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Leftover Salmon: Feb Mini Tour 2010 Mark Vann Benefit Concert

FRESH SALMON IN THE NEW YEAR!

Leftover Salmon will kick off 2011 with a mini tour. Friends Elephant Revival will open several of the dates.

Leftover Salmon Tour Dates

February 23rd Aggie Theatre – Fort Collins, CO
February 24th Vilar Performing Arts Center – Beaver Creek, CO
February 25th Mountain Village Ballroom – Telluride, CO (w/ Elephant Revival)
February 26th The Depot – Salt Lake City, UT (w/ Elephant Revival)
February 27th Belly Up – Aspen, CO (w/ Elephant Revival)

For the Telluride show, Salmon are offering a special price of $20 for the first 200 tickets. All remaining tickets will be $25 in advance and $30 at the door. The band is also offering 4 VIP packages. These will include 6 tickets to the show, private viewing area with couches, and a bottle service of your choice, plus cocktail service.

Every online ticket order will be entered into a drawing to win dinner for 4 at the La Marmotte Restaurant. The winner will be served dinner for 4 on the evening of the show.

The 8th Annual Mark Vann Foundation Holiday Benefit will take place December 11th at the Boulder Theater in Boulder, CO. Pick up tickets here. The lineup is:

Todd Snider
Great American Taxi
Bonfire Dub
Shannon McNally & Hot Sauce
plus special guests and surprises

Leftover Salmon Tour Dates :: Leftover Salmon News :: Leftover Salmon Concert Reviews


Great American Taxi: Boulder Charity Benefit & Fall Tour Dates

GREAT AMERICAN TAXI ANNOUNCES CHARITY CONCERT
COMING TO BOULDER THEATER,
DECEMBER 11


Great American Taxi

On December 11, Great American
Taxi
will host a night of music at the historic Boulder Theater here to raise money for the Mark Vann Foundation charity. In its eighth year
running, the holiday benefit concert this year includes Great American Taxi, Todd Snider, Bill McKay Band, Bonfire
Dub, Shannon McNally & Hot Sauce and others.

“It’s our own little way of keeping alive and nurturing the joyous spirit of Mark Vann,” said Chad
Staehly
, executive director of the foundation and keyboardist/singer for Great American Taxi. Vann, the banjo
player for the Boulder-based band Leftover Salmon, died in 2002; the foundation in his name assists various
nonprofit groups.

This year funds will directly benefit There With Care and
CareConnect. The evening also includes an art exhibit and
silent auction. The show starts at 8 p.m. Tickets cost $20. People are encouraged to wear a fun or favorite hat.

Great American Taxi is currently in the midst of its Fall Harvest tour. Taxi’s latest CD release, Reckless
Habits
, remains active on both the Jambands.com radio chart and the Colorado radio chart,
complemented by two months in the Top 25 on the Americana radio chart.

GREAT AMERICAN TAXI ON THE ROAD 2010

Wed., Oct. 27 FORT COLLINS, CO w/Oakhurst
Fri., Oct. 29 ENGLEWOOD, CO Gothic Theatre w/Todd Snider and Drew Emmitt Band
Sat., Oct. 30 DENVER, CO Fillmore Auditorium w/Leftover Salmon and Todd Snider
Sun., Oct. 31 AVON, CO Agave
Tue., Nov. 2 BILLINGS, MT Yellowstone Valley Brewing Co.

Wed., Nov. 3 LIVINGSTON, MT The Mint
Thurs., Nov. 4 MISSOULA, MT Top Hat
Fri., Nov. 5 PORTLAND, OR Mt. Tabor Theater
Sat., Nov. 6 BEND, OR Silver Moon Brewing Co.

Sun., Nov. 7 EUGENE, OR w/Emmit-Nershi Band
Tue., Nov. 9 APPLEGATE, OR Applegate Lodge
Wed., Nov. 10 ARCATA, CA Humbrews

Thurs., Nov. 11 BERKELEY, CA Ashkenaz w/David Nelson Band
Fri., Nov. 12 SEBASTOPOL, CA Hopmonk Tavern w/David Nelson Band

Sat., Nov. 13 SANTA CRUZ, CA Moe’s Alley w/the Down Beets
Sun., Nov. 14 UKIAH, CA Nelson Family Vineyards w/David Nelson Band

Great American Taxi
Tour Dates

::
Great American Taxi News
::
Great American Taxi
Concert
Reviews


Lollapalooza Lineup: Arcade Fire, Phoenix, Lady GaGa

Lollapalooza Lineup: Arcade Fire, The Strokes, Green Day, Lady GaGa, Soundgarden

Phoenix, MGMT, Yeasayer, Drive-By Truckers, Erykah Badu, The Black Keys, Spoon, Grizzly Bear

Lollapalooza has announced its lineup. Set to go down in Chicago’s Grant Park from August 6-8, the 2010 event will be headlined by Arcade Fire, the Strokes, Lady Gaga, Green Day, the reunited Soundgarden, and Phoenix. Complete lineup follows.

Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

2010 Lollapalooza Lineup:

* Soundgarden

* Green Day

* Lady Gaga

* Arcade Fire

* The Strokes

* Phoenix

* Social Distortion

* MGMT

* Jimmy Cliff

* Hot Chip

* The Black Keys

* The National

* Spoon

* Devo

* Cypress Hill

* Cut Copy

* The New Pornographers

* Erykah Badu

* Slightly Stoopid

* Grizzly Bear

* Gogol Bordello

* Chromeo

* Wolfmother

* Yeasayer

* X Japan

* MUTEMATH

* Metric

* Dirty Projectors

* AFI

* Mavis Staples

* Matt & Kim

* The xx

* Drive-By Truckers

* Blues Traveler

* Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros

* The Temper Trap

* Jamie Lidell

* Frightened Rabbit

* F**k Buttons

* Deer Tick

* Blitzen Trapper

* Stars

* Raphael Saadiq

* The Cribs

* Minus the Bear

* Switchfoot

* The Walkmen

* Mumford & Sons

* Wild Beasts

* Rogue Wave

* Los Amigos Invisibles

* The Big Pink

* The Dodos

* Hockey

* Cymbals Eat Guitars

* B.o.B

* Dawes

* Warpaint

* The Antlers

* The Soft Pack

* Rebelution

* Balkan Beat Box

* Wavves

* American Bang

* The Ike Reilly Assassination

* Company of Thieves

* Nneka

* Harlem

* The Constellations

* Miniature Tigers

* Mimicking Birds

* The Kissaway Trail

* HEALTH

* Javelin

* The Morning Benders

* Foxy Shazam

* Violent Soho

* Royal Bangs

* Freelance Whales

* Semi Precious Weapons

* Dan Black

* The Band of Heathens

* Dragonette

* My Dear Disco

* Shawn Fisher

* Neon Hitch

* Skybox

* The Ettes

* Jukebox the Ghost

* These United States

* MyNameIsJohnMichael

Spinning at Perry’s

* 2ManyDJs

* Empire of the Sun

* Digitalism

* Perry Farrell

* Tiga

* Felix Da Housecat

* Rusko

* Erol Alkan

* Kaskade

* Wolfgang Gartner

* Flosstradamus

* Joachim Garraud

* Mexican Institute of Sound

* Caspa

* Peanut Butter Wolf

* Dirty South

* NERVO

* Cut Copy (DJ Set)

* Beats Antique

* Steve Porter

* Didi Gutman of Brazilian Girls

* Ancient Astronauts

* Ana Sia

* Team Bayside High

* Dani Deahl

* FreeSol

* DJ Mel

* BBU

* Vonnegutt

* Only Children

* Lance Herbstrong

For more on Lollapalooza see our 2009 review here.


Camp Bisco: LCD Soundsystem Ween, Thievery, PL, Major Lazer

THE DISCO BISCUITS ANNOUNCE FIRST ROUND OF PERFORMERS FOR CAMP BISCO 9

Performers Include The Disco Biscuits – All 3 Nights, LCD Soundsystem, Ween

Thievery Corporation, Major Lazer, Pretty Lights, Bassnectar, Diplo, Girl Talk, and Many More


The Disco Biscuits :: Camp Bisco 2009 by Vann

The Disco Biscuits have confirmed the first round of performers slated for Camp Bisco 9, the ninth annual three-day music and arts festival in Mariaville, New York this July 15-17, 2010. The 50+ performer lineup at the multi-stage camping festival includes: The Disco Biscuits – All 3 Nights; LCD Soundsystem; Ween; Thievery Corporation; Girl Talk; Bassnectar; Pretty Lights; Major Lazer; The New Deal; Diplo; Aeroplane; Rusko; Sunrise Silent Disco; The Album Leaf; Brothers Past; Dieselboy; Gift of Gab (of Blackalicious); Future Rock; SOJA; Telepath; Felix Cartal; Two Fresh; Kill the Noise; Eskmo; Orchard Lounge; Rubblebucket Orchestra; Emancipator; Spiritual Rez; Sub Swara; Derek Plaslaiko; Big Gigantic; Earl Greyhound; The Black Seeds; Grimace Federation; C-mon & Kypski; Nobody Beats the Drum; King Britt; Dubskin; Woodhands; Justin Paul; Lee Maytals and DJ Everyday. More artists and festival details will be announced in the coming weeks.

Camp Bisco 9 will once again be held at the picturesque Indian Lookout Country Club in Mariaville, New York. The expanded setup will include: a second stage in the main field, an improved location for the DJ and late night dance tent – complete with a surround sound system, a local artists and performance art stage. Indian Lookout Country Club is located approximately 20 minutes travel time from Albany, New York, and sits on 200 acres of rolling, grass fields. The grounds come equipped with full bathrooms; which include flush toilets and showers, as well as 24/7 bathroom attendants. Festival goers will have access to a full bar on site and a general store, which sells almost every necessity for a comfortable and care free experience.

Early bird tickets are on sale now for a limited time only and begin at $135. Tickets are available online at www.campbisco.net and 1-800-594-TIXX, as well as at all FYE stores in New England and select outlets in New York state.

For more on Camp Bisco, see our 2009 coverage here.

The Disco Biscuits Tour Dates ::: The Disco Biscuits News ::: The Disco Biscuits Show Reviews


Bisco Inferno Vid Contest: Win A Free Trip To Red Rocks!

PLANET ANTHEM / BISCO INFERNO VIDEO CONTEST:

WIN A CID ENTERTAINMENT WEEKEND TRAVEL PACKAGE FOR TWO!

The Disco Biscuits :: Bisco Inferno 2009 :: Red Rocks by Vann

Want to win an all expense paid trip to The Disco BiscuitsBisco Inferno featuring a blowout show on May 29 at Colorado’s legendary Red Rocks Amphitheatre? Of course you do, here’s how:

Take an already released Biscuits song from one of the recent EPs (details below) and make a video and enter your video here by midnight on 3/16 – Planet Anthem release day! An esteemed panel of judges will review the videos and pick a winner. The winner will receive a CID Entertainment Bisco Inferno Travel Package for the weekend (three-day package for two people including tickets for all three shows, shuttle, hotel, and more). If you have already purchased a travel package and win, you will receive a full refund. The winning video will also be played on the big screen at Bisco Inferno at Red Rocks!

Here’s how to enter:

1. Choose one of the following songs from the recent EP’s:

Konkrete – (Studio or OTT remix will be accepted)

Fish out of Water

You and I

On Time

Widgets

Loose Change

2. Create a music video to the song

3. Upload the video to this CID Bisco Inferno Page on Facebook by Midnight on Tuesday, March 16, 2010

4. Encourage your friends to comment and “Like” the video as all will be taken into account on judgment day!


Camp Bisco 9: July 15-17

THE DISCO BISCUITS ANNOUNCE DATES FOR CAMP BISCO 9

3-DAY MUSIC & ARTS FESTIVAL IN MARIAVILLE, NEW YORK JULY 15-17, 2010

Featuring 3 Nights of The Disco Biscuits and Over 50 Acts From Around the World


The Disco Biscuits :: Camp Bisco 2009 by Vann

The Disco Biscuits will continue the tradition of bringing cutting edge acts to Mariaville, New York, when Camp Bisco 9, the ninth annual three-day music and arts festival, returns this July 15-17, 2010. As hosts of Camp Bisco, one of the country’s largest and longest running electronic/rock music festivals, the Disco Biscuits have continued to bring a myriad of talent to the scene in recent years, including: Nas and Damian Marley, Snoop Dogg, Kid Cudi, Thievery Corporation, DJ Shadow, MSTRKRFT, The Roots, Asher Roth, James Murphy of LCD Soundsystem, STS9 (Sound Tribe Sector 9), Girl Talk, Shpongle, Younger Brother, Bassnectar, and !!!. The 2010 lineup will include three nights of the Disco Biscuits and over 50 more acts from around the World.

Camp Bisco 9 will once again be held at the picturesque Indian Lookout Country Club in Mariaville, New York. The venue is located approximately 20 minutes travel time from Albany, New York and sits on 200 acres of rolling, grass fields. Additionally, Camp Bisco 9 will be expanding this year to include: a second stage in the main field, an improved location for the DJ and late night dance tent – complete with a surround sound system, a local artists stage and a performance art stage.

Pre-sale tickets go on sale Friday, January 29 at 10 a.m. for a limited time only and begin at $115. A second tier of early bird tickets will be available in limited quantities, Friday, February 5 at $135, before general admission tickets are offered starting at $155. Tickets can be purchased at the gate for $175. All-inclusive VIP packages will be available this year. Tickets are available at both www.campbisco.net and 1-800-594-TIXX.

Camp Bisco 9 is promoted by MCP Presents and hosted by The Disco Biscuits, who’s upcoming release Planet Anthem, will be out on Diamond Riggs Records March 16.

For more on Camp Bisco, see our 2009 coverage here.


