in-concert newsletters - Peak Experience Productions
Transcription
in-concert newsletters - Peak Experience Productions
THE FABULOUS FOX THEATRE welcome to FOOTPRINTS JUNE 17-19, 2002 WHAT TO EXPECT… VENUE SECURITY CONTENT LIST… SHOW INFORMATION: The parking lot is open all day. Doors open @ 7:00PM — Showtime is @ 8:00PM. ITEMS NOT ALLOWED: Hula hoops and water bottles are NOT allowed in the venue. FIRST AID: Is available inside the venue. KID POLICY: All children must have a ticket. SEATING: Is General Admission VENUE WEBSITE: www.fabulousfox.com SPECIAL NEEDS: Parking for the physically challenged is located on the east side of the theater (along Washington Blvd.) next to the physically challenged entrance on the north side of the theater. Wheelchair accessible seating is available for patrons on the floor as well as the balcony. Elevator access is available to all levels of the theater. Handicap accessible rest rooms are located on the south side of the first floor (orchestra level) and on the third floor (mezzanine level). Telephones for the physically challenged are located in the Box Office and on the fourth floor (lower and middle balcony level). 24 HOUR GAS STATION & FOOD: • Shell-3518 S Grand Boulevard St Louis MO 63103 — 314.535.1126 • Amoco-205 S Vandeventer St Louis MO 63110 — 314.652.3434 • Maurizio's Pizza-open until 3AM 1107 Olive Street St Louis MO 63101 — 314.621.1997 AAA ROADSIDE ASSISTANCE 800-AAA-HELP EMERGENCY 911 voice of the FOOTPRINTS Foundation. This project is Parking lots and campgrounds open at Noon on Thursday, June 20. (and close at 12:00 Noon on Monday, June 24) Everyone in your vehicle must have a ticket to proceed past the checkpoints. You will be turned around and sent to the back of the line if anyone in your vehicle cannot produce a ticket. You will be permitted to re-enter the event grounds, but each time you re-enter you will have to go through the security check. WHAT WILL BE PROVIDED: Potable water, medical assistance, wash stations, portable toilets, a general store, pay telephones, and ATMs. In addition, vendors will be selling a variety of reasonably priced foods and beveages. WHAT NOT TO BRING: No bicycles, scooters, weapons of any kind, fireworks, pets, or illegal substances. Non-licensed vending will not be permitted. WHAT IS ALLOWED INTO CONCERT FIELD: Factory-sealed bottled water, empty water bottles (nonglass), small cameras and non-framed backpacks. dedicated to helping make this dance, sing and live. We address this challenge by WHAT IS NOT ALLOWED INTO CONCERT FIELD: No glass or cans and no food or drinks (other than factory sealed water bottles and small snacks). WHAT WILL BE ALLOWED INTO THE CAMPGROUNDS: Coolers, SMALL grills, camping stoves and a consumable amount of provisions will be allowed. that surrounds the String Cheese Incident healthy, and by leaving footprints in the wake of SCI concerts that can be action that honor local commu- R A V E L P P O V I U K L Z E I I E S L I N T R A V I B N O X E N A D F P N T R A O B A R S T R E E D T I P S O B E H D E H U N M L B E I B Y O L I L O I L T L R A D E M O O R E B M I L T C Z A G L O F F L A A M T Y T E S T P I Y H C S H S O S C I D A S J P R E I E FOOTPRINTS Foundation go to: DON’T SAY stringcheeseincident.com. R R U K E E R S Z E L L O A N D Y C A O N T A I L I N T N E R S H I L M Y S T E A I S O N H A C A L A R M A N G N A K E T P E K I O U R Z P T M E QUESTIONS? COMMENTS? SUBMISSIONS? BE HEARD! Send an e-mail to [email protected] or drop your expressions into the box at the merchandise booth inside the venue. • E-mail us those questions you’ve always wanted to ask. We’ll publish a few answers in each issue of the FOOTPRINTS Newsletter. • If you feel inclined to write a cohesive and captivating story about your most memorable experience at an Incident, or a dream you’ve had which somehow involved the band, the music or an Incident. Please email it to us for publication. We will only accept and consider submissions under 500 words. VOLUME 1, S T R I N G ISSUE 1 • J I N C I D E N T S T. L O U I S & B O N N A R O O JUNE 17–22, 2002 gouda causes leaves FOOTPRINTS In Austin, Chicago, and St. Louis scene as it continues to grow. Many thanks to everyone who helped make spring Gouda Causes efforts a big success. Two activities on the Spring Tour helped raise money and awareness for some very important organizations. home with such items as autographed guitars, posters, and assorted band memorabilia. http://snowcityarts.com/ During our Austin Incidents at Waterloo Park, $500 was donated to The Stevie Ray Vaughan Scholarship Fund. The fund was created to assist students who demonstrate a strong interest and ability in music to pursue a college education. Each year it awards scholarships to students from the schools in the Dallas area where Stevie Ray spent his youth. http://www.srvrideandconcert.org/ Scholarship%20page.htm In current news, last week in St. Louis about one dozen Friends of Cheese donated their time and energy to help urban revitalization in their hometown. In partnership with Gateway Greening, they joined other community volunteers to help transform a neglected and abandoned lot in St. Louis into a productive garden and beautifully