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Televised Tune: On The Tube This Weekend

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Hall of Fame rockers Aerosmith will be profiled on Sunday’s episode of 60 Minutes during a segment put together by CBS chief foreign affairs correspondent Lara Logan. Steven Tyler responds to criticisms from his bandmates and defends his decision to be a judge on American Idol as part of a one-on-one interview with the newswoman. Elsewhere, Amos Lee is featured on this week’s episode of Live From The Artists Den, while The Shins return to Saturday Night Live.

Friday, March 9 [All Times ET]

  • Death Cab For Cutie – Storytellers [Palladia 1PM]
  • Tom Petty – Damn The Torpedos – Classic Albums [VH1 Classic 4PM]
  • U2 – Rattle & Hum [VH1 Classic 9PM]
  • Estelle on Jay Leno [NBC 11:35PM]

Saturday, March 10

  • Steve Earle / Kris Kristofferson – Austin City Limits [PBS]
  • Amos Lee – Live From The Artists Den [PBS]
  • Ladies and Gentlemen – The Rolling Stones [Palladia 11AM]
  • The Shins on Saturday Night Live [NBC 11:30PM]

Sunday, March 11

  • Aerosmith – 60 Minutes [CBS 7PM]
  • Gregg Allman – Live at Sturgis Buffalo Chip [HDNet 8PM]
  • moe., Gov’t Mule, Steve Winwood – Bonnaroo 2004 [HDNet 10:35PM]
  • Adele – Unplugged [Palladia 11PM]



More Footage From LCD Soundsystem Finale Documentary

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Around HT headquarters we can’t wait to see Shut Up and Play The Hits, a new documentary about LCD Soundsystem’s finale at Madison Square Garden last April. Described in nearly every review we’ve read as a sort of Last Waltz for the rocktronica set (how’s that for setting the bar ridiculously high), the Dylan Southern and Will Lovelace-directed film has been making the rounds at film festivals across the world and will be shown four times at SXSW next week.

While we wait for the film to be shown in our neck of the woods, distributor Pulse Films has shared a 90-second clip from Shut Up and Play The Hits featuring Chuck Klosterman speaking with LCD Soundsystem front man James Murphy…

Shut Up and Play The Hits – Exclusive Clip


Video: Allman Brothers Band – Dreams

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Yesterday, unbeknownst to us, we missed the fact that March 8th marked the 44th anniversary of Bill Graham opening the legendary Fillmore East. The venue, located on Manhattan’s E. 6th Street and 2nd Avenue, which was then known as the Lower East Side, hosted just about every important and influential rock act from 1968 to 1971. The former Yiddish theater, opened with a meaty, impressive triple bill of Big Brother & The Holding Company, Tim Buckley and Albert King on that late winter night.

[Signpost Marks The Spot - Photo by Gyre - Used Under CC3.0]

With the Allman Brothers Band set to kick off their annual Beacon run tonight, it seemed only appropriate to honor the anniversary of the Fillmore East with a tune from the Southern-rock act, who recorded arguably one of the best live albums of all time – At Fillmore East  – there. Check out this nine-plus minute version of Dreams recorded at the iconic venue on September 23, 1970…

Allman Brothers BandDreams (Live)


Strangefolk Rehearsing For Reunion at The Barn / Announce Archival Release From 1998

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As we reported in January, the original lineup of Strangefolk will reunite for the first time since 2000 for three performances in New England at the end of March. Reid Genauer, Jon Trafton, Erik Glockler, and Luke Smith are currently scheduled to play a pair of shows at Higher Ground in Burlington on the 29th and 30th as well as a March 31 gig at the State Theatre in Portland, Maine.

Pete Mason of PhanArt recently interviewed founding member Reid Genauer about the upcoming reunion for Hidden Track and Reid revealed that Strangefolk is rehearsing at The Barn in Vermont, a space used by Phish to record several albums that has also hosted a number of legendary musicians such as Toots and The Maytals, Herbie Hancock and The Rhythm Devils.

Genauer explained why Strangefolk chose to rehearse at The Barn, “It was a great choice on several fronts.  For one thing it’s an amazing space, beautiful, quirky, inspirational.  Maybe more to the point, it is in the middle of nowhere so there were no distractions – just us, our instruments and our songs.” Reid told Mason the band members literally did not leave the space, “[We] rehearsed 12 hour days, slept there, woke up, caffeinated and did it again.  It was special.” You can read more of Pete’s chat with Reid on Monday afternoon, so be sure to check HT next week.

UPDATE: The band has just announced a new archival recording from December 27, 1998, featuring the original lineup, will be available for purchase through iTunes and Nugs.net starting this Tuesday, March 13. Here’s the full scoop…

From a Press Release…

The reunion of Strangefolk’s original lineup has caused a palpable buzz with the community of like-minded “strangers” who, over a decade ago, gathered together around their favorite band.  The reunion shows – two nights at the Higher Ground in Burlington, VT, and one at the State Theatre in Portland, ME – were instant sell-outs.  In recent interviews, the band has credited their reuniting to industry vet Pete Shapiro, who originally got the band members on a phone call to talk about the possibility of playing his soon to be reopened Capitol Theatre in Port Chester, NY.  To honor Pete, to acknowledge the historic venue, and to provide fans with a blast from the past, Strangefolk dug through their archives and will be releasing a recording of their December 27, 1998, show at the Capitol Theatre.  The re-mastered soundboard recording will be available through iTunes and nugs.net this Tuesday, March 13.  CDs will be available at upcoming reunion shows only.

