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Posts Tagged ‘Thom Yorke’

Liars: Live EP & Tour

NEW EP FEATURES REMIX FROM THOM YORKE


Live at Shephard’s Bush Empire

Liars are releasing
Live at Shepherds Bush Empire, a new EP consisting of five live tracks from their May 27 2010
show at the renowned London venue. The iTunes exclusive EP is out September 28, 2010.

Liars will also release a new single, “Proud Evolution”, as a six track EP on October 19, 2010. The new EP features a
remix from Thom Yorke, a live
version recorded at Music Hall Of Williamsburg in Brooklyn, plus three exclusive new b-sides “Come Now”, “Total
Frown”, and “Strangers”.

Liars make a long awaited return to Canada, playing Toronto and Montreal for the first time since 2006, and playing
Ottawa and Hamilton for the first time ever! Tracklisting and tour dates are below.

TRACKLISTING:

1. Scissor
2. Proud Evolution
3. The Overachievers

4. Clear Island
5. A Visit from Drum

TOUR DATES

9/29/10 – Lee’s Palace – Toronto, ON

9/30/10 – Le National – Pop Montreal (Headline)

10/1/10 – Ritual – Ottawa, ON

10/2/10 – This Aint Hollywood – Hamilton, ON

10/3/10 – Roosevelt Park – Detroit, MI

Click here to read Associate Editor Dennis Cook’s
review of Liars’ latest album Sisterworld

Liars
Tour Dates

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Liars News
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Liars
Concert
Reviews


Outside Lands | 08.14-08.15 | SF

Words by: Dennis Cook & Eric Podolsky | Susan J Weiand & Josh Miller

Outside Lands :: 08.14.10-08.15.10 :: Golden Gate Park :: San Francisco, CA

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”28″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=110″);}); 8/14/10 – 8/15/10 @ Outside Lands Festival (San Francisco, CA) View Photos

Furthur’s John Kadlecik by Weiand

As the expression goes, third time’s the charm. Outside Lands, the biggest Bay Area summer festival, had things dialed in for year three. By trimming two stages, moving the main entrance and generally reorganizing the geography into a long, straight line between stages and tents, OL ’10 was more pleasant, less hectic and generally refined. Subtle changes throughout, including a better-informed staff and a never-ending dance tent, made for a fairly effortless, enjoyable atmosphere. With extensive wine offerings, Korean tacos and perhaps the finest coffee on earth, the Lands once again played to San Fran’s unique sensibilities, which were also reflected in a lineup that tapped local royalty (Furthur), genre defying oddities (Gogol Bordello, Garage A Trois), hipster gold (The Strokes, Phoenix), and rave faves (Pretty Lights, Bassnectar).

Perhaps the best compliment one can give a festival is that it’s thoughtfully assembled. An extra dash or three of care clearly went into the third installment of this growing summer fixture. There was less sound overlap between the stages than either previous year, and the programming moved closer to Bonnaroo’s science-like knack for putting the right bands in the right order on each stage in a way that plays to a certain sensibility, thus cutting down on nomadic wandering between stages, which is admittedly a real hike inside Golden Gate Park, even with the reduced number of stages. Corporate shilling was still strong but Outside Lands is set up in a way that one can largely ignore it and enjoy the bucolic setting – as long as they’ve brought plenty of layers and clothing options to contend with SF’s ever-changing weather, which offered flashes of sunshine Saturday, plenty of damp and largely moderate temps this year before really brightening up on Sunday.

What seemed like a keeper the first two years is now cemented as a pleasant fixture in one of the most singular (and challenging to master) settings for a music festival. Outside Lands is an ambitious yet easygoing affair, and thus a pretty fine fit for the quirky, outer fringe Bay Area. (Dennis Cook)

Saturday Highlights

1. My Morning Jacket :: 5:00-6:30 PM :: Lands End Stage

MMJ’s Jim James by Weiand

With the simple, direct announcement, “Tonight, I want to celebrate with you,” Jim James, omnichord in hand, struck up MMJ’s unique incantation, a mixture of bare skin intimacy and giant size rock spectacle. It’s a combination prone to blow up in lesser hands but MMJ has it sussed to perfection at this point, moving from eyelash flutter hush to sky climbing enormity with such skill and grace it leaves one a bit dizzy. Before “Golden,” James talked about playing a forested, disco ball strewn fest in Japan called Field of Heaven and how being in Golden Gate Park felt like Field of Heaven 2 or Revenge of Field of Heaven. The magic of the moment and specialness of place are rarely lost on MMJ, who excel at bringing the immediate world into focus with their highly romantic yet curiously barbed POV. The beauty of our shared time in such lovely surroundings, especially with MMJ providing the soundtrack, was not lost on many. With the best rock rhythm section from the south since Bill Berry put his sticks away, a colossally compelling frontman (often stalking the stage in a little black cape!), GIANT guitar gusto and one of the finest catalogues in the past 20 years, My Morning Jacket seized hold of the park. As James sighed, “I’ve been waiting for this moment for so long,” one felt a delightful shiver. The time between MMJ shows creates a lovely anticipation for the faithful, the next chapter devoutly wished for and appreciated with moist-eyed sincerity. One of the reoccurring themes in this band is it’s not only okay but essential to feel whatcha feel, and this performance had no lack of emotion, intensity or unflinching honesty. (DC)

Take 2
This band’s perfect blend of epic, crushing rock and Jim James‘ haunting, otherworldly falsetto never fails to deliver, especially on a big stage. Coming back after a big break from touring, one expected them to debut some new material, but their setlist was mostly identical to the 2008 tour (though they did debut a nifty new one called “Circuital”). No matter, they crushed every tune with reverb-laced majesty. Their huge, dreamy sound fit the gorgeous GG Park setting better than any band of the weekend, making them a perfect transition from afternoon into evening. (Eric Podolsky)

2. Wolfmother :: 6:30-7:20 PM :: Sutro Stage

Hands down, Andrew Stockdale and his band of Aussies stole the show on Saturday with the most consistently hard-rocking set of the day. Wolfmother made the most of their fifty-minute set, barraging the audience with song after song of feedback-laced, grungy, riff-laden rock and roll. Playing directly into the misty ocean breeze that descended on GG Park as the sun set, the band made the most of their short time slot by keeping their energy at a continuous peak of sonic mayhem. Ian Peres‘ crunchy Entwistle-like bass lines drove the band through their consistently great catalog, which included a short run through The Doors’ “Riders of the Storm” and a superbly reckless take on The Who’s “Baba O’Reilly.” Top Notch. (EP)

Take 2
With the best cover choices of the day, Wolfmother offered an indication that they aren’t competing with their contemporaries so much as rock’s giants. It’s what most young bands are aiming for but rarely boldly state outright like Stockdale and his new-ish four-piece lineup. What particularly impressed (and even surprised to a degree) is how well their originals stand up next to iconic radio staples like “Riders” and “Baba.” Stockdale has a bloody great set of furnace hot pipes and a gift for mimicry (Morrison and Daltrey have rarely been aped so well), and the quartet interlocks and slams with unified muscle. At this set, Wolfmother could not be ignored as they grasped and thrust at the large crowd, rock’s poking ‘n’ prodding essence kept vibrantly alive in a really enjoyable way. (DC)

3. Levon Helm Band :: 3:45-4:35 PM :: Twin Peaks Stage

Levon Helms by Weiand

“Thank you for all this loveliness,” croaked Levon towards the end of his band’s too brief, utterly satisfying set. Without question, what Levon and co. are doing is the closest thing to The Band that most of us that grew up after Winterland was shut down have experienced. The intertwining of American musics is complete and seemingly effortless with this huge band (10 people onstage by my count), and there’s a touch more growl and attack than one might expect. Levon is not a young man and his age is sometimes apparent, though not when the wind catches his back and he strums a mandolin or drums in a way that makes the years disappear. With an ace band led by Larry Campbell, Helm is keeping the flame lit for one of the cornerstones of rock ‘n’ roll as we know it, and it was a gift to be in his company for a short spell. (DC)

Take 2
Even though Levon’s voice was shot, his professional Americana band of veterans was a breath of fresh air in the middle of a day comprised of young, up-and-coming bands. His group’s sound was defined by its huge four-piece horn section, which gave all those classic Band songs a huge, refreshing sound. Highlights included Levon’s take on Dylan’s “Blind Willie McTell,” and a rousing NOLA two-step “All On A Mardi Gras Day” to close their too-short set. (EP)

4. The Whigs :: 12:00-12:40 PM :: Panhandle Solar Stage

With waves of befuzzed bass, air kicking guitar rattle and crisp, intense drums, The Whigs roared out of the gate, kicking off the day with nothing-held-back energy. They play in an almost archetypal fashion, looking and sounding just like a rock band should. There’s scads of testicular fortitude but also numerous lyrics that recall Thom Yorke at his pithy, prickly best (“I don’t need to kill anyone to prove I’m real,” “Somebody better come and speed up your heart ’cause it’s dying”). Swinging from cavernously thick, Sabbath-worthy crush (often with a downhill speed up near the end of tracks that was honestly exhilarating) to hooky pop to the softly psychedelic, The Whigs showed off their considerable chops and a songwriting acumen that thoroughly skunks most peers. Every track from this year’s In The Dark was stronger live, and by set’s end it was obvious that The Whigs have ALL rock’s fundamentals down cold. (DC)

