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 Monday, July 09, 2007

Posted by peter






7/9/2007 6:02:23 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]

Posted by peter





 




7/9/2007 6:01:38 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
Falling together in 'Three Easy Pieces'
Posted by peter


linder5.jpgFlying underneath the radar suits the veteran alternative-rock outfit Buffalo Tom (photo at right by Liz Linder) just fine.

With the song "Taillights Fade" and the unlikely success of the album that spawned it, Let Me Come Over, the rootsy Boston-area band with ties to the likes of Julianna Hatfield and Dinosaur Jr.'s J. Mascis seemed poised for big things in the '90s with the slickly produced followup, Big Red Letter.

Though the song "Soda Jerk" got some radio and MTV play, it didn't vault the band to superstardom. And that's okay with bassist/vocalist Chris Colbourn.

"We're pretty comfortable as the JV team," said Colbourn. "It's a good place to be. You're the underdog. And people are like ... they give you a shoulder, like a little brother thing. It's very easy to create then. Literally, there's no jets, no Mercedes to buy. You just buy a Jetta or something."

Known for writing pristine pop songs with loads of hooks and wistful, world-weary lyrics, Buffalo Tom has just released its new record, Three Easy Pieces. Teary ballads like "Pendleton" mingle with country-tinged rave-ups like "Bottom of the Rain" on an album that's solid from top to bottom. And it all begins with "Bad Phone Call," the kind of heartfelt, soul-searching cloudbursts of guitar-based pop that's won Buffalo Tom a strong cult following.

But it begs the question: Why isn't Buffalo Tom as big as ... say, the Goo Goo Dolls? They both go about their business pretty much the same, even if the Goo Goo Dolls may have sold their souls to the almighty soundtrack. Colbourn isn't so sure the Goo Goo Dolls deserve to be labeled "sell-outs."

"I don't have the self-confidence or rock-star guy in me to ever think, 'Oh, I should have been it,'" says Colbourn. "Like the Goo Goo Dolls are a good example. We did a little tour with them. I gotta say, they write great songs. People are always critical of them, but you know what, they do what they do. It's like being critical of Elton John. It's like, 'What?' Like he's great. [John Rzeznik) writes these beautiful melodies, and he matches them with his lyrics. It's very heartfelt. There's nothing embarrassing about that. I mean, I might be into something more indie-rock, but that doesn't mean the Goo Goo Dolls necessarily suck. I thought they were really nice people ... they were really reaching out to people. Like when I grew up, I was a big fan of the Stones and the Kinks. They were just pop bands. There's no embarrassment to like really catchy songs. So, I kind of defend the Counting Crows and that kind of thing. I guess it's not at the end of the day in my record collection, and I understand why people say Sonic Youth is cool, but I don't think there's any big difference between high art and low art."

To read more about Buffalo Tom, check out the Aug. 3 edition of Goldmine.



 




7/9/2007 6:01:07 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Thursday, July 05, 2007
Pop goes Memphis!
Posted by peter

MemphisPops.jpgMemphis and pop music go together like ... well, like nothing, to be perfectly honest. Actually, that's not entirely true. Even though the place is known more for blues and barbecue than for producing catchy hooks and sugary songcraft that go hand in hand with the best pop music, it does have a pop past that's not at all checkered. Fact is, it's pretty damn special.

Nevertheless, Memphis, Tenn., will be play host to the first annual Memphis Pops Fest on Saturday, July 28. An interesting mix of Southern pop acts will perform, beginning at 6 p.m. at the Hi Tone Cafe, at 1913 Poplar Ave., and if I lived anywhere near there, I'd make it a point to go.

Festivities open with the public debut of the Ardent Records 40 Years Story documentary by musicologist Larry Nager. Afterward, bands like Vending Machine (with Robin Grant of Big-Ass Truck fame), Tim Regan's Antenna Shoes (he's played with indie giants Sparklehorse!), the Carbonas (Atlanta's great new punk-rock hopes), the Everyday Parade (featuring members of '80s new-wave/pop near-misses The Crime), and Viva L' American Death Ray (drummer plays in Polyphonic Spree and they sound like Television!).

