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Posts Tagged ‘Velvet Underground’

Teary Boyle walks off ‘America’s Got Talent’ after being snubbed by songwriter

Scottish singer Susan Boyle is said to have left the ‘America’s Got Talent’ show in Los Angeles in tears after a songwriter refused to give her permission to sing one of his hit songs. Boyle, 49, had arrived at the show to perform the song “Perfect Day”, but sources revealed that when producers sought permission [...]

Yo La Tengo: From Monk to the Mets

By: Ron Hart

Yo La Tengo

Yo La Tengo of Hoboken, NJ, formed 25 years ago when New York Rocker scribe and local soundman Ira Kaplan met artist Georgia Hubley, daughter of legendary Disney animator John Hubley, and the two bonded over records and the New York Mets. Since then, alongside longtime bassist James McNew, the band has established themselves as one of the truly great American rock bands in modern times, with a sage-like knowledge of pop history and ability to collaborate with just about anyone under the sun, be it El-P of Company Flow, NYC jazz greats Other Dimensions in Music or Howard Kaylan of The Turtles.

2009 saw the trio release Popular Songs, their 12th album and most adventurous since 2000′s masterful And Then Nothing Turned Itself Inside-Out. JamBase had the privilege of catching up with Ira Kaplan while Yo La were on a brief trip back home in Hoboken. Our conversation touched on TV series Monk, Spinal Tap, taking a hiatus from the band’s long-running tradition of playing Maxwell’s during the week of Hanukkah, bootlegging, and the razing of Shea Stadium, among other topics.

JamBase: While you were in Europe over the holiday season, I read on your blog that you wound up watching Monk in the ancestral home of Hans Christian Andersen.

Ira Kaplan: [Laughs] Yeah, we were in Copenhagen and Monk came on in the middle of the night. It was like a postcard from home.

JamBase: Was he just as neurotic in Denmark as he is in the U.S.?

Ira Kaplan: [Laughs] You know, when you’re traveling, he seems to make perfect sense. I mean, we already like that show, but we’ve had experiences with things you would never watch anywhere else. It’s like, “Oh look, they’re speaking English. I would love to watch Ally McBeal.”

Wreckless Eric and Amy Rigby opened for you guys in Europe. How was it touring with Eric?

We’ve known Eric for a couple of years now, and he’s nothing but a prince to us.

You guys cast such a wide net on who you all work with. I always go back to your Hanukkah shows at Maxwell’s and all the different people who jump onstage with you.

Well, that’s how we met Eric. Eric came to one of the shows and we did some stuff together.

Were you guys bummed that you couldn’t do the Maxwell’s run this past holiday season?

Well, a little bit, but only a little. We know it was the right decision, so why focus on that aspect of it? We’ve had a great year, so we just enjoy the fact that we’ve been too busy to do this other thing that under other circumstances would have been ready.

When did you start those Hanukkah shows?

Yo La Tengo :: March, 2010 :: Tel Aviv by Goni Riskin

2001. For a couple of years, the notion of having some kind of holiday party where we would maybe just play free for our friends seemed like a good idea. We just wanted to do some kind of commemorative something-or-other. And then it would come around we’d be like, “Yeah, this is exactly what the world needs, another Christmas party [laughs].” So, the idea would just go by the wayside. Then one year, not really as a joke but with some element of humorousness, I said, “Oh, why don’t we play all eight nights of Hanukkah.” And I think it seemed audacious to play eight nights in a row. But it just had such a good combination of funny and… what was that Spinal Tap line?

Oh man, it’s been a while.

I just had to look up that line: “The fine line between clever and stupid.” That’s what I thought we were doing, combining clever and stupid [laughs].

I actually heard a couple of your shows on NYCTaper.com, who I believe has consent to tape your shows?

Yeeaaaah.

Are you cool with it?

Well, you know it’s a funny thing. Like a lot of things in this world, I am of two minds about it. I feel like people are gonna do stuff like that anyway and when these things are kinda out there, it means they’re not…. well, now this is a bit different with the Internet. But back before the Internet, we were allowing people to do that, because I didn’t really want people buying them or selling them. You go into these stores and see bootlegs that are like really expensive. So I thought, before it becomes this really rare commodity, you’re not gonna stop it from being done. So yeah, we just focus on that aspect of it and if people are interested [in taping us], that’s flattering. To be perfectly honest, I like to play shows as if no one will ever hear it again, and the fact that people do hear them again is a mixed blessing [laughs].

I hear what you are saying.

It’s just kinda the magic of the moment. You make records to be listened to again and again and you play live to try for something more ephemeral. But that’s just one side of it. The other side of it is that it’s certainly flattering that people care.

Have you guys ever thought about putting out an official live album?

Yo La Tengo

We’ve talked about it here and there among different things. One of the things is that it’s just not that much fun to work on, but we’ll see what happens. [Writer's note: There is one great live document of Yo La Tengo officially available, and that's their compilation of performances during their yearly cover-thon for the WFMU pledge drive, where the band will play anything the callers request on the spot, which the group sells on their website].

I noticed on Popular Songs you play a lot more keyboards than usual.

Yeah, I guess that’s true [laughs]. There’s piano and a bunch of organs.

There’s that one performance of you guys playing the new album’s first track “Here to Fall” on a rooftop and you looked like you were having a good time with all the effects pedals hooked up to your Wurlitzer.

When we first wrote that song, I was playing it on piano. And I’m almost sure it was James who suggested trying it on the Wurlitzer and plugging it into a fuzzbox and then the wah-wah pedal. I think most of that stuff came from James. It definitely had a sound unlike any other one. We were certainly grabbed by it. And then a couple of other things led to trying out a few of the other sounds at the beginning. We were working on trial and error.

You also worked with Cadet Records composer/arranger Richard Evans. How did you hook up with him to do the strings on “If It’s True”?

We had the idea of trying to find an old school string arranger and he was number one on our want list. James just went on the Internet and managed to search him and find out that he’s teaching in Berklee [College of Music] up in Boston. He just sent him a cold email, and next thing you knew he was hearing from Richard Evans.

It’s pretty extraordinary how accessible some people are online. I just sent Doug Yule an email about an interview and he got right back to me.

Oh yeah, how’s he doin’?

He does an old-timey band up in Seattle called RedDog. He still has that great voice. Moe Tucker [Velvet Underground] had a very distinct voice as well, and I definitely hear a little of her in Georgia’s singing, in a way.

Yeah, I love Moe’s singing and I’ve heard that myself [in Georgia's singing]. I’ve read other people make that same observation.

Georgia didn’t start singing until Fakebook [1990], if I’m not mistaken.

Yo La Tengo by Steve Gullick

Pretty much. She sang the tiniest bit before that but she was extremely, extremely reluctant to sing. It was a pretty slow process. She sings on the records a little bit prior to Fakebook, but she certainly never sang a lead vocal until Fakebook.

Did you always know she had such a lovely voice?

Oh yeah, yeah [laughs]. I always encouraged her to sing.

Speaking of Fakebook, how did you guys come up with the concept of your covers album as the Condo Fucks, Fuckbook?

The name is an old name in our world. Even at the time, we forgot how old it is. We were referencing the inner sleeve to the [vinyl version of] I Can Hear The Heart Beating As One [1997]. We did kind of a old fashioned homage to old label inner sleeves in which different records on the label would be highlighted. So, we did our own where we made one for Matador; we made up a bunch of records and the Condo Fucks was one of them. And at the time, and that’s what we were remembering, but it’s only occurred to us in talking about it that Georgia did the cover art for a Homestead compilation called Human Music that we appear on. And when she was doing a mock-up of it, she didn’t know who was going to be on the record, but in the space where she knew the groups would be listed she was writing in band names just to get a feel for how it would look, and one of the names she wrote was the Condo Fucks. So, she came up with that name. I don’t remember what year that was but a long time ago, and we just dredged it back up for I Can Hear The Heart Beating As One.

Well, it certainly is a name for its time, especially given the gentrification of certain parts of Manhattan and Brooklyn over the years.

Well, I’m sure she was referencing more about Hoboken, which hits a little closer to home.

When did you guys first perform as Yo La Tengo?

It was at Maxwell’s for a party with Antietam. Antietam’s second show, our first.

How many people showed up?

Well, it felt like a million [laughs]. Too many, it was terrifying.

I’m sure after a few beers it got more fun.

I think after a few years, it got a little more fun [laughs]. Something we learned pretty quickly was that you think it’s gonna be easy to perform to your friends but there’s actually no harder audience. I don’t necessarily mean that they’re tough on you, but it’s just harder to play for people you know. Playing for strangers is much easier [laughs].

Have you been to Citifield yet?

I have not. I went to one Mets game last year. I drove down to Philadelphia to spend a couple of days there. The Philadelphia ICA had an exhibit of Sun Ra memorabilia, so I drove down and went to that and went to a Mets-Phillies game.

Were you sad to see Shea go?

You know, I was and I wasn’t. It wasn’t a very good place to see a game. But at the same time, part of your life gets knocked down with it. But clearly I was under no illusions about its attributes as a ballpark.

Yo La Tengo Tour Dates :: Yo La Tengo News :: Yo La Tengo Concert Reviews

JamBase | Hoboken
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Yo La Tengo | 03.22 & 03.23 | Tel Aviv

Words by: Kevin Schwartzbach | Images by: Goni Riskin

Yo La Tengo :: 03.22 & 03.23 :: Barby :: Tel Aviv, Israel

Ira Kaplan :: March, 2010 :: Tel Aviv, Israel

You never know quite what to expect from Yo La Tengo. With an extraordinarily diverse repertoire ranging from long-winded psychedelic jams to poppy heartfelt love ballads and everything in between, it’s impossible to predict the character of any given live show. Hell, with this Hoboken-based trio it can be hard enough to predict whose going to be playing which instrument.

What’s truly remarkable about the diversity of their music though is that there isn’t any of the pretentious artistic posturing found in so many bands labeled as “indie.” With Yo La Tengo there really is no “point” greater than the music itself. Sure they can be experimental, but not for the sake of experimentation alone. And yes they can be poetic, but not for the sake of poetry. The various roads they explore in different genres and with different elements are merely a means of self-expression. And what they lack in focus, they make up for in creativity. But despite their often seemingly disconnected discography, there’s a certain unpolished grunginess to their music that serves as a common thread – their unique artistic trademark.

It’s only fitting than that the band’s chosen venue for their two-night tenure in Tel Aviv would be the Barby, a grungy hole-in-the-wall type place located in the southern part of the city. But as the old saying goes, don’t judge a concert venue by its facade – the Barby is one of Tel Aviv’s biggest and most acoustically well-built joints.

Israeli folk-rocker Geva Alon began the first evening armed with nothing more than his voice and an acoustic guitar. Despite his limited resources, the solitary Alon managed to create a somber yet energetic aura filled with emotion that mesmerized the crowd. His deep Johnny Cash-like voice matched with his folksy guitar licks gave him a rather unique sound. And though he addressed the crowd in his native Hebrew, he managed to vividly express himself with a subtle mastery of the English language. “Lately I began to wonder/ What’s there for me around this town?/ Whose skyline shape seems like forever growing monsters/ It gets me down, so down” Alon belted out in the song “Get Closer Now” off his latest, similarly titled album Get Closer. Taking a break from his lyrical insight, Alon showed impressive guitar chops, taking a bluesy solo on top of self-provided loops.

Yo La Tengo :: March, 2010 :: Tel Aviv, Israel

From the get go, Yo La Tengo made it clear that their stay in Israel was going to be heavy on the noise, creating a wall of feedback before dropping into “Big Day Coming” to start things off. Ira Kaplan (vocals, guitar, keyboards) was quick to relinquish his spot behind his warbling keyboard, grabbing his beat up Fender Jazzmaster from the burly James McNew (bass, vocals, and occasionally keyboards, guitar, drums) to deliver the first of many noise-bending solos. Whether it be pounding indiscriminately on the keys or waving his guitar around to harness the feedback, Kaplan’s distorted, effect-laden noise improvisations seemed his favorite mode of expression.

I didn’t quite know how an Israeli crowd would take such far out sounds, but it seemed to be well received. “We were doing some interviews before the show,” began Kaplan in between songs, “and a bunch of people asked us what we expect from these shows. Well, we didn’t really have any expectations. We didn’t even know if people here know who we are.” Surprisingly, much of the crowd seemed to be well versed in Yo La Tengo’s vast material, as song names flew at the stage during every opportune moment (to which the band often obliged).

While they’ve always had a proclivity for the experimental, what makes Yo La Tengo’s music so interesting is the juxtaposition of this experimentation with more conventional elements. It’s no surprise that they’re often compared to 1960′s avant-garde rock groups such as The Velvet Underground. VU’s influence on YLT was clear in Kaplan’s Lou Reed-like voice as well as the droning guitars. Kaplan’s wife Georgia Hubley‘s (drums, vocals and occasionally guitar) voice too has a certain Nico-like grace to it. And like Maureen Tucker, Hubley is one of the few noteworthy female drummers in rock.

Georgia Hubley :: March, 2010 :: Tel Aviv, Israel

Hubley came out from behind her kit to play some guitar and sing for us on Electr-O-Pura‘s “Decora” and “When It’s Dark” from their latest release Popular Songs. Both nights saw all three members moving from instrument to instrument showing a rare level of musical versatility.

In typical Yo La Tengo fashion the trio effortlessly shifted genres over the course of the evening, keeping the crowd on edge. From the trudging post-rock crescendo of “More Stars Than There Are in Heaven” to the swinging minor blues progression of “Periodically Double or Triple” to the power-pop edginess of “Sugarcube,” they really managed to cover all their bases. The mostly instrumental “Pass the Hatchet, I think I’m Goodkind” closed off the first night’s set with their trippiest display yet in a lengthy psychedelic exploration. Over McNew’s steady bass line, Kaplan switched back and forth between demonic noise solos and (slightly) more conventional guitar solos.

