkast, Monae has been turning heads nationwide on a tour in supporting of Montreal (with whom she has been sitting in on a handful of Michael Jackson covers). This is arguably the can’t-miss early afternoon set of the weekend. Monae’s song “Many Moons” has my vote for Voodoo’s unofficial anthem.


3. The Zydepunks :: Bingo! Tent :: 2:45-3:45 p.m.
With an extra hour on Saturday night to catch a little rest as the clocks “fall back,” there’s no excuse to not be energized, fully costumed and ready to go for “New Orleans’ Favorite Irish Cajun Jewish Punk Band” down at the Bingo! Tent. With a Dropkick Murphys level of raw energy and an assortment of influences on par with Gogol Bordello, some folks may leave this one with ears ringing but that 2:30 feeling will be a distant memory.

ALSO: The costume-watching on the vendors’ road is worth the price of admission on Sunday. Preservation Hall Jazz Band will be playing in their “home tent” set (at least for Voodoo) at 3:30 pm and Local WWOZ DJ Soul Sister and her Booty Patrol will be spinning J5-era funk at 8:30 pm in the Preservation Hall Tent. The New Orleans Saints will be playing the Pittsburgh Steelers at the Superdome for Sunday Night Football, and therefore the collision of the post-Saints game spill-out and the annual Halloween freak show down on Frenchman will be a sight for weary eyes after the festival spills out at 9:00 p.m.

If you have any more suggestions for Halloween weekend in New Orleans, feel free to share them in our comments section. Enjoy the weekend!

JamBase | Louisiana
Go See Live Music!


Joe Wright’s wedding with Anoushka Shankar leaves his ex devastated

Indian musician Anoushka Shankar’s wedding with Hollywood movie director Joe Wright has left the director’s ex Rosamund Pike devastated. Rosamund, whose wedding to Wright was called off at the last minute, is said to be shocked with the news that Wright has secretly married – and is expecting a child with his new wife. Wright, [...]

Oslo’s Øya Festival: M.I.A. Pavement, Stooges, The xx, LCD

OSLO’S ØYA FESTIVAL 2010 LINEUP TO INCLUDE M.I.A., PAVEMENT, IGGY & THE STOOGES

THE XX, LCD SOUNDSYSTEM, AIR, RAEKWON, ROBYN & MORE!

M.I.A.

Øya Festival
August 10-14, 2010
Middelalderparkern, Oslo
http://www.oyafestivalen.com
Phone: +47 815 33 133
For ticket sales visit: www.billettservice.no

Headliners include: M.I.A.,
Pavement, Iggy and The Stooges, The xx, LCD Soundsystem, Air, Raekwon, Robyn, and more

More Performers: Miike
Snow
, Major
Lazer
, Big Boi,
Panda Bear, Q-Tip, Sleigh Bells, Surfer Blood, La Roux, Marina and The Diamonds,
Against Me!, Baroness, Converge, Cymbals Eat Guitars, Fool’s Gold, Serena Maneesh, Fucked Up, The Gaslight Anthem, Girls,
LindstrØm & Christabelle, Local Natives, Jonsi (of Sigur
Ros
), tUnE-YarDs,
Casiokids, Tony Allen, Paul Weller, Trash Talk and more TBA

Plus Norwegian acts: Altaar, Motorpsycho, The Cumshots, CCTV, Lidolido, Navigators, John Olav Nilsen, Og
Gjengen, Obliteration, Djerv, Susanne Sundfør, Purified in Blood, The Megaphonic Thrift, Blood Command,
Kråkesølv, Pow Pow, Lucy Swann
, and Mhoo.

The latest wave of announcements for Øya Festival 2010 suggest this year’s lineup is going to be the most arresting and eclectic yet.

