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Posts Tagged ‘Susan J. Weiand’

moe. | SF Fillmore | Pics

Images by: Susan J. Weiand

moe. :: 01.27.11 :: The Fillmore :: San Francisco, CA


Setlist
Set 1: Rebubula, Silver Sun, Suck A Lemon > Wormwood > Okayalright > Bullet > Bring You Down
Set 2: Brent Black (1) > Californ IA (1) > Zed Nought Z, Understand > St. Augustine > Shoot First > Billy Goat
Encore: Queen Of The Rodeo, Wind It Up

1 = w/ Robert Randolph on pedal steel























moe. Tour Dates :: moe. News :: moe. Concert Reviews

JamBase | moe. better

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The Wheel – A Musical Celebration of Jerry Garcia | Pics

Images by: Susan J. Weiand

The Wheel – A Musical Celebration of Jerry Garcia :: 12.04.10 :: The Fillmore :: San Francisco, CA

Last Saturday, The Rex Foundation held a special concert entitled The Wheel – A Musical Celebration of Jerry Garcia with a lineup that included David Nelson & Friends (Barry Sless, Robin Sylvester, John Molo and Mookie Siegel), Jesse McReynolds, Peter Rowan Bluegrass Band and many others. Blair Jackson has a great review of the night over at Dead.net and we present Ms. Weiand’s fabulous shots for your edification.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”17″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=178″);}); 12/4/10 – Rex Foundation Benefit @ The Fillmore (San Francisco, CA) View Photos

JamBase | Bay Area
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JamBase Questionnaire: Charlie Hunter

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from Soulive.

Solo guitar performance is one of the oldest, grandest traditions in the blues and jazz fields. It’s a brave, exposed display of talent that works as an intimate conversation between the musician and listeners. It’s been 10 years since Charlie Hunter stripped down to his 7 & 8-string skivvies, and Public Domain (released September 14 on Reapandsow) finds the fleet-fingered picker tackling copyright free chestnuts like “Danny Boy,” “Ain’t We Got Fun” and “Alexander’s Ragtime Band” alongside more obscure offerings like “Low Bridge Song (15 Miles On The Erie Canal)” and “Cielito Lindo.” The dedication to “Blind Blake, Joseph Spence, Joe Pass, Ted Greene and Tuck Andress” goes a long way in capturing the vibe of Public Domain, with Andress’ feel coming through the strongest in the atmosphere and mercurial arrangements. “This album,” says Hunter, “is really about the songs and how rhythms work together. It’s not about anything flashy.” In the end, Public Domain is a modernist take on the music that folks once “enjoyed listening to on crank-up Victrolas and on tube radios many decades ago” (as per the intro inscription from Hunter’s grandfather Sidney Greenman). (Dennis Cook)

Here’s what Hunter had to say to our inquiries.

Charlie Hunter by Susan J. Weiand

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Un component sociale

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
Original Dixieland Jazz Band

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
Blind Blake

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
A woman

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
One with people!

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
I collect glass animals

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
Cat fights

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
Why Is There Air?

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
Some grandma’s home in Kiev

10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
Everywhere

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
Reading

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
Beatles…duh?!?!

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
Little Richard

Charlie Hunter Tour Dates :: Charlie Hunter News :: Charlie Hunter Concert Reviews

JamBase | Strummed
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Running Down Miles’ Voodoo

By: Ron Hart

Bitches Brew 40th Anniversary
Collector’s Edition

2010 marks the 40th anniversary of the release of Bitches Brew, an album long considered to be one of the pivotal turning points in the history of jazz. Change was indeed in the air when Miles Davis initially incorporated electronic elements into 1968′s Miles in the Sky and 1969′s Filles De Kilimanjaro. However, when he created an album with an all-electric ensemble with In A Silent Way (also released in ’69), it was met with a staggering combination of awe and angst by both jazz and rock critics, particularly because they really didn’t know what to make of the album’s experimental nature, which was billed as Davis’s debut foray into the then still-emerging fusion movement, as well as his first collaboration with longtime producer Teo Macero.

However, when Bitches Brew was released in April of 1970, Miles had fully immersed himself into the rhythmic propulsion of the psychedelic funk and rock sounds popularized by the likes of Jimi Hendrix, Santana, James Brown and Sly and the Family Stone, most of which he was introduced to by his ex-wife, R&B sex kitten Betty Mabry-Davis, whose inspiration is all over the record. Putting together a veritable supergroup of collaborators including Wayne Shorter on soprano saxophone, keyboardists Chick Corea and the late Joe Zawinul, bassists Dave Holland and Harvey Brooks, drummers Lenny White and Jack DeJohnette, clarinetist Bennie Maupin, conga players Don Alias and Juma “Jim Riley” Santos and guitarist John McLaughlin, Miles crafted a double album that took the explorations of the outer perimeters of exposition, development and recapitulation featured on In A Silent Way and sent them even further into the freak zone, incorporating such special effects as tape looping, electro-acoustic reverberation and frequency filtering spurred by Macero’s fascination with the musique concrète movement of the late 1940s and the works of Edgar Varese and Karlheinz Stockhausen, only propelled by an acid jungle groove that would eventually become Miles’ calling card in the early-to-mid 70s on albums like (A Tribute to) Jack Johnson, Live-Evil, On The Corner, Big Fun and Get Up With It.

The end results were nothing short of a sonic revolution across the jazz landscape equal to what The Beatles were doing to the pop idiom with Revolver, Sgt. Pepper and The White Album, creating even more of a furor at the time with stuffy-shirted critics who clung to their copies of Birth of the Cool and Kind of Blue as if they were bracing themselves for a hurricane of Katrina proportions.

Original gatefold album art

In honor of this legendary album’s historic 40-year milestone, Legacy Recordings has released a gorgeous anniversary Collector’s Edition of Bitches Brew. Similar to the monster celebration for the 50th anniversary of Kind of Blue the label released in the fall of 2008, this version contains two CDs containing the original six tracks plus six more bonus cuts, a third disc containing a previously unreleased live performance of the Miles/Keith Jarrett/Chick Corea/Dave Holland/Jack DeJohnette/Airto Moreira/Gary Bartz lineup from an August 1970 concert at Tanglewood, a DVD of another unissued show from Copenhagen in November 1969 featuring the Davis/Shorter/Corea/Holland/DeJohnette quintet, plus the original album on 180-gram vinyl housed in a gorgeous double-LP replication.

