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JamBase Questionnaire: The Old Ceremony

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

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

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

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

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

The Old Ceremony

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

JamBase | Talking Straight
Go See Live Music!


Gail Ann Dorsey: Bowie’s Bottom End

By: Ron Hart

Gail Dorsey by Myriam Santos

Anyone who has followed the four-decade career trajectory of the legendary David Bowie harbors the understanding that the Thin White Duke holds a high watermark for the musicians with whom he tours and records. But while his roster of guitarists reads like a six-string hall of fame with the likes of Mick Ronson, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Adrian Belew and Reeves Gabrels, little is spoken of the Bowie bassists. That is, however, until Gail Ann Dorsey came into the fold.

Since being personally recruited by Ziggy himself for the band he put together for his historic 1995 co-headlining tour with Nine Inch Nails in support of Bowie’s industrialized comeback masterpiece Outside, Dorsey has been a prominent recurring member of the British rock icon’s team for the last 15 years, both in the studio (she played bass on Bowie’s misunderstood 1997 venture into drum ‘n’ bass Earthling) and onstage (she has been onboard the last six tours). Dorsey’s key role in Bowie’s late-period years has never been more prominent than on the recently released live album, A Reality Tour, the long-awaited soundtrack to the DVD of the same name chronicling the Dublin, Ireland stop on Bowie’s 2003-2004 world trek, widely speculated to be possibly his last tour ever. Thanks to her fluid Nathan East-cum-Joni-era Jaco Pastorius inspired bass lines – honed from her years as a solo artist and session musician who has logged in studio time with everyone from Tears for Fears to Gwen Stefani to Stones’ drummer Charlie Watts’ jazz band to Seal to Gang of Four – A Reality Tour marks the very first time in the Bowie lexicon where the four-string trumps the six-string in just about every way. And thanks to her fine singing voice, Bowie was able to properly perform his classic Queen collaboration “Under Pressure” in concert.

JamBase recently spoke with Gail Ann Dorsey about her role as Bowie’s bottom end for the last fifteen years in this exclusive interview. For more information on this incredible, multi-talented musician, who also plays guitar, clarinet, drums and keyboards, visit her official MySpace page.

JamBase: You’ve been playing with Bowie since 1995. How did you hook up with him initially?

Gail Dorsey: He actually called me on the telephone. It’s a crazy story. He just called out of the blue one day. I had no warning or anything. He tracked me down and asked me if I would like to be a part of the Outside band when they were touring for that album with Nine Inch Nails. Quite an initiation! [laughs]

JamBase: Reeves Gabrels from Tin Machine played guitar on that tour, right?

Bowie & Dorsey A Reality Tour 2004
from myspace.com/gailanndorseyofficial

Gail Dorsey: That was Reeves Gabrels and Carlos Alomar was also in the band. And it was a treat to have the opportunity to play with Carlos. He’s probably my favorite of the Bowie guitarist. Of the whole Bowie legend of guitar players, Carlos is just magic. He plays guitar like no one really plays guitar anymore. He’s a great rhythm player, one of the best ever in the world. That kind of guitar playing that he does is almost a lost art. It’s always an upfront thing or a lead thing, but just learning where to sit in a group with a guitar and not do too much and not do too little is definitely an art. And Carlos was just brilliant with that.

JamBase: Bowie seems to have a high water mark when choosing his musicians. So, getting the call from him must have been quite a thrill.

Gail Dorsey: No kidding. It took me two years to ask him, I was so afraid [at first]. I was such a frightened child when I first joined with this group of major players. I was very afraid to even ask Bowie why he chose me, so it took me time to get up the courage to just ask him that question.

What did he say?

It was a very interesting answer, because it was one I did not expect. He had seen me on television in the U.K. many years ago with my solo work. It was for my first solo record in the late eighties [The Corporate World - 1988] in London. I was on a major label and 25 years old and on TV a lot promoting the record. And he said he was in a hotel in London once flipping through channels and I came on the television and he thought that I was really interesting. I was singing and I went on the couch and talked to the host of the show and I did another song or something, and he was really impressed. And he said he thought that one day when he’s putting together the right ensemble that he would want to work with me. And this must have been like five years later, and I just thought to myself whatever I did on that night, I must have been really on [laughs].

