This blog is dedicated to music, live and recorded. I review shows and albums and also publish feature stories on artists.

Friday, September 28, 2007

PHOTOS: Monolith Saturday - September 15th, 2007

Here are the pictures I took at The Monolith Festival on Saturday. My review of the festival will be posted this weekend.

CLICK HERE FOR PICTURES

The Bands Pictured Are:
  • Ian Ball of Gomez
  • Lords of the Underground
  • Art Brut
  • Spoon
  • The Flaming Lips

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Photos: Monolith Friday - September 14th, 2007

I am finally posting pictures from Friday of Monolith. Saturday will be up very shortly and a review will follow in the coming days.

CLICK HERE FOR PICTURES

The Bands Pictured Are:
  • Editors
  • Decemberists
  • CAKE

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Tuesday, September 25, 2007

FEATURE: Phil Lesh Enlists Jackie Greene and Particle's Steve Molitz for Phil and Friends Fall Tour

The music of the Grateful Dead has transcended decades and generations to become some of the most enduring music produced by one band in the history of rock and roll. For 30 years the Grateful Dead jammed and noodled their way through their shows, inadvertently creating an entire subgenre of rock music that continues to grow and thrive 12 years after the band officially parted ways.

While it’s true that the Grateful Dead name was retired in 1995 when legendary lead guitarist and vocalist Jerry Garcia passed away, the music has lived on through the various surviving members. Bob Weir’s Ratdog is actively touring, Mickey Hart and his various projects still interpret the material, and bassist Phil Lesh has done his part to keep the flame alive by enlisting various “Friends” over the past eight years to help him in his quest to reinvent the songs and the spirit of the Grateful Dead.

Lesh’s “Friends” have included a virtual who’s who of the jamband music community, including Trey Anastasio and Page McConnell from Phish, Paul Barrere and Billy Payne from Little Feat, Warren Haynes and Derek Trucks, who currently play with The Allman Brothers, and, more recently, John Scofield and Ryan Adams. Though each incarnation of Phil Lesh and Friends has produced some memorable musical moments, it has always been tough to get a band together that really gelled.

“It’s been kind of a rollercoaster ride with lots of different musicians coming and going,” Phil Lesh told Listen Up Denver! during a recent interview from his home in Marin County, California. “We had ‘The Q’ [The Phil Lesh Quintet] which went for a couple of years, but it’s kinda hard in the final analysis to work around everyone’s schedules. As a result, we decided to try and get a band together that we could work with a while. All the musicians in the current line-up have given us a commitment that they will be available to work with us for about the next year or so. It is really a relief to have those commitments and now we can really focus on taking the music to another level.”

The men who have signed on to work with Lesh are his longtime drummer John Molo, multi-instrumentalist Larry Campbell, singer-songwriter Jackie Greene and Particle keyboardist Steve Molitz. This line-up was debuted in late July at The Independent in San Francisco and drew rave reviews.

The bluesy Jackie Greene has stepped into the spotlight and is handling many of the vocal duties as well as playing guitar and keyboards. “He’s a real find, this guy,” gushed Lesh. “Last year I heard a cut from his album American Myth on the radio and I said, ‘Whoa, who is that?’ ... And I went out and got his record. I absolutely loved it. Everything about it was just so wonderful, the tunes, the singing, the guitar playing, the arrangement and the way the guitars interlocked with one another and all these great little ideas that were bubbling in the background. It was just delightful. I said something about the album in an interview and two months later I got an email from Jackie ... we got together and it just clicked and we invited him to join the band. Fortunately, he jumped at the opportunity, which was really gratifying.”

Steve Molitz is another relative youngster that Lesh has played with for a couple of one-off gigs over the past several years, but this is his first national tour with the bassist and it promises to be a special one. “Steve is a young guy with a whole different perspective ‘cause he comes out of that electronica jamband scene. I’ve been wanting to integrate that aspect of jamband music into my band for a long time and Steve is the ideal person because he can play the root stuff on the regular keyboards and jam out and yet when the moment is right he can do the really spacey, but still jammin’, kind of stuff,” Lesh said.

Lesh is an anomaly in many ways because he is still striving, at the age of 67, to grow and develop as a musician. He consciously brought Molitz and Greene into the band because “the kind of energy that Steve and Jackie bring to the band is so fresh and so exciting that the rest of us old guys kinda gotta get jacked up to that level,” he said. “It makes us play differently and that’s really what I am after with the band. I want to be inspired to play outside of my comfort zone and outside of the box that I have always been in with the Grateful Dead.”

In many ways, when Lesh returns to Colorado at the end of the month, he will be returning to a comfort zone in the form of Red Rocks Amphitheatre. Between the years of 1978 and 1984 the Grateful Dead played the famed venue 21 times and Lesh has returned many times as part of other projects. “Red Rocks seems to bring out the best in us, and we’ve got some special things up our sleeves for that gig,” he said. “We are going to be doing two full electric sets but in the middle we are going to do an acoustic set. Jackie’s music and his playing really lend themselves to that, so we are going to do the special acoustic set which we won’t be doing at The Fillmore.”

Check Out Phil and Friends If You Like:
  • The Grateful Dead
  • Jackie Greene
  • Ryan Adams

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Monday, September 24, 2007

PICK OF THE WEEK: The Aliens - Friday, September 28th - The Larimer Lounge, Denver, CO

Why You Should Go: The Aliens are the new project of ex-Beta Band members John Maclean, Robin Jones and most notably Gordon Anderson. Anderson, a founder of The Beta Band, has battled with mental illness for the last 10 years and been in and out of institutions. Apparently, he has pulled things together and harnessed his creative potential once again with astounding results.

Their website eloquently introduces the band by saying: "Armed with a bottomless bag of psychedelically inclined rock and acid dipped electronics, The Aliens bring a freedom of spirit and a certainty of intent that immediately sets them out from the current crop of guitar slingers."

They were enthusiastically received at Glastonbury this past summer and have been touring extensively since their debut album Astronomy for Dogs was released back in March. The album, an trippy excursion into a land full of sunny pop epics, will be sure to satisfy the cravings of any Beta Band fan while delighting new fans as well.

The Beta Band may be no longer, but The Aliens are landing in Denver this Friday and they've chosen the tight confines of The Larimer Lounge to unleash their madness on the Mile High City.

The Aliens


Venue: Larimer Lounge, 2721 Larimer Street, Denver, CO - 303.291.1007

Doors:
8:00 PM

*Approximate Set Times:
Kate Johnson - 9:30 PM
Augie March - 10:30 PM
The Aliens - 11:30 PM

*Price:
$12.00 (ADV)
$14.00 (DOS)
PURCHASE

*All times and prices are gathered from other sources and I am not responsible for mistakes or inconsistencies. They are intended only as guidelines. Please, always call the venue if you desire the most accurate information possible.

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Wednesday, September 19, 2007

PICK OF THE WEEK: They Might Be Giants - Thursday, September 20th - The Boulder Theater, Boulder, CO

Why You Should Go: They Might Be Giants are quite simply one of the most unique and consistently entertaining bands playing today. They have been going strong for more than 20 years and though they shot to popularity in the early 90's with the success of their album Flood, their recent album The Else contains all of the spark and genius that they showcased for the first time all those years ago.

In the live setting, "The John's" (Flansburg and Linnell) play the role of stand-up comics and story tellers almost as well as they play their instruments. They'll keep you in stitches for the whole show while they keep your feet moving with their incredibly witting brand of darkly humorous songs about "Your Racist Friend," "The Shadow Government," "James K. Polk," or perhaps the "Bee of The Bird of the Moth."