Jam Cruise 8 | 01.03.10 – 01.08.10

Words by: Dennis Cook | Images by: Chad Smith, Casey Flanigan & Dave Vann

Jam Cruise 8 :: 01.03.10 – 01.08.10

Ft. Lauderdale, FL – Ocho Rios, Jamaica – Georgetown, Grand Cayman Island

STS9 :: Jam Cruise 8 by Flanigan

The urge to set sail on an adventure is deeply rooted in our collective unconscious. Tom and Huck on a makeshift raft on the muddy Mississippi, Odysseus tossed about the Mediterranean, Ahab in restless pursuit of his alabaster nemesis – these tales are writ large in our subconscious and I felt the symbolic stirrings of these and myriad other stories the first night on open water during my first Jam Cruise. With nothing but stars, clouds, waves and shiny, happy people around me (plus a few other cruise ships in the distance), I realized that this journey was my reality for the next five days. Home was miles behind me, the air cool and filled with energetic sounds, and I felt a primal sense of adventure rise in me. Jam Cruise is surely a party, but approached with slightly more conscious intent, it can be considerably more.

While sometimes seen as an elitist fest because of the price tag, what I found was the vast majority of people had obtained passage through hard work, talent and scrimping and saving. Yes, it is considerably more than the average camping fest but one has a cabin, shower, 24-hour food and drink, excursions to Jamaica and the Grand Cayman Island, and a host of amenities that constitute real luxury for the average festivarian. And there’s something to be said for being patient and working towards a really big event like this, particularly in a culture of near-instant gratification of most appetites. Sitting in a hot tub watching Luther Dickinson lock horns with Robert Randolph during The Word‘s blistering opening night set, I swiftly realized that this was unlike any other experience I’d ever had. To then wander indoors – barefoot, smiling and steaming – to find Johnny Sketch and the Dirty Notes tearing it up like a miniature gritty soul-rock revue in the Zebra Bar – think a pimp’s idea of “classy” done up in mirrors and garish zebra print – and I soon discovered that there were going to be a lot of temptations to not sleep over the next week. The atmosphere is charged, to say the least, and there’s as much as one can stand – and then some – on offer almost any hour of the day.

Annabel Lukins (JC Organizer) :: Jam Cruise 8 by Smith

There is an intrinsic sense of playfulness on Jam Cruise. One encounters sights and sounds every few hundred feet that make one laugh aloud – costumed freaks making wild animal noises in the stairwells or a door hanger that reads, “Fucking Your Mom – Do Not Disturb.” It was, with few exceptions, good natured mischief, and I found myself humming Little Feat’s “Sailin’ Shoes” (or in my saucier moments, Ian Dury and the Blockheads’ “Sex and Drugs and Rock ‘n’ Roll“) as I strolled the carpeted hallways, frequently finding strangers in harmony with my fine mood. And many times these random encounters turned into extended conversations that dipped into everything from politics to divorce to our children and wistful remembrances of musicians past (Garcia’s spirit was very much afoot on the MSC Poesia). It may not have been universal but there was a significant portion of attendees who seemed split open in the most beautiful way, ready to face all sorts of things inside them, shared with a clarity we don’t often reach on dry land. On a half dozen occasions I found myself cradling someone I’d never met before as they cried into my shoulder only minutes after we’d begun speaking. And I was glad to be their sounding board and temporary comfort. Perhaps some of us felt freed up by the wonderfully alien setting, certain, on some level at least, that we were in safe company and that the music unfolding around us would heal and guide us onward. I saw people move from sobbing to dancing in swift order, and each of these encounters meant I had another new friend every time we bumped into one another the rest of the trip. And unlike most festival friendships, the depth of feelings shared cemented something more enduring that I want to hold onto and nurture now that I’m home, and I hardly think I’m alone in that desire.

DJ Logic :: Jam Cruise 8 by Vann

You’ve also never ever geeked out and talked music like you can on Jam Cruise. Literally hours would pass as we traded our touring pedigrees and insights on beloved albums. With wide, wild eyes, we waxed poetic about Dead, Panic, Phish and Crowes shows we’d experienced, and in this company we felt no shame in being irrationally and completely in love with music. These are people whose personal timelines are marked by musical moments, songs or shows that capture the essence of a relationship or an entire year. A cigarette on the deck could turn into two hours of intense discussion of Duke Ellington or improvisation or whatever metaphorically floats our boats. And regardless of what was happening on stages, one rarely felt like they were missing out. In fact, usually the conversations would travel from disco to pool deck to Jam Room, shifting tone and content as one encountered others or got sparked off by the notes flying at them. More than any other festival, I felt surrounded by my tribe, the people for whom music is central and endlessly informative and inspiring.

And there’s the music. Perhaps it’s the herd mentality and general myopia of most music press, but this might be the most talented yet overlooked collection of musicians on the planet. This thought occurred to me repeatedly throughout the week as I watched players engage with a staggering number of styles and genres, most of them seemingly ready at a moment’s notice to wing it and see where they might go with their compatriots. In terms of pure chops, musical smarts and live energy, it’d be tough to beat the assemblage on Jam Cruise 8, and even if most aren’t household names that takes nothing away from their immense talent and infectious, free spirited spark.

“The beauty of this thing is we’re all sequestered in this place,” said saxophone marvel Jeff Coffin, an artist-at-large this year, who proved a real musical colossus with a wicked imagination and the dexterity and facility to pull off anything that came to mind, as he popped up with seemingly everyone at one point or another. “There’s so many chances to get outside of your comfort zones.”

Coffin’s observation hits the nail on the head: Jam Cruise is a chance to get outside one’s comfort zone and taste and feel the unfolding moment in a tangible way. If nothing else, this trip has reaffirmed that the jam scene continues to thrive where it counts most – the music.

Continue reading for more coverage of Jam Cruise 8…

Sail Away

Trombone Shorty & Orleans Ave. :: Jam Cruise 8 by Vann

As they cut the ropes to the ship in Ft. Lauderdale on Sunday, Trombone Shorty & Orleans Ave. broke into a viciously funky, breathless set that harbingered the flood of New Orleans rooted music to come in the days ahead. One of the finest soul trombonist since Fred Wesley first cracked skulls, Shorty and his blazing band – especially his lead guitarist, Pete Murano, who went after and captured that extra something every time he stepped up – set off the festivities properly with a sound as lean, charismatic and focused as their bandleader himself. Looking around the pool deck, there were visibly joyous people hoisting drink after drink and pushing their internal amps up to “11″ from the very start of the voyage. Amateurs might well be taken aback by the gusto and open throttle of this crowd but it felt quite natural to jump rather than ease into things with Shorty’s bouncing groove ensnaring one’s limbs.

The “Sail Away Party” was truly unifying, a centralized gathering that reminded us we were in this thing together. It made me wish more small festivals would hold something similar to create a general sense of togetherness, and the same collective vibe cropped up at each of the two subsequent Sail Away sets as we left Ocho Rios and Georgetown.

Karl Denson – Sexual Chocolate :: Jam Cruise 8 by Smith

“When they told us we’d be playing the pool stage as we sailed away from Jamaica I had a very different idea of how it would be,” said John Brown’s Body‘s lead singer Elliot Martin on Tuesday as wind and steady rain pounded the still enthusiastic though sparser than expected audience. JBB infuse reggae with a soulful lilt, faster rhythms and choice live dub effects. Using patient builds, lover’s rock vocal sweetness and rebel rock toughness, John Brown’s Body honored their ancestors from the island disappearing in our wake by treating reggae not as canonical but alive and ready for remolding. Plus, they have excellent songs, which is the ultimate litmus test of any band working primarily in a single genre. Like pals and sometime JBB touring partners The Black Seeds, John Brown’s Body offered up genuinely modern reggae that incorporated a plethora of strains rather than another tired-ass recreation of what Bob Marley wrought.

On Wednesday, JJ Grey & Mofro took us out of the Grand Cayman Island with a rockin’, honestly soulful performance that showed off as tight and interesting a bunch as Grey has ever gathered around him. Otis Redding would have loved JJ and his songs redolent of Southern culture, family and an aching worldview with enough heart to weep for fallen trees and lost wilderness. Four days in, some of us, myself included, were feeling a little homesick – as sailors will – and Mofro’s set hit our guts like amazing home cooking. “Is this a big party?” asked Grey. “We been going every night but we still got a ways to go. If this is a big party then everybody dance!” And we did – hard – and we chuckled at his impression and translation of Yellowman and got suitably wistful singing about life on the wrong side of the tracks. Like JBB and Shorty (and many other artists on the cruise), Mofro isn’t an imitator but a vibrant evolution of the sound of their ancestors. I have no problem imaging Ray Charles and the cream of ’60s/70s Muscle Shoals studio killers absolutely loving what this band is laying down today.

First Night

Stanton Moore & Skerik :: Jam Cruise 8 by Smith

Besides Orleans Ave.’s party starter, the evening we set out contained some of the strongest music at Jam Cruise 8, though no day’s fare was weak or anything beyond most expectations – a testament to the quality programming and band choices of the organizers. In fact, it became swiftly apparent that premeditating one’s Jam Cruise experience too much was a fool’s errand. Sure, one could intend to hit this or that set, but more than likely one was jostled about by more immediate, serendipitous influences, overtaken by a Skerik or Ivan Neville sit-in, or just enraptured with the fresh sea air and good company on deck, regardless of who was playing. It’s a point I’ve made before but it bears repeating: Things that situate us in the moment are a blessing. We are so often caught up in our past and future that we miss the pleasures of right now, and Jam Cruise planted one in that wonderful present tense right away.

Dark Star Orchestra‘s nighttime pool deck set made it clear that DSO has as much a claim on the Grateful Dead legacy at this point as any of the surviving members of the Dead. With fans’ hearts and an under-appreciated level of technical skill, DSO reconnects with the source vibe of Dead music, that thing that makes us listen to countless bootlegs of every era, that thing that made us fall for this strange American music in the first place, particularly when they do original setlists, as they did both performances on Jam Cruise. “The Music Never Stopped” kicked this set off and seemed a purposeful anthem for this cruise. Swaying in the inky blackness of open water, cell phones dying off and the mainland a fast fading memory, Dark Star wove music that knitted us together and made one glad to be part of this adventure – not unlike when Garcia was still leading the Dead and made many of us feel we’d run away to some fantastical circus. Any doubts about new lead guitarist-singer Jeff Mattson (i.e. DSO’s new “Jerry”) were erased by a breathtaking “Eyes of the World” that rivaled the arguably definitive version on the So Many Roads box set. Overflowing with beauty and common man’s spirituality, “Eyes” made one glad to be nowhere else at that moment, and Mattson continually proved a real prize in his new role, bringing all his years in The Zen Tricksters to bear and then upping the ante a bit more. Though heresy to many John Kadlecik purists, I personally dug Mattson more in DSO and suspect he’s only gonna prove a better and better fit as time goes by.

Maceo Parker :: Jam Cruise 8 by Flanigan

In the Teatro Carlo Felice, the well-appointed, tiered seating indoor space, Maceo Parker was the definition of class and style, neither of which took one damn thing away from his sheer funky, jazzy essence. I was reminded of Maceo’s guest spotlight with De La Soul years ago, where the track begins with him saying, “I’m Maceo. I be blowin’ the soul out of this horn.” He sure is, and he’s nearly the powerhouse of his youth even in his golden years. With a ridiculously together band, all dressed in suits like Parker, this set and the subsequent pool deck set on Wednesday were just wonderful. This cat helped birth funk music and has only added great complications and tweaks as he’s grown older, like having his British manager come out to recite Shakespeare’s “To be or not to be” soliloquy as the band cooked softly behind her. Not sure what I expected going in but Maceo kept flipping the script, revealing a more well rounded musician than even his many admirers – including every horn player on the boat who watched and played with Parker with kid-like enthusiasm – might have suspected.

Another surprise to many Jam Cruisers was Bay Area faves The Mother Hips, who hypnotized many new listeners with their sinewy, muscular rockin’, stopping folks in their tracks in the Zebra Bar (and again Tuesday in the Teatro) as they sang, “This is the sound/ Let it bring you down.” One of the few truly rock ‘n’ roll acts this year – if there’s one quibble with the programming it’s maybe a hunger for just a little more hard-toned rock music amongst the many funk/soul/jam ensembles – the Hips offered a welcome spot of danger and sex onstage. Loose but never limp, the quartet played a solid cross-section of their catalog with an emphasis on recent Pacific Dust material as they worked on their sea legs. This was an ongoing challenge for the musicians, especially during a few turbulent, white water splashing nights, and all of them deserve an extra measure of respect and appreciation for working through wobbly tummies and jelly legs to keep the music flowing.

Continue reading for more coverage of Jam Cruise 8…

At Sea

Zach Deputy :: Jam Cruise 8 by Smith

Monday and Thursday were spent trucking through the sea and were the only full days of music programming, with Tuesday daytime spent in Jamaica and Wednesday daytime in Georgetown, Grand Cayman Island (or perhaps aboard ship recovering from one’s frolics on the deck with prodigious amounts of coffee and sliced fruit). Boarding and disembarking took several hours each on either end of the trip, though if one relaxed and didn’t let the waiting get to them they probably found some fun with their compatriots waiting in line next to them. The spacing out of options, including a civilized two-hour dinner break most nights, helped set a reasonable pace. Like the gluttony available at the buffet, one could be tempted to take in too much, push and push to miss as little as possible OR you could enjoy simply “being” in an environment designed to stimulate one’s pleasure centers, kicking back with musicians over a three-course meal and some wine or watching college football on the satellite TV in your cabin. While one could “rage” for days on end, there was another constituency that embraced idleness and atmosphere, perhaps choosing a perch somewhat away from the front of the stages and people watching over cocktails, maybe while floating in the pool or hot tubs while colorful creatures raced past, howling at the moon that peeked in and out from behind the running clouds.

