Monthly Archives: August 2008

New Music/CD Releases (September 2, 2008)

September 2nd
Amie Mieriello – I Come Around
Apollo Sunshine – Shall Noise Upon
Brian Wilson – That Lucky Old Sun
Brad Paisley – Play
The Chemical Brothers – Brotherhood
Chris Tomlin – Hello Love
Deitrick Haddon – Revealed
Donnie Klang – Just A Rolling Stone
Extreme Brutal Terror – Voice Of Demon
Giant Sand – provisions
Hollywood Undead – Swan Songs
Jefferson Airplane – At The Family Dog Ballroom
Jefferson Starship – Jefferson’s Tree of Liberty
New Kids on the Block – The Block
Nick Lowe – Best of Nick Lowe
Olivia Newton – John & Friends Celebration in Song
Rodney Crowell – Sex and Gasoline
Sonya Kitchell – This Storm
Terrence Howard – Shine Through It
Tha Pumpsta – Bass Black Treble White
Underoath – Lost in the Sound of Separation
Young Jeezy – The Recession

DVD
Norah Jones – Live In Austin

and remember, whenever possible buy your music directly from the artist(s) or your local independent record store. both could become endangered without your support.


click here for a list of exclusives available @ indie stores and for a list of stores

michael jackson @ 50

it’s hard to believe that michael jackson, little michael, the amazing front man of the jackson five, later to become one of the biggest stars in the history of music is hitting the big 5-0! little, afro’ed, spin dancing, moonwalking michael…fifty?

he is one of the very few that can be named in breath of the greatest names in pop music, the circle of; sinatra, elvis and the beatles. he had an amazing career, then he seemingly lost control of himself, his career, his life and apparently, his mind.

i saw him perform live twice, once “solo” durng the “thriller” tour (i took my neice to the old atlanta stadium, sold out 50k+) and years later @ a “jackson’s reunion tour” (i was given seats in ted turner’s box @ the omni in atlanta). and while michael’s or the jackson’s music was never my style, these were two truly amazing and entertaining nights. he definitely knew how to put on a show and entertain a crowd, a big crowd.

to me, while nothing excuses his recent behavior and/or many of the actions and/or accusations made against him in recent years, his is truly a tragic story. and while i don’t feel sorry for him, i do feel sad for him.

As he turns 50, is this what Michael Jackson should really look like?

By J Randy Taraborrelli

A middle-aged man wearing pyjamas is being pushed in a wheelchair down a sidewalk by an assistant. He is gaunt and frail-looking. His skin seems to be peeling. His fingernails are a sickening shade of yellow-brown.

Beneath a red Marines baseball cap a surgical mask is visible, covering the bottom half of his face. A pair of large sunglasses shield the top.

Three children walk ahead – two boys and a girl. All seem happy and look adorable in colourful clothing. Their baseball caps do not seem a deliberate attempt to shield their faces.

What could have been: An experts’ image of Jackson (left) and how he looks today after surgery (right)

‘Slow down,’ the man commands in a hoarse whisper, but the children ignore him and quickly cross the street to stand in front of a bookshop.

When the man in the wheelchair finally catches up, one of the children dutifully holds the door open as he is wheeled inside.

‘Thank you,’ he mutters weakly. All seems calm, but then – just as the children are about to follow the man into the shop – a stranger approaches the smallest of them.

‘Was that…?’ she begins to ask. The boy is about to answer, when a large man steps between them.

‘No. That was not,’ he says, taking the boy by the hand and rushing him inside. But, just before the door swings closed, the young boy turns to his inquisitor, smiles broadly and mouths just two words: Michael Jackson.

Gaunt: The one-time King of Pop, here in Las Vegas last night at a Planet Hollywood party, cuts a frail figure these days

Welcome to the very sad world of Wacko Jacko. The scene I’ve just described is typical of what goes on in his life almost every day in Las Vegas, Nevada, where he now resides.

As a journalist who has reported more on Jackson in the past 30 years than anyone else – including having written three best-selling books about him – I can’t help but be deeply saddened by the way his life has turned out.

After all, I was the journalist who penned an article entitled ‘Michael Jackson Turns 16’ back in 1974 when his future looked bright.

I also wrote Michael Jackson Turns 21 when he reached that milestone. And then there was Michael Turns 25. ‘He’s the kid who has it all,’ I wrote at the time.

In fact, I covered all the important birthdays, always with optimism because he was one of the most positive entertainers I’d ever known.

From the time he was a teenager, Michael Jackson believed he would sell more records than anyone else – and, of course, he did.

He also knew he would have the biggest-grossing concert tours in history. But all of that is now in the past.

Today, he spends his time wandering around Las Vegas with a gaggle of bodyguards and his three precocious children, Prince Michael I (11), Paris (ten) and Prince Michael II (six).

He is almost always in a wheelchair, wearing a bizarre outfit and so frail he appears to be at death’s door.

Meanwhile, his record-breaking career seems a thing of the past. From all accounts, he is not motivated to do anything. He has no real plans for the future and is deeply in debt.

So, with the passing of his 50th birthday, how did it all come to this?

Those who knew Jackson before the 2005 child-molestation trial – in which he was acquitted – place the blame firmly at its door.

Emotionally devastated, he has been unable to bounce back, suffering almost as much as if the verdict had been a guilty one.

I remember the day of his acquittal. I sat behind Michael in the Santa Monica courtroom – as I had every day for months – and listened as each charge was dismissed.

Michael Jackson

King of pop: Jackson during his HIStory tour in the 1990s. He has now lost his desire to perform.

When he stood up to leave, he didn’t seem to know what was going on or even that he had been found not guilty.

