Five ways TBD 2014 aims to redefine the festival experience

TBD FestBy Molly Kish //

TBD Fest //
The Bridge District (Riverfront Street) – West Sacramento, CA
October 3rd-5th, 2014 //

Formerly known as the Launch Festival and founded by Michael Hargis, this annual music and arts showcase has succeeded in promoting both local and nationally emerging talent in and around the Sacramento region since 2007. Celebrated as both a one-day event and a week-long celebration during certain years, Launch Events has consistently curated an epic, multidimensional lineup rivaling that of large-scale music festivals nationwide.

Currently in its seventh year running, TBD Fest takes on both a new name and its most ambitious production yet. Three full days of innovative music, food, art and fashion will be hitting the West Sacramento Riverfront this weekend, throwing caution to the wind by placing creative ethos in the hands of its anticipated 30,000-plus attendees. What does the upcoming weekend hold for easily one of the most anticipated West Coast festival bills of the 2014 season? Well, quite simply, it’s To Be Determined.

Enter our contest below for a chance to win free tickets!

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THE SITE
Touching upon the festival’s inspired focus on independent culture and design, Hargis and co-organizer Clay Nutting scouted out a fresh location that would allow them to build a cultural destination for the inaugural unveiling of TBD Fest. Positioned directly southwest of the Tower Bridge in West Sacramento’s Bridge District, the two cultivated a site that offered sweeping views of the city’s skyline, as well as enough space to house their $5.6 million architectural project with local developer Mark Friedman, entitled “The Barn”. Designed for year-round use, this 182-foot visually stunning wavelike formation of a wooden structure will serve as the festival’s centerpiece, hosting the full weekend lineup of musical talent against the capital’s cityscape. Highlighting the “indoor-outdoor living” of the typical Sacramento climate beyond this weekend’s festivities, the construction of “The Barn” aims to be the platform for Friedman’s larger vision of residential projects within the vicinity and continues to be utilized as an artistic venue for future community happenings promoting the region’s agricultural and philosophical identity.

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“THE PIT”
Branching out beyond simply music and art, Launch Events dove headfirst into one of the most underrepresented facets of a festival by revealing a brand-new, wood-fired cooking demonstration zone called “The Pit”. Choosing to highlight festival fare in a manner that is not only engaging to the audience but equally as integral to the festival lineup, TBD organizers aim to create an atmosphere that recognizes their handpicked culinary masters, as fellow artists on the events bill. Beyond a fleet of nearly 20 food trucks present on the fairgrounds and an Artisan Pavilion that will host restaurant prepared meals to be paired with craft beer and cocktails all weekend, TBD Fest will feature 14-plus chefs from critically acclaimed local restaurants (Grange, Hawks, Hook & Ladder, Lucca, Mother and Paragary’s), in an elaborate pop-up challenge called “Friendly Fire.” In which teams will compete, using locally grown ingredients to prepare a timed dish for festival attendees, who then will be in charge of voting for a winner. Participating chefs include:

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THE LINEUP
Transcending generational margins, mainstream appeal, artistic medium and festival track records, TBD Fest has easily one of the most eclectically impressive lineups of the entire 2014 festival season. Boasting legends alongside unsigned ingenues, hard rock powerhouses commingling with experimental minimalists, grimy electronic acts, hip-hop archetypes, shoe gazers, pop tarts and everything in between, this year’s bill has surpassed most other Bay Area events, not to mention many national competitors on the booking front. Jam packing three days full of all-encompassing talent is one of the hardest parts of throwing a successful large-scale festival, but the organizers at Launch Events make this upcoming weekend seem as though they barely broke a sweat. Teasing hints of headliners as early as this past June, the TBD Fest lineup has been locked in on message boards and festival speculation sites for nearly five months now. Gaining this much traction with as many artists as it has across the musical gamete is something that only a team of seasoned professionals can typically pull off. A feat that will be incredibly exciting to witness and take part in, considering the future prospect of a festival of such magnitude.


Click here
to view the full schedule.

TBD Fest - Yoga

MORNING YOGA
An emphasis on health and wellness also have a place within the TBD Fest agenda. Offering a full hour and a half of morning yoga sessions sponsored by Yoga Across America, Saturday and Sunday festivalgoers have the opportunity to balance themselves physically and mentally going into the longest days of the festival. Led by professional experts that are teamed with DJs and fellow musicians, all festivalgoers are welcome to participate in the weekend’s morning exercises and are encouraged to RSVP here. Donations are accepted (but not mandatory) and will be directly contributed to Yoga Across America’s efforts in “co-creating happier, healthier communities through the transforming benefits of Yoga.” Other opportunities to center oneself beyond the morning sessions at the main stage can be found in The Riverside Yoga Play Area where attendees can attempt Slacklining, Hooping and Acro Yoga along with ample opportunities for down time at The B-Side Lounge, sponsored by lululemon Athletica. Check out the full schedule here.

TBD Fest attendees

AFFORDABILITY
Beyond elevating the festival experience on several crowd engagement and talent booking levels, Launch Events took this year’s TBD Fest unveiling to the next level in cost effectiveness as well. Offering various tiers of ticket prices and options for nearly every type of festival attendee, TBD Fest’s prices are the most consumer-friendly passes this side of comped. By giving the festivalgoer multiple ways to afford attending this weekend’s festivities, TBD Fest circumvents the financial hindrances most of the general public’s excuses tend to stem from. Single-day tickets, early bird three-day passes, standard three-day passes, late three-day passes, late late three-day passes and VIP wristbands all within a price range starting at $69 to a mere $250 for complete access allow for everyone to be able to curate their own experience in whichever way they choose. Check out the price ranges and choose your level of involvement here. Also, if you’re interested in attending the festival on Showbams’ list, enter for your chance to win a pair of passes below!

CONTEST CLOSED! Buy tickets here.

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Hardly Strictly Bluegrass survival guide

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UPDATE 10/2: The weather will be something out of Coachella on Friday with 88 degree highs expected. Forget the layers, bring extra sunscreen and water.

Hardly Strictly Bluegrass is one of the most anticipated events of the year in San Francisco, but with it’s increased size over the past decade it can be a daunting weekend for some. Showbams breaks down all the pro tips you could need to enjoy long days of stellar, free music in a stunning setting. 

View the Hardly Strictly Bluegrass 2014 Schedule.

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GETTING THERE:
Public Transit is going to be your best bet for arriving at Hardly Strictly in the morning. The 5, 5L, 31, 38, 71 and N are you best bets if coming west to the the Park. NOTE: Some 5 busses will end at 6th Ave.
• Parking can be rather tricky, as you can imagine. It’s possible, and much more feasible the earlier you arrive in the area. Heading past 25th Avenue deeper into the Outer Richmond may be a better bet than trying to park near the festival stages. You can park in the park on Friday and Saturday, but it’s limited to 4 hours, so it’s a gamble. Limited pay lots at these locations were available in 2013:

  • George Washington High School – 600 32nd Ave. [enter at 30th Ave. between Geary & Anza]
  • Argonne 680 18th Ave. [enter at Cabrillo between 17th Ave. and 18th Ave.]
  • Lafayette 4545 Anza Street @ 36th Avenue [enter on 36th between Anza and Balboa]
  • Presidio Middle School (Sat & Sun ONLY) – 450 30th Ave. [enter on 29th Ave. between Geary and Clement]
  • Jefferson Elementary School (Sat & Sun ONLY) – 1725 Irving St. [Enter on 18th Ave. between Irving and Judah]

• Be aware of not blocking driveways if you park, your car will be towed.
Bike parking is available in the form of self-parking or valet.


