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Nicki Bluhm: Stick With Me

Words by: Dennis Cook | Images by: Andrew Quist

Nicki Bluhm by Andrew Quist

It doesn’t take but a few minutes listening to Nicki Bluhm to realize you’re in the presence of a real talent possessed of one of the most winning, emotionally textured voices to come along in some time, a singer that crawls inside the material with obvious passion and purpose. It’s nigh impossible to not think of ground breaking ladies like Linda Ronstadt, Tracy Nelson and Bonnie Raitt, and the quality, rootsy, oh-so-easy-to-dig music she and her band, The Gramblers, make only reinforces this impression. Rock, soul, pop, country and blues are grist for their mill, which recalls the egalitarian spirit of 1970s radio, where having a broad range and good ears for hooks and harmonies were virtues and not just a challenge to drones that try to compartmentalize music these days.

Bluhm’s diversity shines through very brightly on her sophomore album, Driftwood (released February 1 on Little Knickers), an addictively listenable, mature work that moves Nicki several steps along from her 2008 debut Toby’s Song (JamBase review). Starting with the cinematically rich hit single waiting to happen “Carousel,” the album moves seamlessly into classic country (“Stick With Me,” “Women’s Prison”), soaring pop (“Jetplane”), jelly rollin’ barroom fare (“Barbary Blues”), Karen Carpenter territory (“Figure You Out”), Janis Joplin-esque heat (“Kill You To Call”) and more, all of it delivered with sweet singing, artful arrangements and inviting production (courtesy of hubby Tim Bluhm of The Mother Hips and Bay Area studio secret weapon Dave Simon-Baker). The album also features well placed guest turns from Jackie Greene, Railroad Earth’s Tim Carbone and members of ALO.

new album

Driftwood is an album one leaves on repeat because one spin simply won’t do. It’s the kind of record one sings along to, perhaps a little too loudly for polite company, and pushes into the hands of friends because it’s so bloody satisfying. Driftwood puts the lie to folks that say they don’t make them like they used to; this is classic stuff delivered in a classic manner. And at the heart of it is a young lady who belts ‘em out with a wholly winning combination of sweetness and edge, the words ripping free from some place deep within her, a voice laying bare the soul that powers it.

JamBase: The first impression I had of you, right from the time I slipped on your debut, was here was an artist shooting for a more classic model of things than many of your peers.

Nicki Bluhm: That’s most certainly what I’m going for. A lot of the classic, timeless records I picked up from my parents and Tim – early Bonnie Raitt, Dolly Parton, Linda Ronstadt – all the music in this vein has this timelessness to it that you don’t really come by often in music today. And my goal is to make music that will last and stand the test of time. One thing about music that’s so amazing is how it lives on forever. It’s really important when you make music to do it honestly. It’s like a tattoo – it never goes away.

JamBase: Prior to the 20th century this wasn’t the case but after wax cylinders, vinyl and so on, it’s now possible for music to live on forever.

Nicki Bluhm: I was just listening to this Townes Van Zandt record from 1969 as I drove to L.A., and that was 10 years before I was born and I just love it. I think of him in his grave and how many people are listening to the records of dead people and how cool that is, how cool that legacy is.

It’s kind of cool that you get to make music with your partner. There’s something special to your relationship beyond being a married couple that emerges in the music you create together.

I’d agree with that. I really wouldn’t be doing any of this if I hadn’t met Tim and he hadn’t encouraged me. We do have a loving personal relationship but we also have a professional relationship as well. I’m really lucky to be close to someone I’ve admired for a really long time – creatively and musically. It’s been inspirational and intimidating at the same, which creates an interesting experience. Here I am writing songs in the living room and in the next room is one of my favorite songwriters. It can be intimidating but then he pops his head out of the office and says, “Hey, try that again! What was that?” It’s really encouraging, more than your mom or your friends saying that. It’s a very good double-edged sword [laughs].

Tim & Nicki Bluhm by Andrew Quist

I can imagine it’s sometimes nerve-wracking to have someone I consider one of the great songwriters of our time as your sounding board. Tim is as good as it gets. But on the plus side, you two get to collaborate on music, especially with Tim producing your albums.

Luckily, we have really similar tastes and we can communicate well what we want to hear in a song with very few words. I can just say a mood or reference someone or a record and he just understands what I’m saying. It’s a neat, intuitive thing we have, and I think Greg [Loiacono, Mother Hips] and Tim have that, too. It’s an unspoken understanding that can be expressed minimally and he captures it.

You show off a lot more colors on Driftwood than Toby’s Song. The music in your head is clearly evolving.

The first record was very raw and more a collection of songs. I’d never had any experience recording or even writing music before – “Toby’s Song” was the first song I’d ever written. Going back to the intimidation factor, I went into to record those songs and trusted Tim and did as I was told. That was fine but on the second record I sort of understood how the recording process worked and to really come prepared on how I wanted things arranged. I feel like the songs were a lot more well-crafted on the second record, and I was a lot more involved in shaping what I wanted. That said, a lot of other input contributed to the development of the record – obviously Tim and Dave Simon-Baker, but with a largely holistic approach from a number of people, with Tim and Dave being the ringleaders.

Another difference between Driftwood and your debut is your band, The Gramblers, get showcased on the new material.

One of the goals for this record was to have some common thread throughout the record as opposed to being just a collection of songs, and the musicians involved became that through line. Even though the songs are often very different styles, the players are so good that they imbue the vibe of the record, and that’s where the consistency lies.

Deren Ney by Andrew Quist

Your lead guitarist Deren Ney is a friendly ghost floating throughout Driftwood. That guy’s playing is always so tasty.

He’s really special, and he spends a lot of time on his own working on his parts. He definitely cares a lot. And he walks that fine line any guitar player does of playing enough and not too much, and he’s very tasteful and seems to know the boundaries and is always incredibly appropriate. He lends a lot to the band, not just playing guitar but writing songs – he wrote “Carousel” and “Barbary Blues” – and he’s an incredibly thoughtful person. Not only does he write songs and let me sing them but he writes songs with me in mind. He truly tries to write songs with my thinking and style in mind.

I don’t think he’ll be the only one to do that. It’s partially why I think Linda Ronstadt comes up as a primary touchstone for you. She didn’t write a lot of her songs but many tunes were written for her to sing or brought to her to do a version. She was loved by the likes of Neil Young and Lowell George because of her way with a song, and I think you have a lot of the same mojo.

There’s something to singing someone else’s song that’s just comfortable; I almost prefer it. It’s a little less vulnerable, and there’s a carelessness I have when I sing someone else’s song. I can interpret it the way I want to without feeling it’s about this particular experience, person or event that happened to me personally.

There’s something fun about putting on the garb of another songwriter without all the baggage.

