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Posts Tagged ‘Scott Dudelson’

Smokeout 2010 | SoCal | Pics

Images by: Scott Dudelson

Cypress Hill Smokeout :: 10.16.10 :: NOS Events Center :: San Bernadino, CA

The “all day mind opening music festival” returned to Southern California this month, with hosts Cypress Hill joined by MGMT, Slightly Stoopid, Erykah Badu, Incubus and more. Lucky for us, ever-tasty sharpshooter Scott Dudelson was on the spot to capture the festivities.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”8″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=151″);}); 10/16/10 – Smokeout Festival @ NOS Event Center (San Bernadino, CA) View Photos

JamBase | Blazed
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Epicenter Festival | California | Pics

Images by: Scott Dudelson

Epicenter Festival :: 09.25.10-09.26.10 :: Auto Club Speedway :: Fontana, CA

The two-day Epicenter Festival featured a number of California and even North America exclusives this
past weekend, including one-offs from Blink-182, Rise
Against
, Eminem
and the
final stop on KISS‘ “Hottest
Show on Earth Tour.” A mix of largely mainstream hip-hop, hard rock and established punk acts, Epicenter offered
an assortment that seemed custom made for a couple hot late summer days in Southern California. We sent
Scott Dudelson into the pit to bring back some of the sights on offer.

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$(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=136″);}); 9/25/10 – 9/26/10 – EPICENTER TWENTY
TEN @ Auto Club Speedway (Fontana, CA)
View Photos

JamBase | Cali
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Uproar Festival | Irvine, CA | Pics

Images by: Scott Dudelson

Uproar Festival :: 09.17.10 :: Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre :: Irvine, CA

This year’s installment of the annual traveling hard Uproar Festival features headliners Disturbed, Avenged Sevenfold and Stone Sour alongside comers like Airbourne and Hellyeah. The tour continues until October 4th, where it concludes in Madison, WI. Find remaining Uproar dates here.

Here’s a healthy glimpse of what went down in Southern California earlier this month from ace lensman Scott Dudelson .

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”23″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=133″);}); 9/17/10 – Uproar Festival @ Verizon Wireless Amphitheater (Irvine Meadows) (Irvine, CA) View Photos

JamBase | Loud
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FYF Fest | Los Angeles | Pics

Images by: Scott Dudelson

FYF Fest :: 09.04.10 :: Los Angeles State Historic Park :: Los Angeles, CA

With a $30 ticket price and classic punks 7 Seconds & Circle Jerks alongside indie kings like Panda Bear, The Rapture and Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti, the hipper-than-you’ll-ever-be Southern California festival gathered an even more impressive than usual assortment into a single day this year.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”7″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=130″);}); 9/4/10 – FYF Fest @ LA State Historic Park (Los Angeles, CA) View Photos


Vans Warped Tour 6.27.10 | Photos

Images by: Scott Dudelson

The 16th Vans Warped Tour stopped by Seaside Park in Ventura, California on July 27 for another round of punk
rock action. The lineup included The Bouncing Souls, The Adolescents, Fear, Angry Samoans, GBH, The Dickies, Reverend Peyton’s Big Damn Band, Riverboat Gamblers, Sum 41, and others.

The tour runs
until August 15. Check the Warped
Tour website
for more information.

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$(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=88″);}); 6/27/10 – Warped Tour @ Seaside Park
(Ventura, CA)
View Photos


Electric Daisy Carnival 6.25.10 – 6.26.10 | Photos

Images by: Scott Dudelson

Beat junkies, house heads, ravers, electro enthusiasts, trance addicts, dubstep fanatics, and glitch groupies all united
under one roof at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum for the 14th Annual Electric Daisy Carnival on June
25
and 26 at Exposition Park in Los Angeles. The 2009 festival was expanded into a two day event, making it the
premier electronic music festival in the
United States with over 140,000 attendees.

This year featured major electronic artists like Above & Beyond, Afrojack, Infected
Mushroom
, Groove Armada, Roger Sanchez, James Zabiela, Sasha, Deadmau5, Christopher Lawrence, Claude VonStroke, MSTRKRFT, Benny Benassi,
Laidback Luke, just to name a few.

JamBase photographer Scott Dudelson was on hand to capture the festivities.

To check out our coverage of the 2009 Electric Daisy Carnival, click here.