What was the first Bowie album you got into yourself?

Gail Ann Dorsey

Well, I liked Ziggy Stardust, especially “Suffragette City.” I used to play in a Top 40 band when I was about 15 and we used to play that song all the time. But my favorite thing of Bowie’s was Young Americans, that era. That is my favorite Bowie album, and I think following that was Station to Station and into Low and Lodger and all those things. That era was when I just loved him. I just thought the singing was never better than on those records, just the way he sang, especially on Young Americans and the whole Philly soul thing. He got more croony and the songs are really soulful and show his voice so brilliantly. I just fell in love with that period mostly, but I was never like a huge fan. I didn’t really know a lot of the early stuff. I heard whatever they played on rock radio in Philly. I was more into Queen, and I liked Steely Dan; stuff a little bit lighter than him, America and The Doobie Brothers.

Speaking of Steely Dan, Donald Fagen lives up your way in Upstate New York from what I gather.

Yeah, I’ve seen him up here a few times.

Did you run into him at one of Levon Helm‘s rambles up in his Woodstock studio?

I have been to two of them now. What an amazing experience that is. I love it. I just love it. I’m trying to play one of them. I’ve been talking to Larry Campbell about it a little. I might go up and do a little something in one of the opening spots.

So, The Reality Tour live album sounds great. It’s definitely one of the best sounding Bowie shows I’ve ever heard.

Dorsey from myspace.com/gailanndorseyofficial

Yeah, it sounds pretty amazing, I have to say. It really shocked me, because I hadn’t listened to any of this stuff in so long. I hadn’t seen the DVD since it was made, and I haven’t really gone back to revive any of it and listen to the old albums or anything. So, when it came in the mail and I got a chance to listen to it a few weeks before it came out, I couldn’t believe how amazing it sounded. The audio sounds much better than the DVD audio. It’s just something about the mix that’s just great on the record version. It was really an emotional experience listening to it after all this time. I had forgotten how good it really is. I have to agree with you, it might be one of the best live Bowie records, though all of them are so good. But to me, I just feel amazingly blessed and I just can’t even believe that I’m part of that legacy, you know? And now I’m on the record forever [laughs].

You played on Earthling, which I think is a great Bowie album. Did you enjoy making that album with him?

I loved it. I don’t know that I’ll ever experience anything musically like that again. It was such an interesting hybrid of music. And the thing that was so cool with Bowie was the fact that during this period when that music was just growing and beginning following Outside, he was then on the forefront of it and really had his nose to the grindstone. He was into it; he was listening to all these underground 12-inches that were coming from London, what the kids were playing in the clubs. He would bring them to rehearsal and put them on a little turntable. And he’s saying, “The only thing missing from this stuff is the song. And if you can blend the two things together, it would make the whole thing so much more interesting.” That’s what he was attempting to do with Earthling, and I thought he did it so beautifully. To take this whole movement and type of music coming out of London and Europe and put some incredible songs to it was so exciting to be a part of. I think it was maybe the most exciting period I had with him, like we were really, really creating something. But different tours had different vibes, and by the Reality Tour, it was more like just being a part of an incredible ensemble of musicians and playing this really classic music. It was about getting our hearts and bodies and minds around the brilliance of his catalog.

Now people are saying that this could very well be the last time we will hear Bowie live, this tour and the CD documenting it. What do you say to those rumors?

Gail Ann Dorsey

I can’t really answer that question for you. I wish I could. I don’t really know what he’s up to at the moment. I can only imagine he must be writing something or involved in something, even if it’s not music. He’s never been one, in my experiences, to work or to go out and do things just to make a million. He really has to have something to say, and I think that’s what makes him so special. There’s not much fat you can cut off his body of work.

