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Posts Tagged ‘SANTA’

Jaime Pressly Mugshot Arrives

Say Cheese! The next time Jaime Pressly and her lead foot decide to drive home after knocking back a half dozen Mojitos (allegedly anyway), we hope she’ll remember to at least slap on some lip balm and concealer. The former star of NBC’s My Name is Earl was arrested on suspicion of DUI in Santa [...]

GE and Intel’s Telehealth and Independent Living Company is Operational Today

‘CARE INNOVATIONS’ Unveiled as Name for Sacramento-based Joint Venture

FAIRFIELD, Conn. and SANTA CLARA, Calif., Jan. 3, 2011 – GE (NYSE:GE) and Intel Corporation (NASDAQ:INTC) announced that Intel-GE Care Innovations LLC (“Care Innovations”) is the name of their healthcare joint venture and that the company is operational starting today. Care Innovations will develop technologies that support healthy, independent living at home and in senior housing communities. The executive leadership team and board of managers are now in place to support the new company’s transition and future growth.

The formation of Care Innovations follows the success of the healthcare alliance between Intel and GE, announced April 2009. Care Innovations, which combines assets and the expert teams and operations of both GE Healthcare’s Home Health division and Intel’s Digital Health Group, has received final regulatory clearances and is now fully operational. The jointly owned company’s focus is to help address some of the largest issues facing society today, including the aging population, the growing number of people with chronic conditions, and increasing healthcare costs. The market segments for telehealth and home health monitoring are predicted to grow to an estimated $7.7 billion by 20121.

“Our vision as we launch this exciting new company is for Care Innovationsto positively affect millions of people by providing innovative products and services that will enable new models of care,” said Louis Burns, CEO of Care Innovations. “Our passionate leadership team and board of managers will help drive the business strategy necessary to improve quality of care and patient empowerment while helping reduce healthcare costs through new technologies.”

Burns is joined by an experienced senior leadership team with a breadth of knowledge in healthcare, business strategy, sales and marketing, and product development in the company’s core focus areas: disease management, independent living and assistive technologies. The leadership team includes:

  • Louis J. Burns, CEO
  • Douglas F. Busch, Senior Vice President, Chief Operating Officer
  • Lauren Salata, Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Compliance Officer
  • Michael Bassett, General Manager of Assistive Technologies
  • Becky Davis, Director of Corporate Marketing
  • Eric Dishman, Director of Health Policy
  • Aaron Duerksen, General Manager of Disease Management
  • Bonnie Norman, Director of Quality Assurance and Regulatory Affairs
  • James Pursley, General Manager of Independent Living
  • Randall Swanson, Vice President, Business Operations

In addition to Burns, GE and Intel have also appointed four board members to Care Innovations to represent the interests of the parent companies. Senior Vice President of GE and President and CEO of GE Healthcare Systems, Omar Ishrak, is chairman of the board for the company. GE has also appointed Michael Jones, executive vice president of Business Development for GE International, as a board member. Intel board members include Robert Crooke, corporate vice president and general manager of Intel’s Atom and System-on-a-Chip Development Group (ASDG); and Patricia Murray, senior vice president and director of human resources.

Care Innovations markets remote patient monitoring, independent living concepts and assistive technologies, such as the Intel® Health Guide, Intel® Reader and GE QuietCare®. The company is also continuing to develop healthcare IT innovations which will help enable healthcare providers to drive toward lower costs and a higher quality of life for patients worldwide.

Visit www.careinnovations.com for more information.

Fact Sheets

About GE Healthcare
GE Healthcare provides transformational medical technologies and services that are shaping a new age of patient care. Our broad expertise in medical imaging and information technologies, medical diagnostics, patient monitoring systems, drug discovery, biopharmaceutical manufacturing technologies, performance improvement and performance solutions services help our customers to deliver better care to more people around the world at a lower cost. In addition, we partner with healthcare leaders, striving to leverage the global policy change necessary to implement a successful shift to sustainable healthcare systems.

