Monday, March 24, 2008

The Crystal Method


Photo Credit: M-Pulse

The Crystal Method

Despite its suggestive name, this electronic duo adds a level of maturity to the dance music scene, by giving their songs depth and not singing nonstop about all-night drug trips. Following a similar path as Prodigy and The Chemical Brothers, this duo displays their keen knowledge of music by exploring other styles, which produces songs that are much more than a blaring beat. There's something to be said for DJs that can provide their audience with a feeling of happiness, calmness, and anger, all within the course of a single set. In addition, The Crystal Method's music has been used in more movies than almost any other electronica artist.

Personnel: Ken Jordan, Scott Kirkland (samples, keyboards, guitar, bass)

Upcoming: Ultra Music Festival/Winter Music Conference March 28-29

Music Video for "Name of the Game"



Video byanilcp.

Ultra Music Festival


Ultra Music Festival

UMF10 is best known as the official closing party of the annual World Music Conference in Florida. This year marks the tenth anniversary of this world-renowned electronica festival, and it's supposedly going to be the most elaborate event to date. With 14 stages and over 100 DJs, bands, and producers, this statement is sure to ring true. Due to escalating ticket sales, the venue changed a couple of years ago to Miami's Bicentennial Park, a venue which couldn't be better for festival-goers who enjoy tons of fresh air and a nonstop beat.

Headliners: Tiesto, Underworld, Justice, Paul Van Dyk, Erick Morillo, The Bravery

Ultra Music Festival 2006 Promo



Video byanttler.

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Joshua Tree gets ready

Southern California's other desert festival, three weeks after Coachella, is Joshua Tree Music Festival, which holds its sixth annual festival May 16-18 at the Joshua Tree Lake Campground in Joshua Tree CA. The festival added three more acts to its lineup, which includes Ivan Neville's Dumpstaphunk, Ghostland Observatory, JJ Grey and MOFRO, Zilla and lot more.

Early bird ticketing expires midnight March 22. Visit the festival web site for full information. The same producer hosts the Joshua Tree Roots Music Festival in October.

Here's a video that gives you a flavor of the May festival.

Fifth shoe drops: Mile High Music Festival is announced

The fifth major new rock festival for 2008 was announced by AEG Live's Rocky Mountain division. The Mile High Music Festival will take place July 19-20 at the outer fields of Dick's Sporting Goods Park in Commerce City CO. Headliners are Dave Matthews Band, Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers, John Mayer and The Black Crowes.

The festival is co-produced by AEG Live, Starr Hill Presents (the production company of Dave Matthews manager Coran Capshaw) and Kroenke Sports Enterprises (which owns the venue, a professional soccer stadium). The festival's presenting sponsor is SanDisk, maker of flash memory for mobile consumer devices.

After failing to get approval for a proposed festival in Denver's City Park, AEG Live went with its Plan B and moved the planned event to the facility in Denver suburb Commerce City.

Tickets ($150 for two days, $85 for one) go on sale March 29. Visit the festival web site for full details.

In addition to Mile High, other major new rock events for 2008 are All Points West (Jersey City NJ), Rothbury Festival (Rothbury MI), Outside Lands (San Francisco CA) and Pemberton Festival (Pemberton BC). See our Special Report: Year of the Launch for analysis.

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Coachella- A Bit More On The Alleged "Let-down"; MSG Boards Decently Full of Apologists


With the announcement of Aphex Twin, Goldfrapp, Serj Tankian and other artists to the Coachella bill, the festival seems to be in a position to gain back some of its "prestige" lost due to the first (main) lineup announcement. And, as a matter of fact, my previous estimation (see the "Rock Lineup Rundown" article in the March newsletter) might have been a bit too forward and, god forbid, a bit ignorant-sounding and harsh. Certainly, with the lineup size for 2008, it's impossible to predict how spectacular, annoying, decent or horrible Coachella might be-- it could end up featuring magnificent sets by all and turn out to be the best one yet.

