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Big Head Blues Club: 100 Years of Robert Johnson

ALBUM RELEASE MARCH 1, 2011 TO BE SUPPORTED BY NATIONAL TOUR:
“BLUES AT THE CROSSROADS: THE ROBERT JOHNSON CENTENNIAL CONCERTS”


100 Years of Robert Johnson

How do you throw a 100th birthday bash for the most influential bluesman that ever lived? If you’re Big Head Todd and The Monsters, you
gather some of the greatest living blues musicians and record 100 Years of Robert Johnson
(March 1, 2011 – Ryko/Big Records), a stirring new tribute album featuring 10 potent interpretations of some of the
most vital and durable music of the past century.

Big Head Blues Club, as the ad hoc ensemble is calling itself, features, in addition to the Colorado-based
quartet—guitarist and vocalist Todd Park Mohr, bassist Rob Squires, drummer Brian
Nevin
and keyboardist Jeremy Lawton—special guests, blues legends B.B. King, Hubert Sumlin, David “Honeyboy” Edwards and Charlie Musselwhite, as well as keepers
of the blues flame Ruthie Foster, Cedric Burnside, and Lightnin’
Malcolm.

Recorded at the legendary Ardent Studios in Memphis, and produced by Grammy award winning blues producer
Chris Goldsmith (Blind Boys of Alabama), 100 Years of Robert Johnson will be released in early
2011, and supported by a national tour (“Blues at the Crossroads: The Robert Johnson Centennial Concerts”)
featuring many of the participants in the sessions. A complete list of the tour dates is included below.

Blues at the Crossroads: The Robert Johnson Centennial Concerts” Tour Dates:

Jan. 28 San Francisco, CA Regency Ballroom
Jan. 29 Costa Mesa, CA Orange County Performing Arts Center

Jan. 30 San Diego, CA (2 shows) Anthology
Jan. 31 Santa Barbara, CA Campbell Hall / UCSB
Feb. 04 Austin, TX Paramount Theatre

Feb. 05 Dallas, TX Lakewood Theatre

Feb. 10 Ann Arbor, MI Hill Auditorium / U of M

Feb. 11 Chicago, IL Orchestra Hall

Feb. 12 Kansas City, MO Uptown Theatre

Feb. 13 Meridian, MS Riley Center / MSU
Feb. 16 Chapel Hill, NC Memorial Hall / UNC Chapel Hill

Feb. 17 North Bethesda, MD The Music Center at Strathmore
Feb. 18 Boston, MA Berklee School of Music
Feb. 24 Ridgefield, CT Ridgefield Playhouse

Feb. 25 Princeton, NJ McCarter Theatre

Feb. 26 Blue Bell, PA Montgomery County Community College
Feb. 27 New Bedford, MA Zeiterion Theater
March 4 Milwaukee, WI Potowatomi Casino
March 5 Omaha, NE Holland Performing Arts Center

March 6 Minneapolis, MN Orchestra Hall

March 8 Urbana, IL Krannert Center – Tyrone Festival Theatre


Email Efficiency: The ‘Touch It Once’ Rule – How’s That Working For You? Posted By : Marsha Egan

We’ve all heard of the ‘touch it once’ rule – where smug associates with seemingly empty desks tell you they owe their serenity to never allowing paperwork to touch their desk more than once. Have you ever tried it for yourself and found yourself no better off, if not worse?

New Paris Hilton Reality Show Headed To Oxygen Network: “The World According To Paris”

It’s The Simple Life 2.0! The Oxygen Network — which already plays home network to reality shows like Tori & Dean and The Bad Girls Club — has greenlit a new docu-series starring reality TV veteran Paris Hiton. Described as a “for real” showing of the heiress’ life, The World According to Paris will debut [...]

Montel Wiliams Cited For Drug Paraphernalia Possession; Mark Twain Gets Politically-Correct Makeover; John Lithgow Writes Memoir; & More Morning Crunch Crumbs

-Gwyneth Paltrow continues to open up about her experience with postpartum depression following the birth of her second child, Moses, in 2006. “I felt like a zombie. I couldn’t access my heart. I couldn’t access my emotions. I couldn’t connect,” the Country Strong actress told Good Housekeeping’s February issue. “It was terrible, it was the [...]

Daniel Lanois: The Blacker The Dub, The Sweeter The Juice

By: Dennis Cook

Black Dub by Jake Krolick

Infusing music with soul is no easy task. And we’re not talking some stock R&B thing, this is soul in the archetypal sense – the invisible, overarching embodiment of things beyond the world we can see and taste. Soul in music is what makes it more than ditties meant to shift units and pass the time. Soul in music is what makes it breathe and leap into our hearts and minds, and yes, bodies, to live anew in our own strange ways. It’s there in the intentions of the players in a way that transcends language. And there is abundant soul, in this wonderful, fully fleshed sense, inside Black Dub, the boffo new project from celebrated “studio rat” Daniel Lanois.

