Tag: Warren Haynes

  • Best of NYS Music 2015: Staff Picks for Out-of-State Festivals

    While most might dream of tropical getaways when it comes to vacation time, music fans accrue their days to travel across the country—or world—for weekends jam-packed with live performances, indulgent food and experimental fun. From the east to the west coasts to the Midwest, NYSMusic staffers traveled near and far throughout the year to see their favorite groups in action. Here we give you our top picks for out-of-state festivals of 2015.

    2015 festivalsBest Small Festival: Arise Music Festival, East Coast Tsunami Festival, Grand Point North Festival and The Werk Out Music and Arts Festival

    With the growing number of small-scale festivals that seem to pop up each year, it’s no wonder that our team could not pick just one or two as their favorite—so we decided to include the ones we felt deserved an honorable mention. First up is Arise Music Festival, an event in Loveland, CO, that according to Andrew Wyatt “offers a spicy jambalaya of multi-cultural live music, electronic performances, art presentations, along with numerous workshops centered around eco-activism, social justice, and spirituality practice.” With nearly 100 musical acts, the three-day festival now in its third year featured the likes of the Polish Ambassador, Rising Appalachia, Sister Sparrow and the Dirty Birds, Lukas NelsonTurkuazGiant Panda Guerilla Dub Squad, Trevor Hall, Emancipator Ensemble, Ozomatli and Joe Russo’s Almost Dead, among others.

    Headlined by Wu-Tang Clan and Life Of Agony, the East Coast Tsunami Festival held in Reading, PA, treated hip hop, hardcore and metal fans to two full days of shows, including favorited groups Body Count, Mobb Deep, Murphy’s Law, Madball and more. And despite sound issues during day one, Jay Saint G. still dubbed the festival as “a wave of brutality that every music lover should experience.”

    Up next is the Grand Point North Festival held in Burlington’s Waterfront Park with views of Lake Champlain and the Adirondacks. Headlined by Vermont’s sweetheart Grace Potter, the fifth annual installment boasted two nights of music featuring Phish’s Mike Gordon, the Flaming Lips, Shakey Graves, Greensky Bluegrass, Amy Helm and the Handsome Strangers, among others, and special guests like Kenny Chesney who joined Potter to perform their single, “Wild Child.” Alexandra Provost and Laura Carbone noted that “as Potter walked onto the stage, her skin glistening from raindrops, the audience went wild” and that she “put on an astounding performance, showing off her piano, guitar and bluesy vocal skills.”

    And finally the Werk Out Music and Arts Festival at Legend Valley, a venue favorited by the Grateful Dead in the ’80s. With a stacked lineup featuring the Werks, Papadosio, Dopapod, Lettuce, Umphrey’s McGee, the Floozies, Consider The Source, Break Science and Tauk, the sixth year for the Thornville, OH, festival “was as always a ridiculously good time for all who made the journey,” according to Ben Landsman. With three stages, a silent disco and one fan wedding,Landsman noted that “between the beauty of Legend Valley, the bright spirit of the fans, the innovative music, this festival is one of the treasures of the Midwest.”

    Best Midsize Festival: Green River Festival
    Honorable Mention: Aura Music and Arts Festival, Boston Calling, Camp BiscoDelFest, McDowell Mountain Music Festival

    Held at Greenfield Community College in Greenfield, MA, the sold-out 29th annual Green River Festival was “fresh, exciting and invigorating,” according to Eli Stein. Featuring four hot air balloon launches, the family-friendly July event pulled out all the stops with a craft tent, Frisbee dog show, acrobats, karate demonstrations, swimming, a Mardi Gras-style parade and exotic local fare like elk, boar and venison burgers, a Korean food truck and kabob vendors. Throughout the three-day weekend, more than 40 performers ranging from Americana to dance, blues and jam graced the event’s three stages nestled in the foothills of the Berkshires, including Eilen Jewell, the Wood Brothers, Rubblebucket, Marco Benevento, MAKU Sound System, Langhorne Slim and the Law, the Punch Brothers and tUnE-yArDs, which Stein noted was the perfect mixture:

    Musically, the festival served up a heaping slab of New England comfort food. The rest aforementioned activity, as they say, was just the gravy. Not only were the band selections great, they were clearly hand-picked and not just pulled off the nearest passing festival train. The music flowed wonderfully from set to set, and built to a nice peak at the perfect times. There was an evenness to the passion and approach of the musicians that made for a smooth transition no matter where you went.”

