Thursday, January 29, 2009

TnJ 054 (1/28/09)

-HOUR ONE-

WIDESPREAD PANIC – Ain’t No Use > Missoula Jam > Rock (10/9/07 Missoula, MT)
TODD SNIDER – If Tomorrow Never Comes (2006 the Devil You Know)
LEFTOVER SALMON – 4:20 Polka (4/16/96 the 8x10 Club, Baltimore, MD)
INFAMOUS STRINGDUSTERS – Gettin’ Down the Road (12/6/08 Morse Theater, Chicago, IL)
JOHN BUTLER TRIO – Betterman (6/24/02 Mercury Lounge, New York, NY)

-HOUR TWO-

GALACTIC – Saturday Night Special (2004 Under the Influence, Skynyrd tribute)
SPLIT LIP RAYFIELD – Rig or Cross (2008 I’ll Be Around)
BORIS GARCIA – Other Side (2008 Once More Into the Bliss)
DIGNEY FIGNUS – Too High Up (2008 Talk of the Town)
STEVE KIMOCK BAND – Moon People (11/4/01 Abby Pub, Chicago, IL)
ZILLA – Gription (2005 Zilla)
FUTURE ROCK – Rock Kit (2007 Gears)
U-MELT Schizophrenia (2004 the Unbelievable Meltdown)

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Wednesday, January 28, 2009

PHISH NEWS

Just got this email from JEMP Records, thought I'd pass it along:

Last fall, when members of Phish—guitarist Trey Anastasio, drummer Jon Fishman, bassist Mike Gordon, and keyboardist Page McConnell—announced the band would take the stage again for the first time in four years, tickets for the three-night stand at Hampton Coliseum in Virginia sold out immediately. This month, the band announced additional dates, marking a return to the road for one of the most successful touring bands of all time. Tickets for this second touring leg go on sale this weekend.

JEMP Records and Rhino start the celebration a few days before Phish’s highly anticipated March shows with a 7-DVD collection documenting The Clifford Ball, a landmark concert event that drew more than 70,000 fans to upstate New York in August of 1996. It was the largest concert event of 1996 in North America and set the tone for music festivals including Bonnaroo and Coachella.

The Clifford Ball was the first of seven two-day spectacles the band staged, which included The Great Went a year later, followed by Lemonwheel in 1998 and culminating in Big Cypress—the largest ticketed event in the world for the millennium celebrations, drawing over 90,000. The Clifford Ball was held in Plattsburgh, New York, at a decommissioned air force base, during which Phish played two marathon concerts which include several on-stage guests.

The DVDs contain all three sets and encores the band played each night, along with bonus footage—more than 9 hours of live improvisation. The bonus DVD presents choice rarities including a soundcheck from August 15, their “Flatbed Jam” performed in the wee hours of the morning on the back of a truck, an interview with longtime Phish artist Jim Pollock, interviews with Phish and more.

The Clifford Ball DVD Preorder is currently ongoing at Phish Dry Goods.

The Clifford Ball DVD - tracklist

Disc 1
Day One (8/16/1996) – Set One
1. Chalk Dust Torture
2. Bathtub Gin
3. Ya Mar
4. AC/DC Bag
5. Esther
6. The Divided Sky
7. Halley’s Comet
8. David Bowie

Disc 2
Day One (8/16/1996) – Set Two
1. Split Open and Melt
2. Sparkle
3. Free
4. The Squirming Coil
5. Waste
6. Talk
7. Train Song
8. Strange Design
9. Hello My Baby
10. Mike’s Song
11. Simple
12. Contact
13. Weekapaug Groove

Disc 3
Day One (8/16/1996) – Set Three
1. Makisupa Policeman
2. 2001
3. Down With Disease
4. NICU
5. Life on Mars
6. Harry Hood
Encore
7. Amazing Grace

Disc 4
Day Two (8/17/1996) – Set One
1. Old Home Place
2. Punch You In The Eye
3. Reba
4. Cars Trucks Buses
5. The Lizards
6. Sample In A Jar
7. Taste
8. Fee
9. Maze
10. Suzy Greenberg