Monday’s offerings began around noon with Vote-To-The-Boat winners the Ryan Montbleau Band on the pool deck easing into the day with violin and textural keys massaging Montbleau’s warm voice and radio-friendly pop-singer-songwriter fare. With tunes about breakfast and populist lyrics like, “I’ve never broken a bone in my life/ Let alone a heart or hip replaced,” these guys were a pleasant if conventional way to wake up.

Toubab Krewe with Ivan Neville :: Jam Cruise 8 by Flanigan

Inside, a Slide Guitar Workshop in the Zebra Bar led by Steve Kimock, Luther Dickinson and Robert Randolph was both educational and a hoot. “One word of advice is put the pick down. Just listen to what’s in your heart and play that,” said Dickinson. Kimock added a moment later, “Please use your fingers,” which Dickinson rejoindered, “Just pretend you’re with your girlfriend,” to mass laughter.

Back on deck at the Solar Stage, Zach Deputy made me not hate acoustic guitar based, loop-driven music – it’s really all getting a bit cliche, eh? Deputy, a regular pinch-hitter in the Jam Room, oozed charm and reminded one very strongly of prime Bill Withers, both in his singing style and fluid picking. A big man with a sunshine sound, Deputy was a nifty discovery for me and many others.

Toubab Krewe played the first of two stunning, original sets on Monday. They’ve refined and tightened up their already unique sound. There are blurrier lines between the genre blending now, resulting in the sense one was witnessing something new and powerful being born, Africa and America in a bold conversation that takes one into ancestral streams too strong to be ignored. You can dance to it, too, especially when Ivan Neville hops up to get a piece of it, fighting off the buffeting winds to find his own place inside Toubab’s world.

Railroad Earth :: Jam Cruise 8 by Vann

The winds kicked up even more boldly during Railroad Earth‘s deck set, but instead of being cowed by the elements RRE danced with them, pulling out solos that flew and flittered with the breeze, Todd Sheaffer‘s Del McCoury-esque voice cutting the current like a dexterous bird. Between this set and the Tuesday Teatro set – likely the most tender, lovely, emotionally exposed set on Jam Cruise 8 – Railroad Earth showed that every element of this band is top-notch and fabulously dovetailed. It all works like great folk music given new clothes and saucier intentions. For all the philosophizing, it’s not hippy-dippy shit – it’s actually thoughtful! Like fellow unsung modern songwriter Nathan Moore, Sheaffer is a contemporary classic, this generation’s answer to Dylan, Neil Young, et al. and the more one delves into their catalog the richer the experience becomes. Brave enough to be delicate and smart enough to never be pussies, RRE played two of the best sets I’ve ever seen them do, and this with guest bassist Keith Moseley (SCI) filling in for the recently retired Johnny Grubb and showing incredible feel for what they do. Unless one is prone to nitpicking, it would have been hard to find fault with his playing, which offered mostly continuity with Grubb’s work, though a few jerks in the crowd on Tuesday actually booed Moseley when he was introduced.

Two one-off performances also stood out on Monday, namely the heavy-rock-meets-prog-jazz of OHMphrey – which seemed to scare the more delicate flowers off the pool deck but delighted strange, thick noise loving weirdos like myself, totally living up to their introduction, which claimed, “It’s like a combination of Bitches Brew and metal. They will melt your face.” While most of the band jumped off at Jamaica, keyboardist extraordinaire Joel Cummins stuck around and added intuitive magic to a number of sets, including an especially hot Everyone Orchestra gathering on Thursday. The other Monday standout was The Motet Plays Talking Heads barnburner, with Deep Banana Blackout shredder Fuzz, two boffo female singers and Kyle Hollingsworth (keys, vocals) creating a loving, sort-of-giddy salute to the Heads and really lighting up the packed crowd. While perhaps over-praised in their retirement, the Talking Heads are a touchstone, especially for younger fans introduced to them by Phish’s fabled Halloween performance of Remain In Light, and the high feeling and sense of well being permeating the pool area during this set was hard to match the rest of the voyage. A genuine homage, The Motet-plus set did the job it set out to do and skirted being a simple recreation by gently stretching the songs and injecting a lil’ jamminess the Heads would likely never abide.

The Motet w/ Kyle Hollingsworth :: Jam Cruise 8 by Vann

My Monday came to a close with one of the best STS9 shows I’ve caught in some time. I’m fully aware that the rollers and tweakers miss the band’s earlier sound, but standing on the upper deck looking down on the undulating swarm on the deck below, I kept thinking, “Where did this music come from?” It makes no sense on paper – a sometimes jarring intersection of instrumental rock, electronica, African textures, lounge music and more. What I appreciated about this set – and today’s STS9 in general – is their bravery in embracing gorgeous, slower moods. There’s something highly vulnerable in this engagement with pure beauty, and it’s only going to expand their emotional range, particularly since they work in instrumental music, to work with the full range of tempos and feelings on top of bass-heavy, dance stuff. As they’ve evolved as musicians and composers it makes sense that they’d change and this set was a fine example of the band today.

Thursday’s day at sea culminated in Mike Dillon’s Go-Go Jungle in the Zebra Bar, which was a delirious period to place on the music for my first Jam Cruise. As usual, I wanted to illustrate Fleischer style black and white cartoons full of anthropomorphic objects and wise talking animals set to the mayhem unleashed by Mike D. and his cohorts, who brought some much needed agro-energy into our collective bloodstream. The slipstream of this music is breakneck and asks a fair amount of listeners, but go with it enthusiastically and there’s not much more exciting or rewarding out there. This is the kind of band, augmented by omnipresent saxophonics expert Skerik and others, that could nail The Dead Kennedys’ “Too Drunk To Fuck” and then seamlessly ease into Ellington’s “Caravan” and out into hip hop reminiscent of primo Schooly D. That they make such disparate elements swing mightily is a greater achievement still. I relish any session with such delightfully misbehaved musicians, and this particularly gnarly-sweet shindig left me with a head full of fucked-up dreams and a smile that made my jaw hurt.

Continue reading for more coverage of Jam Cruise 8…

All Funked Up

George Porter Jr. :: Jam Cruise 8 by Smith

Funk is pervasive on Jam Cruise. From elder statesmen like Maceo Parker to New Orleans iron men Galactic to one of the ship’s pillars, George Porter Jr. – who played like he’d drunk the blood of a young boy, his groove-metronome head a beacon whenever one fell off their good foot – and the seemingly non-stop grooves of the Jam Room, which acted like a go-all-night long, open door cutting session curated by a different musician each night starting at midnight. One just never ran out of music that made one move and love New Orleans and New York and any other oasis of funk. There was simply too much in this vein to catalog but if funk is a primary musical love for you then Jam Cruise delivers in a HUGE way.

And the whole thing felt like one long family affair with most of the players sitting in with their peers and welcoming them into their own sets. However, one of the glues that held Jam Cruise together was keyboard wizard Robert Walter, who shined brightly every single time he touched a B-3 or Rhodes, and he may have played with more people than anyone else on this cruise. He also led the Fantastic 4 on Wednesday, which may have been the crispest, nastiest funk display I heard. Joined by the freaking crushing guitar attack of Eric Krasno, a vaguely possessed George Porter Jr. and brutally tight drummer Adam Deitch, the Fantastic 4 just killed it again and again and again. A couple quality guest turns from Nigel Hall, including a buzz-inducing vocal turn through Stevie Wonder’s “Love Having You Around,” confirmed that Hall is a major talent, both as an original, appealing keyboardist and strong, engaging singer. I leave the boat with Nigel Hall on my shortlist of dudes to keep a VERY close eye on in the future. The guy is a total pro, even in major party mode, and likely to kick out some of the most engaging soul, funk and jazz we’re gonna hear in the near future.

The primary competitors for “funkiest times on the boat” were Krasno’s set with Chapter 2, which includes Hall, and the Ivan Neville driven Dragon Smoke throwdown in the Zebra, which pleasantly slowed down for a sultry version of War’s “Slippin’ Into Darkness” with War’s original harmonica champ Lee Oskar, another artist-at-large this year. It’s probably a matter of apples and oranges for funk enthusiasts, and I chose to eat the full fruit basket and didn’t regret the decision one little bit!

Zappa Lives

Pretty Lights :: Jam Cruise 8 by Smith

In a very real way, Zappa Plays Zappa, who performed twice, are keeping Frank’s music alive and well. Nostalgia is part of the game, and there’s a great deal they don’t play in Frank’s massive catalog, but what they do tackle is done with loving grace and a bluesy edge that’s markedly different than Dweezil Zappa‘s pop. Mostly young players, Zappa Plays Zappa has a real find in Scheila Gonzalez, who sings with a broad, cool range, plays saxophone and keys with flair, and generally uplifts everything she touches. No one else is a slouch either, which may account for the Australians who’d flow out for the cruise prompted by their great love of ZPZ. Frank Zappa’s work is a wholly unique creation, and yet it’s also one of the largely un-discussed roots of the jam scene in terms of both attitude and composition. Having ZPZ on the boat reminded us of that and helped introduce some of the vast, peculiar catalog of one of the 20th Century’s greatest musicians to neophytes. If they maybe didn’t repeat so many songs at the two sets I’d give ‘em an extra gold star, but that’s really a minor quibble when measured against the pleasure and force of what they do.

Pretty Lights

As fine as Dark Star Orchestra’s deck set had been, it was the Teatro set on Wednesday that brought me back to the feeling I had seeing the Grateful Dead for the first time in 1984 at the Greek Theatre in Berkeley. And though awash in a warm, familiar and very satisfying feeling, I felt a pull to head up top and see what all the buzz was about with Pretty Lights. I’ll say this: The kid and his sleek, hard-knock drummer bring it. His style is heavily informed by straight-up Studio 54 late ’70s disco, with string splashes and orchestral sweeps pushing a knack for comforting, crowd stirring samples (“After Midnight,” “Midnight Rider”). He’s got the balls to bust out Lonely Island’s “I’m On A Boat” AND chase it with the unctuous keyboard intro to Europe’s “The Final Countdown.” He’s shameless and fiercely dedicated to stirring up a hands-in-the-air frenzy, which he surely generated by the pool. Pretty Lights is easy to like, and has a wider range of flavors – including bits that reminded me of Kraftwerk’s robot rock – than many contemporaries. Not hard to see why this act is blowing up.

Continue reading for more coverage of Jam Cruise 8…

Other Jam Cruise 8 MVPs

Ivan Neville & Brock Butler :: Jam Cruise 8 by Flanigan

-Hot Buttered Rum for showing that twang can be modernized, and for hosting a really informative, jovial pickin’ workshop.

-Sexual Chocolate, the Coming To America inspired cruise ship alter-ego to Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe, particularly for their utterly sincere, flute dappled reading of Christopher Cross’ “Sailing.” Extra points for KDTU’s pool deck set for the best version of “Elephants” they’ve ever played, helped along by ferocious guest turns by Skerik, Jeff Coffin, Robert Walter and Mike Dillon, amongst others.

-Steve Kimock Crazy Engine for creating a psychedelic version of instrumental yacht rock and prompting Melvin Seals into some of the most wiggling, turned on playing we’ve heard the big man do in some time. And Kimock was maybe the most relaxed and copacetic I’ve ever seen him be. Neat!

-Brock Butler for his official and unofficial deck sets and whacked yet perfect instinct for cover tunes. Dude makes folks smile BIG!

-Everyone who dressed up for “Funk ‘n’ Formal” and “Superheroes and Villains” theme nights. While I plain clothes it, the attention to detail and wild creativity of those who suited up made the cruise a brighter, more fabulous place.

-Cloud 9 Adventures, the producers of Jam Cruise, for donating the instruments for a whole brass band to a village in Jamaica. That’s putting one’s ideals into substantive practice!

-DJ Logic for consistently crushing it in the disco and making everyone feel like our record collections are inferior to his.

-Every chummy, woozy set on the acrylic piano in the main lobby. Sing-alongs with virtuoso accompaniment and some of the prettiest music of the fest.

-Josh Phillips Trio for idyllic afternoon chilling folk-pop that evoked fab ancestors like Paul Simon and the Everly Brothers. Solid harmonies are always to be celebrated.

-The Jam Room nights that Skerik and Ivan Neville hosted. Lord above, the range of sounds and fearless thrust of the WIDE FUCKING OPEN playing by all was staggering. Never seen anything quite like either night, and both nights were strikingly different from one another. Two master class musicians at the helm and so bloody much to work with coming on and off the stage for hours upon hours.

-JC organizer Annabel Lukins for her ceaselessly upbeat attitude and for keeping the cosmic tumblers of this great enterprise moving smoothly. Girl, you are a miracle and a half.

A Revelation

The Word :: Jam Cruise 8 by Vann

During George Porter’s Super Jam I had a flash, which gelled into a true revelation during Everyone Orchestra. As much as people, critics especially, wax poetic about a time when Elvis and Jerry Lee Lewis or Miles Davis and John Coltrane were new voices and playing in endless configurations that moved music forward at a speedy clip, I realized that the assortment of musicians with their cavernous range, monster sized talent, prejudice free POV and marathon runner stamina gathered on Jam Cruise 8 were the inheritors of these forefathers’ legacy. While many could probably ring more money out of their careers by playing to a single sensibility, adhering to bebop structures, VH1 pop or uninspired Meters recreations, they’ve chosen a tougher path. And God bless them for it.

These shape-shifting men and women reveal the fluidity and basic cohesion of MUSIC, the archetypal thing stripped of adjectives and qualifiers. These musicians extend the line begun by Louis Armstrong, Jimmy Rodgers, The Beatles and countless other heavy-hitters. It’s not to say one era is better than another, but the jam scene, as represented on Jam Cruise 8, is maybe the most wide-open bunch to come down the pike, able to meld field hollers with Fela, Bill Monroe with boogie woogie. They invite us to investigate and explore the whole spectrum of music, honoring the past by not making an artifact of it, and in turn creating music that will grab and inspire future generations.