    Best Large Festival: Gathering of the Vibes and Summer Camp
    Honorable Mention: Austin City Limits, Bonnaroo, Hangout Music FestLockn’ Music FestivalPeach Festival, Rock Allegiance, Rock On the Range

    Celebrating its 20th year, Gathering of the Vibes offered up an impressive lineup with headliners Wilco, Weezer, Tedeschi/Trucks Band, Dark Star Orchestra, Ben Harper, Greg Allman and the String Cheese Incident. The late summer festival returned to Seaside Park in Bridgeport, CT, and treated fans to a super jam called Vibes 20th Anniversary Spectacular featuring Gov’t Mule guitarist Warren Haynes, saxophonist Branford Marsalis, Meters founding bassist George Porter Jr., Marco Benevento on keys and Joe Russo behind the drum kit, plus Jackie Greene on guitar. Although the four-day festival will take a break in 2016, VibeTribers Julia Wolfe and Steve Olker recounted the last day of the 2015 event and dubbed this run as one that would set the pace going forward:

    As the sun set over Vibes for the last time, [Ben] Harper closed out with his song “Better Way,” and it was finally time to head home. Seeing so many bands perform was both enticing and overwhelming at the same time, making leaving Vibes even more bittersweet. The range of genre, popularity, age and background is what makes Gathering of the Vibes separate from other festivals. After 20 years, Gathering of the Vibes has remained one of Connecticut’s most well-known festivals, and it’s attention to bringing about change while discovering your own inner peace is what will bring success for future gatherings to come. Until next time, thank you vibes for a real good time.”

    With more than 100 bands over four days on seven stages, this year’s installment of Summer Camp Music Festival in Chillicothe, IL, saw a stacked lineup of bands like moe.Umphrey’s McGee, Steve Miller Band, Widespread PanicSTS9, Big Gigantic, John Butler Trio, Krewella, Trampled by Turtles, Keller Williams and Grateful Grass, Yonder Mountain String BandViolent Femmes and many, many more. Festivalgoers also had access to on-site camping, the infamous late night Red Barn Shows, musician workshops, a nonprofit village, arts and crafts and unique food vendors, plus some impressive improvements. In Pete Mason’s review of the festival’s final day, he detailed what made the perfect ending to the much celebrated event:

    The final set of the night to check out was North American Scum, an LCD Soundsystem cover band who might be the best band to close out Summer Camp. Members of the group are formerly of This Must be the Band, a Talking Heads band from Chicago, who have traditionally played one of the final sets at Summer Camp. This incredible two hour set featured the entire Sound of Silver album and, because everyone else was playing Grateful Dead songs, a spirited version of “Scarlet Begonias” to cap the night.”

    Read more from Summer Camp Day 1, Day 2, Day 3 and Day 4.

  • Mountain Jam 2015 Day 2 Recap: Rock Stars of All Calibers

    Friday morning beckoned even more fans to Mountain Jam 2015 as the Catskills were greeted with blue skies, sunshine and a killer lineup. Festival goers were still establishing campsites and beginning to organize the daily schedule so as not to miss a moment of music. The chair lifts were operational, giving a bird’s eye view of the festival grounds and breathtaking scenery that decorates Hunter Mountain.

