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Bear Creek Fest Stage Schedule

96 SETS, 5 STAGES, 5 DAYS; NOVEMBER 10-14 IN LIVE OAK, FLORIDA
AT SPIRIT OF SUWANNEE
MUSIC PARK

Bear Creek Music Festival has unveiled the 2010 Festival Stage Schedule. With music in six
different venues, Bear Creek offers nearly round-the-clock options with an incredible lineup. Headliners
moe. and Umphrey’s McGee are joined by Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk, Lettuce, The New
Mastersounds, Perpetual Groove, George Porter’s Running Pardners, Toubab Krewe, Zach Deputy, Maceo Parker, Pee
Wee Ellis, Fred Wesley, Bernie Worrell, DJ Logic, Soulive, The New Deal, Bonobo Live Band and DJ set, Eliot Lipp

and many others.

Tickets to Bear Creek Music & Arts Festival on sale now here.

Complete lineup, ticket info, and all details including Wednesday night’s Pre-Pre Festival and Thursday’s Pre-Festival
Kick-Off Parties available here.


Spiritual Rez: Tour Dates

THE NEXUS OUT NOW


Spiritual Rez

Spiritual Rez have
announced some more dates in support of their new album, The Nexus. This weekend, the band
will perform at the LEAF Fest in Black Mountain, NC before heading down to Alabama, Georgia, and Florida for a
string of dates. Details are below.

Click here to read the JamBase Questionnaire with
Spiritual Rez

October

14 Clemson, SC Club 356
15-16 Black Mountain, NC LEAF Fest

18 Birmingham, AL Zydeco

20 Huntsville, AL Humphrey’s

21 Atlanta, GA Smith’e Olde Bar w/ Zach Deputy
22 Auburn, AL Quixote’s

23 Tuscaloosa, AL Mellow Mushroom
25 Birmingham, AL Zydeco
28 Ft. Lauderdale, FL Halloween Festival @ Snyder Park
29-31 Key West, FL Green Parrot

November

3 Miami, FL Transit Lounge
4 Ft. Lauderdale, FL Dive Bar
5 Palm Beach, FL Nick & Johnnie’s

6 Orlando, FL Rock For Hunger Festival @ Plaza Theatre (day)

6 New Smyrna Beach, FL Beachside Tavern (night)
7 Sebastian, FL Hiram’s
10 Augusta, GA Surrey Tavern

11 Black Mountain, NC Pisgah Brewing Company

13 Live Oak, FL Bear Creek Music Festival
14 Orlando, FL Plaza Theatre w/ John Brown’s Body

17 Charleston, SC Charleston Pourhouse
18 Asheville, NC Mo Daddy’s
20 Boone, NC Boone Saloon

Spiritual Rez
Tour Dates

::
Spiritual Rez News
::
Spiritual Rez
Concert
Reviews


Blackwater & Bear Creek Fests At Spirit of Suwannee Music Park

ADVANCED DISCOUNT TICKETS FOR BOTH FESTIVALS AVAILABLE NOW

Big IV Productions owner and CEO Lyle Williams and director/Chief promoter Paul Levine continue to shape Florida’s
music scene with plans to bring two festivals to Live Oak, Florida’s Spirit of the Suwannee Music Park in 2010.
Returning for its fourth consecutive year, Bear Creek Music Festival will take place November 12-14 and
the
inaugural Blackwater Music & Art Festival will touch down August 26-28.

For the first ever Blackwater Music Festival, fans will be treated to three days of eclectic music with sets by Slightly Stoopid, STS9, Michael Franti & Spearhead, JJ Grey & MOFRO, The Disco Biscuits, G. Love, Galactic and more than
20 other celebrated bands. Up to date lineup and ticket information is available here.

The critically acclaimed Bear Creek Music & Art Festival will once again feature a massive lineup full of
funk,
rock, jazz, funk, live electonica, and jam titans. Fan favorites Umphrey’s McGee return for two
nights of
headlining shows with other acts such as Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk, Lettuce, The New
Mastersounds
, Perpetual Groove,
George Porter’s Running Pardners, Toubab
Krewe
, Zach Deputy
and
others also playing twice over the
three day event. Other performers include Maceo Parker, Pee Wee
Ellis
, Fred Wesley, Bernie Worrell, DJ Logic,
Soulive, The New Deal, Bonobo Live Band, Eliot Lipp
and many more.
Complete lineup, ticket info, and all details
including Wednesday night’s Pre-Pre Festival and Thursday’s Pre-Festival Kick-Off Parties available here.


Mtn Jam Webcast Schedule

Gov’t
Mule

The broadcast schedule for the free iClips stream of Mountain Jam 2010 has been announced.
All times are EDT, and the schedule is subject to change without notice, but this should
help y’all plan your weekend a bit. Thanks to iClips for sharing the fun with live music
obsessed folks that can’t make it out.

