Funk It’s Bear Creek Music Festival 2011 teaser video

As you can image, Bear Creek Music Festival was magical! The Spirit of the Suwannee Music Park was amazing, the artists were amazing, and the people were amazing (and my close friends know that I don’t use that word often).

The music park is perfect, all of the stages are very close together yet there is very little audio bleed through. The vibe is loose and open and everyone is there to party and have a great time. I met a ton of people and I have never seen soo many audio and video tapers in one place. I was very surprised by the amount of people shooting video on either video cameras or SLR cams with external mics. From what I hear, this is one of the only festivals that is a complete free for all as far as shooting video is concerned.

Needless to say, I was a wild man and I ended up shooting 14 hours of video over the course of 3 days. I could have done much more, but I ran out of space and had to borrow a memory card on the last night (thanks Bob!).

Over the next few months I will be featuring many of these videos here. For now, check out this teaser video to whet your appetite.

Funk It’s Bear Creek Music Festival 2011 teaser video:

Funk It’s Bear Creek Music Festival 2011 teaser video:
01. The Funky Meters – Cissy Strut
02. Marco Benevento Trio with Johnny Vidacovich – Junco Partner
03. The Trio: George Porter Jr, Johnny Vidacovich & Jennifer Hartswick with Freekbass – Don’t Be Squeezin’ My Heart
04. Jon Cleary’s Piano, Bass & Drums – Tipitina
05. Eric Krasno’s Chapter 2 – Nautilus
06. John Scofield’s Piety Street Band – unknown
07. Freekbass & Skerik – Improv in the Silent Disco
08. Dr. Klaw with Jamie McLean & Sam Kinninger – Higher Ground
09. Dr. Lonnie Smith Trio – unknown
10. Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey with Jonathan Lloyd, Chris Noonan, Mark Southerland & Skerik – The Burning
11. Orgone – Break In The Road
12. Medeski, Martin & Wood with Pee Wee Ellis – Where’s The Music?
13. The Lee Boys with Matt Grondin, Khris Royal, ?Shamarr Allen? & unknown trombonist – Don’t Stop Till You Get Enough
14. The New Mastersounds – Carrot Juice
15. Russell Batiste Band with George Porter Jr – Cissy Strut
16. The Coup – 5 Million Ways To Kill A CEO
17. Chali 2na Band – Get Focused
18. Snarky Puppy with Louis Cato – unknown
19. Garage A Trois – Rescue Spreaders
20. Medeski, Scofield, Martin & Wood – A Go Go
21. Anders Osborne, Eric Bolivar, Jamie McLean & George Porter Jr – Ya-Ya
22. Breakestra – unknown
23. Dumpstajam with Nigel Hall, Louis Cato, Eric Krasno, Freekbass & The Shady Horns – What Is Hip?
24. Lettuce – Sam Huff’s Flying Ragin’ Machine
25. Dumpstaphunk – Put It In The Dumpsta
26. Robert Walter, Eddie Roberts, Jamie McLean, Louis Cato & Ivan Neville – Standin’ On Shaky Ground

More Late Night at the Maple Leaf – New Orleans Jazz Fest 2011

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Second night in New Orleans, back to the Maple Leaf again:
George Porter Jr, Johnny Vidacovich, Marco Benevento & Skerik.

Unfortunately there was no one recording audio this night, so these videos are the only recordings that exist. It was also unfortunate that I didn’t record the sublime gospel piece that Marco & George came up with. After they finished playing it George remarked that he hadn’t brought his recorder so it was all just going “into the air.” George even asked me after the set if I had gotten it, but alas.

Improvisation:

I Don’t Know:

Improvisation?:

Encore: They All Ask’d For You (a classic Meters tune):

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Third night in New Orleans, I couldn’t get into George Porter’s 2am Superjam with Brian Stoltz, Marco Benevento & Adam Deitch at the House of Blues because it sold out, so I ended up, you guessed it, back at the Maple Leaf.

Jacob Fred Fred Jazz Odyssey “Gets Horny” at 3am with Steven Bernstein on slide trumpet, Jeff Coffin on sax, Mark Southerland on all kinds of weird instruments, and Matthew Leland on trombone. It was a near mystical experience, maybe due to the lack of sleep, or maybe it was the haunting sounds coming from the stage, or both.

