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Posts Tagged ‘string cheese incident’

SCI Winter Carnival 2011

THREE NIGHT RUN AT COLORADO’S 1STBANK CENTER;
MARCH 10-12 2011; TICKETS ON-SALE
TO PUBLIC JANUARY 15


The String Cheese Incident

The String Cheese Incident
announces today that in 2011 they will be bringing back the always highly anticipated Winter Carnival. Set for
Thursday, March 10, Friday, March 11, and Saturday, March 12 at the amazing 1STBank Center in Broomfield, CO,
the three-night run continues the long standing tradition of bringing SCI fans and diverse musical guests to
Colorado for a snowy celebration. Joining SCI at Winter Carnival 2011 is British producer/electro-artist Ott, influential bluegrass legends J.D. Crowe & The New South and New
Orleans’ premier new-school funk band, Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk.

Tickets to Winter Carnival: Pre-sale begins Wednesday, January 12 at 10am MST at www.stringcheeseincident.com, with public on-sale on beginning
Saturday, January 15 at 10 am MST at www.tickethorse.com. “Enhanced Incident” ticket and travel packages are
available beginning January 12 at www.stringcheeseincident.com. As a special thank you to the
fans, each ticket purchased will include a free MP3 download of that evening’s show from livecheese.com.

The String Cheese Incident community has come to expect a Conscious Alliance Food Drive at SCI events. For Winter
Carnival, a 3‐panel event poster will be designed (one panel for each night). As always, the limited edition
posters
will be made available to concertgoers who contribute 10 non-perishable food items per panel, or 25 items for the
complete set. Food collected at Winter Carnival 2011 will benefit the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. Visit
www.consciousalliance.org for more
information.

Winter Carnival 2011 Show Details:

Thursday, March 10 @ 7:00pm
with very special guest Ott

Friday, March 11 @ 7:00pm
with very special guest J.D. Crowe & The New South

Saturday, March 12 @ 7:00pm

with very special guest Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk

1STBANK Center

11450 Broomfield Lane, Broomfield, CO

Doors at 6:00pm

The String Cheese Incident
Tour Dates

::
The String Cheese Incident
News

::
The String Cheese Incident
Concert
Reviews


SCI: Incident in Atlanta – 11.17.00

THE STRING CHEESE INCIDENT LAUNCHES NEW ARCHIVAL SERIES WITH
RHYTHM OF THE ROAD VOLUME 1, INCIDENT IN ATLANTA – 11.17.00


SCI

Today, The String Cheese
Incident
releases the first installment of their brand new live archival series, Rhythm of the Road,
which will highlight the band’s most celebrated concerts with re-mastered limited edition releases. The new release
is titled Rhythm of the Road: Volume 1, Incident in Atlanta – 11.17.00, after the historic show’s
ten-year anniversary.

Incident in Atlanta features the entire 11.17.00 performance, lovingly remastered from the original 24-bit
multi-track master tapes and made available on CD, download (MP3, FLAC) and, an SCI first, 24-bit FLAC download.
It will be released today in stores, through SCI Merchandise, and www.LiveCheese.com.

Track List:

Set 1: Smile, Joyful Sound > Orange Blossom Special*, Barstool, Pygmy Pony,
Missing Me > Ramble On

Set 2: Outside And Inside, Impressions > Glory Chords Jam > Midnight
Moonlight*, This Must Be the Place (Naive Melody) > Miss Brown’s Teahouse,
Wake Up, Black Clouds*

Encore: The Old Home Place*, Shenandoah Breakdown*, Shakin’ the Tree*

* featuring Tony Furtado on banjo and guitar

The String Cheese Incident
Tour Dates

::
The String Cheese Incident
News

::
The String Cheese Incident
Concert
Reviews


Kyle Hollingsworth: Yo Gabba Gabba! Show & Hoppy Holidays

CELEBRATE THE HOLIDAYS AT
CERVANTES’ MASTERPIECE BALROOM DEC. 10-
12


Kyle Hollingsworth

Following The String Cheese Incident‘s
Hulaween shows at the famed Hampton Coliseum in Hampton, VA, keyboardist Kyle Hollingsworth is right back at
it one week later. Sunday, November 7, Kyle joins television’s hit children’s show Yo Gabba Gabba, live at
1st Bank Center in Broomfield, CO, bringing his own brand new children’s tunes with him. The following week, Kyle
Hollingsworth Band travels to the Midwest with St. Louis’ Messy Jiverson supporting all dates before heading to the East Coast to perform with Bonerama, Steve Kimock and Terrence Higgins (Dirty Dozen Brass
Band) for three nights as a special guest.

To wrap up 2010, Kyle will host Hoppy Holidays, a unique brew tour experience and blowout run with Kyle
Hollingsworth Band. DJ Logic and Liza Oxnard lend a hand to the party,
jumping on board with KHB at both Cervantes’ Masterpiece Ballroom in Denver, CO, and Hodi’s Half Note in Fort
Collins, CO. Once again, Kyle has teamed up with renowned local breweries to craft two signature beers – this time
with Boulder Beer and Avery Brewing – that will be available at each show. Hoppy Holidays will culminate in an
intimate finale charity evening at Avery Brewing in Boulder, CO to benefit Conscious Alliance – feeding people in
need and providing toys to underprivileged children. Avery Brewing tickets are extremely limited and all-inclusive,
featuring a Kyle Hollingsworth Band set, several Avery pints of beer, a collector’s custom pint glass, food provided
by Cheba Hut, access to an exclusive silent auction, and a toy drive for Conscious Alliance Hoppy Holidays
posters.

Tickets for all shows are currently on sale at www.kylehollingsworth.com and all venue outlets.

Kyle Hollingsworth with Yo Gabba Gabba! Live!

November 7 1st Bank Center Broomfield, CO

Kyle Hollingsworth Band

November 10 Miramar Theatre Milwaukee, WI
November 11 Martyrs’ Chicago, IL

November 12 Old Rock House St. Louis, MO
November 13 Iowa City Yacht Club Iowa City, IA

Kyle Hollingsworth with Bonerama

November 19 Sullivan Hall New York, NY – w/ Steve Kimock & Terrence Higgins
November 20 North Star Bar Philadelphia, PA – w/ Steve Kimock & Terrence Higgins
November 21 The 8×10 Baltimore, MD – w/ Terrence Higgins

Kyle Hollingsworth Band: Hoppy Holidays

December 10 Cervantes’ Masterpiece Ballroom Denver, CO – w/ DJ Logic & Liza Oxnard
December 11 Hodi’s Half Note Fort Collins, CO – w/ DJ Logic & Liza Oxnard
December 12 Avery Brewing Boulder, CO

Kyle Hollingsworth
Tour Dates

::
Kyle Hollingsworth News
::
Kyle Hollingsworth
Concert
Reviews


The String Cheese Incident: Halloween Thoughts

By: Dennis Cook

Tickets for SCI’s October 29th are still available but Ticketmaster currently experiencing problems with date. Tickets for the October 30th show can be purchased here.

Moseley as SRV :: Halloween ’02
By Todd Radunsky

The String Cheese Incident hasn’t played a Halloween run since 2006 in Las Vegas. Hunger for a fresh All Hallows’ Eve Incident amongst their faithful, ever-colorful flock has been strong for years, and the band will soon feed that appetite on October 29-30 at the fabled Hampton Coliseum in Hampton, VA.

We snagged bassist-singer Keith Moseley to discuss the upcoming show, what the holiday means to SCI, the band’s new archival Rhythm of the Road series, and the group’s future plans.

JamBase: When did Halloween become such a big deal with you guys?

Keith: I think probably from the beginning we’ve always tried to make Halloween something special with the idea of being costumed and throwing in a bunch of fun cover tunes we don’t ordinarily do. We’ve often run with a theme and had special guests, but it’s always been about getting a little wacky and doing something special for the fans on Halloween.

JamBase: Is it fun for you to get into costume? It’s not something one does at most gigs.

Keith: We love it! It’s a chance to get silly and break from the norm. I’m thinking back to the year we did the Shrine in L.A. and did the dead rock star theme. I did Stevie Ray Vaughan and Kang did Hendrix and Travis was Freddie Mercury. When else do you get Travis up front with fake buck teeth and tights singing Freddie Mercury? It’s always a blast to do that kind of thing.