They've been around for years and while I'm quite sure they're still going strong, their shows in Colorado are few and far between. So if you're even a little intrigued by The Giants or Geek Rock in general, do your self a favor pony up for the show.

They Might Be Giants


Venue: The Boulder Theater, 2032 14th Street, Boulder, CO 80302 - (303)786-7030

Doors:
7:30 PM

*Approximate Set Times:
Oppenheimer - 8:30 PM
They Might Be Giants - 9:30 PM

*Price:
$25.00
PURCHASE

*All times and prices are gathered from other sources and I am not responsible for mistakes or inconsistencies. They are intended only as guidelines. Please, always call the venue if you desire the most accurate information possible.

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Thursday, September 13, 2007

FEATURE: The National Become National Sensation With The Release of Boxer

It’s been one of those years for Matt Berninger, front man of the Brooklyn-based The National — one that he probably never thought he would have when he was studying to become a graphic designer in Cincinnati. He’s been to Europe three times, he’s played to a sold out crowd at Radio City Music Hall and he met David Letterman all in the span of about five months.

What precipitated this whirlwind of events was a simple release by his band: an album called Boxer. “I think Boxer is the best album we’ve made,” Berninger told Listen Up Denver! from his New York City apartment on a rare break from touring. “This record has a different personality from the other ones. It took us a long time to find the atmosphere or mood that is represented on the album and I think the fact that we were patient and didn’t rush through it helped us to succeed. There wasn’t any big vision when we started, but we did a lot of different things and only used the ones that added to the song in an interesting way. Everything included on the final product has it own purpose.”

That purpose and intent is evident in the music and convinces the listener that The National is more than just a rock band. They are artists that take their craft seriously and are not going to compromise themselves for the sake of meeting a studio deadline. “We were successful on our own terms,” said Berninger. “There were a lot of moments during the making of Boxer where there was pressure to finish and we kept pushing the deadlines. We just didn’t want to put something out that we felt was compromised on any level. It cost us time and a lot of stress but I am glad that we kept pushing and made the record that we wanted to make.”

The album is a lavishly produced affair that features Berninger’s robust baritone backed by Scott and Bryan Devendorf and identical twins Aaron and Bryce Dessner. Joining these longtime friends is Australian composer and multi-instrumentalist Padma Newsome, whose horn, woodwind and string arrangements flush out the band’s dark and brooding sound beautifully.

“Padma has been sort of a sixth member for a long time. He and Bryce [Dessner] are in a chamber orchestra together called Clogs,” Berninger said. “We didn’t just add in his orchestration as an ornament or pile layers on a chorus to make it sound more epic or something like that. The horns and the woodwinds and the strings all play a really important role in the sound.”

In order to do justice to that “really important role in the sound,” Newsome will again be joining The National on the road this fall as they continue to play, and frequently sell out, bigger and bigger venues around the U.S. and internationally.

Berninger, who has had problems with stage fright in the past, doesn’t seem to be phased by the bigger crowds that his band is performing for these days. “It isn’t that different to play to the bigger crowds. I love performing, but it is never really comfortable. I guess I’ve just come to peace with being uncomfortable and I think that’s fine. Playing to big crowds of say 3,000 people is no more or less nerve wracking than if it’s 20 people. In fact, being in a room where there are only 20 people watching is sometimes worse than the big shows because you feel like you are under such a microscope,” he said.

Berninger also apparently doesn’t like to have the lyrics he writes for The National put under a microscope and largely refuses to have them included in the liner notes for the band’s albums. “Songwriting for me is a collage kind of process and I never begin to put a song together without the music that the other guys have created. The lyrics aren’t meant to stand on their own and I never think of them as being separate from the music. I don’t write poetry, I write songs; and without the music it doesn’t work at all.”

It is these songs that Berninger and his band of brothers create that have propelled The National into the spotlight. Each composition draws on the collected talents of the group and is born out of the desire to create simply beautiful, heart-wrenching music. While difficult to categorize, The National are influenced by some of the darker songsmiths of our time. “Leonard Cohen, Nick Cave, Morrisey, Steven Malkumus and Bob Pollard are some of the many songwriters that I have learned from,” said Berninger. “Listening to the Smiths was when I first realized that rock songs can be more than just entertainment. They can be hilarious and also despicable and depressing at the same time.”

Whether The National will ever live up the musical legacy of The Smiths or Leonard Cohen remains to be seen, but with their soaring popularity and dedication to making music that is not compromised in any way, they may very well be looking at a long string of years as busy as the past five months.

Check Out The National If You Like:

  • The Smiths
  • Interpol
  • Leonard Cohen

View The New Video For The National's "Apartment Story" Below

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MUSICAL MOMENT: Monolith Grids

I have put together typical festival style grids for monolith. It will help you a bit if you are concerned about seeing bands that might be playing opposite each other, or if you just want to plan your day at Red Rocks.

Since Monolith hasn't announced how long a set will run I just put the band in at their approximate start time. You'll have to guess how long they will play.

You can see the grids here: http://www.infodez.com/monolith.htm

Enjoy the festival!

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Tuesday, September 11, 2007

REVIEW: Ben Gibbard - September 10th - The Fillmore Auditorium, Denver, CO

The Scene: This performance / interview was part of a new series produced by MGD and The Rock-N-Roll Hall of Fame called "The Craft." Tickets weren't available to purchase and had to be won through KBCO.com or over the air. The crowd was relatively small (200+) and seemed to be largely industry types and hipsters "in the know."

MGD did a good job of decking out The Fillmore with large video projection screens and lights and it really looked pretty good. The room was split in two with a large velvet curtain hanging from the ceiling just behind the soundboard and the front of the room was set up cabaret style with small tables and clusters of chairs. Overall a nice set up for an intimate evening at such a large hall.

MGD was also nice enough to give everyone 3 drinks over the course of the evening. Of course the choices were limited to MGD or MGD Light, but hey, who am I to complain about free beer.

Ben Gibbard: Gibbard was introduced by the host (Warren Zanes) at about 9:20 or so and came out to a standing ovation and launched right into the Postal Service tune "Brand New Colony." This set the tone unrealistically high for the evening. As soon as Gibbard played the last notes of the song he left the lone mic on the right side of the stage and took a seat center stage next to Zanes and the interview portion of the evening commenced.

I understand where Zanes was trying to go with his questions throughout the evening. He was trying to get inside Gibbard's mind and get him to reveal some of the "secrets" of his craft, however, he wasn't going about it in the right way. Many of Zanes questions focused on his own interpretations of the songs and were very leading. This style led Gibbard to almost take a defensive step back and say "no, that isn't what I was thinking there. It was more like . . . " It would have been much more effective had Zanes posed some open ended questions and allowed Gibbard to speak about the music in his own words. At one point Gibbard literally looked at the audience in shock after Zanes finished posing a long, rambling, in depth question that none of us had followed at all.

I do commend Zanes for getting up there and giving it his all, however, I found the bulk of the conversation to be relatively boring. I recognize that interviewing someone in a live setting isn't an easy thing to do but we are talking Miller Brewing Company and The Rock-N-Roll Hall of Fame here. I am sure they could have found someone trained in journalism and interviewing to host the series.

Gibbard did play a couple of more songs throughout 80 or so minute event. It was a treat to hear stripped down versions of Death Cab and Postal Services songs as he performed solo on just an acoustic guitar in a coffe house like setting, but I could have gone for much more music and much less conversation. In addition to the opener of "Brand New Colony," he also performed "You Remind Me Of Home," "Title and Registration," "Photobooth," and possibly another tune or two but I don't know as I headed home a little early.

NOTE: The usual ratings don't really apply to this event so I've altered them a bit.