Our “healthymagination” vision for the future invites the world to join us on our journey as we continuously develop innovations focused on reducing costs, increasing access and improving quality around the world. Headquartered in the United Kingdom, GE Healthcare is a unit of General Electric Company (NYSE: GE). Worldwide, GE Healthcare employees are committed to serving healthcare professionals and their patients in more than 100 countries. For more information about GE Healthcare, visit our website at www.gehealthcare.com/quietcare.

For our latest news, please visit newsroom.gehealthcare.com

About Intel
Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) is a world leader in computing innovation. The company designs and builds the essential technologies that serve as the foundation for the world’s computing devices. Additional information about Intel is available at newsroom.intel.com and blogs.intel.com.

Intel is a trademark of Intel Corporation in the United States and other countries.

* Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.

1 Combined data for United States and Europe.  Data Monitor reports Telehealth spending North America and Telehealth spending 2007 –2012

Santa Claus “banished” from Bosnia

December 29th, 2010 | No Comments

The Islamic Community of Bosnia-Herzegovina has issued a fatwa that states Santa Claus “is neither known or recognized in the Bosniak tradition”.
Bosniaks (Muslims) are one of the three peoples in that country, the other two being Serbs and Croats, who are Christians.

Madonna Plays Santa For Malawian Orphans

December 28th, 2010 | No Comments

It was a very Madge Christmas in Malawi last weekend as Queen of Pop Madonna shipped boxes of toys, clothes, chocolates, and other sweets to six orphanages in the African nation, PEOPLE Magazine spills. Boxes of goods were shipped with a handwritten note from the star, which read: “To my Malawi children on Christmas and [...]

Antoine Dodson “Chimney Intruder” Music VIDEO Takes Aim At Santa!

December 22nd, 2010 | No Comments

Well! Antoine Dodson, the overnight internet sensation behind the hilarious “Bed Intruder” music video, is now singing a song in honor of the most famous “intruder” in the world. On Tuesday, Antoine Dodson appeared on TBS’ Lopez Tonight, where he unveiled what he hopes will become his next viral smash, “Chimney Intruder,” a holiday-themed music [...]

10 Hottest Actresses Dressed As Santa’s Little Helpers

December 20th, 2010 | No Comments

Santa: we all loved him as kids. Hot celebrity babes: we all love them as adults. So what happens when you put the two together? Excellent Christmas-y photoshoots, it seems. Yes, there appears to be no shortage of famous hotties willing to undress and step into the iconic red and white, which makes us very, [...]

Lady Gaga Kills Santa Claus: The VIDEO

December 20th, 2010 | No Comments

Someone’s getting a giant lump of coal in their stocking come Christmas Day! Giving her traditionally nutso stunts a seasonal edge, the pantsless diva paid tribute to all her fans set to endure a lonely and miserable Christmas this year – by biting off the head of a Santa doll and crushing it with her [...]

Laurie Anderson | Santa Barbara | Review | Pics

November 19th, 2010 | No Comments

Words & Images by: L. Paul Mann

Laurie Anderson :: 10.19.10 :: UCSB Campbell Hall :: Santa Barbara, CA

Laurie Anderson by L Paul Mann

Laurie Anderson, the godmother of multimedia performance art in America, brought her latest work to Santa Barbara. Playing in familiar surroundings at the University of California Santa Barbara’s Campbell Hall, she performed her third piece there in a decade as part of the UCSB Arts and Lectures Series. According to her official website her newest endeavor, Delusion, “is a series of short mystery plays that jump cut between the everyday and the mythic.”

The 64-year-old Anderson, who recently married long time companion Lou Reed, has been an experimental artist and performer since the 1960s. In the 1970s, the New York art world took notice of her after her performance of Duets On Ice. In the piece she played her trademark violin, over recorded tracks, while wearing ice skates frozen in a block of ice. When the ice melted, the performance was over. In 1981, she had her first hit recording, “O Superman.” But it was the 1986 concert film Home of The Brave, in which she starred and directed, that launched her to the forefront of multimedia performance art. Anderson is credited with building much of her musical hardware, as well as her film and tape content. She invented her trademark tape bow violin, which uses a recorded magnetic tape instead of the usual horsehair bow, and she is constantly modifying the device with new technology. She also invented the talking stick, a MIDI-controlled baton that creates sounds, through a principle called granular synthesis.

