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Big Ears: Initial Schedule

BIG EARS ANNOUNCE INITIAL SCHEDULE FOR MARCH 26-28 EVENT

Dirty Projectors

As we reported in December; Knoxville, TN’s Big Ears Festival will take place March 26-28 at venues throughout the city, featuring more than 30 artists and 50 performances.

The initial schedule has been released, with artist and venue information below. Be sure to check the Big Ears website for additional artist and ticket information.

Big Ears Initial 2010 Schedule

Bijou Theatre
Friday, March 26
7:00 p.m. – Terry Riley featuring Gyan Riley, Tracy Silverman and Ches
Smith
10:30 p.m. – The xx + jj + Nosaj Thing

Saturday, March 27
1:00 p.m. – Clogs with very special guests My Brightest Diamond
7:00 p.m. – Andrew W.K. performing with the Calder Quartet
10:00 p.m. – Joanna Newsom + special guests

Sunday, March 28
7:00 p.m. – St. Vincent + special guests

Tennessee Theatre
Saturday, March 27
2:30 p.m. – Dirty Projectors + Bang on a Can All-Stars
8:00 p.m. – Vampire Weekend
12:00 midnight – Terry Riley’s In C, performed by Bang on a Can and special
guests + Terry Riley solo

Sunday, March 28
2:00 p.m. – Brian Eno’s Music for Airports, performed by Bang on a Can + The Books + special guests
9:00 p.m. – The National + special guests

Additional individual tickets for Theatre and Club shows will be available in the coming weeks for many more performances and collaborations including:

- The Ex
- The 802 Tour (Nico Muhly, Sam Amidon, Doveman, with Nadia Sirota)
- Ben Frost
- Tim Hecker
- DJ/Rupture
- Gang Gang Dance
- Gyan Riley
- Iva Bittova
- Javelin
And more to be announced….

Travel packages, including two Inner Ear Weekend Festival Passes, two nights
at the Crowne Plaza hotel in Knoxville, two posters and two t-shirts or
hoodies are available here.


Big Ears Festival 2010 Dates and Initial Lineup

SECOND ANNUAL BIG EARS FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES INITIAL LINEUP
TO BE HELD MARCH 26-28, 2010 IN KNOXVILLE, TN

Vampire Weekend

The groundbreaking Big Ears Festival – slated for the weekend of March 26-28, 2010 in Knoxville, TN – is excited to unveil the initial lineup for the upcoming year’s event. Building on the visionary programming of last year’s inaugural festival, the 2010 Big Ears expands with a remarkable lineup of even greater depth and breadth than its predecessor; with over 30 artists/bands expected to perform some 50 concerts in at least eight venues this year.

In addition, there will be art exhibitions, installations, film screenings, workshops, interactive experiences, lectures, and discussions.

Initial Big Ears Lineup:

Vampire Weekend
Joanna Newsom
St. Vincent
Andrew WK
The Ex
Gang Gang Dance
Clogs
802 Tour (Nico Muhly, Doveman, Sam Amidon, with Nadia Sirota)
The XX

Javelin
DJ/Rupture (solo)
DJ/Rupture and Andy Moor
My Brightest Diamond
The Calder Quartet
Gyan Riley
jj

Visionary American minimalist composer Terry Riley has been confirmed as artist in residence. Celebrating his 75th birthday in 2010, several of Riley’s compositions will be performed throughout the weekend, including an all-star ensemble for his seminal “In C,” and performances by the composer himself.

Bryce Dessner, best known as guitarist for the acclaimed rock band The National, has signed on this year as a curator for the festival. He’s involved in selecting artists to perform during the weekend, commissioning new work, and conceiving of several unique programs.

The Inner Ear Weekend Festival Pass is on sale now. This limited edition pass offers premium access to all Big Ears happenings throughout the entire weekend (subject to available capacity) as well as exclusive invitations and access to select special events as well. They may be purchased here or by calling 865.684.1200 Ext. 2 between the hours of 10:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. EST.

Tickets for individual concerts and events will go on sale in early January. At that time, the schedule of events for the Big Ears weekend will be announced as well.

More artists will be announced in the coming weeks, along with other information about programs, exhibitions, installations, workshops and more.

Launched in February of 2009, Big Ears was created as a forum to present the most exciting music of our time, while exploring connections and interfaces between music, visual art, and film. The brainchild of Ashley Capps, also known as the founder and co-producer of the Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival, Big Ears was a great success, receiving rave reviews from audiences, artists, and critics alike and achieving immediate international recognition and acclaim.


The Feelies: Crazy Rhythms

By: Ron Hart

Straight outta Haledon, NJ, The Feelies were the complete antithesis of cool back when they officially formed during the year punk broke (1976, kids). Named after a deep reference from Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World and dressed like the kids who ran the math club in high school, this quartet of North Jersey suburbanites were the outsiders amongst the outsiders of the NYC underground during the late ’70s. They hated gigging in the city because driving through the tunnels gave them headaches, drank coffee the way Jimmy Page downed Jack Daniels before shows, and were known to shave onstage with electric razors plugged into their amplifiers.