ONCE AT HARDLY STRICTLY:
• Take a look at the schedule and figure which stage interests you most each day — this is where you should setup ‘Homebase’. For best location, arrive an hour or two before the music starts. From there, you can wander to other stages but still have a place to leave your picnic and cooler. 
• Don’t ‘save’ more room than you need. 
• Meet and be friendly with your neighbors.
• Orient yourself early. Locate the closest porta-potties and concessions (if interested in purchasing food), as the park can fill in quickly.
• Most people bring large picnics for the day, though there are concessions offered. 
• Beer and wine is allowed to be brought to the event, and for obvious reasons there is no glass allowed. No hard alcohol is allowed, but this isn’t harshly enforced if you use discretion.
• A beacon or small flag will be helpful if you hope for friends or family to find you, or your Homebase, in the sizable crowds.
• Pace yourself if you do imbibe. These can be long days in the sun, and though you want to let the good times roll, be mindful of your intake for the safety of yourself and attendees. 
• Be mindful of others. There is no smoking allowed in the park, but let’s be honest, it’s not a rule obeyed by many. Do your best to not smoke cigarettes in the crowds and head somewhere in the fringes and throw your butts away into the trash.
• Time-slots are accurate, as the production is top-notch, so allow the needed time to travel between stages.
• It’s supposed to be a sunny, breezy weekend in the park like last year, so bring sunscreen, chapstick, a layer and wishes for as good of weather as we enjoyed last year.


EXODUS:
• There will be increased amounts of 5-Fulton busses, but it can still be a cluster between 25th and 30th avenues. May be better served walking towards Geary to the 31 or 38 or towards Ocean Beach where the busses launch.
• If you are trying to grab a Lyft, Uber, Sidecar or private car, we suggest trying to meet them off of Fulton or Lincoln into the neighborhoods.
• If you truly have to leave the festival quickly in your car, one suggestion would be trying to park your car in the area the night before.
• Walk the park in the early evening back to the Haight or Divisadero with the elated masses.

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Gov’t Mule pay tribute to list of legends at Orpheum

govt-mule-postBy Josh Herwitt //

Gov’t Mule //
Orpheum Theatre – Los Angeles
September 26th, 2014 //

Warren Haynes may be leaving The Allman Brothers Band for good after this year, but that doesn’t mean the future of Gov’t Mule is in jeopardy. The Southern rock outfit has been going strong for 20 years now, becoming a staple in the jam scene and a household name at music festivals across the country.

But for as many gigs as they’ve tallied over the past two decades, the well-oiled machine of Haynes (guitar, vocals), Matt Abts (drums, percussion), Danny Louis (keyboards, trumpet, guitar, vocals) and Jorgen Carlsson (bass) hasn’t slowed down, releasing their 10th studio album Shout! just a year ago.

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Hitting LA on a Friday night for their “20 Years Strong” tour, the quartet ripped through a 19-song, two-and-a-half hour performance at the historic Orpheum Theatre that saw Haynes and company pay tribute to a long list of music’s biggest legends — Ray Charles, Jimi Hendrix, Johnny Cash, Al Green, Ann Peebles, Maynard Ferguson, The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, Grateful Dead, Sly and the Family Stone, The Allman Brothers, Creedence Clearwater Revival and The Police were all represented in some shape or form over the course of the night.

With Gov’t Mule only playing three songs from Shout!, it was clear that this night was more about their appreciation for those who had come before them than what their own music embodies. When it was all said and done, Mule left their loyal LA fan base eager for the next U.S. tour — whenever that may be.

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Set 1:
Mule, Game Face (with “Birdland,” “Mountain Jam” and “Norwegian Wood” teases), Little Toy Brain, Funny Little Tragedy (with “Message in a Bottle” lyrics), Kind of Bird (with “When the Wind Cries Mary” tease), Banks of the Deep End, Captured, Broke Down on the Brazos

Set 2:
Done Got Wise, I Believe to My Soul (Ray Charles cover with Jimmy Vivino and Jeff Babko), Brighter Days, Fallen Down (with “Gimme Shelter” lyrics), The Other One Jam (Grateful Dead cover with “Gimme Shelter” lyrics), Drums, Drums & Bass, I Feel Like Breaking Up Somebody’s Home (Ann Peebles cover with Jimmy Vivino and Yoshi Yanagi with “Let Me Have It All” lyrics)

Encore:
Effigy (Creedence Clearwater Revival cover), Folsom Prison Blues Jam (Johnny Cash cover) > Effigy, I’m a Ram (Al Green cover)

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Thom Yorke – Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes // Community Review

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alt-jTomorrow’s Modern Boxes //

Radiohead frontman and iconic dancer Thom Yorke turned an otherwise normal Friday into a worldwide listening party last week with the surprise release of his second solo record, Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes.

Distributing the eight-track collection through a BitTorrent paygate for six bucks, Yorke has gone beyond his criticism of modern music streaming by attempting to change the game. The album was downloaded 116 thousand times in the first 24 hours, with over 500,000 total downloads so far. So, is it any good?

Click here to get Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes.

BAM TEAM META-RANKING:
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Thom Yorke is marveled as a musical superhero, and although his solo works are somewhat predictable, his reverence for sustaining and creating a practical business model for artists on the Internet is greatly respectable. Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes, inspired by this very concept, is like an anesthetic. It’s hypnotic and easy to get lost in, and at times has the listener popping in and out of consciousness with its moody, lo-fi beats and enchanting vocals. It lacks some of the catchier tracks (“The Eraser” and “Black Swan”) from his last effort, The Eraser, but overall it’s a pleasant surprise and should hold over most Radiohead fans until their next album. -Anthony Presti
3.5 BAMS // Top Song: A Brain In A Bottle

Thom jumps straight out the gates on this stealthy release. His ever-evolving love for bass-laden electronic music is clearly evident within the first minute of Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes, and doesn’t let up in this sublimely paced mini-LP that is sure to wet the whistle of Radiohead and Yorke fans, alike. Shifty samples are layered over warm keys and haunting piano segments – a pairing that Thom and co-producer, Nigel Godrich, have become extremely fond of in the past decade or so. Yorke’s past adoration for Aphex Twin combined with his current love for artists such as Mark Pritchard, Actress and Pearson Sound are clearly defined in this futuristic amalgam. Can we expect these elements present in the impending Radiohead release? One can only hope…. -Kevin Quandt
4 BAMS // Top Song: Guess Again!
 
It’s no secret that Thom Yorke has a thing for electronic music. The Radiohead frontman, after all, has been known to stage a surprise DJ set from time to time, including one in LA as recently as last month. Quite fittingly, the unanticipated release of his second solo record late last week via BitTorrent Bundle comes as quite a surprise after news surfaced just a few weeks ago that Radiohead had begun work on their ninth studio album. But if Radiohead’s new material ends up sounding like what Yorke delivers on Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes, then we may not have as much to look forward to as we think. Minimal in nature, the eight-track album sees Yorke and producer Nigel Godrich playing with both sound and song structure as glitchy dance beats pave the way for strange and amorphous melodies, but it’s under these circumstances that Yorke’s experimental propensities can sometimes get the best of him. -Josh Herwitt
3 BAMS // Top Song: Nose Grows Some

The percussion-driven polyrhythm & syncopation from The King of Limbs and Amok continues to evolve here, but Yorke’s voice is treated more as an accompanying instrument in his second solo effort. Yorke is experimenting with technology and modulation techniques about as much as his marketing and distribution, and it plays mostly as a dreamy soundscape mirrored against spicy, digitized freak-out exhileration. Full of rewarding moments, Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes induces spaced-out bliss along with a deflated back third of the record — except for finale “Nose Grows Some,” which is one of the best songs in the litter. -Mike Frash
3.5 BAMS // Top Song: The Mother Lode

Following the pattern begun with The Eraser, Thom Yorke continues with laptop whirls, blips, and even less melody. Relying more heavily on groove, Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes carries the same general attitude as both its predecessor and Radiohead’s recent direction. The album feels redundant and its flow monotonous, satisfying but not thrilling or electrifying. -Steven Wandrey
3.5 BAMS // Top Song: A Brain In A Bottle

Thom Yorke’s latest solo album comes at you like a commuter train, at a moderate but reliable pace… and this is not a bad thing by any means. Though it doesn’t re-invent the wheel, the steady, hypnotic rhythms and characteristically tasty vocals make this a very pleasant album to listen to. I can easily see many of the cuts standing on their own in a club setting, just as much as I can see the rush to remix them with more break beats. Well done. -Andrew Pohl
3.5 BAMS // Top Song: Guess Again!

