Sunday, November 18, 2007

Roundhouse Blues & BBQ


November 9-10, Savannah GA

Roundhouse Railroad Museum

Roundhouse has been around since the mid70's, though the food wasn't BBQ and the music wasn't blues but Kate Smith and the Preservation Hall Jazz Band. In fact, the festival formerly known as the Night In Old Savannah didn't really start being a blues festival until 1996, but since then it's featured some of the best in the blues festival circuit, including Chubby Carrier and Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown. This year, Johnny Winter leads the pack. Tickets are $12 for one night and $20 for two nights.

Headliners: Johnny Winter, Magic Slim, Wanda Johnson, Shrimp City Slim, Sapphire Bullets of Pure Love

No video available

Friday, November 16, 2007

Buddy Guy audio tour includes stop at Chicago Blues Festival

A multimedia podcast about Chicago blues location narrated by Buddy Guy has been downloaded nearly 100,000 times, but somehow just came to my attention. The tie-in here is that one of those locations is the Chicago Blues Festival, the subject of one of the series' 22 chapters.

The whole project is first class, one of the best multimedia presentations I've ever seen. The idea is that you would put it on your photo-enabled MP3 player and listen to it while visiting the sites, but it works almost as well from the comfort of an easy chair. The tour is available for viewing at a website or for download as a podcast. Highly recommended.

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Video: FP reports from Telluride Blues & Brews

Festival Preview was on hand in Telluride CO September 14-16 for Telluride Blues & Brews 2007. Our video report includes an interview with festival director Steve Gumbel and performance clips by Grace Potter, Joe Bonamassa, Ana Popovic and more.


Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Video: Joe Bonamassa rockin' Telluride

Video blogger kellymon61is posting some of his footage from Telluride Blues & Brews, including this incendiary solo by Joe Bonamassa, which he describes thusly: "Joe jamming at one of the evening Juke Joints at the 2007 Telluride Blues & Brews Festival. He ended the show with Los Endos (Genesis song) which blew my mind...so cool!!!"

Monday, October 15, 2007

Henry Gray

Appraised by the National Endowment for the Arts as one of the great contributors to American culture, Henry Gray has an uncanny ability to distill old-time instrumental r&b right down to its essence. It's only natural, then, that he's been asked to perform at more than New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival editions every year since its inception, and his talents have been utilized in the studio and on the stage by everyone from Muddy Waters to Guitar Slim. And those rock'n'rollers recognize his contributions as well, after 60 years of his fingers hitting the keys-- he was flown into Paris to play at Mick Jagger's 55th birthday party.

Personnel: Henry Gray [piano, vocals (solo)]

Upcoming: Blues Masters at the Crossroads October 19-20, Crescent City Blues Festival October 19-20

A 1984 Clip of Gray Performing "Boogie Woogie"

Video by BobHardy1

Crescent City Blues Festival

October 19-20, New Orleans LA
Lafayette Square Park


Although they're highly regarded for their namesake and signature festival, the people at The New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival & Foundation, Inc. responsible for many more celebrations than just that one monster. The Crescent City Blues Festival is a case in point-- over two days, some of the city's finest as well as outsiders are gathered to bring home that hot stuff in N.O.'s downtown. The best part about this particular event, though, is that it's free.

Headliners: Bobby "Blue" Bland, Tinsley Ellis, Robert Belfour, Marva Wright, Tab Benoit, Henry Gray, Rockie Charles & Guitar Slim Jr.


No video available

Wednesday, October 3, 2007

And the winner is…..Whooooaaaa!

By Donald Frazier

In our effort to document the sights and sounds of this year’s Blues and Brews Festival, one remarkable feature eluded us: the frequent raising of glasses and chanting that took place throughout the tasting of beers from more than 50 breweries that was a centerpiece of Saturday’s action.

Well, it wasn’t strictly a chant. Rather, it was more like a few people declaiming a long and drawn-out “Whooooaaaa!”: softly at first, but gradually rising to a crashing crescendo as more and more happy beer tasters join in. By the end it was somewhere between a frat party just before the cops arrive and The Gathering of the Clans.

But what is it? What kicks it off? And why can’t we get it on videotape?

Austin Colby Nelson solved the mystery. As publisher of ‘Draft’ magazine and the sponsor of this year’s competition, he sees this ritual all the time. “It’s a regular feature of beer tastings.” We can’t catch it on videotape, he helpfully explains, because it’s totally random: a sort of spontaneous upwelling of exuberance that expresses the tasters’ studied appreciation of the beers they are assessing at the time.

(Oh yeah, and maybe the fact that they’ve carefully assessed more than a few as the afternoon wears on.)

This year’s winner was the Sweetwater Brewing Company, Atlanta, in a reprise of their victory of two years ago. Nelson says four to five thousand festival-goers took part in the balloting. Which specific beer were they voting for? The process has not yet become sophisticated enough to figure that out. But between the chuggings and the ‘Whooooaaaa’ings, not too many of the tasters were complaining.