5. Dawes :: 1:25-2:05 PM :: Panhandle Solar Stage

Touring behind one of the strongest debuts in years, this Southern California band is rapidly shaping up to be one of today’s finest, most striking bands, melding cherry influences like The Band, 70s California rock (Eagles, Jackson Browne, Neil Young, Linda Ronstadt), and heaping measures of barroom gusto and stadium-eyeing moxie. Vocalist-songwriter-guitarist Taylor Goldsmith and his highly in-tune compatriots exude the crackling vibe of the E Street Band in their early club days. Dawes has the same hungry energy about them and the same ceaseless need to connect with every person in the audience, no matter how big or small. Dawes has the talent, tunes and tenacity to achieve great things, and they were fueled by infectious confidence and road hardened tunes in GG Park. Looking around at the sizeable number of people belting out the “oh, oh, oh’s” on “Western Skyline” it was obvious I wasn’t the only one really feeling this band and taking their music into their heart. Only expect the number of faithful followers to grow with this band. (DC)

6. Gogol Bordello :: 3:05-4:05 PM :: Lands End Stage

Gogol Fans by Weiand

In many ways, Gogol Bordello’s MacGyver‘s stew of world musics just shouldn’t work. Fiddles and electric guitars and accordions and menacing moustaches, oh my! Watching them beneath their standard banner of a hand holding a slingshot ready to launch a red star, it became clear at Outside Lands that it’s a rugged, Clash-like undercurrent that stitches this crazy quilt together. They are a People’s Band, marching forward towards truth and love and other big, honorable things, and maybe throwing a steel toe into the shins of aggressors and money hoarders along the way. Often yelling, there’s actually a fair amount of substance inside their routine, where we’re reminded that we’ve only got today to live and not waste on looking backwards at “good old days” that never were. Gogol is also as entertaining as watching a clown car unload onto a water slide. Their energy and sheer gusto for life is endearing and inspiring, and their music ain’t half bad either. (DC)

Honorable Mention: Furthur

Never one to genuflect too deeply at the Grateful Dead altar, even in my 1984-90 peak mania, I’m still not totally convinced by Furthur. At Outside Lands, Bob’s singing was better than usual, and the band played with patient insistence, but it still smacked of guys chasing something that’s unattainable – i.e. raising the ghost of the Grateful Dead. I know these songs – well – and I know there are two guys from the Dead in their ranks but I can’t put my finger on what makes Furthur their own band and that’s what’s off-putting for me. If one is likewise trying to raise that ghost then this might be the best seance on offer today. I think from my perspective I’ll still go with Dark Star Orchestra, but this configuration of Dead veterans, Dead music aficionados and a drummer new to the whole thing are fine musicians all and it’s certainly not an unpleasant way to spend one’s time, especially if one adores this songbook. (DC)

Continue reading for Sunday Highlights…

Al Green by Weiand

While Saturday’s eclectic lineup proved somewhat jarring in its musical scope (Pretty Lights > Levon Helm > Furthur> The Strokes?), Sunday’s focus on soul/R&B/dance music proved more cohesive in the day’s flow. Likewise, the festival crowd’s lack of an identity on Saturday gave way to a looser, more vibey scene on Sunday, which saw the sun come out in GG Park for the first time in weeks. While Saturday felt like a series of concerts, Sunday felt like a real festival experience, with everyone grooving under the eucalyptus trees all day long.

My only real qualm with the very efficiently run urban festival would be the consistently short set times, which forced many bands to squeeze their acts into digestible introductions rather than a legitimate representations. This, when combined with the half-mile walk between stages and overlapping sets, meant you were lucky to catch 35 minutes of a band before having to walk another half-mile back to catch most of the next band you wanted to see. Regardless, there was nary a lull to be had all day, with nine straight hours of fantastic music.

With the huge number of overlapping sets, there were some tough decisions to be made. The toughest had to be the choice of catching Al Green in lieu of both Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros and Garage A Trois. This ended up being a somewhat regrettable choice, as the good Reverend seems to have reached the point in his career where he’s coasting on his own legacy. Al was all smiles and enthusiasm, but when it came to performing, he actually only sang about half of the time. The other half was stage banter, as he preached the merit of his own songbook and threw roses to the crowd. This complacency was easily forgiven though, as this was Al-fucking-Green, and Al Green can do whatever the hell he wants. He knew that most were there just to have said that they saw Al Green, and everyone forgave him when he skipped a verse in the middle of “Let’s Stay Together” to drink some Gatorade. Fantastic version of “Pretty Woman,” though. (Eric Podolsky)

Sunday Highlights

1. Mayer Hawthorne & The County :: 1:30-2:10 PM :: Sutro Stage

Mayer Hawthorne by Weiand

The most fun I had all day was dancing to the one band I had never heard of. Hawthore stole the day for me with his early afternoon set of tight-as-a-drum neo-soul. With a groove equally rooted in 60s Motown, 70s Philly Soul and modern hip-hop, Hawthorne and his band serenaded the crowd with their on-point, Temptations-style falsetto harmonies. In matching suits, the multicultural band delivered earnest, danceable love songs while avoiding both irony and sap, most notably in the slinky “Just Ain’t Gonna Work Out.” Hailing from Detroit, it is clear that Hawthorne has Motown in his blood. His voice is like a cross between classic Smokey Robinson and 70s Michael McDonald, in the best way imaginable. It is not often that a band’s performance finds me actively seeking out their catalog, but this music is so supremely likeable and original that it’s impossible to not be enthralled. (EP)

2. The Devil Makes Three :: 2:10-2:55 PM :: Twin Peaks Stage

By the time this trio from Santa Cruz, CA started their peppy afternoon set, the sun had fully emerged from its cloud shroud, which made for a happy country hoedown in the park. Comprised of banjo, guitar and upright bass, The Devil Makes Three can sure throw a party, thanks to their fantastic songwriting and bouncing, bluegrass basslines. Their sound carries a tinge of jug band inanity, which makes anthemic tunes such as “All Hail” sound like they potentially could have a kazoo in there somewhere, though they don’t. This set really felt like a festival, with the crowd dancing harder than I had seen all weekend. Lead singer/guitarist Pete Bernhard‘s vocals were rollicking and enthusiastic, and the group’s three-part harmonies really captured that “high and lonesome sound.” Cooper McBean‘s loping banjo playing had a cool compression to it, which made it sound like it was being broadcast on an old-time radio show. These guys surely won over a ton of new fans with their set, including this writer. (EP)

3. Janelle Monae :: 3:05-3:55 PM :: Sutro Stage

Who is Janelle Monae? The way this girl is performing people won’t be saying that for much longer. Her set was probably the most anticipated of the weekend, and for good reason. Unfortunately, her flight from Toronto was delayed and she took the stage late, cutting her already short time slot down to around 25 minutes. This was a minor tragedy, as she was simply electric. As soon as she stepped onstage, it was clear that this 24-year old girl is a star in the making. Boasting a perfect pompa-fro, Monae and her band let loose an abridged show of frantic, freaky-deeky hip-hop soul, a la Outkast/ Gnarls Barkley. Prancing around the stage like Andre 3000′s little sister, the pint-sized Monae showed off serious pipes and dance moves to match. Her three-piece band was somewhat of an accessory to the pre-recorded tracks that they played along with, but no matter, it was a performance and she worked it. The set peaked and ended with a funky take on “Tightrope,” in which Monae wailed and thrashed about on the drum riser in a cape. Monae’s music has that frantic, weird, Danger Mouse feel to it, and she can sing like Beyonce. In other words, expect to see this girl on MTV sooner than later. (EP)

Phoenix by Weiand

4. Phoenix :: 5:55-6:55 PM :: Lands End Stage

These guys probably attracted the most fervent young fans of the weekend, which crunched the pit with bodies and energy. Frontman Thomas Mars was acutely aware and supremely grateful of his audience, and responded with a balls-out rock star performance of festival-size proportion. Phoenix has so many catchy, infectious, utterly danceable rock songs that their live show is bound to be a great time. The band played (and nailed) them all with drummer Thomas Hedlund kicking some serious ass, though it was Mars who owned every minute of this show. His earnest, clear-eyed vocal delivery truly defines this band. It was eye-opening how good his voice sounded live, and his patented repetition of phrases was right in groove with the tunes. Mars seemed so genuinely happy and grateful for his audience that his rock star stage antics came across as endearing, where his amp climbing and stage diving worked and fed the show’s energy well. This was the most fun rock show I’ve seen in a long time. (EP)

5. Budos Band :: 7:40-8:25 PM :: Panhandle Stage

Playing at the tiny stage, the Budos Band were the sleepers of the weekend, and the intimate crowd that chose to forgo Kings of Leon for some real music were rewarded for it. Though their 45-minute twilight set was far too short to really get into the zone, the ten-piece band (four being percussionists) of Daptone fame laid it down for us in the park with strutting, hard-hitting instrumental Afrobeat funk. This was a heavy groove with a huge sound, with Jared Tankel‘s baritone sax was at the forefront of the polyrhythms rumbling our sternums with its low squawks. The music inspired a stomping, elephant-march dance party of a few hundred people as the sky darkened, and we got our ya-yas out, knowing the end of the weekend was upon us. (EP)