It was a gift to watch them work for five days, and the feeling they stirred in me, combined with the overwhelming good will and kindness of most Jam Cruisers, is something I vowed to take home with me as I stepped off the ship last Friday. While the temptation is to lament the ending of this journey, I’d encourage anyone who was there to strive to bring some of the Jam Cruise world/vibe into daily life – be a touch more patient, a bit more ready to give away what you have, and get out there to your local clubs and see all of these hard working musicians when they come to town. No one is getting rich doing this kind of music, and the community that breathed and rollicked on the MSC Poesia is exactly who these musicians need to survive. The benefit is not only the positive feeling of helping great talents make a living at their craft but an almost lock-certain guarantee that these players will deliver grand music night after night wherever they roam.

Jam Cruise 9 Wish List

Jam Cruise 8 by Smith

1. The Roots. Their collaborative spirit and buoyant vibe would be a perfect match for JC, though a more budget minded choice could be the almost-as-lethal-live Asheville, NC crew GFE, who’d drop some quality hip hop flavor into the funky stewpot.

2. Poor Man’s Whiskey performing Dark Side of the Moonshine on the pool deck. Like this year’s Talking Heads set, I think folks would lose their widdle minds with PMW dressed in Wizard of Oz costumes and lasers firing overhead under a star filled sky. Plus the PMW boys would be extra tasty sauce for the Jam Room and other sit-ins.

3. Craig Finn – Artist At Large. The Hold Steady frontman would be a cool x-factor that’d bring some rough rock energy to the proceedings, as well as lending his earthy, dark tinged personality to the trip.

4. Nate Wilson Group. They’ve already produced a bong hit masterpiece, and are one of the best hard rock units going today. They jam but with teeth, and the former Assembly of Dust keyboardist-singer would be a welcome addition to the general pool of musicianship onboard, not to mention under-valued, supremely heady guitarist Adam Terrell.

5. I’m on the boat sharing this incredible, life-affirming experience again!

Continue reading for more pics of Jam Cruise 8…

Images by: Chad Smith

David Murphy (STS9)

Robert Walter

Skerik

Trombone Shorty

OHMphrey

Brock Butler

Jeff Coffin

Adam Deitch

Drum Workshop

Dark Star Orchestra

Everyone Orchestra

Galactic with George Porter Jr.

Nigel Hall

Jake Cinninger

John Brown’s Body

Karl Denson

Eric Krasno

Eric Krasno

Lee Oskar (War)

DJ Logic

Lotus

Lotus

Maceo Parker

The Motet

Railroad Earth

Continue reading for more pics of Jam Cruise 8…

Images by: Dave Vann

Mike Dillon

Dark Star Orchestra

The Mother Hips

Jamaica

Steve Kimock

Lotus

Maceo Parker

JJ Grey & Mofro

OHMphrey

Pretty Lights

Poker Tournament

Walter, Denson, Moore

STS9

Artist Photo

JamBase | Back On Land
Go See Live Music!


7th Mark Vann Holiday Benefit

The 7th Annual Mark Vann Foundation Holiday Benefit

With Great American Taxi, Tim Carbone playing a set with Keith Moseley & many more

Saturday, December 5 – The Boulder Theater – Boulder, CO

Mark Vann

Mark Vann‘s spirit parted company with his body on March 4, 2002. Mark consistently lived by the motto of “Go Big!” He applied this motto to both playing music and his unending willingness to offer his time and knowledge to teach anybody who wanted to learn. He encouraged others to “Dream Big,” “Go Big,” and “Pick Big,” and personally supported their efforts to do so.


The Mark Vann Foundation was created to continue the spirit of joy, gratitude, and generosity that Mark brought to our collective communities through his life and music.

The Foundation’s primary mission is to serve community based non-profit organizations bringing light, love and laughter into the lives of those in need through nature, music and the arts; and to provide a conduit for kindhearted people with similar values to nurture impactful positive change within their own communities.

Proceeds from this year’s event go to There With Care and RSVP Boulder. Tickets are $20 and VIP tickets are $125. VIP tickets include pre-party admission with food and drink, time to mingle with the musicians, reserved seating and more.

Set to go down at the Boulder, CO’s Boulder Theater on Saturday, December 5, 2009, tickets are available here.

Lineup:

Great American Taxi and Friends (Featuring Vince Herman of Leftover Salmon)

Tim Carbone (of Railroad Earth) with Keith Moseley (of SCI) and Friends

Elephant Revival

Euforquestra

Pete Kartsounes

Black Swan Singers

plus many more special guests and surprises!

For more on Mark Vann and Leftover Salmon check out our exclusive 20 Year Retrospective HERE, and be sure to download Part 1 of the FREE live album.


Leftover Salmon: 20 Years Down River

By: Nancy Dunham

Editor’s Note:

In honor of Leftover Salmon’s historic 20th anniversary, we’re working with the band to offer fans a unique look back at their legendary career. Pop in an old tape (yup, we’ve still got our Maxells), catch the band at a festivaaaaaal, or take a look around JamBase and Leftover Salmon’s influence on the live music scene(s) we cover and care for so deeply is clear and present. In fact, we’re proud to say that Leftover Salmon helped water the very soil that JamBase has grown out of. Maybe you feel the same way.

Yet, as we celebrate what Salmon has given the music world, they want to give us just a little bit more. Leftover Salmon is well aware that they’d never be celebrating 20 years if it weren’t for the fans and they want to say thank you. We’re honored to partner up with them on this opportunity to bring you two albums worth (28 tracks total) of mostly never-before released live Leftover Salmon that covers the band’s entire career. It’s packed with special guests, classics, covers, and it tells as much of the band’s story as the words you’re about to read. And they’re all free, like a proper thank you should be. At the end of this story you’ll find a track listing, link and more info on Part 1 of our four part free live album download, but you can get started and Download Leftover Salmon Celebrating 20 Years Disc 1 now. You can also stream the first installment with the nifty little audio player to the right. And keep an eye out for the second batch of songs coming soon.


Leftover Salmon vintage press shot
Emmitt, Vann, Garrison, Herman, McKay, Martinez

Ben Kaufmann‘s life was changed by Leftover Salmon. The Yonder Mountain String Band bass player knew he wanted to be a musician, but it wasn’t until he was 19 and saw the Boulder-based “Polyethnic Cajun Slamgrass” band at The Wetlands in New York that he had a view of what musical path to take.

“From the minute they took the stage, their music blew me away,” said Kaufmann. “I never heard anything like them before. As soon as the show ended, I went over to the VW bus with the merch table and bought the CD and listened to it and said, ‘Where does this music come from?’ That’s what encouraged me to move to Boulder.”

Stories about how Leftover Salmon affected various lives abound in all quarters of the music community. Kaufmann recalls that once YMSB formed, Leftover Salmon was instrumental in getting them gigs in the Denver area.

The impact of Salmon is even more interesting when you consider the fact that when the band formed in 1989 – when members of the Salmon Heads joined forces with the Left Hand String Band – it occurred by happenstance.

“Last night I watched [Martin Scorsese's film about The Rolling Stones] Shine A Light and those guys are so much like us,” said Leftover Salmon co-founder Drew Emmitt, the group’s mandolin player. “It’s not that we’re like The Rolling Stone but they’re just a ragtag bunch of maniacs like us.”

In the film, Mick Jagger talks about forming the band in 1962 and thinking he’d try it one year and see if it worked out. If so, Jagger said he’d re-up for another year. Of course, the band is still going strong.

“That’s just like us,” said Emmitt. “There was no preconceived notion. We never thought we’d go out and play and travel the country. We just wanted to go out and play and have fun.”

Looking Back On Leftover Salmon

“Their music is unique. It just makes you feel good,” said Wavy Gravy, an activist, comic and all around friend to musicians since the 1960s. “There is nothing like them, with their incredible buoyancy and joy. That’s what they do – they make joy.”

Drew Emitt & Vince Herman – Leftover Salmon by Eric Abramson

That joy must have been what the fates had in mind when they brought the core of the band together.

Drew Emmitt grew up in Tennessee just outside Nashville. Although his family was musical and artistic – his dad was a writer, his mom a playwright – the family feared that Emmitt wouldn’t be able to make a living in music. But Emmitt was hooked from a young age, having grown up on influences that ranged from Gordon Lightfoot to Muddy Water to The Allman Brothers Band and Black Sabbath.

“I was exposed to classic music, rock & roll, and the blues. It was coming from all sides,” Emmitt said of his parents and siblings.

At about the same time, Vince Herman was growing up in Pittsburgh where Motown and doo-wop sounds prevailed.

“My first influence, though, was actually polka,” said Herman. “I was convinced you couldn’t get married without an accordion. I still have a weakness for the accordion.”

In high school, Herman became a fan of Southern rock and bluegrass, and those influences deepened when he was in college in Morgantown, West Virginia, where he got into the “bluegrass and old timey scene.”

Vince Herman – Leftover Salmon by Eric Abramson

“That really made me want to do that for a living,” said Herman, who put his dream on hold after he got married. “I did every kind of work imaginable, from working on fishing boats to construction. I tried the real jobs but they just weren’t for me.”

Emmitt, whose family moved to Boulder when he was about 10, also tried various jobs – most notably working with children in a daycare center, which he enjoyed – but found himself more and more caught up in the city’s music scene.

“In Boulder in the ’70s, it was a little more folk. Pure Prairie League, Stephen Stills, and Dan Fogelberg were always around,” said Emmitt. “But it was when I saw Hot Rize that everything totally changed for me. I was totally bit by the bluegrass bug.”

Although he was in garage bands in high school, the atmosphere surrounding the bluegrass scene was a strong pull for Emmitt.

“I realized there was a whole culture attached to it,” he said. “I loved that whole scene of people getting together around the campfire and playing. That’s what really got me.”

The first time Herman was fully exposed to the bluegrass scene was in about 1977 at a festival at the University of Pittsburgh.

“I had been playing music for years at that point but that’s really when I found my musical niche,” said Herman. “What a great way to socialize and enjoy music.”

Continue reading for more on Leftover Salmon…

 


Their music is unique. It just makes you feel good. There is nothing like them, with their incredible buoyancy and joy. That’s what they do – they make joy.

-Wavy Gravy

 

The Right Place

Drew Emmitt – LoS by Abramson

Musical aspirations and intentions are one thing, making it big quite another. Both Emmitt and Herman said that there are large doses of luck that factor into the equation.

“It has to be the right people for sure,” said Emmitt. “We happened upon it. There are so many great musicians in the world that really deserve to be famous [but don't make it]. It’s all about timing and finding the right people.”

Sam Bush remembers watching the young band when they were first performing as Leftover Salmon.

“One of the things that kind of set them apart was their versatility,” said Bush, “to be able to play electric music [with] fiddle, mandolin. It’s not surprising they found such a large audience. I love all their influences – the newgrass, the rock, the reggae. It really caught my attention.”

Herman said the deep roots of Leftover Salmon can be traced to the musical experimentation he and the other members of the band have explored since they were young.

“Getting your brain wrapped around one thing allows you to speak the language, and once you speak the language it is kind of like entering a culture,” he said. “In Boulder there was a player named Buck who was instrumental in uniting people. He called this thing he put together – before the Internet – Buck’s List, and there were probably 100 people on it. If you wanted to have a picking party or throw together a band, that’s where you started.”

Of course following a musical dream isn’t that easy to do when you have bills to pay. Herman remembers all to well the struggles he faced while working his way up in the business.

“It requires a lot of faith,” he said. “I have a 22-year-old who’s now trying to decide what to do, and I’d hate to see him live as close to poverty for as long as I did. But if that’s what leads to happiness, that’s the way you have to go.”

Emmitt recalls how his parents both fretted about his musical aspirations.

Mark Vann by Abramson

“They always wanted me to have something to fall back on. Unfortunately, they passed away before they got to see me do this,” Emmitt said. “That’s a big regret in my life. They’d be so surprised to see the kind of life I lead.”

Of course that didn’t happen right away. After years of kicking around in music scenes, fate took hold in 1985. That’s when Herman left West Virginia to move to Colorado influenced, like Emmitt, by Hot Rize.

“I was looking for a place to move that had different bluegrass,” said Herman. “I drove to Boulder, walked into a bar that said bluegrass was playing, and that’s where I first met Drew. It’s kind of weird to get out of your car, walk into a place, and find someone you will play with the next 25 years.”

That friendship deepened as they got to know each other through the Boulder music scene. Then, fate stepped in again one year at the Telluride Bluegrass Festival when Herman’s band, The Salmon Heads, was playing. Emmitt was at the fest just hanging out, walking through the compound when he heard “just incredible banjo playing and walked over.” That’s when he met banjo player Mark Vann, who eventually became the third co-founder of Leftover Salmon. The three formed a fast friendship at Telluride while continuing to play in their own bands and competing in a series of silly contests.

“Mark and I were in two different bands. Vince and I definitely had a chemistry going,” said Emmitt. “I thought something cool would happen.”

After the festival ended the three new friends walked up to Bear Creek Falls and sat on a cliff talking until the sun rose.

“You could feel the energy among the three of us,” said Emmitt. “You could really feel it going on.”

As the sun rose in all its splendor, Vann suddenly yelled, “Down in front,” referring to a large mountain that partially obscured their view. All three men started laughing.

“That was what sealed the deal for me,” said Herman. “That was great.”

Starting Leftover Salmon

Figuring out their new band’s name was pretty easy. The three new friends and their buddies who would fill out the group just started playing with the names of the two main bands they were in, and Herman finally coined Leftover Salmon.

Deciding on what music to play was almost as simple.