The main point was and is that Jack Johnson, Portishead, and Roger Waters as the headliner trifecta and sequences like Dwight Yoakam after M.I.A., Fatboy Slim after Kim Deal of the Pixies' The Breeders and Kraftwerk after Death Cab For Cutie don't feel as cohesive as did Radiohead after Deal's Pixies (in 2004), Rage Against the Machine after Manu Chao (last year), Depeche Mode after Franz Ferdinand (in 2006) or the Arctic Monkeys after Jarvis Cocker of Pulp (last year)-- an Anglophile's wet dream. It should be said that the stage settings for all performances are "TBD" as of this writing, and I'm just assuming the worst in terms of timing and location (i.e. everybody ends up in a horrible never-ending clog on the main stage). So if everything runs as smoothly as possible and you aren't forced to sit through a bunch of sets you don't want to hear, please don't take what you've read here out of its cynical context.
Anyway, though it's always a good idea to open people up to new sounds, and there are some good potential two-hour-odd sequences to be found, such as Hot Chip before M.I.A. and space rockers Spiritualized coming on before My Morning Jacket, in my view-- which really might simply be a tad more "empirically" informed than everyone else's-- the higher echelon performers aren't likely to throw a one-two (let alone three-, four- and five) punch to beat what's been experienced by festivalgoers during late April evenings past. It's a continuous flood of good sets-- good sets in the minds of a static audience-- that really distinguishes a good festival from a good show, and that doesn't look quite as likely in 2008 as before.

Something else that might be disenchanting is that there's no Madonna being put in the dance tent this year-- i.e., the performers already mentioned are about as blockbuster as it's going to get this year. Sure, the amount of #1, million-album sellers you can tack onto a lineup doesn't translate to a great event, but it does tell you what may be in store-- what kind of traction organizers have or what investments (time, money, sanity) they're willing to make in setting things up. Indeed, Jack Johnson definitely represents at least one step toward solving the type of conflict I've suggested, but I think it's safe to say that he'll probably go down as being a bit like Melanie at Woodstock-- take from that comparison what you will. Meanwhile, Dark Side of the Moon might qualify as a blockbuster album, but performed in its entirety, it seems like a bit of a novelty, 35 years since its release; Roger Waters should at least go through some more of the Pink Floyd catalog (whatever happened to "Welcome To The Machine"?).

The amount of artists on the lineup receiving major critical or popular attention is nothing like last year, when the likes of Lily Allen, Against Me!, Lupe Fiasco and Nickel Creek were posted nearer to the half-way point than the top of the lineup each day, besides the fact of the Chili Peppers, Tool, Interpol, the Arcade Fire, Rage Against the Machine and Willie Nelson being at the top. 2008 might just be a harder year than usual for Goldenvoice, but with All Points West in the picture, it's hard to keep a little frustration from simmering. Nevertheless, in defending my objectivity in focusing on big names, I defy anyone who's reading this to come up with at least 10 performers from this year's lineup whom they have on simultaneous daily (or weekly, if you're "casual") rotation on their iPod.

As far as the overall thematic arc of the proceedings and programming, not much has changed-- mainly alternative [meaning punk (Gogol Bordello, Flogging Molly, Turbonegro), shoegaze (The Verve, Autolux), post-rock (Battles), and the "indie" umbrella (Annuals, Minus the Bear, Stephen Malkmus & the Jicks, Rilo Kiley), etc.] followed by heavy doses of electronica (Pendulum, Modeselektor, Junkie XL) and dashes of folk (Kate Nash, Teagan and Sara, Brett Dennen), psychedelic (My Morning Jacket, Akron/Family and Mr. Waters, of course) and hip-hop (Spank Rock, The Cool Kids). The fans are to flock, amongst the same sort of odd installation art and sculptures, to and from a sea of tents of various sizes spread out across a flat grassy expanse that doubles as a polo field.

On the part of accomodations and amenities, things couldn't be better. There's a deluxe "Tent Hotel" that features actual bedrooms (w/AC), a comp'd breakfast buffet and deluxe showers and restrooms for those willing to shell out, starting at $700 per person for 2; you can even pay extra for a massage therapist. For the stingy masses, the return of a water bottle recycling program (turn in 10 empty bottles and get a full one free), more registration areas, more showers and toilets and a camping supply store to ensure more efficiency and well-being outside the concert area than ever before. Finally, lest we forget, the plot of living space for three days for the thousands who take the "regular" camping option has been upgraded to 8 ft. x 8 ft.