In Black Dub, whose raw, thickly conjured self-titled debut arrived on November 2, Lanois is joined by highly regarded studio bassist Daryl Johnson, drummer extraordinaire Brian Blade (Wayne Shorter, Joshua Redman, Joni Mitchell) and vocalist-songwriter Trixie Whitley, the daughter of the late, utterly great Chris Whitley. The combination is as crazy talented as one might imagine but also a good deal earthier and readily appealing than such high tone combos often turn out to be. The burn of the blues, the raised hand exultation of gospel and irresistible shuffle of vintage rhythm ‘n’ blues swirls within their future-forward energy and gutbucket, immediate rock feel. Whitley is a force of nature and one of the few young singers that might have joined the roster of Atlantic Records or Stax-Volt back in the day. And the instrumental vets sound looser and more engaged than at almost anytime in their past. That’s not a dig against their worthy pedigrees but the interplay and atmosphere of Black Dub suggests a giving way to a bubbling group-think that’s really intoxicating. The songs rock, from the minimalist “Ring The Alarm” to the more structured pieces like “Nomad” and “Canaan,” and allowed time to really seep into one’s consciousness, Black Dub is a quintessential grower that hints at amazing live incarnations to come from these initial seeds and a wide open studio landscape for the quartet down the road.

JamBase was fortunate to snag a few minutes of Lanois’ time and found him to be a straight shooter of the first order with pretty much the best attitude about making music one could find.

JamBase: One of my favorite things about any new band is when you get a sense of their personalities and how the music was made just from listening to their debut. I get a strong sense of that listening to Black Dub.

Daniel Lanois: It’s quite a blend of spontaneous elements – as is the case with “Surely,” which is live off-the-floor, vocal and all, and we’re quite proud of that one because it’s quite classically written and performed – and without a doubt the people in the band are good improv artists. We have Brian Blade on the drums and I’ve never heard him play the same way twice.

Lanois & Trixie Whitley
By Jake Krolick

JamBase: How did you guys come together? This combination of individuals seem to have an intuitive empathy for one another as players.

It came together in my head originally. There’s a lot that comes to me as I play guitar and sing but I also love to just play guitar and let someone else sing. And when I ran into Trixie Whitley in Belgium, I had not seen her in a good few years and she told me she was playing drums and writing songs and singing. When I heard her I thought there was something really clear and honest about her position. I recorded a couple of songs including “I Believe In You,” which is on the Black Dub record. She got it in one take and I thought, “Whoa, there’s something going on here.” I’ve only ever responded to invitation or natural chemistry, so I thought maybe it was time to huddle up and form this little band.

I can’t really recall you being in a proper band for a very long time. You’re an active musician who usually plays on the records you produce but this seems like something fairly new for you.

Exactly. It’s all new. I was in a few little bands in the beginning, playing on the rooftop of my mother’s house and such. I made a bunch of records with bands no one has ever heard of and never rose in popularity, but I have to say I appreciate the camaraderie. Maybe those feelings never go away, like falling in love for the first time. Even in midlife you don’t want those feelings to ever stop [laughs]. Some feelings you don’t want to ever go away.

There’s a sense of excitement about making music together in Black Dub that’s palpable. You don’t need to be told that something cool is happening in this band. It’s there in the music. You all seem very turned on by what’s happening together.

I think that’s true and it’s a compliment hearing it from you. We’re not industry driven or force-fed. We’re happy to be associated with Jive Records, who bring us to their arena, but the inception of this was driven by chemicals – not the ones you take but the ones that already exist in your body.

The core of this is you and the rhythm section with Trixie riding on top. There’s something cool about the trio configuration. No one can hide in that setting and everyone just has to throw in.

Black Dub by Jake Krolick

Are you talking about three in a trio or threesomes [laughs]? I have to agree with you, man. I love it stripped down. I wish I’d made more records that way, but I’m starting to now. I love it when it’s hands-down, just three people and it’s just, “What’re you gonna play?” And then play every note like it’s the last note you’ll ever play. Trixie joins us on the second drum kit on a couple numbers live and she plays keyboards on “Ring The Alarm” but aside from that it’s pretty much down to the bone.

Every individual part is available to the listener in a trio. There’s no real clutter.

Yes and God bless us for having the courage to do that! I know the record’s not entirely like that but live it will be.

What was the recording process like? How did you go about adding things after the fact? One of the first words that jumped into my head with this album was “viscous.”