Leave your own quick review or comment below.

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Temples’ take on modern psych-rock is both exciting & sloppy

Temples-12Photos by Justin Yee // Written by Scotland Miller //

Temples with Wampire and Fever The Ghost //
The Fillmore – San Francisco
September 24th, 2014 //

There is no denying the fact that the early 1960’s had a remarkable effect on the sound of modern rock ‘n’ roll. The music from back then has a quality to it that just feels right. Imagine if you took a band like The Animals or The Moody Blues and smashed them together with the likes of Led Zeppelin and Pink Floyd. Well guess what? It has actually happened, and they are called Temples.

The four English lads that make up Temples played The Fillmore last Wednesday night and brought with them an echo of what the City used to be like, when LSD was popped like Jelly Beans and the colorful oil-and-water stage projections were cutting edge. The house was by no means packed, but that’s no surprise as these guys are not only foreigners, but they are also just cutting their teeth after releasing their first album, Sun Structures, earlier in the year.

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Moments of the show were bursting and oozing with incredible feelings of flying through the air on the back of the mighty Pegasus, brushing the mountain tops of some distant, snow-covered range, while other moments were slow and sloppy, with wobbly and muddled vocals that sounded like the singer had marshmallows in his mouth. They did, however, succeed in truly embracing their genre and stretching out a few of their songs with some brilliant psychedelic jamming.

Temples offered up an acid-flashback evening of flower-power rock ‘n’ roll with a splash of straight up heavy. Their old-skool take on modern psych-rock is exciting and shows promise for more good music to come.

A mother’s crusade to amend the RAVE Act & how you can help make festivals safer

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By The Festival Lawyer //

Join The Festival Lawyer, Showbams and a new coalition called Amend The Rave Act (ATRA) to make Festivals safer for everyone.

The “RAVE” Act stands for the “Reducing Americans’ Vulnerability to Ecstasy Act”. It’s a federal law that might win the title for “most misnamed law ever” since instead of reducing young people’s vulnerability to the drug it has greatly increased ecstasy’s danger at festivals and raves.

Through a series of unintended consequences, the RAVE Act has made festivals much more dangerous places than they need to be. This year alone, two people died and about 20 were hospitalized at the Mad Decent Block Party in August in Maryland. There were also drug-related deaths at Electric Daisy Carnival in Las Vegas and at LA’s Hard Summer festival.

Additional safety measures relating to drug use (also known as “harm reduction measures”) could be taken at a lot of music festivals and raves. So why isn’t more being done? The problem is that these event producers and organizers are worried that if they take these safety measures they might expose themselves to criminal liability under the RAVE Act.

In August of last year, a young woman named Shelley Goldsmith, a gifted honors student at the University of Virginia, died of heatstroke at an EDM event in Washington D.C.

Shelley’s mother, Dede Goldsmith has now started a campaign in her honor to Amend The RAVE Act (ATRA) and push for greater safety measures at raves and festivals. You can read about her campaign and sign a petition in support here.

But why do we need to change the RAVE Act? What does the RAVE Act have to do with the death of Shelley Goldsmith or others who died from MDMA use at festivals?

THE DEATH OF SHELLEY GOLDSMITH AND A MOTHER’S CRUSADE
It was a year ago that Shelley Goldsmith died. By all accounts Shelley was a remarkable young woman. You can read more about her here.

shelley-biden01Vice President Joe Biden introduced the RAVE Act into Congress when he was a Senator and was mainly responsible for it being passed into law in 2003. In one of those crazy coincidences that sometimes happens in life, Shelley Goldsmith had actually met Biden at an event the year before she died.

Shelley had taken MDMA the night of her death. However, she did not die of an “overdose”, but of heatstroke.

By far the most common cause of MDMA-related medical emergencies and death is heatstroke, where MDMA is only one of a number of factors involved. That’s because even a “normal” dose of MDMA raises body temperature about one degree and also inhibits the body’s ability to regulate its own temperature.

The harm reduction group, DanceSafe, recently wrote an article discussing the relationship of heatstroke to “overdoses”.

One of the other major dangers in taking MDMA is that it may not be MDMA at all. If you don’t know what I am talking about check out this documentary by Bunk Police called “What’s in your Baggie?

Shelley’s mom, Dede Goldsmith, wonders what her daughter would have done if she had received drug education and peer-to-peer counseling before or at the event. Perhaps Shelley might have chosen not to use MDMA. Dede also feels that better safety measures at the event (like free and readily available water and “chill-out” rooms and areas) could potentially have saved her daughter’s life.

I have had a chance to talk to Dede Goldsmith on the phone, and I find her remarkable. Rather than being overwhelmed by her family’s tragedy, she has decided to make it her mission to change things and make festivals safer. She talks about her mission in this local news story.

JOE BIDEN AND THE RAVE ACT
In 2002, then Senator Joe Biden introduced the RAVE Act, a bill intended to expand the federal “crack-house statute.” The “crack-house statute,” a byproduct of the fierce drug war of the 1980’s, made it possible for the Feds to go after and prosecute landlords of a private residence where crack cocaine was being used or sold.

After all, what does “maintaining a drug-involved premise” mean? Things like the speed of the music in beats per minute or the appearance of glow sticks and menthol products.

The idea of the RAVE Act was to expand that statute to go after “rogue promoters” who were putting on illegal “raves” with rampant drug use. The RAVE Act expanded the earlier “crack-house statute” to include temporary venues like these underground “raves”. The RAVE Act also created a new crime, now making it illegal for promoters or landlords to “maintain a drug-involved” premise.

From the start, the vagueness of this language caused problems. After all, what does “maintaining a drug-involved premise” mean? To answer that question, the bill included a list of “findings”. The idea of these “findings” was to give examples of the type of things that Feds should look for as ways to identify an illegal “rave”. Things like the speed of the music in beats per minute or the appearance of glow sticks and menthol products.

Unfortunately, the bill also targeted aspects of harm reduction as criminal identifiers. For example, the original “findings” of the RAVE Act included things like the presence of freely available water and chill-out rooms. Huge opposition to the bill quickly arose. Aside from the fact that an entire music community was being specifically targeted, opponents were worried that legitimate promoters taking reasonable safety measures for drug use at their events would be targeted unfairly under the new law.

Ultimately Biden changed the name of his bill to the less inflammatory sounding “Illicit Drug Anti-Proliferation Act of 2003” and struck the “findings” from the bill. The IDAPA was passed in 2003, although most still refer to it by its original name, the RAVE Act.

UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES OF THE RAVE ACT
After the RAVE Act – oh, sorry, the “Illicit Drug Anti-Proliferation Act” – became law, the DEA set up “Rave Task Forces” to target different events. Despite the language being removed from the final version of the law, events were sometimes targeted due to the original “findings” of the bill (i.e. things like freely available water and chill-out rooms being present). In a few cases, even the presence of medical personnel or a harm reduction groups like DanceSafe were seen as suspect.

The EDM “scene” is far different than it was in the early 2000’s. The problem of underground or illegal “raves” is largely gone. Instead, EDM has joined the mainstream. These days, an EDM “festival” is a massive three-day event with intense security and safety planning. Accusing a modern promotion group like SFX or Insomniac of, “maintaining a drug involved premise” is ludicrous.

But a lot of the event producers of today are survivors of this first wave of “crack-house”/RAVE Act prosecutions in the early 2000’s.

For example, Pasquale Rotella, the CEO of Insomniac Events, explained during a recent Reddit AMA that it was his past experiences with the Feds that caused him to be cautious about “harm reduction groups.”

“When the DEA started going after innocent event producers under the Crack House Law, having DanceSafe at an event was one of the things they looked at to justify putting them in jail for 20 years,” he said. “If you don’t know about the Crack House Law, you should look into it. Dance culture has had a very challenging past. It’s amazing where it is right now.”

So for a lot of current event producers, the RAVE Act is always out there lingering, kind of like a legal Keyser Soze. They worry that if they allow drug education or public safety and health measures at their events, they might be opening themselves up to criminal or civil liability.

