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Sierra Nevada World Music Fest: Toots, Steel Pulse, Rebelution

JUNE 17-19; MENDOCINO CITY FAIRGROUNDS; BOONVILLE, CALIFORNIA


Steel Pulse

The 2011 Sierra Nevada World Music Festival has
announced their first batch of confirmed artists. Set for
June 17-19 at the Mendocino City Fairgrounds in Boonville, California, the festival will feature Toots & The Maytals, Steel Pulse, Rebelution, Horace Andy, and others.

A limited number of Early-Bird tickets are now available online and via mail order through February 28 or until all
Early Bird tickets are sold, whichever comes first. 3-Day Early-Bird Music Tickets are only $125.00 each (children 12
and under are free
if accompanied by a paid adult). Click here
to get tickets.

CONFIRMED ARTISTS
Toots & The Maytals

Steel Pulse

Rebelution

Horace Andy

Collie Buddz & The New Kingston Band

Pablo Moses
I-Octane

Romain Virgo

Kora

Rupa & The April Fishes

Taj Weekes & Adowa

Indubious


Hitachi’s Consulting Arm Buys Offshore Developer Sierra Atlantic

Sierra Atlantic’s offshore development locations in Hyderabad, India, and Guangzhou, China, will expand Hitachi Consulting’s presence in the data center middleware and application integration markets. – Hitachi Consulting, the global consulting division of Japan’s
Hitachi Ltd., said Jan. 4 that it has acquired Oracle and Microsoft enterprise
application developer Sierra Atlantic of Newark, Calif.
Terms of the transaction were not disclosed.
Because Sierra Atlantic has offshore development locat…


Gulf Shrimpers Find Oil In Reopened Fishing Areas. Governnment Says “Shut Up”. Sierra Club Alleges Areas Were Solely Reopened to Limit BP’s Liability

While the government says that the oil is gone, shrimpers say its still there.The Press-Register reports:Opening state offshore waters to fishing and winding down the cleanup effort on the coast is premature, said Louie Miller, state director of the …

High Sierra Festival: 07.01-07.04 | California

Words by: Dennis Cook, Jake Krolick, Susan J. Weiand and Aaron Kayce | Images by: Jake Krolick and Susan J. Weiand

High Sierra Music Festival :: 07.01.10-07.04.10 :: Plumas County
Fairgrounds :: Quincy,
CA

Anniversaries are funny things. Often too much or too little is made of them, but High
Sierra 2010
struck a
lovely balance in celebrating its 20th year, occasionally acknowledging that they’d hit
two decades but mostly just
nailing all the elements that make this festival unique and so dear to the regulars that
return each 4th of July
weekend.

It’s tough to describe High Sierra to those who’ve never attended. On paper it makes
little sense to say there are
people everywhere – tents and RVs tucked into every nook and cranny of the Plumas County
Fairgrounds, spilling into
the woods and open fields surrounding every stage, building and port-a-potty – yet it
never seems overly crowded
or oppressive. In fact, High Sierra is one of the most peaceful, gentle, fun-loving
assemblages of humanity most of
us have ever encountered. Ebullient camaraderie is the general rule, so there are rarely
hassles of any kind. One can
walk right up to front of the stage at almost any set, and they’ll usually be met by a
smile, even if they’re just meeting
the person next to them. Rare is the walk through the maze of campers around the Big
Meadow Stage where one
isn’t greeted with a handshake or a hug or offered some form of constriction loosening
hospitality.

Yes, there’s a strain of high octane Cali hippie-dippie-ness but mostly the citizens of
this temporary city on a hill are
just hardcore music lovers enjoying the smorgasbord laid out before them. High Sierra
attracts folks with thoroughly
catholic tastes, able to fully enjoy the rowdiness of big stage headliners like Widespread Panic and
The Black Crowes
but equally able to
throw themselves wholeheartedly into the quietude of Dan Bern or the mesmerizing, rhythmic originality of Rubblebucket.

The 20th installment accentuated all the positives High Sierra has to offer. What follows
are some of the highlights
experienced by the JamBase crew as we quested after musical nirvana as America celebrated
its 234th birthday.
(Dennis Cook)

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7/1/10 – 7/4/10 – High
Sierra Music Festival
(Quincy, CA)
View Photos

Continue reading for Jake Krolick’s highlights…

Jake Krolick’s High Sierra 2010 Highlights

High Sierra at Sunset by
Krolick

Standout Moments on Thursday & Friday

Best Use of a Fretted Instrument
Both Nels Cline
Singers
sets
in the Vaudeville Tent on Thursday and Friday were the place to be for some serious
shredding, but the early
afternoon set on Friday with guitarist extraordinaire Eric McFadden sitting in on a face melting “Maggot Brain” opener
was an axe lovers
dream. Speaking of great guitarists, by now you’ve probably heard of Big Light, and if
you haven’t then
you will. Singer Fred Trophy, bassist Steve Adams, drummer Bradly
Bilfulco
and
guitarist Jeremy Korpas played in some capacity everyday at High Sierra, and beside
McFadden, who
appeared everywhere throughout the weekend, Jeremy “Swordfish” Korpas definitely popped up
on the radar of
guitarists who made you lose your shit. Korpas really deserved the accolades as he wailed
effortlessly at Big Light’s
sets, the White Stripes themed Guitarmageddon throwdown, the Gramble – where The Beatles
“I’ve Got a Feeling”
reigned supreme – and at a late night party at Camp Harry. Korpas has the patience of a
much older guitarist with a
confidence that allows him to shred effectively with any grouping of musicians. There
were extra cheers every time
he walked on stage and each performance the “Swordfish” was involved in was elevated to
new levels of
excitement.

Cult I’d Most Like To Join
Edward Sharpe & The
Magnetic
Zeros
trouncing of the Big Meadow Stage on Thursday left more than one person
whistling “Home” on
Friday morning. The highlights of the show were the opening “40 Day Dream,” a stirring
version of “Desert Song,”
and Alex Ebert conducting a sing-along in the center of a seated crowd to finish.
The band may have
appeared a tad cultish but by the end of their set the audience was ready to drop all
worldly possessions and follow
their charismatic leader anywhere

Best Band BBQ
Widespread
Panic
barbequed all
Friday afternoon before they tossed us some bones in the evening. A heated “B of D” into
“Worry” ended their first
set, which hinted that the band loved the unique H.S. setting. The second set secured
that notion and was jam-
packed with guests, starting with Eric McFadden on guitar for a meaty “Bowlegged Woman.”
John Bell
introduced Jerry
Joseph
as
“the reverend” when he joined in for a rolling “Light Is Like Water” before Karl Denson added
saxophone for a
rowdy “Ride Me High.” Domingo “Sonny” Ortiz played a late “Drums” and was joined
by the illustrious
Wally
Ingram
before good
papa Bell sung us out with the touching and apropos encore “Heaven.”

Most Fun Field Trip During The Festival
All visiting Quincy for the High Sierra Music Festival should take some time to explore
the Feather River. We hit this
beautiful landmark on Friday and were instantly impressed. It’s easy to find a swimming
hole just minutes from the
fairgrounds, and its cold waters are just about as refreshing as a full night of sleep.
It should also be noted that the
weather was perfect cold at night for sleeping and warm with zero humidity during the
day.

Community and Camps Shout Out
High Sierra is a wealth of good times that fit together like a well worked jigsaw puzzle
buried in some hidden chest
that comes out on a rainy summer day. The edges of this fest are all well worn and by now
all the people attending
know where they fit. Many of one’s best moments and memories come from the hard work of
the community and the
camps that moved your feet or blew your mind wide open with visual extravagance conjured
by this pack of pro
concertgoers. Where else do you get a Wookie Bingo game run through Twitter or a
trampoline 10-feet off the
ground and covered in lights? How about false eyebrows made to look like mini Fu-Manchu
moustaches or kickball
games with musicians sweating alongside campers at 6 am? Who else has a Hippie Bar where
you paid for a drink
with a joke or a dance or Kamp Kwitcherbitchen, where frowns were even frowned upon?
Where else are Red cards
and Yellow cards tossed at flagrant music fan fouls? Legendary Camp Harry threw its own
pirate/mojilto party and
two late night shows with Big Light and Surprise Me Mr. Davis. And let us not forget the tongue-in-cheek
mayoral battle
between Nathan
Moore
and
Vince
Herman
that included
campaign signs throughout the campgrounds. There were hundreds of camps and thousands of
creative freaks – I’m
impressed with you all for your freaky prowess.