HmmmÂ…some things have come from me being a studio rat. There’s an instrumental on there called “Slow Baby” and that’s pretty much a studio sculpture. The guitar playing is pretty spontaneous, done in one take, but the groove and loops and all that came later. I love flirting with machines and flesh, constantly trying to combine the two. I live in the memory of my heroes who tried to pull this off. Sly and The Family Stone did a song called “In Time” on the album Fresh, and that’s a bad dog of a marriage! I love “Sexual Healing,” which is a Roland 808, one of the seeds. We’re still trying to do this now, and we have so much technology available to us. The question is: What’s the most fascinating thing you can do with that? The quest goes on.

I always find the marriage of technology and human beings music to be an interesting one. In the right hands it’s magic. Is there a better rhythm sound than Prince’s drum machine programming in some ways?

There are always people involved, so that’s one thing to keep in mind. I often reference Suicide, this band from the 70s in New York City. They probably couldn’t afford a drummer, so one guy does the music and one guy sings. You gotta love that! In my early days in New York City I got to hear The Fat Boys, just three guys with one of them doing the beats on a microphone. They got to show up to a gig with no gear. More power to them!

Daniel Lanois by Jake Krolick

You’ve used an expression called “spotting” to describe some of your approach to music, and I wanted you to elaborate on what that means. Often musicians feel undue pressure to come up with something totally new and “spotting” seems to suggest being part of a long lineage.

Spotting is really a term for remembering anything special that goes on through the day. As songwriters we’re spotters all along. You might hang around in a bar and listen to a conversation, and they might say something really profound people can relate to and you snatch it for a song. Or it can be something as simple as [sings], “I heard it through the grapevine.” A simple lyric like that can spawn a whole song. That’s what spotting is about. It’s not anything new. I think people have been using spotting all along to bring common street terminology into popular song.

As a record maker it’s my job to notice things that are special during the workday. Perhaps somebody plays a riff or little melody and they might forget it because they moved onto something else a minute later thinking that idea wasn’t absolutely fulfilled. They’re right but that doesn’t mean it couldn’t be fulfilled if you just paid attention to it. That’s what spotting is about to me – noticing what’s fantastic in any given moment.

I like all the echoes of different things on Black Dub. It’s clearly a rock record but there’s a gospel undertow to parts and a whiff of Lee “Scratch” Perry’s Black Ark years, where the production was often done on the fly and was immediate and inspired as the music unfolding around the board.

The number one rule is to get rid of all chairs. No chairs at the console and when you do your work. That way you’re not fucking around for hours. You get the job done and then go to the bathroom. That’s what I learned from Lee “Scratch” Perry [laughs]. These fat fuckers show up in these sound recording magazines and they need a $12,000 multi-pivot office chair to function. Stand up! What are you made of, man? What I got from Lee Scratch was make it lean and mean and get the fuck out of the building.

Amen is all I can say.

Having gotten that out of the way, I don’t like comfort. Comfort isn’t a very good association, right? You might want it in your waterbed but you don’t want your music to be easy, breezy and comfortable. I like to think that Black Dub has crossed the line into the discomfort zone. I don’t want to be comfortable anymore.

Rock has become like a costume that people slip on. It’s lost its danger, its middle finger in many ways.

I asked Iggy Pop how he stays so skinny, and he said, “Steak and coffee.” Then I read about a legendary [Stooges] performance in England where the set was only 42 minutes long. People would be bitchin’ now. There’d be a revolution if you only played a 42 minute set, but at the peak of that great punk era in the 70s there was no messin’ around. They delivered just what needed to be delivered. I’m not saying I’ve done that historically but it sure appeals to me now.

Even if you haven’t done it before, if the light bulb goes off in your head you can do it now. My mom always says that if something is really true it will pierce you like an arrow. It’s not always pleasant or easy to come up against genuine truth but there’s no mistaking when we have to change.

Lanois & Whitley
by Jake Krolick

Your mother told you that? Let’s bring her onboard. As the truth bites and stings, I remember just what we were [a lyric from Lanois' song "Blackhawk"]. Iggy Pop once sang, “Here comes success/ Here comes my Chinese rug.” You end up looking at rugs and drapes instead of making fuckin’ rock ‘n’ roll. Come on!

I was discussing how vocals sound these days with a friend recently. You’d never get an Aretha Franklin or most of the Muscle Shoals soul and rock artists from the 60s & 70s today. They all pushed the meters into the red and distortion and spontaneity were keys to their sound and appeal. That unpremeditated roughness has been sanded away by Pro-Tools, etc. now. I catch a bit of that classic vibe in Trixie.

We don’t use auto-tuning or anything like it. I look her in the eye while I’m playing guitar and we deliver for the moment. But I have to say I quite like the auto-tuning thing when it’s taken to an extreme, where Cher has a hit with it or hip-hop records where it’s clearly radical auto-tuning. If you’re going to plug in the fuzzbox, then go for it. But the easy, breezy mid-zone of it is unappealing. I don’t like to fool people with anything. Why not just tell it like it is? It’s okay. Life is short [laughs].