Leftover Salmon at Telluride Bluegrass Fest by Abramson

“We really just said, ‘Let’s take bluegrass, crank it up, add drums, and that will be Leftover Salmon,’” said Emmitt.

“I really thought it’d last one gig,” quipped Herman.

Not only has it lasted 20 years and counting, but that first gig will be celebrated on December 28 when the band plays The Eldo, the site of their first show. They’ll follow with shows at the Boulder Theater on December 30 and New Year’s Eve.

“It’s not a very large place; I think it seats about 225 people,” said Emmitt of The Eldo, “but after all we’ve done, all the large venues, it’s a way to come full circle.”

In a way, that small club filled with friends from the area is what gave Leftover Salmon the all-important push it needed to launch its career.

“You pick up energy from the audience,” said Emmitt. “You discover people really want you to succeed, and you take that energy and you run with it. You stop worrying about it and you get up there and do your thing and give out energy and get it back.”

The energy Leftover Salmon found reached higher levels the more old string band tunes they added.

“Those would get people really fired up,” said Herman. “It was what really struck a chord with the whole slamgrass thing. People got real rowdy.”

Both Emmitt and Herman admitted to being more than a bit concerned when slamgrass first began, but they say people weren’t overly aggressive, just fun loving. That’s almost the same way the signature sound of Leftover Salmon developed.

Continue reading for more on Leftover Salmon…

 


One of the things that kind of set them apart was their versatility, to be able to play electric music [with] fiddle, mandolin. It’s not surprising they found such a large audience. I love all their influences – the newgrass, the rock, the reggae. It really caught my attention.

-Sam Bush

 

“We took a few different influences and put them all together,” said Herman. “That’s how we called it Polyethnic Cajun Slamgrass. We took all our favorite influences, mixed them together, and that’s what it became.”

Del McCoury, Bush, Emmitt, Vann by Abramson

And other musicians and fans loved it, packing Leftover Salmon’s shows and clamoring for more. One of the early devotes was Paul Barrere of Little Feat.

“Vince and Drew were two of the best young bluegrass pickers I heard in a long time,” said Barrere. “The way that they incorporated rock & roll into the music was just brilliant. Their impact on the jam band scene is huge.”

Musician Ronnie McCoury had first seen the band at Telluride in the early 1990s and was hooked by the eclectic sound and the members’ energy.

“No one really does what they do,” said McCoury. “Personally, I don’t even know how they create that sound, but that’s why they have such a great following that will stick with them forever.”

There were certainly disbelievers, though, when the band started. Emmitt remembers one friend telling him the newly purchased electric mandolin was “cool but all those electric mandolins went out in the ’70s.” Still, the bandmates wouldn’t be dissuaded.

“It really seemed like the smartest thing to do [to develop our sound],” said Emmitt. “You had bluegrass and you had rock, and in that respect there wasn’t much happening. You had the [Nitty Gritty] Dirt Band and others with drums and stuff, but they were more country. We took it to a different place. We played with a lot more abandon.”

Herman talks about the television show America’s Got Talent and the parade of genres and categories showcased.

“I watch that and think we could be contenders in all the categories,” he said. “We saw a window of opportunity and we combined all those categories.”

Losing A Brother

Mark Vann by Abramson

The band was rolling along and life was sweet when suddenly everything changed. Mark Vann, the brilliant banjo player, became ill and was diagnosed with cancer. He died on March 4, 2002.

The time of his diagnosis was an odd time for the entire country because it occurred just prior to the September 11 terrorist attacks. Not only was the band without Mark but they also played a few gigs without a drummer because Jose Martinez was in Seattle. A native of Venezuela, he was concerned about trying to get on a commercial airline flight so soon after the attacks, so he rode a Greyhound bus from Seattle to Texas to rejoin the band.

“Walking onstage that first time without Mark was one of the toughest things I’ve ever done in my life,” said Emmitt.

The pain didn’t ease for years. Even now, raw emotion floods the voices of Emmitt and Herman when they discuss their former bandmate.

“It absolutely devastated us,” said Herman. “It was hard to consider going on and playing again after he passed, but that’s what we do. We would have loved to have canned the whole thing. Drew and Mark and I together, it was a spiritual thing that led it along. But none of us had savings accounts and we had to keep going. And we did. It was definitely one of the hardest things I have ever done. Playing music is so spiritually connected with well being and to go onstage and look at the empty spot where Mark used to stand was brutal.”

Friends, including Sam Bush and banjo player Reverend Jeff Mosier, played with the band and helped ease some of the pain.

Herman & Vann – Leftover Salmon by Eric Abramson

“The Rev. Mosier was really the perfect person to go out with us as the first banjo player,” said Emmitt. “He is a very witty, very funny, very energetic person, and also very spiritual, and it made sense to have someone who was called Reverend be with us at that point. He made us laugh at a time when it was really hard to find laughter anywhere.”

In a way, music became a salvation for the band members. Playing, which had been a pure joy, became a form of healing for them.

“The music is going to be different but the music comes out of you and you need to express it just as much,” said Herman. “Those gigs were really hard but they were also incredibly therapeutic. Music goes on.”

At the end of 2004, the band announced it would take a hiatus. Until they reunited in 2007, many doubted they would ever return.

“I think we were like a three-legged beast walking on two,” said Herman. “We had never quite gotten that balance back, and it was a struggle just changing personnel. We had never taken a break after he passed and we just said at one point it was time to give it a rest. It was too spiritually taxing. It had run its course.”

When the band reunited in 2007 for performances at High Sierra Music Festival, All Good Festival, and, of course, the Telluride Bluegrass Festival, Herman and Emmitt were quick to dismiss notions that Leftover Salmon was back. Yet when they were announced at Telluride as “Drew Emmitt and Vince Herman and Friends,” Jeff Austin of Yonder Mountain String Band said, “We all know what’s going on here.”

Leftover Salmon 2009

It is true? Is Leftover Salmon really back?

“We are in an interesting place,” said Emmitt. “We were a reunion band at that time and we’ve done reunion shows and festivals. It’s hard to say where we are, but it really works well this way. It is awesome. One of the greatest things that ever happened to me personally is putting this band back together because it’s very fresh and enriched because of our solo work.”

Emmitt, Herman, and the other members each support the other’s solo projects that allow them to reach into needed creative areas, knowing they can always return to Leftover Salmon.

“It’s comfortable to be back in this place,” said Herman. “It’s a great repertoire of music and it’s very comfortable to dive back in. I don’t know where it will go but we’ll keep playing music and having fun.”

That, said Bush, is really all their friends and family should ask right now.

“It left a big heartbreaking hole for them to lose Mark,” Bush said. “They really loved Mark; we all did. If anything, since Mark’s demise we are all thankful that they are back and pickin’ together again. If anything maybe helps them all, it’s that they played somewhat separately for a time. That gives them – and us – an appreciation to get them back.”

Continue reading to download the first part of our free Leftover Salmon live double-album…

As part of celebrating Leftover Salmon’s 20 year anniversary, we’re giving away a double-album full of 28 live tracks starting in 1991 and taking us right up to 2009. Selecting, mastering and organizing the material fell largely on the shoulders of Leftover Salmon manger John Joy, who along with band archivist Chad Staehly and Eric Abramson, who did the Leftover Salmon Years In Your Ears DVD, narrowed it down from hundreds – if not thousands – of songs to bring this live compilation to life. Special thanks is also due to James Tuttle who mastered the final selections at Airshow Mastering.

“It sure has been a trip!” said Vince Herman about listening back to the first eight songs we’re offering, all from 1991-1994. Surprised by how rock & roll the young band sounded, Herman explained that, “It just seemed like the places we were playing and the crowds we were playing to, it was more of a rock & roll kind of crowd in the early days, and bluegrass was something kind of new to ‘em, in the bar scene anyways. So I guess we probably leaned a bit more towards the rock & roll than straight ahead bluegrass like we played in the Left Hand String Band or the jug band and the Cajun stuff of the Salmon Heads.”

Vince Herman was interviewed about the 20 Year compilation by Cal Roach.

You can download Part 1 of the Leftover Salmon Celebrating 20 Years Sampler HERE.

Track Listing for Part 1 of the Leftover Salmon Celebrating 20 Years Sampler

1. Blister in the Sun 3:59 – 05/04/1991 McCabe’s Boulder, CO

Band: Vince Herman, Drew Emmitt, Mark Vann, Gerry Cavagnaro, Michael Wooten, Rob Galloway

Songwriter/Composer Credits: Violent Femmes

2. Just Before The Evening 4:02 – 05/04/1991 McCabe’s Boulder, CO

Band: Vince Herman, Drew Emmitt, Mark Vann, Gerry Cavagnaro, Michael Wooten, Rob Galloway
Songwriter/Composer Credits: Drew Emmitt – Leftover Salmon

3. Whiskey Before Breakfast/Over The Waterfall 3:47 – 05/04/1991 McCabe’s – Boulder, CO

Band: Vince Herman, Drew Emmitt, Mark Vann, Gerry Cavagnaro, Michael Wooten, Rob Galloway

Songwriter/Composer Credits: Traditionally arranged by Leftover Salmon

4. Who Stole My Monkey 4:42 – 05/25/1991 Stage Stop – Rollinsville, CO

Band: Vince Herman, Drew Emmitt, Mark Vann, Gerry Cavagnaro, Michael Wooten, Rob Galloway

Songwriter/Composer Credits: Zachary Richard

5. Mystery 4:19 – 10/02/1993 – Fox Theater – Boulder, CO

Band: Vince Herman, Drew Emmitt, Mark Vann, Michael Wooten, Tye North, Joe Jogerst

Songwriter/Composer Credits: Mark Hallman

6. Weights 3:53 10/02/1993 – Fox Theater – Boulder, CO

Band: Vince Herman, Drew Emmitt, Mark Vann, Michael Wooten, Tye North, Joe Jogerst

Songwriter/Composer Credits: Drew Emmitt – Leftover Salmon

7. Dance On Your Head 4:12 – 10/19/1994 Music Farm – Charleston, SC

Band: Vince Herman, Drew Emmitt, Mark Vann, Michael Wooten, Tye North

Songwriter/Composer Credits: Vince Herman / Mark Vann – Leftover Salmon

8. Head Bag 5:34 10/19/1994 Music Farm – Charleston, SC

Band: Vince Herman, Drew Emmitt, Mark Vann, Michael Wooten, Tye North

Songwriter/Composer Credits: Vince Herman – Leftover Salmon

Check back for Part 2 of our Leftover Salmon 20 Year Celebration featuring a bunch more free music!

JamBase | Upstream
Go See Live Music!


Lollapalooza | 08.07-08.09 | Chicago

Words by: Wesley Hodges & Cal Roach | Images by: Dave Vann & Chad Smith

Lollapalooza :: 08.07.09 – 08.09.09 :: Grant Park :: Chicago, IL

Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

It’d be hard to find a better-suited urban environment to host such an ambitious and enormous multi-day music festival than Grant Park. Set in a large, albeit slender, plot of land about a mile long and a couple hundred yards wide sandwiched between Lake Michigan and the stunning Chicago skyline, there is something inherently unique about this festival, and its influence on other alternative American music festivals is undeniable. As The Knux‘s Kentrell “Krispy Kream” Lindsey told JamBase, “Lollapalooza was the first of its kind, having something from almost every genre and fathering in the groundbreaking style of festival that all present day fests have followed since Lollapalooza’s conception.” Karla Muench, a Chicago public school teacher told JamBase that the best thing about Grant Park as a concert venue is “the view all around. You look one way, you see the lake, look the other and you see the skyline, look another way and you see Soldier Field.”

No other American music festival of this scale is as easily accessible within a major metropolitan area. Krispy Kream also mentioned, “Most festivals are in rural areas that are very hard to access and Lolla is in Chicago, one of the biggest cities in the U.S.” With public transportation all around, top-notch restaurants, clubs and music venues all within earshot of the park and enough history to write an epic about, Lollapalooza truly is a one-of-a-kind, albeit ephemeral, urban utopia. With enough quality bands to please the most fickle of music fans and after hours shows in just about every venue each night, there was little time to sleep this weekend and JamBase was more than happy to sacrifice some shut eye to soak it all in and give our beloved readers a full report. (WH)

Friday, 08.07

The Knux – 1:00-1:45 p.m., Citi Stage

Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

Day one was a challenge for even the most road-hardened of music fans as unrelenting rain blanketed the early Lolla crowds for the first five hours of the festival. Unfazed, we headed on over to the Citi Stage to check out The Knux. Early in the weekend the fans were riled up and still light on their feet as Krisp asked the youthful crowd, “Who’s ready to see some amazing music?” Getting hands up early, the rap duo’s rabble rousing, humorously irreverent style, reminiscent of N.E.R.D. was the perfect party starter for what would be a marathon weekend of world-class music. (WH)

Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears – 1:00-2:00 p.m., vitaminwater Stage

Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears tried to get booties shaking early on with their generic ’70s funk, but they lacked three key ingredients for success in this field – a singer not blatantly impersonating James Brown, a seriously distinctive guitarist or other instrumentalist, and a cache of standout original songs. I guess they were playing their own songs, but they were in a singles bar cover band zone. (CR)

The Builders And The Butchers – 1:45-2:30 p.m., BMI Stage

I was able to duck out to the north for a bit to catch The Builders And The Butchers, a party band with a much more original sound. They blend rhythm-driven folk styles heavy on the mandolin with hip-hop and punk inflections, sort of like a high-speed urban bluegrass. What I saw was fun and engaging, and I wished I could stay under the shelter of the trees at the BMI Stage all weekend. Friday featured a nagging drizzle that fluctuated through all levels of annoying almost the whole day, and none of the main stages are near any reasonable shelter. (CR)

The Gaslight Anthem – 2:00-3:00 p.m., Chicago 2016 Stage

Perry & Etty Lau Farrell (wife)
Lollapalooza 2009 by Smith

New Brunswick’s The Gaslight Anthem did get on my nerves initially. It seems there’s a new Springsteen imitator springing up every day, and Brian Fallon is more blatant than most. Plus, the band’s whole sound struck me as just a little too Hold Steady-meets-Kings-Of-Leon. So, how did it end up winning me over? I think it was the earnest empathy from Fallon, who seems too green for rock star contrivance, and an edgy depth to the songs that tempered the soaring ambition just enough. “Boomboxes And Dictionaries” was a particularly raw dose of soulful rock, and closer “The Backseat,” with a “Lost In The Supermarket” quote sandwiched inside, amounted to a perfect working-class nugget. (CR)

Perry’s Dance Area Introduction and Dark Wave Disco – 2:45-3:45 p.m., Perry’s

My crew headed northward towards Bon Iver, but not before making our first stop at Perry’s, an impressive venue entirely devoted to dance music that Lollapalooza founder Perry Farrell described to JamBase as “a hybrid area with the ability to accommodate 10,000 people. It’s not a dance tent, we like it under trees. It’s a custom built DJ Tower that has LED screens, new DJ software with fresh capabilities so that the young people that are producing this music and creating their own videos will be able to do all this and work their machinery on stage.”

