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Leslie and the Badgers: Fall Tour

TOUR STARTS NOVEMBER 1 AT THE TROUBADOUR IN HOLLYWOOD

“Leslie Stevens and her ferociously named backing band play bewitching indie folk highlighted by Stevens’ clear, bell-like voice and spot-on country twang.” – LA TIMES

Los Angeles based Leslie and the Badgers are heading out on the road for a few west coast dates in
November. In the meantime, singer Leslie Stevens is playing a number of solo shows. Check out all the
dates below.

Leslie Solo

9.23 Bottleneck – Lawrence, KS w/ Martin Sexton
9.24 Adobe Music Hall – Wichita, KS w/ Martin Sexton

9.25 Chautauqua Auditorium – Boulder, CO w/ Martin Sexton
9.26 Vilar Performing Arts Center – Beaver Creek, CO w/ Martin Sexton
9.29 Knitting Factory – Reno, NV w/ Martin Sexton
9.30 Mystic Theatre – Petaluma, CA w/ Martin Sexton

10.1 Center for The Arts – Grass Valley Grass Valley, CA w/ Martin Sexton
10.2 Downtown Brewing Company – San Luis Obispo, CA w/ Martin Sexton
10.6 Plush – Tucson, AZ w/ Martin Sexton

10.7 Lensic Performing Arts Center – Santa Fe, NM w/ Martin Sexton

Leslie Stevens and The Badgers

11.1 Troubadour, West Hollywood, CA w/ Laura Veirs
11.2 The Independent, San Francisco, CA w/ Laura Veirs
11.4 Sam Bond’s Garage, Eugene, OR w/ Laura Veirs
11.5 Doug Fir Lounge, Portland, OR w/ Laura Veirs
11.6 The Crocodile, Seattle, WA w/ Laura Veirs

Leslie and the Badgers
Tour Dates

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Leslie and the Badgers
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Leslie and the Badgers
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Reviews


Sufjan Stevens Announces North American Tour

PRE-SALE STARTS AUGUST 10


Sufjan Stevens

Sufjan Stevens will hit the road in October. The tour starts on October 12 in Montreal and move through the Midwest, to Texas, out west, and then back through the Midwest and to New York.

Pre-sale starts Tuesday, August 10. Sales for some theaters will begin on Friday, August 13. You can see details, dates, and (as of Tuesday 1pm EST) links to purchase tickets here.


12 October
Metropolis Theater, Montreal QC

13 October,
Massey Hall, Toronto ON

14 October
Royal Oak Music Theater, Royal Oak MI

15 October
Chicago Theater, Chicago IL

16 October
Orpheum Theater, Minneapolis MN

17 October
Uptown Theater, Kansas City MO

19 October
The Long Center for the Performing Arts, Austin TX

20 October
McFarlin Memorial Auditorium, Dallas TX

22 October
Mesa Arts Center – Ikeda Theater, Mesa AZ

23 October
The Wiltern, Los Angeles CA

26 October
The Paramount Theater, Oakland CA

28 October
Orpheum Theater, Vancouver BC

29 October
Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland OR

30 October
The Paramount Theatre, Seattle WA

1 November
Kingsbury Hall, Salt Lake City UT

2 November
Paramount Theatre, Denver CO

4 November
Hilbert Circle Theatre, Indianapolis IN

5 November
Bijou Theater, Knoxville TN

6 November
The Tabernacle, Atlanta GA

7 November
Thomas Wolfe Auditorium, Asheville NC

10 November
Kimmel Center, Philadelphia PA

11 November
Orpheum Theatre, Boston MA

14 November
Beacon Theatre, New York NY

15 November
Beacon Theatre, New York NY

Sufjan Stevens
Tour Dates

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Sufjan Stevens News
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Sufjan Stevens
Concert
Reviews


Sufjan Stevens | 10.05 | New York

Words by: Alex Nief | Images by: JC McIlwaine

Sufjan Stevens :: 10.05.09 :: Bowery Ballroom :: New York, NY

Sufjan Stevens | 10.05 | Bowery Ballroom

To set the scene: It was a lovely fall evening in New York. I was delirious with fever and the Bowery Ballroom basement was flooded with water emanating from the women’s bathroom.


When faced with the ominous tickles and aches of an oncoming illness there is only one thing to do: drink heavily. The simple fact of the matter is that you’re going to be bedridden for the remainder of the week so you might as well load up while you’re able (and if, in so doing, you manage to poison the oncoming virus, well, you win twice).


