Oliver di Place: Gathering of Friends

GatheringofFriends Oliver di Place: Gathering of Friends

I imagine a room that seems to have only one woman in it, with her guitar. But she only seems to be alone. The muse of songwriting is there with her, invisible even to her. As she sings and plays a new song, other musicians are drawn to her, and they come and listen. Some take out instruments and join in. Soon her song is over, and another singer starts up where she left off, the muse having gone to the new singer. More musicians join in, and more singers take up the task in turn. Soon, there is a full band, inspired by each other and this invisible presence. And then the moment passes, but the songs remain. I am happy to present them now.HeatherStyka LifeboatsForAtlantis Oliver di Place: Gathering of Friends

Heather Styka: Lucy and Sarah[purchase]Heather Styka is that woman alone, but her song Lucy and Sarah soon draws a sympathetic fiddler to her side. No wonder. The song is a remarkable ballad of depression and the power of friendship. It’s not all that easy to make me cry, but the quiet power of this one did the trick. The impact of the song builds through the details of what Styka leaves out, as well as what she puts in. Her performance does the writing justice. Other songs on Lifeboats for Atlantis have fuller arrangements, but the writing is always there, and Styka gives each song just what it needs.JennRawling TaketheAir Oliver di Place: Gathering of Friends

Jenn Rawling: Big Old Lake[purchase]Jenn Rawling is the one whose name is on the album cover, but Take the Air is the work of the duo or Rawling and Basho Parks. Big Old Lake has Rawling on guitar and Parks on fiddle joined by Willem Joersz on standup bass, and the interplay of this trio, plus a drummer playing with brushes for subtle accents, carries the sound here. The song describes the realization that a place the narrator has been away from is no longer home. The situation is bittersweet, and that comes through beautifully. Elsewhere, Rawling and Parks add banjo, keyboards, and even trumpet on three songs. It adds up to some unusual textures for folk-based music, but all makes sense when you hear it.TheGoodIntentions SomeoneElsesTime Oliver di Place: Gathering of Friends

The Good Intentions: The Sound of Time Passing[purchase]First of all, a consumer warning. The Good Intentions heard here are a British folk/ Americana band whose only previous album was Poor Boy. There is also an American group called The Good Intentions, and there is a rock band called Good Intentions, without the The. The concept of British Americana is an interesting one. It’s not hard to imagine an American musician writing these songs, but the performances here are both more restrained and more polished than an American band might have done. That means that the pleasures of this album are subtle, but they do get under your skin. These Good Intentions are a trio, all of whom sing, and the vocal harmonies are one of the things that make this album something special. The Sound of Time Passing is a sweetly nostalgic song that shows just how beautifully the group’s approach can benefit a song.NancyKDillon RosesGuidetoTimeTravel Oliver di Place: Gathering of Friends

Nancy K Dillon: New Train[purchase]On Rose’s Guide to Time Travel, Nancy K Dillon’s songs are pulled between folk and rock. On New Train, this tension comes out in the interplay between the haunting electric guitar and the fiddle. The song is a folk-gospel number, but the setting here gives this kind of song a new power. Elsewhere on the album, there are more folkish numbers, but that creative tension is always there. Dillon’s strong vocals and emotional commitment to the material hold the whole thing together and make it memorable.DaveMcGrawandMandyFer SeedofaPine Oliver di Place: Gathering of Friends

Dave McGraw and Mandy Fer: Forget the Diamonds[purchase]Forget the Diamonds is essentially a rock song, and a fine one. But the electric guitar player has left my imaginary room, and the arrangement is acoustic. No matter. The power that the best rock songs convey is here, along with some tasty fiddle lines in the middle. The quieter moments on this album reveal just how much of a joy it would be to hear these songs performed by just the duo of Mandy Fer and Dave McGraw, But the arrangements here give the songs extra bite, and they thrive under this treatment. Both Fer and McGraw have turns on lead vocals, and each holds their own quite nicely in the fuller arrangements.

Avenged Sevenfold will be finishing up 2011 by headlining the 'Buried Alive' tour, which is also the name of the bands fourth single from Nightmare. There are thousands of viewpoints on this wide ranging issue. By following these basic steps, you will have a great outdoor concert lighting display to highlight some of your best landscaping. Though concert tickets can be high-priced, several men and women feel that it's an expense they are prepared to undertake in buy to see their preferred band dwell, and to get pleasure from an night at a show./p> But that does not indicate that most of us are ready to pull out the wallet to devote hundreds of dollars to see a present. Tony Kakko's vocals and interactivity with the audience was spectacular. You want to make certain that you discover as many processes as possible to get music downloader. The Texas heat is shining down on you, but you don't care because you are about to witness a concert like you have never seen before.? Just purchasing your seat ahead of time does not guarantee you a 'specific' seat if it is an open seating event.

