
Steve Kimock Band: Eudemonic
Steve Kimock and longtime drummer, Rodney Holmes, create an album that invokes many musical styles, and provides the listener with an interesting journey that is led by Kimock
Steve Kimock and longtime drummer, Rodney Holmes, create an album that invokes many musical styles, and provides the listener with an interesting journey that is led by Kimock
Reason #1,459 why New York City is great. A Monday night benefit for the Red Cross, that manages to showcase two NYC Hardcore Metal crowd pleasers, while raising $2,000 at the same time. Yes sir, I think that is a winning combo for a Monday.
To chronicle his first tour with an electric band in seven years, Bob Mould will film a tomorrow’s (Oct. 7) show at the 9:30 Club in his Washington, D.C., home for a live DVD. “It will be a seven-camera shoot with the same crew that [drummer] Brendan [Canty] uses for [the live DVD series] ‘Burn To Shine,'” Mould told Billboard.com last night (Oct. 5) after his show at New York’s Irving Plaza.
The trek, which winds down Oct. 15 in Los Angeles, has found Mould performing everything from Husker Du classics (“Makes No Sense At All,” “Celebrated Summer,” “Chartered Trips,” “I Apologize”) to solo cuts (“Egoverride,” “See a Little Light”) and songs from his sting fronting rock trio Sugar (“A Good Idea,” “Changes,” “If I Can’t Change Your Mind,” “The Act We Act”).
Mould is also playing a healthy dose of his new album, “Body of Song,” released in late July via Yep Roc. The set, which features Fugazi drummer Canty on drums, debuted at No. 22 on Billboard’s Heatseekers chart.
Having rocked out for the past month, Mould will take some time off before returning the road for an 11-date acoustic tour that gets underway Nov. 11 in Cleveland.
Here are Bob Mould’s acoustic dates:
Nov. 11: Cleveland (Grog Shop)
Nov. 12: Indianapolis (Vogue)
Nov. 13: Madison, Wis. (Stage Door)
Nov. 15: Milwaukee, Wis. (Shank Hall)
Nov. 16: Ann Arbor, Mich. (the Ark)
Nov. 18: Louisville, Ky. (Headliners)
Nov. 19: Columbus, Ohio (Little Brother’s)
Nov. 25: Annapolis, Md. (Ram’s Head Tavern
Nov. 29: Alexandria, Va. (Birchmere)
Dec. 2: Philadelphia (North Star)
Dec. 3: Brooklyn, N.Y. (North Six)
Source billboard.com.
Phish and the city of New Orleans have a long relationship. Since the band first played the city in 1990, Phish performed there semi- regularly and have been adopted with typical local hospitality. Keyboardist Page McConnell’s father co-founded the New Orleans Musicians’ Clinic for local musicians in 1998, funded in part with money raised by the sale of a collaborative CD titled “Get You A Healin'” on which Page appears, along with bassist Mike Gordon and an all-star NOLA cast. Page also recorded Vida Blue’s self-titled first album there and drummer Jon Fishman has played there with a variety of bands. The city also provided the backdrop for the formation of Oysterhead, guitarist Trey Anastasio’s collaboration with Les Claypool and Stewart Copeland. All the band members have enjoyed working and playing in New Orleans, collaborating with local musicians, in Phish and other projects over the years. From the early Tipitina’s shows to State Palace Theater and ultimately to the Jazz and Heritage Festival and beyond, Phish has soaked up the bayou’s unparalleled taste for exploratory music and next-level reveling. By the time they arrived at the 27th annual Jazzfest in 1996, Phish was welcomed with open arms and they played in a manner befitting the occasion.
Phish’s “New Orleans Relief” consists of the entire April 26, 1996 performance at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival and is available now at livephish.com in both MP3 and lossless FLAC format. “New Orleans Relief” is rounded out with filler consisting of the entire second set from November 7, 1991 at Tipitina’s where Phish was joined by special guests from Colonel Bruce Hampton and the Aquarium Rescue Unit, who opened the show. The master cassette of set I of the Tip’s show is missing, so “New Orleans Relief” provides a perfect chance to highlight the magic that occurred when Phish and ARU combined their talents to the great appreciation of those sufficiently “out-erested” to follow along. Both shows were mastered from the original 2-track soundboard recordings and were mastered by Fred Kevorkian.
