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Category: News

Track Premiere: EL MAR – “Dreamcatcher”

Posted on August 2, 2017August 2, 2017 by Vinyl Mag

ElMar_Albumn_TryIIForget_02

Brooklyn singer-songwriter Joey Primero, under the moniker El Mar, is all set to release her debut full-length, Try To Forget, next Friday, August 11.

Self-defined as “mystic mermaid rock,” the album is a follow-up to her recently released The Road EP.

To give you a little taste of what Primero—along with a collective of musicians—has cooked up for us, we’ve got the exclusive premieres of “Dreamcatcher,” a track about lost love that shows off Primero’s vocal chops in a big way.

“‘Dreamcatcher’ was written on Cape Cod last summer,” said Primero of the track. “I wanted it to have a sense of urgency in order to capture that feeling of being frazzled or just unsettled in knowing things are coming to an end. And realizing that they were never meant to be.”

Frazzled or not, Primero has found her voice on this debut, and we’re already ready for more.

Be sure to catch El Mar at Rockwood Music Hall on August 26th—it’s a FREE show, so get your ass down there.

Video Premiere: Powerkompany – “Learning to Love”

Posted on July 28, 2017July 28, 2017 by Vinyl Mag
Photo: Ben Rouse
Photo: Ben Rouse

Athens, GA-based dream-pop duo Powerkompany (Marie Davon and Andrew Heaton) are debuting their music video for their sexually frustrated (aren’t we all?) trip-fest “Learning to Love.”

“Every time I listened to the song, it pushed me into another world of excitement and frenzy,” said Davon of the track.  “And that’s what I tried to create in the video, which was filmed and edited over the course of about six months of experimentation. The party scene was filmed by Ethan Payne with lighting help from Pascaldmx in the Fuel Hot Yoga studio with some of my favorite women in Athens: Moriah Piacente, Gracen Daniels, Sienna Chandler and Farida Gasser.  The other scenes were filmed with help from Zelium who has a great little photography studio in the Chase Street warehouses. And like mixing ingredients and spices together to create a feast, I edited and messed with the footage, whipping it into the delirious experience that you see now.”

Watch the exclusive premiere of “Learning to Love” below.

Catch Powerkompany in Atlanta this Sunday July 30 at Dirty South Yoga Fest.  You know that sounds awesome.

Track Premiere: The Majorleans – “Dancing With The Darkside”

Posted on July 27, 2017July 27, 2017 by Vinyl Mag

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The Majorleans are a  New York-based lo-fi rock project led by singer-songwriter Nick Francis DiFonzo and guitarist Chris Buckle, with Christian Bongers on bass and Colin Brooks on drums.

Today, they’re debuting their titillating new single “Dancing With The Darkside.”

“I had originally written this song for the band Mother Feather, or with them in mind at least,” said DiFonzo, who typically channels organic, roots-based songwriting for The Majorleans.  “They passed on it, and I realized that even though it was stylistically a bit different from our other stuff, that we had fun indulging some of the more rock-club, dancefloor vibes that we dig but aren’t a huge part of our sound.   The lyrics just came in a whirl like they always do, and the chorus was certainly emboldened by the post-election malaise here in NYC last winter.  I’m not a topical writer, but the sentiment seemed apt to the times.”

Check out the exclusive premiere of “Dancing With The Darkside” here!

 

New Yorkers, be sure to catch The Majorleans at Union Pool with the newly re-united Des Roar on August 20th.  See you out there.

Artists Not to Miss: Sloss Fest 2017

Posted on July 14, 2017 by Jacklyn Citero

Over the next two days, the music and lifestyle event Sloss Music & Arts Festival will take over the Sloss Furnaces National Historic Landmark in Birmingham, Alabama. We’re anticipating sets from headliners Alabama Shakes, Widespread Panic, ODESZA, Sturgill Simpson, Run the Jewels, and more.

We’re taking a look at a few artists you should not miss this year if you’re heading to Sloss 2017.