Full lineup and event details at www.oyafestivalen.com
5 DAY FESTIVAL PASS: 1940, – NOK + TAX. SINGLE DAY TICKETS ALSO AVAILABLE


The Glitch Mob Announce Tour & Debut Album Release the Sea

THE GLITCH MOB ANNOUNCE NATIONWIDE TOUR AND DEBUT ALBUM RELEASE DRINK THE
SEA

The Glitch Mob

Selling out major venues from coast to coast simply by word of mouth, The Glitch Mob has become a
festival favorite, rocking crowds from Lollapalooza to Red Rocks to upcoming key slots at Coachella and Ultra with
their visceral, innovative performances. “Pairing the richness and headiness of the best dance music with the head-nodding backbeats of hip-hop, they only aim to move you, and they by and large succeed,” raved the Los Angeles
Times
. And this spring, the L.A.-based trio embarks on their first full nationwide tour in support of The Glitch
Mob’s debut album release Drink The Sea, due May 25 on the band’s own Glass Air label.

Drink The Sea represents The Glitch Mob’s transformation up from the underground into a more widescreen vision: from the
cryptic cover art (courtesy Sonny Kay, famed for his work with Mars Volta) to the kaleidoscopic dimension of the
music inside, Drink The Sea evokes a voyage into the unexpected—including sonic waters previously
unexplored by the band itself.

Indeed, Drink The Sea is closer to an atmospheric soundscape journey like Dark Side Of The Moon — if only
that Pink Floyd classic was as furiously rhythmic. While Drink The Sea attains power and heaviness, it does
so on its own idiosyncratic terms, proving as much or more of a headphone masterpiece than straight dancefloor
burner. Throughout the album, Boreta, Ma, and Mayer artfully craft new, futuristic sounds that take influence from
numerous genres, but land in none. For one, there are the Kodo-like drums, skittering percussion, and disembodied
voices evoking Fever Ray and Sigur Ros that haunt songs like “Dream Within A Dream” and “Bad Wings.” Elsewhere, songs like “We Swarm” funk into the unknown with string bass runs, live snares and undulating sunrise synths before
unleashing an all-out rhythmic attack. The album’s sole full vocal track, meanwhile features the singer Swan, who
recently appeared on Eskmo and Eprom’s recently released split single on Warp; however, in keeping with Drink
The Sea
‘s vanguard spirit, The Glitch Mob aggressively manipulates Swan’s dreamlike tones to become another
instrument, another texture in the album’s constantly shifting, prismatic palette.

XLR8R says this about their first single ‘Drive It Like You Stole It’ “If this track is anything, it’s an anthem. Amidst a trademark head-nodding beat heavy slap, a number of synths vie for the forefront position – like a team of buglers
announcing the coming of the beat scene’s heroes-before giving way to an arsenal of heavy percussion.”

Click here to download “Drive It Like You Stole It.”

Drink The Sea, meanwhile, remains a key piece of the puzzle, but not the only one: the group’s live show is
where The Glitch Mob experience truly comes together. “A super-group live show that would make Daft Punk
proud. (They can count Bjork as a fan, who was spotted at one of their recent shows at The Roxy in Los Angeles),” 944 Magazine noted. One of the hardest-touring bands working today in electronic music, The Glitch Mob has
drawn sell out crowds whether on headlining jaunts in key U.S. cities or high-profile support slots for the likes of
The Prodigy and Pendulum (with whom they recently
completed an extensive U.K. tour). On the upcoming nationwide tour, The Glitch Mob will be fusing the new
material with extensive, never-before-experienced musical and visual production that pushes technology, sound
and performance to new levels. “We’ve always wanted our live show to be as interactive and intense as possible — more of a band experience than dudes just hiding behind their laptops,” Boreta says. “Either on stage or on record,
what we do has to be totally immersive, and this new show really is. If you can’t lose yourself in every aspect of it,
it’s not The Glitch Mob.”