Travis as Freddie :: Halloween ’02
By Todd Radunsky

Has it become a challenge at this point to keep coming up with new angles for Halloween?

A little bit but there’s a huge library of fun tunes to cover and we’re pulling in some fun ones this time for sure. It’s always fun to prepare a special event and we don’t seem to have run out of creative ideas yet. We still have some fresh ones this year!

What is it like to preside over a giant size event like this, with enormous balloons and acrobats and so on? What is it like to be onstage making music while all this wildness goes off around you?

It’s super cool. We get to be the party hosts for the coolest gig in town, wherever we are, be it a Halloween show at Hampton or a New Year’s event. It’s pretty amazing to get to host that sort of event and know we’re blowing peoples’ minds over & over again with a fantastic show.

What’s the level of fan involvement in these sorts of shows? There’s no question that String Cheese has one of the most loyal, engaged fan bases out there.

We do, and Halloween, as far as fan involvement, has traditionally been that they come dressed. Put on your funnest costume and be ready to have a good time. A huge majority of the fans in attendance are in costume, so it becomes a larger than life event. At Hampton to have 10-12 thousand people in costume plus what the band throws out there, well, you can’t go wrong. It’s a guaranteed good time.

I’ve talked to a lot of musicians about this and the consensus is that there’s something different about playing to a costumed crowd. You can’t do your normal show when there are ghouls and devils and fairies riding the rail.

It just ups the fun factor. The crowd gets into a headspace where they want the band to be different and take chances. At least for us, they definitely expect something different and maybe silly or risky from the band. And we won’t disappoint. We’re not afraid to laugh at ourselves on Halloween. We’re all about high entertainment value.

Is it freeing as a musician to have a space like this, where you can think, “Well, I might fall on my face but I’ve always wanted to try this musical idea.”

Sure. For us, on Halloween anything goes. We’ve covered Nirvana to Queen to Phish to The Doors. It definitely ups the fun for everyone.

SCI Halloween Show :: Vegas ’05 :: by John Smirtic

How is it playing as String Cheese now that you’re only performing together a handful of times each year as compared to years & years of being road dogs?

It’s kind of fresh and exciting to have taken a break from the Cheese and then come back to prepare for Red Rocks and the Horning’s run. And we’ve been in rehearsal for a couple weeks now for the Halloween run. It feels great because nobody’s burnt out. At this point, we’ve reestablished a large part of our catalog from the tunes we played this summer and we’re reeling in even more of the tunes for this Halloween run, which will feature even more tunes we didn’t this past summer. So, it’s been great to feel we have a handle back on a lot of the catalog. And that coupled with the new tunes for Halloween, it just feels really fresh and exciting.

From what footage I’ve seen of the Cheese’s recent performances, I’ve picked up on a palpable sense of brotherhood onstage when you’re together now. There’s something going on in the way you look at each other, and you all seem very grateful that this experiment you started a long time ago is still going.

Absolutely. There’s nothing like taking some time off to give you some perspective on what you have. We’ve gotten out of the grind of being out on the road and playing a 100-plus shows a year and being away from our families. Now we’re at a really unique place where we’re able to just do select events with lots of prep time for the shows. I think we do look at each other onstage like, “Wow, I’m really excited to be part of this, to be part of such a great scene and great band.” Since December ’93 when we first started doing this, we do look back and think, “Wow, look how far we’ve come. Isn’t a treat to still be together and hosting events like this.”

It’s gotta be a kick in the ass to think you’re staring down 20 years of this thing.

It really is cool. In the beginning we only dreamed it would be something like this, that it’d be a career that would span this many years, this many shows and so many friendships along the way and incredible memories. It’s something you dream for and to realize it makes us feel super thankful and appreciative of what we’ve got.

The flipside of that is we absolutely know we have to come out and deliver now. There’s absolutely no room to play a bad show or have an off night. We know that by only doing select dates we have to come out and hit it out of the park every night. So, we’re trying our best to do that.

Kang Halloween Show :: Vegas ’05
By John Smirtic

This situation also provides the band a chance to reflect on what’s come before. I just listened to the first installment of the new Rhythm of the Road series. It’s gotta be fun to look back and decide what shows you want to represent you as a band.

Right, right. That one’s the Tabernacle from Atlanta in 2000, and that was has always been a fan favorite in terms of older shows. I had heard that and when I went back and listened to it as we mixed and mastered it, I realized there was a LOT of energy in that show. I can see why it is a fan favorite and I’m proud to put it out. That was 2000 and we were breaking into some bigger venues. My wife Kristen and I had just had our first kid, and that was her first show coming back after retiring from being the merch lady. So, I was really excited to see her again. We had our buddy Tony Furtado sitting in. We’ve been friends with Tony forever and he can really bring it! I think there’s a lot of obvious enthusiasm and energy to that show and I think people are gonna love having a chance to revisit it.

What do you see as the studio future for the band? I think the past couple studio albums by the Cheese are easily your best thus far.

I do, too. I think we’re all just maturing as musicians and songwriters, so the last couple albums have been really satisfying for us. I’m hopeful we’ll be able to get into the studio in 2011 and do a release. We do have new material. We featured a couple new songs this summer and we’ll continue to work new material into the repertoire. We’re all excited about bringing in new material and working it up.

You guys have a real nose for good material lately, the kind of tunes you’ll be able to play with and evolve over a long period of time.

That’s just part of the maturation process. When you’ve been doing it as long as we have you naturally begin to filter things out and you learn what you like and don’t like and maybe get more of an ear for a crafty pop hook or what’s likely to make a great jam. It’s exciting to bring new stuff in and see what the band do with it.

The String Cheese Incident Tour Dates :: The String Cheese Incident News :: The String Cheese Incident Concert Reviews

JamBase | Creepin’ ‘Round
Go See Live Music!


The String Cheese Incident: Halloween Thoughts

By: Dennis Cook

Tickets for SCI’s October 29th are available here. Tickets for the October 30th show can be purchased here.

Moseley as SRV :: Halloween ’02
By Todd Radunsky

The String Cheese Incident hasn’t played a Halloween run since 2006 in Las Vegas. Hunger for a fresh All Hallows’ Eve Incident amongst their faithful, ever-colorful flock has been strong for years, and the band will soon feed that appetite on October 29-30 at the fabled Hampton Coliseum in Hampton, VA.

We snagged bassist-singer Keith Moseley to discuss the upcoming show, what the holiday means to SCI, the band’s new archival Rhythm of the Road series, and the group’s future plans.

JamBase: When did Halloween become such a big deal with you guys?

Keith: I think probably from the beginning we’ve always tried to make Halloween something special with the idea of being costumed and throwing in a bunch of fun cover tunes we don’t ordinarily do. We’ve often run with a theme and had special guests, but it’s always been about getting a little wacky and doing something special for the fans on Halloween.

JamBase: Is it fun for you to get into costume? It’s not something one does at most gigs.

Keith: We love it! It’s a chance to get silly and break from the norm. I’m thinking back to the year we did the Shrine in L.A. and did the dead rock star theme. I did Stevie Ray Vaughan and Kang did Hendrix and Travis was Freddie Mercury. When else do you get Travis up front with fake buck teeth and tights singing Freddie Mercury? It’s always a blast to do that kind of thing.

Travis as Freddie :: Halloween ’02
By Todd Radunsky

Has it become a challenge at this point to keep coming up with new angles for Halloween?

A little bit but there’s a huge library of fun tunes to cover and we’re pulling in some fun ones this time for sure. It’s always fun to prepare a special event and we don’t seem to have run out of creative ideas yet. We still have some fresh ones this year!

What is it like to preside over a giant size event like this, with enormous balloons and acrobats and so on? What is it like to be onstage making music while all this wildness goes off around you?

It’s super cool. We get to be the party hosts for the coolest gig in town, wherever we are, be it a Halloween show at Hampton or a New Year’s event. It’s pretty amazing to get to host that sort of event and know we’re blowing peoples’ minds over & over again with a fantastic show.

What’s the level of fan involvement in these sorts of shows? There’s no question that String Cheese has one of the most loyal, engaged fan bases out there.

We do, and Halloween, as far as fan involvement, has traditionally been that they come dressed. Put on your funnest costume and be ready to have a good time. A huge majority of the fans in attendance are in costume, so it becomes a larger than life event. At Hampton to have 10-12 thousand people in costume plus what the band throws out there, well, you can’t go wrong. It’s a guaranteed good time.