Watch the Mountain Jam stream at: http://iclips.net/mountainjam

FRIDAY
12:45 – Gandalf Murphy and SCD
1:30 – Elmwood
2:15 – The Whigs
3:00 – Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue
4:00 – Grace Potter and the Nocturnals
5:30 – Dr. Dog
6:45 – The Avett Brothers
8:15 – Toots & The Maytals
9:00 – Gov’t Mule
1:00 – Les Claypool

SATURDAY
3:30 – Lettuce
4:15 – Yonder Mountain String Band
5:30 – Dave Mason
6:45 – Zach Deputy
7:30 – The London Souls

8:30 – Van Ghost
9:00 – Gov’t Mule
1:00 – Dark Star Orchestra

SUNDAY
1:30 – ALO
2:30 – Michael Franti & Spearhead
4:00 – Matisyahu
5:15 – The Bridge
5:30 – One eskimO
6:15 – Drive-By Truckers
7:30 – Levon Helm & Friends:
Warren Haynes, Donald Fagen, Ray LaMontagne, Sam Bush, Steve Earle, Patterson & David
Hood, Jackie Greene, Allison Moorer and more!


Hangout Festival | 05.14-05.16 | Alabama

Words by: Alex Borsody | Images by: Dave Vann

Hangout Beach & Music Festival :: 05.14.10-05.16.10 :: Gulf Shores, AL

Hangout Beach & Music Festival

The inaugural Hangout Beach & Music Festival was an eclectic crossroads of Southern culture and the progressive festival scene. The promoters put incredible thought into the lineup to appeal to just about everyone. The wide range of fans and artists combined with the recent events of the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, made for an interesting dynamic – ripe seeds of the green movement. Swimming in the 8-foot waves was unforgettable, but on the last day a gas station attendant showed me a tar ball that had washed up on the shore as the spill finally started to make its way to land.

Town-visitor relations could not have been better and the Southern hospitality was warm. Things ran smoothly and peacefully with the community on the white sandy beaches. The promoters pledged to donate their proceeds to the oil cleanup, a generous promise, and the political organization HeadCount was on-site leading a letter writing campaign on the issue.

As the festival went on, the crowd changed from those nearby who just came to check out the scene to more veteran live music lovers. The fans waited out an epic storm and tornado warning on Sunday and prayed for better weather. The grounds closed for a few hours and some performances were canceled, including Matisyahu, who played later that night at a free after party to the first 500 lucky fans. The sky cleared and with some schedule changes, the organizers managed to fit in some of the bigger acts on the bill in the limited time allowed. In the same pithy fashion, here are some of the highlights of the weekend.

Alison Krauss :: Hangout

Best Song Tease:
The first day of the festival featured a high percentage of the local population, with a generous 5000 tickets given out to the local community. Many were unfamiliar with the majority of acts, however, Alison Krauss & Union Station featuring Jerry Douglas appealed to a variety of different people. After a few songs, Krauss stepped off stage leaving Douglas, arguably the world’s best dobro player, to go at it solo. He coasted through a tease of the Duane Allman penned “Little Martha,” while across the beach, Girl Talk played a mash-up of the Grateful Dead’ s “Casey Jones,” creating an unplanned homage to two pioneers of the modern music experience, one from the Deep South and one from freaky San Francisco.

Best collaboration:
The Preservation Hall Jazz Band played a funky New Orleans inspired set that included the sensual charisma of Grace Potter and the superb guitar playing of Warren Haynes. They played an amazing cover of the 1929 Albert E. Brumley bluegrass standard “I’ll Fly Away” and threw Dixie Cup ice cream into the crowd. The band marched off stage through the audience, then back onstage with some enthusiastic dancers from the crowd. They then led a procession up the boardwalk and into the VIP area, where the fun for many had to halt.

Best Dose of Southern Comfort:
The Grammy Award winning Zac Brown Band brought out a sea of meaty, clean cut, good ol’ boys in golf shirts. Brown looks similar to the guitarist Zach Deputy and shares his lightning fast picking style. His lyrics are a cross section of marijuana laced party rock and patriotic southern pride – a seemingly incongruent mix that somehow works. One song even went into a long instrumental jam. Brown played a solemn version of Crosby, Stills and Nash’s “Cost of Freedom,” followed by Charlie Daniels’ “The Devil Went Down to Georgia.” The presence of the armed forces is ubiquitous in the Deep South, and Brown was cheered on as he spoke about the importance of the military and their role in preserving our way of life.

Best Southern Picking:
Jeff Austin & Friends, including Larry Keel, wowed the crowd with a power trio bluegrass combination. The band played complicated bluegrass with fast picking and complex modulation. The Honey Island Swamp Band gets a honorable mention for some solid electric slide guitar.

Trey Anastasio Band :: Hangout Beach & Music Festival

Best Opportunity to Hook Up with a Southern Belle:
John Legend played soulful tunes until curfew, evoking a young Marvin Gaye. Each song was steamier than the next, set amidst the backdrop of crashing waves and a starry sky. He ended with a soulful, yet somber version of Bob Marley’s “Redemption Song.”

Best New Jam:
Nashville natives Moon Taxi played the JamBase Stage before it closed on Sunday due to weather. The high energy and virtuosity of this band is not to be missed.