I love listening to Linda Ronstadt records. Her voice is incredible and she’s someone I’ve studied. She’s so powerful and amazing. More than wanting to sing her songs or hit the same high-marks she did, I see her as the ultimate female vocalist. And I love the early Bonnie Raitt stuff, where she sounds so effortless and natural. And I like singing some of the songs she wrote and some of the old blues songs she covered.

Nicki Bluhm by Andrew Quist

Both Ronstadt and Raitt are cool examples to study because they managed to have this great combination of being feminine and vulnerable and being really strong and in charge in an industry that’s still harder for women to crack than men.

That’s something that definitely draws me to them, the fact that they can be strong, powerful women yet they’re still ladies. You can hear their vulnerability and their strength. There’s a realness in the way they sound that’s really appealing to me.

I feel incredibly lucky because I have this amazing group of friends and musicians that always seem to be available to play with me. I can’t express how much support I’ve felt from the San Francisco Bay Area community of musicians. The bottom line is I’ve felt very well taken care of by the musicians in the Bay Area. I couldn’t sing without a band, and they’ve been incredible. The collection of musicians that have allowed this to happen for me makes it feel easy. I have a long road ahead of me – that’s for certain – but I’m off to an incredibly good start because of this amazing support from all these wonderful musicians and friends.

I think musicians are drawn to the vibe in your music, which consistently feels honest and quite human.

There are a lot of emotions caught up in songs, and I think it’s important to allow room for people to relate to different aspects. I think a lot of people find solace in music. Music and songs have gotten me through a lot of tough times. I just hope my music does that for some people.

Nicki Bluhm & The Gramblers Tour Dates :: Nicki Bluhm & The Gramblers News :: Nicki Bluhm & The Gramblers Concert Reviews


JamBase | Drifin’
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John Hartford Memorial Festival: Greensky, GAT, Tim O’Brien, Barnes

Danny Barnes

In honor of newgrass pioneer John Hartford the John Hartford Memorial Festival will take place June 1-4 2011 at the historic <a target="blank" href="http://www.beanblossom.us/"Bean Blossom Festival Park & Campgrounds in Bean Blossom, IN.

Tickets can be purchased at the festival website. For a limited time if you purchase a full festival ticket for $60, you will receive a free official festival poster! Three-day festival tickets also include a special kickoff party Wednesday night with a full line-up of music and a chili supper. Day tickets are also available for Thursday ($15), Friday ($20), and Saturday ($25). To book onsite camping, contact Bean Blossom directly at 1-800-414-4677.

Legendary Aereoplane Band member and flat pickin’ dobro man Tut Taylor, as well as bluegrass legends Chris Hillman and Herb Pederson, join a lineup that includes:

Tim O’Brien
Danny Barnes
The Infamous Stringdusters
Larry Keel & Natural Bridge
Jamie Hartford
Greensky Bluegrass
Great American Taxi
Chatham County Line
Rodney Dillard & The Dillard Band
Dean Webb and the Missouri Boatride
Bawn in the Mash
Midnight from Memphis
Two High String Band
The Freight Hoppers
Rumpke Mountain Boys
Dry Valley Gamblers
Henhouse Prowlers
The Hillbenders
Branded Bluegrass
The Mississippi Sawyers
Woodstove Flapjacks
Skip Heller & Friends
The White Lightening Boys
Leroy Troy
Whiskey Bent Valley Boys


Steve Jobs Medical Leave Of Absence From Apple

Well….this can’t be good. On Monday, Apple CEO Steve Jobs announced that he will be a taking medical leave of absence from the company — effective immediately — a little less than two years after undergoing a lifesaving liver transplant. In 2004, the Apple chief was diagnosed with a rare form of pancreatic cancer. He [...]

The Rhythm Devils: License To Fly

By: Dennis Cook

Check out some audience recordings of the new lineup here and here to accompany your reading.

Rhythm Devils 2010 by Suzy Perler

The new incarnation of The Rhythm Devils is like no other in this long running project for Grateful Dead percussionists Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann. Where earlier lineups focused on a worldly exploration of percussion, the 2010 version is directly engaging with the Dead catalog and generating a goodly amount of new material, too. Joining the drum masters are Tim Bluhm of The Mother Hips (guitar, vocals), Davy Knowles of Back Door Slam (guitar, vocals), Sikiru Adepoju (talking drum) and Andy Hess (bass). An earlier tour this year had Keller Williams in place of Bluhm. In many ways, this more song-oriented ensemble is a chance for Kreutzmann and Hart to lay rightful claim to their share of the Grateful Dead legacy, and in the original spirit of that band, extend the range and possibilities of one of the most enduring, flexible and downright amazing catalogs ever produced. Whatever the underlying reasons, the Devils are at it again.

Mickey Hart by Suzy Perler

“Our name was bestowed upon us by Garcia. Jerry, one night in one of his funny moods, said, ‘You guys are rhythm devils’ [his voice taking on a deep growl]. It was said in the funniest of ways, and we were really after the rhythm that night. That’s where it all started,” says Mickey Hart. “Originally it was just about Bill and I doing our thing in the second set. It was a free space, rhythmically speaking, and we just went out into the zone and discovered what the rhythm of the day was.”

As percussionists, Hart and Kreutzmann give off a trickster vibe with a knowing playfulness that’s touched by resounding confidence and wildfire. These are not guys one is likely to see knocking out straight bebop. The way rhythm speaks to them is peculiar and touched by something organic and unique.

“We look for the moment, and when we find it we’re not afraid to go after it,” says Hart. “One of things about performance is fear or the lack of it and respect for failing or not failing, which is always there. But the idea of discovery is more important than the fear of failure in our world.”

“Each night is valuable. Everyone has equity in the moment – we own it, you own it – and it will never be repeated again. So, it’s an original. Sometimes an original is better than others but it’s still an original,” continues Hart. “You try to make it as special as you can, and you settle for whatever happens. Hopefully it’s an uplifting moment. This is moment music, and that is the goal – to create something of value that’s never to be repeated again, an original.”

The New Guys

Bill Kreutzmann by Chad Smith

While all top-notch players, the Rhythm Devils 2010 lineup isn’t something that most listeners, even serious Deadheads, would likely have come up with. It speaks to an out-of-the-box intention from the Devils’ leaders that comes with risks but also potentially great rewards.

“We’re playing the songs. It’s not like free space all night. We have structure, and then you have release. You have to have some kind of physical architecture or you’re just jamming all night, and that becomes rudderless and meaningless at times. Just noodling and twittering just to be in the moment is not the object,” says Hart. “The object is to go somewhere together and making something of value and interest not just to you but to the people listening.”

“We’re making the old music our own, and Robert Hunter is composing for us, so we have a loads of new material,” says Hart. “The band is just being born and starting to own the songs. Playing the songs is one thing – you can play them well, you can play them badly – but to own the song, to put your signature sound and feeling on it, is really the objective here. Grateful Dead songs were created with that in mind, which allows for exploration; circumnavigation, as it were. Every night I see new sights, hear new sounds, new ways of putting it together. So, the band is loosening up and becoming a band, not just six players. There’s a difference.”