landscaped area. Specifically, the group added several handicapped accessible beds to the Caronelet Community Garden at the corner of Michigan and Elwood Streets. http://stlouis.missouri.org/gatewaygreening/ A silent auction at the UIC Pavilion in Chicago raised $2465.00 to support Snow City Arts. The Snow City Arts Foundation nurtures imagination and creativity in hospitalized children by making the arts a part of the daily lives of young patients in the Chicago area hospitals. SCI community individuals contributed to the fund and went MY WAY BLUES NO SE st louis SAN JOSE The Gateway to the West Arch is a nationally recognized site as it stands over 630 feet above the Mississippi River. You can take an elevator to the top and overlook all of St. Louis. TEXAS TOWN I UP THE CANYON P C H E E S E Thanks so much for the participation and generosity of so many FOCs! Together, we’ve left a footprint that helped make the world a better place. Stay tuned for more ways to get involved. GALACTIC A G A S S R B O N O K Y A N K L E oratively so we can support this CLIMB H E E T other to work and play collab- For more information on the L M C I SCI Experience to activate each ROLLOVER O W I R E community that embraces the P U E I E Our goal is to inspire the JELLYFISH O C H E N K E BARSTOOL nities into which we are invited. O O P Y R R W A Y E N A D I BAM A O V E L Find the following 13 songs below. E I R O L SEARCH COME AS YOU ARE N G E N O M A D I N D J Y T SONG K E N O Y X S S N A S T M Y J T A N K N H O R N I P O E O L N T O D O T A N D H E H E I N D O U O W S B L F U N U P T A N Y L B P P C O O L W A S B A D N R E O O C H W L B E Y T S T E M U S H R O I O L T H E world a better place in which to recognized as signs of positive U T FOOTPRINTS working to keep the community ADDRESS/DIRECTIONS: 527 N. Grand Blvd, St Louis MO 63103 PARKING: Available behind the Fox Theatre and along Washington, Olive and Grand Boulevard. Handicap Parking is located on the east side of the theater (along Washington Blvd.) next to the handicap entrance. The average price of parking ranges from $3 to $5. This publication is the in-concert DARYL O N O A N O S E WANT TO HELP KEEP THE SCENE CLEAN? PICK UP A TRASH BAG AT THE MERCHANDISE BOOTH INSIDE THE VENUE! issue HIGHLIGHTS 2 3 4 TOUR POLICIES camera, taping, merchandising Undoubtedly the most long lived and popular blues song ever written is William Christopher Handy's immortal classic, “St. Louis Blues," which has almost taken on a life of it's own since it was written almost over eighty years ago. According to Handy, he found his inspiration for the song while wandering the streets of St. Louis. As one of the world’s most recorded songs, “St. Louis Blues" forever cemented St. Louis' place in the world of American roots music. Around St. Louis during the time of the 1904 World's Fair, Handy's contemporary Scott Joplin was a regular in the night spots. His ragtime tunes were Rock'n'Roll of the era—the music of the counter culture. When jazz influences steamed into town aboard northbound riverboats from New Orleans, they blended with Joplin's established ragtime and encountered a great migration of blues musicians from the Mississippi Delta region. The integration of these musical styles created a sound that took its name from Handy's famous composition and became known as the St. Louis blues. G U E S T C O M M E N TA R Y from johnny dwork Q & A F R O M T H E BA N D your questions answered PLEASE PASS THIS ALONG TO A FRIEND OR DROP IT OFF AT THE MERCHANDISE TABLE TO BE RECYCLED. TOUR NOTESRYMAN AUDITORIUM NASHVILLE, TN 4/18/02 We were thrilled to have had the opportunity to perform on the Ryman stage along spring tour, adding us to a long and diverse list of musicians ranging from Roy Acuff to James Brown and Patsy Cline to Sheryl Crow. Thanks to all our friends who joined us is Nashville! The Ryman Auditorium first opened its doors in 1892 as a vision of Captain Thomas G. Ryman. With the coming of the Grand Ole Opry show in 1943, the Ryman found its identity as the Mother Church of Country Music. In 1974, the Opry moved to its current home by the Gaylord Opryland Resort and Convention Center and left the Ryman vacant. It was not until twenty years later in 1994 that the Ryman was restored to be the national showplace that it is today. questions to THE BAND KYLE, IT SEEMS FROM YOUR BODY LANGUAGE THAT YOU ARE OFTEN THE ORCHESTRATOR/CONDUCTOR OF THE BAND DURING CHANGES THAT OCCUR IN SONGS. IS THIS TRUE? HOW DO YOU DECIDE WHERE AND WHEN TO GO IN AND OUT OF JAMS? If you look closely you’ll notice that each of us have some sort of body language that may clue you in to when the jam is going to shift. I suppose my body language is just over-exaggerated! Or perhaps I THINK I’m conducting! Really though, while I may be more inclined to signal changes when we’re playing one of the songs I wrote, it’s most often the music that dictates when it’s going to change. HEY MICHAEL, WHAT’S THE SONG ROLLOVER REALLY ABOUT? A.It’s probably what you think it’s about. The Earth’s history has shown us that the planet can change drastically almost overnight. Rollover is about that possibility. I wrote the lyrics in 1998 in Mt. Shasta with Dain Pape, who has helped me