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By: Dennis Cook

Big Gigantic is currently on tour behind their new album, Nocturnal. The duo plays for the next five days at Mayan Holidaze and then return to U.S. on February 2nd in Tallahassee, FL. Find full tour schedule here.

Download the new album for FREE over here!

Big Gigantic

Big Gigantic is a great band name. It could be any kind of music, and it strikes one as funny and lucky for Dominic Lalli (keys, programming, sax, production) and Jeremy Salken (drums, programming, production) that no one got to it first.

I was walking down the street in Boulder [Colorado] and I thought, Big Gigantic. Thats a good name. No, thats a GREAT name! When I started on a side project [from his gig in The Motet] I was going to call it Dominic Lallis Big Gigantic, but as I thought about it I found it a bit weird and decided to leave my name out of it, says Lalli. I was pretty into Karl [Denson] and dug the Tiny Universe, so that may be why I wanted to put my name in front of it, but it didnt work out [laughs].

A lot of faceless music abounds in the electronica realm but Big Gigantic has quickly differentiated themselves from the sea of homogenous assholes with Abelton software and an 808, something abundantly clear on their brightly shimmering, booty activating new album, Nocturnal (released January 11 and available for free download here).

Big Gigantic by Brad Hodge

Thats the key to anything being successful, says Lalli. It just needs to be its own thing.

One of the big things about why we wanted to do this project was the two of us seeing all this live electronic music coming around four or five years ago. I was an intern at the Fox Theatre in Boulder, and I played music around town in random jazz and funk bands with Dom and different Motet guys, says Salken. We kept talking about the electronic scene and how nobody seemed to know how to play an instrument. It was all producers without the musical background of knowing melodies, chord structures, different modes, etc. and how that could elevate the music if they knew those things.

Theres so much we can do, remarks Lalli. Theres a production side of it EQing and trying to get the kick drum sound just right that Id never dealt with before, and just crafting the sounds themselves is like learning a new instrument. The music part, the piano parts is easy because I played keyboards all through music school. But in terms of creating synthesizer sounds and bass tones, thats a learning process every day, which is really exciting. I love to learn and grow.

Dominic Lalli by Chad Smith

One aspect of Big Gigantic thats become more surefire as theyve evolved is their understanding of electronic/DJ cultures obsession with build and release dynamics.

Thats also whats so appealing about the jam band world. Musicians and fans love when bands build and build. This is a different kind of build and drop, but were working hard to refine that. Its such an important part of the music, says Lalli. In terms of production stuff, it goes back to reading and watching videos on YouTube every day I cant believe how much stuff I learn on there all the time. Were working on getting the music to sound professional and to flow in our own way. With the new album, I tried to represent a whole bunch of electronic music styles, but perhaps put into a different tempo than normal so it feels like Big Gigantic.

[A lot of] electronic music is extremely repetitive. Theres a lot of tension and release with the builds, which is why a lot of jam band kids like it. Thats what they dig in Phish, where they do that on top of the songwriting, says Salken. In the 90s, younger people were really into the jam band scene and it was growing strong with Phish, Cheese and lots of band on the rise. In the later 90s, it was Karl D, Soulive and all those bands kicking ass and selling out multiple nights everywhere. Then the electronic thing came around and theres a new generation thats excited about this new kind of music. But somehow it got more mainstream [than the jam scene] with people like Skrillex and Pretty Lights.

New Album

I think having access to music everywhere is making a difference. Before, you had to buy a CD, or hear just part of an album on the radio, or trade with blanks & postage. Now, you can go online and get almost anything. It makes it easier to get music around to people, says Salken. Facebook is a huge tool for spreading music and giving it to people, and just for publicity and hyping stuff.

The generation thats most taken to electronic music is also a generation thats grown very comfortable not paying for albums, downloading most of their music for free, whether authorized or otherwise. This is a problem to some but Big Gigantic has some insights into this situation.

Because we have computers in our homes now, you can make an album for practically nothing, remarks Salken. Before youd have to go into the studio and spend 10, 20, 30 thousand dollars making an album. Now, its almost free except for your time. You can buy $600 of software or get it for free, so thats one of the reasons electronic artists can give albums away for free because were not going into debt. Its like a side bet to the live show. Its a bonus and an underlying thing that makes this whole scene happen. We just want to get it into the hands of everyone we can so that they come see us. The real thing is the live show.