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$(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=82″);}); 6/25/10 – Electric Daisy Carnival (Los Angeles,
CA)
View
Photos


Rock On The Range | 05.22-05.23 | Ohio

Images by: Scott Dudelson

Rock On The Range :: 05.22.10-05.23.10 :: Columbus Crew Stadium :: Columbus, OH

With a crowd of more than 60,000 over two days, this year’s Rock On The Range closed out Sunday night with back-to-back performances from Limp Bizkit and Rob Zombie. The fourth annual ROTR outing featured more than 35 bands on three stages including Godsmack, Airbourne, Mastodon, Seether and Coheed and Cambria.

“For two days only, Columbus, OH, was hard rock and metal’s Shangri-La,” noted Spin.com, and Rob Zombie said of his ROTR debut, “The fans were awesome and insane. We came to rock balls and we did. What more could you want?”

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”1″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=58″);}); Rocks on the Range Photo Gallery Rock On The Range Festival – May 22 and 23 at Columbus Crew Stadium – a benefit for the Metro Nashville Disaster Response Fund. View Photos

Rock On The Range Canada takes place August 7, 2010. Find more information on this event here.

JamBase | Buckeye State
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Stagecoach Music Festival Photo Gallery

Images by: Scott Dudelson

Stagecoach Music Festival

04.24 & 04.25 :: Empire Polo Grounds :: Indio, CA

On Saturday April 24 and Sunday April 25, country music’s biggest stars came to the Empire Polo Grounds in Indio, CA (the same place Coachella goes down). Acts ranging from The Avett Brothers and Merle Haggard to Keith Urban and Sugarland performed for around 100,000 rabid fans. JamBase photographer Scott Dudelson was on hand to document the event.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”1″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=40″);}); Stagecoach Music Festival | Empire Polo Grounds | Indio, CA The JamBase Stagecoach Festival photo gallery includes Merle Haggard, The Avett Brothers, Sugarland, Keith Urban, Waddie Mitchell, Doyle Lawson and Quicksilver, Victoria Williams, Bill Anderson, Billy Currington, Black Prairie, Bobby Bare, Brooks and Dunn, Carlene Carter, Firefall, Heidi Newfield, Jason Aldean, Joey + Rory, Mary Gauthier, Nick 13, The Oak Ridge Boys, Phil Vassar, Ray Price and more… View Photos

JamBase | California

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Coachella | 04.18.10 | Day 3 Photo Gallery

Images by: Steven Walter & Scott Dudelson

Coachella Day 3

04.18.10 :: Sunday :: Empire Polo Grounds :: Indio, CA

The final day of Coachella 2010 featured Gorillaz, the freshly reunited Pavement, Thom Yorke/Atoms For Peace, French hot shots Phoenix, Spoon, The Strokes’ Julian Casablancas, Florence And The Machine, Sly & the Family Stone, The Big Pink, Yo La Tengo, Sunny Day Real Estate, B.o.B. and many more. Here’s a look at what went down.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”1″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=26″);}); Coachella Music Festival Day 3 | Empire Polo Grounds | Indio, CA The JamBase photo gallery from the third and final day of Coachella 2010 features Gorillaz, Thom Yorke / Atoms For Peace, Pavement, The Big Pink, Phoenix, Deerhunter, Bradford Cox, Matt /&/g Kim, Florence And The Machine, Julian Casablancas, Yo La Tengo, B.o.B, Charlotte Gainsbourg, De La Soul, Jonsi, Mayer Hawthorne & The County, MuteMath, Spoon, Sunny Day Real Estate, Yann Tiersen and more… View Photos

See JamBase’s “9 Must-See Band At Coachella” here.

See photos from Friday at Coachella here.

See photos from Saturday at Coachella here.

JamBase | California

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Coachella | 04.17.10 | Day 2 Photo Gallery

Images by: Steven Walter & Scott Dudelson

Coachella Day 2

04.17.10 :: Saturday :: Empire Polo Grounds :: Indio, CA

Saturday in Indio featured another wildly diverse day of music. Headliners Muse, Faith No More and Tiësto played alongside Les Claypool, The Dead Weather, MGMT, Girls, The xx, DJ Z-Trip, Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros, Gossip, Beach House and many more.

Be sure to check back soon for Sunday’s photos from Coachella…

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”0″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=25″);}); Coachella Music Festival Day 2 | Empire Polo Grounds | Indio, CA The JamBase photo gallery from the second day of Coachella 2010 features Les Claypool, MGMT, DJ Z-Trip, Tiesto, Hot Chip, Portugal. The Man, Girls, Beach House, Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros, The xx, White Rabbits, Band of Skulls, Camera Obscura, Corinne Bailey Rae, The Dead Weather, Devo, Gossip, Old Crow Medicine Show, Porcupine Tree, Shooter Jennings, The Temper Trap, The Raveonettes, Tokyo Police Club and more… View Photos

See JamBase’s “9 Must-See Band At Coachella” here.

