Tuesday, July 12, 2011

In Stores Today: R.E.M. Life's Rich Pageant (25th Anniversary Re-master)

In stores today is the 25th Anniversary re-master of R.E.M.'s fourth studio album, Life’s Rich Pageant.  Words cannot express how much this album impacted my life as this was the album that introduced me to a new world of music back in the mid-80s.  It was like nothing that I had ever heard before; the songs on this album became the soundtrack of my life in junior high school and still remain some of my favorites to this day.  Life’s Rich Pageant contains some of R.E.M.’s finest work and every new release that is touted as a ‘return to form’ is measured by the standards on this album.  

Life’s Rich Pageant was recorded by Michael Stipe, Peter Buck, Mike Mills, and original drummer, Bill Berry at John Mellencamp's Belmont Mall Studios in Indiana.  The album was produced by Don Gehman, who also produced albums for Mellencamp, which explains why Mellencamp’s The Lonesome Jubilee sounded familiar, sonically speaking, of course.   

The singles “Fall On Me” and “Superman” helped R.E.M. to achieve Gold certification status with Life’s Rich Pageant, and the album also reached #21 on Billboard s Top 200 Albums chart, the band’s highest chart position at that point of their career.

The 2-CD box set contains the original album, digitally re-mastered. Disc 2 contains "The Athens Demos," which are 19 previously unreleased tracks recorded by the band during the studio sessions and the box set also includes a poster and postcards, similar to what was found in the Fables of The Reconstruction box set. 

-Will Fisher, The Showbiz Kids


Monday, July 11, 2011

Widespread Panic Announces Fall Tour and NYE

Fall Tour and New Years Eve Announced



A little over halfway through Summer tour and the band shows no signs of slowing down. After they make their first ever visit to Japan for two shows at Fuji Rock Fest, the band will return in September, picking up right where they left off for Fall Tour. 

More than thirty shows over the course of two months, Panic is headed up and down the east coast and throughout the midwest this fall. Featured stops this tour include Boston, Richmond, Raleigh, Knoxville, Savannah, Milwaukee, and Chicago! 

In addition to the fall tour dates, the band is excited to be hosting their annual New Years Eve show in Charlotte, NC at the Time Warner Cable Arena. Details for ringing in the New Year will be announced soon. 

See the full list of dates over at On Tour, the first on-sales begin this week!

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Chris Kuroda Still Shines (Part One)


Originally published in Relix: 2011/07/08

Early last week, Jeff Waful, Umphrey’s McGee lighting director spent some time on the phone with Phish’s l.d., Chris Kuroda. Here is the portion of their conversation that focused on Super Ball IX and ran in Ball Things Reconsidered. The dialogue also took a serious turn as you’ll discover next week in Part Two.
Ok, so I know you can’t give away any specifics, but take us through the process of preparing for this weekend. How long ago did you start making plans for this weekend, how involved are the four band members in that process, are they in the room when you’re having these meetings?
CK: The four band members are involved in everything all the time. I mean that’s just the way it is. They want to know everything. They trust their people to make it good. They trust their people to come up with good ideas. They trust everybody around them implicitly to make it be 100% successful. But on a communicative level, they are aware of every idea. We might like an idea. They might like a different one. If they like a different one, they’re going to let us know. This is their business. This is their world and they know it. And they very properly and very respectfully and very politely work with all of us to get their vision of what they want to see happening as close as possible.
And that’s very unique for a band of that size.
CK: Oh it’s very unique. And oftentimes they’ll have an idea and while a week ago an idea will just be an idea, then they’ll give it to all of us for a week and it goes from an idea to being the same idea but with 800 more details that have been fine-tuned and polished and improved. It works out really well.
I could go on for days and days and days telling you how great these guys are as people, the four band members, how great they are as musicians, but more about how they are as people and how they treat everyone around them with so much respect and they don’t boss anybody around in the conventional sense. The way they handle themselves and conduct themselves as people, I’ve never seen anything like it, honestly. I don’t even mean bands, I mean just people that you know in your life.
Trey has some human qualities that I know very few people have. And the way he treats people and talks to people and explains himself to people. It’s such a gentle, delicate, amazing way that somehow commands a ton of authority in a very unconventional sense. It makes you want to do whatever he wants you to do, as impossible as it sounds. Because you talked to him directly and he didn’t have the tour manager tell you. He decided to tell you himself. When he’s done telling you something you want nothing more than to do it for him 100% even if it’s going to kill you. That’s the kind of person he is as a human being. I could go on for days and days, just the piles of respect that I have for these guys in that sense, forget about being musicians.