6. Chromeo :: 5:15-6:05 PM :: Twin Peaks Stage

Chromeo Fans by Weiand

Usually, DJ sets don’t really do it for me in a festival setting, as they’re better suited for a late-night club dance party, but Chromeo’s music is just so silly and fun that it translated very well to a sunny afternoon in the park. Their music is a straight tongue-in-cheek tribute to early-80s electro-soul, a celebration of robot rock, and a straight vocoder party. The duo, perched behind their keyboards with woman leg stands (think the lamp in A Christmas Story), played live guitar, keyboards and vocoder along with their backing tracks, and inspired the weekend’s biggest dance party in the process. Alternating Dave 1‘s sung vocals with P-Thugg‘s vocoder-enhanced vocals, Chromeo delivered clever lyrics about gettin’ it on atop layered funk. At one point, after a tease of “Money For Nothing” and somewhere in the middle of “Bonafied Lovin’,” some rowdies knocked the barrier fence down and gate crashed, inspiring cheers throughout the audience. There’s nothing like gettin’ down in the park with a few thousand other peeps to really make your day. (EP)

JamBase | Outside
Go See Live Music!


Autolux: New Album in August Tour Dates & New Tracks

FIRST ALBUM SINCE 2004′S FUTURE PERFECT


Autolux

Autolux‘s sophomore album, Transit Transit, will be released on August 2nd,
2010, on ATP Recordings.

Since they stopped touring in support of Future Perfect in 2006, Autolux has been steadily crafting the
songs that make up Transit Transit, as well as continuing to play shows to an ever-growing fan base and
opening for PJ Harvey on her first solo tour of Russia, and more recently, Thom Yorke, with his latest project,
Atoms For Peace. In September 2009, Autolux went on their first headlining US tour, which included an
appearance at the Flaming Lips’curated All Tomorrow’s Parties.

Autolux (Carla Azar: vocals/drums, Greg Edwards: vocals/guitar, and Eugene
Goreshter:
vocals/bass) produced Transit Transit themselves with Edwards serving as engineer. It was
recorded in the band’s studio, Space 23, located near downtown Los Angeles.

Head over to Stereogum to listen to new tracks “Supertoys,” and
“Audience No.2″

Transit Transit track listing:

1. “Transit Transit”
2. “Census”
3. “Highchair”
4. “Supertoys”
5. “Spots”
6. “The Bouncing Wall”
7. “Audience No. 2″
8. “Kissproof”
9. “Headless Sky”
10. “The Science of Imaginary Solutions”

Autolux are heading out on tour starting on August 11 at the Great American Music Hall in San Francisco. Check
below for a complete list of dates.

Autolux
Tour Dates

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Autolux News ::
Autolux
Concert
Reviews


Saturday Eye Candy Radiohead’s Phil Selway

GIVING THE DRUMMER SOME

Though critical and fan accolades usually land on guitarists Jonny Greenwood and Ed O’Brien and the lazy-eyed genius out front, Radiohead‘s sound, especially as it’s evolved from OK Computer onward, owes just as much to drummer Phil Selway. A dead brilliant trap drummer, Selway has also explored the outer reaches of drum machine potential and carried the classlic Krautrock percussion sound into the 21st century. Tomorrow is Phil Selway’s 43rd birthday. In appreciation of his contribution to the drumming arts and modern rock in general, we offer up a smattering of prime Selway, both with Radiohead and in occasional side project 7 Worlds Collide.

We begin our natal day shout-out with Radiohead at their simmering best.

There are but a handful of drummers that could pull off the twists and turns of this one, all the while making it swing.

Selway’s a pretty fine singer-songwriter, too, as evidenced by this lovely Selway penned number, which finds him out front on guitar and vocals.

As one astute YouTube commenter put it, “That’s serious fucking drumming.” Indeed.

Selway’s drumming will often bring heft and solidity into band’s pretty, drifting numbers; a lovely juxtaposition against the ache and fragility in Thom Yorke’s voice.

Though if the Selway had wanted to be a crushing great straight rock drummer, he sure as hell had the chops and muscle right out of the gate.

Radiohead Tour Dates :: Radiohead News :: Radiohead Concert Reviews


Coachella | 04.18.10 | Day 3 Photo Gallery

Images by: Steven Walter & Scott Dudelson

Coachella Day 3

04.18.10 :: Sunday :: Empire Polo Grounds :: Indio, CA

The final day of Coachella 2010 featured Gorillaz, the freshly reunited Pavement, Thom Yorke/Atoms For Peace, French hot shots Phoenix, Spoon, The Strokes’ Julian Casablancas, Florence And The Machine, Sly & the Family Stone, The Big Pink, Yo La Tengo, Sunny Day Real Estate, B.o.B. and many more. Here’s a look at what went down.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”1″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=26″);}); Coachella Music Festival Day 3 | Empire Polo Grounds | Indio, CA The JamBase photo gallery from the third and final day of Coachella 2010 features Gorillaz, Thom Yorke / Atoms For Peace, Pavement, The Big Pink, Phoenix, Deerhunter, Bradford Cox, Matt /&/g Kim, Florence And The Machine, Julian Casablancas, Yo La Tengo, B.o.B, Charlotte Gainsbourg, De La Soul, Jonsi, Mayer Hawthorne & The County, MuteMath, Spoon, Sunny Day Real Estate, Yann Tiersen and more… View Photos

See JamBase’s “9 Must-See Band At Coachella” here.

See photos from Friday at Coachella here.

See photos from Saturday at Coachella here.

JamBase | California

Go See Live Music!


Flying Lotus Celebrates 4/20

DUBLAB SESSION WITH SPECIAL GUESTS
4/20 PRE-ORDER GOODIES FOR NEW ALBUM

To celebrate 4/20 and the forthcoming release of his new album, Cosmogramma, Flying Lotus and members of his Brainfeeder crew will descend on the Dublab studios in Los Angeles for several hours to play some records and make some sounds especially for you.

FlyLo

To open the show, FlyLo will take you through the chosen cuts from his new LP, out May 4. Other likely participants include The Gaslamp Killer, Ras G, Daedelus, Teebs, Matthewdavid, Dr. Strangeloop and more.

Listen and chatroom link with the studio here.

On Air Live Times by region:

12:00 PM – LA
3:00 PM – NYC
8:00 PM – UK
9:00 PM – CET
4:00 AM – JAPAN

For 24-hours on 4/20, all pre-orders of any physical format of Cosmogramma will come with a print of an art piece, “Sketch Head” by Flying Lotus himself, for no extra cost. Each copy of the high gloss, 140 x 125mm print will be hand-stamped. This special pre-order bonus will be available for only 24-hours from Bleep.com.

As an extra twist, the original pen & watercolor piece will be placed at random in one package chosen from the 4/20 Bleep pre-orders. Meaning one lucky listener will get an extra special surprise on release day.

Cosmogramma (featuring Thom Yorke, Thundercat, Miguel Atwood Ferguson, Ravi Coltrane and many more) is released on Limited First Edition CD with foil-blocked slipcase, Double Gatefold LP, Standard CD and Digital on May 4. For information on this release pop over here.

Flying Lotus Tour Dates :: Flying Lotus News :: Flying Lotus Concert Reviews


Thom Yorke/Atoms For Peace | 04.05 | NYC

Words by: Nick Todaro | Images by: Josh Jarrett

Thom Yorke/Atoms For Peace :: 04.05.10 :: Roseland Ballroom :: New York, NY

Yorke & Flea – Atoms For Peace :: 04.05 :: NYC

Beneath the digital glitter that the world refers to as Times Square, there’s a hidden layer of contextual meaning that provides an explanation as to why our world has become so hectically distorted. Taking a look around this area, advertising displays dominate the landscape; completely side swiping the architectural marvels that wait at every corner and undermining the gritty sincerity such a metropolis has to offer. For the average tourist, looking up at the Roseland Ballroom‘s marquee displaying “Atoms For Peace: Sold Out” must have meant absolutely nothing amidst the sea of endless billboards. However, if you were one of the people waiting in the line wrapping around the block to get into to the Roseland, it meant nothing less than the world.

Back in October, Thom Yorke assembled an all-star backing band consisting of Radiohead producer Nigel Godrich, Red Hot Chili Peppers bassist Flea, R.E.M. and Beck touring drummer Joey Waronker and percussionist Mauro Refosco of Forro in the Dark to play Yorke’s solo material. Now performing under the name Atoms For Peace, the group kicked off their first tour in New York.

DJ mastermind Flying Lotus opened the evening by delivering an animated set to an eager audience. For the majority of his performance, FlyLo grooved and lip-synced his way around the material while keeping his beats well knit. Regardless of his skills as a DJ, the Roseland’s speakers were not able to handle the bass frequency of the performance. Cracking thuds kept interrupting the sound quality during the most unfortunate of moments. Ending his set with a remix of Radiohead’s “Idioteque,” FlyLo hyped the crowd right when they needed it most. “It’s almost that time,” he announced as the song came to a halt and the house lights came back up.