Just in talking to you for a few minutes, I get the sense that Black Dub has freed you up in some ways, that something cool has cracked inside you in discovering this band.

A studio rat needs a balancing act. I love the studio and I’ve come up with a lot of things that’ve never been heard before. I’ll always go there when I need isolation from the big, bad world. But, without a doubt, the challenge of living this band is to line ‘em up, pants down and see who can deliver. Oh heavens, I think I’ve slipped into arrogance [laughs].

Black Dub Tour Dates :: Black Dub News :: Black Dub Concert Reviews

JamBase | Close To Canaan
Go See Live Music!


Big Light Celebrates Three-Year Anniversary in San Francisco

NOVEMBER 6 AT THE GREAT AMERICAN MUSIC HALL

Big Light has announced a headlining show at the Great American Music Hall in San
Francisco on November 6, in celebration of their three year anniversary. The band has planned a special night with
some great surprises. Save the date and get your tickets here.

10/29/10-10/31/10 Las Tortugas Music Festival, Groveland, CA
11/6/10 Great American Music Hall, San Francisco, CA w/ Bear Kittay’s Big Universe
11/19/10 Moe’s Ally, Santa Cruz, CA w/ New Fangled Wasteland
12/31/10 Cafe Du Nord, San Francisco, CA w/ Surprise Me Mr. Davis

Big Light
Tour Dates

::
Big Light News
::
Big Light
Concert
Reviews


Mariah Carey Pregnant With Baby Boy?

A bouncing baby boy for pop powerhouse Mariah Carey? The blogosphere is abuzz with reports that the 41-year-old singer is expecting her first child — a son — with husband Nick Cannon, 30. The notoriously private Carey has remained tight-lipped on rumors that she is harboring an occupied uterus. We now hear, however, that Mariah [...]

Gov’t Mule: Mulennium

MULENNIUM OUT AUGUST 3; ’99-00 NYE SHOW FEATURES ORIGINAL MULE LINEUP, BLUES
LEGEND LITTLE MILTON AND THE BLACK CROWES’ AUDLEY FREED


Gov’t Mule

December 31, 1999 ushered in a new century and millennium and called for something truly magical – and that
night’s Gov’t Mule show at
Atlanta’s historic Roxy Theatre delivered it. What made this New Years Eve show so extraordinary? For starters,
Little Milton, one of Warren Haynes‘ most important influences, joins Gov’t Mule for six songs including “I
Can’t Quit You Baby” and “It Hurts Me Too.” Mulennium also marks the 10th anniversary of Allen
Woody’s death and is the first official release featuring the original Gov’t Mule trio issued since his passing.
Mulennium features Gov’t Mule’s original line-up: Warren Haynes on guitar, Matt Abts on drums
and the late Allen Woody on bass and contains many Mule covers played for the first time including The Black Crowes‘ “Sometimes Salvation”
and King Crimson‘s “21st Century
Schizoid Man.” Blues legend Little Milton and The Black Crowes’ Audley Freed join Mule for a spirited second set that
blazes into the wee hours of the new millennium.

The 3-disc collection was painstakingly remixed and mastered from the original master tapes. Mulennium
is out August 3 via Evil Teen.

Disc 1:
1. Bad Little Doggie

2. Lay Your Burden Down

3. Blind Man In The Dark
4. Life Before Insanity
5. Larger Than Life
6. Towering Fool 7. Countdown Jam 8. 21st Century Schizoid Man

9. We’re Not Gonna Take It
10. Dazed And Confused

Disc 2:

1. When The Blues Comes Knockin’*

2. My Dog And Me 3. Lump On Your Stump *
4. I Can’t Quit You Baby *

5. It Hurts Me Too *
6. Blues Is Alright *
7. Is It My Body? ** 8. Power Of Soul **

Disc 3:
1. Helter Skelter **

2. Sometimes Salvation **
3. 30 Days In The Hole ***
4. End Of The Line **
5. Out Of The Rain ****

6. I Shall Be Released *****

7. Simple Man ******

8. Crowd

*with Little Milton

**with Audley Freed
***with Audley Freed & Robert Kearns
****with Audley Freed, Johnny Mosier & Mark Van Allen

*****with Barry Richman, Robert Kearns, Johnny Mosier & Mark Van Allen
****** with Audley Freed & Mark Van Allen

Gov’t Mule
Tour Dates

::
Gov’t Mule News ::
Gov’t Mule
Concert
Reviews


Christina Milian’s Hubby Filed For Divorce When Singer Was 9 Mos. Pregnant

Paging Mel Gibson and David Boreanaz: Please pry yourselves away your next She-Victim. There’s a new cheating cad waiting to be inducted into the Hollywood chapter of the World’s Slimest Husbands. Christina Milian’s husband began legal action to end the couple’s shortlived marriage while the singer was still pregnant with his child.“Single Ladies” songwriter [...]