I’m with everybody else. I just hope, as much as anyone else, as a fan of music that he returns, because we would love to have him back. Whether or not I’ll be there when he gets back or if I’ll still be behind his left shoulder, I don’t know. But if I am, I’ll be happy, and if I’m not I’ll still be happy. I had the most incredible ride of my life, and this CD is a great exclamation point to the whole thing.

As someone who is just getting into Charlie Watts’ jazz and big band music, you played with him in the eighties, didn’t you?

That was one of my very first gigs ever. I was very, very young.

How did you get the job?

With a friend of his who’s now deceased, another drummer called John Stevens. John Stevens was one of the first people I met when I went to London, and he gave me a job. He was one of Charlie’s best friends. So, when Charlie wanted to put together a big band and play the music that he loves more than anything, which is jazz, it was just being in the right place at the right time. So John asked me if I wanted to be involved. And that was the first time I ever saw David Bowie. He came to one of those gigs at Ronnie Scott’s. He sat at the front table, and when I had to go out and sing my number, I was looking down at his little plate of food and I’m like, “Oh my god, David Bowie’s in the audience.”

JamBase | Low End
Go See Live Music!


Fri Playlist: David Bowie Covers

HE’S AN ALLIGATOR
HE’S A MAMA-PAPA COMING FOR YOU!

For someone so mercurial and defiantly individualistic, David Bowie has proven a terrific catalyst to other musicians. This week’s Playlist delves into 13 killer interpretations of the Thin White Duke’s songbook, including heavy guitar rock versions by Turbonegro (“Suffragette City”) and Zen Guerilla (“Moonage Daydream”), stripped back offerings from Ultravox’s Midge Ure (“Lady Stardust”) and The Dandy Warhols (“Jean Genie”), and even a twanged up visit with a boy who can play guitar by The Gourds (“Ziggy Stardust”).

Next week we’ll have a super-sized Halloween Playlist for you. In the meantime, keep watching the skies for falling starmenÂ…

And check out last week’s Playlist full of Clash covers by Social Distortion, Afghan Whigs, Living Colour, and more!

Playlist assembled by JamBase Associate Editor Dennis Cook, who always seems to be squawking like a pink monkey bird as he’s busting up his brain for wordsÂ…


Phish: Festival 8 Band To Play Last Record Alive

Phish Festival 8: Band To Play Last Record Alive

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

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


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

Possible Phish Halloween Cover Albums

Phish

1.AC/DC | Back In Black

2.Aerosmith | Toys In The Attic

3.Allman Brothers Band | Eat A Peach

4.Arcade Fire | Funeral

5.Beastie Boys | Hello Nasty

6.BeeGees | Saturday Night Fever

7.Black Sabbath | Paranoid

8.Blind Faith | Blind Faith

9.Bob Dylan | Blood On the Tracks

10.Bob Dylan & the Band | The Basement Tapes

11.Bob Seger | Against The Wind

12.Boston | Boston

13.Brian Eno | Before And After Science

14.Bruce Springsteen | Born To Run

15.Chicago | The Chicago Transit Authority

16.Creedence Clearwater Revival | Green River

17.Curtis Mayfield | Superfly Soundtrack

18.David Bowie | Hunky Dory

19.David Bowie | Ziggy Stardust

20.David Bowie | Scary Monsters

21.Devo | Freedom of Choice

22.Duran Duran | Rio

23.Eagles | Hotel California

24.Elton John | Goodbye Yellow Brick Road

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

26.Eric Clapton | 461 Ocean Blvd

27.Firehose | Flyin’ the Flannel

28.Fleetwood Mac | Rumours

29.Frank Zappa | Apostrophe

30.Frank Zappa | Hot Rats

31.Genesis | The Lambs Lie Down On Broadway

32.Grateful Dead | American Beauty

33.Guns & Roses | Appetite For Destruction

34.Hall & Oates | Private Eyes

35.Huey Lewis And The News | Sports

36.Jane’s Addiction | Ritual de Lo Habitual

37.Jimi Hendrix | Are You Experienced?