Music Portion: B+
Sound: B-
Interview Questions: C-
Interview Responses: B
Set: A-

Overall: C+

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Monday, September 10, 2007

MUSICAL MOMENT: New York Times Magazine Feature Story on Producer/Genius Rick Rubin

NOTE: Originally published in the New York Times Magazine, I am reprinting this here because of the impact the article had on me. This article should be required reading for anyone interested in the current and future state of the music business. Rick Rubin is a pioneer in the music world and is out to shake things up. Fortunately, as a music fan himself, he has music fans best interests in mind. This article offers a unique perspective into the life of one of the most original and talented executives ever to infiltrate corporate america. Yes, I know it's long, but trust me . . . it's worth it.

The Music Man

By LYNN HIRSCHBERG
Published: September 2, 2007
New York Times Magazine

Rick Rubin is listening. A song by a new band called the Gossip is playing, and he is concentrating. He appears to be in a trance. His eyes are tightly closed and he is swaying back and forth to the beat, trying at once to hear what is right and wrong about the music. Rubin, who resembles a medium-size bear with a long, gray beard, is curled into the corner of a tufted velvet couch in the library of a house he owns but where he no longer lives. This three-story 1923 Spanish villa steeped in music history — Johnny Cash recorded in the basement studio; Jakob Dylan is recording a solo album there now — is used by Rubin for meetings. And ever since May, when he officially became co-head of Columbia Records, Rubin has been having nearly constant meetings. Beginning in 1984, when he started Def Jam Recordings, until his more recent occupation as a career-transforming, chart-topping, Grammy Award-winning producer for dozens of artists, as diverse as the Dixie Chicks, Slayer, Red Hot Chili Peppers and Neil Diamond, Rubin, who is 44, has never gone to an office of any kind. One of his conditions for taking the job at Sony, which owns Columbia, was that he wouldn't be required to have a desk or a phone in any of the corporate outposts. That wasn't a problem: Columbia didn't want Rubin to punch a clock. It wanted him to save the company. And just maybe the record business.

What that means, most of all, is that the company wants him to listen. It is Columbia's belief that Rubin will hear the answers in the music — that he will find the solution to its ever-increasing woes. The mighty music business is in free fall — it has lost control of radio; retail outlets like Tower Records have shut down; MTV rarely broadcasts music videos; and the once lucrative album market has been overshadowed by downloaded singles, which mainly benefits Apple. "The music business, as a whole, has lost its faith in content," David Geffen, the legendary music mogul, told me recently. "Only 10 years ago, companies wanted to make records, presumably good records, and see if they sold. But panic has set in, and now it's no longer about making music, it's all about how to sell music. And there's no clear answer about how to fix that problem. But I still believe that the top priority at any record company has to be coming up with great music. And for that reason, Sony was very smart to hire Rick."

Though Rubin maintains that his intention is simply to hear music with the fresh ears of a true fan, he has built his reputation on the simultaneously mystical and entirely decisive way he listens to a song. As the Gossip, which is fronted by a large, raucous woman named Beth Ditto, shouts to a stop, Rubin opens his eyes and nods yes. This is the first new band signed to Columbia that he has been enthralled by, but he is not yet sure how to organize the Gossip's future. "Let's hear something else," Rubin says to Kevin Kusatsu, who would, at any other record company, be called an A & R executive. (Traditionally, A & R executives spot, woo, recruit and oversee the talent of a record company.) "We don't have any titles at the new Columbia," Rubin explains, as Kusatsu, the first person Rubin hired, slips a disc out of its sleeve. "I don't want to create a new hierarchy to replace the old hierarchy."

Rubin, wearing his usual uniform of loose khaki pants and billowing white T-shirt, his sunglasses in his pocket, his feet bare, fingers a string of lapis lazuli Buddhist prayer beads, believed to bring wisdom to the wearer. Since Rubin's beard and hair nearly cover his face, his voice, which is soft and reassuring, becomes that much more vivid. He seems to be one with the room, which is lined in floor-to-ceiling books, most of which are of a spiritual nature, whether about Buddhism, the Bible or New Age quests for enlightenment. The library and the house are filled with religious iconography mixed with mementos from the world of pop. A massive brass Buddha is flanked by equally enormous speakers; vintage cardboard cutouts of John, Paul, George and Ringo circa "Help!" are placed around a multiarmed statue of Vishnu. On a low table, there are crystals and an old RadioShack cassette recorder that Rubin uses to listen to demo tapes; a framed photo of Jim Morrison stares at a crystal ball. In Rubin's world, music and spirituality collide.

"That's why they call him a guru," Natalie Maines, the lead singer of the Dixie Chicks, explained to me in August, calling from her home in Los Angeles. Maines, who has been with the label since 1997, first worked with Rubin in 2004. "At first, I didn't know if I was down with all that guru stuff. I thought, We're making a record — I don't want to be converted. But Rick's spirituality has mostly to do with his own sense of self. When it comes to the music, he's so sure of his opinion that you become sure of his opinion, too. And isn't that what gurus do? They know how to say the right things at the right time and get the best out of you."

Kusatsu, who has elaborate tattoos on both forearms and a match stuck behind his ear, puts the CD into Rubin's wireless system. This is the fourth male singer-songwriter with an acoustic guitar that Rubin has heard today. The music is heartfelt, spare, poetic. "There were a lot of girls in the audience," Kusatsu says as the track begins. Rubin closes his eyes and gently rocks back and forth. His hands are resting on his stomach, and he seems to be almost meditating. "Everything I do," Rubin told me earlier, "whether it's producing, or signing an artist, always starts with the songs. When I'm listening, I'm looking for a balance that you could see in anything. Whether it's a great painting or a building or a sunset. There's just a natural human element to a great song that feels immediately satisfying. I like the song to create a mood."

He also seeks a melody. As a kid growing up in Lido Beach, on New York's Long Island, Rubin loved the Beatles. "I never really liked the Stones," he said. "Although, I loved the Monkees — they had all the best songwriters." Through his passion for the Beatles, he became fascinated by the seductive, addictive power of songs. From the first hip-hop records he produced for L L Cool J and the Beastie Boys, he insisted on classic song structure. "Before Def Jam, hip-hop records were typically really long, and they rarely had a hook," he continued. "Those songs didn't deliver in the way the Beatles did. By making our rap records sound more like pop songs, we changed the form. And we sold a lot of records." The Beastie Boys' "Licensed to Ill" (released in 1986) went on to sell what was then an astonishing four million plus records; earlier that year, "Walk This Way," which combined Run-D.M.C. and Aerosmith, was the first crossover rap single and revitalized Aerosmith's career. Rubin masterminded both.

Whenever he agrees to produce an album, Rubin scrutinizes the songs before going into the studio. Currently, he is producing records for the hard rock band Metallica, the nerd power-pop band Weezer (it is part of his deal with Columbia that he can produce albums for acts that are not signed to the label) and the legendary Neil Diamond. At the moment, Metallica is touring in Europe, Weezer is writing a new batch of songs and Diamond has just started in the studio. Rubin works slowly — it can take him years to finish an album. "A lot of that is because of the songs," Rubin explained. "I try to get the artist to feel like they are writing songs for the ages rather than songs for an album. As they write, they come over and play the songs for me. For some reason, most people will write 10 songs and think, That's enough for a record, I'm done. When they play the songs for me, invariably the last two songs they've written are the best. I'll then say, 'You have two songs, go back and write eight more.' "

His responses are instant, specific and constructively definitive. "He doesn't even take notes," Maines recalled. "He listens with his eyes closed, presses 'pause' and then says, 'You need another chorus,' or 'There isn't enough of a bridge.' He's really precise, and you go back to work." In the early Metallica sessions, Rubin has been exacting about different drum sounds. "Lars" — Ulrich, the drummer — "will play two things for me, and I'll say, 'This one is great and that one is terrible,' " Rubin recalled. "Lars will say: 'How do you know? They both sound good to me.' Well, I just know. The right sound reaches its hand out and finds its way. So much of what I do is just being present and listening for that right sound."