The second night bore much similarity to the first. Geva Alon opened up again, playing a nearly identical set to the night before. The Jersey natives began with the jazzy “Our Way to Fall.” Like the first night, the second night was a healthy mix of noise solos and more straight ahead pop and rock tunes, but also saw a few wholly instrumental songs like “And the Glitter is Gone.”

James McNew :: March, 2010 :: Tel Aviv, Israel

Though most of the second night consisted of songs we’d yet to hear, they opted to repeat a few tunes from the night before such as “If It’s True” and “When It’s Dark” among others in support of the new album – a bit disappointing given the band’s enormous repertoire and limited opportunity to see them here. As promised from the night before, “Autumn Sweater,” one of their more popular numbers, came out early in the set and was one of the highlights of the evening.

The band’s personalities seemed to shine through much more brightly on the second night, as Kaplan more often took breaks between songs to banter with the crowd in a joking manner. Their quirkiness and geekish connoisseurship of obscure music manifested itself in several choice covers including Sun Ra’s odd “Nuclear War,” during which Kaplan jumped into the crowd, gathering a few people to help him repeat Sun Ra’s hilariously dire proposed consequences of a nuclear fallout. In honor of their stay in Israel they ended their first of two encores with a song by a Jewish artist, Jeffry Ross Hyman – better known as Joey Ramone. Taking a moment to get into character, they charged right into “Sheena Was a Punk Rocker” rocking out in a way that would have made the punk legend proud.

Few bands can pull off what Yo La Tengo does during live shows, jumping from song to song with a complete disregard of defined genre boundaries. But a genuine artistic drive gives this gifted trio the ability to go in just about any direction; what makes them so compelling is that they take the audience with them.

Setlists

03.22.10 :: Barby :: Tel Aviv, Israel

Big Day Coming, More Stars Than There Are in Heaven, Tears Are in Your Eyes, Stockholm Syndrome, Here to Fall, If It’s True, Mr. Tough, I’m On My Way, Decora, When It’s Dark, Periodically Double or Triple, Deeper Into Movies, Nothing to Hide, Sugarcube, Pass the Hatchet I Think I’m Goodkind

First Encore: From A Motel 6, The Kid With The Replaceable Head (Richard Hell cover), Can’t Forget

Second Encore: Big Sky (The Kinks cover), You Can Have It All (KC and the Sunshine Band cover)

03.23 :: :: Barby :: Tel Aviv, Israel

Our Way to Fall, And the Glitter is Gone, Little Eyes, Autumn Sweater, Periodically Double or Triple, The Weakest Part, Here to Fall, If It’s True, I’m On My Way, Black Flowers, When It’s Dark, More Stars Than There Are in Heaven, Cherry Chapstick, Tom Courtenay, Nothing to Hide, Blue Line Swinger

First Encore: Nuclear War (Sun Ra cover), Last Days of Disco, Sheena Is a Punk Rocker (Ramones cover)

Second Encore: Griselda (The Holy Modal Rounders cover), Take Care (Big Star cover)

Yo La Tengo Tour Dates :: Yo La Tengo News :: Yo La Tengo Concert Reviews

JamBase | Israel
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He’s My Brother She’s My Sister | 02.15 | L.A.

Words by: Ryan Torok | Images by: Daiana Feuer

He’s My Brother She’s My Sister :: 02.15.10 :: Bootleg Theater :: Los Angeles, CA

He’s My Brother She’s My Sister :: 02.15 :: L.A.

For 45 minutes on a Monday night, He’s My Brother She’s My Sister, an indie quintet out of downtown L.A. – with a debut album coming soon – played a concise, confident set of ghost town-folk and blues with a vaudeville aesthetic. Sure, it’s not an original sound or look, but not many bands have a tap dancer (Lauren Brown) for additional percussion and a cello (Satya Bhabha) instead of a bass.

Stylish brother and sister vocalist combo Robert (guitar) and Rachel Kolar led the festivities and Rachel’s scratchy vocals truly shined. Flight of the Conchords‘ Jemaine Clement was in the audience of approximately 200 at the Bootleg Theater, which is basically a giant shed made out of plywood and cement in an otherwise dark City of Angels neighborhood.

Highlights included the haunting and swinging “Tales That I Tell,” the band’s closest thing to a hit, “I Was Born” – where the entire group, including drummer Felipe Ceballos, came center stage to join Robert and his banjo for a rootsy, familial sing-along – and “What Goes On,” a rousing Velvet Underground cover. There was no self-indulgence and yet, they seemed to be completely indulging themselves.

The set might have been tight but attitudes were loose. They donned Eyes Wide Shut orgy masks, just because they felt like it. No encore was planned, but when the audience demanded one, Robert turned to his bandmates and said, “We can’t disappoint them. Fuck that. Even if it sounds like shit.”

See them before your friends do.

02.15.10 :: Bootleg Theater :: Los Angeles, CA

Clackin’ Heels, Coattails, Straight Shooter, Choir, I Was Born, Tales That I Tell, What Goes On (Velvet Underground cover), Lazy Daze, House That Isn’t Mine

E: How Am I Gonna Get Home

Continue reading for more pics…

He’s My Brother She’s My Sister

He’s My Brother She’s My Sister

He’s My Brother She’s My Sister

He’s My Brother She’s My Sister

He’s My Brother She’s My Sister

He’s My Brother She’s My Sister

He’s My Brother She’s My Sister

He’s My Brother She’s My Sister

He’s My Brother She’s My Sister

He’s My Brother She’s My Sister

He’s My Brother She’s My Sister

He’s My Brother She’s My Sister Tour Dates :: He’s My Brother She’s My Sister News :: He’s My Brother She’s My Sister Concert Reviews

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Great American Taxi: Reckless Habits (Thirty Tigers)

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

Gorillaz: Plastic Beach (EMI)

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

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

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

Gonjasufi: A Sufi and a Killer (Warp)

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

Past Lives: Tapestry of Webs (Suicide Squeeze)

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

Ruby Suns: Fight Softly (Sub Pop)

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

Portugal. The Man: American Ghetto (Equal Vision)

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

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

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

John Hiatt: The Open Road (New West)

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

Balmorhea: Constellations (Western Vinyl)

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

Randall Bramblett: The Meantime (Blue Ceiling)

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

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

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

Morris On: Morris On (Fledg’ling)

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

Reptar: Reptar EP (self-released)

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

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

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

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


Best of Bonnaroo: Climate Change In Action

By: Jason Greenfield

When My Morning Jacket played the Velvet Underground’s “Oh! Sweet Nuthin’” at their legendary late night set at Bonnaroo 2008 it ranked as one of the most emotional moments in the festival’s rich history. To this point, the only way to hear it was via a few audience tapes making the rounds. Today MMJ is releasing the song for the first time, for free, as part of a campaign to spur music fans to take action about climate change.

The campaign, called Music for Action, is a partnership with Bonnaroo, HeadCount, the NRDC Action Fund and JamBase. As part of the campaign, 17 artists including Phish, Dave Matthews Band, Pearl Jam, Jack Johnson and Wilco are donating favorite tracks from their appearances at Bonnaroo to a special album that will be available only through the Music For Action website.

To download the tracks, the musicians are asking fans to visit www.musicforaction.com and take action about climate change by writing a letter to their senators and local news outlets urging for the passage of climate change legislation. The website automates the process of letter writing, and once the process is completed fans will be able to download the tracks from a unique download page.

The campaign was created to urge the Senate to pass climate change legislation. In June of 2009, the House of Representatives narrowly passed cap-and-trade legislation that is intended to fundamentally restructure the way the U.S. uses and produces energy. The bill is now waiting for a sponsor to introduce a similar bill in the Senate while supporters try to round up the 60 votes necessary to overcome a Republican filibuster.

My Morning Jacket :: Bonnaroo 2008 by Vann

Speaking between stops on tour with The Disco Biscuits, who contributed “And the Ladies Were the Rest of the Night” from their 2008 Bonnaroo appearance, HeadCount’s Andy Bernstein said, “Our campaign is about speaking out and having elected officials hear from music fans. We’re big believers that music can inspire participation in democracy.”

Bernstein’s sentiments are echoed by Jack Johnson, who says, “This generation has an opportunity to be remembered as one that confronted environmental challenges and took responsibility for the future. With that opportunity comes the responsibility to speak out.”

The other partners are just as enthusiastic about the project. Guster‘s Adam Gardner, who with his wife Lauren runs the non-profit concert greening organization Reverb, says, “This is the exact sort of thing that Reverb’s Green Music Group was created to support, getting fans and musicians together around an environmental action.”

Rich Goodstone of Superfly Productions, the company that produces Bonnaroo, says, “[Superfly] is a proud supporter of HeadCount and the work they do. We are also supporters of the environment and doing whatever we can to make people aware of the dire situation global warming is creating.”

Our warming climate

Goodstone and Superfly are providing support for Music For Action in several ways. In addition to promoting the campaign on the Bonnaroo website and at the event itself this June, Superfly also lent their massive music collection to the cause. Ever since the first event, Bonnaroo has been recording every song played on every stage with 48-62 tracks per stage. The event’s archivist, Jon Altschiller, receives the raw tracks on hard drives and has spent the last four months remixing the majority of the tracks to ensure that they are some of the best quality concert recordings ever released.

Altschiller, who cut his teeth in the mixing booth recording Phish’s Rift, is wild about his newest assignment. “Musically, I don’t think there’s been a better collection of stuff put out by Bonnaroo,” says Altschiller, who is particularly excited about the amount of artist involvement in this album who see the importance of this cause. “I had direct contact with Warren Haynes on his track, Trey Anastasio was directly involved with ‘Kill Devil Hills.’ Jeff Tweedy was listening to these mixes. ‘Bull Black Nova’ is a headphone dream. I can’t get over the music selection. This is not just a thrown-together thing as a giveaway.”

Aron Magner, keyboardist for The Disco Biscuits, agrees, “Bonnaroo has always been a really exciting time for the Biscuits. There’s a lot of incredible energy with our performances. [Guitarist Jon Gutwillig] brings out the moment of actually being there as a fan.”

Like everyone else involved with the project, Magner is as serious about the cause behind the album as the album itself. He wants young voters to start “putting their words into actions.”

JamBase readers can get their headphones ready and start putting their words into actions now at www.MusicforAction.com.

Best of Bonnaroo Track Listing
Wilco – Bull Black Nova
Pearl Jam – Animal
Jack Johnson – Inaudible Melodies
Dave Mathews Band – Rapunzel
Death Cab for Cutie – Cath…

Ani DiFranco – Fuel
Phish – Kill Devil Falls
Gov’t Mule – Banks of the Deep End
OAR – Delicate Few
moe. – Not Coming Down
Raphael Saadiq – 100 Yard Dash
Bob Weir & RatDog – Throwing Stones
The Disco Biscuits – And The Ladies Were the Rest of the Night
The Decemberists – Wanting Comes in Waves/Repaid
My Morning Jacket – Oh! Sweet Nothin’
Guster – Happier
Phil Lesh and Friends – Box of Rain

JamBase | Worldwide
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Phish, Lesh, DMB & More Offer Free Bonnaroo Tracks

NRDC Action Fund and HeadCount Give Away Best of Bonnaroo Compilation to Drive Action on Climate Change

Pearl Jam, Dave Matthews Band, Phish, Phil Lesh and many more provide tracks for free download

Pearl Jam, Dave Matthews Band, Phish, Jack Johnson and other top artists are donating their music to encourage Americans to speak out on climate change. Organized by the Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival, HeadCount and the NRDC Action Fund, this collaboration marks the first time free music has been used to prompt Americans to contact their elected officials.

Best of Bonnaroo, a compilation of 17 different live performances from the festival, is available for free at www.Musicforaction.org. Before downloading the music, visitors are asked to email their Senators, the President or their local newspapers about climate change. The music is free no matter what, but the artists hope all their fans join them in taking action on this issue.

“This generation has an opportunity to be remembered as one that confronted environmental challenges and took responsibility for the future,” said Jack Johnson, whose song “Inaudible Melodies” can be heard on the compilation. “With that opportunity comes the responsibility to speak out.”

The compilation also includes live tracks from Wilco, Death Cab for Cutie, My Morning Jacket, O.A.R. and Ani DiFranco, among others. In most cases these recordings have never before been released to the public, and were hand-picked by the musicians themselves. Other featured artists include: The Decemberists, Guster, Gov’t Mule, Raphael Saadiq, Bob Weir & RatDog, Phil Lesh & Friends, moe. and The Disco Biscuits, whose bass player Marc Brownstein is the co-chair of HeadCount. All of the featured tracks are original songs, with the exception of My Morning Jacket‘s performance of The Velvet Underground’s “Oh! Sweet Nuthin’.”

America is closer than ever to passing its first federal climate change-related legislation, but many hurdles remain. The House of Representatives approved an energy bill last June that would reduce emissions of heat-trapping gases and encourage the development of green jobs. President Barack Obama then told world leaders that the U.S. will reduce carbon emissions by 17 percent over the next 10 years (compared to 2005 levels). However, there has been little movement in the Senate, leaving one crucial step incomplete. Literally the whole planet is waiting to see what the U.S. will decide, as India and China are not likely to act without the U.S. doing the same.