JamBase was lucky enough to catch up with two key members of the Brew crew, Messrs John McLaughlin and Lenny White – both of whom would take the fusion genre to new heights of innovation with their respective groups Mahavishnu Orchestra and Return to Forever – to discuss their roles in the making of this monumental masterstroke.

John, tell us about the first time you ever met Miles Davis and how you came to join his electric ensemble for In A Silent Way?

John McLaughlin: I met Miles on the first day I arrived in NYC from London. It was during the first few days of January 1969. I’d been invited to join Lifetime with Tony Williams and Larry Young. However, since Tony was doing his final week with Miles before leaving and devoting himself exclusively to Lifetime, that week was at Club Baron in Harlem – long since disappeared. Even though we’d never met, Miles knew about me since he was losing Tony as his drummer, and was naturally curious about what he was planning. We met that night at the club, and the following day I was with Tony at Miles’ house, and out of the blue Miles said to me, “We’re recording tomorrow. Bring your guitar to the studio.” That was it.

Lenny, when did you first meet Miles and how did you come to join the band for Bitches Brew?

Lenny White by Susan J. Weiand

Lenny White: The first time I met Miles was at The Village Gate. I took the subway from Queens into the Village and went to see Miles. I heard he called my house the same day but I had left to go see him. Miles dressed in back asked me, “Can you play fast?” I said yes and he said “When?” and I said, “Whenever I’m asked.” He then said to be down here every night this week. I got a call to be at his house on 77th St. for a rehearsal. Jack, Chick, Wayne and Dave were there and we rehearsed the beginning statement of “Bitches Brew.”

How much input did you have in the blueprints of Bitches Brew? What were your thoughts on how this new form of electric jazz could be taken to the next level?

McLaughlin: By the time Miles was ready for Bitches Brew, I’d gotten to him very well. Right after the In A Silent Way sessions he kind of took me under his wing and was inviting me to play concerts with him even though I was with Tony and Lifetime. He’d become fascinated with guitar – he loved guitar and eventually got one for himself (I played it on On the Corner). I would go over to his house several times a week and he’d ask me about this or that riff, what would I do thythmically with such and such a chord, things like that. By Bitches Brew, he was moving ahead of everyone else (like always) into the world of fusion.

White: Miles said to me, “Jack will play the beat. I want you to play all around it, like a spice in a big brew.” So, I wanted it to sound like one drummer with eight hands.

Do you have a favorite story stemming from the Bitches Brew sessions?

John McLaughlin

McLaughlin: I have a better story for Jack Johnson, but what maybe was one of the nicest things was that Miles invited sitar player Balakrishna and tabla player Badal Roy, both of whom I’d introduced to Miles.

White: Yeah, I learned a great lesson on the very first day. I had been playing all kinds of music, and R&B and funky stuff was a big part of what I did along with playing jazz. On “Miles Runs The Voodoo Down” he wanted a straight, simple funk groove. We had done a few takes that I thought were great but he wanted something simple. I played what I thought he wanted; more like Tony was playing and it wasn’t what he wanted. Don Alias, who played percussion, said, “Miles, I have a beat,” so he got on my drums and played this real simple beat. Miles loved it and I wound up playing percussion instead of drums on that track. The lesson I learned was don’t pot-think yourself by doing what you think somebody wants. Ask and find out what is needed.

Lenny, being so young going into the Bitches Brew sessions, was it intimidating to be in the room with all of these established cats?

White: It was scary. This was my first real recording session and it was with my idol. Everybody was cool, especially Miles.

What kinds of music were you listening to personally that may have influenced the direction of Bitches Brew?

original cover

White: We all were listening to Tony Williams, but along with Tony and Elvin [Jones], I was listening to Clyde Stubberfield and Jabo Starks with James Brown’s band and John Bonham.

McLaughlin: At that time I was listening to the heroes of my youth – Miles, Coltrane, Bill Evans, etc. – but also I was listening to Bartok, Webern, Jimi Hendrix, Sly & the Family Stone, The Beatles and The Eagles, amongst others. I guess they all played a greater or lesser role. An anecdote about Jimi: One day I was with Miles at his house and I was telling him about Jimi and what he’d done with the electric guitar. Miles had never seen Jimi play so I looked in the Village Voice and found out that the Monterey Pop Festival movie was playing in the Village. So, I took Miles down to see the movie. It was great to see Miles watch Jimi, especially when he burns his guitar. All Miles could say was, “Damn, damn…”

Any truth to the rumor that Miles and Jimi were in talks to record and/or jam together?

White: As far as I know, this was definitely talked about, even to the point that Tony Williams and Larry Young did record a jam with Jimi. One of my big regrets is Miles asking me if I wanted to play with Jimi, and I said no because I wanted to play with [Miles].

Did Miles have a favorite Jimi Hendrix song or album that was crucial in inspiring the Bitches Brew sound?

White: I know he loved “Machine Gun” and around that time the version we were all listening to was from the Band of Gypsys recording.

What is your personal favorite track on Bitches Brew and why?

Lenny White by Lynn Goldsmith

White: “Spanish Key” because it was the first song of the second day after my big mistake with the direction on “Miles Runs The Voodoo Down” and I no longer had any fear. I went into it all the way.

John, how did your name become the title of a song on the album, and why was it that Miles didn’t play on “John McLaughlin”?

McLaughlin: This was and remains to this day a mystery to me. I was kind of shocked when I saw the album. We, most times, never knew the titles during Miles’ recordings. I really don’t know the why of anything about his decision to give the tune my name.

How much did the music you created with Tony Williams and Larry Young in Emergency come into play with your role in the Bitches Brew sessions?

McLaughlin: Playing with Tony and Lifetime was a different creative environment for me. Tony encouraged me from the start to write music for Lifetime. Miles never did this, and I was very happy with this situation, too. Miles would pick my brain for riffs and stuff like that and then adapt it in his inimitable way. This was a really deep learning process for me. I should say that a tremendous amount of Mahavishnu music was born during my tenure with Lifetime. Miles has had a profound impact on me since I discovered him in 1958, and even more so when I had the opportunity to play with him. It really is impossible to quantify or qualify the degree of influence Miles had on me, musically and personally. It’s just enormous.

