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Langerado Music Festival : March 6-9, 2008, Big Cypress Indian Reservation

I recently got an email about the Langerado Music Festival. Do I need to say how excited I am about this?

If you read our recent post, you’d have discovered that LovetheMusic is based out of Tampa (and SLC, but thats Damon), and this Langerado festival is like, hours away. Not plane rides and hotels away, just a couple of hours in the car. And because its only hours away, that means me, the special boyfriend, and more of my friends can come this time. It will be awesome. There will be camping in Florida in March, when it hasn’t quite become balls hot yet. And I’ll get to see more of the Sunshine state, and this is in an area I’ve never been to before.

Nothing but positive vibes and goodness here.

 L I N E - U P

Beastie BoysR.E.M.Phil Lesh & Friends311MatisyahuThievery CorporationThe RootsGov’t MuleAni DiFrancoBen FoldsG. Love & Special SauceMedeski, Scofield, Martin & WoodBuilt to SpillThe NationalLes ClaypoolUmphrey’s McGeeThe Disco BiscuitsMickey Hart Bandof MontrealRobert Randolph & the Family BandThe Wailersfunky MetersCitizen CopeAntibalas!!!Dark Star OrchestraOzomatliSam BushMinus the BearGhostland ObservatoryArrested DevelopmentBlind MelonSierra Leone’s Refugee All StarsThe New DealBenevento Russo DuoPerpetual GrooveRailroad EarthMartin SextonThe Avett BrothersGrace Potter and the NocturnalsThe WalkmenDr. DogIndigenousState RadioVampire WeekendThe Bad PlusThe Felice BrothersPelicanYard Dogs Road ShowBrett DennenEarl GreyhoundThe New MastersoundsDan DeaconJosh RitterPete FrancisRyan ShawBlitzen Trappermatt pond PAThe Dynamites feat. Charles WalkerBassnectarBalkan Beat BoxThe Lee BoysShout Out LoudsGolemThe Wood BrothersBusdriverRAQWill HogeSpam AllstarsPhixAmerican BabiesThe Heavy PetsBackyard Tire FireThe PostmarksSteel TrainHoots and HellmouthJonah SmithPnuma TrioAwesome New RepublicThat 1 GuyTrevor HallAmerican BangSchool of Rock All-Stars

Do you see the Beastie Boys? Thievery Corporation? Ben Folds? G. Love? Ani Difranco? Roots? Yay!! And Les Claypool. I’ve heard so much about this guy, this will be a real treat.

T I C K E T S
• A limited number of tickets will be priced at $169.50
• When these sell out a limited amount will be priced at $184.50
• When this allotment sells out, tickets will be priced at $199.50

• Ticket price includes access to all four days of the Langerado Music Festival and on-site camping for the duration of the event.

• All regular (non VIP) tickets are General Admission.
• Price does not include service, facility and shipping charges.
• Guard your tickets carefully - Just like cash! There will be NO REISSUES for lost or stolen tickets!

More updates will come as Langerado draws near. I hope you guys are willing to check it ou, looks like a crazy Bonnaroo in South Florida. We’ll see!

icon for podpress  Lebanese Blonde - Thievery Corporation [2:18m]: Play in Popup | Download




JBT & Keith Urban On Aussie Arias

Check out this video of John Butler playing with Keith urban on guitar and Michael Barker and Shannon Birchall doing rhythm for JBT’s performance of Funky Tonight on the Australian Arias. Pretty sweet, I say. Not Butler’s best performance of the song, but the dueling guitars at the end is pretty kickin’.




John Butler Trio: House of Blues, New Orleans, 4-29-07

Grand National

John Butler Trio

House of Blues 

New Orleans, LA 

This past weekend the boyfriend (Wade) and I drove to New Orleans to see our decidedly favorite band, the John Butler Trio. 

The Trip 

What a trip. 11 hours of driving later, after leaving Saturday morning, we ended up in New Orleans at about 12 A.M. on Sunday. This was with a few hours at our pit stop in Pensacola to take care of some other business and see some old friends. I was looking forward to seeing New Orleans anyways, because the last time we had both visited had been before Katrina had hit. The city has bounced back. For the record, I saw a guy, casually walking and throwing up at the same time. It was at this that I definitely decided not to wear my flip flops whilst walking.