He was a shell of the person I had known over the years. He was disoriented – his eyes vacant, his face expressionless – the result of obvious drug abuse.

I knew then that he would never be the same. The testimony had been so damning, I was certain that a man as private as Jackson would never recover.

After all, Michael Jackson had been carefully constructing an image for himself since the age of ten – a time when most kids are building tree houses.

He later fancied himself as a new-age Peter Pan and tried to recapture his lost childhood in any way he could – not least through his famous Neverland ranch with all of its amusement park rides, zoo and its bucolic grounds bustling with happy children.

Looking back, Neverland – which he bought in 1988 – was the worst thing ever to happen to Michael Jackson.

It allowed him too much solitude and gave him the chance to isolate himself from his friends and family, and from common sense.

He surrounded himself with children, animals and a false reality – so much so that he never learned how to cope in the real world. He never wanted to grow up, and his managers encouraged these eccentricities when they should have encouraged therapy.

They allowed him to live an excessive life and spend money like there was no tomorrow.

Michael Jackson

Thriller: The album remains the biggest-selling of all time

Alone in his madness, he became gradually weirder, and no one seemed to care.

During the Eighties, when he started to experiment with plastic surgery – an obvious cry for help – there was nobody to slow him down and not even his family seemed to help him.

But by then, it was almost impossible to get through to Michael in his increasingly isolated state.

Then in the early Nineties, Jackson’s world was shattered when Jordan Chandler accused him of molestation at Neverland Ranch.

Jackson agreed a $20million pay-off with the Chandler family and the police charges were dropped due to lack of evidence. Jackson’s image, however, had been shaken.

Almost exactly ten years later, the star was accused by another boy, Gavin Arvizo, of the same offence – only this time the case went to trial.

There was lurid testimony of inappropriate sleep-overs with children and tales of plying them with wine and making sexual advances toward them.

One whole week was devoted to the pornography found at Neverland. It didn’t matter that Jackson was found not guilty. He was ruined – not just his reputation, but his self-esteem, too.

‘Anyone who thinks he is just going to bounce back after such public humiliation doesn’t know Michael Jackson,’ his former manager Frank Dileo told me.

In the past, he has relied on his talent. ‘I can always fall back on what God gave me,’ he said in 1987.

‘People can say what they want about me and make all the jokes they want. But they know that when I make records, they’re going to be the best.’

That used to be true – no one made records like him. Thriller, released in 1982, remains the biggest-selling album of all time with 100 million sales, and Jackson still has an audience – if he wants it.

Recently, he had a deal to do 30 concerts at the O2 arena in London. The promoters were prepared to pay him a staggering $1million a show.

Initially, Jackson seemed enthusiastic, but in a subsequent meeting the singer sat staring at his business representatives as if he didn’t care one way or the other.

Then he got up, shook their hands and that was the end of it. The lucrative deal – and Jackson could have really done with the money – was off.

Currently, there is another offer for a series of shows in Las Vegas, but Jackson has not moved forward with that either.

He doesn’t seem to want to work – the fire he once had to be the biggest and best is all but extinguished.

In Jackson’s defence, the standards of excellence he set himself so many years ago are so high that they’re practically impossible for him to meet.

More than ten years ago, he told me: ‘When I go on stage, people expect a lot. They want the dancing, they want the spins, and all. But I don’t know how much longer I can do it. I don’t know when it’ll just not be possible.’

He has arthritic-like trouble with his knees, his ankles and his fingers joints – hence the wheelchair.

The self-confidence of the old Michael Jackson has disappeared, and with it his drive.

In addition, Jackson believes that the masses of fans who once flocked to his concerts won’t be there for him today. He fears they have been turned against him by the trial.

At a recent meeting with a promoter in Las Vegas, he expressed amazement at the success of the recent re-release of Thriller.

‘I’m really shocked,’ he said. ‘I can’t believe people actually bought it. I heard it sold more than three million copies. Can you believe it?’

To commemorate his 50th birthday, a CD called King Of Pop is being released worldwide.

It is a compilation of Jackson’s best 18 songs, as chosen by British fans via the internet.

Jackson was recently guest vocalist on a song called Hold My Hand by U.S. recording artist Akon.

He sounds great and it suggests that his voice is still there. But touring still seems out of the question.

Despite being in financial dire straits, he is thought to have bought a house in the upper-middle class suburb of Poughkeepsie, New York, for $1million.

When asked about it, Jackson replied enigmatically: ‘I think someone in my organisation bought that for me. I don’t know – sounds nice, though. I’ll bet the kids would love it.’

And what of Neverland Ranch? Abandoned by Jackson, who was in default on the $25million loan, it had been scheduled for foreclosure, but at the last minute was purchased by an investment group called Colony Capital LLC.

‘Neverland? Why, I don’t know anything at all about Neverland,’ Jackson said recently. ‘That’s someone else’s problem now, I think. But I’m not sure.’

So what for the future? Jackson is due to reunite with his brothers on September 4 when the family act is honoured by BMI publishing company in Beverly Hills, but on his 30th birthday in 1988, he told me that he could never envisage working with his family again after the Victory tour of 1984.

‘I don’t live in the past,’ he said. ‘I think everyone should move on from the Jackson Five, I really do.’

Jackson has talked to only one or two family members since the trial ended. He hasn’t talked to his sister, Janet, in at least three years. He rarely speaks to his mum. Never his father.

As for money, he has got The Beatles’ back-catalogue, of course. But in reality it’s all on paper and is viewed as money put aside for his children.