Nicki Bluhm & The Gramblers by
Krolick

A Band I Need To See More
My age makes me less than a thought when CSNY and Buffalo Springfield hit L.A. and
wandered up into the canyon.
Perhaps that is what makes Nicki
Bluhm & The Gramblers
so appealing. Since I missed the first coming I’ll be
damned if I won’t catch the
second. Bluhm was an early breath of fresh air on Thursday and Friday. She’s a stage
darling in the same way her
famous Laurel Canyon predecessors Jimmy Webb and Joni Mitchell were jangly social and
musical icons. Her easy
way with songs and smooth vocal delivery was more than enough to captivate the crowds, but
when you tossed in
Steve Adams‘ groovy bass and husband Tim Bluhm‘s gallant guitar strum into the fold there was something
incredibly desirable
about the music.

Standout Moments on Saturday and Sunday

Best Use of a Kazoo
Yes, Nathan Moore pulled one out at his solo set but it was a good thing he forgot the
whole bag. The act of
forgetfulness led to a stirring Surprise Me Mr. Davis cover of The Beatles’ “Honey Pie” at
around 2:00 am on Monday
morning at Camp Harry. The moment the bag of kazoos was handed out you just knew it was
going to be special.
The crowd participation and the smiles between Moore, Marc Friedman and the Barr
Brothers
said
it all.

Hottest Late Night
Hindsight reveals that the better Mother
Hips
set was on Sunday evening in the Vaudeville Tent with a four song finale that
would grow hair on a
bald baby (“Pacific Dust > Space > Turtle Bones > Hey Emilie”), but as a whole Saturday
night’s late night was the
hottest four band bounce of the entire festival. After catching Tim Bluhm and Greg
Loiacono
with the Hips
on the East Coast I knew I loved them, but it took a trip to the West Coast to really see
them rock a proper crowd.
Saturday evening’s show was such a treat, with several highlights including “Jet Plane”
with Nicki Bluhm and Grambler
guitarist Deren Ney, “Been Lost Once” with TLG’s Josh Clark, and a
“Time Sick Son of
a Grizzly Bear with ALO’s Dan
Lebowitz
. The follow-up was a fast bounce over to catch Fanny Franklin and
the L.A. crew
Orgone, who
established
themselves as a funk force to be reckoned with. The crowd’s energy during the end of
their set was really incredible
and steam poured out of all openings from the High Sierra Music Hall into the cool night
air.

Meanwhile Dr.
Dog
was
flexing their muscles at the Funk’n Jamhouse as they ripped through almost their entire
repertoire, raging a version
of “The Ark” off Fate and paying special attention to “Shadow People” off their
latest album, Shame,
Shame
. Toby Leaman (bass) and Scott McMicken (lead guitar) were wild
and energetic and
their changes left the crowd stunned. Guitarist Frank McElroy even climbed to the
top of his amp stack for
a leap of faith before finishing at around 3:15 am. This left just enough time to get in
to hear Karl Denson
tear it up on flute and sax as well as toss us a joke about Giuseppe Garibaldi. The
amount of steamy pizza flowing
around Denson’s funk down was obscene. I witnessed more than one patron dancing with a
hot slice held high in
their hands.

Vince Herman by Susan J.
Weiand

Oddest Place To Find Sushi
The sushi guy next to the main stage making those delicious hand rolls in an “I am funkier
than you” tee was surreal.
The Widespread Roll was insane and included a wrapper filled with sticky rice, a smear of
wasabi, huge chunks of
albacore & mango, a spicy mayo spread and sprouts, all rolled to perfection for five
bucks.

Best Sporting Event Combo
Kickball into the World Cup games. The new trampoline bases, the costumed Space Man,
vevuzelas blown at 5 am,
and the World Cup games made it worth never finding sleep. But the best moment happened
on Sunday morning
when a piñata was tossed into the middle of the kickball field. When it was finally
broken open it was filled with
airplane bottles of gin and all heck broke loose.

Best Use of a Child On Stage
Marco
Benevento
daughter
Ruby has gained some serious stage confidence since last year’s festival, and that showed
as she used dad as her
own personal jungle gym during his Trio’s set. Marco made the best out of the moment when
he took Ruby’s hands
and had her play the “Real Morning Party” to kick off the set.

The Well-Put Award
Nathan Moore summed up my feelings best on Sunday afternoon at his solo performance. To
paraphrase what he
said, “We are all out on the road day after day, each year just trying to hang on
patiently until we are back together at
High Sierra.” I thought about this notion the rest of Sunday and realized that this
festival never really ends; it just
goes into a different mode, one focused on reconstruction. The community that has
attended religiously for years,
reuniting friends, campsites and intense feelings will no doubt be planning what they can
do better for next year. It
takes all the little touches coming together over the 4th of July weekend to really make
High Sierra the incredibly
special experience it is.

Continue reading for Dennis Cook’s highlights…

Dennis Cook’s High Sierra 2010 Highlights

Zach Deputy by Susan J. Weiand

The Load-In
I have the good fortune of getting into the fairgrounds on Wednesday night, where only a
fraction of attendees are
about, setting up twinkling strings of lights and grilling while the first case of beer
ices down. This allows me a front
row seat for the main deluge Thursday morning when gates open and the majority of folks
pour in. It’s like a
colorful, pleasantly musky land rush – wild, hooting and excited as little kids on
Christmas morning. I pull up a chair
and sip coffee while all this beautiful humanity races past, hauling costumes, coolers,
hula-hoops and inflatable
beasts in red wagons, ready for adventure and eager to embrace their new neighbors with
open arms.

Tim
Carbone

The violinist for Railroad Earth and The Contribution
predictably played two
unshakeably solid sets with RRE and guested winningly with Cornmeal, Great American Taxi
and more, but just seeing
him strolling about always stirs great cheer. He’s earthy music in motion, and where he
roams there’s likely to be
something sweet being played, often by him since it’s hard to keep Carbone off a stage if
he’s got something to add.
And trust me, he’s always got something GREAT to add. White haired and worldly wise, Tim
is one of High Sierra’s
archetypal spiritual figures, emblematic of the many musicians here that are eager to
engage the whole of music and
wrestle it into new, exciting forms.

Guerilla Sets
For all the sanctioned stuff on stages, there’s nearly as much unofficial music making
afoot at HSMF. From campsite
pick-a-thons to lawn sets with portable amps, the players here exhibit a healthy
disrespect for order, allowing the
notes bubbling in their veins to rule them. Despite two Big Meadow sets, The Heavy Guilt
could often be
found rockin’ exuberantly near the food court, as thrilled to be laying down their grungy
goodness to a few
wandering souls as they were in front of a large crowd. And they were hardly alone this
weekend in carving out off-
program opportunities for themselves.

Thursday Highlights

1. Zach
Deputy
– 1:15-2:30 PM
- Big Meadow

The Big Meadow Stage is, well, big, yet Deputy filled it effortlessly, picking and singing
like a young Bill Withers
transposed to a large, hirsute new honky frame. Zach’s looping prowess far surpasses
almost anyone out there – yes,
even the hallowed Keller – in terms of originality and more importantly, musicality.
While loops can come off as
gimmicky, they only serve the songs with Deputy and enable his one-man operation to
actually sound like a band.
He’s got swell tunes and plays guitar with intoxicating flair. While Nathan Moore may
have snagged top honors,
based on the word-of-mouth this year, Zach was definitely the Deputy Mayor by popular
consensus.