As true as that may be, Nocturnal is still more musical than much of whats out there in this field, an album one can listen to and enjoy without the huge amplifiers and crazy light show of a concert.

Big Gigantic Audience by Brad Hodge

Dom definitely approaches each piece as a song with choruses, intros and bridges of traditional songwriting, says Salken. But he also likes using different techniques he finds in all kinds of music as well stuff in electronic music we find that works. Theres definitely stuff those guys do that works and people love and we love and it makes a song cool and interesting.

One of the elements that makes Big Gigantic stand out from the pack of DJs and electronica bands today is Lallis saxophone, which often emerges as a warming blast, a descendent of 70s FM radio redolent of Steely Dan, Gerry Rafferty and the like.

When I have a horn in my mouth and Im trying to do lead/solo stuff, my head is completely in jam band world. Im thinking of guitarists what would Trey do? As a saxophone player, my natural inclination is move like I do in the jam or jazz world, thinking about what I can do to kick it up a notch, says Lalli, spotlighting how the horn helps cut through some of the ADD stroking tendencies of most electronica. Its a different thing but its still music. Everyone is dancing but its a whole different mentality. The crowds are SO awesome. Im speechless about them. Our whole fall was basically spent opening up for Bassnectar and Pretty Lights, and even at those shows people came at 7 at night and were right up front ready to go. Very colorful audiences [laughs].

Big Gigantic by Brad Hodge

Theres a fear with younger kids that theyll get bored, but we like playing a show thats action packed all the way through anyway, says Salken. We like to go full force for two hours wear everyone out, wear ourselves out so it feels like a workout by the end. But we still want a flow to the evening. We used to dip down more into the mellow but kids get bored really quick. The bigger we get, the more we know that people are there to see us and we can take more liberties.

The evolution of the band has taken them from being an electro rarity in jam scene to a slot at Ultra, the worlds biggest electronic music festival, this March.

The music industry and music itself is changing. Everyone can see it, says Lalli. So, we dont want to count ourselves out of anything. The point for me doing this project was to get the music out to as many people as we can. So, were really trying to get it to the jam band people. Were really trying to get it to the electronic cats. Were really trying to reach a younger audience AND an older audience bridge a bunch of gaps. Thats why were really excited to reach people who dont know who we are, to get to them with some music they might really like.

Big Gigantic Tour Dates :: Big Gigantic News

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Jam Cruise 10 Chronicles: Day Three

Words by: Dennis Cook

More photos from Wednesday and Thursday coming tomorrow!

Wednesday was a day no one wanted to end. As the main action died down, a strange gravity pulled many towards the Jam Room and the informal picking party just outside on the deck that’s come to be known as “The Spot” since it began last year when Nathan Moore joined the Jam Cruise family. While a ragin’ range of high energy music prevailed in the Jam Room more on that in a minute Moore, Greensky Bluegrass‘ mandolinist Paul Hoffman and a rotating cast of pros and passengers sat on the deck, pulled tunes, often delivered with a sloppy, one-toke-over-the-line bravura, from the ether, many Moore originals that uniformly charmed ears new and old, but also ditties from the Great American Songbook (“Fly Me To The Moon,” “Salty Dog,” “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry”). Makeshift rhythm devices, acoustic guitars, kazoos and more added their homespun charm as folks talked softly, laughed loudly or sat quietly in a close circle with the musicians, a feeling so happy and natural and unspeakably beautiful washing over us as the MSC Poesia stirred up white water en route to Falmouth, Jamaica.