In truth, if Jackson could easily get his hands on it, he would probably spend it all. For Jackson, it seems, his children are the only source of hope and – by all accounts – he’s at his best when being a dad.

Paris and Prince Michael I were born to Jackson’s second wife, 49-year-old Debbie Rowe – the products of artificial insemination (Rowe will not say whether Jackson’s sperm was used, or someone else’s).

Both are stunning looking with high cheekbones and deep-set features.

‘I turned out two pretty good-looking kids,’ Rowe says of them.

When Rowe couldn’t bear another child, Jackson became distraught. ‘He was upset about that,’ she now says. ‘He couldn’t understand it.’

Jackson went elsewhere for a third baby and the identity of Prince Michael II’s mother remains a secret to this day.

Michael sees a lot of his youthful self in his children, especially in Prince Michael II (nicknamed Blanket).

All three have musical ability but he thinks Blanket is going to be the next star in the family.

It’s what he hangs on to, the chance that he’ll be able to relive the glory days through one of his children.

But for a man who is so obsessed with youth, so intent on remaining a child, many fear his birthday will be a day of reckoning for Michael Jackson. He has no plans to celebrate, other than in some small, private way with his children.

And this time there’ll be no big interview with me – or anyone – to commemorate the occasion.

He has even begun to regret having plastic surgery and spends much of his time staring at his reflection in the mirror.

‘I don’t know what I was thinking back then,’ he recently said. ‘Everyone makes mistakes when they’re young, I guess. But I still look OK, don’t I? I mean, for 40?’

When reminded that, in fact, he was about to turn 50, Jackson gave a sad, half smile.

‘It all went by so fast, didn’t it? I wish I could do it all over again, I really do.’

But for Michael Jackson, it seems, the time for a comeback has passed. ‘I’m tired,’ he said last week. ‘I’ve got nothing left to give. I just want to be left alone. Is that so bad?’

© J. Randy Taraborrelli, 2008

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Rachael Yamagata-Sneak peek of “ELEPHANTS” from her new CD

i saw rachael open for ryan adams a few years ago and was blown away by her performance and have been a big fan of her’s since. i’m really looking forward to this.

enjoy the sneak peek…


LISTEN TO THE SONG “ELEPHANTS” FROM ELEPHANTS

ELEPHANTS – TRACK LISTING
1) Elephants
2) What If I Leave
3) Little Life
4) Sunday Afternoon
5) Elephants Instrumental
6) Duet
7) Over and Over
8 ) Brown Eyes
9) Horizon


LISTEN TO THE SONG “SIDEDISH FRIEND” FROM TEETH SINKING INTO HEART

TEETH SINKING INTO HEART – TRACK LISTING
1) Sidedish Friend
2) Accident
3) Faster
4) Pause The Tragic Ending
5) Don’t

A RECORD IN TWO PARTS: ELEPHANTS…TEETH SINKING INTO HEART
IN STORES OCTOBER 7, 2008

Three years after she began to appear on the public’s radar with her self-titled debut EP and full-length album Happenstance, Rachael Yamagata will release A Record in Two Parts: Elephants…Teeth Sinking Into Heart through Warner Bros. Records on October 7, 2008.

“I didn’t set out to make a two part album,” Yamagata says. “We just followed the songs’ lyrical lead and built them up with textures and sounds that served the story. The beautiful ones were darker and worked with lush arrangements. We used the sounds of rain, tree branches falling on the roof — whatever kept the mood true to this haunted studio in the first stormy days of spring. The second part became more anthemic, like a reclaiming of personal power. There’s something raw about it. To me it sounds weathered, but not broken or cynical.”

Taken together, the two halves present a complete timeline of the emotions that revolve around complicated relationships and the accompanying fallout. “Elephants is much more intimate,” Yamagata says. “It’s about being willing to take a risk even if it’s not going to end up well. Teeth is like rediscovering your backbone after you’ve gone through the loss.

RACHAEL YAMAGATA ON TOUR
September 20 – Asbury Park, NJ – The Wonder Bar
September 21 – Pittsburgh, PA – Diesel
September 22 – Washington DC – Birchmere
September 24 – Philadelphia – Johnny Brenda’s
September 25 – New York, NY – Joe’s Pub (two shows that night) – SOLD OUT
September 29 – Boston, MA – Café 939 @ Berklee College of Music
October 1 – Chicago, IL – Lakeshore
October 2 – Minneapolis, MN – Fine Line
October 4 – Seattle, WA – Chop Suey
October 5 – Portland, OR – Wonder Ballroom
October 6 – San Francisco, CA – Café Du Nord
October 7 – Los Angeles, CA – Largo at the Coronet

For more info, updated tour dates and more music, please visit:
www.rachaelyamagata.com
www.myspace.com/rachaelyamagata

watch an album preview @ rachael yamagata – preview

New Music/CD Releases (August 26th, 2008)

August 26th, 2008
BB King – One Kind Favor
Backyard Tire Fire – Places We Lived
Blues Traveler North – Hollywood Shootout
Cordero De – Donde Eres
David Nail – I’m About To Come Alive
DecembeRadio – Satisfied
Delta Spirit – Ode To Sunshine
Dragonforce – Ultra Beatdown
Earshot – The Silver Lining
The Game – L.A.X.
Golden Animals _ free Your Mind Win A Pony
JJ Grey & Mofro Orange Blossoms
Jimmy Wayne – Do You Believe Me Now
Little Feat – Join The Band
Lil’ Ed/Blues Imperials – Full Tilt
Matthew Sweet – Sunshine Lies
Missy Elliott – Block Party
Motorhead – Motorizer
Slipknot – All Hope Is Gone
Solange Knowles – Sol-Angel and the Hadley Street Dreams
Valencia – We All Need A Reason To Believe
The Veronicas – Hook Me Up
The Verve – Forth

DVD
Poison – Live
Fantomas/Melvins – Live in London

and remember, whenever possible buy your music directly from the artist(s) or your local independent record store. both could become endangered without your support.