Disc 5
Day Two (8/17/1996) – Set Two
1. The Curtain
2. Runaway Jim
3. It’s Ice
4. Brother
5. Fluffhead
6. Run Like An Antelope
7. Golgi Apparatus
8. Slave To The Traffic Light

Disc 6
Day Two (8/17/1996) – Set Three
1. Wilson
2. Frankenstein
3. Scent Of A Mule
4. Tweezer
5. A Day In The Life
6. Possum
7. Tweezer Reprise
Encore
8. Harpua

Disc 7
Bonus
1. The Clifford Ball: A Beacon of Light
2. The Flatbed Jam
3. Soundcheck (8/15/1996)
4. An Interview with Jim Pollock
5. Chris Kuroda Split-Screen
6. Phish: On Jamming
7. Phish: The LG

Monday, January 26, 2009

TnJ 053 (1/21/09)

-HOUR ONE-

KELLER WILLIAMS – Inhale to the Chief (2000 Loop, 3/28/00 Rainbow, Seattle, WA)
POPS STAPLES – I Shall Not Be Moved (1992 Peace to the Neighborhood)
NORTH MISSISSIPPI ALL STARS – Freedom Highway (2001 51 Phantom)
BEN HARPER – I’ll Rise (1993 Welcome to the Cruel World)
GOV’T MULE featuring MICHAEL FRANTI – Unthrow That Spear (2007 Mighty High)
GOV’T MULE – Unring the Bell (2006 High & Mighty)
GOV’T MULE – Reblow Your Mind (2007 Mighty High)
JERRY GARCIA BAND – My Sisters and My Brothers (1991/2006 Pure Jerry 07, 11/9/91 Hampton, VA)

-HOUR TWO-

TOUBAB KREWE – Buncombe to Badala (2008 Live at the Orange Peel)
JANIS JOPLIN – Kozmic Blues (1972 In Concert, 6/28/70 Toronto)
RYAN MONTBLEAU BAND – Maybe Today (2007 Patience on Friday)
BALKAN BEAT BOX – Bulgarian Chicks (2005 Balkan Beat Box)
GALACTIC w/BIG CHIEF MONK BOUDREAUX – Second and Dryades (2007 From the Corner to the Block)
UMPHREY’s McGEE – Mantis (2009 Mantis)
RODRIGO y GABRIELA – Orion (2006 Rodrigo y Gabriela)
PARLIAMENT – Chocolate City (1975 Chocolate City)

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Thursday, January 15, 2009

TnJ 052 (1/14/09) EXPANDO!!!

TnJ 2.0 one-year anniversary (^_^) THX 4 listening!

-HOUR ONE-

moe. – Rebubula (2008 Warts & All, Volume 6, 1/28/07 Lawrence, KS)
DAVE MATTHEWS BAND – The Dreaming Tree (2007 Live at Piedmont Park)
THE AFROMOTIVE – Yako (2007 Scare Tactics)
SAM BUSH BAND – Is This Love? (12/31/03 Boulder Theater, Boulder, CO)

-HOUR TWO-

LES CLAYPOOL & GOGOL BORDELLO – That’s the Way (6/13/08 Bonnaroo)
UMPHREY’s McGEE – The Bottom Half > Space Funk Booty > The Bottom Half (3/6/07 Fox Theater, Boulder, CO)
WIDESPREAD PANIC – Machine > Barstools & Dreamers (10/31/07 Asheville, NC)

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Tuesday, January 13, 2009

STREAMING UPDATE

Oy! I may have spoke too soon on the streaming thing. They launched, it crashed. New, better, stronger equipment being installed now. I'll keep you posted (^_^)