Atoms For Peace :: 04.05 :: NYC

A half hour later the fervent audience erupted into applause as the room went dark once again. Walking to the left side of the stage, Thom Yorke sat down at his piano to commence a full band recreation of his 2006 solo album The Eraser with the LP’s title track. Along with the addition of a horn player, the band expanded towards a much denser sound than the record displays and instantly threw the crowd into a sonic trance.

Continuing the album in sequence, “Analyse” gave Yorke a chance to demonstrate his arcane falsetto. As the Ballroom attendees continued to fill the room with cheers, Mauro Refosco grabbed hold of a Whamola to add a compelling new element to “The Clock.” After upbeat favorite “Black Swan,” another instrumental surprise occurred with Flea – who happened to be rocking blue hair – swapping out his bass guitar for a melodica to produce a spellbinding version of “Skip Divided.” Together, Yorke and Flea looked like a couple of snake charmers dancing underneath the entrancing arsenal of green pulsating luminosity. Clearly, these guys were having an absolute blast.

Godrich’s stalky silhouette hovered over an assortment of electronics and synthesizers while keeping busy on “Atoms For Peace” and “It Rained All Night.” Both of these songs received a huge crowd response, especially during the latter’s stand out line, “And it rained all night and washed the filth away/ Down New York air condition drains.” Keeping the energy level high, “Harrowdown Hill” gave Flea a rare opportunity to return to his slap bass roots, which attached a new layer of funkiness to the tune. As “Cymbal Rush” concluded the opening set, eyes remained fixated on the whirling figures up on the stage.

Thom Yorke – Atoms For Peace :: 04.05 :: NYC

After a brief encore break, Yorke returned to perform a few songs solo. “Boy! There’s a lot of stuff to remember in those songs. Speaking of remembering, here’s one you’ve never heard before,” he said before debuting “Chris Hodge/Let Me Take Control.” The number features a trill vocal performance by Yorke as he supplely finger picks his way around the guitar. Following this was a piano driven “Daily Mail,” which Yorke debuted last summer. Building up to the song’s pinnacle of pouncing chords, Yorke sent the crowd into a frenzy as he finished and went into the Radiohead classic “Everything In Its Right Place.”

After another short break the rest of the guys rejoined Yorke, and the group dove into the Radiohead b-side “Paperbag Writer” before plunging into a new Radiohead track entitled “Judge, Jury, Executioner.” Held together by a bouncy rhythmic core, the song boasts a dimension of gloominess that’s become one of the signature elements of Radiohead’s music. Grinning, Yorke added a sense of foreshadowing to the last songs by stating, “We’re about to get crazy up here.” Soon, the room became immersed in a battle between jumpy bass patterns and frantic percussion rhythms during “Hollow Earth.” Similarly, “Feeling Pulled Apart By Horses” felt completely disorderly with its changing time signature, while maintaining a strict composition that could only have been masterminded by Yorke. Ending the track in a glitchy jam, the band waved their final goodbyes and the crowd pleaded for more.

Walking out of the Roseland and back into the dizzying clutter of lights in Times Square, many seemed to be wondering if these live performances would result in the group collaborating on an album together or further touring. Underneath the tangled assortment of propagated messages, experiencing something with such a consequential vibe to it seemed far too genuine to have a limited number of occurrences. If Atoms For Peace is any indication of Yorke continuing his career outside of Radiohead, we’re in for one hell of a ride.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”1″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=20″);}); Thom Yorke / Atoms For Peace | Roseland Ballroom | New York, NY Thom Yorke’s new band Atoms For Peace kick off their tour at New York’s Roseland Ballroom to a sold out crowd… View Photos

Thom Yorke/Atoms For Peace:: 04.05.10 :: Roseland Ballroom :: New York, NY
The Eraser, Analyse, The Clock, Black Swan, Skip Divided, Atoms For Peace, And It Rained All Night, Harrowdown Hill, Cymbal Rush

E: ChrisHodge/Let Me Take Control (NEW SONG)*, The Daily Mail*, Everything In Its Right Place*

E2: Paperbag Writer, Judge, Jury & Executioner, Hollow Earth, Feeling Pulled Apart By Horses


* = Yorke Solo

Atoms For Peace Tour Dates :: Atoms For Peace News :: Atoms For Peace Concert Reviews

JamBase | Right Place
Go See Live Music!


Coachella Passes Sold Out Set Times Available Now

DOORS OPEN AT 11 A.M. ON FRIDAY, APRIL 16
FESTIVAL HEADLINERS INCLUDE JAY-Z, MUSE,
GORILLAZ AND THOM YORKE

All passes for the Coachella Valley Music And Arts Festival in Indio, California are now sold out.

Record attendance is expected for the three day festival which begins on Friday, April 16 and runs through Sunday,
April 18. Festival headliners include Jay-Z, Muse, Gorillaz and Thom Yorke. Doors open at 11 a.m.
each day.

The final set schedule has been released.
Click HERE for all set times.

For more on Coachella check out our 2009 review here.

Coachella 2009 by Dave Vann


Christian Scott Covers Thom Yorke on New Album

Grammy-nominated Trumpeter Christian Scott to Release

Yesterday You Said Tomorrow March 30 on Concord Jazz

Christian Scott

On March 30, star trumpeter Christian Scott will release Yesterday You Said Tomorrow, his all-new 10-song collection. The album was recorded at Van Gelder Studio in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey where legendary Rudy Van Gelder engineered the work. Van Gelder, who is known for his work with John Coltrane, Miles Davis and Herbie Hancock among others, says about the new album, “This is one of the best things I have done in a long, long time.” Yesterday You Said Tomorrow was co-produced by Scott and Chris Dunn and marks the young trumpeter’s fourth Concord Jazz release.

Born in New Orleans in 1983, Scott has always been acutely aware of the legacy of jazz and its role within the broader context of 20th century history. Regarding the new album, Scott says, “I wanted to create a musical backdrop that referenced everything I liked about the music from the ’60s – Miles Davis’ second quintet, Coltrane’s quartet, Mingus’ band – coupled with music made by people like Bob Dylan and Jimi Hendrix. The music from that era just had more depth, whether it was jazz or rock or folk or whatever. The political and social climate at the time was much heavier, and there were a few musicians who weren’t afraid to reference that climate in their work. The
ones who did that – and at the same time captivated people in a way that referenced their own humanity – were the ones who ended up lasting the longest.”

Yesterday You Said Tomorrow references a saying that Scott’s grandfather would use to emphasize the importance of recognizing the work at hand and making the most of the available time to complete it. He is aided by guitarist Matthew Stevens, pianist Milton Fletcher, Jr., bassist Kristopher Keith Funn and drummer Jamire Williams. Scott addresses the issues head on, regardless of how uncomfortable the subject matter may be. He opens the set with “K.K.P.D.,” a track full of dark harmonies and tense, competing polyrhythms. The title stands for “Ku Klux Police Department,” a reference to what Scott calls the “phenomenally dark and evil” attitude held by some of the local police toward African American citizens of New Orleans when he was growing up – and the similar dynamic that persists there and in other cities to this day.


Scott wipes away some of the darker shades in “The Eraser,” the melodic second track penned by singer-songwriter Thom Yorke, co-founder and frontman of Radiohead (“The Eraser” is the title track to Yorke’s 2006 solo debut). The aptly titled piece resets the tone of the overall recording, says Scott. “With that song, we’re erasing the issue that was raised in the previous song, and then the album starts,” he says. “Those first two songs are very much a part of the album, but they’re there to establish an environment where you’re willing to listen to whatever else we have to say, because you’ve been opened up to the validity of the original argument.”

Since his Concord debut, Rewind That, Scott has received significant accolades. He was quickly tapped as one of the faces to watch by Billboard, received a Grammy nomination for Rewind That and named one of Ebony‘s “30 Young Leaders Under 30.”

Christian Scott Tour Dates :: Christian Scott News :: Christian Scott Articles


Thom Yorke: Tour Dates

THOM YORKE DATES CONFIRMED IN NEW YORK, BOSTON, CHICAGO, OAKLAND, SANTA BARBARA

Yorke, Waronker, Refosco, Flea, Godrich

Thom Yorke announced today at radiohead.com/deadairspace that his band Atoms For Peace (previously billed as ????) will play a series of eight U.S. shows leading up to its April 18 appearance at the Coachella festival in Indio, CA.

The Atoms For Peace lineup remains the same as when the band performed three shows in Los Angeles last October: Yorke, Flea, Mauro Refosco, Joey Waronker and Nigel Godrich. See below for full itinerary and check waste.uk.com for on sale details.

