Jazz Fest After Dark | New Orleans | Review | Pics
By Team JamBase May 18, 2011 • 2:59 pm PDT

Photo Gallery Images by: Casey Flanigan
Jazz Fest After Dark :: 05.04.11-05.08.11 :: New Orleans, LA
Jump right to Casey’s shots of ALO & Tea Leaf Green, The Funky Meters, Galactic, Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe and The New Mastersounds by clicking on band’s name!
“It is rare to see crowd surfing at a Jazz Fest show, especially by a guy in a cream-colored suit wielding a trombone” – David Fricke
Jazz Fest is truly an enigma, a gluttonous musical jamboree like no other, the stuff that dreams are made of. New Orleans is a city that could be described in similar tones, a veritable jungle-gym of sorts for audiophiles to frolic upon, within, and in its essence. When the sun goes down in the Crescent City during Jazz Fest, the freaks come out, and for 2011, to quote a bassist they call “Jesus,” it was “FULL RAGE!!” Or as many a fester uttered, “It’s a celebration, bitches!!” The Big Easy outdid itself once again, hosting a bastion of musical merrymaking that rivals any of the other eight Jazz Fests this writer has attended.
Without any further adieu, here’s the field report from Jazz Fest Nocturnal 2011. Welcome to Planet NOLA! Laissez les bons temps rouler!
Wednesday, May 4
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Benevento has reinvigorated Garage a Trois, evidenced by their feverish set as the evening’s headliner. Showcasing an inspired new record, Always Be Happy, But Stay Evil, GAT unleashed an enraged, punked-up set that married spastic thrashing riffage with spooky, Bitches Brew horror-jazz. Late in the set, Nigel Hall emerged on the B3 and vocals for a humorous take on the improv jam “Fuckin’ Wit’ My Clothes On.” Mike Dillon was in beast-mode, pogo-ing between vibraphones, percussion toys and punk rock frontman, shirtless in a sombrero. Grabbing the mic, Dillon flexed his inner Beastie, torchin’ and crackin and rhymin’ and stealin’, prodded by his maniacal mates. Drummer Nikki Glaspie and vocalist Corey Glover joined the fray as GAT wailed well into morning, setting Jazz Fest’s second weekend on a robust foundation. The encore began as wildin’ white-boy go-go bounce from the District, and traversed a multitude of styles before landing in Sabbath terra firma – a skronk-afied “Sweet Leaf.”
Thursday, May 5
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7 Walkers drummer Bill Kreutzmann, who spent 30 years holding down the pulse of the greatest American rock band of all time, fully plugged into the Fest spirit, rocking a handful of gigs over the weekend. Kreutzmann was enveloped in Nawlinz, playing cold music to many a barroom floor and performing alongside the likes of Papa Mali, George Porter Jr., Steve Kimock, members of Little Feat, local legend Henry Butler, and countless others. After all these years, Billy is still DEAD to the core.
As if he wielded keys to the Crescent City, Warren Haynes unlocked a revolving door of guests at the Mahalia Jackson Theater, including Man in Motion co-conspirators George Porter Jr. and Ivan Neville. Sporting a dapper red hat, Walter “Wolfman” Washington howled at the crescent moon during “Ain’t No Love in the Heart of the City” until he flipped his Kangol backwards and went down on his guitar, tongue, teeth and all. Brian Stoltz and Troy “Trombone Shorty” Andrews joined the krewe for “On Your Way Down,” and during “Feel Like Breaking Up Somebody’s Home,” Shorty’s fervor was contagious, prompting everybody to raise their own bar.
Ruthie Foster announced she just received the American Music Award for Best Female Vocalist before victoriously singing an accapella “Grinnin’ in Your Face” to open the second set. The Dirty Dozen Brass Band emerged for a dirty, dark rendition of “John the Revelator,” oozing Crescent City swag. Anders Osborne and Preservation Hall Jazz Band toured the ubiquitous “St James Infirmary,” where Haynes and Osborne traded soulful verse and lick. The following evening, at the cozy Preservation Hall, the legendary house band and Warren Haynes Band again teamed up for an intimate night of majestic Cajun soul; the diversity and dynamics of this unique pairing were sights and sounds to behold, indeed.
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NOLA Jazz Fest ups the funk ante exponentially, a fact not lost on the b-boys in Lettuce, who mercilessly uncorked tightly wound crunk workouts for nearly two hours. Merely two songs into the set, Lettuce unleashed new banger “Star-Children,” a tune penned long ago by rhythm guitarist Adam “Shmeans” Smirnoff but finally perfected in rehearsal sessions the day before the Ball. The long-lost bastard son of its P-Funk namesake, this slowed n’ throwed neck-snapper was a bombastic dose of slimy funk with drummer Adam Deitch and bassist E.D. Coomes fearlessly stomping the groove onward, their inner boom-bap makin’ heads bob like emergency brakes. The omnipresent Shady Horns channeled forefathers’ The Horny Horns, and regional ragers Big Sam and Donald Harrison got busy on “Blast Off.” Nigel Hall arrived on stage tuned up and ready to take it back to D.C. with Chuck Brown-styled go-go (a prevalent theme over the weekend) “Making My Way Back Home.” The tremendous event culminated in a soaring guest turn from Warren Haynes, who playfully nudged Eric Krasno aside and proceeded to bring the house down with wailing Gibsonics over the Curtis Mayfield medley “We’re a Winner > Move On Up”.