Hollywood Bowl Reggae Night: Jimmy Cliff; Sly & Robbie

REGGAE UNDER THE STARS RETURNS TO HOLLYWOOD BOWL JULY 25

Reggae Night IX returns to the Hollywood Bowl on July 25 for reggae under the stars with roots legend Jimmy Cliff and his hits “Wild
World”
and “Many Rivers To Cross,” plus the irrepressible rhythms of Sly & Robbie, and upcoming reggae
sensation Tarrus Riley.
Click here
for tickets.

Event Line Up:

Jimmy Cliff
Sly & Robbie and The Taxi Gang
Tarrus Riley
Jeremy Sole, Host

And here’s a bit of Jimmy Cliff to get you in the right mood for this show:


Robert Randolph: Shot of Love

By: Dennis Cook

Robert Randolph

As Robert Randolph & The Family Band approach their first decade together, all evidence is their game is tighter than ever. Boldly emerging from the gospel community, Randolph – easily the greatest innovator on his weapon of choice, pedal steel guitar, since Red Rhodes reshaped the instrument with Michael Nesmith in the ’70s – has always hummed with abundant spirit and Holy Ghost energy. This has never been clearer or more finely etched than third studio album, We Walk This Road (released June 21 on Warner Bros.). Produced with a sure hand and great sonic curiosity by T-Bone Burnett, this set nails the Sly & The Family Stone vibe Randolph has been hovering near for years. Less slick and more sharply drawn than 2006′s Colorblind, the new album mingles the voices of the past with a decidedly modern edge. This is gospel music for people who like life to be rowdy and lil’ freaky.

JamBase got to sit down with Randolph to discuss tackling Dylan, the roots of this album in the last Presidential election and more.

JamBase: We Walk This Road is your most together studio work to date. This feels like a classic album rather than a bunch of songs thrown together. There’s a through-line and intelligence to the sequencing, song choices, etc.

Robert Randolph: That’s what we set out to do with T-Bone, just come together and make this sort of thematic record of all sorts of inspirational songs and a lot of very cool sounds, and lyrically just trying to uplift people. And then going back and going back and finding all these old gospel and blues songs – which is really the roots of what I do anyway coming from the church – and taking them and making them into this new sort of Robert Randolph sound with new lyrics that relate to today.

JamBase: For many, gospel music is something of the past and not exactly relevant to today. I think it has the potential to be modern and relevant but often isn’t.

Robert Randolph: In one of the first conversations I had with T-Bone we talked about really digging into these songs, because this is all the same stuff that made Zeppelin become Zeppelin, Dylan become Dylan. They listened to all these old recordings and realized they needed to dive into these things because this is where the roots of American music come from. Whether it’s rewriting or rearranging these old songs, it’s just putting your own music stamp on this but using the bones of it.

For instance, take “Dry Bones” off the record – “Them bones, them bones, them dry bones.” It’s really just an old field recording we took and just looped to it and had like a 30-minute jam. There was a lot of stuff going on all over the place, but we started to think about what they were really talking about with “them dry bones,” and we figured out some new lyrics that addressed the bones of a thousand generations laughing in our messed up midst. And this was before BP blew up in the Gulf!

Randolph and The Family Band

A lot of older material is heard but not actually comprehended. By inserting a contemporary twist you make this stuff live.

Of course! And that’s what we set out to do [with this album]; make this music relevant to everybody. And regardless of what songs are recorded, when we play live this song will some sort of 12-minute anyway!

You’ve never obeyed rules about time limits or staying within any one genre throughout your career.

That’s what happens, and really the magic of playing shows. When these things happen, the crowd is smiling and the next minute the bass or guitar does something else that sparks something else emotionally. And that’s the vibe we went after on this album, by way of exploring the bones and roots of gospel music and try to find a way for this music to relate to people today.

You made some great choices of the material. A lot of people, including the man himself, shy away from Dylan’s Christian period, but you guys murder “Shot of Love.”

Thanks! What was strange about that was one day we were sitting in the studio with T-Bone trying to find just one big, strong song we could just lay down the guitar heavy on and deliver a message. And I finally said, “There’s got to be a Dylan song that nobody did before that I can do what Hendrix did to ‘Watchtower.’” And T-Bone was like, “Yeah, everybody tries that but there’s only one Hendrix. But let’s see.” We chose this one because it had this powerful message in there, and we all sat around and jammed to it.