The Road

I'd also like to mention my near-visit with a State Trooper, for laughters sake. I was going about 7 over the speed limit when one of our infamous uptight Florida State Troopers clocked me, and started to pull off the median to come get me. Thanks to an exit that led to one of our bumfuck towns in Fl, I sped off the exit, pulled around the corner into a gas station, and watched as the trooper pulled off the same exit after me, and went the wrong way in his search. Go me. Don't worry, I don't make this a habit.  

Anyways, off of I-10, we were in the middle of the French Quarter, at an intersection that had hundreds of people milling around and drunkenly weaving around (Jazzfest crowd), so it took us about 10 minutes of waiting at a simple, non-traffic-light intersection before we could drive through and find parking.

After about an hour, we finally found a parking garage that wasn't full. So, we park, ask a resident which direction Decatur Street is on, and head in that direction. Little do we know that Decatur forks, and we end up walking past the House of Blues and all the way down to the very end before we figure that one out.

When we finally get to the Music Hall entrance, we were in line for about 30 seconds before we were asked for ID. Oh, shit. I left mine in the car.

We had been up since 8 that morning, I had blisters, was sweaty, and hearing someone ask me for something I didn't have nearly started the waterworks, especially after our unplanned walking detour and the hour it took to find parking. That and the show started in like 20 minutes.

Wade, who will forever be my hero, grabbed my arm, looked me straight in the face, and said, "I'm gonna run."

So he took off sprinting through the French Quarter to go back to the parking garage and get my ID. About 10 minutes later, he calls me to tell me he's lost and can't find our parking garage, and asks me where it is. "Fuck if I know", says I, and starts walking. I walk one block and see him across the street, and he asks me on the phone, "How did you get there so quick?"

He really was lost. The next 30 minutes are spent walking around trying to find the mysterious parking garage, and we finally found a resident who knew where the street was. We had in that direction and still can't find it. We finally find it, get my ID, and start heading back, carefully. 

Wade's feeling like crap after sprinting, as he doesn't exercise much due to his love of playing guitar, and I'm emotionally thinking that we won't be able to get in because it will be full.

We do end up getting in, yay. Persistence is key.

The Show 

The show was awesome, as expected. I saw JBT a year ago in Mobile, and I have to say that show was probably better than this one. I think this for two reasons:

The venue. At the Mobile show, we were all in the sand, on the beach, and JBT played on a wooden stage that was underneath a restaurant on stilts. Way cooler. HOB was hot, full of drunk people, and very 'done-up', i.e., there was a curtain, a bar, yadda yadda. Being outside appeals to me much more.

John Butler 

The time. This show started at like 2:30 in the morning. I was tired from our days driving, and I can't imagine how tired JBT was after whatever travel and setup they had to do.

They started off with 'Used To Get High', which was slightly ironic, considering our setting.

Here's the setlist (unsigned, nothing too special):

JBT Setlist 

 Daniella rocked the house, especially because John broke out the harmonica for that one. They played several tracks from "Sunrise Over Sea", when I was hoping for more tracks from the new album, Grand National. I didn't expect him to play Ocean, but he did. Ocean was strange; I've noticed that he plays it different at almost every show, but this time it stood out particularly. Usually he starts off pretty slow, with some slap-tap guitar and fingerpicking, and then slowly builds up to the strumming of the high notes. I noticed that this time he just stopped fingerpicking, John Butler Trioand then started madly strumming all of a sudden. John got mad applause when he was done, though, per usual, as Ocean is an amazing instrumental. If you haven't heard it, you need to. I was happy they played 'Better Than', as that is one of my favorites. After an unannounced break (they just left the stage and said thank you, which to me is always quite curious. It appears they're done.) The crowd cheered and cheered and cheered, and then John came back out, said thank you, and sat down to start playing 'Peaches and Cream'. John ButlerThis was my favorite part of the show. Michael and Shannon joined him later on, further into the song, and as we were all singing along, they slowly stopped playing and just let us sing it. This was my first time seeing Peaches and Cream live, because they didn't play it last year.

Gov Did Nothin was pretty special, too, I was looking forward to this the whole time. Gov Did Nothin is a song about how Katrina hit New Orleans, and how…the government did nothing, obviously. The energy during this was great. He dedicated the song to all of us and the residents of New Orleans. Awesome, awesome. 