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KDTU’s second set was a blur of funkadelic bliss with Nigel Hall, Particle’s Steve Molitz, Marco Benevento and Ivan Neville taking turns with David Veith on various keyboard duels, weaving in and out of Rhodes, B3 and analog synths. Sam Kinninger, Ryan Zoidis, Rashawn Ross and Maurice ‘Mo Betta’ Brown stormed the stage for an elongated take on the Afrobeat ecstasy that is “Elephants,” while former Beyonce drummer Nikki Glaspie, who was everywhere all weekend, forced KDTU drummer John Staten to push the envelope. An imbibed Tony Hall called his shot, offering big smiles and bass gymnastics on a charging “Chance With You,” and Karl D captained the mothership into a new dawn, delivering an otherworldly “Can You Feel It?” all sultry and sexy for the lovers courting sunrise. Until nearly 6 am, KDTU reestablished themselves as THE preeminent late-night juggernaut. A weary and wired Tip massive spilled into the streets exhausted, migrating to early hours watering hole Igor’s for the traditional Jazz Fest morning cap. Here, funkateers, musicians and good Nawlins folk shared stories and glories as the sun beckoned Friday’s arrival.
Friday, May 6
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One of the most crucial Fest experiences is the Creole Queen Riverboat, a mini-Jam Cruise of sorts that sets out on the Mississippi River with a few hundred freaks and heaping portions of funk. Kirk Joseph’s 504 Brass Band, ably assisted by Steve Bernstein, kept asses shaking on deck as we awaited departure, an appropriate soundtrack to the Crescent City skyline illuminated in the distance. Opening for Soulive, the NYC/NOLA supergroup Dr. Klaw demolished this club-on-water, upstaging the headliner with merciless aggressive stomps through crunk netherworlds a bazillion leagues beneath the seas on which we traveled. Led by the warrior Adam Deitch’s bludgeoning beats and capo Nick Daniels’ vigorous modulation directives, the crew welcomed The Shady Horns to a cramped stage and let loose two choice takes straight from George’s Mothership. Uncompromising and severely dope, both “Dr. Funkenstein” and “Chocolate City” crushed astounded spectators, many of whom were unfamiliar with this ruthless posse. Nigel Hall delivered, confident and chiming in with vocals and more bounce to the ounce. A scorching “Leave Me Alone,” belted out in high register by Daniels and Hall, let everybody on that boat know just exactly what time it was.
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Superjams are a hallmark of Jazz Fest, and on this late Friday night in the Quarter, two magnificent options were available. The first was the Bear Creek All-Stars at One Eyed Jacks, where a collective of musicians who have shared the stage at the monumental Bear Creek Music and Art Festival came together at the behest of BCMF Guru/General Paul Levine. His marching orders: Bring the funk. The core group consisted of Eric Krasno, Skerik, Ivan Neville, Alan Evans and Kirk Joseph, but the three-hour expedition incorporated a plethora of diverse players.
Joseph was a star on this night, mimicking the likes of Bootsy Collins and Larry Graham, and doin’ it to death with gulping-bass rolling underneath growls of distortion. Nikki Glaspie took the drum sticks from Evans and proceeded to serve up a lesson on how to make and keep “the pocket.” Lengthy funk grooveathons ensued all night, from The JB’s to The Meters and all points between; with the Shady Horns, Kofi Burbridge, Matt Grondin, and Andrew Block all making their formidable presences felt.
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England’s boogaloo badasses The New Mastersounds stormed the Quarter for a pair of 2 am engagements at the House of Blues. Many artists who performed throughout the weekend dotted the teeming audience, which rabidly grooved to the foursome’s up-tempo until 5 am. Revealing a sack of new tracks from the forthcoming record Breaks from the Border, the Brits were a fine tuned machine. On “Make Me Proud!,’’ “Take What You Need” and the now-classic “Carrot Juice,” bassist Pete Shand and drummer Simon Allen led the push toward morning, as Eddie Roberts nimble guitar shone brightly against Joe Tatton’s massive B3 turns during “The Vandenberg Suite.” The band was graciously joined by Adam “Shmeans” Smirnoff (Lettuce, Robert Randolph & The Family Band), vocalist Michelle Sarah (Coppertonic), Robert Walter, and Miles Tackett (Breakestra) over the course of two monster gigs.
