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Super 400 Tour with Stockholm Syndrome

TOUR STARTS FEBRUARY 18 IN SAN FRANCISCO

Coming off multiple sold-out shows across Europe, Northeast power trio Super 400 will head west for a
string of dates with Stockholm
Syndrome
, featuring Jerry
Joseph
and Widespread Panic‘s Dave Schools. Kicking off February 18 &
19 at The Independent in San Francisco and concluding on February 26 at Boulder’s Fox Theatre, the two bands will
play eight shows in nine days. Super 400 is currently at work on its fifth studio album.

Click here to read Dennis Cook’s review of 2009′s critically acclaimed Sweet
Fist
.

Super 400 Tour Dates with Stockholm Syndrome

02/18/11 San Francisco, CA The Independent

02/19/11 San Francisco, CA The Independent

02/20/11 Reno, NV Knitting Factory
02/21/11 Park City, UT Harry O’s

02/22/11 Telluride, CO Sheridan Opera House

02/23/11 Aspen, CO Belly Up Aspen

02/25/11 Denver, CO Cervantes’ Masterpiece Ballroom

02/26/11 Boulder, CO Fox Theatre

Super 400
Tour Dates

::
Super 400 News
::
Super 400
Concert
Reviews


Stockholm Syndrome Tour in Feb

SAN FRAN TO BOULDER IN TWO WEEKS!

Stockholm Syndrome will release their sophomore album, Apollo, on February 15, followed by a series of shows in the West. The band – comprised of Widespread Panic bassist Dave Schools (who also produced the record), Jerry Joseph (vocals, guitar), Eric McFadden (guitar), Gov’t Mule keyboardist Danny Louis and drummer Wally Ingram – produce a sound unlike any of their other projects, a thick, intoxicating rock spell that’s definitely more than the sum of its parts, especially live.

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Dates

2.18-19 San Francisco, CA – The Independent
2.20 Reno, NV – Knitting Factory
2.21 Park City, UT – Harry O’s
2.22 Telluride, CO – Sheridan Opera House
2.23 Aspen, CO – Belly Up
2.25 Denver, CO – Cervante’s Masterpiece Ballroom
2.26 Boulder, CO – Fox Theatre

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Dates :: Stockholm Syndrome News :: Stockholm Syndrome Concert Reviews


Stockholm Syndrome: Apollo

FIRST NEW STUDIO ALBUM SINCE 2004; BAND TO TOUR IN 2011


Stockholm Syndrome

Response Records has announced the upcoming release of Apollo, the hugely anticipated new
album from Stockholm
Syndrome
. The album – which follows the band’s 2004 debut, Holy Happy Hour – arrives
everywhere on February 15, 2011.

Stockholm Syndrome is the collaborative brainchild of two gifted musicians, Widespread Panic bassist Dave
Schools
and singer/songwriter Jerry Joseph. Initially conceived as a side project, the alliance soon
became a full-fledged band, with the able accompaniment of guitarist Eric McFadden, keyboardist
Danny Louis, and drummer Wally Ingram.

Apollo sees Stockholm Syndrome building upon its initial outing by distilling a distinctive sound fueled by
freewheeling creativity and incendiary rock power. Songs like “Finding” and the epic title track showcase the band’s
virtuosic interplay and genre-blurring ingenuity, all centered by Jerry Joseph’s creative, cathartic lyricism.

Produced
by Dave Schools in a converted chicken coop at Cotatai, California’s Prairie Sun Recording, with additional recording
at the famed Compass Point Studios in Nassau, Bahamas – Apollo places Joseph’s soulful vocals and
songwriting gifts at the forefront, all the while confirming Stockholm Syndrome’s remarkable ability to bridge sonic
styles spanning pop, psychedelia, and full-on rock ‘n roll.

In January, Stockholm Syndrome will herald the release of Apollo by taking to the open sea on Jam
Cruise
9
, the 2011 installment of the annual ocean-faring music festival – for full details, please click here. The band will will also tour in 2011 in support of
Apollo.

Stockholm Syndrome
Tour Dates

::
Stockholm Syndrome News
::
Stockholm Syndrome
Concert
Reviews


Stockholm Syndrome: September Tour Dates

TOUR BEGINS SEPTEMBER 1 IN ATHENS, GA


Stockholm Syndrome

In anticipation of their upcoming studio album, tentatively titled Apollo, Stockholm Syndrome have
announced ten dates beginning in Athens, GA at the 40 Watt Club. Fan club tickets go on sale soon, including an
option to purchase a 10″ including 2 tracks from the forthcoming new studio album.

Stockholm Syndrome is Dave
Schools
, Jerry
Joseph
, Eric
McFadden
, Danny
Louis
and Wally
Ingram
.

Tour Dates:

September 1 Athens, GA 40 Watt Club

September 2 Atlanta, Georgia Buckhead Theatre

September 3 Asheville, NC The Orange Peel
September 4 Charleston, SC Music Farm
September 5 Wilmington, NC Greenfield Lake Amphitheater

September 8 Raleigh, NC Lincoln Theatre

September 9 West Chester, PA The Note
September 10 Richmond, VA The National
September 11 Baltimore, MD The 8×10

September 12 Brooklyn, NY The Brooklyn Bowl

Stockholm Syndrome
Tour Dates

::
Stockholm Syndrome News ::
Stockholm Syndrome
Concert
Reviews


Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog 10: SoCal, Arizona, Colorado

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog Part 10: SoCal, Arizona & Colorado

Another report from tour manager Danny Owen:

Stockholm Syndrome

After a short trip down from L.A. the band found themselves near San Diego and ready to
go for the last show in the state of California. SS had decided to change up their stage plot to feature Danny, Dave, Jerry and Eric going from stage right to stage left. I reckon the reason being is so they can hear each other a little bit better and give
each other the room they need.

At the Belly Up, the band got things started with a great version of “Easter” and continued a strong set that included an “Emma’s Pissed” > “That Which Is Coming” before ending the set with a rockin’ “American Fork.”

Set 2 started with a mean “Lick The Tears.” This reggae-rocker is proving to be a true crowd pleaser. “LTT” was followed by a great “Empire One,” “Apollo” and “Milk.” All upbeat tunes that had the entire audience dancing as hard as they could. A rockin’ “Jacobs Ladder” came later in the set and the band encored with “Wisconsin Death Trip.” The run through Cali was delightful and the band thanks everyone who made it out!

03.09.10 | Belly Up | Solana Beach, CA

Set I: Easter, Couldn’t Get It Right, Emma’s Pissed > That Which Is Coming,
Miranda, White Dirt, American Fork

Set II: Lick The Tears, Empire One, Apollo, Milk, Spy, Jacob’s Ladder, Tight

E: Wisconsin Death Trip

Stockholm Syndrome

The band began their journey back eastward stopping in Flagstaff, Arizona for
a Wednesday night romp. The night kicked-off with a tune not yet played called “Pumpkin Time.” The well received song was followed by “Counter Clock World” and a very inspired
version of “Tarantula Hawk.” Next up was a song that also hadn’t seen the dark
of night yet called “Muscle.” The band executed a perfect “Purple Hearts” >
“Shining Path” with Danny Louis leading the charge through the segue. Danny has proven to be the X Factor on all of the shows. Never quite certain how he will mix into the songs beyond the written out parts, he always seems to bring new life and sounds to every piece. Nothing is played the same way twice and as touring artists playing night after night, it truly does help to keep things interesting and fresh.