Best Dose of Culture Shock:
Kathleen Kennedy was brought on to introduce the Zach Brown Band. Dressed in the height of hipster fashion, she began talking about preserving the environment, an issue difficult to oppose. Somehow Kennedy managed to ruin a very clear, beautiful message with the pompous attitude of an MTV VJ crossed with a royal bloodline. As she got booed and subsequently escorted off the stage, there were actually two sides of the coin that became apparent. It was appalling and shocking to see Americans so ignorant and uncaring about an issue as vital as clean beaches, yet here was this famous, twenty-something jetting down to Flora-Bama and lecturing folks with not a bit of humility in her voice.

Best Dose of Psychedelia:
Trey Anastasio and Classic TAB opened with a solid version of “Gotta Jibboo” and the set hit its climax early with “The Devil Went Down to Georgia.” The Phish tune “Alaska” was subdued but featured the horn section creatively. The set was mostly slow and steady carried by bass player Tony Markellis‘ groove. Trey announced that when he and Tom Marshall found out about the festival, they wrote a song just for the occasion. The fruit of this was a reggae tune called “Sailboat Man.” The song was written in the most common rock arrangement of 1-4-5 (think “Stir It Up” or “Chalk Dust Torture”) and it sounded like it was written in five minutes, but nevertheless, was a thrill.

The set closed with slightly higher energy, including a beautiful version of “Drifting” and Led Zeppelin’s “Black Dog.” The choice of “First Tube” for an encore was exciting, but nothing for the record books. Fireworks were set off behind the stage, with bombs bursting in air giving those who traveled just for this show an over the top Southern send off.

For more pics of the Hangout Music Festival go here.

JamBase | Alabama
Go See Live Music!


Furthur to Headline GOTV

Furthur

Gathering of the Vibes has announced that Furthur featuring Phil Lesh and Bob Weir will headline this year’s festival.

GOTV 2010 takes place July 29-August 1 at Seaside Park in Bridgeport, CT. Furthur joins the already announced lineup that includes Primus, The Rhythm Devils, Jimmy Cliff, Umphrey’s McGee, Damian Marley & Nas, Galactic, Sharon Jones & The Dap Kins, Jackie Greene, Robert Randolph & The Family Band, Steve Kimock Crazy Engine, Dark Star Orchestra, Little Feat, The Radiators, Martin Sexton & Ryan Montbleau Band, Mix Master Mike, Deep Banana Blackout, Big Sam’s Funky Nation, Assembly of Dust, Max Creek, New Riders of the Purple Sage, Zach Deputy, Harlem Gospel Choir, King For A Day, Donna Jean Godchaux and more. The daily band lineups have been announced and can be seen here.

Tickets are available here.

Check out JamBase’s 2009 GOTV coverage!


High Sierra Troubadour Sessions Tim Bluhm, Nathan M, Dan Bern

NATHAN MOORE, TIM BLUHM, DAN BERNS, TREVOR GARROD AND MORE
GET UP CLOSE & PERSONAL

One of the distinct pleasures of the High Sierra Music Festival is the intimate, often hushed or warmly humorous late night Troubadour Sessions. The lineup for this year’s Sessions is as follows:

Tim Bluhm by Josh Miller

Thursday, July 1
Trevor Garrod
Zach Deputy
Tim Bluhm
Nicki Bluhm

Friday, July 2
Nathan Moore
Kate Gaffney
TBA
TBA

Saturday, July 3
Scott Law
Julian Coryell
Carolyn Wonderland
TBA

Sunday, July 4
Josh Clark
Paul Benoit
Chris Chandler
Dan Bern

High Sierra takes place July 1-4, 2010 in Quincy, CA. A full schedule of late night offerings can be found here, and those heading to Quincy for Fourth of July weekend can begin planning now with the JamBase High Sierra Grids, which lay out the full festival schedule for 2010.


Jam Cruise 9: Weir, Stockholm Galactic, ALO, Lotus, Greyboy

FLOATING FESTIVAL SETS SAIL JANUARY 4, 2011

Jam Cruise 9 will sail January 4-9, 2011, leaving from Ft. Lauderdale, FL and making stops in Roatan, Honduras and Costa Maya, Mexico. Here’s the announced lineup for Jam Cruise 9:

Jam Cruise 8 by Chad Smith

Scaring The Children (Bob Weir, Jay Lane and Rob Wasserman)
Rhythm Devils
Robert Randolph & The Family Band
Maceo Parker Super Jam
Galactic
The Greyboy Allstars
God Street Wine
Stockholm Syndrome
Lotus
Jojo’s Mardi Gras Band
ALO
Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk
Easy Star All-Stars
Lettuce
Garage A Trois
The New Mastersounds
Sierra Leone’s Refugee All-Stars
Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears
Anders Osborne
Big Sam’s Funky Nation
Cornmeal
Some Cat From Japan (tribute to Jimi Hendrix with Will Bernard, Ron Johnson, Scott Metzger, Eric Bolivar and Nigel Hall)
Greensky Bluegrass
Big Gigantic
Zach Deputy
The Pimps of Joytime

Special Guest Artists-At-Large:
Col. Bruce Hampton
Leo Nocentelli
Fred Wesley
Jennifer Hartswick
Big Chief Monk Boudreaux

Previous sailors can pre-book cabins now, and the public on-sale begins Wednesday, June 2 at 12pm, EST.