See photos from Friday of Coachella here.

See photos from Sunday at Coachella here.

JamBase | Indio

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Coachella | 04.16.10 | Day 1 Photo Gallery

Images by: Steven Walter & Scott Dudelson

Coachella Day 1

04.16.10 :: Friday :: Empire Polo Grounds :: Indio, CA

The 2010 Coachella Music Festival kicked off yesterday (Friday 4/16) at the Empire Polo Grounds in Indio, CA. Day 1 featured gorgeous, hot weather (thought not as hot as years past, thankfully) and a slew of talent including Jay-Z with his girl Beyonce singing lead on set closer “Young Forever,” LCD Soundsystem, Them Crooked Vultures, The Avett Brothers, Gil Scott-Heron, Vampire Weekend, Grizzly Bear, Passion Pit, Yeasayer, Baroness, Deer Tick and more beautiful suntanned folks than you’re likely to find just about anywhere. JamBase photographers Steven Walter and Scott Dudelson will be reporting back every day, so keep an eye on JamBase all weekend for Coachella coverage.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”5″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=24″);}); Coachella Music Festival Day 1 | Empire Polo Grounds | Indio, CA Jay-Z, Beyonce, Grizzly Bear, Yeasayer, Ra Ra Riot, Passion Pit, Deer Tick, Tommy Lee and more are all captured in our first day of Coachella 2010 coverage… View Photos

See JamBase’s “9 Must-See Band At Coachella” here.

See photos from Saturday at Coachella here.

See photos from Sunday at Coachella here.

JamBase | SoCal

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SXSW | 03.19.10 | Austin, TX – Day 3

Words by: Kayceman | Images by: Scott Dudelson & Kayceman

SXSW :: 03.19.10 :: Friday :: Austin, TX

Kayceman’s Top 3

#3 – Miike Snow

Dr. Dog :: 03.19.10 :: SXSW by Kayceman

Sweden’s Miike Snow (no one named Mike, Miike or Snow in the band) took the stage in black jackets and white masks around 12:30 a.m. From the first subsonic bass rattle it was near impossible to stand still and it wasn’t hard to imagine talents like this working with Madonna and Britney Spears, with whom band members Christian Karlsson and Pontus Winnbergwon won a Grammy for Best Dance Recording on “Toxic.” These were dance tracks made by a live band that’s not afraid to rock. Heavy on hooks and dusted with slightly strange vocals, if things break right for Miike Snow they could find success like Phoenix or Justice.

#2 – Dr. Dog

Dr. Dog slayed a very packed crowd at the Filter Party with their workmanlike charm. Mixing touring staples “The Old Days,” “Worst Trip” and “Fate” with a few new numbers, including a cool one that read “Mirrors” on the setlist that chased its own tail with an increasing tempo, everything about this band screams future classic. Bassist/vocalist Toby Leaman was a monster, powerfully belting out vocals and digging his heel deep into the stage to drive the machine. Watching the joy this band finds in their music is contagious and I saw more uninhibited dancing in the crowd at this set than at any other all weekend. It all wound down with a psychedelic gospel rave-up that started with a Prince tease and wound up sounding like a relative of My Morning Jacket.

#1 – Big Light Private Hotel Suite Party

Big Light :: Hilton Suite Party :: 03.19.10 :: SXSW by Kayceman

In all my years of attending SXSW I’ve seen a lot of bands in a lot of very interesting places. During the fest Austin turns every possible location into a venue, and no one thinks twice about raging an abandoned supermarket, rocking in a taco shack or taking over an airplane hanger. But never have I seen a full-on rock show in a hotel room. Starting at around 1:15 a.m. in a giant suite at the Hilton (the hub of the festival/conference), Big Light broke new ground at SXSW. Having just covered Big Light in yesterday’s review it was not my intention to cover them again, but this party was the stuff of legends. In addition to all the managers, press, booking agents and big wig industry types, the suite (and adjoining rooms) were stuffed with about 100 people, including the Talking HeadsJerry Harrison, Blues Traveler‘s John Popper, DJ Logic, Papa Mali and the Barr Brothers. We had given the over-under on how many songs they’d actually get to play before security shut them down at around three, but the stars were aligned and Big Light played an entire hour-plus rock show at full volume. The set even included a nice sit-in by The Slip‘s Brad Barr on guitar. Big Light blew it up and confirmed their place as a serious buzz band at this year’s SXSW. This was easily one of the best parties I’ve been to at South by, or anywhere for that matter.

