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My Morning Jacket to Curate Forecastle X

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Louisville natives and residents My Morning Jacket have teamed up with the city’s biggest festival, the Forecastle Festival, for a partnership that will find MMJ curating the fest’s 10th anniversary from July 13 – 15 at Louisville’s Waterfront Park.

Organizers expect to announce the full lineup soon, but have revealed that MMJ will headline on Saturday night and “will collaborate with producers on festival sights, sounds and experiences, as well as charitable aspects of the event.” “Expect a few surprises,” said Jim James, lead singer of My Morning Jacket in a press release. “This is something we’ve wanted to play for a long time, and plan to make it very special. It’s a opportunity to show people what Louisville is all about, and why this is such a special city.”

Tickets will go on sale this Friday for $100, but the price will increase once the limited number of “early bird” tickets sell out.



Hidden Track Giveaway: Disco Biscuits – Bisco Inferno Video Release – Pt. 2 – M.E.M.P.H.I.S. @ Ogden Theatre

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Last May the Disco Biscuits descended upon Colorado for their third annual Bisco Inferno weekend. The jamtronica pioneers kicked off the action on the 26th and 27th with a pair of performances at Denver’s Ogden Theatre before heading to the world-renowned Red Rocks Amphitheatre for a headlining set on the 28th. All three complete performances will be available on DVD, Blu-Ray and in a variety of downloadable formats on January 31 and we’re giving away a copy a day to a lucky reader each day this week.

For this video release, the Disco Biscuits have teamed up with TourGigs, who have provided fans a full range of purchase options including DVD ($25 per show), Blu-Ray ($30 per show), 480p Standard Definition video files ($15 per show), 1080p High Definition video files ($22 per show) and 1080p “Ultra Quality” video files ($30 per show). There’s a 15% discount for those who buy the same format of all three shows.

As part of our Everybody Wins When We Plug Something And In Return They Offer Us Free Shit To Give Away program, we’re teaming up with the band and TourGigs to premiere video of one full song each day from this release and we’re also giving away a copy of all three shows in DVD or Blu-Ray format. To enter our contest, simply leave a comment below telling us about your favorite Disco Biscuits song. You can enter a second time by leaving a similar comment on the wall of the HT Facebook Page and a third time by following @hidden_track and tweeting the name and date of your favorite tDB jam (be sure to include both “@hidden_track” and #tdbferno” at the end of your tweet so that we see it). This is a quick contest, once the contest entry period closes on Wednesday at 11:59AM EST, we’ll tally all the entries from our comments section, Facebook and Twitter and pick one winner at random.

Here’s the fine print…

  • To enter the contest, leave a comment below telling us your favorite Disco Biscuits song
  • You can enter a second time by leaving a similar comment on the wall of the Hidden Track Facebook Page
  • You can enter a third time by following @hidden_track and tweeting the name and date of your favorite tDB jam (be sure to include both “@hidden_track” and #tdbferno” at the end of your tweet so that we see it)
  • Your comment(s) must be left by 11:59 AM EST on January 25
  • Anybody entering more than once a piece on Facebook, Twitter and at the bottom of this post will be disqualified, tarred and feathered
  • One winner will get a copy of all three shows (5/26, 27 or 28) in the format of their choice (DVD or Blu-Ray)
  • HT staff members are not eligible to win
  • You can enter all six HT/Bisco Inferno DVD/Blu-Ray contests, but can only win once

Now, we present the premiere of M.E.M.P.H.I.S. from the Disco Biscuits’ May 27, 2011 concert at the Ogden Theatre in Denver, Colorado…


Shocker: Ticketmaster Screws Something Up

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At a Facebook event last week, 60 applications were launched that integrate directly with Facebook’s open graph and the newly rolled out (and now being forced on users) Timeline Profile. It was back in September when this functionality was first announced and that was also when we started seeing the ticker on the top right of the page telling us what our friends were listening to on music streaming services such as Spotify and MOG.

The launch of FB Timeline Apps has arrived and there was much excitement last week about Ticketmaster’s contribution, with TechCrunch calling it one of the best. I decided to kick the tires on this new event discovery/ticket purchasing incorporation – perhaps they had done a better job than with the social integration of select-your-own-seat, of which I wasn’t exactly a fan.

Well, I can’t say I was surprised to see that Ticketmaster’s attempt at a Facebook App was disappointing.

In particular:

#1: The events it recommends: So Ticketmaster is going to recommend concerts and events to me based on my listening history and the bands I “Like” on Facebook, sounds simple enough. Wait – why should I go see the Sacramento Kings and Phoenix Suns play basketball? Oh, it’s because I like the band Phoenix.

#2: Adding to the noise and clutter of Facebook Events: You can RSVP to events from inside the Ticketmaster App on Facebook and it will show up in your timeline, that’s pretty sick. Until you realize that there were already too many events for every concert already on Facebook and Ticketmaster just added one more, sort of. Let’s take Wilco at The Fox Theater in Oakland for example – there are six separate event pages on Facebook already: One created by the venue, two created by Sonic-Living Events, one from Pollstar, one from FanSnap and one from Bandsintown. Inside my FB app, it tells me one other person is going to see Wilco, but The Fox tells me 57 other people are going while Bandsintown has 4 RSVP’s. And if I invite someone to go via the TM FB app, all it does is drive them to a screen to buy tickets.

#3: With all the excitement about new “nouns and verbs,” they still couldn’t get tenses right: Alright, now this isn’t so much a functionality issue as much as it is a WTF moment when looking at a company with unlimited development resources. When I RSVP for events from the app, it publishes to my timeline about the shows I am going to – though apparently it also gives me the ability to shift time as it indicates I have already gone to shows taking place in the future. I “Attended Radiohead at HP Pavilion at San Jose on April 11, 2012” – it was great, but I wish they had played more stuff from OK Computer.

Now perhaps I am being a bit harsh on an application that still has that word “beta” plastered on its banner, but it is terrible. In addition to main gripes, it recommends events that are sold out, just wasting the customer’s time. Not only did it recommend I go see the Phoenix Suns, it recommends it multiple times because Ticketmaster has the event listed multiple times, the event itself, the Mezzanine level, premium parking for the event – all separate line items. And it’s slow, painstakingly slow.

At its core, the functionality is cool – recommend events based on the bands I like and my listening history. However, that only functions if the bands are large enough to play a Ticketmaster/LiveNation venue, which does not apply to the majority of small and upcoming bands that we music nerds are going to discover on our own.

