September 3, 2010

HBO’s Treme Soundtrack Out 9/28

SOUNDTRACK FEATURES TROMBONE SHORTY,
SOUL REBELS BRASS BAND, DR. JOHN, STEVE ZAHN,
AND
OTHERS

A digital release date and a tracklisting has been unveiled for the soundtrack to the first season of
the NOLA-based HBO show Treme.
Treme: Music From The HBO Original Series, Season 1 will have a digital release on
September 28, with a physical
CD release is expected later in the fall. The soundtrack features
Trombone Shorty, Rebirth Brass Band, Dr. John, and others. Check out the
tracklisting below. (via hitflix.com).

TREME: MUSIC FROM THE HBO ORIGINAL SERIES, SEASON 1

1. “Treme Song (Main Title Version”) – John Boutte

2. “Feel Like Funkin’ It Up (Live Street Mix)” – Rebirth Brass Band
3. “I Hope You’re Comin’ Back to New Orleans” – The New Orleans Jazz Vipers
4. “Skokiaan” – Kermit Ruffins & The Barbecue Swingers
5. “Ooh Poo Pah Doo” – Trombone Shorty & James Andrews
6. “Drinka Little Poison (4 U Die)” – Soul Rebels Brass Band & John Mooney

7. “We Made It Through That Water” – Free Agents Brass Band
8. “Shame Shame Shame” – Steve Zahn & Friends
9. “My Indian Red” – Dr. John
10. “At the Foot of Canal Street” – John Boutte, Paul Sanchez, Glen David Andrews & New Birth Brass Band

11. “Buona Sera” – Louis Prima
12. “New Orleans Blues” – Tom McDermott & Lucia Micarelli

13. “I Don’t Stand a Ghost of a Chance with You” – Michiel Huisman, Lucia Micarelli & Wendell Pierce

14. “Indian Red (Wild Man Memorial)” – Mardi Gras Indians

15. “Indian Red” – Donald Harrison

16. “Time Is On My Side” – Irma Thomas & Allen Toussaint
17. “This City” – Steve Earle
18. “Just a Closer Walk With Thee” – Treme Brass Band

19. “My Darlin’ New Orleans” – Leigh “Li’l Queenie” Harris



September 1, 2010

Scott Amendola: Lift

DRUMMER SELF-RELEASES FIRST ALBUM IN FIVE YEARS


Scott Amendola

The painting by Mexican artist Victor Zubeldia that serves as the cover of Lift is entitled The
Angel and has hung in Scott Amendola’s living room for years, but it could have been created with his music in
mind. Depicting an androgynous figure being raised into the night sky by a host of blackbirds via long, ropelike
strands of hair, the image echoes the buoyant freedom, transcendent collaboration, and rich depth that characterize
the album as a whole.

Witness the title track, which floats free of gravity as the ebb and flow of Amendola’s percussion nudges Jeff Parker‘s tendril-like guitar lines and
John Shifflett‘s terse, elastic bass in
and out of the tune’s melancholy melody. A similar sense of expansion and contraction pervades Cascade, as an
insistent bass/drum rhythm provides the bedrock under the industrial hiss of Amendola’s improvised
electronics.

They’re such great musicians that you can literally put anything in front of them and they’re going to make great
music from it, Amendola says of his bandmates. And it’s going to be them, their interpretation, which is exciting to
me as a bandleader.

Lift marks the debut recording of the Scott Amendola Trio. The release date is October 19. Check below for
all upcoming CD release performances.