Continue reading for Sarah Hagerman’s SXSW Day 3 highlights…

Words by: Sarah Hagerman

Jonathan Tyler & The Northern Lights

Jakob Dylan and Three Legs (Featuring Neko Case)
03.19.10 :: SXSW by Dudelson

“Baby it’s been too long/ Since rock and roll turned you on,” Jonathan Tyler cried. ‘Nuff said. Fervent believers in the power of music to get our juices flowing, Tyler and his band The Northern Lights had the crowd getting down at the Relix day party at Antone’s. Channeling The Black Crowes with touches of Zeppelin, The Lights had a magnetic stage presence, stomping with their instruments and exuding rock star confidence. They are damn good, and they know it, but they’re ultimately here to have fun and make your ass move. They were tight as hell, too. When the lovely backup singer stepped to the mic to lead a song, throwing some very Erykah Badu-esque R&B and hip-hop into the mix, the band didn’t miss a beat behind her, tying the whole thing together with some Roots-like grooves. I would have liked to see more of her, but hot damn, this was a flat out great show. When they left the stage, Relix Editor-in-Chief Josh Baron wiped his brow as he took the mic, declaring, “I don’t know about you, but I just got run over!”

Trampled by Turtles

Some bands just have an uncanny sense of how to write songs that stick with you. Although they get well-deserved props for their cathartic and energetic live shows – you’ve never seen so much sweat pour from five guys sitting down – it’s the songwriting that sets Trampled by Turtles apart. They’ve got positively addictive hooks, and on quieter numbers, like the beautiful sigh of “Trouble,” they let them unwind with a natural ease. This set at Red-Eyed Fly flew by at a breakneck pace. I got a couple personal favorites, including “Empire” and a vicious “Burn for Free,” plus some killer new material from the upcoming Palomino. Ryan Young (fiddle) and Erik Berry (mando) practically folded into their chairs as they attacked their instrument with red-faced intensity that had the crowd whooping and shrieking. “I like your beards!” I heard someone shout. At this point during SXSW, I’ve seen enough ironic facial hair to last the rest of my life. But TbT offer genuine scruff. You get the sense that no matter how far they climb they won’t ever forget where they came from. It’s that grounding that keeps them so real and keeps their music so warm, even in the midst of the fury they can unleash when they take the stage.

Quasi

Janet Weiss (of now defunct Sleater-Kinney) is one of the fiercest, most versatile drummers in indie rock royalty. She was flexing serious muscle during Quasi’s set at Antone’s, with pin-sharp machine gun rat-a-tats and crescendos that built to brain-pulping levels. Quasi are pure, stripped-down garage adrenalin. They don’t fuck around or have a lot of pretension – they keep it lean, but draw it out in decidedly rough lines. Joanna Bolme‘s bass was chewy, and Sam Coomes‘ guitar work could break down into anarchy at any moment. Closing out their set with “Bye Bye Blackbird,” they destroyed some eardrums as they let it all hang loose with feedback buzzes, squeals, and washes of thick noise.

Velvet Truckstop

Trampled by Turtles :: 03.19.10 :: SXSW

There comes a moment at every SXSW. Your feet hurt. You can’t bear to over hear one more name-dropping conversation or see one more person glued to their iPhone while a band is killing it a few feet away. You are tired of wading through the mess on 6th Street. You are just plain tired, only averaging about four hours of sleep a night. That’s when you need something to remind you why you’re here, and I couldn’t have asked for better medicine than Velvet Truckstop. Crammed into a sweaty Nuno’s, VT laid down rock and roll salvation of the highest order. With their lofty electric blues, driving southern rock jams and echoes of The Band and Wilco, they gave me, and several others, the will to dance down the last hours until closing time. Readers, you need to get acquainted with Velvet Truckstop. These cats are cut from some genuine cloth, the kind of band that pulls you through the rough times and sends you out into the night with a romping “Hallelujah!” Guitarist Dorsey Parker was especially tapped into something huge, making it look so damn easy but one glance at his fingers moving across his axe left your head spinning. They got songwriting skills that bow towards the classic, such as the asphalt-scarred “Carolina Way,” where Jamie Dose sings about the “broken dreams and guitar strings” that litter the highway while you’re chasing a dream. But you keep pushing on regardless, because you believe in what you’re doing. If that’s not what SXSW is ultimately all about, then I don’t know what is.