Paste Magazine: 22 up-and-coming artists you ignore at your own peril!

many congrats to louisville local ben sollee for being featured in the latest issue of paste magazine as one of the top 22 emerging artists. i’ve taken the time to listen to quite a few of these artists and based on what i’ve heard so far there are some really good suggestions there, it seems like a list well worth taking some time to check out…


22 up-and-coming artists you ignore at your own peril!
By Paste Staff

Ben Sollee
Hometown: Louisville, Ky. (via Lexington, Ky.)
Album: Learning to Bend
Why He’s Worth Watching: As one-fourth of Abigail Washburn’s Sparrow Quartet, Sollee applies his classical cello training to the freshly broken ground of Chinese- and folk-tinged bluegrass. On his debut solo LP, he wields his instrument in slightly more familiar singer/songwriter territory, but to no less delightful an end. Whether gently fingerpicked or dramatically sawed, Solee’s deft stringwork adds an uncommon dimension to his songs about life and love.
For Fans Of: Andrew Bird, Otis Taylor, Jamie Cullum
Acceptance Speech: “There are tales of a young man from the hills of Kentucky who built himself a monastery of red clay, and who speaks through a wooden box. They call him ‘Kentucky Buddha.’ He seeks expression through music and finds wealth in giving. One of his aides is Paste magazine, who he thanks for their warm support of his expressions.”

Wild Sweet Orange
Hometown: Birmingham, Ala.
Album: We Have Cause to Be Uneasy
Why They’re Worth Watching: Songs about feeling restless, desperate, nervous and scared rarely go down so easy. This is movie-soundtrack indie pop, made of smartly emotive lyrics and mellow melodies, and sprinkled with tasteful bouts of rock. Finally, something to be excited about for those who haven’t recovered from the Jump, Little Children breakup.
For Fans Of: Bright Eyes, Copeland, Coldplay
Acceptance Speech: “Thank you very much, Paste, for pointing out our little rock band. Thank you for letting our name show up in people’s houses and coffee shops. Maybe Wild Sweet Orange could even be lucky enough to have someone actually spill some coffee on this exact page. How amazing would we feel to be that close to someone?”

Mugison
Hometown: Ísafjörður, Iceland
Album: Mugiboogie
Why He’s Worth Watching: Mugison likely embodies the person Led Zeppelin envisioned when writing “Immigrant Song.” One moment, this man from the land of the ice and snow is sounding the hammer of the gods, alternating between an infernal howl (much like Robert Plant’s) and a guttural heavy-metal groan, the next, he’s crooning to twanging guitar over eerie strings. He’s a shape-shifter and a funnyman, and Mugiboogie builds on his four previous genre-transcending works.
For Fans Of: Tom Waits, Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy, Led Zeppelin
Acceptance Speech: “When I was 14 years old, I was voted the best-looking guy in school, but after the ceremony I found out that some of the girls in the school were running a campaign behind my back. The campaign was called ‘Vote the Freak.’ I also found out they did this to piss off the guy who’d won it three years in a row—they had some unfinished business with him. Is this something similar?”

Katie Herzig
Hometown: Nashville (via Fort Collins, Colo.)
Album: Apple Tree
Why She’s Worth Watching: Herzig set herself up for failure when she declared, “If it gets any sweeter than this, I don’t want to know,” on her 2006 LP, Weightless. Her latest, Apple Tree, pushes her now-signature style—brightly textured acoustic pop that’s clever yet sincere, sunny but grounded—to exquisite new heights. It’s Herzig’s most accomplished work to date (and the sweetest—but don’t tell her that).
For Fans Of: Shawn Colvin, The Weepies, Jewel
Acceptance Speech: “Thank you, Paste! I owe it all to the cherry and apple Lara Bars that keep me alive on the road, my MacBook (aka music-making factory/life partner), Oprah, my present and future exes—both real and imaginary—and the letter ‘O.’ Because, without it, there’d be no ‘Oooohs’ to sing.”

The Dodos
Hometown: San Francisco
Album: Visiter
Why They’re Worth Watching: Blending West African Ewe drumming and bluesy, finger-picked guitar into toe-tapping folk-pop, The Dodos mix intricate musical knowledge with a pleasantly familiar twang. The duo’s refreshingly pared-down songs mingle drummer Logan Kroeber’s energetic rhythms with singer/guitarist Meric Long’s genuine vocal emotion—a combination nearly as rare as the band’s moniker would suggest.
For Fans Of: Animal Collective, Akron/Family, Babatunde Olatunji
Acceptance Speech: “What a pleasure to be gracing the yellowed pages of Paste. Although we don’t know who comprises the rest of the list, we’re honored to be a part of what is doubtless a beefy crop of bands. We’re just gonna keep doing what we’ve been doing—touring and making records—and maybe we’ll see you somewhere in between.”

Amy Macdonald
Hometown: Glasgow, Scotland
Album: This Is The Life
Why She’s Worth Watching: This Libertines-by-way-of Kate Nash singer/songwriter makes waves with her booming contralto and propensity for jangly acoustic pop—talents she’s honed since her first gig at age 15. Macdonald’s infectious guitar hooks and sublime harmonies position her at the top of a genre replete with copycats. Her 2007 debut, This Is The Life, went double platinum in the U.K.
For Fans Of: KT Tunstall, Leona Lewis, Aimee Mann
Acceptance Speech: “Thanks to my family for their support and Sarah Erasmus and Pete Wilkinson, my managers—Pete u legend! Thank you, Paste, for your intelligence and astounding good taste in recognizing the music of a Glaswegian girl like me. You obviously know how to let your hair down and have a good time like us Scots!”