But once co-frontmen Glenn Mercer and Bill Million switched on their guitars as the terse, tight rhythm section of bassist Keith Clayton and one-time Pere Ubu/Electric Eels drummer Anton Fier kicked in their boxcutter-sharp, jittery grooves, The Feelies were an unstoppable force. Their sound was pure minimalism, taking the repetitive patterns of such modern classical composers as Terry Riley and Steve Reich and compounding it with a Bo Diddley groove stripped down to the studs a la the Velvet Underground, creating a sonic style as unique as their image. Originally released in 1980 on the UK-based Stiff Records, the group’s debut, Crazy Rhythms, is only LP to feature to Mercer/Million/Clayton/Fier lineup and remains one of the all-time great albums from the New Wave era. Now, after years of being out of print after the album’s U.S. label, A&M Records, got sucked up by the Universal Records machine, Crazy Rhythms is available once again for a whole new generation to enjoy its quirky genius thanks to Individuals frontman Glenn Morrow’s Bar-None imprint out of Hoboken, NJ, home of The Feelies’ favorite haunt, Maxwell’s.

Remastered and repackaged in a very cool slimline digipak (this is key, as the album’s cover art featuring headshots of the original members of The Feelies against a sky blue backdrop is one of the main selling points – just ask Weezer, who paid homage via the cover of their 1994 debut), the CD and LP of Crazy Rhythms only features the original 9 tracks – which includes such favorites as “The Boy With The Perpetual Nervousness”, “Fa ce-La,” and their scorching cover of The Beatles’ White Album rocker “Everybody’s Got Something to Hide Except for Me and My Monkey” – at the request of the band in order to maintain the integrity of the album’s initial issue. However, the CD does include a download card that features five bonus tracks, including the original Rough Trade 7-inch single version of “Fa ce-La,” demo versions of “The Boy With The Perpetual Nervousness” and “Moscow Nights,” and live renditions of the title track and a cover of the Modern Lovers’ “I Wanna Sleep In Your Arms” from a March 2009 show at the 9:30 Club in Washington, DC.

Also released in tandem with Crazy Rhythms is its equally-indispensible 1986 follow-up, The Good Earth, produced by Peter Buck of R.E.M. and one of the true cornerstones of that jangly, college rock sound we all love so much.

JamBase | Jersey
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Grenade found outside home of Kenny Dalglish

Explosive device found on garden wall as police investigate unconnected vendetta against security boss

Police investigating a vendetta against a security boss discovered a live hand grenade outside the home of former Liverpool player and manager Kenny Dalglish, it emerged today.

The explosive device was found on a garden wall near his home in Southport on Sunday night as police made searches unconnected to the former footballer. The army’s bomb disposal unit, who were called to the scene, cordoned off the street for the public’s safety.

John Ball, a security company boss, whose home has been shot at and whose business premises have been firebombed this year as gangsters unsuccessfully tried to extort money from him and his business partner Terry Riley, reportedly called police after spotting two armed men.

The men were said to have fled in a silver Lexus, which was abandoned nearby. Two men were arrested after a police helicopter was used in the search. They are being questioned on suspicion of witness intimidation.

The army bomb disposal unit were called out to make the device safe and the area was cordoned off.

A Merseyside police spokeswoman said: “The device was removed and made safe and is currently undergoing forensic examination. The road remains cordoned off at its junction with Sandringham Road and high-visibility patrols have been stepped up in the area to reassure the public.

“Detectives believe this incident is linked to a series of other recent incidents in this area and not to the owner of the property where the device was found.”

Kenny Dalglish was returning to the UK today after attending the club’s tour of the Far East. It was announced earlier this month that he had resumed his Anfield career with a senior role at Liverpool’s Academy.

Last month, the Cabbage Inn in Netherton, Merseyside, was firebombed just after 3.15am, forcing the landlady and her partner to flee for their lives. Detectives confirmed the pub attack had been another incident in a long line of attacks against entrepreneurs Riley and Ball.

Ball’s home in Birkdale, Southport, had been shot at in a drive-by shooting twice in a year. He was out at the time, but his wife and children were in bed as up to five shots were fired. Numerous addresses linked to Ball and his business partner Riley have been firebombed and shot at as local gangsters attempt to extort money from the pair.

During one of the shootings at Riley’s home, an unexploded petrol bomb was also found next to a four-wheel drive vehicle parked on the driveway.

The Shorrocks Hill Country Club, in Formby, which had been owned by John Ball and is now owned by Riley, was petrol-bombed in early April.

Since May, Riley’s parents, sister and in-laws have been targeted at their homes. As Riley was driving along Southport’s coastal road, two men on a motorbike sped past him, waving a gun. At the time, police raided a number of addresses and questioned five people, who were bailed.

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