Thom Yorke/Atoms For Peace

(Flying Lotus Supports New York Through Oakland)

04.05 New York, NY Roseland Ballroom

04.06 New York, NY Roseland Ballroom

04.08 Boston, MA Citi Wang Theatre

04.10 Chicago, IL Aragon Ballroom

04.11 Chicago, IL Aragon Ballroom

04.14 Oakland, CA Fox Theatre

04.15 Oakland, CA Fox Theatre

04.17 Santa Barbara, CA Santa Barbara Bowl

04.18 Indio, CA Coachella


Flying Lotus: New Album w/ Yorke, Badu & More

FLYING LOTUS RETURNS WITH THE NEW ALBUM COSMOGRAMMA

SET FOR RELEASE MAY 4, 2010 ON WARP RECORDS

Flying Lotus

Flying Lotus has grown into the position of being far more than a producer, he has helped materialize a far-reaching strain of musical ideology that has encompassed not only a global family of like-minded artists, but also a nearly infinite palate of planetary (and interplanetary) sonics. Now he returns with Cosmogramma on May 4.

On his new album an entirely new range of sounds has been unlocked by our intrepid astral traveler, but every genre touchstone associated with his name has been merged into a self-described space opera. Seamless in execution and too wide in scope to properly describe, it is the authentic embodiment of his unique musical heritage. The spirit of his famed aunt, Alice Coltrane permeates the record, notably in the powerful collaborations with relative Ravi Coltrane, bass virtuoso Thundercat and the brilliant harp prodigy, Rebekah Raff.

Certainly these are further reaches into a musical space that Flying Lotus had hitherto been exploring, however other collaborators such as Erykah Badu and Outkast string arranger Miguel Atwood-Ferguson and guest vocalists Thom York and a returning Laura Darlington help deliver Cosmogramma to dizzying new heights. All this name-dropping, however, is not to detract from the genius of the wizard-like figure behind it all. The most powerful aspect of FlyLo’s output has always been it s ability to communicate his boundless love and enthusiasm for music in all it’s forms and that is what is boldly on display here.

Cosmogramma Track List:

01. Clock Catcher
02. Pickled!
03. Nose Art
04. Intro//A Cosmic Drama
05. Zodiac Shit
06. Computer Face//Pure Being
07. ..And The World Laughs With You ft. Thom Yorke
08. Arkestry
09. Mmmhmm ft.Thundercat
10. Do The Astral Plane
11. Satelllliiiiiteee
12. German Haircut
13. Recoiled
14. Dance Of The Pseudo Nymph
15. Drips//Auntie’s Harp
16. Table Tennis ft. Laura Darlington
17. Galaxy In Janaki

Flying Lotus tour dates available here.


Albums of the Week: February 5-11

JamBase Albums of the Week | February 5-February 11, 2010

Dennis’ Pick of the Week
Galactic: Ya-Ka-May (Anti)

These sons of New Orleans have done their city proud by honoring Armstrong, Prof. Longhair, and other innovators and crafting a distinct, resolutely modern collection that successfully incorporates ancestral elements. Less hip-hop oriented than its predecessor, 2007′s From the Corner to the Block, this announces with authority that music continues to evolve in the Big Easy, absorbing the crispness and edge prevalent on today’s charts and folding it into the city’s irresistible tub-thumping, primal swing. Ya-Ka-May (arriving February 9) differentiates itself from most other modern soul/funk by retaining a human feel, often felt in the crackling rawness of guest vocalists like Allen Toussaint, Big Chief Bo Dollis and Irma Thomas and big band largess of drum stud Stanton Moore. In these settings, the old hands school today’s chart toppers and Galactic themselves reveal what a sham the bloodless, Pro-Tools, Auto-Tuned mainstream really is. Bangers like “Liquor Pang,” “Dark Water” and “Double It” are ripe to go toe-to-toe with anything Timbaland or Lil’ Wayne serve up, except these sweat and grunt in a way that sidesteps the factory produced sterility of most mass consumption singles. One longs to see this entire assemblage tour as a massive revue that would showcase the interlocking nature of New Orleans music throughout several generations. Ya-Ka-May is a juggernaut of fat grooves and slinky sensibilities that announces that New Orleans is alive and well, at least when Galactic is the custodian of its traditions. (Dennis Cook)

Ron’s Pick of the Week
Peter Gabriel: Scratch My Back (EMI)

If there is anything to be learned about Peter Gabriel in the 40-plus years he has been in the pop eye, it’s the fact that he is definitely one advanced-minded Englishman. Whether it be pushing the boundaries of rock ‘n’ roll theatre as the Fox-headed, flute playing frontman of Genesis, with his music videos in the 1980s as a solo act, or the art of the film score with his stunning soundtracks to such critically acclaimed films as The Last Temptation of Christ and Rabbit Proof Fence over the last 20 years, the man hasn’t seen a glass ceiling he didn’t want to throw a bowling ball through. So, leave it up to PG to reinvent the concept of the covers album as well, which is exactly what he’s done with the haunting Scratch My Back (arriving February 16 in the U.K. and March 2 in the U.S.), his first proper solo album since 2002′s Up. With nothing more than a piano and a string section, Gabriel handpicks a dozen songs – six from like-minded contemporaries David Bowie, Paul Simon, Neil Young, Lou Reed, Randy Newman and David Byrne, and six from some of the newer acts he admires like Radiohead, Bon Iver, Elbow, Regina Spektor, The Magnetic Fields and Arcade Fire – and by the power of his unmistakable rasp, makes every one of them entirely his own. Most of his choices fit swimmingly with the stripped down format, most notably Bon Iver’s haunting “Flume,” Young’s “Philadelphia,” Reed’s “The Power of the Heart” and surprisingly, “Listening Wind,” a deep cut from Talking Heads’ Remain In Light. But it’s his take on Simon’s Graceland hit “The Boy in the Bubble,” substituting the song’s quasi-Zydeco buoyancy with a downright somber arrangement that really brings out the paranoia in the song’s Orwellian message that seems more fitting now than it did in 1987. Following Scratch My Back is I’ll Scratch Yours, where the artists featured here have their way with the Peter Gabriel catalog. Thom Yorke is allegedly already on board and planning to record “Wallflower” from Gabriel’s 1982 album Security. And one could only hope Randy Newman comes through with a full-on Basin Street run through “Sledgehammer.” (Ron Hart)

Salvador Santana: Keyboard City (Quannum)

The label that brought us Blackalicious, Lyrics Born and other bright lights in today’s funk/hip-hop scene scores again with Santana’s solo debut, a swirling analog hot tub of muddled Latinismo (a la War), lilting disco, ’70s Herbie Hancock-isms, the brighter side of Gil Scott-Heron & Brian Jackson and video game bloops. Nuggets like “Don’t Even Care” and “This Day (Belongs To You)” are sonic sunshine and ooh, don’t it feel good. Helped out by Money Mark, Gza and Del the Funky Homosapien, Keyboard City (released February 2) is a lovingly stirred concoction that goes down as sweetly as home brewed lemonade on a thermometer poppin’ afternoon. (DC)

King Crimson: Lizard: 40th Anniversary Edition (Panegyric/Discipline Global Mobile)

The 40th anniversary remaster campaign of British progressive rock titans King Crimson, helmed with great detail by group founder and resident guitar genius Robert Fripp and self-anointed uber-fan Steven Wilson of Porcupine Tree, with the deluxe edition of Crimson’s third and most challenging album, Lizard (released January 12). In his scholarly liner notes, Fripp derides his group’s 1970 work as “unsatisfactory” and “joyless”. But thanks to the skillful care of Wilson’s loving revamp, which features bonus material and a DVD-A containing the album in lossless 5.1 surround sound stereo, he renewed the doubtful author’s faith in its unprecedented fusion of classical, free jazz and experimental rock. And if you never quite took to the most misunderstood monster of the King Crimson canon like you did with, say Red or Discipline, allow this definitive version to school you on the brilliance of this legendary band’s transitional classic. (RH)

The Wishing Tree: Ostara (Eagle)

“It’s time for eyes to open now/ It’s time to raise the dead.” Uttered by the honeyed, effervescent voice of Hannah Stobart and given further lift by Marillion guitarist Steve Rothery (who also produced and engineered), these lines are indicative of the big ideas and striking beauty of this prog-pop outing, which begs comparisons to All About Eve, Jane Siberry and frothier Peter Gabriel. Unabashedly romantic and sweetly melodic, Ostara resonates with Rothery’s Fish-era Marillion work infused with female energies. A fine, lovingly sculpted second outing by this pair (released January 19). (DC)

Pierced Arrows: Descending Shadows (VICE)

Garage punk fans the world over were rightfully shocked when Fred and Toody Cole unexpectedly put their longtime group Dead Moon out to pasture in 2006, just six months after the release of Sub Pop’s stellar two-disc anthology, Echoes of the Past (JamBase review) chronicling the Oregon mainstays’ two-decade-strong run. But as quick as they were to shoot the Moon, they returned just as quickly in the form of Pierced Arrows, whose only significant change was the replacement of longtime drummer Andrew Loomis with Portland punker Kelly Hallliburton, whose father played with Fred in the ’60s. Descending Shadows (released February 2) is the Coles’ second album under the new moniker, and finds them as visceral in their AARP years as they were when they first started rattling cages in the Pacific Northwest 20-odd years ago. (RH)

Big Smith: Roots, Shoots & Wings (Mayapple)

