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Posts Tagged ‘Tom Waits’

JamBase Questionnaire: The Old Ceremony

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from Roots of Creation.

Smart, full of different colors, hooky as hell, Chapel Hill, North Carolina’s The Old Ceremony are everything rock should be but usually isn’t. One picks up on the same vibe that infused late period Beatles and early Tom Waits, but tempered with a pleasantly jaundiced eye and a sonic range that touches on tango, folk, sophisticated jazz, Arabic tones, punk and more. What’s more impressive is how they harness this variety into frameworks that get the job done in just a few minutes.

The group has grown from strength to strength on each successive album, with their latest, Tender Age, coalescing their many charms into a series of super catchy cautionary tales for lovers and dreamers. The curveballs come fast on Tender Age, where seemingly dark titles like “Gun To My Head” and “Ruined My Plans” are snappy love songs, one tune is sung in Chinese, and the whole thing simmers down to a gently spiritual hum that sneaks up and leaves one reflective in the best of ways. (Dennis Cook)

The Old Ceremony plays next at the Motorco Music Hall Benefit for Central Park Charter School on Friday, January 28 in Durham, NC, then on Friday, February 4 in Raleigh, NC as part of the Kings WKNC Double Barrel Benefit. After that The Old Ceremony will open a string of dates for Rooney that will hit Philly, D.C. and more Find full tour dates here.

Here’s what TOC singer-songwriter-bandleader Django Haskins had to say to our inquiries.

The Old Ceremony

Instrument of choice: Picasso guitar, barroom piano
Nicknames: “Dave”

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Breaking some eggs. The older I get, the more impatient I am with safe choices.

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
The Cars’ Heartbeat City

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
The Walkmen album You and I. It’s the aural equivalent of oversaturated 35mm film: rich, almost rotten colors bleeding into each other nostalgically with occasional bursts of sad yellow light. I lived in that album for at least a year.

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
Elvis Presley. Or Humphrey Bogart. Or a Harlem Globetrotter. I was a mixed up kid.

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
The surprising one. We always enjoy playing together, but every so often there’ll be a show that shows all the signs of being a downer before we start, but explodes into overjoydom. On nights like that, I usually can’t stop grinning at everything that happens onstage.

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
I still have all my fingers.

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
Rocky beaches. I used to wander beaches in Maine and Nova Scotia in the summers, smashing rocks down on the ground hoping that one would split and reveal a geode. Never found one, but it got out a lot of my childhood angst.

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
Bowie’s Ziggy Stardust or Rum, Sodomy and the Lash by The Pogues

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
We’ve have some great ones. Off the top of my head, I’d say Vatan, a prix fixe Indian place on E. 37th St. in NYC.
10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
The frozen foods section. And house concerts.

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
Staring listlessly at trees flying by for hours on end. And my cowboy mouth.

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
The Beatles. They actually reinvented themselves over and over. The Stones, though I love them, found one good sound and stuck with it. I prefer variety, if I have to choose only one.

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
A long distance bus ride in China that was so crowded that the only place I could stand was on top of a basket of pig parts heading to market.

The Old Ceremony – Til My Voice Is Gone from Sam Griffith on Vimeo.

The Old CeremonyTour Dates :: The Old Ceremony Tour News :: The Old Ceremony Tour Concert Reviews

JamBase | Talking Straight
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Captain Beefheart dies aged 69

American rocker and painter Don Van Vliet, who recorded under the moniker Captain Beefheart, has died at the age of 69. According to a representative for the Michael Werner Gallery in New York, the star passed away on 17th Dec 2010, reports Contactmusic. The exact cause of his death was unknown, although he had long [...]

Neil Diamond to be inducted into Rock and Roll Hall of Fame

Neil DiamondPop singer Neil Diamond will enter the US Rock and Roll Hall of Fame next year. The ‘Sweet Caroline’ singer will be inducted alongside Alice Cooper and singer-songwriter Tom Waits. Diamond said he had thought in the past that he may be nominated “but I kind of figured they”d get around to me at some [...]

Rock Hall 2011 Inductees: Tom Waits, Alice Cooper, Dr. John

STILL NO RUSH, KISS, DEEP PURPLE, CHICAGO, CHEAP TRICK


Rock and Roll Hall of Fame

The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame has announced their list of
2011
inductees. Tom Waits,
Alice Cooper, Dr. John, Neil Diamond, and Darlene Love will join the hallowed
halls as performers. Leon
Russell
will receive an award for musical excellence. Elektra Records founder Jac Holzman and
Specialty Records’ own Art Rupe will receive the Ahmet Ertegun Award, given to music industry
executives.

The nominees not being inducted include the Beastie Boys, Bon Jovi, Chic, Donna Summer, J Geils Band,
Donovan, LL Cool J, Laura Nyro, Joe Tex
, and Chuck Willis.

The 26th induction ceremony is scheduled for March 14 at the Waldorf-Astoria in New York City.


Tom Waits Vinyl Releases

CELEBRATE THE CLASSIC ASYLUM YEARS ON VINYL


Tom Waits

After signing with Asylum Records in the early 70′s, Tom Waits recorded a series of groundbreaking albums whose noir tales
of the after-midnight underworld transformed the seedy into the sublime in songs laced with both dark humor and
profound longing. Nearly 40 years and several musical evolutions later, Waits’ Asylum years still hold a special place
in the hearts of many.

Rhino will celebrate Waits this December by reissuing the Grammy-winning/Oscar nominated artists’ first four
Asylum albums on 180-gram heavy vinyl each packaged with their original artwork. Released on December 21 at
retail outlets, including www.rhino.com

Ahead of the general December 21 Rhino retail release, TomWaits.com is offering limited edition 180 gram red vinyl versions of
Closing Time, The Heart of Saturday Night, Nighthawks at the Diner and Small Change. Those who
pre-order by December 18 should have their packages arrive by December 24.

The red vinyl limited editions (only 1000 pressed of each title) will be available exclusively at www.tomwaitsstore.com and are available for pre-order now.

Tom Waits
Tour Dates

::
Tom Waits News
::
Tom Waits
Concert
Reviews


Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame 2011 Nominees

The nominees are in for the 2011 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees. Bon Jovi, Alice Cooper, The Beastie Boys, and Neil Diamond are among the music lumanaries who have landed hat tips to be inducted into the prestigious Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland next year.The stars join fellow first-time nominees [...]

2011 Rock and Roll HOF Nominees: Beastie Boys, Tom Waits, Dr. John

LET THE DEBATE BEGIN


Rock and Roll Hall of Fame

The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame has unveiled their list of
nominees for induction in the 2011 ceremony. The inductees will be announced in December and the induction
ceremony takes place March 14 at the Waldorf-Astoria in Manhattan. Check out the list of nominees below:

Alice Cooper
Beastie Boys
Bon Jovi
Chic

Neil Diamond
Donovan

Dr. John
J. Geils Band
LL Cool J
Darlene Love
Laura Nyro
Donna Summer
Joe Tex
Tom Waits
Chuck Willis


Primus & Gogol Bordello | Red Rocks | Pics

Words & Images by: Mike Hardaker

Primus/Gogol Bordello :: 08.12.10 :: Red Rocks Amphitheatre :: Morrison, CO

Gogol Bordello and Primus returned to Red Rocks Amphitheatre earlier this month. Primus features Les Claypool (bass, vocals), Larry LaLonde (guitar) and multi-talented drummer Jay Lane, who left touring with the latest Grateful Dead act, Furthur, to join Primus on the road in 2010. Primus formed in Northern California, with musical influences like Pink Floyd and Frank Zappa. There musical style is hard to define, and Primus has been referred to as psychedelic polka, thrash-funk, alternative rock, and much more.

Gogol Bordello’s eight band members hail from across the globe. The band formed in 1999 on NYC’s lower east side, and is known for theatrical stage shows and catchy polka sounding punk songs. Much of Gogol Bordellos sound hails from Gypsy music, and features violins, accordions, guitars, drums and other noisemakers. The last time Gogol Bordello played at Red Rocks Amphitheatre the band sat around with Manu Chao and played music outside of Red Rocks Park until the sun came up in true gypsy style.

Primus Setlist
Pudding Time, In The Flesh (Pink Floyd cover), Here Come The Bastards, Behind My Camel (Police cover), Groundhog’s Day, Those Damn Blue Collar Tweekers, Golden Boy, American Life, Big In Japan (Tom Waits cover w/ Gogol Bordello), Over The Falls, Drum & Whamola Jam, Eleven, Jerry Was A Race Car Driver, Over The Electric Grapevine, Harold of the Rocks. E: Tommy The Cat

Gogol Bordello Setlist
Intro (Illumination), Ultimate, Not A Crime, Wonderlust King, My Companjera, Tribal Connection, Trans-Continental Hustle, We Comin’ Rougher, Break The Spell, Immigrant Punk, When Universes Collide, Pala Tute, Start Wearing Purple, Break The Spell (reprise). E: Sun Is On My Side, Punk Rock Parranda, Sacred Darling

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”0″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=114″);}); 8/12/10 – Primus & Gogol Bordello @ Red Rocks Amphitheatre (Morrison, CO) View Photos

Primus Tour Dates :: Primus News :: Primus Concert Reviews

Gogol Bordello Tour Dates :: Gogol Bordello News :: Gogol Bordello Concert Reviews

JamBase | Rockies
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Scarlett Johansson Third Album?

Movie Trailers – Movies Blog Scarlett Johansson would love to record a third album. (Let the Church say “Girl, no!”) The Hollywood actress – who has already released a pair of critically-panned cover albums “Anywhere I Lay My Head” and “Break Up” – has confessed that she wouldn’t mind putting down tracks on a third LP since she [...]

Patrick Watson Embarks On Longest U.S. Tour To Date

PATRICK WATSON & THE WOODEN ARMS’ MAY U.S. TOUR IS LONGEST TO DATE

Patrick Watson

This May, Patrick Watson &
The Wooden Arms – frontman Patrick Watson, guitarist Simon Angell, drummer
Robbie Kuster and bassist Mishka Stein – will set off on their longest U.S. tour to date, starting in
Brooklyn, ending at the Sasquatch! Festival, and playing their largest U.S. venues so far.