CASHMERE CAT
Blending technical sensibility with bubbly playfulness, Magnus August Høiberg aka Cashmere Cat is something of a pop wizard. The Norway native got his start remixing songs (think Miguel and Lana Del Rey status) and eventually caught the ear of producer Benny Blanco. He then transitioned into working mostly behind the scenes, provided his efforts to some of the top names in pop, R&B and hip-hop, like Kanye West and Ariana Grande.

CBDB
The hype and intrigue around CBDB is growing, and for good reason. The Alabama jam band fuses southern progressive funk rock with blended vocals. Their onstage energy is incomparable; no wonder their music is spreading from the southeast across the nation like wildfire.

CHARLES BRADLEY & HIS EXTRAORDINAIRES
As he promised us this past fall, Charles Bradley has fought cancer and we are so happy to see him back on that stage. Bradley and his backing group the Extraordinaires will take the stage late Saturday afternoon with their riveting live performance.

K.FLAY
K. spins fearless lyrics that show the bright and dark of the world in her head. For her second full-length Every Where Is Some Where (April 2017), the L.A.-based hip-hop/alt-pop artist pushed deeper into introspection while adding an element of political commentary. The result is her most deliberate and dynamic work yet, a thrillingly vital album that channels the frenzy and anxieties of today’s world but ultimately exhilarates.

LAWRENCE
Siblings Clyde and Gracie Lawrence are serving up music that sounds like breakfast; a serving of fresh nostalgia with a side of bacon. Capturing the essence and sounds of a bygone era, their debut album Breakfast meets at the intersection of classic songwriting and modern production.

LILLIE MAE
Lillie Mae has been singing and playing on stages across the country since she could stand on her own two feet. Her latest,Forever And Then Some sees the Nashville-based singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist weaving her own extraordinary experiences with the myriad strains of Americana to create a breathtaking song cycle of romance and struggle, solitude and adventure.

PHANTOGRAM
Duo of Josh Carter and Sarah Barthel serve up plenty of thick, buzzing beats and snaking melodic lines to sink your teeth into. Phantogram has hit a new creative peak that has been building for nearly a decade. With surging energy and appealing experimentation, Phantogram has taken their intriguing, darkly shaded direction and have added new textures to their signature style.

RUN THE JEWELS
El-P and Killer Mike, two of the most distinctive and celebrated names in rap, might have seemed like an unlikely pairing on paper, but the duo subverted and pulverized all expectations with their three albums. Known for their energetic live performances, you won’t want to miss their Sloss appearance.

SPOON
Since forming in 1993, Spoon has proven themselves time and time again as the indie gods they truly are. Their latest Hot Thoughts (March 2017) is the bravest, most sonically inventive work of Spoon’s career. With all due respect to earlier efforts that have made the quintet both critically acclaimed and a commercial contender, preconceptions about this band are about to be obliterated. That’s not to say Hot Thoughts  doesn’t have a requisite supply of infectious earworms but there’s a lyrical bent that’s as carnal as it’s crafty, and a newfound sense of sonic exploration that results in the genresmasher Spoon have flirted with in the past but not fully consummated.

SUN SEEKER
Sun Seeker has drawn applause for their unhurried breed of Cosmic American Music and with BIDDEFORD (Third Man Records), their long awaited debut EP, the Nashville-based band more than affirm their promise. The EP – which follows Sun Seeker’s widely acclaimed Third Man debut single, 2016’s “Georgia Dust” b/w “No One Knows” (TMR322) – sees Alex Benick (guitar, vocals), Asher Horton (bass guitar, vocals), and Ben Parks (drums, vocals) exploring nostalgia, melancholy, and emotional turmoil via laidback psychedelia pollinated with tight harmonies, classic folk songcraft, and country rock spirit, an ageless approach that is simultaneously archetypal and now utterly their own.