Why can’t a company as rich in money and developers as Ticketmaster, with the blessing of a thriving company such as Facebook, knock this out of the park upon launching?


Widespread Panic Kicks Off Wood Tour

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Jam titans Widespread Panic kicked off their first-ever all-acoustic tour, entitled The Wood Tour, last night at The Fillmore in Silver Spring, Maryland with two hour-long sets and a three-song encore. The band offered unplugged versions of material from throughout their career and a few choice covers including Jorma Kaukonen’s Genesis at their first of two shows at the new venue.

Panic dusted off two songs they hadn’t performed since Fall Tour ’08, Fishing and Free Somehow, in the first set. The second set relied more on classic material. Here’s a look at the setlist courtesy of PanicStream.com

I: (8:19 PM) This Part of Town, Worry, Fishing, St. Louis, Clinic Cynic, Wondering, Free Somehow, Genesis, Holden Oversoul (9:12 PM)

II: (9:56 PM) From the Cradle, Can’t Get High, Gimme, Degenerate, Pilgrims, Traveling Man > St Ex, Driving Song > Breathing Slow > City of Dreams (10:56 PM)

E: (11:00 PM) None of Us Are Free, May Your Glass Be Filled, Walkin’ (For Your Love) (11:16 PM)

The Wood Tour continues tonight in Silver Spring.


Video: Unknown Mortal Orchestra – Thought Ballune

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Unknown Mortal Orchestra – a Portland band that’s been gaining a lot of fans around HT headquarters as of late – released one of the more humorous videos of this young year. These party guests learn one of life’s cardinal rules the hard way: always know your source when it comes to eating baked goods.


Postcards From Page Side: Three Musical Wishes For 2012

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To kick off my one of my first columns of 2012, I felt it would be a great idea to put a wish list together of three things I’d like to see happen in 2012. Some requests may seem pedestrian and obvious, while others may be more unrealistic than hearing Hendrix rise from the grave and play a live show in New York. But, regardless of what this list asks for, one thing is music is clear: you just never know what the possibilities may hold, do you?

3.) Phish festival returns to Limestone

Lets’ face it: Phish festivals are the bees knees. They also redefined music festivals in this day and age as we know it, beginning with the out-of-the box thinking and setup of the real “first” festival – The Clifford Ball in 1996 (not counting events such as Ian’s and Amy’s Farm in earlier years on a much smaller scale). There has been no site Phish has visited for their annual festivals more than Limestone, Maine. Hosting The Great Went in ’97, Lemonwheel in ’98 and IT in ’03, Loring Air Force Base has boasted some magical and surreal Phish moments over the years – to say the least.

The reason I would love the band to return here is for several reasons and factors. First, it’s an adventure, plain and simple. I can still remember the Doniac Schvice (Phish’s old, print newsletter) arriving at my door in early ’97, announcing the Great Went in Limestone. Always the jokers, the band described it as “an easy drive from any direction.” Being at the northern-most tip of Maine, and having only one real route to get there, the joke is clearly on the attendees. Waiting in traffic for about 24 hours to enter, the car line takes on a party atmosphere all its own – and I’ve always had a blast.

Secondly, the place is huge! Wandering around during the day, and more especially at all hours of the night when the temperature nosedives like one of the World War II bomber the hangers used to house, Limestone is truly a secluded world of its own, with eye candy galore supplied by the Phish camp and the artists they hire to create it. It literally feels like a huge area to explore and build your own adventure, with tons of Phish sets mixed in. Toss in the fact that you are seemingly hundreds of miles from any sort of reality, and that is the icing on the cake for a great Northern adventure.

2.) More/New Phil & Friends Shows/Tour

Something magical occurred on April 15-17, 1999 at the Warfield Theatre in San Francisco: Phil and Friends, as we got to know it for the next decade, was born. Fresh off a liver transplant and with the help of “Friends” Trey Anastasio and Page McConnell from Phish, Steve Kimock, John Molo and Donna Jean Godchaux, Phil Lesh redefined the concept of the rotating super-group. While the two years has seen him tour tirelessly with Furthur (which is outstanding in their own right), there is just something to be said about some of the surprise lineups and guest spots that seem to gravitate towards Lesh and company over the years.

From regular staples in the lineup like Warren Haynes, John Scofield or Molo, who seem to always deliver fireworks, it is the X-factor guests that often created the greatest results. Ryan Adams was one such notable example who toured with Lesh for a while, and was somewhat unfamiliar to most of the Deadhead community prior to his tenure. But, as Ryan has openly said, he was largely influenced by the Grateful Dead growing up, and it doesn’t seem like too wild of a idea after the fact.

But, my point is, Phil & Friends was and is about the unexpected, the unknown and the exploratory. Having a regularly rotating cast of characters adds to the freshness and flare that always keeps fans on their toes, as well as the band. I, for one, would love to see the recent addition of Furthur drummer Joe Russo in a future lineup of P&F. He, like Molo is a locomotive train that keeps the train barreling down the tracks, leading the other members to play with reckless abandon above him.

I also would die to see a reconciliation between Lesh’s camp and Kimock, who has fit so effortlessly into the extended Dead family over the years. Some of my favorite concerts of my life have been P&F-related. From the return of Anastasio in Glens Falls on October 20, 2007 or the snowstorm show he played at The Beacon on February 12, 2006, or the countless “Q” shows of the early 2000′s, Phil and Friends has been a way for the greatest musicians of our scene to share the stage with a living legend in Lesh.I, for one, could do with more in the future. Thankfully, Lesh has assembled a lineup of friends to play three shows next month, but let’s hope there’s much more where that came from.

1.) Talking Heads Reunion Shows/Tour

Now, quite simply, a boy can dream, can’t he? After seeing LCD Soundsystem’s farewell show at MSG last year, I walked out thinking they might be as close as I would ever come to seeing something akin to The Talking Heads. I’m not calling LCD the TH’s of our generation, but they are very similar and threw awesome dance parties. But, a proper reunion in this day and age of the Talking Heads might just be one of the hottest tickets of all-time. If the Police and Pink Floyd (to a degree) and others can do it, then why not bury the hatchet and give it a try?

The quirkiness of David Byrne, the under-appreciated chops of Tina Weymouth, the infectious drumming of Chris Frantz and sonic swirls of keyboardist Jerry Harrison, it was hard to replicate such a lineup as the Talking Heads had. Cited as examples from just about every jamband today, and one of the most covered artists’ around, the legacy that the Talking Heads carries today is one of its own. While they may not be as big an act as someone like The Beatles, per say, the Talking Heads are still just as vitally important and relevant to past, present and future of music and culture.