Slow Runner
Hometown: Charleston, S.C.
Album: Mermaids
Why They’re Worth Watching: Sonic atmosphere—elegant, corroded and larking all about—is not merely ornamental for these Southern troubadours; it emanates from the deepest recesses of their scrupulously orchestrated compositions. Somewhere on a delicate pivot point between pop balladry and resolute anthemics, Slow Runner is the rare band that can mourn and bewail, then hope and ramble on, all with one hand on the blip-and-bloop button for good measure.
For Fans Of: Grizzly Bear, Clem Snide, John Vanderslice
Acceptance Speech: “How did we end up on this list, you might ask? HGH and camel steroids? Sure, that’s part of it. But hard work, that’s part of it, too. And by hard work, I don’t mean actual work. I mean sitting around thinking about things that are awesome, like unicorns and fireworks and free love. That’s the stuff that fuels great bands. Great bands like SLOW RUNNER.”

White Rabbits
Hometown: New York (via Columbia, Mo.)
Album: Fort Nightly
Why They’re Worth Watching: Two drummers give this six-piece of erstwhile Missourians more frenetic bounce than their namesake, and though they play with the studied synchronicity you’d expect from a band with concert garb that involves sweaters and button-downs, Greg Roberts and Stephen Patterson’s double-team choruses routinely unfold into impassioned, full-band shout-alongs. “He’s not impressed,” they claim on fan favorite “The Plot,” but we are.
For Fans Of: The Walkmen, Cold War Kids, Ted Leo and the Pharmacists
Acceptance Speech: “Although we would love to be here in person, our busy schedule kept us from appearing personally in this information box. Thank you for your award. Here’s to a good 2009.”

Langhorne Slim
Hometown: Langhorne, Pa.
Album: Langhorne Slim
Why He’s Worth Watching: Hold on to your pork-pie hats, y’all—Langhorne Slim’s eponymous second LP swaggers like a jug-band strapped to the back of a rickety jalopy lurching down a muddy country road. The lycanthrope howls of his early songs are unleashed here only sparingly, leaving Slim sounding steady and sure on these new classics, even as he sings, “I felt restless, and I felt soft / Didn’t know anymore who I was ripping off.”
For Fans Of: The Avett Brothers, Josh Ritter, mid-’60s Dylan
Acceptance Speech: “Thank you for including us in your magazine. I’m not sure what you will be writing about, but I hope it is incredibly positive, and that fame, fortune and a possible appearance on Ellen will come as a result. I already liked your magazine and can safely say I like it even more knowing that it likes us. Don’t change, have a good summer and I love you, Mom.”

Liam Finn
Hometown: Auckland, New Zealand
Album: I’ll Be Lightning
Why He’s Worth Watching: The lush musicality of Finn’s debut—on which he plays nearly every instrument himself—feels downright demure compared to his frantic live performances, in which he quite literally throws himself between bass, guitar and drums, conjuring less of Lightning’s sensitive-folkie vibe and more of another feral, bushy-browed percussionist—a certain pink-and-orange Muppet.
For Fans Of: Elliott Smith, Iron & Wine, Ben Folds
Acceptance Speech: “I am mighty honoured to be considered as a Best of What’s Next. If you were to ask me what was to come next, I would answer, ‘Sexual healing all over the ceiling? Step off, step off, don’t you come near ’round here. I ain’t about to be your toy boy, middle-aged woman!’ Maybe it’s the beard?”

Wale
Hometown: Washington, D.C.
Album: The Mixtape About Nothing
Why He’s Worth Watching: This young MC has rapped over Justice (on “W.A.L.E.D.A.N.C.E.”), created a mixtape inspired by Seinfeld (called The Mixtape About Nothing, natch), sold out shows in multiple U.S. cities and signed a production deal with Mark Ronson’s Allido Records. Though he hasn’t yet released a proper LP, his future is already looking bright.
For Fans Of: Kanye West, Rhymefest, Common
Acceptance Speech: “I’d like to thank Allido Records for taking a chance on a knucklehead from DC. I’d also like to thank Con Ed for shutting off my power while I was out of town thus forcing me to write this acceptance speech from my Blackberry rather than my Mac Book Pro. Oh and thanks to PinkBerry for providing me with a cold, tasty sanctuary in this awful July heat in NYC. If they don’t have a PinkBerry in your area yet, I suggest opening a franchise. It’s dairy gold.”

The Everybodyfields
Hometown: Johnson City and Knoxville, Tenn.
Album: Nothing Is Okay
Why They’re Worth Watching: Sam Quinn and Jill Andrews form the core of one of today’s greatest young country bands. Like the South itself, The Everybodyfields deftly straddle old and new, bitter and sweet, desperation and transcendence with an arresting command. And no contrast is more stark—or beautiful—than the two voices: Andrews’ smooth, clear alto and Quinn’s ambling croon.
For Fans Of: Gillian Welch & David Rawlings, Emmylou Harris, The Band
Acceptance Speech: “Hot dog. If you had told me a year ago that living in an irrepressible coma of self-loathing and depression would in turn give an otherwise legitimate publication an inkling that this band would be something to watch—man, I would have been surprised. Hot dog.”