The consummate artist began her new piece in Santa Barbara with the telltale phrase, “I want to tell you a story about a story.” Indeed, Anderson is really more of a philosopher than a poet and perfectly situated in the confines of a university lecture hall. The piece, with visuals designed by longtime collaborator Maryse Alberti, featured the solo artist amidst four synchronized projections. In one corner stood a perpendicular angled screen, in the other a white translucent sheet. In the rear was a traditional film screen, and in the center was a reflective couch. Each screen had its own film loops that would converge into one theme for each segment of Delusions, which appears to be one of Anderson s most revealing pieces, revolving around intimate conversations about the recent death of her mother.

Laurie Anderson by L Paul Mann

Delivered in a digitally altered spoken word style alternating between her feminine voice and her male alter ego Fenway Bergamot, she wrestles with the philosophical meaning of life and death and her personal relationship with her mother. The machinations about her mother’s death are sandwiched between a smorgasbord of philosophical ponderings: “Who owns the moon?”; “What are days for?”; “Which way do we go?”; “How do we begin again?”; “If corporations are individuals, what kind of individuals are they?”; “Why is it always rainy in my dreams?”; “What are the very last things you say in your life?”; “What is a man if he outlives the lifetime of his god?” The philosophical meanderings are punctuated with periods of thunderous sound effects, violin and keyboard solos, layered-in digital noise and a barrage of layered images. The result is an intoxicating performance art piece, altering the audiences’ state of mind not unlike being under the influence of a controlled substance.

Death was a recurring theme in the show, including the devilishly humorous story of a couple who got divorced in their 90s, and when asked why they waited so long they responded that they wanted to wait until their children had died. At other times Anderson’s mood turned more somber, such as the statement, “You die three times” – first when your heart stops, second when you are buried or cremated, and then the last time someone says your name. Anderson, would also occasionally stray into older material, from Homeland, her last work, including the encore piece “Flow,” whose electronically enhanced violin solo include multiple layers of sound, creating a single person orchestra. But the bulk of the evening’s Delusion offerings may be remembered as some of Anderson’s most ambitious work in her illustrious career.

Laurie Anderson Tour Dates :: Laurie Anderson News :: Laurie Anderson Concert Reviews

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ALO NYE in Santa Barbara

November 9th, 2010 | No Comments

TICKETS ON SALE NOW


ALO

ALO has announced their
New
Years Eve plans, with two nights at the Soho Restaurant & Music Club in Santa Barbara, CA on Dec. 30 and Dec. 31.
Openers and themes will be announced shortly, and tickets are on sale right now. Click here for more
information.

West Coast dates:

12/30 – Soho Restaurant & Music Club – Santa Barbara, CA
12/31 – Soho Restaurant & Music Club – Santa Barbara, CA
01/28 – Humboldt Brews – Arcata, CA
01/29 – The Fillmore – San Francisco, CA
02/02 – Belly Up Tavern – Solana Beach, CA

02/11 – Troubadour – West Hollywood, CA

02/12 – Saint Rocke – Hermosa Beach, CA

02/17 – Moe’s Alley – Santa Cruz, CA
02/18 – HopMonk Tavern – Sebastopol, CA
02/19 – Harlow’s Night Club – Sacramento, CA
02/20 – The Crystal Bay Club/Crown Room – Crystal Bay, NV

ALO
Tour Dates

::
ALO News
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Reviews


Jack Johnson | Santa Barbara | Review | Pics

October 22nd, 2010 | No Comments

Words & Images by: L. Paul Mann

Jack Johnson :: 10.13.10 :: Santa Barbara Bowl :: Santa Barbara, CA

G. Love by L. Paul Mann

Jack Johnson brought his feel good road show to the Santa Barbara Bowl for the first of two sold out nights. In fact, the shows had sold out shortly after they went on sale last April. Johnson, who has become one of the most successful pop stars in the country, has headlined nearly every major music festival in the nation. So the solid turnout was no big surprise for the hometown hero and master of California beach pop.