Funky Tonight was last, and a good end to the show. The guys did a good job, they looked a bit tired, John in particular. I'm always amazed at what drummers have to do to play; its so much more high energy that playing guitar. Michael seemed to be completely unfazed by the time. I know I couldn't have done that at 2 in the morning. I managed to snag the setlist, and then me and Wade hightailed it out of there. Its hard to believe, but we were too tired to hang out longer to try and JBTsee the guys and get autographs and such, especially facing a 3 and half hour drive (during which we almost ran out of gas).

You can click on any of the pictures for a bigger size. I'd like to apologize for the crappy quality. Don't buy a Canon Powershot 520A. My batteries were almost dead and I had a crap angle at the stage for shots, especially with my flash. I wanted to take pictures this time for myself and for you guys, as last year I forgot my camera and ended up with none. Well, except for when I got pictures with John after the show. Yes, I've met him. Lucky me.

Related Links:

 John Butler Trio Official Website

John Butler Trio on MySpace

Buy Grand National

Other LovetheMusic posts on JBT: 

Funky Tonight EP Review

Grand National Review

About JBT 

Related Audio: 

Daniella

 

[audio:http://lovethemusicreviews.com/audio/Grand%20National/02%20Daniella.mp3]

 

Good Excuse

 

[audio:http://lovethemusicreviews.com/audio/Grand%20National/05%20Good%20Excuse.mp3] 

 

Gov Did Nothin'

 

[audio:http://lovethemusicreviews.com/audio/Grand%20National/07%20Gov%20Did%20Nothin%27.mp3] 

 




Review : Nickel Creek - Reasons Why (The Very Best Of)

 Bluegrass + Sweet Harmonies + Awesome Instrumentals = Nickel Creek

Reasons Why: The Very Best (CD + DVD) - Nickel Creek

Nickel Creek Official Website

Label : Sugar Hill

 

Well, I was just going to do an MP3 Spotlight post on Nickel Creek, but then I couldn't pick an MP3 to feature from this album, or them, in general, especially when it occurred to me that many people don't know who Nickel Creek are. Which is a crying shame.

I've been into Nickel Creek for a couple of years now, and am quite disappointed that they're not playing at Bonnaroo this year, as they have in the past.

What to say? Progressive bluegrass? Sure. Beautiful instrumentals? You bet. Harmonizing vocals? Check.

I love Nickel Creek, and this Best Of album is a good introduction to their music. Some of my favorites in their past albums have been some that I thought wouldn't be on this album, but I was pleasantly surprised.

They have a sound of bluegrass and country, with the mandolin, violin, and guitar of the 3 band members, or sometimes called 'progressive bluegrass', or 'progressive acoustic'. I think it's just good music. I saw in article that someone described their music as "Nickel Creek music". This is why I like it, because you can always expect something different, so different a genre can't hold them. They're signed to Allison Kraus' label, if that gives you an idea. They're lyrically sound, too, with some heavier, darker lyrics on their later albums. They have a talent for storytelling which is prevalent in this style music, like in "The Lighthouse's Tale", a story of a Romeo and Juliet type romance. They do great without lyrics, too, check out "Smoothie Song".

This album is great, with only one hiccup, being "Out of the Woods". I never liked that song. 

Nickel Creek essentially speaks for themselves. To pinpoint what makes them great would be difficult, involve a lot of swearing, and pretty pointless. Hit play and find out for yourself. 

 

Meanwhile, check out their other stuff if you dig this. Definitely take a listen to the mp3s here. I'll be surprised if you're not hooked.

And sadly, I just found that they're touring this year, the tour being titled "Farwell (For Now)". Catch them while you can. 

 

Related Links:

Nickel Creek Official Website

Buy This CD

Nickel Creek on MySpace

Related Audio:

Smoothie Song

 

[audio:http://www.lovethemusicreviews.com/audio/05-nickel_creek-smoothie_song.mp3]

 

I Should've Known Better

 

[audio:http://www.lovethemusicreviews.com/audio/09-nickel_creek-i_shouldve_known_better.mp3]

 

Reasons Why

 

[audio:http://www.lovethemusicreviews.com/audio/07-nickel_creek-reasons_why.mp3]

 

When In Rome

 

[audio:http://www.lovethemusicreviews.com/audio/03-nickel_creek-when_in_rome.mp3]

 

Enjoy.