TBB slideshow by Kelly Butler


Working out of the press tent at music festivals, it is interesting to see what other publications sent bloggers and photographers. At Telluride, some mainstream press was on hand along with most of the festival blogging corps--people from JamBase, MelodyTrip, MoBoogie.com and others joined Festival Preview in the photo pit for the first several songs of each act.

One of the more interesting press people I met was Kelly Butler, a professional audio engineer who was covering the festival for an environmental web site. (TBB's green initiatives made it an interesting story for that audience.) Now here is a great slideshow of Kelly's still photos of the event, set to the music of one of the festival's big acts, The Radiators.

Turns out that besides having a great eye for photos, Kelly has an ear for the music and is a self-confessed Fishhead (Radiators fan). Nice slideshow.

Showing the Colors

By Donald Frazier

One glance around the festival grounds confirms our observation that something very much like a festival-going lifestyle has emerged. And it’s not just youthful party animals either (although the ‘Brews’ part of this year’s event has certainly attracted a good number of them as well!). It’s people in their forties and fifties who come out in force as well.

To judge by their teeshirts, these festivarians are a broad-minded lot. Sure, we saw the logos for a number of blues-themed events. But they also attend festivals for jazz, indie rock, mainstream rock, country, bluegrass, folk, and even classical music. They attend these events all over the country and beyond, from Georgia and Rhode Island to British Columbia and even Spain. They travel great distances, such as the Festival Preview neighbor who rode out on his Harley from Scranton, Pennsylvania.

And they come well-prepared to party. From their lovingly-prepared campsites, taking in the festivals is not something they do casually. Rather, it’s something they take quite seriously, packing in and setting up with the supplies and the well-practiced order of a military campaign. All the better for those of us who need to borrow a working stove but hey, the spirit of sharing is where it’s been at ever since Woodstock.

Sunday, September 16, 2007

Soggy finish doesn't dampen great Telluride weekend

By Dan Ruby

Not even a steady rainfall could dampen fans' enthusiasm during The Black Crowe's closing set Sunday night at the Telluride Blues & Brews festival. Some dramatic flashes of thunder and lightning accompanied the band's flashy performance.

Maybe it's that the Colorado locals are used to it, but most in the audience pulled on their rain shells and panchos and continued to boogie. After a near-perfect festival weekend, fans wanted to savor the closing act. Very few of them headed for the exits.

On stage, Crowes lead singer Chris Robinson commended the audience, remarking that "you mountain people can show flatlanders how to play in the rain."

It was a satisfying close to a weekend full of highlights. Some of the top musical stories for me were:

• The incendiary playing of a host of New Orleans musicians, capped off with a great penultimate Sunday set by The Radiators with Bonerama. The spirit of New Orleans was captured in a mini Mardi Gras celebration while Chubby Carrier played a medley of "Hey Pocky Way" and "Iko Iko."

• The hardest working person at the festival had to be Henry Butler, the great New Orleans piano player, who played main stage and late night sets with both Rhythm Council and John Mooney's Bluesiana. During the outstanding set by steel guitarist Robert Randolph, I watched Butler as he grooved along to the music.

• Each of the headliners--The Black Crowes, Keb' Mo' and Los Lonely Boys--lived up to expectations, but the true revelation was the number of lesser known artists who impressed. I'll acknowledge there are plenty of gaps in my knowledge of contemporary blues players. This weekend, I was introduced to musicians like Joe Bonamassa, John Mooney, Eric Lindell, Marc Ford and more that blew me away with their playing chops and musical taste.

• The women's division of hot young players was well represented by Grace Potter in a well received return engagement from last year and Ana Popovic in a eye-popping review. Both performers trade on their sex appeal but in both cases the easy-on-the-eyes performance poses did not substitute for real talent and ability to entertain. The blues ain't just for men anymore.

• David 'Honeyboy' Edwards was a revelation. You probably thought that the early blues pioneers were all history, but Edwards has been picking acoustic blues guitar since the 1930s, when he is said to have known the legendary Robert Johnson. In a festival dominated by the sounds of New Orleans, Edwards' performance was a nod to other centers of blues history, Chicago and the Mississippi Delta

The festival introduced several innovations in its 14th year. Getting on board the green festival movement, Telluride Blues & Brews was announced to be 100 percent carbon neutral, accomplished through a partnership with Green Mountain Energy and Sustainable Waves. Attendees had an opportunity to offset their own energy impacts by purchasing a green ticket upgrade.

Also new was a Thursday night opening party, the Bal de Maison, at the Sheridan Opera House, featuring The Rhythm Council. This joins two nights of multiple juke joint options and a celebratory closing event, the Fais Do Do, also at the Sheridan, in the festival's extensive late-night program.

According to festival director Steve Gumbel, the event was a near sellout, with a capacity crowd on Saturday and strong numbers on Friday and Sunday. Sales of the late night events was also strong, with several of the juke joint concerts turning away ticket holders, who spilled over into the other late-night venues.

Overall it was an exceptionally well run and artistically satisfying festivals. The program pulled in a great many eclectic musical styles, all held together by a love and respect for the 12-bar blues.