Lenny, how much of an influence did your time in Miles’ electric ensemble have on your work in Return to Forever, Azteca and Twennynine?

White: It didn’t just shape my attitude in playing in those music projects it changed EVERYBODY’S attitude. After this you were obligated to take chances, try new directions.

In listening to new music now in 2010, where do you most hear the influence of Bitches Brew

White: I hear the influence in the jam bands. I think they have taken the spirit of what we did and brought it to a present day audience.

JamBase | Steeped
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Widespread Panic | Oakland | Pics

Images by: Susan J Weiand

Widespread Panic :: 10.17.10 :: Fox Theater :: Oakland, CA

This past weekend Widespread Panic played a three-show run at Oakland’s fabulous Fox Theater. Fab shooter Susan J. Weiand was there for the final night.

Setlist
Set I: Thought Sausage > Travelin’ Light, Solid Rock > Pigeons, Casa Del Grillo, Space Wrangler, Disco, Proving Ground > Impossible > Proving Ground
Set II: True To My Nature, Better Off, Big Wooly Mammoth > Jam > Mercy > Use Me*, Down, Airplane > Papa’s Home > Drums > Papa’s Home, Give
E: Old Joe, The Shape I’m In, Mr. Soul

* with Wally Ingram on percussion

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Widespread Panic Tour Dates :: Widespread Panic News :: Widespread Panic Concert Reviews

JamBase | Girthy
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Phish 08.05 | Greek Theatre | Berkeley, CA | Photos

Photos by Susan J Weiand

Phish opened the second leg
of their 2010 Summer Tour last night to a sold out
crowd at the Greek Theatre in Berkeley, CA.

Phish 08/05/2010 Greek Theatre
Set 1: Possum, Wolfman’s Brother, The Divided Sky, Funky Bitch, Kill Devil Falls,
Halley’s
Comet > Sample in a Jar, NICU, Bouncing Around the Room, Run Like an Antelope
Set 2: Down with Disease -> Free, Alaska > Back on the Train, Maze, Joy, Tweezer ->
Fluffhead
E: Loving Cup, Tweezer Reprise

Prior to Down With Disease, Trey and Mike both teased Call to the Post and Mike also
teased the Leave It To Beaver theme. Before the encore, but after acknowledging a sign
reading “Stage Banter,” Trey told everyone that he would play a brand new guitar that Paul
Languedoc had made for him, explaining that Paul had “put aside this magic piece of wood
to build me one last really special guitar.” Fish then led the audience in a “Languedoc”
chant.

Setlist via Phish.net

Live Phish Download

Here’s a few perspectives on Greek Night One:

Glide Magazine
Mr. Miner’s Phish Thoughts

Were you there? Add your thoughts to the story
comments
!

And keep up with Phish’s Summer Tour in real time with JamBase’s Real-Time Phish Page!

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8/5/10 – Phish @ Greek Theatre (Berkeley, CA) View
Photos


High Sierra Festival: 07.01-07.04 | California

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Continue reading for Jake Krolick’s highlights…

Jake Krolick’s High Sierra 2010 Highlights

High Sierra at Sunset by
Krolick

Standout Moments on Thursday & Friday

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

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

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

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

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

Nicki Bluhm & The Gramblers by
Krolick

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

Standout Moments on Saturday and Sunday

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

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

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

Vince Herman by Susan J.
Weiand

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

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

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

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

Continue reading for Dennis Cook’s highlights…

Dennis Cook’s High Sierra 2010 Highlights

Zach Deputy by Susan J. Weiand

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

Tim
Carbone

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

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

Thursday Highlights

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

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

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

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

Surprise Me Mr. Davis by Jake
Krolick

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

Friday Highlights

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

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

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

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

Saturday Highlights

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

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

Black Crowes by Jake Krolick

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

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

Sunday Highlights

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

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

Allmond Bros Clan by Susan J.
Weiand

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

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

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

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

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

Aaron Kayce’s High Sierra 2010 Highlights

WSP’s John Bell by Susan J.
Weiand

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

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

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

Susan J. Weiand’s High Sierra 2010 Highlights

Carolyn Wonderland by Susan J.
Weiand

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

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

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

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

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

JamBase | Celebratory
Go See Live Music!


Wavy Gravy’s All Star Jam | 6.13.10 | SF

YOU’VE GOT GRAVY IN YOUR EYES!

Photos by Susan J. Weiand

On Sunday, June 13th, various All-Star musicians converged on stage at The Great American
Music Hall to benefit the Seva Foundation. The
cast of characters included Steve Kimock, Mark Karan, Billy
Kreutzmann
, Melvin Seals, Papa Mali, Lebo, Dave Brogan,
Bo Carper, Reed Mathis, Matt Hubbard, special guest Bobby
Vega
and Wavy Gravy himself.

The evening started off with a set by Lebo, Carper and Brogan performing “Spike Driver’s
Blues”, “Pallet on your Floor” and Old Crowe Medicine Show’s “Wagon Wheel” joined by Karan & Seals. The band played
on for a Dave Brogan tune “Infinite Eye” before Vega joined in for a soulful offering of Allen Toussaint’s classic “On
Your Way Down”.

Steve Kimock then took the stage with Vega, Seals & Brogan for an epic version of
the Zero fan favorites “Cole’s Law” > “Tangled Hangers”. The first set then closed with a
ripping rendition of Dylan’s “Highway 61 Revisited” featuring Karan, Lebo, Brogan, Kimock,
Seals & Vega.

Set two featured 7 Walkers: Papa Mali, Billy Kreutzman, Steve Kimock, Reed Mathis and Matt
Hubbard along with a variety of the aforementioned musicians joining in a setlist that
included “Jam” >
“Sugaree”, “He’s Gone”, “Just Like Tom Thumbs Blues”, “Bertha”, “Jump Back”, “Mr. Charlie”
and “Lovelight” amongst others.

Photographer Sue Weiand was on hand to document the experience for your visual enjoyment.