Thank You M.C. 1969: Michael Chapman’s Folk-Rock Classic “Rainmaker” Arrives From Light in the Attic « The Second Disc

1329818228 23 Thank You M.C. 1969: Michael Chapman’s Folk Rock Classic “Rainmaker” Arrives From Light in the Attic «  The Second Disc

When the distinct green Harvest Records logo is remembered today, it’s often for Pink Floyd or early Electric Light Orchestra.  But the label, created to stake a claim in the burgeoning rock market, boasted a deep, diverse roster, all the better to compete with other “alternative” labels like Decca’s Deram or Philips’ Vertigo.  One of the artists who found early success on Harvest was Michael Chapman, a former art and photography instructor.  Chapman’s greatest achievement was arguably 1970’s Fully Qualified Survivor, on which the troubadour was backed by Mick Ronson on guitars and Elton John’s arranger du jour, Paul Buckmaster, supplying the string orchestrations.  But Chapman was so fully qualified because Survivor was actually the third in a rich series of albums that both defined and transcended the British folk-rock ethos of the period.

Light in the Attic delivered Fully Qualified Survivor last year, and has now turned its attention to remastering and expanding Rainmaker, Chapman’s 1969 debut for Harvest.  (1971′s Window would fall in between those albums.)  Like that more famous sibling, Rainmaker blends psychedelic, folk and rock influences into a potent brew that’s uniquely Chapman and again features a stellar line-up of supporting artists.  The album was overseen by another Elton John collaborator, Gus Dudgeon, the producer behind John’s remarkable series of seventies classics as well as David Bowie’s “Space Oddity” single.  Dudgeon would go on to produce Survivor for Chapman.  The singer, songwriter and guitarist was joined by drummer Aynsley Dunbar, perhaps best known for his association with Frank Zappa, and a host of other musicians including Clem Clempson (Humble Pie), Alex Dmochowski (Retaliation), Norman Haines (Locomotive), Danny Thompson (Pentangle) and Rick Kemp (Steeleye Span).

Hit the jump for more on Rainmaker, including the full track listing and order links!

Chapman occupies the space somewhere between traditional folk and electric rock, but his music was actually influenced by an array of diverse artists from Miles Davis and John Coltrane to Hank Williams and Elvis Presley.  He also found inspiration in abstract expressionist artists like Mark Rothko and the auteurs of French cinema.   It should be no surprise, then, that his music was well-considered and superbly crafted.  The album’s opener, “It Didn’t Work Out,” offers a unique sound thanks to the use of both electric and acoustic basses, and electric guitars shimmering over traditional folk acoustic guitar.  Norman Haines’ organ weaves in and out of the entire arrangement.  But the ornate musical bed doesn’t overwhelm the gently rueful song, anchored by a powerful rock backbeat.  Chapman was carving out his own niche somewhere between Bert Jansch and John Martyn at the crossroads of pop, folk and rock.  Chapman’s own guitar leads (on both acoustic and electric) stand out on the album, whether on “It Didn’t Work Out” or instrumentals like the title track, complete with sound effects, and “Thank You P.K. 1944” (so named for painter Paul Klee, who actually died in 1940!)  Chapman’s jazz roots shine through on these cuts, as well as his affinity for the blues.  “One Time Thing” is another haunting track, paying homage to the rather time-honored tradition of the one night stand.

Six bonus tracks have been added to the original 12-song lineup.  These include four tracks from an unreleased 1968 album, three of which have been previously unreleased: “Anniversary,” “Among the Trees” and “Sleepy.”  All three tracks, as well as the previously issued “Bert Jansch Meets Frankenstein (Take 2),” are heard in mono.  “On My Way Again,” an outtake from the Window sessions, has also been included, as has the mono single “Mozart Lives Upstairs,” the B-side of “It Didn’t Work Out.”

The lavish, 15-page booklet includes rare and unseen archival photos, and a lengthy essay by Byron Coley drawing on extensive, recent reminisces by Chapman himself.  Nick Robbins at Sound Mastering Ltd. has completely remastered the reissue, which is available in stores now from Light in the Attic on both CD and vinyl.  The 180-gram vinyl replica edition lacks the CD’s bonus tracks, but is housed in a reproduction of the gatefold jacket in its original form (including a deluxe Stoughton “tip-on” jacket)!  You’ll find order links below!

Michael Chapman, Rainmaker (Harvest LP SHVL-755, 1969 – reissued Light in the Attic LITA079, 2012 CD/Vinyl)

Vinyl edition contains Tracks 1-12 only.

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Funding boost for folk fest

 Funding boost for folk fest

SHETLAND’s world famous folk festival is to receive a grant of just over £7,000 from Creative Scotland’s One Step Further programme.

The money comes from a pot of £300,000 the national agency spends on enhancing festivals and events throughout 2012.

Shetland Folk festival spokeswoman Mhari Pottinger said the extra cash was “a fantastic boost” to the event which was run 100 per cent by volunteers.

“We have already noted an increase in visitor numbers in recent years and this investment will potentially help us grow it further, bringing associated social, cultural and economic benefits to our local community,” she said.

This year, the 32nd folk festival takes place between 3rd and 6th of May with at least 14 visiting bands from ten different countries.

Creative Scotland chief executive Andrew Dixon said more than 380 festivals were taking place across Scotland this year.

Local VisitScotland manager Steve Mathieson added: “Here in Shetland our culture is one of our greatest assets and a major draw for visitors – that’s why this programme is so important – it’s providing opportunities for visitors as well as local communities right across Scotland.” 

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Folk music of northern Japan comes to Eugene in a rare USA performance

 Folk music of northern Japan comes to Eugene in a rare USA performanceRenowned “shamisen” virtuoso makes his American debut at UO

“A three-string fretless Japanese banjo.”