Glitch Mob Tour Dates :: Glitch Mob
News
:: Glitch Mob Concert
Reviews


Albums of the Week: January 22-28

JamBase Albums of the Week | January 22-January 28, 2010

Dennis’ Pick of the Week
The Society of Rockets: Future Factory (Underpop)

The future has of late not been so bright we need shades. Enter this under-known S.F. marvel to paint the sky with ROYGBIV colors as rhumba beats tickle our heels. An inscription on their site observes, “We’ve been thinking a lot about how buildings should be less like caves and more like treesÂ…about how the future looked brighter in the pastÂ…Here’s to new beginnings!” Sweet but not syrupy, Future Factory ladles Summer of Love vibes – bright strokes and beatific harmonies – over a thick, cerebral stew – a dish both homey in its immediate satisfaction yet modernly dense. There’s the tomorrow clang of H.G. Wells and the rocket ship ’50s wedded to batucada shimmy and a sonic inquisitiveness that’s positively intoxicating. A 21-track opus (available for download now and in March on double vinyl) is a ballsy move by any band, but Future Factory holds up under repeated spins, and in fact grows by leaps and bounds as one picks up on the connective tissue and observant, restorative lyrics. While it may not jump out as an immediate modern classic like their previous release, Our Paths Related (JamBase review), this song cycle full of breakneck changes, head snap inducing guitars, fabulously swoon-y vocals, and hip shaking rhythms continues the evolution of a truly terrific band hell-bent on making some of the most interesting, satisfying rock today. They have succeeded with flying colors once again. (Dennis Cook)

Ron’s Pick of the Week
Four Tet: There Is Love In You (Domino)

“I think a lot of Four Tets (sic) awesomeness roots in the contrast of slick/clean and random/dirty,” recently gushed someone in the comments sections of the recent “official leak” of Four Tet’s long-awaited new full-length on the Soundcloud website (the official release date is January 26). Given the complexity by which Kieran Hebden crafts his grooves, I was at first a little put off by reading this statement. How could someone deduce the agenda of this otherwise multifaceted artist to such black and white terms? But after giving some thought to this tidbit of wisdom left in the wake of the near 30,000 plays There Is Love In You has streamed on Soundcloud (posted by Hebden himself) over the course of this past week, especially when thinking in the context of the totality of the Four Tet catalog, it soon becomes clear that this kid’s clean/dirty theory to his music is actually spot-on. And whether or not you will consider There Is Love In You, the former Fridge guitarist’s fifth full-length under his longtime solo guise, to be a misstep or a masterpiece will likely depend on how you take your Tet. For those who like the chaotic cacophony of his recent work, particularly his brain-rattling collaborative LPs with legendary jazz drummer Steve Reid, as well as his last proper full-length, 2005′s Everything Ecstatic, the strong club vibe this new album gives off with its unapologetic use of cooing female voices and dubstep-inspired rhythmic hops might certainly be met with cries of “sell-out” from the experimental end of the Four Tet fanbase. However, for those who give this remarkable work a deeper and more educated listen – preferably with headphones or within the confines of a soundproof automobile at high volume – and take in all of the intricacies interwoven within these songs’ more dance-ready tendencies – the subtle use of Hebden’s beloved ring modulator, atmospheric Slint-like guitar passages, throwback illbient vibes, elements of such exotic instruments as harp and kora – and you will appreciate There Is Love In You as Hebden’s finest and yes, cleanest album since Rounds and most straightforward release since Pause. Amazing, amazing stuff right here. (Ron Hart)

Beach House: Teen Dream (Sub Pop)

Already shaping up to be this year’s Grizzly Bear-esque anointed joint, Beach House’s third long-player (arriving January 26) is decidedly more direct than Veckatimest, though there’s a shared harmonic reach and woozy beauty that’s pretty bloody charming. The duo of Victoria Legrand (niece of legendary composer Michel Legrand) and Alex Scally ooze ’60s melancholy pop vibes, though their candy colored lens is suitably cracked and teeth pocked for modern times. This spins along like a light bedecked carousel filled with the smitten and those smited by amour – a romantic haze that’s thick but not treacle-y and a fine update of what Dusty Springfield, Lesley Gore and Lee Hazelwood once wrought. (DC)

Emancipator: Safe In The Steep Cliffs (self-released)

Fresh out of Portland, Emancipator’s sophomore effort (released January 19) offers a revitalizing glimpse into auditory canvas of one the electronic scene’s budding new gems. Effortlessly meshing subtle melodies with delicious doses of downtempo and seductively silky songwriting, Emancipator builds around a beat to form a heavily layered, well-produced collection of 14 tracks. From opener “Greenland” and its sultry strings to the laid-back, dubby hand-clap “Kamakura” to the worldly melange of textures and samples of the album-closing title cut, he has a way of transforming live instrumentation into a multihued portrait that looks towards the likes of Bonobo, Bluetech and Sigur Ros, performed with its own potion of delicate intricacy. (Chris Clark)