Continue reading for more pics of SXSW Day 3…

Images by: Scott Dudelson

Billy Bragg and Wayne Kramer at Ghost Bar

Mike Mills (R.E.M.) at Ghost Bar

Wayne Kramer at Ghost Bar

Audible Mainframe at Spin Party

Billy Bragg at Don’t Mess With Texas Party

Frightened Rabbit at Don’t Mess With Texas Party

Citizen Cope at SXSW Day Stage

Diane Birch at SXSW Day Stage

Dead Confederate at Little Radio Party

Foxy Shazam at Spin Party

Fucked Up at Spin Party

Rogue Wave at Spin Party

Miike Snow at Spin Party

Wooden Birds at Mohawk

Metric at Stubb’s

Emily Haines – Metric at Stubb’s

Steel Train at Encore

Click here for coverage of SXSW Day 1. Click here for coverage of Day 2.

Check back tomorrow for more coverage of SXSW 2010…

JamBase | Tejas

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Jim Fairchild: Smiling Mouse

By: Alexander Napoliello

Jim Fairchild by Janet Weiss

After former Smiths guitarist Johnny Marr left Modest Mouse to play with rising U.K. rockers The Cribs in January 2009, the band rummaged through their past for a rhythm guitarist who could help carry the substantial load of the indie rock empire built by Isaac Brock and company. Modest Mouse is complex and well versed, integrating various forms of punk, pop, rock, blues, and aspects of folk – so not exactly a simple feat for any guitarist.

Jim Fairchild, who previously played with the band for a short time in 2006, quickly rose to the top of the list. Fairchild was no stranger to the various musical aspects bandleader Isaac Brock, bassist Eric Judy and drummer Jeremiah Green build upon. For 13-years Fairchild played alongside Jason Lytle in Grandaddy, an established indie rock act incorporating elements of folk and electronica into a pop formula. Fairchild’s solo venture, All Smiles, proved he could not only play next to a prominent frontman, but be one as well.

“Isaac [Brock] is a very smart dude. He doesn’t fuck around. He doesn’t bring people into the picture he thinks won’t be able to bring something to it. So within that, there is a real surprising amount of latitude,” Fairchild told JamBase over the phone from his home in San Francisco. “He encourages you to bring your personality to it. That’s a demonstration, first of all, of just how smart he is, what a great musician he is, and what a great sense he has for what is going to be effective in his band.”

Modest Mouse’s lengthy resume began to take shape with the 1997 cult-classic The Lonesome Crowded West, an album full of anger and resentment transcribed through a renegade, punk fashion. Then, 2004′s platinum-selling Good News For People Who Love Bad News proved a more melodic offering with pop hits “Float On” and “Oceans Breathe Salty.” With this album came instant popularity and the beginning of a pop transformation that found Modest Mouse staying true to their roots but suppressing the anguish found in earlier albums. The release of We Were Dead Before The Ship Even Sank (2007) displayed slight hints of their earlier aggression but largely capitalized on a modern rock undertone featuring sing-along choruses and softer sounds. Created from outtakes of the previous two albums, 2009′s EP No One’s First and You’re Next followed suite, proving just how deep the band’s songwriting cannon goes.

Jim Fairchild by Scott Dudelson

Fairchild has the experience to aid in the evolution of Modest Mouse. His solo career and involvement in Granddaddy encompasses similar aspects to Mouse’s more recent refined sound, and his style offers a nice contrast to Marr (who hasn’t officially left the group altogether, as expressed in a chat with Pitchfork last December).

Essentially, Modest Mouse is like a tree. At the roots are Judy and Green, who’ve been there since the beginning and anchor Modest Mouse’s solid foundation. The trunk is Brock, whose creative intuition is the bridge between the roots and the crown of the tree. The water that feeds the growth is the trio’s rugged rise outside Seattle, which became the driving force behind their hard-egged, rough lyrics (the pain and anger embedded in their early albums is reminiscent of Kurt Cobain’s manic, suffering themes). Over time, this tree grew branches, namely second percussionist Joe Plummer and multi-instrumentalist Tom Peloso, which allowed the band to evolve from an aggressive trio to an upbeat indie ensemble. In 2009, Modest Mouse grew another branch as Fairchild was welcomed in with open arms and offered free reign with the material. Although creativity goes hand-in-hand with an artist’s vision, Fairchild was unfamiliar with such congenial group dynamics.

