August 31, 2010

Mile High Music Fest 2010 | Recap | Photos

Words & Images by: Mike Hardaker | Additional Images by: Soren McCarty

Mile High Music Festival :: 08.14.10-08.15.10 :: The Field at Dick’s Sporting Goods Park :: Commerce City, CO

Beta Girl by McCarty

Day 1

Thousands of music lovers once again joined together for a 2-day music festival on the soccer grounds of Dicks Sporting Good Complex to celebrate the 2010 Mile High Music Festival. The first day featured headliner Jack Johnson, along with the Steve Miller Band, Slightly Stoopid, Phoenix, Nas with Damian ‘Jr. Gong’ Marley, Keane, Cypress Hill, Keller Williams and more. This year’s festival was held later in the summer in hopes of avoiding the heat waves of the past two years. Mother nature did her part, providing nice low hanging clouds and bearable temperatures.

AEG Live has put on the Mile High Music Festival for the past three years. Each year the local concert promoting company finds new ways to make the festival experience as comfortable and easy going as possible for the patrons, VIPs, media, and most important, the artists. The 2010 Mile High Music Festival allowed patrons to re-enter the venue at any time during the event. This way people could picnic outside at their cars and save money on food and drinks during a tough economic period in this country. In years past this would be considered a huge no-no as the concert venue relied on income from food sales. Free water stations were also setup throughout the festival grounds, and keeping everyone hydrated is a great idea! And in more economic related news, Way To Grow, a hydroponics store in Boulder, Colorado, was flying a banner over the festival encouraging people to “Grow Your Own.”

Day 2

Dave Matthews by Hardaker

High temperatures returned to the festival grounds on Sunday, along with an estimated 20,000 concertgoers. The second day featured headliner Dave Matthews Band, along with Weezer, My Morning Jacket, Jimmy Cliff, BoomBox, Bassnectar, Ozomatli, as well as DJs from Beta nightclub in Denver performing at the Beta Beach in the middle of the festival grounds.

In a first for Mile High, AEG Live gave away free water bottles made out of 100% recycled plastic. Combine that with the water stations scattered around the grounds and it seems like the promoters were thinking of safety first and income second – the way it should be with 20,000 people’s live in your hands.

On top of the music, the food selections at the festival were impressive. Vendors from around the state of Colorado and traveling “carnies” setup shop on both sides of the stadium. Denver’s Stubens Restaurant set up a mobile kitchen, the Smiling Moose Deli was cooking made-to-order Mighty Mo sandwiches, pizzas and burgers, and a clever vendor was selling chocolate covered fruit kabobs.

For the non-foodies, there were massage tables setup with $1.00 per minute massages, video game lovers could test their skills on the new Guitar Hero game in front of a huge crowd of onlookers, and artists designed custom t-shirts and bandannas to take home as free souvenirs.

And those just wanting to dance non-stop found their home at the Beta Beach, located in the heart of the stadium. DJs from around the around, including DJ MLE and the Team EZ Dancers from Denver, entranced the crowd with heavy beats and lots of skin. Folks surrounded this tent, making it a very happening place to spend the afternoon.

A Few Words From BoomBox

Mike caught BoomBox‘s Russ Randolph and Zion Rock Godchaux after the fest to get their impressions of this year’s festivities.

“Festival was awesome, everything from the crowd to production to weather, everything was perfect,” says Randolph. “We played at three o’clock in the afternoon, which sometimes can be difficult for crowds, you know standing in the sun for hours and all, but the tent was a great setting for a daytime set.”

“For Mile High, we played for an hour, which normally goes by very quick. Anyone who knows us knows that we are never afraid to take our time and stretch out,” continues Randolph. “Mile High was unique in that time seemed to stop on stage for us, and we just played. We are normally a late night act and design our live show primarily around that. So, the intelligent lights and lazers that can look huge in a dark theater get somewhat lost in middle of the day sunshine. This forces us to come up with a different game plan for the visual aspect of the daytime sets, which are also very important to us.”

“Mile High was incredibly well organized and goes to the top of our list,” says Godchaux. “The Colorado crowds are always great.”

8/14/10 – 8/15/10 – Mile High Music Festival @ Dick’s Sporting Goods Park (Commerce City, CO) View Photos

JamBase | Colorado
Go See Live Music!



August 27, 2010

JamBase Questionnaire: Cochemea Gastelum

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from These United States.