Advance tickets are $10 and are available at www.memphispops.com, Shangri-La Records (1916 Madison Ave.), or Goner Records (2152 Young Ave.).
For more information, visit www.memphispops.com or www.myspace.com/memphispops.

Schedule is as follows:

6 p.m. Ardent Records 40th Year Documentary
7 p.m. (the ever popular) Very special guests TBA
8:15 p.m. Vending Machine
9:30 p.m. Antenna Shoes
10:45 p.m. The Carbonas
12 a.m. The Everyday Parade
1:15 a.m. Viva L' American Death Ray







7/5/2007 3:13:08 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Tuesday, July 03, 2007
Big Top 'Chautauqua'
Posted by peter

webcover.jpgHaving "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind" director Michel Gondry in your corner is one thing, as is getting a Top 50 album of the year nod from Rolling Stone, but that all pales in comparison to getting a four-star review from Goldmine. Am I right?

Surely, the Willowz's cup runneth over these days. Now comes word that the band, led by singer/guitarist Richie James Follin and bassist/vocalist Jessica Reynoza, is gearing up for a summer tour with the Detroit Cobras. It's Cobras vs. Willowz in a knock-down, drag-out, rock 'n roll party in the streets!

Working psychedelic magic into their potent, thick-as-molasses and loud-as-thunder rock sound, the Willowz merge mountainous, classic-rock guitar riffs with country sass on Chautauqua, the band's latest and greatest. It's raw, it's filled with greasy sonic cholesterol and it's good for you.

And the Cobras are a red-hot act in and of themselves, so get in your hot-rod Lincoln and ride to these dates:

Wed July 11                      Covington, KY                                 The Mad Hatter
Thu July 12                      Columbus, OH                                  Little Brother's
Fri July 13                      Millvale, PA                                       Mr. Smalls Theatre
Sat July 14                      Cleveland, OH                                    Beachland Ballroom
Sun July 15                      Buffalo, NY                                       Mohawk Place
Tue July 17                      Philadelphia, PA                                 The Khyber
Wed July 18                      Washington D.C.                                The Black Cat
Thu July 19                      Baltimore, MD                                    Ottobar
Fri July 20                      Cambridge, MA                                  T.T. The Bear's
Sun July 22                      Hoboken, NJ                                        Maxwell's
Tue July 24                      Carrboro, NC                                     Cat's Cradle
Wed July 25                      Knoxville, TN                                        Blue Cats
Thu July 26                      Nashville, TN                                         The End
Fri July 27                      Atlanta, GA                                                 Earl
Sat July 28                      New Orleans, LA                                       Parish
Thu August 9                  Houston, TX                                             Rudyard's*
Fri August 10                  Dallas, TX                                 The Palladium Showroom*
Sat August 11                  Austin, TX                                 Emo's Alternative Lounging*
Mon August 13                  Tucson, AZ                                                Plush*
Tue August 14                  Tempe, AZ                             The Clubhouse Music Venue*
Wed August 15                  San Diego, CA                                     The Casbah*
Thu August 16                  West Hollywood, CA                                Troubadour*
Fri August 17                  San Francisco, CA                                         Slims*
Sat August 18                 San Jose, CA                                     The Bank Club*
Mon August 20                  Portland, OR                                 Doug Fir Lounge*
Tue August 21                  Seattle, WA                                         Neumo's*
Wed August 22                  Boise, ID                                            Neurolux*
Thu August 23                  Salt Lake City, UT                             Urban Lounge*
Fri August 24                  Denver, CO                                    Bluebird Theatre*
Sat August 25                 Kansas City, MO                             The Record Bar*
Mon August 27                  St. Louis, MO                                 Creepy Crawl*
Tue August 28                  Iowa City, IA                                     Picador*
Wed August 29                  Minneapolis, MN                             Triple Rock*
Thu August 30                  Milwaukee, WI                                 Mad Planet*
Fri August 31                  Chicago, IL                                             TBD*
Sat Sept 1                      Detroit, MI                                         Magic Stick*
*Dan Sartain joins the tour