It’d be very easy for a group with song titles like “Toted A Load” and “My Overalls (Don’t Fit Me Anymore)” to be jokey, just another tongue-in-cheek country act like Nashville pumps out with alarming regularity. Happily, Big Smith is rootsy as hell and slathered in hot jazz technique, pinches of dissonance, an earthy vocal mix that’s part bluegrass & part The Band, and a good sense of bittersweet humor. If anything, they remind one of early killer Jimmy Buffett and the ’70s Outlaw Country gang, right down to Willy’s penchant for swing. Damn fine band, sweet lil’ album (arriving February 9). (DC)

Black Cobra: Chronomega (Southern Lord)

Though only two players deep, San Francisco’s Black Cobra play their unique brand of sludgy punk-metal with the precision and fury of the four-to-five man Bay Area thrash bands that preceded them 25 years ago. Their fourth album and Southern Lord debut shows ex-Cavity guitarist/vocalist Jason Landrian and one-time Acid King drummer Rafael Martinez can throw down their trademark Death Angel-cum-Melvins style riff attacks. Chronomega also shows how well these guys can space out a la Sunn 0))) and Earth as well. (RH)

Field Music: (Measure) (Memphis Industries)

Following a short three-year break that saw the Brothers Brewis record a pair of respective solo albums that barely held up to their work as a group, Field Music makes a momentous return to the world stage in 2010 with a magnificent double LP that explores the darker edges of the English duo’s Steely Dan-gone-indie-rock sound. (Measure) (arriving February 16) finds the Brewis boys challenging themselves by adding prog-jazz phrasing, rhythm-defying time signatures and embellishments of guitar fuzz to their effortless harmonies, all married perfectly across this 20 song thread about the human condition. Few newer bands could pull off a double album with such panache, and Field Music stay in line with the age-old tradition of making theirs a masterpiece. (RH)

Lionel Loueke: Mwaliko (Blue Note)

Following up on his 2007 star-making Herbie Hancock-produced debut Karibu, West African guitar lion Lionel Loueke pays homage to his motherland on his second Blue Note offering. Here, Loueke tests his dazzling fusion of playing, rooted in the fretwork rulebooks of Jim Hall and King Sunny Ade, against a series of intimate duets with the likes of vocalist Angelique Kidjo (who hails from the guitarist’s home nation of Benin), singer/bassists Esperanza Spalding and Richard Bona, as well as promising young jazz drummer Marcus Gilmore, the grandson of the immortal Roy Haynes. However, Mwaliko‘s true gems are three new tracks featuring his longtime trio rounded out by Massimo Biolcati and drummer Ferenc Nemeth, whose seamless interplay is unmatched in 21st century jazz. (RH)

Various Artists: Psych Bites: Australian Acid Freak Rock -1967-1974 (Vol. 1) (Past & Present)

If there is anything we learned from AC/DC, The Birthday Party and Lubricated Goat, it’s that the Australian continent shows no fear in displaying its collective ability to get loud. So it should come to no surprise that Oz’s surprisingly little-known late ’60s/early ’70s psychedelic rock scene was equally as brain melting. Compiled by master freak rock archivist Psychomania for Bevis Frond frontman Nick Salomon’s Past & Present imprint, Psych Bites (released February 2) compiles 20 super heavy, mega-rare artifacts from Australia and New Zealand’s second and third wave freak rock movements, a true collector’s bin of bands you’ve probably never heard of but should like Pirana, Long Grass, Flake, Chook, Freshwater and The Dave Miller Set, to name a few. Dig it! (RH)


Listen To Thom Yorke & Gilles Peterson on BBC Radio

Thom Yorke Joins Gilles Peterson To Co-Host BBC Radio Show

Thom Yorke

Radiohead‘s Thom Yorke joins BBC Radio 1′s Gilles Peterson to co-host a special radio show. BBC’s website bills the show as: “joining the musical dots – soul, hip hop, house, Afro, Latin, dubstep, jazz and beyond.”

In addition to playing tracks, Yorke discusses Radiohead’s future (they are getting back to work soon), his solo band, climate change, politics and much more.

You can listen to the entire show at www.bbc.co.uk.

Here’s the complete track list from the show:

Christoph de Babalon — Are You Talking To Me?

Cross Fade Entertainment Floating Points — People’s Potential
Eglo Floating Points — Vacuum Boogie
Eglo Pangaea — Why
Hessle Darkstar — Need You
Hyperdub Gil Scott-Heron — I’ll take Care Of You
XL Charles Mingus — Mood Indigo
His Master’s Voice Sun Ra — On Jupiter
Art Yard MF DOOM — Great Day (Fourtet remix)
Domino Jay Eletronica — Exhibit C
Society TY: Shadows Of Tomorrow — Madlib & Quasimoto
Pinnacle Los Silvertones — Carman
Soundway TY: Can — Oh Yeah
United Artists George Russell — Electonic Sonata For Souls Loved By Nature Part 1
Flying Dutchman/Atco TY: Blaqstarr & Diplo — Get Off (The Rob 3 remix)
Mad Decent Protocol South Rakkas Crew — Mad Again (Boy 8 Bit Mix)
Mad Decent GP: Rockwell — Unknown TrackAlex Cortex — Huyendo Part 2
Klang Elektronik Milton Nascimento — Pao E Agua
EMI Clinic — Distortions
Domino Dam-Funk — Searching For Funk’s Future
Stones Throw GP: Brad Mehldau — Everything In It’s Right Place
Nonesuch João Gilberto — Aguas de Marco

And check our a preview of the show here:


Coachella: Jay-Z, Pavement, Yorke Vultures, Muse, MGMT, Claypool

COACHELLA VALLEY MUSIC & ARTS FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES 2010 LINEUP

JAY-Z, MUSE AND GORILLAZ HEADLINE 3-DAY FESTIVAL WITH MORE THAN 130 ACTS

TICKETS ON SALE FRIDAY, JANUARY 22 AT 10:00 AM

Coachella 2009 by Dave Vann

The 11th COACHELLA VALLEY MUSIC & ARTS FESTIVAL will feature a mix of artists ranging from Pavement, Thom Yorke???? (ed note: that is how they are billing it), Vampire Weekend, Them Crooked Vultures, LCD Soundsystem, Phoenix, Tiësto, Faith No More, Deadmau5, David Guetta, MGMT and Public Image Limited. Set for Friday, April 16, Saturday, April 17 and Sunday, April 18 at the beautiful Empire Polo Club in Indio, CA – the same grounds where COACHELLA debuted in 1999 – the COACHELLA 2010 lineup will feature more than 130 acts.

This year’s COACHELLA will feature a variety of options to make the concert experience an enjoyable one. In addition to expanded camping options – including car, RV and traditional tent camping – COACHELLA will allow, for the first time, in-and-out privileges for all attendees. Festival goers will once again have the ability to purchase 3-day festival tickets and various onsite camping options via an easy layaway payment plan.

For those looking to streamline the weekend’s experience, COACHELLA has teamed with Valley Music Travel to provide exclusive travel packages, local hotel shuttle transportation and private home rentals with VIP COACHELLA access. For more information and to purchase tickets, please visit www.valleymusictravel.com/coachella.php.

FRIDAY APRIL 16: Jay-Z, LCD Soundsystem, Them Crooked Vultures, Vampire Weekend, Deadmau5, Public Image Limited, The Specials, Grizzly Bear, Passion Pit, Echo and the Bunnymen, Benny Benassi, Fever Ray, Grace Jones, She & Him, Erol Alkan, The Avett Brothers, Calle 13, The Whitest Boy Alive, The Cribs, La Roux, Yeasayer, Lucero, DJ Lance Rock, The Dillinger Escape Plan, Proxy, Ra Ra Riot, Deer Tick, Wolfgang Gartner, Aeroplane, Iglu & Hartly, Sleigh Bells, P.O.S., Baroness, Hockey, Little Dragon, White Rabbits, Wale, Kate Miller-Heidke, As Tall as Lions, Jets Overhead, Alana Grace, Pablo Hassan.


SATURDAY, APRIL 17: Muse, Faith No More, Tiësto, MGMT, David Guetta, The Dead Weather, Hot Chip, Devo, Coheed and Cambria, Kaskade, 2Many DJ’s, Major Lazer, Dirty Projectors, Gossip, Z-Trip, The xx, John Waters, Les Claypool, The Raveonettes, Mew, Sia, Camera Obscura, Tokyo Police Club, Porcupine Tree, Old Crow Medicine Show, Aterciopalados, Bassnectar, Frightened Rabbit, Dirty South, Flying Lotus, Corinne Bailey Rae, Pretty Lights, Shooter Jennings, RX Bandits, The Almighty Defenders, Edward Sharp and the Magnetic Zeros, Craze & Klever, Zoe, The Temper Trap, Portugal. The Man, Band of Skulls, Girls, Beach House, Steel Train, Frank Turner.