Islands
Hometown: Montreal, Canada
Album: Arm’s Way
Why They’re Worth Watching: Sprung from the loins of hipster-beloved band The Unicorns, Islands cut to the chase, opening for Beck at one of their first shows. Taking near-theatrical turns, the band’s sprawling indie pop skips from genre to genre, trying on arena rock and neo-psychedelia while following ringleader Nick Thorburn’s whims.
For Fans Of: The Flaming Lips, Of Montreal, The Apples in Stereo
Acceptance Speech: “On behalf of Nick and his messy men, I (the boil on his forehead) would like to acknowledge the aforementioned acknowledgment of Paste magazine bestowed upon a gracefully willful and potently potential ensemble. I’ll be lanced and long forgotten, but Islands is forever, and getting better.”

Dent May & His Magnificent Ukulele
Hometown: Taylor, Miss.
Album: Meet Me In The Garden 7-inch EP
Why He’s Worth Watching: Magnificent or not, this combination could easily prove more gimmicky than the sum of its parts, but somehow the strange brew works. Part backwoods lounge singer, part town troubadour and part spurned John Hughes nerd, Dent May is joined at just the right times by a hand-clapping, “ooh wah wah”-ing band and a dose of synthesizer that’d wilt Tiny Tim’s tulips. After two EPs, a proper full-length is in the works.
For Fans Of: Jens Lekman, Beirut, Caetano Veloso 

Acceptance Speech: “Thanks, Paste magazine, for including me in your list of the 25 Hottest Ukulele Hunks of the New Millenium. Finally, the hundreds, nay, thousands of hours I poured into my craft as a young lad have paid off. And to the ladies along the way who opted instead for the muscled rockers with bad goatees, look at me now!”

Johnny Flynn
Hometown: London
Album: A Larum
Why He’s Worth Watching: At 25, Johnny Flynn is already contemplating the benefits of death, but when he sings, “Pray for the people inside your head / They won’t be there when you’re dead” on “Tickle Me Pink,” there’s a bit of disappointment mixed with his relief. His debut A Larum—with its spry guitar, healthy sighs of accordion and fiddle, and rollicking drumlines—would be a lovely way to shuffle off this mortal coil, but here’s hoping he lingers for a while.
For Fans Of: Fionn Regan, John Fahey, The Chieftains
Acceptance Speech: “Well, thank you for this honorable mention, Mr. Paste. It’s been quite a year and this has really capped it off, or, as we say here in Britain, ‘Put the turkey on the Christmas table.’ And what a turkey. What a Christmas table. You might think the two are synonymous, but without a turkey, a Christmas table is nothing. You have given me that turkey.”

Right Away, Great Captain!
Hometown: Atlanta
Album: The Eventually Home
Why They’re Worth Watching: Drawing lyrics from diary entries of a fictitious 17th-century sailor, Manchester Orchestra’s Andy Hull and his collaborators carve themselves a poignant hole between the worlds of music and literature, where the solitude of the sea proves beautiful, haunting and human. Imagine if Hemingway had created The Old Man and the Sea as a three-album musical project set to an acoustic guitar, and you’ll get the idea.
For Fans Of: Page France, The Mountain Goats, The Weakerthans
Acceptance Speech: “I guess I can’t say I was ‘surprised’ when I got the news—after several chart-topping hits and selling thousands of records in Manchester Orchestra, I figured it was just a matter of time before this project skyrocketed straight to the top as well. But, sincerely—thank you, Paste, for all you do for me and my friends.”

Brooke Waggoner
Hometown: Nashville
Album: Fresh Pair of Eyes EP
Why She’s Worth Watching: In a music world overpopulated with acoustic guitars, warbling voices and tinkling piano keys, Brooke Waggoner and her cache of mesmerizing tunes stand out. With her serenely sweet voice, she plays the piano like a Little Richard/Rachmaninov hybrid and can arrange the bejesus out of a seemingly simple melody. We dare you to think of her as just another girl with a piano.
For Fans Of: Regina Spektor, Tender Forever, Ben Folds
Acceptance Speech: “They’re in my sleep. My dreams. My midnights. My mornings and afternoons. My weekends. My errands. Songs. They’re now in the world and no longer contained in the privacy of my living room. I feel a sense of responsibility with that. Don’t wanna waste people’s time. What used to be written strictly for me is now meant for others and that’s not a cop out. I’m grateful for your attention and time.”

Alela Diane
Hometown: Portland, Ore. (via Nevada City, Calif.)
Album: Pirate’s Gospel
Why She’s Worth Watching: Two years ago, 23-year-old Alela Diane Menig and her debut album of simple, aching tunes slipped nearly unnoticed from the dusty bowels of Nevada City. Though often compared to Devendra Banhart, the freakiest part of Menig’s folk is how it emerged so fully-formed, as startling as a sudden glint of gold in a miner’s sieve. A rumored late-2008 follow-up should showcase the further ripening of this beautiful old soul.
For Fans Of: Cat Power, Nick Drake, Karen Dalton
Acceptance Speech: “I kindly thank you folks for thinking I am promising and all, but how did you find me? I have been hiding out in the cool waters of the emerald river, tucked away in the pines, far away from the lands where magazines are written. You must have a little spy that rides a trout or something!”

Los Campesinos!
Hometown: Cardiff, Wales
Album: Hold On Now, Youngster…
Why They’re Worth Watching: The seven lads and lasses of this enthusiastically punctuated twee-punk outfit bounce with giddy abandon from xylophone-tinkled confessionals to sugar-rushed choruses about coffee breath, the Dewey Decimal system and translating goosebumps into Braille—all in brilliant defiance of their debut LP’s titular admonishment.
For Fans Of: Belle & Sebastian, The Go! Team, Broken Social Scene
Acceptance Speech: “We’re less the next big thing and more like the last old thing. In fact, we are like sooooo 2006 it’s ridiculous. We are much like a pair of well-worn pink cycling shorts; pretty cool to like if you are 11 but just a passing fancy before you move on to more fashionable tastes.”