Kevin Barker: You and Me (Gnomonsong)

As one man John Fahey tribute band Currituck County, Kevin Barker was an instrumental staple of the East Coast “freak folk” movement. But on his first album under his own name (released January 19), the go-to guitarist for such acts as Vetiver, Espers, Antony and the Johnsons and Devendra Banhart showcases his talents as a songwriter with this lovely collection of rural country rock gems crafted with the help of such pals as Wilco’s Pat Sansone, Shins sideman Eric Johnson and Drag City chanteuse Joanna Newsom among others. (RH)

Overmountain Men: Glorious Day (Ramseur)

Rebel pluck, flamenco echoes and “Curtis Lowe” Skynyrd-isms – Overmountain has it all. From the “Death To Tyrants” and May 20, 1775 inscriptions and band photos that paint them as musical soldiers, this project – which includes unsung Avett Brothers bassist Bob Crawford – is actually more wide-angled and swinging than these signposts suggest. Underground mainstay David Childers‘ perfectly Haggard voice provides grit and a classic country feel (with a broader world view), and this debut (arriving January 26) exudes the boisterous bonhomie of its creation. Joe Strummer would’ve loved this. (DC)

The Silent League: Â…But You’ve Always Been The Caretaker (Something in Construction)

Named after the enigmatic line at the end of Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining, the latest title from sometime Mercury Rev keyboardist Justin Russo‘s chamber pop group looks to gap an unlikely bridge separating Van Dyke Parks’ Song Cycle and Kanye West’s 808s and Heartbreak on this strange, beautiful album about the future. Make sure you check out the bonus disc, however, which contains a bevy of worthwhile Silent League odds and ends, including great covers of ELO’s “Can’t Get It Out of My Head” and Alicia Keys’ “No One.” (RH)

Collin Herring: Ocho (self-released)

Herring arrives with a strange angled honesty, a dustbowl true voice whispering about doubts and the hard things he’s seen, yet also capable of gently hooky rockin’ and moody drift. Ocho, beautifully produced by Centro-matic‘s Will Johnson, is a dense half hour whose melancholy tendrils grip one long after it’s over. Kindred spirits include Clem Snide’s Eef Barzelay, Vic Chesnutt and Jim James, but Herring, particularly in these well carved settings, has a thoroughly compelling voice of his own that’s perfect for crawling inside and shutting out the day. (DC)

Elvis Costello & The Attractions: Live at Hollywood High (Hip-O/UMe)

Originally recorded for a promotional 7-inch that was given away with copies of Armed Forces in 1979, this explosive concert that went down on June 4, 1978 at the Hollywood High School auditorium finds a then 23-year-old Elvis and the original Attractions blasting their way through favorites from Costello’s first two albums, 1977′s My Aim Is True and 1978′s This Year’s Model, while previewing cuts from Forces, including a beautiful piano-only version of “Accidents Will Happen.” Produced by Nick Lowe, Universal’s Costello Show series continues to impress with this monumental showcase for the savage young Elvis at the peak of his punk powers. (RH)

The Len Price 3: Pictures (Wicked Cool)

Mods arise! Shamelessly lifting from the usual ’60s sources and more modern templates like Teenage Fanclub and Holly Golightly, the LP3 succeed in making exceedingly well-tread ground seem freshly furrowed. The songs are pure dynamite – from the ’60s Pete Townshend-esque title cut to the Help! era Beatles style of “After You’ve Gone” to the Jam-y growl of “If You Live Round Here” – and the spit ‘em out with apostolic gusto over a tight instrumental snap. No new ground broken but who gives a damn when the music’s this bloody fun? This could bring back the Frug and Hully Gully in a big way! (DC)

The Hotrats: Turn-Ons (Fat Possum)