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WHY AMENDING THE RAVE ACT MATTERS
It’s just not realistic to think that if you get tight enough security you can eliminate drug use completely at a festival. This year’s Electric Zoo had such intensive security measures that the New York Post called the event a “day-glo North Korea”. And yet when you read this article by The New York Times, it’s clear that no matter how many undercover cops you have on hand, some folks will use drugs at any festival.

Let’s face it, drugs have been part of music festivals since there first were music festivals. If you’ve ever watched the movie Woodstock, throughout the movie you can hear different announcements being made to the crowd about various safety issues. At one point the announcer infamously warns everyone that the “Brown acid is bad, don’t take the brown acid”.

That’s right, at one of the first music festivals is also one of the first “harm reduction” messages ever.

JOIN THE AMEND THE RAVE ACT — A CAMPAIGN FOR FESTIVAL SAFETY
Tammy L. Anderson, a sociology and criminal justice professor at the University of Delaware, recently presented an academic paper, “Molly Deaths and Why the Drug War Won’t Clean Up Rave Culture”. Her research has shown that the RAVE Act is just bad public policy and actually discourages organizers from promoting drug safety at their events.

A large coalition is coming together to support a simple idea, to amend the RAVE Act by making it clear that legitimate owners and promoters can take reasonable safety measures to protect their patrons without fear of prosecution.

The proposed language will no doubt be changed many times in this process. But the coalition that is forming is hoping to send language to Congress that may be something like this:

Safety measures taken by property owners and promoters in an effort to reduce the medical risks associated with illegal drug use at their events do not constitute evidence of maintaining a drug involved premise under this Act.

I have had a chance to talk to Dede Goldsmith and meet with members of this coalition. I can tell you that this is a serious campaign and there is a realistic chance to get a bill in front of Congress this fall to do this.

How amazing would it be if we as a festival community came together to change a federal law? Together, we can make festivals safer. Sign the petition, share the knowledge and encourage your fellow festies to do the same.

PLEASE SIGN THE “AMEND THE RAVE ACT” PETITION


Tweet & Retweet at Twitter (use the hashtag #AmendTheRaveAct)
Share at Facebook
Like at Instagram
Upvote & Comment at Reddit

Amend The Rave Act

Lykke Li displays her dynamic duality on ‘I Never Learn’ tour

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By Marc Fong //

Lykke Li with Mapei //
Fox Theater Oakland – Oakland, CA
September 21st, 2014 //

The lovely Lykke Li stopped by Oakland’s Fox Theater on Sunday in support of her latest album, I Never Learn. The talented Swedish beauty’s music has been described as retro-chic, quirky, electro-dance and the same can be said of her live show. Her set was the soundtrack to an eerily-fun adventure and made for a great evening.

Just like in a dream, Li emerged from the darkness and smoke like a mischievous specter. Brooding, she began with the title track of her latest album. A hauntingly beautiful tune, it was even more magical live. Like other great performers, Li was able to not only maintain her distinct and lovely sound, but also make it bigger and more robust in real life.

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Li’s talent was further showcased when she covered Springsteen’s “I’m on Fire” and Kanye West’s “Send It Up”. Her take on the two covers was very much Lykke Li: ethereal, haunting and beautiful.

Bewitching the crowd with her own Stevie Nicks-esque moves, Li danced with a confident, contagious energy that had the crowd singing and swaying along with her. Her quirky sound was at times sad and mournful; at other times, quite dance-able and pop. At all times, her live set was wonderfully enjoyable.

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WIN TICKETS: The Orwells at Slim’s 9/27 (SAT)

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The Orwells with Skaters //
Slim’s – San Francisco
September 27th, 2914 //

Making a stop on their nationwide tour in support of their second album Disgraceland, The Orwells headline this Saturday night at Slim’s. Known for their explosive live shows punctuated by frontman Mario Cuomo’s onstage, full-body fits, The Orwells deliver a refreshingly brash take on contemporary rock music. Echoing aesthetics pulled from 1960’s-era rhythm and blues, Vietnam War anthems and lyrical stylings pulled directly from the forefathers of punk, The Orwells’ sound is as unique as it is timeless. Revisiting a lost era of clangy guitar hooks, driving beats and raw emotion-filled songwriting that has since lost its way in the modern music scene.

For your chance to check out one of the most exciting live performances currently touring though the Bay Area, enter here at Showbams. -Molly Kish

Buy tickets if you know you want to go!


Win-2-Tickets

Enter below if you can attend this show on Saturday, September 27th at Slim’s in SF.

Fill out your full name and email address below.
Contest ends Friday, September 26th at 3 p.m. The winner will be picked at random and notified by email on Friday. Your email will be kept private -– we will share your email with no one.

Like Showbams on Facebook and follow Showbams on Twitter to be eligible to win.

CONTEST CLOSED.

WIN TICKETS: Hercules and Love Affair (live), Tensnake at Mezzanine 9/26 (FRI)

Hercules

Enter to win a pair of free tickets to this show below.

Hercules and Love Affair, Tensnake //
Mezzanine — San Francisco
September 26, 2014 (Friday) //

Full-band funk house party starters Hercules and Love Affair are coming to the Mezzanine this Friday. Shades of Chicago house, electro, and techno all appear on the newest album, The Feast of the Broken Heart. All of these influences sum up to one central theme: making you dance. If you’d like to see the unborn child of the Scissor Sisters and Holy Ghost, I’ll see you at the Mezzanine on Friday. -Steve Wandrey

Buy tickets if you know you want to go!


Win-2-Tickets

Enter to win if you can attend this show Friday, September 26th at Mezzanine in SF.

Submit your full name and email address below.
Contest ends Friday, September 26th at Noon. Winners will be picked at random & notified by email. Your email will be kept private — we will share your email with no one. 21+ only.

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CONTEST CLOSED

ODESZA take live show to next level on ‘In Return’ tour

ODESZABy Justin Yee //

ODESZA //
Mezzanine – San Francisco
September 18th, 2014 //

Back in April, ODESZA played a sold-out show at The Independent, which had fellow Showbams writer Kory Thibeault claiming that they were “poised to explode into electronic stratosphere.” Fast forward five months to the present, and it’s safe to say that they’ve not only met those expectations, but also have hit the big time.

This was never more evident than this past Thursday, as the Seattle production duo of Harrison Mills and Clayton Knight kicked off their “In Return” tour at Mezzanine in support of their recently released sophomore LP. After selling out the show months in advance, a second SF date was added just to meet popular demand.

As someone who is new to their music, it wasn’t until I heard the first single off In Return, “Memories That You Call” featuring Monsoonsiren, that I really got hooked and realized I had been sleeping on them for two years. Their take on the modern electronic sound blends catchy beats with infectious, ambient melodies and pop-infused hooks that emotionally captivates listeners in ways that other artists can’t.

ODESZA

ODESZA’s set at Mezzanine was explosive — a combination of hypnotizing visuals and sound that had the crowd in sensory overload. It’s apparent that they have been hard at work perfecting their live performance. Their use of live drums adds a human element, which allows them to create remixes on the fly as they feed off the energy from the crowd.

This tour marked the next chapter of the group’s rising success and maybe the last time you’ll be able to see them in venues of less than a 1,000-person capacity. Don’t sleep on ODESZA. I’ve already learned my lesson!

alt-J – This Is All Yours // Community Review

alt-j

alt-jThis Is All Yours //

Breakout English indie rockers alt-J’s heavily anticipated sophomore release is now out, and you can listen to it below. This Is All Yours is as divisive with the BAM Team as it is across the board.

What are your thoughts on alt-J’s second album? Leave your own quick review in the comments below for a chance to win two tickets to one of the following shows in SF this weekend:

The author of our favorite quick review will win a pair of tickets to their choice of show, and will be notified on Thursday, September 25th. Read the BAM Team’s reviews of Aphex Twin’s latest below, and contact us if you’re interested in writing for Showbams.