Tim Bluhm by Chad Smith

“I’m just grateful to the universe for having this opportunity, but I can’t say that it’s easy. What’s cool about Billy and Mickey is they don’t do what you think they’re gonna do. I think that’s a great quality to have,” says Tim Bluhm. “I’d heard them play but had never met them. I think Bill spent a lot of time on YouTube looking for guys. I had to learn all the music, and I’m still learning. One big challenge for me is we play at least one new song each show that I’ve never heard before. I’m constantly on my toes, always on the edge of learning new stuff. You’re never done learning stuff with this band. As soon as you’ve gotten a few songs down, there’s a new batch to learn. I’m having a lot of fun onstage hearing the songs get better all the time. It’s a miracle to see what hard work can do. These guys work hard!”

“I was never a big Dead guy. I didn’t grow up listening to them. I knew who they were peripherally but I had to learn a LOT of this music and make my own sort of Grateful Dead 101 study class,” says Andy Hess. “The way I got involved was I’d met Mickey’s manager many times over the year in other situations. He thought of me, and then Bill, who I’d met a bit, was sort of a champion for me when my name came up. I told them, ‘If you’re expecting a Phil Lesh type of bass player, that’s not me.’ Bill was very supportive and said, ‘Play how you play. That’s why I pushed for you to be here.’ So, I’m trying to make it my own a bit with respect to the music. I’m such a different bassist than Phil. I really love John Paul Jones, he’s one of my heroes.”

Davy Knowles by Suzy Perler

“I absolutely have no idea whatsoever how I got this gig [laughs]. I got a call from my agent asking if I wanted to join this band for a bit of a tour. I said absolutely; it wasn’t even a decision, it was just ‘Of course.’ What an honor,” says Davy Knowles. “Suddenly I’m getting phone calls from Mickey Hart asking, ‘Do you play lap steel? Do you own one? Well, you should probably get one.’ So, I was pretty much thrown into the deep end without really knowing what was going on, which is great.”

“I wouldn’t say I was a [Grateful Dead] fan before. I’d heard stuff and had huge respect for them, but I hadn’t delved deeper into them. Now I’m just kicking myself for not doing it sooner. It’s such an amazing library of music that I’m being opened up to,” says Knowles. “What I love about them is they’re a true American band. They play real Americana – blues, country, pretty much every form of American music.”

“Bill just wanted to do it again, so we searched around for these different players that we thought were flexible enough and high-caliber enough to play together and enjoy each other – their personalities, their singing abilities, their playing abilities [were all factors],” says Hart. “I used YouTube quite a bit to study their musical habits and listened to their recordings. I did a lot of research into who they were, and we brought them all together. There’s no telling about chemistry but it worked. You just never can tell.”

Rhythm Devils 2010 by Chad Smith

“We don’t count it anymore, but the poor kids playing with us now have to count it. It’s hard for us to explain why we added two beats before you go into this other part. It just seemed like a good idea at the time,” chuckles Hart. “We just smile with it when they fumble the ball a little bit. Sooner or later, they get the pocket and hold the ball tight and they run. Bill and I don’t put any real pressure on the guitarists because they had to learn 40-plus songs. They probably thought they were going to learn a set or something and here they’ve got 40-plus songs on their plate with lyrics and chord changes and tempo changes. They study all the time. We have long sound checks where play through the songs and have transitions and see if we can find our way from this song to that song. We let ‘em know if it’s going to be faster or slower, but to just keep their ears open and play through it. And all of the sudden, we’ll wind up there! Just stay with it, kid! And all of a sudden, a little smile crosses their face when they can see the light at the end. You’re swimming deep and all of the sudden you can see the surface for a little air, something known as opposed to the unknown, chaos to order, order to chaos and somewhere in between.”

This sort of risk taking – a leap into the unknown with a grin and crossed-fingers – is indicative of how Hart and Kreutzmann have made music their whole lives. Too often, particularly in music these days, artists are unwilling to make such leaps, paralyzed by fear of failure or looking bad or some other hitch that keeps their feet planted.

“That seems like a waste of a good life,” offers Hart. “You’ve got to have musical adventure in your life. Music is life for me, at least a big part of it. It really wouldn’t be a smart idea if I played it safe at this stage in my life. So, what you do is try to find people that want to do something that’s a bit out of the ordinary, out of the box. And if they agree on doing it without having to force them into it – which is not fun – then you have something.”

Tim Bluhm & Davy Knowles by Suzy Perler

“It’s absolutely terrifying, but a real education. I can’t see any other way I’d have gotten this education. It’s such a unique experience. Perhaps the most terrifying thing was Mickey wanted to hear the renditions I was doing with these songs. He asked me to record MP3s of me doing Jerry songs with Robert Hunter lyrics and send them back to him. You can imagine how terrifying it was to record these songs, send them to a Grateful Dead member and wait for a reply. I was quivering,” says Knowles. “I have a whole new respect for Jerry Garcia. What an incredible musician, not just a guitar player. Just amazing.”

“Garcia was such an accomplished guitarist and songwriter, but even more than that, he seems like such a benevolent spirit. I respect him and the material so much. You can’t go too wrong if you approach it that way,” says Bluhm. “It’s like a rock band with these moments of trance. Both Davy and I have learned a lot about playing that kind of Africanized trance rock ‘n’ roll. It’s so fun to play with [Billy and Mickey] because they have that thing that only the Dead had. In some ways, it’s almost more distinctive than what Phil and Bobby brought to it. There’s no mistaking them for anyone else.”

Finding a bassist with the flexibility and quickness to follow two utterly idiosyncratic percussionists like Hart and Kreutzmann is no simple task. But Andy Hess, with a CV that includes Gov’t Mule, The Black Crowes and John Scofield, possesses the sort of fluid open-mindedness necessary to complete the low-end in the Devils.

Andy Hess by Chad Smith

“I’ve sort of been a lifelong sideman who’s played with a lot of people. When I played with Gov’t Mule for five years that was the longest I’ve been in a band,” says Hess. “I’m a very supportive kind of player. I’ve done a lot of different things, and I’ve always liked a lot of different kinds of music. I’ve been in New York City for 20 years, and there’s a lot of great players there. In order to make a living sometimes I have to do different stuff. I may not always be totally into it but I try to be open to it. It’s a constant work in progress. Every time I go onstage I think, ‘Okay, here’s an opportunity.’ Some nights are good and other nights are terrible. It’s so intangible, but it’s humbling to get to do this for a living.”

“Mickey has soooo much energy and he can really inspire you. He’s always saying, ‘Let’s do this and let’s do this,’ and it keeps going. Oh my god, this guy is 25 years older than me and he’s all over the place!” says Hess. “He cares and he’s a lot of fun. He’s got a strong personality. He’s cool and respectful to us all. Even though he wants to get what he wants out of all of us, he’s appreciative and he’s a smart guy.”