Black Kids
Hometown: Jacksonville, Fla.
Album: Partie Traumatic
Why They’re Worth Watching: The last rock star to emerge from Jacksonville—Actionville, to those of us who know it well—was a certain gaffe-prone rap-metal frontman with a backwards baseball cap. So, hurrah for Black Kids! They make super-fun dance rock with an endearingly nostalgic edge, they have one of the best-named tracks of 2008 (“I’m Not Gonna Teach Your Boyfriend How To Dance With You”) and, as far as we know, they’re not doing it all for the nookie.
For Fans Of: The Strokes, Hot Hot Heat, Michael Jackson
Acceptance Speech: “Take your pick: arrogant/arrogant or self-deprecating/arrogant. With the most profoundly feigned humility, we five twentysomethings from the lower-middle-class, Jacksonville, Fla., neighborhood of Arlington do accept this distinction most graciously bestowed upon us by Paste magazine (the most prescient, perspicacious, preeminent arts publication around, if our selection is any indication). Thanks!”

Samantha Crain
Hometown: Shawnee, Okla.
Album: The Confiscation EP
Why She’s Worth Watching: In a genre often pinned to formulaic sounds and themes, Samantha Crain is re-stitching the seams of Americana to fit her singular artistic vision. The 21-year-old songwriter—recently signed to tasteful North Carolina label Ramseur, which also houses The Avett Brothers and fellow Best of What’s Next-ers Everybodyfields—paints mystical, poetic slipstreams of words onto a canvas of haunting echo-chamber lap steel, earthy acoustic guitars, and loose-change tambourine, delivering her graceful songs with a gorgeous, quivering voice.
For Fans Of: Joanna Newsom, Andrew Bird, Mary Gauthier
Acceptance Speech: “Thank you! We can hardly conjugate verbs right now. We want to thank all the people at Paste who looked deep within their Magic 8 Balls before giving us this honor and—to all the other bands out there—we just want you to know how super-pumped your jealousy makes us feel right now! Thank you!”

Joshua James
Hometown: Provo, Utah (via Lincoln, Neb.)
Album: The Sun Is Always Brighter
Why He’s Worth Watching: Joshua James matches each of his radio-friendly pop tunes (“Another silly love song could make me sick / About a heartbroke emo rocker and his messed up chick”) with some real gut punchers (“Every time you wake / It haunts you once again / My daddy ain’t comin’ home”), and his raspy-voiced delivery and delicate, pedal steel-laden arrangements complement both extremes.
For Fans Of: Brett Dennen, Ron Sexsmith, Ray LaMontagne
Acceptance Speech: “I would like to thank the Paste Academy of Cultural Significance for this great honor. It is with considerable pride and consternation that I humbly accept this award. To be included with such an accomplished and enlightened group of artists affords me an entirely new appreciation for the expression ‘mutual admiration society.'”

Neil Young Announces Tour w/Wilco, Death Cab Supporting

it’s been reported that tickets will top out in the $175 (+ fees) range for this tour.

neil, love you man… but sheeh, two bills for a guy that once boycotted a rock ‘n roll HOF dinner because he felt the tickets were overpriced?

Neil Young Drafts Wilco, Death Cab For Tour
Jonathan Cohen, N.Y. | August 19, 2008

Neil Young has snared two of alternative rock’s biggest bands to open for his fall North American tour. Death Cab For Cutie will open the first portion, beginning Oct. 14 in Minneapolis, while Wilco jumps aboard Nov. 29 in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

Los Angeles trio Everest will support on all dates.

Young wraps a European tour Saturday (Aug. 23) in Coburg, Germany, and will appear as usual with Willie Nelson, John Mellencamp, Dave Matthews and others Sept. 20 outside Boston for the annual Farm Aid benefit. Yet to be announced are the dates for his annual Bridge School Benefit, traditionally held in late October.

As reported yesterday, Wilco is expected to spend the time before the Young dates to continue work on its seventh album, due next spring.

Death Cab For Cutie finishes an Australian run Friday in Brisbane and starts a short North American headlining run Oct. 3 in Boston.

Here are Neil Young’s fall tour dates:
Oct. 14: St. Paul, Minn. (Xcel Energy Center, w/ Death Cab For Cutie)
Oct. 16: Winnipeg, Manitoba (MTS Centre, w/ Death Cab For Cutie)
Oct. 18: Regina, Saskatchewan (Brandt Centre, w/ Death Cab For Cutie)
Oct. 19: Calgary, Alberta (Pengrowth Saddledome, w/ Death Cab For Cutie)
Oct. 21: Everett, Wash. (Comcast Arena, no opener specified)
Oct. 22: Vancouver (GM Place, w/ Death Cab For Cutie)
Oct. 29: San Diego (Cox Arena, w/ Death Cab For Cutie)
Oct. 30: Los Angeles (Forum, w/ Death Cab For Cutie)
Nov. 1: Reno, Nev. (Events Center, w/ Death Cab For Cutie)
Nov. 4: Kansas City, Mo. (Sprint Center, w/ Death Cab For Cutie)
Nov. 5: Omaha, Neb. (Qwest Center, w/ Death Cab For Cutie)
Nov. 29: Halifax, Nova Scotia (Metro Centre, w/ Wilco)
Dec. 1: Montreal (Bell Centre, w/ Wilco)
Dec. 2: Ottawa, Ontario (Scotia Bank Place, w/ Wilco)
Dec. 4: Toronto (Air Canada Centre, w/ Wilco)
Dec. 7: Auburn Hills, Mich. (Palace of Auburn Hills, w/ Wilco)
Dec. 9: Chicago (Allstate Center, no opener specified)
Dec. 12: Philadelphia (Wachovia Spectrum, w/ Wilco)
Dec. 15: New York (Madison Square Garden, w/ Wilco)