 

Top 10 Bands You Better Not Miss at Forecastle This Weekend

Posted on July 13, 2017July 14, 2017 by Vinyl Mag
Photo: Forecastle Festival
Photo: Forecastle Festival


If you’re one of the lucky ones heading out to Louisville KY for Forecastle Festival this weekend, we know you’re gonna flock to see the headliners—and we’re right there with you.  Forecastle’s big guns form quite the armory this year with sets from Run The Jewels, LCD Soundsystem, PJ Harvey, Spoon, Weezer, and Sturgill Simpson.  Not to mention the glorious return of the beloved Screaming Eagle himself, Mister Charles Bradley and His Extraordinaires.

That said, if you scroll on down the lineup, it’s fully packed with exciting, dynamic acts right down to the very end.  Here’s a list of the top 10 bands it would be criminal to miss.

Big Thief

Brooklyn’s Big Thief’s music, rooted in the songs of Adrianne Lenker (guitar, vocals) paints in vivid tones. Their highly anticipated second record Capacity was release last month and shows us the gentle side of being ripped open, and then recounts the second act of pulling oneself back together to prepare for it all to happen again.

Whitney

Whitney tries to make the kind of songs they’d be jealous of if someone else got there first. Formed from the core of guitarist Max Kakacek (ex-Smith Westerns) and singing drummer Julien Ehrlich (ex-Unknown Mortal Orchestra),the band itself is something bigger, something visionary, something neither of them could have accomplished alone.

Aaron Lee Tasjan

East Nashville-based musician Aaron Lee Tasjan has always considered himself a songwriter first and foremost, writing his own off-kilter folk-inflected songs since he picked up his first acoustic as a teen guitar prodigy. His New West Records debut, Silver Tears, shows his artistic ambitions and solidifies him as one of the most intriguing singer/songwriters to emerge in sometime.

Adia Victoria

Adia Victoria is establishing a fresh reference point on the musical landscape. From blood-born howls to idiosyncratic phrasing, she is the big red dot saying You Are Here. The Nashville-based artist travels the lands of rock, afro punk, and country, squarely situated in the continent of the Blues.

Mondo Cozmo

Born in Philadelphia and now based in East Los Angeles, Mono Cozmo raised a big middle finger to all opposition, and in 2016 began releasing songs that could’ve been cut under the influence of a “Champagne Supernova” inside a Seattle warehouse if this were the nineties…but it’s not. His latest work, Plastic Soul, will be released in a few weeks. He did it all by deconstructing everything you know and reconstructing it with a rawness the world hasn’t felt since Pearl Jam’s Vs. or Springsteen’s Born To Run. That’s Plastic Soul.

John Moreland

John Moreland’s latest album, Big Bad Luv, is the record he made after, after everything in his life changed. For the better. He sings in one of those accents from flyover country that’s impossible to locate and implausible to mimic. (Texas, by way of Northern Kentucky, but mostly Tulsa, as it happens.) He sings directly from his heart, with none of the restraint and filters and caution the rest of us would apply for public protection. He sings with resolute courage.

Twin Limb

Forecastle will be a hometown throw down for Twin Limb. Louisville’s own Twin Limb is proof that a band can be a powerful trio without being a “power trio”. Friends, Lacey Guthrie and Maryliz Bender decided they were going to build a musical edifice together, with the producing prowess of Kevin Ratterman. Together, an organic blend bringing post-punk guitar sprinklings to a yearning, but militaristic amalgam of soaring vocals, percussion, and slowly-kneaded accordion.

 

Lucy Dacus

Sharp lyrical observations, playful turns of musical phrase, hooks that’ll embed themselves in your frontal lobe for days is what you’ll experience at Lucy Dacus’ set this Saturday afternoon. She has a keen sense of self and that shines clearly on her debut No Burden.

Pell

Born and raised in New Orleans but forced, at 13, to relocate with his family to Jackson, Mississippi when Hurricane Katrina hit and destroyed their home—has been praised for fusing precise lyricism and soulful singing into an eclectic sound, entirely his own.