I’ve talked to a lot of musicians about this and the consensus is that there’s something different about playing to a costumed crowd. You can’t do your normal show when there are ghouls and devils and fairies riding the rail.

It just ups the fun factor. The crowd gets into a headspace where they want the band to be different and take chances. At least for us, they definitely expect something different and maybe silly or risky from the band. And we won’t disappoint. We’re not afraid to laugh at ourselves on Halloween. We’re all about high entertainment value.

Is it freeing as a musician to have a space like this, where you can think, “Well, I might fall on my face but I’ve always wanted to try this musical idea.”

Sure. For us, on Halloween anything goes. We’ve covered Nirvana to Queen to Phish to The Doors. It definitely ups the fun for everyone.

SCI Halloween Show :: Vegas ’05 :: by John Smirtic

How is it playing as String Cheese now that you’re only performing together a handful of times each year as compared to years & years of being road dogs?

It’s kind of fresh and exciting to have taken a break from the Cheese and then come back to prepare for Red Rocks and the Horning’s run. And we’ve been in rehearsal for a couple weeks now for the Halloween run. It feels great because nobody’s burnt out. At this point, we’ve reestablished a large part of our catalog from the tunes we played this summer and we’re reeling in even more of the tunes for this Halloween run, which will feature even more tunes we didn’t this past summer. So, it’s been great to feel we have a handle back on a lot of the catalog. And that coupled with the new tunes for Halloween, it just feels really fresh and exciting.

From what footage I’ve seen of the Cheese’s recent performances, I’ve picked up on a palpable sense of brotherhood onstage when you’re together now. There’s something going on in the way you look at each other, and you all seem very grateful that this experiment you started a long time ago is still going.

Absolutely. There’s nothing like taking some time off to give you some perspective on what you have. We’ve gotten out of the grind of being out on the road and playing a 100-plus shows a year and being away from our families. Now we’re at a really unique place where we’re able to just do select events with lots of prep time for the shows. I think we do look at each other onstage like, “Wow, I’m really excited to be part of this, to be part of such a great scene and great band.” Since December ’93 when we first started doing this, we do look back and think, “Wow, look how far we’ve come. Isn’t a treat to still be together and hosting events like this.”

It’s gotta be a kick in the ass to think you’re staring down 20 years of this thing.

It really is cool. In the beginning we only dreamed it would be something like this, that it’d be a career that would span this many years, this many shows and so many friendships along the way and incredible memories. It’s something you dream for and to realize it makes us feel super thankful and appreciative of what we’ve got.

The flipside of that is we absolutely know we have to come out and deliver now. There’s absolutely no room to play a bad show or have an off night. We know that by only doing select dates we have to come out and hit it out of the park every night. So, we’re trying our best to do that.

Kang Halloween Show :: Vegas ’05
By John Smirtic

This situation also provides the band a chance to reflect on what’s come before. I just listened to the first installment of the new Rhythm of the Road series. It’s gotta be fun to look back and decide what shows you want to represent you as a band.

Right, right. That one’s the Tabernacle from Atlanta in 2000, and that was has always been a fan favorite in terms of older shows. I had heard that and when I went back and listened to it as we mixed and mastered it, I realized there was a LOT of energy in that show. I can see why it is a fan favorite and I’m proud to put it out. That was 2000 and we were breaking into some bigger venues. My wife Kristen and I had just had our first kid, and that was her first show coming back after retiring from being the merch lady. So, I was really excited to see her again. We had our buddy Tony Furtado sitting in. We’ve been friends with Tony forever and he can really bring it! I think there’s a lot of obvious enthusiasm and energy to that show and I think people are gonna love having a chance to revisit it.

What do you see as the studio future for the band? I think the past couple studio albums by the Cheese are easily your best thus far.

I do, too. I think we’re all just maturing as musicians and songwriters, so the last couple albums have been really satisfying for us. I’m hopeful we’ll be able to get into the studio in 2011 and do a release. We do have new material. We featured a couple new songs this summer and we’ll continue to work new material into the repertoire. We’re all excited about bringing in new material and working it up.

You guys have a real nose for good material lately, the kind of tunes you’ll be able to play with and evolve over a long period of time.

That’s just part of the maturation process. When you’ve been doing it as long as we have you naturally begin to filter things out and you learn what you like and don’t like and maybe get more of an ear for a crafty pop hook or what’s likely to make a great jam. It’s exciting to bring new stuff in and see what the band do with it.

The String Cheese Incident Tour Dates :: The String Cheese Incident News :: The String Cheese Incident Concert Reviews

JamBase | Creepin’ ‘Round
Go See Live Music!


The String Cheese Incident: Halloween Thoughts

By: Dennis Cook

Tickets for SCI’s October 29th are still available but Ticketmaster currently experiencing problems with date. Tickets for the October 30th show can be purchased here.

Moseley as SRV :: Halloween ’02
By Todd Radunsky

The String Cheese Incident hasn’t played a Halloween run since 2006 in Las Vegas. Hunger for a fresh All Hallows’ Eve Incident amongst their faithful, ever-colorful flock has been strong for years, and the band will soon feed that appetite on October 29-30 at the fabled Hampton Coliseum in Hampton, VA.

We snagged bassist-singer Keith Moseley to discuss the upcoming show, what the holiday means to SCI, the band’s new archival Rhythm of the Road series, and the group’s future plans.

JamBase: When did Halloween become such a big deal with you guys?

Keith: I think probably from the beginning we’ve always tried to make Halloween something special with the idea of being costumed and throwing in a bunch of fun cover tunes we don’t ordinarily do. We’ve often run with a theme and had special guests, but it’s always been about getting a little wacky and doing something special for the fans on Halloween.

JamBase: Is it fun for you to get into costume? It’s not something one does at most gigs.

Keith: We love it! It’s a chance to get silly and break from the norm. I’m thinking back to the year we did the Shrine in L.A. and did the dead rock star theme. I did Stevie Ray Vaughan and Kang did Hendrix and Travis was Freddie Mercury. When else do you get Travis up front with fake buck teeth and tights singing Freddie Mercury? It’s always a blast to do that kind of thing.

Travis as Freddie :: Halloween ’02
By Todd Radunsky

Has it become a challenge at this point to keep coming up with new angles for Halloween?

A little bit but there’s a huge library of fun tunes to cover and we’re pulling in some fun ones this time for sure. It’s always fun to prepare a special event and we don’t seem to have run out of creative ideas yet. We still have some fresh ones this year!

What is it like to preside over a giant size event like this, with enormous balloons and acrobats and so on? What is it like to be onstage making music while all this wildness goes off around you?

It’s super cool. We get to be the party hosts for the coolest gig in town, wherever we are, be it a Halloween show at Hampton or a New Year’s event. It’s pretty amazing to get to host that sort of event and know we’re blowing peoples’ minds over & over again with a fantastic show.

What’s the level of fan involvement in these sorts of shows? There’s no question that String Cheese has one of the most loyal, engaged fan bases out there.

We do, and Halloween, as far as fan involvement, has traditionally been that they come dressed. Put on your funnest costume and be ready to have a good time. A huge majority of the fans in attendance are in costume, so it becomes a larger than life event. At Hampton to have 10-12 thousand people in costume plus what the band throws out there, well, you can’t go wrong. It’s a guaranteed good time.

I’ve talked to a lot of musicians about this and the consensus is that there’s something different about playing to a costumed crowd. You can’t do your normal show when there are ghouls and devils and fairies riding the rail.

It just ups the fun factor. The crowd gets into a headspace where they want the band to be different and take chances. At least for us, they definitely expect something different and maybe silly or risky from the band. And we won’t disappoint. We’re not afraid to laugh at ourselves on Halloween. We’re all about high entertainment value.

Is it freeing as a musician to have a space like this, where you can think, “Well, I might fall on my face but I’ve always wanted to try this musical idea.”

Sure. For us, on Halloween anything goes. We’ve covered Nirvana to Queen to Phish to The Doors. It definitely ups the fun for everyone.

SCI Halloween Show :: Vegas ’05 :: by John Smirtic

How is it playing as String Cheese now that you’re only performing together a handful of times each year as compared to years & years of being road dogs?