write lyrics for a handful of songs. BILLY, WHAT TECHNICAL WIZARDRY AND STYLISTIC APPROACH DO YOU EMBRACE IN ORDER TO MAKE YOUR ACOUSTIC GUITAR STAND UP TO THE TASK OF PLAYING FUNK AND SPACE MUSIC? A.Funk is easier to play on an acoustic guitar than are the space jams. The rhythm of funk music can be works surprisingly well with a straight acoustic sound. It cuts right through the beat. Then I can use affects like the wawa peddle to funk it up. Playing space music is a bit more challenging, mostly because the duration of notes on acoustic guitar is so short. I’ve come up with a collection of sounds in my affects unit that offer longer duration, such as delays and stereo sounds. I can also create the illusion of duration by cross picking notes in, say, series of triplets. This helps create texture, too. set LISTS 5/25/02 ~ GORGE AMPHITHEATRE, GEORGE, WA SET 1: SEARCH • CAN'T STOP NOW • THIS MUST BE THE PLACE (NAIVE MELODY) > JAM > IT IS WHAT IT IS • SUPERSTITION* • WINDY MOUNTAIN > DARYL • JOYFUL SOUND > JAM > RIVERTRANCE • BEST FEELING > ROUND THE WHEEL ENCORE: HIGH ON A MOUNTAINTOP • ¡BAM! • RESTLESS WIND GUESTS * Ben Harper on vocals NOTES: Sasquatch Music Festival – Other acts were Ben Harper, Jack Johnson, Galactic, Soulive, and Maktub June 1999 ~ 3 years ago 6/14/1999 ~ AGGIE THEATRE FT. COLLINS, CO SET 1: SHINE • LONESOME FIDDLE BLUES • JOYFUL SOUND* • WORK • PIRATES • JELLYFISH** • ROLL OVER ENCORE: ONESOME ROAD BLUES*** • BEST FEELING*** GUESTS: ** with Jamie Janover on Djembe *** with Keller Williams NOTES: * 1st Joyful Sound k-9 SCOOP camera We celebrate pets in our lives as great companions, but concert environments should not be their home. The parking lots and campgrounds at concerts can be very hot and crowded. These factors contribute to unsafe conditions at Incidents for our much loved pets. Leaving your dog tied up or in your car during a show is dangerous and unfair to the animal. So, please leave your dogs in places away from the concerts where they can also have a good time. sci CONSIDERATIONS Did you know... % That your photos of the concert will come out better if you don't use a flash? Please feel free to bring your camera into the show. But please do not use a flash, as it can be distracting. Instead, we recommend using film with speeds of 800 and higher. Sorry, but no video cameras of any kind are allowed into the venues. Digital cameras are OK. The best rule of thumb is to not bring in any camera that holds a tape. Happy shooting! RECORDING POLICY We support and encourage the audio recording of our shows. Please make note that taping is only allowed in designated taping areas (usually located behind the soundboard). Space in the taper-section is limited and access policies vary from venue to venue. In most cases, if any of the venue seating is reserved, tapers will be required to show a special TAPER TICKET when bringing their recording equipment into the venue. TAPER TICKETS can be purchased only at SCI Ticketing.com or by calling 303.544.5875. In the case that the venue is entirely general admission, or that the floor is General Admission, tapers are allowed into the venue on a first come, first serve basis. When the section is full, no additional recording equipment will be allowed into the show. Sorry, but anyone found taping in violation of the above policy will be removed from the venue. For more in depth information on our taping policy and for details regarding specific shows, visit stringcheeseincident.com. merchandise POLICY SCI’s goal to support an artistic community surrounding the concert environment that offers a wide variety of unique creations, and a free trade of ideas. The intention is to artistically challenge each other in order to contribute to the growth of this special scene. With this in mind, certain creative guidelines need to be established in order for the band and the scene to compliment each other and grow together. Please understand that the band cannot support the replication of any SCI registered trademarks or copyrights. Examples are: “The String Cheese Incident,” “SCI,” or any related variations. This also includes logos and artwork that have appeared on official SCI merchandise, literature, it all and stringcheeseincident.com. Please avoid the use of venues, tour dates or tour titles in unofficial designs. Try using song titles or lyrics if you would like to make something related to the band. Hopefully you can support the band’s individuality by not copying their creations, as the band pledges the same to you. Usually the coolest merchandise available in the lots does not even reference a band’s name. Also consider that creating a derivative of a corporate logo, on a t-shirt or sticker, promotes and justifies ideas that are usually unrelated to our scene. Hopefully we can lead by example with truly distinct creations. BEGINS HERE AUTO TIP ON TOUR: Let's keep our tires inflated. If all the cars on the U.S. road had properly inflated tires, it would save an estimated 2 billion gallons of gasoline a year. A tune up before tour will also reduce the amount of carbon dioxide pollution. AUTO TIP AT HOME: Let's recycle our motor oil. If a mechanic changes our oil, let's check with him or her before