Back in the library, the singer-songwriter's demo is ending. Rubin opens his eyes, blinks and says to Kusatsu: "We may have found one. Does he have any other songs I can hear?" While Kusatsu cues up the next sampling, Rubin texts an assistant on his BlackBerry. Within minutes, a chocolate protein drink is brought to him. As Rubin sips, he listens to the next track — a derivative, meandering song that drones like early Dylan without the lyric sophistication. With his eyes closed, Rubin begins to shake his head slowly. He looks disappointed. "And you wonder why people don't buy CDs anymore," Rubin says. "One song is great and the other is. . . . "

His voice trails off. As a producer or the head of a small independent label, Rubin could afford to be very particular. But Columbia, which is the home of established stars like Bruce, Beyoncé, Bob, Billy and Barbra, desperately needs a jolt of the new. It has also been years since Rubin worked with an artist who is not yet established. Since producing System of a Down in 1998, he has focused on reinvigorating the careers of Johnny Cash and producing records for well-known musicians like Tom Petty, U2 and Justin Timberlake. One of the biggest challenges of the Columbia job is to find unsigned artists and help chart their course.

"I don't know about this guy," Rubin says diplomatically. Kusatsu nods. "I don't want to make a decision for the wrong reason," Rubin continues. "The most important thing we have to do now is get the art right. So many of the decisions at these companies have not been about the music. They sign artists for the wrong reasons — because they think somebody else wants them or if they need to have a record out by a certain date. That old way of doing things is obsolete, but luckily, fear is making the record companies less arrogant. They're more open to ideas. So, what's important now is to find music that's timeless. I still believe that if an artist gains the belief of the listener, then anything is possible." Rubin pauses and looks at Kusatsu. "What else can I hear?" he asks.

This summer, Columbia Records began a program called Big Red. The company invited 20 college students from Harvard, Penn State and the University of Miami to work on various music projects. The interns concentrated mostly on the digital marketing and promotions departments in Columbia's offices in Midtown Manhattan, which are on Madison Avenue in a granite skyscraper designed by Philip Johnson.

At the end of their paid internships, the students took part in focus groups that were closely observed by Steve Barnett, Rubin's co-head at the label, and Mark DiDia, whom Rubin brought in as head of operations, as well as by other Columbia executives. The focus groups may have been the real point of Big Red — Barnett and the New York executives, especially those who had been at Sony for years, wanted to try to take the pulse of the elusive music audience. "The Big Red focus groups were both depressing and informative, and they confirmed what I — and Rick — already knew," DiDia told me afterward. "The kids all said that a) no one listens to the radio anymore, b) they mostly steal music, but they don't consider it stealing, and c) they get most of their music from iTunes on their iPod. They told us that MySpace is over, it's just not cool anymore; Facebook is still cool, but that might not last much longer; and the biggest thing in their life is word of mouth. That's how they hear about music, bands, everything."

Few of the kids knew that record companies participate only in the profits from records — that they derive no income from a band's merchandising or touring revenues. And they all thought that the Columbia logo stood for something prestigious, except in the hip-hop world. There it was deemed too commercial and corporate, but anywhere else it still represented a kind of impressive imprimatur. "Which was good news," DiDia continued. "It means we still have a brand that commands respect."

His insecurity on this point reflects the trepidation that is consuming the music business. Seemingly overnight, the entire industry is collapsing. Sales figures on top-selling CDs are about 30 percent lower than they were a year ago, and the usual remedies aren't available. Since radio is no longer a place to push a single, record companies have turned to television and movies. "High School Musical," which originated with a Disney Channel television show, was the top-selling album of 2006, and not only has "American Idol," with its 30-million-plus audience, created best-selling singers like Kelly Clarkson and Chris Daughtry, but an appearance on the show can also boost sales. When Jennifer Lopez performed on "American Idol," it was considered worth noting that her album "Como Ama Una Mujer," already out for four weeks, dipped only 7 percent rather than falling by the usual double digits. More impressively, songs that are heard on popular shows like "Grey's Anatomy" become instantly desirable. When the Columbia artist Brandi Carlile's song "The Story" was featured on the ABC show, it posted a 15 percent jump in sales and was downloaded 19,000 times in one week. Before being heard on the show, the song had been available for nearly two months without any notable interest.

"Until very recently," Rubin told me over lunch at Hugo's, a health-conscious restaurant in Hollywood, "there were a handful of channels in the music business that the gatekeepers controlled. They were radio, Tower Records, MTV, certain mainstream press like Rolling Stone. That's how people found out about new things. Every record company in the industry was built to work that model. There was a time when if you had something that wasn't so good, through muscle and lack of other choices, you could push that not very good product through those channels. And that's how the music business functioned for 50 years. Well, the world has changed. And the industry has not."

Steve Barnett, who is 55 and was the sole head of Columbia until he agreed to split his role with Rubin, was president of Epic Records, also a division of Sony, until 2005 and was well aware of the seismic shifts in the business. Barnett's corner office on the 25th floor of the Sony building is like a miniversion of the Hard Rock Cafe — autographed guitars belonging to Jeff Beck, Korn and Angus Young from AC/DC rest in their stands, and the walls are covered with vintage posters from the celebrated New York rock venue the Fillmore East. To the right of Barnett's large desk, above the framed Johnny Cash portrait, is a sign that reads, "Your Faith Needs to Be Greater Than Your Fear." "I have always believed that," Barnett told me in mid-August, "but it seems particularly relevant at the moment."

Barnett, who is English, is a sharp counterpoint to Rubin. He lives with his wife and two of their four sons in Connecticut. He has neatly parted sandy brown hair, and on the day we met, he was dressed in a blue button-down shirt, tan slacks and Gucci loafers with dark socks. Barnett is polite, careful, aware of his corporate status. Yet he supported recruiting Rubin. "My wife's father is Dick Vermeil, the former coach of the St. Louis Rams," Barnett explained. "My sons would go to training camp, and when Marshall Faulk started playing for the team, they called me and said, 'Not only is this guy a great player, he makes everyone around him better.' Of course, the Rams went on to win the Super Bowl. I think Rick Rubin is our Marshall Faulk. I knew he would change the culture here."

By the time Barnett first approached Rubin about coming to Columbia, Rubin had already decided that he would have nothing more to do with Columbia Records. This was because of the company's handling of the Rubin-produced Neil Diamond record "12 Songs" in 2005. Diamond was a hero of Rubin's, and he spent two years working on the album, persuading Diamond to record acoustically, something he hadn't done since the '60s.

"The CD debuted at No. 4," Rubin told me at Hugo's, still sounding upset. "It was the highest debut of Neil's career, off to a great start. But Columbia — it was some kind of corporate thing — had put spyware on the CD. That kept people from copying it, but it also somehow recorded information about whoever bought the record. The spyware became public knowledge, and people freaked out. There were some lawsuits filed, and the CD was recalled by Columbia. Literally pulled from stores. We came out on a Tuesday, by the following week the CD was not available. Columbia released it again in a month, but we never recovered. Neil was furious, and I vowed never to make another album with Columbia."

But when Barnett flew out to Los Angeles to discuss the job with Rubin, Rubin was intrigued. "I felt like I could be a force for good," he explained. "In the past, I've tried to protect artists from the label, and now my job would also be to protect the label from itself. So many of the decisions at these companies are not about the music. They are shortsighted and desperate. For so long, the record industry had control. But now that monopoly has ended, they don't know what to do. I thought it would be an interesting challenge."

