Wednesday
Mar302011

Newport Folk Festival 2011 Lineup


Hot off the presses...here is your Newport Folk Festival 2011 lineup!  As we've come to expect from Newport Folk, the lineup features a healthy mix of new faces, legends and a few interesting surprises (Gogol Bordello acoustic!).  In recent years the festival has focused on putting up-and-coming indie artists alongside folk legends, fostering a collaborative spirit and it looks like this year will follow that trend.  Veterans like The Decemberists, M. Ward and Gillian Welch (collaboration, perhaps?) join fresh faces like The Head And The Heart, Middle Brother and Mountain Man alongside legends such as Emmylou Harris, Ramblin Jack Elliot and Mavis Staples.  July can't come fast enough.

The Decemberists
Emmylou Harris
Elvis Costello (acoustic)
Gillian Welch
Gogol Bordello (acoustic)
Earl Scruggs
Amos Lee
Ramblin Jack Elliot
M. Ward
Wanda Jackson
Tegan and Sara
The Felice Brothers
Carolina Chocolate Drops
The Civil Wars
Freelance Whales
The Cave Singers
Devil makes Three
Pokey Lafarge & The South City Three
The Secret Sisters
Trampled By Turtles
Song Circle W/ John Gorka, Ellis Paul, Dar Williams & Liz Queler
Mountain Man
What Cheer? Brigade
The Seeger
Clogging All Stars
The Wailin' Jenny's
River City Extension
Typhoon
The Ebony Hillbillies
Brown Bird
PS22 Chorus

Last night's Newport Folk Festival lineup announcement party was a blast!  The full lineup was revealed on cue cards in an homage to Dylan's "Subterranean Homesick Blues" video.  Steve at Kitchen Sessions filmed the event and (on a tight deadline) edited together the following Newport Folk Festival Lineup Announcement video - check it out...


 

Monday
Mar282011

Jeff Tweedy - Live at the State Theater, Portland ME 3.26.11


Jeff Tweedy played a sold out show at Portland's reopened State Theater on Saturday.  I don't have time to write a lengthy review but, needless to say, Jeff Tweedy never disappoints...especially when playing solo.  For a man plagued by crippling stage fright at one point in his career, Tweedy has a comfortable rapport with fans.  His witty, often-hilarious banter provides lighter moments between the songs, the highlight being when he called out a tempo-challenged fan mid-song, joking "somebody brought a seal".

As for the music, the acoustic setting puts Tweedy's songwriting in the spotlight - stripping densely-produced songs to their bare essentials.  Whether you're partial to the country-rock of A.M. or Being There, the lush pop of Summerteeth or the art/noise-influenced Yankee Hotel Foxtrot or A Ghost Is Born - played solo-acoustic they're all folk songs.  The setlist was a fan's dreaming - pulling in songs from all period's of Tweedy's career - from Uncle Tupelo, every Wilco album (except Sky Blue Sky I'm an idiot, thanks commenter), Loose Fur and more.  One of many highlights was not a deep catalogue track - though "Magazine Called Sunset" and "Passenger Side" were glorious - but rather a brand new track, possibly a preview of the upcoming, still-unannounced Wilco record.  A tongue-twister of a song that musically seems to fit in line with its immediate predecessors Wilco (The Album) and Sky Blue Sky.

As Wilco has grown into the ubiquitous, self-sufficient force that it is, and more and more voices opine on the merits and faults of the band, what is almost beyond-debate is that Jeff Tweedy is one of the most important songwriters our generation.  Over the past 15 years there are few people that have pushed as many boundaries and written so many heartachingly beautiful songs. 

The entire set is available below for stream or download.  Sound is excellent with the exception of the last two songs, which Tweedy played unamplified from the edge of the stage. 

Jeff Tweedy
State Theater - Portland, ME
March 26, 2011

Via Chicago
Remember The Mountain Bed
I Am Trying To Break Your Heart
[Blue Light Banter]
One Wing
Muzzle Of Bees
Forget The Flowers
Solitaire
You're Not Alone
Black Eye
I'll Fight
Magazine Called Sunset
[Where's Steve? Banter]
The Ruling Class
New Song
Not For The Season
[Haste Ye Back Banter]
Hummingbird
[Somebody Brought A Seal Banter]
Jesus Etc
The Late Greats
A Shot In The Arm
Passenger Side
I'm The Man Who Loves You
Walken (acoustic)
Acuff-Rose (acoustic)

Full set download:  mp3 zip

Friday
Mar252011

Frontier Ruckus - Live at Red Room, Boston MA 2.12.11



Frontier Ruckus made my favorite album of 2010 and also played one of my favorite shows of the year - a uniquely intimate show at Harper's Ferry where the band turned a cavernous, empty room into a special, unforgettable moment.  In February the band returned to Boston and this time found themselves playing to a packed crowd at Berklee's Red Room at Cafe 939.  This was my first show at the Red Room, but it won't be my last - it's an intimate space with a fantastic sound system and the added bonus of a full-service cafe next door.