2. Rubblebucket
- 3:30-4:45 PM
- Vaudeville Tent

Brooklyn has another amazing band y’all need to check out. Building up from a foundation
drawn from roots reggae
and Afrobeat, Rubblebucket layered a crazed yet brilliantly woven hodgepodge of sounds
atop their gut level
rhythms. Like the finest original groups, there’s an internal logic that makes it all
work in a very immediate, flatly
exciting way. With female led vocals reminiscent of Bjork and Patti Smith, the group
swerves confidently – true
performers all who genuinely entertain onstage – on the prowl and sinking their sharp
incisors in at all the right
moments. Their Friday set was even stronger, inspiring their trumpeter/co-bandleader to
leap into the waiting arms
of the fevered audience, where he was held aloft to continue playing. Those enamored of
Yeasayer, Akron/Family,
Tricky and Antibalas are heartily encouraged to dig into Rubblebucket, easily my best new
find at HSMF 2010.

Surprise Me Mr. Davis by Jake
Krolick

3. Surprise Me Mr. Davis – 11:30-1:30 AM – Vaudeville Tent
Suited up like friends at a wedding, SMMD unleashed all the magic and mojo that’s made
them a mainstay at High
Sierra for years. The combination of Nathan Moore, The Slip and Marco Benevento proved a
wondrous reminder of
how fun and fulfilling rock ‘n’ roll can be. Sure, they jam a bit but it’s the songs and
their scintillating delivery that
offer nourishing marrow to be sucked and savored. If Henry David Thoreau and Paul
McCartney had formed a band
it might sound a lot like Davis. And I had my personal high for the day at this set when
Moore ordered the backstage
masses onstage for a dance party during “Sisyphus,” passing out hugs and smiles as he
frolicked and enjoyed his
bandmates beside us. ‘Joyful’ is the word that most springs to mind with SMMD, followed
quickly by ‘holy’ (an
impression resoundingly confirmed by the closing “As Long As There’s One of Us Still
Standing” closer).

Friday Highlights

1. Nels Cline Singers – 11:15-12:30 PM – Vaudeville Tent
His lead guitar role in Wilco has raised
Cline’s profile higher than ever, but it’s in this formation one experiences the full,
devastating breadth of his genius.
Genius is a word I use VERY sparingly but witnessing the voluminous range and imagination
of Cline’s playing at this
set it’d be hard to argue against it in his case. Surrounded by ultra-sympathetic,
equally gifted collaborators
Scott Amendola (percussion, electronics), Yuka Honda (keys) and Devin
Hoff
(bass),
Cline handily shattered preconceptions about instrumental music, raging in a way that
frightened some morning
listeners (one of my camp mate’s literally fled with terrified eyes during a particularly
noisy, disorienting stretch).
But, the ensemble was equally skilled at hushed introspection and bebop-ish interaction.
Overall, just bloody
stunning.

2. Dr. Dog – 9:30-11:00 PM – Big Meadow
When the last notes of this breakneck performance died away I muttered, “They make me SO
glad there’s music.” Dr.
Dog is surely a rock band, and all the Beatles, Band and Beach Boys references are apt, to
a point, but there’s
something way more primal and fundamental going on with them. Their songs address life
with unblinking honesty
and joyful engagement, understanding that light and shadow are a dance and then giving us
the melodies that
choreograph our constriction shattering gyrations. Song for song, note for note, nobody
played a better set this
year.

3. Jerry Joseph and
the
Jackmormons
– 11:30-1:30 AM – Vaudeville Tent

Jerry J was in full-blown preacher mode during this anthem-upon-anthem rock extravaganza.
After playing several
acoustic-leaning sets, the snarling rock animal inside Joseph and his mighty bandmates
(bolstered with inspired
extra percussion by Wally Ingram) let fully loose inside the steamed up Vaudeville, the
tightly packed throng swaying
and leaping like a congregation lit up from within. While often overlooked, Jerry’s
guitar strangling was miraculous
this evening; the man is easily one of the most powerful, relentless guitarist alive.
Beneath the hot, swirling lights,
Joseph gesticulated and ranted like a man who’d crammed both Joe Strummer and Mick Jones
into his compact body
- a barefoot punk prophet and king of the motherfuckin’ disco, too.

Saturday Highlights

1. Pimps of
Joytime
– 3:15-4:30
PM – Big Meadow

This set launched my repeated one word exhortation for the weekend: Hectic. The Pimps are
on the funk like ink on
paper, moving like calligraphy across the page where most make clunky block letters and
sign with a thumbprint.
Smooth but not too smooth, they captured the general bonhomie in the air yet kept things
dirty enough to be
credible. Clean funk isn’t really funk at all. Their dynamics alone set them apart from
the herd, with the whole band
able to blast hard and instantly drop down to a compelling murmur and back again.
Watching Brian J (vox,
guitar, keys), Clark Dark (bass, moog) and Mayteana Morales (vocals,
sampler, percussion)
groove along the edge of the stage one felt compelled to reach down deep for all the
Prince gymnastics they had in
their dance trick bag. All killer, no filler.

Black Crowes by Jake Krolick

2. The Black Crowes – 9:00-11:00 PM – Grandstand Stage
While a 20-year Crowes veteran like myself might have liked to hear more than one tune
from the band’s two most
recent albums (though “Oh Josephine” was mid-tempo ballad gold), this was a perfect
festival set, peppered with
bygone hits like “Hard To Handle” and anchored to material the band always plays well.
What’s highly enjoyable
about the Crowes at this stage is how wonderfully consistent they are. From the sound of
it many folks at High Sierra
hadn’t seen them since the mid-90s and were just about universally knocked on their tushes
by this performance.
The Crowes are one of the few rock acts one can mention in the same breath as Zeppelin,
Aerosmith, et al. and this
set ably showed why that is.

3. The Mother Hips/Dr. Dog – 11:45 PM-3:30 AM – Funk’n Jamhouse
Arguably the best late night combo this year – Pimps of Joytime opening for The New Mastersounds
on Sunday being
the obvious competition – the pairing of the Dog and the Hips was tangible proof that rock
‘n’ roll is anything but
dead. Both bands played a little outside their comfort zone, especially the Hips who
delved into some older fan faves
and welcomed Nicki Bluhm and sublime Grambler lead guitarist Deren Ney for a
mesmerizing, emotional
version of “Jet Plane,” a new Nicki tune that’ll appear on her forthcoming sophomore
album. So absorbing and
enriching were both bands that it was easy to settle into the moment and really experience
the music on a cellular
level. By the end of Dr. Dog’s headlining set I found myself leaping and spinning like my
3-year-old does when we
watch School House Rock and every song is greeted like his favorite.

Sunday Highlights

1. Poor Man’s
Whiskey
– 12:00-
1:15 PM – Grandstand Stage

Shirtless in an Uncle Sam long coat, Eli Jebediah and the rest of PMW were a lively
reminder of some of the
very cool things about Americans and American music. Taking their cues from a wide
assortment of influences like
Old & In The Way, Woody Guthrie and Dr. Hook & The Medicine Show, Poor Man’s reminded us
that we need to live
our lives sometime and maybe this was the right day to dig in. Their music is a
celebration of the right things in life,
and they’re all phenomenal musicians to boot. By turns folksy and rockin’, they move
along rhythms that are hard to
resist and sling lines that you’ll find yourself quoting to your friends later. A 100-
watt stage presence and spot-on
knack for covers (they closed with Tom Petty’s “American Girl” in honor of the holiday)
further up the ante. I see a lot
of live music and can assure you there are few more charming, enjoyable groups going than
Poor Man’s Whiskey.