The show began early, in typical Jack Johnson style, with an impromptu acoustic jam in the garden just inside the venue. Johnson and longtime friend G. Love performed a short pre-concert jam, before most fans had any idea what was happening. After a few quick songs, Johnson bolted up the hill with his newest offspring in tow, just as a bewildered crowd began to jam the walkway.

The main stage show began right on schedule with an opening set by miniature Malaysian singer Zee Avi. The tiny singer with a big voice has become a recording sensation with a large Asian fan base on the heels of her self-titled debut album. Her music was discovered on YouTube, and found its way to Jack Johnson’s record company with the help of Patrick Keeler of Raconteur fame. Avi paints an interesting musical canvas with her pleasantly soothing voice wrapped around sounds from many musical genres. When playing her ukulele, she channels the sounds of the Pacific Islands, but with her band, the sound blends indie pop and jazz to create interesting textures. In a true testament to the power of the Internet, her music has become popular purely by the will of her fast rising fan base. The early bird crowd responded politely to her sweet sounds.

As the afternoon light faded to twilight, G. Love and Special Sauce hit the stage. G. Love has been making his own unique brand of hip hop infused Philadelphia blue since the mid 1990s. Always a great live performer and consummate entertainer, the musician seems equally at home as a street musician with a harmonica & beat-up guitar or a bandleader in front of a large amphitheatre crowd. G. Love has become forever entwined in the career of Jack Johnson. He first featured Johnson on his 1999 album Philadelphonic and played a version of “Rodeo Clowns” long before the world knew of the future California surfer musician phenomenon. Johnson opened for G. Love on his earliest tours. Now G Love records on Brushfire Records, Johnson’s label, and frequently opens for the musical prodigy he helped discover. G. Love and Special Sauce offered a funky, blues drenched live show that had many of the elements that make New Orleans music such a great live sound. The crowd greeted the band with an enthusiastic response throughout their 60-minute set.

Jack Johnson by L. Paul Mann

As a cool October evening fell on the Bowl, Jack Johnson emerged right on schedule to begin his triumphant two-hour set. It was no surprise that his presence was a catalyst for a vociferous, adulate crowd since the local surfer still maintains a house in Santa Barbara, and is considered a local hero. What was a surprise was how much his music and live performance have matured. Johnson has sold over 8 million records in less than a decade with his largely innocuous soft rock sound. His simplistic approach to music with a fine laidback sound has endeared him to a huge worldwide fan base. At the same time, fans of more complex music have criticized his sound as monotonous and uninspired. In fact, his live shows over the years have been lessons in minimalism, in both style and substance. But with the release of his most recent album and the subsequent tour, a more complex, mature musician has emerged.

Johnson now spends extensive time on the electric guitar, playing more intricate chords and riffs than in the past. His band has also followed his more upbeat, evolved sound. His drummer now sports a complete drum set and uses it to create a much more complex backbeats than in the past. His keyboard player Zach Gill (ALO) plays extensive honky tonk solos in the new work, too. Even Johnson’s bass player has taken on a new deeper, richer sound live. To be sure, Johnson still pulls out the acoustic guitar for some of his early, simpler hit songs, but his newer, throatier material provides a perfect juxtaposition to the older classics, painting a much more interesting and varied live portrait.

Johnson’s use of multimedia in his live shows also continues to morph into new and interesting directions. A large panoramic screen was painted in layers of environmental colors and images, interspersed with live inserts of the band and the crowd. The ever-evolving backdrop created a living link to the performance in a unique, artistic way. A steady stream of musical guests, also added additional layers to the show. Guests included Zee Avi on ukulelele and ALO guitarist Dan Lebowitz, amongst others. But it was the extended appearance near the end of the show by G. Love that was the highlight, and brought the evening full circle back to the impromptu garden jam. Singing, dancing and playing guitar and harmonica, the musical maestro clearly reveled in his performance with his former protege turned pop icon.