That’s how local composer and University of Oregon (UO) doctoral candidate Simon Hutchinson describes the shamisen.

For those who’ve never seen this instrument played live by a master musician, Chouei Sato will perform for the first time in the U.S. at the UO School of Music and Dance on Saturday, February 18 at 8 p.m.

Together with his students, Hutchinson and Chieko Shirogane, Sato will perform tsugaru-jamisen (a style of folk music native to the northeast Japan region) at a 4 p.m. Lecture Demonstration at Thelma Schnitzer Hall and at an 8 p.m. concert at Beall Hall. Both events are part of the 2012 Society of Ethnomusicology (SEM) Northwest Chapter Meeting.

Chouei Sato is a renowned shamisen virtuoso and folk singer who made his recorded debut in 1984 (on the album “Kitauni wo Utau”). Sato has received numerous awards for his live performances, including the 1989 competition at the Tokyo Budokan, and the 2006 Tsugaru Jamisen National Competition. He has accompanied numerous vocalists on recordings and television performances, and released his most recent album of solo and group arrangements for shamisen, titled “Tamashii no Hibiki,” in 2006. Along with teaching private students, Sato leads two shamisen groups, “Towa Sangenkai” and “Choueikai.” He performs regularly with these groups and as a soloist, and has recently appeared with them on TV Iwate and the Japanese Public Broadcasting Station NHK.

The style of music Sato plays, called tsugaru-jamisen, is a sub-genre of min’yō (folk music) that grew out of a tradition of folk songs accompanied by the shamisen. This unique style was developed in the late 19th century in and around Tsugaru, a city on the northernmost end of Honchu (Japan’s largest island), and has since gained both national and international recognition for its energy and accessibility.

Hutchinson calls tsugaru-jamisen “a great window into Japanese music,” perfect for beginners without the “high buy-in” that other forms of Japanese music might have for Westerners. Its lilting rhythms and strophic folk-song-based structure make it readily approachable to just about anyone. He compares it in its accessibility to taiko, which has been popular in this country since the early ‘70s, and thinks that tsugaru-jamisen could catch on in the same way.

“When I started out, I needed this genre to bridge the gap between my experience as a jazz musician and Japanese music,” Hutchinson explains. “Now I like it all.”

The comparison to jazz is apt, given Hutchinson’s description of Tsaguru-jamisen:

“The rhythmic shamisen playing was so interesting that it developed into a solo repertoire. Even the solo shamisen music comes from a folk songs. There’s one piece we’re going to play, titled ‘Jonkara Bushi.’ We’ll probably play about twelve minutes, but of that maybe two minutes will be sung and the rest will be an introduction and an extended solo.”

Hutchinson first met Sato in Japan in 2002 when he was working as an international specialist in a small town called Towa in northeast Japan. At the time, he was interested in Okinawan shamisen music, which he describes as “a kind of island music.” He decided to study shamisen in Towa to prepare for further studies in Okinawa after his year-long contact with the local government ended. Instead, Hutchinson fell in love with the northern style of tsugaru-jamisen. When his contract expired, he stayed in Towa to continue studying with Sato, taking a part-time job teaching English to pay the bills and devoting the rest of his time to learning the shamisen.

“I really liked this northern folk-music style,” Hutchinson says. “And of course, the fact that [Sato] is a fantastic teacher and a hilarious personality as well. He’s worried that his jokes won’t translate into English very well for the performance but he’s going to do his best, or maybe I’m going to do my best in translation.”

Tickets for the February 18 concert are $12 for general admission and $8 for students and seniors (available online or at the Beall Hall ticket office). The “Lecture Demonstration” is part of the SEM Conference and is free to attendees.

Registration for the conference is $5 for students and “independent scholars” (aka the public) and $10 for faculty. And though the Lecture Demonstration is part of an academic conference, Hutchinson doesn’t expect the level of discussion to go over anyone’s head:

“We’re going to give a sizable demonstration and maybe a bit of historical background, but we’re hoping its’ going to be mostly questions from people attending. It won’t be a specialist talk because even the specialists in musicology are unfamiliar with this particular style of Japanese music. It’s very rare to have performances in the U.S.”

DAVID OZAB IS A FREELANCE WRITER AND BLOGGER LIVING IN EUGENE. HE WRITES ABOUT PARENTING AND LIFE AT WWW.FATHERHOODETC.COM. HE IS A MEMBER OF WILLAMETTE WRITERS.

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Grammys 2012: ‘Bon Iver’ wins for alternative album

1329392229 70 Grammys 2012: Bon Iver wins for alternative album

The experimental folk act Bon Iver has won for alternative album at the 54th Grammy Awards for its second and self-titled album, beating several major-label peers for the honor.

The project, led by Wisconsin-based singer-songwriter Justin Vernon, rose from a beloved underground sensation on the independent Jagjaguwar label to mainstream crossover with “Bon Iver” in 2011. This is the first year Bon Iver has been nominated for a Grammy, and the project is also up for best new artist, record of the year and song of the year for the single “Holocene.”