Set 2 started with a great version of “Flirted With You All My Life” and
continued to bowl the crowd over with “Conscious Contact,” “Friendly Fire” and
“Red Lightning.” The encore escapes me at this moment so we’ll have to rely on
the tapes… So far every show but L.A. has been captured by the tapers so be
on the look out on archive.net and LMA for these shows as you’ll definitely
want to hear this band live. Thanks to Chris and Matty Z for taking care of
the band and crew.

03.10.10 | Orpheum Theater | Flagstaff, AZ

Set I: Pumpkin Time, Counter Clock World, Tarantula Hawk, Muscle, Sing Bird
Sing, Purple Hearts > Shining Path

Set II: Flirted With You All My Life, Emma’s Pissed, Conscious Contact,
Wisconsin Death Trip, Friendly Fire, Red Lightning, Light is Like Water
E: ?

Stockholm Syndrome


SS took a nice day off in the mountain town of Mountain Village, CO. Band needed some rest, albeit at 9,000 feet, but it was still well deserved rest. Getting ready for their KOTO sponsored show at the Convention Center in Mountain Village, the band took in the town of Telluride and all it had to offer.

They had a great turnout for this one as the town and slopes were abuzz. Jerry penned a rockin’ first set that included a great “These Grey Days,” “Crime & Punishment” and “Milk.” They ended the set with a rousing version of “Empire One.”

Back to the dressing room to suck on the oxygen tank and catch their
collective breath, the band was feeling really good about what they just
threw down even if they were all breathing a little slower.

Set 2 was even more rocking as they introduced a Jerry Joseph classic known
as “Drive.” Probably one of my favorite tunes penned by Jerry, he let it all
hang out on this one. Taking off his guitar at one point and just preaching
to the audience about the good ol’ days of getting crunk and doing things maybe one
shouldn’t, it was a very deep cut. Following this awe inspiring tune was a great “Bouncing Very Well” which saw Danny Louis and Dave Schools lock up into some soloing that teased some Gov’t Mule and saw Dave drop a nice “Chilly Water” tease that of course pleased the crowd. “Emma’s Pissed” was next, still holding her spot as one of the best tunes these guys have crafted which then melted into a very well
played version of “White Dirt.” A rockin’ “Lick The Tears” had the crowd going
batty and then the guys came back with a “Wisconsin Death Trip” for an encore.

Thanks to KOTO, Janice and Norman and the folks at the Convention Center for taking good
care of everyone. On to Aspen, sure to be another barn burner… Just two more shows!

03.12.10 | Telluride Convention Center | Mountain Village, CO

Set I: Couldn’t Get It Right, These Grey Days, Crime & Punishment, Miranda, In
Your Cups, Milk, Apollo, Empire One

Set II: Flirted With You All My Life, Drive, Bouncing Very Well, Emma’s Pissed >
White Dirt, Lick The Tears

E: Wisconsin Death Trip

Check back soon for the final installment of the Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog…

In 2004 JamBase’s Editor-in-Chief Aaron Kayce was invited to document the birth of Stockholm Syndrome as they performed their first shows across Europe. You can read about it here.

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Dates :: Stockholm Syndrome News :: Stockholm Syndrome Concert Reviews

Continue reading for Part 9 of the Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog from Los Angeles…

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog Part 9: Los Angeles with Woody & These United States Video

A full review of SS’s two-night stand in San Francisco is available here.

Stockholm Syndrome :: 03.08 :: The Roxy Theatre :: West Hollywood, CA

Tour Manager Danny Owen checks in:

After releasing their hold on the Bay Area, the Syndrome traveled by day down the coast of California, through the Grape Vine and into the City of Angels. Even though it was a Monday, the hard-cores were out and the band did not disappoint.

SS pulled off a solid set that included “Oil,” “In Your Cups,” “Emma’s Pissed”
and a set closing “Flirted With You All My Life.” At set break, Jerry’s good buddy Woody Harrelson came back stage to say hello and really gave the band kudos. Second set was off and running with “Apollo” and a great “Leaving Lopez” wit Mr.
Steve Lopez in the audience to hear it this time. We saw the second “Purple
Hearts” of the tour and a great “Bouncing Very Well” which saw very nice soloing from Dave
and Wally. Jerry called the last tune perfectly with “These Grey Days” and a “Wisconsin Death Trip” to say goodnight.

We hit the ground running and ran out of town to Solana Beach to soak in the
southern most point of our run down the West Coast.

On The Road Again with These United States Part II:

Stockholm Syndrome is on tour now. Check back soon for the next installment of the Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog…

In 2004 JamBase’s Editor-in-Chief Aaron Kayce was invited to document the birth of Stockholm Syndrome as they performed their first shows across Europe. You can read about it here.

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Dates :: Stockholm Syndrome News :: Stockholm Syndrome Concert Reviews

Continue reading for Part 8 of the Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog from Eugene, OR…

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog Part 8: Eugene, OR

Stockholm Syndrome :: 03.04 :: Eugene by Brian Lupton

For the next installment we check back in with Tour Manager Danny Owen:


Stockholm Syndrome has begun their journey southward and landed in Eugene for a night. The Eugene show found the band loose and excited to play. The first set featured a great “Counter Clock World” which seems to be a go to song for the guys in the early part of the show. Fans were also treated to a first set “American Fork” which is proving to be a true all star song for this lineup.

Second set saw the first “Leaving Lopez.” A great song written for good friend
and longtime Widespread Panic/Stockholm Syndrome Tour Manager, Steve Lopez. And for an encore it was a Jerry gospel tune called “Supper’s Ready.”
All in all another great show.

Stockholm Syndrome is on tour now. Check back soon for the next installment of the Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog…

In 2004 JamBase’s Editor-in-Chief Aaron Kayce was invited to document the birth of Stockholm Syndrome as they performed their first shows across Europe. You can read about it here.

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Dates :: Stockholm Syndrome News :: Stockholm Syndrome Concert Reviews

Continue reading for Part 7 of the Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog from Seattle…

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog Part 7: Seattle, WA

Stockholm Syndrome :: 03.03 :: Seattle by Owen

Back with more from Danny Owen:

The band rolled into a surprisingly sunny Seattle ready to capture another good one. Spirits are still high even as some band members battle colds and the rigors of the road. It’s not all fun and sunshine.

They decided to start the night with a Jerry tune he plays often called
“Easter,” getting their collective legs underneath them and doing it true justice
in a five-piece configuration. We saw another “Emma’s Pissed” > “That Which Is
Coming” which was perfect and another song that hadn’t been played yet called
“Purple Hearts.” The reggae-tinged “Purple Hearts” morphed into a great “Shining Path” to end the set.

Set break came and went. Some old familiar faces were in the crowd screaming all sorts of requests. The band stuck with what it had been crafting to near perfection with an “Apollo” opener and a very inspired version of “Tarantula Hawk.” A near silent crowd took in a great “Flirted With You All My Life” then exhaled as the band crushed with a set ending “Jacob’s Ladder.”

