Hidden Track

Wednesday Intermezzo: Keller Finds WMDs

Keller Willams has once again assembled his WMDs for a series of east coast dates in November. While we enjoy Keller’s creative, albeit gimmicky solo work, we love seeing Keller

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Briefly: The Softest Launch In Web History

So, apparently, and we’re not sure when this happened, but Amazon.com’s long-awaited challenge to iTunes is open…maybe…we think. Amazon’s new mp3 store is offering unprotected music files at a cheaper

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PBS’ Austin City Limits TV Schedule Out

The PBS schedule is out, and Pitchfork‘s got the story: Norah Jones begins the televised festivities on October 6th, while most music-lovin’ New Yorkers will be on Randall’s Island for

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You’re Nobody ‘Til Somebody Grifts You

When I met former Phish keyboardist Page McConnell last May in the JFK airport on my way to San Francisco, my first thought was to thank him for all the times his band awed me silly. My next inkling was to ask him to buy me some magazines and a Snickers with almonds at the terminal’s Hudson News, the least he could do for taking so much of my disposable income lo these many years.

Phish


But just last week a little birdie told me to pick up a fairly new book by Emily White called You Will Make Money In Your Sleep: The Story of Dana Giacchetto, and that quasi-biography shed some new light on where all my ticket and merchandise money had gone.

Giacchetto, a hip money manager for Leonardo DiCaprio, Tobey Maguire, Cameron Diaz and the popular rock band Phish, became known as Scammer to the Stars when he pled guilty to fraud charges, spent years in jail and was banned for life from working in finance. And as it turns out, Phish was the biggest loser:

In December 1999, the accountant for Phish notified Dana that he’d discovered a $3 million discrepancy in their account, and he was preparing to sue. He had an urgent meeting with the band and warned them that they had been robbed. In the story of Dana as a thief — a story Dana still denies — Phish was the extreme loser; their account was mercilessly ransacked…

And here I thought Phish fans were the extreme losers…turns out it’s the band. I keed, I keed. Anyway, I’m making my way slowly through White’s book, and it’s an interesting read even without the Vermont foursome (and, in truth, they only show up on four or five pages). Phish eventually re-claimed their pilfered millions in surprising fashion, but read on after the jump for full excerpts of the band’s plight.

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Sir Joe Russo’s Got a Trio Of His Own

New Yorkers tomorrow night will be treated to the debut performance of Anti-Jazz Raygun, a trio that describes itself as “ImprAvant Death Rock.” With his Duo partner Marco Benevento spending

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Stormy Mondays: So, What’s New?

The weather’s yet to turn cold and it’s not December, but this week’s Stormy Monday is a glimpse at some of the more interesting new releases from 2007. This week’s

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Monday’s Hors d’Oeuvres & Weekend Setlists

Jennifer Hartswick will be releasing her second album, True, on October 2nd. Hartswick and her new band will celebrate the release of True with two special shows: September 30th at the Higher Ground in Vermont and October 20th at the legendary Blue Note in New York City. Look for our interview with Jennifer about the making of True on Hidden Track some time next week.

And as always on Mondays, read on after the jump for a full slate of weekend setlists including Arcade Fire, Bob Dylan, Genesis and Phil & Friends’ tour opener…

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