Knowles had the pleasure of playing guitar and singing with Keller Williams and Tim Bluhm, two very distinctive players and singers with almost nothing in common. How did this go over in the Devils?

“It’s wonderful both ways. They’re both incredible musicians and it’s been an honor and a privilege to work with both of them and get to know their styles and even rob parts of their styles, too. That’s what playing with other people is all about really,” says Knowles. “Keller is kind of a hyper solo musician and all his tempos are really quick – he’s the first to say that – and it’s kind of awesome. He’s so used to playing by himself, whereas Tim Bluhm is sort of the definition of laid-back California. He’s just an unbelievable guitar player, but he seems a bit shy about it. The one thing I love about Tim is his tone and touch. He doesn’t have to play a lot of notes. He’s drenched in soul, and his playing is just fantastic.”

Mickey Hart by Suzy Perler

As for bandleader Hart’s assessment of this newest bunch:

“This is not telepathic yet, so you have to lead a little bit more and you have to be a bit more on top of things to give these signals to the rest of the band, who aren’t intuitive yet,” says Hart. “Being intuitive means being in the groove for hundreds of hours to be able to move and pulse and throb as one. The goal, eventually, is to go there together instantly. There are so many possibilities and how are they going to know where to go without some leading. They can’t read each other’s minds like Bill and I can with just body language, just a wink or a nod. Moving forward a quarter of an inch can mean everything. Even just in thinking I can crawl around in his mind. It’s not a pretty thought [laughs]. We’d do that with Phil or Bob or Jerry, too. Our conversations were non-verbal on a musical and personal level.”

“[With the current Rhythm Devils lineup], we don’t know these guys. We haven’t done everything in the world with them, and those life experiences carry over into the music. We haven’t lived together as a band as we did with the Grateful Dead, so we have to be a bit kinder to them in how we approach the music,” says Hart. “Actually, instructive is a better word. We need to give them something to grab onto, some invisible thought process as we learn to mind-meld with each other. Each night it gets to that place of mind-meld in places, and they gain more confidence and you gain more confidence in them and they gain more confidence in you and slowly you grow and become an organism.”

Continue reading for much more from Mickey Hart and the other fresh Devils…

Bill Kreutzmann & Mickey Hart by Chad Smith

Lessons In The Dead

The palpable in-the-moment quality of the Grateful Dead was often most visible in the interplay of Kreutzmann and Hart, whose faces and bodies often conveyed a joyful daring-do that infected others, tapping into the primal, childlike need to bang on things until cool noises leap out. Their relationship often feels like we’re getting to eavesdrop on a very long, involved exchange that’s still a blast for both parties.

“We practiced a lot in the early days – thousands of hours personally, alone – to be able to throw it away and be fluid onstage. It’s not something that just happens. We worked at it,” says Hart. “We think of it more as a conversation. So, this conversation has lasted 40-odd years now, and it’s still interesting because we’ve never really totally codified things. We never talk about what we’re going to talk about. We never say, ‘You play that and I’ll play this.’ We never do that. We just search around until we find a combination that works and then settle into it. When we listen back to tapes on the bus we might say, ‘See, that thing you did there was really cool.’ And if the other person thinks it was cool, too, they’ll do it again. There’s still a learning curve on what works. We don’t do things different every night just to be different. It’s a constant state of morph and fluxing that’s about change in the right direction, not just change for change sake.”

Mickey Hart by Suzy Perler

“I like a lot of processing and space and delays and reverb and all kinds of instruments unborn. I like to find new sounds and new spaces every night that just amaze me. I’m certainly a hunter. I stalk the groove. I’m a stalker [laughs]. I work really hard to be able to do that,” continues Hart. “I warm up every night and rehearse the band to be able to relax enough to be able to go after the good, the rare, the thing that shines and makes you want to go back again the next night. Being a musician is not easy. You go from city to city, you set up, you play a few hours and you tear down. Unless you really want to do it don’t bother because it’s not really that comfortable mentally, physically and so on.”

The mythology of the Grateful Dead has long acknowledged that the audience is part of the music, inexorably threaded into what the musicians do, for good or bad.

“At its best moments, you get a full circle, a round trip, if you will, where the audience is feeding the band, the band is feeding the audience and neither can do it without the other,” says Hart. “It truly becomes a musical moment that’s shared as opposed to someone’s listening and someone’s giving. There’s a blurring of the lines between the stage and the audience. The better it is, the more cathartic it is, with many crashing, enlightening and uplifting moments throughout the evening.”

However, Grateful Dead Music requires both this audience-band synergy and a high level of musicianship to pull off. Within these powerful unfolding moments, there are still the practical issues of following the music in tandem, hitting the right keys and segues and so on.

Bill Kreutzmann by Suzy Perler

“You have to have trust,” says Hart. “It’s a little heroic, and sometimes you have to go into a place you’ve never been. It feels very euphoric when you find it but you have to let go, and letting go in front of thousands of people isn’t easyÂ…at first. Then, it becomes easier. It becomes your style, and the expectations people bring with them to a show are realized and courted. When that happens it’s a successful night, a successful moment, but you have to believe you’re going to find your way out of this dark alley you find yourself in. It’s a seemingly dead-end street and you find yourself at the end of it. So, how are you going to get out of this dark alleyway or super light alleyway or whatever it might be? How are you going to travel? It’s the way of going that’s important.”

“When you have group-mind, then you depend on that. Everyone just listens intently and is really sprightly in their work – moving quickly or slowly as the case may be – but listening and reacting and updating based on miniscule times. The time frames are tiny when you’re improvising and you have to make your decisions in a split second or else you’re behind. It becomes more intuitive instead of thinking,” continues Hart. “Once it becomes a body, the music takes on a whole other aspect. Once you develop that group-mind you move differently. Instead of moving a sea tanker where you have to go real slow, you can cut and run on a dime. It’s kind of a license to fly once everybody understands how high and fast they can fly individually and as a group. Then you become a group, and the rush of group melody, rhythm and harmony becomes intuitive rather than thinking, ‘Where do I go now?’ And obviously, the better in tune you are with yourself and the group, the more successful you are at jamming.”

Cracking The Songbook

Andy Hess & Bill Kreutzmann by Suzy Perler

The organic malleability of the Dead catalog is perhaps the heart of its enduring viability and the reason so many hands and voices can handle it while still creating something of their own.

“There’s certain signature things you have to have to make it the song, but we couldn’t remember what we did the night before, so a method was born [laughs]. We didn’t do this on purpose,” says Hart. “I remember one day there was an incident where Bob was supposed to do something and he didn’t do it and we came down on him. And it was so sad and we thought, ‘We can’t do this forever. If we’re gonna play this music forever we can’t go into the blame game.’ So, we dropped that and let it happen and it worked out. It wasn’t that kind of child; it didn’t have discipline in that respect. You could whip it into shape and discipline it and make it do what you wanted it to do OR you could let it go and just see it grow.”

