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Greensky Bluegrass with Danny Barnes | NYE Run | Review

Words by: Sarah Hagerman | Images by: Josh Mishell

Greensky Bluegrass with Danny Barnes :: 12.30.10-12.31.10 :: Cervantes’ Other Side :: Denver, CO

Greensky Bluegrass by Josh Mishell

Denver certainly wasn’t short of choices in the New Year’s revelry department. One could have ushered in 2011 with Widespread Panic at the Pepsi Center, STS9 at the Fillmore, or Railroad Earth at the Ogden, and that’s just naming the bigger shows. But I think I made the right choice by spending it with Greensky Bluegrass and Danny Barnes at Cervantes’ Other Side . Nestled up in Five Points, a historically black neighborhood with a rich jazz history – and nowadays demonstrating the age-old story of rough-and-tumble urban center meets gentrification – the venue was somewhat removed from the neon and crowds of downtown just a few blocks away. It gave the show a semi-exclusive secret party vibe, and even The Motet thumping through the walls next door in the main room of Cervantes didn’t take away from the refreshing sense of intimacy. Not to say things didn’t get wild – when you’ve got one of the most fearlessly independent and creative musicians working today opening up for one of the most energetic, hard working acoustic roots outfits pounding that pavement, you know damn well some sparks are going to fly.

Danny Barnes by Josh Mishell

Barnes kicked off both nights’ festivities performing solo on the “barnjo” – a custom-made hybrid banjo/electric guitar that he debuted this summer at Northwest String Summit. Melding the hammering drive and fine detail of his banjo-work on an instrument that allows him to fully embrace plugged-in rock-and-roll aggression, it proved the perfect outlet for his own wonderfully mercurial musical nature. Unlike the FolkTronics approach he had previously taken with his music, where he used Ableton software to craft a broad palette with the banjo, looping the instrument and incorporating beats and samples, this method had a considerably more stripped-down aesthetic. But this was some pure diesel, as Barnes travelled between sonic moods and textures with a tight, dizzying quickness.

It was cool to hear the open-throttle versions of songs spanning his career over both nights, from Bad Livers (“Lumpy, Beanpole & Dirt,” “Little Bitty Town,” “Legend of Sawdust Boogers,” “Going Where They Do Not Know My Name,” “Love Songs Suck”) through his latest album, the brilliant Pizza Box. Take, “Sleep,” a claustrophobic tale based on a friend of Barnes who went to jail. He told Barnes he was relieved when the cops finally busted in his door, because he knew they were coming and he could finally get some sleep. On Pizza Box, it unfolds like an unhinged dream, but the barnjo interpretation tapped its murky, shuddering dread in direct, close-to-the-bone cuts.

Danny Barnes by Josh Mishell

Meanwhile during “Everything Fades,” on the line “Everything fades/That was made by a man,” Barnes simply let a lonely, lovely hum hang in the air, as if to emphasize that point, before spiraling down into some heavy Stooges-like stomping. Barnes utilized the instrument with equally potency on more delicate tunes like Things I Done Wrong‘s “Big Girl Blues,” which he nicely segued into T. Rex’s “Bang a Gong (Get It On)” on New Year’s Eve, and “Overdue,” where he let the notes gracefully float and dissolve in the air. Plus you have to appreciate a man who wrote “Love Songs Suck” – which lent itself to a crushing barnjo interpretation perfectly – writing “Overdue.” It’s a love song which, to put it mildly, in no way sucks at all. That’s how you show ‘em how it’s done.

The barnjo also allows Barnes to more-readily tap the punk rock heart that has always set him apart from the often-tired roots music scene. He even played Minor Threat on the first night of the run for, “All the designated drivers out there,” ripping out a vicious cover of “Straight Edge.” It was a pretty ballsy song choice, especially on the cusp of a holiday that’s become associated with getting as FUBARed as possible. Barnes has always had that element of subversion in his music, and this latest badass development is no exception.

Despite the “Bluegrass” in their name, Greensky aren’t trying to fit neatly into that category or cater to the IBMA crowd. They’ve obviously done their musical homework, but they pull from their own frames of reference in a way that keeps their sound fresh, rooted in a thoroughly modern sensibility rather than nostalgia. They are as likely to cover Bruce Springsteen or Michael Jackson as they are classic bluegrass tunes – and treat them with the same ace musicianship (not a lame Pickin’ On approach). Meanwhile, their original songwriting features a splendid attention to melody and old soul contemplations that dig deeper than the atypical road and mountain songs written by many acoustic roots bands.

Paul Hoffman by Josh Mishell

They also are one hard touring band. According to the stage banter, by mandolin player Paul Hoffman‘s math, the band has averaged 187 driving miles each day since 2007. But it’s so obvious that they love what they do for a living, that they are just flat out fun to watch. Take the jam out of ”Freeborn Man” during the first set on the first night, where they threw around musical references the way movie geeks throw around film quotes. This Jimmy Martin tune is one of those songs that is so oft-played that it can make for pretty tired covers, or dive into masturbatory bluegrass solo-passing territory. But Greensky kept things snappy and locomotive. Guitarist Dave Bruzza teased ‘The Simpsons’ theme, and dobro-player Anders Beck got down on “The Lion Sleeps Tonight” when he came up to bat. Hoffman jumped and boogied as he sang snatches of “Jump In Line” (an old calypso song made famous by Harry Belafonte), and later Beck and banjo player Michael Arlen Bont both riffed on Springsteen’s “Dancing in the Dark,” which Hoffman had led the band in a rousing cover of earlier in the set.

Other highlights on the first night included a spacious, swirling jam out from “Just to Lie,” off their 2008 album Five Interstates that drove straight on into Benny Galloway-penned “”Train Junkie,” featuring some particularly fierce playing by Bruzza and Beck. I also enjoyed Bont channeling Dwayne Allman on the banjo for the encore of “One Way Out,” a perfect choice for Bruzza’s strong whiskey-and-leather vocals.

But the standout of the night, and maybe all the Greensky sets over the two nights for me, was the Beck-penned “Tarpology.” “I wrote this for Sound Tribe to play, but they haven’t gotten back to me,” he laughed. Stretching well over ten minutes, the song had a perceivable pulse to it, building to mini-peaks and then crashing down again, moments of expanse giving way to tight, fist-pumping fury. It also displayed some killer use of the effects pedals by Beck and Hoffman, pushing the sound way out into bloinky, sci-fi territory. At one point, Beck’s dobro splintered over the drive of the band and then swooped in low and loud, a striking example of the tooth-baring rock and roll approach he takes to the instrument. When it was over, Beck said, “We were Greensky Bluegrass, in case you forgot.”

If Greensky on the 30th was all fire, New Year’s Eve seemed to move in snapshots, with each section of the show having a slightly different, albeit consistently joyful, vibe. After first set opener “What’s Left of the Night,” Barnes joined the band for “Groundhog” and Bad Livers’ “Deathtrip,” where he got deliciously freaky over Mike Devol‘s bruising bassline. Bruzza watched intently as he ripped it up on the barnjo, and Beck grinned wildly, obviously excited to have him on the stage. “Groundhog” dropped down into a disco-like thump for a while, before Bont picked up the tempo, giving Barnes and Bont the chance to exchange a little banjo/barnjo interplay. After Barnes’ exit, Greensky busted out a stretch of Beatles songs, including “Got to Get You Into My Life,” “Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds,” “Help” (which lent itself to a fast bluegrass interpretation incredibly well), “A Day in the Life,” and the entire B-side of Abbey Road to take us up to set break.

Dave Bruzza & Vince Herman by Josh Mishell

The band came back in the nick of time to ring in 2011 with “Stop That Train,” the balloons falling, couples kissing, glasses raising all around us. The second set clocked in at over two hours, and featured some favorite Greensky songs, like the heart-wrenching “Reverend” and the pick-your-head-up “All Four,” an uplifting way to welcome the New Year as the balloons popped around us at our feet. They were also joined by some friends, specifically, a clean shaven Vince Herman , and later, Boulder-based singer/songwriter Pete Kartsounes, who wailed on the harmonica and picked Bruzza’s guitar while Bruzza drank champagne from the bottle, passing it to people in the front row.

Herman always brings a party to the stage. He shook his head so hard during “Way Up on the Hill Where They Do the Boogie” that his New Year’s hat tumbled off. Later in the song, his mic’s boom arm began to sink downwards. Caught up in the spirit, Herman kept singing into it, following it as went down, before Bruzza reached over and caught it, propping it back upright. Herman then kicked off a round of “Salty Dog,” a song that always gets decidedly dirty. It’s a number you bust out at a late night jam when the kids are in bed and everyone left standing is half in the bag. After passing around a few ribald verses, Herman cried, “Let’s all pick the shit out of this boys!” as Greensky rallied around him. After Herman’s exit, the band would keep up that infectious energy, propelling us past the 2:30 am mark with gusto.

It was a two-night stand that satisfied both my yee haw and punk rock factors, as we bid adios to the foul year of our lord and welcomed the clean slate possibilities of 2011. As I’m writing this, a few days into the year, 2011 is already shaping up to be a rough year. But as a friend of mine recently said to me, “The arts are mankind’s maybe one get out of jail free card.” I don’t know about you, but I take comfort in the fact that there are joyful road warriors and inventive badasses out there, adding to the collective spirit that may just be our one shot at redemption, if we’re smart enough to recognize it.

Greensky Bluegrass Tour Dates :: Greensky Bluegrass News :: Greensky Bluegrass Concert Reviews


JamBase | Ramblin’
Go See Live Music!


