Rothbury | 07.03 – 07.06 | Michigan
By Team JamBase Jul 8, 2008 • 5:33 pm PDT

Rothbury Music Festival :: 07.03.08 – 07.06.08 :: Double JJ Ranch :: Rothbury, MI
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Thursday :: 07/03
There are certain aspects of the festival experience you have to just get through including traffic, for one. Getting in was relatively painless Thursday around noon, although parking and setting up camp was a cramped and poorly organized affair. No big deal, though; I’m usually dripping with sweat, exhausted and unmotivated the first evening of Bonnaroo, but thanks to weather you can actually nap comfortably in, Rothbury was much kinder. It took longer than I expected to get to Sherwood Court, one of three arena-type stages, but Perpetual Groove sucked me in immediately. This was the official debut of new keyboardist John Hruby, but you’d never have known it. The band seemed too big for Thursday evening, especially on the stunning set-closer “Teakwood,” which churned on a buzz-bass-led groove that built to a techno pitch then exploded in a cascade of Brock Butler guitar wails. The bar was set high already and I’d only seen one set.
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The main event for Thursday was The Disco Biscuits, back at the Ranch, and the crowd was primed. To be a true Bisco fanatic, you have to be like a Trekkie who can speak Klingon (that was what kind of version? It completes the version from when?) So much planning goes into the Biscuits’ mystique that it’s a wonder these guys can find the time to jam, but of course, they do, and you certainly don’t need to know the mythology to love the music. The segue from “Digital Buddha” into Pink Floyd‘s “Run Like Hell,” and the way they have come to own this song in their own right, require a prowess few bands possess, period. “Story of the World” got so giddy at its apex, it seemed that would have to be the end, but they came back once more with “Rockafella” and nailed the end with a “Run Like Hell” reprise that set the crowd on fire. We’d just seen how many hours of music? And there are still how many days left?
Friday :: 07/04
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Tea Leaf Green needs to find something soon to separate itself from the pack besides just Josh Clark‘s guitar prowess. Friday’s set was a good example of the group’s standard attack: good musicianship, fluid jams, nothing too intense and all too derivative. There is a thread of sameness that links many, many jam bands together, but the really good ones develop something unique that transcends this makeshift genre, and Tea Leaf Green hasn’t found its something yet. Following TLG was Sam Beam of Iron & Wine, who oozed disingenuous indie smart-assitude. Who wasn’t sitting in the audience thinking, “Isn’t it hilarious having another hipster joking about how high we all are?” Beam was the one who kept lousing up his songs and laughing about it, after all. I don’t particularly care for his singing, but he played a pretty mean acoustic guitar some of the time, and there’s no denying his songwriting skills, but he could stand to learn some audience appreciation.
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I’m sure Keller Williams‘ WMDS looked on paper like a plan that couldn’t possibly fail, but so far, Keller has proven to be more of a lone craftsman than a collaborative artist. When you remove his ability to do whatever he wants, whenever he wants, it’s probably an enjoyable challenge for him but it gets tedious for me. These are all great musicians; this just isn’t their band. Given time, maybe they’ll coalesce, but apart from a few bright spots, this set felt more like an exercise than a performance. It also revealed that Keller’s normal voice isn’t strong enough for a rock band; he sounds best accompanied only by himself.
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Modest Mouse was raucous from the get-go, although mostly in the slick, dance punk style of the group’s recent work. But singer Isaac Brock sings with a sincerity akin to Darby Crash‘s, and his enthusiasm comes across even better live than on record, where you hear Brock sing the songs exactly the same way every time you listen. It brings some dulled meaning back to hear a different inflection. The band brought some much-needed clang to the proceedings and did its best to drown out 311. We left in order to catch the last half of Yonder Mountain String Band‘s set with Jon Fishman on drums. This isn’t Fish’s first seat behind this band, and he’s clearly in his element with bluegrass. It was an energetic performance, as always, with YMSB; if you know what you’re expecting, you won’t be let down.