Allmond Bros Clan by Susan J.
Weiand

2. The Allmond Bros Clan – 4:30-6:00 PM – High Sierra Music Hall
A tribute band is a tricky thing. Genuflect too much and you’re a boring recreation,
stray too far off the blueprint and
folks won’t recognize the source material, which is a central aspect to a tribute’s
pleasure. This Allman Brothers
homage led by Guitar Player Magazine’s Jimmy Leslie (who plays the Dickey
role) gets the balance
just right. Unlike the Grateful Dead, Beatles or Stones, few bands cover the Allmans
because it is a separate language
that swirls gutbucket blues with jazz sophistication. Just as most of us don’t speak
Esperanto, Allman-ese isn’t
common and it was exciting to see this large band teach themselves how to talk eloquently.
Unlike today’s ABB, the
Allmond Clan uses the At The Fillmore East era as their Rosetta Stone, and one
suspects their grasping at
these numbers mirrors the Allmans’ own during that time period. Simon “Eli Jebidah”
Kurth
was a fire hose
of great guitar riffing as Duane “Sky Frog” Allmond, and stellar guest turns from Sean
Leahy, Josh Clark, Greg Loiacono and Lebo
added further air guitar heft to the session. PMW’s Josh Brough was also
murderously good as Gregg
“Allmond Boy” Allmond, attacking the organ and vocals with the gusto of a young Gregg.
Most of us weren’t able to
see ABB when Duane was alive but the hunger for that music remains. The Allmond Bros Clan
fulfills that appetite in
a way that honors Duane’s memory by really wrestling with this music in a quite alive way.
Festival bookers take
note: Don’t let the other guys get to this project before you.

Also worth mentioning that Simon Kurth also recently took over the reins with Guitarmageddon
and blew out the
doors on Friday with a White Stripes
focused performance. If Kurth is involved I can just about guarantee two things: It’s
going to be entertaining as hell
and the musicianship will make you salivate. Beyond that it’s best to trust his instincts
and go for whatever ride he’s
offering.

3. Carolyn
Wonderland
– 11:30-
1:30 AM – Vaudeville Tent

With The Mother Hips delivering yet another unbelievably great set before her, it was
somewhat of a surprise that
Carolyn Wonderland captured my final slot for the weekend, but damn if the tiny Austin
blues belter didn’t take my
heels out from under me. I’m intensely picky about the blues and, like many grumpy old
men, feel that maybe the
best purveyors are no longer with us or not long for this world. I reject slick,
modernized blues, and thankfully
Wonderland and her on-the-money drummer and multi-tasking keyboardist (he provided
keyboard bass, too) dealt
in only the real stuff. Carolyn can shred mightily and her tone is gritty, loud and
impolite. Glorious! She’s got
compositions that sit well next to the Bo Diddley and the like in her arsenal, and she’s
got an odd, alluring stage
manner that draws you in but also makes you feel like she might cut you if you looked at
her wrong. She’s got depth
and her band swung like all get out. As perfect a nighttime ramble as High Sierra has
ever offered.

Continue reading for Kayceman and Susan Weiand’s highlights, plus some video
highlights…

Aaron Kayce’s High Sierra 2010 Highlights

WSP’s John Bell by Susan J.
Weiand

1. Widespread Panic – Main Stage – Friday
Festivals aren’t always the best place to get one’s Panic on. Time constraints,
questionable sound systems and a
mixed bag of fans can often clip the band’s wings, as was the case the last time WSP
appeared at High Sierra in 1999.
But the festival’s 20th anniversary sparked an inspired two set affair that left hardcores
fully satisfied. Taking
advantage of the stacked lineup Panic welcomed a number of special guests including
guitarist Eric McFadden on a
dirty, sexy “Bowlegged Woman” that found bassist Dave Schools deep in a P-Funk
inspired romp,
guitarist/vocalist Jerry Joseph on his own “Light Is Like Water,” saxophonist Karl Denson
on an extended psych-funk
workout of J.J. Cale’s “Ride Me High,” and percussionist Wally Ingram on “Drums” and the
second half of “Surprise
Valley.” When the band closed the show with an emotionally saturated take on the Talking
Heads’ “Heaven” it was
not only a reminder of Widespread Panic’s power, but a nod to just how amazing the High
Sierra Music Festival truly
is.

2. Dr. Dog – Funk’n Jamhouse – Saturday Late Night
Dr. Dog’s Saturday late night set proved to be a huge slab of dark, psychedelic rock that
had a packed house of fans
freaking out and dancing wildly until 3 in the morning. Leaning heavily on material from
their latest release
Shame, Shame, the show highlighted the band’s remarkable evolution from lo-fi
indie-pop to gigantic,
confident rock. Though the new songs showcased Dr. Dog’s amazing songwriting, it didn’t
seem to matter what part
of the catalog they pulled from, everything was performed with razor sharp intensity and
executed to perfection.
From note one the band was locked in; every change was dramatic and full of force, every
harmony soaring, and the
jams thick with friction. For this writer, the band’s HSMF late night show elevated the
Dog from a really good band
with serious potential to one of the best live acts on the circuit. It shouldn’t be long
until we see Dr. Dog headlining
festivals.

3. Surprise Me Mr. Davis – Camp Harry – Sunday Late Night
For many High Sierra patrons, including a number of artists such as The Mother Hips’ Tim
Bluhm and Greg Loiacano,
Nicki Bluhm, Wally Ingram and several others, there was no better way to end the weekend
than with Surprise Me Mr.
Davis at Camp Harry on Sunday night. Set up guerilla-style between two RVs, this annual
tradition has turned into
one of the most highly anticipated sets of the weekend for fans of Mr. Davis, The Slip and
Nathan Moore (Surprise Me
Mr. Davis being The Slip plus Nathan Moore). The defining moment of the night came when
Davis took on The
Beatles and created the very appropriate “High Sierra’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” (The Slip
celebrated their 12th
consecutive HSMF this year) with shout-outs to High Sierra co-founder and close friend
Dave Margulies in place of
“Billy Shears.” With fans passing bottles and funny cigarettes to each other and the
band, the two hour set felt more
like a summer camp send-off than the conclusion of a major music festival.

Susan J. Weiand’s High Sierra 2010 Highlights

Carolyn Wonderland by Susan J.
Weiand

1. Carolyn Wonderland – Vaudeville – Sunday Late Night
CW has played High Sierra three years now, but her closing set on Sunday night finally
cemented her place as HS
royalty. Fans were driven to tears and smiles by her ballsy playing and soulful singing.
She held the capacity crowd
in the palm of her hand. Many new Carolyn Wonderland fans were converted this evening.

2. Vince Herman’s Great American
Taxi
- Big Meadow – Thursday

The self-proclaimed Mayor of High Sierra is a festie staple and to me, represents all
things High Sierra. He and his
Taxi bandmates kicked things into high gear with his “4:20 for 20 years” jam played at
precisely 4:20 pm, of
course.

3. The New Mastersounds – Camp Happiness – Friday at 4:20
Camp Happiness always throws a great happy hour party with crab cakes, gumbo, cocktails
and great people. The
New Mastersounds have played this annual party in the past and returned this year for a
get-down funk-athon. With
bandmate Joe Tatton playing a borrowed kid’s keyboard (with the notes conveniently
written on the keys),
the band delivered the funky goods. Mega dance party!

Honorable mentions: Rads late night; the Funkify Your Life, Horns a Plenty, Rads Pre War
Blues, Marco Benevento Trio,
and Allmond Bros Clan playshops; Kate Gaffney main stage; Orgone Big Meadow; Poor Man’s
Whiskey doing Dark
Side of the Moonshine
.

JamBase | Celebratory
Go See Live Music!


All Good/Forecastle Previews

By: Dennis Cook
JamBase Associate
Editor

How you holding up? It’s only July, kids, and there’s MANY more sets and sunrises to enjoy before summer comes to
an end. Eat some high fiber cereal, take your vitamins and pack enough beer. We’re far from over this season! Let’s
dive into two primo offerings this coming weekend.