Fans of jam music may dismiss Jack Johnson’s music as being too simplistic, but they may want to give his newer music another listen. They just may be surprised at how much the surfer boy sound has matured. He may grow up to be a true jam musician yet.

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Jack Johnson Tour Dates :: Jack Johnson News :: Jack Johnson Concert Reviews

JamBase | Wave Ridin’
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Michael Lohan Injured In Parking Lot Assault

October 22nd, 2010 | No Comments

Michael Lohan sustained minor injuries in an attack outside his Santa Monica parking lot on Thursday night. The father of actress Lindsay Lohan, 50, was approached when a White male wearing a black tracksuit — likely in his 50s or 60s — wearing a black tracksuit approached him from behind and cut his neck with [...]

Betty White Will Voice Mrs. Claus In ABC Holiday Special “Prep & Landing: Operation Secret Santa”

October 20th, 2010 | No Comments

Another gig for octogenarian Betty White: The multiple Emmy winner has been tapped to voice Mrs. Claus in a new animated holiday special premiering on ABC this winter, network spokesfolks said Tuesday. Prep & Landing: Operation Secret Santa — a seven-minute short film — premieres Dec. 7, right in the middle of the airing of [...]

Mariah Carey “Merry Christmas II You” Tracklisting

October 12th, 2010 | No Comments

Music Lovers are in for a Very Mariah Carey’s Christmas this holiday season. The second holiday-themed album from the songbird — titled Merry Christmas II You — drops Nov. 12 and we’re getting our first look at some of the potential Santa-certified hits that will make up the album. The album features production by American [...]

Willie Nelson/Ryan Bingham | Santa Barbara | Pics | Review

October 5th, 2010 | No Comments

Words & Images by: L. Paul Mann

Willie Nelson :: 09.23.10 :: Santa Barbara Bowl :: Santa Barbara, CA

Ryan Bingham by L. Paul Mann

“Living legend” is an oft-overused phrase in the music world, but 76-year- old Willie Nelson has surely earned the title. The proponent of American roots country music has created relevant music for close to 60 years while touring relentlessly. His bigger than life personal experiences and iconic outlaw image also help to bolster his legendary status.

Modern country-oriented rocker Ryan Bingham played an opening set with his band The Dead Horses. Singing in his trademark gravel voice, Bingham set the tone for the evening, playing a low-key set. The 29-year-old Academy Award winning singer-songwriter has been a regular on the festival circuit the last few years, often surrounded by indie rockers, where his concerts tend to be more rock ‘n’ roll in tone. At the Bowl, he offered a more intimate, almost folk sound. Bandmates Corby Schaub (guitar, mandolin), Elijah Ford (bass) and Matthew Smith (drums) followed Bingham’s lead playing with a subdued style that highlighted Bingham’s unique vocal skills and allowed an appreciative audience to absorb his masterful lyrics.

Shortly before dark, Nelson sauntered onstage with Trigger, his ragged acoustic guitar. Like Bingham, Nelson has played countless large music festival over the last few years and toured with a ramped-up band that gives a rock & roll road show quality to recent his live performances. However, his current tour offers a quieter show, something akin to a jazz club or honky tonk affair.

He largely played the same set his fans have come to expect over the years. “Whiskey River” was followed by “Still Is Still Moving To Me,” an almost mandatory opening pair for any Willie concert. But with a toned down band, this show offered a much more intimate and surprisingly more interesting view of the iconic songwriter’s talents. His twangy old guitar was prominent in the mix and his raspy vocals were easier to decipher and follow than usual. With fans hanging on his every word, the ability to hear his lyrics more succinctly seemed to bind the crowd more tightly to their favorite musical outlaw. His band included his little sister Bobbie Nelson on piano, longtime drummer Paul English on a simple single snare drum, Mickey Raphael on harmonica, and Billy English, Bee Spears and Jody Payne on backing vocals. With Nelson’s voice & guitar in the forefront of the subdued arrangments, mandatory classics like the Nelson-penned Patsy Cline hit “Crazy” and “On The Road Again” had folks dancing in the aisles and singing every line.