Chubby Carrier finds the funk in zydeco

By Donald Frazier

He may hail from way out in Cajun country, but Chubby Carrier and the Bayou Swamp Band delivered a rousing and festive set of zydeco-based party music last night just as proficient and sophisticated as any of the citified New Orleans performers we’ve heard here over the last few days.

From its first moments, this set was intended as a party, with an intro medley of Mardi Gras classics and costumed performers tossing beads to the audience in a well-practiced, crowd-pleasing bit of showmanship.

As for the music, this is strictly zydeco lite. No earthy, bluesy shouts or growls; none of the raw edges of a Beau Jacques or a Keith Frank. Every phase, every melodic line was as sharp and vibrant as last week’s pop hit.

And Carrier’s selection of material presented a retrospective of zydeco, showing how it evolved from backwoods juke joints such as El Sido’s to become one more element of the eclectic New Orleans mainstream.

Consider the progression between two songs. An old Boozo Chavis favorite, "Don’t You Mess with My Choo-Choo," hammered down a simple, emphatic two-step with the catchy staggered fourth beat that makes zydeco so danceable. A few songs later we were in Funk Nation, with the jagged basslines of the War classic, "The Cisco Kid." Half a century of music in 15 minutes.

But his infectious, good-natured performance made sure everybody had a good time in ‘the Chubby party.” At times he almost hectored the audience where their energy flagged: “git up and dance, y’all!” The got up, they complied, and they boogied.

On the ground in Telluride

By Donald Frazier

No broken glass. Not a single shard of it, and that’s at a beer-themed event burgeoning with glasses and bottles slung about with increasing abandon by a suds-befogged crowd.

That’s just one index of how well-run the Telluride Blues and Brews Festival is. Everything about it is clean, even the omnipresent Bob’s Johns. One part is an exceptionally mellow crowd. Lots of high-energy music, alcoholic beverage, and mass excitation, yet scarcely an tense word in the air, let alone some of the confrontation that has sadly become a feature wherever drink and raging hormones collide.

Credit is due also to the management of this year’s event. Lines begin early – some arrive at 6 a.m. for an 11 a.m.
opening – but are well-run, with no jostling and thronging. Seating areas are clearly marked, with diagonal access routes maximizing good sightlines for all, even at the back. VIP areas are spacious, but do not seem to prevent the rest of us from getting as close as we want to the music.

The rest of the amenities are also among the better in this year’s festival circuit. Food stalls are plentiful and varied, and not unduly expensive. A swarm of local volunteers mans every checkpoint, always with civility if not always with information. One pleasure compared with other festivals: almost no police presence. Nothing like being patted down for possible explosives to set a peaceful crowd on edge.

Parking is a big hassle, but accommodations are not an issue: the few actual hotels here are so expensive that camping is de rigeur. The town runs an extensive campground abutting the Festival area, with many spaces of various sizes from pup tent to RV. No campfires allowed, but a hot shower for two bucks, a place to wash dishes and, of course, lots more sparkling Bob’s Johns.

A few observations:

The Grey Panthers. The crowd here skews older than any festival in memory, as The Woodstock Generation hits
retirement age. Not just the holdout hippies with their tie-dyed shirts and bald-guy pony tails, but normal
civilians as well. Plenty of young people too, but a great relief to not be the oldest person here by two decades.

Hey, Dude. One new feature: actual, true-to-life groupies. Festival Preview was asked to provide an introduction to one bassist on stage, who seemed boyish to us but, to an tipsy yet determined 45-year old from Crested Butte, seemed ‘cute.’

Running the class lines. Telluride is one of the most expensive resort markets in the country, where hedge-fund managers from the Coasts snap up second and third homes for millions. Yet it’s full of energetic entrepreneurs offering all of the services needed to keep Masters of the Universe in style – and just scraping by. The result is a disconcerting vibe on the streets, with a clear line between the servers and the servees. Must have been like this in the Court of the Sun King.

The (Festival) Lifestyle. One new angle: many of the attendees here are practiced festival-goers, sporting tee shirts
from Lolapalooza to Merlefest to prove it. They are not just party animals, but discerning music fans with the experience to compare this event to others this year. As the crowd grows more knowledgeable and thus more demanding, we can expect the festival scene to become increasingly professional.

Guess the guitarist

The lineup at Telluride Blues & Brews was filled with hot blues guitarists. Guess who's who from these closeup photos. Send your picks to info@festivalpreview.com. The first three correct entries win a Festival Preview t-shirt.

Update: The contest is now closed. Congratulations to winners Shannon Pineda, Michele Choate and Matt Robinson.








Day 2 photos from Telluride Blues & Brews

Ana Popovich kicks off the afternoon

More Ana

Marc Ford

John Mooney's Bluesiana

A mini Mardi Gras breaks out

Festival director Steve Gumbel gets into the spirit

Chubby Carrier

Keb' Mo' closes the day

More Keb'

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Piano 'professor' leads class at Telluride

By Donald Frazier

Morning at the Blues and Brews Festival, and the venerable New Orleans tradition of the virtuoso keyboard ‘professor’ is alive and well in the hands of Henry Butler with the opening act, R&B supergroup Rhythm Council.