Saturday, January 10, 2009

TnJ 051 (1/7/09) All Night Train

-HOUR ONE-

JERRY GARCIA & MERL SAUNDERS BAND – Mystery Train (1974/2004 Pure Jerry 04, Keystone, Berkeley, CA 9/1/74)
THE COUNTRY GENTLEMEN – Train 45 (1/7/71 unknown source)
MARTY STUART and his FABULOUS SUPERLATIVES – Orange Blossom Special (2006 Live at the Ryman)
HUGH MASAKELA – Stimela (2006 Live at the Market Theatre)
R.E.M. – Driver 8 (1985 Fables of the Reconstruction)
POOR BILLY – Lovetrain (2008 Moonlight Stranger)

-HOUR TWO-

ZIGGY MARLEY & the MELODY MAKERS – People Get Ready (2000 Live Vol. 1)
JAMES BROWN – Night Train (1961 James Brown Presents His Band)
BRADLEY WALKER – Shoulda Took That Train (2006 Highway of Dreams)
BR549 – No Train to Memphis (2004 Tangled in the Pines)
DARRELL SCOTT, DANNY THOMPSON & KENNY MALONE – Folsom Prison / White Freightliner Blues (2004 Live in NC)
JOHNNY CASH – Hey Porter (1955 Sun single)
ALLMAN BROTHERS BAND – All Night Train (1994 Back Where It All Begins)
LOS LOBOS – That Train Don’t Stop Here (10/13/00 Stubb’s, Austin, TX)
LOS LOBOS – Everybody Loves a Train (1998 Colossal Head)
JORMA KAUKONEN – Blue Railroad Train (2002 Blue Country Heart)
LEVON HELM – A Train Robbery (2007 Dirt Farmer)
JIMI HENDRIX – Hear My Train a Comin’ (1969/1994 Woodstock)

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Thanks to Ira G (KBAC’s original mad scientist) for calling in the Bradley Walker. Never heard it before and it sounded great on the all train show!

Tom and I definitely have enough picks to do a second one of these sometime. Thanks for all the calls letting us know you enjoyed it (^_^)

Next week (1/14): Anniversary EXPANDO edition – all long bombs, baby, as TnJ 2.0 turns 1 year old…

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Wednesday, January 7, 2009

STREAMING

Hey, Toast-n-Jammers ~

Word is you can check out Toast-n-Jam from anywhere in the world via the series of tubes known as the interweb by going to kbac.com

WOOT!

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TOM’S TOP TEN 2008

First of all, I would like to thank Chris Diestler for making Wednesday night my favorite of the week; I would also like to thank Scott Hutton & Ira Gordon for making it all possible.

Trying to find the top ten albums of 2008 is a daunting task; so many great albums were released. I tried to make my list with as many jam bands as possible but I cannot live by jam alone – sometimes I need some toast to go with my jam.

#10 – Drew Emmitt “The Long Road”

Leftover Salmon’s multi-instrumentalist & vocalist breaks out with a solo record. Great songs from many genres with a lot of guests such as Sam Bush.

#9 – Waybacks “Loaded”

Americana meets jam on this relatively bluegrass-sounding disc. Traditional instrumentation overloaded with virtuosity make this a fun & fabulous album.

#8 – Stanton Moore Trio “Emphasis on Parenthesis”

Stanton incorporates an organ trio for this not-so traditional disc. Many timbres, rhythms and forms make up this very funky record.

#7 – Markus James “Snakeskin Violin”

Africa meets Mississippi in the middle of a dirt road; I can smell the BBQ from here and wow does it smell good.

#6 – Widespread Panic “Free Somehow”

Recorded in the Bahamas it is Jimmy Herring’s first studio effort with Panic. Not as strong as some of their early recordings it still holds up as one of my favorites of the year.

#5 – Michael Franti & Spearhead “All Rebel Rockers”

Sly & Robbie produce this juggernaut of the jam band scene. Every track is strong and different from beautiful to powerful; lean to heavy; the production value is awesome and so is this disc.

#4 – Xavier Rudd “Dark Shades of Blue”

Xavier is an Australian multi-instrumentalist whose strong points are song writing and texture with a flair for using his native rhythms mixed with rock’n’roll. A great disc from the relative newcomer to the jam band scene.