38.Jimi Hendrix | Electric Ladyland

39.John Lennon | Plastic Ono Band

40.Modern Lovers | The Modern Lovers

41.Journey | Escape

42.KISS | Alive II

43.King Crimson | Larks’ Tongues In Aspic

44.Led Zeppelin | I

45.Led Zeppelin | IV (Zoso)

46.Leonard Cohen | I’m Your Man

47.Love | Forever Changes

48.Manu Chao | Clandestino

49.Medeski, Martin & Wood | Shack Man

50.Metallica | Master Of Puppets

51.MGMT | Oracle Spectacular

52.Michael Jackson | Thriller

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

54.Miles Davis | A Tribute To Jack Johnson

55.Minutemen | Double Nickels On The Dime

56.Neil Young | Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere

57.Neil Young | Tonight’s The Night

58.Nirvana | Nevermind

59.Pavement | Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain

60.Pearl Jam | Ten

61.Peter Gabriel | So

62.Pink Floyd | Meddle

63.Pink Floyd | The Wall

64.Pixies | Come On Pilgrim

65.Pork Tornado | Pork Tornado

66.Primus | Sailing The Seas Of Cheese

67.Prince | Purple Rain

68.Queen | A Night At The Opera

69.Radiohead | Kid A

70.Rage Against The Machine | Evil Empire

71.Rolling Stones | Exile on Main Street

72.Rolling Stones | Sticky Fingers

73.Rush | Moving Pictures

74.Steely Dan | Pretzel Logic

75.T.Rex | Electric Warrior

76.Talking Heads | Fear Of Music

77.Television | Marquee Moon

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

79.The Beach Boys | Pet Sounds

80.The Beatles | Rubber Soul

81.The Clash | London Calling

82.The Doors | The Doors

83.The Police | Ghost In The Machine

84.The Ramones | Ramones

85.The Roots | Phrenology

86.The Who | Who’s Next

87.Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers | Damn The Torpedoes

88.Tom Waits | Rain Dogs

89.U2 | Joshua Tree

90.Van Halen | Van Halen

91.Van Morrison | Astral Weeks

92.Velvet Underground | Velvet Underground And Nico

93.Violent Femmes | Violent Femmes

94.Ween | White Pepper

95.White Stripes | Elephant

96.Wilco | Yankee Hotel Foxtrot

97.X | Los Angeles

98.Yes | The Yes Album

99.ZZ Top | Tres Hombres

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


The Flaming Lips | 07.28 | Australia

Words & Images by: Alex Anastas

The Flaming Lips :: 07.28.09 :: Hordern Pavilion :: Sydney, Australia

src="http://images.jambase.com/bands/theflaminglips/090728_Anastas/7_1.jpg">
The Flaming Lips :: 07.28 :: Sydney, Australia

If Willy Wonka had music piping through his personal quarters at the Chocolate Factory, The Flaming Lips would be in heavy rotation. Their contagious zest for life, underlying political consciousness and general wacky Prankster behavior is rare in today’s minimalist scene. Often times I wonder if Rip Taylor or Wavy Gravy have ever seen or been a part of a Lips show. If either of those unique characters were present, Wayne Coyne‘s hard-working crew would certainly have to bring even more confetti and balloons, if that’s actually possible.

Kicking off their show at Sydney’s Hordern Pavilion with an enthusiastic synthesizer laden groove, Melbourne standouts Midnight Juggernauts laid down a backbeat reminiscent of Ziggy Stardust-era Bowie. Featuring voice box effects, heavy metal vamp endings and a Floydian flair for dramatic key changes, the Juggernauts received a warm reception from the now anxiously frothing audience, many dressed appropriately in a variety of costumes. Perhaps having seen the film 24 Hour Party People one too many times, Vincent Vendetta spilled forth youthful exuberance in his operatic vocal turns and ambivalent posturing. Meanwhile drummer Daniel Stricker never relented his pounding on the skins, even when his comrades joined him on an electronic percussion jam center stage. However, Andrew Juggernaut stood out as he led his fellow bandmates with commanding skills on the bass, guitar and synth, taking almost all the solos. Juggernaut and Vendetta occasionally switched instruments, most successfully while sampling some Daft Punk during a “Welcome to the Freakshow” jam. Ending by stating, “This is the third time we’ve shared the stage with The Flaming Lips in as many days,” Wayne Coyne certainly enjoyed his protegees, smiling like a Cheshire cat in the shadows side stage.