All Good Festival :: 07.08.10-07.11.10 :: Marvin’s Mountaintop :: Masontown,
WV

This mid-Atlantic darling genuinely lives up to its catchphrase name. With no overlapping music on its twin Dragon
and Crane Stages, All Good encourages one to settle in and enjoy the musical adventure they’ve programmed for
you, cutting back on the gypsy wandering one experiences at most summer fests. Umph’s Jake Cinninger has dubbed
to performance space “the concert bowl,” and it’s all-too-easy to imagine stretching out on the grass as headliners
Furthur, Widespread Panic, Umphrey’s McGee and Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi rock ya for a little
while. Here’s a few suggestions for sets you should be out of your tent in time to enjoy.

1. Femi Kuti & The Positive Force ::
Friday :: 3:45-4:50 PM :: Dragon Stage

While his father is currently the toast of Broadway, Femi Kuti is breathing hot life into the musical tradition Fela
began. A fiery blend of dance-ready African rhythms, political themes and tight, large group musicianship, Femi &
Positive Force are lethal live. Come prepared to kick off your shoes and dance.

2. Dr. Dog :: Saturday :: 2:40-
3:40 PM :: Dragon Stage

If The Beatles had decided to NOT retire from the road and instead suss out ways to transmute their studio brilliance
into equally brilliant live performances, well, it might have sounded a good deal like Dr. Dog. While the band’s
presence has grown rapidly on the national stage, based on what JamBase heard at High Sierra, many fest veterans
haven’t experienced their life-affirming concert performances yet. This is soul-deep music that arms one with small
kernels of wisdom and puts a warm breeze beneath your heels.

3. The Lee Boys & The Travelin’ McCourys :: Sunday ::
12:15-2:15 PM :: Dragon Stage

Sacred steel meets bluegrass and southern rock. It’s a gosh darn beautiful combination and a far cry from the way
these boys play when Del is leading the charge. A real conversation that expands one’s musical horizons takes place
when this bunch assembles onstage. Not to be missed, and a grand way to get your Sunday rolling.

Check out JamBase’s 2009 All Good review for fuller picture of what awaits you on Marvin’s
Mountaintop.

All Good Music Schedule

All Good Directions

All Good Official Site

Continue reading for our picks for Forecastle Festival…

Forecastle Festival :: 07.09.10-07.11.10 :: Waterfront Park :: Louisville,
Kentucky

The 9th Annual Forecastle Festival, located in the heart of one of the great cities of the South, takes its
name, according to the fest’s website, from a sailing term meaning “a superstructure at the bow of a ship where the
crew is housed. Hard at work in the boundless blue sea, a place where workers unite after a hard day of labor. A
place where the people come together.” Sounds nice, and it won’t be hard to have a good time with headliners like
Widespread Panic, Smashing Pumpkins, Spoon and The Flaming Lips providing the
soundtrack for one’s revels. And there’s a lot of other golden moments waiting to happen on Forecastle’s four music
stages. Here’s three keepers we want to steer attendees towards.

1. Lucero :: Friday :: 10:30-12:00
midnight :: East Stage

While many of you will be glued to Widespread on the main stage, another American rock ‘n’ roll great will be playing
a short distance away. Over the past 12 years, Lucero has married punk to southern rock and quality singer-
songwriter sensibilities. Anchored by Ben Nichols and Brian Venable, the band is as real as a
heart attack and tuneful as the best Drive-By Truckers and The Replacements, just two kindred spirits to this
exceptional band.

2. Devo :: Saturday :: 7:30-8:45
PM :: West Stage

The term “devolution” didn’t exist before these spud boys invented it. Not many bands alter the general social
lexicon AND cover the Rolling Stones with aplomb. Devo is playing with real energy and wit these days, perhaps
reveling in the fact that they were already living the present moment decades before us all. You don’t want to tell
your grandkids one day that you missed a chance to see these guys live.

3. Joe Purdy :: Sunday :: 1:00-
1:45 PM :: West Stage

Very quietly but with sure, strong steps, Purdy has crafted one of the finest, heaviest songbooks of any American
singer-songwriter going. His beautifully broken voice, his vaguely hobo-esque appearance and especially his insight
into the human condition leave a profound impression.

Check out JamBase’s 2009 Forecastle review for insights into what lays ahead in year nine.

Forecastle Schedule

Forecastle Directions

Forecastle Official Site

JamBase | Toes In The Grass
Go See Live Music!


Dr. Dog on Craig Ferguson

BRINGIN’ THOSE SHADOW PEOPLE INTO THE LIGHT

After a number of the JamBase crew got their collective minds blown by Dr. Dog at High Sierra this past weekend, we wanted to share this recent performance from The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson. Their music makes us happy to have ears.

Dr. Dog Tour Dates :: Dr. Dog News :: Dr. Dog Concert Reviews


Nateva/High Sierra Festival Previews

By: Dennis Cook, JamBase Associate Editor

As the summer festival season rolls on, JamBase looks ahead to 4th of July weekend with helpful links and considered suggestions for two major gatherings, one in the East and one in the West.

Nateva Music & Camping Festival

Maine hasn’t had a gathering like the inaugural Nateva Music & Camping Festival before. A more intimate cousin to big boys like Coachella and Bonnaroo, Nateva is a three-day (or four if you count the Thursday night warm-up with Gypsy Tailwind, Lettuce and Lotus) jam-happy event, July 2-4, at the 100 acre Oxford Fairgrounds, which are just a couple hours from Boston and 45 minutes from Portland, Maine. With headliners moe., Grizzly Bear, The Flaming Lips, Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi, STS9 and festival closers Furthur, this is set to be an auspicious debut.

Nateva organizer Frank Chandler told the Bangor Daily News today, “It’s all about creating this little temporary community that is centered around music. It’s uniquely intimate, since we’ve capped ticket sales at 15,000. It’s not like other festivals, where there are just thousands upon thousands of people. We don’t want anyone to feel overwhelmed. That was always the goal.”

Sounds like a good mindset and game plan for a fine festivarian experience. And here’s a few pointers of our own for your listening adventure.

1. Greensky Bluegrass :: Friday :: 12:05-1:05 PM :: Main Stage 1

There’s a curious, compelling mixture of roughneck energy and brainy sophistication to Greensky. They dabble in bluegrass ways but have just as much in common with the rowdy cleverness of early Ozark Mountain Daredevils and fellow contemporary rules breakers the Punch Brothers. They’re also super swell when they take things down a bit, making folks lean in and plucking heartstrings as efficiently as their instruments.

2. The Heavy Pets :: Friday :: 5:30-7:00 PM :: Port City Music Hall Stage

There’s no dirth of ambition in the Pets, who proudly wear the “jam band” tag in an age where it’s increasingly less cool. If groups played with as much fire or snaking imagination as this Florida outfit then it might not be on the slide. The Heavy Pets have built a fan base the old fashioned way, i.e. through tireless touring, which has sharpened their chops and grown their catalog extensively. The lines between rock, reggae, electronica, soul and prog get blurred nicely in the Pets, who just released their self-titled sophomore album in May.

3. Crash Kings:: Saturday :: 3:15-4:15 PM :: Main Stage 2

Dirty ass rock ‘n’ roll rarely happens without guitars, but there’s wonderful exceptions like the Crash Kings, a trio with serious whomp that’s got keys as their primary assault weapon. Throw that on top a rhythm section that reminds one of a robust young Zeppelin plus a singer with the raw energy of young Rod Stewart and you’ve got good times. Our guess is they’ll bring it hard in this afternoon set.

4. Nate Wilson Group :: Sunday :: 1:15-2:00 PM :: Port City Music Hall Stage

Melodic hard rock has few better allies than former Assembly of Dust keyboardist Nate Wilson and his fine Group, who in more than a few ways nod back to the original Jeff Beck Group with AOD guitarist Adam Terrell burning hot front and center on many pieces (though the guy has a Gilmour-like subtlety, too – definitely one of rock’s under-sung greats). What the NWG has over the competition is super strong songwriting that scoops out the yummy parts of rock and serves them up in a really appealing way. JamBase awaits the follow-up to their killer debut impatiently.