    One of the top acts of the afternoon was New York’s own and returning act, Spirit Family Reunion brought everything but the kitchen sick. Performing with kitchen utensils and a washboard rhythm, their deeply rooted harmonies provided a funky backwoods start to Friday’s lineup. Trigger Hippy gave a heavy dose of soulful rock and gospel doo wop with Jackie Greene raging on a trifecta of guitar, harmonica and organ. Joan Osborne strutted herself up and down the stage as her sweet voice caused the crowd to sing along. There was no such thing as personal space on that stage as the musicians consistently engaged each other, tightening the music and spreading smiles.

    As soon as Trigger Hippy’s set ended, Greene ran one stage over to join four-piece California Soul band, The Mother Hips. Lead by guitarists Tim Bluhm and Greg Loiacono, they wasted no time wowing the crowd with psychedelic folk melodies and charming desert vocals. A musical festival isn’t complete without a Grateful Dead tribute band and Mountain Jam was lucky to have Joe Russo’s Almost Dead. Drummer Joe Russo was front and center as he effortlessly wailed his sticks. The beautiful weather wasn’t meant to last as the traditional rain storm gradually made its way across the mountain. The refreshingly drenched crowd didn’t seem to mind as JRAD performed in sync with the wind and rain.One of the highlights of the day was rock goddess Grace Potter who paraded on stage after flying in from Minneapolis after performing with The Rolling Stones the night before. “A festival like this is just like a woman, she ain’t the right kind of excited unless she’s WET,” Potter teased the soaked fans as the band erupted into “Queen of my Heart” and “Hot Summer Night” before she quickly threw her beautiful high heels clear across stage. The bare-footed siren was all confidence and soul as she went into a never-before-heard song “Fill Up Your Empty Heart,” a romantically assertive ballad which was quickly fawned over by fans. It was no surprise that Potter’s “Best Friend” Warren Haynes joined her onstage for Neil Young’s “Cinnamon Girl,” embracing each other in open arms and classic rock ‘n roll just in time for the sun to peak thru. Another strong female fronted group, Nicki Bluhm & The Gramblers entertained the audience with folksy songs off their new album, Loved Wild Lost. Her gentle stage presence makes her a class act as she swoons music lovers with “Queen of the Rodeo.” (Full interview coming next week).

    The big headliner of the night, Rock and Roll Hall of Famer, Robert Plant, of Led Zeppelin, gathered a huge crowd that no one could afford to miss. Plant and his Sensational Space Shifters are a multi-instrumental machine that went above any and all fan expectations. Plant’s vocals are still so pristine echoing off the hillside especially for the enchanting lullaby of “Going to California.” Jammers weren’t the only ones happy to be here as Plant said, “It’s good to be back in this part of New York.” Performing a few new tunes for an exotic tribal rhythm was “Little Maggie” off of Plant’s and the SSS’ first album together Lullaby and the Ceaseless Roar. Fans of all ages soaked in the familiar chord progressions of psychedelic blues, metal and Appalachia folk from the Zeppelin classics of “Whole Lotta Love” and the encore of “Rock n Roll” all with high peaks and roaring guitar. You can never get enough Zeppelin especially with  Zapparella, a four piece all female Led Zeppelin cover band, performing right after Robert Plant at Healey Hall. Their precise timing and female presence spiced up classics such as “Dazed and Confused” and “Trampled Underfoot,” giving a new appreciation for old favorites. Lead vocalist Noelle Doughty said it was “exciting and terrifying” to follow the master, Robert Plant’s set.The intermission on the East Stage featured progressively hallucinogenic visuals on the main screens before Gov’t Mule presented a special Pink Floyd tribute dubbed Dark Side of the Mule. A thick foggy mist had rolled over the festival, amplifying the light show and heightening the Floyd experience. The keyboardist laid out heavy piano chords throughout the set as Haynes “Warrenized” the excessively stretched out jams. The trio of female vocalists were clear-cut hitting the signature high notes. Folks looking for a more energetic party vibe headed to Healey Hall for the late night set of Dopapod who recharged the crowd with livetronica bliss. Stay tuned to NYSMusic for another day full of music on the mountain with Rusted Root, Rebelution, The Wailers, Gov’t Mule and The Black Keys.