Food Drive at Fourmile Canyon Revival

BRING GOOD FOOD TO A GOOD CAUSE

Conscious Alliance will be hosting a food drive on October 9th at the 1st Bank Center in Broomfield Colorado at the Fourmile Canyon Revival featuring the String Cheese Incident, Yonder Mountain String Band, Big Head Todd & the Monsters, Drew Emmitt & Vince Herman, and the members of Phish [see details here]. All food donations collected will benefit the Boulder Community Food Share. Patrons that donate 10 non-perishable food items will receive a free limited-edition poster by Richard Biffle!

The Conscious Alliance always encourages food donations to be low-sodium and health oriented products. “Organic” food donations are especially encouraged. RAMEN NOODLES will NOT be accepted for the free poster.

You can also help Conscious Alliance feed those in need by texting “ARTFEEDS” to 85944.


Yonder Mountain/Leftover Salmon | Red Rocks | Pics

Images by: Mike Hardaker

Yonder Mountain String Band/Leftover Salmon :: 08.27.10 :: Red Rocks Amphitheatre :: Morrison, CO

Polytechnic Cajun Slam-grass met American progressive bluegrass at Red Rocks Amphitheatre when Yonder Mountain String Band and Leftover Salmon got together for an intimate night of string music. To see two of Colorado’s most progressive jam bands together on the same bill was a real treat for the huge local following.

YMSB Setlist
<b.Set I: Looking Back Over My Shoulder > New Horizons, Left Me in a Hole, Fingerprint, Troubled Mind, Rag Doll, Casualty, Jail Song, Cuckoo’s Nest > Peace Of Mind > Angel > Follow Me Down To The Riverside > Angel > Peace Of Mind
Set II: Sidewalk Stars > If There’s Still Ramblin’ in the Rambler (let him go) > Reuben & Cherise> If There’s Still Ramblin’ in the Rambler (let him go), Polly Put The Kettle On, Damned If The Right One Didn’t Go Wrong, Idaho, Isolate > Death Trip1, Another Day, No Expectations > Traffic Jam > King Ebenezer > Traffic Jam > Out Of The Blue
E: Steam Powered Aereoplane2 > Boatman2 > Jack London2

1 Eric Mardis on banjo & Wayne Gottstine on mandolin
2 Drew Emmitt on mandolin & Vince Herman on guitar

A reliable setlist for Leftover Salmon could not be found. If you have one please share it in our comments section!

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Yonder Mountain String Band Tour Dates :: Yonder Mountain String Band News :: Yonder Mountain String Band Concert Reviews

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

JamBase | Rocky Mountain High
Go See Live Music!


Great American Taxi: “American Beauty” Video

LIFE ON THE ROAD IN THIS GREAT LAND DISTILLED IN SOUND & VISION

“Woodie Guthrie was a huge influence for us and we truly believe in the power of song,” said Great American Taxi frontman Vince Herman in a recent interview. “[Songs about hard luck times tend to] hold a man up and make him feel stronger than he is — and they make him feel good about his community. We want to address the issues appropriate to our times, while making music that gets people up and moving.”

But no one can accuse Taxi of crying the blues. Even Great American Taxi protest songs are generally up-beat, containing Cajun, calypso, and bluegrass melodies and a retro, ’70s feel — think the Grateful Dead, Wilco, and the Byrds. “We like to get as much dancing going as possible,” said Herman, who enjoys experimenting with traditional Southern boogie and swampy blues-rock sounds.

Here’s the new video from GAT’s latest album, Reckless Habits (here).

Great American Taxi Tour Dates :: Great American Taxi News :: Great American Taxi Concert Reviews


High Sierra Festival: 07.01-07.04 | California

Words by: Dennis Cook, Jake Krolick, Susan J. Weiand and Aaron Kayce | Images by: Jake Krolick and Susan J. Weiand

High Sierra Music Festival :: 07.01.10-07.04.10 :: Plumas County
Fairgrounds :: Quincy,
CA

Anniversaries are funny things. Often too much or too little is made of them, but High
Sierra 2010
struck a
lovely balance in celebrating its 20th year, occasionally acknowledging that they’d hit
two decades but mostly just
nailing all the elements that make this festival unique and so dear to the regulars that
return each 4th of July
weekend.

It’s tough to describe High Sierra to those who’ve never attended. On paper it makes
little sense to say there are
people everywhere – tents and RVs tucked into every nook and cranny of the Plumas County
Fairgrounds, spilling into
the woods and open fields surrounding every stage, building and port-a-potty – yet it
never seems overly crowded
or oppressive. In fact, High Sierra is one of the most peaceful, gentle, fun-loving
assemblages of humanity most of
us have ever encountered. Ebullient camaraderie is the general rule, so there are rarely
hassles of any kind. One can
walk right up to front of the stage at almost any set, and they’ll usually be met by a
smile, even if they’re just meeting
the person next to them. Rare is the walk through the maze of campers around the Big
Meadow Stage where one
isn’t greeted with a handshake or a hug or offered some form of constriction loosening
hospitality.

Yes, there’s a strain of high octane Cali hippie-dippie-ness but mostly the citizens of
this temporary city on a hill are
just hardcore music lovers enjoying the smorgasbord laid out before them. High Sierra
attracts folks with thoroughly
catholic tastes, able to fully enjoy the rowdiness of big stage headliners like Widespread Panic and
The Black Crowes
but equally able to
throw themselves wholeheartedly into the quietude of Dan Bern or the mesmerizing, rhythmic originality of Rubblebucket.

The 20th installment accentuated all the positives High Sierra has to offer. What follows
are some of the highlights
experienced by the JamBase crew as we quested after musical nirvana as America celebrated
its 234th birthday.
(Dennis Cook)

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7/1/10 – 7/4/10 – High
Sierra Music Festival
(Quincy, CA)
View Photos

Continue reading for Jake Krolick’s highlights…

Jake Krolick’s High Sierra 2010 Highlights

High Sierra at Sunset by
Krolick

Standout Moments on Thursday & Friday

Best Use of a Fretted Instrument
Both Nels Cline
Singers
sets
in the Vaudeville Tent on Thursday and Friday were the place to be for some serious
shredding, but the early
afternoon set on Friday with guitarist extraordinaire Eric McFadden sitting in on a face melting “Maggot Brain” opener
was an axe lovers
dream. Speaking of great guitarists, by now you’ve probably heard of Big Light, and if
you haven’t then
you will. Singer Fred Trophy, bassist Steve Adams, drummer Bradly
Bilfulco
and
guitarist Jeremy Korpas played in some capacity everyday at High Sierra, and beside
McFadden, who
appeared everywhere throughout the weekend, Jeremy “Swordfish” Korpas definitely popped up
on the radar of
guitarists who made you lose your shit. Korpas really deserved the accolades as he wailed
effortlessly at Big Light’s
sets, the White Stripes themed Guitarmageddon throwdown, the Gramble – where The Beatles
“I’ve Got a Feeling”
reigned supreme – and at a late night party at Camp Harry. Korpas has the patience of a
much older guitarist with a
confidence that allows him to shred effectively with any grouping of musicians. There
were extra cheers every time
he walked on stage and each performance the “Swordfish” was involved in was elevated to
new levels of
excitement.

Cult I’d Most Like To Join
Edward Sharpe & The
Magnetic
Zeros
trouncing of the Big Meadow Stage on Thursday left more than one person
whistling “Home” on
Friday morning. The highlights of the show were the opening “40 Day Dream,” a stirring
version of “Desert Song,”
and Alex Ebert conducting a sing-along in the center of a seated crowd to finish.
The band may have
appeared a tad cultish but by the end of their set the audience was ready to drop all
worldly possessions and follow
their charismatic leader anywhere

Best Band BBQ
Widespread
Panic
barbequed all
Friday afternoon before they tossed us some bones in the evening. A heated “B of D” into
“Worry” ended their first
set, which hinted that the band loved the unique H.S. setting. The second set secured
that notion and was jam-
packed with guests, starting with Eric McFadden on guitar for a meaty “Bowlegged Woman.”
John Bell
introduced Jerry
Joseph
as
“the reverend” when he joined in for a rolling “Light Is Like Water” before Karl Denson added
saxophone for a
rowdy “Ride Me High.” Domingo “Sonny” Ortiz played a late “Drums” and was joined
by the illustrious
Wally
Ingram
before good
papa Bell sung us out with the touching and apropos encore “Heaven.”

Most Fun Field Trip During The Festival
All visiting Quincy for the High Sierra Music Festival should take some time to explore
the Feather River. We hit this
beautiful landmark on Friday and were instantly impressed. It’s easy to find a swimming
hole just minutes from the
fairgrounds, and its cold waters are just about as refreshing as a full night of sleep.
It should also be noted that the
weather was perfect cold at night for sleeping and warm with zero humidity during the
day.

Community and Camps Shout Out
High Sierra is a wealth of good times that fit together like a well worked jigsaw puzzle
buried in some hidden chest
that comes out on a rainy summer day. The edges of this fest are all well worn and by now
all the people attending
know where they fit. Many of one’s best moments and memories come from the hard work of
the community and the
camps that moved your feet or blew your mind wide open with visual extravagance conjured
by this pack of pro
concertgoers. Where else do you get a Wookie Bingo game run through Twitter or a
trampoline 10-feet off the
ground and covered in lights? How about false eyebrows made to look like mini Fu-Manchu
moustaches or kickball
games with musicians sweating alongside campers at 6 am? Who else has a Hippie Bar where
you paid for a drink
with a joke or a dance or Kamp Kwitcherbitchen, where frowns were even frowned upon?
Where else are Red cards
and Yellow cards tossed at flagrant music fan fouls? Legendary Camp Harry threw its own
pirate/mojilto party and
two late night shows with Big Light and Surprise Me Mr. Davis. And let us not forget the tongue-in-cheek
mayoral battle
between Nathan
Moore
and
Vince
Herman
that included
campaign signs throughout the campgrounds. There were hundreds of camps and thousands of
creative freaks – I’m
impressed with you all for your freaky prowess.

