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THE GREAT GOOGAMOOGA ANNOUNCES MUSIC LINEUP

Superfly Presents is excited to announce the music line up for The Great GoogaMooga, the highly anticipated food, drink and music festival set to take place in Brooklyn’s Prospect Park on May 19-20, 2012. Superfly has curated the music to complement the unprecedented food experience that is GoogaMooga.

Confirmed so far are: Philly soul legends Hall & Oates, the irrepressible Motown/Stax-influenced Fitz & The Tantrums, the electro dance magic of Holy Ghost! and more listed below.

Spanning across the park’s Nethermead area and making for the ultimate sensory experience, GoogaMooga will host approximately 75 restaurants & vendors, 35 brewers, and 100 wines. Helping to power the food experience, Googamooga is excited to announce a special partnership with Seamless, the nation’s leading mobile and online service for ordering delivery and takeout food. Through the partnership, Seamless will power the festival’s online restaurant pages, host culinary & technology panels onsite within Googamooga’s Restaurant 101 stage, and bring their Craved Awards to Googamooga, giving guests a chance to vote for their favorite festival dishes.

General Admission at GoogaMooga is free but attendees must register to obtain a ticket to the event; concessions in General Admission are priced individually. With Extra Mooga, GoogaMooga’s all-inclusive paid ticketed experience, guests have exclusive viewing of the Main Stage shows and access to 20 different events per day, ranging from music to comedy, culinary seminars, cocktail demos, wine and beer tastings and theme parties.

Click here to see this listing in our Festival Guide

Artist Lineup

  • Daryl Hall & John Oates (Sun)
  • Fitz & the Tantrums (Sun)

  • Holy Ghost! (Sat)

  • Preservation Hall Jazz Band (Sat)

  • Charles Bradley & His Extraordinaires (Sun)

  • The Pedrito Martinez Group (Sat)

  • Escort (Sun)

  • Naomi Shelton & the Gospel Queens (Sat)

  • Bear Hands (Sat)

  • Unknown Mortal Orchestra (Sat)

  • Lez Zeppelin (Sun)

  • Peelander-Z (Sun)

  • Fort Lean (Sat)

  • Lucius (Sun)



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    BAMBOOZLE FEST EXPANDS ENTERTAINMENT WITH AFTER PARTIES
    FEATURING SKRILLEX, DJ PAULY D, THE BARSTOOL BLACKOUT & MORE

    The Bamboozle, the annual three-day music spectacular, will offer non-stop music and entertainment with after-parties planned each night as it celebrates its 10th anniversary on the beach and boardwalk in North Beach Asbury Park, New Jersey on May 18-19 and 20.

    After-party headliners, Skrillex, DJ Pauly D and the Barstool Blackout will close each night’s after party line-up in the Convention Hall, the legendary Stone Pony and the Wonder Bar.

    The after parties scheduled to begin at 11:00 PM will feature performances by Skrillex and Friends, DJ Pauly D, the Barstool Blackout FOAM party, Fishbone, Big Freedia, White Panda, Datsik, T. Mills, Dramarama, Tragedy: A Tribute to the Bee Gees, Outasight, and more, plus The Bamboozle special guest.

    A separate purchase is required for the after parties and is only available to festival attendees. For a complete schedule, please visit: www.thebamboozle.com

    Headliners for The Bamboozle Festival include Bon Jovi, Foo Fighters, Skrillex, Blink 182, Incubus and Brand New.

    Single day, three-day and after party passes are currently available for purchase. For more information about passes, after parties, a complete list of current scheduled performers, the daily festival line-up and transit information, please visit: www.thebamboozle.com.

    MAY 18

  • Skrillex
  • Incubus
  • Mac Miller
  • Aer
  • Aiden Chance
  • Anamanaguchi
  • Armor For Sleep
  • Big Freedia & The Divas
  • David Garibaldi
  • DJ Prime
  • Casey Veggies
  • Gonzo
  • Kreayshawn
  • Mike Posner
  • Miss May I
  • Sailesh The Uncensored Hypnotist
  • Stray From The Path
  • The Receiving End of Sirens
  • The Wonder Years
  • Timeflies
  • V-Nasty
  • Volbeat
  • We Came As Romans
  • Whitechapel