The David Mayfield Parade opened, with super-talented David Mayfield playing an excellent set of quirky folk songs.  I admit I wasn't familiar with Mayfield prior to the show, but he's someone you want to get into right now.  His engaging stage presence and virtuosic guitar style almost distracts from the quality of the songs - but it makes for a fun show.  His recently-released record features his sister Jessica Lea Mayfield and The Avett Brothers and is a great listen - definitely recommended, you'll be hearing more about him.

Frontier Ruckus appeared visibly surprised to be playing to a packed room after their last experience in Boston, but also weary from the effects of the flu.  Opening with "Silverfishes", a highlight from last year's Deadmalls & Nightfalls, the band mixed in tracks from 2008's The Orion Songbook and brand new tracks.  Extended breaks between songs featured equal parts nose-blowing/tea-drinking and humorous banter with the crowd, giving the show a relaxed pace and intimate feel.  The still-packed crowd sat rapt as the band played four gorgeous songs, unamplified, to close out the set, Matthew Millia's quivering voice reberating through the room without the artificial disconnect of a microphone.  A truly gorgeous set from one of my favorite bands.

Full recording is below - sound is excellent thanks to pristine sound in the room.  Please do yourself a favor and buy both Frontier Ruckus albums (you won't be sorry).  Enjoy!

Frontier Ruckus
Red Room @ Cafe 939 - Boston, MA
February 12, 2011

Intro
Silverfishes
Rosemont
[banter]
Springterror
Nerves of the Nightmind
Orion Town 2
Ontario
[thanks + jokes]
The Tower
Mount Marcy
What You Are
Junk-Drawer Sorrow
Mona and Emmy
Dark Autumn Hour

Full set download (mp3 zip)

Videos of Silverfishes and Rosemont from Cafe 939, courtesy of our friends at Kitchen Sessions:

Huge thanks to Lily from You're Not Your for the photo you see above!

 

Thursday
Mar242011

New Ryan Adams: Class Mythology 7" - "Go Ahead And Rain"


One of many things that caught my eye when checking out the Record Store Day lineup today was a new 2x7" EP from Ryan Adams.  Yes please.  From what I can gather, the EP will contain four Cardinology-era outtakes.  Far from my favorite era of his varied output, but I can't say no to new music from Ryan Adams. 

So, want a preview??  Here's one-fourth of the EP for your listening pleasure:

Thursday
Mar242011

Review: Joe Fletcher & The Wrong Reasons - "White Lighter"


Providence's Joe Fletcher & The Wrong Reasons released the excellent White Lighter in December of last year.  We previewed the album a couple months prior to that - but I feel like the release got a bit lost in the shuffle of a west coast trip, compiling year end lists and fighting through hoards of holiday shoppers.  While I may be a few months late, I feel like I need to go on record giving White Lighter its due.

My experience with White Lighter started sometime in the summer/fall of last year when, on a recommendation from my good friends at Kitchen Sessions, I contributed to the Kickstarter campaign to fund the album.  I hadn't heard a note, but their gushing told me all I needed to know to fork over my $10-15.  That was money very well-spent. 

The urban legend of the white lighter is well-documented - but the decision to name the album after a mythical curse might give you a hint as to the contents that lie within.  These are not happy songs.  They are songs of bad luck, bad decisions, hard living, harder drinking, desperation and loss.  And isn't that exactly what you expect out of a hard-edged, whiskey-soaked country album.

The album starts on a somewhat upbeat note with the folky "Say What You Will", but takes a sharp turn towards outlaw-country territory on "Ambulances".  Above a shuffling beat Joe Fletcher's perfectly-deep, gravelly voice growls "Just yesterday I was the queen of ballroom dance, now it's motor courts, heroin and ambulances" as a boxcar harmonica wails in the background.  Shit.  "Flat Tire" is the perfect song to soundtrack some Hollywood scene where the heartbroken lover roars down the desert highway, bottle in hand as he starts to wonder how it all went wrong.  "Every Heartbroken Man" is a slow-burner and (in my opinion) the absolute centerpiece of the album - a devestating story song that proves Fletcher's mettle as a songwriter, and the band's prowess.  One hopes that Joe Fletcher hasn't lived the life he describes in these songs - but they're delivered with such intensity, passion and weary resignation that you can't help but believe these are his stories.

The album certainly features the gritty influence of Merle Haggard and Johnny Cash, but there are lighter moments to provide a necessary balance - the swinging "Drunk and Single (For George Jones)" provides witty levity - "Some talk funny and some can't walk and others fall down on the floor/But when the beers are cold my fidelity's the first to go".  Woozy singalong "Too Many Doors" closes the album with contributions from a Providence folk all-star team of John McCauley (Deer Tick), David Lamb and MorganEve Swain of Brown Bird.  It's a gorgeous song and an unexpectedly uplifting end to a masterful and rewarding album.

Joe Fletcher & The Wrong Reasons - Say What You Will

BIG update!  Forgot to mention that you can get White Lighter FREE for a limited time here.