Sun Seeker

Sun Seeker has drawn applause for their unhurried breed of Cosmic American Music and with BIDDEFORD (Third Man Records), their long awaited debut EP, the Nashville-based band more than affirm their promise. The EP – which follows Sun Seeker’s widely acclaimed Third Man debut single, 2016’s “Georgia Dust” b/w “No One Knows” (TMR322) – sees Alex Benick (guitar, vocals), Asher Horton (bass guitar, vocals), and Ben Parks (drums, vocals) exploring nostalgia, melancholy, and emotional turmoil via laidback psychedelia pollinated with tight harmonies, classic folk songcraft, and country rock spirit, an ageless approach that is simultaneously archetypal and now utterly their own.

 

Electric Forest 2017: Weekend 2

Posted on July 5, 2017July 5, 2017 by Jacklyn Citero
[tps_header]

What a crazy, surprising, and hypnotic two weekends of Electric Forest this year. We’re still trying to process all the magic, but in the meantime we have some photos  for you to reminisce to.

Headliners for both weekends included The String Cheese Incident, Bassnectar, Big Gigantic, Dillon Francis, The Revivalists, and Lotus. Second weekend festival goers were also able to catch Flume, DJ Snake (who don’t cancel on us), Thievery Corporation, and RL Grime.

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EF16 cw

 

 

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Track Premiere: Hidden Hospitals – “Smile And Wave”

Posted on June 30, 2017 by Emily McBride

Hidden_Hospitals_Corpse_On_Pumpkin_Jaret_Ferratusco (1)

Chicago pop rock trio Hidden Hospitals are dropping the newest single from their second full-length, LIARS, out later this year.  “Smile And Wave” hits you where you live, with a climactic-scene-of-a-movie, hope-for-the-future, montage-of-the-past impact.

Or, as the band describes it, “Christmas meets summer crush and the facade of playing house.”  So there you go.

Check out the premiere of “Smile And Wave” right here, and let it wash right over you.

Hidden Hospitals Tour Dates:

6/30 The Melody Inn – Indianapolis, IN
7/1 Beat Kitchen – Chicago, IL
7/6 Crofoot – Pontiac, MI
7/7 Skully’s – Columbus, OH
7/8 Smiling Moose – Pittsburgh, PA
7/9 Tralf Music Hall – Buffalo, NY
7/10 Bug Jar – Rochester, NY
7/12 The Range – Ithaca, NY
7/13 The Low Beat – Albany, NY
7/14 PA’s Lounge – Somerville, MA
7/16 The Space – Hamden, CT
7/17 Rockwood Music Hall – New York, NY
7/18 Cafe Nine – New Haven, CT
7/20 Maxwell’s – Hoboken, NJ
7/21 Milkboy – Philadelphia, PA
7/22 Gold Sounds – Brooklyn, NY

Electric Forest 2017: Weekend 1

Posted on June 28, 2017June 28, 2017 by Jacklyn Citero
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Before we dive back into the world of Electric Forest for Weekend 2, let’s take a little look back at the EF first weekend. It was rainy, it was muddy, it was exhilarating, and above all…it was magical.

Headliners for last weekend included: The String Cheese Incident, Bassnectar, Big Gigantic, Dillon Francis, The Revivalists, and Lotus. First weekend festival goers also saw ODESZA, My Morning Jacket, and Above & Beyond – all who will not be playing this coming weekend.

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Bonnaroo 2017: Cam x Vinyl Mag

Posted on June 19, 2017 by Jacklyn Citero
Courtesy of: CAM
Courtesy of: CAM

Bonnaroo Sundays are a struggle, to say the least. With the hot Tennessee sun beating down on your third, maybe fourth, maybe even fifth day of the festival, the motivation to start your day is usually lacking.

As the temperatures began to rise and the fight against afternoon lethargy began, we made our way behind the Which Stage to meet up with Cam prior to her Sunday afternoon set. As the door to her bus opened we were greeted by gust of invigorating air-conditioning, followed by a welcoming, bubbly, and confident Cam.

Her spirit was infectious and her energizing attitude brightened an otherwise laboring day.