The encore saw the second rendition of Dylan’s “Where Are You Tonight” and it was flawless. Jerry nailed the four pages of lyrics and had some tambourine help from drummer Robby Cosenza of touring partners These United States.

Set I: Easter, Emma’s Pissed > That Which Is Coming, Red Lightning, Sing Bird
Sing, Purple Hearts > Shining Path

Set II: Apollo, Empire One, Tarantula Hawk, Flirted With You All My Life,
Wisconsin Death Trip, Jacob’s Ladder

E: Where Are You Tonight

Stockholm Syndrome is on tour now. Check back soon for the next installment of the Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog…

In 2004 JamBase’s Editor-in-Chief Aaron Kayce was invited to document the birth of Stockholm Syndrome as they performed their first shows across Europe. You can read about it here.

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Dates :: Stockholm Syndrome News :: Stockholm Syndrome Concert Reviews

Continue reading for Part 6 of the Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog from Portland…

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog Part 6: Portland, OR

More thoughts from Tour Manager Danny Owen:

After catching some much needed rest in Boise, the band and crew set forth to the great Northwest. Rolling into Jerry’s old stomping grounds of Portland, OR and the sweet Crystal Ballroom felt good as friendly faces abound.


Before the show the band rehearsed some other tunes that we should see soon and I unearthed a great Jerry and Dave track from the duo romp through Europe. The song is called “Green Ice” and I had two copies form the shows there. Great tune that JJ and DAS penned together. Dave was excited I had it so hopefully this will translate into relearning and the rebirthing of the song with the five-piece configuration.


Jerry dialed in another winner for set one. A great “Couldn’t Get it Right” and very good “These Grey Days” kicked things off. The first set saw the first of what some Panic and jam fans like to call a segue or “>”. It was talked about and then executed almost to perfection as “Emma’s Pissed” slowed down and went into “That Which is Coming.” An enthusiastic “American Fork” ended a great set.

Set two was even better as the hard-cores were definitely in the building. Dancing hard to an upbeat “Apollo” opener and “Ray of Heaven,” the band soon brought it back down for Chesnutt’s “Flirted With You All My Life” before “Conscious Contact” ended the set. This song is simply magic in this configuration and really should be played on radio stations everywhere. If Nickelback was singing it, the Pope would probably be rocking out to it. Alas, we’re the lucky ones…

Stockholm Syndrome is on tour now. Check back soon for the next installment of the Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog…

In 2004 JamBase’s Editor-in-Chief Aaron Kayce was invited to document the birth of Stockholm Syndrome as they performed their first shows across Europe. You can read about it here.

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Dates :: Stockholm Syndrome News :: Stockholm Syndrome Concert Reviews

Continue reading for Part 5 of the Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog from Utah…

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog Part 5: Utah & These United States Video

Fixing the flat :: Photo by Dave Schools

The fifth installment of our Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog finds tour manager Danny Owen checking in from Utah as well as a special video from touring partners These United States.


Stockholm Syndrome had a real adventurous morning as Dave Schools and the band’s bus
driver had to change a blown trailer tire at a rest area in Wyoming. Most of
the band was asleep as the two fought with the tire to get it off; Dave Schools
using a crow bar to help John out. Finally they got it off and changed.

Playing Park City is always an interesting situation but the band had a great time and did their best to capture the attention of this hipster high society ski town. Set one featured the first “Shining Path” of the tour as well as a song called “Miranda.” They ended the set with a great version of Jerry’s “The Kind of Place.”

Set two started a little slower then normal with a run through of the new Vic tune “Flirted With You All My Life.” Second set also saw a great “Jacob’s Ladder,” the reggae-ish “Friendly Fire” and a set ending “Road To Damascus” that literally shook the
walls. No joke. The show ended with an “Apollo” encore in honor of the end of the Olympics.

Band and everyone are on their first day off, well deserved and more importantly, really needed. See you in the Northwest this week, trust me, you’ll want to be there. Trial week is over!

Stockholm Syndrome :: 02.28 :: Park City, UT

Stockholm Syndrome :: 02.28 :: Park City, UT

On tour with Stockholm Syndrome is These United States. We’ll be including tour blogs from them as well. Here’s our first offering:

Stockholm Syndrome is on tour now. Check back soon for the next installment of the Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog…

In 2004 JamBase’s Editor-in-Chief Aaron Kayce was invited to document the birth of Stockholm Syndrome as they performed their first shows across Europe. You can read about it here.

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Dates :: Stockholm Syndrome News :: Stockholm Syndrome Concert Reviews

Continue reading for Part 4 of the Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog from Denver, CO…

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog Part 4: Denver, CO

Stockholm Syndrome :: 02.27 :: Denver, CO

Part 4 of our Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog features a report from Denver by tour manager Danny Owen:


Denver really came out in force on Saturday night. The sold out crowd at the Bluebird Theater got to see another great show from these guys. Sound check was spent learning a tune by Bob Dylan called “Where Are You Tonight?” This song made its debut in the first set along with an opening of the first version of “Tight.” Not being a big Dylan fan, I was very surprised at how great this song felt to a non-believer and how these guys made it sound so good. Jerry did a great job with the vocals but I expect it to get way better.

There was a great second set opening “Tarantula Hawk” followed by crowd faves “Bouncing Very Well” and the song “Conscious Contact.” This was my first time hearing Stockholm Syndrome perform this Jerry staple and I thought it was fantastic. While the lineup is full of Alpha Dogs it’s been remarkable to watch how well the band gels and works together. They mix upbeat rockers with sadder, heavier songs as well as any band I’ve seen. Everyone should get out to see this band; I’m biased yes, but wrong, not likely.

Stockholm Syndrome :: 02.27 :: Denver, CO

Stockholm Syndrome :: 02.27 :: Denver, CO

Check back soon for the next installment of the Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog…

In 2004 JamBase’s Editor-in-Chief Aaron Kayce was invited to document the birth of Stockholm Syndrome as they performed their first shows across Europe. You can read about it here.

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Dates :: Stockholm Syndrome News :: Stockholm Syndrome Concert Reviews

Continue reading for Part 3 of the Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog from Boulder, CO…

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog Part 3: Boulder, CO

Stockholm Syndrome :: 02.26 :: Boulder, CO by Owen

Part 3 of our Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog features another report from tour manager Danny Owen:

This band is one of those bands you have to see to believe. Friday night I became a full on believer in what five musicians with their own bands, projects, and histories can all come together and do. The whole show got the stamp of full approval from everyone. Big thumbs up!

Jerry Joseph put together a great first set with a rare “Couldn’t Get It Right” to start the show that kept the energy up and the bodies moving for its entirety. Other highlights included the new Vic Chesnutt cover being played again and what I have been told was the first time SS had done the song “Milk.” A packed Fox Theatre was getting a heavy dose of this band and even though it was the group’s third time at the venue in almost 53 weeks they took it head on and pretty much leveled it, again.


It was all the same level of playing and energy in the second set. Starting off with two great new tunes, “Apollo” and “Emma’s Pissed,” they just continued where they had left off. The set also had one of the coolest versions of “American Folk” I’ve ever heard and a great “Crime & Punishment.” Both strong tunes that Jerry sometimes visits in his other configurations. Most impressive was just how tight the band was and how comfortable they all seemed with each other, albeit in just the third show of the tour. I reckon this means it is officially, game on!