Album highlights and track listing are below

 

Strangefolk
12/27/98
The Capitol Theatre
Port Chester, NY

Recorded by Nat Koren to 2-track DAT.
Mastering and Post-production by Ben Collette at The Tank Studio, Burlington, VT

Disc 1:
(Set One)
Introduction
Stout Hearted Man
Rachel
Walnut
Pawn
Chasing Away
Great Long While
Crest of My Wing

Like You Anyway

Disc 2:
(Set Two)
Valhalla
Neighbor
Mud Spring Draw
Sometimes
The Shooting of Dan McGrew*
Cabin John
Poland
Blue and Grey

Disc 3:
(Set Two cont.)
Strange Ranger
See To
Reuben’s Place**
(Encore)
Heart Blood
So Far Gone***

SHOW NOTES:
*”The Shooting of Dan McGrew” – a narrative by Yukon poet Robert W. Service – was recited by Luke with Reid and Jon playing ambient music.
**Reuben’s Place includes “What Say You?” lyrics.
*** “So Far Gone” includes “Shift My Step” lyrics as well as an extended jam,  clocking in at 25+ minutes.


Phil Lesh Casually Opens Terrapin Crossroads

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Phil Lesh’s years in the making music venue, Terrapin Crossroads, opened last night in San Rafael, California, where the Grateful Dead / Furthur bassist greeted those who attended the “casual opening” with handshakes and smiles. Many of Lesh’s musical friends came out to perform in front the approximately 200 attendees including Jaz Sawyer, Nicki and Tim Bluhm, Jeff Chimenti and Jackie Greene as well as Phil’s son Grahame.

[Image by Grahame Lesh]

The makeshift band tore through covers and originals from the Grateful Dead repertoire as well as a few tunes from Tim and Nicki’s catalog. Thanks to DrStuartLevine1 we can check out a video of The Leshes rocking out Bertha along with Jackie Greene, Jaz Sawyer and Jeff Chimenti from opening night…

Terrapin Crossroads Casual Opening – Bertha

Many of the same participants are expected back at Terrapin Crossroads tonight.


Picture Show: Bowlive III – Night Eight – Soulive w/ George Porter Jr., Alice Smith, Citizen Cope, ?uestlove, Skerik and Billy Martin

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On most Thursdays at Brooklyn Bowl, ?uestlove spins the night away during sessions billed as Bowl Train which means a more compressed evening than usual for the concert that leads into The Roots drummer’s DJ gig. As was the case last night, where Soulive took the stage early and welcomed a bevy of guests by the time they passed the baton to ?uesto before midnight. Among the many talented musicians joining Soulive at the eighth of ten Bowlive III performances were Medeski Martin and Wood drummer Billy Martin, saxophonist Skerik, singer/songwriter Citizen Cope, Kofi Burbridge, Alice Smith, The Bowlive Horns, Nigel Hall and legendary bassist George Porter Jr.

[All Photos by Phrazz]

Each of Soulive’s two sets last night offered something completely different. The first set started out with just the trio for Steppin’ and Kofi and the horns on El Ron, before they welcomed Cope to lead them a few of his originals, including Bullet and a Target. Alice Smith had a chance to shine towards the end of the set on a cover of Cee Lo’s Fool For You. The Tuesday Night Squad first set closer featured the horns and Nigel Hall on keys.

For the closing stanza, Soulive paid tribute to New Orleans with the help of George Porter Jr., ?uestlove, Billy Martin, Burbridge and Skerik. By the time the set was through, Soulive and their guests had covered Meters classics Hey Pocky Way, Funkify Your Life, Africa and Just Kissed My Baby. For a full recap of Night 8, head over to Royal Family Records’ blog where Karen Dugan has the scoop.

Bowlive III finishes off tonight and tomorrow at Brooklyn Bowl or via iClips Pay-Per-View webcast. Here’s a full gallery of snaps from Night Eight thanks to Nick “Phrazz” Fitanides

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Rex-A-Vision Pilot Released: moe., Yonder, Cornmeal

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Our friend and HT contributor Rex Thomson has spent the last few months working on the pilot for a reality show that documents his adventures travelling to music festivals and both interacting with his favorite bands and shooting the action from the photo pit, backstage and even on stage.

This morning Rex has unveiled the pilot episode of Rex-A-Vision which features appearances from such HT faves as moe., Yonder Mountain String Band and Cornmeal. Yet just as important as the music are the people who play such a huge role in the scene and those festival-goers, along with Rex himself, steal the show. All in all, the pilot, which was shot on a shoestring budget, covers a week of Rex’s travels from his Kentucky home to last November’s Bear Creek Music and Arts Festival in Florida. Head over to Groovestreet.TV to watch each of the seven segments that make up the episode.


Pitchfork Festival Lineup: Real Estate, Ty Seagall, Beach House

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Earlier this year organizers of the annual Pitchfork Music Festival revealed a handful of the acts scheduled to perform at Chicago’s Union Park from July 13 – 15 to an underwhelming response from music fans. Well today the full lineup has come out and it should get a better reaction thanks to the addition of many impressive bands such as Real Estate, Beach House, Cults and Atlas Sound.

Here’s a look at the full lineup as it stands today…

Vampire Weekend, Feist, Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Hot Chip, Sleigh Bells, Beach House, Wild Flag, Real Estate, Atlas Sound, Big K.R.I.T., Nicolas Jaar, Cults, Chavez, Ty Segall, Oneohtrix Point Never, Youth Lagoon, Thee Oh Sees, King Krule, Lotus Plaza, Dirty Beaches, Lower Dens, Milk Music, the Psychic Paramount, Unknown Mortal Orchestra, Outer Minds, A Lull, Dirty Projectors, Flying Lotus, AraabMUZIK, A$AP Rocky, the Field, Danny Brown, Liturgy, Clams Casino, the Olivia Tremor Control, Iceage, Kendrick Lamar, Grimes, Purity Ring, The Men, Cloud Nothings, Tim Hecker, Schoolboy Q, the Atlas Moth and Willis Earl Beal

Three-day passes are already sold out, but individual day tickets remain.