Warhorse familiars like Tipitina and Down in New Orleans, just like they’re supposed to, took on a new stridency and oomf, thanks to vocals from Papa Mali and an unexpected delight, funk sousaphone master Kirk Joseph, a founding member of the Dirty Dozen Brass Band (which, for anyone with a long enough memory, was once something of a house band for that New Orleans seedbed of great brass bands, The Maple Leaf).

But this set’s guiding spirit, in keeping with the New Orleans theme of the festival, was definitely Professor Longhair (Henry Byrd). A critical mass of musicians and the confluence of musical styles ranging from blues and jazz to funk, country, classical and even West Indian made New Orleans and Lousiana into the finishing school for American indigenous music, spawning a rich variety of traditional, schools, and teachers – all hotly competitive.

In this demanding environment, a piano ‘Professor’ was a player who mastered all of the styles expected of him, and Professor Longhair was the acknowledged kingpin. Here in Telluride, we’re going to hear a lot of Louisiana styles in artists such as Chubby Carrier (zydeco), Robert Randolph (soul/gospel), Beth Popovic (blues), Johnny Sketch and the Dirty Notes (jazz/rock) and The Radiators (everything at once),

You can hear the excitement of discovery in Rhythm Council’s play: each of the members was accomplished in his own right before coming together in an impromptu recording session. Each song has a raw energy and these players, each with a lot to say and a zeal in saying it, finding a way to combine it into something new.

Challenging logistics at TBB

So many things are perfect about this festival that I was surprised to find the press facilities far less than perfect. The biggest issue is no Internet, which explains the delay in getting these blog items up.

I'm writing now Friday afternoon after the Grace Potter set. It was another star-power performance by Potter, but we got a further disappointment afterward when we learned she would not be making herself available to media. It puts a crimp in my plans for a video featuring Potter. Maybe not fatal. We got some footage and stills of her main stage set, and will be on hand tonight at the Sheridan Opera House for her late night set. I can follow up with a phone interview that would go with the images we have have.

(Now it is the next morning and I'm ensconced at Baked in Telluride, a top hangout for locals and festival-goers--partly for the great baked goods and coffee but also for the free wifi. Anyway, we didn't get into the Sheridan Opera House last night to see Potter's late night act, so the video is getting shakier. We'll move on to some other targets. Maybe The Radiators.)

Friday photos from Telluride Blues & Brews

Henry Butler and Kirk Joseph of Rhythm Council

Papa Mali of Rhythm Council

The view from the grounds

Joe Bonamassa

Juke Joint stage set

Grace Potter

Grace Potter hits a high note

Grace Potter trades riffs with Scott Tournet

Robert Randolph

Henry Garza of Los Lonely Boys

Henry and Jojo Garza

Friday, September 7, 2007

Wrapping up Bumbershoot

By Karen Martin

Good morning after to all of you die hard Bumbershoot fans. Yesterday was kissed goodbye by Wu Tang Clan at the main stage and Steve Earle at the Starbuck’s Stage. Many went to see the Greyboys Allstars and Solive at the Esurance Stage, but the majority were split between the other two stages. Attendance was good, and there were still people pouring in the gate at 9:30 last night for all three stages. The Starbucks Stage turned out to be a nice new innovation, as not everybody feels the need to drink beer while they are watching live concerts.
 
The Rain Goddess was especially generous as she waited until after the crowds had been pouring out the gate for at least 30 minutes before she decided to wash the Bumbershoot Grounds clean. Yes folks the majority of the kids go back to school on Wednesday and that means as the rain continues to pour this morning that winter is here.
 
I hope all that attended were happy. I know that we made new friends and that they will return next year. For all that attended thank-you for making Bumbershoot 37 a memorable one and here is to all the hard working individuals who worked late into the night all of you had gone home--volunteers and paid staff as well. For another year, goodbye and see ya next year at the 38th.

Wednesday, September 5, 2007

Preview playlist for Telluride Blues & Brews

From modern uptempo boogie to mellow deep-in-the-pocket acoustic noodling, here are two cuts from all the major players at the upcoming Telluride Blues & Brews Festival. This iMix will satisfy fans from all ends of the blues spectrum and serve as the perfect appetizer for the main event.

Sunday, August 5, 2007

Reggae Rising, Day 2-- Positivity Prevails


Here are the impressions of the second day, as well as general impressions of the Reggae Rising Festival in Humboldt County for two FP representatives:

Like last night, there was a notion of grandiose faux-integrity that seemed to cling to the Dimmick Ranch during the second day of the new Reggae Rising festival. There was also a lot of positivity, as festival director Carol Bruno of People Productions (P.P.) and venue owner Tom Dimmick seemed overwhelmed but satisfied with the results of their efforts when they sat down for a press conference during the second day.

"Everything that we could have possibly dreamed of is happening this weekend," said Bruno.