Dressed in a flowing blouse, in her trademark yellow of course, and a pair of the most amazing jeans we have ever seen (sequined mermaid and sea themed), the California-born singer/songwriter sat down to have a chat about her artistry, her early years, and, of course, her favorite color yellow.

Thank you so much for your time today. We’re really looking forward to your set this afternoon. I just want to start off by talking about how your music is very storytelling. One thing I love is when artists can tell a story through their lyrics. Can you tell us what your creative process looks like to capture your personal stories into your music?

For “Burning House” that was a dream. Like, I really did have a dream. First I was telling my story to my co-writer and he’s like kind of like this, and he sang back ‘I had a dream about a burning house,’ and I was like ‘yeah, that’s it!’ So sometimes it’s pretty straightforward and other times it’ll be a catchphrase or something, but it always has to tap into something emotionally that makes me remember something pretty strong; remembering some kind of emotional memory. Maybe it’s because I have a background in Psychology research and love studying emotions, but if it doesn’t have that color to it then I don’t care about the song as much and it’s probably not going to make the album. For me, I have to be close with my co-writer so I can get a little deep into the stuff that’s personal.

Through your storytelling you get to show this side of you that is in fact so personal.

Just being a human being… the personal is something you just don’t share with a lot of people. Sometimes the stories can be very embarrassing and vulnerable. So when you do share it in the privacy of a songwriting room and then you start playing it, like today in front of thousands of people at Bonnaroo, it is a bizarre jump from a very personal conversation and then sharing it with all those people. To be honest, it is not comfortable at all, and the only thing that makes it worthwhile at all is…Ya know, I’d much rather stay protected and not have these very personal stories out there. Like tell other people stories, but when you get fans, or just anyone who listens to the songs, and they come up to you and they hug you and they basically know how you felt. Like they say ‘I love someone with an addiction problem,’ and maybe it’s not the same exact story,  but they have that same feeling, that same nerve that got hit. Thist is one of the most rewarding things that I found in life; how music can connect people on such a deeper level that it just reminds everyone that we’re all one humankind.

Do you think that this reward is what gets you over that hump of hesitation to put yourself out there?

Absolutely. I think in the beginning you don’t realize the big picture. You’re just dreaming about lots of people hearing your songs, but you’re also like, ‘eh, I don’t know how much of that is actually going to end up happening.’ And then when you get to the point where people are actually hearing it, it’s terrifying but at the same time you get so much back from them [the fans] that the next time you go into your music, like right now I’m working on my second album, and you’re writing things you’re like, ‘oh s*** people are going to hear this but, that’s kind of cool that people will actually hear this.’ It’s a mixed bag but that’s the part that definitely keeps me going.

And as you keep on going, you have a lot going on with your career and your life, what keeps you grounded these days?

For me, grounded means when you’re traveling a lot and your home is like on a bus and you don’t have a steady spot to be,  which I think helps create who you are, like the culture of your community, your everyday routine, the coffee shop you go to, and the gas station you go to, all that stuff…the people you meet with and talk to everyday, those people become part of your personality.  So when you’re traveling all the time, in my personal experience of how life is right now, it’s affected by all the people sleeping in the bunks around me and it’s affected by these really rare snapshot experiences of all these people and fans loving the songs. It isn’t a normal experience. And then when you get home from the road, that is not how it goes. You are doing your laundry, people are not screaming at you, wanting to hug you and stuff like that. So it’s a big shift. For me, the great thing is that everybody who is a part of this, we’re all really good friends and the band started creating music years ago, and everybody has either played or written on the album or produced on the album. So we keep a very chill group. I think just kind of staying real with the people on the road, because once you get home it’s easy to be grounded. It’s like a reality check at home.

You mentioned your band and how you have been working on music for many years already.  You all worked really hard to get here today and have come a long way from using Kickstarter to create your album. What advice would you have for someone who is grinding away, similar to you had in the early years?