It’s kind of fresh and exciting to have taken a break from the Cheese and then come back to prepare for Red Rocks and the Horning’s run. And we’ve been in rehearsal for a couple weeks now for the Halloween run. It feels great because nobody’s burnt out. At this point, we’ve reestablished a large part of our catalog from the tunes we played this summer and we’re reeling in even more of the tunes for this Halloween run, which will feature even more tunes we didn’t this past summer. So, it’s been great to feel we have a handle back on a lot of the catalog. And that coupled with the new tunes for Halloween, it just feels really fresh and exciting.

From what footage I’ve seen of the Cheese’s recent performances, I’ve picked up on a palpable sense of brotherhood onstage when you’re together now. There’s something going on in the way you look at each other, and you all seem very grateful that this experiment you started a long time ago is still going.

Absolutely. There’s nothing like taking some time off to give you some perspective on what you have. We’ve gotten out of the grind of being out on the road and playing a 100-plus shows a year and being away from our families. Now we’re at a really unique place where we’re able to just do select events with lots of prep time for the shows. I think we do look at each other onstage like, “Wow, I’m really excited to be part of this, to be part of such a great scene and great band.” Since December ’93 when we first started doing this, we do look back and think, “Wow, look how far we’ve come. Isn’t a treat to still be together and hosting events like this.”

It’s gotta be a kick in the ass to think you’re staring down 20 years of this thing.

It really is cool. In the beginning we only dreamed it would be something like this, that it’d be a career that would span this many years, this many shows and so many friendships along the way and incredible memories. It’s something you dream for and to realize it makes us feel super thankful and appreciative of what we’ve got.

The flipside of that is we absolutely know we have to come out and deliver now. There’s absolutely no room to play a bad show or have an off night. We know that by only doing select dates we have to come out and hit it out of the park every night. So, we’re trying our best to do that.

Kang Halloween Show :: Vegas ’05
By John Smirtic

This situation also provides the band a chance to reflect on what’s come before. I just listened to the first installment of the new Rhythm of the Road series. It’s gotta be fun to look back and decide what shows you want to represent you as a band.

Right, right. That one’s the Tabernacle from Atlanta in 2000, and that was has always been a fan favorite in terms of older shows. I had heard that and when I went back and listened to it as we mixed and mastered it, I realized there was a LOT of energy in that show. I can see why it is a fan favorite and I’m proud to put it out. That was 2000 and we were breaking into some bigger venues. My wife Kristen and I had just had our first kid, and that was her first show coming back after retiring from being the merch lady. So, I was really excited to see her again. We had our buddy Tony Furtado sitting in. We’ve been friends with Tony forever and he can really bring it! I think there’s a lot of obvious enthusiasm and energy to that show and I think people are gonna love having a chance to revisit it.

What do you see as the studio future for the band? I think the past couple studio albums by the Cheese are easily your best thus far.

I do, too. I think we’re all just maturing as musicians and songwriters, so the last couple albums have been really satisfying for us. I’m hopeful we’ll be able to get into the studio in 2011 and do a release. We do have new material. We featured a couple new songs this summer and we’ll continue to work new material into the repertoire. We’re all excited about bringing in new material and working it up.

You guys have a real nose for good material lately, the kind of tunes you’ll be able to play with and evolve over a long period of time.

That’s just part of the maturation process. When you’ve been doing it as long as we have you naturally begin to filter things out and you learn what you like and don’t like and maybe get more of an ear for a crafty pop hook or what’s likely to make a great jam. It’s exciting to bring new stuff in and see what the band do with it.

The String Cheese Incident Tour Dates :: The String Cheese Incident News :: The String Cheese Incident Concert Reviews

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Kyle Hollingsworth Band: November Live Dates

MILWAUKEE, CHICAGO, ST. LOUIS & IOWA CITY GET A VISIT

Kyle Hollingsworth

After wrapping up a successful run of summer festival performances, the Kyle Hollingsworth Band will hit the road in the Midwest this November. St. Louis’ Messy Jiverson will join KHB on all dates. Tickets will be on sale Monday, September 13, at Noon CDT at www.kylehollingsworth.com, and on sale at venue outlets Wednesday, September 15, at Noon CDT.

KHB Tour Dates

November 10 Miramar Theatre Milwaukee, WI
November 11 Martyrs’ Chicago, IL
November 12 Old Rock House St. Louis, MO
November 13 Iowa City Yacht Club Iowa City, IA

Playing in String Cheese Incident and leading his own band has allowed Hollingsworth unrestricted access to the world of music, and has bestowed on him the kind of fearlessness that can move from funk to bluegrass on a chord change.

“In the jam world, where there are no set ways of doing things, we’re not afraid to move in and out of genres,” he says, “and because of that I’ve learned to be creative, not only on stage but in the studio. I can get on board with something pretty quickly. You have to.”

Hollingsworth’s most recent solo release is Then There’s Now.

Kyle Hollingsworth Band Tour Dates :: Kyle Hollingsworth Band News :: Kyle Hollingsworth Band Concert Reviews


Mimi Fishman Poster Auction For Conscious Alliance

The Mimi Fishman Foundation just launched a new poster auction they are hosting for their friends at Conscious Alliance, which features a handful of signed posters from bands such as String Cheese Incident, Widespread Panic, The Disco Biscuits, Umphrey’s McGee, STS9 and Phil Lesh. Also included is a Jam Cruise 6 poster with tons of signatures. Check out the auction here.

Bidding concludes Tuesday, September 7.


Euforquestra: Live Download w/Members of SCI

NEW ALBUM SOUP OUT NOW


Live at Camp Euforia 2010

Self-proclaimed purveyors of “Afro-Caribbean-Barnyard-Funk” Euforquestra recently played at the
Camp Euforia festival on July 17 in Lone Tree, Iowa. During their performance the band playing the
String Cheese Incident song “MLT,” with half
of SCI: Kyle Hollingsworth, Michael Travis, and Jason Hann. Hollingsworth sat in with the band on
keyboards the
entire night. Click here to listen to and download the
track.

Click here to download Euforquestra’s new album,
Soup, for free.


SCI: Rhythm of the Road New Archive Series

BRAND NEW CLASSIC ARCHIVAL SERIES WITH RHYTHM OF THE ROAD VOLUME 1, INCIDENT IN
ATLANTA – 11.17.00
OUT 11.09.10; TICKETS TO HULAWEEN OCTOBER 29 & 30 AT HAMPTON COLISEUM ON
SALE NOW


The String Cheese Incident

The String Cheese Incident
announces a brand new live archival series with Rhythm of the Road: Volume 1, Incident in Atlanta –
11.17.00
. Available 11.09.10 in celebration of the historic show’s ten year anniversary, this will be the
first offering in SCI’s new series Rhythm of the Road which will be highlighting many of the band’s most
celebrated
concerts with remastered limited edition releases.

Rhythm of the Road: Vol. 1 includes special guest Tony Furtado on banjo for several songs and features
covers of Led Zeppelin, Talking Heads, John Coltrane, Peter Rowan, and Peter Gabriel, as well as bluegrass standards
and a host of SCI originals. The show is the perfect way to kick off The String Cheese Incident’s archival series
Rhythm of the Road.

Incident in Atlanta features the entire 11.17.00 performance, lovingly remastered from the original 24-bit multi-
track master tapes and made available on CD, download (MP3, FLAC) and, an SCI first, 24-bit FLAC download. It will
be released on November 9 in stores, through SCI Merchandise, and www.LiveCheese.com.

Track List:

Set 1: Smile, Joyful Sound > Orange Blossom Special*, Barstool, Pygmy Pony,
Missing Me > Ramble On
Set 2: Outside And Inside, Impressions > Glory Chords Jam > Midnight
Moonlight*, This Must Be the Place (Naive Melody) > Miss Brown’s Teahouse,
Wake Up, Black Clouds*
Encore: The Old Home Place*, Shenandoah Breakdown*, Shakin’ the Tree*

The band will conclude the year with an epic Halloween weekend at Virginia’s Hampton Coliseum. “Hulaween 2010”
will feature special guests The Disco
Biscuits
on Friday, October 29 and Saturday, October 30 will offer a three-set evening with The String Cheese
Incident. A limited amount of tickets are still available, please visit www.stringcheeseincident.com for additional information.