It's not as if the festival doesn't have big numbers-- there are, with the new announcement, over 120 artists set to play. And if you're one of those fans who belongs to the festival website's own "micrommunity," you've no doubt found ways to get excited. You've probably started threads on the addition of a single band; at least that's the kind of behavior I've been seeing on the message boards. There are several threads (with three running over three pages) devoted to the addition of Aphex Twin, an "official" MGMT thread (boasting 272 posts at last check), and multiple threads each devoted to the headliners as well as Kraftwerk, Serj Tankian, Stephen Malkmus, Vampire Weekend (who really should play higher in the lineup due to their recent exposure), Justice, and the Streets.

All this suggests that supply and demand are much better matched than what one would first deduce. While some of the people who start these threads joined the online community in January and February of '08, and thus come off as obsessives responding to the news of their band's addition on a fan club site, others who have been around since Jan. '07 seem to support the lineup, gushing over the additions of Aphex Twin, Erol Alkan, My Morning Jacket, Vampire Weekend, Kate Nash, etc.-- I really could go on forever listing cases of the support of (relative) festival veterans in regards to the 2008 program.

In fact, the extent to which this is true is kind of amazing. By far the most convincing piece of evidence that the festival won't lose its market share is the very first post in the archives of the "Line Up/Artist" section of the boards, dated Nov. 25 2006: "I hope Portishead is in the lineup this year." The opinion was seconded on a weekly basis 'til the end of the thread in late January. Last year. So perhaps I was fairly wrong in my first assessment.

On the other hand, some of the board trolls also share similar opinions to the ones I've elaborated upon earlier-- "The official I want Roger Waters to do 'Wish You Were Here' thread" and "Probably the most disappointing lineup possible!" are the two specific titles that caught my eye.

So, I suppose we're right back where we started-- we won't know whether my first guess was gloriously wrong or horrendously right until everyone clears out on the early morn' of the 28th.


-- Ross Moody

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

2008 rock lineup rundown

By Ross Moody

Lollapalooza is still holding out, as are some of the late season events like Austin City Limits and Vegoose, but by now most of the big-time rock events have named their 2008 rosters. That includes two of the three big new festivals, All Points West and Rothbury, while Outside Lands has named its headliners but not a full lineup.

So this gives us a chance to take a run through most of the big festivals, looking at lineup highlights and getting a hit on which are likely to be the hottest tickets of the season. Well, which will be the hottest in addition to Bonnaroo, which just keeps getting better and sets the standard for all the rest.

But we'll get to that. Let's tackle this chronologically, starting with the just concluded Langerado, which is sort of the season opener. While Langerado started five years ago as a decently sized jam-centric event more along the lines of snoeDown or 10,000 Lakes, it now pulls artists like the Beastie Boys, 311 and of Montreal and features more than 60 performers (about 20 more than last year). This year, Langerado relocated from Miami to an Indian reservation in the Everglades, and while the initial run was not without some problems, the new site gives the festival a base for continuing its climb toward the top ranks of festivals.

Later in March comes the Ultra Music Festival, which definitely hasn’t lost its step, though last year’s visitation by The Cure decidedly proved not to be a harbinger of future lineups. The Bravery are the only sure stylistic outlier in 2008, though this will probably be lost on the roughly 70,000 people who are expected to come to see Tiesto, The Crystal Method, Underworld, Paul Van Dyk, Junkie XL and more than 80 other performers that make this a veritable American one-stop for dance and electronica.

Next isCoachella in late April, which sadly does not measure up to last year. First of all, there’s no big reunion along the lines of Jane’s Addiction (in 2001) or Rage Against the Machine (last year). My Bloody Valentine will not reunite at Coachella this year, as had been rumored. Second, it’s safe to say the average Coachella fan has probably heard Dark Side of the Moon enough to last five lifetimes, so Pink Floyd’s Roger Waters might be hurting things more than helping them by performing the album in entirety. Nor do the other two headliners, Portishead and Jack Johnson, deliver a got-to-be-there urgency. Perhaps Coachella’s relative weakness can be partly explained by the organizer Goldenvoice's focus on its new project, All Points West (see the dish on that below), but it still has to rank as the disappointment of the year, compared to many others on this list.