“No one really tried to commit most things to memory. Some things we had to so people would recognize the songs,” continues Hart. “Things were going from one thing to another, just morphing and morphing, and there weren’t really any songs, there was just music. Then we tried to make songs out of it, and the songs grew. Robert Hunter started writing words to our music as we were playing it. He’d sit there and just write words. ‘Uncle John’s Band’ came out of a jam, most of ‘Dark Star’ and ‘The Other One’ were just moments we went through and Hunter just heard the words. And we never really codified or crystallized a lot of this. We never said this is the way it has to be. It was made to be explored, so everybody had some kind of personal freedom to explore on a daily or nightly basis. And it was okay to change things, and even when things became signatures we could still play with that signature riff because we birthed them. So, that’s the way it is in the Grateful Dead musical lexicon.”

“It’s fun and it’s getting better,” says Hess. “This music is all a great melting pot. It’s also really loose. I’ve also played in a lot of bands where it’s about being tighter, and this floats here and then floats into the next song. It’s a different approach that they’ve mastered over the years. That’s been challenging to me to let go of a stricter time thing. Mule was loose in a lot of ways and improvisational, but I come from groove music where there’s a lot of repetition. I’m trying to bring myself into this music and make the songs work.”

Davy Knowles by Suzy Perler

“My ultimate favorite is ‘So Many Roads.’ I think it’s absolutely perfect. If you can find a better definition of music, I’d like to hear it. It’s achingly beautiful. The lyrics are beautiful and the melody is incredible. It’s a road song without being cheesy. It’s just correct and so stunning,” says Knowles, who’s also enjoying the Dead’s old blues chestnuts. “I’m really digging the Pigpen-era stuff. And ‘Easy Wind’ is such a great blues track. It’s a different kind of blues. I’m very happy it’s not a 12-bar. It’s something else entirely. I figure if you to hear a 12-bar blues why not put on a Freddie King or Albert King record because they can do it a lot better than I ever will. The idea is to take those influences and make something of your own out of them. I’m 23-years-old and I don’t want to play 12-bar blues the rest of my life. I want to pay tribute to it, but there’s a lot of people that came before me that do a much better job at it. If you want to hear that, then go put it on. It’s important to try something which is why I like songs like ‘Easy Wind.’”

“The blues crowd is incredibly faithful but sometimes it feels like you can’t do anything outside the blues or they’ll lynch you. And the craziest thing is the blues came from black people being oppressed in these just evil times, and suddenly the blues market is all white, middle-aged guys with long hair trying to wear zoot suits. You think, ‘Wow, the white guys have kind of taken over again,’” says Knowles. “It’s very strange how upside down it is. If you’re a white kid who plays the blues but doesn’t play them like Freddie King or Albert King or one of the legendary black blues guys, then they say you’re not playing blues no more.”

“Probably [the most difficult song to learn has been] ‘Uncle John’s Band.’ There’s bars of three and suddenly it goes from 4/4 to 3/7. And my timing is pretty rubbish. I’ve played with 4/4, maybe 6/8 or 3/4 now and again, for so long and that’s about it. So, my timing needs a lot of work and suddenly it’s, ‘Oh crap!’ and I need to come in at precisely the right place,” says Knowles. “And these guys [Mickey and Billy] don’t know all the timing. They’ve played them for so long that they just know them. I’d ask if there was a bar of three and they’d say, ‘I don’t know. That’s just how it goes.’ Arrgh! What do I do? Help! Help!”

Tim Bluhm & Andy Hess by Suzy Perler

“I think the things that are working the best for me so far are the Dead ballads like ‘Brokedown Palace,’ which are right in my comfort zone,” says Bluhm. “Davy does a great ‘So Many Roads’ and I get to sing harmonies on that. He kills – he just rules it. I’m enjoying playing with him, but he’s definitely pushing me. I’m playing more guitar solos in this band than with the Hips. I saw the same thing happen with Jackie [Greene], where he learned more about big guitar playing when he was out with Phil. You learn what equipment works and what will cut through. I can’t really see it from inside but I know I’m growing when I think about it.”

Making music, on some level, is an act of regurgitation – what comes out after one has digested tradition. But it’s often a snake eating its tail, where music often sounds like mere variations on a theme instead of moving into fresh territory. This is one of the crucial differences in Grateful Dead music, which formed its own language since nothing previous quite got the message across in the right way for them. Make no mistake what Hart, Kreutzmann and their compatriots forged is a true American original distinct from anything before its arrival.

“That’s why I thought I could do this the rest of my life, this kind of music, and I was right,” says Hart. “It allows for growth. When you have this kind of architecture it’s not inhibiting to your creativity, as opposed to playing the song the exact same way every night, which is really the death knell for creativity. Playing songs really well is a wonderful art, but it’s not ours. Not to put that down at all, to play a song with all its nuances intact, but for us it would be creative suicide.”

“You gotta be like a warrior in a way, a road dog, and desperate in a way to bring your music to the people or else you shouldn’t do it, you shouldn’t take up the wand. I wouldn’t recommend it for most people,” says Hart. “It’s a very intense kind of life, and you have to balance it with family and a home life. People pay good money to see us and I try to reward that with an effort, to go to that place that will make them charmed. That’s my responsibility to them. If you go out and don’t deliver what you’re capable of then you’re ripping them off, and I don’t like that, brother. It’s a rip off if you don’t put in everything you have into it that night. Even if you fail it’s okay as long as you try real hard.”

The Rhythm Devils will perform next on Jam Cruise on January 7-8, and then a post-cruise show at Revolution Live in Fort Lauderdale, FL on January 9. Check out setlists from this past year along with a list of new tunes being performed here.

The Rhythm Devils Tour Dates :: The Rhythm Devils News :: The Rhythm Devils Concert Reviews

JamBase | Grooving
Go See Live Music!


15 Actors Who Turned Down Great Roles

It’s not always easy for actors to tell which films are going to be a huge success before they’re made. Sometimes a lackluster script meets outrageous talent, stunning visuals, an epic soundtrack, and suddenly you have best-picture winner, Gladiator. Sometimes you have A-list talent and a director famous for churning out critical favorites, but something gets lost along the way and you end up with The Fountain.

Paltrow cried after punching McGraw

Gwyneth Paltrow 2Actress Gwyneth Paltrow was left in tears after she punched her co-star Tim McGraw in her new movie “Country Strong” because she had never hit anyone in her life. After faking the punch several times for the cameras, McGraw started calling her names in a bid to get her angry enough to hit him for [...]

