Live Music Reviews

Conor Oberst Live in Bethlehem, PA 7-24-12

July 24, 2012– Conor Oberst traveled to “the land Jesus was born in” to play a lengthly solo set that eventually ended with him accompanied by the Band Dawes . Dawes opened the evening, drawing attention and pleasing many. Conor Oberst told the crowd that Dawes will be recording soon, so keep your eye out for something new from these friendly, talented guys (and also keep an eye out for the photographs of their set as well, those are coming soon).

I’ve never been to the Musikfest Cafe, what a neat venue. Facing old steel stacks, the Musikfest cafe provides a beautiful glass window view from floor to ceiling. Quite the ambiance, sun setting, as a band takes the stage. Perfect.

I didn’t write down the set list, I was busy taking photos for the first three songs- and then went to my seat to enjoy music. Happy crowd, smiling faces and several new songs filled the evening.

This is just the beginning of the week for Conor Oberst. He’s slowly making his way over to the Newport Folk Festival this weekend. Sisters Dissonance will also be there covering the fun. Check back this week for more and more and more… This is going to be a great week.

Click here to view the full photo set of Conor Oberst live in Bethlehem. 

2012 Newport Folk Festival is upon us!

We can just about start counting down to the sold out 2012 Newport Folk Festival in terms of hours now, and I think I can feel the collective surge of excitement. All of the usual social media outlets are abuzz with tweets and posts about the impending fun that awaits.

I have arrived in Philly, part one of our own personal journey there, and Friday Ady and I shall head out together to attend our first ever NFF in the flesh, something we’ve been dreaming of taking part in for a long while. Our excitement is just about at fever pitch now.

This year’s line up is jam packed with a bounty of good music, it’s truly amazing what is in store this year. If you aren’t headed there in person there will be loads of coverage here on the blog, and elsewhere on the web from many other sources. NPR will be broadcasting via live web stream which you can tune in to here via the NPR Music Presents 2012 Newport Folk Festival link. If you can’t be there, it is highly suggested you set aside your entire weekend, pour yourself a drink and flip on the—well, we can’t say telly—boot up the ol’ pixel box and join in virtually! The line up and celebration of Woody Guthrie’s 100th birthday promises to be, to borrow a great term from the festy’s organizers, folkin fantastic.

Ady and I will be there and we will be covering via our own Sisters Dissonance style, which of course means in addition to photos and words, a couple of interactive creative projects for everyone to join in on. You can keep up here on this site as well as our Facebook and Twitter ( @2sisdissonance )accounts.

The line up:

Day 1: Saturday:
My Morning Jacket
Iron and Wine
Patty Griffin
Guthrie Family Reunion
Dawes
Deer Tick
City and Colour
Preservation Hall Jazz Band
Alabama Shakes
Sharon Van Etten
Blind Pilot
First Aid Kit
Brown Bird
Jonny Corndawg
Spirit Family Reunion
Robert Ellis
Ben Sollee
Frank Fairfield
The Apache Relay
HoneyHoney
Sleepy Man Banjo Boys
Elizabeth Mitchell & You are my Flower
Anthony D’Amato
Grave Robbers

Day 2: Sunday
Jackson Browne
Conor Oberst
Head and the Heart
Punch Brothers
Tallest Man on Earth
Tune-Yards
Tom Morello: The Nightwatchman
Tramled by Turtles
Charles Bradley & his Extraordinaires
Gary Clark jr.
Of Monsters and Men
New Multitudes
Parker and James
Sara Watkins
Jonathan Wilson
The Deep Dark Woods
Carl Broemel
Spider John Corner & His Rag Tag Boys
Joel Rafael
Rodriguez
Joe Fletcher and the Wrong Reasons
The Kossoy Sisters
Berklee City Music Choir
RJ Storm & Old School
Jonah Tolchin

We’d also like to take a moment to mention the very important Newport Festivals Foundation. The Foundation maintains and supports both the Newport Jazz and Folk festivals, to present performers around the world at these festivals, to educate its audiences and to help create partnerships around the world to invite American musicians to festivals elsewhere around the world under the Newport banner. The full mission of the Newport Folk Foundation is stated on their site and is as follows:

  • To maintain the famed Newport Jazz Festival® and the Newport Folk Festival® in perpetuity, to be presented at historic locations, including Fort Adams State Park and other facilities in Newport, RI;
  • To continue the Newport Jazz Festival® as it has since 1954 in the presentation of the greatest jazz performers who follow the traditions of New Orleans, swing, bebop and modal as the core and heart of jazz music; and to continue the Newport Folk Festival® by maintaining the excellence of folk artists as it has since 1959, in the tradition of Pete Seeger, Joan Baez, Bob Dylan and others;
  • To realize that jazz and folk music as with any art form, is an ever-evolving cultural expression which encourages and recognizes the freedom of creativity necessary to the growth and continuing vitality of this music;
  • To present performers who respect and honor folk music traditions, and at the same time reflect the changes in today’s musical trends;
  • To present all forms of jazz and folk music from yesterday, today and tomorrow;
  • To educate young people primarily from RI and New England, but also from around the globe, about jazz and folk music as presented at the NJF and NFF through the establishment of partnerships with local grade schools and colleges/universities;
  • To bring jazz artists from around the world to the festival, since jazz is no longer just “America’s music”, but has influenced musicians from all over the globe;
  • To create partnerships around the world which would invite American musicians under the Newport Jazz Festival® or Newport Folk Festival® banner to their festivals.