The Montreal-based band, whose 2009 album Wooden Arms (Secret City) set the stage for
breakout success, are, says Entertainment Weekly, “a beguiling, bewitching treat, like absinthe-laced
gumdrops: part rickety graveyard waltz, part hand-over-heart chamber pop, part avant-garde piano theater.”

“If Jeff Buckley, Syd
Barrett
, Bertolt Brecht, and Erik Satie were all to rise from the grave and team up with
Tom Waits, the results
might sound something like Patrick Watson & the Wooden Arms,” raves Guitar Player.

Those wanting to see what NPR calls “a brilliant band… performing vibrant, thoughtful and textured pop
music” will have 12 opportunities in May. But beware: as CNN warns, ” At a Patrick Watson concert, no
kitchen utensil is safe, no car parts are off limits, and nowhere is out of bounds.”

See the CNN piece here:
http://bit.ly/PWatson-
CNN

Tour dates:

May 6 – Bell House – Brooklyn, NY*
May 7- 92Y Tribeca – New York, NY*
May 8 – Rock & Roll Hotel – Washington, DC*
May 9 – Unitarian Side Chapel – Philadelphia, PA*
May 17 – Schuba’s – Chicago, IL
May 19 – Larimer Lounge – Denver, CO
May 21 – Rhythm Room – Phoenix, AZ
May 22 – Hotel Cafe – Los Angeles, CA*
May 24 – Casbah – San Diego, CA*
May 26 – Cafe du Nord – San Francisco, CA*
May 28 – Doug Fir – Portland OR**
May 29 – Sasquatch! Festival – Quincy, WA
*with Doveman
**with Laura Marling


Patrick Watson Tour Dates :: Patrick Watson News :: Patrick Watson Concert Reviews


Delta Spirit: New Album 6/08

DELTA SPIRIT TO RELEASE NEW RECORD HISTORY FROM BELOW, JUNE 8, 2010
NORTH AMERICAN TOUR DATES CONFIRMED

Delta Spirit

Rounder Records is excited to announce the release of the new Delta Spirit record on June 8, 2010. Entitled History From Below, the record was produced by My Morning Jacket‘s keyboardist Bo Koster and Eli Thomson. History From Below is the follow up to the band’s
critically acclaimed debut, 2008′s Ode to Sunshine, which Spin hailed in its four-out-of-five-star
review, saying, “This rousing debut impresses mightily,” while Filter called it “pure joy” and Jim
Fusilli
of the Wall Street Journal said, “I make no pretense of objectivity with Delta Spirit, I love these
guys.”

History From Below was recorded at Prairie Sun Studio C in Cotati, CA – the same place Tom Waits has recorded almost
exclusively since 1991. The record is brimming with incredibly deep and moving songs that are alternately grand
and explosive, always eloquent and melodic. It has a powerful energy that radiates musically, lyrically and vocally
from the moment you hit play as it finally captures the uncontainable spirit the band exudes on stage.

History From Below Track Listing:

“911″
“Bushwick Blues”
“Salt in the wound”
“White Table”
“Ransom Man”
“Devil knows you’re dead”
“Golden state”
“Scarecrow”
“Vivian”
“St. Francis”
“Ballad of Vitaly”

Delta Spirit will hit the road in support of History From Below. Click below for dates.

Delta Spirit Tour
Dates
:: Delta Spirit News :: Delta Spirit Concert Reviews


Sparklehorse’s Mark Linkous Commits Suicide

Sparklehorse’s Mark Linkous Commits Suicide

Mark Linkous

Mark Linkous, best known as the driving force behind Sparklehorse, committed suicide on Saturday March 6.

A note on Sparklehorse.com reads:

From the Linkous Family: “It is with great sadness that we share the news that our dear friend and family member, Mark Linkous, took his own life today. We are thankful for his time with us and will hold him forever in our hearts. May his journey be peaceful, happy and free. There’s a heaven and there’s a star for you.” – March 6, 2010

In addition to his work as Sparklehorse, the Virginia-based musician collaborated with Radiohead, R.E.M., Tom Waits, and recently recorded the wonderful Dark Night Of The Soul with Danger Mouse.

Though there is some confusion over Linkous’ exact age, he was in his 40s when he died.


Albums of the Week: March 5 – March 11 Jimi Hendrix, Gorillaz

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

Dennis’ Pick of the Week
Free Energy: Stuck On Nothing (Astralwerks)

Getting the fundamentals right is sometimes more satisfying than truckloads of innovation. Philly’s Free Energy is a gang of guys dedicated to carefully honed pop rock in the tradition of Cheap Trick, Badfinger, Buddy Holly, early Beatles and ’80s pure pop like The Outfield and The Knack. The rainbow adorned black and white high top sneaker pulling on street bubblegum on their debut’s cover is a succinct hint at what’s inside. Casual listeners may dismiss this as fluff, but, like the difficulty of writing a comedy versus a tragedy, really nailing non-ironic, positivity infused music like this is more challenging than the naval fixated mope more common to today’s young acts. It’s a bloody shit storm out there and music that makes us crack a smile and shuffle happily is a real gift. The first verse of opener and theme song “Free Energy” is a kind of manifesto for letting loose:

We’re breaking out this time
Making out with the wind
And I’m so disconnected
I’m never gonna check back in
We’re gonna start a new life, see how it goes
Before we’re tired and too slow

Produced with real punch and clarity by James Murphy (LCD Soundsystem), Stuck On Nothing (arriving March 9) feels like this millennium’s Seconds of Pleasure, the beloved music dork classic by the woefully short-lived Rockpile. There’s a purity of purpose to this band that kisses us with cherry lips and makes us run like an extra in A Hard Day’s Night. Stuck On Nothing is packed with the chutzpah of smiling live wires out to make the world a smidgen brighter. And they have. (Dennis Cook)

Ron’s Pick of the Week
Jimi Hendrix: Valleys of Neptune (Experience Hendrix-Legacy)

When the rights to Jimi Hendrix’s music reverted back to his father Al and half-sister Janie in the mid-90s, it brought forth a plethora of new Hendrix titles that aimed to right the wrongs implemented by the questionable handling of the late guitar legend’s posthumous cache of studio material by his former label, Reprise Records. And though it’s true that much ado has been made about Janie Hendrix – who was just a little girl when Jimi was alive – taking over the Hendrix estate following the death of their father in 2003, she continues to do an excellent job with marketing her half-brother’s nuggets-rich archives. However, her latest creation, Valleys of Neptune (arriving March 9), could very well be the family’s most anticipated collection to date.

Released in the year that marks the 40th anniversary of the Seattle guitar great’s untimely passing and produced by Janie, Hendrix biographer John McDermott and Jimi’s longtime engineer Eddie Kramer, this set – the first under the Hendrix family company Experience Hendrix, LLC’s joint venture with Sony Legacy – is the closest we have come to the 1969 studio album that never was. It contains 12 entirely unreleased cuts predominantly culled from the last studio recordings of the original Jimi Hendrix Experience, which went down during a four-month period in 1969 when the trio of Jimi, bassist Noel Redding and drummer Mitch Mitchell were attempting to craft a follow-up to their 1968 psychedelic magnum opus Electric Ladyland. Seemingly bored with the style the group developed over the course of three albums, these final Experience sessions serve as a quintessential showcase of Hendrix’s initial intentions to push the envelope of his group’s sound into something more organic and earthbound.

Included here are three previously unreleased songs – “Ships Passing Through The Night” (an early template for “Nightbird Flying”), “Lullaby for the Summer” (a song that would soon become “Ezy Ryder”) and “Crying Blue Rain” (featuring “Sympathy for the Devil” percussionist Rocki Dzidzornu on bongos) – as well as a rare electric version of “Hear My Train A Comin’” (an acoustic 12-string rendition was featured on the soundtrack to the 1973 film about Jimi Hendrix and the 1994 compilation Blues, not to mention a grossly re-recorded version on producer Alan Douglas’ notorious 1975 album Midnight Lightning, which saw Hendrix’s singing and guitar playing overdubbed atop hack session musicians barely talented enough to borrow a pick from the man, let alone jam with him), and a studio take on the Experience’s loving cover of Cream’s “Sunshine of Your Love.” You also have expanded arrangements of Hendrix classics “Fire” and “Red House” in addition to an updated rendition of the 1966 standard “Stone Free” taken from Hendrix and Mitchell’s first studio sessions with Band of Gypsys bassist Billy Cox in 1970. And it was that very trio who were also responsible for the full band version of this album’s coveted title cut, long considered to be the Holy Grail of commercially unheard Hendrix (a demo of the track was included on the now-defunct 1990 biographical box set Lifelines). Meanwhile, fans of 1997′s South Saturn Delta, a compilation of material originally featured on such out-of-print Reprise titles as Cry of Love, Rainbow Bridge and War Heroes, will recognize tracks like a cover of Elmore James’ “Bleeding Heart” and a studio version of concert staple “Lover Man,” also previously heard on such seminal live albums as the hard-to-find Hendrix In The West and Live At Woodstock. Then there’s “Mr. Bad Luck” (later known as “Look Over Yonder” on the Delta set), which is the earliest cut on Neptune, having been recorded in 1967 during the Axis: Bold As Love sessions. Any fan of Jimi Hendrix’s last two years walking the earth, which saw him undoubtedly at the peak of his skills as a guitarist and taking great strides towards a more soulful, funkier style, needs to pick up Valleys of Neptune as quickly as possible. That goes double for those of you who may have stepped away from your Jimi stash for a while and need to rekindle your love for the greatest player known to rock ‘n’ roll, both on and off the stage. No Hendrix collection would be complete without it. (Ron Hart)

Great American Taxi: Reckless Habits (Thirty Tigers)