It's doubtful that she's telling the complete truth in that statement, though. Now a hot topic of Northern California music circles for more than half a year, Bruno and Dimmick's tense legal battle with the Mateel Community Center (M.C.C.), of which Bruno was a former leader, ended with People Productions effectively gaining control of the permit to hold the festival from the Humboldt County Planning Commission and Superior Court in April. Later on, with a 2007 festival in their pockets, Bruno and Dimmick asked Mateel if they would let them use the festival name for $2.4 million over the next 10 years, which Mateel rejected.

That response is quite curious, as Mateel fired People Productions in December last year for essentially wasting too much of their money. M.C.C. executive director Taunya Stapp fired the first shot of the so-called "reggae war" when she made a presentation last November detailing an audit of People Productions financial records and concluded that P.P. business practices that caused an overall loss of more than $200,000 in M.C.C. income from the 2005 and 2006 festivals.

Perhaps Mateel didn't accept the name offer, because it believes that it'll get the festival sometime in the near future. After all, if one were to log on to the organization's website right now, they'd find a section of it is still dedicated to the now-defunct Reggae On The River 2007, abandoned once it became clear that the planning commission was not going to act on the permit issue and a request by Mateel to get an injunction from the Sup. Court failed. But with the precedent that's been set this summer, festivalgoers should expect that this festival isn't going to change hands for a long time.

So, there you have it. This year's fight for the right to hold a festival that's considered to be the finest annual collection of reggae artists in the U.S. left Mateel without a festival and People Productions and Dimmick with a black eye from the local community and weary from the scramble to get artists and vendors on board. But enough of this negative nonsense-- here's the report on the music:

Your intrepid FP reporters got to the festival at 4:00, right as Chirstian rapper Wisdom was finishing up his set with one of his more popular songs, the catchy "Rise Up". The crowd was about as lively as it was ever going to get, with a cluster of 2,000 fans hugging the guard railing, a few thousand more chilling in the shade of a couple 200 square foot umbrellas and other shade structures.

In between Wisdom's set and that of Tanya Stephens, festival MC's would shout out random calls and praises of the festival, which seemingly served to keep those caught stoned in the 80-degree heat from nodding off, and not much else.

When Tanya Stephens did get on stage, she was quite the firecracker. In between songs such as "These Streets", she offered opinions on everything from open and/or theoretically non-existent marriage to the leadership in American government. "Let's hope that we never elect another motherf***er like George Bush," shouted Stephens, who said at a backstage conference that she means everything she says onstage. "I'm not schizophrenic. Rather than bringing the personality of a 'star' into my everyday persona, as other singers do, I'm more about bringing my regular self onstage. I'm not much different on the stage than off." In response to Stephens' verbal aggression, the crowd cheered as fiercely as it ever would that day.

The reception of senior players Sly & Robbie later on that night could compete with that of Stephens, however. The duo of Lowell "Sly" Dunbar's effect-laden drumset went along perfectly with bassist Robbie Shakespeare's agile phrasings to get a solid beat that slid from one dub to another, all under a reliable horn section, guitars, and singer Horace Andy's light falsetto stylings.

At times throughout the two days, especially during Sly & Robbie and Friday night closer Heavyweight Dub Champion's set, the sound team could have been a little bit more meticulous in their establishment of the sound mix coming through the festival's speakers, but the vibes still came through crystal clear.

On another note, there should also be a limit on how many times the MC's, singers, and other bandmates at the festival, can put the word "rising" in the same sentence as "freedom", "revolution", or "reggae" (except when saying the festival's name, of course) at future festivals. The extent to which four aforementioned words were used most likely gave some at the festival a headache and some a bad trip.

Although there wasn't much visible or audible enthusiasm from the crowd during Friday or Saturday, that doesn't mean the masses weren't happy. In addition, an outdoor reggae festival in the mountains of Northern California simply cannot and should not be put under the same critical lens as, say, a jazz festival at Lincoln Center, because the audience more often than not just wants to hear something that makes the great vibes they're already feeling (due to quality time spent with friends and family, the nice weather and scenery, controlled substances or a little bit of everything) even better.

In general, a festival such as Reggae Rising is created for the express purpose of rest, relaxation, and reggae coming together to create a certain thing the French call "Good Times," with no one ingredient more integral to the recipe than any other; this year's Reggae Rising, in its programming and now-controversial choice of location, struck that balance perfectly.

-- Ross Moody And Zach Rehm

Saturday, August 4, 2007

Reggae Rising, Day 1- Fun And Games At Piercy







Here are the chronicles of two Festival Preview representatives on the first night of the Reggae Rising Festival:

After meandering along CA highway 101, described by the festival website as, “Five to six hours of spectacular scenery”, we pulled into the entrance-way to the festival, a long snaking road of yellow caution tape, only to be denied entry by security.

“Come back at 8:00 a.m. for your passes. Will call is closed for the night,” said the bearded gatekeeper.

Well, of course that wasn’t the end of the proceedings that night. Heavyweight Dub Champion was set to go on in an hour, and we learned that there were shuttles that took people past the guards and into the festival grounds itself.

