Friday, November 13, 2009

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Les Paul will live on



A special edition guitar named "Spirit of America." The guitar is made from 
materials that were removed from the Statue of Liberty during the 1986 
restoration. Photo by bridge used under Creative Commons license. 

With the news that Les Paul died last week at the age of 94, the world of music lost a great musician, futurist innovator and the creator of some of rock and roll’s greatest gear.

Born June 9, 1915, Paul learned several instruments in his youth and played in several country bands in his teens. In the 1930’s he set out with a vision to revolutionize the electric guitar.

He built the first electric guitar pickup in 1934 using spare radio parts. He built his first prototype solid body electric guitar 1941. It was different from the hollow body guitars existing at the time, which vibrated and resonated to produce a tone.

Nicknamed “the log,” Paul’s creation was more like a railroad tie with a guitar neck and strings than it was a guitar. The guitar produced a tone (or signal) from the strings vibrating above a magnetic pickup, and the guitar body did not resonate much at all.

The first Les Paul guitars and similar guitar designs from Leo Fender and Adolph Rickenbacker were produced in the early 1950’s.

Once the design was tweaked and perfected, the Les Paul would become a top choice for guitarists from many genres. Artists continue to use the legendary axe and span multiple decades, including Jimmy Page of Led Zeppelin, Slash of Guns ‘n Roses, Bob Marley, George Harrison, Duane Allman, Chuck Berry, Billie Joe Armstrong of Green Day, Jimi Hendrix, Lindsey Buckingham of Fleetwood Mac, Joe Perry of Aerosmith, Frank Zappa, Randy Rhoads, Johnny Winter and Neil Young, to name a few.

The Les Paul guitar became a staple of famous rock and blues guitarists worldwide, and also a permanent fixture leaning in the corner of the living rooms of amateurs and enthusiasts everywhere.

In the 1940s, Paul built his first recording studio and began to pioneer some techniques that are still used today including microphone techniques, echo delay and multi-tracking. In the early ‘50s he built the first eight-track recorder, which allowed musicians to record sounds from several sources (simultaneously or one at a time) and mix them into a song, altering tone, volume and pan of each separate track. Multi-track recording is still widely used today and without it there would be no Sgt. Pepper’s, Pet Sounds or Dark Side of the Moon. Without Paul’s invention, the direction of the recording industry would be unknown.

His guitar playing was as unique as his guitar designs and Paul continued to play music up to the end of his career, putting out an album in 2008 and winning a Grammy in 2006 for “Les Paul and Friends: American Made World Played.” Throughout his career, Paul explored a few different genres, most notably country and jazz.

Upon learning of his death, many artists and musicians have spoken out to the news media about Les Paul’s influence and impact to the music world. Several bands have paid musical tribute by playing Paul’s tunes at their concerts.

The Les Paul guitar has come a long way from the prototype design, with hundreds of different models available. Gibson created several guitars in 2007 and 2008 such as the Robot Guitar and the Dark Fire that integrated computer systems into the Les Paul design. The advanced versions of the log allow for automatic computerized tuning of the tuning pegs and switching pickups and coils automatically while playing.

Recording systems have grown in complexity, but they are still just advanced versions of what Paul came up with in the 1950s.

So while Paul is now strumming with the likes of Jimi Hendrix and Bob Marley, his ideas continue to be the backbone of a musical tradition that will never die.

Originally published in the Lovell Chronicle.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Phish and a few bad mangoes

A variety of shirts for sale in the lot at the gorge in 2009. 
Angie and I left Thursday for the Gorge Amphitheater in George, Washington. Phish was playing a two-night stand in the middle of nowhere.

From Wyoming we drove west on I-90 through Bozeman and Missoula, stopping for sushi and picking up supplies as we drew closer to our destination. Having never been in the area, we both marveled at the tree covered rocky hillsides that surrounded the highway.

Rolling hills and farmland emerged as we pushed into Washington. We made it to the campground adjacent to the amphitheater and pulled in to a nice, centrally located spot.

We set up our tent and met our neighbors, students from Montana State University in Bozeman, who were excited for the weekend and had never seen Phish live before. I assured them they would have a great time during the concert and while soaking in the friendly atmosphere of the community of Phish fans.

Angie and I walked down to an improvised marketplace where a few vendors were set up alongside the campground path stretching for about a quarter mile. Dreadlocked entrepreneurs were selling everything from T-shirts to burritos and quartz stones to Pepcid AC. We bought some burritos and headed back to camp for the night.