JamBase | Bay Area


Thank to various helpers for piecing together the setlist. Pardon any omissions or
errors.

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6/13/10 – Wavy Gravy Seva Jam @ Great American Music Hall (San Francisco,
CA)
View Photos

Seva Foundation was founded in 1978 by a group of people who helped eradicate
small pox,
and inspired by that achievement, joined together to alleviate other suffering caused by
poverty and disease. Seva’s public health programs in India, Nepal, Tibet, Cambodia
Bangladesh and Tanzania work to eliminate curable blindness. Over two million people have
received sight-restoring surgeries. In Mexico and Guatemala Seva assists indigenous
communities with training and resources to attain literacy and economic self-sufficiency.
In the United States, where diabetes claims Native American lives at four times the
national average, Seva offers diabetes prevention and small grants programs, created and
directed by Native Americans.

Wavy Gravy, activist clown, former Ben & Jerry’s flavor, hippie-icon, flower-
geezer, is a
founding board member of the Seva Foundation. He is the creative director of Camp
Winnarainbow, a circus and performing arts camp in Northern California.


Furthur Festival | 05.28-05.30 | California

By: Garrin Benfield

Furthur Festival :: 05.28.10-05.30.10 :: Calaveras County Fairgrounds ::
Angel’s Camp, CA

Phil & Bobby by Susan J. Weiand

Arriving at the site of the Furthur Festival, I wondered why it had been so long
since the previous Mt. Aire gathering. The setting is classic Northern California –
rolling golden hills punctuated by groves of oak trees, miles of free form campgrounds,
and a lovely grass concert bowl. Clearly the one narrow, congested road into the grounds
could be a major temporary inconvenience to local residents, but it seems the revenue
generated by this mostly supremely mellow, polite crowd would easily offset any
frustrations. Once inside, things mostly ran like clockwork, and the 10,000 or so
gathered were treated to an intimate, bucolic weekend of rock ‘n’ roll.

Perhaps as a nod to those who thought the notion of Furthur
announcing it would perform six Grateful Dead records a bit, shall we
say, antithetical to the Dead ethos, the first night’s “sound check” featured a circuitous
setlist heavy on classics but not tied to any particular era. An inspired “Eleven” opener
gave way to one hell of a set that was dialed in from the get-go. I was struck right away
by the detail of the mix that allowed every instrumental voice to be heard with clarity
and volume. As a full moon rose over the early arriving crowd, the band patiently made
it’s way through a full one-set show, clearly surprising many who were not sure what to
expect from this first evening. Personal highlights for me included John Kadelecik
quoting Trey’s “First Tube” during a heavy “Let It Grow” and Bobby delivering a
stately “Standing On The Moon,” proving the old adage that “if at first one does not
succeed…” Satiated, we all slowly made our way back to the campgrounds, which were
still springing to life in the chilly darkness.

Dan Bern

On Saturday, I wandered over to the Acoustic Stage and caught a beautiful set by Mark Karan and
Friends
. While I was there they played an assortment of leftfield covers by
Townes Van Zandt, Randy Newman and the Dead. I had never seen Karan in this context and
he really shone, singing and playing with sensitivity and conviction – a lovely way to
ease into the day. On the Sunshine Stage, Dan Bern delivered
newer songs with his usual incisive, sardonic wit, backed by his new project, Common Rotation.
I’m happy to see Dan on the road again, and especially pleased to have his uncompromising
insights floating about the sometimes pollyana-ish jam scene. Next, James Nash, Joe
Kyle Jr.
and the rest of a temporary Waybacks lineup
brought their absolute A-game to the sweltering afternoon, pleasing those perhaps
unfamiliar with their own material with masterful versions of “Dupree’s Diamond Blues” and
“Shady Grove.” These guys are virtuosos with real heart and soul.


What was exciting me most about Furthur’s first “classic albums” sets was the tunes I’d
never seen performed live, or in some cases had never seen the light of day at all.
Oddly, the first half of the American Beauty set, comprised of songs these guys
have played hundred of times, was stiff and a bit rusty. This trend continued into the
first rarely performed song, Pigpen’s “Operator,” this time sung tentatively by
Phil. Happily things warmed up significantly with JK’s reading of “Candyman” (who
can resist “Hand me my old guitar…”) and the rest of the set was a pure joy of
monumental pieces from the dead canon, aided by Larry Campbell‘s
fiddle and guitar, and his wife Teresa Williams‘ vocals. I think for many who grew
up going to or listening to live Dead shows it will always be disorienting to hear
“Ripple” and “Brokedown Palace” in the middle of a set, but “Truckin’” brought it all home
with classic slow burn!

The Workingman’s Dead set busted out of the gates with “Uncle John’s Band” and
never let up. The band had clearly relaxed, and spent the next hour reveling in more
classic tunes that this time benefited from years of having been in the performance
repertoire. Larry Campbell’s biting Strat work lent a shimmer to “Cumberland” and
everything that followed, without impeding Furthur’s own identity and chemistry from
clearly emerging. The Anthem of the Sun set, the most anticipated by many as it
represents perhaps the pinnacle of “primal” Grateful Dead, was a monster from top to
bottom, climaxing with crushing versions of “Alligator” and “Caution.” I hope the
bruising guitar exclamations in “Caution” translate to tape, because, wow, they needed no
explanation under the rising moon!

The Mother Hips

I soldiered on and caught sets by three great bands on Sunday prior to Furthur. The
biggest surprise discovery of the weekend was the towering psychedelic progressive rock of
Carney.
Led by a fantastic and charismatic vocalist/guitarist and the most passionate, fiery band
I witnessed all weekend, Carney’s music seemed to fall in the Jeff Buckley meets Radiohead
universe, a welcome change of pace from the mostly Americana proceedings on the side
stages. The always-great Mother Hips were joined on the main stage by Jackie Greene,
who proved himself more than able on organ. The Hips designed their set for a gentle
afternoon and stuck mostly to their sunny Pacific stylings, save for the odd time changes
and riffage of their mid-nineties classic, “Magazine.” I wouldn’t have missed Electric Hot Tuna,
who were next up on the main stage, for the world. Stalwarts of blues, garage rock,
massive riffs and some of the original diplomats of the Haight-Ashbury, Jorma and
Jack have been playing together for 52 years. I was moved not just by their gnarly
set, but also by their longevity and by the Dead organization’s insistence on their
presence at this Festival. Loyalty does exist in the music business!