Joe Fletcher & The Wrong Reasons have a bunch of local dates coming up, including THIS SATURDAY at the Middle East with Kingsley Flood and The Grownup Noise (CD Release):

3/26 - Cambridge, MA @ Middle East (Downstairs) w/ Kingsley Flood, Grownup Noise
3/29 - Providence, RI @ Firehouse 13 w/ Those Darlins (CD Release Party), Atlantic Thrills
4/1- Providence, RI @ The 201 TOM WAITS TRIBUTE/ Amos House Fundraiser
4/3- Providence, RI @ Club Hell w/ Eddie Spaghetti
4/9- Groton, CT @ Backstage Rose's Cantina w/ Get Haunted, Paul Brockett Roadshow

WHITE LIGHTER SPRING TOUR
Fri 4/15 Providence, RI @ The 201*
Sat 4/16 Housatonic, MA @ The Brick House Pub*
Sun 4/17 Charleston, WV @ The Empty Glass*
Mon 4/18 Knoxville, TN @ The Preservation Pub*
Tue 4/19 (noon) Blue Plate Special on WDVX in Knoxville*
Wed 4/20 Nashville, TN @ fooBar*
Thu 4/21 Columbus, OH @ Rhumba Cafe*
Fri 4/22 Brooklyn, NY @ Pete's Candy Store*
Sat 4/23 Cambridge, MA @ The Plough & Stars*

* with Lydia Loveless

Video of "Say What You Will" from Kitchen Sessions:

 

Wednesday
Mar232011

Album Review: The Leadership - Frontiers


It was a few weeks ago that I first heard The Leadership's excellent debut Frontiers.  I was scouring my iTunes library, submissions from bands/publicists and other music blogs to find new tunes for the Spring Mixtape when I somehow found myself on the band's bandcamp page.  Opening track "Keep The Change" earned a spot on the mix, and the whole album has been in heavy rotation ever since.

"Keep The Change" starts as a subdued shuffle before a wave of distorted guitars enter for the chorus and Jonathon Childers' voice rises to a raspy roar.  For the most part, The Leadership take sonic cues from no-frills country and blues-rock - two obvious touchstones are fellow Illinois bands, Uncle Tupelo and (early)Wilco.  "Thank You" and "Cocaine" both have a Stones-y swagger and "Aluminum Man" bounces along on a shuffling country beat.  "Bring It Back (to the Beginning)" lets the band stretch their legs, starting as a whisper and steadily building to a soaring guitar solo.

I've really been digging Frontiers, honestly I've listened to it at least once per day for the last couple weeks.  Nothing too complicated - just solid songs and great hooks.  Check out the first two tracks below, and head to the band's bandcamp page to get the rest for just $6.

The Leadership - Keep The Change
The Leadership - Thank You

Tuesday
Mar222011

New music: Young Hunting - Sonata

Better late than never on this one.  Young Hunting released a fantastic 7" back in September that features two stunning pop songs that demand attention.  Syrupy, slightly woozy melodies, mature songwriting and beautiful production give the songs a glossy sheen.  Cop-out comparison... a mellower, slightly less-wide eyed Local Natives, or a higher-fi Desolation Wilderness.  Not sure if there's a full LP in the works, but I'm looking forward to hearing more.

Check out the B-side "Sonata" below, and head to the band's bandcamp page to grab "Into Yr Mind"

Young Hunting - Sonata

Monday
Mar212011

Album Review: Lab Coast - Pictures on the Wall



There's just something about lo-fi recordings.  Give me gorgeous songs strangled by a hissy, hazy 4-track mess of white noise over slick, big budget recording studio sterility any day.  And that reverby beachy sound that Real Estate, Holiday Shores and countless other bands have turned into its own sub-genre over the past couple years is probably my favorite flavor of lo-fi. 

If you dig those bands you'll want to listen to Lab Coast, a Canadian band that sounds way more SoCal than Calgary.  A casual slacker sound permeates their debut LP Pictures on the Wall.  With 12 songs clocking in at under 20 minutes (only one track cracks the 2:30 minute mark), calling it an LP is a bit generous - but it's a totally enjoyable listen, even if it's over too quick and the ideas are left frustratingly unexplored.  "Radio" wants to be a hit in the shimmering, meandering vein of "Range Life" but it's over before it really gets going.  Maybe that's the point though - these are fleeting moments of beauty, like a summer day it's gone before you know it.  "Really Realize" might be the most fleshed-out song here and it sounds like a 90s alt-rock radio hit filtered through a 2011 indie rock lens -- it's destined to be one of my summer roadtrip songs.  Check out "Really Realize" here, and grab the rest on iTunes.

Lab Coast - Really Realize

 

Thursday
Mar172011

Moving pictures: Brenda - "Girl Don't Grow"

We first heard Brenda's "Girl Don't Grow" at the Solid Sound Festival last August - it was a standout within a set that featured mostly tunes from the band's debut Silver Tower.  The band shared a demo version of the song back in January, but now we have a final version and a gorgeous video to go along with it.  Great track - check out the video...

The band will be playing with Titus Andronicus on March 29 in Portland ME (Space Gallery) and March 30 in Burlington VT (Club Metronome) -- if you're in the area I highly recommend checking it out.

 

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