5. Moonalice:: Sunday :: 1:45-2:45 PM :: Main Stage 2

Moonalice delivers good ol’ hippie freak rock with a genuine love of festival type folks, you know quality weirdos who like to kick down a door of perception or three but wanna boogie a touch as they break on through to the other side. This rising West Coast group is working on being a national concern and this is a chance for our East Coast readers to get a taste of what we’ve been enjoying in the Bay Area for a spell.

The good folks at iClips will be webcasting from Nateva here during the festival.

Nateva Music Schedule

Nateva Directions

Nateva Official Site

Continue reading for our picks for High Sierra Music Festival…

High Sierra Music Festival

The High Sierra Music Festival celebrates its 20th anniversary this year. From Thursday, July 1st through late Sunday, July 4th, the mountain fairgrounds in Quincy, CA that serve as home to this fest will overflow with great music and hearty companionship. With tents and RVs surrounding the performance spaces and the most casual artist-fan relationship in the fest circuit, High Sierra stands apart in many ways. The “hang” is all, and it casts a spell over attendees and performers alike, where often the guitarist who shredded your mind in the afternoon is standing next to you in the evening while headliners like Widespread Panic, The Black Crowes, Railroad Earth and The Avett Brothers (it’s nigh impossible to hold a summer fest in 2010 without them!) flatten the masses. You’ll both have the same stupid, entirely copacetic grin on your faces, too.

Here’s five winners from the broad assortment on offer this year.

1. Nicki Bluhm & The Gramblers :: Thursday :: 12:15-1:30 PM :: Vaudeville Tent

It’s worth getting set up early so you can leave your tent behind and catch this nooner with one of the most talented, charming young singers and bands on the West Coast. They’ve got the swerve and bluesy slap of vintage Linda Ronstadt and Traci Nelson & Mother Earth, though their straight pop chops ain’t shabby neither. In a nutshell, good, good, good rock ‘n’ roll fronted by a powerful, fetching singer. What the hell else do you need to kick off your revels?
[Nicki & The Gramblers also perform on Friday from 11:30-12:45 pm on the Big Meadow Stage]

2. Nels Cline Singers :: Thursday :: 7:30-8:45 PM :: Vaudeville Tent

People who only caught wind of mind-blowing guitarist Nels Cline after he joined Wilco have whole worlds to explore in Cline’s past, not to mention his ongoing solo, projects with gifted pals like Jenny Scheinman and more. However, it’s with the Singers that one feels closest to whatever internal mojo fires up Cline. Flanked by Devin Hoff (contrabass, bass guitar) and percussion & electronics whiz Scott Amendola, Cline veers into hitherto unexplored sonic spaces. At times jarring or unexpectedly beautiful in the strangest places, the Nels Cline Singers harness adventurousness to some of the best musicianship we’re likely to witness at HSMF 2010.
[The Singers also perform on Friday from 11:15-12:30 pm in the Vaudeville Tent]

3. Rubblebucket :: Friday :: 4:55-6:20 PM :: Vaudeville Tent

Frequently those that delve into Afrobeat sound like mere copycats, though many come off well due to high energy presentation. What’s swell about Rubblebucket is how they clearly draw from Afrobeat’s ideas but mingle them with bits of Talking Heads and other rhythm-wise modern rock. Hailing from three fine B’s – Burlington, Boston and Brooklyn – this is a cool opportunity for West Coasters to experience one of the most justifiably buzzed about bands on the circuit right now.
[Rubblebucket also plays Thursday 3:30-4:45 in the Vaudeville Tent]

4. The Black Seeds :: Saturday :: 2:20-3:40 PM :: Vaudeville Tent

New Zealand may not be the first place one thinks of when it comes to quality funky reggae music, but that might change real fast once you hear the Seeds. With a reach way beyond roots reggae (though they do that well, too), this band makes honestly soulful music with one of the strongest vocal mixes around. And their compositions are smartly drawn and full of perfect, unexpected twists and breakdowns. Come prepared to sweat a bit.
[The Black Seeds also play Sunday 1:45-3:00 on the Big Meadow Stage]

5. Newfangled Wasteland :: Sunday :: 5:30-6:45 PM :: Big Meadow Stage

You ain’t never heard Beck like this. Made up of Trevor Garrod (Tea Leaf Green) on keys & vocals, bassist-singer Steve Adams (ALO, Big Light), guitarist Chris Haugen and drummer-singer Dave Brogan, the quartet shows real affection and just enough irreverence to make the material soar. Even the more familiar Beck ditties wiggle differently in their grasp, and their knack for unearthing pleasures in deep cuts is something else.
[Newfangled Wasteland also plays 2:30-3:45 pm on the Grandstand Stage on Thursday]

High Sierra Music Schedule

High Sierra Late Night Music Schedule

High Sierra Directions

High Sierra Official Site


Conscious Alliance Food Drive At High Sierra Music Fest

FEEDING THE HUNGRY EVERYWHERE MUSIC PLAYS

The Conscious Alliance will be staging a food drive at this year’s High Sierra Music Festival. The food donations will benefit a local Feeding America affiliate. All patrons that donate 10 non-perishable food items will receive a free limited-edition High Sierra poster created by Phil Lewis.

Donations can be made at the Conscious Alliance Art that Feeds Gallery, located on the festival guide map. Posters are printed on a post-consumer waste paper, further enhancing the greening efforts of the festival.

The Conscious Alliance encourages food donations to be low-sodium and health oriented products. Organic food donations are especially encouraged. RAMEN NOODLES will NOT be accepted for the free poster. Conscious Alliance thanks JamBase readers for their continued support in feeding the hungry everywhere the music plays.


Surprise Me Mr. Davis: Summer Shows, Live Video

10 DATES IN THE WEST, ACAPPELLA UNDER A BRIDGE

Surprise Me Mr. Davis have announced a handful of summer tour dates. The five-piece rock band, featuring Nathan Moore, Brad Barr, Marco Benevento, Marc Friedman and Andrew Barr, will come together from their homes in Montreal, Brooklyn and the Shenandoah Valley for ten shows. They’ll be supporting their latest EP release, That Man Eats Morning For Breakfast.

SMMD Summer Dates

June 24 | Tractor Tavern | Seattle, WA (w/ Marco Benevento Trio)
June 25 | Doug Fir Lounge | Portland, OR (w/ Marco Benevento Trio)
June 26 | Axe & Fiddle | Cottage Grove, OR (w/ Marco Benevento Trio)
July 1 | High Sierra | Quincy, CA
July 3 | High Sierra | Quincy, CA
July 6 | Cafe Du Nord | San Francisco, CA
July 7 | Moe’s Alley | Santa Cruz, CA
August 19 | Fox Theater | Boulder, CO
August 20 | Three 20 South | Breckenridge, CO
August 21 | Newhoma Music Festival | Florissant, CO

And here’s Surprise Me Mr. Davis performing an acappella rendition of the Nathan Moore song “Tombstone” on the Williamsburg Bridge shortly before they took the stage for a headline show in April at New York City’s Mercury Lounge. The piece was filmed as a segment for The Bridge Sessions.

Surprise Me Mr. Davis Tour Dates :: Surprise Me Mr. Davis News :: Surprise Me Mr. Davis Concert Reviews


The CW “Hellcats” Trailer

High School Musical alum Ashley Tisdale has joined the cast of the forthcoming CW pilot Hellcats in the role of a fiesty cheerleader. The project centers on Marti (Aly Michalka), a college girl from the wrong side of the tracks who, after losing her scholarship because of budget cutbacks and her childlike mother [...]

High Sierra Troubadour Sessions Tim Bluhm, Nathan M, Dan Bern

NATHAN MOORE, TIM BLUHM, DAN BERNS, TREVOR GARROD AND MORE
GET UP CLOSE & PERSONAL

One of the distinct pleasures of the High Sierra Music Festival is the intimate, often hushed or warmly humorous late night Troubadour Sessions. The lineup for this year’s Sessions is as follows:

Tim Bluhm by Josh Miller

Thursday, July 1
Trevor Garrod
Zach Deputy
Tim Bluhm
Nicki Bluhm

Friday, July 2
Nathan Moore
Kate Gaffney
TBA
TBA

Saturday, July 3
Scott Law
Julian Coryell
Carolyn Wonderland
TBA

Sunday, July 4
Josh Clark
Paul Benoit
Chris Chandler
Dan Bern

High Sierra takes place July 1-4, 2010 in Quincy, CA. A full schedule of late night offerings can be found here, and those heading to Quincy for Fourth of July weekend can begin planning now with the JamBase High Sierra Grids, which lay out the full festival schedule for 2010.