George Porter Jr. by Brad Hodge

Inside, an undulating, revitalizing groove that began at midnight was going strong as 6 am approached, a living thing spun into being by gutbucket sage Col. Bruce Hampton, who long ago had turned in for the night, safe in the knowledge that potent torchbearers like George Porter Jr. would carry on the breathing, cavorting history lesson he’d started. For anyone who may have thought this jam thing was a relatively recent thing, this ever-shifting room of seasoned vets and excited, promising newcomers threw lines back to jump blues, hot jazz, backwater blues, and the initial 60s rise of contemporary rock. In its early stages, the Colonel guided and coaxed a group of ultra pros that included Brad Houser, a good chunk of the Runnin’ Pardners, and RRE’s Tim Carbone, who showed off his Sugarcane Harris side standing shoulder to shoulder with a constantly fluctuating horn section featuring Jessica Lurie (a powerhouse superb additive all week in her artist-at-large role) and loads of unfamiliar faces that played so damn well it made one want to track them down to find out their story. The launch pad sequence for this seven hour marathon offered us an assortment only the wired-different-than-the-rest Colonel could come up with dotted by spontaneous interjections by the players. Cream’s “Glad” was inter-cut with a bit of Creedence’s “Fortunate Son,” which then led into “Smokestack Lightning” mingled with Sun Ra’s “Rocket No. 9″ and “Space Is The Place” (which had a roomful of folks pointing skyward and pondering the planets). Only the Colonel seemed to know the “Compared To What” he got started but after a tiny meander something essential and right about these unrehearsed convocations things banged into place again as Hampton introduced George Porter Jr. with, “The King has arrived.” His majesty then interpolated improvised lines about Jam Cruise, “Caledonia, Sly’s “Dance To The Music” and a teeny weeny bit of love. The sound was massive and gracious and full of surprises to their fellow musicians, many of whom whispered their new regard after a segment ended AND then introduced themselves. This history lesson with a fast pulse would later morph into the more traditional funk and soul based Jam Room vibe, though spiced up by new Cruiser Brad Barr, who left a ton of stunned new fans in his wake, a true original on guitar that made a strong impression last night, including a guest spot with the Dead Kenny Gs.

Jam Cruisers by Brad Hodge

These two spaces – “The Spot” and the Jam Room were an encapsulation of why this experience is different than any other festival. Cruising the high seas, well fed, and blessed with one of the greatest pools of talent on God’s green earth, this bit of shipboard geography was an endless stream of one-time-only moments, music dancing in recombinant splendor, mash-ups of players that will never happen again. While a tiny amount of premeditation informs the early stages of the Jam Room and “The Spot” – a cover considered, a pairing or two conjectured what actually happens cannot be planned. Better still, it is driven by a love of music and playing it for people eager to hear it. Nothing else is behind what one encounters, and divorced from the omnipresent commercial nature of most contemporary music, one comes face-to-face with a pure thing, hearts and spirits let fly in the open air, the musicians unafraid to be so exposed at least after getting their toes in the warm water and reconnected with what stirred them to pick up an instrument or let voice fly in the first place. And we lucky co-conspirators, too, find our own appreciation for all of music’s potentials and purposes is reawakened and prompted to soft shoe giddily amongst the notes. It made one happy to be alive, and happy beyond words that this experience exists at all – this vessel of adventure, generator of tales, builder of bonds, lifter of spirits.

All this high-minded reverie was preceded by a toes in the sand beach party with Zach Deputy and Toubab Krewe and relief efforts and charitable outreach in Haiti. Even though the ports are mostly pure cruise ship culture where passengers are regarded as friendly ATM machines, Jam Cruise’s organizers make a real effort to do some good for places we visit, acknowledging that the bounteous blessings we possess on board are not the reality for most of the world. It speaks to the extremes of care and love that hover over this journey like holy spirits.

Jam Cruisers by Brad Hodge

Come nightfall, steaming over wobbly seas, the tribe adorned themselves in every manner of green one could imagine for this evening’s Go Green theme. Emerald haired Oompa Loompas boogied with giant bunches of grapes with human beings inside them, and one was struck by how normal this manner of free-form play becomes after three days of nothing else. One doesn’t even blink as Sasquatch or Popeye and Olive Oil shimmy by, and the longer one does this the more one feels compelled to add their own beneficent madness, a hopping cavalcade of non sequiturs that makes the world larger and more colorful. It’s a visible sign of the way many, if not most, attending Jam Cruise tap into wells of childlike wonder, a readiness for amusement and adventure that the working week lives we left ashore simply cannot allow.

