Tag Archives: morning-jacket

Does Bonnaroo Lineup Stray Too Far From Roots With Eminem, Lil Wayne?

Festival splits the difference between new acts and old, in a nod to its future and past. By James Montgomery Eminem Photo: Kevin Mazur/EM/WireImage On Tuesday (February 15), organizers announced the lineup for the 2011 Bonnaroo festival , a bill featuring plenty of nods to the fest’s past (mainstays Widespread Panic, My Morning Jacket and the String Cheese Incident, to name a few), but also — most notably — two of the biggest hip-hop acts on the planet, Eminem and Lil Wayne. Browse photos of the 2011 Bonnaroo performers . And, sure, mainstream hip-hop headliners aren’t exactly new for the ‘Roo — Kanye West topped the bill in 2008, and Jay-Z did it last year — but the tandem of Em and Wayne marks a definite departure for the 10-year-old fest, one that members of its die-hard fanbase may have a hard time digesting, if only for the fact that it’s such a departure from the days of old. When West took the stage at 4:30 a.m. in ’08 (a scheduling snafu he blamed, in part, on Pearl Jam running late with their set), those die-hards howled that Bonnaroo had moved too far from its roots. That deafening din was only amplified by the fact that the festival also featured Metallica as a headliner . And while we don’t expect the same kind of outrage this year, we have to wonder if, by tapping the likes of Eminem and Wayne, Bonnaroo had forever alienated the fans who made the festival what it is today. The answer, it seems, is no. “I first went in 2004, and even then the ‘traditional’ fans were already saying it’s too commercial, it’s BS, and that was when the jam-band scene was huge,” Caine O’Rear, editor of American Songwriter magazine, said. “I think you’ll have some purists who will complain, but overall, people will be psyched about the lineup. … Jay-Z was one the most well-received acts last year, which I think was a surprise to most people. [Widespread] Panic is a flagship Bonnaroo band, plus String Cheese Incident, My Morning Jacket … it appeals to this core demo. [Organizers] definitely consider the festival’s roots.” “I think, as a fan, I’m excited by this year’s lineup,” Josh Baron, editor of Relix magazine, added. “Once again, they’ve delivered a pretty unique lineup of programming. You’re not going to find these same acts together at any other festival in this country, if not the world, and that’s something [Bonnaroo organizers] always strive to do. And in this 10th year, they’re hyper-conscious of honoring their roots with a band like Widespread Panic, but also pushing the envelope with acts like Eminem and Wayne. … I don’t think this lineup is going to lose any more fans than they have past years; this isn’t the year that Bonnaroo jumped the shark. People who had that problem probably left the festival years ago.” And perhaps that’s always going to be the catch-22 as far as Bonnaroo is concerned: It is such a beloved institution — one that started in 2002 as a way of showcasing so-called jam bands and the flourishing community that surrounded them — that die-hards are always going to complain about the lineup. It’s sort of an annual tradition. And as organizers push the festival into its second decade, they’re always going to have to weigh the will of their original fans with the ever-evolving tastes of new audiences. “There’s no question [organizers] consider the festival’s history when they put together the lineups. You’re always going to see those core types of bands — Phish, Dave Matthews, Panic, the Dead. … They unequivocally know those are the fans that made the festival. They travel considerable distances to make the Bonnaroo experience what it is,” Baron said. “But part of what makes a festival is that it allows people to see music they normally wouldn’t. I wouldn’t buy a Lil Wayne ticket, but I’m excited to see him in concert, and Eminem is an undeniable performer. And as much as there’s a backlash to a band like Metallica, if you were there, it certainly wasn’t as if it was empty. There were tens of thousands of people watching Metallica.” “Clearly they’re hitting the big demos this year — hip hop, big indie, a lot of the big Americana acts — because I think a lot of people who go to these festivals have eclectic tastes,” O’Rear said. “And I think Bonnaroo is better for it.” What do you think of this year’s Bonnaroo lineup? Let us know in the comments! Related Photos Bonnaroo 2011 Lineup Related Artists Lil Wayne Eminem

Here is the original post:
Does Bonnaroo Lineup Stray Too Far From Roots With Eminem, Lil Wayne?

