November 2003

2004 Rock n Roll Hall Of Fame Inductees

The late George Harrison, Prince, Traffic and ZZ Top are among the 2004 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees. Jackson Browne, the Dells and Bob Seger round out the group.
Harrison was previously inducted in the Rock Hall’s 1988 class as a member of the Beatles; former bandmates John Lennon and Paul McCartney have already been inducted as solo artists.
The 19th annual induction ceremony will be held March 15 at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York. A Lifetime Achievement Award /Non-Performer honoree will be announced soon.
Artists become eligible 25 years after the release of their first recording. A Foundation committee nominates eligible artists, who are then voted on by an international body of about 700 music experts.
Source cnn.com.

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Guster to Cover The Violent Femmes Album

Guster, about to wrap up months worth of touring in support of their latest release “Keep It Together,” have announced a special upcoming show. The three piece will play homage to one of their three piece influnces – The Violent Femmes. Guster will perfom the Violent Femmes’ debut album in its entirety on November 25th at New York’s Arlene Grocery. The self titled debut album was release in 1982, and features the world recognizable – “Blister in the Sun.”
Source Rollingstone.com.

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Sgt. Peppers #1 on Rolling Stone Top 500

Rolling Stone has compiled their list of the 500 greatest albums of all time, with The Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band claiming the #1 spot. The Beatles, clearly the best band ever on vinyl, take 4 of the top 10. Revolver is 3rd, Rubber Soul 5th and The Beatles (“The White Album”) is 10th. Abbey Road doesn’t come in till 14 and Let It Be barely makes the top 100.
See the complete list here: Rollingstone.com.

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Cobain ‘Journals’ Paperback: New Entries

The paperback edition of late Nirvana frontman Kurt Cobain’s “Journals” has been bolstered with 14 pages of new material, including an extended narrative about a semi-fictional serial killer. Riverhead released the volume Nov. 10, with a front cover reproduction of Cobain’s red Mead notebook bearing his hand-written caveat, “if you read, you’ll judge.”
“Frankly, we had this the first time around, but we chose not to include it, because it’s disturbing and bizarre,” Riverhead co-editorial director Julie Grau tells Billboard.com of the serial killer-themed pages. “We checked, and there was a serial killer that shared some of the traits and biographic facts that he writes about. But it’s hard to know if Kurt was inventing all of this but had pieces of facts he recalled.”
Source Billboard.com.

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Garaj Mahal Announces NYE Run

Garaj Mahal has planned to ring in 2004 with a 3 night run in British Columbia. New Years Eve, Dec 31st & New Years Day, Jan 1st will be at THE BOOT 7124 Nancy Green Way, Whistler, B.C. The Jan 2nd show will be held at MESA LUNA 1926 W Broadway St. Vancouver.
To celebrate New Years, the band is also holding a Dream Set Contest. The person who

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Wilco In Studio Working on New Album

Wilco is in a New York studio recording the follow-up to its acclaimed 2002 album “Yankee Hotel Foxtrot.” As with that set, which was released by Nonesuch after Wilco parted ways with Warner Bros., the band is working on the sessions with producer/multi-instrumentalist Jim O’Rourke. Chris Shaw, best known for his work on Bob Dylan’s “Love and Theft,” is engineering.
The album, tentatively titled “W*lco Happens,” will most likely not be released until late spring. Tracks include “We are Finished Waiting for You Now” and “Hell Is Chrome.”
Source Billboard.com.

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Black Keys To Lay Low For Awhile

Rock duo the Black Keys has postponed an extensive European tour after guitarist/vocalist Dan Auerbach fractured two toes while unloading a van full of equipment. The Akron, Ohio-based group was scheduled to be in Europe through a Nov. 30 show in Berlin. Fans are encouraged to keep their tickets for the affected gigs, as they will be valid when the shows are rescheduled next year.
“Not only were we exhausted and way too stressed after this insane year of non-stop touring, but little s*** like missing planes and fracturing toes added to our decision to take a break,” Auerbach writes on the band’s official Web site.
The Black Keys were touring in support of their sophomore album, “thickfreakness,” released this year by Fat Possum. The pair will return to the stage on Dec. 6 in Oberlin, Ohio, and will play a previously announced New Year’s Eve show at the Beachland Ballroom in Cleveland. The only other show on the group’s schedule is Jan. 2 in Detroit.
During the downtime, Auerbach says he and drummer Patrick Carney “are busy in the basement trying to remember what it’s like to practice. All of our recording equipment and musical junk has a nice thick layer of dust on it, so we’re gonna wipe the dust away and get to work on writing some new songs.”
Source Billboard.com.