#3 - moe. “Sticks and Stones”

By far their best studio effort; “Sticks and Stones” is chockablock full of different qualities; from pop to jazz and everywhere in between. A forty-five minute tour of what a jam band studio effort should sound like.

#2 - YMSB “Mountain Tracks vol 5”

This live double disc has the best of what Yonder offers. Disc I is all live but not from the same show, disc II is from the same show. For a string band these guys pump up the jam. It is quite obvious they love what they do and so do I.

#1 – Keller Williams w/Gibb Droll, Jeff Sipe, Keith Moseley “Live”

This double live disc comes with an additional DVD. Many different facets and flavors dominate this improvisational tour-de-force. Reworked Keller originals and some great covers make this my favorite disc of the year.

Thank you so much for listening and have a great New Year. May your ears be blessed and your bowl always full.

Peace,

Tom

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Saturday, January 3, 2009

PIGMENT tonight

Looking to get out of the house this weekend, Santa Fe's jammiest band, PIGMENT, plays Tin Star Saloon tonight (1/3/09), 9pm!!!

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Battle of the Bands

I was really impressed with my first exposure to a band called Some Kind of Dumb at Warehouse 21 last night.

I'd describe their style as something like prog punk, if such a genre exists (and if not, they should spearhead its creation). Bobby Strait might be the hardest-working bass player in show business.

Word is Some Kind of Dumb will play Battle of the Bands in Albuquerque tomorrow (1/4/09) at the Launchpad in Albuquerque. Santa Feans can take the Rail Runner for free, yo (^_^)

I especially liked the number mysteriously titled "Killers Wear Panties." Super catchy. Sub Pop should sign these guys, like, immediately.

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Thursday, January 1, 2009

TOAST's BEST of 2008

It may not look like much of a genre-faithful list at first, but hey, the jamband scene (if there truly is one) is a many-headed monster, and all of these bands already have or certainly will play Bonnaroo at least once, some several times.

I intentionally didn’t include live recordings in my consideration for this year’s top ten list (though many made Honorable Mention status in an earlier post), focusing rather on studio releases which came across TnJ’s desk in 2008.

Every one of these little gems is worth several listens, IMO:

1) THE RACONTEURS – Consolers of the Lonely

Jack White has done it again, with another solid collection of songs showcasing his personal brand of frenzied lunacy. One could infer a few swipes at former bandmate (Sister? Wife? Anybody know?), Meg, in some of the lyrics. The big radio single “Top Yourself” is almost impossible not to take that way. But mostly, this is just an amazing rock-n-roll album. Production and arranging leans a little heavy on the Zep and Beatles “sounds,” but if you’re gonna steal, steal from the best.

Favorite Tracks: All of ‘em. Seriously. But if I gotta pick, “Consoler of the Lonely” – will strip paint off walls, “Top Yourself” – a nearly perfect rock-n-roll song, “Carolina Dream” – fancies ‘imself a post-punk bard ‘e does, “Rich Kid Blues” – all the meander and bluster of a great old Queen or ELP song, without all the suckiness.

9 out of 10 stars

2) THE INFAMOUS STRINGDUSTERS – The Infamous Stringdusters

Like the Raconteurs release, an incredible sophomore effort which supersedes its predecessor. And both these bands’ debut records were awesome, mind you.

This is, however, the first Stringdusters to feature guitarist Andy Falco, and the first blessed by newgrass legend Tim O’Brien’s production. The Stringdusters have been hittin’ the festival circuit hard-n-heavy and are poised to become THE newgrass act to see (and kick yer heels up ta) in the years to come.

Favorite Tracks: “Glass Elevator” – rippin’ instrumental, “Get It While You Can” – catchy, “You Can’t Handle the Truth” – catchy & fast, and, of course, “Lovin’ You” – my favorite song of the year.

7 out of 10 stars

3) MICHAEL FRANTI & SPEARHEAD – All Rebel Rockers

Like I said in an earlier Franti show review post, I think this boy’s really onto something. His usual charm and urgency is now happily anchored at the center of a Jamaican dancehall hurricane courtesy of dubmasters Sly & Robbie, among others.