With climate change legislation now at a critical juncture, several organizations teamed up to use the gift of music to inspire citizens into action. HeadCount – a nonpartisan civic engagement organization best known for registering voters at concerts – conceived the idea as a way to point new voters toward being informed and active citizens. The NRDC Action Fund – an advocacy group committed to passing legislation that jump-starts the clean energy economy and reduces pollution – stepped in with resources, research, strategic guidance and a base of 250,000 supporters.

“The musicians we work with are very passionate about this topic and have great power to drive change,” said HeadCount’s Executive Director Andy Bernstein. “Their music will serve as a soundtrack for action.”

“Forging a clean energy future means healthier kids, a safer world, and more jobs,” said Heather Taylor-Miesle, director of the NRDC Action Fund. “This is our moment to demand that Congress put us on the path to a clean energy future by beginning to address climate change. We are excited about the opportunity to work with musicians and new activists throughout the country to make it happen.”

Others involved include JamBase.com, which is actively promoting the campaign to its base of more than half a million users. Music publications Paste, Relix, and Spin are also providing marketing support. The nonprofit environmental groups Oxfam America, the Energy Action Coalition, The Worldwatch Insitute, Grist.org and 350.org are supporting the initiative as coalition partners, as is the music-oriented environmental organization Reverb, which will promote the campaign through its new Green Music Group. Reverb’s founder Adam Gardner can be heard on the compilation performing with his band Guster. “This is the exact sort of thing that Green Music Group was created to support, getting fans and musicians together around an environmental action,” Gardner said.

“There have been so many incredible performances at Bonnaroo over the years,” said Richard Goodstone, one of the founders and principals of Superfly Presents, the co-promoter of Bonnaroo. “We’re very happy that we could work with our family of artists in this way and inspire people to be active citizens. Climate change is the single biggest challenge our planet has ever faced and we all need to pitch in and be part of the solution.”

“The decisions made today will affect you and your children for many years to come,” said former Grateful Dead guitarist Bob Weir, a member of HeadCount’s board of directors who can be heard on the compilation with has band RatDog. “Whether it’s voting in an election or speaking out about issues like climate change, it’s critical that we all make enough noise so that politicians have no choice but to listen.”

Best of Bonnaroo Track List:

Wilco Bull Black Nova

Pearl Jam Animal

Jack Johnson Inaudible Melodies

Dave Mathews Band Rapunzel

Death Cab for Cutie Cath…

Ani DiFranco Fuel

Phish Kill Devil Falls

Gov’t Mule Banks of the Deep End

O.A.R. Delicate Few

moe. Not Coming Down

Raphael Saadiq 100 Yard Dash

Bob Weir & RatDog Throwing Stones

The Disco Biscuits And The Ladies Were the Rest of the Night

The Decemberists The Wanting Comes in Waves/Repaid

My Morning Jacket Oh! Sweet Nuthin’

Guster Happier

Phil Lesh and Friends Box of Rain

The Best of Bonnaroo compilation is available for free at www.Musicforaction.org. Please email your Senators, the President or a local newspaper about climate change before downloading.


Sat Eye Candy: Velvet Underground

IF THEY’RE GOOD ENOUGH FOR PHISH, BECK AND THE CROWES
THEN THEY’RE GOOD ENOUGH FOR US!

The Velvet Underground seems to be experiencing a bit of a resurgence these days, with indie bands returning to their brutal/pretty template and big rock acts covering their tunes (sadly, no good video of “Oh! Sweet Nuthin’” or “Rock And Roll” readily available). They are one of the foundational acts to emerge from 1960s, and as with many great ideas, their power to inform and influence continues to be strong today.

Here’s a lil’ background on the Velvets.

Just how does one dance to this noise?

Rehearsal footage put to a marvelous tune.

Lou Reed offers up a pretty sweet reading of Velvet’s classic “Sunday Morning.”

This was filmed on 16mm at the Annual Dinner of the New York Society for Clinical Psychiatry in 1966. Trippy, n’est pas?

The reunion a number of years back was actually pretty satisfying, even if it wasn’t really vintage Velvets. Nostalgia with more polish than the original is more like it, but you got killers like this out of the deal.

Lastly, a fan produced video for one of the seemingly sweet numbers full of razor sharp thoughts. Ah, now that’s a Velvet Underground song!


Phish | 12.04.09 | MSG Night 3

Words by: Brian Bavosa

Phish :: 12.04.09 :: Madison Square Garden :: New York, NY

Phish :: 12.03 :: MSG by Perrucci

The final night of Phish‘s return to MSG fell on Friday night, and saw the crowd a little more rambunctious than the previous two evenings. For the first time, there seemed to be a market for tickets, as many outside begged and pleaded to get themselves through the doors. For those that did make it in, MSG3 offered some bust outs, firsts and some classic, rocking Phish.

“Heavy Things” offered a light-hearted start, as many fans still scrambled to get situated, as the lines to get in were far worse than the previous two shows. “Possum,” “Wilson” – the first song Phish ever played at the Garden in ’94 – and “Kill Devil Falls” was a sequence of straightforward, soaring guitar rock, which set the tone for a powerhouse Friday night in NYC.

The first, real treat was the return of “Glide,” a song not performed since the infamous debacle of Coventry. This version saw Trey nail the guitar parts, as Fishman tackled the knick-knack of the drums. From the plastered smiles on the crowd, it appeared that few cared how they played this one; they were just happy to be seeing it again.

A smoking “46 Days” was patient, yet fierce in its rocking and frolicking, while “Bouncing Around the Room” and “Reba” offered a blissful mid-set portion. “Reba” showcased lighting director Kuroda at his best, using the patented “bubbles” to illuminate the floor before ascending to the rafters along with the song’s jam. “Dinner and a Movie,” another real treat, saw the juxtaposition of tempos with a breakneck barreling down a highway vibe pushed against the song’s lazy, lullaby chorus.

Trey :: 12.02 :: MSG by Perrucci

The stage was set for the sixth and final set of the MSG run with “Maze” and “First Tube.” Trey has often remarked that a Phish show for him is all about the energy. If so, he must have exploded during “First Tube.” The place was simply going bonkers in the way only an MSG crowd can. It’s hard to explain, but in this building everyone just becomes affected a little bit differently. Trey was jumping around, slashing his guitar with a huge Cheshire cat grin on his face. Overall, a well played, wide ranging 12 song first set with a steady incline of energy, like the ascent of a roller coaster that started its freefall during “First Tube” before the wild loop-de-loops to come in set two.

“Scents and Subtle Sounds,” another song not performed since ’04, was a completely unexpected surprise. A song that defined ’03 and ’04, many couldn’t help but think back to this tune’s debut over six years ago in Phoenix, as well as Phish performing this track about 20 blocks away on top of the Letterman marquee on what appeared to be their farewell tour. This song featured some great textures, and as I looked around I saw the masses grow enraptured by the weaving strands of the composition. In the past, it could have been five or 35 minutes. This one came in on the shorter end, but it was all that was needed. A blissful second set opener that brought back memories of Phish 2.0.

Not ones to mess around, Phish got back to the rocking shortly thereafter with The Velvet Underground’s “Rock and Roll.” Another tune that the crowd was primed for, when Page belted out the lines, “Then one fine mornin’ she puts on a New York station/ You know, she couldn’t believe what she heard at all/ She started dancin’ to that fine fine music/ You know her life was saved by rock ‘n’ roll,” the place exploded. “Rock and Roll” eventually wound down and found its way to “Seven Below,” with the infectious hook by Trey leading the way and some synth action by McConnell. Again, this tune, and the following “Twist,” featured some great textures like the opening “Scents.” “Twist” saw the place do just that, complete with accompanying calls of “Whoo!” during the chorus.

Everything came to a head with the song of the night: “Mike’s Song.” An absolutely blistering, razor sharp rendition, the energy in the building was at the highest of the run, with Phish fucking nailing it. The transitions were perfect and the band was hell-bent on offering an earth-shattering version. It landed in old counterpart, the beautiful “I Am Hydrogen,” before the slap bass breakdown and dance party of “Weekapaug Groove.” Clocking in at just over 15 minutes, the “Mike’s Groove” was short, sweet and certainly to the point, with “Mike’s Song” doing the heavy lifting.

Phish :: 12.03 :: MSG by Perrucci

“The Horse” > “Silent in the Morning” is hardly a bathroom break, but offered a slight respite before the cherry on the sundae, set closer “You Enjoy Myself.” Another outstanding version, “YEM” capped off the main portion of a truly special three-night return to MSG. It was so funky and hot that it was like a broken steam pipe, offering a scorching blast of Phish right down your insides. All in all, a perfect way to end the run.

Not one to forget how they got here or what they’ve been doing lately, the encore was the second ever reading of “Shine a Light” from the Halloween album, Exile on Main Street. No, Sharon Jones didn’t show up, but all we needed was the phab phour. Isn’t that all we ever needed? As this extremely poignant tune suggests, “Make every song you sing your favorite tune.”

Whether you’re a cynic, a critic, a fluffer, or somewhere in between, there is simply no denying the message that Phish 3.0 is sending: We have gas left in the tank, so let’s continue to enjoy this ride together – in the moment. MSG has seen some serious Phishtory over the years, and ’09 did nothing but add to that tale.

Phish :: 12.04.09 :: Madison Square Garden :: New York, NY

Set I: Heavy Things, Possum, Wilson, Kill Devil Falls, Glide, 46 Days, Bouncing Around The Room, Reba, Dinner and a Movie, Guyute, Maze, First Tube

Set II: Scents And Subtle Sounds, Rock & Roll > Seven Below > Twist, Mike’s Song > I Am Hydrogen > Weekapaug Groove, The Horse > Silent in the Morning, You Enjoy Myself

E: Shine A Light

Order the show for Download on LivePhish.com.

Phish conclude their current tour tonight (12/05) at John Paul Jones Arena in Charlottesville, VA; complete tour dates available here.

You can keep up with all things Phish, including live Tweets and setlists, at jambase.com/phish.

JamBase | Gardening
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Nebula: Five West Coast Shows

NEBULA ANNOUNCES FIVE CALIFORNIA DATES FOR LATE NOV., EARLY DEC.

Nebula

Legendary Los Angeles based rock trio Nebula has announced a set of late November/early December west coast shows, taking place from 11/28-12/05. All dates will be supported by Dusted Angel and Radio Moscow. Nebula released their latest album Heavy Psych in July on Tee Pee Records, and in September completed a U.S. tour with The Entrance Band.

Playing dirty rock and roll and primitive blues, these psychedelic iconoclasts have earned a reputation as one of the most influential bands to emerge from the Los Angeles underground rock scene of the last two decades.

With a penchant for fuzz-wah pedals, wild drums, and debauchery, Nebula plays feedback-heavy, guitar-driven psychedelic rock in the tradition of The Stooges, MC5, Jimi Hendrix, and Cream – laced with the spaced out sounds and discord of Spaceman 3 and The Velvet Underground.

Nebula Tour Dates

11/28/09 Sat The Blank Club San Jose, CA

11/29/09 Sun Annie’s Social Club San Francisco, CA

12/03/09 Thu Kensington Club San Diego, CA

12/04/09 Fri Royal Dive Oceanside, CA

12/05/09 Sat Nomad Gallery Los Angeles, CA

Formed by front man Eddie Glass upon the split of Fu Manchu in 1997, Nebula toured relentlessly in North America, Europe, Japan, and Australia, playing alongside bands like Mudhoney, Iggy and the Stooges, Local H, The Hellacoptors, and Queens of the Stone Age.

Nebula quickly gained a cult following in the burgeoning psych scene that was taking root in their hometown of Los Angeles and in music scenes abroad, paving the way for bands like Brian Jonestown Massacre, Dead Meadow, Black Angels, and Wolfmother. In 2009, Nebula joined Tee Pee Records for the release of Heavy Psych. The new line up includes Eddie Glass on guitar/vocals, Tom Davies on bass/vocals, and Rob Oswald on drums.

Combining the combustibility of the sun with the mysticism of the moon, Heavy Psych lives up to its name, no matter your preferred definition, and reaffirms Nebula’s reputation as one of rock’s brightest stars; in this galaxy or any other.

Praise for Heavy Psych

“This is one of those records that makes you want to throw out every other record you’ve listened to, grow your hair to your elbows, and start all over again.” – NME

“Nebula collapses a long lineage of heaviosity in its gravitational pull: Blue Cheer, the MC5, the Stooges, early Sabbath, mid-Seventies hard rock, sludge-era Black Flag, and mentors Mudhoney.” – Revolver


Las Tortugas IV | 10.29-11.01 | Yosemite

Words by: Dennis Cook | Images by: Chad Smith

Las Tortugas – Dance of the Dead IV :: 10.29.09-11.01.09 :: Evergreen Lodge :: Groveland, CA

Las Tortugas

More days than I care to admit, I find myself empathizing with the Devil, wondering if humanity is, at best, a flawed experiment run amuck. It’s an unattractive perspective but one that’s cropped up for me more and more in recent years as wars, tea-bagging, general pettiness, and greed whittle away at our shared humanity. But it takes only four days each Halloween weekend to bring me around to a considerably more copacetic, hopeful outlook. Turning off Highway 120 onto the ridiculously peaceful, verdant seven mile back road that leads to Evergreen Lodge and Las Tortugas – Dance of the Dead music festival one feels some of the world’s weight lift almost instantly. The air is moist and green flourishes wherever your eye falls. Take the road slow and drink it in and the last leg of one’s journey works like an elixir absorbed through the skin. Where you are going is not the “real world” but a happy, highly musical oasis where palpable community, good will, and great times abound. Yes, this is a gathering of bands and fans, but if one fully launches themselves into the experience there’s a chance at something hearteningly humanizing that goes well beyond a badass set or blinding solo, though Tortugas IV had both in abundance.