Simply put, this is some first rate country rock. Anyone sweet on the Flying Burrito Brothers, Gram, Poco, early Eagles, et al. will scuff up their boots and run up a hefty bar tab to Great American Taxi’s sophomore effort (released March 2). Though perhaps heresy to Leftover Salmon fans, I think Vince Herman has more grit ‘n’ dusty character in this setting, and the whole dang band can play and sing real well. GAT manages to nestle in fine with their ancestors but also inject a timely, observant thread that keeps things fresh and relevant. This is what you want blaring as you pound whiskey and expound on the putz you work for and life’s other workaday woes. And props for conjuring the spirit of old Dr. Hook and the Medicine Show (“Fuzzy Little Hippie Girl,” “Get No Better”); these boys need to dig into Shel Silverstein’s tunes like “I Got Stoned And I Missed It,” “I Call That True Love” and other early Hook and Bobby Bare classics he wrote and make ‘em their own (a task they may be uniquely qualified for). By turns frisky and thoughtful, the Taxi’s second serving builds on the promise of their debut (JamBase review) with an increasingly developed sound that’s hard to refuse. (DC)

Gorillaz: Plastic Beach (EMI)

At long last, the greatest animated band since The Banana Splits returns from a five-year exile with their excruciatingly anticipated third full-length release. Here, the enigmatic brainchildren of artist Jamie Hewlett and UK rock wunderkind Damon Albarn (who also serves as the album’s producer this time out) transplant their cartoon alter egos – singer 2D, bassist Murdoc Niccals, guitarist Noodle and drummer Russel Hobbs – onto Plastic Beach, a metaphor for what oceanographers are calling “The Great Pacific Garbage Patch.” It’s a clever name for a massive, continent-sized layer of plastic fragments gathering in the middle of the Pacific Ocean that serves as one of our planet’s most dire environmental concerns (though on the album, the Gorillaz recycle the plastic bits to create newfangled gadgets). From there, they utilize an island-kissed variation of their hip-hop/dub/soul/pop hybrid to receive transmissions from such collaborators as Snoop Dogg, Lou Reed, Bobby Womack, Mos Def, De La Soul, Mark E. Smith of The Fall, the Hypnotic Brass Ensemble and, playing for the first time together since The Clash, Mick Jones and Paul Simonon, to craft their most socially conscious, inventive album yet. (RH)

Antioquia: My piano ate the front page of the San Francisco Chronicle (self-released)

You gotta love a band that’s impossible to pigeonhole. Antioquia is stewed from feisty rebel music from many continents, flavorful social consciousness with a hot pepper zest, sexy and smart and waiting to be slurped up in a hungry rush. Latin and African rhythms skip with guitars that wouldn’t be out of place in Captain Beefheart’s Magic Band or headier live Talking Heads. There’s also the New World Order shattering, quasi-future thrust of prime Devo or Pere Ubu, plus the charged, earthy poetics of Patti Smith to boot. If it seems I’m throwing a lot at the wall, well, you kinda have to with Antioquia. There’s some profound shit going inside My PianoÂ… but you could also fuck like a beast to it. Politics and social inquiry are rarely so mouthwatering, and it’s a safe bet Fela, Gil Scott-Heron and Sun Ra would LOVE this. Crank this up LOUD and just see if you don’t crumble a few internal shackles toot suite. Not going to be real surprised if this winds up on some of the hipper, more truly open-minded “Best of 2010″ lists. You can order this release directly from the band here. (DC)

Gonjasufi: A Sufi and a Killer (Warp)

The term “Sufi,” when stripped of all its Islamic mysticism, simply means “man of wool.” And much like the abrasive fabric at the root of this powerful, ancient word, the music on this brilliant debut album from a dreadlocked yoga teacher/MC/singer from Nevada’s badlands is both coarse and comforting all at once. Excellently produced by a trio of Los Angeles’ brightest hip-hop visionaries – The Gaslamp Killer, Flying Lotus and Mainframe – A Sufi and A Killer (arriving March 9) is a globetrotting, psychedelic headtrip of an album that could come from the likes of HR from Bad Brains if he ditched hardcore and punk altogether, signed to Warp Records and defected to California to creatively crash on Madlib’s couch for a spell. Equal parts Tom Waits’ Bone Machine and J. Dilla’s Donuts, it doesn’t take a wise man to see that Gonjasufi is a key ingredient to the future of West Coast hip-hop in the 21st century. (RH)

Past Lives: Tapestry of Webs (Suicide Squeeze)

A gripping rumble revealing surprising sunshine spikes, Past Lives’ debut full-length builds high on the cornerstones of modern prog-rock, hardcore punk and the Velvet Underground. Ex- Blood Brothers Jordan Billie (vocals, lyrics), Morgan Henderson (multi-instrumentalist), Mark Gajadhar (drums) and original BB guitarist Devin Welch exhibit no shortage of ambition on Tapestry of Webs (released February 23), but don’t expect the Brothers’ tumultuous, chalkboard screech. This undulates with greater sensuality and Billie reveals a flexibility and warmth previously unheard. Considerably less claustrophobic or manic than earlier efforts, this presents a band exploring where their sizeable talents and sharp observational skills will take them, willing to slow down and simmer until the right flavors emerge. Open possibilities abound and listeners will find much to explore and interpret within this promising, genuinely seductive new group (DC)

Ruby Suns: Fight Softly (Sub Pop)

From the sandy, organic beaches of New Zealand comes the third album from Los Angeles-by-way-of-Auckland indie pop auteur Ryan McPhun and his band The Ruby Suns. Fight Softly (released March 2) finds McPhun doing away with guitars and drums in favor of laptops, synthesizers and effects pedals. Yet somehow this creates the same organic feel of earlier Ruby Suns’ via digital means, enhancing their unique pastiche of American art pop, Brazilian Tropicalia and Pacific island vibes. Fight Softly is essentially Merriweather Post Pavillion served poolside in a coconut shell with a little umbrella. Not to mention a much better album, arguably speaking. (RH)

Portugal. The Man: American Ghetto (Equal Vision)

Slinky as hell, a loaded title and a captivating experimental yen reminiscent of My Morning Jacket’s Z, Portugal. The Man’s sixth album coalesces and expands on the many subtle, hard-to-pinpoint elements that made a lot of ears lean their direction the past four years. Everything about American Ghetto (released March 2) welcomes in-depth inspection, so as seductively easy as it is to just press play and float on their hip lubricating current here, there’s a great deal going on above & below the surface. Like MMJ, Portugal. The Man welcomes in soul/funk touches, including lover man falsetto and overdriven sleaze guitar lines, which makes the album dance up to one like a pheromone dripping, glowingly perspiring cutie that smells fantastic but also like loads of trouble. Take their wet-lipped kiss and you instantly realize how many secrets and how much quiet ache lies on their darting tongue. American Ghetto is an album fraught with the confusion and excitement of present times, executed with the group’s highest level of sophistication and charm to date. (DC)

Method Actors: This Is Still It (Acute/Carpark)

Early ’80s post-punk duo the Method Actors might not have garnered the kind of accolades fellow Athens natives R.E.M., the B-52s and Pylon received in the first wave of new rock to emerge from the seminal Georgia college town, but as Peter Buck puts it in the R.E.M. guitarist’s extensive liner notes to this excellent collection of early recordings from singer/guitarist Vic Varney and drummer David Gamble, the Actors’ Southern strain of jagged, Gang of Four-meets-Captain Beefheart new wave was a crucial aspect to the “secret history of the Athens scene.” At some points in listening to this 19-track set, it’s hard to believe only two guys are creating this sharp, aggressively precise music. This is definitely recommended for any new wave fan out there. (RH)

John Hiatt: The Open Road (New West)

The road song is a long, revered tradition, especially in American music. There’s a love affair with asphalt under our wheels and the promise of what lies on the other side of a mountain range. Hiatt, the definition of a musician’s musician, has taken his touring band into the studio for 11 road-focused ditties that readily remind one why he’s a go-to songwriter for the likes of Nick Lowe, Emmylou Harris and many more. The Open Road (released March 2) isn’t particularly complex, choosing to be accessible and understandable in a pure folk sense. The music is smoothly delivered roots rock played by guys who’ve been loading gear in & out of vans for many decades. Hiatt’s voice is ragged-right, tattered in all the right ways, and one of the keys to this set’s success, lending a beautifully lived-in character to tunes about getting out there and experiencing life. (DC)

Balmorhea: Constellations (Western Vinyl)

When Austin, TX-based dark acoustic ensemble Balmorhea planned to follow up All Is Wild, All Is Silent, the group’s 2009 concept album based on the desolation experienced by the settlers wandering the American frontier, it seems like they figured the only place to go from there is up. With Constellations (released February 23), they take their sound to the cosmos, crafting a haunting love letter to the night sky that connects us with those very souls wandering the Old West way back when. Balmorhea’s sound, which suggests a late night jam session between Bill Frisell, Keith Jarrett and the Dirty Three at their most solemn, makes for the quintessential soundtrack to counting the stars that hang so calmly above us. (RH)

Randall Bramblett: The Meantime (Blue Ceiling)

Though known to most as a saxphonist/multi-instrumentalist sideman extraordinaire with folks like Levon Helm, Steve Winwood, Widespread Panic and many others, Bramblett dives wholeheartedly into an intimate, personal set focused on his lead vocals and piano and organ playing. The Meantime (arriving March 9) sits close to Bruce Hornsby’s trio work, and here Bramblett is subtly bolstered by Gerry Hanson (drums) and Chris Enghauser (upright bass). Captured with airy grace by Athens, GA legend John Keane, this sensitive, romantic offering is clearly a labor of love. While a touch sugary at times, The Meantime suggests the candlelight crooner crowd has some strong new competition. (DC)

Robert Pollard: We All Got Out Of The Army (Guided By Voices, Inc.)