To help with their mission you can make a donation here.

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Felice Brothers – live at the Mauch Chunk Opera House 2012

I think I speak for both Ady and I when I say that Jim Thorpe, PA has solidly planted itself at the top of our list of favorite towns to visit together. We were there the for the first time last year when the Brothers blew into town and played the Mauch Chunk Opera House, and we were quickly taken in by the old world charm oozing from its every nook and cranny. The town’s residents welcome their visitors warmly, and when the Felice Brothers arrive it’s as if there is a conspiracy of fun erupting—doors propped open and residents standing at their doorsteps to say hello, music players set on the porch blasting Felice Brothers albums, posters announcing their arrival plastered on every flat surface available—turning the town into one giant welcome party.

We had such a great time during our first visit that I was inspired to work on the illustration Two Sisters and a Tavern when we returned home. After spending many hours working on the illustration back then, I found it disorienting and surreal to be walking around Jim Thorpe once again. The illustration, a semi fact/semi fictitious geographical mash up of places and events, consumed me and became so vivid in my mind during its creation that when I stepped out onto the streets from our hotel room, it seemed that buildings had become displaced (“That shop/bar/tree should not be there! Should it?”).

After my own personal wave of bewildered nostalgia subsided, we headed out and about prepared for our Jim Thorpe adventures that awaited. We traveled there (almost exactly a year later from last year’s show, and this year, no tire blow out!) for the 2012 return with two wonderful friends, Cindy and Kristi, with much anticipation and excitement. We knew (rightly so) that the town would once again turn into the veritable Felice Brothers cheering squad. We tooled around the main drag for several hours before the show before finally tucking into Crave Fine Food & Spirits, a little gem of a tea house/restaurant that also serves spirits and other beverage delights, before we set out to the show, the pinnacle of our trip that involved four friends/two sisters plotting our convergence on a single ultimate destination—Kristi (author of Not That Kind of Groupie) traveling from Dolores, Colorado, Cindy from Brighton, Michigan and me from Cleveland, Ohio to meet up with my sis, Ady, traveling up from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It was the perfect trip and reaffirmed what Ady and I knew: Jim Thorpe and the Mauch Chunk Opera House is the best place to see a show—especially when it is the Felice Brothers.

James and Ian Felice of the Felice Brothers live at Mauch Chunk Opera House 6/23/2012

It was everything I had hoped the trip would be, great company traveling to and from, a fun day on the town followed by a fantastic show from the Felice Brothers, who also sung praises for Jim Thorpe and were visibly charged by the audience’s exuberance. A single math equation to sum it all up: Jim Thorpe + The Felice Brothers (@Mauch Chunk) = THE magic combination.

(A little shout out to Meghan and Amy, who we ran into again, always nice to say hello to new friends!)

Full photo set from the Felice Brothers at the Mauch Chunk Opera House 2012 on Flickr

Last year’s show: Felice Brothers Live at Mauch Chunk Opera House 2011 photoset via Flickr

Two Sisters and a Tavern illustration original post – prints available! Please contact us if you are interested!

Nelsonville Music Festival 2012: the festival with everything but the kitchen sink!

The very first thing that struck me when we walked through the entry tent and into the Nelsonville Music Festival (after being taken in by the beautiful Appalachian foothills as we arrived into the area that is) was how well planned and laid out the festival was. That immediately set the tone for what would unfold as a very enjoyable day filled with one exciting experience after another.

The main stage, located conveniently just past the entrance, was immediately approachable from the side with a generous field for the festival goers to populate. There was a pit area at the front for people to pack into close-quartered to dance, and plenty of room for people to kick back on a folding chair or blanket further back to watch from a relaxed distance.

Dark Dark Dark on the Main Stage

The food stands were also placed at the entrance, with a great little communal picnic table courtyard in the center of the ring. Huge props to whoever coordinated the food as there was something (very delicious) for everyone via very carefully selected regional vendors—there were gyros (I pronounce it the proper Greek way, by the way—a long standing joke is my quest to teach the proper pronunciation, but that’s because Greek is one half of the two Sis’ ethnic heritage, so we grew up not calling it a JYro!), pizza, vegetarian and non-vegetarian Indian selections, coffee, burritos, bbq, and my personal weakness/subject of a culinary love affair, Jeni’s Ice Cream to mention a few. Later in the evening I found myself literally standing frozen with indecision, eyes closed and sniffing the air to try to figure out which vendor to visit because it all smelled so good! (I chose the gyros.)

This was only just the first few steps into the festival.