BAM TEAM META-RANKING:
3-5-bams_fix2

With their second album, alt-J continue to explore familiar, lush and ambient textures. Less poppy and overstuffed with ballads, the album feels less powerful than An Awesome Wave and drags during some stretches. While the soundscapes are beautiful and the arrangements still interesting, the album leaves you a little unsatisfied. It’s worth a listen, but not many. -Steven Wandrey
2.5 BAMS // Top Song: Left Hand Free

This Is All Yours burns slow in the first 15 minutes or so before breaking down the door with “Every Other Freckle” – a song that beckons to the brilliance of An Awesome Wave. The genre-bending trio slowed things down a bit, going a bit more inward, crafting something more haunting than we’ve heard from them prior. The pace and overt studio trickery (see: “Hunger of the Pines”) tends to distract, even detract, from this becoming the critical success that their debut was, but fans of the freaky Englishmen are sure to revel in this fresh batch of tunes. -Kevin Quandt
3 BAMS // Top Song: Every Other Freckle

alt-J certainly bring it on This Is All Yours – it being a swirling mix of electro dub pop, folk and alt-rock — creating an album that serves as a worthy sophomore effort to the out-of-left-field-breakthrough An Awesome Wave. The newest effort is at its best when the British indie rockers lead with their guitars and deftly layer the electronic elements on top (“Left Hand Free”), but they aren’t afraid to flip the script leading to some skippable tracks (“Arrival in Nara”) but also the truly epic, Miley Cyrus sampling dub-groove standout that is “Hunger of the Pine.” alt-J still need to figure out exactly who they are, but it’s a pretty entertaining ride listening to them try. -Dale Johnson
3.5 BAMS // Top Song: Left Hand Free

This Is All Yours is a tough nut to crack. The sophomore release from alt-J is a smooth and casual jaunt through a complicated soundscape, inducing images of a jungle adventure to a downed alien spacecraft. Shifting tempos and scattered instrumentation prove to be a difficult distraction. It listens like a cryptic riddle that entangles your brain in auditory confusion and denies you access to the answer. -Scotland Miller
3.5 BAMS // Top Song: Hunger of the Pine

Given that alt-J are a band that is hard to pin down stylistically, on their sophomore release This Is All Yours, they opted to go with consistency rather than pivoting.  Much like their debut album, each song has unique qualities that force the listener to engage with each track individually.  I like a good challenge. -Andrew Pohl
3.5 BAMS // Top Song: Left Hand Free

It was only a little more than two years ago when alt-J first opened our ears to the folktronica grooves that surfaced on their debut full-length record An Awesome Wave. Yet, even with a prestigious Mercury Prize firmly stamped on its résumé, the Leeds-based band doesn’t let itself get too comfortable on This Is All Yours. While alt-J has quickly gone from quartet to trio after the departure of founding member Gwil Sainsbury earlier this year, they haven’t toned down their experimental tendencies all that much. “Left Hand Free” could pass as their most pop-centric hit to date — unless you count the homage they pay to Miley Cyrus a few songs later on “Hunger of the Pine” — but the 13-track album offers plenty of uniquely eccentric moments that we’ve grown accustomed to from alt-J. Whether it’s lead vocalist Joe Newman pronouncing that “Love is a pharaoh and he’s boning me” on the hypnotically beautiful “Nara” or reciting more sexually-charged lines like “I’m gonna bed into you like a cat beds into a beanbag / Turn you inside out and lick you like a crisp packet” on the ensuing cut “Every Other Freckle,” This Is All Yours continues where An Awesome Wave left off, further cementing alt-J’s place among the other great indie contemporaries across the pond. -Josh Herwitt
4 BAMS // Top Song: Nara

alt-J looks to lead the pack of brilliant music coming from the UK, separating themselves from their peers with this unique and thoughtful concept album. This Is All Yours is ambitious and arousing, a carousel of instrumentation that sends the listener into whatever utopia their mind lusts after. alt-J doesn’t abandon their typical platform of worldly and primitive sounds featuring tribal rhythms and chants juxtaposed with obscure guitar riffs, medieval woodwinds and balanced electronic accompaniments. It’s pretty safe to say there is no other current band that sounds like alt-J. -Anthony Presti
4 BAMS // Top Song: Every Other Freckle


WIN 2 FREE SHOW TICKETS BY SHARING YOUR OWN QUICK REVIEW:
Leave your own quick review below as a comment. Write no more than five sentences, give your own BAM Ranking and pick your top song. If you’d like to win two tickets to one of these shows, simply write the name of the show you’d like to win under your review.

Hercules and Love Affair (Live) + Tensnake this Friday 9/26 at Mezzanine
The Orwells this Saturday 9/27 at Slim’s
Simian Mobile Disco this Saturday 9/27 at Mezzanine

Bam-Indicator_fix

Interpol play it cool with Rey Pila at Fox Theater Oakland

interpol-post1Photos by James Nagel // Written by Andrew Pohl //

Interpol with Rey Pila //
Fox Theater Oakland – Oakland
September 20th, 2014 //

The best part of seeing bands that you’ve never seen before is that you can take what they are offering and not have to compare it against anything else. Having never seen Interpol before and being an appreciator of their music, I was excited to see how the show would go. The Fox Theater in Oakland was an ideal setting for this new experience, with easy views of the stage and top-notch sound.

Rey Pila was the night’s opening act. The five-piece group, which hails from Mexico City (now residing in New York), were a complete mystery to me prior to catching their show. It was immediately clear why there were tapped to support this tour as their sound was complimentary to that of Interpol’s but different enough to add some variety to the night.

Rey-Pila

The majority of their set was full of post-punk/early alternative style cuts à la Echo & the Bunnymen or The Church, with less emphasis on synths. Energetic frontman Diego Solórzano did his best to engage the crowd, at several points jumping off stage to meet the fans at their level. The performance was solid and the songs were enjoyable, though it felt like they weren’t connecting with the audience as well as they may have hoped.

After a brief intermission, Interpol took the stage, dressed to the nines. A large video screen displayed the cover art from their new album El Pintor for the first three songs, and there were a few rotating strobes filling the otherwise black stage with red, blue and purple throughout their set. The set itself was a solid mix of tracks from the new album, along with material from all of their prior releases, mostly from Antics. Throughout the set, the visual element on the video screen offered minimalist/modern psychedelia and geographic landscapes that paired well with the mood of the music.

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Lead singer Paul Banks’ vocals were a bit “pitchier” than I expected, but that didn’t affect the music in much of a negative way as the band, on the whole, performed splendidly. The set was shorter than I anticipated, but in many ways, that was a good thing. Interpol’s songs are not drawn-out epics — they are nice and tight. I think they are wise to offer up a concise, well-packaged set instead of doing a marathon worth of material. Though they’re not the most energetic band on the planet, what Interpol lacks in conventional stage presence they made up for by setting a consistent mood and feeling of “cool.”

Setlist:
1. My Blue Supreme
2. Say Hello to the Angels
3. Evil
4. My Desire
5. Length of Love
6. Breaker 1
7. The Lighthouse
8. Anywhere
9. Everything Is Wrong
10. Lights
11. Narc
12. Not Even Jail
13. Slow Hands

Encore:
14. All the Rage Back Home
15. NYC
16. Obstacle 1

Hardly Strictly Bluegrass 2014 daily schedule announced

Hardly Strictly Bluegrass 2013

Photos by Shawn Reiss // Written by Mike Frash //

Hardly Strictly Bluegrass 2014 //
Golden Gate Park – San Francisco
October 3rd-5th, 2014 //

UPDATE: Full Stage Schedules have been announced!

Hardly Strictly Bluegrass is coming up quickly, and the daily lineup has now been announced (but not the complete schedule). Take a look below at which artists are playing each day. Friday, as always, is stacked. If you haven’t put in for that day off yet, now is the time.

As you likely know by now, this is a free event in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park courtesy of the late Warren Hellman.