“It got to the point toward the end of Grandaddy where there was no room for anyone’s creativity except for Jason’s, and that became pretty darn frustrating,” says Fairchild. “I don’t think it would be an overstatement to say he just didn’t want any input from anybody. He wanted to play exactly what he had written, exactly the way he had written it.”

“Lack of creative room led to the demise of Grandaddy. That was certainly a part of it, at least on my behalf,” Fairchild continues. “First of all, if people are going to make records they should make them however they want to make them. If Jason wants to sit around and only have himself plan the record, that’s fine. That’s his prerogative. But, I do think that there is strength in groups and I think there is strength in bouncing ideas off of people.”

Continue reading for more on Jim Fairchild…

 


You have to stay sharp when you’re doing stuff with [Isaac Brock]. That’s really a big part of the magic of that band; it’s certainly never the same show twice. He might do different lyrics or he might want to do a chord twice; those surprises are a big part of what makes that band so interesting and unique.”

-Jim Fairchild on playing in Modest Mouse

 

Photo by: Janet Weiss

Despite Brock being such a powerful force, Modest Mouse’s longevity and rise in popularity stems from a group conscience, the catalyst behind the progression of their sound. Fans from all walks of life can receive what they want depending on which album they choose to explore. Their earlier records offer kicks for a straight edge punk rock kid, while a laid-back stoner can get his musical fix from their latter releases.

Isaac Brock – Modest Mouse by Michael Jurick

“Playing with Modest Mouse is a lot more like being a part of nature than it is like being a part of a building or something man made. That’s what’s really fun about it,” says Fairchild. “It’s very haphazard, but there’s a real beauty in that. And there’s a lot of knowledge that’s informing those turns that can be perceived as… well, they are spontaneous.”

Onstage, Modest Mouse is full of loose threads. Brock’s sporadic playing often leads to repeated verses, improvised lyric teases, and deranged mashes of pedal effects and reverb.

“You have to stay sharp when you’re doing stuff with him. That’s really a big part of the magic of that band; it’s certainly never the same show twice. He might do different lyrics or he might want to do a chord twice; those surprises are a big part of what makes that band so interesting and unique,” Fairchild explains. “That’s a really fun thing to be a part of, especially coming out of having played with Grandaddy for so long. We played the songs exactly the same way every night and pretty much tried to recreate them as they exist on the album. That has its place, but at this point in my development as a person, it’s a really fascinating challenge [to be] playing in a situation that’s totally different every night. It’s a really interesting canvas to try to integrate yourself into. You have to really use your sharpest listening skills as much as [your] playing.”

Jim Fairchild by: Janet Weiss

In November 2009, Fairchild went on a brief solo tour overseas to promote his sophomore All Smiles full-length, Oh for the Getting and Not Letting Go (get a free download off the album here), as well as his first EP, Fall Never Fell. Currently, he is in the process of writing a new full-length and mixing a second EP. According to Fairchild, the EP will be released sometime in March but there’s no set release date for the full-length. He has also confirmed an appearance at the South By Southwest Festival (SXSW) in Austin this March.

Although it appears Fairchild is the missing piece in Brock’s complex puzzle, he assures JamBase that he is not an official member of Modest Mouse. However, he toured with MM all through 2009, including a short international tour last December in support of No One’s First and You’re Next. “The way Isaac describes it, I was the person that they called. That’s a good position to be in, I guess,” he laughs.

Even though Fairchild enjoys playing with Modest Mouse, All Smiles serves as his creative dumping ground, his mouthpiece to the musical world that allows him complete creative freedom for his musical vision.

He describes finding the perfect sound as “an intuitive thing, in the same way you encounter new people. Sometimes you’re not sure why, but you’re like, ‘That guy is bullshitting me,’ and then you avoid that person. And then sometimes you’re like, ‘I think I can hang out with that guy ’cause he’s not bullshitting me.’ I’ll sit around and tinker with [a song] forever until it just simply feels right and sounds right to sing it – [until] the actual sound of the words or the words themselves seem very true.”

“The world doesn’t need anymore songs necessarily. So, if you’re going to go through the trouble of writing one or making another record, what I try to imagine is, ‘Is this necessary to the world? Does the world need this?’”

Modest Mouse tour dates available here :: All Smiles tour dates available here

JamBase | Smiling
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