Nicki Bluhm & The Gramblers by
Krolick

A Band I Need To See More
My age makes me less than a thought when CSNY and Buffalo Springfield hit L.A. and
wandered up into the canyon.
Perhaps that is what makes Nicki
Bluhm & The Gramblers
so appealing. Since I missed the first coming I’ll be
damned if I won’t catch the
second. Bluhm was an early breath of fresh air on Thursday and Friday. She’s a stage
darling in the same way her
famous Laurel Canyon predecessors Jimmy Webb and Joni Mitchell were jangly social and
musical icons. Her easy
way with songs and smooth vocal delivery was more than enough to captivate the crowds, but
when you tossed in
Steve Adams‘ groovy bass and husband Tim Bluhm‘s gallant guitar strum into the fold there was something
incredibly desirable
about the music.

Standout Moments on Saturday and Sunday

Best Use of a Kazoo
Yes, Nathan Moore pulled one out at his solo set but it was a good thing he forgot the
whole bag. The act of
forgetfulness led to a stirring Surprise Me Mr. Davis cover of The Beatles’ “Honey Pie” at
around 2:00 am on Monday
morning at Camp Harry. The moment the bag of kazoos was handed out you just knew it was
going to be special.
The crowd participation and the smiles between Moore, Marc Friedman and the Barr
Brothers
said
it all.

Hottest Late Night
Hindsight reveals that the better Mother
Hips
set was on Sunday evening in the Vaudeville Tent with a four song finale that
would grow hair on a
bald baby (“Pacific Dust > Space > Turtle Bones > Hey Emilie”), but as a whole Saturday
night’s late night was the
hottest four band bounce of the entire festival. After catching Tim Bluhm and Greg
Loiacono
with the Hips
on the East Coast I knew I loved them, but it took a trip to the West Coast to really see
them rock a proper crowd.
Saturday evening’s show was such a treat, with several highlights including “Jet Plane”
with Nicki Bluhm and Grambler
guitarist Deren Ney, “Been Lost Once” with TLG’s Josh Clark, and a
“Time Sick Son of
a Grizzly Bear with ALO’s Dan
Lebowitz
. The follow-up was a fast bounce over to catch Fanny Franklin and
the L.A. crew
Orgone, who
established
themselves as a funk force to be reckoned with. The crowd’s energy during the end of
their set was really incredible
and steam poured out of all openings from the High Sierra Music Hall into the cool night
air.

Meanwhile Dr.
Dog
was
flexing their muscles at the Funk’n Jamhouse as they ripped through almost their entire
repertoire, raging a version
of “The Ark” off Fate and paying special attention to “Shadow People” off their
latest album, Shame,
Shame
. Toby Leaman (bass) and Scott McMicken (lead guitar) were wild
and energetic and
their changes left the crowd stunned. Guitarist Frank McElroy even climbed to the
top of his amp stack for
a leap of faith before finishing at around 3:15 am. This left just enough time to get in
to hear Karl Denson
tear it up on flute and sax as well as toss us a joke about Giuseppe Garibaldi. The
amount of steamy pizza flowing
around Denson’s funk down was obscene. I witnessed more than one patron dancing with a
hot slice held high in
their hands.

Vince Herman by Susan J.
Weiand

Oddest Place To Find Sushi
The sushi guy next to the main stage making those delicious hand rolls in an “I am funkier
than you” tee was surreal.
The Widespread Roll was insane and included a wrapper filled with sticky rice, a smear of
wasabi, huge chunks of
albacore & mango, a spicy mayo spread and sprouts, all rolled to perfection for five
bucks.

Best Sporting Event Combo
Kickball into the World Cup games. The new trampoline bases, the costumed Space Man,
vevuzelas blown at 5 am,
and the World Cup games made it worth never finding sleep. But the best moment happened
on Sunday morning
when a piñata was tossed into the middle of the kickball field. When it was finally
broken open it was filled with
airplane bottles of gin and all heck broke loose.

Best Use of a Child On Stage
Marco
Benevento
daughter
Ruby has gained some serious stage confidence since last year’s festival, and that showed
as she used dad as her
own personal jungle gym during his Trio’s set. Marco made the best out of the moment when
he took Ruby’s hands
and had her play the “Real Morning Party” to kick off the set.

The Well-Put Award
Nathan Moore summed up my feelings best on Sunday afternoon at his solo performance. To
paraphrase what he
said, “We are all out on the road day after day, each year just trying to hang on
patiently until we are back together at
High Sierra.” I thought about this notion the rest of Sunday and realized that this
festival never really ends; it just
goes into a different mode, one focused on reconstruction. The community that has
attended religiously for years,
reuniting friends, campsites and intense feelings will no doubt be planning what they can
do better for next year. It
takes all the little touches coming together over the 4th of July weekend to really make
High Sierra the incredibly
special experience it is.

Continue reading for Dennis Cook’s highlights…

Dennis Cook’s High Sierra 2010 Highlights

Zach Deputy by Susan J. Weiand

The Load-In
I have the good fortune of getting into the fairgrounds on Wednesday night, where only a
fraction of attendees are
about, setting up twinkling strings of lights and grilling while the first case of beer
ices down. This allows me a front
row seat for the main deluge Thursday morning when gates open and the majority of folks
pour in. It’s like a
colorful, pleasantly musky land rush – wild, hooting and excited as little kids on
Christmas morning. I pull up a chair
and sip coffee while all this beautiful humanity races past, hauling costumes, coolers,
hula-hoops and inflatable
beasts in red wagons, ready for adventure and eager to embrace their new neighbors with
open arms.

Tim
Carbone

The violinist for Railroad Earth and The Contribution
predictably played two
unshakeably solid sets with RRE and guested winningly with Cornmeal, Great American Taxi
and more, but just seeing
him strolling about always stirs great cheer. He’s earthy music in motion, and where he
roams there’s likely to be
something sweet being played, often by him since it’s hard to keep Carbone off a stage if
he’s got something to add.
And trust me, he’s always got something GREAT to add. White haired and worldly wise, Tim
is one of High Sierra’s
archetypal spiritual figures, emblematic of the many musicians here that are eager to
engage the whole of music and
wrestle it into new, exciting forms.

Guerilla Sets
For all the sanctioned stuff on stages, there’s nearly as much unofficial music making
afoot at HSMF. From campsite
pick-a-thons to lawn sets with portable amps, the players here exhibit a healthy
disrespect for order, allowing the
notes bubbling in their veins to rule them. Despite two Big Meadow sets, The Heavy Guilt
could often be
found rockin’ exuberantly near the food court, as thrilled to be laying down their grungy
goodness to a few
wandering souls as they were in front of a large crowd. And they were hardly alone this
weekend in carving out off-
program opportunities for themselves.

Thursday Highlights

1. Zach
Deputy
– 1:15-2:30 PM
- Big Meadow

The Big Meadow Stage is, well, big, yet Deputy filled it effortlessly, picking and singing
like a young Bill Withers
transposed to a large, hirsute new honky frame. Zach’s looping prowess far surpasses
almost anyone out there – yes,
even the hallowed Keller – in terms of originality and more importantly, musicality.
While loops can come off as
gimmicky, they only serve the songs with Deputy and enable his one-man operation to
actually sound like a band.
He’s got swell tunes and plays guitar with intoxicating flair. While Nathan Moore may
have snagged top honors,
based on the word-of-mouth this year, Zach was definitely the Deputy Mayor by popular
consensus.

2. Rubblebucket
- 3:30-4:45 PM
- Vaudeville Tent

Brooklyn has another amazing band y’all need to check out. Building up from a foundation
drawn from roots reggae
and Afrobeat, Rubblebucket layered a crazed yet brilliantly woven hodgepodge of sounds
atop their gut level
rhythms. Like the finest original groups, there’s an internal logic that makes it all
work in a very immediate, flatly
exciting way. With female led vocals reminiscent of Bjork and Patti Smith, the group
swerves confidently – true
performers all who genuinely entertain onstage – on the prowl and sinking their sharp
incisors in at all the right
moments. Their Friday set was even stronger, inspiring their trumpeter/co-bandleader to
leap into the waiting arms
of the fevered audience, where he was held aloft to continue playing. Those enamored of
Yeasayer, Akron/Family,
Tricky and Antibalas are heartily encouraged to dig into Rubblebucket, easily my best new
find at HSMF 2010.

Surprise Me Mr. Davis by Jake
Krolick

3. Surprise Me Mr. Davis – 11:30-1:30 AM – Vaudeville Tent
Suited up like friends at a wedding, SMMD unleashed all the magic and mojo that’s made
them a mainstay at High
Sierra for years. The combination of Nathan Moore, The Slip and Marco Benevento proved a
wondrous reminder of
how fun and fulfilling rock ‘n’ roll can be. Sure, they jam a bit but it’s the songs and
their scintillating delivery that
offer nourishing marrow to be sucked and savored. If Henry David Thoreau and Paul
McCartney had formed a band
it might sound a lot like Davis. And I had my personal high for the day at this set when
Moore ordered the backstage
masses onstage for a dance party during “Sisyphus,” passing out hugs and smiles as he
frolicked and enjoyed his
bandmates beside us. ‘Joyful’ is the word that most springs to mind with SMMD, followed
quickly by ‘holy’ (an
impression resoundingly confirmed by the closing “As Long As There’s One of Us Still
Standing” closer).