As a kind of test, Rubin made some unusual demands. "Oh, God, I would have liked to have heard those negotiations," Natalie Maines exclaimed. "Rick knows what he's worth, and I can just hear him telling them, 'You might never see me, I may never wear shoes, you're not the boss of me.' And I'm sure they were saying, 'Whatever you want, Mr. Rubin.' I was surprised Sony made such a smart decision: someone who knows music should be running the company."

In addition to his "never wearing a suit, never traveling, never going to an office" demands, Rubin also suggested (strongly) that Columbia become the first major record company to go green and abolish plastic jewel boxes for all its CDs. "They thought about it and agreed," Rubin said. "And that made me think they would listen to me. It was also a turning point in terms of how big my reach could be. In the past, I would not normally have access to that kind of sweeping change. At Columbia, I'm able to operate on a much larger scale."

That was in late April. By August, Rubin still sounded optimistic, but a weariness had crept into his voice. "It's a big ship to turn around," he told me in the Hollywood Hills house. Simon and Garfunkel was playing in the background and Rubin was padding through the templelike rooms. "Columbia is stuck in the dark ages. I have great confidence that we will have the best record company in the industry, but the reality is, in today's world, we might have the best dinosaur. Until a new model is agreed upon and rolling, we can be the best at the existing paradigm, but until the paradigm shifts, it's going to be a declining business. This model is done."

While Columbia has made some small changes in its organizational structure, it has not instigated the kind of extensive alterations that Rubin says are crucial to the salvation of the business. Barnett is promoting the division at Columbia that sells music directly to TV, so that a network or cable show can introduce an artist to audiences the way radio once did. At Rubin's suggestion, he has also set up a "word of mouth" department, which will probably employ some members of the Big Red focus group along with dozens of other 20-somethings. The "word of mouth" department will function as a publicity-promotional arm of the company, spreading commissioned buzz through chat rooms across the planet and through old-fashioned human interaction. "They tell all their friends about a band," Barnett explained. "Their job is to create interest."

Rubin has a bigger idea. To combat the devastating impact of file sharing, he, like others in the music business (Doug Morris and Jimmy Iovine at Universal, for instance), says that the future of the industry is a subscription model, much like paid cable on a television set. "You would subscribe to music," Rubin explained, as he settled on the velvet couch in his library. "You'd pay, say, $19.95 a month, and the music will come anywhere you'd like. In this new world, there will be a virtual library that will be accessible from your car, from your cellphone, from your computer, from your television. Anywhere. The iPod will be obsolete, but there would be a Walkman-like device you could plug into speakers at home. You'll say, 'Today I want to listen to ... Simon and Garfunkel,' and there they are. The service can have demos, bootlegs, concerts, whatever context the artist wants to put out. And once that model is put into place, the industry will grow 10 times the size it is now."

From Napster to the iPod, the music business has been wrong about how much it can dictate to its audience. "Steve Jobs understood Napster better than the record business did," David Geffen told me. "IPods made it easy for people to share music, and Apple took a big percentage of the business that once belonged to the record companies. The subscription model is the only way to save the music business. If music is easily available at a price of five or six dollars a month, then nobody will steal it."

For this model to be effective, all the record companies will have to agree. "It's like getting the heads of the five families together," said Mark DiDia, referencing "The Godfather." "It will be very difficult, but what else are we going to do?"

Rubin sees no other solution. "Either all the record companies will get together or the industry will fall apart and someone like Microsoft will come in and buy one of the companies at wholesale and do what needs to be done," he said. "The future technology companies will either wait for the record companies to smarten up, or they'll let them sink until they can buy them for 10 cents on the dollar and own the whole thing."

Given the competition among record companies, the subscription model is bound to be tricky to organize and implement. One problem with iTunes is that, with some exceptions, all the songs are priced equally — a Justin Timberlake smash costs the same as an Al Jolson classic. Since a listener would, ideally, pay more for a Top 10 hit, that egalitarian system costs record companies potential millions of dollars. The opponents of the subscription model feel that making all music by all artists available for one flat fee will end up diminishing the overall revenue stream. They would also have to pool their talent, which is difficult for companies that have spent decades fighting over who signs with whom to accept. "There would have to be a new economic plan," Geffen explained. "And it would have to be equitable, depending on the popularity of the artists."

Steve Barnett is nervous about the subscription model. "Smart people have told me if the subscription model is not done correctly," he said, "it will be the final nail in our coffin. I've heard both sides of the argument, and I'm not convinced it's the solution to our problems. Rick wants to be a hero immediately. In his mind, you flick a switch and it's done. It doesn't work like that."

Barnett has other ideas, which he is discussing with Rubin. For instance, asking Columbia artists to give the record company up to 50 percent of their touring, merchandising and online revenue. This is unprecedented — even successful artists like the Dixie Chicks make a large percentage of their income from concerts and T-shirts. "Artists should never give that money up," Natalie Maines told me. "The companies are all scrambling because of the Internet, and they will screw the artist to meet their bottom line. I can't imagine Rick will go along with that."

Rubin won't say — he'd rather concentrate on honing the new model for the industry. "I don't want to waste time," he said, sounding a little frustrated. "The existing people will either get smart, which is a question mark. Or new people will understand what a resource the music business is and change it without us." Rubin paused. "I don't want to watch that happen."

One sunny day in June, Rick Rubin was trying to decide where the new Columbia Records headquarters in Los Angeles should be located. He may not want to go to an office himself, but he still recognizes the influence that a workplace can have on a staff. "I told the corporate Sony people that we have to get out of our old space in Los Angeles as quickly as possible," Rubin said as he disembarked from his Range Rover, which was parked outside a large, one-story former factory that now functions as a sound stage. "The Sony people thought I was insane. I'm also trying to get them to move out of their offices in New York. That space is tainted with the old way. And it's not an artist-friendly place — they search you when you walk in."

Rubin, who was wearing, as usual, khaki cargo pants and a white T-shirt, was trailed by two architects who had flown in from Manhattan for this meeting. He discovered these architects, Dominic Kozerski and Enrico Bonetti, when he saw a chair they designed in a magazine layout. Rubin loves research. He's always on a quest to find just the right thing, whether it be a book or a building. Recently, he hunted down the brand of water that claims to have the greatest level of purity (Ice Age); he pored over architectural manuals to determine what kind of hinge would have been used in 1923 (for his house); and when Johnny Cash was ailing, Rubin discovered a kinesiologist whom Cash credited with extending his life. And so on. Rubin has always been passionate, even compulsive, about his interests.

"From the time I was 9 years old, I loved magic," Rubin recalled as he walked around the cavernous loftlike space. "I was an only child, and I think that had a big impact on me. I always had grown-up friends even though I was a little kid. I would take the train from Lido Beach into Manhattan, and I'd hang out in magic shops. When I was 14, I had magician friends who were 60. I learned a lot from them — I still think about magic all the time. I always think about how things work, the mechanics of a situation — that's the nature of being a magician."

In high school, around 1980, Rubin started listening to a mix of heavy metal and punk rock. (He recalls buying the Germs' record "GI" and "Back in Black" by AC/DC on the same day.) "I saw the Ramones play every week," he said. "I was the only punk in my high school." Rubin paused. "I've always been an outsider. When I did magic, I was the only kid. When I worked with Johnny Cash, I was completely out of place in Nashville. And when I started Def Jam, I was the only white guy in the hip-hop world."