We started this record coming out of the Bush Administration. Every break we’d watch the 2008 Presidential debates because T-Bone is a big Obama fan, and one of the other guys was a McCain fan. So, we’d sit there just watching & watching and we just realized how screwed up everything is! All the messages on this record, particularly “Shot of Love,” well, we ALL need a shot of love right now. People are hurting with all the lying that’s been going on. The song “Keep On Talking” (“Keep on talking, I’m not listening”) was written as a direct result of that campaign. We were sort of afraid that the song might not age well with all the negative stuff in it, but there’s still plenty more liars and crooks.

Oh, I don’t think we’ve even begun to turn over the rocks in this country [laughs]!

Robert Randolph by Rod Snyder

Oh yeah. We really wanted to make a strong statement without pissing too many people off and hopefully uplifting most of them.

Speaking truth is always a little uncomfortable, but if you can do it in a way that makes people want to raise their hands and get into it and actually work on this stuff, well that’s the way to do it, not just sit there and bitch and moan.

Look at Wall Street and BP, and then you look at this Tea Party stuff. Geez, where we going in this country?

We can’t seem to join hands and do things together as a country like we used to. You don’t pick your neighbors; you just happen to live near each other. But, you can pick the relationship you have with your neighbors.

We can do that, and we’re really trying to tell people that in this record. Don’t forget the word ‘gospel’ means the good word. So, we’re ALWAYS trying to spread the good word. And the fact that we were able to tie all these different themes together, with segues from these old songs going into brand new ones, we’ve made Robert Randolph and the Family Band songs we’ll be playing for the next 40 years. It’s cool!

I like that you tap Prince on this album [a cover of "Walk Don't Walk" from Diamonds & Pearls]. People know all the songs about sex and dancing but spirituality and social conscience are reoccurring themes in his music, too.

By me knowing him and talking to him and being around him, I know he’s a real spiritual dude. His spirituality is in his music and his lyrics in songs like “The Cross.” We actually did a version of that one with the Blind Boys of Alabama that didn’t make it onto a record and we thought about doing it again for this one. But then Lenny Waronker, the guy who signed Prince and did a bunch of records with him, came by towards the end of this record and suggested “Walk Don’t Walk” as a way to tie this whole record together. I heard it one time and said, “Let’s go! Let’s record this NOW!” We just knew we could do this whole Family Band version of this song.

T-Bone is the man. He’s just all about capturing the recording and getting the message across. And he told us, “I guarantee you just by me telling people we’re recording together that people are going to want to come down.” Next thing you know Jim Keltner saying, “Hey, let me play on some tracks.” You got Robbie Robertson coming down just to sit in the studio, and Bob Dylan calling in on the phone. You got Robert Plant, Elton John and Leon Russell just hanging out playing piano. And all this stuff came out of inviting people to just come and hang, having an event they were welcome to. They knew we’d have great things to eat, and they just wanted to be part of it in some way.

That fits in with the general spirit of the record, which sort of says, “We’re all in this together. We’re all on the same block. WE walk this road. Not YOU walk this road. It’s WE.”

Robert Randolph

We walk this road together. We ARE all in this together. That’s basically what it is.

One of the best stories of this record was capturing our version of Blind Willie Johnson’s original version of “If I Had My Way.” T-Bone had given me this CD with all these old songs and he had this one on it. One day we took a shot at it and it turned into this 40-minute jam, guitars everywhere and this, that and the other thing. At one point we even had two different songs; one was a country song and the other was very different. I wasn’t sure it was gonna work, so we left it alone for 5 or 6 months. Then, Ben Harper comes in and we start jamming on guitars. We had a cool little thing already but he says, “Let me hear something you don’t have finished yet.” I put on “If I Had My Way,” and he said, “Is this like the Blind Willie Johnson thing?” and he went right into the vocal booth and started singing those choruses – “If I had my way, I’d tear the building down.” And everybody was like, “Well, well, let’s dive into this thing now!” It became this great, soulful song where we swapped out this story of Sampson & Delilah for the one of Daniel in the lion’s den. T-Bone and I went into the lounge with the Daniel lyrical concept while Ben was knocking out the choruses, and it turned out to be a great night.

You’re coming up on 10 years with the Family Band, and now more than ever, you’re one of the few modern equivalents to Sly & The Family Stone.

Don’t forget, Sly came out of the church, too. But I’d only barely heard Sly & The Family Stone, and then I saw an interview with Sly back in 2002 that made me think, “Well, we’re doing the same thing!” He said they were using all the sounds they grew up with in church but Sly said he just had more of a whacky, rock ‘n’ roll mind to tie all this stuff together. And I thought, “That’s me, too,” without even really trying to be like that. It’s just one of those natural things with me going from sitting in church and then going out to play those early shows at the Lakeside Lounge and Mercury Lounge in New York and places all over Boston and Philly. I realized this was a whole different universe to Planet Church. There’s people out here that want a good message, that want to be inspired and uplifted, and that will always be in us.