We fell asleep like cats under the stars as a constant stream of cars trickled into the venue through the night. The next morning, we awoke to find ourselves entrenched in a sea of tents and RVs. Bustling activity was going on at 8 a.m. as the sun came out, heating the nylon domes and forcing campers to step outside to stay cool.

After some refreshments, we headed back out to mingle with the crowd and check out the marketplace. The fan-run marketplace had grown like mold overnight. The once laid-back trading center had become a flurry of commerce, with people shouting their wares for sale, pulling coolers out in front of walking crowds to sell cold drinks and a solid wall of display tents for about a half-mile.

A band with four keyboards, a leslie speaker and a drum set was getting ready to play, complete with a gas generator to power amps and equipment. Back at camp we chatted about the songs we wanted to hear the band play.

Ready for Phish.
Coincidentally, we brought mangoes to eat as did our neighbors. We enjoyed the exotic fruit as anticipation for the night’s show grew and show time became closer. The campsite came alive with people yelping and howling as they celebrated and prepared for the evening of music. Everyone was talkative as we made a mile-long trek to the venue, which is situated on the edge of a gorge overlooking the Columbia River.

Walking over the hill into the venue was astounding, and we watched the sun go down until the lights finally went out and Phish took the stage. The band busted out some of their best songs, exploring a gamut of musical textures while improvising over the grooves laid out in their original compositions. Along with a tour of their newest album, Phish threw the crowd a few pleasers, even nailing a great version of the technically challenging Fluffhead, a song they had stopped playing in 2000 and picked back up in 2009.

After the show, we walked like cattle back to our campsite with visions of sugar plumbs still dancing in our heads from the night of music. The next morning, it was nothing but relaxing until the next show. We hung out at the campsite with our neighbors, finding it impossible not to chuckle at the “new jazz” coming from a few campsites over, where a dreadlocked man rocked while blowing unrestricted melodies on a harmonica while an acoustic guitar played in an unrelated key. Every once in a while he would pause to yell obscenities at his friends.

People walked through our camp all day, some talking to themselves, others selling veggie burritos or giving away free hugs. We made a lot of friends just hanging out as people would drop by and talk about the previous night’s show or what they hoped for at the coming performance. With their first Phish experience under their belts, our campsite neighbors from Bozeman said they had a great time and even recognized a few songs.

We were all tired but looking forward to another great night. Eventually, show time rolled around and we headed to the grass hill to hear Phish once again.

We left camp late this time and as we crested the hill, the band began the first notes of another favorite – the Mango Song. We wondered if we had somehow triggered the song to be played with our unique snack choice earlier.

 They continued through an adventurous two sets of music, pulling out many hard rocking songs including an encore of Led Zeppelin’s Good Times, Bad Times. Again, we floated back to camp, thankful for the great experience we had that weekend. Everything went great and I was glad to be a part of the group of people nestled on the remote patch of grass for the weekend.

When our neighbors made it back to camp, they were still dancing to the music when they noticed their tent had been broken into and several valuable items were missing. Angie and I noticed our tent was unzipped, too, but no valuables were inside and nothing was taken.

As one of our neighbors slumped down in a camp chair, rightfully annoyed that her backpack, phone, GPS unit and other items were taken, a sobering mood fell upon our camp. We all enjoyed the free community feel of the concert, but now we were witnesses to the dark side of the community.

The shady characters who don’t have any interest in the music, but rather, are along for the scene or the money surrounding the tour. Though Angie and I left the venue unscathed, I couldn’t help but think what our neighbors were thinking about the group of fans that call themselves Phishheads. I hoped that the sour taste in their mouth wouldn’t over power the fun times they had over the weekend.

What was a quick buck for one thief destroyed the happy mood of the weekend for our group right away. To sum it up the moral seems a little bit obscure, but in a big group there are always a few bad mangoes no matter how good the bunch is. I will try not to let the experience bother me and continue to enjoy the community at concerts like this, but from now on I’ll be more careful and always lock my tent.

Originally published in the Lovell Chronicle, August 2009.