Check out JamBase’s heartfelt rave for Jam Cruise 8 to get in the mood for Round 9!


Bear Creek Adds: UM, London Souls & More

Bear Creek Adds Umphrey’s McGee, The London Souls Pee Wee Ellis & More

Bear Creek 2009 by Chapman

The Bear Creek Music and Art Festival, November 11-14, 2010 at The Spirit of the Suwannee Music Park in Live Oak, Florida has announced a third round of artist additions. Bear Creek welcomes back Umphrey’s McGee for two headlining shows on 11/11 and 11/12. The London Souls will make their first Bear Creek appearances, as will Papadosio and Lingo. Saltwater Grass, The Soular System and Curious Circus return to Bear Creek once again. Artist-at-large additions include saxman Pee Wee Ellis and Motet vocalist Jans Ingber.

The addition of Pee Wee Ellis, who will join Maceo Parker and Fred Wesley on the bill, rounds out the presence of The JBs, aka The James Brown Horns, at Bear Creek. These funk and soul pioneers have not appeared on the same stage in many years and Bear Creek is honored to bring together these legends once again.

Bear Creek early-bird tickets are $115 until June 2. Thursday night, 11/11 pre-party tickets are $40 until June 2. VIP tickets are also available. Info and ticket information is available at bearcreekmusicfestival.com.

Full artist additions:

Umphrey’s McGee x 2

The London Souls x 2

Saltwater Grass

The Soular System

Curious Circus

Lingo

Papadosio

Artists at Large additions:

Pee Wee Ellis

Jans Ingber

Previously announced artists include:

- Maceo Parker Band

- The New Deal

- The New Mastersounds x 2

- Perpetual Groove x 2

- The Everyone Orchestra

- Elliot Lipp

- Alex B

- Brock Butler

- Josh Phillips Folk Festival

- Orgone

- Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk x 2

- Lettuce x 2

- Soulive

- George Porter’s Running Pardners x2

- Papa Grows Funk

- Toubab Krewe x 2

- Zach Deputy x 2

- John Brown’s Body x 2

- Will Bernard

- DubConscious

- Garaj Mahal x 2

- Rebirth Brass Band

- Eric Krasno

- Adam Deitch and Break Science

- The Dead Kenny G’s

- Big Sam’s Funky Nation

- The Tony Hall Band

- Brian Stoltz

- Dr. Claw

- Sam Kininger Band

- Rubblebucket Orchestra

- The Macpodz x2

- Lubriphonic x2

- The Nigel Hall Band

- The Legendary JC’s

- Avis Berry’s Soul Revue

- Matt Grondin Band

- Snarky Puppy

- Cadillac Jones

- The Malah

- Green Hit

- Greenhouse Lounge

- Burnin Smyrnans

- Entropy

- Spiritual Rez

- Cope

- Diocious

Artists at Large
- Fred Wesley

- Skerik

- Mike Dillon

- The Shady Horns

- Kofi Burbridge

For more on the Bear Creek Music Festival see our 2009 review here.


High Sierra Adds: WSP Crowes, Lotus, Hips, Joseph

High Sierra Adds: Widespread Panic, Black Crowes, Lotus, Mother Hips, Jerry Joseph & More

Set to take place July 1 through July 4, 2010 at the Plumas-Sierra County Fairgrounds in Quincy, CA, the High Sierra Music Festival made some very substantial additions to their 20th Anniversary lineup today. The following acts have all officially been announced:

HSMF 2009 by Krolick

Widespread Panic

The Black Crowes

Lotus

Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros

The Mother Hips

Jerry Joseph & The Jackmormons

The Radiators

The Pimps of Joytime

Truth & Salvage Co.

Coryell, Auger, Sample Trio

New Fangled Wasteland

Orgone

Chris Chandler & Paul Benoit

Living Folklore

These artists come as additions to the following already announced acts:

The Avett Brothers

Ozomatli

Femi Kuti and Positive Force

Railroad Earth

Bela Fleck, Zakir Hussain, and Edgar Meyer

Dr. Dog

Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe

Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue

Cornmeal

Blitzen Trapper

The New Mastersounds

March Fourth Marching Band

Nels Cline Singers

The Infamous Stringdusters

Surprise Me Mr. Davis

The Slip

BLVD

Beats Antique

Telepath

Carolyn Wonderland

Darol Anger’s Republic Of Strings featuring Sharon Gilchrist

Great American Taxi

Nathan Moore

Johnny Vidacovich, Robert Walter Duo

Big Light

Trampled By Turtles

Zach Deputy

and many more to come!

Discounted 4-day passes for the High Sierra Music Festival are $175 and are on sale now here.

Fore more on High Sierra see our coverage of the 2009 event here.