As The Hotrats, Gaz Coombes and Danny Goffey of England’s venerable modern rock underdogs Supergrass unleash a fun, excellently executed collection of quality cover tunes that includes inventive remakes of the Beastie Boys’ “Fight For Your Right (To Party),” the Sex Pistols’ “EMI,” and The Doors’ “Crystal Ships” interspersed with faithful renditions of such AOR snob faves as Pink Floyd’s “Bike,” The Kinks’ “Big Sky,” David Bowie’s “Queen Bitch,” and a great take on Roxy Music’s “Love is the Drug.” Produced by the great Nigel Godrich (Beck, Radiohead), Turn-Ons sounds like the Grass boys secretly dubbed 40 minutes of my old radio show in college and decided to make it an album. Good show, lads! (RH)

Jason Boesel: Hustler’s Son (Team Love)

After more than a decade drumming for the likes of Rilo Kiley and Bright Eyes, Boesel drops his first solo album, and it’s every bit as well crafted and appealing as any of his associations. Hustler’s Son (released January 12) has the warmly caressed feel of ’70s FM, slipping between countryish chooglers (“Black Waves”), what could be prime Lindsey Buckingham (“French Kissing”) and Yacht Rock gold (“Miracles”). Aided by pals Jonathon Wilson, Benmont Tench, David Rawlings and Blake Sennett, this is a creeper likely to become a repeat spin favorite, its bittersweet, worldly-wise optimism finding a ready home in one’s breast. (DC)

Harvey Milk: Harvey Milk (Hydrahead)

The first recordings of the recently reunited Athens, GA, stoner/noise heavyweights Harvey Milk, produced by Shellac’s Bob Weston sometime in the early ’90s, have been floating around the Internet via various Mediafire and Megaupload links on more educated Blogger sites for years. But thanks to the band’s new label, Hydrahead, the barely audible, lo-fi hiss and sonic corrosion that made this ultra-rare debut album such a challenge to listen to has been cleaned up thanks to a beautiful remastering job worthy of the Maxell XL II 90 minute tape that graces the cover of this long-overdue reissue (arriving January 26). (RH)

Editors: In This Light And On This Evening (Fader)

This proffers a glass and chrome futurism that’s besmirched with the oils and complications of human fingerprints. Finally seeing a U.S. release on January 19, this set has already garnered serious European love, and if one is a fan of early Depeche Mode and other bastions of New Romanticism it’s easy to see why. Tom Smith‘s keening pipes suggest a (un)happy meeting point of Sisters of Mercy, Bauhaus and Muse, and the music’s grimy click ‘n’ thump proves fairly stirring, if one’s open to such baroque silicon constructions. (DC)

Fucked Up: Couple Tracks: Singles 2002-2009 (Matador)

One of the most inventive, original hardcore bands to ever set fire to North America gathers up all of the previously uncollected, one-off 7- and 12-inchers the Canadian sextet recorded for various labels over the course of the ’00s on this jam-packed two-disc set. For anyone who likes screaming vocals and throat-stomping riffs offset by jazz flute and a melodic style as influenced by Unrest as it is the Cro-Mags, this incidental anthology is a great beginner’s guide to the most exciting, innovative band on the hardcore circuit. (RH)

JamBase | California
Go See Live Music!


Emancipator: Tour Dates/Album

EMANCIPATOR TO RELEASE SAFE IN THE STEEP CLIFFS 1/19, WILL TOUR IN SUPPORT

Emancipator

Safe In The Steep Cliffs, due out January 19, is the new set of finely-crafted, epic instrumentals from Portland-based electronica/hip hop/downtempo producer Emancipator, and features tight, syncopated percussion, organic melodies and eclectic samples.

The subtle beatmaster eludes genre classification but will appeal to admirers of DJ Shadow, Bonobo, and Pretty Lights.

Emancipator played his first live show in July 2009, opening for Bonobo at the Roseland Theater. Since then, he’s toured with Bassnectar, drawn crowds at festivals like Trinumeral and Symbiosis, and closed out Sound Tribe Sector 9‘s late night parties in Denver at the request of the band.