SUNDAY, APRIL 18: Gorillaz, Pavement, Thom Yorke????, Phoenix, Orbital, Spoon, Sly and the Family Stone, De La Soul, Julian Casablancas, Plastikman, Gary Numan, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Sunny Day Real Estate, Yo La Tengo, MUTEMATH, Deerhunter, Infected Mushroom, Club 75, Matt & Kim, The Big Pink, Gil Scott-Heron, King Khan and the Shrines, Florence and the Machine, Yann Tiersen, Little Boots, Miike Snow, Talvin Singh, Ceu, B.o.B., Babasonicos, Owen Pallett, The Glitch Mob, Mayer Hawthorne, Local Natives, Rusko, The Middle East, Hadouken!, The Soft Pack, Kevin Devine, Paparazzi, Delphic, One EskimO.


Tickets for COACHELLA go on sale Friday, January 22 at 10:00 a.m. at all Ticketmaster locations and www.coachella.com. Three-day weekend passes are $269.00, plus surcharges. More details on layaway, camping options and up-to-the minute information, can be found at www.coachella.com. COACHELLA 2010 sponsors include Heineken and PlayStation.

For more on Coachella check out our 2009 review here.


Coachella 2010 Lineup Revealed

Jay-Z, Muse, and Radiohead’s own Thom Yorke are among the acts leading the lineup at this year’s Coachella Valley Music & Arts Festival. Them Crooked Vultures, The Dead Weather, and a bevy of reunion acts, including De La Soul, The Specials, and ’60s funk icons Sly and the Family Stone are other notable acts hitting [...]

Marillion: Less Is More

By: Dennis Cook

Face it, most “acoustic” albums are little more than watered down versions of hits or well tread covers. In short, polite, unchallenging filler. Not so with Marillion‘s acoustically slanted Less Is More (released in U.S. on December 8 on Eagle Records), which rejiggers a carefully chosen, non-obvious selection of older compositions, working the emotionally dense, often anthemic originals into warmly caressed, fascinating new shapes.

Ranging from a shuffling, saucy reworking of “The Space” from 1989′s Season’s End to a new take on “Wrapped Up In Time,” originally on last year’s excellent Happiness Is The Road (JamBase review), Less Is More puts the old title axiom into practice, finding delicate yet never wispy newness hiding inside familiar territory. By digging deep into their catalogue and consciously steering away from singles or dominant fan favorites, Marillion has found some serious sweetmeat that makes one reassess these tunes in a wholly favorable light. The occasional bit of electricity notwithstanding, Less Is More moves with the warm rush of acoustic guitars, hammered dulcimer, piano, Glockenspiel, xylophone and hushed percussion, with Steve Hogarth‘s voice prominent in the foreground – a fitting spot for one of the great under-celebrated singers of past 25 years, a voice with the vibrating emotional timbre of Thom Yorke melded to the pop classicism of The Zombies’ Colin Blunstone.

Since Hogarth’s arrival in 1989 Marillion has been a model of high-end musicianship, quality songwriting, and thoughtful construction in nearly every aspect of their work. The result is wonderfully accessible yet richly layered work like Less Is More, where there’s a strong sense of happy interaction with this music and one picks up on the musicians’ pleasure in discovering fresh inspiration in past efforts. At the stage where many bands lumber along on auto-pilot, Marillion seems supercharged for tomorrow, even if they arrive their by way of yesterday.

Bonus: The U.S. edition of this release includes two bonus tracks including a great cover of Radiohead’s “Fake Plastic Trees.”

JamBase | Interior
Go See Live Music!


Thom Yorke Reports From Copenhagen Climate Conference

Thom Yorke Reports From Copenhagen Climate Change Conference

Radiohead‘s Thom Yorke acquired a press pass for the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen and has been reporting from the event via the band’s Dead Air Space. He’s made several entries over the past few days, check ‘em out.

Thom Yorke and environmentalist Tony Juniper at the United Nations Climate Change Conference
In Copenhagen – Photo from Dead Air Space


Jon Anderson | 11.15 | Santa Barbara

Words & Images by: L. Paul Mann

Jon Anderson :: 11.15.09 :: SOhO :: Santa Barbara, CA

Jon Anderson :: 11.15 :: Santa Barbara, CA

A special last minute show was added to the calendar at Santa Barbara’s premiere live music restaurant and bar venue, SOhO. Jon Anderson played an acoustic set of new and old material, at the intimate spot last Sunday night. As the quintessential lead singer of the classic rock band Yes, Anderson sang on every album in the band’s catalog, save one. Yes’ chameleon lineup has boasted some of the biggest names in rock music throughout its long history, and in many ways epitomized the genre of true Classical Rock music. Over four decades members have included guitarists, Peter Banks, Steve Howe, Trevor Rabin, and Billy Sherwood, keyboard players Tony Kaye, Rick Wakeman, Patrick Moraz, Geoff Downes, and Igor Khoroshev, and drummers Bill Bruford and Alan White. The two unifying forces in the band over the decades have been bassist Chris Squire and the unique high-pitched vocal talents of Anderson.

Before Thom Yorke of Radiohead pierced the airwaves with his angelic voice, it was the front man of Yes that was most associated with the rock voice of an angel. Although many critics have falsely labeled him a traditional falsetto singer, Anderson himself has described his singing range as an alto tenor, with the ability to hit only certain high notes. Regardless of the category, his voice is instantly recognizable when he begins to sing.

As he took to the stage in the California town that he has called home for nearly a decade, his voice sounded a little hoarse and strained. But with each subsequent song, his voice and range grew stronger. It is sometimes hard to imagine how this tiny Englishman from Liverpool, whose bandmates used to affectionately refer to as Napoleon, can release such a huge voice from his frail, little frame. Anderson was warmly greeted in the tightly packed venue. An audience of mostly older adoring fans sang and clapped along to every recognizable song. As Anderson frequently stopped to celebrate the moment, fans would shout out their support and appreciation with ongoing love fest banter.

Jon Anderson :: 11.15 :: Santa Barbara, CA

Jon Anderson music has always been about the triumph and healing of the human spirit. In the early days of Yes his lyrics were fanciful, naively optimistic yearnings for freedom, fairness, and love. His solo material, however, has taken on a more personal, realistic view of the healing power of music and love.


His appearance in Santa Barbara, and debut of some intimate new material, took on an even greater sense of urgency and renewal since a near death experience he had last year. The vulnerable and venerable Yes frontman was actually preparing for his first tour with the band since 2004 just before falling ill. The band went on to tour without him, enlisting replacement singer Benoit David from Yes tribute act Close to the Edge.

In his solo show, dubbed “Have Guitar Will Travel,” Anderson played 23 songs, covering nearly the entire Yes oeuvre, as well as new solo material and songs that he had collaborated on with Greek composer/keyboardist Vangelis of Chariots of Fire fame.

The concert began and ended with Yes numbers that had the crowd singing and clapping like a group of teenagers around the fire at summer camp. The first two songs he sang, “Yours Is No Disgrace” from 1971′s The Yes Album and “Long Distance Runaround” from 1972′s Fragile, were Yes classics. Hearing the frail singer croon, sans the massive musical framework of thunderous sounds that would envelope him in a typical Yes concert, was disconcerting at first. But quickly it became apparent that Anderson’s voice was up to the challenge and allowed the audience to decipher every word, many of which would normally be drowned out in a cacophony of rock music.


Anderson then went further back in time to 1970′s Time And A Word, playing “Sweet Dreams” and a totally rearranged, reggae-influenced version of the title track. The latter started with Anderson jokingly bantering with the audience, while struggling to find the right octave, but then quickly hitting the right stride. He sang the song with a Sting-like vibe and lyrical quotes from The Beatles’ “She Loves You” and “All You Need is Love” and Hal David and Bruce Bacharach’s “What The World Needs Now Is Love.” The word is “love,” indeed, all thrown in for good measure. The crowd was ecstatic and began singing and dancing in the aisles.

Jon Anderson :: 11.15 :: Santa Barbara, CA

On a more personal note, Anderson chatted about his illness in his introduction to new song “Under Heaven’s Door.” In the first of many anecdotes, he explained how he had almost died from respiratory failure last year, and thanked the local paramedics for bringing him back from the brink of death not once but twice. This was one of a few songs for which Anderson used a strum stick, a rich-sounding three-stringed instrument based on an Appalachian dulcimer, as accompaniment.


This prolific songwriter followed up with “I’ll Find My Way Home,” a track co-written with Vangelis, which Anderson explained was (successfully) composed in response to the record company’s demand for a hit single.


Three more Yes songs followed, including a show highlight for many in attendance, when Anderson sang, “All we are saying/ Is give peace a chance,” while the audience sang the “diddit didda’s” from “I’ve Seen All Good People.” The others were an abbreviated “Nous Sommes Du Soleil” from 1974′s epic Tales from Topographic Oceans and “Starship Trooper,” which gave Anderson some trouble with the bridge at the beginning of the song, but he eventually nailed it down to roaring approval. It seemed the harder this masterful musician struggled to get things just right, the more excited the mood in the crowd became.


After the uplifting new song “Unbroken Spirit Of Mine,” Anderson tackled
Yes’ 1983 comeback hit “Owner of a Lonely Heart,” which replaced precise electronic sounds with a driving acoustic guitar rhythm. This was followed by a piano medley that touched on different eras from Anderson’s long career. He quickly returned to guitar for “And You And I” from 1972′s Close to the Edge.