the service to insure that our motor oil is being recycled. If we find an ecofriendly mechanic, we'll check with him or her about recycling our dead automobile battery too! guest COMMENTARY KEEPIN’ IT REAL I remember the moment I first realized just exactly how special the String Cheese Incident scene is. It was at the 1999 High Sierra Music Festival. The band was presenting a music "workshop" at the enclosed swimming pool club across the highway from the festival campgrounds. The high altitude air was clean and crisp, the sky, cloud-free and the sun, scorching hot. The venue was jam-packed with several hundred very "happy" campers. The energy was electric. Before the music started some old friends and I observed that this wasn’t just your average group of concert-goers happy to be on the inside of a sold-out performance. This scene was different—it was a mix of uber-healthy mountainfreaks, veteran “festivarians," and a large contingent of long-time Bay Area Deadheads. This later group was especially appreciative of this new vibe after having experienced the bittersweet demise of the Dead’s scene. So, here we were —this newly forming family of mountainfreaks, jam band and bluegrass fans—dancing and swimming and hula hooping and loving each other and life under the high noon sun. We all grinned, knowing that we knew we were just exactly where we were supposed to be. The format of this workshop was designed so that fans could submit questions about the band’s music to an emcee that was hosting the event. The band would answer these questions and then play a related song. After a good while the emcee read a fan’s question which asked, “enough with art, when are we going to see your naked butts in the pool along with ours?" At which point, without so much as a moment’s hesitation, the entire band ripped off their clothes and jumped in the pool with the rest of us naked, happy freaks. Everyone looked at each other with one of those ear-to-ear grins. It was one of those scenes you had a sense you’d remember for a long time to come. And it was at that moment I realized why this scene is so special. Yes, like the Grateful Dead, String Cheese embraces traditional music of the Americas and a penchant for improvisation. But the Dead, bless them, was comprised of musicians old enough to be the grandfathers of many of their fans…men who repeatedly stated when interviewed that their formative experiences (the legendary Acids Tests) could only be understood by people who were there. by Johnny Dwork String Cheese on the other hand is comprised of men our age…or younger. While they may no longer be as accessible as they were at the moment their butts jumped into the pool that very sunny day, they are still just as real. This band embraces an aesthetic that is so down-toearth, so honest, so family-oriented that, knowing them personally, it’s hard to think of them as rock and roll royalty. They sing of the sacredness of nature, family and life, and they do so from having a first-hand experience with these great values. Quite simply; the message in this band’s music is about being kind. In turn, this aesthetic emanates outwards to us, their community. And, in turn, this scene has grown into one filled mostly with mindful, considerate, loving people. At the moment the String Cheese Incident scene is healthy. My family of friends and I appreciate the blessings of this scene; the music that opens our hearts and inspires us to dance, the healthy band members, the wonderful friends all around us, and our ability to celebrate gracefully with each other without too much hassle. However, we are not without challenges. Any scene this great is inherently destined to grow. And with this growth comes the great challenge of orienting our newly arriving community members as to the need for keeping the scene healthy. And it is exactly because of this challenge that Footprints now comes into existence. So, as one who followed another band around for 20 years in search of good friends, great adventure, and music that made my soul take flight…as one who saw that previous, magical scene crumble and dissolve…as one who then saw what I never thought I’d be blessed to have again in my lifetime, the birth of yet another truly magical music-based community Experience, I ask each of you to do your part to keep this scene healthy. Please turn to the person next to you at this (and every) Incident, introduce yourself, give them a hug, ask them if they know how lucky they are to have access to this great Experience, and share with them the perspectives embodied by this band and written about in this publication. Let’s all do our share to keep the scene healthy. If not, a rare, vibrant, continuously evolving form of peaceful joyous celebration may slip away and leave us wishing we had done more to keep it real. “…With this growth comes the great challenge of orienting our newly arriving community members as to the need for keeping the scene healthy.” THE FABULOUS FOX THEATRE welcome to FOOTPRINTS JUNE 17-19, 2002 This publication is the in-concert WHAT TO EXPECT… VENUE SECURITY CONTENT LIST… SHOW INFORMATION: The parking lot is open all day. Doors open @ 7:00PM — Showtime is @ 8:00PM. ITEMS NOT