Cover tunes are a huge part of the musical makeup of Jam Cruise a common watering hole for the musicians to gather around that’s valuable given the spontaneity of so many pairings – and yesterday was especially satisfying example of this aspect. Amongst the standouts was the closing section of The Omega Moos‘ set, where John Oates joined The New Deal‘s Darren Shearer and Jamie Shields and Umphrey’s McGee‘s Brendan Bayliss and Ryan Stasik for their 80s pop celebration. Cynicism was set aside as a packed pool deck sang-along to “Maneater,” “Out of Touch,” and “I Can’t Go For That” with non-ironic gusto. Oates thanked us during his sit-in and said he was having one of the times of his life. Even superstars recognize this isn’t like anything else they’ve ever been involved in.

Late night, Perpetual Groove showed off future forward momentum with one of the most sonically fascinating and interesting sets of the cruise so far. Where PGroove seems to be headed
with the recent return of keyboardist Matt McDonald is a darker place, and for my own tastes, it’s a positive move, making the band seem not only contemporary but highlighting the visionary tendencies of this group that’s way more than a “jam band,” a dumb soundbite that ignores what strong songwriting and modern rock awareness this band has always possessed. A thick, growling cover of the David Bowie/Trent Reznor dark horse “I’m Afraid of Americans” early in the set reminded one how much deeper into the collective song bag Brock Butler and his mates dig, and many of the instrumental sections of the set reflected a denser atmosphere than the Pgroove of old, who ultimately surfaced in the final numbers asking “Where Are Your Friends Tonight?” (a perfect marriage of place and song) and pouring us a shot of sweet oblivious cheer before sending us out into the night. I may be wrong about where this band wants to go, and moreover, it may not be where some core fans want them to go, but my instincts say that if they pull off this evolution we’re in for the best music yet from them.

Jam Cruisers by Brad Hodge

The crowning glory for cover tunes has to go to Soulive, whose theatre set included a centerpiece, trio-only Beatles section that was unbelievably good. In ever single instance, Eric Krasno, Neal and Alan Evans offered tasty, insightful and downright original new spins on “Come Together,” “Something,” “Eleanor Rigby,” and “I Want You (She’s So Heavy),” respecting the original melodies just enough for easy recognition but presenting us with takes that made the tunes seem new. For all the funk and soul-jazz grounded music on Jam Cruise this year (and every year), Soulive was the strongest, coolest set of it I’ve seen this year. Every note these cats laid down was worth one’s attention, and that didn’t change even when they integrated The Shady Horns, who clearly vibed off the indestructible flow at work – a feeling that existed in both the fast paced ragers and the quiet interludes they were brave enough to include in an environment that loves its shock ‘n’ awe. Personally, it was the keyboard sublimity of Neal Evans that left me most floored with his ability to lay down THE illest bass lines and paint with such expressive color simultaneously. Take note, Soulive is on fire right now, kids.

Some of the most powerful emotions conjured up this night happened on the pool deck with 7 Walkers, who served up a healthier share than usual dose of the Grateful Dead material that was clearly hungered for by the massive crowd. A tear-stirring guest turn by Papa Mali‘s son Miles, some of the most animated Steve Kimock playing I’ve ever witnessed, and a set closing “Eyes of the World” that made one feel they might just be the song that the morning sings were but a few of the highlights.

It was a day no here could have expected and won’t likely ever be forgotten. Magic – a word I use with real caution – of this kind is rare indeed, and one shuffled off at day’s end feeling grateful and slightly stuffed with joy, weary for all the right reasons and ready for the next chapter with barely contained anticipation.



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Words by: Dennis Cook | Images by: Brad Hodge

Full review below photo gallery!

1/9/12 – Jam Cruise 10: Day 1 (Fort Lauderdale, FL) View Photos

Motion and emotion were the operative words for the Monday kick-off to Jam Cruise 10. The sense of something special afoot began at Port Everglades, where it felt like many currents flowed to this one buzzing spot, friends literally squealing with delight as they reconnected with a tribe that grows and grows, a depth of feeling that defies simple explanation but so tangible that even the many first timers coming aboard vibed heavily with the seasoned Repeat Offenders. To call the participants in this experience welcoming is an understatement, open arms and broad smiles making newcomers an immediate part of this evolving dream. And the feeling of massive camaraderie prevailed in the pre-boarding area inside the port hall where the musicians, Cloud 9 Adventures staff and various journalists and photographers gathered a space with more collective talent than almost any other this writer has ever seen. Look left and George Porter Jr. is grinning huge as he laughs with Steve Kimock or Lettuce’s Nigel Hall embraces Ivan Neville, the musicians as delighted as anyone to be here. One of the more charming aspects of the several hours wait was seeing seasoned veterans quietly geek out as they caught sight of JC 10 artist-at-large John Oates, most like myself too shy to just walk up to the worldwide star, though needlessly since Oates is one of the most enthsiastic, approachable new additions to the musical mix who’s excitement about getting his hands into this free-form convocation is clear. Which makes sense since Jam Cruise provides a happy crucible for musicians, particularly for the top-of-their-game players and gifted up-and-comers that provide the score for this journey. Listen closely in that waiting room and one picked up on the joyful plotting and brainstorming for musical moments ahead, and the sense of excitement about their craft in this unique was apparent.