FRIDAY OCT 3 (10:30am – 7pm)
• Ryan Adams
• John Prine
• Conor Brings Friends For Friday Featuring: Waxahatchee, The Good Life, Jonathan Wilson, Sharon Van Etten, Dawes, Conor Oberst
• Lucinda Williams
• Yo La Tengo
• Cibo Matto with Nels Cline
• Thao & The Get Down Stay Down
• Hurray For The Riff Raff
• Poor Man’s Whiskey (Friday morning middle school program)
• The Aquabats! (Friday morning middle school program)
• Buckwheat Zydeco
• Dave Alvin & Phil Alvin with The Guilty Ones
• The Waybacks
• Peter Rowan’s Twang An’ Groove
• Dry Branch Fire Squad
• Bill Kirchen & Too Much Fun

SATURDAY OCT 4 (11am – 7:15pm)
• Steve Earle & The Dukes
• Robert Earl Keen
• Chris Isaak
• Holler Down The Hollow: A Hardly Strictly Salute To the Masters (Dickens, Hellman, Reed, Scruggs, Seeger, Watson & Winchester),
• Dave Rawlings Machine
• Social Distortion
• Built to Spill
• Deltron 3030 with The 3030 Orchestra
• Mavis Staples
• Red Baraat
• St. Paul & The Broken Bones
• Sister Sparrow & The Dirty Birds
• Justin Townes Earle
• The Felice Brothers
• Jon Batiste and Stay Human
• Buddy Miller’s Cavalcade of Stars: Kate York, Striking Matches, Nikki Lane, Shawn Colvin, Tony Joe White, Buddy Miller & Friends with Doug Seegers, Sam Palladio & McCrary Sisters
• Willie Watson
• Chris Smither
• Evolfo
• Carlene Carter
• Reckless Kelly
• The Flatlanders Featuring Joe Ely, Jimmie Dale Gilmore & Butch Hancock
• Johnnyswim
• The Mastersons
• Jessica Hernandez & The Deltas
• Rose’s Pawn Shop
• Blue Rodeo
• Bad Luck Jonathan
• Horseshoe Hill
• Parker Millsap
• Alison Brown Quintet
• Heidi Clare
• The Time Jumpers Featuring Vince Gill, Kenny Sears, Dawn Sears and Ranger Doug Green
• McCrary Sisters
• Whograss

SUNDAY OCT 5 (11am – 7pm)
• Emmylou Harris
• Dwight Yoakam
• Tweedy
• Sun Kil Moon
• Lukas Nelson & Promise of The Real
• Joe Russo’s Almost Dead
• Laurie Lewis & The Right Hands
• T Bone Burnett
• Rosanne Cash
• Béla Fleck & Abigail Washburn
• Lake Street Dive
• The Sam Chase
• Bruce Cockburn
• Malawi Mouse Boys
• Kevin Welch, Kieran Kane & Fats Kaplin
• The Brothers Gibb
• The Lone Bellow
• Caitlin Rose
• Ralph Stanley & The Clinch Mountain Boys
• Blackie and The Rodeo Kings
• Chuck Cannon
• The High Bar Gang
• JB Nimble
• Jerry Douglas Presents Earls of Leicester
• Rising Appalachia
• Shelly Colvin
• The Apache Relay
• Robbie Fulks
• Moonalice
• Jimmie Dale Gilmore
• Bonnie “Prince” Billy & The Cairo Gang featuring Dawn McCarthy
• Hot Rize Featuring Red Knuckles & The Trailblazers
• Chuck Prophet & The Mission Express ‘Strings In The Temple’
• The Go To Hell Man Clan
• Jason Isbell
• Nitty Gritty Dirt Band
• Jesse DeNatale
• Sarah Jarosz

HSB

Old Crow Medicine Show’s sweat sound & punk-rock energy even gets security dancing at The Masonic

Old-Crow-Medicine-Show-Pedro-Paredes-Haz_postBy Pedro Paredes //

Old Crow Medicine Show with The Deslondes //
The Masonic – San Francisco
September 20th, 2014 //

Old Crow Medicine Show’s music has been called many things: bluegrass, country, folk, mountain style and so on. As someone who is rather new to the whole bluegrass scene, I wasn’t quite sure how to define it myself.

I will admit my senses were a bit confused, and not only because of all the beers ingested previously to the show: my ears heard the sweet sounds of an Americana string band, but my eyes saw the energy of a punk-rock band taking over the stage and audience.

Pedro Paredes-Haz-13

My feet were standing in SF’s Nob Hill at the newly renovated Masonic Center, but my mind was wondering through the green pastures of Tennessee. Even the venue’s security people got a bad case of the Southern charm.

At one point near the end of the show, when an overly enthusiastic fan invaded the stage, one of the bouncers could not resist his dancing feet and decided to start his own country “kicker dancing” session to the delight of the band and whole venue. Definitely a show to be remembered.

Aphex Twin – Syro // Community Review

FINAL MASTER SYRO DIGIPAK.indd

Aphex TwinSyro //

Aphex Twin makes his return on Warp with his new album Syro. This is Richard D. James’ first Aphex Twin album since 2001’s Drukqs.

Have an opinion on the new Aphex Twin album? Leave your own quick review in the comments below for a chance to win two tickets to one of the following shows in SF this weekend:

The author of our favorite quick review will win a pair of tickets to their choice of show, and will be notified on Thursday, September 25th. Read the BAM Team’s reviews of Aphex Twin’s latest below, and contact us if you’re interested in writing for Showbams.

Stream or Buy Aphex Twin’s Syro.


BAM TEAM META-RANKING:
4-bams_fix1
THE ULTIMATE ANTITHESIS OF THE CURRENT EDM SCENE
Richard D. James has been practically an enigma for the last decade, hiding out in a small Scottish village of 300 and releasing no new music as Aphex Twin since 2006. But the long layoff hasn’t changed the fact that he remains one of the most unique and influential electronic producers in the game today. Serving as his first Aphex Twin record in nearly 13 years, the 12-track, 64-minute Syro shows the 43-year-old UK native reintroducing his signature, ambient-leaning sound that many IDM fans gravitated to in the early 90’s. Some of James’ best material on Syro comes early on, from his club-oriented mixes like “minipops 67 [120.2]” to the techno funk ­he crafts on the ensuing “XMAS_EVET10 [120]” and “produk 29 [101].” Still, these aren’t beats designed to make you sweat your ass off — if anything, the cerebral nature of James’ work makes him the ultimate antithesis of the current EDM scene. -Josh Herwitt
4.5 BAMS // Top Song: produk 29 [101]

WHAT A GEM!
After so long away, it’s a joy to have another Aphex Twin album that exceeds my high expectations. Using many of the same tricks that he’s always had in his bag, James still manages to make the album sound fresh. The bleeps, bloops, tweaks, and pops make an hour go by quickly. Hopefully he puts together a tour focusing on this new material. -Steven Wandrey
4.5 BAMS // Top Song: XMAS_EVET10 [120] (thanaton3 mix)

THE FUTURE OF ELECTRONIC MUSIC?
Upon first hitting play, hearing Syro almost felt like a highly evolved alien language — you could tell the orchestration was sophisticated and purposeful as intricate melodies bounced around a cacophony of techno, break beats and drum & bass. But with subsequent listens, the patterns and emotive complexity begins to reveal itself. Similarly, song titles look as though Richard D. James’ cat walked across his keyboard, but the non-linear coded names suitably reflect the amalgamation of wide-ranging electronic elements. Propulsive and unpredictable yet somehow familiar, this album is an insane, rewarding journey that succeeds based on the master craftsmanship of taking all the the individual parts to make a Frankenstein that you want to dance, party and reflect with. Let’s hope this is the future of electronic music. -Mike Frash
4 BAMS // Top Song: CIRCLONT6A [141.98] (syrobonkus mix)

EQUALLY AMBIENT AND INFECTIOUS
It’s a challenging album to listen to, which is both good and bad. If you’re not already a fan of electronic music, this may not be a great primer, but it does have some tasty tracks. Equally ambient and infectious. -Andrew Pohl
3.5 BAMS // Top Song: 4 bit 9d api+e+6 [126.26]

TYPICAL AWESTRUCK COMPOSITIONS
For his first album in 13 years, Richard D. James didn’t try to outdo himself. He simply played to his strengths and created a comfortable record that picks right back up where he left off. Syro sucks you in with his typical awestruck compositions and reveals the fact that James is now a veteran of his craft, like a grandfather of drum n’ bass telling timeless stories through his music. -Anthony Presti
3.5 BAMS // Top Song: 180db_ [130]


WIN 2 FREE SHOW TICKETS BY SHARING YOUR OWN QUICK REVIEW:
Leave your own quick review below as a comment. Write no more than five sentences, give your own BAM Ranking and pick your top song. If you’d like to win two tickets to one of these shows, simply write the name of the show you’d like to win under your review.