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Jay Farrar Ads More U.S. Club Dates

Following opening for the Yonder Mountain String Band for New Years Eve in Denver, Americana rocker Jay Farrar will headline a series of US club dates in support of Terroir Blues, released last June. From January 15 through the end of the month, Farrar and his backing band, Canyon, will play a selection of theatres and clubs from Texas out West to Washington.
Currently, Farrar is bringing his brand of rock to Europe. In the U.K. and Ireland, he is backed by Mick Clews and Peter Noone (both in Peter Bruntnell’s band) and Mark Spencer (Blood Oranges), with Peter Bruntnell supporting. Then, in Europe, it’s just Farrar and Spencer.
For complete tour dates visit pollstar.com.

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Beta Band: New Album/DVD Due Next Year

Scotland’s Beta Band recorded their upcoming album four times before finally getting it right this summer, when they tracked a fifth and final version.
“Our first album [The Beta Band] was written in the studio,” singer Stephen Mason says. “But we were ridiculously prepared for this one.” The as-yet-untitled album, the follow-up to 2001’s Hot Shots II, is due in late March.
“I initially wrote a load of songs, and gave the demos to the band,” Mason says. “They went away and each did a version, so we ended up with four versions of each song. Then we had to condense those four versions down to make another version, and we took that and used it as the starting point for the studio.”
The process was laborious to say the least, but it resulted in twelve songs that are among the most cohesive the band have ever recorded, and a louder, more aggressive sound than previous efforts. “This album is, in some ways, a lot less unusual than the other stuff we’ve done,” Mason says. “Unlike in the past, where we’d record a one-minute song with a fifteen-minute outro, there are no monoliths on this one. Some are much more like pop songs, for us anyway.”
The self-produced album — recorded in Wales during an eight-week stretch this summer — is currently being mixed by Nigel Godrich (Radiohead) and the band. Among the tracks are “Assessment,” which features a brass section. Mason describes it as “guitar-led with quite a large rock tribal rhythm behind it.” Mason likens “Space Beatle” to “a really sad guy alone in a mine, mining for feelings. The only thing he’s got with him is a tiny little hammer and an out of tune electric organ.” But “Simple” is a “classic acoustic guitar song” that is among the most commercial tunes the group has ever recorded.
A pair of DVDs are slated to accompany the album, one a making-of film shot by Scottish comedian Pete Rankin and the other a collection of twelve videos. Mason, drummer Robin Jones, sampler John Maclean and bassist Richard Greentree will each shoot three of the low-budget videos, which will either be set to demo version of songs from the album or culled from the six tracks that didn’t make the final cut.
Source Rollingstone.com.

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Pavement’s Scott Kannberg CD Due Jan ’04

Between the release of Preston School of Industry’s 2001 debut and the recording of their upcoming album, Monsoon, frontman Scott Kannberg relocated from the Bay Area to Seattle. But despite the title, Monsoon, slated for a January 20th release, doesn’t sound like it was written underneath Seattle drizzle — the album is chock-full of sunny California melodies. “I moved to a whole new environment up here,” says the former Pavement guitarist. “I’m not used to the rain. Moving away was kind of hard in the beginning. Seattle’s a challenge.”
Wilco joined in for “Get Your Crayons Out.” Plied with BBQ chicken and salmon, beer and diet Coke, they ransacked Kannberg’s basement studio for instrumentation and gave the track the kitchen sink treatment.
“Jeff [Tweedy] did some really amazing guitar parts,” Kannberg says. “It sounds like a jug band or an early Velvet Underground bootleg or something. Glen [Kotche] found some pots and pans in the basement and started playing those. I gave Leroy [Bach] some old Pavement ashtrays that we have, and he used those as percussion instruments. He was really excited about that.”
Upon his return from a six-week tour of Australia, Kannberg plans to dig through the vaults for bonus material slated for a planned expanded, re-mastered version of Pavement’s Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain targeted for release next year. “I gotta go through all my own archives, all the songs we never put out,” he says. “There’s probably five or six songs that were totally unreleased from around that period, and probably a few demos that we actually did with our old drummer Gary [Young]. I think we can salvage a few of those.”
Source Rollingstone.com.

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