He may or may not be the next Bob Marley, but he can keep on chanting down Babylon like this for years to come as far as I’m concerned. Conscious, rhythmic, playful, and powerful.

Favorite Tracks: “A Little Bit of Riddim” – stream of consciousness political commentary hasn’t been this instantly catchy since Dylan’s ‘Subterranean Homesick Blues,’ “Soundsystem,” – a fist-pumping anthem for the conscious party, “Nobody Right Nobody Wrong,” – an anti-protest song that brings a tear to my eye every time, unashamedly pretty.

7 out of 10 stars

4) DeVotchKa – A Mad & Faithful Telling

Who knew there was such a void waiting to be filled by this rocky mountain outfit’s gypsy-esque eastern-blockana? Though not as strong as their 2004 release “How It Ends,” which has its own template-from-which-all-others-must-borrow archetypal appeal, there’s a lot to love on this new release. A very entertaining band to see live.

FT: “Transliterator” – well-crafted crescendo catch-and-release à la Radiohead, “Head Honcho” – gotta have at least one Ennio Morricone-esque number on these things, don’t they? “Undone” was one of the few radio songs in this or any year which did not suck mightily. Shades of Robert Plant in the haunting choral refrain.

6 out of 10 stars

5) RAINMAKER – Long Slow Fade

Bay-area studio magic from a new band to these ears in 2008. Rootsy – some snobs will declare needlessly so – but somehow able to spin threadbare melodies and arrangements into a fresh and pleasing sequence of songs. Fans of Little Feat or The Grateful Dead who appreciate those acts for their solid-yet-quirky songwriting seem to be the target audience. Not particularly challenging, but hard not to like. How did simple get such a bad rep over the years anyway?

FT: “Sweetwater Has Run Dry” – a pensive ode to bygone days, “Further from the Truth” – li’l R&B flava, “In a Way That You Want It to Be” – instant nostalgia, like a Norman Rockwell painting.

5 out of 10 stars, as are the rest on this list. Am I too tough?

6) STEPHEN MALKMUS & the JICKS – Real Emotional Trash

With more than half the tracks clocking in at 5-10 minutes each, it’s almost as if Stephen Malkmus is TRYING to alienate the Pavement faithful. However, his sense of “lyricynicism (yes, I just made that up)” soldiers on with a new band and quite a few sonic diversions into what could be considered “jam” territory. His publicist, however, will probably spin that into “post-rock sonic experimentation” to make it sound cooler. Whatever. It rocks. Catch ‘em live if you can. Saw ‘em at The Variety Playhouse in Atlanta, GA while doing some work for a website. Great venue. Great show.

FT: “Real Emotional Trash” – a musical rollercoaster, 10 minutes of some of the best-sounding s#!t I’ve heard in years, “Baltimore” – c’mon, you gotta love a string of words like, ‘come on like gangbusters | laying it thick | arboreal Sleestak | lost in the sticks,’ “Elmo Delmo” – I could listen to him jam on this one for-just-about-ever, as long as he ditched the chorus.

7) moe. – Sticks and Stones

John Siket is a sonic genius. Can’t wait to hear what some of these songs sound like live, with extra SUPERJAM on top. Hee Hee (^_^)

FT: “Queen of Everything” – really, really can’t wait to hear this one live, “Deep This Time” – first track we picked for TnJ, yo, “202” – who let the ghost of Zappa onto this record?

8) THE DUHKS – Fast Paced World

Rick Anderson posted this on allmusic.com: “Someday the Duhks may find their natural style and settle into it, and when they do, their albums will become much less interesting.” I can’t beat that. Preach on, brotha (^_^)

FT: “Fast Paced World” – borderline preachy/puerile folk anthem in the making, couldn’t get it out of my head for days, “Ship High in Transit > Magalenha” – this is why it’s called ‘progressive’ bluegrass, folks, “New Rigged Ship” – original, knee-slappin’, toe tappin’ goodness.