Hercules and Love Affair (Live) + Tensnake this Friday 9/26 at Mezzanine
The Orwells this Saturday 9/27 at Slim’s
Simian Mobile Disco this Saturday 9/27 at Mezzanine

Bam-Indicator_fix

Meow the Jewels hits 10k in Kickstarter funding

Meow The Jewels

One of our favorite live acts of last (and this) year, Run the Jewels, have been building a media fervor as their next album, RTJ2, inches closer to an October 28th release. Killer Mike has made multiple appearances on cable news outlets in the wake of the Michael Brown tragedy and Ferguson protests, two dope new songs have been released as of late, and as we wait in anticipation for the new record, a genius collection of deluxe package offerings have stolen our hearts.

The bonus packages offered by Run the Jewels this past week have achieved for the duo a free round of viral advertising that might extend into unprecedented territory, while completely staying true to form and style.

If you haven’t checked out the bonus package choices yet, do it for a good laugh at least, but most attention has been given to the 40k bonus offering called “The Meow The Jewels Package”, promising “Run the Jewels will re-record RTJ2 using nothing but cat sounds for music.” Almost immediately, someone from Phoenix, Ariz., started a Kickstarter campaign and accompanying social media channels to crowd-fund the would be project.

Run the Jewels have captured the cultural zeitgeist by opening up their world to all cat-sourced production (Run the Jewels part one only had one cat’s meow.) El-P, whom is the sole producer of Run The Jewels, immediately confirmed that he will make this a reality if the Meow the Jewels Kickstarter total of $45,100 is met. And all the proceeds will go to charity.

Meow The Jewels3

Meow The Jewels hit 10k in funding on Sunday, with 622 total backers. With 36 days left to go (as of September 21st) there’s plenty of time to spread the word and bank small donations like the early days of the Obama campaign (There have been 16 backers whom have given $100 or more and no 1k backers…yet).

For backing Meow The Jewels, a plethora of sick swag is promised in return. Meow The Jewels stickers, “MTJ” branded lighters, shirts, bags of catnip, and final product vinyl signed by Mike and El-P are promised, and for being a 1k donator, you can submit your very own cat’s ridiculous utterances to be worked into the production of Meow The Jewels.

Consider donating today.

Killer Mike and El-P released one of the best albums of 2013 with their self-titled debut, self-producing the entire thing and releasing it as a free download a full year before U2 tried it. It was through the duo’s captivating live performances that word continued to spread about Run the Jewels — and now the guys are ready to catapult to the top tier of rap acts.

Even though cats may be providing all original sources of sound production for an RTJ2 remix album, Run the Jewels is still not for your children.

Meow The Jewels2

Beck opens for himself to launch The Masonic in SF

Beck_Masonic

By Mike Frash

Beck //
The Masonic – San Francisco
September 19th, 2014 //

A new music venue premiered in San Francisco on Friday night in a historic space with Beck breaking the champaign bottle on The Masonic, formerly known as the Nob Hill Masonic Center.

It was an early-evening event, as Beck Hansen took to the stage at 8:37 and was finished by 10:20, which is likely a harbinger for events to come at the venue promoted by Live Nation.

Located atop Nob Hill, a district rich in history (and hoity-toity residents), opening night of The Masonic has been a long time coming. Live Nation began this refurbishment process in 2008, but Nob Hill neighborhood groups did everything in their power to thwart The Masonic’s development.

After appeals to Superior Court and a lengthy environmental review, the parties settled at a cap of 79 events per year, fewer bars available to control alcohol consumption and an early starting (and ending times) for events.

The lines to purchase food and drinks were indeed very long, with only four places to queue up for a capacity 3,300 crowd. And when tickets range from $75.00-$99.50 plus fees, access to a quick beer pre-show shouldn’t be a hassle, but it is what it is. Live Nation sent out an email on Friday that had warned of the early start time, which had a large majority of patrons arriving at the same time around 8pm.

Expensive tickets also translated into typical SF laissez-faire security treatment, both at the doors and in not policing open marijuana smoking. Also, posters to commemorate the evening were handed out upon leaving The Masonic, something Live Nation has made a wonderful habit of doing for every sold out show at The Fillmore.

The venue is extremely intimate for its size, with all seats and General Admission areas close to the stage, which speaks to the architectural choice of a spherical space. This also helps the overall sound as well compared to other venues, allowing audio waves to envelop the audience.

So maybe it was due to time constraints, or that Beck is a festival headliner and he doesn’t need the support, but there was no opening act on the bill. So Beck opened for himself, and he said as much upon taking the stage.

The opening nine-song segment honed on Beck’s more mellow offerings, taking on most of this year’s Morning Phase, a couple cuts from 2002’s Sea Change and “Asshole” by fan-request for only the fourth time since 2009.

The mix was a bit rough at first, with vocals and guitar too high, but after a few songs, instruments blended much better. Beck and band briefly left the stage to signify a changeover to the radio hits, but “Devil’s Haircut” was a train wreck to ignite the rock section of the show. It sounded as if the drum and bass were being played in a different time signature than the rest of the group. Everything tightened up by the time “Loser” had begun.

Beck_tape

The Quiet Storm stretched out crime scene caution tape at the end of the main set, only to cut said tape during the always entertaining “Debra” during the encore.

Despite the small hiccups, Beck put on a thoroughly enjoyable evening, particularly by leading with the Morning Phase-driven segment.

Old Crow Medicine Show, Train and Modest Mouse will be performing at The Masonic this week if you want to check out SF’s newest music venue.

SETLIST
The Golden Age
Blackbird Chain
Blue Moon
Say Goodbye
Heart Is a Drum
Country Down
Lost Cause
Asshole(Partial)
Waking Light

Devil’s Haircut
Black Tambourine
Loser
Hell Yes
Think I’m in Love / I Feel Love
(Donna Summer cover)
Soul of a Man
Girl
Timebomb
E-Pro

ENCORE
Debra
Where It’s At


http://instagram.com/p/tLW1ISpKUx/
http://instagram.com/p/tK2r3fCYy0/


http://instagram.com/p/tKAeu_oNvR/

WIN TICKETS: LP at Great American Music Hall 9/21 (SUN)

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Enter to win a pair of free tickets to this show below.

LP with Odessa //
Great American Music Hall – San Francisco
September 21st, 2014 //

Laura Pergolizzi, stage name LP, will be gracing Great American Music Hall on September 21st, and will be bringing with her a heavy arsenal of delicious pop missiles to fire upon the audience. If you’ve never heard of Laura’s solo work, there is a significant chance that you have heard her work having spent a good portion of her career writing/co-writing songs for the likes of Rhianna, The Backstreet Boys, and Cher to name a few. Her solo work has seen high praise, attracting Cracker/Camper Van Beethoven’s David Lowery to produce her debut album, as well as seeing multi-platinum award winning producer Rob Cavallo (Green Day, Goo Goo Dolls) for her latest release, Forever For Now.

Opening the show is Santa Rosa native (now residing in Los Angeles), Odessa. After spending several years as a backing violinist in multiple bands, a near fatal bike accident inspired her to focus on her own material. Odessa’s debut EP was released September 16th. A recent appearance on “The Queen Latifah Show”, and having her new single “I Will Be There” appear on a new Subaru ad campaign indicate that we should expect to see much more from her in the near future. -Andrew Pohl

Buy tickets if you know you want to go!


Win-2-Tickets

Enter to win if you can attend this show Sunday, September 21st Great American Music Hall in San Francisco.

Submit your full name and email address below.
Contest ends Friday, September 19th at Noon. Winners will be picked at random & notified by email. Your email will be kept private – we will share your email with no one.