Tim Buckley Debut Album Deluxe Edition Out in January

PRE-ORDER AT RHINO.COM ON DECEMBER 15; SHIPS JANUARY 11


Tim Buckley

Rhino Handmade retraces the first steps of Tim Buckley‘s uncompromising musical journey with a two-
disc set that includes both the stereo and mono versions of his debut. The second disc contains nearly two dozen
unreleased recordings Buckley made in 1965 with The Bohemians and in 1966 with frequent songwriting partner
Larry Beckett. Tim Buckley – Deluxe Edition comes housed in a weathered cardboard
folio with rare photos and is set for release on January 11, with pre-order available beginning on December 15,
exclusively at www.rhino.com for $39.98.

Tracklisting

Disc 1: Album in Stereo and Mono
1. “I Can’t See You”
2. “Wings”
3. “Song Of The Magician”
4. “Strange Street Affair Under Blue”
5. “Valentine Melody”
6. “Aren’t You The Girl”
7. “Song Slowly Song”
8. “It Happens Every Time”
9. “Song For Jainie”
10. “Grief In My Soul”
11. “She Is”

12. “Understand Your Man”

Disc 2: The Bohemians Demos
1. “Put You Down”
2. “It Happens Every Time”
3. “Let Me Love You”

4. “I’ve Played That Game Before”
5. “She Is”
6. “Here I Am”
7. “Don’t Look Back”
8. “Call Me If You Do”
9. “You Today”
10. “No More”
11. “Won’t You Please Be My Woman”

12. “Come On Over”

Acoustic Demos
13. “She Is”
14. “Aren’t You The Girl”
15. “Found At The Scene Of A Rendezvous That Failed”
16. “Wings”
17. “My Love Is For You”
18. “Song Slowly Song’
19. Song Introductions by Larry Beckett
20. “I Can’t See You”
21. “Birth Day”
22. “Long Tide”


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How to sync iTunes music to Motorola Android Posted By : Tim dogolas

Here is a step by step guide showing you two ways to sync iTunes music to Motorola Android smartphone.

How To Convert a MOV File to Windows Media Player Format Posted By : Tim dogolas

The MOV is a file format read only by programs designed for Mac computers. If you have a Mac computer, playing a MOV file is easy. If you are a Windows user , you have to download some program to play MOV file on windws.Here are some steps on how to do this.

Darker My Love: Quite Alive

By: Brennan Lagasse

Darker My Love

You’d think a fresh young band that’s received critical acclaim across the globe for their second studio effort would take the money and run, right? Not so with Darker My Love’s (DML) third studio album, Alive As You Are (released August 17 on Dangerbird). The band that created their name based on reverb-laden, distorted, hugely psychedelic grooves has taken a step back with their latest effort to create a more melodic, flowing collection that’s intricate and focused on songwriting as opposed to taking the listener on a non-stop ride through an aural kaleidoscope.

Listeners with an appetite for psychedelic indie rock knows DML delivers the goods, so those folks may be slightly thrown off by their first taste of Alive As You Are. It’s more of an Americana thing, but it’s still DML. Their trademark sound is there but it feels lighter, freer, perhaps liberated from the expectations that come when a band makes its name playing a certain style of music. But what’s most important is it’s good. Real good. Songs like “18th Street Shuffle,” “Rain Party,” “June Bloom” and “Dear Author” may stand out, but after you get past your first spin, the album becomes one of those rare modern pieces where you just want to listen to the whole album straight through each time.

With a growing fan base, a tour supporting Band of Horses, and new material coming out left and right, DML is rapidly evolving and picking up new listeners all the time. The psychedelic tones are still there and very much a part of the band’s identity, but their new album clearly shows how diverse this collective of five bright musicians really is. With Alive As You Are you have the band altering its trajectory much like American Beauty did for the Grateful Dead. The Dead were in a much different place in 1970 than say 1968′s Anthem of the Sun, and DML is equally comfortable playing tunes with the deep tones of American Beauty on Alive As You Are as they are playing the droned out mind-melters from their first two albums.

JamBase had the chance to catch DML’s recent show at the Greek Theatre in Berkley, and singer-songwriter-bassist Rob Barbato was gracious enough to sit down in the Greek’s hallowed halls to answer some questions before their set.

JamBase: You have a pretty unique sound. What bands have influenced you?

New Album

Rob Barbato: I think with the new record John Phillips from The Mamas and The Papas was a pretty big influence, and obviously the Grateful Dead, CCR (Credence Clearwater Revival) and stuff like that. But also bands like Big Star were a pretty big influence for us. Who else would you say Will?

Will Canzoneri [organ/clavinet]: R.E.M.

Rob: Yeah, R.E.M. as a modern sound.

JamBase: Well that’s pretty cool since there’s an R.E.M. poster in your dressing room backstage.

Rob: Totally. So, anything from classic rock into modern independent stuff all influences us. And our friends and family, too. J.J. Cale’s a big influence.

Would you say your fan base is centered more on the West Coast or elsewhere?

I think we have fans all over the place that pop up. We have fans in England and here and there, but I would say being a West Coast band makes it more a West Coast thing [laughs]. But we have diverse listeners, especially with the new record. We have fans that are psychedelic fans, fans that are more countryish or Americana listeners, and people more into jam band type stuff. Our fans are diverse, and even age-wise we have people who are 50-years-old down to like 13 or 12 year olds, so it’s not a particular person or fan. In any city or town in the world it can be any type of person, which is a pretty cool thing because it means we speak to a bunch of different people.

Do you think the energy at your shows stays at a consistent high each night or it changes with who shows up, a unique jam, or maybe the venue?

A huge factor has to do with the audience because it goes back and forth with the audience. You can be playing to ten people but if the crowd is way into it you’re gonna be way into it. And if you’re playing to 8,000 people and they’re not into it, it’s tough for you to get into it. Sometimes it depends on how you feel, but you always try and give it 100-percent.

How does improvisation play into your music?

We jam out, but in shows like this support set we can’t spread it out as much because there really isn’t time to if you only have like 45 minutes. So, it’s really hard for you to be able to stretch songs out, but when we headline shows we often jam out songs. We have a lot of live recordings, especially from earlier shows where we have 10-minute versions of much shorter songs. We like to jam but it’s a tough thing to go out on a limb like that. I respect every band that jams like that because it’s not easy to just let go. Sometimes it’s easier to play tighter, but all our solos are always improvised and not really played like the records, even though when they were played on the record they were improvised, too.

Tell me about playing with The Fall. They have a huge fan base in England and are hugely improvisational.

Gig Poster

Yeah, that was a lot of fun. Tim [Presely (guitar/vox)] and I did that from 2006-2007. Basically, their band left them in Phoenix and we put a band together to play on the West Coast. We thought we were just going to do it for the U.S. tour, but then Mark E. Smith asked us to come play the 30th anniversary of The Fall in Manchester, so we flew over there and did that. And then we recorded a record and then we flew back over to do some more festivals. We kept playing and we did a live album/DVD of the last show at the Hammersmith Palais, which is a pretty famous venue where Bob Marley, The Clash and Bill Haley & His Comets played. That venue is important because it’s where American artists came over to play rock and roll and introduced the sound. It was also big during the punk years, and a lot sick reggae shows went down there, too. So, that was amazing and Tim and I learned so much. We’re still friends with Mark and the rest of the band, and every time we go over to England we see them. But it was a situation like, “I’m in The Fall?” because to British people The Fall is quintessentially British and it’s almost like the Grateful Dead in a way. There’s a heavy online community, people follow the band on tour, tape shows every night, and are stoked to see what songs they played. When The Fall play older songs, rarities or covers people will be like, “They haven’t played that since 1984.” It’s kind of like that so it’s amazing, but it’s also a completely different thing because it’s this weird post-punk type music and it’s a lot darker than something like the Grateful Dead.