Stockholm Syndrome :: 02.26.10 :: Fox Theatre :: Boulder, CO

Set I: Couldn’t Get It Right, Empire One, In Your Cups, Flirt, Sing Bird Sing, Milk

Set II: Apollo, Emma’s Pissed, American Folk, Spy, Crime & Punishment, Ray of Heaven

E: Wisconsin Death Trip

Check back soon for the next installment of the Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog…

In 2004 JamBase’s Editor-in-Chief Aaron Kayce was invited to document the birth of Stockholm Syndrome as they performed their first shows across Europe. You can read about it here.

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Dates :: Stockholm Syndrome News :: Stockholm Syndrome Concert Reviews

Continue reading for Part 2 of the Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog from Steamboat Springs, CO…

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog Part 2: Steamboat Springs, CO

Stockholm Syndrome :: 02.25 :: Steamboat Springs, CO by Owen

Part 2 of our Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog continues with another submission from tour manager Danny Owen:


On Thursday night Stockholm Syndrome captured Steamboat Springs, CO, playing the Sheraton Hotel Grand Ballroom. As grand as it may or may not have been, it was the first rock show in this room since 2000 and Stockholm was ready to give it a work out. Thursday was also the first time Dave Schools had been back since the infamous Winter 1996 Widespread Panic Sit N Ski tour, which was actually held in this same room.

Sound engineer Chris Rabold did an excellent job turning a room that is used for Bar Mitzvahs and weddings into a place that deserved what it was getting. Just like with any good touring band that consistently changes things up, these guys are finding their way with each other and the newer material.

This show also saw them play the Vic Chesnutt song they learned the other day, “Flirted With You All My Life.” A very touching song that the guys have added to and made something very special to them.

The band was back to two sets and will continue with that tonight in Boulder, CO. Hope to see you there.

Stockholm Syndrome :: 02.25.10 :: Sheraton Ballroom :: Steamboat Springs, CO

Set I: Counter Clock World, In Your Cups, Emma’s Pissed, That Which Is Coming, Flirted With You All My Life, Kind of Place, Red Lightning

Set II: Sing Bird Sing, These Grey Days, Apollo, Friendly Fire, Bouncing Very Well, Road To Damascus

E: White Dirt

Check back soon for the next installment of the Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog…

In 2004 JamBase’s Editor-in-Chief Aaron Kayce was invited to document the birth of Stockholm Syndrome as they performed their first shows across Europe. You can read about it here.

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Dates :: Stockholm Syndrome News :: Stockholm Syndrome Concert Reviews

Continue reading for Part 1 of the Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog…

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog Part 1: Rehearsals & Vail, CO

Stockholm Syndrome :: 02.24 :: Vail, CO by Owen

Stockholm Syndrome is one of our favorite super groups. Featuring Widespread Panic‘s Dave Schools on bass, ringleader/guitarist/vocalist/Jackmormon Jerry Joseph, guitar hero Eric McFadden, drum genius Wally Ingram and Gov’t Mule‘s Danny Louis on keys, this is one “super” group that actually lives up to the billing. Trying to get the schedules of five very busy musicians to line up is no easy task and often makes it hard for this band to tour. But when they do, it’s worth keeping tabs on. That’s why we’ve teamed up with the band to bring you the Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog. With words, photos, videos and more coming in from the band and crew, this Tour Blog offers a unique, behind-the-scenes look at the group.

For our first entry we hear from tour manager Danny Owen with a report from the first night in Vail, CO at the Bud Light Street Beat free concert series:

The 2010 Stockholm Syndrome Winter Tour started off with a bang! The band practiced a bunch of the new songs yesterday in rehearsal; they even learned a great Vic Chesnutt tune and we could see some Dylan at some point. The band kicked it off at a free outdoor show in Vail last night (02/24). Ripping through one set of mostly newer tunes the band was doing all they could to keep themselves and the crowd warm in the sub freezing temps. Took a few songs to get them warmed up but once they were going, the heat was flowing full steam ahead. Spirits are currently high as they march onward; don’t miss the band’s upcoming Colorado shows in Steamboat Springs (2/25), Boulder (2/26) and Saturday night in Denver (2/27). Hope to see you along the way…

Stockholm Syndrome :: 02.24.10 :: Bud Light Street Beat :: Vail, CO

Apollo, Empire One, Emma’s Pissed, Flirted With, In Your Cups, Sing Bird Sing, Red Lighting, Lick The Tears, Oil, Couldn’t Get It Right

E: Wisconsin Death Trip

Check back soon for the next installment of the Stockholm Syndrome Tour Blog. Tonight The band teams up with These United States for the rest of the tour and we’ll be hearing from them as well.

In 2004 JamBase’s Editor-in-Chief Aaron Kayce was invited to document the birth of Stockholm Syndrome as they performed their first shows across Europe. You can read about it here.

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Dates :: Stockholm Syndrome News :: Stockholm Syndrome Concert Reviews


Metabolic syndrome: A game of consequences?

One of the scourges of modern life may have been profoundly misunderstood

BEING fat is bad for you. On that, almost everyone agrees. It is just possible, though, that almost everyone is wrong. In fact, getting fat may be a mechanism that protects the body. The health problems associated with fatness may not be caused by it but be another consequence, another symptom, of overeating.

That is the heretical proposal of Roger Unger and Philipp Scherer. Dr Unger and Dr Scherer, who work at the University of Texas, in Dallas, have been reviewing the science of what has come to be known as metabolic syndrome. This is a cluster of symptoms such as high blood pressure, insulin resistance and fatness that seem to increase the risk of heart disease and strokes, late-onset diabetes and liver disease. Metabolic syndrome is found in a sixth of the American population. …

Stockholm Syndrome | 03.05 & 03.06 | S.F.

Words by: Kayceman | Images by: Susan J. Weiand

Stockholm Syndrome :: 03.05.10 :: The Independent :: San Francisco, CA

Stockholm Syndrome :: 03.05 :: San Francisco, CA

It’s amazing how little has changed in six years. In 2004, I was in Europe with Stockholm Syndrome (read about it here). I was documenting the band’s first tour, carrying amps and selling t-shirts. While it was a great time to be around the band, watching them learn the material and wrestle their way into a hierarchy of sorts, it was not a cool time to be an American overseas. When Obama took office it became a little easier to wear your American pride outside our borders, but inside the confines of our 50 states, it’s still a shit-storm. We may have voted for change, but not much has changed.

Rock & roll is comfort food in times like these, and this band dishes it out in plentiful portions. Whether magnifying our demons on songs like “American Fork” and “Empire One” or helping us forget the pain for a minute with “Bouncing Very Well” or an uber-funky, Clav-heavy “Couldn’t Get It Right” (that sounded like it might drop into “Superstition” at one point), the power of a great song or inspired jam can medicate.