Mountain Jam Adds: Levon Helm Truckers, Potter, Dog, NMS

Mountain Jam Announces Latest Additions to Lineup

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Originally conceived as a celebration for Radio Woodstock’s 25th anniversary, Mountain Jam has grown into an annual stop for some of the biggest names in live music. The 2010 event has confirmed that Levon Helm & Friends, Drive-By Truckers, Grace Potter & The Nocturnals, Dr. Dog, The Whigs, The New Mastersounds, Jay Farrar (of Son Volt), Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue, The Duke & The King, Justin Townes Earle, Jerry Joseph & Wally Ingram, The Bridge, Zach Deputy, The Brew, Simone Felice, Gandalf Murphy & The Slambovian Circus of Dreams and Van Ghost have all joined the sixth annual Mountain Jam Music Festival’s growing lineup.

Mountain Jam will return to New York’s Hunter Mountain from Friday, June 4 – Sunday, June 6, 2010, featuring performances by Gov’t Mule, Michael Franti & Spearhead, Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Band, The Avett Brothers, Les Claypool, Yonder Mountain String Band, Toots And The Maytals, Matisyahu, Dark Star Orchestra, and Dave Mason, along with dozens of other bands and a full Awareness Village. Gov’t Mule, who has headlined Mountain Jam each year since its inception, will play two full headlining shows. Ticket information and a full list of confirmed acts are available at mountainjam.com.

Confirmed Artists (more to be announced)

Gov’t Mule (two nights)
Levon Helm & Friends
Michael Franti & Spearhead
Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Band
The Avett Brothers
Les Claypool
Yonder Mountain String Band
Drive-By Truckers
Matisyahu
Toots and the Maytals
Dark Star Orchestra
Grace Potter & The Nocturnals
Dr Dog
Dave Mason
Lettuce
ALO
The Whigs
The New Mastersounds
Jay Farrar (of Son Volt)
Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue
The Duke & The King
Justin Townes Earle
Jerry Joseph & Wally Ingram
The Bridge
Zach Deputy
The Brew
Simone Felice
Gandalf Murphy & The Slambovian Circus of Dreams
Van Ghost
The London Souls
These United States
Elmwood
Jonathan Tyler & the Northern Lights
Mojo Miles Mancuso
Dean Batstone
IS
Kari Spieler


High Sierra Music Fest: Avetts, Femi, RRE, Dr. Dog, Slip

High Sierra Music Festival Initial Lineup

The 20th Annual High Sierra Music Festival has announced the following acts. There will be many more to follow:

HSMF 2009 by Krolick

The Avett Brothers

Ozomatli

Femi Kuti and Positive Force

Railroad Earth

Bela Fleck, Zakir Hussain, and Edgar Meyer

Dr. Dog

Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe

Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue

Cornmeal

Blitzen Trapper

The New Mastersounds

March Fourth Marching Band

Nels Cline Singers

The Infamous Stringdusters

Surprise Me Mr. Davis

The Slip

BLVD

Beats Antique

Telepath

Carolyn Wonderland

Darol Anger’s Republic Of Strings featuring Sharon Gilchrist

Great American Taxi

Nathan Moore

Johnny Vidacovich, Robert Walter Duo

Big Light

Trampled By Turtles

Zach Deputy

and many more to come!

Discount early-bird tickets are on sale now and available here.

Fore more on High Sierra see our coverage of the 2009 event here.


Bear Creek Adds: Maceo New Deal, PG, NMS, Lipp

Bear Creek Music and Art Festival Artist Additions

The Bear Creek Music and Art Festival has announced the second round of artist additions to the 2010 lineup. Returning to The Spirit of the Suwannee Music Park in Live Oak, Florida, November 12-14, the festival has added:

Bear Creek 2009 by Chapman

Maceo Parker Band

- The New Deal

- The New Mastersounds x 2

- Perpetual Groove x 2

- The Everyone Orchestra

- Elliot Lipp

- Alex B

- Brock Butler

- Josh Phillips Folk Festival

- Orgone

These artists join the previously announced talent:

- Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk x 2

- Lettuce x 2

- Soulive

- George Porter’s Running Pardners x2

- Papa Grows Funk

- Toubab Krewe x 2

- Zach Deputy x 2

- John Brown’s Body x 2

- Will Bernard

- DubConscious

- Garaj Mahal x 2

- Rebirth Brass Band

- Eric Krasno

- Adam Deitch and Break Science

- The Dead Kenny G’s

- Big Sam’s Funky Nation

- The Tony Hall Band

- Brian Stoltz

- Dr. Claw

- Sam Kininger Band

- Rubblebucket Orchestra

- The Macpodz x2

- Lubriphonic x2

- The Nigel Hall Band

- The Legendary JC’s

- Avis Berry’s Soul Revue

- Matt Grondin Band

- Snarky Puppy

- Cadillac Jones

- The Malah

- Green Hit

- Greenhouse Lounge

- Burnin Smyrnans

- Entropy

- Spiritual Rez

- Cope

- Diocious

Artists at Large

- Fred Wesley

- Skerik

- Mike Dillon

- The Shady Horns

- Kofi Burbridge

Early-bird tickets are $99 until February 17 when they will jump to $115. Early VIP tickets are $225 until February 17 when they jump to $250. Thursday night Pre-party tickets are $40. Tickets available at www.bearcreekmusicfestival.com.

