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Banqueto - Tito Puente

Robert Randolph & the Family Band — "Ain't Nothing Wrong With That"

Talking About - Susan Tedeschi

Shame - The Avett Brothers

Waever of Dreams - Freddie Hubbard

Welcome to the Jungle - Guns N Roses

Chapagne of Christmas - The Fleshtones

Bubbly - Colbie Caillat

Talking About - Susan Tedeschi

Everyday is like Sunday - Morrissey

Review: Tito Puente, Reissues

Chicago January 5, 2009 | 11:08 AM Categories: Latin, New Releases

Banqueto - Tito Puente

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tito fuente.jpgWhen it comes to music, the Internet is increasingly fulfilling its early promise as the ultimate library. Though much of the music it holds is illegally or quasi-legally posted, sometimes it feels like you can find nearly everything ever recorded online if you're willing to do some serious digging.

Thankfully it's not always necessary to resort to this vast gray market to find great music that fell out of print decades ago. In 2008 legitimate record labels continued to churn out killer reissues--so many, in fact, that I was often tempted to simply let myself recede into the past, basking in vintage sounds as fresh and vital as anything made today.

Leading the charge over the past couple years has been the revived Fania Records, which was the key salsa label from the 60s through the early 80s. One of the label's best reissues of 2008 went back even further, though--the music on the first two volumes of Tito Puente's The Complete 78s (two more are on the way) originally came out on the great Tico label in the late 40s and early 50s.

New Year's Eve: Robert Randolph and the Family Band at the 9:30 Club

Washington, DC January 2, 2009 | 4:26 PM Categories: Christian/Gospel, Live, Reviews, Rock/Pop, Soul/R&B

Robert Randolph & the Family Band — "Ain't Nothing Wrong With That"

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About halfway through a Robert Randolph concert, the slide wunderkind kicks his chair back, throws his feet in the air, and starts spinning on it. This is the cue for the rest of the band to go into double time, and--if it's 12:01 a.m. on New Year's day--it's the cue for three million females to teeter onstage for the dubious privilege of having champagne sprayed at them. For a brief moment, the 9:30 Club feels like Cancun in mid-March: the jam disintegrates, replaced by awkward, arrhythmic dancing.

Then the ladies evacuate and the Randolphs get back to putting on the best live show in the country.

Review: Trucks and Tedeschi @ Tampa Theatre

Tampa-Sarasota December 31, 2008 | 10:34 AM Categories: Live, Reviews, Rock/Pop

Talking About - Susan Tedeschi

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susan tedeschi.jpgNo matter how hard we might try, family gatherings and holiday season don't always add up to joyous -- or even peaceful -- experiences. But when the Trucks clan joined forces for their Soul Stew Revival bash at Tampa Theatre on Monday, a near capacity crowd of around 1,400 witnessed domestic bliss at its finest. The jubilant vibe, marked by expert musicianship, permeated the ancient venue. If the rumors are true about the historic movie house being haunted, even the ghosts must have been grinning.

The gnat's-ass-tight gang of musicians mesmerized with gorgeous executions of the timeworn tension-and-release dynamic. It's a God-send rooted in the churches of the Deep South, one that was sold with aplomb to the secular world by the likes of Ray Charles, James Brown and Aretha Franklin. The Allman Brothers Band, Derek Trucks' chief employer, then expanded the sonic presentation with Kind of Blue-indebted jazz elements in the late 1960s. Decades later, the holy tradition thrives, coming together wonderfully Monday night at Tampa Theatre.

Preview: Carnivores @ 529 Flat Shoals Ave

Atlanta December 31, 2008 | 10:23 AM Categories: Alternative/Punk, Reviews, Upcoming

Philip Frobos pauses when asked if Carnivores, the band in which he sings and plays bass, is a punk band. "You could say we're a punk band," he offers, "but we're a punk band in the way that the Pixies were a punk band, or the way the Replacements, the Minutemen and Pavement were punk bands. The roots are there but we're going somewhere else with them."

To get a handle on where Carnivores (formerly Chainstereo) takes these roots, it requires a psychedelic trek into lo-fi tropicalia, lounge and death-afflicted sound collages that defy easy categorization. Frobos - along with Nathaniel Higgins (guitar), Caitlin Lang (keyboard/vocals) and Tauseef Anam (drums) - splatters songs with a clutter of fuzz and musical inflections that come off busy at first. But every rhythm, melody and yearning voice is placed exactly where it's needed. The spirit of punk is undeniable in its presence, but the experimental bend of the songs is on par with the likes of Animal Collective, Faust and even the harmonic complexities of early Beach Boys records.