Pitchfork has also announced the breakdown by day…

Friday, July 13:

A$AP Rocky
Willis Earl Beal
Big K.R.I.T. **
Clams Casino
Dirty Projectors
Feist
Tim Hecker
Lower Dens **
The Olivia Tremor Control
Outer Minds **
Purity Ring

Saturday, July 14:

The Atlas Moth
Atlas Sound **
Danny Brown
Cloud Nothings
Cults **
Flying Lotus
Godspeed You! Black Emperor
Grimes
Hot Chip
Nicolas Jaar **
Liturgy
Lotus Plaza **
The Psychic Paramount **
Schoolboy Q
Sleigh Bells
Wild Flag **
Youth Lagoon **

Sunday, July 15:

A Lull **
AraabMUZIK
Beach House **
Chavez **
Dirty Beaches **
The Field
Iceage
King Krule **
Kendrick Lamar
The Men
Milk Music **
Thee Oh Sees **
Oneohtrix Point Never **
Real Estate **
Ty Segall **
Unknown Mortal Orchestra **
Vampire Weekend
** just added



Bear Creek Video Bonanza: Funky Meters, Medeski Martin & Wood, Medeski Scofield Martin & Wood + More

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Last November at Bear Creek, videographer Randy Bayers shot many hours of fantastic footage that he’s been rolling out over the past few months through his Funk It blog. For a taste of just how good these vids are, and of what bands you can expect to see in his clips, check out this teaser video…

Funk It’s Bear Creek Music Festival 2011 Teaser Video

Randy’s most recent post focuses on Medeski Martin & Wood as well as Medeski, Martin, Scofield and Wood. In this clip of MMSW, the quartet performs A Go Go,  Down The Tubes (aka Improv), Hanuman and Little Walter Rides Again…

Medeski, Martin, Scofield and Wood @ Bear Creek

Funk It also contains posts featuring Randy’s Bear Creek videos of Dumpstaphunk, The Funky Meters, Dr. Klaw, Johnny Vidacovich w/ The Trio, Jon Cleary and Marco Benevento, Lettuce, Live Hip Hop, Skerik, Eric Krasno & Chapter 2, the Secret Tree House After Party Jam Session, Russell Baptiste Band and Snarky Puppy as well as a post featuring an assortment of clips. Thanks to Randy for sharing all of his work with us at Funk It!


Mike Gordon: Steamroller Wheelies – A Restoration Convoy

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Phish bassist Mike Gordon has just released a compilation of collaborations with fellow musicians called Steamroller Wheelies – A Restoration Convoy to raise funds for Vermont Flood recovery. On this compilation, which is available for download at LivePhish.com or on CD through Dry Goods, Cactus presents tracks from various projects he’s either developed or participated in over the years, beginning in 1999.

The list of musicians who participated in at least one track is lengthy and varied. It includes Mike’s Phish band mates Page McConnell and Jon Fishman, Marco Benevento, Joe Russo, Chris Thile, Little Feat, Danny Barnes, Russell Batiste, Fonzworth Bentley, Scott Murawski and Oteil Burbridge.

“The repairing of Vermont is about bringing different kinds of people together, so I wanted to do that musically with this group tracks that were recorded over the years with interesting and unique musicians, but not widely released to the public,” says Gordon.

Here’s a full track listing, including the artists involved…

HANG GLIDE  WRITTEN BY MIKE GORDON
Mike Gordon – Acoustic Guitar, Bass, Vocals
Jon Fishman – Drums
Chris Thile – Mandolin
Jared Slomoff – Moog

GO DOWN SWINGIN’  WRITTEN BY DANNY BARNES
Danny Barnes – Guitar, Vocals
Mike Gordon – Bass, Vocals
Brett Lanier – Pedal Steel
Jared Slomoff – Keyboard

SIDEWAYS  WRITTEN BY MIKE GORDON
Mike Gordon – Bass, Guitars, Vocals
Joe Russo – Drums
Marco Benevento – Wurlitzer

THIS LAND IS YOUR LAND  WRITTEN BY WOODY GUTHRIE, ARRANGED BY LITTLE FEAT
Paul Barrere – Guitar, Vocals
Bill Payne – Piano, Vocals
Michael Utley – B-3, Vocals
Fred Tackett – Guitar
Mac McAnally – Guitar, Vocals
Shaun Murphy – Vocals
Alan Schulman – Vocals
Mike Gordon – Bass
Richie Hayward – Drums
Sam Clayton – Tambourine

WALKING ON IPE  WRITTEN BY FONZWORTH BENTLEY AND MIKE GORDON
Fonzworth Bentley -Vocals
Mike Gordon – Bass, Guitars, Vocals
Sean Preece – Drums
Page McConnell – Keyboards

CRUMBLIN’ BONES  WRITTEN BY TOM CLEARY
Tom Cleary – Piano, Vocals
Scott Murawski – Guitar, Vocals
Mike Gordon – Bass, Vocals
Todd Isler – Drums

BEAM ME UP, TOTO  WRITTEN BY CHRIS BARRON AND MIKE GORDON
Chris Barron – Drums, Vocals
Mike Gordon – Bass, Guitar, Keyboards, Vocals
Kenny Goldsmith – Drums

SHORT CIRCUIT  WRITTEN BY MIKE GORDON, SCOTT MURAWSKI AND JOE LINITZ
Scott Murawski – Guitar, Drums, Pedal Steel, Vocals
Mike Gordon – Bass,  Acoustic Guitar, Vocals

WHAM BAM BOODLE   WRITTEN BY GARY GAZAWAY
Gary Gazaway – Flute, Trumpet
Walfredo Reyes, Jr. – Drums
Mike Gordon – Bass
Larry Chaney – Guitar
Col. Bruce Hampton – Vocals
Oteil Burbridge – Bass
Matt Rollings – Keyboards
Victor Wooten – Vocals