Does Bonnaroo Lineup Stray Too Far From Roots With Eminem, Lil Wayne?

Festival splits the difference between new acts and old, in a nod to its future and past. By James Montgomery Eminem Photo: Kevin Mazur/EM/WireImage On Tuesday (February 15), organizers announced the lineup for the 2011 Bonnaroo festival , a bill featuring plenty of nods to the fest’s past (mainstays Widespread Panic, My Morning Jacket and the String Cheese Incident, to name a few), but also — most notably — two of the biggest hip-hop acts on the planet, Eminem and Lil Wayne. Browse photos of the 2011 Bonnaroo performers . And, sure, mainstream hip-hop headliners aren’t exactly new for the ‘Roo — Kanye West topped the bill in 2008, and Jay-Z did it last year — but the tandem of Em and Wayne marks a definite departure for the 10-year-old fest, one that members of its die-hard fanbase may have a hard time digesting, if only for the fact that it’s such a departure from the days of old. When West took the stage at 4:30 a.m. in ’08 (a scheduling snafu he blamed, in part, on Pearl Jam running late with their set), those die-hards howled that Bonnaroo had moved too far from its roots. That deafening din was only amplified by the fact that the festival also featured Metallica as a headliner . And while we don’t expect the same kind of outrage this year, we have to wonder if, by tapping the likes of Eminem and Wayne, Bonnaroo had forever alienated the fans who made the festival what it is today. The answer, it seems, is no. “I first went in 2004, and even then the ‘traditional’ fans were already saying it’s too commercial, it’s BS, and that was when the jam-band scene was huge,” Caine O’Rear, editor of American Songwriter magazine, said. “I think you’ll have some purists who will complain, but overall, people will be psyched about the lineup. … Jay-Z was one the most well-received acts last year, which I think was a surprise to most people. [Widespread] Panic is a flagship Bonnaroo band, plus String Cheese Incident, My Morning Jacket … it appeals to this core demo. [Organizers] definitely consider the festival’s roots.” “I think, as a fan, I’m excited by this year’s lineup,” Josh Baron, editor of Relix magazine, added. “Once again, they’ve delivered a pretty unique lineup of programming. You’re not going to find these same acts together at any other festival in this country, if not the world, and that’s something [Bonnaroo organizers] always strive to do. And in this 10th year, they’re hyper-conscious of honoring their roots with a band like Widespread Panic, but also pushing the envelope with acts like Eminem and Wayne. … I don’t think this lineup is going to lose any more fans than they have past years; this isn’t the year that Bonnaroo jumped the shark. People who had that problem probably left the festival years ago.” And perhaps that’s always going to be the catch-22 as far as Bonnaroo is concerned: It is such a beloved institution — one that started in 2002 as a way of showcasing so-called jam bands and the flourishing community that surrounded them — that die-hards are always going to complain about the lineup. It’s sort of an annual tradition. And as organizers push the festival into its second decade, they’re always going to have to weigh the will of their original fans with the ever-evolving tastes of new audiences. “There’s no question [organizers] consider the festival’s history when they put together the lineups. You’re always going to see those core types of bands — Phish, Dave Matthews, Panic, the Dead. … They unequivocally know those are the fans that made the festival. They travel considerable distances to make the Bonnaroo experience what it is,” Baron said. “But part of what makes a festival is that it allows people to see music they normally wouldn’t. I wouldn’t buy a Lil Wayne ticket, but I’m excited to see him in concert, and Eminem is an undeniable performer. And as much as there’s a backlash to a band like Metallica, if you were there, it certainly wasn’t as if it was empty. There were tens of thousands of people watching Metallica.” “Clearly they’re hitting the big demos this year — hip hop, big indie, a lot of the big Americana acts — because I think a lot of people who go to these festivals have eclectic tastes,” O’Rear said. “And I think Bonnaroo is better for it.” What do you think of this year’s Bonnaroo lineup? Let us know in the comments! Related Photos Bonnaroo 2011 Lineup Related Artists Lil Wayne Eminem

The rest is here:
Does Bonnaroo Lineup Stray Too Far From Roots With Eminem, Lil Wayne?