Whether searing the fat off jam music in Robert Walter’s 20th Congress, lighting up a Broadway stage as part of the Fela! band, keeping soul music soulful with Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings, getting deep with Archie Shepp or blazing a session with the likes of Amy Winehouse and Paul Simon, NYC fixture Cochemea Gastelum is the living embodiment of “coming correct.” His crisp, lethal, adventurous sax and flute playing find the sweet spot in whatever type of music he’s involved in, and unlike many horn players, he never overstays his welcome, playing just what’s needed and leaving listeners hungry for more. Though clearly well grounded in the work of his predecessors, Gastelum synthesizes honking 50s big band rumble, 60s modal moves, 70s electricity, New Orleans slink and more in a way that simply announces a man in total command of his instrument, free of other’s fingerprints and ready to engage in whatever comes his way.

Gastelum’s long-awaited debut as bandleader, The Electric Sound of Johnny Arrow (released July 20 via MOWO! Inc.), unfurls an intoxicating array of sounds, tapping into On The Corner Miles-isms, vintage Fania salsoul, warm Brecker Brothers-esque excursions, the Latin pop of War and El Chicano, and the charged, forward thinking feel of late 60s/early 70s jazz, particularly the electric sax work of Eddie Harris and the impossible-to-place groove of Phil Woods’ European Rhythm Machine. Co-produced by Gastelum and Mocean Worker, the album rolls along layered percussion and a controlled, powered-up energy – a flowing inducement to move, to swing, to sway, aided by guest turns from Joe Russo, Brian Jordan, Zak Najor, Chris Stillwell and more.

It’s bloody sexy music, and executed so smoothly that it’s only upon further inspection that one realizes how much is actually going on. Yet, The Electric Sound of Johnny Arrow never feels overstuffed or confusingly diverse. Like Gastelum’s playing, it is exactly what it needs to be and a fantastic snapshot of a rich musical mind in full flight. (Dennis Cook)

Here’s what Gastelum had to say to our inquiries.

Cochemea Gastelum by Greg Aiello

Nickname: “Cheme” pronounced /tchem-ay/

1. Great music rarely happens without
Listening, letting go, and in the immortal words of Fred Wesley, playing like you don’t give a fuck.

2. The first album I bought was
Charlie Parker’s “Hot House

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig was
Orchestre Poly-Rythmo De Contou’s “Echos Hypnotiques”

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to be
A drummer

5. My favorite sort of gig is
A sweaty dance party

6. One thing I wish people knew about me is
There are moments when I may seem detached or distant, but I just like to be quiet and watch sometimes.

7. I love the sound of
The ocean

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic as
Sly & The Family Stone’s There’s A Riot Going On

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was at
Au Virage Lepic in Paris

10. I always find the coolest audiences in
Unexpected places

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time is
Eating late night junk food!

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
Hmmm, probably The Beatles. My mom used to play their records all the time growing up, and I always seem to go back to their songs for some inspirado. Been on a big Stones kick lately, though.

13. The craziest thing I ever saw was
Ornette Coleman having a jam session in his apartment.

Cheme will perform perform the entire solo album in its entirety on September 10th in New York City at 92Y Tribeca with ten piece band, including members of Antibalas and Budos Band.

Cochemea Gastelum Tour Dates :: Cochemea Gastelum News :: Cochemea Gastelum Concert Reviews

JamBase | Dark City
Go See Live Music!



August 13, 2010

The Black Crowes: Tall Tales <br>Continue w/ Mushroom Party

MORE WARTS ‘N’ ALL STORIES FROM MR. ROBINSON

On August 2nd Chris Robinson of The Black Crowes began a series of webisodes titled “20 Years of Tall Tales”, delving into the sordid details of the group’s 20 year-and-growing history. In the latest installment Chris talks about the bacchanalian party the band threw upon the completion of the Amorica album, replete with bizarre costumes, psychedelic mushrooms and cameras rolling.

Glimpses of this crazed party scene appear in a promo video from the time of Amorica‘s release.

20 YEARS OF TALL TALES Video Links

#1: Aerosmith Tour (1990)

#2: Fashion (1990)

#3: Getting Thrown Off A National Tour (1991)

#4: Convenience Store Incident (1990)

#5: High Times Cover (1992)

#6: Moving From SYMM to SHAMC (1992)

#7: Pink Pop Festival (1993)

#8: Million Dollar TALL Album (1993)

The Black Crowes Tour Dates :: The Black Crowes News :: The Black Crowes Concert Reviews