Since his emancipation from the indie rock industrial complex in 2008, former Guided By Voices svengali and middle school teacher Robert Pollard has released 11 titles under his own accord, including solo albums, a third volume of the GBV Suitcase rarities box series and LPs from his three (yes, THREE) new bands – Boston Spaceships, Cosmos and Circus Devils (and not a dud in the bunch). In 2010, Dayton, Ohio’s favorite drunk continues the onslaught of quality with his 14th solo album (released March 2). Any fan of such late ’90s GBV gems as 1997′s notorious Mag Earwhig! (where Pollard replaced the classic Bee Thousand line-up with members of Cobra Verde) and 1999′s TVT classic Isolation Drills should instantly fall in love with the crisp, crunchy post-UK Jive of We All Got Out Of The Army. (RH)

Morris On: Morris On (Fledg’ling)

Original released on Island Records in 1972, the Morris On LP is a lost British folk classic from a supergroup (of sorts) comprised of members of the Fairport Convention, namely the core threesome of drummer Dave Mattacks, bassist Ashley Hutchings and guitarist Richard Thompson. The music on here might be a little too Olde English for some; so much so, in fact, that you might feel as though you are standing in line for a yard of mead at the Renaissance Faire. But the combination of Hutchings, Thompson and Mattacks (who should have recorded together more often as a solid trio based on this set), joined to the stellar squeezebox work of Fairport associate John Fitzpatrick, produced a ragtag quintet that combined centuries-old English Morris dance music with rock rhythms, creating one of the most intriguing and sought-after gems of its time. This is an elegant, alluring piece of music that will instantly appeal to your inner British nobleman. (RH)

Reptar: Reptar EP (self-released)

The fictional green dinosaur named Reptar is viewed as a hero who helps save the world. Perhaps that’s why this Athens, GA quartet decided to name their band after the character. The EP is a four song set giving the world its first look into the kaleidoscopic, infectious synth-pop world of Reptar. Lyrically, it’s self-reflective and mature beyond the songwriter’s years until the comical rap “Track 4,” a dirty, confused little narrative that I’m glad made it onto the EP. Although only four songs, the range of influences is notable. The band channels the more pop-oriented Modest Mouse’s canonical stylings on “Houseboat Babies,” a pummeling drums-and-synth rock song. “Context Clues” has the swirling, repetitive clutter of “Summertime Clothes” as the singer repeats, “You came to see the good things,” in a hypnotic fashion amongst sitar-ish keys, bird calls, a ticking clock and other dissonant sounds. Comparisons to fellow psych-synth pop artists like Animal Collective and Passion Pit fit, but I promise you these tracks are worthy of a listen. This is neither 2008′s synth pop [MG MT] nor last year’s [Passion Pit]; Reptar manages to create yet another nook in the ever-expanding genre. The only thing seeming to hold these youngsters back is a full class load and geographical separation amongst band members (they’re still in college at UGA, Dartmouth and UNC-Asheville). Like Animal Collective (“Four walls and adobe slats for my girls”), Reptar’s demands aren’t much (“All we want from life is big boy beds and a climax in our heads”). I implore any indie A & R label head to scoop these guys up before it’s too late. Remember, at this point last year, Passion Pit was just a little band with an EP, and look where they are now. (Wesley Hodges)

Oops, We Missed It!
Killer Releases From 2009 That Somehow Slipped By Us

Vince Guaraldi: The Definitive Vince Guaraldi (Fantasy-Concord)

Anyone who ever made the viewing of A Charlie Brown Christmas a holiday tradition in their household is very well aware of the music of Italian-American jazz maestro Vince Guaraldi and his trusty trio. But, there is so much more to the catalog of this genius of the piano, whose life was cut short at the age of 47 in 1976, than “Linus and Lucy,” as this two-disc anthology covering his 11 groundbreaking years on the Fantasy label (1955-1966) so righteously testifies. Just do yourself a favor, if The Definitive Vince Guaraldi moves you, don’t stop here. Make sure that you celebrate this man’s entire catalog, to paraphrase downsizing consultant John Slydell in Office Space. For all you funk fans out there, I would personally start with Oaxaca, a killer 2004 compilation of late 60s/early 70s recordings that finds Guaraldi rocking the Fender Rhodes. Also well worth checking out is 1965′s From All Sides, his stunning collaboration with Brazilian guitar great Bola Sete. This is, of course, already assuming that you own A Boy Named Charlie Brown, which every respectable jazz fan should have in their collection. Dig it! (RH)


fun.: Tour Dates

fun. Announce Spring Tour Dates With Motion City Soundtrack and Paramore
Winter Tour With Jack’s Mannequin Kicks Off

fun.

The 2010 touring season is officially in effect for fun. Almost two weeks into their month long winter tour with Jack’s Mannequin, the rock/pop trio is excited to announce Spring tour dates with both Motion City Soundtrack (April 6 – April 25) and Paramore (w/ Reliant K April 26 – May 16), including a stop at Bamboozle on May 2 in New Jersey.

Additionally, the band will make their way overseas to play their first ever show in London at The Social on March 23.

To celebrate the kick-off of their 2010 tour season, fun. has just released the single, “At Least I’m Not as Sad (As I Used To Be),” as a 7″ vinyl that also includes a clear CD.

fun. recently won the Independent Music Award (IMA) for the Pop/Rock Song Category for hit track “All The Pretty Girls” off their 2009 debut Aim and Ignite. Winners were chosen by a panel of judges made up of industry professionals including Tom Waits, The Black Keys, Mark Hoppus, Aimee Mann, Suzanne Vega and Zooey Deschanel.

Tour Dates:

With Jack’s Mannequin:

Feb. 17 – Dallas, TX @ House of Blues
Feb. 19 – Kansas City, MO @ The Beaumont
Feb. 20 – Minneapolis, MN @ First Avenue
Feb. 22 – Chicago, IL @ House of Blues
Feb. 23 – Chicago, IL @ House of Blues
Feb. 24 – Indianapolis, IN @ Egyptian Room
Feb. 25 – Ann Arbor, MI @ Blind Pig
Feb. 26 – Toronto, ON @ Sound Academy
Mar. 1 – Philadelphia, PA @ Electric Factory
Mar. 3 – Washington, DC @ 9:30 Club
Mar. 5 – Norfolk, VA @ The Norva

Headline Show In U.K.

Mar. 23 – London, U.K. @ The Social

With Motion City Soundtrack:

Apr 6 – Duluth, MN @ Grandmas Sports Garden Bar @ Grill
Apr 7 – Chicago, IL @ House of Blues
Apr 9 – Milwaukee, WI @ The Rave
Apr 12 – Nashville, TN @ Rocketown
Apr 13 – Columbus, OH @ Newport Music Hall
Apr 15 – Iowa City, IA @The Blue Moose Tap House
Apr 16 – Ames, IA @ Iowa State University
Apr 17 – Winona, MN @ McCown Fieldhouse
Apr 19 – Asheville, NC @ The Orange Peel
Apr 20 – Athens, GA @ 40 Watt Club
Apr 21 – Gainesville, FL @ The Venue
Apr 24 – St Petersburg, FL @ State Theatre
Apr 25 – Lake Buena Vista, FL @ House of Blues

With Paramore:

Apr. 26 – Knoxville, TN @ Knoxville Civic Coliseum
Apr. 28 – Charlottesville, VA @ John Paul Jones Arena
Apr. 30 – Atlantic City, NJ @ Trump Taj Mahal – Mark G Etess Arena
May 2 – East Rutherford, NJ @ Meadowlands Sports Complex (Bamboozle)
May 3 – Columbus, OH @ The LC Amphitheatre
May 4 – Grand Rapids, MI @ DeltaPlex
May 6 – Rockford, IL @ Rockford MetroCentre
May 7 – Moline, IL @ i Wireless Center
May 8 – Council Bluffs, IA @ WestFair Amphitheatre
May 10 – Salt Lake City, UT @ E Center
May 12 – Seattle, WA @ WaMu Theater
May 15 – Bakersfield, CA @ Rabobank Arena
May 16 – Las Vegas, NV @ The Joint


Sat Eye Candy: Captain Beefheart

WE’LL LICK YOUR DECALS OFF ANYTIME!

Yesterday was the 69th birthday of Don Van Vliet, better known to sonic freaks and general weirdos everywhere as Captain Beefheart, the leader of a Magic Band and carver of one of the most unusual musical mythologies ever. He also managed to charm Frank Zappa, influence a startling array of folks – ranging from The Clash to Matt Groening to Joan Osbourne to Tom Waits – AND reimagined the blues in a post-LSD world. The Captain and his coconspirators made aggressive strangeness a virtue and unearthed boogie in the oddest of places. No one – seriously, no one – ever conjured lyrics or delivered ‘em in such a perversely compelling way as Beefheart. Though retired from music since the early ’80s, Vliet remains a notable fringe figure in the painting world, and his musical legacy will endure as long as there are ears and switched-on brains unafraid of what’s lurking in the deep brush.

We plug in our birthday salute with a late ’60s TV broadcast that even in the era must have come across as very peculiar as it crept into American living rooms.

Next, a rough, funky assault on a Beefheart favorite from French TV in 1980.

“She’s Too Much For My Mirror” and “Human Gets Me Blues” done up in a nasty, crossroads raw style.

Oh, to have scored a ticket to this Letterman taping!

A nifty snapshot of the Captain and his Magic Band at this long running Dutch music festival.

Oddest beach party band ever! This clip is from 1968 in Cannes, France.

Monster guitarist Gary Lucas offers insights on working with Beefheart.

Oh yeah, he’s still a child of the 1960s!

We wrap with some fast, befuddled blues to help shake you up proper. Happy birthday, Captain. Long may you sail!


Carolina Chocolate Drops: Genuine Negro Jig & Tour

CAROLINA CHOCOLATE DROPS’ GENUINE NEGRO JIG OUT 2/23

Carolina Chocolate Drops

Nonesuch Records is set to release Genuine Negro Jig, the label debut of North Carolina-based string band the Carolina Chocolate Drops on February 23. The album was produced by critically acclaimed recording artist and songwriter Joe Henry (Allen Toussaint, Elvis Costello, Solomon Burke).