The party atmosphere was emanating from Perry’s as DJ Trancid managed to encapsulate the entire vibe of Lollapalooza past, present and future in the first three minutes by sampling Nirvana’s “Smells Like Teen Spirit” seamlessly into a slowed down, pitched up twist on MGMT’s “Kids” as a horde of young fans formed a tribal dance circle while passing around a shoe (much like “The Conch” in Lord of the Flies) signifying the leader of the makeshift dance troupe. The realm of dance music has undoubtedly bled into the mainstream as evidenced by such popular artists as Santigold, MGMT and the huge crowds at Perry’s throughout the weekend providing further evidence of the burgeoning acceptance of the medium. (WH)

Bon Iver – 3:00-4:00 p.m., Playstation Stage

Bon Iver :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

Bon Iver took the stage for an ill-timed set as the rain continued to pour down. Justin Vernon‘s glowing, pastoral harmonies weren’t enough to keep the audience’s attention as many people only stuck around for a few songs after hearing the band’s surprise underground hit “Skinny Love” in the early portion of the set. The North End of the park contains two stages, with the larger main Budweiser Stage backed up to the end of the park and the Playstation Stage tucked in the area’s opposite corner making for a quick and easy scoot to the other stage to see Mr. Folds. (WH)

Heartless Bastards – 3:00-4:00 p.m., vitaminwater Stage

Clearly, the Heartless Bastards weren’t about to get the dance party started in earnest; so, for me, this was the most unfortunate scheduling choice of the day. I’ll give singer Erika Wennerstrom some credit for coming off a lot like Chan Marshall, but with actual stage presence. She is the clear focal point of the band, the first of many charismatic, intriguing female artists on this year’s Lolla stages. The other two guys were another story, either confined within the droney constraints of the songs or just not able to assert themselves. In another setting, this could have been an hour of pastoral dirtiness, harnessing the crawling beauty of old My Morning Jacket, but in the middle of an afternoon of mostly uptempo music, amidst a dreary rainstorm, this set just lost me. (CR)

STS9 – 4:00-5:00 p.m., Chicago 2016 Stage

STS9 :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

STS9 was poised to be the antidote to the Bastards. An opening combo “Shock Doctrine” and “Atlas” popped and crackled, getting at least the actual Sound Tribe fans moving, although much of the soaked crowd seemed pretty lethargic. The flow did hit somewhat of a lull in the middle, but in the end it was a very well planned set. “EHM” began to build the momentum back up, “Rent” was the comfort food that everyone was waiting for, and “The Unquestionable Supremacy of Nature” blew the roofs off the porta-potties, an earth-shaking bomb that also seemed to acknowledge our weather-themed predicament for the weekend. (CR)

Ben Folds – 4:00-5:00 p.m., Budweiser Stage

Ivory wunderkind Ben Folds took the Budweiser Stage to a largely sedate crowd and unfortunately had some problems with the sound mix early on. Always the showman, Folds managed to keep the audience engaged with his dazzling flourishes on the piano and unabashedly poppy lyrical hooks running through his staple cover of Dr. Dre’s “Bitches Ain’t Shit” (always cracks me up to see the sideburned Folds summoning his inner ’90s rapper) and new single “You Don’t Know Me” before closing the set with the always enjoyable “Army,” a song about the soul searching quarter-life period of living. Rain and music festivals are rarely a good mix and their was no end in sight as forecasts called for heavy rain and thunderstorms throughout the evening. (WH)

Crystal Castles – 5:00-6:00 p.m., vitaminwater Stage

Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

What STS9 does with instruments (i.e. get people dancing), Crystal Castles continued to do with buttons and keys, without the jamming but with the added attraction of Canadian fireball Alice Glass. I was enthralled for the first 20 minutes or so. Ethan Kath kept the beats coming, never boring or too homogeneous, but Glass’ jumping around and shrieking went from exciting to annoying after it became apparent that her shtick wasn’t really going to vary much and it was impossible to understand any of the actual words (if there were any). Still, overall the music was good enough to offset the antics. (CR)

Fleet Foxes – 5:00-6:00 p.m., Playstation Stage

One of the biggest indie rock success stories of the decade (playing SNL only months after releasing their debut LP on Sub Pop), Fleet Foxes were one of the most anticipated shows of the weekend and the “beard rockers” (see Band of Horses, My Morning Jacket, and Bon Iver for other examples of this growing sub-genre) showered the poncho-wearing audience with their shimmering vocal harmonies and intricately arranged pastoral folk jams. Tunes like “Ragged Wood” had the crowd doing their best to sing-along with the gifted young band. The lighthearted banter between songs was a welcome diversion during tuning as drummer Josh Tillman offered to sublet his beard on Craigslist for the rest of the summer. In perhaps an attempt to part the clouds and end the relentless rainfall, the band opened their set with a pair of tracks off their debut Sun Giant EP, starting with the title cut before playing “Sun It Rises,” a couple of lustrous tunes that couldn’t conjure a break in the clouds. The Foxes’ chills-inducing brand of folk rock reached its apex at the end of the set with the trio of “He Doesn’t Know Why,” the jaw-dropping “Mykonos” and “Blue Ridge Mountains” as the rain shockingly subsided for the remainder of the day, much to the relief of the sold out crowd in Grant Park. (WH)

Thievery Corporation – 6:00-7:00 p.m., Chicago 2016 Stage

Kevin Barnes – of Montreal :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Smith

Next came my first real Thievery Corporation set, and I was very quickly bummed that I’d missed the pre-party Thursday night. It wasn’t just the impeccable grooves – you can get those on any of Thievery’s records – or the talented guest singers (led by the seductive Emilíana Torrini) or the photogenic Rob Myers on sitar. It was the aura of awareness and positivity emanating from the stage and the juxtaposition of downtempo music and a rebellious bent that just caught me up in its swell. That’s not to downplay the beats, and the infectious smiles on stage were reflected in the happy, dancing crowd, and the music never really stopped. So, even amidst rants against racial injustice and war, it was a joyous celebration at the Chicago 2016 Stage, and the highlight of the day for me. (CR)

Peter Bjorn & John – 6:30-7:30 p.m., Citi Stage

I was anxious to catch a little bit of Peter Bjorn & John’s set and headed down to the Citi Stage to check out the Swedish indie pop trio. Some far out vocal effects translated well on stage for the live reading of “Objects of My Affection,” then we drifted on down to the vitaminwater Stage for of Montreal. (WH)

of Montreal – 7:00-8:00 p.m., vitaminwater Stage

Andrew Bird :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

The first of several glam rockers to appear at the fest over the weekend arrived in a dizzying array of colors and flamboyant feathered costumes to deliver a noise pop heavy set amidst the ongoing circus on stage. Not hiding their obvious influences, the band covered David Bowie’s “Moonage Daydream,” a tune that had frontman Kevin Barnes shrilling, “Freak out in a moonage daydream, oh yeah!” The crowd responded best to the gimmicks (smoke, confetti hoses, masks and lots of random dancers), but even people unfamiliar with the band were able to recognize and appreciate “Wraith Pinned to the Mist and Other Games,” a song and melody synonymous with Outback Steakhouse and their delicious Bloomin’ Onion. Androgynous, psychedelic and vaudevillian, of Montreal is guaranteed to bring something different to the table with each performance and they certainly left an impact on hordes of casual fans with this particular freak show rave up. (WH)

Andrew Bird, 7:00-8:15 p.m., PlayStation Stage

Kings of Leon :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

The dance party continued with of Montreal, but I had to check out native son Andrew Bird on the other end of the lengthy park. Bird has been evolving his songs on an almost daily basis for years now, although he has virtually abandoned everything he did prior to The Mysterious Production Of Eggs, his 2005 breakthrough album. As his quest for the perfect pop song has intensified, his live shows have often picked up the slack in instrumental dynamics, and he has definitely earned his second-to-last slot at the fest, but you wouldn’t know it from this display. The energy simply wasn’t there from any of the players, and the improv seemed like more of an intellectual exercise than a performance. I wouldn’t say I’m losing faith in the guy, but unless this set was an anomaly, he is in real danger of at least temporarily disappearing up his own ass. (CR)

Kings Of Leon, 8:15-10:00 p.m., Budweiser Stage

I have to say I think Bird topped Kings Of Leon, though. Okay, I confess I was not a huge fan prior to this show, but I went out there with love for at least a couple of their songs and a real desire to be converted by their headlining set. But as usual, the overbearing impression I got from this band, intrusively from singer Caleb Followill in particular, is a suffocating need to be admired – rock star bravado without the substance to back it up. These guys write solid pop music that for some reason sounds like it’s from England, no doubt about it. They also play that music competently on stage. I simply don’t believe these emotions they’re trying to project, the ones that produce the combustible sex. I hoped I’d feel like pumping my fist or banging my head or at least clapping rapturously at some point, but I was just bored.

As a partial concession to KoL, maybe I was just feeling the dance party that day. I caught the tail end of Crookers‘ set and thought it killed, and then Kid Cudi came on quickly and kept Perry’s bumpin’ for another half hour to close out my Friday. It was a welcome pick-me-up; I couldn’t let the first day end in a nosedive. (CR)

Depeche Mode – 8:00-10:00 p.m., Chicago 2016 Stage

Depeche Mode :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Smith

A show many Stateside fans were anxiously awaiting, Depeche Mode took the stage just as of Montreal played their final notes to an uproarious and eager audience. The New Wave legends’ influence on music is immeasurable – lead singer Petter Ericson Stakee of the British rock band Alberta Cross told JamBase that DM was probably the band’s biggest influence and described lead singer Dave Gahan as “a god on stage.” Live sampling and electronic dub segments have become so prevalent in mainstream rock music and much of that can be traced to Depeche Mode and their international popularity. As for the show, the band opened with a trio of new songs from Sounds of the Universe with “In Chains,” the single “Wrong” and “Hole to Feed.” Every headliner of the weekend had their own stunning visual display and DM’s video wall fit their style well. For “In Chains” the screen featured an old white man’s face next to a young black boy’s face. As the song progressed, the faces slowly transformed until the old white man was the young black boy and vice versa. (WH)

The crowd dynamic was something I had only previously witnessed watching videos of Glastonbury as the entire audience swooned with their hands in the air as DM poured through their vast catalogue with hit songs like “Enjoy the Silence,” “Personal Jesus,” “Policy of Truth” and “A Question of Time” rousing the crowd to their highest levels of euphoria. Gahan’s voice has a commanding power from the lower register that billows out clear as a bell all the way to the back of the field. Industrial strength drum lines and synth-ed out keyboards are Depeche’s modus operandi and seeing it unfold in the flesh is something I would have never imagined if they hadn’t been brought to the Lollapalooza stage. That’s the beauty of an event like Lollapalooza, as Perry Farrell told us the Monday before the fest when asked what his favorite thing was about music festivals, simply offering, “Everyone wins, the musicians win, [the fans] get to hear the music that they’ve been listening to on their iPods or online all year. They get to actually see them perform. Everybody at the festival wins.” (You can read the entire Perry Farrell interview here.) (WH)

Continue reading for Saturday’s coverage of Lollapalooza…

Saturday, 08.08

The Low Anthem – 12:00-12:45 p.m., vitaminwater Stage
Living Things, 12:45-1:30 p.m., Chicago 2016 Stage

Lollapalooza 2009 by Smith

Friday’s rain gave way to a scorching weekend, but Saturday was still mostly tolerable. The Low Anthem seemed like it would be the perfect mellow start to the day, but I needed a bit more of a jumpstart than this set. Even the bursts of energy were of the lazy variety, which isn’t inherently bad, just not terribly motivating. Living Things were not doing it either; they reminded me of latter-day INXS but even more generic, but I only stuck around for a few songs before walking to the Citi Stage for Constantines, the first major surprise of the weekend. (CR)

Delta Spirit – 12:30-1:30 p.m., Budweiser Stage

Delta Spirit is no stranger to the road or the festival circuit. Having cut their teeth opening for Cold War Kids, Dr. Dog and currently for The Shins, Matthew Vasquez and his bandmates seem at home on big stages as a result of their experiences traversing the country for 150-200 shows a year since forming in 2005. Vasquez commented on how great it was to play to such a huge early crowd saying, “We usually play for 200 people, so this is amazing.” Delta Spirit’s uplifting jangle soul rock and percussive backbeats were just the thing to get the early birds going as Vasquez beckoned the crowd shouting, “If you’re feelin’ what I’m feelin’ come on/ All you soul-searching people c’mon!” Midway through the set, Vasquez took the mic and explained that it was his brother’s wedding day and that he was supposed to be the best man so he decided to give him a call from the stage and get the crowd to help out with his unique wedding day gift by screaming, “Congratulations, Travis,” into the phone. But seriously, what kind of brother gets married when his little brother is playing at Lollapalooza? No respect. The anthemic “Trashcan” was sandwiched between a short solo cover of Mark Dvorak’s “The Streets of Old Chicago” and a loungy cover of Louis Armstrong’s “St. James Infirmary” before the always rousing ’60s style political plea “People, Turn Around” to close a brilliant set. (WH)