While a riff between Byrne and his band mates still remains, I am an optimistic dreamer and remain hopeful that time heals all wounds and relationships. If this goes down, I’d be first in line to see them, and you better believe I’d be stretching my legs for weeks before they hit the stage, because you know a dance party would surely be on the agenda.

Overall, 2012 holds great possibilities and promises for the world of music as a whole. It also holds uncertainty, unexpectedness and one of may favorite traits, danger. You never know what’s around the next corner, but these three things I’ve detailed are a few things I am hoping for in the future. How about you? What are your musical wishes for 2012?


God Street Wednesdays: Jon Bevo’s Love Orchestra – Saturday

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Back in the ’90s when God Street Wine wanted to play a venue that was thought to be “too small” for them, the group performed under the moniker Jon Bevo’s Love Orchestra. The “secret name” helped the band return to rooms such as The Nightingale Bar and Wetlands Preserve long after they outgrew them. This Saturday night GSW members Lo Faber, Aaron Maxwell and Jon Bevo will team up with drummer Dave Diamond, multi-instrumentalist Jason Crosby and Ominious Seapods bassist Tom Pirozzi to resurrect JBLO at Mexicali Live in Teaneck, New Jersey.

Just as with past Jon Bevo’s Love Orchestra performances, Saturday’s gig will feature songs from God Street Wine’s repertoire. In fact, Faber is taking requests through the Bring Back GSW Facebook group. He describes the show as, “A GSW like show with GSW members and all GSW songs plus very special guests” and adds that “rehearsal sounded great.” Pirozzi and Faber go way back as Lo produced the Seapods’ Jet Smooth Ride LP in 1997 and the bassist was a member of the Lo Faber Band.

Tickets for the return of JBLO are currently available through TicketWeb.


Klosterman Stirs tUnE-yArDs Discussion

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Monday, venerable music writer Chuck Klosterman (@CKlosterman) posted a column on Grantland that examined w h o k i l l, the latest album by tUnE-yArDs which was named album of the year in the 2011 Pazz & Jop poll (and #18 on the HT Poll)The article, titled “The Pitfalls of Indie Fame,” quickly stirred controversy as Klosterman’s typical hyperbolic tendencies found their way into his assessment of Merrill Garbus, who essentially is tUnE-yArDs.

The Village Voice’s Maura Johnston (@maura) responded to Klosterman’s piece yesterday, challenging not only his opinions but the quality of his research and the overall depth of his analysis. While neither author can truly predict how history will judge Garbus or her album, they stirred an interesting exchange among fellow music writers (Jessica Hopper @jesshopp, Rob Mitchum @robmitchum, Matt LeMay @mattlemay) on Twitter.

Uncomfortable question: would Klosterman be calling tUnE-YarDs' music "asexual" if Merrill looked like Lana Del Rey? Or Chan Marshall?
@mattlemay
Matt LeMay


Or if she was a dude? MT @: Would Klosterman be calling tUnE-YarDs’ music “asexual” if Merrill looked like Lana Del Rey?
@robmitchum
Rob Mitchum


@ exactly. That album is way more “sexual” than 99.99% of indie bro music.
@mattlemay
Matt LeMay


@ I guess that doesn’t sink in after 1.5 listens and a Wikipedia search. #research
@robmitchum
Rob Mitchum


@ it’s, like, RIGHT THERE, though! It’s RIGHT THERE IN THE MUSIC.
@mattlemay
Matt LeMay


@ I really think the last thing Klosterman wanted to talk about in that article was the music.
@robmitchum
Rob Mitchum


@ @ If he thinks TuneYards whokill is asexual then he must find D’Angelo’s VooDoo downright chaste.
@jesshopp
Jessica Hopper


@ @ I think if she were a dude we’d all be trumpeting “the return of confident sexuality to neutered indie rock.”
@mattlemay
Matt LeMay


@ @ And then that begs the question–asexual in comparison to—Too $hort, Khia, Piles? Whats Klosterman count as NASTY?
@jesshopp
Jessica Hopper


@ @ @ another gross thing is how Klosterman uses “androgynous” and “asexual” as synonyms
@randlechris
Chris Randle


@ And androgyny is fucking sexy and utterly carnal–see also Patti Smith, Bowie.
@jesshopp
Jessica Hopper


What I thought the Tune-Yards album was about: “lust”, “Identity politics” and “the enchantment of violence”: http://t.co/153afQ1F
@jesshopp
Jessica Hopper

Even the Mountain Goats had this to say about Klosterman’s article:


I wish Chuck Klosterman a long life but that Tuneyards piece is some of the laziest thinking published so far this century
@mountain_goats
The Mountain Goats



Hidden Track Giveaway: Disco Biscuits – Bisco Inferno Video Release – Pt. 3 – Helicopters @ Red Rocks

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Last May the Disco Biscuits descended upon Colorado for their third annual Bisco Inferno weekend. The jamtronica pioneers kicked off the action on the 26th and 27th with a pair of performances at Denver’s Ogden Theatre before heading to the world-renowned Red Rocks Amphitheatre for a headlining set on the 28th. All three complete performances will be available on DVD, Blu-Ray and in a variety of downloadable formats on January 31 and we’re giving away a copy a day to a lucky reader each day this week.

For this video release, the Disco Biscuits have teamed up with TourGigs, who have provided fans a full range of purchase options including DVD ($25 per show), Blu-Ray ($30 per show), 480p Standard Definition video files ($15 per show), 1080p High Definition video files ($22 per show) and 1080p “Ultra Quality” video files ($30 per show). There’s a 15% discount for those who buy the same format of all three shows.

As part of our Everybody Wins When We Plug Something And In Return They Offer Us Free Shit To Give Away program, we’re teaming up with the band and TourGigs to premiere video of one full song each day from this release and we’re also giving away a copy of all three shows in DVD or Blu-Ray format. To enter our contest, simply leave a comment below telling us about your favorite Disco Biscuits album. You can enter a second time by leaving a similar comment on the wall of the HT Facebook Page and a third time by following @hidden_track and tweeting the name of your favorite tDB album (be sure to include both “@hidden_track” and #tdbferno” at the end of your tweet so that we see it). This is a quick contest, once the contest entry period closes on Thursday at 1:59PM EST, we’ll tally all the entries from our comments section, Facebook and Twitter and pick one winner at random.