Just after sundown, the Cloud 9 staff and a huge crowd on the pool deck toasted this lovely dream, and with a funky strut the Dirty Dozen Brass Band took us out on the water under a big, bright moon. Every act that followed long through the night took the same approach, lunging out of the gate at the start of each set with ferocity and purposeful intention that made folks snap to attention with a quickness, no time wasted as they showed off their best stuff and kept showing it off until their time onstage ended, almost always leaving one quite satisfied and yet still hungry for more. There are no mediocre musicians on this trip, and a healthy sense of competition makes each act strive to be their most memorable, innovative, etc. Everyone wants their slice of time to be THE most memorable, and the intensity of it all made the engaged, grooving masses feel a touched overwhelmed in a wholly positive way. People wore expressions that said, This is the first day? Seriously? as the music makers strived to take us and themselves higher, deeper, further, happier, etc. The intertwined audience/performer dynamic is perhaps stronger here than any other festival I’ve ever attended. As the lights came up at set’s end, one usually encountered a sweaty, surprised glow on everyone’s face whether they were onstage or on the floor.

As per norm, the spirit of New Orleans and more broadly, The Drum in the archytypal sense permeated the music, caught up in the enveloping warmth of Bruce Hornsby & The Noisemakers‘ pool deck performance (which included a bang-up piano sit-in from Ivan Neville, who seemed to bring out the playful side of Hornsby), the classicaly grounded yet progressive, psychedelia-touched surprise set from Lettuce (who filled in for a missing Shpongle), the airtight Apollo Theatre style revue thrust of Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue (who have one of the best young lead guitarists out there right now), or in the colossally swinging 7 Walkers set, which showed there are new things that can be done with the New Orleans rhythm tradition, the combination of Bill Kreutzmann‘s flowing, energetic drumming and George Porter Jr.’s inquisitive, foundational bass so satisfying it made one smack their lips, especially on a downright holy “Lovelight” that featured guests Col. Bruce Hampton, Anders Osborne and Big Sam that had people dancing madly, hands to the sky like a revival meeting. This pervasive sense of rhythm ‘n’ flow extended to the twisting, how-the-hell-did-they-do-that three hour performance from Umphrey’s McGee, who once again reminded us what a truly unique group they are, weaving classical music, electric jazz and more with a real understanding of what makes classic rock so goddamn satisfying. Simply put, no one else sounds like these guys or is likely to pull off even a reasonable facsimile of what they do.

As usual, a choose-your-own-adventure vibe prevailed as the night drew on, some drawn to Matt Butler‘s suprise filled Jam Room hosting session, where musicians were grabbing each other to listen to what was going down, others pulled towards the monster good foot stomp of Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe theatre set, and others still captured by the crunchy newness and hip-hop bounce of Break Science with guest MC Chali 2na in the charmingly garish Zebra Lounge, the sort of room Scarface surely had in his Miami digs. And before the wee wee hours, one might have caught Robert Walter on the clear top atrium piano showing off his boogie woogie skills or getting avant-jazzy with Galactic‘s Stanton Moore on a snare drum and Karl D barking like a man who’s heard a few Albert Ayler records. Or perhaps you were drawn to the appealingly busy groove of The Heavy Pets, who mixed up muscular rock, catchy pop, and prog/jam band elements into a really nice package.

There’s no one pathway on this ship, and sometimes the best moments occurred when people slowed down to have a deep, revealing conversation or just watch the open water expand endlessly around us. Options abound and perhaps the core of it all is how aware of the unfolding moment one becomes once that anchor rises. We are here. We are happy. We have just begun.



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