Just at the edge of the food area was the merch booth where we (we being me and not Ady but one of the Misters Dissonance) picked up a very cool signed limited edition block print festival poster by artist Bobby Rosenstock of Just A Jar Design Press. Beyond this area tucked in between the trees is where local artists were selling their works (again, a nice cross section of types of goods and styles), including some very cool screen printers producing made-to-order, screened in front of you Nelsonville Festival t-shirts.

Historic building near the Porch Stage

This led to the secondary Porch stage, more intimate and shaded, where people could laze in the grass or sit upon the porches of some of the historic buildings that peppered the property. At the far back in the nooks and crannies of this area was the truly unique (and hard to get into!) No Fi Cabin where bands, some of who also were performing on the Porch and Main stages, would unplug and give an acoustic set to those lucky enough to secure a spot within or immediately outside.

Finally, a maze of fun tents where loads of activities took place created the kids area. And I’m not even including the city of tents in the camping area that we only saw from a distance (we were only able to attend as day trippers for Saturday only, unfortunately, but we were there for the entire 12+ hour day).

To paraphrase, the festival coordinators had already built us a fantastic world to inhabit and explore before they even began populating it with a wildly eclectic selection of performers.

Lee “Scratch” Perry

And now for the music. Three stages with music continually tempting us this way or that way, everyone ping ponging back and forth to catch new bands, old bands, well established bands and up and coming bands of many different genres. We walked away with some new-found favorites, and were treated to some big time pioneers in music history (and the Nelsonville folks certainly know who the legends are).

Saturday’s closer was indeed a rare treat. Legendary music producer Lee “Scratch” Perry—who, as a longtime fan, I was really looking forward to seeing in person for the first time ever—took the stage past midnight and closed out

Roky Erickson

the night with his intriguing rhythms and grooves. Perry incidentally produced the Junior Murvin-penned “Police and Thieves”, a song famously covered by the be all end all favorite of mine, the Clash).

13th Floor Elevators founder Roky Erickson, who I first learned of through a compilation cd that I purchased back in the early 1990’s called Where the Pyramid Meets the Sky, was also performing. I was thrilled at the opportunity to catch both Erickson and Perry live in one place and on the same day.

Shovels and Rope (Cary Ann Hurst and Michael Trent)

Shovels and Rope was also at the top of my list to see for the first time and they cemented my growing love for them during their fantastic Porch Stage performance. Clearly they were a favorite of many others as well, as their audience grew larger and larger and more ecstatic with each song. Cary Ann Hearst is such an energetic and engaging personality it was a treat to watch her. Even setting up was an enjoyable event as she playfully goofed around with their keyboard until they got it working properly during sound check. Live musically, her incredible set of lungs and beautiful voice drives the music and weaves in and out with Michael Trent’s as the two play together and switch back and forth between drums and guitar in perfect rhythm and harmony. They’ve got the grooves and some infectious tunes to boot, and are just so much fun to watch. We caught them a second time for a bit of their No Fi Cabin set, though it was so packed before we got there we only heard through the windows. I can’t wait to see them again sometime.

Enter Mucca Pazza! front of the parade, en route to the main stage

Mucca Pazza, the Balkanesque circus punk marching band from Chicago, arrived on the scene with a huge bang via a massive parade. Led by sousaphone (which served as the beacon of the oncoming mass of music) traveled throughout the festival grounds before taking the Main stage. There was a stir of activity in the audience as people gathered round to see what looked like a proper living incarnation of a Dr. Seuss rumpus. They later appeared as a surprise guest with Andrew Bird (who was of course amazing to watch) during “Tables and Chairs” (their cheerleaders leading the charge with the SNACKS!). I’d not yet heard of Mucca Pazza until seeing them listed on the schedule about an hour before they appeared, but they are now very high on my radar for new music to plunder.

We also caught R. Ring at the Porch stage, who again, I only noticed just before they came on was fellow Ohioan Kelley Deal in collaboration with musician Mike Montgomery. It was really great to hear her familiar, hallmark (beautiful) voice while laying there in the shade on a sunny Ohio day, as well as see first hand her silly/radiant/down to earth personality (at one point she asked the audience “do I sound like I just smoked a big joint?”) shine through as they worked their way through their set.

This is but a small sampling of the many bands who where scheduled.

I’ve yet to somehow weave into this article that the Nelsonville Music Festival (produced by Stuart’s Opera House) is a non-profit, non-commercial, green festival, where recycling, composting, conserving and preserving area at the top of their priorities. Working with Rural Action and its Zero Waste Initiative, the Nelsonville Music Festival is working hard to become a zero waste event in the future.

Honestly, this festival really was, and had, everything (I think I later spotted a kitchen sink). We joked that about the only thing overlooked was that someone forgot to make arrangements with mother nature and ask her not to make it so damn hot! (though by about 4pm it was perfect out, so there you go). Andrew Bird said it best when he was onstage late Saturday night, telling us that he was so happy to be there because those behind the festival were so incredibly nice and welcoming and he thanked them for putting on “a proper festival . . . for all the right reasons.”

Complete 2012 Nelsonville Music Festival gallery of photos and video will appear shortly!

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