Friday Highlights

1. Nels Cline Singers – 11:15-12:30 PM – Vaudeville Tent
His lead guitar role in Wilco has raised
Cline’s profile higher than ever, but it’s in this formation one experiences the full,
devastating breadth of his genius.
Genius is a word I use VERY sparingly but witnessing the voluminous range and imagination
of Cline’s playing at this
set it’d be hard to argue against it in his case. Surrounded by ultra-sympathetic,
equally gifted collaborators
Scott Amendola (percussion, electronics), Yuka Honda (keys) and Devin
Hoff
(bass),
Cline handily shattered preconceptions about instrumental music, raging in a way that
frightened some morning
listeners (one of my camp mate’s literally fled with terrified eyes during a particularly
noisy, disorienting stretch).
But, the ensemble was equally skilled at hushed introspection and bebop-ish interaction.
Overall, just bloody
stunning.

2. Dr. Dog – 9:30-11:00 PM – Big Meadow
When the last notes of this breakneck performance died away I muttered, “They make me SO
glad there’s music.” Dr.
Dog is surely a rock band, and all the Beatles, Band and Beach Boys references are apt, to
a point, but there’s
something way more primal and fundamental going on with them. Their songs address life
with unblinking honesty
and joyful engagement, understanding that light and shadow are a dance and then giving us
the melodies that
choreograph our constriction shattering gyrations. Song for song, note for note, nobody
played a better set this
year.

3. Jerry Joseph and
the
Jackmormons
– 11:30-1:30 AM – Vaudeville Tent

Jerry J was in full-blown preacher mode during this anthem-upon-anthem rock extravaganza.
After playing several
acoustic-leaning sets, the snarling rock animal inside Joseph and his mighty bandmates
(bolstered with inspired
extra percussion by Wally Ingram) let fully loose inside the steamed up Vaudeville, the
tightly packed throng swaying
and leaping like a congregation lit up from within. While often overlooked, Jerry’s
guitar strangling was miraculous
this evening; the man is easily one of the most powerful, relentless guitarist alive.
Beneath the hot, swirling lights,
Joseph gesticulated and ranted like a man who’d crammed both Joe Strummer and Mick Jones
into his compact body
- a barefoot punk prophet and king of the motherfuckin’ disco, too.

Saturday Highlights

1. Pimps of
Joytime
– 3:15-4:30
PM – Big Meadow

This set launched my repeated one word exhortation for the weekend: Hectic. The Pimps are
on the funk like ink on
paper, moving like calligraphy across the page where most make clunky block letters and
sign with a thumbprint.
Smooth but not too smooth, they captured the general bonhomie in the air yet kept things
dirty enough to be
credible. Clean funk isn’t really funk at all. Their dynamics alone set them apart from
the herd, with the whole band
able to blast hard and instantly drop down to a compelling murmur and back again.
Watching Brian J (vox,
guitar, keys), Clark Dark (bass, moog) and Mayteana Morales (vocals,
sampler, percussion)
groove along the edge of the stage one felt compelled to reach down deep for all the
Prince gymnastics they had in
their dance trick bag. All killer, no filler.

Black Crowes by Jake Krolick

2. The Black Crowes – 9:00-11:00 PM – Grandstand Stage
While a 20-year Crowes veteran like myself might have liked to hear more than one tune
from the band’s two most
recent albums (though “Oh Josephine” was mid-tempo ballad gold), this was a perfect
festival set, peppered with
bygone hits like “Hard To Handle” and anchored to material the band always plays well.
What’s highly enjoyable
about the Crowes at this stage is how wonderfully consistent they are. From the sound of
it many folks at High Sierra
hadn’t seen them since the mid-90s and were just about universally knocked on their tushes
by this performance.
The Crowes are one of the few rock acts one can mention in the same breath as Zeppelin,
Aerosmith, et al. and this
set ably showed why that is.

3. The Mother Hips/Dr. Dog – 11:45 PM-3:30 AM – Funk’n Jamhouse
Arguably the best late night combo this year – Pimps of Joytime opening for The New Mastersounds
on Sunday being
the obvious competition – the pairing of the Dog and the Hips was tangible proof that rock
‘n’ roll is anything but
dead. Both bands played a little outside their comfort zone, especially the Hips who
delved into some older fan faves
and welcomed Nicki Bluhm and sublime Grambler lead guitarist Deren Ney for a
mesmerizing, emotional
version of “Jet Plane,” a new Nicki tune that’ll appear on her forthcoming sophomore
album. So absorbing and
enriching were both bands that it was easy to settle into the moment and really experience
the music on a cellular
level. By the end of Dr. Dog’s headlining set I found myself leaping and spinning like my
3-year-old does when we
watch School House Rock and every song is greeted like his favorite.

Sunday Highlights

1. Poor Man’s
Whiskey
– 12:00-
1:15 PM – Grandstand Stage

Shirtless in an Uncle Sam long coat, Eli Jebediah and the rest of PMW were a lively
reminder of some of the
very cool things about Americans and American music. Taking their cues from a wide
assortment of influences like
Old & In The Way, Woody Guthrie and Dr. Hook & The Medicine Show, Poor Man’s reminded us
that we need to live
our lives sometime and maybe this was the right day to dig in. Their music is a
celebration of the right things in life,
and they’re all phenomenal musicians to boot. By turns folksy and rockin’, they move
along rhythms that are hard to
resist and sling lines that you’ll find yourself quoting to your friends later. A 100-
watt stage presence and spot-on
knack for covers (they closed with Tom Petty’s “American Girl” in honor of the holiday)
further up the ante. I see a lot
of live music and can assure you there are few more charming, enjoyable groups going than
Poor Man’s Whiskey.

Allmond Bros Clan by Susan J.
Weiand

2. The Allmond Bros Clan – 4:30-6:00 PM – High Sierra Music Hall
A tribute band is a tricky thing. Genuflect too much and you’re a boring recreation,
stray too far off the blueprint and
folks won’t recognize the source material, which is a central aspect to a tribute’s
pleasure. This Allman Brothers
homage led by Guitar Player Magazine’s Jimmy Leslie (who plays the Dickey
role) gets the balance
just right. Unlike the Grateful Dead, Beatles or Stones, few bands cover the Allmans
because it is a separate language
that swirls gutbucket blues with jazz sophistication. Just as most of us don’t speak
Esperanto, Allman-ese isn’t
common and it was exciting to see this large band teach themselves how to talk eloquently.
Unlike today’s ABB, the
Allmond Clan uses the At The Fillmore East era as their Rosetta Stone, and one
suspects their grasping at
these numbers mirrors the Allmans’ own during that time period. Simon “Eli Jebidah”
Kurth
was a fire hose
of great guitar riffing as Duane “Sky Frog” Allmond, and stellar guest turns from Sean
Leahy, Josh Clark, Greg Loiacono and Lebo
added further air guitar heft to the session. PMW’s Josh Brough was also
murderously good as Gregg
“Allmond Boy” Allmond, attacking the organ and vocals with the gusto of a young Gregg.
Most of us weren’t able to
see ABB when Duane was alive but the hunger for that music remains. The Allmond Bros Clan
fulfills that appetite in
a way that honors Duane’s memory by really wrestling with this music in a quite alive way.
Festival bookers take
note: Don’t let the other guys get to this project before you.

Also worth mentioning that Simon Kurth also recently took over the reins with Guitarmageddon
and blew out the
doors on Friday with a White Stripes
focused performance. If Kurth is involved I can just about guarantee two things: It’s
going to be entertaining as hell
and the musicianship will make you salivate. Beyond that it’s best to trust his instincts
and go for whatever ride he’s
offering.

3. Carolyn
Wonderland
– 11:30-
1:30 AM – Vaudeville Tent

With The Mother Hips delivering yet another unbelievably great set before her, it was
somewhat of a surprise that
Carolyn Wonderland captured my final slot for the weekend, but damn if the tiny Austin
blues belter didn’t take my
heels out from under me. I’m intensely picky about the blues and, like many grumpy old
men, feel that maybe the
best purveyors are no longer with us or not long for this world. I reject slick,
modernized blues, and thankfully
Wonderland and her on-the-money drummer and multi-tasking keyboardist (he provided
keyboard bass, too) dealt
in only the real stuff. Carolyn can shred mightily and her tone is gritty, loud and
impolite. Glorious! She’s got
compositions that sit well next to the Bo Diddley and the like in her arsenal, and she’s
got an odd, alluring stage
manner that draws you in but also makes you feel like she might cut you if you looked at
her wrong. She’s got depth
and her band swung like all get out. As perfect a nighttime ramble as High Sierra has
ever offered.

Continue reading for Kayceman and Susan Weiand’s highlights, plus some video
highlights…

Aaron Kayce’s High Sierra 2010 Highlights

WSP’s John Bell by Susan J.
Weiand

1. Widespread Panic – Main Stage – Friday
Festivals aren’t always the best place to get one’s Panic on. Time constraints,
questionable sound systems and a
mixed bag of fans can often clip the band’s wings, as was the case the last time WSP
appeared at High Sierra in 1999.
But the festival’s 20th anniversary sparked an inspired two set affair that left hardcores
fully satisfied. Taking
advantage of the stacked lineup Panic welcomed a number of special guests including
guitarist Eric McFadden on a
dirty, sexy “Bowlegged Woman” that found bassist Dave Schools deep in a P-Funk
inspired romp,
guitarist/vocalist Jerry Joseph on his own “Light Is Like Water,” saxophonist Karl Denson
on an extended psych-funk
workout of J.J. Cale’s “Ride Me High,” and percussionist Wally Ingram on “Drums” and the
second half of “Surprise
Valley.” When the band closed the show with an emotionally saturated take on the Talking
Heads’ “Heaven” it was
not only a reminder of Widespread Panic’s power, but a nod to just how amazing the High
Sierra Music Festival truly
is.