Vernon, known for his pristine falsetto and increasingly ambitious arrangements, has performed on “Saturday Night Live” and collaborated extensively with rapper Kanye West on West’s album “My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy.” Bon Iver reportedly declined an invitation to perform at this year’s Grammys, citing Vernon's discomfort at performing alongside other artists not of his choosing.

FULL COVERAGE: Grammy Awards

Bon Iver beat out several other established bands for the award, including “Codes and Keys” from the Seattle-based quartet Death Cab for Cutie; “Torches,” the debut full-length from the L.A. electro-pop trio Foster the People; the latest album from longtime Grammy favorite Radiohead, “The King of Limbs”; and the Kentucky quintet My Morning Jacket’s latest record of jam-friendly rock, “Circuital.”

The Grammys are determined by about 13,000 voting members. The eligibility period for nominated recordings was Oct. 1, 2010 to Sept. 30, 2011.

The latest headlines and any breaking news will be posted here on Pop & Hiss. 

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Photo: Justin Vernon, known as Bon Iver, at the 2011 SXSW Music Festival in Austin, Texas. Credit: Los Angeles Times.

The star has his decent share of lime light earlier as well due to his association with Pamela Anderson and the following controversies. Update: Congratulations to COLDPLAY, for receiving a Grammy Award! I need to travel at high speed here since there's no evidence of this. Many see him as the successor to Garth Brooks, and even supposing his data are not slightly as distinctive, he does appear determined to remain a rustic artist (whatever that implies today) with titles akin to "Don't Mention Memphis", "Give It To Me Strait", "It Doesn't Get Any Countrier Than This" and his 1996 US usa no 1 "She Never Lets It Go To her Heart". It is however extremely hot to sleep in a tent in Spain in July, so I recommend booking a Big names this year:The Prodigy, Kasabian, PIL, The Specials, Ian Brown and Dizzee Rascal. The crown marked the beginning of a dynasty that won seven Central Division championships (including six consecutively) and four Super Bowls from 1972 to 1980.

Poor Man’s Whiskey

1329303426 47 Poor Man’s Whiskey

What:

The Bay Area’s outlaw music bards bring a reputation for high-energy live shows and an incomparable fusion of folk, punk, rock, and disco to stages and festivals world wide. This “High-Octane Hootenanny” will certainly delight those interested in a foot-stompin good time. Poor Man’s Whiskey has evolved into a ragged, spontaneous beast pulling from equally deep wells of story-telling originals, expertly crafted covers and zany on-stage shenanigans.

PMW has released 5 studio albums, “Goodbye California”, released in 2011, “Dark Side of the Moonshine” (a double disk set featuring original music as well as the bluegrass interpretation of the Pink Floyd classic album) in 2009, “Roadside Attraction”(2005), and “Train to California” (2003), “Hunnerd Proof”(2002).

Notable festivals and shows: Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival, Byron Bay Blues and Roots Music Festival (Australia), High Sierra Music Festival, Wakarusa Music Festival, Yonder Mountain Harvest Festival, Kate Wolf Music Festival, The Fillmore, SF; Harmony Festival; Strawberry Music Festival; The Great American Music Hall; Dead on the Creek, 4 Peaks Music Festival, The Summer Melt Down, Las Tortugas; finals of the Telluride Bluegrass Festival.

When/where:

DatesTime9:30 p.m.Phone707-826-2739VenueSee Event DescriptionCost$15.00Web site

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Grammys 2012: A record of the year word cloud

1329026228 86 Grammys 2012: A record of the year word cloud

What, exactly, are we hearing when we're bombarded with the five songs nominated for song of the year at the 54th Grammy Awards, which take place in Los Angeles on Sunday night? Of course, we're hearing music, but what words are being drilled into the head with each listen to Adele's "Rolling in the Deep" and Katy Perry's "Firework," two of 2011's most relentlessly overplayed hits? Toss the other three into the mix — Bon Iver's "Holocene," Bruno Mars' "Grenade," and "The Cave" by English folk-rock band Mumford & Sons — and that's a lot of verbiage going into America's ears.

Which words, specifically? Through the wonders of technology, Pop & Hiss fed all the lyrics of the five songs listed above, which are nominated for record of the year, into a word cloud generator. What arrived is the above image. (Click on the image to expand it.)

Much to your high school grammar teacher's dismay, the most repeated word in the five songs is "gonna," followed by the mantra-words from Adele's hit — "rolling" and "deep." More interesting, though, is to examine the lesser-used samplings, where "jagged," "strength" and "choke"  pop up alongside words such as "black," "ice" and "bullet." 

What does the cloud say about 2012's lyrical themes? Not much, probably, other than the fact that Adele repeats "rolling" a heck of a lot during the song, just as Perry drills the word "firework" into our heads. As for "The Cave"? Mumford & Sons mentions the title word only once in the lyrics, and none of the other songs feature the word, so it didn't even make the cut  — unless it's buried in there somewhere we can't see.

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The Vortis Diaries: Ghosts of bands past

Dero VortisDiaries v2 The Vortis Diaries: Ghosts of bands past

Second only to true love, no bond in life is tighter or endures longer than one with someone you’ve made music with.

Friendship and shared experience are part of it, of course—all of those hours spent rehearsing, recording, performing, and waiting to perform, to say nothing of crossing the country huddled together in a wreck of a van, or sleeping side by side on someone’s floor, if touring was involved. But it goes deeper that that.