Few of us have known leaner times than today and there are few artists alive who channel struggle, pain and frustration as well as Jerry Joseph. Regardless of what configuration we find him in (Jackmormons, solo, Denmark Veseys, etc.), Jerry always charts a path to open hearts. But, he is never more affective than with Stockholm. Backed by bassist Dave Schools (Widespread Panic), drummer Wally Ingram (David Lindley, Sheryl Crow, Jackson Browne), keyboardist Danny Louis (Gov’t Mule) and the inimitable Eric McFadden on guitar, there are not many bands that can match the intensity and sheer power of SS.

Jerry Joseph :: 03.05 :: San Francisco

Mixing songs from the band’s 2004 debut, Holy Happy Hour, with new tracks off the soon-to-be-released sophomore album and Jerry’s solo work, Stockholm Syndrome also decimated a few huge covers on their first night in San Francisco. Coming out of a sprawling “Kind Of Place,” a Jerry song with a huge sing-along hook that should have charted on the radio years ago, the band closed set one with the late Vic Chesnutt‘s “Flirted With You All My Life.” A song about death by a man who recently took his own life, there is no heavier subject matter, and they paid homage by taking it into very dark terrain. But what was so remarkable about this song was the transition from pitch black despair into something with a slight reggae influence and upbeat conclusion. Together it was a musical reminder that there is light at the end of the tunnel, even if we have to cross over to find it.

The other bust-out cover came mid-way through the second set with Dylan‘s “Where Are You Tonight?” Beefed up on testosterone and delivered in classic Jerry style, they latched onto the original’s gospel roots and turned it into a rock burner. Even folks familiar with the song were scratching their heads for the first few minutes. You could almost read their minds: “I know this song… but what is it?”

More than any specific song, what makes this band so fun is watching them lock horns. Each member is a true Alpha Dog and if they don’t take some space, they won’t get any. This is what makes Danny Louis such an asset. The original keyboard player, German star Danny Dziuk, was more passive, Louis is not and he knows when to really lean in. The same could be said for McFadden. A more talented guitarist you will not find, and though he is at times overshadowed by Jerry’s massive stage presence (not to mention his often overlooked guitar work), McFadden is a powder keg ready to explode. His solos are always over-the-top, but it’s when he and Jerry rub against each other, harmonizing their guitars and weaving notes, as they did on “Ray Of Heaven” and “Conscious Contact,” that the sparks really fly.

McFadden & Schools :: 03.05 :: San Francisco, CA

Alas, one would be remiss to not make prominent mention of Dave Schools. Playing a bit more of a traditional bass role than in Widespread Panic, Schools utilizes a four-string here to devastating effect. From heavily dubbed out sections that would set Jerry up for surprisingly strong white-boy reggae (not easy, and Jerry does it better than just about anyone) to expansive bass solos, mean power rock and spot-on vocal harmonies, Schools is the not-so-secret weapon of Stockholm Syndrome.

It can be a dicey situation with Jerry Joseph as the bandleader. He can’t do it any other way. He has to be the frontman, and the more confident and loose he is, the better the performance. But this is not the Jackmormons and every player needs room to shine or they’ll grow bored (or worse, they might get angry). Finding that balance is the key to Stockholm Syndrome’s success, and longevity.

During second set standout “Shinning Path,” I couldn’t help but wonder what would happen if this band was the full-time priority for all five members. An older Jerry song about the brutal Communist Party of Peru, the band gave Jerry as much rope as he wanted, and he tied a knot around The Independent, pulling us deep into his world. A slow building, explosive rocker, when Jerry screamed, “You said that you’d die for me,” while McFadden blazed a solo and Schools dumped heavy bass over the top, it was everything rock fans dream about.

Stockholm Syndrome :: 03.05.10 :: The Independent :: San Francisco, CA

Set I: Red Lightning, Couldn’t Get It Right, These Grey Days, Sing Bird, In Your Cups, Kind Of Place, Flirted With You All My Life

Set II: Ray Of Heaven, Purple Hearts, Shining Path, Where Are You Tonight?, Friendly Fire, Bouncing Very Well, Conscious Contact

E: Wisconsin Death Trip

Continue reading for Dennis Cook’s review of the second night…

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

Stockholm Syndrome/These United States :: 03.06.10 :: The Independent :: San Francisco, CA

Stockholm Syndrome :: 03.05 :: San Francisco, CA

The best rock shows tend to carry a sense of ritual about them. It’s all fine and well for a band to play appealing songs good and loud, but if the instigators have deeper intentions – even if they’re primarily subconscious – then a gig becomes an experience, perhaps first felt in a visceral manner but followed by psychic aftershocks that keep one pondering what occurred. More simply, if musicians build a metaphorical bonfire, bang a drum and wag their talking stick in our faces we respond to the shaman’s call.

While maybe not a full blown pagan revival meeting, Stockholm Syndrome with testifying openers These United States, flirted with this sort of ontological rising tide. For sure, both bands proffer some of the sturdiest, thickest rock out there right now, but both also actively engage in questions of spirit, humanity, politics and ethics. No teenybopper tripe here, and while some of the headier notions got caught in a snarl of guitars, volcanic bass and the sweat ‘n’ heat of the moment, there was no denying we collectively surfed the edge of a deep wave. Sometimes the music held us high, staring out over an ocean, and at others pulled us down into the salt and seaweed to gasp a little.

From their reaction inspiring name through their coiled group energy and increasingly tricked out catalog, These United States long to connect – for good or bad – with any audience they face. Largely unknown to the heavily Panic slanted crowd at The Independent, TUS nevertheless delivered a raggedly right performance that leapt with such joy and happy intensity that I stood dumbfounded at the mostly motionless people around me – dear lord, how can you NOT move to this!?! Watching lead singer/frontman Jesse Elliott leap into the yawning divide between the stage and hangers-back, there was no doubting their dedication to bridging such spaces. From their foundation up, TUS is about connections, all of them – love, hate, envy, history, etc. – just so long as truthful feeling is involved. And their strong playing and cool variety in interpreting their earlier tunes shows the density of shared intentions has grown very strong with this lineup. There’s more than a touch of mid-70s Dylan to them, and their interpretation of Bob’s “Meet Me In The Morning” this night would have put a smile on Dylan’s pancake white face during the Rolling Thunder days. As with every other time I’ve seen TUS, it seemed like they left everything they had in them on the stage. To withhold from one’s calling would be a sin and these boys aren’t sinners in any but the most playful ways.

Dave Schools :: 03.05 :: San Francisco

There are a lot of “what if’s” in rock history. What if Blind Faith hadn’t been undone by ego and friction and managed to make a second or a third album? What if Robbie Robertson hadn’t pirated The Band’s fortunes and instead shared the wealth and creative control with his comrades? There are too many such seemingly brilliant combinations of talents that imploded despite the best hopes of all involved. Which brings us to Stockholm Syndrome, a supergroup of sorts, at least within the cloistered jam community. Jerry Joseph (lead vocals, guitar), Dave Schools (bass, vocals), Wally Ingram (drums), Eric McFadden (guitar, mandolin, vocals) and Danny Louis (keyboards) all have their fingers in multiple pies, some high profile (Schools’ enduring role in Widespread Panic, Louis’ anchor role in Gov’t Mule), some cultily adored (Jerry J, McFadden), some relentlessly busy (Ingram’s in-demand studio talents and hired killer status for big name acts as well as collaborator with great lesser-knowns). But, every damn time they assemble as Stockholm Syndrome we I start wishing they’d quit their day jobs and really see what Stockholm can do. It’s usually a few songs into the first set that this feeling hits me, hard, and right on time it whacked my solar plexus as Joseph roared, “I’m a killer, baby, that’s what killers do!” with McFadden prodding his ass like the devil with a new pitchfork and a luxurious, furious undercurrent of Schools, Louis and Ingram creating a rumble you felt in the meat of you.