ALLOWED: Hula hoops and water bottles are NOT allowed in the venue. FIRST AID: Is available inside the venue. KID POLICY: All children must have a ticket. SEATING: Is General Admission VENUE WEBSITE: www.fabulousfox.com SPECIAL NEEDS: Parking for the physically challenged is located on the east side of the theater (along Washington Blvd.) next to the physically challenged entrance on the north side of the theater. Wheelchair accessible seating is available for patrons on the floor as well as the balcony. Elevator access is available to all levels of the theater. Handicap accessible rest rooms are located on the south side of the first floor (orchestra level) and on the third floor (mezzanine level). Telephones for the physically challenged are located in the Box Office and on the fourth floor (lower and middle balcony level). 24 HOUR GAS STATION & FOOD: • Shell-3518 S Grand Boulevard St Louis MO 63103 — 314.535.1126 • Amoco-205 S Vandeventer St Louis MO 63110 — 314.652.3434 • Maurizio's Pizza-open until 3AM 1107 Olive Street St Louis MO 63101 — 314.621.1997 AAA ROADSIDE ASSISTANCE 800-AAA-HELP EMERGENCY 911 of the FOOTPRINTS Foundation. This project is Parking lots and campgrounds open at Noon on Thursday, June 20. (and close at 12:00 Noon on Monday, June 24) Everyone in your vehicle must have a ticket to proceed past the checkpoints. You will be turned around and sent to the back of the line if anyone in your vehicle cannot produce a ticket. You will be permitted to re-enter the event grounds, but each time you re-enter you will have to go through the security check. WHAT WILL BE PROVIDED: Potable water, medical assistance, wash stations, portable toilets, a general store, pay telephones, and ATMs. In addition, vendors will be selling a variety of reasonably priced foods and beveages. WHAT NOT TO BRING: No bicycles, scooters, weapons of any kind, fireworks, pets, or illegal substances. Non-licensed vending will not be permitted. WHAT IS ALLOWED INTO CONCERT FIELD: Factory-sealed bottled water, empty water bottles (nonglass), small cameras and non-framed backpacks. dedicated to helping make this dance, sing and live. We address this challenge by WHAT IS NOT ALLOWED INTO CONCERT FIELD: No glass or cans and no food or drinks (other than factory sealed water bottles and small snacks). WHAT WILL BE ALLOWED INTO THE CAMPGROUNDS: Coolers, SMALL grills, camping stoves and a consumable amount of provisions will be allowed. that surrounds the String Cheese Incident healthy, and by leaving footprints in the wake of SCI concerts that can be action that honor local commu- R A V E L P P O V I U K L Z E I I E S L I N T R A V I B N O X E R A O B A R S T R E E D T I P S O B E H D E H U N M L B E I B Y O L I L O I L T L R A D E Y M O O R E B M I L T C Z A G L O F F E S T P I Y H C S H S O S C I D A S J A A M T K E COME AS YOU ARE E BAM other to work and play collab- BARSTOOL oratively so we can support this O O P Y JELLYFISH scene as it continues to grow. P U E ROLLOVER For more information on the CLIMB FOOTPRINTS Foundation go to: DON’T SAY stringcheeseincident.com. Y T P R E I E N O Y X S H E O R R U O V E R R O C H E W I E K E I L E R S R O L L N K E R E W A Y E Z E L L O A N D Y C A O N T A I L I N T N E R S H I N A D I A I M C I L M Y S T N O M A D I N D J Y T N G E M Y J T S N A S T E T E A I A R M A N G N A K E T P E K I A G TEXAS TOWN I UP THE CANYON P T Send an e-mail to [email protected] or drop your expressions into the box at the merchandise booth inside the venue. • E-mail us those questions you’ve always wanted to ask. We’ll publish a few answers in each issue of the FOOTPRINTS Newsletter. • If you feel inclined to write a cohesive and captivating story about your most memorable experience at an Incident, or a dream you’ve had which somehow involved the band, the music or an Incident. Please email it to us for publication. We will only accept and consider submissions under 500 words. J SCI Experience to activate each E VOLUME 1, S T ISSUE 1 R • I N G C H E E S E I N S T. L O U I S & B O N N A R O O C I D E N T JUNE 17–22, 2002 gouda causes leaves FOOTPRINTS In Austin, Chicago, and St. Louis Many thanks to everyone who helped make spring Gouda Causes efforts a big success. Two activities on the Spring Tour helped raise money and awareness for some very important organizations. home with such items as autographed guitars, posters, and assorted band memorabilia. http://snowcityarts.com/ During our Austin Incidents at Waterloo Park, $500 was donated to The Stevie Ray Vaughan Scholarship Fund. The fund was created to assist students who demonstrate a strong interest and ability in music to pursue a college education. Each year it awards scholarships to students from the schools in the Dallas area where Stevie Ray spent his youth. http://www.srvrideandconcert.org/ Scholarship%20page.htm In current news, last week in St. Louis about one dozen Friends of Cheese donated their time and energy to help urban revitalization in their hometown. In partnership with Gateway Greening, they joined other community volunteers to help transform a neglected and abandoned lot in St. Louis into a productive garden and beautifully landscaped area. Specifically, the group added several