2. Dr. Dog – Funk’n Jamhouse – Saturday Late Night
Dr. Dog’s Saturday late night set proved to be a huge slab of dark, psychedelic rock that
had a packed house of fans
freaking out and dancing wildly until 3 in the morning. Leaning heavily on material from
their latest release
Shame, Shame, the show highlighted the band’s remarkable evolution from lo-fi
indie-pop to gigantic,
confident rock. Though the new songs showcased Dr. Dog’s amazing songwriting, it didn’t
seem to matter what part
of the catalog they pulled from, everything was performed with razor sharp intensity and
executed to perfection.
From note one the band was locked in; every change was dramatic and full of force, every
harmony soaring, and the
jams thick with friction. For this writer, the band’s HSMF late night show elevated the
Dog from a really good band
with serious potential to one of the best live acts on the circuit. It shouldn’t be long
until we see Dr. Dog headlining
festivals.

3. Surprise Me Mr. Davis – Camp Harry – Sunday Late Night
For many High Sierra patrons, including a number of artists such as The Mother Hips’ Tim
Bluhm and Greg Loiacano,
Nicki Bluhm, Wally Ingram and several others, there was no better way to end the weekend
than with Surprise Me Mr.
Davis at Camp Harry on Sunday night. Set up guerilla-style between two RVs, this annual
tradition has turned into
one of the most highly anticipated sets of the weekend for fans of Mr. Davis, The Slip and
Nathan Moore (Surprise Me
Mr. Davis being The Slip plus Nathan Moore). The defining moment of the night came when
Davis took on The
Beatles and created the very appropriate “High Sierra’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” (The Slip
celebrated their 12th
consecutive HSMF this year) with shout-outs to High Sierra co-founder and close friend
Dave Margulies in place of
“Billy Shears.” With fans passing bottles and funny cigarettes to each other and the
band, the two hour set felt more
like a summer camp send-off than the conclusion of a major music festival.

Susan J. Weiand’s High Sierra 2010 Highlights

Carolyn Wonderland by Susan J.
Weiand

1. Carolyn Wonderland – Vaudeville – Sunday Late Night
CW has played High Sierra three years now, but her closing set on Sunday night finally
cemented her place as HS
royalty. Fans were driven to tears and smiles by her ballsy playing and soulful singing.
She held the capacity crowd
in the palm of her hand. Many new Carolyn Wonderland fans were converted this evening.

2. Vince Herman’s Great American
Taxi
- Big Meadow – Thursday

The self-proclaimed Mayor of High Sierra is a festie staple and to me, represents all
things High Sierra. He and his
Taxi bandmates kicked things into high gear with his “4:20 for 20 years” jam played at
precisely 4:20 pm, of
course.

3. The New Mastersounds – Camp Happiness – Friday at 4:20
Camp Happiness always throws a great happy hour party with crab cakes, gumbo, cocktails
and great people. The
New Mastersounds have played this annual party in the past and returned this year for a
get-down funk-athon. With
bandmate Joe Tatton playing a borrowed kid’s keyboard (with the notes conveniently
written on the keys),
the band delivered the funky goods. Mega dance party!

Honorable mentions: Rads late night; the Funkify Your Life, Horns a Plenty, Rads Pre War
Blues, Marco Benevento Trio,
and Allmond Bros Clan playshops; Kate Gaffney main stage; Orgone Big Meadow; Poor Man’s
Whiskey doing Dark
Side of the Moonshine
.

JamBase | Celebratory
Go See Live Music!


Electric Avenue Fest: Denson, Hollingsworth

ELECTRIC AVENUE MUSIC FESTIVAL TO TAKE PLACE LABOR DAY WEEKEND ON WELTON ST. IN FRONT
OF CERVANTES’


Karl Denson

Electric Avenue Music and Arts Festival will take place right outside of Cervantes’ Masterpiece on Welton Street in Denver, Colorado over
three nights and two fun-filled days with music beginning at 1 pm on both Saturday and Sunday, September 4 and
5, Labor Day Weekend.

Over 25 bands will perform on four stages (two outdoor & two indoor) and the lineup will feature a full array of
different genres of music, including Rock, Jam, Jazz/Funk, Hip-Hop, Electronic, Bluegrass and Experimental.

Lineup:

* Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe
* Living Legends
* Pnuma Trio

* Who’s Bad – The Ultimate Michael Jackson Tribute Band
* King Pigeon featuring Michael Kang (SCI), Steve Molitz (Particle/Phil Lesh), Adam Deitch (Lettuce/John Scofield) and
Ron Johnson (Brett Dennen)
* Kyle Hollingsworth Band
* Greensky Bluegrass
* Great American Taxi featuring Vince Herman of Leftover Salmon
* Eliot Lipp
* Anders Osborne
* Juno What?!
* Octopus Nebula
* Adam Deitch’s Break Science
* Dark Party
* Sol Drive Train

* Euforquestra
* Mountain Standard Time
* Yamn
* MTHDS

Tickets are on sale now. Click here for more information.

Via jambands.com


Great American Taxi Donates Song To Coal Miner Relief Efforts

VINCE AND THE BOYS DO THEIR PART TO HELP WEST VIRGINIA MINERS

Great American Taxi

Just in time for Earth Day (April 22), Great American Taxi, whose current album Reckless Habits (JamBase review) is climbing the Americana radio airplay charts, has donated a free download of a song, “Appalachian Soul,” culled from its debut album Streets of Gold, to raise awareness of the plight of coal miners and their communities in West Virginia. The track is offered free to radio stations that agree to direct listeners to www.greatamericantaxi.com, which in turn links to West Virginia Council of Churches website, which collects donations for the miners.

GAT frontman Vince Herman, who grew up in West Virginia, comments, “Great American Taxi sends our thoughts out to the families and communities affected by the mining disaster at the upper big branch mine. We hope that their unconquerable Appalachian spirit and families can help them navigate these difficult times. The country and the world share in their grief. We need coal. We need our miners to be safe. We need understanding on all sides of this contentious issue of our national energy policy. We would like to make Taxis’ tribute to that Appalachian spirit available as a download here and suggest a donation to the WV council of churches to assist the families of our fallen brothers. Let’s all come together and honor the families who have paid that ultimate price for our energy needs and hope that this is the last such disaster we must face.”

Great American Taxi Tour Dates :: Great American Taxi News :: Great American Taxi Concert Reviews


Jerry Joseph | 03.25-03.27 | Big Sky Run

Words & Images by: Phil Santala

Jerry Joseph & The Jackmormons :: 03.25.10 :: Knotty Pine :: Victor, ID

Jerry Joseph & The Jackmormons:: 03.26.10-03.27.10 :: Whiskey Jack’s :: Big Sky, MT

Jerry Joseph :: 03.26 :: Big Sky, MT

In a barnstorming blitz of ski towns Jerry
Joseph & The Jackmormons
returned to the greater Yellowstone area in promotion of their new live album, Badlandia. Fresh off the heels of a successful Stockholm Syndrome tour (see JamBase’s raves here), Jerry came out guns blazing, and firing on all cylinders.

Vince Herman of Leftover Salmon/Great American Taxi once called the Teton Valley the cultural center of the universe. The hub of that center would have be the Knotty Pine in Victor. “Fury” > “Frost Heaves” was a fitting combo for those of us who have lived in the valley and combated the deteriorating road conditions on Teton Pass this winter. But, it was the heavy handed “Hammer” followed later by “Soda Man” with an extended drum riff building the middle stanzas during the second set that really blew the hair back of those in attendance.

Just a few hours up the road, along a drive Jerry said he has enjoyed making much of his life, is where the band really hit their stride. Whiskey Jack’s at the base of Lone Peak is just a few miles (as the crow files) from Bandito’s, where Badlandia was recorded live last August. There must be something in the air or water in these parts that really gets the Jackmormons’ gears a-grinding. The Friday show was electrifying, and the Saturday show absolutely blew the roof off of the place.

The pace in Big Sky was set early with the third song Friday night, “Drive,” which often shows up in the tail end of a set, and typically a second set at that. I was able to witness a unique exchange during the “Altar in a Box” > “North” > “Altar in a Box.” As Jerry led the bloodthirsty crowd into “North,” chairs were practically bouncing off the walls. “Ask me if I give a…,” cried out Jerry, as “…FUCK!” wailed back from the majority of the audience. The two guys in front of me were absolutely floored by this exchange. “Wow,” one said to the other, “that’s not the kind of sing-along you get at Phish!”


Jerry Joseph :: 03.27 :: Big Sky, MT

The treat Friday evening was the “Brother Michael” > “Big Sky Country” > “Presence of the Lord/Rama Cita jam” > “Brother Michael” combo. “Big Sky Country” is a song by Chris Whitley, whom Jerry Joseph toured with in 2002. Whitley, who passed away in 2005, was a big influence on Jerry, and the nod was appreciated by the audience. The locals know that Montana is “Big Sky Country,” at least according to the state propaganda machine and our license plates. Hardcore Jerry Joseph fans from out of the area were also quick to point out that the song had not been played before to their knowledge, and if it had been covered, none in attendance had witnessed it. Another cover, Bob Marley’s “One Drop,” truly hit us from leftfield, rounding out Friday night nicely and propelling us ravenously into Saturday.

The capacity crowd at Saturday’s sold out show was in for some treats, too. During the “Revelator” > “Second Skin” opener, Jerry broke a string on his well worn, workhorse, “Support Your Local Hell’s Angels” guitar. He finished the first set on a new-looking blue substitute, though the sound remained pure Jerry. “Henry” featured magical teases from Whitley’s “Big Sky Country” and The Beatles’ “Dear Prudence” in the middle of “Whatever You Got in the Basket.” But, it was the slow “Climb To Safety” that would really hold us over through set break.

Better still, the second set focused on music to get you though the night and not just a set break. The greater Yellowstone area – around Grand Teton National Park and all the surrounding mountains of Montana, Idaho, and Wyoming – is the kind of place where life is like water. That’s just how the three day run closed, too: “Kind of Place” > “Light is Like Water” > “2 Balloons” > “Light is Like Water.” The combination got our feet moving before sending us out the door knowing that “Supper’s Ready” down the “Hallelujah Trail.”