Three more new songs followed, including the spiritually inspired “Music is God” and the autobiographical “Tony and Me” based on Anderson’s adventures in his pre-Yes band with his brother Tony in 1963. The latter included musical quotes from The Beatles’ “She Loves You,” The Everly Brothers’ “Wake Up Little Susie,” and The Beach Boys’ “Help Me Rhonda.” In the middle Anderson told yet another tale of how a young rotund 16-year-old with a bottle of whiskey joined them onstage for a rousing version of “Hit The Road Jack” in a Sheffield pub. The unlikely singer turned out to be a young Joe Cocker.

Later he recounted a story of the band’s ride home on a deserted road through the Moors. They came across a box on the road, which they pilfered and were disappointed to find contained five hundred pairs of extra-large underpants. The main set ended with the Vangelis-co-write “State of Independence.”

Anderson returned for an encore that began with a bluesy version of “Roundabout” and ended with an inspiring version of “Soon” from Yes’ 1974 prog masterpiece Relayer. The adoring crowd gave him a five-minute standing ovation at the end of his set. Jon Anderson left the stage with a big smile and a promise that he would be back soon.


Jon Anderson :: 11.15.09 :: SOhO :: Santa Barbara, CA

Yours Is No Disgrace, Long Distance Runaround, Sweet Dreams, Time and a Word, Under Heaven’s Door, I’ll Find My Way Home, I’ve Seen All Good People, Nous Sommes Du Soleil, Starship Trooper, Unbroken Spirit of Mine, Owner of a Lonely Heart,
Piano medley: Set Sail / Close To The Edge / Children of the Light / Marry Me Again /, The Revealing Science of God, And You And I, Count Your Blessings, Music Is God, Tony and Me, State of Independence

Encore: Roundabout, Soon

For more on the inner workings of this amazing musician check out JamBase’s lengthy 2004 chat with Jon.

JamBase | Winged
Go See Live Music!


Radiohead: Kid A/Amnesiac/Hail: CollectorÂ’s Editions

By: Ron Hart

When you talk to anyone who is big into Radiohead and ask them what their three favorite Radiohead albums are, chances are you’ll get something along the lines of The Bends, OK Computer, and Kid A, or perhaps OK Computer, Kid A, and In Rainbows; or you might even have the rare Pablo Honey, The Bends and OK Computer combo plate – rare because most fans of Radiohead today hardly acknowledge the Oxford progressives’ 1993 rote stutter step of a debut album. In any case, many would consider it nothing short of sin incarnate not to include OK Computer when talking about the three best Radiohead albums, regardless of the other two picks.

However, while it is readily established that OK Computer is indeed the band’s best album of the 1990s and one of the five best recordings of that decade overall, there are a select few who do harbor the belief that Computer was merely a launchpad for what would be the group’s true trilogy of creative genius: 2000′s Kid A, 2001′s Amnesiac, and 2003′s Hail to the Thief. And similar to the treatment given to their first three albums earlier this year, the bottom half of the group’s six-album major label run have been repackaged as 2-CD/1-DVD deluxe editions from Radiohead’s former label, Capitol-EMI, in their attempt to squeeze every last dime from their successful catalog act as the band continues to shed the old skin of a creaky, outdated music industry with each download they make available on their digital store, W.A.S.T.E..

Fatigued and disillusioned by the voracious lionization bestowed upon them following the release of OK Computer (brilliantly documented in director Grant Gee’s 1998 film meditation Meeting People Is Easy), the band journeyed inward for OK Computer‘s follow-up, Kid A, the album some arguably consider to be Radiohead’s true singular masterpiece. It has been said that much of the material from Kid A stemmed from a collective bout of writer’s block the band experienced upon trying to work up material that would meet the expectations of both industry brass and their fans following the release of OK Computer. And, rather than kowtowing to critics hailing them as the new Pink Floyd, the band opted to become the new Soft Machine instead, creating an album brimming with improvisational adventurousness and dynamic explorations into their own love of the music emanating from their private stereos back in 1999-2000. Boards of Canada, Autechre, Aphex Twin, Charles Mingus, electric Miles Davis, Brian Eno’s late ’70s collaborations with German experimentalists Cluster, Scott Walker, soundtrack music for Disney nature films, minimalist classical, and mid-20th century computer music were all obvious touchstones that fade in and out across these 10 tracks, signified in the IDM rock of the album’s title cut, the analog Arthur Kreiger samples that flutter and bleep across “Idioteque,” or the free jazz “traffic jam” that kicks in at the height of “The National Anthem.” According to a 2001 article in Wire by noted music journalist Simon Reynolds, Thom Yorke admitted to reading Ian MacDonald’s Revolution in the head, which chronicles The Beatles’ recording sessions with George Martin during their Sgt. Pepper/White Album period, and it certainly shows the daring moves Radiohead made while creating what still remains arguably their sonic Sistine Chapel.

2001′s Amnesiac, meanwhile, consisted of material recorded during the Kid A sessions, which had initially given the album the stigma of being a Kid A outtakes compilation (or “Kid B”, as many wannabe comedians moonlighting as music critics hailed it upon its release).

“In some weird way, I think Amnesiac gives another take on Kid A, a form of explanation,” offered Yorke with regards to Amnesiac in a 2001 post on the now-defunct website Spin With A Grin.

And while Amnesiac might not have been as warmly received in the summer of 2001 by those very critics who hailed its predecessor, time has indeed been kind to the album. Many of the songs have since become live staples, such as “I Might Be Wrong”, “Dollars and Cents” and the simply gorgeous “Pyramid Song,” which seems to have helped the plight of what is definitely the band’s mellowest and most nuanced album to date. In listening to Amnesiac again, it most definitely deserves a space in the Top 3, if only for its soulful closing number “Life in a Glass House,” pretty much the finest New Orleans funeral march ever crafted by English blokes. If any album served as the proper precursor to Yorke’s solo album, The Eraser, it’s Amnesiac.

2003′s Hail to the Thief, Radiohead’s sixth album whose title was widely rumored to be a thinly-veiled swipe at George W. Bush, was released with the promise of a return to the guitar rock of their ’90s era. What we wound up getting instead was a brilliant fusion of The Bends and Kid A eras, where the group ventures into territories that makes the Krautrock sound anthemic, as on the album’s great initial single “There, There.” Elsewhere they explore elements of jungle on the kinetic “Sit Down, Stand Up,” do some Warp Records raiding on “Backdrifts” and “The Gloaming,” and yes, a return to good, old fashioned guitar rock on songs like “2 + 2 = 5″ and “A Punch Up at a Wedding.” If Radiohead recorded The Bends after OK Computer it could have sounded like Hail to the Thief.

Like the deluxe editions of their first three albums, these versions of Kid A, Amnesiac and Thief all come doubled up with a bonus disc loaded with all sorts of rare treats. Most of the stuff on here many serious Radiohead fans already have in terms of b-sides from each album, but also featured is some great, previously unreleased live material, especially on Kid A and Amnesiac, both of which include a particularly amazing performance at Canal+ Studios from April of 2001 spread equally across both second discs, not to mention a great BBC Radio One session featured on Kid A. Sadly, Hail to the Thief has a bit of a deficit in live material, save for a version of “Sail to the Moon” from a May 2003 edition of the Jo Whiley Show on the BBC and a wonderful take on “Go To Sleep” from DJ Zane Lowe’s Radio 1 show. If you shell out the extra dollars, there are special collector’s editions of all three of these albums that come with a DVD filled with the promotional videos that accompanied each release and some pretty great performances from their three separate appearances on the beloved BBC talk show LaterÂ…With Jools Holland promoting each album. Hopefully the next Radiohead-related project EMI rolls out is a complete Radiohead live album from this era (a 2-CD version of I Might Be Wrong: Live Recordings, perhaps?).

Now we can argue over which three Radiohead albums are their trilogy of greatness until the cows come home, but a strong case can be made for Kid A, Amnesiac and Hail to the Thief marking the most significant arc of creativity and artistic expression in this band’s career, particularly when you consider the stuff these guys are doing beyond the realms of the group: Thom Yorke’s freshly recruited, as-yet-unnamed band featuring Flea on bass, master session drummer and music industry progeny Joey Waronker on drums, and longtime Radiohead producer Nigel Godrich; Jonny Greenwood‘s soundtrack work on Paul Thomas Anderson’s oil baron drama There Will Be Blood and the 2003 biological documentary Bodysong; and guitarist Ed O’Brien and drummer Phil Selway‘s recent collaboration with the Finn Brothers as 7 Worlds Collide. And when you look at these three LPs in such a context, it’s hard not to consider Kid, Amnesiac, and Thief anything BUT their most prized trifecta of greatness.

JamBase | Heady
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“Twilight New Moon” Soundtrack Tops Billboard Top 200

The New Moon soundtrack has clawed its way to the top position on the Billboard Top 200.

Billboard –which features tunes by Thom Yorke, Death Cab for Cutie, and The Killers — says the album sold 153,000 copies in its first full week of release, according to Nielsen SoundScan.
The Twilight Saga: New Moon hits [...]