Do you predict future collaborations with them?

I don’t know. Mark is always like sooner or later we’ll get back together and do some more stuff, but you never know. Kind of the reason we stopped playing with them is it’s just really expensive to fly all of us over to England all the time to work on things. But you never know. Hopefully something will happen.

You’re a tough band to slap one category on. Do you find your identity through one particular categorization or do you feel you breach multiple genres and don’t like having to conform to the idea of a band that plays one type of music?

We’re really just into rock and roll. The first two albums were more psychedelic/acid rock type albums, but for the new record we just tried to make the best record we could. And really that’s all we’re ever trying to do. It may hurt us, but we’re not really into or part of one particular scene or anything like that. It’s hard to categorize us, but it’s like pop music, and when I say pop music [I mean] it’s like The Beatles. But The Beatles were rock and roll through pop music, and it was also psychedelic and trippy, too. But our new record has a country twinge, too, so yeah, hard to categorize but we just play what we want to play.

What’s inspired your songwriting and music compositions beyond musical influences?

Darker My Love

Friends and family are huge inspirations, and also other friend’s music. And people who have passion in their life are a huge influence. That’s always something that gets me really excited to create.

Has it changed the band’s sound or your relationship together overall to bring in a new drummer?

Yeah, Dan [Allaire] has totally changed the band. He’s an amazing drummer. Andy [Ganelli] was an amazing drummer, but Dan does stuff differently. Dan was a big part of the songwriting on the new album and our [fresh] direction because he can do the stuff we were going for. It’s a big deal and he’s an amazing dude and an awesome drummer, so it’s really great to have him in the band.

Your new album seems more intricate and song focused than your first two. How does that speak to where DML is at right now?

I think it’s just another piece of the band as an evolution. Some fans want more psychedelic stuff and some fans see [Alive As You Are] as another branch of what we’re doing. Regardless, it’s the same band more or less. We just decided to strip away a lot of the reverb and distortion this time in favor of more acoustic, organic sounds.

How did bringing in a close friend to the band for production shape the new album?

A: Well, Nick Hunington was great. The [previous] record we worked with a huge producer that kind of got a little out of control for us, where we didn’t have a say in stuff. With Nick it was more of collaboration in the production area, and he’s an amazing musician, songwriter and producer, so we were really lucky. He also has a different temperament then the rest of the guys in the band, which is a very calming thing, so that also helped when we were tracking and doing stuff like that. I would love to work with him again whether with DML or otherwise. I had worked with Nick in the pas,t too. I played drums for him with the band Canyon Country, which he put out on his record label Attack 9.

Did you guys concentrate on anything specific with the new album?

Darker My Love

Lyrics and songwriting. We focused on a really organic production and really trying to nail the songs live-in-the-studio so that we got it down and done, so it wasn’t something that we were trying to fix later in the mix. With songwriting we just tried to focus on being as honest as possible. Tim had gone through a lot. His dad had passed away, so his songs have a lot of gravity to them. It definitely put the record in the sort of space where everyone could concentrate. I don’t even want to call it a new direction because we’re just doing what we do, but that’s what happened with a different sort of focus.

The record was recorded in San Francisco at a studio where many other famous tracks have been recorded. What made you choose that site?

Hyde Street was where CCR had the Cosmo’s Factory where they recorded their first two or three records before they moved to Fantasy in Berkeley. We’d actually recorded there before and we just always loved the vibe. It’s in the Tenderloin District, so it’s really kind of gritty, and it’s reasonably priced to record there. All of Herbie Hancock’s funk records were done there, and Workingman’s Dead and American Beauty were done there. [It's an] awesome place to record, and that’s what we were going for. And all of those mics are still there, so we used all the same pieces of equipment. Studios in L.A. are pricier, and I don’t want to say stale. We recorded our album 2 at Sunset Sound where The Rolling Stones recorded and The Doors did all their stuff, but we wanted to get away from L.A. It’s good to get away from everyday distractions. When you go home you can get the mail and your cell phone bill is there [laughs], so when you’re in San Francisco and you’re going back to this place where you are just renting, you can go home have a drink, go to bed, and be ready to record more in the morning and not think about that other stuff and totally think about the record.

There’s amazing interplay between you and your bandmates. Do you think that comes more from the time you’ve put in practicing, recording or touring?

It’s mainly from touring. We don’t really practice much anymore. When we get together we write songs but we don’t rehearse that much. That also adds to the live feel because you can make a mistake. Playing on tour you get more comfortable when you’re playing together every night. We’re also all good friends, so that helps the chemistry for sure.

You and Tim wrote the songs for this new album. Is that the way it normally goes or do you bring in the other bandmates to write as well?

Sometimes Tim will write a song, sometimes I’ll write a song, and then we’ll bring it to the band and it will get completely figured out. But then sometimes we’ll all work together on a song. But we always bring songs to the whole band to play and work through collaboratively, and that’s when ideas get thrown around – editing, rearranging, and things like that happen. Then again, sometimes we all put something together that comes from a jam in practice or something like that.

You’re building a bigger fan base right now. This is your third album. You’re about to play the Greek Theatre in Berkley with Band of Horses, and start another headlining tour in November. What do you see in the future for DML?

Make another record, write cool songs, that’s it. And have fun playing shows. To take it too seriously at times will drive you crazy. So as long as you just realize you’re doing it to write songs and have fun then it’s all gravy because that can be attained. But, if you start shooting for financial stability or stuff like that, that is what drives you crazy in the music industry.

Darker My Love just wrapped up a West Coast tour in support of Band of Horses. They hit the road again in November with Delta Spirit and The Fling. The tour starts in the Midwest and makes it way out to the East Coast and Southeast before coming back to California in December.

Darker My Love Tour Dates :: Darker My Love News :: Darker My Love Concert Reviews

JamBase | Shading Nicely
Go See Live Music!


Dave Matthews & Tim Reynolds: Seattle Charity Concerts

TICKET PURCHASERS TO DESIGNATE WHERE FUNDS ARE DONATED


Dave Matthews and Tim Reynolds

Dave Matthews and Tim Reynolds will perform two
unprecedented special benefit concerts on December 6 and 7 at Seattle’s McCaw Hall. One hundred percent of the
proceeds from these two shows will benefit charities selected by each ticket purchaser.