October 23: Blue Whale, Los Angeles, CA (9:00pm)
October 24: Dana St. Roasting Co., Mountain View, CA (7:30pm)
October 25: Yoshi’s, Oakland, CA (8:00pm)

October 26: Earshot Festival, Poncho Concert Hall Cornish College, Seattle, WA
October 27: The Goodfoot Lounge, Portland, OR double bill with Blue Cranes

October 28: Kuumbwa Jazz Center, Santa Cruz, CA (7:00pm)

Scott Amendola
Tour Dates

::
Scott Amendola News
::
Scott Amendola
Concert
Reviews



August 29, 2010

Sat Eye Candy: Stevie Ray Vaughan

BLUES ROCK GIANT GONE 20 YEARS

Yesterday marked the 20th anniversary of Stevie Ray Vaughan‘s untimely death, but so overstuffed with life is the music he left behind that it hardly seems possible that he’s gone. Texas born Vaughn exuded red hot passion and a grabbing, exciting gusto to get into it, whatever “it” might be. When he arrived on the national scene in the early 1980s he re-infused the blues with a rawness and vitality that the increasingly slick genre was sorely in need of. And then he took it much, much further, offering his painfully honest, heart touching, utterly wounded story in songs that tear one up to this day. There was also the good time, boot scootin’ Dallas boy who reminded us how to boogie, but it’s the sharp truthfulness of his longing, his admittance to personal failings and his subsequent rise into hope and rejuvenation that makes his work endure as it has.

For myself, Stevie Ray Vaughan is crystallized in a single night and even a single moment during that evening. It was New Year’s Eve 1987 at the Henry J. Kaiser Auditorium in Oakland, CA. A clean & sober Stevie Ray and the lock-tight Double Trouble hit the midnight hour charging in hard party mode, the capacity crowd already well warmed up by The Paladins and Tower of Power. But as the minutes crept into the first day of 1988, Vaughan took it down – way down. Though a native Texan, Stevie Ray had become a fixture in Oakland and around the Bay Area, and for a spell made his serious fans, myself included, seriously worried about his health and future. His triumph over his demons and subsequent commercial and artistic success was something felt in a hearty, happy way by those of us who’d watched him evolve for years. During a wrenching version of “Life Without You,” he began to testify in his quiet way about just how lucky and blessed and goddamn pleased he was to be here doing what he was doing. It was as simple and direct an expression of profound gratitude as any person has ever uttered, and he followed it with a guitar solo that still raises hairs on my neck. There wasn’t a dry eye in the house and the roar that followed the final notes shook Heaven’s floor.

In some ways, this moment taps some of the power and glory of Stevie Ray Vaughan, but also just as importantly, his warts-and-all humanity and its catalyst to examine and live our own lives with the same fortitude and honesty. We are stronger than the weakest parts of us, and Stevie Ray knew that. We are the blessed ones for the gifts, insights and music he shared. (Dennis Cook)

We begin appropriately enough with a searing version of “Life Without You.” As he sings, “The angels have waited for so long, now they have their way.”

This’ll turn your fleece white as snow!

This is a LOT of guitar firepower on one stage – Stevie Ray, Jimmie Vaughan and Jeff Beck with singer Angela Stehli in rare Honolulu performance.

One of Stevie Ray’s longtime songwriting foils was Doyle Bramhall, who was also a running partner of ZZ Top’s Billy Gibbons & Dusty Hill as a teen. This is one of better Vaughan/Bramhall compositions off In Step, Stevie Ray’s last studio release with Double Trouble before his death.

This triple threat of Vaughan, B.B. King and Albert Collins doing damage to this signature blues was captured at Jazz Fest in 1988.

So synonymous with electric guitar was Vaughan that it came as a surprise to some that he absolutely killed on acoustic in what is arguably the finest installment of MTV Unplugged next to the iconic Nirvana performance.

Hands down, one of the finest slow blues ever, and this version adds fellow Texas bluesman Johnny Copeland for extra spice.

Tough as ever, this one was especially refreshing on the MTV of 1985.

This one always kicked like a mule, and this take from the Loreley Rockpalast Festival, Germany in 1984 is no exception.

Many try to pull on Hendrix’s velvet trousers, so to speak, but few have done so with as much authority and authenticity as Stevie Ray. Here’s a double shot of SRV doing Jimi. Catch the little bit of “Third Stone from the Sun” he throws in to “Little Wing.”

We end upbeat, hopeful that wherever SRV is now that the house is shakin’ real good every night.