The String Cheese Incident
Tour Dates

::
The String Cheese Incident
News

::
The String Cheese Incident
Concert
Reviews


YarmonyGrass Fest: Railroad Earth, Nershi, EOTO

FIFTH ANNUAL YARMONYGRASS FEST TAKES PLACE IN BOND, CO ON AUGUST 20-
22


Railroad Earth

Ticket sales for the fifth annual YarmonyGrass Festival are now underway. The high country camping
event known for unrivaled mountain activities and top shelf national talent will take place in Bond, CO on August 20-
22 offering concert goers an experience that is as good for the soul as it is for the ears.

2010 marks the five-year anniversary for the YarmonyGrass Festival – an intimate two-day camping event slated for
late summer in the Colorado Rockies. In just a few short years the event has grown from a word of mouth gathering
into a full-fledged festival specializing in all the activities the Colorado Rockies has to offer.

YarmonyGrass features an array of musical flavors including a two-night stand with the six-piece Americana outfit,
Railroad Earth. Other
notables include Billy
Nershi
(String Cheese Incident)
performing with guitarist Scott
Law
and
Tao Seeger, as well as
Head for the Hills, Elephant Revival, EOTO, The Contribution and Kyle Hollingsworth Band
performing with DJ Logic
and members of The Motet.

Each year the event strives to combine musical performances with unique outdoor activities such as rafting, a live
music float trip, down home BBQ (hosted by members of Honkytonk Homeslice) and even a kickball tournament
aimed at pitting festival attendees against their musical heros. Also featured at this year’s event is a rare chance to
go flyfishing with Railroad Earth’s, Tim Carbone. This year’s YarmonyGrass Festival will also feature a riverside bar,
nestled on the banks of the Colorado river, featuring a full-slate of singer songwriters and acoustic performances as
well as the one and only floating stage taking place on the river on Saturday afternoon with live music chosen by fan
vote at www.yarmonygrass.com.

Tickets: Advance 3-day tickets are now onsale at $149, with a gate ticket price of $160. Children ages 10 and
under do not require a ticket. Tickets on sale at www.yarmonygrass.com


Bluegrass In Paradise Fest Crested Butte w/ Emmitt, Nershi

BLUEGRASS COMES HOME TO CRESTED BUTTE; A NEW ROOTS GATHERING FINDS ITSELF IN
PARADISE

Drew Emmitt

For thirteen years, the Crested Butte Music Festival (CBMF) has turned Crested Butte into one big concert
hall in the summer, with music resounding from outdoors venues, hotels, stunning private homes, churches and
barns. This summer, for the first time, CBMF will host Bluegrass in Paradise, a five-day festival for one of
the most popular musical genres in the American West. From July 6-10, both traditional bluegrass and “newgrass”
will be showcased in a range of events: a three-day camp for kids, workshops for adults, jam sessions, children’s
performances and six top-level bands. For five days of foot-stomping fun, learning, and camaraderie, Bluegrass in Paradise will keep festival goers on their feet.

The host of the Festival is internationally acclaimed newgrass star – and resident of Crested Butte – Drew Emmitt. Emmitt is not only
one of the most energetic and innovative mandolin players in bluegrass today, he is also a singer, storyteller, and
master of multiple stringed instruments. He has played with the band Leftover Salmon, and most recently, the
Drew Emmitt Band. This jack-of-all-roots-trades will be a stimulating guide through the five days of Bluegrass in
Paradise.

2010 Performer Lineup:

Ralph Stanley & The Clinch Mountain Boys: Stanley, The Godfather of bluegrass, is still the best banjo picker and tenor singer in bluegrass music
after 55 years in the business. As a recording artist, he has performed on more than 170 albums, tapes and CDs. He has written countless songs both individually and together with his brother, the late Carter Stanley. Ralph has played throughout the United States and the world, including several tours of Japan.

Emmitt-Nershi Band:
Festival host Drew Emmitt will perform with Billy Nershi, the founding member and acoustic guitarist of The String Cheese Incident, an American
jam band from Boulder, Colorado. The Emmitt-Nershi Band will feature Emmitt on mandolin and vocals, Nershi on
acoustic guitar and vocals, Andy Thorn who plays with both Larry Keel and the Drew Emmitt
band on banjo, and Tyler Grant from the Drew Emmitt Band on bass.

Bearfoot: Bluegrass music
from Alaska? Not just any bluegrass, but some of the best. Telluride Band Contest winner Bearfoot has a fresh
approach to acoustic music that features twin fiddles, fast-picking mandolin and guitar, upright bass, and beautiful
harmony vocals. Bearfoot’s exuberant stage presence elicits an appeal that bridges generations.

Shannon Whitworth:
Shannon Whitworth, a founding member of the acclaimed acoustic quartet The Biscuit Burners, has set a high bar
for Americana music in the last few years. Her definitive songwriting and captivating voice have earned her national
praise. Shannon’s debut solo release, No Expectations, is pure, strong, and heartfelt, catching
the ears and touching the hearts of the most unsuspecting bystander.

Blue Highway: Now in its
sixteenth year as a band, Grammy-nominated Blue Highway is indisputably one of the most esteemed and influential
groups in contemporary bluegrass. With a deep bench of virtuosic songwriters, vocalists and instrumentalists, Blue
Highway’s hallmark is an unwavering commitment to the ensemble, the “democracy of the band” that makes Blue
Highway a powerhouse.

Spring Creek: In 2009,
Spring Creek joined the ranks of Ralph Stanley & The Clinch Mountain Boys, Kenny & Amanda Smith and Steep Canyon Rangers as a Rebel Records
recording artist. Hailing from Lyons Colorado, Spring Creek’s creative original songs and meticulous harmony vocals
made it the first Colorado-based band to be signed by Rebel.


The Contribution | 04.03 | S.F. | Photo Gallery

Images by: Susan J. Weiand

The Contribution :: 04.03.10 :: Great American Music Hall :: San Francisco, CA

The Contribution is a jam supergroup featuring Railroad Earth‘s Tim Carbone (violin, vocals), The String Cheese Incident‘s Keith Moseley (bass, vocals) and Jason Hann (drums), and New Monsoon‘s Phil Ferlino (keys, vocals) and Jeff Miller (guitar, vocals). The band released their debut album, Which Way World, on March 30 through SCI Fidelity and recently completed a short run of shows in support. For more on The Contribution see our exclusive feature/interview from last week here.

Setlist

Set I: Come Around, Time Was Only Yesterday, Don’t Do it (The Band), Steady Ride, Samsara, Only You Know and I Know (Bonnie & Delaney), Fear of Nothing, Let the Children Play (Santana), The Song Remains the Same (Led Zeppelin)

Set II: Midnight on the Water > Hoedown (Traditional), Which Way World, Wind Me Up, Gimme Shelter (The Rolling Stones), Not This Time, Don’t Let Go (Jesse Stone; also recorded by the Jerry Garcia Band), Better Days, Let’s Get It On (Marvin Gaye), Year of Jubilee

E: Live and Let Die (Wings)

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”0″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=18″);}); The Contribution | Great American Music Hall | San Francisco, CA The jam supergroup featuring Tim Carbone (Railroad Earth), Keith Moseley (SCI), Jason Hann (SCI), Jeff Miller (New Monsoon) and Phil Ferlino (New Monsoon) play the legendary Great American Music Hall in San Francisco… View Photos

The Contribution Tour Dates :: The Contribution News :: The Contribution Concert Reviews

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The Contribution: Fear of Nothing

By: Dennis Cook

The Contribution

You’d be hard pressed to find five more gifted, organic, flexible musicians than Railroad Earth‘s Tim Carbone (violin, vocals), New Monsoon‘s Jeff Miller (guitar, vocals) and Phil Ferlino (keys, vocals) and The String Cheese Incident‘s Keith Moseley (bass, vocals) and Jason Hann (drums). Each is a fixture on the jam circuit, yet their new project together, The Contribution, is strikingly different from the bands these players have emerged from. Their debut, Which Way World (released March 30 on SCI Fidelity), is a fully fleshed rock album in the classic sense, where the songs and playing take one on a little trip, often to places deep inside we might not have reached without a little melodic greasing. One picks up on this different vibe immediately in the three-part harmonies and hand clapping snap of lead-off track “Come Around,” but the aura of difference – in a wholly positive way – lingers on every cut of this record birthed in the tall trees of Northern California where three friends discovered a profound musical bond.