Although Rubin's parents — his father was a shoe wholesaler, and "my mother's job was me" — wanted him to be a lawyer, he had other ideas. In 1983, while he was attending N.Y.U., he borrowed $5,000 from his parents and recorded "It's Yours" by T La Rock and Jazzy Jay, a 12-inch single that became a local dance hit. Rubin then invented a label, calling his company Def Jam ("Def" meaning great, and "Jam" meaning music), and ran the business out of his dorm room. "The clerk at the front desk handled all the shipping," Rubin recalled.

Russell Simmons, who was then a hip-hop producer, loved "It's Yours" when he heard it on the radio. "I thought for sure that Rick was black," Simmons said. In 1984, a 16-year-old named L L Cool J (Ladies Love Cool James) sent a demo tape to Rubin's dorm room/Def Jam. "He was much better than anything else I heard," Rubin recalled. "And he still is. 'I Need a Beat,' L L's first single, was the real birth of Def Jam." Rubin did not release the track right away — he tightened up the structure, editing the rhymes so they more closely resembled verses in a song. The result is a spare, clean sound, rather than the endless repetitions of most early rap. "I thought the record would do well, and I asked Russell to be my partner at Def Jam. I did all the work from my dorm, and he did the promotion. Russell was five years older, and he was established. By myself, I was just a kid making records. He gave me credibility."

"I Need a Beat" sold 100,000 copies, and in the next year, Def Jam released seven more 12-inch records, selling a total of about 300,000 units. The major labels had ignored rap, dismissing it as a regional fad, but they took notice of Def Jam. CBS offered Rubin and Simmons $600,000 to pick four acts a year, a kind of finder's fee. "I was 20," Rubin said. "I sent a Xerox of the check to my parents. That's when this stopped being a hobby. At that point, I wanted to live the life of an artist."

By 1987, Rubin had already discovered the Beastie Boys, three upper-middle-class guys from New York City who could rap. The trio's anthemic hit, "(You Gotta) Fight for Your Right (to Party!)," which was produced by Rubin, was an instant classic: the rhythms of the words form a hook that circles and loops around your brain and will not leave. The Beasties' debut album, "Licensed to Ill," was the first rap album to go to No. 1 on the Billboard chart. "And we were still in the dorms," George Drakoulias, a successful producer who worked with Rubin for a decade, told me. "Rick didn't want to leave. He got college credits for running the record company. He stayed until he graduated. And by then, he and Russell were fighting over the direction of the company."

Each had a different idea of which bands Def Jam should produce. The partnership fell apart during renegotiations for their contract with CBS. Simmons wanted to get the biggest monetary advance possible from CBS, while Rubin wanted to bet on Def Jam, take a small amount of money for the sake of independence and make most of the cash on the back-end profits. They couldn't agree, and Def Jam was split in two, an arrangement that took nearly three years to finalize.

When things went sour, Rubin flew to Los Angeles to work on the soundtrack for the film "Less Than Zero." "I never really moved here," Rubin said now, still walking around the former factory space. "I never packed and moved. But I never left Los Angeles, even though I hadn't planned to stay." He lived in the Chateau Marmont for nine months and started a new record company, Def American. Rubin changed gears: he signed the hard rock bands Slayer and Danzig and gave a record deal to the misogynist comic Andrew Dice Clay. "At every stage of my career, there have always been people telling me not to do whatever it is that I'm doing," Rubin said. "After my initial success in rap, I started making rock records, and people said, 'Why would you do this?' I made a comedy album, and they said, 'Why this?' Now people ask me, 'Why do you want to do this Columbia job?' It's always the same answer: 'I've always liked doing the stuff that I like.' I just like good music or comedy or whatever it is, and now I have the chance to bring that to a big record company. I have no training, no technical skill — it's only this ability to listen and try to coach the artist to be the best they can from the perspective of a fan."

The architects were still daydreaming about where to put the lobby and the conference room in the factory-turned-soundstage when Rubin suggested that they drive over to another potential site for the new Columbia offices. They piled into his Range Rover, which was being driven by Nino Molina, one of his assistants. In the front seat, Rubin turned on the satellite radio and Sinatra's "Fly Me to the Moon" flooded the car. "Where we are going could not be more different than this spot," Rubin told the architects. "In a way, this factory is like a cool, old vintage Mustang convertible and the next building we're seeing is a Rolls-Royce. In the end, they are both great and they probably cost the same money, but they are completely opposite in style." Rubin fiddled with the radio. "Every Picture Tells a Story" by Rod Stewart replaced Sinatra. "They couldn't be more different, but both work," Rubin continued.

We drove east until we arrived at the former CAA building on Wilshire Boulevard in Beverly Hills. I. M. Pei designed this curvy, cream-colored travertine structure, and the most dominant feature of the space is its vast, soaring, three-story lobby. "This is a significant building," Rubin said. "How often do you get a chance to reinvent a landmark? Los Angeles doesn't have too many marquee buildings, and this is one of them."

The two spaces — one raw and full of promise and the other established and perfect for reinvention — are a neat metaphor for Rubin's divergent music tastes. "I've always been attracted to both new stuff and older stuff," he said as he opened the door to a plush screening room. "When I came to Los Angeles and started producing more, that became clearer to me."

At Def American, Rubin concentrated on a harder rock sound: Slayer's "Reign in Blood," which is considered to be a heavy metal classic, or the Geto Boys, whose rap song "Mind of a Lunatic" depicted vivid scenes of necrophilia and murder. "I just couldn't put out a record about sex with dead bodies and cutting off women's breasts," said David Geffen, whose company Geffen Records was the distributor of Def American. "I begged Rick not to put out the Geto Boys. In the end, I lost. He left and went to Warner Brothers."

Although Rubin claims that Geffen fired him, he stood by the Geto Boys: "I thought the art was good. As a fan, the Geto Boys were thrilling in the same way that a horror movie might be thrilling." In 1993, Rubin saw that the word "def" was now in dictionaries, and he decided to change the name of his company. Inspired by a documentary he'd seen about the hippie movement, Rubin held a formal funeral for Def. "When advertisers and the fashion world co-opted the image of hippies, a group of the original hippies in San Francisco literally buried the image of the hippie," Rubin explained. "When 'def' went from street lingo to mainstream, it defeated its purpose."

The funeral was lavish. The Rev. Al Sharpton was flown in from New York to deliver the eulogy, the Amazing Kreskin performed and Rubin purchased a cemetery plot and engraved headstone. The death of Def also marked a change in Rubin's career. He had never signed what he calls "grown-up artists," and he wanted to work with someone with enormous talent whose career had been eclipsed. "The first person I thought of was Johnny Cash," Rubin said now. "He was a little like this building — already a legend, but ripe for something different. I knew I could do something great with him."

In many ways, the Cash phase of Rubin's life, which lasted 10 years and produced five albums, has overshadowed all his other accomplishments. Rubin had worked intensively with artists before. When he produced the Red Hot Chili Peppers in 1991, he helped reinvent their sound by persuading them to incorporate melody and a more lyrical approach in their songwriting. The Chili Peppers defined their music narrowly — as rap infused with funk — and Rubin imagined a different quality. "My job was to break down those boundaries," he explained. "No band has to fit into a little box. I saw the Chili Peppers as being like the Beach Boys in some ways. They represented Los Angeles, a place of dreams." Anthony Kiedis, the lead singer, showed Rubin his notebooks, and the producer homed in on a poem about drugs and alienation called "Under the Bridge." He persuaded Kiedis to set the words to music, and the resulting song was a career-altering hit for the band.