After finding a place to park in nearby Benbow, we waited on a lonely dirt road for a shuttle to take us to the promised land. We met a couple of cordial drunks who were helping themselves to vodka straight out of a half-gallon bottle. They had been coming to the festival for 12 years and knew the Dimmick family (the folks that help make the festival possible by leasing their land to the festival each summer). A long, drawn-out legal battle between the organizers of Reggae Rising (People Productions LLC) and Mateel Community Center (who started the original festival at Dimmick Ranch years ago, previously called Reggae on the River) threatened to stop the festival from happening this year. After Tom Dimmick decided to allow People Production to run this year’s festival, it was necessary to move the festival grounds a couple thousand yards up the hill from the spot where the Reggae On The River used to be.

After a short ride on the shuttle, which eerily played a soundtrack of demonic punk music and oldies (no trace of reggae, ska, or dub on the bus’s playlist), we stepped off and heard the festival MC’s big, booming pronouncement of Heavyweight Dub Champion’s arrival. Knowing it was crunch time, we quickly made our way down a short dirt road to the concert area. Along the way, we saw an untold number of freaks and longhairs (the titles are quite apropos in this case) who very looked carefree and happy, with that great stoned look on the faces suggesting they had no job and didn’t care, or that they had pulled a no-show today and were prepared to quit on Monday.

At the gate to the concert area, we were met with more resistance from the staff. “I can radio in and ask [the folks at the press tent] for a pass, but I can tell you right now that they aren’t going to give it to you,” said the guard.

After no less than six more conversations with gatekeepers and confused volunteers, we finally made it inside-- we slipped in without any identification or pass whatsoever, not even a wristband.

The struggle we had endured was well worth it, however, Heavyweight Dub Champion’s mix of straight hip-hop sampling and percussion and the endless building echoes that give Dub its appeal made for quite a soundtrack to the chilly mountain night. These guys got their wings in the mountains of Colorado, but they are adept at taking their urbanized industrial soundscapes and making it fit any environment.

Dub pioneers Mikey Dread, and Augustus Pablo would be taken aback if they were at the festival today and listening to HDC’s take on their already haunting, ethereal derivative of reggae. The volume is louder, the tempo is faster, and the melody is more chromatic than ever. The MC’ing was more prevalent than times past as well. The vocals did not just consist of little phrases thrown behind the rhythm here and there, as in the classic dub style of old. Vocals took center-stage as MC’s A.P.O.S.T.L.E. and Stereo-Lion railed against the Bush administration and mainstream rap. It’s quite ironic however, that A.P.O.S.T.L.E. dedicated a minute-long rant to the monotony and commodification of rap, telling fans to, “Kill the DJ! Burn the radio! Throw a brick through the window of the corporation!” as he lists Top 40 stars NWA, 2Paq, and LL Cool J as influences on his MySpace page.

On a later number, the stutter-step rhythm of HDC’s beats was accentuated with a lengthy and intensive strobe light blast across the canyon. Pyrotechnics were also a feature in numerous songs, with a scantily clad, hula-hooping woman prancing across the stage with up to six torches at once.

While the performance was a bit over the top and not in line with the sound of traditional dub, the show kept the crowd standing and cheering for two hours. It provided entertainment that one can only achieve after driving into the heart of Northern California and throwing oneself into a thriving Reggae atmosphere. Leaving the bustling crowd, the two FP representatives couldn’t help but feel satisfied with the first night of Reggae Rising.

-- Ross Moody and Zach Rehm

Thursday, August 2, 2007

Win free tickets to Telluride Blues & Brews Sept. 14-16

Note: The contest entry deadline has been extended to 5 pm MST on August 24, 2007

Think you know your stuff when it comes to blues trivia? Answer two of the three questions in our quiz correctly, and you'll be entered to win two free full-festival passes to Telluride Blues & Brews.

Going into its fourteenth year, TBB runs Sept. 14-16 in Telluride CO. This year, the festival presents Los Lonely Boys, Keb' Mo' Band, and the Black Crowes as headliners, guaranteeing an exciting experience to festival-goers.

For more information about this festival, see these Festival Preview articles:
Lineup (mostly) set for Telluride Blues & Brews
Black Crowes fill out Telluride Blues & Brews lineup
A mix Of Southern flavors to hit Telluride this September

How to enter
To enter the contest, complete the blues trivia quiz and provide your name and email address. (All entrants will be subscribed to the free Festival Preview newsletter.)

The contest ends August 24, 2007. One winner will be chosen at random to receive two free all-festival passes.

Good luck, and if you need a hint, look closely at the Festival Preview R&B blog. For more blues trivia, see the Festival Preview section of the TBB program available onsite at the festival.

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Only the name has changed

With the Humboldt County CA reggae festival dispute now settled, the winning side is getting on with the business of actually producing a festival. The producers of Reggae Rising, which will replace the long-running Reggae on the River on the same Dimmick Ranch site and same first weekend in August date, are positioning the new event as a natural evolution of the old one.

The festival's recent e-newsletter stresses that the event is run by the former production team, People Productions, and it features three staff members who are veterans of Reggae on the River. Such assurances could settle any doubts by long-time attendees that the festival experience will be different.