“The three of us [Ferlino, Miller and Carbone] agreed from the beginning that we wouldn’t write unless the three of us were all in the same room. These songs are total collaborations,” says Carbone. “This might sound weird, but this is the only record in my entire career that I go back to and get goose bumps. This one, I want to put it one again and again.”

“I was thinking about the process that me and Phil and Tim went through to filter down to these tunes. People had a few ideas, but when we opened up the notebooks, got out the guitars and a couple bottles of wine it all magically emerged,” says Miller. “One of us would have a chord progression that complimented another’s lyric, or Tim would pull out a random line he’d written months ago and it would fit perfectly into something Phil introduced. We batted the ball around in this triangle, and it’s such a great way to write. When I’m writing by myself I’m my own worst critic instead of having someone there to help me shape and edit things. That’s part of what makes us such a great writing team, and we haven’t even explored writing with Keith and Jason, which we’ll do on the next record. Having someone there you trust to say what works and what doesn’t, to edit on the fly, makes things so much better.”

Phil Ferlino from myspace.com/thecontribution

“Phil is, by the nature of his personality and instrument, more of a background processing type of guy. He’s like the Spock of the operation back there figuring out chord progressions and things. To have Phil as a component of any writing process is amazing,” says Miller. “Then Tim comes in and he’s a catalyst, a spark with all kinds of creative ideas. He’ll pull his iPhone out and laptop and do searches on Buddhist words and things. It’s cool, man. He’s like a Buddhist in a coal mine [laughs].”

Which Way World is some of the most controlled, beautiful playing any of these musicians has done on record, and an album that explores the potential of the studio as an invisible but palpable member of a band.

“Jeff and Phil and I produced it together, but I sort of led the way since I’ve had a lot of experience producing records – bluegrass records, rock records, blues records [31 albums by current count, starting in 1986] – and each one you approach differently. With this one we went in with the model of a modern rock record – don’t be afraid to layer vocals or have multiple guitars doing things. Of course, we’ll have to sort that out live, but we’ll work it out,” chuckles Carbone. “We mixed it with Phil Nicolo [John Lennon, Taj Mahal, Bob Dylan], who has an amazing pedigree. We told him exactly how we wanted the record to sound and as soon as he heard the tracks he was gassed. ‘Whoa, this is a fuckin’ rock record, man!’”

“This was the most fun I ever had making a record,” says Carbone. “I loved every single minute of it, and that includes the writing of it. Phil and Jeff and I are just such a great writing team. We’re just very comfortable with each other, and we allow ourselves the latitude to make mistakes. And everybody can say anything, including, ‘That sucks.’ It’s a fine line. You can’t go in without ego – just to do the stuff we do, you need a certain amount of ego just to pull it off. You can be as humble as you want or appear to be but the bottom line is, I don’t care who you are, you need ego to pull this off. That’s what it takes. However, to an extent, you have to check your ego at the door doing this kind of writing project, and we were very successful at doing that.”

Got Rhythm

Jason Hann :: 04.03.10 :: SF by Weiand

“We talked about who we’d like to play bass and drums. I had been doing some playing with Jason, where he and I did a percussion-violin improvisational show after we’d done Nershi’s jamboree in Costa Rica, where we were basically pushed out onstage by Nershi and we crawled inside each other’s brains. I’m a very rhythmic player; I play drums as well. So, by virtue of me playing with Jason a bunch and feeling like we had a real rapport and always liking Keith’s playing and Keith as a person – and during the Summer Classic, Phil and Jeff had developed a really nice relationship with Keith – that we thought, ‘Why don’t we get those guys down to be the rhythm section?’” says Carbone. “They were totally into it, but scheduling was very, very dicey, especially because EOTO is so freakin’ busy. Believe it or not, the drum tracks were created and recorded in five days. Jason is an extraordinary drummer, and what’s beautiful about him was how he completely got the songs, which are the amalgamation of the three of us [Carbone, Miller and Ferlino] and our experiences as musicians. There’s so many different influences, even within a single song, but Jason seemed to tap into all of them and emulate the favorite drummer you could imagine on a particular tune. On the opening track, ‘Come Around,’ he’s totally fuckin’ John Bonham! Then, the next track he’s channeling Jim Keltner. Sometimes on the record it feels like he’s Ringo Starr or Keith Moon. Jason isn’t a copycat drummer but he’s so fucking good he knows exactly what to play in each situation AND make all the tracks on the album feel of a piece.”

“The band developed an identity quickly, and I can’t say enough about Keith and Jason coming into this process with Tim that has been going on for four or five years. It’s like they’d heard them their whole lives. They put together bass and drum parts so quickly and so much better than anything I could have come up with. We’d sit in the control room and listen to what they came up with and say, ‘Wow, where did these guys come from?’ And even as individuals they are the right guys for the job. We’d all loved their playing, professionalism and vibe for years and felt lucky to have them involved,” says Miller. “Where I felt [The Contribution] was truly magical was the night Jason and Keith flew in to record with us. We went straight to their hotel room with a couple bottles of wine and a case of beer and sat there and played the tunes. Jason played on his knee with his hand and Keith just sat back against the headboard with his bass, and it just instantly gelled, even without real instruments. Sitting there in the hotel room it just seemed too easy, and we realized the easy part is everyone is seasoned and experienced. The level of professionalism is exciting.”

The entire ensemble plays to the strengths of each particular song. Each man could command the spotlight with their soloing abilities but there’s a shared zeitgeist to The Contribution that blurs individual lines beautifully.

Continue reading for more on The Contribution…

 


I can’t emphasize enough how unbelievably joyous the entire experience was, right from the very first writing sessions up in Marin at this little house tucked into the redwoods. We worked our asses off, and when we didn’t feel like writing we walked and drank a ton of wine. It was idyllic. Really, dude, it’s everything with why I do what I do.

-Tim Carbone

 

Photo of Carbone, Moseley & Miller by: Susan J. Weiand | 04.03.10 | Great American Music Hall | San Francisco, CA

The Contribution enjoying wine in the studio
From myspace.com/thecontribution

“There’s elements on the record where we knew we needed some solos, but every one of them is heartfelt, like Jeff’s lead guitar part on ‘Not This Time.’ He played exactly what needed to be played for that song. Then on ‘Which Way World’ and ‘Come Around’ we did something that people love that we do onstage, which is the interaction of the fiddle and the electric guitar. One of the ways we did that was by having him play a solo where he leaves spaces and then I played a solo right after him that spoke to those spaces. Phil and I did the same thing on ‘Samsara,’ where all the violin/piano parts at the end were done live standing next to each in the room,” explains Carbone, highlighting the intimacy, energy and pleasant overlap of the musicians in the studio that gets picked up on in these sessions. “I can’t emphasize enough how unbelievably joyous the entire experience was, right from the very first writing sessions up in Marin at this little house tucked into the redwoods. We worked our asses off, and when we didn’t feel like writing we walked and drank a ton of wine. It was idyllic. Really, dude, it’s everything with why I do what I do.”

“How often do you sit down for a 10-course meal? Or take a vacation where you have an amazing time? It’s very much like that when I’m with these guys. We’re working really hard but it doesn’t feel like work at all. I don’t know what time it is, I don’t need to look at my phone, I’m just in it fully,” says Miller. “It rewinds you back to your childhood and why you picked up that strange looking thing with strings and plucked it for the first time. You fast forward down the road of your life and you realize you’ve been listening to George Harrison’s work for a lifetime and now you’re able to do that. I literally had that experience when [The Contribution] was in the studio. The whole process was SO fun, and that’s really the essence of playing music and everything really. If it’s not fun, then what’s the fucking point?”

“If you’ve ever read The Secret or anything like that, it seems like the one thing everybody agrees about through the ages is fun. If life is fun and you’re feeling good then you’ll probably be successful at what you’re doing. People gravitate to people having fun,” observes Miller. “I do want to point out on a more serious level that there’s a weight to this record. Some of the songs are darker and a little heavier, which emerge more slowly than the ear candy songs but are waiting there in the grooves. I had some moments in the studio where I was fighting back tears during a performance. I’m singing something or playing a guitar and it’s like a freight train going through me emotionally because it’s tender and sensitive and coming from a real place of needing to put this out there.”