HOKEY POKEY  TRADITIONAL, ARRANGED BY RUSSELL BATISTE
Russell Batiste – Drums, Vocals
Mike Gordon – Bass, Vocals
Chris Wyckoff – Keyboards
Tom Mathews – Guitar
Mike Dix – Guitar

Produced by Mike Gordon and Jared Slomoff
All songs mixed by John Holbrook, and Mastered by Fred Kevorkian except
“Wham Bam Boodle”, “Hokey Pokey” and “This Land Is Your Land”
Management by Jason Colton for Red Light Management
Photography/Design by Julia Mordaunt
Publishing by Beth Montuori Rowles

All songs published by Who Is She? Music, Inc (BMI) except for “This Land Is Your Land” published by Ludlow Music Inc (BMI),
“Hokey Pokey” published by Sony/ATV Tunes LLC (BMI) and “Wham Bam Boodle”  published by Gary Gazaway

“This Land Is Your Land” was originally released on Little Feat’s Join The Band and “Wham Bam Boodle” was originally released on El Buho’s Wham Bam Boodle 2000


River’s Edge Music Festival: DMB, Tool, Flaming Lips

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Live Nation has been expanding its reach into the music festival world by promoting the inaugural Peach Music Festival as well as inaugural River’s Edge Music Festival, which is set to take place at Harriet Island in Saint Paul, Minnesota on June 23 and 24.

For this new festie, Live Nation has put together an eclectic lineup that features headliners the Dave Matthews Band, Tool and the Flaming Lips. In addition, Brand New, Polica, Motion City Soundtrack, Puscifer, Coheed & Cambria, Diplo, Scissor Sisters, Datsik, MuteMath, Delta Spirit, Blaqstarr, Kinky, Mexican Institute of Sound, Civil Twilight, Quietdrive, An Horse, Gardens & Villa, AM & Shawn Lee, The Whigs, Hey Rosetta!, K-Flay, Yawn, Kids These Days, Yuna and The Rope are set to perform.

“We are thrilled to bring the Twin Cities the festival it has long deserved, a reflection of the discriminating tastes of its music fans as well as the area’s reputation as a cultural leader,” said Mark Campana, Co-President, Live Nation. “We will be making the most of this beautiful site and its natural advantages to create an experience that truly reflects the community, creativity, and culture of the area. River’s Edge Music Festival will enrich Saint Paul’s already vibrant musical landscape and provide a new touring destination for artists for years to come.”

Tickets go on sale next Friday, April 13, at 10AM CT through the event’s website.


Umphrey’s McGee to Make moe.down Return

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The first round of artists set to perform at moe.down 13 at Snow Ridge Ski Area in Turin, New York on August 10 – 12 have been announced and there’s a familiar name involved as Umphrey’s McGee will make their fourth appearance at moe.’s annual festival. Ever since the first one in 2000, moe. has done a good job of varying the moe.down lineup each year. It’s rare that bands get asked a second time, let alone a third but Umphrey’s McGee is a special circumstance.

Rebubula, a classic moe. song, was one of the first covers Umphrey’s ever played back in 1998. In 2002, UM guitarist Brendan Bayliss lived out a dream when he performed Rebubula with moe. at the first Bonnaroo. Since then, the two jam scene staple, have gone on to co-headline the Summer Camp Music Festival each Memorial Day weekend. Bayliss had high praise when asked about the moe. for a Relix Magazine feature, “I really can’t stress enough how instrumental moe. has been in my career. I’ve met a lot of musicians and there’s nobody like those guys when it comes to being down-to-earth people not caught up in the rock star bullshit. They’re content with what they’ve created and how they’ve done it, and they should be.”

Umphrey’s last appeared at moe.down in 2009, which followed previous sets at moe.down 7 in 2006 and moe.down 4 in 2003. Buffalo prog-rockers Aqueous, who cite both moe. and Umphrey’s as influences, fellow Upstaters Timbre Coup and reggae act SOJA round out the short list of acts that made up the first round of moe.down 13 artists. Tickets are on sale now for $120.


Televised Tune: On The Tube This Weekend

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HT faves Rodrigo y Gabriela return to The Tonight Show with Jay Leno tonight, but unlike the “Mariachi Metal” duo’s past appearances, this time they’ll have a full band in tow.

Friday, April 6 [All Times ET]

  • Mastodon – Live From Sonisphere [Palladia 10PM]
  • Rodrigo y Gabriela on Jay Leno [NBC 11:35PM]
  • All-American Rejects on Jimmy Kimmel [ABC Midnight]
  • Future on Jimmy Fallon [NBC 12:35AM]

Saturday, April 7

  • Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears on Austin City Limits [PBS]
  • Joe Bonamassa – Live at the Beacon [Palladia 9AM]
  • Freddie Mercury – The Untold Story [Ovation 2:30PM]
  • One Direction on Saturday Night Live [NBC 11:30PM]

Sunday, April 8

  • Radiohead – The King of Limbs [Palladia 10AM]
  • Neil Young – Musicares: Person of the Year [Palladia 2:30PM]
  • Ringo Starr and the Roundheads w/ Colin Hay [HDNet 8PM]
  • Bachman and Turner – Reunited [HDNet 9:05PM]


Video: Punch Brothers – Just What I Needed

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The A.V. Club’s latest edition of their Undercover series is barely underway, and yet this is the second time that we’ve decided to feature a performance from it. It’s hard to ague with wanting to share this video of the Punch Brothers taking on The Cars’ classic track Just What I Needed. Chris Thile & Co., who have helped to take bluegrass into the 21st century, have once again reinvented the genre with their cover of the 1978 classic, and thus will now be known as the founding fathers of New Wave-grass.