    MAY 19

  • Foo Fighters
  • Blink 182
  • A Great Big Pile of Leaves
  • A$ap Rocky
  • Action Bronson
  • All American Rejects
  • Anti-Flag
  • Attila
  • Ballyhoo!
  • Big Chocolate
  • Boy Sets Fire
  • Close Your Eyes
  • Datsik
  • DJ Pauly D
  • Emmure
  • Hi-Rez
  • Hot Water Music
  • James McCartney
  • Iggy Azalea
  • Jimmy Eat World
  • Less Than Jake
  • Make Me Famous
  • Matt Toka
  • Michael Monroe
  • Motion City Soundtrack
  • Mr. MFN eXquire
  • MyChildren MyBride
  • Never Shout Never
  • Periphery
  • Powerglove
  • Protector
  • Protomen
  • The Dear Hunter
  • The Knocks
  • The Maine
  • The Promise Ring

    MAY 20

  • Bon Jovi

  • Brand New
  • The Gaslight Anthem
  • Action Item
  • Alesana
  • Andrew Dice Clay
  • Ashland High
  • Bayside
  • Boys Like Girls
  • Buckcherry
  • Catch 22
  • Comeback Kid
  • Cris Cab
  • Dramarama
  • DJ Toro
  • Folly
  • He Is We
  • Like Moths To Flames
  • Marianas Trench
  • Murphy’s Law
  • Obey The Brave
  • Outasight
  • Patent Pending
  • Plug In Stereo
  • Riff Raff
  • Sammy Adams
  • Skizzy Mars
  • Spacehog
  • Star Slinger
  • T. Mills
  • Texas In July
  • The Bouncing Souls
  • The Story So Far
  • Trapped Under Ice
  • Wallpaper.
  • White Panda
  • Woe Is Me



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    Words by: Dennis Cook | Images by: Dave Vann

    The Bridge Session :: 03.24.12 :: TRI Studios :: San Rafael, CA

    Big photo gallery below review!

    Bob Weir & The Bridge Session Band by Dave Vann

    An early arrival for the Headcount sponsored live webcast dubbed The Bridge Session found the one-time-only band gathered around a single very expensive looking microphone working up a patient acoustic version of Uncle Johns Band, their harmonies rich and touch light as they beckoned one to come on along or go alone. In some greater sense, this invitation lay at the heart of this combination musical performance and political/social forum designed to bridge perceived differences and discover common ground. Feeling apart, separate and alone is a frequent feeling amongst voters and even music fans in 2012, and its easy to miss possible connections that might well enrich our own lives not to mention society at large. While the players, Headcount staff and invited roundtable speakers never hammered too hard on these points, the evening offered folks a chance to reflect on where ones life and interests overlap with others, guiding us there gently and thoughtfully through the vehicle of beautiful, well played music and lively discussion.

    The remainder of the rehearsal found the guys working through lovely lean-in-and-listen takes on Dead classics Ripple and Brokedown Palace. Say what one will about the Grateful Dead themselves, their songbook is one of the most enduring, instantly humanizing and wonderfully constructed in American history. The truth of this shined in the two set performance that followed and three-song encore that recreated the rehearsal vibe standing in middle of the tiny invited audience where Dead alum Bob Weir collaborated with a bunch of Brooklyns brightest who clearly vibed powerfully off the many Dead numbers they tackled along with smartly chosen and executed covers of Bob Dylans Most of the Time, Cass McCombs Love Thine Enemy and two from The National, Fake Empire and Daughters of the SoHo Riots. In addition to The National‘s bass and drum playing brothers Scott and Bryan Devendorf, the group who had been holding 10 hour/day rehearsals leading up to this event included The Nationals Aaron Dessner (guitar, electric mandolin), Kyle Resnick (trumpet) and Thomas Doveman Bartlett (keys) with Yellowbirds Sam Cohen (guitar) and Josh Kaufman (guitar, lap steel), The Walkmens Walt Martin (keys), and Taka Takas Conrad Doucette (drums).

    Bob Weir & The Bridge Session Band by Dave Vann

    After a brief, jovial intro from the evening’s emceee The Disco Biscuits’ Marc Brownstein, a Headcount co-founder, the care and preparatory work the musicians had put in was immediately apparent on Set One opener Help On The Way, which moved in a warm, limber manner that scooped one up, the jazzy elements downplayed for a fairly rockin version that dropped us into Love Thine Enemy, one of the evenings highlights, a loaded, painfully personal song with broader reverberations and knotty lyrics like, Hypocrites especially practice the golden rule/ I love what you say though sometimes its mean/ Without earthworms how else would the soil keep clean? Weir shined on this fairly alien material to his usual fare and continued to do so throughout the performance, singing in a clear, strong voice that meshed well with his young collaborators. An appreciation of what others bring to the table was part of the subtext to The Bridge Sessions, and this theme came through in ways bold and subtle as they explored music together, often touching on the profound friction and violence that can exist between opposing forces in our culture a point laid bare in Set One closer My Brother Esau, which Weir hadnt performed since 1987.