For more information, peep these web sites: thewillowz.com; myspace.com/thewillowz; and dimmak.com




7/3/2007 3:38:24 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, June 27, 2007
Wolfmother howls!
Posted by peter

p61634kddk4.jpgThe next time somebody tells you that rock is dead, grab 'em by the scruff of the neck and haul 'em over to wherever the hell Wolfmother is playing, and then ask them, politely, "Still think that way, moron?"

Resurrecting the psychedelic, proto-heavy metal sounds of Blue Cheer and early Black Sabbath, Wolfmother (pictured at right in an Autumn De Wilde photo) doesn't roll with current musical trends. And yet, the trio of hairy vocalist/guitarist Andrew Stockdale, bassist/organist Chris Ross and drummer Myles Heskett has landed its time machine smack dab in an era where slick hip-hop and American Idol "flavors of the month" rule the charts. What a great time to be alive!

wm_album.jpgNo matter. Wolfmother hasn't let that get them down. Fuzzed-out and trippy, with searing lead guitar, crashing drums, towering rhythms and moody, prog-inspired keyboard movements, Wolfmother brought the music world kicking and screaming back to the acid-rock fog of the late '60s/early '70s with its self-titled 2006 release on the Interscope label. And those that got dragged back loved it.

On Tuesday, June 26, Wolfmother landed its time machine at the Oneida Casino in Green Bay, Wis., and torched the place. After struggling a bit through the opener "Dimension" — the pacing seemed a little off, a little slow — Wolfmother collected itself as a unit, roaring through the single "Woman" as the crowd of about 500 people just exploded. Mind-altering, metal-tinged instrumental passages mixed with the folk-rock innocence of "Apple Tree," and "Mind's Eye" and "White Unicorn" offered a mesmerizing mix of power and drama.

But, it was the thundering "Colossal" and the white-hots jabs of "Joker & The Thief" during the encore that sent everybody — the band, the audience, security guards ... everyone — into a frenzy. Ever the rock 'n' roll showman, Stockdale had all the '70s arena-rock moves down pat, while the acrobatic Ross abused his keyboards and Heskett smashed his cymbals into kindling. 

Wolfmother isn't just raping the past, however. Yeah, the band's sound is based in the bluesy, psychedelic metal that was birthed when Generation X was in diapers, and lyrics are drawn from the world of fantasy literature and goddess worship — Led Zeppelin already went there, I know. But, there's something new and fresh in the way Wolfmother presents the past. Think of their music as the sequel to what's already come before it, and while sequels don't always measure up to the original, Wolfmother's zeal and energy prevail — especially live.

Wolfmother's current tour is almost done. Visit www.wolfmother.com to see where the band plays next.




6/27/2007 12:47:15 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Friday, June 22, 2007
Hang it all
Posted by Peter


hanglove_mini.jpgJust because a band has multiple personalities doesn't mean it's ready for a straitjacket. Though ungodly heavy practically all of the time, unleashing mesmerizing torrents of distorted guitar noise upon tender, unprotected ears, the Burning Brides do have a soft acoustic side.

It doesn't come out much on Hang Love (self-released), the band's frightening, ferocious new record, but it's there, like on the triumphant album closer, "And I'm Free," a stinging "Emancipation Proclamation" with Beach Boys-style harmonies and lovely piano moments growing like flowers through the broken, concrete power-chords. Nobody contrasts beauty and darkness better than the Brides.