Here’s the fine print…

  • To enter the contest, leave a comment below telling us your favorite Disco Biscuits album
  • You can enter a second time by leaving a similar comment on the wall of the Hidden Track Facebook Page
  • You can enter a third time by following @hidden_track and tweeting the name of your favorite tDB album (be sure to include both “@hidden_track” and #tdbferno” at the end of your tweet so that we see it)
  • Your comment(s) must be left by 1:59 PM EST on January 26
  • Anybody entering more than once a piece on Facebook, Twitter and at the bottom of this post will be disqualified, tarred and feathered
  • One winner will get a copy of all three shows (5/26, 27 or 28) in the format of their choice (DVD or Blu-Ray)
  • HT staff members are not eligible to win
  • You can enter all six HT/Bisco Inferno DVD/Blu-Ray contests, but can only win once

Now, we present the premiere of Helicopters from the Disco Biscuits’ May 28, 2011 concert at the iconic Red Rocks Amphitheatre in Morrison, Colo.


Review: moe. Album Release Party @ Hiro Ballroom

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moe. @ Hiro Ballroom, January 23

Words: Scott Bernstein
Images: Rob Chapman

Over 20 years after forming on the campus of the University of Buffalo, jam stalwarts moe. are still cutting their own path through the notoriously finicky music industry. The band that bucked industry trends by releasing a 45-minute single in 1996 as their debut single on a major label, threw their own festival before it became the norm and has kept the same lineup for 13 years, just put out their tenth studio album, WHAT HAPPENED TO THE LALAs, and celebrated with a typically unorthodox album release party featuring two sets and acrobats at the intimate Hiro Ballroom in New York City on Monday.

[All photos by Rob Chapman]

For Monday’s “show,” moe. treated fans to two sets – a 45-minute acoustic performance and a much longer electric set. The acoustic set was the entertainment for VIPs who plunked down $100 that also entitled them to an open bar, event poster, meet and greet and sushi. Perhaps 150 of the band’s most devoted (and well-heeled) fans gathered around the quintet who opened with the LALAs track Smoke, which like many songs in moe.’s repertoire would fit nicely on ’70s rock radio.

While most of the songs on LALAs were debuted in recent years, there are two exceptions: The Bones of Lazarus (debuted as Lazarus in 2001) and One Way Traffic (unplayed until this show), so it was fitting those two tunes were performed in tandem towards the beginning of the acoustic set. The acoustic version of Lazarus was similar to the album cut and lacked the length of previous electric takes, while the catchy One Way Traffic found Rob Derhak putting down his bass to focus on singing. One Way Traffic, a tune Derhak wrote with Nashville songwriter Steven Dale Jones, appears to be the one LALAs track that departs from the band’s signature sound, as it’s straight, sugary pop. A female acrobat emerged during Lazarus and twirled around a huge hoop set up right above the stage, adding a bit of showmanship to the performance.

Jack Teagarden’s Shake Your Hips, a staple of moe. acoustic sets, fit the room and setting perfectly, before guitarist Chuck Garvey stepped to the mic for a solo version of Suck A Lemon. In a nod to the non-conformist way in which they’ve operated their career, moe. ended the acoustic set with a ten-minute romp through Meat – a dark and dirty jam tune which you wouldn’t expect to hear unplugged (though they have done it before). Meat gave the band their first chance to stretch out and featured impressive solos from Garvey, Derhak and Al Schnier. Following Meat the doors were open to GA ticket holders and the room filled up quickly.

In hiring an outside producer (John Travis) and working with an outside label (Sugar Hill Records) in putting out  WHAT HAPPENED TO THE LALAs, you’d expect a sea change in the group’s sound. However over the course of the evening it was clear that moe.’s style has remained similar over the past decade or so and this was on display during the Downward Facing Dog > St. Augustine sequence that opened the electric set. They still deliver prog-tinged rock songs with slow, expansive, guitar-based jams that their fans love. By pairing songs from the new album with a classic moe. material from the band’s earliest days, they kept the crowd into a show that contained each and every tune from the new album by the time the night was through. More than their counterparts in the jam scene, moe. knows how to milk segues for all they’re worth as the first hints of St. Augustine came minutes before the song actually started. St. Augustine featured the best solo of the night, with Garvey ferociously torching the fretboard as he built up his slide solo to a hearty climax.

A four-some of LALAs tracks made up the bulk of the electric set with Puebla standing out as the best of the bunch. Two pretty female acrobats emerged at the beginning of Rainshine and performed all sorts of tricks on cocoon-like structures set up in the middle of the room. The ladies stayed out for all of Rainshine as well as the Paper Dragon that followed winning cheers from the crowd as they completed difficult spins and twirls. As mentioned, Puebla stole the show in terms of the “new” tunes and contained the most exploratory jam of the evening. Drummer Vinnie Amico slowed the pace towards the end and dropped into a beat reminiscent of the catalog staple Moth, so it wasn’t exactly a big surprise when Moth finally started. During a break between lines, Schnier took the opportunity to thank the fans for coming out and allowing the band to do what they do.

The sound at Hiro Ballroom was fantastic with one exception, you had to strain to hear the work of percussionist Jim Loughlin. Thankfully the mix was fixed when the band re-emerged for the encore and you could hear Loughlin’s malletkat clearly as he led the way through his own Chromatic Nightmare, the last LALAs tune remaining. For the finale, moe. went with fan favorite Rebubula and brought the acrobats back out for another turn on the cocoon-like structures. At 1:30AM, six hours after doors opened to VIPs, the night came to a close. If you’ve seen moe. in the past and enjoyed what you saw, odds are you’ll still enjoy what they are doing in the present. If you’re looking for something different, or a major evolution, you’ll probably be disappointed.

Setlist… (courtesy of Kahlil Katool)

moe. ~ 1/23/12 ~ Hiro Ballroom at The Maritime Hotel ~ NYC, NY

{9:36 PM > 10:22 PM EST}

I: Smoke, The Bones Of Lazarus, One Way Traffic#, Shake Your Hips@##, Suck A Lemon*, meat.