The newsletter reports that the festival is more than halfway to a sellout, and that some of the prime campgrounds are already or close to being filled. To help bring in the faithful, the artist lineup includes three sons of the legendary Bob Marley (Stephen, Damian and Ziggy) along with a roster of other top reggae names.

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Chicago Blues Festival audio preview

Press play below to listen to an audio preview of all the highlights of the 24th Chicago Blues Festival--Koko Taylor, Bobby Rush, Billy Branch and much more. Audio blogger Tom Laporte reports from the Windy City.










Tuesday, June 26, 2007

A Mix Of Southern Flavors To Hit Telluride This September


Well, now the cat is completely out of the bag- we now know the complete lineup of the 2007 Telluride Blues and Brews Festival, so FP will give you a taste of the sounds one can expect to hear echoing through the valley at the festival, which takes place on Sept. 14-16 in Telluride, CO:

First, for the headliners. The first night will be closed out by none other than Los Lonely Boys. These Latin-rockers, of course, were the ones who put out the massively accessible hit "Heaven" in 2004, along with their debut. Their new album, Sacred, contains more of the same mix of pop, blues, and modern rock, but that's not such a bad thing, is it?

The following night's headliner, the Keb' Mo' Band, takes the sound of the festival's headlining slot out of the Tejano clubs and far into the Mississippi delta with frontman Keb' Mo's soulful croon-and-noodling. However, the Keb' Mo' Band's new, self-produced Suitcase offers country and folk tunes as well as the blues.

Finally, on the third night comes the surprise act, the Black Crowes. Ending a three-year hiatus in 2005, the band has been pushing on with their straightforward brand of blues-rock- the newst dose of which arrived in last year in the form of the compilation The Lost Crowes-which everyone who even remotely likes classic rock can get into.

As you can see, the headliners of this year's Telluride fest promise to bring blues and rock to the stage throughout the the festival's 3 days. The festival's not just that simple, though, and a strong taste for zydeco, funk, and other styles are encouraged for optimal enjoyment at Telluride.

There's Robert Randolph And The Family Band, an outfit whose namesake was educated in his trade (a mean pedal-steel guitar) at the House Of God Church, not a local old bar and grill, resulting in a tendency toward gospel and funk rather than the blues. In fact, Randolph, who takes the stage along with his band on the first night, has even said, "I never heard of the Allman Brothers, Buddy Guy (or) Muddy Waters. I wasn't into that music, only the church thing."

At the same time, Telluride Blues And Brews gets about as old-time and down-home as a festival can with the inclusion of David "Honeyboy" Edwards in the lineup. Many festinistas are likely to make the trip to Telluride just to see Edwards, who has performed with Robert Johnson and recorded for the Library of Congress, on the festival's third day.

Finally, the festival features some music of the South with roots stretching back to before the time of the blues- Chubby Carrier & The Bayou Swamp Band offer zydeco music with a high-energy, almost pop-punk (maybe it's the drums...) edge that helps to update accordion music standards for the 21st century. Songs like "Luziana Feelin'" are pogo-worthy and will offer a good respite for crowds weary of all the guitar wailin' when Carrier and his band take the stage on the second day of the festival.

Thus, the Telluride Blues and Brews festival isn't simply a solid block of blues. Rather, it's a nexus of all music that has roots in the south, from the post-modern zydeco of Chubby Carrier to the Latin blues-rock of Los Lonely Boys.

--By Ross Moody

Monday, June 25, 2007

Black Crowes fill out Telluride Blues & Brews lineup

With one big Telluride festival, Bluegrass, in the books after Sunday night, the attention turns to another big Telluride festival, Blues & Brews, coming up September 14-16. And now that, across state, also Sunday night, The Black Crowes are closing the festival at Jazz Aspen Snowmass, it is okay for Telluride Blues & Brews (TBB) to unveil the last piece of its lineup.

Yup, it's The Black Crowes, who played a killer show at TBB in 2005, shortly after the band had reunited following a five-year hiatus. The Crowes had been one of the biggest rock acts of the 1990s, with a string of top 10 hits and sales of 19 million records.

2007 is the 14th year for the festival, which began as a celebration of Colorado craft beers and has grown to become a world-class event. The festival is held at Town Park in the Rocky Mountain resort community, as well as at various clubs and stages around town.

Besides The Crowes, the main-stage closers at TBB are Los Lonely Boys and the Keb Mo Band. Also on the bill: Robert Randolph, Grace Potter, The Radiators with Bonerama, and much more. When the main stage closes, the action shifts to the late-night "juke joints," jams and dances.

Thursday, May 31, 2007

Lineup (mostly) set for Telluride Blues & Brews

Los Lonely Boys and Keb' Mo' will close two of the three nights at the 14th Telluride Blues and Brews Festival September 14-16, with the third headliner due to be announced before the end of June.

Other big names in a festival that mixes blues, rock, soul, gospel and other styles include Robert Randolph & The Family Band, The Radiators with Bonerama, JJ Grey with Mofro, Joe Bonamassa, Grace Potter & The Nocturnals, and more.