When you play with a group that really clicks, you instinctively come to sense where your bandmates are going next, following their lead or guiding them where you want to go. You laugh with commiseration at their missteps, or your own; celebrate spontaneous moments of inspiration, and conduct running commentaries on everything happening on stage, in the room… and in the universe. At the risk of waxing mystical, this ability transcends verbal communication, or even visual exchanges. It’s a sort of telepathy, and it doesn’t fade with time.

Vortis has been plenty busy of late: The group played the Double Door last Friday with pals Anxiety High (who are about to go on hiatus), and did an hour on WLUW’s Razor & Die show just before the new year (the audio can be found here). But it was the ghosts of bands past that were on my mind through the holidays, and though I adamantly avoid living in the past, they were welcome visitors indeed.

Speed the Plough and Jay Orff both released new albums in the waning days of 2011. One initially greets new sounds from old collaborators with a bit of trepidation—again, like the letter from an old love—even when you’re not a music critic, and even when you’re not somehow expected to publicly comment on them. But there’s a sense of excitement, too, and promise, and even some pride, as if you had some small, abstract role in their creation, having once been central to it. The music may be unfamiliar at first, but soon enough, that old intimacy comes rushing back, and that indelible connection is renewed in a way that social networking couldn’t begin to match.

I already had played in a dozen groups by the time I joined Speed the Plough in the mid-’80s, but I’ve always considered it my first “adult” band. I was 21, and the three key players at the core of the project—keyboardist-vocalist John Baumgartner, his wife, woodwinds player and vocalist Toni Paruta Baumgartner, and their lifelong friend, guitarist and vocalist Marc Francia—couldn’t have been more than a decade older. Yet, on top of their already long history, they shared a mature approach to the playful act of making music alien to the band worlds I’d known, where somebody invariably was late, couldn’t afford decent gear or rent for the rehearsal space, injected needless drama into things just for the heck of it, or otherwise messed up in myriad juvenile ways, disrespecting the project and everyone involved in it.

When Speed the Plough gathered to rehearse every Sunday night in the attic of the Baumgartners’ comfy, Laura Ashley-accented house in Haledon, New Jersey, a leafy suburb in Passaic County, everyone showed up on time, ready and eager to create, and full of mutual respect, if not love. Toni might make brownies or French press coffee when you arrived; John always had a stash of tasty imported beers on hand, and you were welcome to smoke a joint in the living room. In short, this was the first band that made me realize that playing rock ’n’ roll wasn’t just an activity for screwed-up teenagers; you could be a grown-up and still make a glorious noise. And, oh, that noise.

STP%20THEN The Vortis Diaries: Ghosts of bands past  

The group played an introspective, hypnotic, and gently psychedelic brand of folk-rock. Francia and the Baumgartners had first made their mark on the music world as part of the Trypes, an offshoot of the legendary Feelies, some of whom they knew from high school. They shared that band’s kinetic, backwards backbeats, but took a more nuanced, seductive, elliptical, and orchestral tact, with more Fairport Convention, George Harrison, Philip Glass, Penguin Café Orchestra, and Brian Eno in the mix. They issued one brilliant EP, The Explorer’s Hold, in 1984 (streaming now on Speed the Plough’s Web site), but when the Feelies got too busy touring after their second album The Good Earth, the non-Feelies Trypes regrouped with a new lineup and a new name (which came from a Scottish folk song, not the Mamet play).

I played drums and percussion on the first self-titled Speed the Plough album in 1989, but left in 1991, when I moved to Minneapolis. Yet through long stretches of seeming inactivity, and quite a few lineup changes, the band never stopped going, driven by that core threesome, and eventually including John and Toni’s son Mike on guitar and Marc’s sons Ian and Dan on drums and bass, as my buddy Jim Testa wrote in this 2010 profile. Five more albums followed the debut, including the latest, Shine, released last Fall on Dromedary Records, and possibly the best in the band’s discography.

shine 300x300 The Vortis Diaries: Ghosts of bands past

The group hasn’t altered the formula it’s honed for more than three decades now: The ebb-and-flow crescendos, John’s slippery keyboard lines, Toni’s simple but beautiful flute and sax parts and angelic vocals, and Marc’s bedrock rhythm guitar sound exactly as they always have. But the fragile but insistent guitar leads, especially those from new member Ed Seifert, add a welcome edge, and songs such as “In My Book,” “Madeleine,” and “Sea of Tranquility” have a timeless, magical feel that places them among the very best the group has written.

Do I lack the objectivity to say that? I don’t think so. The last time I saw John, who always had a bit of the Billy Corgan dictatorial taskmaster in him, he cut me with a crack along the lines of, “So, you’ve done pretty well with this whole rock-critic shtick of just trying to piss people off,” which hardly is my modus operandi (or at least not more than one out of a thousand times). I’d love to stick it to him as payback—though not to Toni or Marc, who were as sweet as ever—but I just can’t. Shine is a quiet masterpiece.

As for the other voice recently resurfaced from my musical past, there never was any hint of iron-will dictator there; in fact, Jay Orff always has been the sort of artist wracked by self-doubt, forever second-guessing or selling himself short, despite his massive talents as a poetic lyricist and an architect of wonderfully subtle, slyly insinuating folk-rock melodies.