After the show, appreciative fans filed past Nelson’s biodiesel tour bus with wide smiles for the American icon that never seems to tire of touring.

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Willie Nelson Tour Dates :: Willie Nelson News :: Willie Nelson Concert Reviews

Ryan Bingham Tour Dates :: Ryan Bingham News :: Ryan Bingham Concert Reviews

JamBase | Rolling
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Listen To Mariah Carey New Christmas Song “Oh Santa”

October 1st, 2010 | No Comments

Mariah Carey is spreading the holiday cheer early this year. The heavily-rumored expectant mom will unveil her second holiday album, Merry Christmas II You, on Nov. 2 and the highly-anticipated first single — “Oh Santa!” — hit the airwaves on Friday. Rock It or Drop It? (If YouTube player does not work, CLICK HERE…)Produced by Jermaine [...]

Furthur | Santa Barbara | Pics | Review

September 27th, 2010 | No Comments

Words & Images by: L. Paul Mann

Furthur :: 09.20.10 :: Santa Barbara Bowl :: Santa Barbara, CA

Bob Weir by L. Paul
Mann

Alive and well, despite being quite Dead, Phil Lesh and Bob Weir brought Furthur to the Santa Barbara Bowl
last week. Playing a marathon show lasting three and a half hours (with a 30 minute intermission), the fathers of
jam band music and their new entourage proved they are still masters of their genre. The show began right at the
official 6 pm start time and had aging fans dancing and prancing from the moment they arrived onstage. It seemed
everywhere you looked someone was doing some sort of hippy dance. Although most of the crowd was middle-
aged and up, there were a surprising number of new wave hippies in their teens and twenties. Throw in a few
hundred young children and the crowd truly represented every demographic, resembling a sort of giant, undulating
commune.

Furthur is really just an extension of the original Grateful Dead, featuring original members Lesh and Weir with
longtime RatDog keyboardist Jeff Chimenti, Former Dark Star Orchestra guitarist John Kadlecik,
Joe Russo on drums, and backup singers, Sunshine Garcia Becker and Jeff Pehrson.
Like the original Dead, Furthur changes the setlist for every performance. It is one of the reasons that avid fans
follow the band from city to city and will attend multiple concerts hoping to hear seldom-played rare gems in the
Dead catalog.

The Santa Barbara show featured most of side one of their 1975 record Blues for Allah, including “Franklin’s
Tower,” which had the crowd chanting the chorus (“roll awayÂ…the dew”) in happy unison. In addition to many Dead
classics, the band also played “Money for Gasoline” from Weir’s RatDog project and a new song called “Seven Hills of
Gold.” Two classic covers – Traffic’s “Feelin Alright” and The Beatles’ “Come Together” – also had fans singing like a
church choir. At the end of the second set, nearly four hours after the show began, Lesh made a brief plea for
people to donate their organs and discussed the liver transplant that had saved his life. The band then played a final
song, “Attics of My Life,” and took a long bow. It has been a long strange trip indeed, and for these veteran
musicians it hasn’t ended yet.

Setlist
Set I:Hell In a Bucket, Cream Puff War, Feelin’ Alright, Me and My Uncle, Althea, Money for Gasoline, Comes
a Time, Turn On Your Lovelight
Set II: Viola Lee Blues (first and second verses), Seven Hills of Gold, Viola Lee Blues (third verse), The
Eleven, King Solomon’s Marbles, Days Between, Help on the Way > Slipknot!> Franklin’s Tower
E:Donor Rap (liver transplant recipient Lesh’s plea for people to become organ donors), Come Together,
Attics of My Life

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$(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=135″);}); 9/20/10 – Furthur @ Santa Barbara Bowl
(Santa Barbara, CA)
View Photos

Furthur Tour Dates :: Furthur News :: Furthur Concert Reviews

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Smashing Pumpkins | Santa Barbara | Review | Pics