Rubin installed the Peppers in a mansion in the Hollywood Hills that was rumored to be Harry Houdini's former home. It actually wasn't, but the house did have secret passageways, and the rumors of its history lingered. A studio was built, and the Peppers moved in with Rubin's personal chef at their service. As he always does when he produces a record, Rubin came and went. "I do not know how to work a board. I don't turn knobs. I have no technical ability whatsoever," he said. "But I'm there when they need me to be there. My primary asset is I know when I like something or not. It always comes down to taste. I'm not there to hold their hands and baby-sit, but I'm there for any key creative decisions."

And yet it was different with Cash. While Cash was an excellent songwriter, Rubin handpicked rock songs like "Hurt" by Nine Inch Nails, "Personal Jesus" by Depeche Mode and "Rusty Cage" by Soundgarden for Cash to reinterpret. (He also suggested "Addicted to Love" by Robert Palmer, but that didn't work.) He was much more involved with every aspect of the production — from the choice of songs to the arrangements to the videos — than he had been with any other artist. Rubin and Cash also had a deep spiritual kinship: during the final months of Cash's life, they took communion together every day, even though Rubin, who was born Jewish and now sees himself as not having any specific religious orientation, should not be eligible for the holy sacraments. Even after Cash's death, Rubin would close his eyes and hear Cash's voice as he said the benediction. "It was like hearing a song that you love," Rubin said. "He was there with me."

When Cash was in Los Angeles, he often stayed at Rubin's house. His bedroom, with its view of the city, was on the third floor, and Cash would take the elevator down to the recording studio in the basement. "I was always aware of how important Cash was," Rubin said. "But no one under 40 who didn't live in the South knew much about Johnny Cash besides a few hits and his name." What seems so clear now was not obvious when Rubin began working with Cash — it was risky to reinvent a living legend for a new generation.

After Cash's death, Rubin was searching for a challenge with an even higher degree of difficulty, a greater test for his powers of listening. The Columbia job is a different kind of reclamation project, but Rubin knows that, just possibly, he could restore an entire institution to greatness. "I can imagine people coming up with brilliant, creative ideas here," Rubin told the architects as they finished their tour of the building. "But Sony has to agree. I'm not sure they realize that they are selling art. Right now they could be selling any product. That's why we have to move — we're in the art business."

For the last two years, Rubin has lived in a house in Malibu that overlooks the ocean. In a way, this house is a return to his childhood in Lido Beach, where he spent his days near the water. "It's inspirational to live out here," Rubin said as he settled into a lounge chair with linen cushions facing the sea. "You feel the rhythm of the planet more keenly. I am never this aware of sunrise and sunset when I'm in town. The daily changes of nature at the beach can be deeply affecting."

Rubin has many of his business meetings here now. The '70s architecture of the house is nondescript, but the views from every room are spectacular. There's an old, elaborately carved grand piano in the living room alongside an enormous four-poster brass bed with a striking white linen canopy. When I arrived, Amanda Santos, Rubin's fiancée, was having a private yoga session. While we sat on the terrace, a small Yorkshire terrier named Henry ran between the living room and Rubin's lap. Despite a state-of-the-art sound system, there was no music playing. Only the sound of the waves.

All this Zen calm notwithstanding, Rubin, who was drinking ginger tea, was working. "Do you know about Paul Potts?" he asked as he went to the kitchen to get his laptop. "You have to see this. It totally blew my mind." Rubin found the proper link and turned the screen to face me. The clip was from a British show called "Britain's Got Talent," a version of "American Idol." Despite its popularity, Rubin has never seen "American Idol," and he had never heard of Simon Cowell, who is a judge on both programs.

"This is insane," Rubin said enthusiastically as the clip began. In the video, an ordinary-looking middle-aged man waited nervously backstage. When he faced the judges, he told them he worked at a mobile-phone store and wanted to sing opera. The studio audience looked annoyed — they clearly wanted to hear a pop song — and the judges were cold and dismissive. No one expected anything remarkable from this dull-looking, forgettable guy.

But then Paul Potts sang — "Nessun dorma" from "Turandot." He had an improbably beautiful voice. "Where does that come from?" Rubin said as he watched. Tears were rolling down his cheeks. "I can't look at this without crying," he said. "His voice is so beautiful." When Potts finished his song, Cowell said, "I thought you were absolutely fantastic." The studio audience roared with approval, and Potts beamed.

"It's August now — that show was eight weeks ago," Rubin said. "In England, Paul Potts is already gigantic, but we are going to launch him in America. This just blew my mind."

No one could have predicted that one of the first new Columbia artists to excite Rick Rubin would have been a would-be opera singer from a televised talent contest. "I certainly didn't expect his response to be so positive," said Steve Barnett, who originally brought Paul Potts to Rubin's attention. "I was surprised and pleased that he wanted to jump on it."

Rubin has an immediate plan for Potts — he wants to test the powers of his "word of mouth" department. "I want to see if we can create interest without there being a record to buy," he said. "I've told our whole staff to send it to everyone, to tell everyone, to mention it everywhere. I want to get Paul Potts out to the world." Rubin stopped for a moment. "Although, if someone tells you how great this is, it's not as moving. It's the element of surprise that makes you interested in Paul Potts: he looks so bland, and then he sings so well. If you expect him to be great, will the clip still be great?"

The question cannot be answered. A word-of-mouth campaign, like so many possible remedies for the ills of the record business, feels forced. "I just don't know how else people will see Paul Potts," Rubin said. "And I'm really glad I saw him." He paused and looked out at the surf. "I know this sounds hard to believe, but I never had any expectations of success," he said finally. "I knew what I liked, and I didn't really care if anyone else liked it. I still never assume that anyone will like anything. But I can't imagine that they won't, either."

"Sam Cooke built this," Neil Diamond said as he greeted Rubin at ArchAngel Studios in West Hollywood on a gray afternoon in late July. "I bought the place around 30 years ago. It's not open to the public, but I let Rick use it sometimes."

Rubin smiled. "I think the Doors made their first demo here," he said as he followed Diamond down the hall, past the walls of gold and platinum Neil Diamond records, past the framed album covers and into a glass recording studio. "And now, Neil."

For the past two weeks, Rubin and Diamond had been working on new material, and Diamond wanted Rubin to hear some songs that were near completion. "You know, initially I stalked Neil," Rubin said as an engineer prepared the first track. "Yes," said Diamond, who is trim and was wearing a suede baseball hat, dark shirt and jeans. "At first, it was a little scary — I didn't know what to make of it."

A classic Neil Diamond song about the renewing power of a relationship boomed from the speakers. Diamond looked down, a little self-conscious. Rubin, eyes closed, was seated at the engineer's console with his arms resting lightly on the mixing board. When the song ended, Rubin paused, opened his eyes and said: "You really caught a good mood on that. It lived for the first time." Diamond nodded. They discussed the merits of adding strings or changing the structure so that the bridge didn't sound so much like a chorus. "Some strings might inspire you," Rubin said. "And maybe some amplification near the end. It needs a little polish."

Diamond agreed, and four more tracks were played for Rubin's opinion. He was encouraging and specific — "a little percussion element could go here," he said. Or, "Let's shorten that rolling piano." After about an hour, Rubin hugged Diamond goodbye. They agreed to reconnect in a month, after he'd written some more songs. "I'll settle in without distraction," Diamond promised. "And then I'll be in touch."

Rubin headed back to his Range Rover. In the car, he said he had some live footage of the Gossip that he wanted to show me. "I saw the group at the Troubadour, and they blew my mind," he said. "It was the best show I've seen in five years. Afterward, I met with the band. They felt stressed, and they were having trouble writing songs. The energy in the room when they were performing was so intense, and I'm not even sure how we'd get it to feel like that in the studio. So we decided to record a live show during their European tour, and we're going to release a DVD of the live album as their first release."