Jay%20Orff The Vortis Diaries: Ghosts of bands past

The winter of 1996 was one of the coldest and snowiest on record in Minneapolis, which really is saying something, and it was a difficult time for Jay, recently ejected from the cozy cocoon of academia and sporting a severely broken heart; our friend Devin Hill, an amazing guitarist troubled by more self-doubt than Jay, questioning whether he even wanted to make music any more, and me, struggling to support a newborn and figure out what I was going to do with my life while freelancing after an ignominious departure from Rolling Stone.

Together, we found catharsis from the bitter sub-zero chill, our fears and uncertainties, and collected psychic wounds by recording an album of Jay’s songs that came to be called Devils & Darlings. The sound? Imagine what Nick Drake circa Pink Moon might have been like if he’d had more Dylan/Minnesota in him, a view of Middle America and its dreams and nightmares akin to that of David Lynch’s Blue Velvet, and an obsession with the otherworldly, midnight voodoo vibe of Los Lobos’ Kiko and the Lavender Moon. (There is very little straightforward drumming on the record, in part because we were shooting for the way Daniel Lanois had built that disc’s undulating rhythms from layer upon layer of odd percussive clatter.)

Jay has kept busy in the years since, as a writer of slightly skewed, discretely subversive, but very moving prose and a director of short films that share those same, sometimes obtuse qualities. (I’ve come to consider any film or short story that ends without resolution, just like real life, as having “an Orffian ending.”) He also has a fascinating day job, as one of the key people behind Magnetic Poetry, those great sets of little magnetic words that turn any refrigerator into a showcase for smutty haiku. And, needless to say, he has kept making music, self-releasing another half-dozen collections of beautiful, introspective, and intensely personal sonic missives, though none resonate more than his latest, Your Heart on the Stage of Desire.

Jay%20Cover The Vortis Diaries: Ghosts of bands past

Swirling, atmospheric, and endearing songs such as “Ice Machine,” “Blue Moon,” “Greeting Card from Walgreens,” and “The Daffodil” evoke a graceful balancing act on the tightrope separating despair and optimism, desire and repulsion, and emptiness and fulfillment. This is the product of another of life’s stretches of emotional turbulence, this one even more disruptive than the dark days of ’96, but who among us hasn’t been there and can’t relate? You don’t have to be an old friend to pull for Jay to thrive as he emerges on the other side, or to be moved by and find inspiration in his journey.

THE VORTIS DIARIES

Sept. 12, 2011: Everything Falls Apart

July 27, 2011: Record Release Party

May 31, 2011: Rock ‘n’ roll rituals

Mar. 9, 2011: Stage patter sucks

Jan. 27, 2011: Finding catharsis at Cal’s

Dec. 15, 2010: An evening at Pancho’s, the new (and far superior) Ronny’s

Nov. 14, 2010: A trip to Milwaukee

Oct. 11, 2010: Dance Fever

Aug. 30, 2010: A road trip to Madison

July 26, 2010: A weekend at Wall to Wall

July 12, 2010: An evening with F*cked Up

June 21, 2010: Six hours at Ronny’s on a Saturday night

Ani DiFranco, RZA, and Steve Albini at The New Yorker festival in September 2005. I'm laying an important foundation. The sixth song was "Trampled Underfoot" from "Physical Graffiti." John Paul Jones bass lines dominate this song. So, how do you get the best tickets? It was a star studded event blessed with renowned and great personalities like Oscar winning actor Denzel Washington and magnificent actress Anne Hathaway. Cheap Flights to Lilongwe And Fun Concert in Lilongwe Lilongwe is the capital city of African country Malawi. The Engineer must have a solid grounding in live sound, studio recording, location recording, as well as experience in live concert recording itself. Shocked to hear this, my girlfriend purchased two tickets to the Jay-Z concert at the Palace of Auburn Hills last Christmas. There may be more to this, but I don't need to ramble on and on about that. It is interesting that I am talking about this touching on concert.

The Last Spectacular: The folk rock collective with a dazzling album debut

1328163434 82 The Last Spectacular: The folk rock collective with a dazzling album debutThe Last Spectacular

Despite only having formed as recently as 2009, Gateshead folk rockcollective The LastSpectacular are far from being the kind of transient phenomenonthat seems to be churned out by the music industry these days only tobe forgotten about mere moments later. Thanks to a wealth of previousindividual experience, together with a strong debut album, the grouppossess a sound that makes it appear as if they’ve been part ofmusic’s rich tapestry forever and are better prepared than most tostand the test of time.

Soon after forming and notwithstanding some early personnel changes,the band set about recording their eponymous debut album – acollection of 10 expertly crafted songs that have intriguingly drawnupon influences as diverse as traditional American country music,Appalachian folk and spaghetti western film soundtracks with positivereviews and recognition following after its release in 2011.

This acclaim is partly thanks to the songwriting skills of lead singerPaul Worthington who counts being music producer at Gateshead’s busyBroadwater Studios as his day job whilst also finding time to createand produce music for film and television and run his very own recordlabel, Principal Sounds. In addition, Gav Richards, Paul’s colleagueat Broadwater, came to recognition as the guitarist with sadlydisbanded rock worship band Yfriday and brings a wealth of recordingand performing experience to a band that also benefits from thetalents of drummer Matt Glen, keyboard player Simon Honeysett andJames Shepherd on bass and trumpet.