Next, I saw my first Widespread Panic show with lead guitarist Jimmy Herring, and I didn’t really know what to expect. It became immediately clear that he has injected some overall energy into this institution of a band. Melodically, he can be a bit cliché, maybe relying on his considerable speed a bit much, but the somewhat meatier edge he has brought Panic is most welcome. The biggest problem with WSP remains the drumming. I just don’t understand what anyone sees in Todd Nance‘s drumming, but I understand there must be a vein of camaraderie too rich to discard here, and it could be catastrophic to make a change at this point. They have had a few hiccups over the years, but the band still packs the lawn full of fans, and still wails. Tonight, they had violinist Ann Marie Calhoun onstage for some great stringed battles as well as some straight-up smooth playing. Highlights included “Arleen,” “Surprise Valley” and the closing epic page-turner of “Sewing Machine” and “Life During Wartime.” After the drum jam, which was augmented but not quite saved by Jeff Sipe, the band was firing on all cylinders, although the end of set two seemed a bit abrupt, almost unfinished. Maybe it was the lack of an encore, but it could also be that we missed a bit of each set by skipping out to see Of Montreal.
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The main late night set on Friday was Primus, a band that had only four gigs scheduled this year and hadn’t played a show in a year and a half prior to Rothbury. As busy as bassist-singer Les Claypool is with other projects, I’m left wondering how much rehearsal these guys could possibly get before gigs. But while fans continue to wonder whether Les will ever start playing new material again, we still get treated to genre-defying performances of music so unique, it’s utterly timeless. These songs are still evolving, played by three musicians who seem to have lost not a step over their entire careers, and whose chemistry is so intuitive that their first show in 18 months was at least as amazing as any Primus show I’ve ever seen. Maybe they know that if they ever actually suck, there will just be no more music in the Primus genre, and they’re just too decent to let that happen. Thanks, guys. Ever since drummer Tim Alexander returned to the band in 2003, their live show has gotten better and better. Primus always improvised live, but Claypool’s increasing prominence on the jam band scene has fostered a more jam-oriented philosophy in Primus, and it plays to the strengths of each member. Guitarist Larry LaLonde was ridiculous in the epic “Over The Electric Grapevine;” this is a musician who has been peaking for about 15 years. “American Life” was a mind-boggling journey, a surging, twisting full-band jam that just went where no other band can really go. Even “Wynona’s Big Brown Beaver” got extended, and now that the song had lain dormant, its weird potential showed itself in ways that never appeared in its heyday. There just wasn’t a misstep in this set, my favorite of the weekend. All 12 hours of music caught up with me in the span of 25 minutes as I walked back to camp. Thank God for mild Michigan summer mornings.
Saturday :: 07/05
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I got to the Ranch in time for the somewhat recently reformed Secret Machines (guitarist Benjamin Curtis left the band to focus on a new project, School of Seven Bells last year), possibly the loudest show of the weekend. They slowly built metallic waterfalls of sound that crested and flowed and generally pulsed with a shrill intensity that never flagged significantly. They played a mixture of old and new material, but stopped worrying about melodies for the most part and filtered everything through a big My Bloody Valentine-style barrage. “Alone, Jealous and Stoned” was truly monumental, sort of a testament to the various styles this group takes on, but the set was almost one big piece in itself, with some distinction between movements. Ultimately, it exemplified the kind of continuity that many bands can’t hope for onstage.
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It was pretty clear that the biggest crowd was at Sherwood around 5:15 p.m. for Medeski, Martin & Wood. It felt strange to be seeing this particular band in broad daylight for some reason. It was a warm one for sure, but still not too warm in the early evening heat to get people moving. One of the reasons John Medeski is such a presence is his connection to the beat. Rather than just skate in and around the rhythm like a normal jazz pianist, he becomes the rhythm. He’s often propelling the groove much more directly than Billy Martin or Chris Wood. Perhaps predictably, though, the set was pretty laid back overall. The crowd was still grooving, but there was a very long night ahead, so not many would complain about a chill MMW set.