Excerpt from the Race Riot Suite:

Improvisation No. 1: Tatontious Was Not A Cat

Improvisation No. 2: Kitty Boy Floyd Is A Cat

We left at 5:15 a.m. as JFJO were beginning their second set. I only had three hours of sleep the night before (after being at Tipitina’s till 6 a.m. for Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe’s Cinco De Mayo throwdown) and I had hit the wall. I didn’t feel too bad though, as Steven Bernstein was calling it a night, I mean morning, also…

BTW, what the hell is this instrument Mark Southerland is playing? You should have heard it when he started swinging the tube around in the air. Whoa nellie!

George Porter Jr, Ivan Neville, Johnny Vidacovich & June Yamagishi – Late Night at the Maple Leaf – Jazz Fest 2011

At the risk of making this blog too NOLA-centric, the next few posts will feature Jazz Fest related content. While I was in New Orleans for the 2nd weekend of Jazz Fest I shot around 9 hours of video footage in the span of only four nights. As that footage makes its way to youtube I’ll be posting it here.

First I’ll point out that a stellar audio recording of this show can be downloaded here: http://bt.etree.org/details.php?id=544956. (or 24bit for you audiophiles: http://bt.etree.org/details.php?id=545006)The rest of this blog entry will feature 5 videos, comprising about 67 minutes of footage from this two and a half hour show.

The first night after we arrived, I went straight to the Maple Leaf for a unique lineup that’s been over 2 years in the making (thanks to Deborah Vidacovich for the booking efforts, and the cookies). As some of you may know, Johnny Vidavovich (the legendary New Orleans drummer) has a weekly gig at the Maple Leaf on Thursday nights billed as “the Trio”. Although the gig doesn’t always consist of only 3 players, it almost always consists of the Johnny Vidacovich / George Porter Jr rhythm section. One of the most usual third players is June Yamagishi, guitarist for Papa Grows Funk. In fact, this Trio configuration has actually released a live album that you might want to check out: We Came To Play.

On this particular night, George, Johnny & June were joined by heavyweight Ivan Neville. Ivan’s barebones rig preference, like John Medeski, is a Hammond B-3 organ and Leslie speaker coupled with a clavinet. When Ivan comes to the Maple Leaf, he comes to bring it, and this night his chops were as deep as I’ve ever witnessed.

The night opened right up with some greasy funk improvisation until George broke a bass string. [about 5.5 minutes into the video located below] As he re-strung, Ivan & June locked into a nasty groove. That groove began to build up higher and higher until [about 10 minutes into the video] George releases all of the energy in the room and opens up the second weekend right, belting out the opening lines to “Let The Good Times Roll.” Then June let’s loose a straight fire guitar solo. Yeah, You Right.

This next video includes 4 tunes, beginning with a cover of the Jessie Hill classic “Ooh Poo Pah Doo,” which segues into another New Orleans classic “Don’t You Just Know It” by Huey Piano Smith. Then Ivan drops right into the “Cabbage Alley” organ riff, which really allows Johnny to show off his second-line drum rhythms. Johnny’s second line will have you mesmerized as they segue into another groove that George turns into a swampy version of Wilson Pickett’s “In The Midnight Hour.” Quite a first set, and captured from the perfect vantage point in the front row.

The second set began with more improvisation, which quickly turned into a cover of the Billy Preston tune, “Will It Go Round In Circles.” See the next video to watch Ivan get a little gospel with it.

Unexpectedly, Corey Glover, the singer for Living Colour (and more recently, Galactic), jumped on stage for a riveting cover of the Temptations’ mind-bender, “Papa Was A Rolling Stone”! There isn’t much else to be said, so just watch/listen to it!

This final video begins with Ivan leading the crowd on a sing-along through Prince’s “Little Red Corvette.” This moves into another very unexpected selection, “Come Back Jack” an unreleased tune by Leo Nocentelli, original guitarist for The Meters. That then turns into a song that I had hoped to hear, a tune that Ivan & George tend to bust out when they play together at the Maple Leaf, the Tami Lynn classic made famous by the Neville Brothers, “Mojo Hannah.”

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