"We've always come from the school of thought that a great rock band is one that can change shapes and change moods at the drop of a hat," says Coats. "Led Zeppelin, the Stones, the Who, even early Aerosmith ... all those great records [they made] are full of really heavy tunes and really sweet acoustic ballads, and we like to show off our range as artists. I think that's what makes for a dynamic story line. I'm still into the art of making an album and how the songs are threaded together and what sort of picture they paint at the end of the day."

In a sense, Hang Love, which features a cover with Dimitri's head in a noose, is a rebirth for the Burning Brides. After going through major-label hell and back, all the while dealing with drug problems and relationship issues that could have destroyed them (Dimitri and bassist Melanie Coats — formerly Campbell — are now happily married), the Brides almost didn't survive.

Hiring a new drummer, ex-Guzzard stickman Pete Beeman, was a move that helped glue the pieces back together.

"We were down and out in L.A., Melanie and myself, and my friend, Aaron North, who plays guitar in Nine Inch Nails, knew we were looking for a drummer — he's a big Burning Brides fan, and he used to be in the Icarus Line, and we toured a bunch back in the day — and he hadn't even auditioned for Nine Inch Nails yet," relates Dimitri. "We were talking about the possibility of maybe putting him in our band as like a crazy sound-texture guy, and he went to see his ex-girlfriend's band play at some small bar here in town and just saw Pete setting up his drums and sort of like taking a couple of whacks at the floor tom, and he could tell just by the way that Pete was setting up his drums that he should stick around and check this guy out. Pete was playing in another band ... and Aaron was just blown away by what he saw. And he went up to Pete and said, 'Listen, my friends in the Burning Brides need a drummer, and you are exactly what they're looking for.' And Pete said, "Really, because this band is breaking up.'"

Dimitri eventually called Beeman and set up an audition. "We flew him out, and he just destroyed the competition, and it was love at first listen," says Coats. "And also, later that night, we went out, and it was clear this kid just had a ton of heart and that he was the real deal. And you know, he f**king drives a motorcycle, does wheelies ... he literally would give you the shirt off his back. He's just uncomplicated, and you could set your watch to the guy. He's exactly what a rock drummer should be. He's a f**king oak tree."

That's about how strong his new guitars are. Made by Mark Fuqua, known around L.A. as guitar repairman to the stars, the guitars are one-of-a-kind, custom-built jobs (Coats says Queens Of The Stone Age plays Fuqua's guitars) that Dimitri treasures.

"I gave Mark an unmastered version of Hang Love, and he just absolutely fell in love with it, started coming to the shows and he's like, 'Listen, I've never built a guitar for anybody before, but I want to take your guitar, I want to find out what you like about it so much, and I want to build a $2,000 version of it — something that will stay in tune, something that you can just beat the f**k out of, and it will do what your guitar does and more, and it might even bring your guitar playing to a new level, and it sure has," explains Coats.

It even comes with a special coating. ""It's a super-charged version of what I was getting into," says Dimitri. "I even had him put a drop of blood into the paint of the black one, just to give it a little mojo. It changed the color. It's this weird black that you can't really describe. He called it 'vampire black' and he'll never do it again. I feel like when I go out on tour, I'm going out to battle, you see? And I have my two Excaliburs now."

For more on the Burning Brides, visit www.burningbrides.com, and to learn more about Mark Fuqua's guitar business, go to www.motorave.com, or visit his MySpace page, www.myspace.com/motoraveguitars.




6/22/2007 2:56:58 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Thursday, June 21, 2007
Return of the Meat Puppets
Posted by peter


risetoyourknees.jpgRise To Your Knees is the first Meat Puppets' album in seven years and trust me, it's one of the best releases of 2007. If only every rock reunion resulted in material this great, the world would be a much better place.

Comprised of simple, easygoing melodies, hallucinatory atmospheres, layers of rich sonic tapestries, and exotic instrumentation from the use of a "guit-jo" — a six-string banjo that lends the song "Tiny Kingdom" a lush Americana feel — and Cris Kirkwood's mood-altering keyboards, Rise To Your Knees is a typical Meat Puppets' effort. It's strange and wonderful, and unlike anything you'll ever hear.

