
RS Online Exclusive: As Mardi Gras Rages, New Orleans’ Music Scene Struggles to RecoverPhoto: Kravitz/FilmMagic The fourth Mardi Gras since Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans is raging right now in the French Quarter. But many local musicians are still rebuilding. In a Rolling Stone online exclusive, writer Alex Rawls explores how local musicians — from its traditional brass bands to contemporary heavy metal bands — are coping with diminishing gigs and rising costs “Anxiety about what will become of New Orleans is still a part of the city’s discussion,” writes Rawls. “With zoning law enforcement limiting live music venues, grudging police support for second lines and Mardi Gras Indian parades as well as dispersed neighborhoods, the street-based culture that shapes the city’s music is in danger. Fortunately, some people are working to keep musicians at home and employed.” Some of those people are behind “Musicians Bringing Musicians Home IV,” a benefit for the non-profit Sweet Home New Orleans (SHNO) which recently brought Will Oldham, Nicole Atkins, Alec Ounsworth of Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, Hank Shocklee of the Bomb Squad and Fleet Foxes’ J. Tillman, among others, to famed venue Tipitina’s. “I didn’t understand the severity of things,” says Shocklee. “We have flooding, but nothing like that. To read more about the recovering music scene of New Orleans, check out the story below: As Mardi Gras Rages, New Orleans’ Music Scene Struggles to Recover
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Published: 2009-02-24 Provider: Rolling Stone Keywords: Rock News
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Clap Your Hands Say Yeah’s Alec Ounsworth Talks Solo Disc “Mo Beauty”: Hear the AlbumPhoto: Michael Regan Alec Ounsworth has released albums with Clap Your Hands Say Yeah and as Flashy Python, but he’s casting out under his own name for the first time with his solo debut, Mo Beauty (hear the whole record, which is in stores today, after the jump). Rolling Stone caught up with the Philadelphia-based singer/songwriter to get the story behind the new album and an update on the future of CYHSY. How did you come to record this album in New Orleans? I was there for an artists’ retre
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Published: 2009-10-20 Provider: Rolling Stone Keywords: Rock News
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Lakisha Goes Home, Akon Is Sorry, Green Day Totally Appear In “Simpsons” Film Lakisha Jones was ousted from American Idol last night, leaving Blake, Melinda, and Jordan to vie for the AI crown. Austin City Limits lineup announced. It includes Dylan, Lucinda Williams, Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, Arcade Fire and more. Akon has apologized for the exploitative dancing he did with an underage fan at a concert in Trinidad. “I want to sincerely apologize for the embarrassment and any pain I’ve caused to the young woman who joined me on stage, her family and the Trini
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Published: 2007-05-10 Provider: Rolling Stone Keywords: Morning News Roundup
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Silverchair, Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, Cold War Kids Rock the Early Shift at Lollapalooza’s Day Two Before any band even begins playing, Saturday is off to a promising start. Overcast skies and lower temperatures are a welcome relief from the heat, and the hand-sanitizer dispensers have actually been refilled.Boy-girl Brooklyn synth-pop duo Matt & Kim are equally enthused. Neither can believe the size of the stage or the throng of people awaiting them. “Look how my boobs look up there. That is so not to size!” exclaims drummer Kim Schifino upon seeing her body up on the projection screen. Her partner, keyboardist Matt Johnson, is downright giddy. Their pastel tunes belong in a basement, not on a bandshell, though that doesn’t prevent “Grand” and “Yea Yeah” from registering cute-factor points. Later, Matt & Kim pull double duty, subbing for the cancelled CSS. Tokyo Police Club also express shock at attracting a decent crowd. Sonically, the Toronto quartet doesn’t stay in the same place for too long, and its approach borders on train-wreck looseness, yet somehow everything gels. The group punctuates its hectic garage-cum-indie rock with red-throat yelps and spiky bursts of sound. A few fans wave Canadian flags as keyboardist Graham Wright flails about and tambourines fly through the air during a forty-five-minute set that lives up to the hype. Speaking of expectations, 2006 buzz band Tapes ‘n Tapes take the stage next, and despite similarities between the two acts — herky-jerky motions, disjointed new-wave synthesizers, staggered tempos — the Minneapolis foursome is far artier. Maybe the group is distracted by the wafting pot smoke, but they threaten their set’s momentum with an overabundance of pauses and tempo changes. A few stages away, Silverchair is performing in the area for the first time in recent memory. Shirtless and sporting a headband, leader Daniel Johns embraces his inner rock star. The stadium-directed anthems are proudly populist and carried by falsetto vocals. Thanks to the band’s ringing chords, basic structures, showy
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Published: 2007-08-06 Provider: Rolling Stone Keywords: Rock News, Festivals, Lollapalooza
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