High Sierra: Daily Schedules

WHAT A VERY FULL FOURTH OF JULY WEEKEND!

Dr. Dog

The customizable daily schedules for this year’s High Sierra Music Festival are available here.

Set to take place July 1 through July 4, 2010 at the Plumas-Sierra County Fairgrounds in Quincy, CA, the High Sierra Music Festival will celebrate its 20th Anniversary this year. Headliners include The Black Crowes, Widespread Panic, Railroad Earth and Dr. Dog. A list of the full lineup can be found here.

For more on High Sierra check out our 2009 coverage.


Trombone Shorty: Backatown Out Today/Free Stream

TROMBONE SHORTY GOES NATIONWIDE WITH BACKATOWN ON 4/20

Shorty

Trombone Shorty‘s major
label debut, Backatown (Verve Forecast/Universal), hits today. Produced by Ben Ellman (of Galactic) and featuring guest
performances from Marc Broussard,
Lenny Kravitz and Allen Toussaint, the album is a tour de force from New Orleans’ 24 year-old trombonist/trumpeter/vocalist.

Right now the full album is online and streaming free HERE.

His live shows have been the stuff of legend and last night he was named Entertainer of the Year and Best Male
Performer at Gambit Magazine‘s Big Easy Awards in New Orleans. Backatown finally captures the magic in
the studio, leading Entertainment Weekly to write, “Go get Trombone Shorty’s new album, Backatown, now.” USA Today agreed, writing “For years, [Trombone Shorty's] savvy, seismic mesh of jazz, rock, R-n-B and hip-hop electrified audiences. He and his dauntless band Orleans Avenue finally captured it in the
studio after enlisting Ben Ellman of jazz/funk band Galactic.”

Troy has been busy outside of the studio as well and appeared in this week’s episode of the HBO series
Treme, playing himself in the first appearance of what will be a recurring role.

Shorty will be touring non-stop this summer in support of the record, from a furious 10-show Jazz Fest schedule
that concludes with a Sunday set on the final day of the Festival, to performances at Bonnaroo, the
Playboy Jazz
Festival
, High Sierra, Mountain Jam, Fuji Rock and others – with more big shows
and national TV appearances being
announced soon. Check below for dates.

Trombone Shorty Tour Dates :: Trombone Shorty News :: Trombone Shorty Concert Reviews


Nels Cline Singers Tour

HIGH SIERRA, PHILLY, NYC AND WILCO’S OWN FEST ON AGENDA

Nels Cline Singers

The Nels Cline Singers first planned tour dates to support their new release, Initiate (arriving April 13). These dates include the band’s first ever South American tour, an appearance at the High Sierra Music Festival, a full night at New York City’s (le) poisson rouge, a night in Philadelphia at Johnny Brenda’s, the Singers’ first ever Washington, D.C. date at The Black Cat, and finally, an appearance in August in Western Massachusetts at Mass MoCA as part of the Wilco-curated Solid Sound Festival. More tour dates, including a West Coast run will be announced at a later date.

Initiate, the Singers’ fourth release and Cline’s seventh as a leader for Cryptogramophone, approaches the concept of Yin and Yang with a series of firsts for both the group and its intrepid leader, slyly dubbed by JazzTimes as “The World’s Most Dangerous Guitarist.” Initiate, in a beautifully designed, six-panel digipak featuring Simon Norfolk’s gorgeous photographs of the world’s largest machine (the Large Hadron Collider at CERN) is Cline’s first double album, with its second disc culled from a September 2009 performance at Cafe du Nord in San Francisco, the Singers’ first live recording. Nels Cline Singers are Nels Cline (guitar), Scott Amendola (drums, electronics) and Devin Hoff (bass). Guests on the live disc include Yuka Honda (Cibo Matto), Greg Saunier (Deerhoof), John Dieterich (Deerhoof) and Satomi Matsuzaki (Deerhoof).

Nels will also make his Village Vanguard debut as a sideman with his longtime friend and musical associate violinist Jenny Scheinman [a JamBase fave along with Nels and his Singers] with her band Mischief and Mayhem July 13-18.

Nels Cline Singers Tour Dates

06/08 Sao Paolo, Brazil | Bourbon Street Music Club
06/10 Buenos Aires, Argentina | La Trastienda
06/12 Santiago, Chile | Teatro Oriente
07/01 Quincy, CA | High Sierra Music Festival
07/06 New York, NY | (le) poisson rouge
07/07 Philadephia, PA | Johnny Brenda’s
07/08 Washington, DC | Black Cat
08/13-15 North Adams, MA | Mass MoCA – Solid Sound Festival

Nels with Jenny Scheinman
07/13-18 New York, NY | The Village Vanguard

Nels Cline Singers Tour Dates :: Nels Cline Singers News :: Nels Cline Singers Concert Reviews


Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars U.S. Tour To Help Refugees

SIERRA LEONE’S REFUGEE ALL STARS PARTNER WITH

THE INTERNATIONAL RESCUE COMMITTEE ON U.S. TOUR TO RAISE AWARENESS OF REFUGEES’ NEEDS

BAND’S NEW ALBUM RELEASED TO ACCLAIM MARCH 23

Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars

In keeping with the theme of their acclaimed new album, Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars are
partnering with the International Rescue Committee (IRC) on their extensive U.S. tour, which begins next week
in Vermont. (See dates below.) The shows, which aim to raise awareness about the needs of refugees, will feature
material from the All Stars’ new album, Rise & Shine.

The All Stars first formed and performed in refugee camps in Guinea where the IRC managed school programs,
health clinics and other critical services for tens of thousands of Sierra Leoneans who escaped civil war at home. Since then, in electrifying live performances and recording experience with the likes of Aerosmith and Mavis Staples, the All Stars have
been establishing an identity based as much on skill, imagination and charisma as on their undeniably touching
story (The Los Angeles Times). The band’s remarkable journey was documented in the multi-award winning
documentary Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars, by Zach Niles and Banker
White
.

“Amid their shared experience of living as refugees [the All Stars] found a common cause to play beautiful music,
bring cheer and hope to refugees who fled a brutal war and help them forget the horrors they left behind,” says International Rescue Committee spokeswoman Melissa Winkler. “Their music became an antidote
to the misery, monotony and uncertainty that Sierra Leonean refugees faced each day, and their music continues to
be an inspiration to refugees around the world.”

On the upcoming tour, concertgoers will be encouraged to donate $5 to IRC programs by texting REFUGEE to 25383. The donations will help Sierra Leonean and other refugees given sanctuary in the United States to recover and
rebuild their lives here. The All Stars and Cumbancha are also donating $2 to the IRC’s global humanitarian aid
programs for each copy of Rise & Shine sold through this link: www.theirc.org/shop-irc-market.

Rise & Shine is the follow up to the All Stars’ debut, Living Like a Refugee, which garnered
the band international acclaim and high profile fans such as Keith Richards, Sir Paul McCartney, Angelina Jolie
and Ice Cube. On the new
album, produced by Steve Berlin (Los
Lobos
, Angelique
Kidjo
, Rickie Lee
Jones
, Michelle
Shocked
, Alec
Ounsworth
, Jackie
Greene
), Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars have realized a unique and seamlessly coherent sound: a fusion
of traditional West African music and roots reggae, inflected with New Orleans styles.