For each ticket you purchase for $135 for either show, you will receive a unique code worth $150 that you may use
to direct a donation to any charity of your choosing on JustGive.org (a nonprofit organization that connects people to over 1.8 million
charities).

Visit the Warehouse website for more
information and place a ticket request for Dave and Tim in Seattle.


Dave Matthews & Tim Reynolds Announce December Shows

DECEMBER 9 IN BROOMFIELD, DECEMBER 10, 11 IN LAS VEGAS


Tim Reynolds

Dave Matthews and Tim Reynolds will perform at the new
1st Bank Center in Broomfield, CO (metro Denver area) for the first time on December 9 at 7:30 pm. Tickets for the
show are $95.00 and $85.00 and VIP packages are available for $275.00.

They will also return to the Theatre for the Performing Arts at Planet Hollywood Resort and Casino in Las Vegas, NV on
December 10 and 11 at 7:30 pm. Reserved tickets are $89.25 (including a $4.25 Live Entertainment Tax) and VIP
packages are available for $275.00.

Click here for more information.


Did “Saturday Night Live” Steal Adult Swim “Tiny Hats” Sketch?

Fans of Adult Swim’s comedy duo Tim and Eric fans are accusing Saturday Night Live of swiping a sketch from the guys during last weekend’s 36th season premiere. The long-running NBC series ran a parody called “Tiny Hats” — which looks strikingly similar to a segment on Adult Swim of the same name. Coincidence? Many [...]

Tim and Eric Awesome Tour, Great Job!

ADULT SWIM DUO HIT THE ROAD STARTING NOVEMBER 1

From the absurdist comedy of Tim Heidecker and Eric Wareheim, creators and stars of the hit
Adult Swim series Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job!, comes their fourth nationwide live tour, “Tim and
Eric Awesome Tour, Great Job! Chrimbus Spectacular 2010″. The duo will be appearing on Jimmy Kimmel
Live
on Wednesday, Oct. 13, and will kick off their 5-week US tour in Seattle on Nov. 1 and wrap up in Atlanta
on Dec. 5.

Much like the television series, “Tim and Eric Awesome Tour, Great Job! Chrimbus Spectacular 2010″ is a fast-paced,
live variety show, complete with short films, parodies, pranks and musical numbers. Tim and Eric will also show
never-before-seen videos and clips from their upcoming one-hour holiday special, Tim and Eric Awesome Show,
Great Job! Chrimbus Special
, which will premiere December 5. Throughout the tour, special performances will
include the band Pusswhip Banggang, and comedian Neil Hamburger will perform the opening set.

TOUR DATES*:

MO Nov 1 Seattle, WA @ SODO 8:00pm

TU Nov 2 Portland, OR @ Roseland Theater 8:00pm
WE Nov 3 Eugene, OR @ W.O.W. Hall 8:00pm

TH Nov 4 Chico, CA @ El Rey Theater 8:00pm

FR Nov 5 San Francisco, CA @ The Regency Ballroom 8:00pm
SA Nov 6 Los Angeles, CA @ Club Nokia 9:00pm
MO Nov 8 Albuquerque, NM @ Sunshine Theater 8:00pm

TU Nov 9 Denver, CO @ Ogden Theatre 8:00pm

TH Nov 11 Dallas, TX @ Granada Theater 8:00pm
FR Nov 12 Houston, TX @ Warehouse Live 8:00pm
SA Nov 13 Austin, TX @ Paramount Theatre 8:00pm
MO Nov 15 Kansas City, MO @ Midland by AMC 8:00pm
TU Nov 16 Milwaukee, WI @ Pabst Theatre 8:00pm
WE Nov 17 Minneapolis, MN @ State Theatre 8:00pm

TU Nov 18 Chicago, IL @ Vic Theatre 8:00pm SOLD OUT
TU Nov 18 Chicago, IL @ Vic Theatre 10:30pm ON SALE NOW
SA Nov 20 Columbus, OH @ Newport Music Hall 7:30pm
SU Nov 21 Detroit, MI @ Royal Oak 7:00pm
MO Nov 22 Pittsburgh, PA @ Carnegie 7:00pm
TU Nov 23 Buffalo, NY @ Town Ballroom 8:00pm

WE Nov 24 Philadelphia, PA @ The Trocadero 8:30pm

FR Nov 26 Boston, MA @ Wilbur Theatre 7:30pm

SA Nov 27 New York, NY @ Best Buy Theater (Formally Nokia) 7:00pm
SU Nov 28 Burlington, VT @ Higher Ground 8:00pm
MO Nov 29 Hartford, CT @ The Webster 8:00pm
TU Nov 30 Albany, NY @ Northern Lights 8:00pm
WE Dec 1 Falls Church, VA @ State Theatre 7:30pm
FR Dec 3 Nashville, TN @ The Cannery 8:00pm
SA Dec 4 Louisville, KY @ Headliners 8:00pm
SU Dec 5 Atlanta, GA @ Variety 8:00pm


*tour dates may be subject to change

Tim and Eric
Tour Dates

::
Tim and Eric News
::
Tim and Eric
Concert
Reviews


Tim Gunn Slams Taylor Momsen: “Pathetic Brat!

Remind us never to piss off Tim Gunn. Don’t let the silver hair and impeccable sense of style fool you, this is one Crabby Queen that’s bitcher than a Blackberry-wielding Naomi Campbell!Gunn was less than impressed with Taylor Momsen while filming a guest spot alongside teen actress on The CW’s Gossip Girl over the summer. [...]

Tim Allen Is The Voice Of Chevrolet

American automotive manufacturer General Motors has tapped television and film actor Tim Allen as the new voice of Chevrolet.“Tim Allen brings the right combination of a recognizable voice with the credibility, likeability and humor that will connect with viewers,” Joel Ewanick, Vice President of US Marketing for General Motors, announced Tuesday. “His passion for [...]

Timbaland Suicide Attempt?

Despite reports that superproducer/rapper Timbaland (real name Timothy Mobley) attempted suicide on Tuesday, officials with the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department say the were commissioned only to help locate the missing husband and father, who disappered in a funk on Tuesday after learning that a Jacob & Co. timepiece with an estimated value of $2 million [...]

Tim Gunn “Gossip Girl” Guest Appearance

Sharp-tongued and even sharper-dressed style star Tim Gunn has landed a guest spot on The CW’s fashion-forward primetime soap Gossip Girl. The Project Runway mentor has agreed to appear as himself on an episode of GG premiering in late October, Entertainment Weekly TV Gossip Guy Michael Ausiello divulged on Tuesday. Details surrounding Tim’s appearance are being kept [...]

12 Of The Worst TV Shows Based On Movies

Sometimes, a successful movie will attempt to make the transition to the small screen, but rarely with success. Without the budget of a feature film, special effects are limited, third rate actors are hired, and stricter content controls mean that all the fun stuff from the films need to be cut. With a good director [...]