Deep Water

Which Way World is a quintessential grower, one of those carefully layered gifts that only gives up its full flavor after one has savored and studied it a bit. New facets of every player are revealed, and there’s a depth to the musicianship and thematic thrust that’s born from the commingling of several lifetimes spent on the road carving sound for a living. This may be a new band but there’s a wonderfully lived-in atmosphere to these thoughtful ruminations. And better still, the lyrics, while often philosophical, skirt hippie-dippie pap that can be off-putting.

The Contribution in the studio from myspace.com/thecontribution

“Your ‘suck-o-meter’ goes off! Well, we have a suck-o-meter, too, and anytime something became maudlin or cloying we said, ‘No,’” says Carbone. “To be honest, there is a philosophical thread that runs through the album. When we first started writing this record four years ago, back then I was very deeply into Buddhism – and still am. Lyrically, I think that might have rubbed off on Jeff and Phil to a certain extent. There’s a lot in the lyrics that reflects the spirit of Buddhism. Like on ‘Which Way World,’ there’s a line that says, ‘This has all happened before.’ ‘Samsara’ is basically the wheel of pain and suffering. In spots it’s about the duality of the universe. His holiness, the Dalai Lama himself will tell that even when you’re experiencing joy there’s an element of suffering in that joy because in the background you’re clinging to that joy, and whenever that joy goes away you’ll suffer.”

“When we were deciding on the tunes and finishing them, I knew this was not going to be the kind of record that’s a pure crowd pleaser, like, ‘Hey, this is a great record to put on and dance to!’ The one thing about [the jam scene] – and this isn’t a criticism – is people are partying. They want to dance and have fun. All of our bands have been that provider on umpteen thousand experiences at gigs and festivals. So, that experience level is there, and what’s exciting about [The Contribution playing live] is seeing how we can bring that crowd pleasing factor into the nature of this project,” says Miller. “However, there comes a point as a musician where you want to get serious. You don’t go to a Neil Young concert expecting him to make you dance. You’re going to sit down, listen to the songs and he’s gonna move you in all kinds of ways, but it’s an emotional movement as opposed to a physical movement. The thing we really wanted to accomplish with the record versus the live show is you can sit down by yourself in your house or car or computer and have an emotional experience saying something you can relate to, something you need to hear that’s a salve for your heart. That’s where I’m at with writing in general – if it’s salve for my heart it’s hopefully salve for someone else’s heart, too.”

Which Way Next

It’s unlikely The Contribution will be rough trailing it through clubland. Myriad scheduling conflicts with their other projects make regular gigging a challenge, but there’s also something a touch lofty in their music, a huge souled, big sky sound ready to be ripened at rare festival appearances or inside cherry theatres with keenly attuned audiences – rare sightings that make one truly relish what these five guys do together. The band made their live debut this past week in Denver and San Francisco, and by all reports their studio chemistry is carrying over in concert, with one trustworthy pal telling me that the S.F. show had “too many sick covers to list,” though he did note their version of McCartney’s “Live And Let Die” was tremendous. It’s not a song one might obviously pick for this band, but the suspicion is The Contribution will evolve in their own idiosyncratic way and the end results will never be less than heartfelt and appealing. The group already has three songs written for their follow-up album, so this tale is far from told.

“I don’t think we’ve even really scratched the surface. We were able to go into the studio and distill these 10 songs, but there’s still a lot left over from the original writing sessions, which produced hours and hours of recordings that we sifted through to find the kernels worth keeping. You listen back and think, ‘I might have been a little drunk while I was playing that but that’s kinda cool!’ Wine is always involved, sort of the silent fourth partner of this writing process,” offers Miller. “But, two of the cornerstones of the album, ‘Come Around’ and ‘Fear of Nothing,’ came together in the extra few days we tacked onto the studio time. And we were all kind of shocked at how quickly they came together. This is just happening, and you grab a pen and just start writing it down. It was such a thrill to write a song and then three days later listen to a completed track in the studio. None of us had EVER experienced that. We’d all been in bands where you play a song live for a year before you record it. To write a song on Monday and record it on Wednesday is the greatest feeling. It’s where the rubber meets the road.”

The Contribution Tour Dates :: The Contribution News :: The Contribution Concert Reviews

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Dexfest: Cosmic Convergence Conspirator, EOTO, Big Gigantic

JUNE IN TENNESSEE GONNA BE BUMPIN’

Conspirator by James Young

The second annual Dexfest known as Cosmic Convergence, will be taking place June 17-June 20 at Sherman Oaks Campground in Dandridge, TN. The event takes place the weekend of the summer solstice, and is a four-day, multiple stage music extravaganza featuring some of the hottest electronic acts in the country, as well as a strong lineup of talented regional musicians. The main stage headliners include Conspirator, featuring members of the renowned jam/electronica act, The Disco Biscuits as well as one of Colorado’s most popular touring act’s, EOTO, brainchild of String Cheese Incident members Jason Hann and Michael Travis. Other national talent includes Big Gigantic and Starkey along with regional sensations Mindelixer, Dj Bowie, The Midnight Ace, Dex, This is ART, Corleone, DJ Kidsmeal, Truly Grimy, EP3, Jamwerks, Zoogma, Arpetrio, Freepeoples Frequency, Agobi Project, Ga-Na-Sita and Noise Org. A second round of major artist additions will be announced on April 1.

Dexfest is located in historic Dandrige, Tennessee and nestled in the foothills of the Smoky Mountains on beautiful Lake Douglas. Within reach of eight border states and with easy access to interstate I-40, the festival grounds are only 30 minutes east of Knoxville, 90 minutes from Asheville, NC, and few hours drive from Nashville, Chattanooga, Athens, Atlanta, Columbia, Greenville, and Charleston, SC.

Cosmic Convergence will also offer its guests a wide variety of activities ranging from, hiking, swimming, arts & crafts, yoga, costume contests and Brainquility, a new and unique digital meditation experience. The event boasts state of art sound and lighting along with live art installations and performances. There will also be a multitude of merchant and food vendors on site for festival attendees.

Early Bird tickets will go on sale Friday, March 13 at noon EST. For up to date information, artist info, lineup, schedule, or to purchase advance tickets please visit the offical Dexfest 2010/Cosmic Convergence event website.


Chris Berry Trio with Kimock | 03.01 | Ukiah

Words by: Zack Sampsel | Images by: Rob Burgess

Chris Berry Trio with Steve Kimock :: 03.01.10 :: Ukiah Brewing Company :: Ukiah, CA

Kimock & Berry – CB3 :: 03.01 :: Ukiah, CA

The Chris Berry Trio returned to the certified organic confines of the Ukiah Brewing Company once again, this time with guitar legend Steve Kimock in tow, and gave the Redwood Empire crowd a lesson in feel-good fun and psychedelic exploration.

The evening began with a solo set from Steven Bates on acoustic guitar, who at first struck me as a woodsy version of James Blunt mixed with the voice of Bob Dylan. As the crowd packed in, Bates utilized a strong catalog of covers to raise the temperature on a damp Monday night. Launching into a strong rendition of The Beatles’ “A Day in the Life,” Bates evoked some Phish-y thoughts and a sing-along from the eclectic and equally colorful crowd. Bates also showed off his mandolin skills with a heartfelt rendition of Bob Marley’s “Three Little Birds” that immediately had this Widespread Panic fan thinking of John Bell and the Marley raps he peppers throughout versions of “Stop-Go.”

Previously when CB3 visited Ukiah last summer, Berry brought with him longtime friend and Panjea member Michael Kang of String Cheese Incident fame, but the revolving door of CB3 guest musicians had turned and with it came Steve Kimock. Throughout the nation, and the West Coast in particular, Kimock has made guest appearances with a plethora of bands and brings with him a legion of loyal followers – for good reason, too. Kimock, Berry and Aaron Johnston and Jesse Murphy, both of Brazilian Girls (though Murphy is no longer an active member), took the stage to show Ukiah just what they had up their sleeves.

Kimock – CB3 :: 03.01 :: Ukiah, CA

Opening with “Come Away,” Berry wasted no time in getting out his unique mbira and filling the Brew Co. with its xylophone-meets-organ sound, and the crowd loved it. From Kimock’s upstroke guitar riffs to the bouncy, rolling tones of the mbira, the inimitable sound of CB3 was locked in and the kettle was starting to boil. I’ve come to expect that the soundscapes Berry and the band create can often be so rich that they’re almost visual, and this show was more of the same.