In May we have the 7th edition of Sasquatch, Washington state rock fest now owned by Live Nation that has done pretty well for itself. Located at The Gorge, which has been voted by Pollstar Magazine as the best outdoor music venue nine times over, the festival’s lineup increases by more than 15 artists. They also managed to get M.I.A., who pulled out at the last minute in 2007, so that shows some reverence-- either on the singer’s part or that of producers-- which bodes well for the future. With headlinders R.E.M., The Cure, and The Flaming Lips, I'll give it an A- as things stand now.

In June comes Bonnaroo-- “finally” because it really is the festival to look forward to this year. Four days of camping in the middle of Tennessee might sound a bit dull and/or exhausting, but this is the necessary span of time needed to guarantee that you’ll get sick of being entertained by the end. First, there’s the 71-artist musical lineup, which is insanely strong. There’s no one selection this year as adventurous as Ornette Coleman, but Sigur Rós and Lupe Fiasco, Metallica and Jack Johnson and other quite eclectic pairs can be found in this year’s lineup, and we’re concerned with the best rock festivals right now, anyway.

That said, what makes Bonnaroo the champ this year is how it manages to put so many big rockers (Metallica, Pearl Jam, My Morning Jacket, The Allman Brothers Band, to name a few) with the so many big names of another ilk (B.B. King, Bela Fleck, Kanye West, Solomon Burke). The point: it’s more likely at Bonnaroo than any place else this year that you won’t just be overjoyed by seeing your favorite bands, but you’ll probably have five or 10 new favorites that you’d have never thought to check out before as well.

In addition, there’s a comedy component that seems to grow every day, and it’s full of people you actually know-- Chris Rock, Lewis Black, David Cross, Janeane Garofalo-- rather than just a collection of random faces whose maximum exposure amounts to a Comedy Central special. Thus, while we won’t really know which is the best until summer’s over, Bonnaroo looks the best on paper.

Perhaps the most interesting and risky new festival isRothbury. Set for early July, the festival frankly deserves more attention this year than either of the other two big new ones, All Points West and Outside Lands, partly for the fact that actually seems sincere about sustainability. The festival includes its own think tank for environmental change, in addition to a system that will offset its carbon footprint and install solar panels for local schools. The program is anchored by a panel of four environmental scientists. The surprisingly robust musical lineup (more than 60 acts, including artists like Dave Matthews Band, John Mayer, and Snoop Dog) is more than respectable, so all in all, it looks like Rothbury could be the pick of the new festivals this year.

August brings a succession of big events in major cities-- Lollapalooza, All Points West, Virgin Baltimore and Outside Lands. As noted, Lolla and Virgin are so far mum on their lineups. For the two new eventsm, the jury is still out. Granted, both of them can boast two of the world’s most popular bands-- Radiohead and Jack Johnson (and Tom Petty as well for Outside Lands)-- as headliners, but the rest of the lineup for APW is fairly unremarkable. (OL has yet to announce beyond its three headliners.) It leaves me to wonder if Goldenvoice would have done better adding some its to top APW names to the underpowered headliner list at Coachella, and ended up with one powerhouse festival instead of two with question marks.

So, there you have it so far. It may be too early to reach definitive conclusions, but the look of the year going in is that Bonnaroo has the mojo, Coachella is dim by comparison, and the pick of the new fests might well be darkhorse Rothbury in Michigan.

Part 4: Festival Economics

By Dan Ruby

So as we head towards high festival season, we can already mark down 2008 as a year of frenetic festival launches. Whether it also pans out as a year of boffo festival attendance remains to be seen.

The launch activity certainly suggests that major producers think the market remains ripe for development. And there are reasons that the festival business might continue to do well this year despite an economic downturn.

Even with rising ticket and travel costs, festival attendance remains an affordable luxury when bigger ticket items are being trimmed. The fundamental draw of festivals--participating in a live community event--will continue to attract festival patrons seeking opportunities to have a memorable live experience.

My best guess is that total festival attendance will match the industry performance in recent years, but that there won't be the big growth spurt that the production companies seem to be expecting.

Most attendees will substitute attendance at one festival to take a chance on one of the new ones, although some will gladly add one or more new ones to their schedule.

We're still waiting for news about Mile High and possibly others for 2008. The bigger question is how the industry will fair this year and how that could affect each of the new events in 2009 and beyond.
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4