    It’s brother to brother and it’s man to man
    And it’s face to face and it’s hand to hand
    We shadowdance the silent war within
    The shadowdance, it never ends

    Buddy Roemer & John Perry Barlow by Dave Vann

    While the music was the main lure for those watching online (and most of those in attendance), one of the best portions of the event occurred when a panel comprised of independent Presidential candidate Buddy Roemer, Grateful Dead lyricist and electronic culture pioneer John Perry Barlow, upstart political party No Labels co-founder Mark McKinnon, and Executive Director for the Energy Action Coalition Jessy Tolkan held a half hour discussion of some key issues facing the United States. Each spoke with a clarity and conviction thats rare in contemporary politics, showing that undisguised passion and reason still exist in this field, each participant showing uncommon good sense, a healthy amount of honest compassion, and a willingness to unleash venom on the right targets.

    We dont run the country anymore. Checks do, observed Roemer, who wisely pointed out that despite their stated differences the two controlling major American parties are joined at the billfold to the same wealthy masters. Try and call your representatives and see what happens. They arent taking your call.

    This is the year of political disruption, said Tolkan. The power of the people is not gone. We need to disrupt, disrupt, disrupt, and remember that disruption is our right.

    Tolkan, McKinnon, Weir & Headcount’s Andy Bernstein by Dave Vann

    Asked what he thought about the Supreme Courts Citizens United decision, Bob Weir, who joined the panel between sets, offered, Its not what our Founding Fathers had in mind. If corporations are people put em in prison. But you cant! Hows that for a big mound of horseshit? Well said, sir.

    At the core of the varied discussion which I personally would have loved to seen doubled in length were people seeking some areas a majority of people could rally around and put their shoulders into bringing to fruition. Its a worthy goal and the truth and power of what was said by Roemer and the others generated a real moment for some of us, a conviction in our spirit to get involved, to participate and engage even in the face of the fractious, tribalizing dissent and abject, fact-free dumbness that abound in todays political discourse. Throughout this article there are hyperlinks to more information on the participants. Click away, investigate, and ruminate on ways you might get involved. The time for active engagement and full-throated participation is now. And you can begin by getting registered at Headcount and perhaps seeing what you can do to aid their voter registration efforts. As first steps towards active citizenship, its a bang-up one.

    Bob Weir & The Bridge Session Band by Dave Vann

    The second set was by turns playful and intense, mingling sing-a-long fave Brown Eyed Women with the propulsive, finger-twisting journey of The Other One (which these Dead newbies pulled off with serious aplomb). Fake Empire brought Doveman out on lead vocals and found Weir clearly enjoying The Nationals music, a fresh but sure convert to their indie beloved tunes. An ever-crowd-pleasing one-two punch of China Cat Sunflower > I Know You Rider got attendees in motion at the end of Set Two, a pleasant, comforting reminder of this pairings strange power.

    For my own tastes, the quieter moments on Set Ones Looks Like Rain and Set Twos Standing On The Moon and world weary reading of Dylans Most of the Time with Weir in majestic ache and the band in empathetic harmony with him may have been the sweetest musical points. However, it was the thoughtful, interwoven nature of the whole experience that lingers. The subtleties of our differences and sameness were explored in art and conversation in ways that stirred one out of calcified stancesif one opened up and let it. Like most things in this modern world, its easy to stop at being entertained or amused. Its to be hoped that the efforts of The Bridge Session participants and organizers will have some positive rippling effect amongst the audience that witnessed it.

    Setlist

    Set I: Help on the Way, Love Thine Enemy, Looks Like Rain, El Paso, Friend of the Devil, Cassidy, Daughters of the SoHo Riots, My Brother Esau

    Set II: Me and My Uncle, Fake Empire, Most of the Time, Brown Eyed Women, The Other One, Standing on the Moon, China Cat Sunflower > I Know You Rider

    Encore: Ripple, Uncle Johns Band, Brokedown Palace

    3/24/12 – Bridge Session @ TRI Studios (Mt. Tamalpais, CA) View Photos

    JamBase | Spanned
    Go See Live Music!



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