The previous CB3 show in Ukiah featuring Kang kept with a mostly island-like, calypso groove, but Kimock brought an entirely different flavor. With a row of effects pedals in front of him that looked like he could launch rockets, Kimock did just that. Following the opening verses of “Start Over Again,” Berry said, “Take it, Stevie,” and the ensuing solo dipped into an inspired jam that resonated through the room leaving mouths agape. Creating an almost Egyptian feel, Kimock took the jam into the depths of world beat downtempo before igniting the crowd with his fluid style of searing electronica and spacey interplay. Johnston and Murphy kept the first set flowing with a quick drum and bass solo as Kimock’s nimble fingers danced up and down the fretboard over the top. From there, the band uncorked a track that sounded like something from The Disco Biscuits‘ catalog thanks to the flavorful combination of guitar and pedal magic.

If CB3′s first set was all about structure and composed rhythm, then the second set was an experimental free-for-all with Kimock let loose on almost every track, stirring the crowd like a bowl of psychedelic soup. While Berry made up lyrics on the fly about the sky splitting Redwood trees of Mendocino County, the crowd stayed engaged as they fist pumped in unison. As the set drew to a close, Berry was in typical madman form onstage, multitasking between the bongos and mbira while keeping up with the vocals the whole time. With one track left, Kimock and Berry squeezed out the last of the crowd’s energy with a huge jam that touched on elements of jungle, calypso and some old fashioned rock & roll. As the jam reached its final crescendo with Kimock’s guitar placed in his lap, a good friend turned to me and gave a colorful conclusion about the show: “Steve Kimock is the Doctor Digital of the lap licks on guitar.” I think that about sums it up.

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Kyle Hollingsworth Band March Dates/SCI Live Vid

KYLE HOLLINGSWORTH OPENS 2010 WITH COLORADO MOUNTAINS

Kyle Hollingsworth

Following the band’s 2009 premier, Kyle Hollingsworth Band will open 2010 in the mountains of Colorado. Denver four-piece Yamn will join KHB on all dates. Tickets will be on sale Monday, February 8, at Noon MT at kylehollingsworth.com and on sale at venue outlets Wednesday, February 10, at 10 a.m. MT.

Tour Dates

March 12 The Eldo Crested Butte, CO

March 13 Agave Avon, CO

March 14 three20south Breckenridge, CO

As previously reported, Hollingsworth’s other band, The String Cheese Incident, recently announced their return.

Check out a band new video of SCI performing at KBCO’s Studio C in Boulder:


String Cheese Incident: 2010 Shows, Red Rocks/Horning’s

THE STRING CHEESE INCIDENT ANNOUNCES SELECT INCIDENTS IN 2010

THE BAND WILL PERFORM RED ROCKS AMPHITHEATRE ON JULY 23, 24, AND 25

AND HORNING’S HIDEOUT JULY 29 – AUGUST 1

The String Cheese Incident

The String Cheese Incident will perform a handful of “Incidents” in 2010. The band will play their greatest hometown venue, Red Rocks Amphitheatre, on July 23, 24, and 25. In addition they’ll set up camp at a site close to the band’s/fans’ hearts, Horning’s Hideout (near Portland, Oregon), July 29 through August 1.


This announcement ends a three-year break from performing; a hiatus interrupted only once – this past summer- when SCI united to headline ROTHBURY (JamBase review here) for one incredible Incident. (Fans can download SCI’s epic ROTHBURY 2009 performance in its entirety at iClips.net, and check out a sneak peek at stringcheeseincident.com).

2010 Show details are as follows:

July 23, 24, and 25, 2010

Red Rocks Amphitheatre

Morrison, Colorado

Red Rocks Ticket Information:

Tuesday, February 9 at 10:00 am MST – Presale at www.stringcheeseincident.com

Friday, February 12 at 10:00 am MST – KBCO Presale at www.kbco.com

Saturday, February 13 at 10:00 am MST – Public On Sale www.ticketmaster.com

Hotel/Travel packages for Red Rocks shows available at www.stringcheeseincident.com

July 29 – August 1, 2010

Horning’s Hideout

North Plains, OR

Full Festival Lineup and Schedule To Be Announced

Presented by Madison House Presents

Horning’s Hideout Ticket Information:

Tickets available beginning Tuesday, February 9 at 10:00 am MST

Only at www.stringcheeseincident.com

Four-day tickets and RV Passes available.

Every ticket order placed at www.stringcheeseincident.com will receive a download code to LiveCheese.com for a FREE “Best of” SCI sampler – “Cheese on the Rocks” (RR) and/or “Cheese in the Trees” (HH) – depending on the tickets purchased. Each download features over 100-minutes of old-school SCI.

The String Cheese Incident’s recent live release, Trick or Treat (SCI Fidelity Records / October 2009), offers fans a chance to relive the group’s legendary “Hulaween” Incidents. Known to perform special concerts comprised heavily of cover tunes each Halloween, Trick or Treat offers selections from SCI performances recorded at Atlanta’s Variety Playhouse (1998), Philadelphia’s Electric Factory (1999), Portland’s State Theatre (2000), New York City (2001), Los Angeles’ Shrine Auditorium (2002), Sin City’s Cox Pavilion (2003), and Madison Alliant Energy Center. The two-disc release is available now on CD, vinyl, and digitally at stringcheeseincident.com.

Complete SCI tour dates available here. And for more on String Cheese, check out our extensive coverage of the last time they played Red Rocks here.


Holy Kimoto: Kimock, Hann, Travis Hollingsworth 01/08 in FL

HOLY KIMOTO

Featuring: Steve Kimock, Kyle Hollingsworth, Michael Travis and Jason Hann

AT THE WHITE ROOM IN MIAMI, FL JANUARY 8

Steve Kimock

Glitterglu Productions is proud to announce the debut performance of
Holy Kimoto, a brand new supergroup featuring jam heavy hitters Steve Kimock,
Kyle Hollingsworth (The String Cheese Incident), and Michael Travis and Jason Hann (EOTO, SCI). This very special event takes place on January 8
at the White Room in Miami, FL. The evening promises to be an exciting experiment
in improvisation featuring some of the best musicians on the scene today. While this
is the debut performance, rumors of future performances are flying, but at the moment
this will be the first and only performance that is scheduled. Tickets are available now at Glitterglu Productions official website.

Holy Kimoto

01.08.10

Miami, FL

White Room

Tickets On Sale! – $20.00

Tickets available @ the door

Doors open at 7 p.m.

18 and up


3-Night Post-Phish NYE in Miami w/ EOTO, BoomBox, Break Science

THREE NIGHT PHISH AFTER-PARTY SERIES IN MIAMI

FEATURES BREAK SCIENCE, BOOMBOX, EOTO

EOTO

Under One Beat Entertainment is thrilled to announce a three-night series of Phish After-Party shows at The White Room in Miami, FL, December 28-30, to be called Black Curtains Concert Series. The lineup features some of the best dubstep, electro, and IDM acts in the country, including Break Science, BoomBox, and EOTO. Also on the bill are many of Miami’s top local performers such as Afrobeta, Otto Von Schirach, DJ Le Spam, and Richard Devine.

The shows will be held at Miami’s premiere venue, The White Room (1306 N. Miami Avenue, Miami, FL 33136), voted the area’s “Best Venue for Live Music” by the Miami New Times. The venue is a short walk from the American Airlines Arena where Phish is staging its four-night NYE run. All headlining performers at the Black Curtains Concert Series will start their sets after the Phish shows let out, and will be sure to keep the dance party going late into the night.

Advance tickets are available here.

Black Curtains Concert Series Schedule

Monday, December 28

- Break Science (Featuring Adam Deitch)
- Afrobeta

- Panthergod
- Kentsoundz

Tuesday, December 29

- BoomBox (Featuring Russ Randolph and Zion Godchaux)
- Otto Von Schirach
- DJ Le Spam (Spam Allstars, Vida Blue)
- DJ Par-D

Wednesday December 30

- EOTO (Michael Travis and Jason Hann of The String Cheese Incident)
- Richard Devine, The Jeanmarie
- Kool Large & Mr. Baxter