For more on the Bear Creek Music Festival see our 2009 review here.


Bear Creek Adds: Maceo New Deal, PG, NMS, Lipp

Bear Creek Music and Art Festival Artist Additions

The Bear Creek Music and Art Festival has announced the second round of artist additions to the 2010 lineup. Returning to The Spirit of the Suwannee Music Park in Live Oak, Florida, November 12-14, the festival has added:

Bear Creek 2009 by Chapman

Maceo Parker Band

- The New Deal

- The New Mastersounds x 2

- Perpetual Groove x 2

- The Everyone Orchestra

- Elliot Lipp

- Alex B

- Brock Butler

- Josh Phillips Folk Festival

- Orgone

These artists join the previously announced talent:

- Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk x 2

- Lettuce x 2

- Soulive

- George Porter’s Running Pardners x2

- Papa Grows Funk

- Toubab Krewe x 2

- Zach Deputy x 2

- John Brown’s Body x 2

- Will Bernard

- DubConscious

- Garaj Mahal x 2

- Rebirth Brass Band

- Eric Krasno

- Adam Deitch and Break Science

- The Dead Kenny G’s

- Big Sam’s Funky Nation

- The Tony Hall Band

- Brian Stoltz

- Dr. Claw

- Sam Kininger Band

- Rubblebucket Orchestra

- The Macpodz x2

- Lubriphonic x2

- The Nigel Hall Band

- The Legendary JC’s

- Avis Berry’s Soul Revue

- Matt Grondin Band

- Snarky Puppy

- Cadillac Jones

- The Malah

- Green Hit

- Greenhouse Lounge

- Burnin Smyrnans

- Entropy

- Spiritual Rez

- Cope

- Diocious

Artists at Large

- Fred Wesley

- Skerik

- Mike Dillon

- The Shady Horns

- Kofi Burbridge

Early-bird tickets are $99 until February 17 when they will jump to $115. Early VIP tickets are $225 until February 17 when they jump to $250. Thursday night Pre-party tickets are $40. Tickets available at www.bearcreekmusicfestival.com.

For more on the Bear Creek Music Festival see our 2009 review here.


Summer Camp: STS9, PL, ALO

SUMMER CAMP MUSIC FESTIVAL SECOND ROUND OF ARTISTS ANNOUNCED

Summer Camp 2009 by Smith

Jay Goldberg Events & Entertainment and Jam Productions, Ltd. are proud to announce the second round of artist announcements for Summer Camp 2010 Music Festival for May 28, 29 & 30, 2010 at Three Sisters Park in Chillicothe, IL.

This will be the 10th Annual Summer Camp Music Festival and will feature over 55 bands on 5 stages over the course of 3 days. Taking place at Three Sisters Park in Chillicothe, IL (just 20 miles north of Peoria), the festival also features a kid’s camp, an extensive representation of non-profit organizations, on-site camping, lots of unique arts & craft artisans, a variety of good food and plenty of ice cold beer.

New artist announcements for Summer Camp 2010 Music Festival include:

- STS9
- Pretty Lights
- Steel Pulse
- Victor Wooten
- Railroad Earth
- The Hood Internet
- ALO
- Hot Buttered Rum
- Dumpstaphunk
- My Dear Disco
- That 1 Guy
- Zach Deputy
- The Macpodz
- Papadosio
- Steez
- The Bridge
- Dangermuffin
- Heatbox
- Waterstreet
- Chicago Farmer

Tickets are on sale now by phone at 1-800-514-ETIX or online here. Early bird tickets are sold out, and 3-day tickets are currently $150, including primitive camping. A limited number of tickets will be sold at this price, and once the allotment is sold out, the price may go up without notice. Tickets are also available now for Thursday Pre-Party passes, electric & primitive RV spots. Information on VIP Upgrade tickets will be available soon.

Summer Camp is also proud to announce the Your Facebook, Your Festival contest. Each week through early March the festival will be hosting a poll to see what bands you want to see at this year’s festival. On the final week, each previous week’s winners will go head to head and the biggest vote getter will get a slot at the Summer Camp 2010 Music Festival. For more info, go here.

For more on Summer Camp see our 2009 coverage here.


Hookahville 33: Mule, Spearhead

HOOKAHVILLE 33 TO BE HELD MAY 28-30, INCLUDES GOV’T MULE, SPEARHEAD, MORE

ekoostik hookah

The Ohio jam band institution of ekoostik hookah announced today the 33rd installment of their biannual Hookahville Festival, happening May 28-30 at Legend Valley in Thornville, Ohio, one of Central Ohio’s largest camping venues.

In addition to two nights of the festival’s namesake, the Hookahville Spring lineup features Gov’t Mule, Michael Franti & Spearhead, Larry Keel and Natural Bridge, and Zach Deputy. Additional artists will be announced in the coming weeks and months ahead.

