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Super Bowl XLIV: Manning, Brees and The Who

February 7th, 2010    Posted in Uncategorized
 

nfl_manning_brees1_576

Tonight marks a time when two of my favorite things “join together” – football and rock and roll. Ah yes, the Super Bowl. Once again Coach Marvin Lewis and our very own Cincinnati Bengals have yet to find a way to make it to the big game, ending yet another season in disappointment. It was certainly better than the year before, however the team pulled through strong and overcame obstacles with the passing of wide receiver Chris Henry and Defensive coach Mike Zimmer’s wife, Vikki. But we’ve got to forget about the Bengals on a day like today. As the Who-Dey nation says every year, “there’s always next year.”

So once again we’ve got the Indianapolis Colts and one of the best quarterbacks of all-time in Peyton Manning battling the New Orleans Saints, who have that heartwarming story, with the devastation left on the lives of Hurricane Katrina years ago. I’m hoping the Saints can pull it out today, not just because we’ve heard enough of Manning over the last decade, but I think it’d be great for the city of New Orleans. But my interest tonight really has nothing to do with the game.

Music VH1 Rock Honors

I’m looking forward to the halftime show, which will be put on by one of rock’s greatest bands of all-time, The Who. Roger Daltrey and Pete Townshend may be the only remaining members of the great classic rock band, but I’m just glad they’re still friends, still playing and continuing on the legacy of The Who. They’ll perform a twelve-minute show this evening, performing a medley of hits that will include “Baba O’ Riley”, “Pinball Wizard”, “Who Are You”, “Won’t Get Fooled Again” and the closing of the album, Tommy. It also marks the first American football game that Daltrey will see in person. Not a bad game for your first time.

Questions often arise, especially for a band like this who hasn’t really done a lot of touring over the past several years. That question is, “does this mark a return and tour for The Who?” Unfortunately it appears that The Who will not be touring this year (bye bye the chance of Bonnaroo); they’ve only got one other gig lined up this year, and that is next month at the Royal Albert Hall, where they will perform the album Quadrophenia in its entirety. Later in the year, Daltrey is teaming up with Eric Clapton for a tour in the United States.

The Who join a cast of Super Bowl performers that in the past have included Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band, Paul McCartney, The Rolling Stones, Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers and Prince. As for the game, Daltrey’s pulling for the Saints, while Townshend’s going with the Colts. While my heart is with Daltrey and his prediction, my head is saying “go with Pete.”

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Mark Your Calender/Get Your Tickets Now

January 11th, 2010    Posted in Uncategorized
 

Lots of great bands coming to town in the next few months…

Gov’t Mule
Taft Theatre
Friday, January 29

Cowboy Mouth featuring Junior Brown
Southgate House
Wednesday, February 3

RJD2, Kenan Bell, Happy Chichester
Southgate House
Saturday, February 6

Marcy Playground, The Flight Station, The Western, Faceblind, Our Rising
Mad Hatter
Friday, February 12

Lucero, Glossary
Southgate House
Friday, February 12

Jonathan Tyler & the Northern Lights
Southgate House
Friday, February 12

Robert Earl Keen, Jr
Madison Theater
Saturday, February 13

Fucked Up, Kurt Vile, Iron Age, Till Plains
Southgate House
Monday, February 15

Dark Star Orchestra
Madison Theater
Tuesday, February 16

Ha Ha Tonka
Southgate House
Tuesday, February 16

Carbon Leaf
20th Century Theater
Wednesday, February 17

Love in October, Enlou, Oso Bear, The Never Setting Suns
Southgate House
Wednesday, February 17

The Queers, Off With Their Heads, The Dopamines
Southgate House
Thursday, February 18

Those Darlins
Northside Tavern
Friday, February 19

Reverend Peyton’s Big Damn Band
Southgate House
Saturday, February 20

Arms Exploding LAST SHOW, Anxiety High, Knife the Symphony
Southgate House
Saturday, February 20

State Radio, Big and the Kids Table
20th Century Theater
Tuesday, February 23

500 Miles to Memphis CD Release Party, Kentucky Struts, duppy a jamba, Shotgun Lover, Underground Saints, De Los Muertos, Six Nights Alone, The Mudpies, Paul K
Southgate House
Friday, February 26

Ani DiFranco
Madison Theater
Saturday, February 27

Pop Empire CD Release Party, The Seedy Seeds, Lions Rampant
Southgate House
Saturday, February 27

The English Beat, Fishbone, Outlaw Nation
Mad Hatter
Monday, March 1

Reverend Horton Heat, Banderas, The Tillers
Southgate House
Wednesday and Thursday, March 3-4