Constantines – 1:00-1:45 p.m., Citi Stage

Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

No prefixes or gimmicks or flash required; sometimes all you need for a great rock show is some good fucking songs, and Constantines have a bunch of those. Frontman Steve Lambke has a definite Joe Strummer/Roger Daltrey hybrid going on, and the band as a whole seems to have taken a lot of The Who‘s best qualities and updated them for the new millennium; “Young Offenders” could’ve been a modern day “Young Man Blues,” and “Nighttime/Anytime (It’s Alright)” felt like the sort of dubious rallying cry Pete Townshend used to come up with all the time. The set in a nutshell: solid songcraft plus tight, balls-out performance equals a kick-ass rock show. (CR)

Ida Maria – 2:15-3:00 p.m., Citi Stage

Possibly the “it” girl of the weekend, but unfortunately, what comes off as endearingly bratty pop on record becomes a tad obnoxious when she sings it live. It was still kinda fun, especially for the first few songs, but it began to grate pretty quickly. I suddenly realized that I’d become that guy, just waiting to hear the “Naked” song, so I took off. (CR)

Los Campesinos! – 2:30-3:30 p.m., Budweiser Stage

I figured I’d walk by Perry’s en route to Los Campesinos! and see if Animal Collective‘s DJ set grabbed me. It didn’t, but you can’t help but be grabbed by the Welsh band with the Spanish name. These guys are nothing if not in your face. They are like electro-Vaselines; just as cute, but not cuddly. They have a lot of really good songs, but they all strike me as a bit sterile, like a bunch of clever jokes they don’t think the audience gets. Maybe I just haven’t let LC! sink in enough yet, but only “You! Me! Dancing!” really connected with me during this set. Major hipster points for covering Pavement‘s “Box Elder,” though. (CR)

Atmosphere – 2:30-3:30 p.m., Chicago 2016 Stage
DJ Kaskade – 1:30-2:30 p.m., Perry’s
Langhorne Slim – 1:45-2:30 p.m., BMI Stage

Atmosphere:: Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

Heading to the south side of Lolla, the trance beats of local DJ Kaskade were bumpin’ through the trees in Perry’s dance area and the train continued down to the shadiest little corner of the festival, the scantily attended BMI Stage, to briefly check out Langhorne Slim, a minstrel show style old-time folk rock trio in a similar vein as The Avett Brothers. The shade and foot-stomping music were a nice break before heading south again. Tongue-in-cheek hip-hop artist Atmosphere commented that his friends and critics don’t take him seriously and then proceeded to tell us, “The only guarantee in life is a life worth dying for,” before ad-libbing, “Now let’s go make some smores.” Equal parts social commentary and humor-driven rap, Atmosphere is a likeable, genuine hip-hop artist looking to have a good time on stage with a knack for making people laugh along the way. (WH)

Joe Pug – 3:00-3:45 p.m., BMI Stage

I had to catch a bit of Pug’s set, and, as it turned out, it was the solo portion of the show, so the burgeoning Dylan parallels were acutely apparent. Yes, in lyrics, voice and harmonica, Pug is an awful lot like Dylan, but he does have something Bob always lacked – warmth. Besides, who wouldn’t want to be called Chicago’s new Dylan for the 21st century? Pug’s songs, particularly the lyrics, are occasionally that good. (CR)

Gomez – 3:30-4:30 p.m., vitaminwater Stage

Gomez :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

British jamband veterans Gomez took the vitaminwater Stage as Atmosphere was still rambling and delivered a mediocre mix of older material and songs from their equally middling latest effort, A New Tide. Most notable from the new LP was “Win Park Slope,” a swampy romp that translated beautifully on this sunny afternoon. “Win Park Slope” segued into the “Bone Tired,” as it does on the record, and many fans, including yours truly, scurried up the hill to the Citi Stage as a siren-like call beamed from the area where Chairlift was performing. (WH)

Chairlift – 3:30-4:30 p.m., Citi Stage

Like a less dancey, airy version of the Brazilian Girls, Chairlift is an interesting trio that mostly delivers dreamy soundscapes that would fit in perfectly on some tripped-out, foggy sunrise nature video with starlet lead vocalist Caroline Polachek‘s intoxicating voice zoning the listener into the material. My preconceived notions of this band prior to the weekend could not have been any further removed from reality, and I’m thankful at the opportunity to have seen them twice this weekend (I also caught their set at The Apple Store on Thursday with Passion Pit). (WH)

Coheed And Cambria – 4:30-5:30 p.m., Chicago 2016 Stage

I finally got to witness the phenomenon that is the Coheed And Cambria music factory. You know, it’s a shame when such talented musicians devote their talents to such derivative, corny pursuits. Some maddeningly cool shit sometimes happened in the proggy interplay between the instruments, but as long as Claudio Sanchez is up there singing and playing his Satriani-on-steroids guitar, there’s no escaping the cheese. And who was clamoring for a power metal makeover of The Church‘s “Under The Milky Way?” I couldn’t help shuddering. (CR)

Arctic Monkeys – 4:30-5:30 p.m., Budweiser Stage

Arctic Monkeys :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

A huge crowd congregated around the Budweiser Stage for the still very young Brit rockers Arctic Monkeys, who had no problem matching the spirit of their fervid audience with an intensely raw brand of no frills rock & roll. The crowd-surfing and mosh pitting commenced as the Monkeys thrashed through fan favourites “The View from the Afternoon” and “I Bet You Look Good on the Dancefloor” before putting a cool spin on Nick Cave’s “Red Right Hand,” a tune about the tempting business enterprises presented to impoverished inner city teens. It was refreshing to see an alternative rock band in this day and age still content with delivering a balls-to-the-wall, freewheeling set of old-fashioned rock music sans electronic overkill. (WH)

Santigold – 5:30-6:30 p.m., Playstation Stage

The huge crowd migrated ever so slightly over to the Playstation Stage to catch a glimpse of the ceaselessly protean Brooklynite Santigold, one of the most exciting new artists on the scene in 2009. In full command of the late afternoon crowd, little Ms. White entertained us, delivering “L.E.S. Artistes” and “Say Aha” early on as her robotically syncopated dancer/background singers flanked her. Tough to categorize as she moves from ska-punk to diva pop to electro rock with ease, Santi declared boastfully, “I’ve got to be unstoppable,” amongst the stickiest of beats, and judging by her ever-growing fanbase and affable charm we’ll probably be seeing her around for years to come. Go see Santigold. (WH)

No Age – 5:00-6:00 p.m., Citi Stage
Glasvegas – 5:30-6:30 p.m., vitaminwater Stage

Santigold :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

The nice thing about shitgaze as a genre is that when you see it live you can just pretend the P.A. system sucks. In that light, I thought No Age’s set rocked, because the band has such good songs that would really sound great if it weren’t so hip for them not to. It’s all in good fun with these guys, who’d be equally at home hobnobbing with Deerhunter or The Dead Milkmen. What you can make out in these songs is kind of intricate tunesmithery for such brief blasts of punkish noise, but it really works, especially live. I couldn’t tear myself away, which meant I missed some of Glasvegas, which may have been a mistake but I’ll never know. These Scots impressed me more with each song. Singer James Allen has the Celtic gravel of Elvis Costello and the anthemic howl of Eddie Vedder, and he and the rest of the band play with the shimmering determination of Mogwai. Their version of the oft-covered Korgis track “Everybody’s Got To Learn Sometime” was the best take on the song I’ve ever heard. The set was simply stunning.(CR)

Lykke Li – 6:30-7:30 p.m., Citi Stage

It would’ve been tough for anybody to really top Glasvegas, yet Lykke Li somehow pulled it off. She came out almost unassumingly, and the peculiar, immaculate songs began to speak for themselves. I wasn’t really expecting her to have this amazingly tight band behind her, but these guys shifted between hi- and lo-fi textures, from busy to minimal, with precision and grace. And that voice! She’s even more engrossing live, and I couldn’t even see her half the time. It was an hour of perfect, haunting, intoxicating pop music, and I was mesmerized. (CR)

Animal Collective – 7:30-8:30 p.m., vitaminwater Stage

Lykke Li :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Smith

So, as if expectations weren’t already high for Animal Collective, the band’s sets seem to either be masterpieces or trainwrecks, and I had no idea how the music would translate under the big open sky. Then, the journey began with the unreleased “What Would I Want Sky.” If you recorded this set, I pity your attempts at tracking it; songs melted into each other like rainbow sherbet for the next hour, and songs that actually have been released resembled their studio counterparts only fleetingly. The vocal improv in the middle of “Guys Eyes” was just on a different plane than what other bands do. “Daily Routine” crept out of “Bleed” like they were parts of the same song, a pulsing lucid dream sequence. “Fireworks” sprung from the nebulous “Lablakely Dress,” which went on an insane tribal glitch jam with Avey Tare on guitar. How they were able to rein it in and return to the song I will never know, but it was breathtaking. “Brother Sport” hit similar highs just before its coda, and might’ve taken us all away in its supersonic ending loop jam had not Tool started playing precisely at 8:29 p.m. You know how Maynard Keenan is always writing songs where he pretends to be a meathead, but he’s really trying to point out how idiotic that bullyish attitude is? Hey, maybe Tool didn’t know AC was still on or the big security guard forced Maynard on stage; I just thought it was interesting. I mean, Tool has been playing the same setlist for like four years now; couldn’t they have made up those five minutes somehow, so AC could’ve finished the song? (CR)

Animal Collective – 7:30-8:30 p.m., vitaminwater Stage

BEWARE OF RANT: For the second time this summer, I attended an Animal Collective festival set with high expectations and once again, like their Bonnaroo set, I walked away simply not being able to wrap my head around the hype that has been building for years. Likeminded music fans, blogs, and websites can’t seem to get enough of these dudes these days, yet their set of swirling cacophony rarely resembled any kind of coherent melodic thought at any point. I consider myself accepting of all kinds of music and always eager to find new sounds but I just don’t get the appeal about this group as a live band. On record these guys show great potential, but I have found their performances to be aimless and desultory as they meander through languid walls of noise and cacophonous yelping. To wrap up this rant, I want to like this band, and as I said, there are several songs on record that lead me to believe there is hope for a “click” moment; I just haven’t gotten there yet. The only thing I will likely remember from this show were the two kids who passed out cold within twenty feet of me and within three-minutes of each other. Scary. (WH)

Yeah Yeah Yeahs – 8:30-10:00 p.m., Budweiser Stage

Karen O – Yeah Yeah Yeahs:: Lollapalooza 2009 by Smith

I had to skip across the grounds for Yeah Yeah Yeahs. The people who try to claim that this band is an unfit substitute for the Beastie Boys are really barking up an imaginary tree; I can understand people being pissed about buying a one-day ticket and not being able to get their money back when the Beasties canceled, but YYYs deserve that spotlight as much as any of the non-veteran headliners, if not more. Karen O convinced me that she is not just a great singer but one of the great performers of our time. She was really able to inspire this crowd, and there were some true fanatics around. Still, there were some awkward aspects of the set. Some of the little electronic interludes seemed extended just to make the set longer, and they were especially skeletal compared to what AC had just been creating. And a song like “Maps,” with all the women in the crowd singing along, certainly felt like a happening I wasn’t privy to, but it’s moments like this that can intrigue legions of potential new fans. Besides, after that the band closed with its most exhilarating tracks of the night, “Y Control” and “Date With The Night.” Guitarist Nick Zinner came alive with some searing, Thurston-like guitar work, and Karen gave every drop of sweat she had. I can’t say it ever blew me away, but it was an occasionally thrilling, ultimately satisfying end to the night. (CR)

Tool – 8:30-10:00 p.m., Chicago 2016 Stage

Tool once again pulled back the curtain to the theater of the morose and despicable, unleashing their visceral fury on Grant Park to close down night two. Vocalist-frontman Maynard James Keenan commented on the incredible gulf between the two bands headlining Saturday night in the most sarcastic of tones: “The only shame is that we had to miss the Yeah Yeah Yeahs,” which was met with a smattering of laughter.

Tool :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

The visual element of a Tool show is as important as the music itself, helping to further the distinctly dark, skin crawling discomfort that goes hand-in-hand with their music. Thematically the images are based around torturous zombie-like androgynous bodies in various undesirable situations mostly involving some form of repulsive mutilation. Not for the faint at heart, Keenan’s lyrics are both intellectually robust and darkly perverse, addressing the underbelly of the universe, as on “Ænema” when he sings “Some say end is near/ Some say we’ll see Armageddon soon/ I certainly hope we will cuz I sure could use a vacation from this.” Their genre-bending style beams across the spectrum, meshing progressive metal with art rock in such a seamlessly intricate way that they exist in a space all their own. Musically fluid and brain-jarring with perhaps the most dexterous, rhythmically sound drummer on the music scene today, Danny Carey, who serves as the lightning rod and backbone for the band’s sound as Maynard’s silhouette creepily sways back-and-forth like an arachnid figure against the dark stage lights and terrifying imagery.

The crowd for the Tool set was aggressive and anyone with any intention of getting out from the front of the ruckus had to be crowd-surfed out. Intense but respectful, most fans were simply too entrenched in the music to cause a bother. Whether you like them musically or not, these guys bring a certain kind of passion and production to festival main stages that is hard to find anywhere else.