Once again, Hookahville is offering a limited amount of VIP tickets for only $150. This premium package includes behind-the-stage camping next to your car with easy access into the concert bowl and expanded facilities. These limited VIP tickets are available only in advance here, and will not be available for purchase at the gate.

Early bird tickets are available now here, and more information on Hookahville is available here.

Beginning as a humble fundraiser and camp-out on band co-founder Dave Katz’s wooded property the two-day event has grown steadily since its formation in 1994. In the past, Bob Weir & Ratdog, Willie Nelson, David Crosby, Arlo Guthrie, David Grisman, Dickey Betts, Galactic, Jazz Mandolin Project, Dr. John, Leftover Salmon, Keller Williams, among dozens of other notable artists, have played the Hookahville stage.


Jam Cruise 8 | 01.03.10 – 01.08.10

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

Jam Cruise 8 :: 01.03.10 – 01.08.10

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

STS9 :: Jam Cruise 8 by Flanigan

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

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

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

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

DJ Logic :: Jam Cruise 8 by Vann

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

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

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

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

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Sail Away

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

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

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

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

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

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

First Night

Stanton Moore & Skerik :: Jam Cruise 8 by Smith

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

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

Maceo Parker :: Jam Cruise 8 by Flanigan

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

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

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At Sea

Zach Deputy :: Jam Cruise 8 by Smith

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

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

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

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

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

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

Railroad Earth :: Jam Cruise 8 by Vann

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

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

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

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

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

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All Funked Up

George Porter Jr. :: Jam Cruise 8 by Smith

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

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

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

Zappa Lives

Pretty Lights :: Jam Cruise 8 by Smith

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

Pretty Lights

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

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Other Jam Cruise 8 MVPs

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

A Revelation

The Word :: Jam Cruise 8 by Vann

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

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

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

Jam Cruise 9 Wish List

Jam Cruise 8 by Smith

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

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

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

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

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

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Images by: Chad Smith

David Murphy (STS9)

Robert Walter

Skerik

Trombone Shorty

OHMphrey

Brock Butler

Jeff Coffin

Adam Deitch

Drum Workshop

Dark Star Orchestra

Everyone Orchestra

Galactic with George Porter Jr.

Nigel Hall

Jake Cinninger

John Brown’s Body

Karl Denson

Eric Krasno

Eric Krasno

Lee Oskar (War)

DJ Logic

Lotus

Lotus

Maceo Parker

The Motet

Railroad Earth

Continue reading for more pics of Jam Cruise 8…

Images by: Dave Vann

Mike Dillon

Dark Star Orchestra

The Mother Hips

Jamaica

Steve Kimock

Lotus

Maceo Parker

JJ Grey & Mofro

OHMphrey

Pretty Lights

Poker Tournament

Walter, Denson, Moore

STS9

Artist Photo

JamBase | Back On Land
Go See Live Music!


Bear Creek 2010 Initial Lineup

BEAR CREEK MUSIC AND ART FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES INITIAL LINEUP

Soulive

The Bear Creek Music and Art Festival will return to The Spirit of the Suwannee Music Park in Live Oak, Fl., November 12-14, 2010. The festival is proud to announce it’s 2010 initial artist lineup which includes Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk, Soulive, Lettuce, George Porter’s Runnin Pardners, The Will Bernard Band, Toubab Krewe, John Brown’s Body, Break Science and many more bands.

Artists at Large include Fred Wesley, Mike Dillon, Skerik, Kofi Burbridge and The Shady Horns.

More acts and headliners will be announced in the coming months. Early-bird tickets are on sale for $99 until February 17. Thursday night, November 11, Pre-party tickets are also available for $40. More information here.

Bear Creek Music and Art Festival Initial Lineup
- Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk x 2
- Lettuce x 2
- Soulive
- George Porter’s Running Pardners x2
- Papa Grows Funk
- Toubab Krewe x 2
- Zach Deputy x 2
- John Brown’s Body x 2
- Will Bernard
- DubConscious
- Garaj Mahal x 2
- Rebirth Brass Band
- Eric Krasno
- Adam Deitch and Break Science
- The Dead Kenny G’s
- Big Sam’s Funky Nation
- The Tony Hall Band
- Brian Stoltz
- Dr. Claw
- Sam Kininger Band
- Rubblebucket Orchestra
- The Macpodz x2
- Lubriphonic x2
- The Nigel Hall Band
- The Legendary JC’s
- Avis Berry’s Soul Revue
- Matt Grondin Band
- Snarky Puppy
- Cadillac Jones
- The Malah
- Green Hit
- Greenhouse Lounge
- Burnin Smyrnans
- Entropy
- Spiritual Rez
- Cope
- Diocious

Artists at Large
- Fred Wesley
- Skerik
- Mike Dillon
- The Shady Horns
- Kofi Burbridge


Zach Deputy Tour Dates

ZACH DEPUTY HITS THE ROAD FOR FLORIDA AND CARIBBEAN TOUR

Zach Deputy

Having been added to Jam Cruise 8 as a result of a fan-generated campaign, guitarist and songwriter Zach Deputy will kick off the new year on a luxury cruise liner leaving Ft. Lauderdale, sailing between Cuba and Haiti then hitting Jamaica, Grand Cayman Island, back past Cuba and then – back on land – through Florida for over a week of dates in the sunshine state.

