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THE B LIST: 10 FAVORITE JAM CRUISE SETS

GLIDE MAG - January 14, 2010

8. The Word  Pool Deck

I’ve never had a chance to check out The Word –  a supergroup made up of Robert Randolph, John Medeski and the members of the North Mississippi Allstars – in the live setting until Jam Cruise and it was well worth the wait. These guys are all monsters at their instruments and played such a happy brand of music. The set on the Pool Deck raged and seemed to be attended by most on the boat. Can’t wait to check these guys out again.

7. Steve Kimock  Pool Deck

We’ve been covering the early days of Steve Kimock & Crazy Engine a bunch on this site in 2009, but this was my first opportunity to see the unit in action. Each tune they played contained tons of jamming and I believe the shortest song of the set was around nine minutes. Highlights included a gorgeous Stella Blue featuring Robert Walter and a spunky That’s What Love Will Make You Do that saw Melvin Seals wailing on the B3.

6. Railroad Earth  Theater

The morning after Railroad Earth’s performance in the theater, this set was the talk of the boat. Lots of “bests” and “favorites” were thrown around thanks to the group’s beautifully-composed set in the intimate venue and stellar playing over the course of three hours. You’d think the band would’ve been handicapped by bassist Johnny Grubb’s departure, but they thrived with SCI’s Keith Moseley handling “the deep end.”

5. Pretty Lights  Pool Deck

Yet another act I had yet to see, Pretty Lights drew a huge crowd to the Pool Deck for my favorite dance party of the week. Pretty Lights’ set kept everybody moving the whole time, especially during a lively mash-up of After Midnight and Midnight Rider. This type of music isn’t usually my bag, but I enjoyed every minute of PL’s performance.

4. Zappa Plays Zappa  Theater

One of my favorite experiences on Jam Cruise 8 was wandering into the theater during Zappa Plays Zappa’s soundcheck. It was quite the learning experience to watch these guys figure out the transitions [“Frank played it this way on Philly ’76” and work on individual songs that would be dropped over the band’s two sets. As far as the performances, ZPZ’s set in the theater absolutely killed. I enjoyed what I caught of the regular set, yet the encore of Cosmik Debris, Willie The Pimp, Don’t Eat the Yellow Snow and Muffin Man couldn’t be touched. Dweezil has his father’s tone down and his Willie The Pimp solo ran the gamut from rock to soul to metal in the course of five minutes.

3. OHMphrey  Pool Deck

I wasn’t quite sure what to expect from OHMphrey’s live show. I knew I enjoyed the album, but how would it play out on stage? After the first hard and heavy tune scared the shit out of some attendees, these guys dropped over two hours of metal-groove music that showed off the unbelievable chops of each player. Later, they took it down a notch for a blissful cover of Stevie Ray Vaughan’s Lenny that brought the house down. From the thoughts of my non-Umphrey’s loving friends who caught this set, it seems you don’t have to like UM to get a big kick out of OHMphrey.

2. The Motet plays the Talking Heads  Pool Deck

It doesn’t get much better than watching a formidable group of musicians playing the greatest of the Talking Heads’ greatest hits while floating in the Caribbean. Motet admin/drummer Dave Watts did an incredible job putting together this lineup which featured Fuzz on guitar, Joey Porter and Kyle Hollingsworth on keys and a triumvirate of singers including Liza Oxnard, Carrie Sangiovanni and Jans Ingber. Girlfriend Is Better, Once in a Lifetime and Naive Melody were among my favorites of this mind-blowing set

1. Brock Butler and Ellie Labar Sunrise Set  Back Pool Deck

Considering how much I enjoyed this set, it’s crazy to think how close I was to missing it. With my wingman The Joker of the Coventry Blog at my side, we decided to catch our first Jam Cruise sunrise and called it a day at 6:15AM. I decided to hit the bathroom on the way to my room and when I came out I heard someone singing Let It Be. My #1 priority on this trip was catching Brock’s set, so I was in heaven when I realized what was going down. Brock and Ellie played a variety of some of the best songs ever written including Paul Simon’s Graceland, Neil Young’s Long May You Run, the Talking Heads’ Naive Melody, PGroove’s It Starts Where It Ends and Tom Petty’s Wildflowers over the course of two of the best hours of my life. I hope audio surfaces, but I’m content to let this memory live in my mind.