Foo Fighters To Return This Spring With ‘Massive’ New Album

Yet-untitled record is shaping up to be their heaviest to date. By James Montgomery The Foo Fighters’ Dave Grohl Photo: Kevin Mazur/WireImage The Foo Fighters , for the majority of their career, have been the kind of band that only operates on a really, really huge level (witness their two-night stand at London’s Wembley Stadium in 2008 for proof of this, or even the sprawling, double-disc In Your Honor album). So when Dave Grohl is saying that their new album is, well, “massive,” you’re probably going to notice. On Tuesday (January 4), Grohl spoke to BBC Radio 1’s Zane Lowe about the Foos’ still-untitled new album (which they had apparently just finished the night before, according to a celebratory tweet ), and from the sound of things, it’s going to be a big deal. “There’s 11 songs and, front to back, there’s not one sleepy ballad,” Grohl said. “The fact that we did it without any computers, it was just really simple. It just sounds massive. It’s different to any other Foo Fighters album, because it just sounds big. It was really inspiring.” The band began work on the album — which Grohl said will be hitting stores “in spring” — last September. They teamed up with super-producer Butch Vig (Nirvana’s Nevermind ), former Nirvana bassist Krist Novoselic and, judging by the photo he posted on the band’s Twitter account, frequent Nirvana collaborator/former Foo Pat Smear too. But rather than go for a big studio sound, the band opted for a much, well, simpler approach. “It was really in my garage,” Grohl said. “You could put a minivan in there and that’s it. We entered into this project with a direction. The first song we started recording, the tape just started shredding.” And judging by the early results — a 10-second snippet of a song called “White Limo” the band tweeted on Monday — Grohl isn’t kidding about the massive part. Or the rough-around-the-edges garage bludgeon, either. This really could be their heaviest work to date. And now, with the recording out of the way, the Foos can focus on more important tasks — like picking the first single. “I don’t even know what the single is going to be,” Grohl said. “It’s hard to choose because it sounds like there’s more than one.” What are you expecting from the new Foo Fighters album? Let us know in the comments! Related Artists Foo Fighters

Read the original:
Foo Fighters To Return This Spring With ‘Massive’ New Album

Is Rock Dead?

Rock bands had a hard time breaking through in 2010, but our critics say indie groups like Vampire Weekend might be nirvana for the genre. By Gil Kaufman Photo: Getty Images There was a time not long ago when good-old fashioned meat-and-potatoes rockers like Nickelback, Hinder and Disturbed frequently landed albums in the top 10 and reeled off solid chart singles. Then came a new generation of bands like MGMT, Vampire Weekend and Arcade Fire who were heralded as the saviors of a limping-along genre that had been overtaken by pop cuties like Katy Perry, Justin Bieber and Lady Gaga. “In 2010, we just didn’t see the people like the MGMTs, who potentially could have taken over the top from being a great niche artist to being a pop sensation [take off],” said Noah Callahan-Bever, editor-in-chief of Complex magazine, addressing the psychedelic duo’s confounding, sometimes confusing second album, Congratulations. But maybe it was just an off year and, as Elliott Wilson, founder and CEO of Rap Radar suggested, we’re due for the kind of musical flushing of the pipes we experienced back in 1991 with the rise of Nirvana. Back then, music was emerging from an era of spandex and lipstick rule by a generation of hair-metal bands like Poison and M

Sasquatch Festival 2010 Lineup Includes Pavement, Vampire Weekend, MGMT

My Morning Jacket, Wale, Kid Cudi, the National also join three-day festival in Washington May 29-31. By Kyle Anderson Vampire Weekend Photo: Francois Guillot/ AFP/ Getty Images Even though the terrible winter weather still grips most of the East Coast and the South, there’s a light at the end of the tunnel: Festival season is just around the corner. The Coachella lineup has already been announced (featuring Jay-Z, Muse and Gorillaz), the bands for Bonnaroo have been set (including Weezer, the Flaming Lips, Kings of Leon and Jay-Z again) and rumors are already circulating about the Lollapalooza lineup (Lady Gaga and the reunited Soundgarden are being whispered about). On Monday night, the latest warm-weather festival announced its full slate of bands. The ninth annual Sasquatch festival, held every year at the picturesque Gorge Amphitheatre in George, Washington, revealed its full lineup during a party at Seattle’s Crocodile Caf