This is not small-ball rock ‘n’ roll. Stockholm not only aspires to but achieves the dense, intermingled thickness of ’70s progenitors like Zeppelin, Deep Purple and Thin Lizzy but with Jerry’s politically and psychologically intense lyrics (which provide the lion’s share of the words thrown out) transforming them into a totally different animal than these classic rock stepping stones. And here’s where that shamanic/cosmic thing comes in. Combined with music that’s not just reaching out but actively snatching one up and slapping them around a bit, the lyrics hold a deep, dark, truthful mirror up. It’s for society in the larger sense, but also for us, personally. Slamming down drinks and numbing the working week’s disappointments, I still couldn’t escape the feeling I’d been psychically depantsed by Joseph refrains like, “It’s good to be alone,” “We see what we want to see,” and other nitty gritty couplets that hit close to home for dreamers and lovers that struggle to do either in the world as it is today.

Stockholm Syndrome :: 03.05 :: San Francisco, CA

Some sections are strong and uplifting, but even that is hard won in Stockholm’s scheme of things. The work of life, the labor of being better than our past and emerging into the best we can be, floats in their themes and stories, which sometimes offer us “crayons from our childhood/ a 64-pack set” but more often hand us a gun or torch. Personally, I freakin’ love it and welcome any chance to dive deep in this shallow world. It’s clear they won’t be satisfied in the shallows based on the new material played at this show, all of which is promising and worthy of further inspection. It’s hard to get a distinct sense of Stockholm’s catalog or where it’s going because they play together so rarely, but for guys who only gather occasionally they sure exhibit a TON of chemistry that largely overcomes the rough edges. Dressed in jeans and t-shirts, this feels like their “working band,” a project that reconnects them to the roots of their inspirations AND is a total blast to play in. None of these guys is known for oodles of smiles in their other bands, yet they can’t seem to stop grinning in Stockholm Syndrome. That alone is a powerful sign that they should invest whatever time they can in this band. Plying one’s craft with genuine pleasure is the surest way to guarantee positive end results.

The steaming, churning engine inside them was firing on all cylinders by the end of the first set with a blistering takedown of “Crime & Punishment” and especially “American Fork.” Wasting little time with a break – who could deny them a smoke after a set that left one feeling pleasantly wrecked like after good sex – they attacked the second set with enormous vigor, with the highlights, perhaps predictably, being shattering, faith affirming versions of Joseph’s signature tunes “The Jacob Ladder” and “Road To Damascus.” Now, nothing surrounding these two was any slouch, and it’s intriguing how the songs are starting to mingle and morph with this quintet. If nothing else, the relatively intimate Independent allowed one the rare opportunity to perch mere feet over Dave Schools’ shoulder and just let his technically brilliant, he-man-as-hell bass work vibrate your balls and make you feel alive. The man oozes rock power and his presence as much as his playing informs this band in totally positive ways.

Stumbling out onto Divisadero Street, I once again entertained the question that’s followed me from every Stockholm show: What if these guys made this band their priority? My gut says the possibilities are pretty limitless and that they’ve only just scratched the surface. The collective confidence and sheer talent of these five men is staggering and incredibly exciting. I just hope we get to see it come to its full fruition one day.

Stockholm Syndrome :: 03.06.10 :: The Independent :: San Francisco, CA

Set I: Tight > Empire One > Easter, Tarantula Hawk, Miranda, Crime & Punishment, American Fork

Set II: Apollo > The Jacob Ladder > Emma’s Pissed, That Which Is Coming, Spy > Road to Damascus, Light Is Like Water
E: Lick The Tears

Continue reading for more pics…

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Stockholm Syndrome Tour Dates :: Stockholm Syndrome News :: Stockholm Syndrome Concert Reviews

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Stockholm Syndrome: Live EP Tour Starts 2/24

STOCKHOLM SYNDROME LIVE EP OUT 2/16, ANNOUNCE TOUR

Stockholm Syndrome

Stockholm Syndrome (featuring Wally Ingram, Jerry Joseph, Eric McFadden, Dave Schools and Danny Louis) will release a seven song Live EP February 16; recorded at Streetlight Records in Santa Cruz, CA last September, and includes four previously unreleased tracks.

A new, full length studio album is also in the works, with details coming soon.

The band will also be on tour this February and March in the Western U.S., including stops in Denver, Seattle and two nights at San Francisco’s Independent.

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Dates

02/24/10 Wed Vail Village Vail, CO

02/25/10 Thu Sheraton Ballroom Steamboat Springs, CO

02/26/10 Fri Fox Theatre Boulder, CO

02/27/10 Sat Bluebird Theater Denver, CO

02/28/10 Sun Harry O’s Park City, UT

03/02/10 Tue The Crystal Ballroom Portland, OR

03/03/10 Wed Neumos Seattle, WA

03/04/10 Thu McDonald Theatre Eugene, OR

03/05/10 Fri The Independent San Francisco, CA

03/06/10 Sat The Independent San Francisco, CA

03/08/10 Mon The Roxy Theatre West Hollywood, CA

03/09/10 Tue Belly Up Tavern Solana Beach, CA

03/10/10 Wed Orpheum Theater Flagstaff, AZ

03/12/10 Fri Telluride Conference Center Telluride, CO

03/13/10 Sat Belly Up Aspen, CO

03/14/10 Sun Black Sheep Colorado Springs, CO

For more on Stockholm Syndrome see our behind the scenes feature: A Band Is Born.


Stockholm Syndrome Tour

Stockholm Syndrome Announce Tour

Stockholm Syndrome

Stockholm Syndrome, featuring Dave Schools (Widespread Panic), Jerry Joseph (Jackmormons), Eric McFadden, Wally Ingram and Danny Louis (Gov’t Mule), has announced a string of tour dates in support of their forthcoming new studio album, which will be available in 2010.

In related news, Jerry Joseph is performing a free show tonight (01/07) at the House of Blues – Foundation Room in Boston, MA. There are no tickets on sale but fans must be put on the guest list to attend. In order to get a guest spot please email: bostonguestlist@jerryjoseph.com.

Stockholm Syndrome Tour Dates

02/24/10 Wed Vail Village Vail, CO

02/25/10 Thu Sheraton Ballroom Steamboat Springs, CO

02/26/10 Fri Fox Theatre Boulder, CO

02/27/10 Sat Bluebird Theater Denver, CO

02/28/10 Sun Harry O’s Park City, UT

03/02/10 Tue The Crystal Ballroom Portland, OR

03/03/10 Wed Neumos Seattle, WA

03/04/10 Thu McDonald Theatre Eugene, OR

03/05/10 Fri The Independent San Francisco, CA

03/06/10 Sat The Independent San Francisco, CA

03/08/10 Mon The Roxy Theatre West Hollywood, CA

03/10/10 Wed Orpheum Theater Flagstaff, AZ

03/12/10 Fri Telluride Conference Center Telluride, CO

03/13/10 Sat Belly Up Aspen, CO

For more on Stockholm Syndrome see our behind the scenes feature: A Band Is Born.