Zach Deputy is touring in support of his new album, Sunshine, released in summer 2009 on new model indie label United For Opportunity. In late January and February Zach will then head into Texas and Colorado, among other stops.

From his base in Hilton Head, Zach Deputy has been performing 250-300 shows a year for the last four years, and has rapidly developed a strong following from the Mississippi to the Atlantic coast. The pace of growth has been startling. Zach Deputy now basically lives and works from a small box truck, playing almost every night of the week. The tireless work ethic is paying off, as audiences are reacting with genuine joy and passion, spreading the word to friends and fellow music lovers.

Zach Deputy is a songwriter, guitarist, soulful singer, and a master of the live looping technique. He creates a “one man band” feel by laying down live tracks and looping them over one another to become his own accompaniment. The sound, influenced by family heritage in Puerto Rico and St. Croix, is essentially roots rock, but in this case the roots are in soul, calypso, and dancehall, underpinned by driving hip-hop, rock steady, Motown and Stax backbeats.

Zach Deputy 2010 Tour Dates

01/03/10 Sun Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/04/10 Mon Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/05/10 Tue Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/06/10 Wed Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/07/10 Thu Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/08/10 Fri Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/09/10 Sat Beachside Tavern New Smyrna Beach, FL

01/10/10 Sun Skipper’s Smokehouse Tampa, FL

01/12/10 Tue Filthy McNastys Vero Beach, FL

01/13/10 Wed Jack Rabbits Jacksonville, FL

01/14/10 Thu Common Grounds Gainesville, FL

01/15/10 Fri The Plaza Theatre Orlando, FL

01/16/10 Sat The Engine Room (Formerly Beta Bar) Tallahassee, FL

01/18/10 Mon Pandora’s Grayton Beach, FL

Complete Zach Deputy tour dates available here.


Rock The Resort: Lettuce, Dumpsta, JGB, DJ Logic

LETTUCE, MELVIN SEALS & JGB, TYRONE WELLS TO PERFORM AT INAUGURAL

ROCK THE RESORT AT HUDSON VALLEY RESORT & SPA IN KERHONKSON, NY DECEMBER 4-6

Lettuce

Lettuce, Melvin Seals and Jerry Garcia Band, and Tyrone Wells will be among many acclaimed musicians to perform at the first Rock The Resort Festival, December 4-6, 2009 at the Hudson Valley Resort and Spa in Kerhonkson, New York. This three day indoor festival will also feature Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk, DJ Logic, Glitch Mob, Skerik, Eric Krasno & Chapter 2, Rubblebucket Orchestra, Rustic Overtones, and The Original RADIOACTIVE, who will host the festival. Rock The Resort is located on 600 acres of beautiful land among the Shawangunk Mountains, just 20 minutes from New Paltz and 90 minutes from New York City.

Music will start on Friday, December 4 at 4:30pm and go until 6:00am. On both Saturday, December 5 and Sunday, December 6 music will start at noon and go until 6:00am. There will be 3 stages of music at Rock The Resort; one in the resort’s indoor ballroom, one in the lounge, with the main stage residing in a 2000-capacity heated tent. Art exhibits run by Cappy Franti, poetry workshops, daily open mics, non-profit community booths, live painting, and yoga classes will also take place throughout the resort.

The All Spa Jam will perform during Saturday’s late night set from 3:30am – 6:00am. This jam, proving that Rock The Resort is a festival for the musicians as much as it is for fans, will feature Eric Krasno, Adam Deitch, The Original RADIOACTIVE, Skerik, Sam Kininger, Ryan Zoidis, J Bowman, Nigel Hall, Keaton Simons, and many special guests. Additional artists performing at Rock The Resort include Trevor Hall, Break Science, Skerdio, Roots of Creation, Hot Day at the Zoo, The Trapps, Zach Deputy, Jatoba, Humble Boy Club, Sophistaphunk, Revision, and Jaden, with more artists to be announced soon.

Tickets for the festival are now on sale here. Weekend passes cost $129 and passes for Sunday cost $49. Rooms at the resort are available for $139/night and can be booked online while purchasing tickets. Packages for weekend passes and rooms are also available, as well as RV passes for $50. Passes for dogs (allowed at both the festival and inside the resort rooms) are available for an additional $50.

The Hudson Valley Resort and Spa will offer buffet meals for the weekend in their dining room, where guests can expect to dine alongside the musicians. Breakfasts will cost $10, lunches $15 and dinners $20. Room service will also be available for guests at the resort. For more information on the resort and its amenities please visit their site.

Rock The Resort is the second festival produced by Paper Chaser Productions. This inaugural festival follows the ninth annual Harvest Celebration in Redfield, New York that took place on September 24-27, 2009 and featured Keller Williams, David Grisman, Rusted Root, and The Original RADIOACTIVE.