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”0″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=15″);}); 3/25/10 – Jerry Joseph and The Jackmormons @ Knotty Pine (Victor, ID) View Photos

Jerry Joseph Tour Dates :: Jerry Joseph News :: Jerry Joseph Concert Reviews

JamBase | Open Sky
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Great American Taxi | 03.14 | Eureka

Words & Images by: James Martin

Great American Taxi :: 03.14.10 :: Red Fox Tavern :: Eureka, CA

Great American Taxi :: 03.14 :: Eureka, CA

Great American Taxi rolled into town, SUV and trailer jam-packed with band members and equipment, just minutes before the show. As they ambled onto the stage, the crowd cheering, Taxi didn’t hesitate to get the show going with a lively version of “High On The Mountain,” starting off with Vince Herman picking on the mandolin. This was followed by “For Twenty Long Years” and “Four Twenty Special,” which got fans happily dancing.

Great American Taxi has become a frequent favorite in the Humboldt County music scene, their bluesy-bluegrass-rock fusion never ceasing to please. From the get-go Taxi kept the audience engaged, inviting fans to make requests. As titles poured in for covers from The Band, Taxi responded by playing what Vince called a “little The Band set.” Taxi’s takes on “Twilight,” “Shape I’m In” and “Ophelia” were all impressive, embedding their own talent and style into each piece.

Early into the set, Taxi broke into a jammy, sultry cover of Jackson Brown’s “Casino Nation.” Don’t be mistaken – Great American Taxi isn’t just a cover band, though they do a remarkable job weaving their own creative twist into each one they select to play. Many of the highlights from this evening were their own original tunes, such as “Appalachian Soul,” a heartfelt tribute to the Appalachian way of life and one of Taxi’s most popular songs. “Reckless Habits,” the title track off their recently released new album (JamBase review) was long and loose with solid solos from each band member. The first set ended with “Great Night to Boogie,” which couldn’t be more true; with Great American Taxi jamming out an upbeat set, who wouldn’t be dancing?

After the set break though the crowd thinned, Great American Taxi came out stronger and with more energy, including a funky “Swamp Song” sung by bassist Brian Adams, a favorite amongst many fans. The energy remained vibrant with a well-executed medley of “Who Do You Love” into “Not Fade Away,” finishing with a tune fit for the local scene, “Fuzzy Little Hippie Girl.” This jam showcased the individual talents and chemistry the band shares.

There was no doubt Taxi would encore for the local, loyal crowd and ended on a positive, upbeat note with “Lumpy Beanpole and Dirt,” a quirky, fun number that seemed like just the right way to end the night.

When you go to a Great American Taxi show you know you’re going to do some dancing, and they did not disappoint, keeping energy levels high. Celebrating five years as a band, Taxi continues to get stronger as they work their way into the fabric of the jam band scene. We hope they return to Humboldt County soon.

Great American Taxi Tour Dates :: Great American Taxi News :: Great American Taxi Concert Reviews

JamBase | Meter Running

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Winterfest on the Mountain Nershi, Emmitt, Aijala, Greensky…

1st Annual Winterfest on the Mountain

Nederland, Colorado / January 22-24, 2010

The 1st Annual Winterfest on the Mountain will take place in Nederland, Colorado (15 miles from Boulder) at the Nederland Community Center on January 22-24, 2010. 20 bands will play music simultaneously on two stages, on two separate floors over three days. The beautifully renovated, LEED certified and solar powered building will provide two stages along with a large vending area. The vending area will supply many great local Colorado goods, food, and microbrews.

Artists include:

Billy Nershi

Billy Nershi’s Blue Planet

The Drew Emmitt Band

Adam Aijala & Ben Kaufmann of YMSB

The Motet

Billy Nershi – Drew Emmitt Acoustic Duo (3rd Time Ever!)

Split Lip Rayfield

Greensky Bluegrass

Tony Trischka

Phix (2 set reunion show)

Todd Sheaffer Solo of Railroad Earth

Great American Taxi w/ Vince Herman of Leftover Salmon

Euforquestra

Whitewater Ramble

Boulder Acoustic Society

Elephant Revival

Pete Kartsounes

Mountain Standard Time

Riverbend

York Tide

Complete schedule available here and tickets on sale now here.


Great American Taxi To Release Reckless Habits On 03/02

GREAT AMERICAN TAXI’S SECOND ALBUM, RECKLESS HABITS

DUE OUT MARCH 2 THROUGH THIRTY TIGERS

Great American Taxi

In the past five years, Great American Taxi has become one of the best-known headliners on the jam band circuit; their uninhibited sound a swinging concoction of swampy blues, progressive bluegrass, funky New Orleans strut, Southern boogie, honky-tonk, gospel, and good old fashioned rock ‘n’ roll. That loose, anything-can-happen feel is the hallmark of Reckless Habits, the band’s second album set to be released March 2, 2010, which was recorded in Loveland, CO with producer Tim Carbone (Railroad Earth).

When banjo player Mark Vann of Leftover Salmon died of cancer in 2002, the band lost momentum. Salmon singer/guitarist/mandolinist Vince Herman had a few rough years before joining keyboardist Chad Staehly for a superstar jam to benefit the Rainforest Action Group in Boulder in March 2005. “We put together a dream band of the best local musicians for a one-off gig,” Herman recalls. “It worked so well we had to do it again, and again, and again.” Thus, Great American Taxi was born. The band’s current lineup includes Herman, Staehly, guitarists Jeff Hamer and Jim Lewin, bassist Brian Adams, and drummer Chris Sheldon.

Great American Taxi has been compared with roots rockers like New Riders of The Purple Sage, Grateful Dead, Wilco, Uncle Tupelo, The Byrds, and Little Feat. Herman finds the comparisons flattering. “We’re definitely connected to all the acts in the country/rock spectrum, as well as the spirit of Gram Parsons and Woody Guthrie,” he says. “We want to address the issues appropriate to our times, while making music that gets people up and moving.”

“The band is a true democracy,” Staehly adds. “We tinkered with the tunes on the road, with everybody having input. In the studio, Tim would suggest ideas to make them sound bigger and brighter.” Carbone brought in the Black Swan Singers — Sheryl Renee, CoCo Brown and Shelly Lindsey — to add gospel flavored backing vocals. He also brought the Peak to Freak Horns — Justin Jones, sax; Nathan Peoples, sax; Dan Sears, trumpet; and Dave Stamps, trombone — for some New Orleans-style brass accents, as well as pedal steel player Barry Sless (Dane Nelson Band, Moonalice) and banjo man Matt Flinner.

The 13 tracks on Reckless Habits gleefully stretch the boundaries of American roots music with a nod to both tradition and the future. The title track, for instance — Staehly’s salute to Gram Parsons — is as country as it is rock, a rousing honky-tonk tune with Carbone’s fiddle and Sless’ pedal steel kicking up the sawdust on a Saturday night dance floor. The titles of several other Parsons songs appear in the lyrics, and there’s a definite Cosmic Cowboy vibe to the band’s expansive playing.

Staehly’s “American Beauty” tips its hat to the Grateful Dead, and features an extended jam. Herman’s “Cold Lonely Town” is a slow R&B tune that describes life during long Colorado winters. The Black Swan Singers add smoky doo-wop asides to Herman’s poignant vocals. Carbone has described its swampy laid-back vibe as “‘A Day in the Life’ meets Gram Parsons in the high desert.”

The CD will be housed in a die-cut package designed by artist Greg Carr, who designed Steve Martin‘s The Crow. “Greg has a picture of nuns smoking on the cover, wearing Reckless Habits,” Herman explains. “We want to give people something unique, so they won’t just burn it and pass it on.”

And finally, the band’s cryptic name refers to Herman’s unique skiing style. “A friend of mine once said I came downhill looking like a great American taxi — a large, lumbering object that’s totally out of control and coming downhill towards you faster and faster. It seemed to fit the band’s m.o., so we adopted it.”

Great American Taxi is currently on tour; dates available here.


7th Mark Vann Holiday Benefit

The 7th Annual Mark Vann Foundation Holiday Benefit

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

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

Mark Vann

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


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

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

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

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

Lineup:

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

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

Elephant Revival

Euforquestra

Pete Kartsounes

Black Swan Singers

plus many more special guests and surprises!

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


Hardly Strictly Bluegrass | 10.02-10.04 | S.F.

Words by: Sam Martin | Images by: Dave Vann

Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival :: 10.02 – 10.04 :: Golden Gate Park :: San Francisco, CA

Hardly Strictly Bluegrass 2009

Golden Gate Park played host to the 9th Annual Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival, and the lineup, crowds and camaraderie did not disappoint.

There was a sixth stage added this year, the Towers of Gold Stage, and although Speedway Meadow was pushed to its capacity, it didn’t seem to bother the estimated 500,000 that turned out for this year’s extravaganza. The event felt well organized and with 80 top-notch bands performing for free all weekend, there was hardly anything one could really complain about.

Financed by billionaire investment banker and amateur banjoist Warren Hellman, this year was the largest by far and has already been touted as a success. Which leaves one to ask, “Where can it go from here?” Hellman, a bluegrass enthusiast and lover of music who started this Festival in 2001, made his money as the founder and chairman of San Francisco-based Hellman and Friedman LLC, a private equity investment firm. So, what makes him so far removed from his peers? With his nickname, The Hillbilly Millionaire, his band, The Wronglers, and his passion for bluegrass, he most surely stands out from his associates. This being said, it hasn’t always been such an eclectic festival. Yes, from the onset it’s been subsidized by Hellman and it has always been a bluegrass festival, but it wasn’t until 2003 that the “Hardly” was added to the name of the festival and artists from almost every genre were invited.

