JamBase

Thrillcall has been in the concert listings game for a few years now with a site that’s similar to the likes of , , and . But today, they’ve announced a new mobile app that will offer a twist on the concert listings game — exclusive ticket offers via mobile to live music fans in LA and SF. READ MORE

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Andy Gadiel just did an interview with the team over at Kickshuffle.com (great new blog, by the way!), and in it he talks about how digital media is obviously changing the live music experience quite a bit. I’ve been fortunate enough to have shared a few conversations with the man himself on the subject, and he’s definitely been put to the test throughout the years maintaining a relevant product ahead of “buzz-worth” startups that are trying to disrupt a space that him and his team have fought to be at the forefront of. READ MORE

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I’m going to make a t-shirt that says, “We <3 Dave Vann Photography.” This man is a talent.

Bisco Inferno Photo Gallery [JamBase]

Post image for Win Tickets to JamBase Exclusive 4/29 Midnight Screening of Phish 3D

Want to see Phish 3D before the rest of the general public has a chance? Check out what JamBase is up to….

is proud to be giving away tickets to an exclusive midnight screening of on Thursday April 29. You can enter the contest for several different cities at: www.jambase.com/phish3dmovie.

Midnight Movie Screening
THURSDAY APRIL 29TH
in BOSTON, CHICAGO, DENVER, LA and NEW YORK
CLICK YOUR CITY TO ENTER TO WIN…
Deadline to enter is 11:59 PST April 26th.

LM2.0_logo

Over the past few years, as this whole web 2.0 thing has really grown and progressed, we’ve seen a number of new sites launch that are specifically geared towards live music fans on the web. In a sense, all of them exist to help fans track and follow their favorite touring bands/artists in a variety of ways, but with a focus on their live shows rather than their studio output (which is amply covered by a slew of Music 2.0 sites and services).

While a lot of these sites have not yet emerged into the larger music business landscape, there’s no doubt in my mind that web technologies in general will continue to affect and disrupt the live music space, as they’ve already been doing quite drastically with the recording industry. Back when I was able to dedicate more of my free time to Live Music Blog, I was really interested in exploring this space in depth. Although Justin and I have occasionally posted about some of these sites — mentioning iLike.com and ShowClix or talking up the latest feature from JamBase — we’ve never really focused on them directly as a key topic. We’d like to change that. Since we are a site dedicated to live music, it only makes sense to look at the related web services and sites that serve all of US as a community of fans. I’d like to finally re-visit my original idea and dig a bit deeper into all the sites and services that form what we call “.”

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Post image for JamBase iPhone App v2 Released

The latest version of the JamBase iPhone app just got pushed to the app store. I’ve been fortunate enough to test this out for a few weeks now and it’s a vast improvement over the first version of the app. Download the app here.

JamBase Big Light Nathan Moore webcast

I’m psyched for the and webcast coming up in an hour or so. Watch it live at jambase.com/live.

Big Light, along with very special guest Nathan Moore, will be doing a special live performance webcast this afternoon, Thursday June 4.

You can watch it online starting at 2pm PST / 5pm EST at http://www.jambase.com/live

© morgan corviday

© morgan corviday

Our good buddy Lauren Siegal is back with her second review for LMB after she saw a rather incendiary performance by on Tuesday night at the Connecticut Yankee here in San Francisco. Here it goes. -Justin

Once I got over wanting to rip his clothes off (side note, his jeans were already ripped and after a few minutes of strategizing, I concluded that there were only six more rips necessary to fully de-pants him) and started to listen to him play, I quickly became a Nathan Moore fan. It’s not often that I stay out past midnight on a Tuesday, but last night the only thing that would have gotten me out of chair at the Yankee was maybe an invitation to go back to Moore’s hotel room. But even then, it would have been a tough choice, because sitting in that crowded room and listening to him sing was one of the most magical experiences I have had in a while.

I wasn’t the only one who was in awe. The audience barely spoke during his almost three-hour set. At one point, Moore announced that it was the end of the show and that he was going to go and smoke a cigarette and then come back and play some more music but that we should just think of it as background music and not pay too much attention to him. However, once he got back on stage, the crowd re-positioned their chairs so that they were facing him and promptly put away their cell phones. At the first stroke of his guitar, they were back under his spell, and stayed that way until almost 1am.

Listening to his very prolific and heartfelt lyrics, I got the feeling that I was experiencing a modern day Bob Dylan. While I have never seen Bob Dylan, I did read Chronicles, Volume 1 and saw the movie I’m Not There and understood at least 40% of it, so I consider myself well-versed on the subject. You would have to be a rock to not be moved by at least one verse in his impressive repertoire. In the span of his set, I fell in love, went through a broke-up, traveled the world, experienced great pain, and finally, experienced pure joy. The energy of the room told me that I wasn’t the only one on this journey with him. From the couple cuddling in the corner, to the dude with the dreads rocking his head to the beat, everyone was moved in some way.

A highlight of the night was when Fred Torphy, the lead singer from up-and-coming San Francisco band Big Light, joined Moore for two songs. I have seen at least a dozen times before and while I always have fun seeing them, I have only seen them in shitty venues and could never really hear the lyrics or Torphy’s voice. I was pleasantly surprised that Torphy, beneath his Kurt Cobain look-a-like exterior, was actually a really talented lyricist with a sick voice. “Piece Together Wings,” a song the two co-wrote over Facebook one night was catchy and well-crafted. Torphy’s psychedelic-heavy sounding voice was an awesome contrast to Moore’s folksy twang.

I look forward to checking out both Moore and Torphy at the live JamBase webcast on June 4th. Clothing optional.

08.22.2005

Dude, Where’s My Show?

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Thumbnail image for Dude, Where’s My Show?

You’ve got to give love where love is due. Andy Gadiel, Mr. JamBase himself, has put together a little ditty of a site that matches the JamBase show database to the Google Maps API. Within about four minutes on Friday night, I was able to check the map for shows in Raleigh, NC (where I [...]

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