I grabbed a few drinks at the basement bar and took up residence on a comfortable, well-decorated bench. I was almost instantly unnerved at the sight of a pocket-sized notepad that had been placed on the table in front of me by a gentleman a few feet to my right. The top page read: “Sufjan Stevens 10/05 Bowery.” Wholly unwilling to be moved by this puerile gesture – clearly a fellow journalist attempting to intimidate me – I scrawled the same title atop my legal pad and slammed it down on the table, dwarfing his diminutive flip-pad. I gave him a sharp stare and tilted my head slightly as if to say, “If you like that, you should see my pen.” The amateur evacuated. I began to study the room, searching for non-white Sufjan Stevens fans (I gave up after twenty minutes).


Thirty minutes of observing the crowd revealed a strikingly homogeneous group. The Sufjan Stevens fan can be described as white, 25-35 years of age, well dressed, and in good shape from excessive bicycling. Most who adore Stevens do so with a cult-like passion. For the women in the audience, they would gladly leave their significant others for a night of passionate cuddling and crying with Stevens. The men would likely do the same.

Sufjan Stevens | 10.05 | Bowery Ballroom

When Sufjan Stevens took the stage the packed Bowery audience erupted for about twenty-five seconds before falling silently transfixed as he grabbed his banjo and, with horn accompaniment, eased us in with “The Mistress Witch from McClure (or The Mind That Knows Itself),” a depressing ditty which is part evocative memoir and part auto-philosophical. Almost every Sufjan Stevens song has a strange way of sounding like the recounting of a slow and painful death. The crowd, which had not so much as sneezed during the three-minute opener, again came to life with startling applause at its conclusion.


Stevens’ onstage persona calls up memories of a young Bob Dylan fielding questions from eager reporters upon his arrival in San Francisco in 1965. At one point early in his set, Stevens moved a piece of paper, leaned into the microphone and said, “Sweet.” The entire audience roared with laughter, and you could almost sense that there were people rushing to the bathrooms with their iPhones to call every bar in Williamsburg with the fantastic news.


Despite the too-clever post-hipster art worship crowd that seems to gather at his feet, Sufjan Stevens is a gifted songwriter with an uncommon skill: taking fairly simple musical compositions, applying dynamic arrangements for multiple instruments and ultimately creating cute little symphonies that are quite impressive. This, coupled with hauntingly evocative lyrics, makes Stevens the admired artist that he is and no amount of derisive commentary from a non-believer like myself can change that. But allow me to continue to try.

Sufjan Stevens | 10.05 | Bowery Ballroom

I would sooner climb a barbed wire fence naked than pay to see this circus displayed at a general admission, standing-room-only venue such as the Bowery. Make no mistake – the Bowery has one of the best layouts of any venue in NYC – but one must consider the performer (it was as counterintuitive as a seated thrash show). But it is a testament to his cult following that Sufjan Stevens holds the record for the most sellouts at the Bowery. He could probably sell out the quarantine unit at New York Presbyterian during an Ebola outbreak.


The highlight of the show was the introduction of a couple of new songs, which showed a clear departure from his previous work. The new numbers were robust and energetic, more “Flaming Lips” than his earlier “Belle & Sebastian on downers” sound. It was still Sufjan Stevens though: well-orchestrated cacophony, post-folk art rock.


About halfway through his set, I tried to make my way from the balcony to the stage. Since nobody dances during a Sufjan Stevens show – the audience huddles close together, forming a giant, mesmerized mass – this ended up taking about twenty minutes, and I arrived at stage right covered in corduroy burns.


As one fan moved toward the exit after the last encore he stopped by my barstool in the basement where I had been hiding for a short while with a bottle of Maker’s Mark, now beyond delirium. “How’d you like the show?” I asked. He shrugged and gave it an “Alright.” “Lots of people though,” I said. His response summed it up: “Yeah, but that’s the thing: I’d rather listen to Sufjan in my living room with headphones on.” I couldn’t agree more.

Continue reading for more images of Sufjan Stevens in New York…

JamBase | Disaffected
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Rachel Stevens takes 2010 calendar lingerie for honeymoon

Brit singer Rachel Stevens loved the lingerie she posed in for her 2010 calendar so much that she decided to take them on her honeymoon.
Stevens, 31, who starred on ‘Strictly Come Dancing’, was ecstatic she was able to take the gear on her honeymoon with trader Alex Bourne, who she married in August.
“I shot my [...]