Friday, March 20, 2009

311 Unity Tour 2009



Nick Hexum plays on the 2008 311 tour. / 311.com

311 recently announced a Midwest / West Coast summer tour to follow their spring tour. The spring tour begins April 15 in Tuscon, Ariz., and finishes May 16 in Nashville. The Summer Unity Tour will pick up on June 3 in Bakersfield, Calif., and continue through July 12 with a closing show in Irvine, Calif., for a total of 47 dates in three months. 

The tour will include such venues as Red Rocks in Golden, Colo., The University of Iowa Fieldhouse, The Orange Peel in Asheville, NC, The Austin Music Hall in Austin, Texas and The Saratoga Performing Arts Center, to name a few. 311 will headline with a variety of opening acts including Ziggy Marley, Full Service, Red Jumpsuit Aparatus, Passafire, The Urgency, Blue Island Tribe, The Movement and The 88, with others to be announced. Check out 311.com for details.

Monday, March 9, 2009

No Doubt's Entire Digital Catalog: Free With Online Ticket Purchase

No Doubt, who recently announced a 2009 tour, will be giving away a digital copy of their entire discography to anyone who buys a top price level ticket (priced greater than $42.50) online for most dates on No Doubt's upcoming Summer tour, according to a statement on the band's Wbesite dated March 2, 2009.


"Since the band is heading back to the road, we wanted to find a cool way to get people listening to our music and stoke them with a great deal at the same time.  With this download its easy for fans to get psyched up to hear our music live once again and that rocks," No Doubt guitarist Tom Dumont said.


This download includes more than 80 songs from the band's seven studio albums:


  • The Singles 1992-2003 (2003)
  • Everything In Time (B-Sides, Rarities, Remixes) (2003)
  • Rock Steady (2001)
  • Return Of Saturn (2000)
  • Tragic Kingdom (1995)
  • The Beacon Street Collection (1995)
  • No Doubt (1992)


Also included is "Stand And Deliver" (originally by Adam And The Ants) - No Doubt's newest recording, only available with the download offer.  


The 2009 No Doubt Summer Tour is the first tour since the band co-headlined with Blink 182 in 2004. The Sounds, Janelle Monae and Bedouin Soundclash will open for No Doubt on select dates. 


Tour dates:

May 2, 2009 Atlantic City, NJ

May 3, 2009 East Rutherford, NJ

May 16, 2009 Las Vegas, NV

May 19, 2009 Fresno, CA

May 20, 2009 Bakersfield, CA

May 22, 2009 San Diego, CA

May 23, 2009 Phoenix, AZ

May 25, 2009 Salt Lake City, UT

May 27, 2009 Denver, CO

May 28, 2009 Albuquerque, NM

May 30, 2009 Dallas, TX

May 31, 2009 Houston, TX

Jun 2, 2009 Tampa, FL

Jun 3, 2009 West Palm Beach, FL

Jun 5, 2009 Atlanta, GA

Jun 6, 2009 Charlotte, NC

Jun 8, 2009 Raleigh, NC

Jun 10, 2009 Virginia Beach, VA

Jun 11, 2009 Philadelphia, PA

Jun 13, 2009 Pittsburgh, PA

Jun 14, 2009 Washington, DC

Jun 16, 2009 Toronto, CAN

Jun 17, 2009 Montreal, CAN

Jun 19, 2009 Darien Center, NY

Jun 20, 2009 Boston, MA

Jun 24, 2009 Uncasville, CT

Jun 26, 2009 Holmdel, NJ

Jun 27, 2009 Wantagh, NY

Jun 29, 2009 Cleveland, OH

Jun 30, 2009 London, ON, CAN

Jul 2, 2009 Milwaukee, WI

Jul 3, 2009 Detroit, MI

Jul 5, 2009 Saint Paul, MN

Jul 6, 2009 Kansas City, MO

Jul 8, 2009 St. Louis, MO

Jul 10, 2009 Indianapolis, IN

Jul 11, 2009 Chicago, IL

Jul 13, 2009 Winnipeg, CAN

Jul 15, 2009 Calgary, CAN

Jul 16, 2009 Edmonton, AB, CAN

Jul 18, 2009 Vancouver, CAN

Jul 19, 2009 Seattle, WA

Jul 21, 2009 Concord, CA

Jul 24, 2009 Sacramento, CA

Jul 25, 2009 Mountain View, CA

Jul 27, 2009 Universal City, CA

Jul 28, 2009 Universal City, CA

Jul 31, 2009 Irvine, CA

Aug 1, 2009 Irvine, CA

Aug 2, 2009 Irvine, CA