Those in the know have been following Emancipator since he self-released his first album, Soon It Will Be Cold Enough, at the age of 19 in 2006. His agile melodies layered over headnodic, immaculately-produced beats captivated fans across the internet and across the world. Soon It Will Be Cold Enough was picked up by Japanese super-producer Nujabes, pressed in Japan and sold 5,000 copies in the first six months. Emancipator then landed a Puma sponsorship, gave an interview to Rolling Stone Japan, discovered one of his songs was played at the Beijing Olympics (still trying to figure out how that happened) and his song “Shook,” a mash up that perfectly mixes Mobb Deep‘s mighty raps with a haunting track from the Icelandic band Sigur Ros, became the highest-rated song on Hype Machine‘s Best 50 Songs of 2007, and appeared on Hype Machine as the #2 most popular song in April 2009.

The new album blends new instrumentation and organic samples with the signature Emancipator style of clean production, silky melodies and addictive drums. Dense layers of choirs, horns, American folk instruments such as the banjo and mandolin, violin and some distinct Asian influences make for a playful but refined album built out of intricate tracks listeners can enjoy on as many levels as they want. Dance to it, chill out to it, immerse your mind in it.

Downloading Safe In The Steep Cliffs beginning January 19 here.

Emancipator Tour Dates
02/02/10 Tue Crown Hall Mendocino, CA*

02/03/10 Wed Arcata Theater Arcata, CA*

02/04/10 Thu McDonald Theatre Eugene, OR*

02/05/10 Fri Roseland Theater Portland, OR*

02/06/10 Sat Showbox SoDo Seattle, WA**

02/22/10 Mon The Wilma Theatre Missoula, MT**

02/25/10 Thu The Depot Salt Lake City, UT**

02/26/10 Fri House of Blues Las Vegas, NV**

02/27/10 Sat Marquee Theatre Tempe, AZ**

02/28/10 Sun Rialto Theatre Tucson, AZ**

03/03/10 Wed New Earth Music Hall Athens, GA

03/04/10 Thu 90 Proof Night Club Knoxville, TN

03/05/10 Fri 412 Market Chattanooga, TN

03/06/10 Sat 12th & Porter (Main Stage) Nashville, TN

03/07/10 Sun Kentucky Downs Franklin, KY


*Supporting Bassnectar
**Supporting STS9


Sigur Rós’ Jónsi: Solo Album

Sigur Rós’ Jónsi To Release Debut Solo Album Go March 23, 2010

Sigur Ros

Sigur Rós front man Jón “Jónsi” Thor Birgisson will be releasing his debut solo album, entitled Go, on XL Recordings on March 23, 2010. Co-produced by Jónsi, Alex Somers, and Peter Katis (The National, Interpol), mixed by Tom Elmhirst in London, and recorded in Iceland and Connecticut, Go is exhilarating, joyful and fearless. The record also features arrangements and piano playing by acclaimed composer Nico Muhly.

Jónsi has spent more than a decade writing epic compositions with Sigur Rós, creating some of the finest, most acclaimed albums of the last ten years. The choice to make an album of solo recordings came together as a solution to a backlog of songs Jónsi had written that didn’t seem to fit within the Sigur Rós context. The first collection of this material saw its release earlier this year in the form of a record called Riceboy Sleeps, an instrumental album made with his partner, Alex Somers. Go, however, is a different beast entirely. Ecstatic, dramatic and alive, it features Jónsi’s signature vocals throughout, with the majority of the songs sung in English.

When he began working on Go, Jónsi initially thought he would be making a low-key, acoustic album until, as he says, “somewhere along the line, it just sort of exploded.”

That explosion resulted in sheer aural fireworks. Not a straight ahead pop record, nor rock, folk, ambient or electronic, it encompasses all of these to create an expansive musical palette that’s been brought to life by Jónsi, alongside a number of free-spirited collaborators.

Chief among these is Muhly, the Philip Glass protege, who is renowned for his work with Bjork, Antony & The Johnsons, Bonnie Prince Billy, and Grizzly Bear. Muhly has arranged all the songs on Go, bringing strings, brass and woodwind to dance playfully alongside his offbeat piano playing. Add into the mix the percussive genius of Samuli Kosminen, whose original drumming powers many of the songs along, and you have a sonic landscape that bears little relation to anything else around today, yet explodes from the speakers with sheer happiness and wonder, wide-eyed and eager to be heard.