Oh man, it’s tough because in the beginning you look at the stage in think I can do that. You see a person doing it and you think I could do that too. And then you get that fire and you’re hustling so hard and then there’s going to be basically years of things not happening. You don’t have enough money and you’re going to have a breakdown every other week. Then you’re going to think your stuff is really good, show it to someone who really matters and they’re going to tell you that it’s not good enough. But that starts to weed out people in the business and it will make you question if you really want to do this, because you need to pick your ego up off the ground make your work better do it again. It’s good that it’s tough because it keeps the right people going. People who think they could get in and get out, that’s just impossible, there’s no way. So that part’s good, but I would just say first,  know all parts of your business because you’re not just making art for yourself. You are now saying that you want to make art for lots of people and it is a business. If you don’t understand where your money is going other people will. Don’t sign anything, get a good lawyer, understand all the business stuff, and then surround yourself with people who understand your vision and believe in you. It’s going to be hard in the beginning but don’t settle for relationships with managers and people that don’t get what you’re doing. All that time you spent hustling and creating…this is your life and this is your career, and this is it. Keep you high standard.

That’s some great advice.

Thanks!

So, you wear yellow…

That’s right!

A lot! And of course wearing yellow today and looking fabulous at Bonnaroo. So…what is with the color yellow?

So I’m from California, and basically when I came to Nashville a lot was different including the weather. I miss the sunshine and I miss the coast. With wearing yellow I get to keep this sunny thing with me everywhere. Honestly people smile at me more when I’m in yellow and they treat me sweeter when I’m in yellow.

It’s a happy color.

Exactly. And there’s this ‘too cool’ mentality with artists and especially when the country industry tries to do this thing for female artists where they make them really sexy and stuff. I’m anti that an anti the ‘too cool’ business, so anything that’s kid friendly that’s what I’m about.

You did mention writing some new music,  are we going to hear some new tracks from you today?

You’re going to hear some songs that are not on the album. Some of them may end up on the next album but, these are songs, especially for a Bonnaroo crowd, that makes me really excited.  Sometimes when you play country music festivals the mainstream country kind of gets split into this American folky throwback stuff and then this like broken pop country. When you do those types of festivals, as an artist you tend to get lumped into the grouping of whatever you set matches. I think my songwriting and the way the band plays, we play  a little bit differently and we’re not trying to do the same thing everyone else is doing. We have all these songs that we play on tour and when we’re at festivals we play with the notion of how far can we stretch things.  So today we’re going all over the place. We’re going to play a song that’s basically metal country, and we’re playing a song that’s like a throwback beautiful hymn. I actually didn’t even write this song, but we heard it at the Bluebird Cafe, and no one’s ever played the song, and songs can show up at the Bluebird and they’ll be amazing and no one will ever cut the song. So we’re bringing it to all these people here at Bonnaroo and showing them all the different degrees of how country can be.

 

 

Bonnaroo 2017: In Review

Posted on June 14, 2017June 14, 2017 by Jacklyn Citero

BonnarooChance3
It was Sweet 16 for Bonnaroo this past weekend. The nonstop party hosted some of today’s biggest names in music and was home to over 65,000 attendees during the four-day festival. Some highlights from the weekend included U2’s legendary performance, the addition of the new Other stage that played host to thousands of dancing revelers all weekend long, and beneficial organizations like Hugh Acheson’s Seed Life Skills.

We’re reviewing some of our favorite performances, and not so favorite moments, of this year’s Bonnaroo:

Biggest Surprise of the Weekend: Marshmello

This weekend we were not only surprised, but jaw-droppingly impressed by the man in that iconic white marshmallow helmet. Mixing everything from the Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ “Heads Will Roll,” to Papa Roach’s “Last Resort,” and everything in between, it didn’t take long to see and hear why there’s so much love for the masked DJ. His remix of Adele’s “Hello” closed out Saturday night as it sent the crowd into a euphoric sing-a-long; a perfect ending to a long day on The Farm.

