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John Butler at the Athletic Club of Bend: 9.9.08

Here’s a rundown of JBT’s show in Bend on Tuesday night. We’re still trying to get some video and pics up here … bear with

Here’s a rundown of JBT’s show in Bend on Tuesday night. We’re still trying to get some video and pics up here … bear with us, they’ll be up soon.

We hadn't made it out to a show at the Athletic Club of Bend yet this
summer, but we'd heard a thing or two about how shows go down at this
venue. Rumors have graced our ears of draconian no standing/no dancing
decrees, picket fences segregating VIPS from general admission peasants
and a smattering of other no-fun policies.

So, one can understand why we had our guard up when we arrived at the
ACB last night to see the John Butler Trio drop into Bend for the
second time in a matter of nine months. But after JBT's fellow
Australians Crash Symphony opened the show and Butler walked onto the
stage much of the crowd (the one's who weren't sipping wine from Eddie
Bauer coolers) STOOD UP, in direct violation of the rumored rules. By
the time John Butler shouldered his banjo and blasted out "Better
Than," these standing folks had charged the stage, flooding what we
thought was the "reserved section" and for the next two hours, it was a
real-live rock concert. And the best part…no security or venue
management personnel did anything to stop it.

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PP Heads and PBRs: Person People at Parrilla 9.5.08

How many PBR tall boys does it take to satiate a few hundred Person People fans? We’re afraid that his question falls straight into the

How many PBR tall boys does it take to satiate a few hundred Person People fans? We're afraid that his question falls straight into the owl with the Tootsie Pop arena of unsolved queries.
You see, when Person People launched into a loud-as-all-bejeezus set in the Parrilla Grill parking lot on Friday night to benefit the Divison Street Skatepark Project, the PBR was flowing like, well PBR.

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John Butler: The WHOLE interview

Shelby Harwood chatted it up with Australian roots rocker John Butler and here’s the full transcript of that interview which is MUCH longer than the

Shelby Harwood chatted it up with Australian roots rocker John Butler and here’s the full transcript of that interview which is MUCH longer than the portion that appeared in the print edition. Enjoy all you faithful JBT fans…

It seems like you've been on tour almost non-stop since Grand National
came out last year, but you said in an interview at Lollapalooza that
you had enough songs for a new album, how do you find time to write
with such a busy schedule?

I'll actually take a bit of a break after this tour and just chill out,
write more songs and do nice things like visit the beach with my
family, and then I'll see how I go and just record an album. We're
looking to kind of probably, now that we're kind of getting more
established in all the territories we're going to give everybody a
little less. Usually what happens is you go really hard at the
beginning and kind of get everybody on board and then once everybody's
on board you don't really need to tour three or four times a year, you
know, it's actually probably dangerous to do that because everybody you
know gets sick of you. You know, we'll start coming back once or twice
a year, and that will leave a little bit more time for all kinds of
stuff. You know, it takes a long time to get it to that place - whether
it be in America or Australia or Europe - and you just kind of have to
dig in for a while you know?
I was actually living in Australia last year when Grand National came
out in March and was wondering what's it like being so huge in
Australia - getting daily radio play and being blasted over the sound
system at City Beach on a regular basis for example - and then coming
to the US as a relatively unknown act? Is it strange or do you like it
better being somewhat anonymous?

It's to be expected, you know, there's a big difference between
mainstream popularity and underground popularity, which is what I guess
we kind of have over here now after seven or eight years of [touring]
America. It just takes time, you can't expect things to transfer from
one country to the next unless you have some sort of world-wide hit,
which comes with it's own dangers. There's several bands from Australia
that have had major world-wide hits - no one's ever heard of them and
then they're big around the world and then it's hard to kind of
maintain that. So we kind of do it in the opposite way. We kind of just
build it up from the ground up and what it kind of means is by the time
you're kind of getting to where your status is in the well-known
region, it's solid and it just stays for a long time. That's kind of
what's happened in Australia, every step of the way it's grown slowly,
it's never been like a huge splash and so by the time we were big, the
roots were very deep, it wouldn't really matter what storm came by,
what we built … it wouldn't be knocked over. So that's pretty much what
we've built over in America, it just hasn't hit mainstream yet, but
it's a very solid place to be and I don't have a problem with that.
 

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The STP Sing-along

Last night my 4,312-day Stone Temple Pilots concert drought came to an
end as the four men of the newly reunited STP brought their aged selves
onto the Les Schwab Amphitheater stage on a particularly brisk night
for what can be most easily and predictably described as a 1990s
nostalgia sing-along.

After waiting for a good hour after I disappointingly missing openers
Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, Led Zeppelin's "Good Times, Bad Times"
boomed over the largest collection of speakers I've ever seen on the
LSA stage and the lights finally went dim. Enter three-fourths of STP,
dressed for the event with bassist Robert DeLeo actually in a sport
coat variation and brother Dean in some sort of quirky-yet-classy
Western shirt. They all saddled up - but still no sight of Scott
Weiland. Instantly, my mind went a little nuts as it often does,
wondering if Weiland had again fallen off the wagon and was maybe
camped out somewhere in between Bend and Seattle (where the band played
a headlining slot at Bumbershoot) ingesting whatever substances he
could get his hands on. I imagined him sitting in a drainage ditch for
some reason - perhaps that's what my generation expects out of Weiland.
But then out of the shadows, the red glimmer of a freshly lit cigarette
glowed through the darkened stage and there was Mr. Weiland.