Thursday, 10.29

One of the striking differences about Tortugas versus most other festivals is how immediate the transformation from workaday existence to exuberant shindig takes place. Thursday here feels like a Saturday at most fests, as the first of many costumes emerges, twinkling lights are strung, pumpkins carved, and seals on whiskey bottles are broken as virtually everyone in attendance stretches out their arms to everyone they see. It may come off as some sort of bunk hippie claptrap but just being in this environment for a short while triggers off a wave of general niceness and hospitality that runs through attendees, performers, and the exceedingly gracious staff that worked their butts off all weekend so the rest of us could revel without a care. Nothing is too far away from anything else, and as you wander past cabins and tents towards the music frothing in the distance you’ll likely be stopped by someone you don’t know and offered a drink, some candy, or all sorts of amusements simply because they felt like being kind and they liked your smile.

Bill Kreutzmann :: Las Tortugas

And don’t just trust me on this. Listen up to Tortugas IV guest of honor Bill Kreutzmann, he of the Grateful Dead, BK3, The Rhythm Devils and more, who performed a couple quite epic sets with pal Papa Mali but also sat in with headliners Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk and Umphrey’s McGee, amongst others. The man was a drumming fool, in the best sense, enlivening everything he touched with both his huge, deeply underrated percussion chops and general fabulous energy. So, Bill, did you have a good time Tortugas?

“Are you kidding? I had a GREAT time. It feels like a party,” says Kreutzmann by phone a few days after the event. “Festivals are really fun because I get to meet the fans. I really love talking to the people face-to-face and let them know I’m a real person and get to know what’s on their minds and what they’re thinking about musically.”

Izabella :: 8:00-9:15 p.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

You couldn’t pick a finer main stage opener than Izabella, a continually evolving Northern California unit that oozes positivity anchored to serious chops and strong songwriting. Archetypically “jam band” in nature, they encompass soul, rock, pop, and jazz as if all lived happily in one big bed. Yet, unlike many of their overly eclectic brethren, Izabella keeps refining their sound, which hums with ancestral echoes but ultimately carves their own path. “You all look pretty scary right now,” remarked lead singer-guitarist-percussionist Brian Rogers, “and that’s saying something coming from me.” The lost Village Person, shirtless with a cowboy hat and feather boa, spoke the truth, as the first night’s “Voodoo Circus” theme came to life with clown pants, duppy makeup, and other New Orleans/Ringling Brothers inspired touches. Izabella’s set flowed so seamlessly that one wondered how they’d brought us from a slow prog ascent into country territory and out into full-on funk. There was a real “diamond in the back, sunroof top” feel to some sections, and their cover choices were sublime – a hallmark of Las Tortugas acts overall. Wilco‘s “Handshake Drug” rattled nicely and made Big Light groan because Izabella got to one of their picks first. Michael Jackson – a specter in many setlists – emerged with a solid rendition of “Billie Jean,” and the set concluded with a way above-par stab at Queen‘s “Bohemian Rhapsody,” complete with Wayne and Garth look-alikes rocking onstage with the band. In between originals like “Beauty In The Journey,” a modern descendent of primo ’70s Robin Trower, began our collective elevation in earnest.

Poor Man’s Whiskey :: 9:15-10:15 p.m. :: Tuolumne Hall

BAG of Trix :: Las Tortugas

If there’s a band that loves getting onstage more than Poor Man’s Whiskey I’ve never met them. Yet, that seemingly sloppy enthusiasm hides some serious players who actually approach their craft with an earnestness that’s endearing. PMW picked up the “groove energy” put out by Izabella and rolled it in something gritty, pumping out their Whiskey-fied version of “Whipping Post” alongside their crowd-pleasing originals. For these guys rock and twang are Siamese twins, and their psychedelisized freak show slapped us around good.

Nathan Moore :: 9:15-10:15 p.m. :: The Tavern

Moore was a blessed fixture at Tortugas all weekend, sitting atop tree stumps rolling smokes and dispensing gentle wisdom like the riverbank, backwoods Buddha many of us know him to be. He arrived with his voice a bit tattered, which gave his first performance in Evergreen’s cozy bar a ragged, intense sweetness. He was bound and determined to give the people some songs and stories, and when Moore told us, “The world is really magic/ Nothing could be clearer,” the words sunk deep, a truth penetrating past whatever rigmarole we still had clinging to us from our lives beyond the tall trees, clear moon-filled skies, and moist Yosemite air. Like every time I’ve seen him before, Moore reminded me of the acute power one man with a guitar and the right material can have.

BAG of Trix :: 10:15-11:45 p.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

Three-fourths of ALODave Brogan, Steve Adams and Zach Gill – cemented the festival vibe with a set that overflowed with sunshine and melody. These dudes are just SO enjoyable to take in, and it extends beyond the well-played tunes to their basic personalities, which positively glow through the notes. Dressed in fuzzy, indistinctly animal outfits – except for Gill’s obvious bunny hat – BAG were playful as pups armed with nasty piano stings, undulating bass, and lock-tight drumming. Drawing from their large ALO and solo catalogs, they swung like an alien piano/organ trio on a mission to sonically smooch everyone in the tent. I appreciate their fearlessness with covers because of the utter sincerity with which they render some genuinely unhip material. So, as Gill crooned Wang Chung‘s “Dance Hall Days,” one truly felt compelled to “take your baby by the heel and do the next thing that you feel.” Rarely are serious musicians this playful, and it’s always a treat to see what they have up their sleeves.

New Monsoon :: 11:15-1:00 a.m. :: Tuolumne Hall

Ivan Neville :: Las Tortugas

When one hasn’t heard New Monsoon play in a while – and they’re off the road a lot more of late – it’s a lovely shock to hear their beautiful, wholly unique melange. Regardless of the time between gigs, something special happens when they assemble, and that feeling was particularly strong this night. Able to be merciless or smooth, equally convincing at both, they merge carefully composed songs (with increasingly strong vocals) and genre-busting instrumentals without apology. In some ways NM asks a bit more than your average band of its listeners, but, as stunning renditions of originals like “The Other Side” or covers like Zeps‘ “Poor Tom” showed, surrendering to their current always takes you somewhere cool.

Dumpstaphunk :: 1:00-2:30 a.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

There’s a lot of kinds of funk out there, but if you love, if you crave the stuff that’s sticky ‘n’ stanky, well, there’s none better than Ivan Neville and his hard-nosed bunch. Decked out in robber masks, they launched into a ferocious performance that gathered up ALL the loose booty in a five-mile radius. On their best nights – and this was surely one of them – funk is a mission for this band, and their pursuit of it is exhilarating. If you were able to keep your limbs from flailing rhythmically during this set I’d suggest you pick up a defibrillator pronto. What further separates Dumpsta from the pack is how everything isn’t bullet fast (or obviously derived from touchstones like Funkadelic, James Brown or Sly Stone), as exhibited by their molasses slow ease into a blinding cover of the Stones’ “Sympathy For The Devil” highlighted by Ian Neville‘s jagged guitar cuts and the focused, endlessly exciting drumming of Raymond Weber. Their vocals, as a group, have matured, so it’s not just Ivan rockin’ the mic, and they’ve developed into excellent showmen, particularly the winking, leaping Tony Hall, who switched between bass and guitar with ease all evening. Towards the end of the set, they took us to church, Ivan exhorting us to gather up all the crap and trouble and worry and stress we’d brought into the woods with us and “put it in the dumpsta.” It’s a regular bit but there was a holy roller intensity here that made hundreds shout, “Put it in the dumpsta!” over and over and over in a way that really did liberate us.

Continue reading for Friday’s coverage of Las Tortugas…

Friday, 10.30

Las Tortugas

We woke to bucolic weather, hovering in the low 70s during the day and low 40s at night, which held throughout the fest. Gone, but not forgotten, were the torrential rains of Tortugas III, and the difference meant a lot of grateful, fully engaged folks who switched colorful outfits more often than a Cher concert. And it wasn’t just youngsters suiting up. Tortugas is a truly multi-generational gathering, where Steve Adams – always a sartorial treat at festivals – rolled alongside his painted up parents, who had as much fun as anyone here. There’s something, dare I say, a bit more civilized about Tortugas than most festivals. While not everyone had a cabin, the front porches and indoor plumbing were shared pretty freely and provided an extended, relaxed party atmosphere that wasn’t completely focused on the central area or what was happening onstage. One felt safe and able to freak as much or as little as their heart desired. Some of my favorite moments occurred while watching the parade of laughing, giddy people flow past my cabin.

Zach Gill :: 3:30-4:30 p.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

A solo set in name but Gill invited a few friends from New Monsoon and ALO to join him in one of the most disarming, honestly sweet sets this year. Looking like a comedia clown without the long-nosed facemask, Gill opened with a short, centering ohm chant, and then announced, “This song is about breaking through the ice.” The covers this round included Billy Joel‘s “Vienna” (done straight and true for all the crazy children that needed to slow down for a bit) and Huey Lewis & The News‘ “The Heart of Rock & Roll,” which Gill explained afterwards, “Huey Lewis was the first concert I chose to go to, begged my parents to buy tickets to. Then I saw Kenny Rogers. He wore a silver jumpsuit and threw out Frisbees. And how I tried to catch those Frisbees.” That Gill sounded genuinely wistful describing what seems like a cornball moment strikes to the center of his music. His cover choices and originals that more than hold their own against established masters speak to his ambitions and loves, and whether behind a piano, squeezing an accordion, plucking a ukulele or just swaying to a melody, Gill exudes talent and goodness in a way one would be stupid and rough spirited to refuse.

New Monsoon :: 4:45-6:15 p.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

Zach Gill :: Las Tortugas

In many respects, NM is the quintessential Tortugas band – stellar musicians and serious composers yet not a household name. This fest celebrates talent and drive, with a distinct slant towards working bands making music because something in them demands it AND won’t allow them to slack off in carving out their own identity, regardless of the easier, perhaps more quickly profitable paths open to them. NM exhibited a melodic flow that slipped between genres/styles in a way that bolsters the idea that there is simply music and all of it – past, present and future – longs to converse in a living conversation. Standouts this time included an expansive “On The Sun” and a gliding version of the Talking Heads’ “Slippery People” that seemed lubricated with K-Y it was so smooth.

Poor Man’s Whiskey :: 6:15-7:15 p.m. :: Tuolumne Hall

Dressed as Spinal Tap, the boys rollicked through “Big Bottom,” “Sex Farm Woman” and more, down to a tiny foam Stonehenge that was discarded for a bottle of whiskey. Control and abandon did a square dance onstage, making one feel like they’d wandered into a carnival ride of some sort. They wrapped the exuberant set by unplugging and playing Dr. Hook and the Medicine Show’s stardom loving “Cover of the Rolling Stone,” with the audience hooting the chorus with infectious glee. This band just knows how to put on a show that leaves one wanting very little in its wake.

Dun Four :: 6:15-7:15 p.m. :: The Tavern

Big Light and Nathan Moore teamed up for their folk-rock Voltran configuration, the Dun Four. With Moore’s voice on the mend, they still played in a way that made one lean in. One is keenly aware that they are part of what’s unfolding when this group plays, and with ringmaster Moore urging us through hoops and tickling us with feats of magic (the man made his own head disappear!) one wants to join in. The carefree character of Tortugas was well represented as they juggled their songs and played musical catch with wide grins and easy flowing laughter. This is a real peanut butter & jelly combination that’s only likely to get tastier with future outings.

The Mother Hips :: 7:15-8:30 p.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

The Mother Hips :: Las Tortugas

Blasting out like caged rock beasts, the Hips went right from zero-to-sixty with “Time-Sick Son of a Grizzly Bear” and “Third Floor Story.” Working in their comfort zone, they quickly assimilated into full festival mode and it seemed as if they’d already been playing in their minds and the audience had to just catch up. Anchored to the slinky, complex bass of Paul Hoaglin (dressed in Steve Adams’ Thursday furry suit and looking like the rockingest Ewok ever) and the relentless drumming of John Hofer (sporting black rim glasses with a penis nose), singer-guitarists Tim Bluhm and Greg Loiacono raged mightily, particularly on new ones “White Falcon Fuzz” and the rangy “Pacific Dust,” the title track from their new album released last week, which takes their early wild jam sensibilities and marries them to something more structured and ultimately more satisfying. Whatever they touched, it seemed their group throttle was wide open, which left many of us dazed and happily confused as they plowed into the giant size finish of “Can’t Sleep At All,” with the guitars racing all the way up to Heaven. My lord, what a tremendous rock ‘n’ roll band.

Dumpstaphunk :: 9:30-11:00 p.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

A touch smoother and more relaxed than the nicely battering energy of Thursday night, Dumpstaphunk again got us to toss our woes in the dumpster, and showed they really know how to work Stones material when they put “Miss You” on low simmer and cooked it to perfection. Highlight of this set was a spirited sit-in by Bill Kreutzmann. It was hard to tell who was smiling the most – drummer Raymond Weber, Ivan Neville or Kreutzmann – but their musical chemistry put some serious fizz into the whole evening.

“They’re pretty cool, huh? Me and Raymond got along great and played good together,” says Kreutzmann. “Playing with Dumpstaphunk is quite challenging. You gotta be a pretty heavy hitter to hang out with those boys.”

Blue Turtle Seduction :: 11:00-12:30 a.m. :: Tuolumne Hall

Jake Cinninger – UM :: Tugas

Wrongly viewed by many as just another jam band, Blue Turtle have far more in common with The Pogues, The Clash, and other rowdy, intense uniters of the people. This set overflowed with bonhomie, wickedly played instruments, nicely barking vocals, and a feeling of vibrant engagement with music (and perhaps life as a whole) that made the throng inside Tuolumne literally bounce and leap with uncontrolled pleasure.