Pomegranates
Southgate House
Friday, March 5

Umphrey’s McGee
Madison Theater
Saturday, March 6

Flogging Molly, Frank Turner, The Architects
Bogart’s
Tuesday, March 9

Rodrigo y Gabriela
Madison Theater
Wednesday, March 10

Split Lip Rayfield
Southgate House
Wednesday, March 10

G. Love & Special Sauce
Madison Theater
Friday, March 12

David Bazan, Headlights
Southgate House
Monday, March 15

NEEDTOBREATHE, Stephen Kellogg and the Sixers, Graham Colton
Southgate House
Tuesday, March 16

STS9
Madison Theater
Thursday, March 18

The Big Pink, A Place to Bury Strangers
Southgate House
Monday, March 22

David Gray
Taft Theatre
Tuesday, March 23

Trampled By Turtles
Southgate House
Wednesday, March 24

Ekoostik Hookah, Jon Justice
Southgate House
Thursday, March 25

Sponge
Mad Hatter
Friday, March 26

Backyard Tire Fire
Southgate House
Friday, March 26

Henry Rollins
Southgate House
Saturday, April 3

CincyPunk Fest VIV
Southgate House
Friday and Saturday, April 9-10

Rocky Votolato, Brooke Waggoner
Southgate House
Thursday, April 15

Gil Mantera’s Party Dream
Southgate House
Friday, April 16

That 1 Guy
Southgate House
Tuesday, April 20

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Latest Bonnaroo Rumors Include Cincinnati Band

January 11th, 2010    Posted in Uncategorized
 

Rumors are starting to circulate that Cincinnati’s very own, Seedy Seeds, are in the running to be playing on one of the smaller stages (most likely the Blue Room Cafe or Troo Music Lounge) at this summer’s Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival. The festival includes two large stages, the What and Which stages, with capacities of 100,000 and 30,000, respectively. There are also three large tents (This, That, Other, with capacities estimated around 5,000 – think the type of tent outside of Grammer’s at MidPoint last year). There are also two other smaller stages that host music; the Blue Room Cafe is located in the outfield on the festival’s main stage (What), while the Troo Music Lounge is located towards the back of the outfield on the Which Stage. There is one more stage which sometimes hosts music; that is the Solar Stage, a stage located in Centeroo (center of festival grounds featuring shops, vendors, artists and much more). The sound coming from the Solar Stage is actually powered by the sun. This stage also features many activists and other programs such as political and environmental activists and speakers and discussions and yoga classes. I will stay on top of this totally awesome rumor, as well as any other rumors or artist confirmations. Seedy Seeds at Bonnaroo. Heck yes!

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Celebrate Xmas at the Mad Hatter

December 23rd, 2009    Posted in Uncategorized
 

I’m not much of a holiday type of person, so I get super psyched when I hear about concerts happening on holiday nights, especially Christmas. This Christmas, if you feel you need to get out of the house (like I know I will), head down to the Mad Hatter in Covington for a concert with The Seedy Seeds, Lions Rampant and The Guitars. If you feel guilty about leaving your family and relatives for the night, let ‘em know that this show benefits the Women’s Crisis Center of Northern Kentucky. Not only will you feel good listening to these bands, but you’ll feel good by doing something great to help those in need. Isn’t that what Christmas is really about anyways? Earn some points from the man upstairs on his birthday as well.

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Phish, 11.21.09

November 22nd, 2009    Posted in Uncategorized
 

Phish
U.S. Bank Arena
Cincinnati, Ohio
November 21, 2009

Jam band road warriors, Phish, ended their two-night stand last night at Cincinnati’s U.S. Bank Arena, to another sold-out crowd. They had nothing to prove, as their twenty-five year-plus career speaks for itself (also add in a couple of breaks here and there), but they did show that even after a five-year break, why they are still one of the hottest and most successful touring bands of all-time. A lot of that has to do with their dedicated, cult-like following, many of whom travel all around the country just to see them.

The parking lots and garages under and around Pete Rose Way were full with massive herds of all types of people ranging from both the young and old; hippies, hipsters, and even business men and women. To me, the scene down there felt much like a little version of Bonnnaroo that had been moved to the streets of the city, simply because the only time I’ve ever seen Phish was at Bonnaroo, and this was my first Phish-only show. The lots even managed to turn into Shakedown Street (named after the Grateful Dead song), which is basically the area where you’ll find everyone hanging out (including artists, musicians and vendors) and where you can buy your “psychedelics”, veggie burritos, t-shirts, hemp products and anything else you can think of.