Rosanne Cash Calls Out Country Clown John Rich

good for rosanne! in my opinion, these clowns, “big and rich” (uggh! give me a break) pretty much sum up everything that is wrong with music today in one act. totally talentless hacks big on flash, glitz and “style” while completely lacking any talent or substance. idiots and fools.

and for this idiot and fool to invoke and use the name of johnny cash in this manner is disgusting.

fuck you john rich. and the trained music video horse you rode in on.

Cash To Rich: Use Of Father’s Name Is ‘Appalling’
Ken Tucker, Nashville | August 19, 2008 , 8:30 PM ET

Rosanne Cash is tired of people using her late father’s name to further their own political agenda.

“It is appalling to me that people still want to invoke my father’s name, five years after his death, to ascribe beliefs, ideals, values and loyalties to him that cannot possibly be determined, and to try to further their own agendas by doing so,” Cash said in a statement on her Web site.

The statement was released after country star John Rich invoked the name of Johnny Cash at a recent Florida rally for presidential candidate John McCain. According to media reports, Rich told the crowd, “Somebody’s got to walk the line in the country. They’ve got to walk it unapologetically. And I’m sure Johnny Cash would have been a John McCain supporter if he was still around.”

Rich then sang Johnny Cash’s “I Walk the Line.”

“I knew my father pretty well, at least better than some of those who entitle themselves to his legacy and his supposed ideals,” Rosanne Cash said in the statement, “and even I would not presume to say publicly what I ‘know’ he thought or felt. This is especially dangerous in the case of political affiliation.

“It is unfair and presumptuous to use him to bolster any platform,” she continued. “I would ask that my father not be co-opted in this election for either side, since he is clearly not here to defend or state his own allegiance.”

New Music/CD Releases (August 19th, 2008)

August 19
The Academy Is… – Fast Times At Barrington High
Amy MacDonald – This Is The Life
Black Stone Cherry – Folklore and Superstition
Chris Knight – Heart Of Stone
Crystal Shawanda – Dawn Of A New Day
The Dandy Warhols – Earth To The Dandy Warhols
David Byrne – Big Love: Hymnal
David Byrne & Brian Eno – Everything That Happens Will Happen Today (digital release)
Deitrick Haddon – Revealed
Donavon Frankenreiter – Pass It Around
Donnie Klang – Come Into My World
Evelyn “Champagne” King – Open Book
Family Force 5 – Dance Or Die
Fiery Furnaces – Remember (Live CD)
George Jones – Burn Your Playhouse Down: The Unreleased Duets
Glen Campbell – Meet Glen Campbell
Goo Goo Dolls – Greatest Hits Vol. 2
GZA/Genius – Pro Tools
Hotel Lights – Firecracker People
Human Highway – Moody Motorcycle
Ice Cube – Raw Footage
Jeff Hanson – Madam Owl
Joe Bonamassa – Live From Nowhere In Particular [2 CDs]
John Pizzarelli – With A Song In My Heart
Juliana Hatfield – How To Walk Away
Karina – First Love
Laura Marling – Alas I Cannot Swim
Lykke Li – Youth Novels
Loudon Wainwright III – Recovery
Sandra Boynton – Blue Moo
Shwayze – Shwayze
Staind – The Illusion Of Progress
Stereolab – Chemical Chords
The Stills – Oceans Will Rise
Toadies – No Deliverance
Todd Snider – Peace Queer
Uh Huh Her Common Reaction
The Walkmen – You And Me

and remember, whenever possible buy your music directly from the artist(s) or your local independent record store. both could become endangered without your support.

Over the Rhine announces “Special 20th Anniversary Celebration!” & Christmas tour dates

cincinnati based “over the rhine” has announced their annual christmas tour plans culminating with a two date, 20th anniversary celebration @ the taft theatre in cincinnati. looks like it’s going to be a fun run of shows…

Sat, 2008-11-29 Seattle, WA – Triple Door
Sun, 2008-11-30 Seattle, WA – Triple Door
Mon, 2008-12-01 Portland, OR – Aladdin Theater
Tue, 2008-12-02 Klamath Falls, OR – Ross Ragland Theater – On Sale Now!
Thu, 2008-12-04 San Francisco, CA – The Fillmore
Sat, 2008-12-06 Los Angeles, CA – Troubadour
Fri, 2008-12-12 Louisville, KY – Bomhard Theater – On Sale Now!
Sat, 2008-12-13 Chicago, IL – Double Door
Fri, 2008-12-19 Cincinnati, OH – Taft Theater
Special 20th Anniversary Celebration!
Sat, 2008-12-20 Cincinnati, OH – Taft Theater
Special 20th Anniversary Celebration!
Sun, 2008-12-21 Norwood (Cincinnati), OH – St. Elizabeth’s

obviously, of special note are the first ever west coast christmas tour dates and the two “special 20th anniversary celebration!” dates @ the taft on 12-19 & 20, which should be a very special weekend.

as far as ticket info, only the ross ragland theater and bomhard theater tickets are on sale now and more info will be released in the near future. stay tuned for more info.