September 8th, 2010 | No Comments

Words & Images by: L. Paul Mann

Smashing Pumpkins :: 09.04.10 :: Lobero Theatre :: Santa Barbara, CA

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”11″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=123″);}); 9/4/10 – Smashing Pumpkins & Bad City @ Lobero Theatre (Santa Barbara, CA) View Photos

There was surreal mash up of cultures at the historic Lobero Theatre last Saturday night. The tiny 680-seat theater is the oldest continuously operating performance hall in California. The venue was founded in 1873 and is a state landmark with a rich history of stage, screen, and musical performances. Today, the Lobero is run much the same way as it was 100 years ago, but by a non-profit organization. The usher staff is composed mostly of retired, well-dressed volunteers who maintain antiquated rules of etiquette. Patrons are personally seated only during breaks in a performance. The crowd is expected to stay in their rather small, stodgy old seats for the entire performance. Wealthy, mostly elderly patrons rewarded for their support of the non-profit theatre with season tickets seem to be happy with the old school etiquette. The system usually works for most types of performances booked at the theatre, like live jazz bands and folk singers, but every once in awhile a rock band is booked to play the intimate space and all hell breaks loose. My Morning Jacket played a marathon four concerts at the venue several years ago and fans were dancing in the aisles and on their seats all night long.

Bad City by L. Paul Mann

So, the announcement that Smashing Pumpkins would be playing the little venue came as a great surprise to most rock fans. The opening act for the September 4th show quickly established the mood of the evening and showed a readiness to unleash a rocking barrage of music on unsuspecting fans. Bad City, a young new band of rockers from Chicago with their first album released just a few weeks ago, exploded onstage. Handpicked by Head Pumpkin Billy Corgan to open the show, the group is composed of energetic teenage rockers with a collective old soul. Sounding like a veteran hair band from the 80s, the band launched a traditional rock assault on the audience. Led by charismatic lead singer Josh Serek, the band joked and laughed with the audience between songs. Serek, the last member to join the group, actually hails from Temecula, and his sleepy Southern California wine town seems to be spawning an inordinate amount of successful rockers of late. Other members of the band also bantered back and forth with the crowd. One guy asked “if the people sitting in the front were there for the Kenny G light jazz,” playing into the evening’s mash-up between irreverent rock and the world of old school manners. Bad City boasts a double guitar threat in Max Perenchio and Tom Schleiter battling in a six-string war on many songs. Most of the band members were solid back-up singers as well. Serek quipped on the last song of their solid set that as long as the band’s members are alive, rock and roll will never die. Considering how young they are that means rock has a good long road ahead.

Billy Corgan and his new Pumpkins sauntered onstage after intermission and continued the light banter about the restrictive, reticent atmosphere. Fresh from their performance, the Saturday before as headliners for the Sunset Strip Music Festival [see review & pics here] in front of over 30,000 people, the band looked surprisingly relaxed and engaged in the tiny venue. With most of their sound and lighting equipment crammed onto the small stage, the band immediately began to assault the audience with a wall of exploding audio and visual stimulation. The blinding lights and strobes of all shapes and sizes actually forced some fans to don sunglasses.

Billy Corgan by L. Paul Mann

In the lighting chaos, Corgan screamed and wailed in his trademark voice and attacked his guitar like a madman. The new Pumpkins, looking surprisingly like the old Pumpkins, followed his lead in a frenzy of sound. The new members include Jeff Schroeder on guitar, who gave Corgan a run for his money in guitar battle throughout the set. Nicole Fiorentino is a veteran rock bass player who has played with numerous bands including Veruca Salt. Young drumming prodigy Michael Byrne rounds out the new lineup.