Chronic fatigue syndrome: Seconds out

A fight over the cause of a mysterious disease

LAST October a discovery was made that brought hope to millions of sufferers from chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). A group of researchers found a bug with the long-winded name of xenotropic murine leukaemia virus-related virus (XMRV) in 67% of American patients with CFS (as opposed to 4% of healthy controls). This figure increased dramatically when the patients were retested.

The news was exciting for patients because CFS is a debilitating disorder of long-term tiredness for which there is no simple explanation, and certainly no sniff of a cure. It has even attracted a certain degree of media scepticism—being dubbed, at one time, “yuppie flu”. …

China syndrome

London’s Asian art festival is full of surprises

ASIAN Art in London—the city’s week-long late-autumn flowering of dealers’ shows and daily auctions, which ended on November 7th—was characterised by some beautiful exhibitions, an unprecedented flood of Chinese visitors and an assortment of auction sales that included some lots that went through the roof, others that failed utterly and a few notable pieces that were withdrawn on suspicion that they may have been fakes.

Christie’s had the hardest time of it. Despite the bullish market for Chinese ceramics and fine art, 104 of the 319 lots offered in its November 3rd auction failed to sell, suggesting that buyers, even those who have travelled far, are quick to punish sellers who are too greedy or cataloguers who are too enthusiastic in their assessments. Gilt-bronze figures were cast aside willy-nilly, as was a consignment of bronze plaques and, perhaps more surprisingly given their popularity, a number of jade animals and figures. …

”Sudden Adult Death Syndrome” killed Stephen Gately?

Stephen Gately from the band Boyzone could have died of ”Sudden Adult Death Syndrome,” medical experts believe.
The preliminary reports of post mortem have suggested that the singer died of natural causes following which the officials have dismissed the report that he had choked to death on his own vomit.
“That did not cause his death,” the [...]

Stockholm Syndrome | 09.06 | S.F.

Words by: Justin Gillett | Images by: Susan J. Weiand


Stockholm Syndrome :: 09.06.09 :: The Independent :: San Francisco, CA

Stockholm Syndrome :: 09.06 :: San Francisco

It’s interesting to see a band that rarely tours actually play live. Going into the show, concertgoers don’t know if what they are about to see will be a sloppy display due to infrequent interaction or a finely tuned act that simply lacks the ability to dedicate itself to the road due to band members’ conflicting schedules. In the case of Stockholm Syndrome, it’s undoubtedly the later.

Using the term super group to define the band almost seems cliche, but for lack of a better word that’s what the band is – a super group. What originally started as a collaboration between guitarist/vocalist Jerry Joseph (Jackmormons) and bassist Dave Schools (Widespread Panic), turned into a serious musical endeavor a few years back with the additions of lead guitar shredder Eric McFadden(EMT), drum wiz Wally Ingram and versatile keyboardist Danny Louis (Gov’t Mule). Even though the group rarely tours, a testament to how busy all the members’ respective main musical endeavors are, when Stockholm Syndrome does announce an off-hand set of dates, the shows are worth attending, if for nothing more than witnessing five musicians at the top of their game perform together. The musical backgrounds and styles of the five artists are quite different, although when playing together the collaborative rock monster that is created is truly remarkable, especially considering the band typically performs less than 10 dates a year. Stockholm Syndrome’s show at The Independent in San Francisco on Sunday night found the band in great form, performing as if the group lived on the road – which, in one way or another, they kinda do.

Dave Schools – Stockholm Syndrome :: 09.06

Opening up the show was local San Francisco blues inspired rock outfit The Stone Foxes. With two guitarists, a bass player and a drummer – all sharing vocal duties – the band displayed an impressive command of the stage. Oftentimes sounding like a classic rock throwback act, the quartet’s sound was consistently driven forward with the solid, occasionally spastic drumming of Shannon Koehler and the steady, rarely faltering bass lines of Avi Vinocur. Even though all the musicians often sang together, they did not seem to be achieving any sort of refined harmonies. Instead, their vocals acted as contrasts to one another, which added to the group’s unique sound.

As Stockholm Syndrome arrived onstage and greeted the slightly older crowd, the band tuned up and launched into a massive set that would persist for the better part of two hours. Schools, playing without his stalwart Modulus Quantum six-string, opting to play a Modulus Funk Unlimited four-string instead, imminently lit up a smoke, one of the countless number he sparked during the show, and looked eager to kick off the evening’s musical ventures. While Stockholm songs are a vast departure from the Panic songs that Schools normally plays, his dominating bass lines are still extremely similar in nature. He’s proven himself a bass player that can perform in several musical contexts, yet still hold onto a characteristic semblance that makes all of his playing unique and unmistakable.

Stockholm Syndrome :: 09.06 :: San Francisco

As the band got warmed up with its first few songs, attention shifted to Ingram’s diverse drumming. Attaching hand drums to his drum kit, Ingram occasionally tapped into a sound that deviated from the typically rock driven sound of the band. Apart from Ingram’s remarkable drumming, the songs proved that Stockholm really is the love child of Joseph and Schools. The other three musicians onstage played with as much dedication as Joseph and Schools did but occasionally it felt like they may not have invested as much heart into the songs as the noted guitarist and bass player have. The songs seemed to have been crafted by Joseph as singer-songwriter tunes, then as all the musicians in the band sear their brand onto the songs they morph into something completely different. But, the core of the songs is clearly Joseph’s lyrics, which prove above all else he is a talented storyteller.

At points during the show the two guitarists would harmonize their instruments during solos, which created an amazing sound that worked surprisingly well considering Joseph’s and McFadden’s vastly different approaches. Typically, when the band’s songs called for some sort of solo, McFadden would be the player to step up and deliver. His skill on the guitar was so impressive that it’s astonishing he doesn’t command more respect amongst serious six-string followers. His style is extremely flashy but McFadden displayed such dexterity while playing that his fellow musicians seemed to be in awe of him. His showboat style is no doubt bolstered because he looks like a bad ass when he plays, too. Sporting a sneer, thin dreadlocks and tattoo-covered forearms, McFadden just looks like a dude who plays a guitar really well.

Stockholm Syndrome :: 09.06 :: San Francisco

While many of the songs seemed to lack any sort of coherent “hook,” the extended jamming and improvisation more than made up for any sort of apparent lack of mainstream listening appeal. The band brought out several tunes that will appear on their forthcoming new album, which the band claims will drop soon. On some of these fresh songs, Joseph’s voice was extremely pronounced – a welcome change to some of the band’s songs that lacked a characteristic inflection. The song selection as the band neared the end of its set seemed to really capitalize off the musical diversity that Louis displayed behind his keyboards. Ranging from reggae to Texas rock, Louis’ knack for cross-genre competence really proved that he’s one of the more talented and severely underrated keyboardists on the circuit today.