Yusuf (Cat Stevens): Tour

FIRST LIVE SHOWS IN OVER THREE DECADES

new album

Yusuf Islam (Cat Stevens) has announced an innovative four-date tour around the U.K. and Ireland after 33 years away from the stage. The shows will incorporate Yusuf’s hits alongside music from his highly acclaimed new albums, An Other Cup and Roadsinger (JamBase review). To make it even more of a spectacle for fans, Yusuf will also weave his latest creative voyage, his first musical, Moonshadow, into the shows.

Speaking about his work on Moonshadow, Yusuf said, “My songs always told a story, so it’s natural for me to extend that into a stage musical form. It’s taken a long time to arrive, but it’s always been a dream of mine to write a musical. Growing up in the West End of London, surrounded by theatres and shows, obviously left a strong impression on me. I originally wanted to be a composer, not a pop star. Strange how it’s taken almost a lifetime, but it had to – the story is somewhat a metaphorical mirror of my own journey, so I suppose it had to wait to reach where I am today.”

The musical director of Moonshadow is Christopher Nightingale, who has previously worked on the Lord of The Rings Musical and Bombay Dreams alongside A.R. Rahman (Slumdog Millionaire). The choreographer, Nichola Treherne, was behind box office smashes from Starlight Express to Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat. Renowned lighting designer Mark Brickman is designing the stage and lighting. Brickman lit Pink Floyd’s The Wall tour and is currently designing Cirque du Soleil’s new show in Las Vegas.

The four city “Guess I’ll Take My Time Tour” will commence in Dublin and continue to Birmingham, Liverpool and end in London at the Royal Albert Hall.

The full dates are:

November 15 – Dublin The O2
November 23 – Birmingham NIA
December 5 – Liverpool Echo Arena
December 8 – London Royal Albert Hall

Tickets will go on general sale on Monday 21st September 2009 and will be available from AEG Live and for Dublin The O2 from Ticketmaster.


Rachel Stevens wins ‘Rear Of The Year’ award

British Singer Rachel Stevens has been named this year’s winner of the Rear Of The Year award.
The ‘Strictly Come Dancing’ star was voted as the favourite for the cheeky title, while tenor Russell Watson topped the men’s category.
“I”m very flattered and I”m now going to insure each cheek for a considerable sum of money,” the [...]

Mike Ragogna: Monday Music Quarterback: Robert Francis, Gossip, Vic Chesnutt, Soulsavers, MUTEMATH, Matt Hires, Taking Woodstock soundtrack, and Sufjan Stevens’ The BQE

As you’re recovering from the joyful overkill that was this year’s Comic-Con (by the way, Iron Man II will rock very hard, Battlestar Galactica’s The…

Sufjan Stevens: The BQE

Sufjan Stevens Presents The BQE CD/DVD With Viewmaster Reel

180-Gram Vinyl And Comic Book Due October 20


Sufjan Stevens

Indie folk darling Sufjan Stevens premiered The BQE, a musical film exploring New York City’s infamous Brooklyn-Queens Expressway, at the Brooklyn Academy of Music’s Next Wave Festival in November 2007. The critically applauded performance that featured 36 performers included a wind and brass ensemble, string players, a horn section, projected film footage of the expressway and five hula-hoopers. On October 20, Asthmatic Kitty Records will release The BQE.

The comprehensive package features the CD soundtrack, the DVD of the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway film footage, a 40-page booklet with extensive liner notes & photographs and an accompanying stereoscopic 3-D Viewmaster reel. Furthermore, Stevens will release a limited edition double gatefold vinyl edition of The BQE on 180-gram vinyl with a large-scale 32-page booklet including liner notes, photographs and a black and white version of a 40-page BQE-themed Hooper Heroes comic book.

On October 24, 92YTribeca will host the premiere screening of The BQE DVD with an introduction by Stevens. Tickets for this event go on sale July 23 here.

The concept behind The BQE is based largely on the history of New York’s Brooklyn-Queens Expressway — 12.7 miles of urban roadway built between 1939 and 1964 by master urban planner Robert Moses. The Viewmaster, unveiled at the 1939 NYC World’s Fair, was intended to promote 3-D panoramic illusions of the American landscape and serve as advertising for various tourist destinations and motivation for American drivers. The Hooper Heroes comic book, written by Stevens and drawn, colored and inked by collaborator Stephen Halker, follows three extra-terrestrial superhero sisters who use hula-hoops to combat “the Messiah of Civic Projects,” Captain Moses.

THE BQE- A Film By Sufjan Stevens from Asthmatic Kitty on Vimeo.