Umphrey’s McGee :: 12:30-2:30 a.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

Not overly familiar with Umph’s oeuvre, I tend to take them in experientially, as if battered and tossed about by a powerful storm system. Their technical acumen is jaw-dropping, or put more colloquially by Blue Turtle’s Jay Seals as we stood stunned side stage, “These guys are a total Shredzillas.” True dat, and you could hear all the rehearsals and hours of solo practice that precede their performance, yet they managed to shake off the academic tang that can accompany such high end musicianship to create something that throbbed and breathed heavily in the moment. You can’t rightfully call what they do prog rock or jam music, yet those are in there. But so are the more violent, stimulating parts of modern classical music, jazz-fusion, deep reggae, goofy mainstream pop, and whatever else floats into their purview. With one solid block of time to work with in their Tortugas debut, Umphrey’s – bathed in the most exciting light show all weekend – ranged through familiar material (opener “Pay The Snucka” flipped our collective switch FAST and last tune “Partyin’ Peeps” sent us into the night festive as fuck) and an excellent cover of The Police‘s “When The World Is Running Down…,” but it was the tidal rise and fall of the intercut “Utopian Fir” that most revealed what a powerhouse act they are today. As Tortugas continues to raise its bar on headliner talent, Umphrey’s McGee were a great fit that left the majority hungry for their Halloween night sets.

Umphrey’s McGee setlist
Pay the Snucka, Andy’s Last Beer > The Bottom Half, White Man’s Moccasins, The Triple Wide* > Syncopated Strangers, When the World Is Running Down You Make the Best of What’s Still Around, Utopian Fir > Glory^ > Utopian Fir > Masoka Tanga > Utopian Fir, Plunger
Encore: Women Wine and Song, Partyin’ Peeps


Notes:
* with Rhiannon teases

^ with Ivan Neville on keys

Continue reading for Saturday at Las Tortugas…

Saturday, 10.31

Big Light :: 3:00-4:15 p.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

Big Light :: Las Tortugas

What finer, more succinct compliment can one give a band than to say that they’re a bit better every single time you see them? Big Light is surely that, and within a few short years they’ve developed into one of the most consistently enjoyable modern rock acts going. Their jam roots are pretty much behind them, especially with lead guitarist Jeremy “Swordfish” Korpas endlessly needling them forward into tougher, gnarlier terrain. A well-sauced bohemian youth asked me, “What is this? I like it but couldn’t say what it is.” I told her, “It’s rock that pops, pop that rocks, and rarely does it settle for doing things as they have in the past.” There’s a restless jitter to Big Light that recalls the basement jams of the Velvet Underground, except they play songs with considerably more heart and compassion than Reed, Cale, etc. Umph’s Joel Cummins manned the keys for most of the set, and his piano rolls and sumptuous fills beefed up the Light’s sound and revealed a simpatico comrade in Cummins, who is, in my opinion, the secret weapon in Umphrey’s McGee, where he slips between the many notes of the guitarists to provide gorgeous texture and a unifying glue that’s essential to their overall mojo.

Counter Clarkwise :: 4:15-5:15 p.m. :: The Tavern

So loose and fearlessly silly, this side project of Tea Leaf Green‘s Josh Clark reminded me a huge amount of The Modern Lovers if they played their instruments better. Ditties for a smiling tomorrow offered with crooked grins. I’ll take it!

Hot Buttered Rum :: 5:15-6:30 p.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

Hot Buttered Rum :: Las Tortugas

Dressed as wild rag dolls, HBR presented a particularly fluid mixture of musics past and present, hot jazz snuggling with exploratory, highly modern acoustic music, hay wagon hick shaking hands with bubblegum pop. And underneath it all rode Matt Butler (Everyone Orchestra), the invisible drummer so marbled into the musculature of this music that you don’t often notice there’s a drummer at all. All of them are finding more and more ways to serve the songs and cut back on spotlight soloing, which just makes their open-armed sprint towards WHATEVER music turns them on work better and better.

Nicki Bluhm & The Gramblers :: 5:15-6:15 p.m. :: The Tavern

Dressed as a prima bonita senorita, Nicki belted ‘em out with the power and naked appeal of obvious touchstones Bonnie Raitt and Linda Ronstadt, looking especially happy next to her Sergio Leone cowboy husband, Tim Bluhm. There’s so much blues power soul to the Gramblers, and words simply sound better falling from Nicki’s tongue. Good songs and good players, they kick up real dust on their lonesome roads and homeward bound journeys. Love seems always on the edges of what they do, and in this way it always feels warm and familiar even if you’re hearing the tunes for the first time. Throw in the slow hand glide of guitarist Deren Ney and the whole shebang rocks.

Pimps of Joytime :: 6:30-7:30 p.m. :: Tuolumne Hall
New Fangled Wasteland :: 6:30-7:30 p.m. :: The Tavern

As the sun fully set, we had our choice of two varieties of funky soulfulness, either the polished, unbelievably tight, endlessly rolling grooves of the Pimps or the Beck-inspired swing of New Fangled Wasteland, which includes TLG’s Trevor Garrod, ALO’s Dave Brogan and Steve Adams, and holy-jeez-this-guy-is-amazing guitarist Chris Haugen. You couldn’t lose no matter which path you chose, and not a few of us kept sprinting back and forth between the two, finding that the proverbial “good foot” lay on our left and our right. Both bands offered up something fresh in a field that’s frequently tired as can be.

The Mother Hips :: 8:45-10:00 p.m. :: Tuolumne Hall

Umphrey’s McGee :: Las Tugas

Easily one of the hardest, heaviest Hips sets ever, and this coming from someone whose total exposure is swiftly moving towards triple digit attendance. In a smaller room and Halloween infusing a pervasive mischievousness in most folks, the Hips absorbed that vibe and issued forth a dirty sweet exhibition that had guitars rattling, drums nailing us in the gut and the bass taking the feet out from under us. I said it aloud a few times during this set, but it bears repeating here: The Mother Hips are a perfect classic four-man rock outfit. The material is as good as it gets and they play with a rich skill that doesn’t refuse the immediate inspiration of the moment. I and others screamed ourselves hoarse throwing in on gems like “Rich Little Girl,” and if you weren’t already in love with them it was almost a sure bet you were by the end of this barnstormer.

Umphrey’s McGee :: 10:00-11:15 p.m. & 12:15-1:45 a.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

Umph’s split two-set Halloween show was more focused and overtly clever than Friday night, with a plethora of smarty-pants mash ups, both in the music (see setlist below) and their costumes, continuing a tradition started last year on Halloween. However, it was the second set that really put the hammer down, the sort of performance that doesn’t wait for you to join in but instead just grabs you by the collar and screams, “You’re coming along NOW, motherfuckers!” So intense, so heavy that I can only say I felt vaguely violated in a fine way. And Kreutzmann jumped up to get a piece of it, and though a somewhat odd pairing it seemed all were having fun jostling about together. Umphrey’s are the sort of technical wizards that Guitar Player Magazine readers adore, but their willingness to hang their asses out, both for a laugh and the thrill of it, makes for music that totters on the edge of collapse almost constantly but rarely if ever really crumbles. Cool.

“The more work that people put into their music the easier they are to play with,” says Kreutzmann on playing with Umphrey’s. “Years ago I was playing in a jam session at this guy’s barn in Kauai and I kept listening for songs or melodies until finally I said, ‘Do any of you guys know ANY songs?’ and not one of them did. So, the opposite is quite preferred.”

Umphrey’s McGee Set I: JaJunk% > 2×2& > Q*Bert& > 2×2, Cemetery Walk, Padgett’s Profile, All In Time%%, Cemetery Walk II, Sweet Sunglasses*
Set II: Jazz Odyssey > Nothing Too Fancy > Hangover > Night Gambler** > Nothing Too Fancy, FF > Professor Wormbog^, JaJunk, Mulche’s Odyssey, Land of Wappy$
Encore: 40′s Theme, Nemo’s Fat Bottomed Good Times$$


Notes:
% with Smooth Criminal > Heartbreaker jam
& with Late In the Evening jams
%% with Wanna Be Startin’ Somethin’ jam
* mash up of: Sweet Dreams (Eurythmics) + Sunglasses at Night (Corey Hart) + Electric Feel (MGMT)
** mash up of: The Gambler (Kenny Rogers) + Night Fever (The Bee Gees) + Rapper’s Delight (The Sugarhill Gang) + Bring the Noise (Public Enemy; with Andy on vocals)
^ with Bill Kreutzmann on drums
$ mash up of: Wappy Sprayberry + Land of Confusion (Genesis) + Seek & Destroy (Metallica)
$$ mash up of: Nemo + Fat Bottomed Girls (Queen) + Good Times Bad Times (Led Zeppelin)

Sean Leahy :: 11:15-12:15 a.m. :: The Tavern

Papa Mali :: Las Tortugas

What a goddamn tone master is Sean Leahy! His guitar work throbs with the massive fullness of blues greats like Freddie and Albert King, where things build and build and are then sliced ‘n’ diced with sharp slashes and wicked, finger-cramping runs. Playing in a neat trio setting with a crisp, intuitive drummer and bassist Mark Calderon, one of the hardest working men at Tortugas, performing with even more bands than Steve Adams (which is saying something), Leahy was a fount of good rockin’ after midnight (even before the clock chimed 12) and secured a spot on my list of “Under-sung Musicians” that I will continue to champion. The dude was every bit the player of anyone who picked at six-strings all weekend, satisfying in a really visceral way. And his songs are damn catchy and he sings well, too. So there!

Papa Mali featuring Bill Kreutzmann :: 3:30-7:30 a.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

With a delayed start, a decent amount of the crowd had dissipated by the time Papa and company took the stage. Bone weary and tired of my costume, I made it through the first wave of thick, off-footedly funky swamp music, and it was only sheer fatigue that made me leave. With eyes rimmed by cool makeup, Kreutzmann swings in a different way with Papa’s music, and even the Dead covers sprinkled throughout their set have an organic newness to them despite their familiarity. They began playing as if the music had been hanging in the air waiting for them to deliver it. No warm up, no ascent, we were just suddenly sky high and flying fast. By all reports these blues-rock-jazz-Dixieland explorers stayed near this altitude until the sun was firmly in the sky, digging into songs only Papa Mail knew by Van Morrison and others, with the ensemble thrusting ahead with a shared confidence that they could pull off whatever they tried.

“This all came about because Aimee [Kreutzmann's significant other] introduced me to Malcolm’s [Papa Mali] music. I’m from New Orleans, and she knows I love the music. My mother was born there. And then lo and behold – it’s now two or three years ago – we were playing the Oregon Country Fair and he was one of the headliners on the main stage. I heard him and went, ‘Uh huh,’ and went up and introduced myself and we didn’t part until the end of the Fair. We were connected at the hip. We actually closed that weekend playing from 1-4 in the morning, though we outdid that at Las Tortugas ’cause I hear we didn’t finish till 7:30 in the morning,” chuckles Kreutzmann, who with Papa Mali showed more raw stamina than even most of the hardened festival vets this year. “Music does that to you. It kinda gives this energy to keep on playing, keep on going, especially when it’s not a job and you’ve been in the band for 40 years and you’ve done it over and over and you’re still playing the same old songs. Then you don’t get the energy from it.”

Continue reading for Sunday at Las Tortugas…

Sunday, 11.01

The slow exodus began this morning, and while there was considerably less flailing and exotic dancing on Sunday, there was one of this year’s overall strongest days of music, with a distinctly Dead-y undercurrent unifying things. Where the final day at many small festivals feels like a cobbled together afterthought, Tortugas consistently delivers MANY great reasons to stick around for the full load.

Trevor Garrod :: 12:00-1:00 p.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

In what’s become a Tortugas tradition, the Tea Leaf singer-keyboardist kicked off the main stage’s final furlong with heartbreaking originals and an unerring instinct for deep covers that suit him to a tee. A tender, exposed artist in this setting, his willingness to parade emotionally naked before us generated more than a few tears amongst the lounging, largely shagged out troopers sticking around for Day Four. If Tom Waits sang ‘em sweet instead of sour it might come out sounding a bit like Trevor solo.

Tracorum :: 1:00-2:00 p.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

A somewhat classic jam band, Tracorum wandered through styles looking for what truffles they could find. While rangy as hell, they artfully explored whatever avenues turned them on, and acquitted themselves well in the blues, reggae and traditional rock areas. Gospel touches kept cropping up, and they delivered a particularly melancholy reading of Dylan’s “You Ain’t Going Nowhere.” Against all belief, Kreutzmann hopped onstage and knocked it out of the park during his sit-in. If he slept after his arrival on Friday afternoon then few of us knew when.

Guitarmageddon :: 3:00-4:00 p.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

Full-on groin thunder ‘n’ lightning is what the Josh Clark/Sean Leahy led Guitarmageddon delivered with one of the best surprises all weekend, a set of nearly all AC/DC covers (capped by a blistering assault on Iron Maiden’s “Aces High”). Opener “Sin City” seethed like The Stooges of “Down In The Street,” and like most of their takes on AC/DC’s tunes, they put subtle spin on fairly straight renditions, making things just different enough to tickle your ear but sacrificing none of the lusty, nasty pleasure of the originals. “Dirty Deeds,” “Jailbreak,” slow blues deep cut “Ride On” and “Whole Lotta Rosie” (both with make-ya-scream shredding from Big Light’s Korpas), and a ballsy “Highway To Hell” amped up our flagging Sunday energies and made a number of us act the fool at the lip of the stage as we punched key lines and threw the horns with real abandon. Little touches like Clark’s Survivor (the band not the TV show) t-shirt and Leahy’s Thrasher Magazine shirt planted their tongues firmly in their cheeks, but the music was all muscle backed by one of the most powerful rhythm sections all weekend. At one point between songs, Leahy further added to their classic rock cred, saying, “I walked into a wall and gave myself a black eye last night. Good times.” I was glad to offer up the bottle of Jack Daniels in my cabin for their onstage lubrication.