Punch BrothersJust What I Needed

The Punch Brothers will head out for a lengthy U.S. tour, which includes high profile appearances at the Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival and Newport Folk this summer.


Friday Mix Tape: Making Peace With The Sun

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This mixtape is dedicated to the spirit of the rising sun. Sunrise is part of the party culture, but it must be accompanied by the most cerebral and gentle sounds to make the transition from creep to sleep that much softer. Any true party kid must make his peace with the sun.

This is the soundtrack to that treaty.

Making Peace With The Sun by Scott Bernstein on Grooveshark



Levon Helm “Backs” Out of Wellmont Gig…Again

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Our wishes for a speedy recovery go out to Levon Helm, who has postponed a planned performance at the Wellmont Theatre in Montclair, New Jersey for a second time. Promoter Bowery Presents have announced that tonight’s show, which was originally scheduled for February 10, has been postponed again due to the back issues that sidelined The Band drummer earlier this year. A new date has not been revealed and no word on whether Deer Tick, who were scheduled to open tonight, will join the Levon Helm Band at the rescheduled show.

Here’s the full explanation from the venue’s website

Levon has had a slipped disk in his back this past few weeks as you may have heard, and despite daily therapy, it hasn’t healed enough for him to move freely enough to travel or sit at the drums for any length of time. Levon would like to assure everyone that his health otherwise has been excellent as of late. Levon and the band have had a strong run of touring this past month and were very much looking forward tonight’s show in Montclair with Deer Tick. Levon and the band are eager to get back on the road and hope to see all the fans soon. We are very sorry for any inconvenience this has caused. Refunds will be available at point of purchase.

As of press time Levon’s website hasn’t been updated with the news or the status of tomorrow night’s Midnight Ramble with guests the Alexis P. Suter Band.

[via Brooklyn Vegan]


Europe ’72: 40 Years Later – A Tale Of Two Cities, Part I : London

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In honor of the 40th anniversary of Europe ’72, a legendary Grateful Dead tour now available in all its 16-track glory, we enlisted the help of Joe Kolbenschlag and the Steel Cut Oats team to break down a handful of the most memorable shows from the run. Today, they start with an essay on a Grateful Dead concert that took place 40 years ago today in England’s biggest city.

Grateful Dead, April 7th, 1972, Wembley Empire Pool, London, England

One of the few misconceptions overheard once the mammoth “Euro Box” (Europe ’72: The Complete Recordings) was scheduled for release was “why bother?…everything already circulates in great quality.” Well, the very first disc of the 73 CD set squashes that theory immediately. Previously, the only lossless sources of the band’s first set of the tour were two dull audience recordings – considered more laughable than listenable. 2002′s Steppin’ Out With The Grateful Dead featured the significant jam portion of the second set – Truckin’ > Drums > Other One > El Paso > Other One > Wharf Rat – so we at least could estimate the rest of the show was safely tucked in the Vault. Using the same 16-track recordings as the ‘Euro Box’, Steppin’ Out was a 4-disc compilation culled from seven of their eight performances from England during the tour. Loaded with five hours of highlights, it was well-received by fans, and certainly proved that anything Europe ’72 was desirable in the Dead market. Ten years later, a gem like this inaugural set finally circulates in top-notch quality, so let’s get right to it.

Sam Cutler’s unmistakable ‘ho-hum’ intonation introduces the Grateful Dead to the London audience. Most would probably associate the Englishman and recent Dead tour co-manager as being the manager for The Rolling Stones – famously heard at the beginning of their Get Yer Ya-Ya’s Out! live album. Opening three of the first five shows,’Greatest Story Ever Told kicks off the tour with massive enthusiasm. Immediately tight, the entire band is represented sans Pigpen – Keith lays down some great piano work behind Phil and Billy’s beat, and Jerry’s wah-wah solos are spot on. Weir and Donna wail away to close out the track, and five minutes in, the band is brimming with confidence.

“Pig has the old-school organ tones cranking, Keith and Jerry are blistering their solos, and Billy is just snapping everyone in line for what might be considered the best version of all time – insane!”

Garcia calls Sugaree next, and although in 1972 it was considered simply a warm-up song, this version has solid footing throughout. Pig’s organ is finally audible, and proves to be another excellent track while Jerry demonstrates some very youthful vocals. The next highlight is certainly the China Cat Sunflower > I Know You Rider – having never heard this one before, I was stunned at how sprightly the opening sequence was. Phil is a monster during the post-verse jams, and aggressive right through Bobby’s solos. Jer/Bobby/Billy/Keith/Phil – all in sync here, and with that punch of Jerry’s ‘headlight’ verse, it’s so indicative of this entire evening. The perfectly executed transitions complement the grooves as Phil remains steady on the top side as the band closes the first mini-jam of the tour. Only 30 minutes in, and it had exceeded any type of notion I had for how the first set could possibly develop – stunning right out the gate.

  • Previous Steel Cut Oats Installments: #9, #8#7#6#5

Relatively rare over the entire ‘Euro Box’, one of two technical issues hampering this specific show produces the first bummer of the evening – an otherwise fantastic Big Boss Man is marred by a cut with about 30 seconds to go ending the song prematurely. Pig engages the crowd, his harp solos have minimal feedback as Jerry complements his leads, and you can feel and hear Pig just starting to get his feet wet in this strange place….and then the damn thing fades out. A real heartbreaking moment, but thankfully there’s very few of these that span the 22 shows.