Mixing old songs with new, the Pumpkins tore through a nearly two-hour set. Opening with a Middle Eastern tinged new song titled “Astral Plane,” the band quickly established that they could live up to their historic pedigree. Other new songs included “Freak,” “A Song for a Son” and “My Love Is Winter.” But it was the old classics that got the crowd excited and out of their tiny, wooden seats. “Today” had fans screaming with anticipation. An awkward moment came when the band played the classic “Bullet With Butterfly Wings.” As he has done countless times, Corgan paused and pointed at the audience to sing the familiar chorus – “Despite all my rage/ I am still just a rat in a cage” – but a seemingly clueless Santa Barbara audience stood silent and bewildered like the proverbial deer in the Pumpkins’ headlights. The feisty Corgan, however, showing just how relaxed he was onstage, didn’t get flustered and sarcastically took a moment to teach the audience the lyrics. He began with an ironic, slow annunciation of the chorus, slowly speeding it up until he devolved into a guitar wailing and screaming frenzy.

By the time the band launched into the 1993 hit “Cherub,” the crowd had fully come alive, sensing their good fortune at being invited to Corgan’s little party at the Lobero. That classic song devolved into a salute to the sixties – a sound that Corgan has admired and incorporated into his recent side project Spirit in the Sky – first playing a Hendrix jam of the “Star Spangled Banner,” then morphing into the beginning of Led Zeppelin’s “Heartbreaker.” This evolved into a classic drum solo, giving Byrne a chance to showcase his incredible talents. The band returned to play a searing encore to the main set. Finally, after three more tunes and more friendly chatter, Corgan thanked the crowd for attending the event and the sleepy ushers slowly drew back the exit curtains. It was truly a surreal scene perhaps only possible in Santa Barbara

Setlist
Astral Planes, Ava Adore, Drown, As Rome Burns, A Song for a Son, Today, Eye, Bullet With Butterfly Wings, United States (with Star Spangled Banner and Moby Dick interludes), My Love Is Winter Perfect, Cherub Rock, That’s the Way (My Love Is), Tonight, Tonight, Stand Inside Your Love, Tarantula
E: Disarm, Freak, Zero

Smashing Pumpkins Tour Dates :: Smashing Pumpkins News :: Smashing Pumpkins Concert Reviews

JamBase | Smashed
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Dr. John | Santa Monica | Pics

September 7th, 2010 | No Comments

Words & Images by: L. Paul Mann

Dr. John & The Lower 911 :: 09.02.10 :: Santa Monica Pier :: Santa Monica, CA

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”4″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=122″);}); 9/2/10 – Dr. John @ Santa Monica Pier (Santa Monica, CA) View Photos

New Orleans musical legend Dr. John played a versatile closing night set for the 2010 Twilight Dance Series 2010. The free concerts took place every Thursday on Santa Monica Pier throughout the summer. A swarm of music fans of all ages crowded the pier and the beach below for the final show of the season. The funky musical genie didn’t disappoint, offering jazzy renditions of some of his most well known songs that lent themselves well to a dance ready audience.

Dr. John burst into the rock world in the late 60s as the ambassador of the New Orleans sound to mainstream pop culture. Known at the time as ‘Dr John, The Night Tripper,’ his debut album, released in 1968, established him as a pop icon. Combining traditional New Orleans music with psychedelic rock, the album featured songs such as “I Walk on Guilded Splinters” that created a whole new musical genre and inspired musicians and fans alike. His original music and live performances were steeped in a mystical stew of voodoo and experimental sounds that established him as sort of a white version of blues master Screamin Jay Hawkins. In fact, several (what appeared to be genuine) human skulls graced the stage Thursday night!

By the 1970s, Dr. John had dropped ‘The Night Tripper’ moniker and evolved his music into a more funk-based sound. This era produced his biggest pop hit, “In The Right Place.” Always continuing to reinvent himself over his four decades of music making, he has collaborated with countless pop, rock, blues and jazz legends. A master keyboard player, one of his piano tunes Thursday night was even reminiscent of Joe Jackson’s foray into samba music. On another new jazzy tune, he sang about his commitment to preserving the wetlands in New Orleans and urged the crowd to get involved in saving the region’s traditional way of life.

By the time the 10 pm curfew literally forced the feisty musician off the stage, he had performed over two hours of music – singing, dancing, playing multiple keyboards and guitar. Long live, Dr John, The Night Tripper, and bravo for free concerts on the Santa Monica Pier.

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