Do you have any pre-show discussions about the show with them at this point? I know they don’t really know specifically what they’re going to do, but are there ever segues or the like that are discussed ahead of time?
CK: No, not lightwise. No, that’s not true. I mean, there’re a couple of cool ideas we all worked on together and talked about. The fact that this could happen and do we want this to happen. The song “Steam” we’ve got some smoke machines and there were some thoughts about how we wanted to handle that and the band was very involved in that stuff, but in general, no. We talk about songs a little bit before the gig and what songs might work and what songs might not, but you know Phish, we can talk about 20 songs and they’ll go on stage and they won’t play any of those 20 even if we just talked about them an hour ago. We talk, but it’s all kind of as brothers, and as fun, and bouncing ideas off of each other. There’s no real serious air to it. At this point, we’re dialed after 20 some-odd years. We all know each other’s philosophies, and let’s go.
How has your style evolved in the current era of Phish?
CK: Well if anything it’s made me need to be more precise. There’re no more 45 minute guitar loops where you basically can do anything and it looks fine. It’s made me need to pay attention more to what they’re doing because the jams are way more thought out now. They’re not just reckless and out there. There’s a lot of precision to them, if you pay attention enough you can really listen and understand the musical thinking that’s going on at any given live moment. And it’s a lot more intelligent than it used to be. So I try to be more precise with what I’m doing based on that philosophy.
The trend of the fans holding up these signs, do they ever block your view and prevent you from seeing the visual cues from the band members?
CK: Yes, absolutely, all the time. Is there anything I can do about that? No. Do I want to send a security guard down there to take the sign away from that person? Yes. Will I? No, because it’s a kid having fun at a concert who doesn’t know that they’re blocking my sightlines 30 rows in front of me. So again, that’s a tolerance thing. It’s like beach balls. Beach balls get in my way too. Glowsticks—I bought a GrandMA2 light board and a glowstick cracked my center screen. Am I mad about it? Yes. Do I understand it? Yeah, it’s a kid throwing a glowstick at a concert. How can you be mad at that? It just happened to break my light board. What are you gonna do? But there were people around me that were freaking out and going completely insane and trying to find the kid and I told everybody to just calm down. How are you even going to figure out which kid threw it for that matter? There’re a thousand kids throwing glowsticks right now, you know? It’s all attitude, you know? Whatever.
Maybe people should hold up signs that say “Don’t Throw Glowsticks.”
CK: Possibly. [laughter]

Saturday, July 9, 2011

Listen to new Yes album 'Fly From Here'


Listen to 'Fly From Here'

From Rolling Stone

Yes fans, rejoice: Your decade-long wait for new material from the prog giants is finally over. On July 12th, the band are releasing their new LP Fly From Here, but right now you can hear an exclusive stream of their new single "We Can Fly."

The LP is produced by Trevor Horn, who worked on the band's 1983 mega-hit "Owner Of A Lonely Heart." The track is a part of a much longer suite of music on the new album called "Fly From Here," which dates back over 30 years. "We played it live on the 1980 tour when it was just five minutes long," Yes bassist Chris Squire told Rolling Stone in March. "Now it's an extravaganza!"

Yes have been through many changes since the release of their last studio album. Original lead singer Jon Anderson and keyboardist Rick Wakeman haven't played with the band since Yes wrapped up their 2004 summer tour. In 2008 Yes reformed with new singer Benoit David, who used to front a Canadian Yes tribute band. Rick Wakeman's son Oliver was their keyboardist for a few years, but he was recently let go in favor of Geoff Downes – who originally played with Yes in 1980.

Meanwhile, Anderson has gone on his own tours – both solo and with Rick Wakeman. This isn't the first time that Yes has toured in two separate camps. In 1989 the Yes splinter group Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe formed, which was 4/5th of the classic 1970s Yes line-up. They put out an album and toured, but quickly realized that a Yes divided against itself cannot stand. In 1991 they joined forces for the Union album and tour - which featured an insane number of Yes alumni all sharing one stage.

It remains to be seen whether Yes will once again come back together, but in the meantime Fly From Here should please many of the hardcore fans. Horn is an incredibly gifted producer – and, unsurprisingly, was even the lead singer for Yes at one point in his life.