The band attempts a few mid-tempo numbers next (Black Throated Wind, Loser), but it doesn’t suit them on this evening – there’s too much nervous energy abound, and the shorter songs are taking over. Bobby selects Beat It On Down The Line at just the right time. Setting the English audience right in the middle of San Francisco’s Acid Test days of the mid-sixties, BIODTL is amphetamine-laced right from the playful nine-count. Pig has the old-school organ tones cranking, Keith and Jerry are blistering their solos, and Billy is just snapping everyone in line for what might be considered the best version of all time – insane! As if plucked right from their first studio album, it’s four minutes of fury where the old meets the new, and East meets West. All parties are clearly satisfied.

Jerry confidently moves on to one of the new tunes that blossoms into an eventual classic from the original Europe ’72 album – Tennessee Jed. All the elements that have carried the band thus far are still intact – a bit of muscle mixed with some confidence and on-stage swagger – resulting in a wonderful reading of the six-month-old tune. Concluding the first set (as the true closer, Casey Jones is missing from the reels, becoming technical oddity number two of the set) is Playin’ In The Band. Played at every single gig in Europe – and twice during a taping for television exactly two weeks later in West Germany – Playin’ is the definitive benchmark track of the tour. Of any song played, this one clearly gains the most momentum artistically and creatively in these seven weeks.

The track really started to progress just prior to the European tour (specifically at Manhattan’s Academy of Music in late March before heading overseas), and once they returned to the States, it would never be the same. Just about every version brings something new to the table, and with constant evolution night after night, the real maturation of this classic begins on this tour. On opening night, it’s representative of the rest of the set – high energy backed with group synergy and competence. There are much stronger versions as the tour progresses, but this one caps a solid (yet short) first set. These guys were certainly chomping at the bit to finally get on with performing for their foreign hosts, and I was shocked to hear such a firecracker of a set coming right out the gate. Set I proved many, many more surprises were in store…..remarkable.

Opening the second set with Truckin’, we’re right back where we left off before the intermission – big energy coupled with a quick pace. As with most, Weir can’t quite nail all the lyrics, but his personality shines through as he subs the “Chicago” vocal for “London” – the spirits are high. After the closing lyrics, the band works to slow the pace down, shifting into a minor key – hinting at a possible Other One. The themes begin, all are ready to pounce, and just like that everyone drifts off leaving Bill Kreutzmann to deftly handle the reins. For those keeping score, Billy’s drum solos for this tour ranged between one and four minutes. Typically, there are some obvious signposts where these occur during the sets, but what he does inside those brief spaces is fantastic.

Without a doubt, a good chunk of the credit should go directly to the original recording crew – fan favorite Betty Cantor (2 track mixes), Bob Matthews (front of house), Dennis “Wizard” Leonard (16-track) and legends Jim & Janet Furman. When the crew set up the drum kit and applied the recording techniques used throughout the European run, Billy was given the first five of the sixteen recording tracks – 1 = bass drum, 2 = floor tom, 3 = snare, 4 = overhead, and 5 = hi hat. Be sure to crank these portions, it’s a real treat to be given the ability to hear so much sonic data produced by one musician from a 40 year old piece of magnetic tape – very impressive.

Without spending too much time on the Other One portions due to its previous official release, there are a number of quick bursts created, and the theme is again, fast and furious. It is, however, interesting to note Phil popping the Caution theme close to the 16 minute mark just before the band settles down for a few minutes allowing Weir and Garcia to sneak in an El Paso. After the sequence closes with Wharf Rat, an unidentified American crew member requests folks to “clear the aisles” due to fire code, prompting Sam Cutler to quip “so the police have more room to dance”…festive moods, indeed.

The final thirty minutes of the show bring more of the same juice – a triumphant, yet lyrically gaffed Ramble On Rose, a funky Sugar Magnolia and a hot hot Not Fade Away > Goin’ Down The Road Feelin’ Bad > Not Fade Away trifecta. This version of the suite was a ‘no-brainer’ to be included on 2011′s 2-disc companion release Europe ’72 : Volume 2. Once again, everyone is in the game, and the energy level is as high as it was at the start of the show – something that is typically not all that common over the next seven weeks of touring. One band member whose presence was clearly missing throughout the second set was Pigpen – he gives and gets plenty of attention throughout Europe in several Good Lovin’ and Caution romps, but he does save one last surprise for this evening. As the band closes in on the NFA reprise, he goes toe-to-toe vocally with a charged Bobby Weir, and it’s a thing of ragged beauty that only Pigpen could provide. Garcia, who stood between them on stage, must have had a huge grin as Pig does his best to keep right up with Bob as both shout into the microphones to finish off the set as the final crescendos fall to applause – one of those great Pigpen moments in which you can’t help but laugh, hoot, and holler right along with him.

Clocking in at under three hours, this show is one of the shortest of the run. With that being said, it comes highly recommended to anyone looking to hear a little something new from this tour – especially the first set tunes and the finale. This is a very unique European gig – a bit speedy with some decent jams, but it won’t ever be confused as being one of the ‘deeper’ shows from April or May. The compact nature of this show paired with the ‘we are finally here’ energy allows this night to burn a little more white-hot than most. With the Grateful Dead successfully managing their first night jitters, and with its (almost) complete official release decades later, this show can now be be held as one of the true classics of the Europe 1972 tour.

Grateful Dead, April 7th, 1972, Wembley Empire Pool, London, England:

Set I: Greatest Story Ever Told, Sugaree, Chinatown Shuffle, Me and My Uncle, China Cat Sunflower > I Know You Rider, Big Boss Man, Black-Throated Wind, Loser, Mr. Charlie, Beat It On Down The Line, Tennessee Jed, Playin’ In The Band, Casey Jones

Set II: Truckin’ > Drums > The Other One > El Paso > The Other One > Wharf Rat, Ramble On Rose, Sugar Magnolia, Not Fade Away > Goin’ Down The Road Feelin’ Bad > Not Fade Away

Encore: One More Saturday Night


Televised Tune: On the Tube This Week

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It’s a great music week for late night talk shows with M. Ward on Conan and Slash on Jimmy Kimmel tomorrow and Feist on Leno and The Shins on Kimmel this Thursday. Also on Thursday, HT faves Alabama Shakes are set to appear on Letterman before performing at the Music Hall of Williamsburg.