Friday, 10.02

Friday the meadow was filled with a variety of fans, not to mention the lucky middle school students from the local district that got to spend their afternoon in the park watching music. Speaking with a few students who seemed ecstatic to be at such a large festival, they were amazed that it was free to the public. Of course, MC Hammer playing “Can’t Touch This” probably went over their heads, and although his time as a headliner has past, that did little to diminish his performance, and the fact that he’s been included in the festival the past couple of years shows the diversity in artists that get to play.

The highlight of Friday was John Prine, who played in the afternoon as a notable chill picked up out of the West as festivalgoers dug into their packs for sweatshirts and blankets. Prine, never one to stick to just singing, interspersed songs with commentary, though he nailed hits such as “Angel From Montgomery.” The evening was dazzling, with a feel of autumn in the air as Prine and his formally dressed band exited the stage. It almost felt like the perfect note to leave on, but it was worth waiting around to hear a few songs from Lyle Lovett and His Large Band. With an ear-to-ear grin, Lovett never disappoints, and as a live artist he rocks and rolls, playing off the crowd and did so until darkness brought the day to a close.


Saturday, 10.03

Steve Martin :: Hardly Strictly Bluegrass 2009

Saturday started with a bang at the Star Stage with Great American Taxi, a bluegrass/country-rock mix featuring Vince Herman of Leftover Salmon. It was exciting to hear the way they approached their songs. They strayed from the typical bluegrass routine and jammed out a few tunes with amazing banjo and bass rhythms.

Next stop, back to the Towers of Gold Stage, as I planned my day around a tight schedule and an increasingly crowded park. With the wind now starting to shift from a mild breeze to whirlwinds and dust storms, Buddy Miller was on the agenda. As Miller made his appearance, the music was sweet and melodic but almost too much so, and then to much fanfare and surprise Buddy’s old boss Emmylou Harris came out, looking stunning as usual. She was not expected to perform until Sunday afternoon, so this came as a nice surprise. Speaking of nice surprises, an amazing appearance by Robert Plant, who played last year with Alison Krauss, came as a total shock, and they covered Hank Snow’s “I’m Moving On” – an electric moment for sure.

Another great band that some overlooked was Okkervil River, an indie rock act from Austin, Texas. Their chemistry onstage was so moving that after their set I was ready to buy a few of their albums, Black Sheep Boy and Golden Opportunities being what was recommended. They amassed a nice crowd at the Towers Stage as the wind continued to whip and wallop the meadow as the audience loosened up for a day of dancing, clapping, and cheering.

Steve Martin could fit in with almost any bluegrass outfit of his choosing. A little known secret about the well-known actor and comedian is that music and the banjo have always been his first love. He has, of course, incorporated this into his stand-up routines, but his humor takes nothing away from his raw talent as a musician, and he absolutely rocks onstage! The Steep Canyon Rangers, the band that he has played with more and more lately, are incredible. Martin was captivating and never one to shy away from humorous commentary, but the music, while slightly drowned out by the wind’s howl, still hit hard. The percussive beats that flowed from his banjo were mesmerizing and made one wish this show could have gone on forever.


As Saturday morning turned into Saturday afternoon, the crowd of 300,000 was making itself known, cramming onto hillsides, on top of portable bathrooms, and into trees. Nick Lowe performed on the Star Stage, which was less than impressive, most likely because by this time the sound was suffering due to the wind and din of a very large crowd. As I departed I could make out “Cruel To Be Kind,” but it was time head to the Banjo Stage for Gillian Welch. Happily settled in front of the stage, where the acoustics were great for this entire set, Welch displayed her beautiful voice and rhythm guitar licks. The wind seemed to die down completely as she bellowed out “Wrecking Ball.”


Sunday, 10.04

Emmylou Harris :: Hardly Strictly Bluegrass 2009

Sunday was the day I was most looking forward to. The day started windy but not bothersome, and it wasn’t too crowded as I made my way to the Rooster Stage to see Robyn Hitchcock & The Venus 3. They had me at the sound check. His Americana musical influences came through strongly on songs like “The Falling” and the rocking “Give It To The Soft Boys,” with his voice mixing well with The Venus 3. Hitchcock played many of the newer songs off of his latest album, Goodnight Oslo, and though his show was more Americana, being a British born singer-songwriter, he teamed up well with Peter Buck (R.E.M.) in his recent work to create an Americana-Indie hybrid that was lovely. An awesome start to a long wind swept day.

At this point it was off to the Star Stage to catch The Chieftains, an Irish band that has been playing their traditional Irish folk music and upbeat rhythms for over 40 years. This got me thinking about how much Irish folk music has influenced bluegrass in America. Leaving the Star Stage, it was back to the Banjo Stage to see the honorable Earl Scruggs. If it wasn’t for people like Scruggs we would not be having this festival, and for someone born in 1924 he brought it to the stage at full steam! The connection he shared with the crowd as they cheered him on was overwhelming, and I felt honored to see him perform again. I hope he returns next year. What a living legend!

Regretfully, I missed the amazing piano work of Allen Toussaint, but when there are 80 bands to choose from you can only catch so many. However, I struck up a conversation with a couple from New Orleans who had seen Toussaint and would not stop talking about how beautifully he played. You can’t see it all and if you happen to get stuck in one of those amazing moments like I did with Earl Scruggs, then you’ve gotta go with the flow. The night ended with a gorgeous set by Emmylou Harris, another Hardly Strictly Bluegrass staple, and then a long set that went past twilight from Old Crow Medicine Show.

Other great sets included Neko Case and Aimee Mann, not to mention a much talked about “White Room” cover by Robert Earl Keen.

What I came away with, besides three days of diverse and terrific music, was a feeling of community that was lacking at other festivals in Golden Gate Park this past year. People seemed happy to just be there. Maybe it was the lack of a price tag or the intimate, grassy area that was shared by so many. Whatever it was, I’m Hardly ready to see it go, this weekend in San Francisco was strictly a pleasure.

Continue reading for more pics from Hardly Strictly ’09…

Saturday, 10.03

Steve Martin with Steep Canyon Rangers

Dar Williams, Allison Moorer, Steve Earle, Tom Morello Song Circle

Steve Earle

Tom Morello

Nick Lowe

Boz Scaggs

James Cotton

Richie Havens

Gillian Welch & Emmylou Harris

Gillian Welch

David Rawlings, Gillian Welch & Emmylou Harris

Continue reading for more pics from Hardly Strictly ’09…

Sunday, 10.04

Booker T.

Booker T. & The DBTs

Mike Cooley – Booker T. & The DBTs

Del McCoury Band

Earl Scruggs

Doc Watson

Billy Bragg

Mike Farris & the Roseland Rhythm Revue

Aimee Mann

Booker T. with Galactic

Malo

Mavis Staples

Mavis Staples

Amadou & Mariam

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The Flaming Lips: Melt Your Head Again

By: Nancy Dunham

The Flaming Lips

For all the cool things that can be said about Wayne Coyne, perhaps the coolest is that he just doesn’t take himself that seriously.

At a recent concert outside of Washington, D.C., the frontman and founder of The Flaming Lips spent 20 minutes or so working with the band’s roadies to set up equipment before the show. And with his help, one of the typical Lips high-energy extravaganzas was underway.

“I love it. I love it like I love my wife and my family and my dogs,” said Coyne of his band and its music, “but I am completely untrustworthy – a fanatic. I don’t climb mountains or shit like that. So, I put my energy into music and I act like it’s the most important thing in the world. But I know it’s not. Everybody should love the things they do in their lives, the people in their lives, more than [they love] some stupid rock band. I know that.”

Let’s face it, you don’t hear many rockers who have won three Grammy Awards plus a multitude of critical and commercial kudos dissuading people from obsessing over the music they create. Yet perhaps that self-effacing manner is why Coyne, who in 1983 started the psychedelic rock band that has morphed into something of a cultural phenomenon, is so much more successful than many of his peers. While the majority of his contemporaries in other groups have long since disbanded or are now relegated to shows at small venues and state fairs, Coyne and his bandmates still play amphitheatres and have fans pining for new material.

The Early Years

What started as something of a lark for Coyne, his brother Mark and bass guitarist Michael Ivins – who has said that rampant drug use as kids is what led them to make “weird music” – has developed into one of the most influential bands of the day. The Lips could even be considered role models for alt-rockers with Coyne serving as the wise elder statesman. But it wasn’t always that way, and the path has been long and twisted.

The Flaming Lips circa 1989

After releasing its self-titled debut in 1985 with Hear It Is following in 1986, the band played a Buffalo, New York show supporting the Butthole Surfers. That show resulted in Coyne meeting Jonathan Donahue who later became the group’s sound technician and guitarist.

Despite what Coyne and Ivins call a more cohesive feel to their sound, it wasn’t until 1991 that the Lips signed to Warner Brothers. The Lips’ major label debut, Hit to Death in the Future Head, was released in 1992 and was quickly followed by Donahue’s departure to focus on his other band, Mercury Rev.

It took several more years – where the band appeared everywhere from MTV’s annual Spring Break broadcast to a lip-synched performance on Beverly Hills 90210 – for the band to build buzz. Of course, that was helped by a bit of PR when 90210 cast member Ian Ziering – in the role of Steve Sanders – said, “You know, I’ve never been a big fan of alternative music, but these guys rocked the house!”

The band flirted with commercial success at various times only to stumble and land back in cult status. In 1996, it seemed the Lips would implode due to an array of injuries and odd accidents. Then various strange musical experiments, including 1997′s Zaireeka, a set of four discs designed to be played simultaneously, created the impression that Coyne and his band were just plain odd.

“Sometimes you want everything to be like it was with your first album where everything is new and anything is possible,” Coyne said. “If you have enough experience you always know everything involved. We have made about 12 records by now and you get in these quagmires. It can be difficult.”