In addition to this very special download release, Phish Dry Goods is offering a special “New Orleans Relief” T-Shirt and a brand new, limited edition poster by Jim Pollock. The t-shirt and poster are available for pre-order now at drygoods.phish.com/nola .
All artists and vendors involved in the project donated their time to the cause and ALL proceeds from “New Orleans Relief” downloads, t-shirt and poster sales will be donated directly to Tipitina’s Foundation and the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Foundation. The New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Foundation has earmarked their funds for “Raisin’ The Roof”; a program that builds affordable housing for New Orleans musicians, and to fund 2nd Line Parades.
The ruthless efficiency of our consumer culture in co-opting anything organic and true is the subject of “Colonized,” one of the first new songs in more than four years from the San Francisco Bay Area’s beloved Mother Hips.
Ironically, for more than a decade the roots-rockers worked overtime trying to market their own music. The industry, for the most part, wasn’t buying. Despite a brief, two-album run with Rick Rubin’s American Recordings in the mid-Nineties, the band toiled for years on the road-warrior circuit, self-releasing two of its five albums and building a fiercely devoted following, one set of ears at a time.
Those ears are now ringing with word of mouth that the Mother Hips are back together after an extended hiatus.
Singer-guitarist Greg Loiacono, co-founder and co-songwriter with his fellow frontman Tim Bluhm, opted out of the group two years ago, leaving Bluhm, drummer John Hofer and bassist Paul Hoaglin to pursue side projects. But now the Mother Hips have officially reunited, with an EP and single due in November on New York-based Camera Records and a spate of West Coast dates beginning October 28th in Santa Barbara. The band also has plans to play New York and other eastern cities in February.
To read more, visit rollingstone.com.
Just as fans begin storming the stores for the long-awaited Extraordinary Machine, Fiona Apple has announced a three-week U.S. tour beginning just before Thanksgiving.
Fans have been lusting after Extraordinary Machine for several years, enduring countless rumors and a leaked early version, most of which was later scrapped.
The album – her first since 1999’s When The Pawn… – appears to be living up to the hype, immediately hitting No. 1 on iTunes and garnering a host of rave reviews.
Apple’s first major tour in more than five years begins November 22 at Portland, Ore.’s Roseland Theatre. She’ll hit theatres including San Francisco’s Warfield, Chicago’s Riviera and several House of Blues venues on the trek.
Two shows are planned for Philadelphia’s Tower Theater just before the tour wraps at New York City’s Nokia Theatre Times Square December 11.
The singer/songwriter’s last tour was a two-month jaunt in the spring of 2000.
Source pollstar.com.
On Friday, Oct 7, O’Brien will turn over his entire show to the band, which is in New York for seven sold-out engagements at Madison Square Garden.
The NBC show has never before devoted itself entirely to a musical guest, although it gave major time a few years back to a holiday appearance by bandleader Max Weinberg’s other employer, Bruce Springsteen.
O’Brien is a big U2 fan, and made a personal connection by talking at length with Bono during breaks in rehearsals for the band’s “Saturday Night Live” appearance last season, Pitt said.
Source: billboard
New Monsoon shows increased maturity with this new release, both in their songwriting and confidence in the vocals by lead guitarist Jeff Miller and pianist Phil Ferlino.
Stereolab nearly defies criticism as their music exists in its own little dimension, waiting to be discovered and savored by sonic explorers. When you listen to any new release by Stereolab-this one included-the experience is deceptively nondescript. Their latest work is no exception; six songs on three 7-inch singles recorded in France, which are also available for download.
The Perishers came to New York City and played Webster Hall this past week. The band is from Sweden,