I catch up with Paul, Gav, Simon and James in a break from their busyworkloads to ask them how The Last Spectacular came into being. “Paulhad been working on the songs for at least a couple of years before weproperly got together as a band,” confirms James. “He started chattingto Gav, Matt and myself about the possibility of forming a bandtowards the end of 2009 and our first official practise took placeearly in the following year. Over the course of the next few months weworked on some songs together and discussed influences in a fairlyrelaxed way. It wasn’t until Simon joined us on keyboards that thingsreally started to take off.”

“After playing the songs together we decided to begin recording anEP,” adds Simon Honeysett. “There was a lot more material we could useand it became apparent that a full length album was feasible. Itturned out to be a bigger project than any of us anticipated!”

“After many discussions about what songs to include and exclude on theEP, we decided to make a 10 track album instead,” continues James. “Weset to work on this in October 2010 – not long after the line up wascomplete. Over the course of about nine months, in short windows ofour spare time, we recorded, mixed and mastered the album.”

As with many other memorable albums, it seems that the recordingprocess had its struggles as well as its highlights. “It was a verychallenging process,” Simon agrees. “Not least logistically as we allhad full time jobs and had to find time in evenings and weekendsalthough we were fortunate to have access to Broadwater Studios inGateshead where Paul and Gav work. Lots of creative things happenedduring the recording process with everyone voicing opinions and Paultrying to feed them into the recording and production. Sometimes youwould come back into the studio after a break to find that a track hadtaken a new direction. To hear arrangements take shape like this wasthe most exciting and rewarding thing but it could also be stressful.”

Thanks to the band’s hard work and perseverance, the end product is animpressive album that seems familiar and fresh at the same time. I askPaul Worthington why this is. “I suppose lots of our songs are inquite traditional forms so they seem to be recognisable in thatthey’re reflective of other forms of music,” he suggests. “Also we tryto write quite emotional material and I think this appeals to people’sdeeper instincts. The reaction to the album’s been better than we hadexpected. We’ve had glowing reviews from the press and on blogs so I’mreally happy that people are enjoying the record.”

I ask the band why there is a heavy American influence on the album interms of musical styles and why they haven’t referenced moreindigenous sources. “Music tastes in the band are diverse but we’veall always been partial to a bit of folk, country and Americana,”clarifies James. “Many of Paul’s songs were written in a traditionalstyle and, as we arranged them and worked on them together, we tendedto settle into the sound you hear on the album quite nicely. As forlocal influences, Tyne And Wear and Northumberland has a good heritageof folk music – perhaps not Americana so much but certainly in thesame ball park.”

As Christians, I wonder how important is it for the band to get theGospel message across in their music and how conscious they are ofmarrying this approach with trying to appeal to mainstream audiences.”I’m not sure we’ve really come to any strategy on where faith is inour music,” reflects Paul. “I think our music is full of our own livesand that reflects the ideas we have about faith and God. People dotend to say that our music is deep and has spiritual facets so Isuppose that’s a good thing.”

“We don’t aim to have any message in our music and we don’t aim to bean overtly Christian band but I suppose we don’t try to hide iteither,” continues James. “Making good music glorifies God. Paul’slyrics are often borne out of what he’s thinking and going through atthe time and, of course, God and faith feature heavily in that. Isuppose we want to appeal to as broad an audience as possible but atthe same time we want to make music that we like playing!”

Having been the guitarist in the long-running CCM band Yfriday, GavRichards is perhaps better placed than most to comment on thedifference between being in a noticeably Christian group and the moresubtle approach of TheLast Spectacular. “Well, for a start, I get to play the banjo,” hejokes. “It’s a different vibe playing live. A Yfriday event was alwaysa worship-focussed gig whilst The Last Spectacular is not.” I ask Gav ifhe misses being part of Yfriday. “Of course,” he admits. “After 12years with the band, it was always going to be something I’d miss butI look back on the Yfriday chapter of my life as an amazing time.”

It seems that Gav’s new band also has the potential for longevity, asSimon confirms. “Our main focus for the time-being is playing live andpromoting the album but it’s also important to us that we continuedeveloping by working on new material, with everyone taking part inthe songwriting process.”

“I think we’re in a really good place as a band,” James adds inclosing. “We are all committed to The Last Spectacular and to seeing where itmight lead but we also have other commitments and passions too. It’s astrange one – everyone’s totally committed but totally relaxed too. Wejust want to make music we love, share it with people and to see whathappens!” 

Concert doesn't need any special education. Album released 1972.The first benefit concert in history with one of the greatest lineups in history all came from the genius of George Harrison who wanted to help Ravi raise money for disaster relief in Bangladesh. If that be true then I was right all along bordering on free music stations. Start with a really cool bonus listen to free music online is that it scopes out less music stations online. Oh, one more thing.... Don't let music playlist stop you. I am interested in seeing your results with get free music and there is much about it. Concert tickets are not cheap by any means; in fact, most of them can be really costly. These legendary rockers do not come very often for a live concert.