There was also a large authority presence of policemen and security guards, who noted that the night ran rather quiet and smoothly, with just about ten arrests. The lines were long and slow getting up the stairs and into the venue, and I knew once we got inside it wouldn’t be that long. After seeing Friday night’s setlist, I often wondered about the possibilities of what we may hear, but with a catalogue as big as Phish’s, anyone’s guess is as good as the next person’s.

The lights went off and Phish took the stage around 8 pm, inside the smokey, noisy arena. I immediately knew they were changing things up a bit, when I heard the opening bass lines to “Wilson”, a song typically reserved for later on in the night. A few curveballs were thrown during the first set, including covers of the Rolling Stones “Torn and Frayed” and Neil Young’s “Albuquerque”, the mellow and quieter “Dirt”, and “Ginseng Sullivan”, which was brought back to life for the first time since 2004. Their magnificent light show accompanied the music quite well, bouncing around from soft colors of red, blue, green, yellow, pink and purple during extended jams of phan phavorites like “Split Open and Melt” and “Run Like An Antelope”, both clocking in at over ten-minutes in length.

The band kicked things into a higher gear when they came back for set two, starting off with a cover of the Velvet Underground’s “Rock & Roll” which turned into a completely new improv jam, appropriately titled “Cincinnati Jam” before going into the near-eleven minute, rare “Ghost.” They also played a couple of cuts from their latest release, Joy, with only one song in each of the two sets. “Ocelot” and “Backwards Down the Number Line”, both with that classic Phish sound, should see plenty of time down the road, becoming some of the hotter, new selections.

But the most intense part of the night for me personally, came in the second half of Set Two. Beginning with songs like “Prince Caspian”, followed by “Suzy Greenberg”, followed by “Also Sprach Zapathustra (Theme from 2001: A Space Odyssey)”, and ending with “The Squirming Coil”, which was topped off by pianist Page McConnell playing onstage alone. As strong as they were when they kicked off the night, Phish somehow managed to finish even stronger.

They came back onstage for the encore just a couple minutes later, with songs like “Sleeping Monkey” and “Axilla I”, which was requested from someone down in front, something that typically doesn’t happen. Before I knew it, the show was over, and I thought that the night seemed to go by much too quickly. As it turns out, they played for nearly three hours, which is a little short for Phish, but about twice as long as most bands manage to play for. With twenty-three songs and jams in all, most of the songs seemed to fall closer to the five-minute range, with only a few going over ten minutes, for an average of just a little over seven minutes per song.

 

Set One
Wilson
NICU
Wolfman’s Brother
Ocelot
Torn and Frayed (Rolling Stones cover)
Strange Design
Ginseng Sullivan
Albuquerque (Neil Young cover)
Split Open and Melt
Dirt
Limb By Limb
Run Like An Antelope

Set Two
Rock & Roll (Velvet Underground cover)>
Cincinnati Jam>
Ghost
If I Could
Backwards Down the Number Line
Prince Caspian
Suzy Greenberg
Also Sprach Zarathustra, Theme from 2001: A Space Odyssey
The Squirming Coil

Encore
Sleeping Monkey
Axilla I

 

>denotes jam into another song

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Those We Lost in the Music Industry in 2009

November 12th, 2009    Posted in Uncategorized
 

In keeping up with the Year in Music lists, I wanted to put together a sort of remembrance featuring some important figures in the music industry that passed away this year. This is not a complete list of every single musician, producer or executive that has passed this year, just a list featuring names whom you may be familiar with.

Ron Asheton, guitarist for The Stooges
Billy Powell, keyboardist for Lynyrd Skynyrd
John Martyn, British singer/songwriter
Dewey Martin, drummer for Buffalo Springfield
Estelle Bennett, singer for The Ronettes
Kelly Groucutt, bassist for Electric Light Orchestra
Reg Isidore, drummer for the Robin Trower Band
Randy Cain, singer in The Delfonics
Ron Stallings, saxophonist for Huey Lewis and the News
Jay Bennett, multi-instrumentalist for Wilco
Koko Taylor, blues singer, know as “The Queen of Blues”
Sky Saxon, singer and bassist for The Seeds
Michael Jackson, pop singer, Known as “The King of Pop”
Les Paul, musician and inventor of the Les Paul guitar
DJ AM, producer and member of Crazy Town
Erich Kunzel, conductor for the Cincinnati Pops Orchestra
Mary Travers, folk singer in Peter, Paul and Mary
Roc Raida, turntablist for The X-Ecutioners
Steve Ferguson, guitarist for NRBQ
Taylor Mitchell, Canadian folk singer/songwriter
Jerry Fuchs, drummer for The Juan Maclean, !!!, Maserati and LCD Soundsystem
Jim Dickinson, record producer, his sons are Luther (Black Crowes, North Mississippi Allstars) and Cody (North Mississippi Allstars, Hill Country Revue)