[mixcloud]https://www.mixcloud.com/luis-rs/marshmello-live-bonnaroo-music-festival-100617/[/mixcloud]

Most Legendary Performance: U2

When a band has 41-year history, they are undoubtedly legends. U2’s two-hour Bonnaroo set was the band’s first first headlining appearance at a U.S. music festival. The performance was part of their world tour celebrating the 30th anniversary of their Grammy-winning “The Joshua Tree” album. The band played the full album, as well as some of their other hits, including “Sunday Bloody Sunday”, “New Year’s Day” and (of course) “Beautiful Day.” At the end of the set, Bono spoke to the crowd, “What an extraordinary thing Bonnaroo is, thank you for naming it after me.”

Photo Credit: Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic for Bonnaroo Arts and Music Festival
Photo Credit: Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic for Bonnaroo Arts and Music Festival

 

Biggest Disappointment: The Which Stage – Flume & Cage the Elephant

The lack of sound quality at The Which Stage this year can only be described as a disgrace. For both Cage the Elephant and Flume – both which were Saturday performances – the volume was severely lacking. At no fault of the artists, the inadequate sound was nearly ruining for these two sets in particular. Standing close to the soundboard for Flume, attendees could whisper to one another with ease. We’ve stood at a lot of festival stages and can honestly say this was the quietest stage we have ever been at.  Also…what happened to the question mark on top the stage Bonnaroo??

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Rock Solid Set: Umphrey’s McGee

The guys of Umphrey’s McGee are no stranger to Bonnaroo (nine times to be exact). Saturday night they took over the late night spot in the That Tent, filling in for Shpongle (Simon Posford ran into some visa issues and was unable to make it to the festival). The hard-rocking, jam filled set included the favorite “Frankie Zombie,” blending White Zombie, Frankie Goes to Hollywood and Pink Floyd.

Courtesy: Umphrey's McGee
Courtesy: Umphrey’s McGee

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Best Afternoon Set: Cam

Brightening up the stage with her yellow flowy shirt, amazing sequin designed jeans, and a backdrop of sunflowers, Cam was a pop of happiness and positive energy on a hot Sunday Bonnaroo afternoon. Fan favorites of “Burning House” and “Mayday” were of course played, but overall the set was a perfect display of her own style and take on pop and country.

Courtesy of: CAM
Courtesy of: CAM

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Best Addition to Bonnaroo: The Other Stage

Previously called “The Other Tent,” “The Other” was an entirely new open air stage dedicated to hip hop and electronic music. This stage was not only one of the best additions to Bonnaroo this year, but it was much needed. The Other was also the late night stage for the festival this year closing out the nights with the likes of Big Gigantic, Marshmello, and Yellow Claw.
BonnarooChance4

 

 

Biggest FOMO Set: Lorde

Lorde’s Sunday set was one not to miss. While there was an almost 30 minute delay due to technical difficulties and Lorde’s monitors not working, when everything was finally a go, she returned to own the stage and bewitch the crowd. As the old adage goes, “the show must go on.” And on it did. Joined on stage with interpretive dancers and a string quartet, Lorde moved through old favorites and fresh new hits from her sophomore album that will be released this Friday. You could definitely see the awe in her eyes looking as she looked out into the crowd and stated,  “Bonnaroo, I am so in love with you…You’ve made this unforgettable.”

Courtesy of: Jose Martinez
Courtesy of: Jose Martinez

 

Favorite “Giving Back” Organization & Experience: Hugh Acheson’s Seed Life Skills
Chef Hugh Acheson (you may know him from Top Chef and his Georgia restaurants) was on site this year with his nonprofit Seed Life Skills. His organization and team  are dedicated to teaching underserved kids home economic skills. Over the course of the weekend, Acheson provided cooking classes at the Academy, was interviewed by Oxfam, and his non-profit did demonstrations throughout the festival from their booth. All activities were centered on Seed Life Skills whose mission is to create and share a living curriculum dedicated to empowering youth to be sustainable stewards of food and financial resources.

Courtesy of: Seed Life Skills
Courtesy of: Seed Life Skills
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