Folk singer brings legendary act to Gallo

1327923427 98 Folk singer brings legendary act to Gallo

MODESTO — Judy Collins was 14 and studying classical piano when she happened to turn on the radio and hear a song that changed her life.

It was the folk song “Barbara Allen,” sung by Jo Stafford. Before long, young Collins put classical music aside and decided to learn the guitar and play folk music.

“It wasn’t the folk revival when I got involved,” said Collins, who performs Wednesday with opening act Amy Speace at the Gallo Center for the Arts in Modesto. “It was 1954-1955. Things hadn’t come together yet. I didn’t know people made a living at this. I didn’t know they played concerts.”

But she eventually figured it out and got gigs playing folk clubs first in Colorado, where she grew up, and then in New York. By 1967, she was famous because of her hit Grammy-winning rendition of Joni Mitchell’s “Both Sides Now.”

Collins, now 72, wrote about the early days of her folk career in her new memoir, “Sweet Judy Blue Eyes: My Life in Music,” a title that references a song written by her former boyfriend Stephen Stills of Crosby, Stills and Nash, “Suite: Judy Blue Eyes.”

To go along with the book, she recorded the CD “Bohemian,” which includes her interpretations of such folk songs as Woody Guthrie’s “Pastures of Plenty” and Mitchell’s “Cactus Tree,” which she sings with Shawn Colvin.

Collins has a lot of stories to share and doesn’t skimp on details in her book.

“I have had an extremely interesting life,” she said. “I talk about music. I talk about sex, drugs and rock ‘n’ roll. I talk about alcoholism. I talk about recovery. I talk about being a working alcoholic, which is a hard thing to do … It’s very inspirational because it has a happy ending through all that chaos, all that drama.”

The song “Both Sides Now” came into her life through her friend Al Kooper, known for organizing the band Blood, Sweat and Tears. Mitchell invited him and others over one night to hear her songs, and though he didn’t know anything about her music, he went because she was good looking, Collins said.

“I was sound asleep and I got a phone call from him at 3 in the morning,” Collins said. “When he heard the song, he called me. He said, ‘You’ve got to hear this.’ “

Collins went right over and was blown away. The next day, she took it to her record label and soon recorded it. But it wasn’t until nine months later that it became a hit. One of the people at her label decided to remix it so it was more radio friendly, and then it quickly took off. Collins said commercial success was never her top concern anyway.

“We hadn’t made records to make hits,” she said. “I never did, anyway. I was looking for a great song.”

The other big highlight of her career came in 1975 when her rendition of Stephen Sondheim’s “Send in the Clowns” from the musical “A Little Night Music” won the Grammy Award for song of the year. Once more, it was a friend who brought the song to her attention. She called Collins in 1972 and asked her to listen to a great song on a soundtrack from a new musical. Collins tried to brush her off, saying she wasn’t interested in theater, but the friend persisted. When Collinsfinally listened, she thought it was incredible. She got on the phone to Hal Prince, the musical’s producer.

“I said, ‘Hal, you know, I hope that you can tell me about this song,’ ” Collins said. “It’s a beautiful song. He said, ‘Yes it’s a beautiful song. Two-hundred people have already recorded it.’ I said, ‘I don’t care who’s recorded it, I have to record it.’ It became a huge hit.”

Collins said her recording’s success was in some ways a matter of luck. Her label, Elektra Records, was hot at the time and had a great marketing team. It was at the beginning of her career.

“It was the right song for me,” she said. “It was the right song for the times. It was a breakthrough for me.”

While Collins never again hit such heights, she didn’t stop performing and making music. She has recorded songs in every decade since the 1960s.

She also has written several books, including “Sanity and Grace,” about the suicide of her only son. Her Web site says she strives “to create music of hope and healing that lights up the world and speaks to the heart.”

She said music has kept her going through life’s challenges, including her own suicide attempt as a teenager.

“Without the music, I would not be here, for sure,” she said. “The first person that it heals and gives hope to is me. The next people who it gives hope to are my audiences. They’ve stuck around for 50 years.”

WHAT: Judy Collins

WHEN: 7 p.m. Wednesday

WHERE: Rogers Theater, Gallo Center for the Arts, 1000 I St., Modesto

TICKETS: $15-$45

CALL: (209) 338-2100

ONLINE: galloarts.org

Seger supported Beautiful Loser with an extensive tour with the Silver Bullet Band, and whilst it did not make the album a hit, it provided a widespread grassroots following across the country. It has the exceptional recognition of becoming the one and only television show ever to achieve number one in 6 successive seasons, which is a lot more than The Cosby Show as well as All in the Family, which had been number one for five consecutive seasons. It isnt often that one would get a chance to see their favorite artists from such a close distance as they actually perform for the benefit of the audience on stage. Reggae is a genre that every walk of life recognizes and love, it doesnt matter where you come from. When push comes to shove, these devilish remarks with respect to concert. But then again a trobairitz performs only for the elite. Music radio should not be confused with similar stuff. In 1993, he had two further minor hits with "Memory Lane" and "Two Steppin' Mind", all 3 of these songs taken from his debut album. Granted, I feel it's better than a poke in the eye with a sharp stick yet you won't regret music playlist. I am really starting to become a big fan of Iron and Wine, so when I see anything by him on vinyl I usually snatch it up rather quickly.