{11:22 PM > 12:52 AM EST}

II: Downward Facing Dog > St. Augustine, Haze^, Rainshine, Paper Dragon, Puebla > Moth

Enc: Chromatic Nightmare > Rebubula

{What Happened To The LA LA’s CD Release Party
First Set was an acoustic set for VIP ticket holders
@ w/ al on mandolin
* w/ chuck solo (entire song)
^ w/ al on ’74 Gibson double-neck
# FTP > First Time Played (acoustic)
## LTP > 1/30/11}

Here’s a full gallery of Rob Chapman’s photos…

IMG_0190 IMG_0188 IMG_0183 IMG_0168 IMG_0165 IMG_0163 IMG_0147 IMG_0144 IMG_0132 IMG_0120 IMG_0099 IMG_0092 IMG_0083 IMG_0075 IMG_0067 IMG_0057 IMG_0049 IMG_0044 IMG_0039 IMG_0014


Paul Simon + Wynton Marsalis + Aaron Neville @ Rose Theater

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What’s sure to be one of the more interesting pairings of 2012 is getting together for three performances at Rose Theater in New York City, when Paul Simon teams up with Wynton Marsalis and Aaron Neville for concerts billed as “The Paul Simon Songbook” on April 18, 19 and 20.

[Photo via Jazz at Lincoln Center]

The trio will perform new orchestrations of Simon’s classic material backed by both the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra and members of Paul’s band. Ever since Marsalis took over as leader of the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra, the ensemble has been playing on creative bills like this one, yet this particular pairing could top them all. All three musicians are legends who have helped develop their own signature styles, we can’t wait to hear how they mesh.

The opening show, on April 18, will be the venue’s annual gala and a tribute to chairwoman Lisa Schiff. This concert isn’t open to the public, unless you want to throw down at least $2,500. Subscribers and members of Lincoln Center will be able to participate in a Jazz at Lincoln Center Friends and Family Mastercard Pre-Sale this Monday, January 30, using MasterCard for the last two shows. Tickets for the 19th and 20th will go on sale to the general public on February 3 through the JALC box office.


Ratdog Reunites For TRI Studios Webcast

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Bob Weir brought his Ratdog ensemble back together for the first time in nearly two years tonight for a free webcast from the Grateful Dead / Furthur guitarist’s TRI Studios. A special version of the group featuring Steve Kimock on guitar performed two full sets that included plenty of Dead classics as well as a number of RatDog originals. Longtime bassist Robin Sylvester had to pull out of the event due to illness. Weir mentioned his comrade towards the end of the show and urged viewers to donate to his Ratdog Foundation to help Sylvester with his medical bills.

[TRI Studios Screenshot]

For setbreak, the feed showed interviews with the band members that told the story of Ratdog. Towards the end of the setbreak featurette, footage of Sammy Hagar singing Loose Lucy with Ratdog, presumably from a rehearsal, was aired. Weir had his acoustic guitar strapped on when the band emerged for the second set as he led them through Peggy-O, Friend of the Devil and Corrina. A Bird Song in the middle of the closing stanza melted into a jazz-oriented “Stuff” jam that showed off the skills of saxophonists Dave Ellis and Kenny Brooks. All in all, TRI Studios gave viewers three and a half hours worth of content in pristine high-definition audio and video for free – quite the deal.

Here’s the setlist…

Set 1: The Music Never Stopped > New Minglewood Blues, Money For Gasoline > Eyes of the World, Even So > October Queen > Mississippi Half Step, Ashes and Glass

Setbreak: The Story of Ratdog featurette

Set 2: Peggy-O@, Friend of the Devil@, Corrina@, Row Jimmy, Cassidy > Bird Song > Stuff, Days Between > Two Djinn > Not Fade Away,

Encore: Ripple

As of now, there are no future gigs scheduled for Ratdog.


Video: Flaming Lips w/ Nels Cline – I Want You (She’s So Heavy)

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Yesterday an official video featuring all of the Flaming Lips’ epic 17-minute take on I Want You (She’s So Heavy) by The Beatles, on which they were joined by Wilco guitarist Nels Cline, surfaced on YouTube. The clip was filmed on New Year’s Eve in Oklahoma City and contains all of the elements we love from the Lips, namely confetti, dancers and a ridiculous light show. Take a look…

Flaming Lips w/ Nels Cline – I Want You (She’s So Heavy)


Marc’s Musings: Jazz Fest On The Mind – January in NYC

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Ever since the lineup for the 2012 New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival was announced on December 13, myself and many other music fans have been dreaming of long days spent listening to the endless choices of amazing music from every genre available at the Fairgrounds (and praying for no rain like last year…did I just jinx us all?!?).

[All Photos by Marc Millman]

Although some people make the sojourn to the Big Easy in late April/early May for boozing on Bourbon Street and some go for the food (Am I the only one dreaming of Cochon de Lait for breakfast, lunch & dinner on the field?), most go for THE MUSIC. And yes, it’s great that the Beach Boys are reuniting with Brian Wilson for their 50th Anniversary. And I am totally psyched to see the Foo Fighters who I missed this tour for the first time ever. And no, I don’t care about the money-grabbing Eagles (even if Joe Walsh is a god and they have a hundred great songs). Let’s face the fact – most die-hards make the trek to NOLA for the local music, the occasional special guest “sit-in” on the field and the special “jams” that occur in the clubs at night.

But alas, it’s January in New York City and it’s freezing out. Instead of Cochon de Lait I get some great falafel at Mahmoun’s or Bereket, great pizza at Joe’s, John’s or Ben’s and great pastrami at…you name your favorite famous deli. But what about THE MUSIC? Well thanks to the likes of the guys at CEG Presents, Brooklyn Bowl and some savvy smaller promoters like Shari Frank of SF Management and Hypersoul from New Orleans, there is plenty of funky, soulful, rock & jazz to tide us over for a few months until Central Park thaws, the cherry and magnolia blossoms open and we hop on flights to Louis Armstrong Airport.

Over the last several weeks, two events in particular stuck out in my mind as the perfect confection until we get to Bourbon or Frenchman Streets to make the connection.

On Friday, January 6th, the good folks from Hypersoul held the first of three nights in a row showcasing their acts from Louisiana. Export NOLA at Hill Country BBQ on West 26th Street provided nearly six hours of music from Mia Borders, Amanda Shaw, Big Sam’s Funky Nation and the Stooges Brass Band. And one week later on Friday the 13th and Saturday the 14th, Shari Frank put on another round of her Up From The Bayou series to help raise money for the New Orleans Musicians Assistance Fund at AOA on the outskirts of TriBeCa. These two shows featured Raw Oyster Cult which is 60% of the Radiators (Dave Malone, Camile Baudoin & Frank Bua) with John Gros (Papa Grows Funk) and Dave Pomerlau (Johnny Sketch & the Dirty Notes Band). Both nights local band Circus Mind opened, playing tight New Orleans influenced funk grooves. And on Friday local teen Charlie Dane opened and even performed Son of A Preacher Man with Circus Mind.