Dave Brogan Band :: 4:00-5:00 p.m. :: The Tavern

Front Street featuring Stu Allen :: Las Tortugas

Hands down, one of the most baldly, immediately enjoyable sets at Tortugas IV. With TLG’s Scott Rager laying down a clean, sharp drum line, Garrin Benfield ripping up lead guitar (including some mouth watering slide runs that compared favorably to Derek Trucks… really), and Brogan (ALO) out from behind the kit with an acoustic guitar, the whole combination just worked. Brogan’s got a classic pop voice and killer falsetto, and he used it on his very winning originals and a splendid, appropriately sleepy cover of the Stones‘ “Waiting On A Friend” that hit the spot on our final afternoon. This was the dance party that filled our limbs and heads with enough new fuel to push on through to Tea Leaf’s late night finish.

Front Street featuring Stu Allen :: 5:00-6:30 p.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

Comprised almost entirely of well-chosen Grateful Dead tunes, the JGB guitarist-vocalist shined away from Melvin Seals, running his handpicked band through their paces and radiating a sort of liquid sunshine to a crowd that drank in every ray they beamed out. This was the “comfort set” of the weekend, and it continued Tortugas tradition of honoring Jerry, Bobby, et al. and their cornerstone position in this scene. “Truckin’” was pure pleasure and came across with the same bravado it had when first recorded. “New Speedway Boogie” followed, bolstered by yet another sit-in from Kreutzmann, who flowed with easy confidence, each stick strike exactly where it should be, the man flowing with the music and in turn bringing everyone else’s game up. Superb takes on “St. Stephen” and angry Bob classic “Throwing Stones” took this one over the top and made the old slightly new again.

Kreutzmann with Dumpstaphunk

“I like doing a few Dead tunes, especially in BK3 because we do them so outrageously different, but I don’t like doing a whole night of them,” says Kreutzmann. “My favorite stuff that’s coming up is with Malcolm and it’s called Seven Walkers, and it’s all brand new [Robert] Hunter songs. We have all the basics recorded except for one. We’re just putting on the final touches. It’ll be called Seven Walkers and that’s also the name of the band. We’ll still play as Papa Mali but we’ll have this other band that plays Hunter songs. These songs are terrific. I read ‘em and they brought tears to my eyes they’re so terrific.”

“I guess I hogged the stage a little bit [laughs]. I love playing with other musicians. I play all kinds of music; it just depends on the musicians I’m playing with” continues Kreutzmann. Over here [in Hawaii, where he lives] I play with a lot of jazz musicians. I loved playing with all the bands [at Tortugas], even not knowing their material unless they were cover bands, and that was even fun playing in the Grateful Dead cover band [i.e. Front Street].”

Tistrya And Friends :: 6:30-7:30 p.m. :: The Tavern

Beginning with an a cappella version of traditional “I’ll Fly Away,” Tistrya proved a folksy songbird of great, simple potency, inviting pals from many bands to sing and sway with her, delving into heart warming original material and inviting covers. This was music to gather around and absorb with a smile. Real nice stuff.

Hot Buttered Rum :: 7:30-9:00 p.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

Papa Mali & Friends featuring Kreutzmann

“Bye, bye grey skies/ Everybody’s ready for the blue.” HBR sang what many of us were thinking and delivered another top notch commingling of elements that on paper don’t gel but in their hands move together with the solidity and swiftness of mercury. They exploded their thing to include a nifty mid-set Everyone Orchestra interlude with Matt Butler as the hopping conductor out front. And few in attendance will forget the gaggle of Dolly Parton costumed gals who joined them during a cover of “9 to 5.” A very Talking Heads style take on “Take Me To The River” furthered the sense one was at a slightly naughty revival meeting.

Papa Mali featuring Bill Kreutzmann :: 10:00-11:30 p.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

When Reed Mathis finally arrived from the Bay Area, Papa’s quartet that’s been recording in Austin blindsided us with one of the strongest, most gripping 90-minutes this year. Backed by perhaps the most conversational drummer of all time – yes, Kreutzmann keeps marvelous time but his sure cymbal strikes and dancing tom strokes are in constant chatter with his bandmates – they developed a kind of voodoo swing, going deep into freaked out caverns and outwards onto riverboats full of jazz bounce. Garcia faves “Deal” and “Goin’ Down The Road Feelin’ Bad” were offered up with serious gusto, and the music danced with us and the musicians making it. New Hunter composition “New Orleans Crawl,” about the heel dragging post-Katrina though decidedly more joyous than that sounds, was marvelous and makes one hungry to hear the whole lot of new Hunter tunes performed by this group. Overflowing with bounteous soul and blues dirtiness, Papa Mali and his band knocked it out the park late in the game.

Montana Slim :: 11:30-12:30 a.m. :: Tuolumne Hall

Like a modern day descendent of Dan Hicks and His Hot Licks or a contemporary aware cousin to the Cheap Suit Serenaders, Montana Slim are a primo string band that roams around way beyond the hills of bluegrass and folk low lands. There’s flashes of humor, which is always appealing, but they play with seriousness and a real engaging sort of back-and-forth between players. They were a lovely way to simmer down after Papa Mali rolled over us, and set up the remaining festivarians nicely for the finale.

Tea Leaf Green :: 12:30-2:30 a.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

Tea Leaf Green :: Las Tortugas

Beginning with Bowie‘s “Moonage Daydream” (likely in honor of the nearly full moon beaming down on us) and finishing the main set with Ziggy’s “Starman,” TLG proved the ideal closer for this festival. They are tight as hell right now, dovetailing beautifully together, and working up fine new material that speaks to a promising future for this lineup. Older faves like “Ride Together” had swaying hips in this set, and they attacked every cut like a headliner, pushing and slicing in ways that kept even the wobbliest of us on our feet.

Tea Leaf is always buoyant, bubbly even, but this night they were like a fizzy lifting drink, and I let myself float away from the crowd so I could wander the moon-lit grounds one last time before the alarm clock, duty filled world of home beckoned once again come sunrise. And in this stroll I felt something break loose inside me, in a good way.

For all the darkness and negativity of this world – the myriad things that have me empathizing with the Devil – I realized that human beings are also capable of something outrageously lovely like this festival. It’s not practical or reasonable for such a thing to last more than a few days, but it’s encouraging in a fundamental way that the collective efforts of many people could create this temporary paradise. Music is the unifying element, but it’s so much more – days of extreme fullness and peace filled with stories and laughter and kisses and gentler things. Leaving Tortugas behind is always a bittersweet sting but that it happens at all, that four days can be made into this delightful thing, is reason enough to not give the Devil his due and strive to bring some of this magic home with us to share with others.

Continue reading for more images of Las Tortugas – Dance of the Dead IV…

Bill Kreutzmann

Tea Leaf Green

Dumpstaphunk

Bill Kreutzmann with Umphrey’s McGee

Kris Myers – Umphrey’s McGee

Brendan Bayliss – Umphrey’s McGee

Joel Cummins – Umphrey’s McGee

Ryan Stasik – Umphrey’s McGee

Brendan Bayliss – Umphrey’s McGee

Jake Cinninger – Umphrey’s McGee

Vince Iwinski (manager) & Joel Cummins – Umphrey’s McGee

Kris Myers & Brendan Bayliss – Umphrey’s McGee

Bradly Bifulco – Big Light

Steve Adams – Big Light

Steve Adams & Nathan Moore – The Dun Four

Paul Hoaglin & Tim Bluhm – The Mother Hips

Dennis Cook – Your Fearless Scribe

Blue Turtle Seduction

Matt Butler – Hot Buttered Rum

Matt Butler

Jeff Miller – New Monsoon

Trevor Garrod – Tea Leaf Green

Reed Mathis

Poor Man’s Whiskey

Bill Kreutzmann & Raymond Weber – Dumpstaphunk

Dumpstaphunk

Ian Neville – Dumpstaphunk

Zach Gill

JamBase | A Happy Place
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The Feelies: Crazy Rhythms

By: Ron Hart

Straight outta Haledon, NJ, The Feelies were the complete antithesis of cool back when they officially formed during the year punk broke (1976, kids). Named after a deep reference from Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World and dressed like the kids who ran the math club in high school, this quartet of North Jersey suburbanites were the outsiders amongst the outsiders of the NYC underground during the late ’70s. They hated gigging in the city because driving through the tunnels gave them headaches, drank coffee the way Jimmy Page downed Jack Daniels before shows, and were known to shave onstage with electric razors plugged into their amplifiers.

But once co-frontmen Glenn Mercer and Bill Million switched on their guitars as the terse, tight rhythm section of bassist Keith Clayton and one-time Pere Ubu/Electric Eels drummer Anton Fier kicked in their boxcutter-sharp, jittery grooves, The Feelies were an unstoppable force. Their sound was pure minimalism, taking the repetitive patterns of such modern classical composers as Terry Riley and Steve Reich and compounding it with a Bo Diddley groove stripped down to the studs a la the Velvet Underground, creating a sonic style as unique as their image. Originally released in 1980 on the UK-based Stiff Records, the group’s debut, Crazy Rhythms, is only LP to feature to Mercer/Million/Clayton/Fier lineup and remains one of the all-time great albums from the New Wave era. Now, after years of being out of print after the album’s U.S. label, A&M Records, got sucked up by the Universal Records machine, Crazy Rhythms is available once again for a whole new generation to enjoy its quirky genius thanks to Individuals frontman Glenn Morrow’s Bar-None imprint out of Hoboken, NJ, home of The Feelies’ favorite haunt, Maxwell’s.

Remastered and repackaged in a very cool slimline digipak (this is key, as the album’s cover art featuring headshots of the original members of The Feelies against a sky blue backdrop is one of the main selling points – just ask Weezer, who paid homage via the cover of their 1994 debut), the CD and LP of Crazy Rhythms only features the original 9 tracks – which includes such favorites as “The Boy With The Perpetual Nervousness”, “Fa ce-La,” and their scorching cover of The Beatles’ White Album rocker “Everybody’s Got Something to Hide Except for Me and My Monkey” – at the request of the band in order to maintain the integrity of the album’s initial issue. However, the CD does include a download card that features five bonus tracks, including the original Rough Trade 7-inch single version of “Fa ce-La,” demo versions of “The Boy With The Perpetual Nervousness” and “Moscow Nights,” and live renditions of the title track and a cover of the Modern Lovers’ “I Wanna Sleep In Your Arms” from a March 2009 show at the 9:30 Club in Washington, DC.

Also released in tandem with Crazy Rhythms is its equally-indispensible 1986 follow-up, The Good Earth, produced by Peter Buck of R.E.M. and one of the true cornerstones of that jangly, college rock sound we all love so much.

JamBase | Jersey
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Black Crowes: Cabin Fever DVD

A GLIMPSE INTO THE INTIMATE RECORDING PROCESS BEHIND LATEST ALBUM

The Black Crowes

The Black Crowes will release their new DVD, Cabin Fever on November 24, 2009 on the bands own label, Silver Arrow. The DVD includes footage from the recording sessions that ultimately became their critically acclaimed new album, Before the FrostÂ…Until the Freeze (JamBase review).

The innovative technique of inviting fans into the studio to become part of the process during recording is a rare experience and prudently, the band filmed the sessions. Before the FrostÂ…Until the Freeze was recorded over a series of five nights in front of an intimate studio audience at Levon Helm Studios in Woodstock, NY. The DVD of those sessions, Cabin Fever, takes that experience one step further by allowing viewers to see behind the scenes footage of both the recording and songwriting sessions, along with interaction between the band and the audience. The DVD gives fans that didn’t have the opportunity to attend the ability to feel the experience firsthand.

Exclusively on the DVD will be Crowes original “Little Lizzie Mae,” as well as covers of The Velvet Underground’s “Oh Sweet Nuthin’” and Fred Neil’s “Dolphins.” The DVD will also include the tracks “Aimless Peacock,” “Good Morning Captain,” and “Appaloosa,” among others from Before the FrostÂ…Until the Freeze.

Chris Robinson, who conceived the concept of both Before the FrostÂ…Until the Freeze and Cabin Fever, says, “I think we fulfilled a musical commitment to continue on the golden road of artistic independence. Approaching 20 years into our careers, we still are ambitious enough to push ourselves to create something unique that we have never done before.”


Phish Festival 8 | 10.30.09 | Indio, CA

Words by: Brian Bavosa | Images by: Steven Walter

Phish Festival 8 :: 10.30.09 :: Indio, CA

Phish Festival 8 :: 10.30 :: Indio, CA

Festival 8 is not your regular Phish show. It’s not even a typical Phish festival.

Phish put on their first fest in 1996 with The Clifford Ball. 1997 welcomed The Great Went, 1998 Lemonwheel, 1999 Camp Oswego, 1999 brought the epic New Years event at Big Cypress, 2003 found It, and finally, 2004 brought fans to Vermont for Coventry. Festival 8 is the band’s eighth festival. But it also falls on Halloween, making it significantly different than any of the previous events.