Monday, April 9 [All Times ET]

  • Alice Cooper: Behind the Music Remastered [VH1 Classic 2PM]
  • Pink Floyd: The Wall [VH1 Classic 9PM]
  • Tennis on David Letterman [CBS 11:35PM]
  • Esperanza Spalding on Jay Leno [NBC 11:35PM]
  • Pulp on Jimmy Fallon [NBC 12:35AM]

Tuesday, April 10

  • M. Ward on Conan [TBS 11PM]
  • Shooter Jennings on David Letterman [CBS 11:35PM]
  • Eric Turner w/Lupe Fiasco and Tinie Tempah on Jay Leno [NBC 11:35PM]
  • Slash on Jimmy Kimmel [ABC 12:05AM]
  • White Rabbits on Jimmy Fallon [NBC 12:35AM]

Wednesday, April 11

  • Eminem: Biography [BIO 9AM]
  • Tom Petty: Live from Gatorville [HDNet 9PM]
  • Kaiser Chiefs on David Letterman [CBS 11:35PM]
  • Neon Trees on Jay Leno [NBC 11:35PM]
  • The Civil Wars on Jimmy Kimmel [ABC 12:05AM]

Thursday, April 12

  • The Arctic Monkeys on Conan [TBS 11PM]
  • Alabama Shakes on David Letterman [CBS 11:35PM]
  • Feist on Jay Leno [NBC 11:35PM]
  • The Shins on Jimmy Kimmel [ABC 12:05AM]
  • The Ting Tings on Jimmy Fallon [NBC 12:35AM]


Video: Bonnie Raitt – Right Down The Line

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Move over indie bands, legacy acts are trying to make sure that you don’t forget about them in 2012. This year we’ve already seen high quality releases from the likes of Bruce Springsteen, Van Halen and Leonard Cohen, and tomorrow we’ll see that trend continue as Bonnie Raitt will put out her latest studio album Slipstream. The 12-track covers-heavy affair will be Rock & Roll Hall Of Famer’s first new record in seven years, and will also serve as the debut album for her own label, Redwing Records. Late last week Raitt released the music video for that album’s first single, a cover of the Gerry Raftery classic Right Down The Line. Let’s check it out…

Bonnie RaittRight Down The Line

Bonnie Raitt will make a slew of national television appearances this week, and will officially kick off the first leg of her North American tour on Tuesday, May 1, at the Events Center at the First Council Casino in Newkirk, Oklahoma.


Strangefolk: A Great Long While In The Making

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Knowing that Strangefolk was reuniting for four nights of shows to celebrate their 20th anniversary as a band, I eagerly made plans to attend the entire run of shows. This was the band that I was introduced to in 1996 alongside great friends at Syracuse University and listened to nearly as much as any other band in the past 16 years. Their music has always brought an errant smile to my face, as much now as back when I saw the original quartet of guitarists Jon Trafton and Reid Genauer, bassist Erik Glockler and drummer Luke Smith at Hungry Charlie’s in Syracuse, as well as throughout upstate New York. They were the band that introduced me and many others to the broad genre of jambands, as well the nascent concept of live music. The music was fun, happy, had high danceability and I found it fun to have my hair bounce up and down as I bobbed and weaved doing the funky chicken from side to side. Strangefolk is and will always be my first jam band love.

[Photo Courtesy of Jon Trafton]

Erik Glockler: Last week was great for me in many ways. It was truly awesome to see so many people I hadn’t seen for so long. Many relationships were formed along the way and it was nice to revisit, if only for a short time. I’m always amazed at how strong the community vibe is. I forget that many people all know each other from the past.

But this love was not requited; I loved them, then in 2000 Reid left. I still loved them yet I moved to Florida, well out of their Northeast home base. I came back and they were gone, with Luke having left and a hiatus in effect due to Jon’s cancer diagnosis. I was left with my tapes, discs and the Live Music Archive, I reluctantly dealt with it. In 2007 I caught them at moe.down 8 and although it wasn’t the same four on stage (they had grown to five with Don Scott on keys, plus Luke Patchen Montgomery on guitar and Russ Lawton replacing Luke Smith on drums), the music was the same and I danced throughout the empty pit in the early afternoon sun as though I was back in college.

In 2008 I started making the annual trek out to Boston for the two shows each March and attended with my friend Matt, who had seen them as much as I had during our time in Syracuse and post-college back at home in New England. The annual pair of shows was a shift in step, blending together the old and new perfectly and reigniting my love for this band that started it all. While shows were few in number and spread out over the year, they were that much sweeter and enjoyable. Fewer tour dates continued to make the heart grow fonder.

Jon Trafton: Going to the barn in Vermont for rehearsals was something we did knowing it would set the vibe for the entire reunion run. We’d all been practicing in our own respective woodsheds for months and we’d penciled the first weekend in March as our first rehearsal session but we hadn’t decided where it would take place. Ultimately, the decision to hunker down in our home state of Vermont away from all distractions was a no-brainer. We literally never left the building until it was time to go home.

Fast forward to 2012 and this is still the same band I grew up on in my late teens and throughout my 20s and now 30s. The group always plays their namesake festival, StrangeCreek (né Garden of Eden) as well as Gathering of the Vibes nearly every other year. And then after three months of anticipation and planning, there they were on the stage right in front of me at Brooklyn Bowl, and at Higher Ground and The State Theater over four nights to end an intense March that seemed to last a year.