Raw Oyster Cult – Last Getaway

(Other Vids: It Takes A Lot to Laugh, It Takes A Train to Cry, Look-Ka-Py-Py,  Dragon’s Blood – Fever, Sweet Virginia, Goodnight Irene)

Export NOLA was actually a weekend-long event. There was the Friday night show mentioned here, another one on Saturday at Brooklyn Bowl and a last on Sunday night back at Hill Country. The other two shows were variations on this line-up and included Shamarr Allen & the Underdawgs and The Iguanas. On Friday night Ms. Borders set reminded me of early Joan Osborne shows at places like Delta 88. Although she plays a Telecaster and leans a little more towards rock, she has that slightly raspy voice with a Southern twang. And for the first of four bands, she had no problem commanding the attention of the sold-out room.

Ms. Shaw, who at 19 works the stage like a woman many years older and wiser, came next. Amanda tore it up on the fiddle like a woman possessed. In fact, for one of her covers she did Charlie Daniels’ The Devil Went Down To Georgia, which grabbed the crowd’s attention. After moving around the stage  quickly and without stopping for an hour, she ended with a cover of The Clash’s hit from Combat Rock, Should I Stay Or Should I Go. The answer from the crowd, even though there were two bands left, seemed to be: STAY.

The actual headliner came third. I have reviewed Big Sam before. This is the ultimate party band. Their mix of funk, rock, pop, R&B and rap gives you a little bit of everything a great dance party should have. They mix in recent Top 40 hits with their own material making it feel more like listening to a great Saturday Night DJ on WBLS-FM back in the ’80s rather than to another live band from New Orleans fronted by a trombone player.

Big Sam’s Funky Nation – Put Your Hands

(Other Vids: Intro, See Me Dance, Hard To Handle)

After Sam played a set close to 90 minutes in length, the Stooges Brass Band wrapped up the night. They are one of the Crescent City’s top Brass bands. If you are a fan of the Dirty Dozen or the Soul Rebels, you will thoroughly enjoy the street party these guys put on. I stumbled upon them for the first time last year as I left the Festival Grounds one afternoon during Jazz Fest. While waiting for a friend, I was drawn in by the revelry going on over my shoulder where old ladies and little kids were dancing with long-haired hippies and baby boomers.

Stooges Brass Band – Wind It Up

The next weekend, I spent two nights at a newer venue called AOA (Avenue Of The Americas). It is really more of a sports bar and restaurant. However, local promoter Shari Frank found it to use as a new venue for her continuing Up From The Bayou concert series that raises money for NOMAF. The cause is a great one. If you love the music of the Big Easy, it’s nice to see some of it locally and be able to help provide healthcare for these hard-working musicians, many of whom don’t have the insurance needed to get proper medical care.

Ms. Frank is doing a local take on the now famous Down on The Bayou show held every year during Jazz Fest week in New Orleans at the Howlin’ Wolf club. She is very adept at pulling together a mix of musicians from different bands to form an “all-star” group. Sometimes this incorporates local players from the New York area. This time it featured three of the five members of the recently disbanded Radiators with Mr. Gros on keys and vocals and Mr. Pomerlau on bass. Mr. Malone did most of the singing and shared guitar duties with Mr. Baudoin. Mr. Bau played drums. The sets leaned heavily on Radiators staples (both originals and covers). And Mr. Gros acted as the other lead vocalist. On Friday night, the great Christine Ohlman from the Saturday Night Live band sat in with them as she did at the last Up From The Bayou show.

The bands managed by Hypersoul who were part of Export NOLA make frequent swings through the City. All of them tour nationally. If you are in the New York City area, you will generally find them playing shows promoted either by the men behind Sullivan Hall under the NOLA Funk “brand” or at Brooklyn Bowl. Ms. Frank’s next show in the Up From The Bayou series is Fishhead Stew. This is another show tailor-made for Radiators lovers. It will feature Dave Malone, Camile Baudoin and Reggie Scanlan of The Rads, along with the amazing Adam Deitch (Lettuce, Break Science) and of course, Christine Ohlman. The show is on Tuesday, February 7th. So we can all go out that day and buy the new Van Halen album and then go and shake our booties in the Meatpacking District (sort of like a crazy night on Frenchman Street).

Stooges Brass Band Hill Country BBQ (Fri 1 6 12)_January 07, 20120005-Edit-Edit Raw Oyster Cult AOA (Sat 1 14 12)_January 15, 20120068-Edit-Edit Raw Oyster Cult AOA (Sat 1 14 12)_January 15, 20120060-Edit-Edit-Edit Raw Oyster Cult AOA (Sat 1 14 12)_January 15, 20120056-Edit-Edit-Edit Raw Oyster Cult AOA (Sat 1 14 12)_January 15, 20120041-Edit-Edit-Edit Raw Oyster Cult AOA (Sat 1 14 12)_January 15, 20120030-Edit-Edit Raw Oyster Cult AOA (Fri 1 13 12)_January 13, 20120004-Edit Mia Borders Hill Country BBQ (Fri 1 6 12)_January 06, 20120005-Edit-Edit-Edit Mark Rechler Circus Mind AOA (Fri 1 13 12)_January 13, 20120008-Edit-Edit Big Sam's Funky Nation Hill Country BBQ (Fri 1 6 12)_January 07, 20120019-Edit-Edit Amanda Shaw Hill Country BBQ (Fri 1 6 12)_January 06, 20120020-Edit-Edit-Edit


Mountain Jam 2012 Lineup: Winwood, Mule, Roots & More

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The initial lineup announcement for the 2012 Mountain Jam Festival has been revealed and it’s impressive. Joining host Warren Haynes and Gov’t Mule a top the bill will be Steve Winwood, Michael Franti & Spearhead, The Roots, Ben Folds Five and The Travelin’ McCoury’s featuring Keller Williams. Also of note, supergroup The Word will reunite for a Mountain Jam performance.

This year’s event will be held over the course of four days from May 31 to June 3 at Hunter Mountain in Hunter, New York. Tickets are currently available for $150.