Rubin looked pleased. Beth Ditto, the lead singer of the Gossip, is exactly what he has been looking for since he took this job at Columbia: she is an outsize personality in an outsize body with a Joplin-esque, bluesy voice. Ditto is the kind of artist Rubin loves — unique, ambitious and open to guidance. "For a band like the Gossip," Rubin continued, "the support of a record company like Columbia is still really important. I grew up in the independent music business, and you still really need the muscle of the majors. A record company call can still get you heard like nobody else."

Rubin paused. "That's the magic of the business," he said. "It's all doom and gloom, but then you go to a Gossip show or hear Neil in the studio and you remember that too many people make and love music for it to ever die. It will never be over. The music will outlast us all."

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PICK OF THE WEEK: Monolith Festival - Friday & Saturday, September 14th & 15th - Red Rocks Amphitheatre, Morrison, CO

Why You Should Go: Quite simply, why would you not go? A two day festival at arguably the greatest venue in the world is something not to miss, especially if you are lucky enough to live here in Colorado and you have the venue in your backyard.

If that's not enough, the line-up should be enough to entice you. Both headliners, CAKE and The Flaming Lips have headlined Red Rocks on their own and as anchors to this festival they should bring the house down. While Red Rocks show are notoriously expensive, Monolith has tried to keep the ticket price relatively low and for more than 25 bands each day I think they have accomplished it nicely.

In addition to the famed Main Stage at Red Rocks the organizers of Monolith have plotted out an additional 4 stage locations to include two indoor stages in the visitors center at the top of Red Rocks. With stage capacities ranging from 9,000 to probably 500 it will be a great opportunity to see some outstanding emerging artists on small stages while still catching the international headliners on the main stage.

Other bands on the bill include: The Decemberists, Spoon, Kings of Leon, Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, Art Brut, Editors, Yacht, Flostradamus and many many more.

We are fortunate to have a festival of this caliber happening right here on the front range, please get out and support Monolith so we can be assured that it will become an annual festival as the organizers have planned.

Cake:


The Flaming Lips:


The Decemberists:


Spoon:


Venue: Red Rocks Amphitheatre, Red Rocks Park, Morrison, CO 80465 - (720)865-2494

Doors:
Friday: 1:30 PM
Saturday: 12:30 PM

*Approximate Set Times:
See Schedule Here

*Price:
Friday: $42.50
Saturday: $42.50
Two Day Pass: $79.50
VIP Pass: $175
PURCHASE FRIDAY
PURCHASE SATURDAY
PURCHASE TWO DAY
PURCHASE VIP GOLD PASS

*All times and prices are gathered from other sources and I am not responsible for mistakes or inconsistencies. They are intended only as guidelines. Please, always call the venue if you desire the most accurate information possible.

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Friday, September 07, 2007

PICK OF THE WEEK: VHS or BETA - Friday September 7th - Larimer Lounge, Denver, CO

Why You Should Go: A fiery mix of dance-punk and rock-n-roll give VHS or BETA a leg up on most of today's bands that are capitalizing on the resurgance of the New Wave sound. Their 2004 single "Night on Fire" (below) catipulted them into the mainstream and their recent album Bring on the Comets was released last week and has been referred to as "The Killers meets the Cure meets late-night top-40 radio dance remixes." And to be honest that's fairly accurate.

I wouldn't expect to leave the show unalterably changed, but I would expect to be sweaty and tired from moving to the undeniably danceable tunes that band is sure to crank out in the wonderfully cramped and dingy confines of the Larimer.

VHS or BETA


Venue: Larimer Lounge, 2721 Larimer Street, Denver, CO - 303.291.1007

Doors:
8:00 PM

*Approximate Set Times:
Walter Meego - 11:00 PM
VHS or BETA - 12:00 AM

*Price:
$12.00 (ADV)
$14.00 (DOS)
PURCHASE

*All times and prices are gathered from other sources and I am not responsible for mistakes or inconsistencies. They are intended only as guidelines. Please, always call the venue if you desire the most accurate information possible.

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Tuesday, September 04, 2007

REVIEW: Wilco - September 1 & 2 - The Fillmore Auditorium, Denver, CO

The Scene: While Saturday was sold out by the time Wilco came on, Sunday was a much more mellow crowd. The hipster hippies were out in force this weekend, with all of the plaid and tight t-shirts that comes with that crowd. It was your typical Wilco crowd, primarily 25 - 35 and a good solid mix of girls and guys. There were a few grey hairs in attendance who were really digging the tunes from the tables along the right side of the floor and overall it was a very respectful crowd.

The Opener: Richard Swift. I had heard good things about Richard Swift before walking into the Fillmore on Saturday night. I however, was not impressed by the 2 songs I heard on Saturday and the 3 I heard on Sunday night. Swift's voice is reminiscent of Bob Dylan and if you've ever seen Dylan live in recent memory you will understand that this is not a good thing. I don't know if the sound was off or it was simply Swift's performance but it was difficult to see through the harshness of his vocals to the lyrics and melodies that made up his songs. While I did catch an occasional couplet that intrigued me there isn't much I can say about Swift's performance. It was telling that when he was invited up on stage Sunday night during Wilco's encore he didn't sing a note.

Wilco: The ads on KBCO all summer have touted Wilco as "The world's best live band," and while I took issue with that every time I heard it, I have to admit now that they weren't completely off-base. There were very few flaws with both performances this past weekend.

One of the few things I can point to is the repetition of 11 songs over the two nights. Why is it that band with a catalogue as extensive as Wilco's can't play two nights at the same venue without repeating more than a song or two? Afterall, they were selling two night tickets and were very aware that the audience was going to be very similar both nights. Let's do something to reward the fans who came out both nights.

That being said I do understand that Wilco is a VERY rehearsed band and that is the only way they can achieve the tightness that they have managed on recent tours. 36 different songs is a decent number to have in rotation and I was consistently blown away by how well they played together as a band.

The other thing that blew me away was their unique approach to lighting the stage. Rather than the typical approach of lighting everything from a hanging rig above the stage they brought several standing light stands with old style light cans mounted on them that shined through red film. They also employed the theater technique of using footlights to light the band from below with lights mounted at the front edge of the stage. It is the same technique that Martin Scorsese used to get the great lighting effets that are seen in the concert film, The Last Waltz. It was great to see a band finally using this time tested technique to enhance their performance.

Even with the lights and the exceptional tightness of the band, I think that the moment that summed up my Wilco experience took place during Sunday evening's first encore. Tweedy and company had just run through "California Stars" with Richard Swift and his band mate and then band broke into "Poor Places" from Yankee Hotel Foxtrot. As they neared the end of the song they elongated one of their trademark noise jams and deftly used just the right amount of disonnance to keep us all fixated on their every move until it seemed to segue right into the cryptically romantic "Reservations." After reviewing some setlists from the past several years it turns out to be a common song pairing and as many are probably aware "Reservations" follows "Poor Places" on the original album.

Regardless of whether it is common for the band to pair these songs it still resonated with me as exactly what Wilco is all about. A friend of mine said that they are part Rush and part Willie Nelson and I think there is a lot of truth to that. They are able to play country songs drenched in heartache and soul while still morphing into a true progressive rock-n-roll band almost at will.

This metamorphasis that they manage so effortlessly on stage isn't something that they capture as well on their captivating albums. As a studio band Wilco is at the forefront of the Alt-Country movement in the US right now, and as a live band they are setting the bar for touring acts all over the world. It is a true pleasure to watch and I am already looking foward to seeing them again.

Energy: A-
Sound: A
Musicianship: A
Stage Presence: B+
Set/Light Show: A

Overall: A

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