Genuine Negro Jig features string band interpretations of Blu Cantrell‘s beat-box driven R&B single “Hit ‘Em Up Style” and Tom Waits‘ “Trampled Rose,” as well as a pair of original compositions, alongside traditional tracks such as “Cornbread and Butterbeans” and “Trouble in Your Mind.”

It is the band’s second record; their 2007 release, Dona Got a Ramblin’ Mind, was praised by Paste for “bravely and expertly reclaiming the string band tradition for modern African-American culture,” while NPR‘s Weekend Edition calls the band “the hottest thing to hit the old-time music community in decades.” The band is touring in advance of the album’s release, dates below.

The Carolina Chocolate Drops formed after band members Dom Flemons, Rhiannon Giddens and Justin Robinson met at the Black Banjo Gathering in Boone, NC in 2005, and have toured continuously since the band’s inception. All three trained in the Piedmont banjo and fiddle musical tradition under the tutelage of Joe Thompson, who, at age 90, is believed to be the last living performer from the Piedmont string band heyday. While old-time Southern string music is often associated with Caucasian musicians from Appalachia, Giddens pointed out in a recent NPR interview that “it seems that two things get left out of the history books. One, that there was string band music in the Piedmont, period. (And that) black folk was such a huge part of string tradition.” The Carolina Chocolate Drops seek to not only correct this misunderstanding, but to keep the centuries-old string music tradition alive and developing.

The members of Carolina Chocolate Drops all come from diverse musical backgrounds, sharing singing duties and swapping instruments throughout their sets. Flemons has immersed himself in the music of the past, with a prodigious record collection and an immense knowledge of the different playing styles of the blues, country, and string band traditions. In addition to her work with Joe Thompson, Giddens — a Piedmont native — studied opera at Oberlin Conservatory, performs with a Celtic band and is also an avid contra dancer and caller. Robinson, the group’s main fiddler, also plays banjo; he grew up in a house full of musicians—his mother is a classically trained opera singer and cellist, his sister a classical pianist and his grandfather a harmonica player.

Carolina Chocolate Drops Tour Dates
01/08/10 Fri Melting Point Athens, GA

01/10/10 Sun The Pour House Charleston, SC

01/14/10 Thu Dartmouth College Hanover, NH

01/15/10 Fri Dartmouth College Hanover, NH

01/16/10 Sat Dartmouth College Hanover, NH

01/18/10 Mon Birchmere Alexandria, VA

01/19/10 Tue Rams Head On Stage Annapolis, MD

01/21/10 Thu Venue Music Bar Freeport, ME

01/22/10 Fri Iron Horse Music Hall Northampton, MA

01/23/10 Sat Somerville Theatre Somerville, MA

01/30/10 Sat Derby University Derby, GB

01/31/10 Sun Memorial Hall Sheffield, GB

02/03/10 Wed St. Georges Bristol, GB

02/04/10 Thu Bush Hall London, GB

02/05/10 Fri Arlington Arts Centre Newbury, GB

02/06/10 Sat The Met Bury, GB

02/25/10 Thu Royal Art Theater Danville, IN

02/26/10 Fri Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis St. Louis, MO

02/27/10 Sat Fitzgerald’s Berwyn, IL

02/28/10 Sun Schubas Chicago, IL

03/01/10 Mon Down by the Riverside Rochester, MN

03/02/10 Tue Down by the Riverside Rochester, MN

03/03/10 Wed Down by the Riverside Rochester, MN

03/04/10 Thu Down by the Riverside Rochester, MN

03/05/10 Fri Down by the Riverside Rochester, MN

03/06/10 Sat Mayo Civic Center Rochester, MN

03/09/10 Tue Calvin College Grand Rapids, MI

03/13/10 Sat Stone Mountain Arts Center Brownfield, ME

03/14/10 Sun Bowery Ballroom New York, NY

05/01/10 Sat Schomburg Center For Research In Black Culture New York, NY

05/22/10 Sat Ohio River Valley Folk Festival Madison, IN

05/28/10 Fri Montpelier Cultural Arts Center Laurel, MD

06/13/10 Sun Spoleto Festival Charleston, SC


Cook’s Corner: 2009 Year In Review

By: Dennis Cook

I listened to a lot of music this year, approximately two new albums per day, give or take. Some might call this
‘heroic,’ others ‘ludicrous,’ and others still ‘grotesque.’ But, all this listening isn’t some sort of record geek
machismo; it’s an honest-to-god drive to find the best, coolest, most enriching music that can be found… and then
share what truffles I’ve sniffed out with y’all. Of the 120 full album reviews I penned this year for JamBase, only a
tiny few were negative and that’s not because I’m easy. Instead, my primary goal is to sing enthusiastically about the
great things I come across, and in many respects, this is the site’s overarching editorial philosophy in a nutshell. We
choose not to swing at everything, often passing on much that the mainstream and dominant indie rock outlets
cover in favor of artists we think rate just as highly (or higher) than many bands getting oodles of press.

There are some notable absences from my 2009 picks, releases that have been popping up on almost every year-end-roundup – the latest from The Avett Brothers, Wilco, Animal Collective, The Low Anthem, Monsters of Folk. This is not because I did not hear these albums – I worked hard to “get” each but found them all wanting in some
crucial way. I feel the albums highlighted here excel beyond these widely celebrated releases in some way, be it
artistically, technically, just plain entertainment value or for other less easily phrased reasons. One unifying factor in
all the Cook’s Corner choices is how each release succeeds as an album, not just a conglomeration of random tracks.
As music continues to shatter into easily digestible bits that we carry around in our pocket, I think there’s real value
in celebrating thoughtfully composed song cycles whose constituent parts add up to works with real power to inform
and elevate our lives. Music can be a skeleton key for unlocking the universe, starting with our own lil’ cosmos.
Here then is a big, jangling ring of possible tumbler turners for your consideration.

Cook’s Corner Top 25 Albums of 2009

Akron/Family: Set ‘Em Wild,
Set ‘Em Free

A clarion call for truth, beauty and an expanded sense of the universe. This is music that touches earth and sky,
interior and exterior worlds, and does so with an exuberance and musical fortitude that’s simply breathtaking.
Akron/Family truly believes in music’s power to shape a better, more engaged world, and Set ‘Em WildÂ…
finds them channeling ancestors as diverse as Woody Guthrie and Jerry Garcia, all of whom they do proud. (album review)

The Black Crowes: Before The
FrostÂ…Until The Freeze

The long-lived rockers’ first double album – captured live in front of hardcore fans at Levon Helm’s Barn in
Woodstock – found them more creatively switched-on and varied than anything previous in their catalogue. This is
the full plumage of one of the great bands of our time on proud display. (album
review
)

Neal Casal: Roots And
Wings

A sterling addition to the California rock canon that can proudly take its place next to Jackson Browne’s Late For
The Sky
and Gene Clark’s No Other. As lead guitarist and harmony foil in Ryan Adams & The Cardinals,
Casal is fantastic; on his own, in service to his own tender, painfully honest muse he is simply stunning. Put directly,
Neal Casal is one of the finest singer-songwriters to emerge in the past 20 years or more. Sleep on his work to your
own detriment. (album review)

Clutch: Strange Cousins From
The West

Tough, uncompromising hard rock with a fathoms deep connection to real blues. Clutch has steadily refined their
mayhem and grind into a diamond-tipped drill into the meat of things, snarling with righteous conviction and
smiling, fists clenched and a wicked glint in their eye, ready for all comers. (album
review
)

Mike Dillon’s Go-Go Jungle:
Rock Star Bench Press

Possibly THE sleeper of ’09. Mike D, Go-Go Ray and JJ Jungle redeem the lazy shorthand “punk-jazz” by channeling
the best parts of both genres and then refashioning them into ontological handgrenades that splinter
preconceptions and social malaise. Bonus props for covering Jane’s Addiction and The Minutemen. (album review)

Gov’t Mule: By A
Thread

Very quietly, as far as the mainstream is concerned, Gov’t Mule has evolved into a devastating rock ‘n’ roll
juggernaut, and this is their finest studio hour yet. Powered by the tightest, most interesting songs Warren Haynes
has ever penned, this melds the original spirit of the Mule with the expansive surge of recent years into an
addictively listenable whole. (feature article)

Grizzly Bear:
Veckatimest

Likely 2009′s most misspelled word, Veckatimest defies simple explication. Though surely rock, there’s
something celestial and cavernously vast about this set. Where so much today is easily parsed, Grizzly Bear has
crafted music that retains its mystery no matter how many times one plumbs its depths. (album review)

Lucero: 1372 Overton
Park

A long promising band has made their first masterpiece, an album worthy of all the Springsteen and Replacements
comparisons they’ve accrued in the past 11 years. Ben Nichols has fully grown into his cheese-gratered, tough guy
voice, and his tales have the sort of flesh and reality one associates with the Drive-By Truckers or even Steely Dan in
Lucero’s love of n’er-do-wells wracked by longing and the weight of misdeeds. This is a cold shower and cup of
hot, mean coffee for blue collar souls, and lord knows we could use it right about now in America.

Manchester Orchestra: Mean
Everything To Nothing

Manchester Orchestra’s mixture of hooky chops and angried-up bite stirs memories of Nirvana, though there’s a
swoon to this that soothes the belly wound bleeding. Strident enough in places to appeal to the emo kids, this has
enough classic rock heft to lure in old long hairs like me. It takes a few spins to really feel the full measure of this
one but when it finally hits you it’s a Mike Tyson style haymaker. (show review)

The Mars Volta:
Octahedron

After multiple releases where blinding speed and obfuscated lyrical outpour dominated, The Mars Volta showed that
they’re equally brilliant when they slow down. Taken together with El Grupo Nuevo De Omar Rodriguez
Lopez
and Xeonphanes and 2009 has blown the doors out for what’s possible from the dizzyingly
creative Mr. Lopez. Octahedron is oceanic, vast, dark waters that never reveal all that’s lurking below the
surface, yet one feels compelled to keep diving in again and again anyway.