  • Mountain Jam 2015 Recap Day 1

    The 11th annual Mountain Jam Festival got off to a great start on Thursday June 4 2015 with plenty of good vibes and a solid night of music in the books.

    The weather was nearly perfect as clouds parted early in the day to reveal the beautiful Catskill Mountains in all their glory. Hunter Mountain was dressed to the nines with assorted vendors, colorful stages and thousands of Jammers scattered throughout the hills. Those eager to start the fun arrived early to set up camp, find friends and get settled for the long music filled weekend ahead. Check in proved to be hassle free as fans were directed to the various parking and camping locations with minimal searches. However, the Main Gate entrance had serious pat downs to ensure clean, safe fun inside the festival grounds.

    20150604-Railroad Earth-06

    One of the first acts of the day started on the petite West Stage with the 5 piece Americana stylings of Sons of Bill, a three brother founded group that amped up the crowd with classic rock riffs and attitude. The first act of the massive East Stage was the bluegrass rock group, Railroad Earth and with a recently announced shared tour with Gov’t Mule, it was no surprise that Warren Haynes sat in for some classic rock and roll jamming. Guests were treated to double sets of both Marco Benevento and moe. on the mountainside for a late night special. Benevento was in rare form as his enthusiasm was top notch with crisp key pounding and contagious giddy melodies as he howled like a madman in his technicolor suit.

    20150604-moe-03

    moe. was in awe of the scene as it was their first time at Mountain Jam and received grand cheers as they kicked off the set with “Same Old Story” and “Crab Eyes”. The off tempo fans got down to the marimba madness and intense focused lyrics spitting as moe. was dressed in their 25th anniversary silver attire. Warren Haynes sat in for an outlandish “Opium” adding a vintage rock voltage to end the first set. Fans raved for the multiple segues of the second set with “Silver Sun” packing an exciting climax with Pink Floyd like jamming. Al Schnier took full advantage of the broad space as he came out and shredded over the pit. The Mountain Jam app gave fans the opportunity to vote for moe.’s encore which proved to be the fiery classic “Rebubula”. It was a somewhat early night as music ended around 2am giving fans a decent amount of rest. Good thing with Friday’s headliners to include Nicki Bluhm & The Gramblers, Rock and Roll Hall of Famer, Robert Plant, a special set of Gov’t Mule: Dark Side of the Mule and late night Dopapod. Be sure to download the Mountain Jam app (available for both Android and iPhone) for daily updates on contests, show times, photo galleries and webcasts.

    Stayed tuned for more updates via NYSMusic’s Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

    [FinalTilesGallery id=’217′]

  • 2015 Rockin’ on the River Lineup Announced

    North Tonawanda’s annual Rockin on the River series lineup has been announced for 2015.

    Kicking things off this year is Toronto’s USS (Ubiquitous Synergy Seeker) – a two man alternative dance music/EDM group on July 10. July 17 will feature the dub/reggae beats of SOJA along with Rochester’s Giant Panda Guerilla Dub Squad, North Tonawanda’s hottest groove rock export Aqueous, and Buffao’s Skyepilot. Rochester native and jukebox hero Lou Gramm will bring a slew of Foreigner hits and solo material to town July 31.  The series will end in a totally epic manner as Gov’t Mule’s Warren Haynes stops into town with friends and collaborators Railroad Earth.

    All shows are free, all ages and held at Gratwick Park. Those that want a closeup experience with some extra amenities can opt for VIP passes that go on sale June 20. Nearby parking is available for $5. Check out the full schedule below.

    North Tonawanda Rockin’ on the River 2015 

    July 10 – USS w/ special guests to be announced
    July 17 – SOJA w/ Aqueous, Giant Panda, and Skyepilot
    July 31 – Lou Gramm w/ Radio9, Magone, and Famous Fred and the Creatures Unknown
    Aug 7 – Warren Haynes w/ Railroad Earth and The Jeremy Hoyle Band