Robert Randolph & The Family Band Tour Dates :: Robert Randolph & The Family Band News :: Robert Randolph & The Family Band Concert Reviews

JamBase | In The Spirit
Go See Live Music!


Michael Jackson Murdered For Catalogue?

Was Michael Jackson “killed” for his music catalogue?As fans approach the first anniversary of the King of Pop on June 25, Leonard Rowe – a former financial advisor to the late “Thriller” star and close friend of Joe Jackson — is stepping forward with his assertion that the singer was killed because he refused to [...]

Oslo’s Øya Festival: M.I.A. Pavement, Stooges, The xx, LCD

OSLO’S ØYA FESTIVAL 2010 LINEUP TO INCLUDE M.I.A., PAVEMENT, IGGY & THE STOOGES

THE XX, LCD SOUNDSYSTEM, AIR, RAEKWON, ROBYN & MORE!

M.I.A.

Øya Festival
August 10-14, 2010
Middelalderparkern, Oslo
http://www.oyafestivalen.com
Phone: +47 815 33 133
For ticket sales visit: www.billettservice.no

Headliners include: M.I.A.,
Pavement, Iggy and The Stooges, The xx, LCD Soundsystem, Air, Raekwon, Robyn, and more

More Performers: Miike
Snow
, Major
Lazer
, Big Boi,
Panda Bear, Q-Tip, Sleigh Bells, Surfer Blood, La Roux, Marina and The Diamonds,
Against Me!, Baroness, Converge, Cymbals Eat Guitars, Fool’s Gold, Serena Maneesh, Fucked Up, The Gaslight Anthem, Girls,
LindstrØm & Christabelle, Local Natives, Jonsi (of Sigur
Ros
), tUnE-YarDs,
Casiokids, Tony Allen, Paul Weller, Trash Talk and more TBA

Plus Norwegian acts: Altaar, Motorpsycho, The Cumshots, CCTV, Lidolido, Navigators, John Olav Nilsen, Og
Gjengen, Obliteration, Djerv, Susanne Sundfør, Purified in Blood, The Megaphonic Thrift, Blood Command,
Kråkesølv, Pow Pow, Lucy Swann
, and Mhoo.

The latest wave of announcements for Øya Festival 2010 suggest this year’s lineup is going to be the most arresting and eclectic yet.

Full lineup and event details at www.oyafestivalen.com
5 DAY FESTIVAL PASS: 1940, – NOK + TAX. SINGLE DAY TICKETS ALSO AVAILABLE


Bea Arthur PETA Ad

Our beloved Dorothy Zbornak — a devoted animal rights activist — is making a posthumous appearance in the latest ad from the fur-hating zealots at People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. PETA is bringng actress Bea Arthur back to life almost a year to the day of her death in a new campaign promo [...]

Reggie Bush Kim Kardashian Breakup….Again

Attention Fellas: Kim Kardashian is back on the market.
It’s another split for the reality star.socialite and her on-again/off-again beau of nearly three years, New Orleans Saints star Reggie Bush.
On Tuesday, E! News spies confirmed what sources close to the pair have been whispering for weeks; the embattled stars have mutually decided to part [...]

Soulive | 03.02 – 03.13 | Brooklyn

Words & Images by: Dino Perrucci

Bowlive :: 03.02 – 03.13 :: Brooklyn Bowl :: Brooklyn, NY

Last Saturday night Soulive wrapped up their two week, 10-night stand at Brooklyn Bowl. Easily one of the musical highlights of this young year, the run featured special guests every night, including: Ivan Neville, Robert Randolph, Charlie Hunter, Warren Haynes, Derek Trucks, Susan Tedeschi, Kofi and Oteil Burbridge, The Shady Horns, and many more. Most nights featured an opening set from Nigel Hall followed by a set of Soulive in classic trio configuration and a set of Soulive with guests, while some nights saw a third Soulive set go into the early morning hours and even a mini-set from NYC’s own London Souls.

The musical highlights were far too many for this photographer to write about; I’ll have to let my photos speak for themselves. Wetlands founder and current Brooklyn Bowl co-owner Peter Shapiro has once again created an environment where the musicians and fans alike have a great level of comfort that allows for an experience that is like no other. The great success of this run will certainly make Bowlive a can’t miss in the future.

Bowlive!