In addition to the great music, the festival celebrates microbrewing, with a price-included three-hour "grand tasting" of more than 100 beers from 50 breweries.

Single-day passes go on sale June 1. A three-day pass goes for $150, with extra fees for camping and late-night "juke joint" performances in venues in the town of Telluride. The festival is held in Telluride Town Park, the same location with the same breathtaking views as the Telluride Bluegrass Festival.

As for the third headliner, it is not unusual for an embargo to be placed on announcing upcoming appearances when an artist is scheduled for earlier performances in the same market. Curious readers might want to look at the lineup of Colorado festivals taking place the weekend of June 21-24 for clues.

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

Tuesday, May 8, 2007

Thursday, March 15, 2007

Conflict Over Reggae Fest Goes To Court


You might expect the organizers of reggae festivals to maintain the same mellow vibes that their music imparts. However, the organizers of two different festivals, the Reggae On The River festival and the new Reggae Rising festival, have become so bitter over a venue that they took the issue to court, which resulted in a ruling that represented victory for Reggae Rising and defeat for Reggae On The River.

The first sign of trouble appeared when some of the staff who had organized the Reggae On The River festival for 23 years dissented from their fellow producer Mateel Community Center, Inc. on some aspect of the nature of the festival (the specifics of the dispute remain unknown). In response to the dispute, the dissenting staff members ended their collaboration with Mateel, and, under the name People Productions LLC, announced that they would hold the 1st edition of the Reggae Rising festival on the same date (August 3,4 & 5) and in the same venue (The Dimmick Ranch) as Mateel would hold Reggae On The River.

Faced with this conflict over his venue, owner Tom Dimmick sided with People Productions. However, Mateel filed to sue People Productions and Dimmick, claming that People Productions had been terminated as a producer of festivals on the Dimmick Ranch. Specifically, Mateel filed for a restraining order against People Productions on the days in which both were to hold festivals on the Dimmick ranch, in addition to filing for a legal confirmation of Mateel's right to hold the festival on the property for the three aforementioned August days.

The case eventually went to court, and resulted in a ruling the rejected Mateel's request to force Dimmick to allow them to use the venue as well as the producer's request for the restraining order against People Productions. Although he favored Reggae Rising, Dimmick remained optimistic about relations with Mateel after the ruling was given, and said, "The bottom line is that we're all neighbors...regardless of the ultimate outcome."

The dispute is not over though, as Dimmick still faces negotiations with Mateel over the terms of their withstanding lease on his property. This and the threat of appeal may explain why the Reggae On The River festival website is still up and running, promising that their festival will still launch on those disputed August days.


-- Ross Moody (Photo: A cover of the "Reggae On The River" DVD, featuring a full view of the Dimmick Ranch)

Sunday, March 4, 2007

"Live" Rap Goes A Long Way (Lyrics Born, The Coup @ The Fillmore, Mar. 1)



The time the doors of the Fillmore Auditorium opened to the time the last Frisco hipsters exited the building was about 5 hours- a time allotted for just two bands of the more than 50 performing at this year's Noise Pop festival. The time it took for the bass, drums, guitar and keys to be mic'd and properly tuned was made up for, though, as the live bands backing both indie hip-hoppers Lyrics Born and the Coup provided a huge slab of funk that would dominate any James Brown or Parliament sample known to man.

The Coup took the stage about an hour late, but judging from the always apparent smell of joint smoke in the air, this was probably not a care to anyone in the building. When Coup frontman Boots Riley did finally step onstage, he took the audience on a bit of a time warp. Backed by a classic horn sample and a syncopated motif, one could not help but think of Shaft as Riley shook his bulbous head of afro at the outset of his group's recent hit "My Favorite Mutiny".

Lyrics Born, unlike the act before him, obviously did not intend to inject much political thought into his stage time, and he would rather just let the funk build to the breaking point. He will probably need to think of some other ways to get the crowd going other than turning on the house lights in the middle of a set, but his showmanship on this night equated to a deafening Fillmore crowd. And, despite of this minor annoyance, his other talent might have made showmanship obsolete anyhow- those who stayed for the encore of his set would have witnessed a rhyme speed that would put Twista to shame.

Although the sound grew a bit too opaque and felt admittedly a bit tired by the end, it was nice to know that at any given time they occupied the stage either LB or Boots might just stop their rapid-fire wordplay and step aside for a blazing guitar solo.

--Ross Moody
(Photo: Lyrics Born rocking the mic)

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

The Festival Preview R&B Blog

Welcome to the FP R&B Blog! In this special appendage of our site you will find rare interviews, reviews, and general op-ed pieces concerning music festivals and other live events. Remember that the people who contribute to this little ongoing "publication" of ours will be some of the most knowledgable music fans around.

So be sure to come back regularly for the latest hot info regarding R&B festivals and other live rhythm and blues, hip-hop, reggae, or blues events happening all around North America, with live blogs being posted at big-name festivals such as Essence or Summer Jam.

If you have just been to an awesome festival and want to share your experience with the rest of the world, you can visit the link below to submit an article yourself.

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And while you're at it, why not go to the following link and sign up for the FP newsletter?

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