With a cowboy hat, scarf, sunglasses, and skin-tight designer jeans,
Weiland took one last drag, hacked a sizable chunk of saliva to the
side and got the show on the road, manhandling the microphone stand as
only Weiland can do as the band got things started with "Big Empty." It
was only a few seconds later that, just as my pubescenent eyes saw on
November 11, 1996, precisely 4,312 days prior, Weiland hopped up on the
monitor speakers and strutted around. And just as I did more than 4,000
days ago in Seattle's Mercer Arena, I, and everyone around me was
singing along, without a care of how silly a line like "her dizzy head
is conscious laden" sounds. How often do you describe one's head as
"conscious laden"? Probably not often.

But nonetheless, the sing-along continued through familiar ditties like
"Creep," "Big Bang Baby," "Lady Picture Show" and of course, of course,
of course "Plush." Weiland is still heroin-addict skinny (that's just
illustrative language and not to be taken literally, OK?) and still
arrogant as all hell, dishing out the occasional hip thrust and finger
point from his front-of-stage, monitor speaker altar. In this day of
modest indie rockers who enjoy themselves on stage, yet have no
delusions of hubris, it was strangely refreshing to see the kind of
showmanship Weiland brings to the table. Another weird thing about
Weiland…he was super tan. You don't see that in a rock star too often.

The venue included seats for the first several rows, stopping any
chance of a mosh pit, as was once the norm at an STP show. There seemed
to be more than a few testosterone overloaded fans who disagreed with
the fence keeping them from getting closer to Weiland and the guys, as
a massive contingent gathered around the entrance to the seated area.
One aforementioned man-of-men showed his disappointment by hucking a
trash can over the fan at a security guard. But for the most part, STP
fans have aged to the less aggressive, stand-and-sing-along types,
rather than mosh pit enthusiasts.

Damn, I used to love mosh pits.

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Sweating it Out at R3: And why Vengeance Creek rules the local metal scene

 
Sound Check drove the dreaded 32 miles down to LaPine Friday night for
the R3 Festival and learned three very important things; Vengeance
Creek are Central Oregon's metal royalty, clever beat-boxing can steal
the show and you can three-person sandwich grind to metal.

As the
sun set on a triple-digit August night, band after band played to a
half-interested crowd switching between the two trailer truck stages.
The crowd grew as the sun descended and the local rap group Povciti
took the stage giving the crowd its promised dose of local rap and
properly woke them up. Sound Check learned from this set that you can
apparently find Povciti's Epic and H@ze in the Old Mill District and
that they're established local celebrities. Well, if they weren't local
celebrities before then they are now. The duo laid their underground
hip-hop routine on thick and brought the crowd to its feet with their
finale - a freestyle rap accompanied by master beat boxer Dain
Strothoff. The kid can beat-box like nobody's business to every kind of
beat imaginable and stole the show from right under the duo. Whoever
this kid is, Sound Check contemplated that he could give Person People
(keyword "could") a run for their money if accompanied by the right
freestyle artist. Maybe it was the possible heat stoke, but our thirty
bucks entrance fee was justified right then and there.

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Conor Oberst Video from the Domino Room

Conor Oberst brought his newly formed Mystic Valley band to the Domino Room last night and played a set that showcased material from his soon

Conor Oberst brought his newly formed Mystic Valley band to the Domino Room last night and played a set that showcased material from his soon to be released self-titled record, which he’s releasing under his actual name, rather than his Bright Eyes alias. Last night’s show may have disappointed those looking to hear a Bright Eyes hit list, but surely impressed everyone who can appreciate an artist like Oberst, who very well might be his generation’s greatest singer songwriter.

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4 Peaks Cuts Ticket Prices! New 2009 Location!

Next weekend just got a bit more affordable for music fans as the folks at the helm of next weekend’s 4 Peaks Music Festival announced

Next weekend just got a bit more affordable for music fans as the folks at the helm of next weekend’s 4 Peaks Music Festival announced today that they’ll be cutting the ticket prices for the second annual gathering in Tumalo. Organizers also announced that the festival will move from it’s Rockin’ A Ranch location in 2009.

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The Patterson Hood Interview

Let There Be Rock!We caught up with DBT founder and frontman Patterson Hood at his home in Athen, GA recently to discuss the band, some

Let There Be Rock!We caught up with DBT founder and frontman Patterson Hood at his home in Athen, GA recently to discuss the band, some music history and the ongoing tour. Hood was in a talkative mood and generously gave us almost a half an hour of his time.

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Buckethead Rules!

A couple of video clips from Buckethead’s performance last Friday at the Domino Room. And a shout out to Random Presents for bringing this gotta-see-it-to-believe

A couple of video clips from Buckethead’s performance last Friday at the Domino Room. And a shout out to Random Presents for bringing this gotta-see-it-to-believe it show to Bend.

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