Hot Tuna

Initially I thought we were being thrown for a loop when Furthur came out and did not bust
into the expected “Help on the Way” to begin their Blues For Allah set. Instead,
the band leapt into one of those “same tempo as the next song but in a different key” jams
before beginning perhaps the Dead’s most progressive and esoteric collection. “Help >
Slip > Franklin” was pretty happening but not earth shattering. Far more moving was the
intense detail and thunder of “King Solomon’s Marbles,” which I’d vote for most welcome
comeback of the songs Furthur has reintroduced over the last year. “Music Never Stopped”
featured some searing runs by JK, and he delivered “Crazy Fingers” beautifully. Weir’s
dense but lovely “Sage and Spirit” was saved by Jeff Chimenti, who appeared to be
the only person who knew it that well. The “Blues for Allah” suite was a thrill to hear
live, but if you want to hear the only (?) other live version, you might be better off
checking out One From The Vault, as this well-intentioned attempt was gauzy and
confused around the transitional moments. Still, who’s complaining? Standing there
watching these guys try this stuff out and letting these songs wash over me was a thrill.
Joe Russo really distinguished himself deep in this second night with momentum and
focus, as Phil and Bobby seemed to show some wear and tear. There’s more than one reason
to hire a young, talented drummer, right?

Jackie Greene

After a wonderfully trippy set break that allowed some of the evening mist to begin
seeping into the amphitheater, the band returned and brought us back further in time with
a complete performance of Aoxomoxoa, the record that includes perhaps some of the
least performed Dead material of all. After a typically awesome “St. Stephen” (though I
would argue this might be the most over-performed song of the post-Jerry years), JK segued
right into a “Dupree’s” that also featured Larry Campbell on fiddle. For me, the two most
significant tunes that followed were Phil’s reading of Jerry’s “Rosemary” and the 11-
minute, genuinely psychedelic “What’s Become of the Baby?” which asked the pressing
question clearly on everyone’s mind: “Where is the child that played with the sun chimes
and chased the cloud sheep to the regions of rhyme?” Teresa Williams’ vocal wails and
white gown perfectly embodied the acid-queen-diva-goddess on this excursion. “Cosmic
Charlie” brought us home, and almost sadly, to the precipice of the last set of the
weekend.

Mark Karan

Despite mild exhaustion setting in, the Terrapin Station set rocked. To segue from
the set break music, Radiohead’s In Rainbows to a 14-minute “Estimated Prophet” was
perfect. (As a side note, all weekend the house music was very inspired, from Beck at
sunset to James Brown and Billy Preston! Yeah!) “Dancin’ in the Streets” was given its
full disco treatment (minus the convoluted outro jam of the celebrated ’77 versions),
“Passenger” was spot on, and Bobby really rallied for “Samson.” The last awesome surprise
was Teresa Williams returning for a song most people in attendance had surely never seen
performed, the Jerry-penned Donna Gauchaux showcase “Sunrise.” I felt a real affection in
the crowd for this one, a deep track that those of us who spent a few years scouring Dead
records before entering the tape trading community remember fondly. Teresa received a
real ovation before we glided into the B-side of this record, the entire 26-minute
“Terrapin Station” suite. What a way to bring it home!

Sir Joe Russo by Susan J. Weiand

After Phil thanked the crowd for being at our “family picnic,” he generously mentioned all
the people who worked so hard to make the festival happen, which received the largest
cheer of the weekend, hands down. Deadheads can be a wonderfully gracious bunch. The
appreciation was heartfelt, though. The whole weekend had that inescapable quality of
people fully absorbing the music, the scene, the memories, the personal connections, and
the uniqueness of a phenomenon that is not going to last forever. As I listened to the
weave of “Lady with a Fan”, convinced the band had intended this to be a sonic response to
the ecological tragedy unfolding in the Gulf of Mexico, I closed my eyes and said my own
thank you. Thanks, San Francisco! Thanks, Grateful Dead! Now what are we gonna do with
this energy?

JamBase | Awakened
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Santa Cruz Blues Fest | 05.29-05.30 | CA

Images by: Susan J.
Weiand

Santa Cruz Blues Festival :: 05.29.10-05.30 :: Aptos Village Park ::
Santa Cruz, CA

In its 18th year, the Santa Cruz Blues Festival played host to luminaries Buddy Guy, Ben Harper and
Relentless7
and Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi, as
well as spry veterans like Coco Montoya and Was (Not Was).
Luckily, Ms. Weiand was there to capture some of the magic with her lens.

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Santa
Cruz Blues Festival 2010
View Photos

JamBase | Back Door
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Furthur Play Whole Dead Albums At Furthur Festival

UNPRECEDENTED LIVE PRESENTATION OF CLASSIC ALBUMS IN THEIR ENTIRETY

Phil & Bob in Furthur by Susan J. Weiand

Furthur will perform six classic Grateful Dead albums at Furthur Fest, taking place May 28-30 at the Calaveras County Fairgrounds in Angels Camp, CA. The schedule is:

Saturday – Set I – American Beauty
Saturday – Set II – Workingman’s Dead
Saturday – Set III – Anthem of the Sun
Sunday – Set I – Blues For Allah
Sunday – Set II – Aoxomoxoa
Sunday – Set III – Terrapin Station

In an ongoing series of videos discussing these Grateful Dead albums, the latest installment features Phil Lesh and Bob Weir, along with kindred spirit-turned-intrepid-interviewer Jackie Greene and longtime Grateful Dead road manager Rock Scully, talking about the creation of Workingman’s Dead. The quality of the songs Jerry was bringing to the table, along with the influence of Crosby, Stills and Nash, are revealed as two of the biggest inspirations behind the 1970 classic. Check out the video and the earlier discussion of American Beauty here.

Furthur will do an “Open Aire Soundcheck” on Friday, May 28. The full Furthur Stage schedule for the weekend can be found here, and the schedule for the daytime Sunshine Stage is here. The schedule for the acoustic Dark Hollow Stage, curated by Larry Campbell and Teresa Williams has not been set, but the late night set for Friday will be an All-Star Jam Session and on Saturday night it’s Galactic at what the fest has dubbed the “Frogtown Fillmore.”