Friday, July 8, 2011

Ex-Yes Frontman Jon Anderson Opens Up About Getting Fired

As the band gets ready to release a new album and go on tour, Anderson is still bitter about how he was treated

Rob Verhorst/Redferns/Getty Images
 
By Andy Greene
Article orginally publised in Rolling Stone on July 6, 2011
 
When Rolling Stone posted the new Yes song "We Can Fly" last month it didn't just provide fans of the legendary prog band the first glimpse into the band's new album – it also allowed former lead singer Jon Anderson to check out what his band has done in his absence. "I wasn't really convinced," he tells Rolling Stone. "The new singer is singing good, but it sounded a bit dated to me. Also, the production wasn't as good as I expected. They've got a great producer with Trevor Horn, so what the hell are you doing?"

Anderson has reason to be bitter. He co-founded the band in 1968 with bassist Chris Squire, and with the exception of 1980's Drama he sang on every album. In 2008 – after illness kept him off the road for four years – Yes replaced him with Benoit David, an Anderson sound-alike who previously fronted the Yes tribute band Close to the Edge.
Nobody in the band called Anderson to tell him the news – he had to hear it from a friend. "They didn't tell me anything," he says. "They were just off and running. But what can you do? I was pissed off in the beginning, but then you say, 'Oh well, the boys want to go on tour and be rock & rollers. Let them to do it.' Now people come see me and I'm suddenly 30 years younger!"

Even before getting unceremoniously replaced, Anderson had grown disillusioned with Yes. The group toured relentlessly in the early 2000s, even as Anderson's health declined. "I was coughing so much that the only time I wasn't coughing was onstage," he says. "I just needed a break, but the guys were upset about that."
Anderson travelled on a bus with keyboardist Rick Wakeman, while the other three Yes members (Chris Squire, Alan White and Steve Howe) travelled on another one. "We had the happy car," says Anderson. "They were in the grumpy car."

Those two buses now travel on separate tours. Anderson now tours with Wakeman as an acoustic duo, playing a set heavy on Yes classics. Yes originally replaced the elder Wakeman with his son Oliver – but he recently got replaced by ASIA's Geoff Downes. "People get into that place where they don't care about people," says Anderson. "To them, it's just business."

So far, Anderson/Wakeman have just toured Europe – but in the fall they're finally headed to America. "We're bringing it to the East Coast around the middle of October through the middle of November," he says. "We'll do Yes songs, but we'll concentrate more on the new album. I sing more doing these shows than I ever did with Yes. I don't have to say, 'Turn down the bass, Chris!'"

Anderson keeps a much lighter tour schedule than Yes, who often do five or six shows a week. "I would never do that kind of tour," says Anderson. "It's stupid. Some people haven't got a life I suppose. They want to be on the road all the time." Guitarist Steve Howe performs with ASIA when Yes are off, which means maintaining a punishing schedule. "He hasn't got a home," says Anderson. "He's a journeyman, like Willie Nelson."
Despite all the turmoil, Anderson doesn't completely rule performing with Yes again someday. "If we ever get into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame we'll all get together," he says. "We'll give each other a hug and let bygones be bygones." How about a reunion tour? "You never know," he says. "It would have to be two or three shows a week, though."
In the meantime, Anderson remains focused on his solo career. Last year he released Survival & Other Stories. In a unique twist, it features contributions from online fans. "There's so many talented people out there," he says. "Using the Internet as as vehicle to work with people is fascinating. It's sort of a Pandora's box of energy for me."

The process begins with fans simply sending Anderson MP3s. "Over the last few years I've written indigenous music songs, symphonies, musicals . . . all sorts of things," he says. "I'm working on my next project right now. Music is beautiful. Yes music is great. My music's great. My new album's great. Life is good."

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Davis Mitchell tonight at the Preservation Pub in Knoxville


Our good friend and frontman for Knoxville's own Dishwater Blonde, Davis Mitchell, will be performing tonight at the Preservation Pub in Knoxville, TN.  Guitar virtuoso, Bob Goodson, will be sitting in for the show and we have been promised a smoking set of blues, funk, and rock. 

The show begins around 10 PM...be there or be square!

28 Market Square
Knoxville, TN 37902-1404
(865) 524-2224



Erick Baker Free Acoustic Show 07/14



Our good friend, Erick Baker, will be playing a free acoustic show at Calhoun's @ Ft. Loudon Marina in Lenoir City, TN next Thursday, July 14th.  See you there!!