Its diversity is incredible, offering a range of heavy, moody doses of desert, stoner psychedelia, traces of punk and rich country finery that blend into one another like scenes from a dark, avant-garde movie. It's sort of like its own musical ecosystem, swampy and mysterious, but also trippy and scary in some parts, and comfortably melodic in others.

To Curt Kirkwood, it feels more like a proper followup to the Meat Puppets' classic Meat Puppets II. In a recent interview with Goldmine, Curt compared the two records.

"Yeah, I think so, for sure," says Curt. "It has a cool variety of styles, which Meat Puppets II had. Other albums became more consistent after that — like Up On The Sun. In terms of like track to track, it's an album, but those songs tend to run together more than the ones on Meat Puppets II do to me. And I think that was the concept we were looking for, trying to find some uniformity, because we found ourselves to be kind of thinly spread sometimes, and we'd look at other bands and go, 'How did you do this? How do you make this happen?' That's what people seem to like, that the band is recognizable."

In essence, the Meat Puppets are still trying to find their identity.

"We really just didn't know what we sounded like," says Curt. "We try to do it like ... I think we felt that only certain people could get it, and if we didn't do things a little more ... just try to make it more of a whole as an album. We just weren't really sure, and we still try to experiment, and we would up with an album that just didn't have the sonic variations. And there's also the spirit thing. I think there's a good, strange kind of buzz to an album that reminds me of it a lot of times. Although it sounds kind of vague, it is a vibe thing, it's like it has a similar electricity."

To read more about the Meat Puppets return to glory, check out the upcoming issue of Goldmine, dated July 20. The Meat Puppets' new album streets July 17. Check it out. And to learn more about the Meat Puppets and their label, Anodyne Records, visit www.meatpuppets.com or www.anodynerecords.com.




6/21/2007 1:44:53 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [2]
 Tuesday, June 19, 2007
Reno rocks!
Posted by peter

images12.jpgSo ... Janet Reno wants to rock. I guess issuing dull, dry legal opinions and scaring young children doesn't have the allure it used to for the former U.S. Attorney General.

Well, she'll learn quickly that politics is a lot more forgiving than rock 'n' roll. I mean, the music business eats its young. If you make a mistake in Washington, you do some sort of penance and get a high-paying job as a lobbyist. It's pretty easy to bounce back.

But, what if you make a stinker of an album? You might wind up living under a bridge or something, that's what!

Actually, Reno isn't actually recording or playing in a band or anything (thank God!). What she's done is help put together a three-CD set of songs titled Song of America that serves as a sort of history lesson for those that never passed high-school civics.


HandinAirThm.jpgAmong those contributing tracks are the Blind Boys of Alabama, Devandra Banhart (photo at left by Galen Pehrson), the Black Crowes, Andrew Bird, Danielson, Jim Lauderdale and John Mellencamp. Due out Sept. 18 as a joint (she never inhaled!) release between Split Rock Records and 31 Tigers (through RED Distribution), the collection aims to take listeners on a journey through time from 1492 to the new millennium.

Running the gamut of folk, rock, R&B, country, classical, blues and even hip-hop, the set is the brainchild of Reno herself, who enlisted her niece's husband, blues-punk phenom Ed Pettersen (for a review of his new album, check out http://www.goldminemag.com/Default.aspx?tabid=825&articleid=6367&articlemid=
4972#4972Articles
), for assistance.

"The historical detail of the songs fascinated me and I suggested that Ed (Pettersen) record a whole album of songs focusing on key periods in American history, in order to tell our story to young people who might find joy in learning history through music," says Reno, in a press release.

Now, I sincerely hope that it works out for Reno and that the collection does lead children to a greater understanding of history, but really ... are kids going to sit still long enough to listen to John Wesley Harding doing "God Save The King?"