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It didn’t take Coffin long to make himself known. The intro to opener “Seek Up” built to a shrill, horn-driven climax before Matthews even began singing, and the end jam was just as powerful. With Reynolds on board, the whole show was decidedly more muscular than typical DMB, and Reynolds really was the star for much of the night. Matthews was in zany spirits, scatting his way through the end of “Jimi Thing” and busting a move through “Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin).” Mainstays from his latest crop of tunes, “Eh Hee” and “Cornbread,” had seemed a bit flimsy before, but with Reynolds’ help they were richer and dirtier, and rarity “#27” came across as classy in its simplicity. The band has worked a few of Matthews’ solo tunes into the repertoire, and “So Damn Lucky” and “Gravedigger” were both potent, somewhat more frenetic than Dave & Friends’ versions. The show did lose a little steam toward the end of the set, although the “Anyone Seen The Bridge?” section was impressive, especially with a couple of non-members along for the ride, but “Too Much” was unremarkable, and set closer “Ants Marching” was rote. Overall, though, it would have to be called a triumphant set. It didn’t take me anywhere I haven’t been, but it did show me some things I hadn’t seen from Matthews before.
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Sunday :: 07/06
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It was interesting walking in on Gov’t Mule playing the same song we’d just heard Mike and Trey playing. Festivals, ya gotta love ’em! Warren Haynes‘ voice sounded spectacular, especially on the “Hunger Strike/Dear Mr. Fantasy” sandwich. It felt like he wasn’t so concentrated on soloing, more on singing and song, which surprised me a bit, but Haynes has always been the one ’70s survivor who isn’t a slave to the decade that created him.
Haynes returned to the stage not long after Gov’t Mule left it as a guest during the first set of Phil Lesh & Friends‘ festival closing performance. Sitting at a P&F show, you might suspect that the improvs all sound like Grateful Dead jams because they’re mostly Dead songs, but there’s more to it than that. With Lesh being the only former Dead member, it’s puzzling why most of the various musicians who come in and out of the collective insist on emulating his former mates. Keyboardist Steve Molitz (Particle) should have injected some (relatively) youthful freshness into the band, but he just blended back into the meandering stream of sound on Sunday. Haynes struggled to stand out as well, although when he was given the spotlight he made use of it. Singer Teresa Williams was a welcome help, adding some professional-sounding vocals, but she was underused, singing on only three songs in the first set and two in the second set. With all the potential “Friends” around, why not bring on anyone who might be able to bolster the energy coming off the stage?
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While this was an incredible weekend of music on par with any event of the summer, it seems possible that it could go downhill from here for Rothbury. Festival organizers have procured the resort for the first weekend in July through 2010, and are already hoping to double the size of the fest next year. My advice: DON’T DO IT. We barely had enough space to step between our tents this year, and thinking about the delays leaving DMB, only with twice the people, isn’t pleasant. Would they cut down more trees to widen the paths? Bulldoze more land to expand capacity? How about, for a change, keeping the relatively pure motives for the event intact, NOT altering what’s not broken, instead of giving in to greed? Learn a lesson from Bonnaroo: cater to the fans that made you a success. Don’t try to squeeze the community for every red cent. Either way, I suspect most people will remember “the first Rothbury,” like the first ‘Roo, as something amazing that can’t be duplicated, and I am immensely grateful to have been a part of it.
Continue reading for more images of Rothbury…
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Continue reading for even more images of Rothbury…
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Continue reading for Rothbury videos…
Mike and Trey doin “Meat” at Rothbury
“She Said She Said” Trey Anastasio, Mike Gordon, Jon Fishman at Rothbury
Trey Anastasio with Mike Gordon “Backwards Down the Number Line” at Rothbury
Trey Anastasio “Sample In a Jar” at Rothbury
Rothbury Music Festival Dave Matthews Band “Jimi Thing”
Phil Lesh and Friends – Rothbury 08 – “Dire Wolf”
Primus – “My Name Is Mud at Rothbury
Disco Biscuits “I-Man” at Rothbury 7/3/08
Snoop Dogg “Gin & Juice” at Rothbury
The Wailers – “No Woman No Cry” at Rothbury
311 “Who’s Got The Herb” at Rothbury
Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Soul Stew Revival – “Get Out My Life Woman”
Perpetual Groove – “Three Weeks” at Rothbury
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