handicapped accessible beds to the Caronelet Community Garden at the corner of Michigan and Elwood Streets. http://stlouis.missouri.org/gatewaygreening/ A silent auction at the UIC Pavilion in Chicago raised $2465.00 to support Snow City Arts. The Snow City Arts Foundation nurtures imagination and creativity in hospitalized children by making the arts a part of the daily lives of young patients in the Chicago area hospitals. SCI community individuals contributed to the fund and went st louis NO SE C A L P community that embraces the MY WAY SAN JOSE O U R Z M E QUESTIONS? COMMENTS? SUBMISSIONS? BE HEARD! H Thanks so much for the participation and generosity of so many FOCs! Together, we’ve left a footprint that helped make the world a better place. Stay tuned for more ways to get involved. GALACTIC S O N H A A S S R B O N O K Y A N K L E Our goal is to inspire the L A N K N H O R N I P O E nities into which we are invited. L N T O D O T A N D H E O SEARCH I N D O U O W S B L F U N U P T A N Y L H E SONG O O L W A S B A D N R E O O C H W L B E B P P C Find the following 13 songs below. N A D F P N T T S T E M U S H R O I O L T world a better place in which to recognized as signs of positive U T FOOTPRINTS working to keep the community ADDRESS/DIRECTIONS: 527 N. Grand Blvd, St Louis MO 63103 PARKING: Available behind the Fox Theatre and along Washington, Olive and Grand Boulevard. Handicap Parking is located on the east side of the theater (along Washington Blvd.) next to the handicap entrance. The average price of parking ranges from $3 to $5. voice DARYL O N O A N O S E WANT TO HELP KEEP THE SCENE CLEAN? PICK UP A TRASH BAG AT THE MERCHANDISE BOOTH INSIDE THE VENUE! issue HIGHLIGHTS 2 3 4 TOUR POLICIES camera, taping, merchandising G U E S T C O M M E N TA R Y from johnny dwork Q & A F R O M T H E BA N D your questions answered BLUES Undoubtedly the most long lived and popular blues song ever written is William Christopher Handy's immortal classic, “St. Louis Blues," which has almost taken on a life of it's own since it was written almost over eighty years ago. According to Handy, he found his inspiration for the song while wandering the streets of St. Louis. As one of the world’s most recorded songs, “St. Louis Blues" forever cemented St. Louis' place in the world of American roots music. Around St. Louis during the time of the 1904 World's Fair, Handy's contemporary Scott Joplin was a regular in the night spots. His ragtime tunes were Rock'n'Roll of the era—the music of the counter culture. When jazz influences steamed into town aboard northbound The Gateway to the West Arch is a nationally recognized site as it stands over 630 feet above the Mississippi River. You can take an elevator to the top and overlook all of St. Louis. riverboats from New Orleans, they blended with Joplin's established ragtime and encountered a great migration of blues musicians from the Mississippi Delta region. The integration of these musical styles created a sound that took its name from Handy's famous composition and became known as the St. Louis blues. TOUR NOTESRYMAN AUDITORIUM NASHVILLE, TN 4/18/02 We were thrilled to have had the opportunity to perform on the Ryman stage along spring tour, adding us to a long and diverse list of musicians ranging from Roy Acuff to James Brown and Patsy Cline to Sheryl Crow. Thanks to all our friends who joined us is Nashville! The Ryman Auditorium first opened its doors in 1892 as a vision of Captain Thomas G. Ryman. With the coming of the Grand Ole Opry show in 1943, the Ryman found its identity as the Mother Church of Country Music. In 1974, the Opry moved to its current home by the Gaylord Opryland Resort and Convention Center and left the Ryman vacant. It was not until twenty years later in 1994 that the Ryman was restored to be the national showplace that it is today. guest COMMENTARY set KEEPIN’ IT REAL 5/25/2002 ~ GORGE AMPHITHEATRE by Johnny Dwork I remember the moment I first realized just exactly how special the String Cheese Incident scene is. It was at the 1999 High Sierra Music Festival. The band was presenting a music "workshop" at the enclosed swimming pool club across the highway from the festival campgrounds. The high altitude air was clean and crisp, the sky, cloud-free and the sun, scorching hot. The venue was jam-packed with several hundred very "happy" campers. The energy was electric. String Cheese on the other hand is comprised of men our age…or younger. While they may no longer be as accessible as they were at the moment their butts jumped into the pool that very sunny day, they are still just as real. This band embraces an aesthetic that is so down-to-earth, so honest, so family-oriented that, knowing them personally, it’s hard to think of them as rock and roll royalty. They sing of the sacredness of nature, family and life, and they do so from having a first-hand experience with these great values. Quite simply; the message in this band’s music is about being kind. In turn, this aesthetic emanates outwards to us, their community. And, in turn, this scene has grown into one filled mostly with mindful, considerate, loving people. At the moment the String Cheese Incident scene is healthy. My family of friends