The complete track listing for Song of America is as follows:

Lakota Dream Song                                                    Earl Bullhead
Once More Our God Vouchsafe to Shine                            Julie Lee
Let Us Break Bread Together                                Blind Boys of Alabama
God Save The King                                                John Wesley Harding
Young Ladies In Town                                                Elizabeth Foster
The Old Woman Taught Wisdom                                Malcom Holcombe
The Liberty Song                                                         Ed Pettersen
Yankee Doodle                                                            Harper Simon
Jefferson & Liberty                                                        The Wilders
Hail Columbia                                                Steven Kowalczyk-Santoro
Star Spangled Banner                                                        Take 6
Sometimes I Feel Like A Motherless Child                    Beth Nielsen Chapman
Peg and Awl                                                            Freedy Johnston
Sweet Betsy From Pike                                                BR549
Trail of Tears                                    Will Hill and Jehnean Day Washington
Declaration Of Sentiments                            Minton Sparks and Pat Flynn
Go Down Moses                                                Fisk Jubilee Singers
Dixie's Land                                        Mavericks featuring Thad Cockrell
John Brown's Body                                                         Marah
Battle Hymn of the Republic                                        Joanna Smith
Johnny I Hardly Knew Ye                                                Janis Ian
Thousands Are Sailing to Amerikay                                Tim O'Brien
The Farmer Is The Man                                                Otis Gibbs
Home On The Range                                                    Joni Harms
Stars & Stripes Forever                                            Jake Shimabukuro
Over There                                                                Jen Chapin
How You Gonna Keep 'Em Down On The Farm                   Andrew Bird
Lift Every Voice And Sing                                                Karen Parks
Happy Days Are Here Again                                            Danielson
Brother Can You Spare A Dime?                                        Andy Bey
Seven Cent Cotton and Forty Cent Meat                        Jim Lauderdale
Deportee                                                        Old Crow Medicine Show
Rosie The Riveter                                                    Suzy Bogguss
Reuben James                                                    Folk Family Robinson
Apache Tears                                                        Scott Kempner
The Great Atomic Power               Elizabeth Cook and The Grascals                                           
Little Boxes                                                    Devandra Banhart
The Times They Are A Changin'                        The Del McCoury Band
Get Together                                                            Kim Richey
Say It Loud, I'm Black and I'm Proud            The Dynamites/Charles Walker
Ohio                                                                        Ben Taylor
What's Going On                                                    Anthony David
I Am Woman                                                    Martha Wainwright
Youngstown                                                            Matthew Ryan
Streets Of Philadelphia                                            Bettye LaVette
Wave                                                        Gary Heffern/Chris Eckman
The Message                                                            Shortee
Sleep, My Child (Schlof Mayn Kind)                    Judith Edelman/Neilson Hubbard
Where Were You When The World                                    The Wrights
This Land Is Your Land                                            John Mellencamp






6/19/2007 4:21:39 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Thursday, June 14, 2007
Flashbacks
Posted by peter

ZombiesOnStage01Th.jpgIn case you haven't heard, it's the 40th anniversary of the Summer of Love. Goldmine will be celebrating the three-month long period of musical exploration, liberation and flower power with a special issue dated Aug. 17.

Now, I wasn't even born until August of that year, so, obviously, I don't remember much from it.

Some of you, though, did experience that magical time, though you may not remember much from it either. Drugs can have that effect.

If you care to jog your dormant memory, the organizers of Hippiefest have an offer for you: The Turtles, Felix Cavaliere's Rascals and The Zombies (pictures live at right) are headlining the second annual tour event. Other acts slated to appear include Mitch Ryder, Mountain, Badfinger, Country Joe McDonald, Iron Butterfly, Denny Laine and Melanie.

"This festival is for people who weren't around in the '60s and '70s, or were and just can't seem to remember," says tour creator Toby Ludwig. "Bring your parents, your grandparents and your kids. Come be a hippie for a day!"

For more information on Hippiefest, you're going to have to do some Google searching.