Go completes a personal journey for Jónsi away from the wordless and near-brutal sonic monoliths of Sigur Rós’ untitled ( ) album, and is a bold stride beyond the career-redefining pop of “Hoppipolla,” and even the explosive percussive assault of the last album’s “Gobbledigook.” Above it all sits Jónsi’s voice, which has never been more impressive or breathtakingly arranged; here spectral and wraith-like, there fulsome and gorgeously warm, or other times, his backing vocals swoop and dart everywhere in a giddying array of crazed inventiveness. Indeed, Go is also one of the most joyous collections of songs you’re ever likely to hear. It’s an album that sounds like an artist entirely out on his own, doing exactly as he pleases, and from the creator of some of this decade’s most inventive, evocative music, we would expect nothing less.

Jónsi will be bringing these songs to life with an extensive world tour throughout 2010. For more details on this, along with exclusive Jónsi news, music and information, please check out his website here.

Go Track Listing

1. Go Do

2. Animal Arithmetic

3. Tornado

4. Boy Lilikoi

5. Sinking Friendships

6. Kolnidur

7. Grow Till Tall

8. Around Us

9. Hengilas


20th Tibet House Benefit Show: Patti Smith, Baaba Maal, More

TIBET HOUSE U.S. ANNOUNCES 20th ANNUAL BENEFIT CONCERT AT CARBEGIE HALL

Philip Glass

Tibet House U.S. will hold its 20th Annual Benefit Concert at Carnegie Hall on Friday, February 26. Philip Glass, the concert’s Artistic Director, once again brings together an original lineup of contemporary artists including Patti Smith, Jesse Smith, Michael Campbell, Baaba Maal, and Pierce Turner with more performers being confirmed soon. Tickets will go on sale December 24, 2009.

For twenty years, the annual concert has assembled some of the biggest names in music and offers audiences a mix of unprecedented musical collaborations and solo offerings. Past unforgettable concerts have featured such talents as David Bowie, Paul Simon, Sheryl Crow, Moby, Sigur Ros, Bright Eyes, R.E.M., The National, Natalie Merchant, Rufus Wainwright, Vampire Weekend, Emmylou Harris, Live, Ray Davies and Damien Rice, among many others.

The Tibet House U.S. Benefit Concert commemorates the Monlam Prayer Festival traditionally held at the time of the Tibetan New Year. The festival drew vast numbers of monks, citizens, and pilgrims from all over the country who gathered to pray for world peace and prosperity. Tibet House U.S. is a non-profit organization founded in 1987 at the behest of His Holiness the Dalai Lama that serves as a center for the preservation and presentation of the endangered Tibetan culture.

Carnegie Hall is located at 881 Seventh Avenue (at 57th Street). Concert tickets are $35 to $85 and can be purchased by calling Carnegie Charge at 212.247.7800 or in person at the Carnegie Hall Box Office (57th Street and Seventh Avenue). Tickets go on sale December 24. Tickets to the concert and a fundraising reception with the event’s Honorary Chairpersons and artists (following the performance) are available through Tibet House U.S.

Please note: Concert only tickets are not available through Tibet House U.S. For more information or to reserve tickets for the concert and reception call Tibet House U.S. Monday – Friday, 10 a.m. – 5 p.m. at 212.807.0563 or visit the Tibet House website here.


Editors: Tour Dates/New Album

EDITORS ANNOUNCE U.S. TOUR, IN THIS LIGHT AND ON THIS EVENING OUT 01/19

Editors

After two years away, Editors are returning to the U.S. for a
long-awaited headlining North American tour this February in support of
their highly anticipated new album In This Light And On This Evening. The
album, which is out stateside via FADER January 19, 2010, debuted at number one
on the U.K. charts this past October, and charted in the Top 10 throughout the rest of Europe.

Produced by Grammy award winner Mark “Flood” Ellis (U2, Sigur Ros, PJ Harvey) In This Light And On This Evening finds Editors heading in a new direction; where synths replace the soaring guitars and lead singer Tom Smith takes his vocals to haunting new places, giving the album a dystopian, apocalyptic, mechanical ambience.