Mastodon: Crack The
Skye

The finest hard rock concept album in the past five, possibly ten years, a work that begs comparisons to Metallica or
even Pink Floyd’s best efforts. The level of catharsis contained in these tracks is gigantic, pushed along by the finest
harmonies in metal today and real finesse with shifting moods and tempos. Mastodon comes at you with an
intensity and seriousness that’s compelling rather than off-putting, and thus is able to reach listeners outside
metal’s inner sphere. Anyone who has lost someone they love dearly will find terrific emotional resonance with
Crack The Skye, and perhaps, like the band – who spent the better part of 2009 playing the album in its
entirety live – one may find their scars have healed a bit after spending time with this one.

Ian McLagan & The Bump Band:
Never Say Never

With the heartbreaking inspiration of his wife’s passing, the Small Faces/Faces keyboardist has made the solo album
of his career. Grief and loss are dealt with honestly but not super-seriously, and the light bounce to some tunes
seems hard won and all the more satisfying because of it. Ghosts linger close here, but it’s the sort of haunting that
raises the goose bumps of first kisses and long, happy nights nestled against the one we love. (album
review
)

Megafaun: Gather, Form &
Fly

A warm sigh that exhales particulate beauty. Megafaun produces a wild array of sounds for a trio, yet each is
anchored to a deep curiosity about what makes people and music tick. Quality black cloud pop, acoustic exploration
and full-on experimental clatter mingle in this release and none seems a strange bedfellow with Megafaun doing the
matchmaking. (album review), (show review)

The Mother Hips: Pacific
Dust

I’ll just come right out and say it: The Mother Hips are the perfect classic rock band. Two amazing songwriters and
four top-flight musicians, and everything just sounds fuckin’ great on this latest salvo. If one loves The Beatles and
anything else of that well-crafted, crazy talented ilk then you really should nestle between these Hips, especially
today when the quartet has every last element dialed in. (feature
article
)

The Mumlers: Don’t Throw
Me Away

Only two albums in and San Jose, CA’s The Mumlers are well on their way to being a Great American Music band,
where multiple strains in the U.S.’s vast sonic tapestry get woven into terribly winning, smartly etched tunes. Will
Sprott writes and sings ‘em with the sharp eye and prematurely weathered pipes of vintage Tom Waits and Randy
Newman, though he seems decidedly less premeditatedly cool than either. The kid is just a natural and he’s got
boffo collaborators that make the whole shebang swing. Don’t blink and miss this band, please. (album
review
)

Porcupine Tree: The Incident

With each release in recent years Porcupine Tree has grown into the rare modern equivalent to the great U.K. rock
boom of the late ’60s through the mid ’70s, where Deep Purple, Yes, Pink Floyd and other much-emulated Brits
experienced their heyday. The Incident continues the Tree’s evolution, melding the melodic grace and
widescreen vision of their forebears with contemporary metal’s density and electronica’s penchant for subtle shading
and fragmented congruencies. When combined with the band’s beautifully constructed, sensory pricking live show,
this song cycle shines even brighter, a testament to the material and the gifted craftsmen behind it. (feature
article
)

Richmond Fontaine: We Used
To Think The Freeway Sounded Like A River

With zero fanfare, Richmond Fontaine may have produced the most fully realized album of their lengthy, woefully
under-appreciated career. Combining the heaviness and crunch of their early work with the bruised hope of
Post To Wire, their latest is further proof that this Portland, Oregon group is one of the finest American rock
units of the past two decades, every bit the equal of The Hold Steady, Wilco and other more press-pimped bands.
Bandleader Willy Vlautin breathes life into characters with dirt under their nails and skeletons in their closets. They
drink and worry too much and quietly long for some long shot that’s gonna pull them out of the muck. And held up
in the right light, they look a lot like you and me. The portraits drawn on We Used To Think The FreewayÂ…
are like glorious black & white films subtitled with the pithy insight of a great short story writer, and the whole band
plays with an eloquence and confidence that only comes from years & years of carving out one’s own identity with
steadfast conviction. This is armor and solace for the hard times ahead of most of us, and a poignant reminder that
tough going can sometimes produce work of resonant truth and compassionate humanity.

Todd Snider: The Excitement
Plan

“I’m broke as the Ten Commandments, and sometimes I’m harder to follow.” If there’s a funnier, more insightful
singer-songwriter than Todd Snider kicking around I’ve not encountered him or her. There’s an off-handed
dexterity and never-see-it-coming emotional wallop to The Excitement Plan, which strips things down to
the bright basics and lets Snider pick and croon with ol’ pros Greg Leisz, Don Was and Jim Keltner. Todd is right at
home in their company, spinning tales of LSD fueled no-hitters and the pitfalls of psychotherapy. This was my
comfort zone and never fail fallback album of ’09, waiting for me when the world started getting on my last nerve. It
made me dance when I thought I was out of jigs, and it made me acutely aware of my own bullshit on more than a
few occasions. Not many records make us better people but this one does. (album review)

The Staxx Brothers: We Are
The Blaxstonz

All things can be funky when the strings are manipulated by master funkateers like The Staxx Brothers. The
sophomore slab from these Seattle freakazoids is the perfect mixture of grime and polish, where they slap you high
five while simultaneously exposing the seamy side of our collective underbelly. Street and book smart, this crew
romps with purpose, creating impossible to get out of your head nuggets like “1992,” “Westsound Union” and “Game
Recognize Game.” With wafts of country and hard rock, they groove gloriously on their path towards a fab new soul
mythology. (show review)

Southeast Engine: From the
Forest to the Sea

Spirituality and the discontent of modern man are tough nuts to crack, but Southeast Engine leaves both wonderfully
shattered here. This is as urgent, heartfelt and musically electric as anything being dished up by My Morning Jacket
and Grizzly Bear, and like those kindred spirits, Southeast Engine moves with sincerity and utter conviction. You can
feel how much this music means to them and that translates into a great emotional journey for the listener.
One feels their toes slowly sink into hallowed ground as they move through the scorched earth scattered throughout
From the Forest to the Sea – truly a work inspired by and perfect for the times we live in. (album review)

Them Crooked Vultures:
Them Crooked Vultures

This pummels you like a sparking furnace, flames licking at your skin, perspiration running over your lips, the beast
in your gut awakened and anxious to eat, rut and otherwise live. Dave Grohl (Foo Fighters), John Paul Jones
(Led Zeppelin) and Josh Homme (Queens of the Stone Age) didn’t have to try this hard. They could have farted out a
party record or done variations on blues scales and it would have likely met with moist praise. However, they’ve
fashioned a rugged, hard to penetrate, decidedly heavy rock album that finds them at the top of their respective
games. For all the “New Zeppelin” buzz flying around them, this is really its own thing, largely defined by Homme’s
razor sharp, unpredictable lyrics (mayhap the best in the mainstream since Beck’s Midnite Vultures) and
lascivious, unpredictable guitar and vocals. Jones is a total monster super-player here, too, and Grohl surprises with
the range of his stick work and ability to keep up with the Zep vet’s free-ranging, worldly chops. Every time I put
this on I feel like pounding mescal and getting into trouble somewhere off the grid.

Themselves:
Crownsdown

I want to rub this in the noses of every critic out there singing Kanye’s praises as a hip hop innovator. Jel and
Doseone are so far beyond anything that loudmouth egotist is ever likely to produce, and the slamming, brain-
bonking proof of that rests here. Adept at slogans that linger and impenetrable, rapid-fire word storms, Themselves
offers hope that hip hop, as an art form, still has a future despite the bleak, money grubbing, socially bankrupt
mainstream. (album review)

These United States:
Everything Touches Everything

Simply put, These United States give me hope and make me caper like there’s a decent tomorrow around the corner.
They’re like the roots rock cousin to Akron/Family’s genre-wilding, and the greater focus and leaner character of
Everything Touches Everything only moves their many virtues to the fore. Instead of choosing to be distant
and cool, they’ve chosen to enfold us in a bear hug and whisper small truths into our ear as we relax into the
welcome heat of them. The last bit of the liner notes I penned for this album read: “We are no longer prisoners of
the past, and the future is ours to make or break. Roll up your sleeves, grab a tambourine and a shovel and join the
revival.” Genuinely inspirational stuff from a band that only seems to get better and better.

Tortoise: Beacons of
Ancestorship

Many have tried but no one else really sounds like Tortoise, and they’ve put a few more miles between them and the
competition with this imaginative release. These Chicago boys have done a lot for instrumental music, expanding
the vocabulary for those who wish to tell stories with no words. Beacons confirms their leadership spot in
this rarified field with reenergized flair. (album review)

U2: No Line On The Horizon

Easily the most cohesive, thoughtful album this seemingly-never-ending powerhouse has released since
Achtung Baby (1991). Nothing like a couple of wars, worldwide environmental and hunger concerns, and a
rapidly changing social milieu to fire up this bunch. Absolutely no one tackles stadium size ideas better than U2,
and this is as fine a bunch of cross-cultural, people unifying songs as they’ve ever produced. They also sound like
they’re having a bit of fun, and The Edge keeps coming up with sumptuous new guitar tones. No Line On The
Horizon
has a flow and feel right up there with U2′s mid-80s heyday, yet somehow manages to be resolutely
modern. There’s a reason they’re the biggest band on the planet. (album review)

And The RestÂ…

Top 10 Debut Albums of 2009

To my ears, this is the graduating class for this past year – artists one would be wise to keep tabs on because
they’re likely to be making amazing music in the years ahead based on the evidence of their respective opening
salvos.