Like Showbams on Facebook and follow Showbams on Twitter to be eligible to win.

CONTEST CLOSED.

Rupa & the April Fishes: Social activist, doctor and artist is a modern-day Renaissance woman

Rupa_postBy Bridget Stagnitto //

Rupa Marya is a passionate musical character with an opinion about the current state of affairs, and what can be done to improve the planet. She expresses her concerns through compositions which are deliberately elevating and multifaceted. Being raised by Punjabi immigrant parents in India, France, and the Bay Area, has given her the background to comfortably create well-informed world music she likes to call “Electric Gumbo Radio”. She calls her music a “mestizo” (defined as a person of mixed ancestry) to embody a more complex, post-national identity that would invite a more diverse audience to the music.

That’s just her life in music. Did I mention that she’s also a doctor? Between tours, Rupa works at the San Francisco Free Clinic and is a professor at UCSF. When she isn’t busy healing and teaching, she produces amazing projects like Catapulta. Coordinated along with PODER (People Organizing to Demand Environmental and Economic Rights), Catapulta is a multi-disciplinary performance celebrating and documenting the courage of people enduring global migrations in search of work and opportunities. Held in 2010 at the Brava theatre in San Francisco’s Mission district, the goal was to inform the city’s undocumented workers of programs that offer free or low cost healthcare without fear of being deported.

The range of social activism that Rupa engages is broad but tangible. She strives to touch the souls of real people in every venture. Her voice and delivery carry the devotion she already expresses in her actions. Reminding us of the good that exists in the world, I find myself inspired to bring out those qualities within myself. I hope she can do the same for you.

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Following the last show of their European tour, I was fortunate enough to sit down with Rupa & the April Fishes and ask a few questions over a delightful Hungarian style buffet.

Showbams: I love the song “L’elephant”. It is so dramatic in the way that the character of the elephant is depicted through the music, but it’s in French and I have no idea what it’s about.

Rupa: I wrote that song when I realized that I had really given my life to music. I made a conscious choice to allow music into my life in a certain way. I feel like I constantly remake that choice on different levels and it’s something I’m always in a relationship with. You can call it the muse or whatever you prefer. It’s very creative and destructive. It has both of those capacities to it. At least for me when I write I feel like I’m at the edge of myself. I feel like it is a possession of myself that is extremely intense and beautiful. Everything gets more beautiful, wild and crazy, and all of the beauty and terrifying nature of those things come out at the same time. I think that for me that dualism is part of the creative dialogue in my own life. So when I gave myself to music it feels like it was an elephant.

That song is about an elephant walking through the forest. It’s based on a poem by the Indian philosopher, Krishnamurti. He talks about an elephant walking through the forest and the trees are your ideas of what reality is and the truth is like an elephant that makes a path by knocking down the trees. Not out of any malice but just because that is how it walks. Then the light of the moon can shine on the ground and you can see what things really are when that force is there. Otherwise you’re obscured so much by your own ideas of what you think things are.

Showbams: I always thought about crazy elephants that come in and trample whole villages and run amok. It sounds like in that middle section that the elephant is running through the forest, but what if it just flattens everything and just lays waste to human civilization?

Rupa: Yeah, and also relationship to the ego and what you think you know and what you are so certain about. For example, there is something so liberating about death but when someone dies we focus on the mourning and terrible aspect of it. But there is another side of it that is extremely liberating that the thing you fear the most has come to pass that when that person is gone, now where are you? You are left here without that other person. So, it becomes a strange kind of liberating pain, and I see those two things as being very much hand in hand, the letting go of death as well as birth and creation. That song contains a lot of that.

Showbams: The encore and the song before the encore were so upbeat, what is that all about?

Rupa: The last song is a melding of two songs, “La Frontera”, which is along the border, “I’m going along the border, when I get there I don’t know what I’m going to do, I’m going along the border because the wind told me to, to see to see, that which I cannot believe, that a line is worth more than a life, how can a line be worth more than a life? And all along the highway I raise my voice I raise hell I’m going along the border because the wind told me to, to see to see that which I cannot believe, to see to see, a bitter truth, to see that a line is worth more than a life, how can a line be worth more than a life?” For me, that song is about the celebration of that which is natural living, as opposed to our constructions that create death and suffering for other people.

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The last song, “La Espera Luna”, I see as an indication of the end of patriarchy so “I’m waiting for the moon” is a recount of the experience of a migrant crossing the border between Mexico and the U.S. The sun is so harsh and people die of exposure as they cross, so this woman is waiting in the desert on the Camino del Diablo, the Devils Highway, which is a historical footpath between Mexico and the U.S. even before the U.S. existed. This person is waiting for the moon to arrive so she can travel safely. For me, it’s the indication of the beginning of a different era and the end of patriarchy.

Showbams: What compels you write upbeat celebratory songs when the content is so heavy?

Rupa: That’s a good question. I feel like I am drawn to things that are positive. Like sex positive, or life positive, life affirming. I like things that make me feel elevated especially when I’m going to art and especially when it’s dealing with something heavy. I want to hear the message, but I also want to feel lifted. We are so susceptible as human beings and I feel like if I’m going to bring someone something I want to give them a way to feel elevated. I don’t want to leave them feeling like they want to hurt themselves or someone else. I feel like these things need to be discussed or brought into awareness, but they need to brought into awareness with a “we can do something” attitude. Too often our culture is so demoralizing of people’s spirits that even when you call AT&T to change your cellphone service or router you get this 50-minute experience of repression. There are so many daily demoralizing things that make people feel powerless. I feel like if you are going to talk about something that’s heavy, it’s important to do it in a way that’s uplifting.

Showbams: What has the journey of the band been like?

Rupa: The only one we chose was Misha because we wrote a Craigslist ad. We wrote a Craigslist ad looking for a new cellist, and Aaron and I wrote a Craigslist ad like we wanted to date someone. But everyone else has fallen in. When we were looking for a new trumpet player, we ran into Mario at the cigar bar and we auditioned him. Jhno, I was so lucky to play with him at a gig at Yoshi’s he was playing with Todd Sickafoose, and Todd introduced us to him. It’s all been so lucky. The Ditt (Aaron) was the original one. When I had a vision of the kind of drummer I wanted to play with, I had described it to Todd Brown, the guy who runs the Red Poppy (Art House), and he introduced me to him. We got together and jammed, and it was like meeting my soul mate of music and we just had so much fun. It’s been a learning process because we’ve been like a married couple with our issues and annoyances. He also has a pure heart and innocent approach to music that I really respect and I feel works really well with what we’re doing.

Showbams: How do you balance your life with your one-year-old baby, Bija?

Rupa: I have the most awesome family and network of supporters because this band could tell me to fuck off because I don’t tour enough, or we don’t want your kid on tour or to be around your husband. Bija is a whole new level of unknown, and I don’t know how it’s going to all work out. But he is so excited by the music and that feels really good right now.

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SONY DSC

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WIN TICKETS: Son Lux at The Independent 9/20 (SAT)

Son-Lux

Enter to win a pair of free tickets to this show below.

Son Lux with Helado Negro //
The Independent – San Francisco
September 20th, 2014 (Saturday) //

The cinematic, transitory music of Ryan Lott and his trio Son Lux is brooding yet easily assessable, epic but also restrained. A ghostly combination of soft, wondrous melody and symphonic electronic elements set an eerie tone, but Lott’s glitchy beats make the quickest impact.

Son Lux’ 2013 LP Lantern is an impressive, woefully under-appreciated piece of work, and you’ve got your chance to check it out yourself on us this weekend. Just enter your name and email below.

Lott put out a remix album earlier this year that includes an alternate take on one of Son Lux’ best songs, “Easy”, wooing Lorde to add her hazy vocals into the mix. Might Lott be on board to help produce the new queen of alt/pop-rock for her next effort? It wouldn’t be surprising. -Mike Frash

Buy tickets if you know you want to go.


Win-2-Tickets

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Contest ends Friday, September 19th at Noon. Winners will be picked at random & notified by email. Your email will be kept private — we will share your email with no one. 21+ only.

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