From the sad, ethereal pace of "For Griffin" to the bouncy, Brazilian flare of "Heart of Copper" on the band's debut, All Night Dead U.S.A., (due in March on Double Phantom), Carnivores shows genuine enthusiasm for exploring the fringes of fun, exotic music. Drummer Anam studies music at Emory University where he dabbles in everything from Samba to classical. The rest of the group springs from the traditions of homespun DIY. Their strengths and weaknesses provide a counter-balance of chaos and considered songwriting.

Preview: The Soft Pack @ Schubas' Tomorrow Never Knows festival

Chicago December 31, 2008 | 10:13 AM Categories: Folk, Live
The Soft Pack, formerly the Muslims, just contributed a little acoustic set to Sterogum's little acoustic feature called Decomposed. One of the songs they performed was "Call It a Day," from their self-titled EP, the one with the sleeves the band had blasted with a shotgun by a retired cop (it's already extremely hard to find copies).

Review: The Avett Brothers @ Belk Theatre

Charlotte December 31, 2008 | 9:55 AM Categories: Country, Live, Rock/Pop, Upcoming

Shame - The Avett Brothers

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avett brothers.jpgThe Avett Brothers w/ Auld Lang Syne and Jason Webley
Belk Theatre
Dec. 30, 2008

The Deal: The Avett Brothers return to Charlotte for the first night in a sold-out, two-night New Year's Eve stand.

The Good: Auld Lang Syne warmed up the crowd as the first opener and were a little mellow in comparison with what was to come. Jason Webley was up next and got his feet stomping, the crowd involved and screamed his heart out. Even though he broke a guitar string, the show went on and he did his best to bring some energy out in the theatre.

You could tell the crowd was excited for The Avetts before they even hit the stage. There was an energy of anticipation for the whole night, and when the first notes finally rang out, the crowd broke into a frenzy and sang along with every word. While you may have thought it was full-on crowd participation for the opening song, it was en masse for "Paranoia," the second song of the night. The Avett's sister, Bonnie, came out to sing "Swept Away" and gave a nice female, family harmony to the song. Paleface and Mo made an appearance for three of the songs, including the first encore song. People who were yelling out for "Salvation Song" all night were rewarded at the end of the encore as Bonnie returned to join in with the band. It always amazes me that the band is able to keep up that energy each and every time I see them...but that's probably why their following continues to grow. Foot stomping, screaming, strumming -- it's always one hell of a live show to witness.

Trumpet great Freddie Hubbard dies at age 70

Tampa-Sarasota December 31, 2008 | 9:21 AM Categories: Jazz, News

Waever of Dreams - Freddie Hubbard

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freddie hubbard.jpgI met Freddie Hubbard many years ago backstage at the Clearwater Jazz Holiday. A few people warned me that he could be an asshole. He was a sweetheart.

Guns N Roses to tour

Charlotte December 30, 2008 | 9:41 AM Categories: Rock/Pop, Upcoming

Welcome to the Jungle - Guns N Roses

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guns n roses.jpgWhile no dates have been announced yet, RollingStone.com is reporting that Guns N Roses will tour for two years to support the long-awaited new album Chinese Democracy, according to the band's guitarist.

The tour is expected to start in late March, though with the deadlines the band has been known to tie itself to in the past, this could mean late March of 2025.

Interview: Dan Scanlan of Zoroaster

Atlanta December 30, 2008 | 8:56 AM Categories: Electronic/Dance, Interviews, Scenes

For today's interview we call out Dan Scanlan of Zoroaster.

Who are you?
Dan Scanlan, drummer, noise maker for Zoroaster.

Describe yourself in three words.
Pretty Fucking Awesome.

Who -- dead or alive -- would most you like to meet?
Dick Wolf, Creator/ Executive Producer of Law and Order. I'd like to thank him for giving me a reason to spend every second of my spare time on the couch!!

Who would you most like to slap in the face?
Michael Vick.

What song do you wish you had written?
Happy Together by The Turtles....quite possibly the best song ever!

Elvis Costello or Elvis Presley?
Presley!!

LP, CD or MP3?
LP, but really I like 8-tracks, I'm waiting for their resurrection someday.

If you could start one trend, what would it be?
Canceling American Idol... Does that count? Well it should!!

Preview: Zoroaster, Voice of Saturn

Atlanta December 24, 2008 | 6:58 AM Categories: New Releases, Rock/Pop, Upcoming

zoroaster.jpgAtlanta psych metal trio Zoroaster has completed its third album, Voice of Saturn, due out on March 10th via the group-run Terminal Doom Records.

Voice of Saturn was recorded at The Living Room with Ed Rawls, and carries Zoroaster's hallucinogenic hybrid of doom-laden metal, drone and dirge to bombastic new places, and even features a guest appearance from Mastodon guitarist Brent Hinds on the song "White Dwarf."

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