Saturday, May 7
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Meanwhile, at the Mahalia Jackson Theater, local behemoths Galactic and The Funky Meters united their tribes on an early double bill. Galactic blazed the building with whopping renditions of ”Boe Money,” “The Moil” and a sinister “Crosstown Traffic.” Between sets, the groups unified as one, blessing the people with exclusive takes on “Night People” and “Cabbage Alley.” Late night at Tipitina’s Uptown, The Greyboy Allstars debuted a load of new material (“Multiplier”), interspersed with immortal tunes like “Planet of the Superkids” and “Happy Friends.” The boogaloo champs then hosted a party on the Riverboat Creole Queen the following evening.
In one of the most intriguing and eclectic bills of the weekend, Insomniac’s party at The Sugar Mill was a throwdown of epic proportions. Two newer bands, Orgone from the West Coast and Toubab Krewe from North Carolina, warmed up the massive with another in a series of impressive performances from this weekend. These young guns brought heat to every room they set foot in all weekend long. The Hot 8 Brass Band, fresh off their dynamite backing of Mos Def the previous weekend and Ms. Lauryn Hill earlier that day, kept the people moving as the star-studded crowd filtered in for Thievery Corporation. And boy did the headliner deliver in spades!
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Clearly stoked on by Thievery’s colossal display, labelmates Paper Diamond and Break Science stepped their respective games up proper, going into the wee hours at Republic. Alex B began the adventure, dropping the massive “Levitate” and then taking what Yeezy taught him and putting it to proper use with a colossal remix of Kanye West’s “Power.” Break Science unleashed an array of extremely varied material – machine gun electro funk, mushroom jazz, hip-hop, dub soundsystem and dubstep, all of it “crunk in yo system.”
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Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey covered NOLA literally from top to bottom, playing late-night sets both uptown at the Maple Leaf; and deep in the Quarter at the Blue Nile. Brian Haas and the revamped Oklahoma faction welcomed Johnny Vidacovitch, Steven Bernstein, Jeff Coffin, Mark Southerland and Matt Leland to their stage for a newfangled Fred equinox. Chris Combs’ lap steel playing has added a fresh frontier to both the sound of JFJO and the maniacal brain of Fred founder Haas. Their Maple Leaf gig didn’t wrap until after 7:15 am, truly a breakfast of champions.
Billed as “The Prophylactics,” New Orleans crunk titans Galactic rendered a special “secret” show late Saturday night at One Eyed Jacks. Announced on the humble, this was an exclusive gig, and Galacticfunk was in full effect on the very streets they first cut their teeth on over 15 years ago. The intimate concert starred an array of Fest guests, as native son Cyril Neville, guitarist Jonathan Freilich and keyboardist Robert Walter enhanced the krewe, swelling their already globular sound to outrageous proportions. The horn section of Naughty Professor also got in on the routine. On this night, the baby faced, youthful exuberance and furious bass work of Robert Mercurio spearheaded G-funk’s prophylactic attack until six in the mornin’.
Sunday, May 8
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True to tradition, Dumpstaphunk had the honor of closing out the Fess Jazztival at Tipitina’s Uptown, this year being a Mother’s Day mambo at the corner of Napoleon and Tchoupitoulas Streets. Though Festers and the bands were on their proverbial last legs, this was indeed a very funky fais do-do. The first set was firing D-Phunk, bursting out the gates with “Gasman Chronicles” at a breakneck pace. Nick Daniels sang “The Big Payback” with Raymond Weber nailing the Clyde hits as guest Skerik added a devilish, demented pimp strut. Ian and Ivan Neville shined on Sly Stone’s “Stand,” and Cyrille Neville rode in to bless a set closing “Chug a Lug.” To bring it home, good replaced evil (in the form of Karl Denson relieving Skerik for the second set) and the Diesel tore through “Paper Chasin’ Britney” and “Oughta Know Betta,” Appropriately, a subterranean “Deeper” closed down Tipitina’s 2011 Fest.
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When it was over, my feet hurt, my heart swelled, and we finally rested. I packed up the fly-guy attire, finished a final Igor’s Bloody Mary (or mimosa), and departed back to reality. There really ain’t much left to be said other than a glorious chorus of “Thank You’s!!” to the musicians who cheated death and kept crazy hours to deliver us all week, to the bartenders and staffs at the abundance of venues that hosted our soirees, to Igor’s for tolerating early morning shenanigans that are better left unsaid, and lastly, the loudest and largest salutations to the wondrous City of New Orleans, the gift that keeps on giving.
Continue reading for Casey Flanigan’s killer pics of late night at Tipitina’s…
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Continue reading for more pics of ALO & TLG…
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Continue reading for more pics of ALO & TLG…
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Continue reading for pics of The Funky Meters…
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Continue reading for pics of Galactic…
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Continue reading for pics of Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe…
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Continue reading for pics of The New Mastersounds…
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Continue reading for more pics of NMS at HOB…
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