Not only does Phish have deep history in regards to throwing festivals (many credit them with helping revolutionize American festivals as we know it), but the band’s Halloween shows are the stuff of legend. Dating back to 1994 when Phish performed The Beatles’ White Album in its entirety (and in order) in Glens Falls, New York, they have donned a “musical costume” for each following Halloween they would play.

1995′s “costume” was The Who’s Quadrophenia performed in Chicago. 1996 was The Talking Head’s Remain In Light busted out in Atlanta, and the last Halloween show Phish performed was in Las Vegas in 1998 where they did The Velvet Underground’s Loaded.

Festival 8 unofficially kicked-off on Thursday night with a soundcheck including teases of “Fuck Your Face” (last played about 20 years ago) and MGMT‘s “Kids,” off their smash hit Oracular Spectacular, which is rumored to be one of the eight remaining possible albums Phish will cover (they have been “killing off” a list of potential albums featured on their website, supposedly leading to the final selection which will be performed in its entirety on Halloween). Toss in the one-of-a-kind, unique stylings of the ground’s art, complete with 140 lit palm trees, “The Coil,” the burning heart of fire, beer tent, The House of Live Phish (where fans can mix songs from this past summer tour), giant Ferris Wheel, and white tents reminiscent of Shoreline, and Phish has turned The Empire Polo Club into what they are calling “Little Vermont.”

UNO

Trey – Phish Festival 8 :: 10.30 :: Indio, CA

Opening the first of eight weekend sets with “Party Time,” the feeling was immediately relaxed, a sort of anything-goes vibe. “Chalkdust Torture” came next, igniting the crowd with its trademark reckless abandon. The deep funk of “The Moma Dance” and a well placed “NICU” continued to build momentum, before a mid-set “Stash” offered the first real jam of the weekend, hitting some high points without getting particularly dissonant or scary.

A rare “I Didn’t Know” saw Jon Fishman play a vacuum solo while simultaneously “sucking and blowing in the shape of an eight,” followed by “Poor Heart” and “Cavern” that gave this portion of the show a real vintage ’92 feel.

“Beauty of a Broken Heart” is a Page McConnell number from his solo, self-titled, 2007 release, and tried to shine in Indio, but this entire set was already mailed in. Not lackluster or performed without passion, but Set I was akin to tantric sex. For all previous fests the band has been careful not to blow their load, instead working the crowd slowly, bringing the masses into a shared state of being that will last for hours and days upon end.

“Time Turns Elastic,” another tune off of the band’s latest release, Joy, concluded an hour-and-forty-minute set with a flurry, especially the last four-minutes, which are by far the most interesting part of the song.

DOS

“Punch You in the Eye” opened up the second set, with the line “where palm trees dipped and seagulls swerved,” drawing a huge response as lighting director Chris Kuroda splashed color upon the trees behind the stage. “Down With Disease” was on fire, bringing some of the most intense jamming of the night with Trey busting out celebratory licks on his Languedoc guitar. Morphing into “Prince Caspian” out of “DWD,” things again slowed a bit, but featured a McConnell led, Wild West-esque, bobble outro before a slamming “Wolfman’s Brother,” which was funky and stripped down featuring a concise Trey and Page led duel. Although a short version of “Wolfman’s,” it was still one of the night’s strongest numbers.

Phish Festival 8 :: 10.30 :: Indio, CA

The end of the set featured a standard “Joy,” before a menacing “David Bowie,” with Trey remarking, “we’re gonna give you a little hint about the Halloween album now.” A cryptic comment for sure, it’s hard to know exactly what Trey meant, but the obvious answer seems to be that they will not be playing David Bowie’s Hunky Dory, which up to this point was still one of the eight records still “alive” according to the band’s website.

The artistic highlight of the night was definitely “Harry Hood” with the roaming “Balloon Burble,” which is a blimp-like, balloon structure wired for psychedelic color via remote control. At times during the chill “Hood” jam it looked like a giant pill of rainbow that brought many back to Phish’s first festival 13 years ago at The Clifford Ball when the “Hood” jam featured fireworks. Full circle indeed.

A fun closer of “Golgi Apparatus” didn’t have the typical kick at the refrain, “I saw you with a ticket stub in your hand!,” because attendance seems slightly less than anticipated. Perhaps 30-50 thousand people as opposed to the 70 or 80 that the Polo Fields are capable of holding. The “Character Zero” encore was hot and full of gritty rock power chords, but the crowd seemed almost subdued, perhaps in shock that this historic event was finally underway.

Walking out shortly after midnight, a showing of The Shining on a giant movie screen attracted a plethora of bug-eyed campers, while many, including myself crept back to nearby condos and hotels to ponder what Phish had in store for Halloween.

More photos of this show are available here.

Phish perform again tonight on Halloween! Keep an eye on jambase.com/phish for live Tweets, setlists, pics and full reviews. Complete Phish tour dates available here.

Phish Festival 8 :: 10.30.09 :: Indio, CA

Set I: Party Time, Chalkdust Torture, Moma Dance, NICU, Stealing Time From The Faulty Plan, Stash, I Didn’t Know, Poor Heart, Cavern, Beauty of a Broken Heart, Ocelot, Time Turns Elastic

Set II: Punch You In The Eye, Down With Disease > Prince Caspian > Wolfman’s Brother > Piper > Joy, David Bowie*, Harry Hood, Golgi Apparatus

Encore: Character Zero

* “We’re gonna give you a little hint about the Halloween album now.” -Trey

JamBase | Indio

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Phish: Festival 8 Band To Play Last Record Alive

Phish Festival 8: Band To Play Last Record Alive

Phish‘s Festival 8 site has released a list of 99 albums of which the band will pick one to play on Halloween.

Several albums have already been “killed off” and a note on the site indicates that Phish will “play the last record alive.” See below for a complete list, including those that have already been “killed.”


Special thanks to jamtopia.com for compiling the potential albums list below.

Possible Phish Halloween Cover Albums

Phish

1.AC/DC | Back In Black

2.Aerosmith | Toys In The Attic

3.Allman Brothers Band | Eat A Peach

4.Arcade Fire | Funeral

5.Beastie Boys | Hello Nasty

6.BeeGees | Saturday Night Fever

7.Black Sabbath | Paranoid

8.Blind Faith | Blind Faith

9.Bob Dylan | Blood On the Tracks

10.Bob Dylan & the Band | The Basement Tapes

11.Bob Seger | Against The Wind

12.Boston | Boston

13.Brian Eno | Before And After Science

14.Bruce Springsteen | Born To Run

15.Chicago | The Chicago Transit Authority

16.Creedence Clearwater Revival | Green River

17.Curtis Mayfield | Superfly Soundtrack

18.David Bowie | Hunky Dory

19.David Bowie | Ziggy Stardust

20.David Bowie | Scary Monsters

21.Devo | Freedom of Choice

22.Duran Duran | Rio

23.Eagles | Hotel California

24.Elton John | Goodbye Yellow Brick Road

25.Elvis Costello (nee Declan McManus) | This Year’s Model

26.Eric Clapton | 461 Ocean Blvd

27.Firehose | Flyin’ the Flannel

28.Fleetwood Mac | Rumours

29.Frank Zappa | Apostrophe

30.Frank Zappa | Hot Rats

31.Genesis | The Lambs Lie Down On Broadway

32.Grateful Dead | American Beauty

33.Guns & Roses | Appetite For Destruction

34.Hall & Oates | Private Eyes

35.Huey Lewis And The News | Sports

36.Jane’s Addiction | Ritual de Lo Habitual

37.Jimi Hendrix | Are You Experienced?

38.Jimi Hendrix | Electric Ladyland

39.John Lennon | Plastic Ono Band

40.Modern Lovers | The Modern Lovers

41.Journey | Escape

42.KISS | Alive II

43.King Crimson | Larks’ Tongues In Aspic

44.Led Zeppelin | I

45.Led Zeppelin | IV (Zoso)

46.Leonard Cohen | I’m Your Man

47.Love | Forever Changes

48.Manu Chao | Clandestino

49.Medeski, Martin & Wood | Shack Man

50.Metallica | Master Of Puppets

51.MGMT | Oracle Spectacular

52.Michael Jackson | Thriller

53.Michael McDonald | If That’s What It Takes

54.Miles Davis | A Tribute To Jack Johnson

55.Minutemen | Double Nickels On The Dime

56.Neil Young | Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere

57.Neil Young | Tonight’s The Night

58.Nirvana | Nevermind

59.Pavement | Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain

60.Pearl Jam | Ten

61.Peter Gabriel | So

62.Pink Floyd | Meddle

63.Pink Floyd | The Wall

64.Pixies | Come On Pilgrim

65.Pork Tornado | Pork Tornado

66.Primus | Sailing The Seas Of Cheese

67.Prince | Purple Rain

68.Queen | A Night At The Opera

69.Radiohead | Kid A

70.Rage Against The Machine | Evil Empire

71.Rolling Stones | Exile on Main Street

72.Rolling Stones | Sticky Fingers

73.Rush | Moving Pictures

74.Steely Dan | Pretzel Logic

75.T.Rex | Electric Warrior

76.Talking Heads | Fear Of Music

77.Television | Marquee Moon

78.The Band | The Band (aka Brown Album)

79.The Beach Boys | Pet Sounds

80.The Beatles | Rubber Soul

81.The Clash | London Calling

82.The Doors | The Doors

83.The Police | Ghost In The Machine

84.The Ramones | Ramones

85.The Roots | Phrenology

86.The Who | Who’s Next

87.Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers | Damn The Torpedoes

88.Tom Waits | Rain Dogs

89.U2 | Joshua Tree

90.Van Halen | Van Halen

91.Van Morrison | Astral Weeks

92.Velvet Underground | Velvet Underground And Nico

93.Violent Femmes | Violent Femmes

94.Ween | White Pepper

95.White Stripes | Elephant

96.Wilco | Yankee Hotel Foxtrot

97.X | Los Angeles

98.Yes | The Yes Album

99.ZZ Top | Tres Hombres

What album do you want them to play? Tell the world on the JamBase Forums.


The Warlocks | 08.14 | NYC

Words & Images by: Alex Borsody

The Warlocks :: 08.14.09 :: The Bowery Ballroom :: New York, NY

The Warlocks :: 08.14 :: NYC

The Warlocks have been playing for over ten years, surviving lineup changes with the one constant being frontman Bobby Hecksher. I caught the band just off the U.K./France leg of their tour, supporting their new album, The Mirror Explodes (released May 19 on Tee Pee). What’s in a name? In this case, at least, something. The Warlocks was the original name for both the Grateful Dead and The Velvet Underground, two bands which helped define 1960′s music yet existed at opposite ends of the cultural spectrum. The Velvet Underground was similar to The Doors in rejecting the hippie lifestyle, preferring a darker, more urban mystique. Brian Eno sums up their influence on modern music: “Despite hardly anyone buying this album [The Velvet Underground and Nico] on its release, everyone that did buy it seemed to have formed a band.” On the other end, the earthy Grateful Dead were equally influential, being responsible in large part for the entire jam band scene.

So, the band name The Warlocks has quite the legacy and is evocative for many people. You only need see The Warlocks perform to notice the Velvets influence; their dark sunglasses and somber expressions bring back memories of NYC’s original hipsters. Songs off this night’s setlist that were most obviously influenced by VU include “Song for Nico,” “Shake the Dope Out” and “The Dope Feels Good.” The link can be heard clearly in their live sound, which evokes the dark, bi-polar landscapes of Live at Max’s Kansas City.

The Warlocks :: 08.14 :: NYC

The Bowery Ballroom is one of NYC’s many strange and beautiful venues. There is a bar downstairs with the concert hall upstairs, and the clientele are low-key rocker types who wear a lot of black. The opening band, The Morning After Girls, put on a powerful performance, projecting a very genuine energy. The band obviously cared a lot about their live show, and the lead singer was incredibly engaged and seemed to deliver music from his own private world. The sound was a familiar indie rock formula, but darker and with greater emotion.

The Warlocks took the stage around 11:30 p.m. and did not miss a single change or beat. Their sound was raw, and despite all my impulses to say otherwise, unpretentious. The singing was high energy, with tactful use of back-up harmonizing. The group had solid vocals, creating a sound that was very clean and exact, at times even giving things a studio mastered effect. The solos were experimental and unpredictable, and at one point I felt like one of the guitarists was channeling John Cale (the violinist/multi-instrumentalist for The Velvet Underground) with distorted and ambient screeching effects. Three guitarists, a bass player and a keyboardist are usually hard to keep so perfectly in sync.

The backstage area had a case of PBR on the floor across from a bottle of Makers Mark on the table – the art school combo. I asked the band why they chose their name and it seemed not to be too big of a deal for them, a simple nod to The Velvet Underground’s inspiration. I came to the show wondering if the band had known about the Grateful Dead connection but realized how narrow my taste in music had become. I had been overtaken by Phish/Dead mania and completely forgot about my childhood hero Lou Reed. The Warlock’s lead singer Bobby Hecksher is a soft spoken, androgynous character who seemed to be somewhat anxious, possibly due to the fact that he was one of the only ones not drunk in a room full of intoxicated people. As he came out from behind his dark sunglasses, I asked him if he had ever met Lou Reed. He said, “It would probably be a weird conversation.”

The Warlocks :: 08.14 :: NYC

The Warlocks and other similar sounding art rock bands are sometimes categorized as psychedelic rock. Wondering where this label came from, I asked people at the concert if they had ever done psychedelics, or if they thought that was a part of the culture surrounding the music. The resounding answer was no, so this appeared to have little to do with it. It seemed ironic on the 40th anniversary of Woodstock that a band with the Grateful Dead’s original name was billed as psychedelic rock. To top it all off I had skipped a local Phish show to see something new at this concert. The band talked about being from the West Coast, where the real hippies actually listen to art rock. Today’s psychedelic rock often sounds like U.K. pop bands from the 1960s, and the guy who coined the term “psych rock” came from Texas, so the roots of the sound are hard to pin down or understand anyway.