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


Poor Man’s Whiskey | 05.08 | Photo Gallery

Images by: Susan J. Weiand

Poor Man’s Whiskey :: 05.08.10 :: Great American Music Hall :: San Francisco, CA

On May 8, Poor Man’s Whiskey performed a set of Old and in the Way at the Great American Music Hall with special guests Peter Rowan (who was an original Old and in the Way member) and SCI’s Michael Kang.

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Poor Man’s Whiskey Tour Dates :: Poor Man’s Whiskey News :: Poor Man’s Whiskey Concert Reviews

JamBase | California

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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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7 Walkers | 04.09.10 | GAMH | San Francisco

Images by: Susan J. Weiand

7 Walkers

04.09.10 :: Great American Music Hall :: San Francisco CA

Legendary Grateful Dead drummer Bill Kreutzmann and guitarist/vocalist Papa Mali‘s new band 7 Walkers has embarked on its first tour ever. Though Reed Mathis appears on the album due later this year, due to touring commitments with his other band Tea Leaf Green, New Orleans’ George Porter Jr. joined the band on bass for this run of shows. 7 Walkers is rounded out by multi-instrumentalist Matt Hubbard (Willie Nelson and Friends).

In addition to a batch of brand new Robert Hunter songs (Grateful Dead and Bob Dylan lyricist) and originals the band penned together, the 7 Walkers’ set at San Francisco’s Great American Music Hall featured some choice covers, deep NOLA grooves and several chestnuts from the Grateful Dead songbook.

Setlist

Set I: Jam > The Deal > Death Don’t Have No Mercy, Bottle Up and Go, Evangeline > The Seven Walkers, Turn On Your Lovelight > George and Billy > Turn On Your Lovelight > Hey Pocky Way > Iko – Iko > Shoe Fly

Set II: Bertha > Warf Rat, Junco Partner > New Orleans Crawl, I know you Rider, Sue from Bogalusa, The Other One Jam > George and Billy > Sugaree > Not Fade Away

Setlist courtesy of archive.org

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”0″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=17″);}); 7 Walkers | Great American Music Hall | San Francisco, CA 7 Walkers, the new band put together by drummer Bill Kreutzmann and guitarist/vocalist Papa Mali, perform their first set of shows ever and bring New Orleans bass legend George Porter Jr. along for the party… View Photos

7 Walkers Tour Dates :: 7 Walkers News :: 7 Walkers Concert Reviews

JamBase | San Francisco

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

COMPLETE LINEUP AND LATE NIGHT SCHEDULE ANNOUNCED!

Jackie Greene by Susan J. Weiand

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

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

Artists-At-Large
Josh Clark
Lebo
Skerik
Eric McFadden

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

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

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

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


Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Reveal Band Lineup

Derek & Susan Band Lineup Set For Savannah

Derek Trucks by Susan J. Weiand

The Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Band is only a few days away from their debut at the Savannah Music Festival on April 1. We know fans have been eagerly awaiting news about the group’s lineup, so without further delay, here are the players who will join Derek & Susan in Savannah:

Derek Trucks ­– Guitar

Susan Tedeschi ­– Guitar, Vocals

Oteil Burbridge ­– Bass

Kofi Burbridge ­– Keyboards, Flute

JJ Johnson ­– Drums

Tyler Greenwell ­– Drums

Mike Mattison ­– Vocals

Nigel Hall ­– Vocals

Some of these names will sound familiar while others may be new to some of you, but all share a vision for the new project and have been among the rotating cast of musicians hanging in Jacksonville at the Trucks-Tedeschi studio. Expect a lot of brand new material in April produced over the last few months with collaboration and inspiration from the extended family.

Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Band Tour Dates

04/01/2010 Savannah, GA Savannah Music Festival

04/17/2010 Live Oak, FL Wanee Music Festival

04/29/2010 New Orleans, LA House Of Blues – New Orleans

04/30/2010 New Orleans, LA New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival

06/03/2010 Boston, MA Bank Of America Pavilion Supporting Jeff Beck

06/05/2010 Hunter, NY Mountain Jam

07/02/2010 Hyannis, MA Cape Cod Melody Tent

07/04/2010 Oxford, ME Nateva Festival


New Mastersounds/Trombone Shorty | 03.13

Words by: Dennis Cook | Images by: Susan J Weiand

The New Mastersounds/Trombone Shorty & Orleans Ave/Salvador Santana
03.13.10 :: The Fillmore :: San Francisco, CA

The New Mastersounds :: 03.13 :: San Francisco

Once music is stuffed under the “funk/soul” umbrella there’s often little wiggle room. A certain tempo, energy, style, etc. is expected by the people putting cash on the barrelhead. This frequently leads to a homogeneous sound that’s predictable, down to the frenetic, wide-open soloing and sanctioned sources covered (James Brown, The Meters, Prince, Sly, Al Green, Dr. John, Motown, Stax). Even regional differences blur in the sameness not just expected but tacitly demanded of “funk/soul” purveyors, whose core audiences come to dance and savor flavors already dear to them. So, it’s a narrow tightrope to traverse if bands want to serve groove music’s basic instincts AND push the boundaries a bit. At The Fillmore we got three bands located at fairly divergent spots on this spectrum, with the evening’s headliner showing how one pirouettes on the high wire without missing a beat.

Salvador Santana and his tight, polished band kicked off the evening, and like his recent, quite winning solo album Keyboard City (JamBase review), their short set was summer afternoon warm and easy to like. However, the crispness and immediacy of the album wasn’t quite matched by Santana’s live presentation. His current mood recalls the crossover soul-rock of War, Donny Hathaway and even the bumpin’ side of early Doobie Brothers – like I said, easy to like stuff. What gelled in the studio hasn’t quite made its way to the stage, and things weren’t helped much, outside of a little residual star power, by a forgettable guest appearance by Salvador’s pop Carlos Santana, who just strummed along with one tune without setting off any fireworks.