Here’s the full initial lineup…

STEVE WINWOOD, GOV’T MULE, MICHAEL FRANTI & SPEARHEAD, THE ROOTS, BEN FOLDS FIVE, THE WORD (FT. ROBERT RANDOLPH, JOHN MEDESKI, & NORTH MISSISSIPPI ALLSTARS), TROMBONE SHORTY & ORLEANS AVENUE, THE TRAVELIN’ MCCOURY’S (FT. KELLER WILLIAMS), KARL DENSON’S TINY UNIVERSE, DAWES, GARY CLARK JR., CAROLINA CHOCOLATE DROPS, GIVERS, CHARLES BRADLEY, MARIACHI EL BRONX, BUSTLE IN YOUR HEDGEROW (FT. JOE RUSSO, MARCO BENEVENTO, DAVE DREIWITZ & SCOTT METZGER), EOTO, ANDERS OSBORNE, SARA WATKINS, ZACH DEPUTY, BREAK SCIENCE, PLANET OF THE ABTS, THE LEE BOYS, MARCO BENEVENTO, WOLF!, SISTER SPARROW & THE DIRTY BIRDS, THE SHEEPDOGS, THE BREW, LUKAS NELSON & PROMISE OF THE REAL, GROUND UP, PEDRITO MARTINEZ, ZEE AVI, AUNT MARTHA, KOPECKY FAMILY BAND, LAUREN SHERA, UNCLE LUCIUS, CONNOR KENNEDY BAND



Hidden Track Giveaway: Disco Biscuits – Bisco Inferno Video Release – Pt. 4 – Tricycle @ Ogden

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Last May the Disco Biscuits descended upon Colorado for their third annual Bisco Inferno weekend. The jamtronica pioneers kicked off the action on the 26th and 27th with a pair of performances at Denver’s Ogden Theatre before heading to the world-renowned Red Rocks Amphitheatre for a headlining set on the 28th. All three complete performances will be available on DVD, Blu-Ray and in a variety of downloadable formats on January 31 and we’re giving away a copy a day to a lucky reader each day this week.

For this video release, the Disco Biscuits have teamed up with TourGigs, who have provided fans a full range of purchase options including DVD ($25 per show), Blu-Ray ($30 per show), 480p Standard Definition video files ($15 per show), 1080p High Definition video files ($22 per show) and 1080p “Ultra Quality” video files ($30 per show). There’s a 15% discount for those who buy the same format of all three shows.

As part of our Everybody Wins When We Plug Something And In Return They Offer Us Free Shit To Give Away program, we’re teaming up with the band and TourGigs to premiere video of one full song each day from this release and we’re also giving away a copy of all three shows in DVD or Blu-Ray format. To enter our contest, simply leave a comment below telling us about your favorite year of the Disco Biscuits’ career. You can enter a second time by leaving a similar comment on the wall of the HT Facebook Page and a third time by following @hidden_track and tweeting the name of your favorite tDB year (be sure to include both “@hidden_track” and #tdbferno” at the end of your tweet so that we see it). This is a quick contest, once the contest entry period closes on Friday at 11:59AM EST, we’ll tally all the entries from our comments section, Facebook and Twitter and pick one winner at random.

Here’s the fine print…

  • To enter the contest, leave a comment below telling us your favorite year of the Disco Biscuits’ career
  • You can enter a second time by leaving a similar comment on the wall of the Hidden Track Facebook Page
  • You can enter a third time by following @hidden_track and tweeting your favorite year of tDB(be sure to include both “@hidden_track” and #tdbferno” at the end of your tweet so that we see it)
  • Your comment(s) must be left by 11:59 AM EST on January 27
  • Anybody entering more than once a piece on Facebook, Twitter and at the bottom of this post will be disqualified, tarred and feathered
  • One winner will get a copy of all three shows (5/26, 27 or 28) in the format of their choice (DVD or Blu-Ray)
  • HT staff members are not eligible to win
  • You can enter all six HT/Bisco Inferno DVD/Blu-Ray contests, but can only win once

Now, we present the premiere of Tricycle from the Disco Biscuits’ May 26, 2011 concert at the Ogden Theatre in Denver…


Bloggy Goodness: Wilco – The Video

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Over the last few years HT faves Wilco have launched their own music festival, started their own label, played innovative tours in their hometown of Chicago and even sold their own brand of coffee, but the one thing that they haven’t done, at least since 1999, is make a music video. That changed yesterday as Jeff Tweedy & Co. released a new animated video for the tune Dawned On Me, but this isn’t your straight up clip. For their first video in over a decade the band teamed up with the folks at King Features for an animated video that features not only the band as cartoon characters, but also the studio’s iconic characters Popeye, Olive Oyl, Bluto, Whimpy and Swee’ Pea in their first hand-drawn, frame-by-frame rendering for Popeye cell animation since the Popeye and Son series from 1987.

In addition to the video, Wilco and Kings Features also launched a full on interactive website, which features links to a live version of Dawned On Me, their iTunes session and more. Let’s check it out…

Finally, to say that Fiona Apple has had a rocky relationship with her record label might be a bit of an understatement, as the singer-songwriter has seemed to consistently battle with her bosses at Epic over the last decade to get her music released. The tempestuous Apple, who has only released three studio albums since 1996, her last being 2005′s Extraordinary Machine, has reportedly been finished with her latest for well over a year. Well earlier this week Epic Records head honcho L.A. Reid tweeted the following, “Lots of good music coming from @Epic_Records in the next few weeks. Stay tuned music fans. Welcome back Fiona!” A spokesperson for Epic confirmed to Time that Apple’s new album would indeed be released, but an exact date had yet to be determined.


B List: 10 Best Moments of Umphrey’s Best Buy Run

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This past week Umphrey’s McGee returned to New York City for two sold out performances at the Best Buy Theater. Over the course of the weekend Umphrey’s showed why fans have been raving about recent shows. These HT faves are on an upswing and if they keep it up the sky’s the limit.

In lieu of a standard review, I wanted to point out my ten favorite moments from Friday and Saturday’s show, accompanied by the outstanding work of photographer Jeremy Smith. If you’re a fan, these are 10 moments you need to hear and if you’re not a fan, perhaps after listening to the moments of which I speak (1/20 & 1/21 are available through UMLive.net), you will be.