Tour dates:

Wednesday, July 25    Toronto, ON / Molson Amphitheater       
(The Turtles, Felix Cavaliere's Rascals, The Zombies, Mountain, Mitch Ryder, Badfinger, Country Joe McDonald)

Thursday, July 26         Brooklyn, NY / Seaside Park (FREE SHOW)
(The Turtles, Felix Cavaliere's Rascals, The Zombies, Melanie, Denny Laine, Country Joe McDonald)

Friday, July 27         Wallingford, CT / Chevrolet Theatre       
(The Turtles, Felix Cavaliere's Rascals, The Zombies, Mountain, Mitch Ryder, Badfinger, Country Joe McDonald)


Saturday, July 28         Vernon, NY / Vernon Downs           
(The Turtles, Felix Cavaliere's Rascals, The Zombies, Mountain, Mitch Ryder, Badfinger, Country Joe McDonald)


Sunday, July 29         Farmingville, NY / Brookhaven Amphitheater   
(The Turtles, Felix Cavaliere's Rascals, The Zombies, Mountain, Mitch Ryder, Badfinger, Country Joe McDonald)

Monday, July 30         Vienna, VA / Wolftrap               
(The Turtles, Felix Cavaliere's Rascals, The Zombies, Mountain, Mitch Ryder, Badfinger, Country Joe McDonald)

Thursday, Aug. 2         Hollywood, FLA / Hard Rock Hotel & Casino   
(The Turtles, Felix Cavaliere's Rascals, The Zombies, Mountain, Badfinger, Country Joe McDonald)

Friday, Aug. 3         Atlanta, GA / Chastain Park           
(The Turtles, Felix Cavaliere's Rascals, The Zombies, Mountain, Badfinger, Country Joe McDonald)

Saturday, Aug. 4         Wichita, KS / Cessadium Stadium       
(The Turtles, The Zombies, Mountain, Iron Butterfly, Mitch Ryder, Badfinger, Denny Laine, Country Joe McDonald)

Sunday, Aug. 5        Grand Prairie, TX / Nokia Live           
(The Turtles, The Zombies, Mountain, Iron Butterfly, Mitch Ryder, Badfinger, Denny Laine, Country Joe McDonald)

Tuesday, Aug. 7        Cape Cod, MA / Melody Tent           
(The Zombies, Mountain, Mitch Ryder, Badfinger, Country Joe McDonald)

Wednesday, Aug. 8        Cohasset, MA / South Shore Music       
(The Zombies, Mountain, Mitch Ryder, Badfinger, Country Joe McDonald)

Thursday, Aug. 9        Philadelphia, PA / Mann Center           
(The Turtles, Felix Cavaliere's Rascals, The Zombies, Mountain, Mitch Ryder, Badfinger, Country Joe McDonald)

Friday, Aug. 10        Champion, PA / Seven Springs Resort       
(The Turtles, Felix Cavaliere's Rascals, The Zombies, Mountain, Mitch Ryder, Badfinger, Denny Laine, Country Joe McDonald)

Saturday, Aug. 11        Liberty, NY / Bethelwoods Amphitheater   
(The Turtles, Felix Cavaliere's Rascals, The Zombies, Mountain, Badfinger, Denny Laine, Country Joe McDonald)

Sunday, Aug. 12        Gilford, NH / Meadowbrook Farms Amphitheater 
(The Turtles, Felix Cavaliere's Rascals, The Zombies, Mountain, Badfinger, Denny Laine, Country Joe McDonald)

Thursday, Aug. 16        Temecula, CA / Pechanga Resort & Casino
(The Turtles, Felix Cavaliere's Rascals, The Zombies, Mountain, Mitch Ryder, Badfinger, Country Joe McDonald)

Friday, Aug. 17        Lemoore, CA / Tachi Palace Hotel & Casino   
(The Turtles, Felix Cavaliere's Rascals, The Zombies, Mountain, Mitch Ryder, Badfinger, Country Joe McDonald)