The Flaming Lips

But, according to Ivins, a brotherhood of sorts is what has always keeps the band moving ahead musically.

“I would hope that in the big picture that we have arrived at this point that we are making Flaming Lips music, our own sound,” said Ivins. “It’s odd to look back at ourselves. I think for a while we were making record collection music and stumbling accidentally on twists and turns in music. We never actually sounded like we wanted to sound. At points earlier in our career we thought that birthday party stuff sounds cool and then we got it wrong and had some weird songs. Since the late 1990s, we were able to make or break or at least get a handle on how to really use the language of music – the melodies and lyrics – and put them together in a way that made sense.”

That language of music, according to Coyne, isn’t always easy to grasp but you simply have to keep trying. Because even when difficult, it’s often through the process of doing it, of just going into the studio and working, that meaning can be found and magic can happen.

“The worst thing that happens – I think it happens with all things – is you walk in there and you think you have this great song or great ideas and you record them and they are just boring,” Coyne said, “and they are not thrilling you, they are not thrilling [others] and you don’t even pursue them. What we have learned is that is going to happen but you still have to work through them anyway and keep going. I think you just have to keep fighting and if something hits you, you have to have the imagination and energy and make something happen.”

Continue reading for more on The Flaming Lips…

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Sometimes you have to make music really at the edge of what you’re comfortable with. We aren’t one of those groups that want to make the same song over and over.

-Wayne Coyne

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Having A Ball

Confetti, lasers and balloons are just some of the props that have engaged audiences since the band was quite young. And to the delight of fans, including Vince Herman, founding member of Leftover Salmon, Coyne doesn’t show any signs of stopping.

The Flaming Lips :: Coachella 2004 by Jay Blakesberg

“[We saw The Flaming Lips] a few years back and at one point Wayne gets up, sings and [the floor] starts to dissolve. Then suddenly we look down the eight-story atrium and he’s laying there with what looks like blood pouring out,” said Herman of a classic Coyne theatrical stunt he began in various forms almost 20 years ago. “It was amazing. I am a huge fan.”

Such antics are what sets the band apart from others, according to Ivins.

“When you start out in a band there is a general level of insecurity that you have to overcome to forge your way,” said Ivins. “We just kept going on and doing things. In a lot of ways, people compare us with Pink Floyd in that sort of way. That is something we have always tried to aspire to. You come to see The Flaming Lips show and you walk into a different world.”

The band first began entering that “different world” with wild New Year’s Eve parties, but soon realized every night could be New Year’s Eve if you played it right.

“We always upped the ante [every NYE], threw more stuff in to make it more exciting,” said Coyne. “Then we started thinking that we should do this every night. Why not make our shows a celebration every time, make these things permanent parts of the show?”

The band shoved personal insecurities and self-consciousness aside and began to bring massive numbers of balloons, buckets of confetti and other props into the shows until they struck the tone they wanted.

The Flaming Lips

“Think of New Year’s Eve and these other cliched markers in people’s minds,” said Coyne. “Regardless of where you were – at a hotel, some boring party – when you got home you turned on the television and watched the ball drop in Times Square and wished you were there.”

In thinking through the musicians that made the biggest impact on them – The Beatles, Pink Floyd, and others of that ilk – the Lips realized that those groups mirrored culture which, of course, made them even more relevant.

“Everything about it is an art form – the way you stand, where you stand, how you play,” said Coyne. “People don’t come to rock shows just to hear the music. You don’t go and say, ‘I heard the Rolling Stones.’ It is an event that really goes beyond listening. There may be purists out there that think the show can overwhelm the music, but I’d think not many. I always think about a Pete Townshend quote – who was never about just playing music – [where he] said he never lets the music get in the way of the show.”

Ivins goes even further, noting that The Flaming Lips’ concerts are beyond a “show” classification.

“It is a performance so it should be big and exciting and bombastic and not a bunch of guys just standing playing instruments,” said Ivins. “Plenty of bands do that. We aren’t all that interested in that. We are into being able to do everything with video screens and confetti and balloons, making [the concerts] New Year’s Eve and birthday parties and a celebration every night. We are out here celebrating life and are able to let the audience know it’s all right not to worry, to just uncoil at this time and jump around and have a good time.”

And what about that giant plastic ball that Coyne climbs into and launches so that he can roll around on top of the audiences?

“That image of me in the bubble,” said Coyne reflectively, “you never know the thing you are doing that is going to capture some unique essence. The space bubble thing I did at a Coachella show, I did it and I don’t even know when we were doing it or why. You fear you will do something like that and pick up the reviews the next week or the next morning, and people will think it’s a dumb gimmick. With that, we played this giant festival with Radiohead and The Cure and I picked up the paper the next day and I was on the front page of the paper in that giant bubble. That’s what people remember at the shows. I think you just get lucky and you capture something people love.”

Behind The Music

The innovative stage shows and ever changing music of the Lips has led journalists and fans alike to consistently wonder what master plan Coyne and his bandmates follow to keep their music fresh. On October 13, the band will release their twelfth album, the 18-track Embryonic, that’s already garnered a plethora of chatter for being edgier and more psychedelic than anything since 2002′s breakout Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots.

Wayne Coyne

“I’m glad to hear when people enjoy it,” Coyne said. “We never know what to think. We have embraced recording with computers. It’s a fascinating, strange way to make music, sort of piecemealing things together, sound by sound.”

In a way, this new album was perhaps more experimental than most in their catalog as it was born from an impromptu session between band member Steven Drozd and Coyne.

“Steven’s a great drummer and I’m not a good bass player but we still said, ‘Let’s get some stuff out and just bang around, see what develops.’ We didn’t know what would come of it and we were surprised by things that happened,” said Coyne. “You do stumble upon these little accidents, these grooves that are exciting when you find yourself moving in some direction that you weren’t prepared for. There are all these cliches about recording that [say] musicians instinctively go where [the music] takes you. That’s bullshit. That’s why you have the same people making the same song over and over and over again.”

Yet Coyne said with experience comes a form of intuition, which guides many musicians through rough patches, prying their holds off certain parts of songs so they can move on and develop more artistically.

“It’s interesting to see if we have any intuitive skills,” said Coyne. “A lot of [Embryonic] is almost a first take. Perhaps a section of the songs we lock in and then it gets intense, or whatever the word would be. When people say, ‘We like it,’ we say, ‘Oh, good,’ because sometimes you have to make music really at the edge of what you’re comfortable with. We aren’t one of those groups that want to make the same song over and over.”

Coyne is modest about his music, saying that a combination of luck and timing made his band move from “not very good” to a powerhouse while changing their sound. Coyne and Ivins both indicate that the Lips are the opposite of many other bands that took solid music and developed a stage show. For the Lips the show, in a way, came before the solid musical footing of the band. Now that the band members have been in the business more than 20 years, they feel more comfortable than ever letting experimentation lead the way musically.

“That’s our style,” said Coyne. “We would do a lot of things in the computer that didn’t sound the way we expected. We would go to great lengths to make sounds sound spontaneous and real. That gives it an air of authenticity. Sometimes we want to take everything and make it perfect. Everyone can take a sloppy drumbeat and throw it in a machine and make it perfect, but ‘better’ isn’t always in time, it isn’t always perfect.”

The Flaming Lips tour dates are available here.


<td style='padding:2px 1px 0px 5px;' colspan='2'The Flaming Lips – Convinced of the Hex
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Great American Taxi New Lineup & Tour

Great American Taxi: New Lineup and Tour


Great American Taxi

Vince Herman and Chad Staehly are leading their new lineup in Great American Taxi into an exciting string of shows. Taxi now boasts a solid core lineup featuring Jim Lewin from Santa Cruz, CA on electric guitars along with Boulder-area players Chris Sheldon on drums and Brian Adams on bass (both toured extensively in the Phish tribute band Phix).

GAT heads west to play a set at the Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival in San Francisco as well as backing up Todd Snider for some of his set the following day. Snider and Taxi first hooked up in Durango earlier this year and again at the Hoxeyville Music Festival in Michigan this past August. They will also do a few more dates together in November. Railroad Earth has also added Taxi onto a few bills in October. Dates continue to be added so check back for updates.

Tour Dates

09.30 – The State Room – Salt Lake City, UT

10.01 – Crystal Bay Club and Casino – Crystal Bay, NV – free show!

10.03 – Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival – Golden Gate Park – San Francisco, CA

10.04 – Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival (with Todd Snider)

10.07 – tba

10.08 – Connecticut Yankee – San Francisco, CA

10.09 – Catalyst Club – Santa Cruz, CA

10.10 – Hop Monk Tavern – Sebastopol, CA

10.23 – Magnolia Music Festival – Live Oak, FL (w/ special guest Barry Sless)

10.24 – Magnolia Music Festival – Live Oak, FL (w/ special guest Barry Sless)

10.26 – Beachland Ballroom and Tavern – Cleveland, OH (w/ Railroad Earth)

10.27 – Mr. Small’s – Millvale, PA (w/ Railroad Earth)

10.28 – tba

10.29 – The Barrymore Theater – Madison, WI (w/ Railroad Earth)

10.30 – Vic Theater – Chicago, IL (w/ Railroad Earth)

10.31 – special Halloween show in Peoria, IL (details TBA)

11.03 – tba

11.04 – Victoria’s Midnight Cafe – Columbus, OH

11.05 – Cosmic Charlie’s – Lexington, KY

11.06 – Pisgah Brewing Co. – Black Mountain, NC

11.07 – tba

11.08 – Smith’s Olde Bar – Atlanta, GA

11.11 – The Rutledge – Nashville, TN

11.12 – The Copper Dragon – Carbondale, IL

11.13 – Shank Hall – Milwaukee, WI (w/ Todd Snider)