After the unrelenting set concluded, the band bowed off the stage visibly stricken from the massive amount of musical movement all had taken part in. After the crowd cheered for a bit, they returned to the stage and launched into an extremely heavy two-song encore so intense that Ingram broke his snare.

Continue reading for Dave Vann’s pics from the previous night of Stockholm Syndrome in San Francisco…

Images by: Dave Vann

Stockholm Syndrome :: 09.05.09 :: The Independent :: San Francisco, CA

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Hacker mother appeals to Obama

The mother of a British computer hacker facing extradition to the US has appealed to President Barack Obama to intervene in the affair.

Janis Sharp spoke after her son, Gary McKinnon, who has Asperger’s Syndrome, lost a court bid to avoid extradition.

The US wants to try him for what it calls the biggest military computer hack ever, in 2001 and 2002, but he says he was seeking evidence on UFOs.

Ms Sharp said: "Please hear us, Obama. I know you would do the right thing."

A letter has been sent to the US president signed by 40 British MPs asking him to step in and "bring this shameful episode to an end".

Speaking outside the court Ms Sharp said President Obama should help those campaigning on her 43-year-old son’s behalf make the world "a more compassionate place".

"Obama wouldn’t have this. He doesn’t want the first guy extradited for computer misuse to be a guy with Asperger’s [Syndrome], a UFO guy.

"My predecessor has already sought and received clear assurances from the US that Mr McKinnon’s health and welfare needs would be met, should he be extradited"

Alan Johnson, Home Secretary

Reaction to decision

Gary McKinnon profile

"I’m just praying, please hear us, Obama, because I know you would do the right thing," she added.

Mr McKinnon admits hacking by accessing 97 government computers belonging to organisations such as the US Navy and Nasa, but denies it was malicious. He also denies the allegation he caused damage costing $800,000 (£487,000).

Whether or not he can appeal to the new UK Supreme Court – due to launch in October – will be decided later, Lord Justice Burnton said.

Glasgow-born Mr McKinnon had challenged refusals by the home secretary and the director of public prosecutions (DPP) to try him in the UK.

The home secretary insists he has no power to demand the trial take place in the UK.

The DPP refused to order a UK trial, saying the bulk of the evidence was located in the US and Mr McKinnon’s actions were directed against the US military infrastructure.

Gary McKinnon

The court was also asked to rule on whether his Asperger’s Syndrome – a form of autism – meant he could not be extradited to the US.

Mr McKinnon’s lawyers argued extradition was "unnecessary, avoidable and disproportionate" and had not taken place in other cases.

Home Secretary Alan Johnson said: "Mr McKinnon is accused of serious crimes and the US has a lawful right to seek his extradition, as we do when we wish to prosecute people who break our laws.

"The court judgement has also made absolutely clear that the DPP’s decision not to prosecute in the UK was the right one.

"My predecessor has already sought and received clear assurances from the US that Mr McKinnon’s health and welfare needs would be met, should he be extradited."

Mr McKinnon faces up to 70 years in prison if convicted in the US.

He has always insisted he was looking for classified documents on UFOs which he believed the US authorities had suppressed.

Ms Sharp said her son – who did not attend court on Friday – had been "naive enough to admit to computer misuse without having a lawyer and without one being present".

US-UK EXTRADITION TREATY

  • 2003 treaty, agreed in aftermath of 9/11 attacks
  • Offence must be punishable by one year or more in jail in both countries
  • US has to prove "reasonable suspicion" for extradition of a British citizen
  • To extradite an American from the US, British must prove "probable cause"
  • Since 2004, 56 people have been sent from the UK to the US for trial, and 26 for US to UK
  • US courts have granted about 70% of UK extradition requests, while nearly 90% of US requests have been granted

Send us your comments

She said she was "heartbroken" and feared for his health.

"He’s very ill, he’s got really bad chest pains, it’s affected him emotionally, mentally, every way, he’s terrified," she said.

In a statement, his lawyer Karen Todner, asked: "What does it take to make this government sit up and listen to the clear public view that Gary McKinnon should not be extradited

"The extradition treaty with America was brought in to facilitate the extradition of terrorists and it must be clear to anyone following this case that [he] is no terrorist."

She added that he was "clearly not equipped" to deal with the American penal system.

In February the Crown Prosecution Service refused to bring charges against Mr McKinnon in the UK, following a ruling by former Home Secretary Jacqui Smith to allow his extradition.

Mr McKinnon has already appealed unsuccessfully to the House of Lords and the European Court of Human Rights and his latest judicial reviews in the High Court are likely to be his last chance.

His lawyers say the authorities have not given proper consideration to his Asperger’s Syndrome, which could have "disastrous consequences" – including suicide – if he was to be extradited.

Asperger’s Syndrome sufferers commonly become obsessed with certain activities and interests and have a level of social naivety when it comes to evaluating the consequences of their actions. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

New drug may help treat childhood leukemia

Scientists from Tel Aviv University have found a drug that may act as an alternative to traumatic chemotherapy for childhood leukaemia.
“Modern medicine can cure eight out of 10 cases of childhood leukemia, so parents can still be hopeful when they hear a diagnosis,” the Lancet quoted Dr Shai Izraeli of Tel Aviv University’’s Sackler School [...]

Interplay of maternal, paternal genes may last well into childhood

The subtle tug-of-war between maternal and paternal genes is likely to track into childhood, and possibly as late as the onset of puberty, say researchers.
Human development is set by ongoing interplay of parent and offspring genes.
Previous research has offered evidence of a genetic struggle for supremacy only during foetal development.
In the womb, some [...]

First potential genetic mutation behind restless legs syndrome identified

In an international study led by Mayo Clinic scientists, researchers have discovered the first mutated gene, called MEIS1, which is linked to restless legs syndrome, a common neurologic disorder.
The researchers have said that a large proportion of the millions of people who suffer from the syndrome have this mutated MEIS1 gene.
However, they pointed out [...]

‘Angel of the north syndrome’

It’s a big day tomorrow. Maybe not so big outside Britain, but for those of us here, of a certain age, it’s a big one. The Jaguar XJ is getting a re-do and is being officially shown to grunt journalists (after a rollout to Jay Leno, some celebs and a few biggie journos this evening, as I write). But this one is going to be a shock for a few. It’s already attracted some flak from some people who can’t quite cope with the idea that the XJ, yes, the Xf’ingJ, Jag’s flagship saloon, has actually cut loose from the design lineage that goes back to XJ6 in 1968 (and arguably, even further). This is a proper re-do. Clean sheet of paper. It’s not trad Jag.


Pictures have been leaked all over the web today. It’s a brave look. I think it might work, but a guy who has seen even more big launches than me has some wise words (see below link to Autocar, where there are also pics of the car). Is that C-pillar and use of crome quite right? Not sure. Might be inspired, might look odd. But as Mr Cropley says, let’s wait and see it in the flesh, in the street.


It took a while for many people to except Gormley’s ’Angel of the North’, a massive sculpture off the A1 in the north of England. But accept it they did.


With my business head on, I wonder what sales prospects for the XJ look like? Tough market segment and a tough time. Will it turn heads? In a good way? I think – and sincerely hope – it will. Looking foward to seeing it tomorrow morning at the Saatchi Gallery.

Steve Cropley in Autocar