Saturday, Aug. 18        Phoenix, AZ / Dodge Theatre           
(The Turtles, Felix Cavaliere's Rascals, The Zombies, Mountain, Badfinger, Denny Laine, Country Joe McDonald)

Sunday, Aug. 20        Saratoga, CA / The Winery           
(The Turtles, Felix Cavaliere's Rascals, The Zombies, Mountain, Badfinger, Country Joe McDonald)

Tuesday, Aug. 21        San Diego, CA / Humphrey's By The Sea   
(The Turtles, Felix Cavaliere's Rascals, The Zombies, Mountain, Badfinger, Country Joe McDonald)










6/14/2007 3:31:48 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, June 13, 2007
Direct Hit
Posted by peter

artbrutnew.jpgContrary to the title of its new album, there's nothing complicated about Art Brut.

And despite the band name, which refers to the outsider 20th century art movement that encapsulated the work of mental patients and other artists that specialized in trespassing beyond established artistic boundaries, there's nothing pretentious about the group either. The U.K. art-punks just bang out quick, three-minute songs that are fun and catchy, but with angular riffs that seem to come at you from everywhere, like a squadron of fighter planes.

The band's sophomore album, It's A Bit Complicated, is due out June 19 on Downtown Records, and so far, it's a chart buster. Powered by the deliriously infectious single "Direct Hit," It's A Bit Complicated debuted as the #1 Most Added Album at the CMJ Top 200. Nice.

A lot of you might know some of this from the pimping of the new record I did in an earlier blog. But, there's more news about Art Brut to tell you about. First off, the band is going to be touring the U.S. this summer (keep checking www.artbrut.org.uk/ for more information as it becomes available) and you should go out and see them. And there's more. Art Brut will be performing on Late Night With Conan O' Brian on July 11 and playing an exclusive New York City show with Goldmine favorites, White Rabbits on July 9.

In addition, Goldmine plans on running a feature story about the band in its July 20 issue. Art Brut's cheeky master of ceremonies Eddie Argos talked recently about his group's live performances, which reportedly are the stuff of legend. To them, it's all about showmanship.

"We played live so much now," says Argos. "We played live nearly every day of last year I think. We left Germany and went to America and back to England. No time off, hardly, and everybody's a big show-off."

Along with the bristling energy and gripping hooks of the new album, Art Brut employs a horn section in certain areas, fleshing the band's highly caffeinated sound out in more soulful ways. Will they be brought on tour?

"If we can, but I think it might be quite expensive," laughs Argos. "No, for special occasions I think. We're thinking of getting them for a few shows. I'd love to have a horn section though all the time, but I don't think it's financially viable. Maybe I should learn the trumpet. That's something I might do. Maybe I could play the horn section then."

Dates across the U.S. will include opening act Maximo Park.




6/13/2007 4:00:28 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, June 06, 2007
Calling all writers
Posted by Peter

200px-LesterBangs.jpgDo you think reviewers always get it wrong about your favorite albums? Do you feel like your prose measures up to the great Lester Bangs (pictured at right)?

Well, here's your chance to prove it. Goldmine is looking for writers to supply us with fresh content in the form of features or reviews for our web site, www.goldminemag.com.

If you're interested, write to me at peter.lindblad@fwpubs.com, send me a few clips of your work, and we'll talk. Now, these are not paid positions at the moment. Let me repeat that. THESE ARE NOT PAID POSITIONS.

I know what you're going to say. "Well, what's in it for me?"

For one, you'll get free CDs that are yours to keep. That's perk No. 1. Secondly, getting your work published is the first step to possibly getting a paid job writing for us or some other music rag. Everybody's got to start somewhere. I wrote reviews and features for an online music site for three and a half years and never saw a dime from it. In essence, this is a labor of love that could vault you into actually becoming a professional music journalist. It's a great opportunity!

I look forward to hearing from you.




6/6/2007 9:44:49 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]