One thing about Trombone Shorty & Orleans Ave. is they put on a reliably exciting, musically robust show. In the half dozen sets I’ve caught they’ve never been less than satisfying, but the dance floor igniters were especially on and particularly charismatic this night. There’s an awful lot of talent stuffed into this band, and while Troy “Trombone Shorty” Andrews – just 24 and looking likely to conquer any mountain he sets his strong mind to – is the name upfront, he’s gracious in sharing the spotlight and exudes real enthusiasm for this band’s gifts. However, when the focus swings back his way his chops, talent and naked personal appeal is gripping. He kills on his brass instruments and he’s got a strong, flexible voice, but this gig also featured some tasty Hammond organ action, which surprised some folks coming from a dude whose trombone skills suggest we’re looking at this generation’s Fred Wesley. The other standout onstage, as per usual, was guitarist Pete Murano, whose feel and tone instincts mark him as an emerging great. Plenty of assholes can shred their way into Guitar Player transcription notoriety, but Murano works it in a way you can feel in your limbs.

Trombone Shorty :: 03.13 :: San Francisco

However, the one wrinkle in an otherwise pretty amazing bit of musical entertainment is a similarity in setlist construction from show to show, which bubbled up again at The Fillmore despite the exceeding pleasure their performance engendered. Hearing them switchback between a spot-on cover of Marvin Gaye’s “Let’s Get It On” and a melange that married ’50s Miles Davis-like bop to an oversized marching beat AND a strong dose of quality new jack swing and Cab Calloway, I felt sure that there’s music outside the hometown New Orleans comfort zone that shapes the boundaries of their set. This is largely a young band and there’s some very cool, original music lurking on the edges. Their newer originals, which will get a full airing on Shorty’s new album Backatown (arriving April 20), suggest they’re beginning to explore their own sound beyond the second line, James Brown and Meters moves they’ve gotten down very well already. Don’t get me wrong, I was still wiggling like I got happily tasered during their set, and there’s not many working the rich New Orleans traditions quite like Shorty and his boys. I’d just like to see where they’d go if they really took the brakes off and got as fearless as their music and potent drive suggests they might be.

I simply can’t rave enough about The New Mastersounds, who have steadily risen to my top spot for a largely instrumental soul/funk band over the past few years. It would be SO easy for a quartet with such traditional instrumentation for this genre – Eddie Roberts (guitar, tambourine),
Pete Shand (electric bass), Joe Tatton (Hammond organ, Fender Rhodes) and Simon Allen (drums) – to sound like a straight Meters knockoff or some derivative of any horn-less James Brown configuration – despite the fact they’re from England. But they don’t; they sound both classically grounded in the deepest roots of their chosen field – extending out to the most fiery, positive examples from ’70s electric jazz, ’90s acid jazz and contemporary dance music – and utterly their own men. From the opener onward, there was an inescapable sense of distinct personality to The New Mastersounds’ music, rising both from their individual touches and their absolutely dead solid compositions – the latter aspect being one of the chief ways NMS differentiate themselves from the competition.

The New Mastersounds with Trombone Shorty :: 03.13

“We’re at the bloody Fillmore!” whooped Eddie Roberts, who always looks a touch cooler than I’ll ever be on my best day and seemed ridiculously at ease on the fabled stage. “Ease” is an appropriate word for this group, who rarely whomp one over the head with obvious moves or overly showy soloing. Like this show, they just seem to divine the sweet spot of each number and stroke it until it purrs. There’s an unrushed charm to them, too, as if they’d all sipped of whatever nectar has fueled Charlie Watts endlessly unruffled demeanor all these years in the Rolling Stones. Taken together, they come across as a class act that’s always playing precisely what they want to and has real empathy for what will swerve an audience in the right ways at the right times. Shuffling contentedly in front of the soundboard, it took mere minutes before I’d caught their current, which took me with a sureness I genuinely appreciate when trying to get my funk on.

Another way they move away from their peers is in being satisfying on a cerebral as well as, shall we say, a tactile level. Moving and feeling are swell, but for a giant sized music nerd like myself there’s a great deal to parse and explore in their sound – the way each instrument is speaking and interacting with the others and the melody, all the texture and intelligent nuances they inject. Eyes closed below the lavender hued chandeliers, I felt a zing in my brain akin to the first time I encountered Miles Davis’ post-Hendrix, post-Sly work, and particularly his many ’70s live recordings. There’s something irrepressibly alive about the Mastersounds’ music, and though there’s greater discipline and less of a wild hair than Miles’ last great outpouring, this band stokes some of the same fires as the master.

It’s as if they’ve spent the last 10-plus years together pondering and then executing ALL the possibilities of their configuration they can figure out. While they do well incorporating guest vocalists and other high-end musicians, they’re usually at their best with the four of them, playing hot potato with their solos or gliding collectively into the curves of their songs. As this Fillmore show testified, NMS is always fun, never less than highly stimulating and living proof that, despite the perceived limitations of the genre, there are some artists capable of teaching old dogs new tricks.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”17″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=4″);}); The New Mastersounds and Trombone Shorty | The Fillmore | San Francisco, CA | 03.13.10 The New Mastersounds, Trombone Shorty and Orleans Ave., along with Salvador Santana bring the deep funk and NOLA grooves to San Francisco’s Fillmore. View Photos

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Yuri’s Night Bay Area 2010 Black Keys, Les, Glitch, N.E.R.D.

NASA AMES OPENS DOORS TO CELEBRATE SCIENCE AND MUSIC!

Phil Lesh :: Yuri’s Night ’08 :: by Susan J. Weiand

Yuri’s Night is an international celebration of the orbital flight of Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, the first human in space, on April 12, 1961. It also marks the first space shuttle flight in April 1981. An annual event, Yuri’s Night is celebrated at more than 90 events in 30 countries. It is a global celebration of human space achievement, designed to raise awareness and support for space exploration.

This year, Symbiosis is teaming up with Lumatech Lighting and Ankh Marketing for what will be the largest Yuri’s Night celebration in the world on April 9-10 at NASA Ames Research Center at Moffett Field, California. Over 15,000 people will join astronauts, artists, musicians, scientists and engineers for two days of learning, celebrating and connecting with space at Yuri’s Night Bay Area 2010.