The new album is garnering considerable critical praise, including:

“It is simply great songwriting with incredible production. None of their message – unity, cultural celebration, spiritual salvation – is lost, and so much is gained.”
-The Huffington Post

“Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars have tapped into the music’s transformative powers… Rise & Shine is a testament to the unbreakable human spirit.”
-Relix

Sierra Leone’s Refugee
All Stars Tour Dates
:: Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars News :: Sierra Leone’s Refugee
All Stars Concert Reviews


High Sierra: Late Night Sched Adds Greene, Choc Drops, Skerik

COMPLETE LINEUP AND LATE NIGHT SCHEDULE ANNOUNCED!

Jackie Greene by Susan J. Weiand

The final batch of artists to join the 20th Annual High Sierra lineup has been announced:

Jackie Greene
Preservation Hall Jazz Band
Carolina Chocolate Drops
Dan Bern
Heavyweight Dub Champion
The Black Seeds
Skerdio (Skerik + Radioactive)
Poor Man’s Whiskey
Scott Amendola and Wil Blades
Rubblebucket
The Heavy Guilt
Nicki Bluhm and the Gramblers
Kate Gaffney Band

Artists-At-Large
Josh Clark
Lebo
Skerik
Eric McFadden

The complete lineup for the 2010 High Sierra Music Festival can be found here.

The festival has also announced this year’s Late Night lineup, which includes:

Railroad Earth, Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe, New Mastersounds, Cornmeal, BLVD, March Fourth Marching Band, Dr. Dog, Lotus, Pimps of Joytime, The Mother Hips, Orgone, Beats Antique, Heavyweight Dub Champion, Telepath, Darol Anger’s Republic of Strings with special guest Sharon Gilchrist, Poor Man’s Whiskey Darkside of the Moonshine

For specifics on Late Night sets and to purchase tickets pop over here.


Sierra Nevada World Music Fest Adds Don Carlos & Kora

THE 17TH ANNUAL SIERRA NEVADA WORLD MUSIC FESTIVAL
WELCOMES DON CARLOS AND
KORA

The Sierra Nevada World Music Festival is pleased to announce that Don Carlos and Kora will be performing at the
17th annual musical celebration. SNWMF 2010 will be held at the Mendocino County Fairgrounds June 18 through
20. The fairgrounds, in the heart of Anderson Valley (Boonville), are just 30 minutes south west of Ukiah.

Don Carlos was born and raised in Western Kingston, Jamaica in a very deprived district known as Waterhouse. Don
Carlos began singing in 1973 as a member of Black Uhuru. He sang alongside Garth Dennis and Derrick Simpson, the leader of the
trio. Don played a key role in the recordings of the highly acclaimed Love Crisis album, produced by Prince Jammy
in 1977 which was later re-released as The Black Sounds of Freedom. After some time finding his sound as
a soloist, Carlos blossomed in May 1981 releasing the heavy cultural roots album Suffering for Negus
Roots
. He has since become very popular in the live scene and has released twelve solo albums working
alongside Gold, his backup vocalist and co-writer. Some of his most notable albums include Harvest Time,
Day to Day Living and Them Never Know a Natty Dread were released in 1982. Spread
Out
, also released in 1982, commonly known now as Laser Beam, had many fan favorites. Carlos still maintains
his roots flavor and awesome melodies to this day; he continues to grow in popularity and still performs all over the
world.

Kora are a New Zealand reggae, rock, dub & roots band, originally hailing from Whakatane. Four musical brothers
from the Kora family, Laughton, Francis, Stuart and Brad, began playing together as a band in the early 1990s,
winning the national Rockquest high school band competition in 1991 and the East Coast region Battle of the Bands
three years running, earning a release on Tangata Records for their efforts. In early 2002 Kora’s core members
Laughton and Francis recorded a four song demo while on holiday in Queenstown, sharing songwriting duties with
local muso Dan McGruer who also joined them on bass guitar and keyboards, and inviting visiting Madagascan
tourist Lilou to lay down vocals on the song “Barely Can See.” Kora’s four track demo caught the attention of
Wellington-based record label LOOP Recordings Aota in late 2002, leading to the release of Barely Can See on the
label’s LOOP Select 004 compilation CD in December. In 2007, the group released their acclaimed self titled album,
much to the adoration of their loyal following.

Lineup

Los Van Van

Baaba Maal

Fat Freddy’s Drop

Don Carlos

Barrington Levy

Marcia Griffiths

Tony Allen

Playing For Change

Soul Syndicate

Alborosie

David Rodigan

Stone Love

Rootz Underground

Sambadá

Sarazino

Johnny Clarke

Vernon Maytone

Prince Alla

Ooklah The Moc

Kora

Ras Kush

Queen Makedah

Youssoupha Sidibe

More artists to be announced soon…


Ashley Tisdale “Hellcats” Cheerleading Dramedy On The CW

High School Musical alum Ashley Tisdale has joined the cast of the forthcoming CW pilot Hellcats in the role of a fiesty cheerleader.

The project centers on Marti (Aly Michalka), a college girl from the wrong side of the tracks who, after losing her scholarship because of budget cutbacks and her childlike mother [...]

High Sierra Adds: WSP Crowes, Lotus, Hips, Joseph

High Sierra Adds: Widespread Panic, Black Crowes, Lotus, Mother Hips, Jerry Joseph & More

Set to take place July 1 through July 4, 2010 at the Plumas-Sierra County Fairgrounds in Quincy, CA, the High Sierra Music Festival made some very substantial additions to their 20th Anniversary lineup today. The following acts have all officially been announced:

HSMF 2009 by Krolick

Widespread Panic

The Black Crowes

Lotus

Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros

The Mother Hips

Jerry Joseph & The Jackmormons

The Radiators

The Pimps of Joytime

Truth & Salvage Co.

Coryell, Auger, Sample Trio

New Fangled Wasteland

Orgone

Chris Chandler & Paul Benoit

Living Folklore

These artists come as additions to the following already announced acts:

The Avett Brothers

Ozomatli

Femi Kuti and Positive Force

Railroad Earth

Bela Fleck, Zakir Hussain, and Edgar Meyer

Dr. Dog

Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe

Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue

Cornmeal

Blitzen Trapper

The New Mastersounds

March Fourth Marching Band

Nels Cline Singers

The Infamous Stringdusters

Surprise Me Mr. Davis

The Slip

BLVD

Beats Antique

Telepath

Carolyn Wonderland

Darol Anger’s Republic Of Strings featuring Sharon Gilchrist

Great American Taxi

Nathan Moore

Johnny Vidacovich, Robert Walter Duo

Big Light

Trampled By Turtles

Zach Deputy

and many more to come!

Discounted 4-day passes for the High Sierra Music Festival are $175 and are on sale now here.

Fore more on High Sierra see our coverage of the 2009 event here.


Dusty Rhodes and The River Band: Best Live Band in Orange County

Dusty Rhodes and The River Band: Best Live Band in Orange County

Dusty Rhodes and the River Band

Last Saturday night, Dusty Rhodes and the River Band took home Best Live Band at the 2010 Orange County Music Awards. Held in the Samueli Theater at the Orange County Performing Arts Center, the Best Live Band finals featured five of OC’s best; Blok, The Steelwells, The Colourist, Dusty Rhodes and The River Band and The Union Line (who won last year).

Dressed in white, the band ripped through a 30 minute set that solidified Dusty Rhodes and the River Band’s reputation as an amazing live band, as witnessed by folks who have caught them on tour the past couple years with Flogging Molly, Dirty Pretty Things, Gogol Bordello and at festivals including Wakarusa and High Sierra.

In addition to a really big check, the band won $2,500 in gear from Fender and three days of recording time at Red Bull Studios in Santa Monica.

The band is also up for three more awards; Best Album for Palace and Stage, Best Rock and Best Country/Americana. The Awards Ceremony is March 6 at The Grove Of Anaheim.

For more on Dusty Rhodes, check out JamBase’s exclusive feature/interview with the band here.

Dusty Rhodes and the River Band Tour Dates :: Dusty Rhodes and the River Band News :: Dusty Rhodes and the River Band Concert Reviews