All tickets will go on sale December 12.

Editors North American Tour Dates
02/05/10 Fri Showbox at the Market Seattle, WA

02/06/10 Sat Commodore Ballroom Vancouver, BC

02/08/10 Mon The Warfield San Francisco, CA

02/09/10 Tue House of Blues San Diego, CA

02/11/10 Thu The Wiltern Los Angeles, CA

02/13/10 Sat Ogden Theatre Denver, CO

02/15/10 Mon The Vic Theatre Chicago, IL

02/16/10 Tue Phoenix Concert Theatre Toronto, ON

02/18/10 Thu House of Blues Boston, MA

02/19/10 Fri Terminal 5 New York, NY

02/20/10 Sat The Trocadero Philadelphia, PA

02/21/10 Sun 9:30 Club Washington, DC

A complete list of Editors tour dates can be found here.


The Album Leaf: 2010Tour Dates

THE ALBUM LEAF ANNOUNCE FEBRUARY TOUR DATES

The Album Leaf

A Chorus of Storytellers was recorded by Ryan Hadlock in the frosty month of February 2009 at Bear Creek Studio just outside of Seattle. It was mixed in the decidedly warmer month of June in Reykjavik, Iceland by Birgir Jon Birgisson (of Sigur Ros). Those paying attention will notice that this is nearly the same way their last album, Into the Blue Again, was recorded.

There is, however, one fundamental difference between this and every other album The Album Leaf has ever recorded. For the first time in five albums, The Album Leaf recorded as a whole band. In the past, almost every instrument was performed by principal songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Jimmy LaValle. This time the whole band was invited to participate and the result is their best record yet.

The Album Leaf Tour Dates
02/05/10 Fri Doug Fir Portland, OR

02/06/10 Sat Neumos Seattle, WA

02/12/10 Fri Great American Music Hall San Francisco, CA

02/13/10 Sat El Rey Theatre Los Angeles, CA


Editors: U.S. Album Release

NEW ALBUM OUT STATESIDE JANUARY 19, 2010 WITH BONUS MATERIAL

Editors

“On their own terms, not anyone else’s, Editors have triumphed, aiming high and hitting the mark.” – The Sunday Times

In This Light And On This Evening, which debuted at #1 in the UK charts last week, is Editors‘s follow-up to 2007′s platinum selling An End Has A Start, and was produced by Grammy Award winner Mark “Flood” Ellis (U2, Sigur Ros, Depeche Mode). The album finds Editors heading in a new direction where synths replace the soaring guitars and lead singer Tom Smith takes his vocals to new places on an album with a dystopian, apocalyptic, mechanical ambience.

However, some things remain vintage Editors. The record is as bleak and as vivid as ever. “A record that sings of no God, a record of broken love songs, a record where the filthy city is so close you can smell it, taste it, a record of drunken violence, a record which has lost all trust in those in charge of our world,” describes Smith.

But those who focus on the gloom-and-doom in itself, he says, are missing the point. “Dark is interesting, dark is exciting, dark can be funny, there’s real life in the dark, real life IS dark,” says Smith. “When an album feels like this, the fragments of hope and love that do occasionally shine through, shine through ten times brighter than they would normally do so.”

To celebrate this week’s UK release of their third studio album, Editors have created a unique listening experience for their new album by appearing to ‘hack’ Google Street View. The experience allows fans to use a version of Google Maps on the Editors website to travel to certain areas of London where the band have hacked in their own custom locations. The new additions consist of some gloriously moody 360-degree images, shot at night. Within each location the user will hear a track from the new album, which was inspired by the mood and magic of London at night. The images feature the band and a group of their fans performing surreal activities, which reportedly have hidden meanings relating to the songs. The locations are normally unavailable on the regular Street View. Editors modified version of Google Maps allows users to enter into these locations and make the transition from light to dark so fans can explore the band’s atmospheric vision of London at night.

To access the Map go here.

To see the new video from Editors for their first UK single off the new album, “Papillion,” pop over here.