Neal Evans – Soulive :: 03.04

Eldar with Soulive :: 03.04

Bowlive – Brooklyn Bowl :: 03.05

Eric Krasno – Soulive :: 03.05

Alan Evans – Soulive :: 03.05

Soulive :: 03.05

London Souls :: 03.05

London Souls :: 03.05

Neal Evans, Ivan Neville, Nigel Hall :: 03.06

Nigel Hall & Alan Evans :: 03.06

Ivan Neville :: 03.06

Robert Randolph with Soulive :: 03.06

Robert Randolph :: 03.06

Robert Randolph & Pete Shapiro :: 03.06

The Shady Horns :: 03.06

Nigel Hall :: 03.09

Charlie Hunter with Nigel Hall :: 03.09

Charlie Hunter :: 03.09

Nikki Glaspie :: 03.09

Eric Krasno – Soulive :: 03.09

Charlie Hunter with Soulive :: 03.09

Robert Randolph & Eric Krasno :: 03.09

Kofi Burbridge with Soulive :: 03.10

Kofi Burbridge with Soulive :: 03.10

Oteil Burbridge with Soulive :: 03.10

Talib Kweli with Soulive :: 03.10

Soulive with Oteil, Kofi and The Shady Horns :: 03.10

Soulive & Their People :: 03.10

Neal Evans – Soulive :: 03.13

Alan Evans – Soulive :: 03.13

Warren Haynes with Soulive :: 03.13

Warren Haynes & Eric Krasno :: 03.13

Warren Haynes & Nigel Hall with Soulive :: 03.13

Soulive Tour Dates :: Soulive News :: Soulive Concert Reviews

JamBase | Brooklyn

Go See Live Music!


Farrah Fawcett, Bea Arthur Left Out Of Academy Awards Memorial Tribute Montage

Film fans were left scratching their heads with raised eyebrows as screen stars Farrah Fawcett and Bea Arthur were left out of the annual Oscars “In Memoriam” montage, honoring Hollywood’s fallen giants, at Sunday night’s 2010 Academy Awards.

Each year, there are a few names who end up being left out of the tribute to [...]

“America’s Next Top Model” Cycle 14 Contestant Interviews

A new season of Tyra Bank’s America’s Next Top Model is upon us, and fashion fans are in for another cycle of high heels and even higher drama. Tyra and The CW have unveiled the 14 aspiring young stunners who will compete for the title of the Fashion World’s Next Big Thing on the [...]

Ellen “American Idol” Debut Extended Sneak Preview

FOX has released another promo clip of Ellen and The Gang during dream-crushing Hollywood Week, as anticipation builds for Ellen Degeneres’ big American Idol debut.
The daytime funny gal brings the laughs to Idol this Tuesday at 8/7c.

U.K.’s Great Escape Fest

U.K.’S GREAT ESCAPE FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES FIRST WAVE OF ARTISTS

Broken Social Scene

The Great Escape, Europe’s acclaimed music festival and industry conference has announced the first wave of acts for its landmark fifth annual Brighton, U.K. outing. Taking over 30+ venues throughout the city and hosting over 350 bands playing across three days, the event will once again showcase rising stars, as well as give fans the opportunity to see some of the most loved bands around in pleasingly intimate surroundings.

Opening the 2010 festival season in style and running from May 13-15, this year’s Great Escape has confirmed Manchester’s Delphic will be bringing their much lauded indie-rave hybrid to southern shores. Tipped as ones to watch by all in 2010, and already garnering almost universally high praise for the debut album Acolyte, this may be the last chance you get to see the band before they make the leap to filling the stadiums that their anthemic warehouse-pop hints at.

Also confirmed for this year’s event are drum ‘n’ bass overlords Chase and Status. Having built a reputation as one of the most blisteringly on-point live acts in dance music, it’s guaranteed to be nothing short of breathtaking to witness them dropping the heavy bass pressure.

Canadian uber-group Broken Social Scene, who are currently putting the finishing touches to their fourth album, will be crossing the Atlantic to join the action with their incredibly engaging baroque-pop. The festival will also be set alight by quirky new wave bliss from the sublime Marina and The Diamonds, hooky electronica from the BBC‘s top tip for 2010 and BRITS Critics Choice winner Ellie Goulding, cutting edge Basque folk funk from Crystal Fighters, intergalactic rockabilly-esque folk from Sheffield duo Slow Club, experimental synth sounds from Philadelphia’s Cold Cave, Brighton’s very own Esben & The Witch, lush and icy electro-pop from Hurts, garage rocking duo Japandroids, psychedelic surf rock from Real Estate, swampy ragged blues from Timber Timbre, indie rock with a side of calisthenics from Darwin Deez, hazy bedroom pop from Best Coast, punky power-popsters The Cheek, primal soundscapes from Wild Palms and psych action from Kiwi band Ruby Suns.

Early bird tickets, that not only get you in to see all the bands but will also get you access to outdoor gigs, afternoon shows, club nights, after parties and much more, are on sale now for a mere 45 Euro here.