There was an accepting and non-egotistical atmosphere at the concert. Fans were standing around looking somber and subdued, which seemed perfectly normal. No one was jumping up and down in catharsis as a musician’s fingers began to start a fire on the fretboard. Because of this, The Warlocks, especially in their later work, have been described as shoegazers, a genre named after people who go to concerts and stare at their shoes while nodding to the rhythm. In the end, music is music, and by dividing genres and subcultures into target markets it only suppresses artistic expression.

JamBase | Loaded
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Sonic Youth | 07.31 | Denver

By: Cal Roach

Sonic Youth :: 07.31.09 :: Ogden Theatre :: Denver, CO


Sonic Youth by Steven Friederich

The scene outside the Ogden Theatre at show time was chaotic. Shady asshats were trying to squeeze fans for 80 bucks a ticket, and there were tons of out-of-luck stragglers. I’m told that artists often underestimate the size of the ticket buying public in Denver, so I guess this wasn’t out of the ordinary. It was a pleasant surprise to discover that despite the demand, the venue didn’t seem oversold; it was packed, but not like a sardine tin. The mood of the crowd was energetic enough for a stadium, though, with the roar that went up when Thurston Moore lumbered onto the stage, you’d have thought he was a rock star or something.

I wasn’t expecting “Stereo Sanctity” as the opener, but it really worked, Moore establishing his unmistakable six-string howl immediately, a musical presence that is simply unparalleled. The last time I’d seen Sonic Youth had been an almost somber experience. They played Daydream Nation in its entirety, and the landmark album confined them like a straightjacket, while the encore of the new Rather Ripped material was clearly what their hearts were into. Thus, it shouldn’t have been a surprise that they played all but one song from the brand new album, The Eternal (released June 9, 2009 by Matador Records), and that the band was explosive compared with the nostalgia trip I’d witnessed two years ago.


Thurston Moore by Steven Friederich

To begin with, Thurston was jumping around like a crazy person, clearly feeling it, rather than his forbidding, wooden performance of 2007. You can talk about other guitarists “shredding” but this is a guy who brings visual and sonic clarity to that term, just as acutely on the new material as ever before. Creative yet concise, he tore apart “Sacred Trickster,” and then it was Kim Gordon‘s turn to take the spotlight, screeching with a freakish sexuality on the monstrous “Calming The Snake.” This song achieved instant classic status as I witnessed it live, the epitome of prog-punk, a searing blast of spontaneous emotion contained within a flawless composition. “Anti-Orgasm” was busted down into its metal essence then taken to its most perversely melodic extreme before swelling in a swathe of tension and exploding, absolutely incredible. “Poison Arrow” was King Crimson-meets-The Velvet Underground plus a dash of Germs, and “Malibu Gas Station” was downright Nirvana-esque (yes, it’s okay to be influenced by your offspring), but each song was instantly recognizable as just one band.

Apart from the new stuff, the obvious highlights were the liberated Daydream tracks (the two albums covered all but two songs of the set). “Hey Joni” was perfectly executed geekpop, and “Silver Rocket” was half ’80s hardcore, half shoegaze progenitor, Thurston & Co. taking their time with the occasionally-rhythmic noise jam, then slamming the song home con brio. And after a picturesque take on the elegant “Massage The History” ended the set proper, we got an absolutely unbeatable combo: “The Sprawl,” sounding as modern and fresh as any Pitchfork darling of today, and “‘Cross The Breeze,” the “Stairway To Heaven” of indie rock, frightening in its precision and passion. With the pristine sound in the Ogden, you could hear jaws drop.

The only lull in the entire show was “Walkin’ Blue,” which sucked a little energy out of the room following “Orgasm,” but just-as-ballady “Antenna” flowed naturally out of “Rocket,” and “What We Know” made a pop-perfect second encore until the avant-growl of “Death Valley ’69,” complete with a Moore/Lee Ranaldo guitar fencing match, reminded us with authority how prescient this band was even in 1984. They were innovators; this is incontestable. Judging by this show, they still are, pushing and/or ignoring boundaries, evolving their songs night after night, bringing scenes together, refining their songcraft, and retaining their inimitable essence.

Sonic Youth tour dates available here.

JamBase | Youthful
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Phish | 08.01 | Red Rocks Day 3

Words by: Brian Bavosa | Images by: Dave Vann

Phish :: 08.01.09 :: Red Rocks Amphitheatre :: Morrison, CO

Gordo – Phish :: 08.01 :: Red Rocks Amphitheatre

For as long as I’ve been seeing Phish -1 6 years and counting – the third night of a four night run has always been, well, wild, special and more often than not, THE night. Night three of Red Rocks was certainly a worthy contender in this tradition.

Opening with “AC/DC Bag,” the fire-fueled, Gamehendge rocker, it was on from note one. The line, “Let’s get this show on the road!,” is always a surefire way to let the masses know the band means business, and set one was my favorite of the three firsts opening sets thus far, on paper and in execution. Speaking of execution, the second tune, “The Curtain With,” was the first reading since the now infamous encore at Coventry, which Trey screwed up something awful. Tonight was flawlessly executed to perfection. The band really appeared to take their time in practicing and making sure they played this one right, and this take gave a flying “Fuck You” salute to Coventry and the bad memories it has held since ’04. Good riddance.

And then the band launched into the drum-lead “Mound,” a bust out not played since the last “return” show at MSG on New Year’s Eve ’02. Always a fan favorite, this too, is a difficult composition to pull off, and the band crushed it. All four members were in sync from the jump tonight, something that carried over to the crowd inside (and the few hundred who climbed the mountain behind the venue).

“Gotta Jibboo” was as fun and danceable as ever, while “Guyute” served as the composition song in set one. “Punch You in the Eye” – a song the band hasn’t had the easiest time with this summer – was exceptionally locked-in, and Trey led throughout; he was very sharp and spirited this evening, particularly in set two. “Tube” was the first set highlight, and was super-duper tight and funky, featuring McConnell on the Clav/synth who was simply laying it down. “Alaska” was reworked and featured a triple repeat of the opening line. It was loose and took on a bluesy, stripped-down feel. Another big gun, “Run Like an Antelope,” closed set one and was not as razor sharp as normal, but rather dark, twisted and weird. Overall, a great first set with some major treats.

Phish :: 08.01 :: Red Rocks Amphitheatre

Unlike the previous night’s (read about it here) rain-soaked set break, Saturday felt quick and saw Anastasio and company land in The Velvet Underground’s “Rock and Roll.” It lived up to its name for sure and eventually devolved into a spacey breakdown that found Trey looping effects and Gordon smothering pedals before dropping the intro bombs of “Down With Disease.” A song that took on real character in Leg One of the tour, this night’s “DWD” was shorter and more out there than usual, but still interesting.

The hammer was then dropped into “Free,” which with the exception of the big five or so, is, in my opinion, the quintessential, ultimate Phish song. Lyrically, musically and emotionally, “Free” represents all things good about Phish and why we continue to traverse the country to see them. It allows one to get lost and fly “freely” across a slamming anthem. But, the highlight of Red Rocks thus far, in my mind and in terms of sheer balls, was the first “Esther” since Vegas ’00, and my personal first since The Clifford Ball in ’96, ironically enough the same tour Phish last played Red Rocks. What most impressed me about this rendition was that Trey hit every single lyric. Not a flub to be found. It was also in these moments that I truly managed to lose myself and my ego, drift off to the sublime spaces that only Phish generates and truly believe in my heart of hearts that PHISH is the greatest band of our generation. While most of Phish 3.0 has been “safe,” the gall it takes to play “Mound” and “Esther” leads me to believe that there are still hints of greatness left in the Phab Phour.

Trey & Gordo – Phish :: 08.01 :: Red Rocks Amphitheatre

“Dirt” served as the breather song of the second set, but was more upbeat and Trey-charged than usual, with him adding some extra spice, so much so that the set-closing “Harry Hood” featured a “Dirt” guitar lick tease by Trey in the intro section. If I ever had to choose a place to “live beneath the dirt,” Red Rocks would be at the top of the list. “Hood” is also a perfect song for Red Rocks, with Chris Kuroda‘s lights resonating off of the giant red slabs to either side of the venue while the city lights of Denver glistened silently in the background. In a word, it was majestic. While the second set seemed short tonight, it still featured some big guns and a MAJOR bust out.

An encore of “Sleeping Monkey” was a semi-gospel prayer (with organ worship hands flying high) with a Beatles “Let It Be” tease by Page. The night was capped off by “First Tube,” which was super high energy and saw Trey jumping all over the place, literally and musically. Not only has Phish delivered three monstrous efforts in a row but the tour is just heating up. All signs for Sunday point to a narration, a huge “You Enjoy Myself” and a deep “2001″ to help us wrap up Red Rocks. Night four still has some huge tunes in store, but also some final surprises I’m sure.

Lastly, Happy Birthday, Jerry. Without you, Phish wouldn’t be what they are today.

Dig in, night four is descending upon us…

Phish :: 08.01.09 :: Red Rocks Amphitheatre :: Morrison, CO

Set I: AC/DC Bag, The Curtain With, Mound, Gotta Jibboo, Guyute, Punch You in the Eye, Tube, Alaska, Run Like An Antelope
Set II: Rock and Roll, Down with Disease > Free, Esther, Dirt, Harry Hood
E: Sleeping Monkey, First Tube

Phish :: 08.01 :: Red Rocks Amphitheatre

For more pics of Phish at Red Rocks Night 3 go here. And for coverage of Night 1, go here, and coverage of Night 2 here.

Phish perform again tonight at Red Rocks. Check back
for live Tweets, setlists, pics and full reviews. Complete Phish tour dates available here.

Just like Leg I of Phish’s Summer Tour, JamBase will be at every stop with more coverage than you’ll find anywhere! Keep up to speed with all things Phish at jambase.com/phish.

JamBase | Three Fathoms Deep
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Phish Festival 8: Indio, CA

Phish Festival 8: Indio, CA


Phish

Phish has announced Festival 8, a three-day Phish festival which will take place on October 30, 31 and November 1 at the Empire Polo Club in Indio, California (the same location as Coachella).


With lush green fields and palm trees, and surrounded by vistas of California’s majestic Santa Rosa mountains, the festival site is simply breathtaking. And for the first time ever, Phish will combine two of its most cherished traditions – a multi-day camping festival and performing on Halloween – in a glorious three-day celebration.

Keeping the tradition of past Halloween shows, Phish will don a musical costume on Halloween night and cover another band’s album. The tradition began on Halloween 1994 with Phish covering The Beatles’ The White Album. In subsequent years, they covered The Who’s Quadrophenia, Talking Heads’ Remain in Light and the Velvet Underground’s Loaded.

The band will play eight sets over the course of three days, and as with all past Phish festivals, fans will enjoy on-site camping, numerous attractions and art installations throughout the weekend.

Tickets for Festival 8 will go on sale Monday, July 27 at 10a a.m. Pacific Time for $199 + $1 WaterWheel Donation (plus applicable service fees) via http://places.musictoday.com/festival8. This includes entry for all 3 days into the event area. All vehicles entering the Car Camping area must also purchase a $15 Vehicle Pass. Limited Car Camping is available. Gates will open for the event at NOON on Thursday, October 29. Capacity is limited, so advance ticket purchase and carpooling is strongly encouraged.

Visit official Festival 8 website at phish.com/festival8, where you can find exhaustingly detailed information about the event. Travel package information is available at valleymusictravel.com

Phish recently completed the first leg of their first summer tour in five years and JamBase was at every stop. We’ve got full reviews and lots of pics, you can check it all out at jambase.com/phish.

Phish return to the road on July 30 for four nights at Red Rocks. Complete Phish tour dates available here.


Joy, Phish’s first studio album in five years, will be released on September 8. The album was recorded in New York City this spring with producer Steve Lillywhite.


Beck: Modern Guilt Acoustic More VU Covers & Waits Interview

Beck Does Modern Guilt Acoustic, Continues Record Club with More VU Covers

And Launches “Irrelevant Topics” Interview Series with Tom Waits

Modern Guilt was released one year ago this week! For the occasion Beck is putting up acoustic versions of the entire album recorded earlier this year after returning from the Japan tour (under severe jet lag). Tracks will be released weekly starting with this rendition of “Orphans.” There will be limited EP of four tracks from the session available soon. Beck will also be putting up all the promotional videos from the album this week in the new section of his website, Videotheque.

Modern Guilt Acoustic “Orphans” from Beck Hansen on Vimeo.

Beck has also continued his Record Club project with several more tracks off The Velvet Underground and Nico:

“Venus In Furs”:

Record Club: Velvet Underground & Nico “Venus In Furs” from Beck Hansen on Vimeo.

“Femme Fatale”:

Record Club: Velvet Underground & Nico “Femme Fatale” from Beck Hansen on Vimeo.

“Waiting for My Man”:

Record Club: Velvet Underground & Nico ‘Waiting for My Man’ from Beck Hansen on Vimeo.

And finally, Beck has begun another new project for his website, Irrelevant Topics, featuring an interview with Tom Waits.

Tom Waits x Beck Hansen : Pt. 1

Irrelevant Topics in a new section featuring conversations between musicians, artists, writers, etc. on various subjects, without promotional pretext or editorial direction. For the first in this series of conversations, the legendary musician and performer, Tom Waits agreed lend an hour of his time to talk about anything and nothing in particular. Here is Pt. 1 of that conversation.