and I appreciate the blessings of this scene; the music that opens our hearts and inspires us to dance, the healthy band members, the wonderful friends all around us, and our ability to celebrate gracefully with each other without too much hassle. However, we are not without challenges. Any scene this great is inherently destined to grow. And with this growth comes the great challenge of orienting our newly arriving community members as to the need for keeping the scene healthy. And it is exactly because of this challenge that Footprints now comes into existence. So, as one who followed another band around for 20 years in search of good friends, great adventure, and music that made my soul take flight…as one who saw that previous, magical scene crumble and dissolve…as one who then saw what I never thought I’d be blessed to have again in my lifetime, the birth of yet another truly magical music-based community Experience, I ask each of you to do your part to keep this scene healthy. Please turn to the person next to you at this (and every) Incident, introduce yourself, give them a hug, ask them if they know how lucky they are to have access to this great Experience, and share with them the perspectives embodied by this band and written about in this publication. Let’s all do our share to keep the scene healthy. If not, a rare, vibrant, continuously evolving form of peaceful joyous celebration may slip away and leave us wishing we had done more to keep it real. “…With this growth comes the great challenge of orienting our newly arriving community members as to the need for keeping the scene healthy.” Before the music started some old friends and I observed that this wasn’t just your average group of concert-goers happy to be on the inside of a sold-out performance. This scene was different—it was a mix of uber-healthy mountainfreaks, veteran “festivarians," and a large contingent of long-time Bay Area Deadheads. This later group was especially appreciative of this new vibe after having experienced the bittersweet demise of the Dead’s scene. So, here we were —this newly forming family of mountainfreaks, jam band and bluegrass fans—dancing and swimming and hula hooping and loving each other and life under the high noon sun. We all grinned, knowing that we knew we were just exactly where we were supposed to be. The format of this workshop was designed so that fans could submit questions about the band’s music to an emcee that was hosting the event. The band would answer these questions and then play a related song. After a good while the emcee read a fan’s question which asked, “enough with art, when are we going to see your naked butts in the pool along with ours?" At which point, without so much as a moment’s hesitation, the entire band ripped off their clothes and jumped in the pool with the rest of us naked, happy freaks. Everyone looked at each other with one of those ear-to-ear grins. It was one of those scenes you had a sense you’d remember for a long time to come. And it was at that moment I realized why this scene is so special. Yes, like the Grateful Dead, String Cheese embraces traditional music of the Americas and a penchant for improvisation. But the Dead, bless them, was comprised of musicians old enough to be the grandfathers of many of their fans…men who repeatedly stated when interviewed that their formative experiences (the legendary Acids Tests) could only be understood by people who were there. camera CONSIDERATIONS Did you know... % That your photos of the concert will come out better if you don't use a flash? Please feel free to bring your camera into the show. But please do not use a flash, as it can be distracting. Instead, we recommend using film with speeds of 800 and higher. Sorry, but no video cameras of any kind are allowed into the venues. Digital cameras are OK. The best rule of thumb is to not bring in any camera that holds a tape. Happy shooting! sci RECORDING POLICY We support and encourage the audio recording of our shows. Please make note that taping is only allowed in designated taping areas (usually located behind the soundboard). Space in the taper-section is limited and access policies vary from venue to venue. In most cases, if any of the venue seating is reserved, tapers will be required to show a special TAPER TICKET when bringing their recording equipment into the venue. TAPER TICKETS can be purchased only at SCI Ticketing.com or by calling 303.544.5875. In the case that the venue is entirely general admission, or that the floor is General Admission, tapers are allowed into the venue on a first come, first serve basis. When the section is full, no additional recording equipment will be allowed into the show. Sorry, but anyone found taping in violation of the above policy will be removed from the venue. For more in depth information on our taping policy and for details regarding specific shows, visit stringcheeseincident.com. PLEASE PASS THIS ALONG TO A FRIEND OR DROP IT OFF AT THE MERCHANDISE TABLE TO BE RECYCLED. LISTS F R O M T H E G O R G E & PA S T GEORGE, WA SET1: Search • Can't Stop Now • This Must Be the Place (Naive Melody) >> Jam >> It Is What It Is • Superstition* • Windy Mountain >> Daryl • Joyful Sound >> Jam >> Rivertrance • Best Feeling >> Round the Wheel ENCORE: High on a Mountaintop • ¡BAM! • Restless Wind Guests: * Ben Harper on vocals Notes: Sasquatch Music Festival – Other acts were Ben Harper, Jack Johnson, Galactic, Soulive, and Maktub 6/14/1999 ~ AGGIE THEATRE FT. COLLINS, CO SET 1: Shine • Lonesome Fiddle Blues • Joyful Sound* Jellyfish** • Roll Over ENCORE: Lonesome Road Blues*** • Best Feeling*** • Work • Pirates • Guests: ** with Jamie Janover on Djembe, *** with Keller Williams Notes: * 1st Joyful Sound A BLURB FROM THE ARCHIVES…. A warm up to the Telluride on the Rocks and Bluegrass Festivals, this mini-Keller Incident happened to yield the debut performance of Joyful Sound which ended up the second single off the Outside Inside album. Prior to the Cheeses’ set the band sat in on Keller’s opening set. questions for THE BAND KYLE, IT SEEMS FROM YOUR BODY LANGUAGE THAT YOU ARE OFTEN THE ORCHESTRATOR/CONDUCTOR OF THE BAND DURING CHANGES THAT OCCUR IN SONGS. IS THIS TRUE? HOW DO YOU DECIDE WHERE AND WHEN TO GO IN AND OUT OF JAMS? If you look closely you’ll notice that each of us have some sort of body language that may clue you in to when the jam is going to shift. I suppose my body language is just over-exaggerated! Or perhaps I THINK I’m conducting! Really though, while I may be more inclined to signal changes when we’re playing one of the songs I wrote, it’s most often the music that dictates when it’s going to change. HEY MICHAEL, WHAT’S THE SONG ROLLOVER REALLY ABOUT? A.It’s probably what you think it’s about. The Earth’s history has shown us that the planet can change drastically almost overnight. Rollover is about that possibility. I wrote the lyrics in 1998 in Mt. Shasta with Dain Pape, who has helped me write lyrics for a handful of songs. BILLY, WHAT TECHNICAL WIZARDRY AND STYLISTIC APPROACH DO YOU EMBRACE IN ORDER TO MAKE YOUR ACOUSTIC GUITAR STAND UP TO THE TASK OF PLAYING FUNK AND SPACE MUSIC? KELLER’S SET: Inhale to the Chief • Running on Fumes • 221” • Roshambo, Passapatanzy • Brunette >> Bru Loup >> Tribe, Rockumal* • Stupid Questions* • Revelation* • Blatent Ripoff* • Vacate* • Breathe* • Callaloo And Red Snapper* • Chillin’* • Franklins Tower* Guests: * with The String Cheese Incident it all BEGINS HERE AUTO TIP ON TOUR: Let's keep our tires inflated. If all the cars on the U.S. road had properly inflated tires, it would save an estimated 2 billion gallons of gasoline a year. A tune up before tour will also reduce the amount of carbon dioxide pollution. AUTO TIP AT HOME: Let's recycle our motor oil. If a mechanic changes our oil, let's check with him or her before the service to insure that our motor oil is being recycled. If we find an eco-friendly mechanic, we'll check with him or her about recycling our dead automobile battery too! mechandise POLICY SCI’s goal to support an artistic community surrounding the concert environment that offers a wide variety of unique creations, and a free trade of ideas. The intention is to artistically challenge each other in order to contribute to the growth of this special scene. With this in mind, certain creative guidelines need to be established in order for the band and the scene to compliment each other and grow together. Please understand that the band cannot support the replication of any SCI registered trademarks or copyrights. Examples are: “The String Cheese Incident,” “SCI,” or any related variations. This also includes logos and artwork that have appeared on official SCI merchandise, literature, and stringcheeseincident.com. Please avoid the use of venues, tour dates or tour titles in unofficial designs. Try using song titles or lyrics if you would like to make something related to the band. Hopefully you can support the band’s individuality by not copying their creations, as the band pledges the same to you. Usually the coolest merchandise available in the lots does not even reference a band’s name. Also consider that creating a derivative of a corporate logo, on a t-shirt or sticker, promotes and justifies ideas that are usually unrelated to our scene. Hopefully we can lead by example with truly distinct creations. A.Funk is easier to play on an acoustic guitar than are the space jams. The rhythm of funk music can be works surprisingly well with a straight acoustic sound. It cuts right through the beat. Then I can use affects like the wawa peddle to funk it up. Playing space music is a bit more challenging, mostly because the duration of notes on acoustic guitar is so short. I’ve come up with a collection of sounds in my affects unit that offer longer duration, such as delays and stereo sounds. I can also create the illusion of duration by cross picking notes in, say, series of triplets. This helps create texture, too. k-9 SCOOP We celebrate pets in our lives as great companions, but concert environments should not be their home. The parking lots and campgrounds at concerts can be very hot and crowded. These factors contribute to unsafe conditions at Incidents for our much loved pets. Leaving your dog tied up or in your car during a show is dangerous and unfair to the animal. So, please leave your dogs in places away from the concerts where they can also have a good time.