ATP Adds Sufjan, Super Furry

FIRST U.S. SUFJAN STEVENS PERFORMANCE IN TWO YEARS

Super Furry Animals

The 2nd Annual ATP New York Festival, taking place September 11-13 at Kutshers Country Club in Monticello, New York, has added the following artists to this year’s All Tomorrow’s Parties lineup: Sufjan Stevens, Crystal Castles, Super Furry Animals, Shellac, Circulatory System, Grouper, Boris, Low Lows and Oneida Presents the Ocropolis.

Last year’s festival was co-curated by My Bloody Valentine, and this year’s Fest will be co-curated by The Flaming Lips.

The full line-up so far for this intimate, wholly unique fest (capacity limited to just 2800 people) is as follows:

Friday

The Jesus Lizard

Iron and Wine

Don’t Look Back: Dirty Three Performing Ocean Songs

Don’t Look Back: Suicide Performing First LP

Don’t Look Back: The Feelies Performing Crazy Rhythms

Don’t Look Back: The Drones Performing Wait Long By The River

Comedy Stage -Hosted and curated by David Cross

Saturday (curated by ATP)

Animal Collective

Panda Bear

Sufjan Stevens

Deerhunter

Melvins

Shellac

Boss Hog

Autolux

Dead Meadow

EL-P

Anti-Pop Consortium

Circulatory System

Autolux

Atlas Sound

Akron/Family

Grouper

Sleepy Sun

Bridezilla

Sunday (curated by The Flaming Lips)

The Flaming Lips

Boredoms perform 9 drummer BOADRUM

No Age perform Husker Du

Caribou perform as Caribou Vibration Ensemble

Deerhoof with Martha Colburn

Crystal Castles

Super Furry Animals

Boris

Low Lows

Oneida Presents the Ocropolis

Limited single day tickets now on sale. Friday single day pass is $75 + booking fee
Saturday or Sunday single day passes are $95 + booking fee. Weekend passes are $235 + booking fee. Tickets and full information available here.


Sat Eye Candy: Cat Stevens

NICE TO HAVE YOU BACK, ROADSINGER

Today, like every other day,
We wake up empty and frightened.
Don’t open the door to the study.
and begin reading. Take down a musical instrument.
Let the beauty we love be what we do.
There are hundreds of ways to kneel and kiss the ground.

We woke with this Rumi poem playing on repeat in our heads. And then, in a flash, it occurred to us what the perfect soundtrack for such poetic philosophizing might be – Cat Stevens. These days he goes by the name Yusuf Islam but the brave, yearning heart of what makes him tick is beating very, very strong. His new album, Roadsinger: To Warm You Through The Night, is a slow stunner (JamBase review), and it’s sparked us to explore his back catalog anew. And folks, there’s much we need to hear today, now, in this tumultuous moment we find ourselves in.

Like Marley’s “Three Little Birds,” there’s something prayerful and innocent about our opener. If there’s a gentler, more quietly blessed way to wake up then we haven’t found it.

It’s a beautiful thing to see him come back to his old songs, finding a way to fit them into his more pronounced spiritual path of recent years, realizing the great stockpiles of understanding and truth hiding in his “pop songs.” To wit, this thoughtful stroll through one of his best from 2007.

Love is a hard thing in his work. It’s something that requires much of us, demanding a patience and depth of understanding few of us can muster most of the time. And sometimes he distilled this concept into something wonderfully tough like this blues-tinged jewel from his 1976 Earth Tour.

His recent return to recording in the past few years has shown him to be a vigorous, funny, fiercely engaged musician with still a lot to say in his songs. This is a primo performance of one of the standouts off 2006′s An Other Cup.

Here’s a dark turn from the new album delivered with restrained style on Jools Holland grand BBC program.

And it isn’t always dark clouds and naval gazing. Sometimes he just tossed off a killer ditty that reminds you what a fine nuts ‘n’ bolts composer he can be.

Stevens’ music will always be inexorably liked to the cult film Harold And Maude, which seems to touch a nerve in each subsequent generation where liking the movie lets one know they’re amongst fellow freaks. Here’s Doug Martsch of Built to Spill performing Stevens’ centerpiece tune from the soundtrack.

The highway our feet travel may be long, rocky and full of unexpected twists and dead ends, but if we’ve tucked the right songs into our bindle we’ll be alright. It’s a true joy to have this man making music again. We conclude with the title tune from his latest offering and his 2006 Nobel Peace Price concert performance of perhaps his best known anthem.

And don’t forget, you can eyeball video sweetness 24/7 with JamBase TV.