10. First NYC All Night Long Since 1999

In the middle of the Der Bluten Kat on Friday night, which guitarist Brendan Bayliss introduced as one of the group’s first songs, Jake Cinninger put down his guitar and headed over to Andy Farag’s percussion rig. Longtime fans recognized that Jake primarily plays percussion on the band’s version of All Night Long by Lionel Richie, so they weren’t surprised when minutes later UM lit into their first All Night Long in the Big Apple since an October 20, 1999 performance at Wetlands.

9. Giant Inflatable Crayon Solo

During Jake Cinninger’s solo in Pay The Snucka the guitarist made use of an inflatable crayon thrown on stage with great success. Did you have that friend in high school who could make a pipe out of an object you gave them? Jake’s the same way when it comes to making music.

8. Jefferson Waful’s Lights During Miami Virtue

Now that Umphrey’s LD Jefferson Waful has over three full years of experience lighting the band under his belt he can clearly sense exactly what his employers will do next and that came through in his outrageous work during a 17+ minute take on the Death By Stereo track Miami Virtue.

7. Lyrical Stewart Out of Bridgeless

When Bayliss is particularly feeling one of UM’s “Jimmy Stewart” excursions he’s prone to throwing some lyrics into the mix. Towards the beginning of the relentless second set from Saturday night Brendan started spouting rhymes about “standing on a corner stop” that ended with a line “comin’ round on a Saturday night” that drew big cheers from the crowd.

6. Umphrey’s Debuts Voyager by Daft Punk

Umphrey’s continued a trend of debuting electronic-tinged covers at the Best Buy on Saturday night when they unveiled their version of Voyager by Daft Punk out of Intentions Clear. The group absolutely nailed the tune, providing a 10-minute dance party early in the show.

5. 14-Minute Rocker Part II

Rocker Part II continues to showcase Umphrey’s improvisational wizardry and Friday’s take on the composition was no exception. The interplay between the guitarists was outstanding.

4. Jake Makes Pony Cry w/ His Glory Solo

After decades of watching Cinninger in action, Jake’s immense talent can still stir emotions in bassist Ryan Stasik. Jake’s approach to the instrumental Glory was above and beyond on Saturday night. After the song was over Stasik stepped to the mic and admitted Jake’s solo made him tear up.

3. Arabian Slide Jam in Der Bluten Kat

For the second jam in Friday’s Der Bluten Kat, Cinninger lead the way on slide for a Middle Eastern-infused exploration that left jaws on the floor.

2. Umphrey’s and Jennifer Hartswick Pay Tribute to Etta James

To start the two-song encore on Saturday night, Umphrey’s welcomed longtime collaborator Jennifer Hartswick to sing At Last in tribute to Etta James, who passed away on Friday. Umphrey’s take a lot of heat for their A.D.D. tendencies, but for six minutes the band laid back and let Hartswick’s voice take center stage.

1. Buttery Ringo Jam

Personally, my favorite jam of the weekend took place during the 16-minute Ringo that ended the first set on Friday night. The sextet started off the exploration with a few dark minutes of jamming that evolved into a mesmerizing major-key “butter jam,” which was right in my wheelhouse.

Here’s a full gallery of Jeremy Smith’s photos…

DSC_0925 DSC_0902 DSC_0861 DSC_0845 DSC_0840 DSC_0839 DSC_0807 DSC_0805 DSC_0797 DSC_0776 DSC_0738 DSC_0676 DSC_0671 DSC_0670 DSC_0653 DSC_0623 DSC_0602 DSC_0573 DSC_0565 DSC_0554 DSC_0537 DSC_0532 DSC_0506 DSC_0505 DSC_0499 DSC_0499 2 DSC_0491 DSC_0485 DSC_0471 DSC_0470 DSC_0465 DSC_0464 DSC_0463 DSC_0440 DSC_0430 DSC_0425 DSC_0420 DSC_0419 DSC_0411 DSC_0409 DSC_0405 DSC_0400 DSC_0393 DSC_0385 DSC_0383 DSC_0380 DSC_0372 DSC_0370 DSC_0369 DSC_0365 DSC_0357 DSC_0350 DSC_0335 DSC_0327 DSC_0322 DSC_0321 DSC_0313 DSC_0311 DSC_0310 DSC_0308 DSC_0298 DSC_0289 DSC_0276 DSC_0261 DSC_0261 2 DSC_0247 DSC_0241 DSC_0232 DSC_0221 DSC_0215 DSC_0207 DSC_0174 DSC_0174 2 DSC_0173 DSC_0160 DSC_0159 DSC_0141 DSC_0133 DSC_0121 DSC_0115 DSC_0112 DSC_0086 DSC_0075 DSC_0470 DSC_0465 DSC_0066


Televised Tune: On The Tube This Weekend

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Palladia has started airing a Black Keys concert film/documentary called This is a Concert by the Black Keys which features footage shot at the band’s recent Webster Hall performance as well as gives insight into the group’s creative process. You can catch This is a Concert by the Black Keys this Saturday morning at 9:30AM ET on Palladia.

Friday, January 27 [All Times ET]

  • J. Page, Edge, J. White – Might Get Loud [VH1C 4:30PM]
  • Yo Ya Ma & Friends on Jay Leno [NBC 11:35PM]
  • Common on Jimmy Fallon [NBC 12:35AM]
  • Atmosphere on Carson Daly [NBC 1:37AM]

Saturday, January 28

  • Florence + The Machine – Austin City Limits [PBS]
  • Mumford & Sons – Unplugged [Palladia 9AM]
  • This Is A Concert By The Black Keys [Palladia 9:30AM]
  • Michael Buble – Saturday Night Live [NBC 11:30PM]

Sunday, January 29

  • Johnny Cash at Folsom Prison [Ovation 2PM]
  • Alice Cooper / Thin Lizzy @ Download Festival 2011 [Palladia 3PM]
  • Widespread Panic – Tunes For Tots Highlights [HDNet 8PM]
  • Sublime w/ Rome – Live [HDNet 11:15PM]


Video: The War On Drugs – Brothers

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We first wrote about The War On Drugs all the way back in January of 2009, when we introduced you to the Philadelphia-based act’s blend of Dylan-influenced Americana meets the drone of Velvet Underground-infused lo-fi psych-rock via our ongoing Blips feature. Last year the band released their critically acclaimed sophomore effect Slave Ambient, which landed at number five on our Top 25 list. Earlier this week the band dropped this unbelievably intense music video for the track Brothers, which is equally parts creepy as it is cinematically shot. Let’s check it out…

The War On DrugsBrothers


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