With two days in the book and my brain sufficiently shaken from the horrid imagery of the Tool show, it was now time to head home and then to seek the familiar territory of STS9‘s late night show at House of Blues. (WH)

Continue reading for Sunday’s coverage of Lollapalooza…

Sunday, 08.09

Alberta Cross – 11:45 a.m.-12:30 p.m., vitaminwater Stage

Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

Every once in a blue moon we get the opportunity to catch a new band and immediately get a sense that something big is in store for them. On Sunday morning a groggy and already sweaty crowd of a couple hundred got to witness one of the up-and-coming bands of the next decade. Hailing from Brooklyn by way of England, Alberta Cross has a classic look, a furiously wailing sound, an amazingly gifted lead singer and a penchant for slow-burning epic breakouts that elevate your soul with the ability to alter your mindscape for a fleeting moment. Ripping through their set, a tune called “Rise from the Shadows” was one that caught my attention with its grim sound and My Morning Jacket mind-warping jam out. Lead singer Petter Ericson Stakee‘s vocal talent alone is enough to make an impact but the entire band has enough gusto to carry these guys to the stratosphere. Commenting about the experience playing Lolla, Stakee told us, “[It was] simply amazing, I’ve been reading about this fest since I was a kid. There is so much history. This is one of the best out there, and the view of the city is amazing.” With their smoking hot full length debut album set for release on September 22 on ATO Records expect these guys (former “JamBase New Favorite Band” from back in 2007 we might add) to land on a few year-end “best of” lists. (WH)

Ra Ra Riot – 12:30-1:30 p.m., Chicago 2016 Stage

Hoo-boy, running on four hours of sleep with the heat index surpassing 100 degrees, this should be fun. Wait, it’s like this at every festival come Sunday… Ra Ra Riot is not a bad band at all, but it is a part of this new breed of MOR-indie that’s been made safe for the entire world by Arcade Fire and Vampire Weekend. Having violin in your rock band is no longer enough to be considered “eclectic,” and this band just doesn’t have strong enough songs yet to set itself apart. “Too Too Too Fast” came closest with its ’80s synth riff borrowed from Rush‘s “Subdivisions,” but it was the lone oddball of the set. (CR)

Portugal The Man – 1:30-2:30 p.m., Playstation Stage

The Airborne Toxic Event :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

I made the hike to catch Alaska-turned-Oregon groove rockers Portugal. The Man and was a bit under-whelmed by their organ heavy style centrally based around lead singer John Gourley‘s high-pitched singing. The band exuded a great deal of talent, it just didn’t seem to mesh well on stage this time around. (WH)

Bat For Lashes – 1:30-2:30 p.m., vitaminwater Stage

Bat For Lashes, the stage name of Natasha Khan, started slow and never really sped up, but she did seem to ease into her comfort zone gradually and ended up in control of the initially hesitant crowd. I’d been thinking that the new Two Suns album had really made 2006′s Fur And Gold seem primitive, but I was impressed at how much stronger the old songs were now; “Trophy” and “Tahiti” seemed much richer, and “Priscilla” was a highlight of the set. She sometimes has a mournfulness that approaches PJ Harvey levels, and her voice can be similarly striking, but this cohesive set was a convincing display of Khan’s emerging talent. (CR)

The Airborne Toxic Event – 2:30-3:30 p.m., Chicago 2016 Stage

The “Airborne Toxic Event” might have been a description of the stench that had permeated the south end of the grounds since Saturday morning, but instead it was a band. This band is so oddly, definably Irish-rock-sounding, yet it’s from L.A. I don’t know for sure if this contributes to how contrived the songs seem, but Mikel Jollett reminds me way too much of Caleb Followill in delivery and tone, and whether or not he believes in what his band is selling, I’m not buying it. (CR)

Kaiser Chiefs – 2:30-3:30 p.m., Budweiser Stage

The Raveonettes :: Lolla 2009 by Smith

Before Sunday, I only had a casual appreciation of Kaiser Chiefs, having only heard a few of their popular radio singles, but after seeing this particular shitkicker I am committed on finding out everything there is to know about this band. Kicking off their set in overdrive, their hit song “Never Miss A Beat” started a thrill ride that wouldn’t cease until the band left the stage. Quintessentially British in every way, the Chiefs have the attitude of The Clash and refined pop sensibility of Blur. Approaching a hiatus for the band, lead singer Ricky Wilson was hellbent on putting on the best performance possible. He jumped into the photo pit numerous times to do a lap around the audience, and at one point he sat on the railing facing his band and commented on how fun it was to watch the Kaiser Chiefs play. Wilson was also the only artist of the weekend I saw doing sign language with the interpreter and jump on the massive stage speakers to rev up the crowd. Conducting the crowd as his band ripped through their slew of Euro radio hits, the lead singer did his best to incite an “Angry Mob” after playing “I Predict a Riot.” The madman wasn’t content unless the crowd was clapping along, moshing, crowd-surfing or getting drunk at all times, and he did his best to play the role of facilitator. Kaiser Chiefs were able to bring the British festival atmosphere of pure pandemonium to Grant Park for their hour long set (in the scorching heat) and it was surprisingly my hands-down favorite performance of the weekend. Ricky Wilson should be given a medal of rock star honor for his service to the people of Chicago. The Rock Gods surely salute you, sirs. (WH)

The Raveonettes – 3:30-4:30 p.m., Playstation Stage & Hollywood Holt, 3:30-4:30 p.m. Perry’s

The Raveonettes offered a stark contrast to the music of the Kaiser Chiefs with their ethereal, droning New Wave-ish space pop coming from the North side of the park. Their sound just didn’t go over well on a big stage at a massive music festival, but it’d be cool to catch them in a smaller club environment. Moving down towards the Southside I caught my second MGMT sample of the weekend (“Time to Pretend”) in my limited time at Perry’s DJ area with Hollywood Holt. Whether you like it or not, MGMT’s music is almost unavoidable these days. Once again, the ritualistic dancing was in effect at Perry’s; this area of the park seemed to have a narcotic effect on people. (WH)

Dan Deacon – 3:30-4:30 p.m., vitaminwater Stage

Neko Case :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

Shame on you, Dan Deacon! People are passing out from heat exhaustion and you want us to run around creating human tunnels and interact with each other? I know his reputation precedes him, but if you can’t get at least a little excited about a performance that truly combines sociological experimentation with overpowering goodwill and triumphant dance music you might want to question why you are going to see live music. Deacon creates an experience with his audience that every person who participates will remember forever. And his songs are damn good, too. (CR)

Neko Case – 4:30-5:30 p.m., Budweiser Stage
Dan Auerbach – 5:30-6:30 p.m., PlayStation Stage

After Dan Deacon’s kind of energy, there was an inevitable lull, and Neko Case couldn’t hope to arouse much excitement at this point. She is an incredibly charming and gracious performer, and while I don’t really care for her singing, I’d thought it was because she was cold and dispassionate. I got a different impression at this set, though, where I believed every word I heard, though I still haven’t heard her quite coax the longing in her words out in her singing. Dan Auerbach also just wasn’t quite there. He can really surprise you sometimes with a hot guitar solo, kind of a Jon Spencer/Jack White style, but this blues rock genre is so limited in its scope that it has been done to death even though it remains vibrant in the right hands. Auerbach can bring it to that next level, but he just seemed lackadaisical here, so it came off a bit like store-brand Southern rock. Blame it on the heat. (CR)

Vampire Weekend – 4:30-5:30 p.m., Chicago 2016 Stage

Vampire Weekend fans :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

There is little I can add about this prep school meets Paul Simon group that hasn’t been blogged about 10,000 times. However, I will comment on the mind-blowingly large crowd that was there to see Vampire Weekend. It was hard to tell if they were all there to get a good spot for Snoop Dogg (who had the largest audience of the weekend), but it was very telling of this band’s widespread acceptance. I tried and tried for a while to act like I didn’t like this band but their music is just so damn agreeable. Songs like “A-Punk” and “The Kids Don’t Stand A Chance” are just too peppy to turn your nose up at… unless you really got something against Northern prep school kids. (WH)

Passion Pit – 5:00-6:00 p.m., Citi Stage

Summer party heroes Passion Pit are not the band of a generation, or even 2009, by any means, but they did create possibly the most fun album this year and for that they should be commended. As a live act they haven’t quite gotten it nailed down yet, as Michael Angelakos often struggled to keep his breath during high-pitched shrills and the band hasn’t quite reached any real telepathy in their playing. Nevertheless, their synth lines and choruses are extremely infectious and their beaming attitude is constantly ecstatic. You can really tell by the smiles and joy on stage that the band is living in a dream world, floating on a cloud. The live version of “Sleepyhead” is every bit as good as it is on record, and even if “The Reeling” sounded a bit cluttered and confused it’s a damn fun song to get down to. (WH)

Cold War Kids – 5:30-6:30 p.m., vitaminwater Stage

Lou Reed :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

Cold War Kids were jittering and jangling just below at the vitaminwater Stage and seemed more comfortable in their own skin than ever before while playing to an enormous late-afternoon crowd. Half of the audience was keenly engaged singing-along with the punkish “Something Is Not Right With Me,” while many were just stopping by en route to Snoop-a-Loop. The most notable song of the set was a rearranged, dubby version of “I’ve Seen Enough” that had Nathan Willett asking, “How’s it gonna feel when summer ends/ Out of money, out of friends.” Always a good show, soulful, delightfully amelodic at times and full of catchy sing-alongs, the Cold War Kids once again did not disappoint. (WH)

Lou Reed – 6:30-7:30 p.m., Budweiser Stage

A cranky Lou Reed, inventor of indie rock, came out five or ten minutes late, unwittingly kicking a tiny snowball down a large hill. Yeah, it was probably his fault he came on late, and who knows if he consciously or obliviously went twenty minutes past his scheduled end time. Yeah, he has that be-thankful-I-showed-up haughtiness just like Dylan, and he stumbles over his lyrics like a drunk. But, don’t you have to give some leeway to anybody who’s the ‘Godfather’ of something? Anyway, Reed’s set veered wildly between engaging grooves, screeching sax solos, walls of feedback and Lou gesticulating stubbornly as he spat out his words, but at least you could tell that they still mean something to him. Highlights were a belligerent take on “Dirty Boulevard,” the menacing and unhinged “Mad” and “Paranoia Key Of E,” which ended in an extended knob-twiddle jam before resolving into “I’m Waiting for the Man.” (CR)

Band of Horses – 7:30-8:30 p.m., PlayStation Stage

Snoop Dogg :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Smith

When Lou Reed started “Walk On The Wild Side” after already cutting ten minutes into Band of Horses’ slot, some cheered and others groaned. BoH, to its credit, waited until Lou was waving goodbye to start playing. The band’s music is pretty straightforward Americana. Its success hinges largely on whether you like Ben Bridwell‘s voice or not. My only verdict is a shrug of the shoulders. I couldn’t find any fault with the music, so I’ll give the set a marginal thumbs up. The way it ended was destined to make it offensive to non-fans, but legendary for those who were singing-along. (CR)

Snoop Dogg – 6:30-7:30 p.m., Chicago 2016 Stage

Snoop Dogg is one cool motherfucker. There, I said it. If for no other cause, the reason he had the biggest crowd of the entire weekend at a festival occurring many years past his prime is because people like to be in the presence of cool. Sampling anything and everything, shouting out to 2Pac and demanding fans to throw up their middle fingers and say, “Fuck tha police,” Mr. Broadus may be pushing 40 but the D.O. Double G still knows how to work a crowd. (WH)

Silversun Pickups – 7:30-8:30 p.m., vitaminwater Stage

Silversun Pickups closed down the vitaminwater Stage for the weekend and seemed very gracious for the opportunity, thanking the crowd numerous times. There sound is straight up 90s alt rock (like the always mentioned Smashing Pumpkins or a kinder, gentler Garbage) and fits right in with the basic ideas this festival was built on. It seemed like an enjoyable show, it was just hard to get into from afar. (WH)

The Killers – 8:30-10:00 p.m., Chicago 2016 Stage

Silversun Pickups :: Lollapalooza 2009 by Vann

To close down an amazing fifth sold out installment of the new era of Lollapalooza in its permanent home in Grant Park (C3 Presents and the City of Chicago recently agreed to a 10-year extension to host the event in the Windy City), The Killers made themselves right at home, decorating the stage with fake palm trees to create a glitzy, stylized Vegas night club aesthetic. With an enormous production budget, The Killers were able to put on an impressive visual display with a high-powered light rig and a colorful LED Wall offering a stunning array of colors. And, in case you forgot who you were seeing “The Killers” would flash by on the screen every few minutes for those fans who had passed out in a THC-induced haze at Snoop and just come back to Earth. I’ve never quite understood why bands feel the need to put their band name on the video walls, but whatever.

Opening with “Human,” a newer song that I still don’t really get, I immediately understood that although not my kind of music it is wholly necessary for this arena rock band to exist and prosper for the world to continue spinning on its axis. Their product is custom built for the Everyman rocker without the time to read music blogs or go digging through the record bins at their local music store. Their songs, image and live presentation are so agreeable that you have to wonder if the band even attempts to fight their primal artistic urges to break the boundaries and try to explore new directions. Danceable, hook-driven and mostly PG-rated, The Killers were able to do their duty as festival closers by giving tired fans an enjoyable, uncontroversial note to go out on, and appropriately played “When You Were Young” to close a long and incredible weekend of live music that provided something for everyone, and in the end, the Everyman. (WH)

Jane’s Addiction – 8:30-10:00 p.m., Budweiser Stage

Farrell & Navarro – Jane’s Addiction :: Lolla 09 by Smith

Jane’s did wait until about 8:40 p.m. to come on stage; BoH made it clear that Perry Farrell is not quite as old as Lou Reed and therefore not deserving of their respect. It was ridiculous having to listen to the nebulous clatter underscore JA’s first four songs as BoH just kept playing. Jane’s did actually inve