1. Dan Auerbach: Keep It Hid
(album
review
)

2. Dawes: North Hills (album review)

3. Fol Chen: Part I: John Shade,
Your Fortune’s Made
(album review)

4. Here We Go Magic: Here We Go
Magic

5. Hiss Golden Messenger:
Country Hai East Cotton (album review)

6. James Husband: A Parallax
I

7. Lansdale Station: Lansdale
Station
(album review)

8. Lions In The Street: Lions In The
Street
(album review)

9. Rain Machine: Rain
Machine

10. Elijah and Jo Wilkinson: On Sacred
Ground (Mother and Son)

Best Mainstream Album of 2009

Lily Allen: It’s Not Me, It’s
You

The same part of me that morbidly follows the Eurovision competition is inexorably drawn to Ms. Allen. Shaking my
tush and singing along to the banjo dappled disco of “Not Fair” or belting out the black opening lines of “The Fear,” I
find I couldn’t give a flying fuck if it’s cool to dig her. I just do, warts and all, and she’s made a hell of a populist
gem. And she’s given us the fine flipping-the-bird farewell to George W. Bush and his ilk with “Fuck You,” so you
should like her, too. (album review)

International Release of 2009

Tinariwen: Imidiwan:
Companions
(album review)

Best Tribute/Covers Albums of 2009

Phosphorescent: To Willie
(album
review
)

Poor Man’s Whiskey: Dark Side of
the Moonshine

Archival Releases of 2009

Nick Cave and The Bad Seeds: Mute
reissues (album review #1), (album
review #2
)

Death: Â…For The Whole World To See (album review)

Chris Darrow: Chris
Darrow/Under My Own Disguise
(album review)

Best “New” Classic Rock Albums of 2009 (or “The Zeppy Award”)

Leroy Justice: The Loho
Sessions
(album review)
Powder Mill: Do Not Go
Gently
(album review)

Concept Album of 2009

Mike Keneally: Scambot 1 (album review)

Soul Album of 2009

The Black Seeds: Solid
Ground
(album review)

Best Live Album of 2009

Thin Lizzy: Still Dangerous
(album
review
)

Best Dance Album of 2009

Gossip: Music For Men (album review)

Best EPs of 2009

Hottub: On Blast! (EP review)

The New Up: Better Off

Best “Best Of” Anthology of 2009

Blur: Midlife: A Beginner’s Guide
To Blur

Surprising Return To Form of 2009

KISS: Sonic Boom

Best Bong Hit ‘n’ Headphones Album of 2009 (or What Several Species of Small Furry Animals Are Grooving
To In A Cave These Days)

The Flaming Lips:
Embryonic

25 Songs from 2009 That Will Greatly Enrich Your Life

1. “Gimakiny Akia” by Extra Golden
2. “One String Harp” by Bell X1
3. “Messing With My Head” by Tinted Windows
4. “The Fade” by Megafaun
5. “That Western Skyline” by Dawes
6. “Laughing With” by Regina Spektor
7. “16 & Valencia Roxy Music” by Devendra Banhart
8. “Blue Moon” by Drug Rug
9. “Cocaine & Ashes” by Son Volt
10. “Northern Lights” by Bowerbirds
11. “Calling All Crows” by State Radio
12. “Blanket of Weeds” by Meat Puppets
13. “Crying Lightning” by Arctic Monkeys
14. “‘Til My Voice Is Gone” by The Old Ceremony
15. “Goodbye” by The Maldives
16. “The Way You Can Get” by The Gourds
17. “So Slowly” by Early Day Miners
18. “East Jesus Nowhere” by Green Day
19. “Another World” by Antony and the Johnsons
20. “Needle Down” by Super 400
21. “Alice Mae” by Hill Country Revue
22. “Divide & Conquer” by Vandaveer
23. “Hurry For The Sky” by Robyn Hitchcock & The Venus 3
24. “Leave The Window Open” by Chuck Prophet
25. “Stillness Is The Move” by Dirty Projectors

A Look To The FutureÂ…

Covers There Should Be A Moratorium On In 2010

Okay, Michael Jackson is gone. Six months of “Billie Jean” and “Thriller” covers is enough. Really. And be honest,
most of the attempts at Michael’s catalog were pretty limp by comparison to the Pop King’s studio grandeur. The
Corner suggests that acts seeking to increase their soul quotient explore the rich catalogs of Donny Hathaway,
Funkadelic, The Temptations and Gil Scott-Heron & Brian Jackson for some primo, less-traveled fare.

5 Artists To Watch in 2010

There’s something special brewing in this shortlist of really, really talented folks. My gut instinct is these bands are
on the verge of major musical breakthroughs, both in the studio and onstage.

1. Flowmotion

2. Everest

3. J. Tillman

4. Hot Buttered Rum

5. Backyard Tire Fire

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Go See Live Music!


Norah Jones: 2010 Tour Dates

NORAH JONES ANNOUNCES 2010 U.S. TOUR DATES IN SUPPORT OF HER ACCLAIMED NEW ALBUM THE FALL

Norah Jones

Multiple Grammy Award-winning singer and songwriter Norah Jones has announced U.S. tour dates in support of her critically-acclaimed new album The Fall, which was released by EMI’s Blue Note Records on November 17. The 36-city tour will kick off March 5, 2010. All tour dates listed below. A select number of shows will go on sale beginning Friday, December 4. Ticketing information is available here.

Jones is also premiering several remixes from The Fall this week. On December 1, RCRD LBL presented “That’s What I Said (The NYC Remix by Adrock and Mike D).” On December 2, Stereogum presented “Chasing Pirates (Santigold and Snotty Remix).” On December 3, Artist Direct will present “Chasing Pirates (Droogs Remix),” which was created by a remix collective that included Beck. The remixes will be released digitally and on vinyl on January 12, 2010.

“We decided to have people I admire do some remixes,” Jones recently told Entertainment Weekly. “[Adrock and Mike D of] Beastie Boys did one, and Beck, and Santigold.” Jones first collaborated with Beastie Boys during the 2008 presidential election when they recruited her for their Get Out The Vote concerts, which also included Santigold. Jones also appeared in the season finale of 30 Rock this past May along with Mike D and Adrock. Jones and Beck first met when they performed together on KCRW’s holiday concert in 2002.

The Fall finds Jones experimenting with a new set of collaborators, including Jacquire King, a noted producer and engineer who has worked with Kings of Leon, Tom Waits, and Modest Mouse among others. Jones enlisted several songwriting collaborators, including Ryan Adams and Okkervil River‘s Will Sheff, as well as her frequent partner Jesse Harris. King also helped Jones put together a new group of musicians to perform on the album, including drummers Joey Waronker (Beck, R.E.M.) and James Gadson (Bill Withers), keyboardist James Poyser (Erykah Badu, Al Green), and guitarists Marc Ribot (Tom Waits, Elvis Costello) and Smokey Hormel (Johnny Cash, Joe Strummer).

Norah Jones Tour Dates
12/15/09 Tue The Tonight Show with Conan O’Brien Burbank, CA

12/16/09 Wed Jimmy Kimmel Live Los Angeles, CA

03/05/10 Fri Brady Theater Tulsa, OK

03/06/10 Sat Midland Theatre Kansas City, MO

03/07/10 Sun Orpheum Theatre Omaha, NE

03/09/10 Tue Civic Center Des Moines, IA

03/11/10 Thu EJ Thomas Performing Arts Hall Akron, OH

03/12/10 Fri Whitney Hall Louisville, KY

03/13/10 Sat The Murat Theatre Indianapolis, IN

03/15/10 Mon Overture Center for Arts Madison, WI

03/19/10 Fri Riverside Theater Milwaukee, WI

03/20/10 Sat The Chicago Theatre Chicago, IL

03/25/10 Thu Wang Center Boston, MA

03/26/10 Fri MGM Grand Theatre at Foxwoods Mashantucket, CT

03/27/10 Sat WaMu Theater At Madison Square Garden New York, NY

03/30/10 Tue Lyric Opera House Baltimore, MD

04/01/10 Thu The Paramount Theater Charlottesville, VA

04/02/10 Fri Warner Theatre Washington, DC

04/03/10 Sat Tower Theater Upper Darby, PA

04/18/10 Sun Paramount Theatre Seattle, WA

04/19/10 Mon Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall Portland, OR

04/21/10 Wed The Fillmore San Francisco, CA

04/23/10 Fri Orpheum Theatre Los Angeles, CA

04/24/10 Sat Spreckels Theater San Diego, CA

04/25/10 Sun Dodge Theatre Phoenix, AZ

04/28/10 Wed Kiva Auditorium Albuquerque, NM

04/29/10 Thu Plaza Theater El Paso, TX

05/01/10 Sat Stubb’s BBQ Austin, TX

05/04/10 Tue Majestic Theatre Dallas, TX

05/05/10 Wed Verizon Wireless Theater Houston, TX

05/06/10 Thu Saenger Theatre Mobile, AL

05/08/10 Sat Orpheum Theater Memphis, TN

05/09/10 Sun Alabama Theatre Birmingham, AL

05/11/10 Tue Thomas Wolfe Auditorium Asheville, NC

05/12/10 Wed Ovens Auditorium Charlotte, NC

05/14/10 Fri Ryman Auditorium Nashville, TN

05/15/10 Sat Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre Atlanta, GA

Praise for The Fall

“Jones is standing tall on The Fall… A terrific batch of songs that smartly address her recent romantic travails.” — USA Today

“Jones sounds more confident and stretches her songwriting muscle… Her continued growth as a writer, not just as singer, brings another exciting dimension to The Fall.” — Associated Press

The Fall has been billed as Norah Jones’ rock album. In fact, it’s something even more surprising: a hot-blooded soul record.” — SPIN


Widespread Panic | 11.13 | Oakland

Word by: Kayceman | Images by: Josh Miller

Widespread Panic :: 11.13.09 :: Fox Theater :: Oakland, CA

Widespread Panic :: 11.13 :: Oakland

It had been over two years since perennial road warriors Widespread Panic played a non-festival show in the Bay Area. Shacking up at the gorgeous Fox Theater in Oakland, CA for a three-night run, it was the second show on Friday the 13th that stuck out as special. There was nothing wrong with Thursday or Saturday’s shows, other than being perhaps a bit flat, but Friday’s concert was a reminder of why this band has one of the most dedicated fan bases in all of music and it was a prime example of why these fans continue to drop it all and chase Panic around the country. During the band’s peak, somewhere between 1997 and 2002, shows like this popped up frequently, and for many seasoned touring vets, Friday’s show was one of the better since band co-founder Michael Houser passed away.