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RIP Jerry Fuchs

November 10th, 2009    Posted in Uncategorized
 

jerry fuchs

Tragedy struck the music world this past weekend, when drummer Jerry Fuchs tragically died from injuries sustained resulting from falling five stories down an elevator shaft. He was known as a legendary drummer of this era, and had played in bands like The Juan Maclean, MSTRKRFT, LCD Soundsystem, !!!, Holy Ghost! and Turing Machine. He had recently been on tour with Maserati. He was also a prolific graphic designer and freelance writer for Entertainment Weekly. He was just thirty-four years old. God rest your soul and God bless your family, friends and fans.

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Chesnutt Gives Strong, Emotional Performance

November 5th, 2009    Posted in Uncategorized
 

I’ve always enjoyed checking out a band for the first time by seeing them in concert. It seems not to happen as much anymore, as I’ve discovered and seen hundreds of bands over the better part of the last decade. But last night I was introduced to the songs of a music legend in his own right, singer/songwriter Vic Chesnutt. I went in to the show last night at the Southgate House not knowing what to expect or having never heard his music; in fact, I wasn’t even familiar with his backstory. It’s usually a good idea for a music writer to at least know a little about who he’s going to see, what kind of music they’ll be playing, and in general, who they are as a musician. But I often feel it’s better to go in not knowing anything at all, and just let the artist unveil their magic right before my eyes. This was the case for Vic Chesnutt and his supergroup of a band.

A little bit about Vic and his band. Vic is a forty-four year old, kind of a folksie singer/songwriter from Athens, Georgia, who was tragically left paralyzed from a car accident in 1983 at eighteen years old. He has worked alongside Michael Stipe of R.E.M., Widespread Panic, Lambchop, Bill Frisell and the Cowboy Junkies, and in film, alongside Billy Bob Thornton in Sling Blade. It was the 1996 tribute album, Sweet Relief II, that exposed him to a much broader audience, featuring a number of highly-esteemed musicians covering his music, such as Madonna, R.E.M., the Smashing Pumpkins, Garbage and Live. For the past few years, he’s been working with a number of greats from several bands like Fugazi, Godspeed You! Black Emperor and Thee Silver Mt. Zion, who are accompanying him on his 2009 tour. He has recently released two albums in a matter of just weeks, Skitter On Take-Off, produced by Jonathan Richman, and At The Cut, featuring the musician’s who were joining him onstage tonight.

Most of the music last night came from the At the Cut record, as well as the album North Star Deserter, which also featured contributions from many of the same musician’s who were playing tonight. A drummer, keyboardist and several guitarists playing both acoustic and electric filled the stage, playing everything from quiet Americana folk-rock, to a distorted, slightly heavier mix of punkabilly and rock and roll. Chesnutt’s performance was really quite captivating and beautiful, and even with all of the bands I’ve seen before, I have never seen a single artist put in as much heart, soul or truth into what they’re doing. He’s clearly one of the few coming from a rare breed of musician’s; I think the music world would be much better off if there were more Vic Chesnutt’s.

But it wasn’t just Chesnutt and company whose performance blew me away. Opening the show were four members of the indie pop band, Clare and the Reasons. Clare Muldaur, a product of the Berklee College of Music, quietly belted out a powerful and beautiful voice, all the while jumping back and forth from the guitar, to ukulele, to washboard. She was joined by three multi-instrumentalists, who added everything from guitars, to strings like the violin, to soft brushes of tiny snare drums, to members of the horn family like trombone, trumpet and flute. Most of the music of the night came from their most recent effort, Arrow, as well as their 2007 debut, The Movie.

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Most Hated Bands of the Decade

November 4th, 2009    Posted in Uncategorized
 

It’s almost the end of the year, and that means it’s time for lots and lots of best and worst lists in music. If you’ve been following the blog, then you know that the “Best Albums of the Year” list is already underway, but I’ve still got quite a bit of work to do. I thought I’d go ahead and get this list out of the way.

Most Hated Bands of the 2000’s

It’s A Five Way Tie!

Nickelback vs. Kanye West vs. U2 vs. Fall Out Boy vs. Kenny Chesney

Send in your votes to nate@brokenmic.com to rate who you think is most deserving of this award. Feel free to write your own choice in to.

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Have You Heard?

November 3rd, 2009    Posted in Uncategorized
 

Listen up Pink Floyd fans…Rumor has it that Roger Waters will be touring in 2010-11, performing The Wall in its entirety. Not a whole lot to this story just yet, but apparently six dates have been confirmed. Read about it here.

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