Friday April 9 :: Multiverse Education Day :: 9AM – 3PM
A FREE Event for Bay Area Students and Educators!
Visit the website for info and registration.

Saturday April 10 :: Festival Day :: 12PM – 12AM
Artists from all over the world will assemble at NASA Ames to captivate Yuri’s Night participants. Significant aircraft from past decades will be on hand as static displays with tours and flying demonstrations. Speakers from NASA, space industry, and groundbreaking technology organizations will inspire attendees with the possibilities of the future.

Yuri’s Night Bay Area 2010 Lineup

The Black Keys
Common
Les Claypool
N.E.R.D.
DJ Q-Bert
The Glitch Mob
Hamsa Lila

Bayonics – Beats Antique (DJ set) – Blix Cannon – DJ Apollo – Dyloot – The Flying Skulls – Georgia Anne Muldrow & Declaime – John Beaver vs. DJ Hill – Majitope – Random Rab – Savage Henry – Super Natural & DJ Shortkut – Tomas Cruzio – Vibesquad – Zen Finger Painting

Stage and Atmosphere Design by SYMBIOTIC CREATIONS

Tickets can be purchased here.

Check out the JamBase review of the previous Yuri’s Night celebration!


Al Di Meola’s World Sinfonia | 02.27 | S.F.

Words by: Eric Podolsky

Al Di Meola’s World Sinfonia :: 02.27.09 :: Palace of Fine Arts :: San Francisco, CA

Al Di Meola on his Prism guitar from aldimeola.com

In the current landscape of performing jazz/fusion guitarists, there are very few that are considered to be true legends of their time. Few will argue that Al Di Meola is one of them, as his fretboard virtuosity and unique gypsy/flamenco style have been influencing musicians for over 30 years now. Since Di Meola has put aside his highly publicized one-shot reunion with Return to Forever (which proved to be better than most expected), he is able to get back to playing his own music, which is a signature blend of clean, acoustic world-style compositional jazz. In executing this unique sound, Di Meola’s own World Sinfonia band creates music which extends and compliments the immaculate, pristine tone of his guitar.

Di Meola started off his show at The Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco’s Marina District with some hushed acoustic compositions, which set the tone for the night and introduced the well behaved, mostly middle-aged audience to his stellar ensemble. Right off the bat, the interplay between Di Meola and accordionist Fausto Beccalossi jumped to the forefront of the music. Beccalossi’s accordion not only defined the music with its European feel, but his incredible mastery of the instrument inspired some breathtaking duels with Di Meola, as Beccalossi proved to be Di Meola’s musical foil all night long with his complex lines. One composition entitled “Cafe 1930″ was comprised solely of a delicate guitar/accordion duet until the very end of the song, at which point the full band joined in to bring it home. As can be inferred from this song’s title, Di Meola’s music specializes in evocative soundscapes, bringing the listener to a foreign place with his carefully chosen instrumentation and sonic textures. Throughout the night, the notes coming from Di Meola’s nylon-stringed acoustic guitar were often colored with MIDI sounds to add some extra sonic brushstrokes. This concept was also accentuated through slow-motion projections behind the band of evocative landscapes from around the world.

After some more lyrical, intricate acoustic numbers, Di Meola arose from his seat and strapped on his rainbow-colored electric Prism guitar. The band then launched into the “Elegant Gypsy Suite” from Di Meola’s landmark 1977 fusion album Elegant Gypsy. Thus began the electric portion of the show, where the music really began to groove and develop some bite. Much of these songs felt more like prog rock than jazz at times, as the band ran through different sections of rapid-fire, complex rhythm changes under Di Meola’s bright, searing guitar leads. His longtime percussionist Gumbi Ortiz jumped to the forefront at this point with passionate conga playing, leading the groove with his sharp polyrhythmic hits. In building his solos, Di Meola showed professional restraint. He started out simple and thoughtful, and saved his machine-gun marvel runs up and down the fretboard till the climax, being careful to rein in his jaw-dropping virtuosity until the music called for it. With this approach, it was inspiring to witness him coax such emotional peaks from such technically complex music.

Al Di Meola by Susan J. Weiand

After a set break of crowded, polite mingling in the lobby, the second set began in recital form once again, with an acoustic piece called “Michelangelo’s 7th Child” (named for his father, Michelangelo being his grandfather’s name). This piece saw guitar and accordion weaving bright counterpoint melodies with each other, complimented by subtle rhythm accompaniment from second guitarist Peo Alfonsi. The tune was followed by some furious compositions, which saw Di Meola unleash the lightning flamenco in him, running through foreign-sounding scales like nobody’s business. With all the regional influences inherent in the music, it was impossible to try to pigeonhole the sounds this band was creating. With a Latin rhythm section and Italians on lead instruments, this band could go in any direction. At times it was a blazing Spanish/Middle Eastern tango, other times it was slinky Italian folk music, as with the tune “Umbra,” which stood out with its on-a-dime changes and fluid, ebb-and-flow ensemble playing punctuated by flourishes of guitar and accordion.

At the encore break, Di Meola took a moment to acknowledge his love for San Francisco and its attentive and enthusiastic audience. He mentioned that this year was the thirtieth anniversary of the recording of his landmark Friday Night in San Francisco album, a massively popular collaboration with Paco de Lucía and John McLaughlin that “played a huge role in spreading the popularity of acoustic music,” in his own words. The band then broke out the surprise of the night: an immaculate instrumental reading of “Strawberry Fields Forever.” Di Meola played electric for this one, and the intonation on his melodic variations was pure, crystalline beauty, peppered with harmonics for good measure. The accordion phrasing was lush, and the band was amazingly sympathetic to every nuance of every note. It was an instant highlight of the night. This was followed by the instantly recognizable first track to Friday Night in SF, Di Meola’s well-known acoustic composition “Mediterranean Sundance.” If I had to play one song to introduce a friend to Al Di Meola, this would be the one. The tune is Di Meola in a nutshell, at his most energetic. It’s pure gypsy flamenco, and a perfect showcase for his scintillating fretwork. His clean, rapid leads peaked the tune out right, and put the cherry atop a pure, refreshing night of flawlessly executed melodic precision.

Al Di Meola Tour Dates :: Al Di Meola News :: Al Di Meola Concert Reviews

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