Clocking in at around an hour and a half, the lengthy first set featured Bob Dylan (“Solid Rock”), Tom Waits (“Goin’ Out West”), Neil Young (“Don’t Be Denied”), and Jerry Joseph (“Light Is Like Water”). The tone was set immediately with Jimmy Herring‘s ominous guitar bleeding the dark notes to first song “Junior” and before long it was Jojo Hermann‘s dirty Clavinet that pushed the song into surprisingly funky terrain. Hermann would prove to be the catalyst throughout the night, leaning on his keys, tempting a Friday the 13th “Superstition” (which never surfaced) and creating spacey interludes so that the momentum rarely slowed.

John Bell :: 11.13 :: Oakland

During old school instrumental “Happy,” Herring was channeling vintage Garcia as he pulled notes from the sky and showed incredible control of his warm tone. Frontman John Bell grabbed hold of the crowd during “Pigeons,” belting out some of the most poignant lyrics in rock: “We’ve all been waiting/ Wondering, will we ever know the truth/ What it’s like washing windows when you know there are pigeons on the roof.” The world is a harsh, unforgiving place and we all know it. We wake up and struggle to find a moment of peace, we wash the windows of our life only to turn around and find shit caked all over them once again. But we push on. We clean up and fight another day. It’s all we can do.


Another old gem, “Walkin’” was a revelation. Taking the loping tempo and twisting the notes until they were unrecognizable, Panic landed in one of the night’s longest and most impressive jams that may have been influenced by the recent tour with the Allman Brothers. With bassist Dave Schools working overtime to keep the wheels glued on, Herring and Hermann were free to fly loose and light, dancing around one another, dipping into fast-paced duels and spacious feather-weight cascades.


If the set ended there it would have been a great first set, but then emerged one of the most emotional songs in the band’s repertoire, Neil Young’s “Don’t Be Denied.” With strong parallels to Panic’s history, as JB sang, “Pretty soon I met a friend who played guitar,” the Fox erupted. One look at the capacity crowd and it was clear many were feeling it. Tears were forming, arms were wrapped around shoulders, and if you stared long enough, maybe you could still see Mikey Houser sitting up there on the stage.

Clearly this had to be the end of the set. “Don’t Be Denied” is generally a first, last or encore song. Wrong again. Out comes Jerry Joseph for a blistering “Light Is Like Water.” They’ve previously only played the song eight times and it had been over a year since it last showed up. A meaty middle section featured a three guitar attack with Herring, JB and Joseph winding around each other, and then Schools and JB doing back-up harmony for the Reverend Jerry Joseph in a raucous church revival moment as he screamed, “Whatever gets you through the night!” It was a big way to end a massive first set that left many out of breath with eyes glassed over.

Ortiz & Schools :: 11.13 :: Oakland

When they came back out with “Tie Your Shoes” > “Blight” > “All Time Low” > “Blight” it was clear that Panic was not letting up on this evening. Set two never stopped and never slowed down. Every song bled into the next and they turned the Fox into a sweaty soup of gyrating bodies and flailing limbs.

“Tie Your Shoes” was played at a frantic pace with notes folding over one another and everyone somehow staying off each other’s toes. “Blight” was slow and dark, allowing fans the rare chance to hear Schools sing lead. With a heavy delay on his vocals, Schools was improvising about “green shoots popping up everywhere,” and when JB sang back-up, Schools followed by blurting out “spooky” before they did some of the finest vocal harmonizing of the run. The fact that they went out of “Blight” and back into it for a brief moment after “All Time Low” sent the hardcore fans reeling.


Set two found Dave Schools out front, and when he dropped the bombs to signal The Meters‘ “Just Kissed My Baby” (which hadn’t been played since 2006) the dance party went into overdrive. Fully equipped with the JB “Night People” rap, Jimmy Herring’s fire-starter lead and percussionist Wally Ingram adding color, things opened wide during this section.

Herring & Hermann :: 11.13 :: Oakland

One could wax poetic about every song played: the strong “C. Brown;” the heavenly, delicate jam out of “Wonderin’;” the slow, methodical, long “Porch Song” that erupted at the end, reminding fans of the late ’90s; and the “Love Tractor” that closed the set. But it was “Arleen” > “Red Hot Mama” that turned a great show into the stuff of legend.


The dirty disco funk of “Arleen” came on hot and heavy and sent backs breaking and knees popping. Everyone – band and fans alike – were fully lubricated at this point and there was no looking back. It didn’t matter if this was your 150th Panic show or your first; everyone felt it and it appeared that all had given themselves over to the groove. Jojo was hammering the Clav, locked-in deep with Schools, and JB was loose, adlibbing about the neighbor girl (“her face look good but her body not ready”) and tossing in a brief moment of “Junior,” adding to the story he’s been crafting for decades. It all built to a mean crescendo with that little neighbor girl’s daddy coming out with his gun locked and loaded as the band fell in step, turning out the final jam before Schools teased Sugar Hill Gang‘s “Rappers Delight” with a bit of “Hotel motel Holiday Inn.”

At this point all bets were off, and when they blasted into Parliament/Funkadelic‘s “Red Hot Mama” it was a blur of funky keys, growling guitars, heavy bass, and grinding ass funk. For this writer, “Arleen” > “Red Hot Mama” (and the entire second set for that matter) was as good as anything he’s seen all year.

John Bell :: 11.13 :: Oakland

“We’re glad we came to work tonight,” declared JB before the encore. It was a big show felt just as much by the band as the fans, and when they closed with JB on mandolin for a tender “End Of The Show” it was the perfect way to send us off into the night, feeling just a bit lighter than when we walked in.

There’s transcendence in these songs. Dancing with eyes closed and screaming along with old friends you rarely see and new ones you’ve yet to make, there’s community here. There’s a shared experience that stretches far beyond the concert hall. Widespread Panic is a true blue workingman’s rock & roll band. They aren’t singing of fantastical places or imaginary moments, this is salt of the earth stuff and as Americans we need it more than ever. Life is hard right now and we’re carrying a lot weight. People are losing jobs, houses, and lives, and many aren’t sure how they’re gonna pull through. A rock concert might not save us from tomorrow, but it sure feels nice to let it all slide off our shoulders and roll down our backs, even if it’s just for three hours on a Friday night.

Widespread Panic :: 11.13 :: Fox Theatre :: Oakland, CA

Set I: Junior, Solid Rock, Happy > Goin’ Out West, Big Wooly Mammoth, Pigeons, Crazy, Walkin’ (For Your Love) > Don’t Be Denied, Light Is Like Water*

Set II: Tie Your Shoes > Blight > All Time Low > Blight > Just Kissed My Baby**, C. Brown** > Wondering > Porch Song > Arleen > Red Hot Mama > Love Tractor

E: End Of The Show
* with Jerry Joseph on guitar/vocals

** with Wally Ingram on percussion

You can stream and/or download this show for free now at panicstream.com.

Widespread Panic is on tour now; dates available here.

Continue reading for more pics of Widespread Panic at The Fox in Oakland…

Images by: Casey Flanigan

JamBase | Liberated
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The Heavy Guilt: Free MP3s New Band for J Smart & Al Howard

Take Two Tracks & Pass It On, Free MP3s from The Heavy Guilt

New Band Featuring J Smart & Al Howard

The Heavy Guilt is offering two free songs on its website theheavyguilt.com, if you dig the sounds, forward the MP3s to friends. If you email 10 friends and cc the band on the email (info@theheavyguilt.com), they’ll mail you a free autographed full-length CD. The full length debut, Lift Us Up From This is available at theheavyguilt.com and on iTunes.

The Heavy Guilt is an unlikely composite of divergent influences meeting in the middle to form something raw, fresh and potent. The emphasis is on the unique and gritty voice of Erik Canzona. He howls like the lament of generations, with a whiskey stained roar from another time. Like a seasoned tempest tearing through small towns with brave new poetic visions, this young troubadour moans for the alleyways of America, for love and its opposite, for desolation and most importantly, for hope. He belts these songs rooted where folk, soul, indie rock and psych meet.

The band’s first album, Lift Us Up From This, features Josh Rice on the Fender Rhodes and Hammond B3 and
Alfred Howard on lyrics and percussion. These two played together in
the K23 Orchestra for seven years. They had been writing material for almost as long that didn’t fit within the psychedelic funk stylings of the K23, but was more inspired by Leonard Cohen, Tom Waits, Neutral Milk Hotel, Wilco, Rimbaud, Radiohead and infinite others. When they heard Canzona’s voice there was an instantaneous click, the kind of
serendipitous moment you find at the heart of really great music. Creative lightening struck and in a quick instant, the seeds were planted for a band to be formed. Sean Martin is on the electric guitar and Jason Littlefield plays upright and electric bass, the two have played hundreds of gigs together in Skirt Alert and various jazz ensembles in San Diego. They are virtuosos on their instruments, teachers of students ages 6 to 90, seasoned musicians who can glide over scales with terrifying speed and dexterity or hit that perfect note, sparse, chilling and precise.

On the kit is Jason Smart, formerly of Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey and frequent collaborator with
Fareed Haque, he’s another brilliant musician who finds comfort in a drum throne behind any style. He laid down the framework for this album perfectly. His drumming takes it, at points, to a frenzied fevered pitch and can just as quickly drop down to a soulful “less is
more” approach. This is a group of hidden all stars, disparate masters speaking through the common language of song, no house hold names, just bold players, great lyrics and a voice like an exclamation point. This debut album drives their stake hard into the soil of music, The Heavy Guilt is here.

The Heavy Guilt currently have a couple shows scheduled in San Diego, you can see all dates here.