Luke Smith: There was a lot of teamwork that went into this, each person did their part and there were support systems for us as we worked to make it happen. Andy Herrick, Pete Shapiro, Alex Crothers, the fans who booked plane tickets and took time from work and lives, all were great motivators on that ride, but knowing people and fans put chips into the game, it served as a constant reminder to stay true to the task at hand, to play the best we could play.

Despite lineup changes, the heart of the band is still there and through a month of practice and rehearsals, the band I grew up on hadn’t changed or lost their ability to play their classic songs. The only notable difference among the band – quite a bit less hair, but the same can be said about the crowd, for they have cut their locks and grown older too. The fans that went to these shows were able to get their fill of songs, with few repeats and nearly every tune fans could have asked for was played at some point in the more than 12 hours of music over the four days.

The appeal of the music of Strangefolk is found in their memorable lyrics, riffs and songs that are very inviting to the average ear. At one point on Friday, I struck up a conversation with a fan who remarked that he had seen over 50 shows since the mid ’90s and, like many, was thrilled to be seeing the original lineup again. Then he said something that stuck and made great sense – Strangefolk is campfire music: the songs are easily sung as a group, can be played over and over without getting bored and provide a pleasant and upbeat soundtrack to travel and the outdoors. Certainly, this is due in part to their roots in the music of CSNY, Neil Young, Phish, The Grateful Dead and others of the same ilk, but also in part due to their Burlington and New England roots. If there was a soundtrack to the region, Strangefolk would surely be a great part of it, echoing from Valhalla to Reuben’s Place.

Reid Genauer: In terms of excitement, preparation, the “collective think” the days and even months were like a long ramp. It started with a simple phone call and the commitment to do some shows. The shows were booked and announced. Emails flew around. Long hours locked in my rehearsal space unfolding tunes or at least parts of tunes that had gotten dusty. Rehearsing the material with the band and solidifying the forms. Writing a set list! BAM – taking the stage! It was like one little milestone after another that really culminated at the State Theater in Maine with a few good hours of Rock and Roll. It was a really intense and in some ways condensed journey from the private preparation to public display. From dormant to live!

The Shows

Brooklyn Bowl is nearly three years old yet already has a certain mysticism about it. Pete Shapiro doesn’t just own the venue, he brought Strangefolk to play there the night prior to the three other announced shows and let the band practice for the shows at the soon to be reopened Capitol Theater in Portchester. Flying back for the shows from vacation in Florida, his encouragement was instrumental in getting the band to pick up where they left off 12 years prior. His effort paid off with a great first show back, starting with Poland, which referenced not only Brooklyn but hinted at the elephant in the room of their breakup and reuniting after all this time. “I was thinkin’ about my life, thinkin’ where I’ve come; things he might have said, things he might have done.”

The first night back started off strong, with highlights of As… being short and sweet, Pawn stretched out into a highlight of the night jam, the lone version of Alaska of the run, this lyrical odyssey and sing-a-long was classically jammed and extrapolated as though they had never stopped playing. Crowd favorites Rather Go Fishin’ and Westerly elicited the greatest cheers and dancing from a crowd that although slightly smaller in number after setbreak, were nonetheless appreciative of the band as the night progressed. This reunion was apropos for the timing, being the band’s 20th year and they were both well-received and well-rehearsed.

3/28 – Brooklyn Bowl

Set 1: Poland, Bus Driver, Valhalla, …As, Pawn, Chasing Away, Alaska, Stout Hearted

Set 2: Speculator, All The Same, Oxbow, Elixir, Fishin, I Tell Myself, So Far Gone, Westerly

Encore: Roads

[All Four Setlists via Strangefolk Reunion]

Erik Glockler: It feels like Strangefolk is just the catalyst for this community to get together and laugh, dance and share some time together. It was also very fun to play those old songs again. It didn’t take long to get back in the groove and find some of those elusive notes. And lastly, it was great making music with three friends again, who started out on this road nearly 20 years ago. It felt the same as it ever did. Well, maybe it was a little more exciting this time.

Venturing up to their original haunt of Burlington, Vermont, the crowd was even livelier, with some having made the trek from the Brooklyn show and parts all around the country for a show where it all started. Opening up with Lines and Circles, the lyrics again beckoned deeper meaning, “Am I asking forgiveness?” as well as discussed the paths taken by the band members: “Some people follow lines, some people follow circles” and was interspliced by a surprising spoken word piece of CSNY’s Find the Cost of Freedom that brought the crowd to near silence as they focused on Reid’s passionate rendition. Two Boys, the first Strangefolk song written by Reid and Jon, was played while friends rekindled old relationships, laughed and hugged over Long Trails and Heady Toppers. Versions of Neighbor, Cabin John and the classic So Well added up in total to more than 45 minutes of pure rock and impressive improvisation. A unique encore of Things That Fly, another of the first Strangefolk songs written by the original duo, was patient, smooth and left the crowd anticipating Friday before they were even out of the venue.

3/29 – Higher Ground

Set 1Lines and Circles, Rachel > Walnut, Shift My Step, Fountain, Blue and Grey, Two Boys, Burned Down

Set 2: Furnace, Sinner, What Say You, New Glock II > Whatever, Far From yourself, Cabin John, Utterly, Neighbor, So Well

Encore: Things That Fly

Reid Genauer: It was a dreamscape in some ways – elevated reality. We really enjoyed seeing each other. Having so many friends and family members around lent to the glow. It was like a warm bubble of personalities, places and musical color. The energy of the crowd could not have been higher. It felt like a high school reunion times 100. We were happy with how we played as well, which was a question mark until it actually happened. Kind of a harsh comparison but its like war – you can train all you like but you don’t know how you’re going to hold up until you are under fire. I think we held the line! We’re still processing what went down but I can say for sure it was a special few days for all of us. We are still coasting on the glow…

PAGE TWO = Higher Ground Night Two and State Theater + Videos


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