9) MY MORNING JACKET – Evil Urges

You GO, Jim James! Perhaps between DeVotchKa, the Duhks, and My Morning Jacket, a pattern is starting to emerge – that of unclassifyability (yep, just made that one up, too).

Some of the most unexpected and mesmerizing sounds of the year, here. I’m kicking myself for not making it to the CD preview party out in the wilds of New Mex, might’ve been the perfect environment to experience this recording.

Stark yet beautiful, hypnotic yet provocative, grounded yet ‘far out,’ man.

FT: “Evil Urges” – a quirky, sonic masterpiece, “Touch Me I’m Going to Scream pt.2” – a sprawling, proggy, new wave 80s anthem, “Highly Suspicious” – can’t explain what there is to like about it, but it makes me smile wryly.

10) TEA LEAF GREEN – Raise Up the Tent

The circus-themed album art seems to bleed into some of the songs, most of which have a lilting quality generally absent from rock-n-roll these days. I applaud this new effort from one of the Bay-area’s best live bands and anxiously await their mysteriously-lit return to a live venue near me soon, dammit! David Lowery’s production is irreproachable.

FT: “Don’t Curse at the Night,” “Red Ribbons,” and “Not Fit” all demonstrate what clockwork-like songwriting precision four mere mortals can achieve.

~ Chris Diestler, A.K.A. “Toast”

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TnJ 050 (12/31/08) Best of 2008

-HOUR ONE-

KELLER WILLIAMS w/MOSELEY, DROLL & SIPE – Skitso (2008 Live)
KELLER WILLIAMS w/MOSELEY, DROLL & SIPE – Temple Balls (2008 Live)
YONDER MOUNTAIN STRING BAND – Kentucky Mandolin (2008 Mountain Tracks Volume 5)
KELLER WILLIAMS w/MOSELEY, DROLL & SIPE – Thin Mint (2008 Live)
DeVotchKa – Blessing in Disguise (2008 A Mad & Faithful Telling)
STEPHEN MALKMUS & the JICKS – Elmo Delmo (2008 Real Emotional Trash)
THE RACONTEURS – Consoler of the Lonely (2008 Consolers of the Lonely)
moe. – Cathedral (2008 Sticks and Stones)
MICHAEL FRANTI & SPEARHEAD – All I Want Is You (2008 All Rebel Rockers)

-HOUR TWO-

XAVIER RUDD – Uncle (2008 Dark Shades of Blue)
RAINMAKER – Further from the Truth (2008 Long Slow Fade)
THE DUHKS – Ship High in Transit > Magalenha (2008 Fast Paced World)
THE INAFAMOUS STRINGDUSTERS – Black Rock (2008 The Infamous Stringdusters)
LITTLE FEAT w/EMMYLOU HARRIS, SAM BUSH & BÉLA FLECK – Sailin’ Shoes (2008 Join the Band)
WIDESPREAD PANIC – Solid Rock (6/28/08 Red Rocks Amphitheater, Morrison, CO)
MY MORNING JACKET – Evil Urges (2008 Evil Urges)
TEA LEAF GREEN – Let Us Go (2008 Raise Up the Tent)

See the next post(s) if you’re a “High Fidelity” type who wants to examine the order in which we actually ranked the Best TnJ Discs of 2008. This playlist has the sequence shuffled for aesthetic as well as practical broadcast reasons. These are not necessarily our favorite tracks (though in the cases of the Raconteurs and My Morning Jacket, they were) from these releases, because there’s a good chance we already played those earlier in ’08, and were trying not to repeat ourselves the first year. Drew Emmitt slipped through twice with the Marshall Tucker Band cover, “Take the Highway,” but at least we tried for no repeats in a year. We TRIED, dammit (^_^)

The Widespread Panic track isn’t from an official 2008 release, but rather from Chris’ favorite concert experience this year. Thanks to Ira Gordon and Jordan Zucker for putting me and my wife there. It was Kate’s first Red Rocks show and she was suitably impressed.

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