While the crowd swelled to near sold out capacity, the master of ceremonies, Wayne Coyne, repeatedly surveyed his band’s equipment, stalking back and forth across the stage while his mates sound-checked their gear. Soon disappearing backstage, their massive lo-fi display screen came to life, depicting a naked, glowing neon woman contorting as an emanating light from between her widely spread legs sent the words “birth” out to the band and crowd. This must be seen to be believed as one by one band members opened a hidden door in the screen and marched down a plank positioned by stagehands. With guitar/synthesizer wizard Steven Drozd positioned behind his rig stage left, Kliph Scurlock sitting atop his drum throne center stage, and the always cool Michael Ivins seated bass in hand off to the right, the crew slowly inflated Wayne’s now customary sphere. Bouncing around the first few rows of the crowd as the Lips opened with “Race for the Prize,” Coyne’s shit-eating grin inside his clear bubble was matched by every fan that pushed his orb back towards the stage.

src="http://images.jambase.com/bands/theflaminglips/090728_Anastas/19_1.jpg">
The Flaming Lips :: 07.28 :: Sydney, Australia

The show’s energy may have peaked early with Coyne introducing the third tune, “The Yeah Yeah Yeah Song,” as an ode to the new President of the U.S. of A. However, throughout the evening The Flaming Lips frontman was extremely cordial and talkative with the rabid crowd, stating the last time they were in Australia was for 2004′s Big Day with Metallica, The Strokes and The Mars Volta, and that they’d be back sooner if “only Australia wasn’t 9,000 fucking miles away.” So true. Dedicated to their “cosmic brother Nick Cave,” “Vein of Stars” had the Worm King and frogs stage left grooving with the Fat Sun and hot bunny dancers stage right in the wild party atmosphere of pure bliss that a Lips concert perpetuates. A ballad version of “Yoshimi… Part 1″ followed closely by Coyne on trumpet for “Taps” mellowed the show with olfactory sensations of dank, possibly brought from their recent stop at Byron Bay’s Splendour in the Grass days before.

Closing their set with a video display of The Daily Show‘s Jon Stewart introducing “She Don’t Use Jelly,” this smash tune off 1993′s Transmissions from the Satellite Heart, let the rapturous Tuesday night crowd show they had a little more in their tank. Before capping it all off with “Do You Realize?,” Coyne proclaimed, “The Flaming Lips audience is the greatest ever. You’re not cynical. We throw balloons and confetti and you treat each as a magical piece of fairy dust or squishy magical piece of plastic. Through all this happiness, there are a couple people out there experiencing real sadness in their lives, too, and YOU give them a reason to think that tomorrow will be a brighter day.”

During the extremely brief encore break, Coyne quickly ducked backstage to grab two of the frog people for a marriage proposal center stage, to which the female frog proclaimed, “It’s about time.” After a blowout night of Flaming Lips bombardment, I think many of their Australian fan-base would agree.

The Flaming Lips :: 07.28.09 :: Hordern Pavilion :: Sydney, Australia

Race for the Prize, Silver Trembling Hands, The Yeah Yeah Yeah Song, Fight Test, Enthusiasm for Life, Convinced Of The Hex, Mountain Side, Vein Of Stars, Yoshimi Battles The Pink Robots – Part 1, Pompeii Am Götterdämmerung, Taps, The Wand, She Don’t Use Jelly

Encore: Do You Realize??

The Flaming Lips tour dates available here.

Continue reading for more pics of The Flaming Lips in Australia…

Midnight Juggernauts

The Flaming Lips

JamBase | Flame Broiled
Go See Live Music!