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Daily PicksSetbreak Music Player Deer Creek Music Center 07/20/1994 click here to begin. Setbreak PodcastAdd To iTunes |
Submitted by admin on Tue, 2007-06-19 04:13.
Submitted by iriedoc on Sun, 2007-07-15 23:36.
Another HOT time at High Sierra this year! As always, a highlight of the summer with plenty of bluegrass, fiddles, banjos, mandolins and this year some phat beats thrown in! The police presence, such a downer last year, was not existent. So, everyone was pretty loose and enjoying themselves. Here are some highlights in top ten form.
2. Bassnectar. DJ. Lorrin brought his unique style to high sierra for a late night set that went until dawn. I love the addition of electronic music to the festival and the format of having a performance based show of DJ's with live rappers and beat boxers is the wave of the future for electronica (I think). He also played a free show at the Vaudville tent with about 50 partiers on stage which also rocked but was too short. Zilla with Micheal travis of SCI on drums opened and rocked the house for the late nite set. Submitted by admin on Thu, 2007-07-12 23:09.
New Mastersounds: SF - New Mastersounds
Having a tough time getting through this first
hump day post High Sierra? Have no fear for the
good times roll on! Come on down to 12 Galaxies on Friday the 13 for the Official High Sierra
After Party with the New Mastersounds and special
guests Vinyl.
Submitted by admin on Thu, 2007-07-12 17:20.
Published on Science Blog (http://www.scienceblog.com/cms)
LSD treatment for alcoholism gets new look
By BJS
Created 10/06/2006 - 09:03
For the past five years, Dr. Erika Dyck has been unearthing some intriguing facts related to a group of pioneering psychiatrists who worked in Saskatchewan, Canada in the '50s and '60s. Among other things, the University of Alberta history of medicine professor has found records of the psychiatrists' research that indicate a single dose of the hallucinogenic drug LSD, provided in a clinical, nurturing environment, can be an effective treatment for alcoholism. Her findings are published this month in the journal Social History of Medicine. After perceiving similarities in the experiences of people on LSD and people going through delirium tremens, the psychiatrists undertook a series of experiments. They noted that delirium tremens, also know as DTs, often marked a "rock bottom" or turning point in the behavior of alcoholics, and they felt LSD may be able to trigger such a turnaround without engendering the painful physical effects associated with DTs. As it turns out, they were largely correct. "The LSD somehow gave these people experiences that psychologically took them outside of themselves and allowed them to see their own unhealthy behavior more objectively, and then determine to change it," said Dyck, who read the researchers' published and private papers and recently interviewed some of the patients involved in the original studies--many of whom had not had a sip of alcohol since their single LSD experience 40 years earlier. According to one study conducted in 1962, 65 per cent of the alcoholics in the experiment stopped drinking for at least a year-and-a-half (the duration of the study) after taking one dose of LSD. The controlled trial also concluded that less than 25 per cent of alcoholics quit drinking for the same period after receiving group therapy, and less than 12 per cent quit in response to traditional psychotherapy techniques commonly used at that time. Published in the Quarterly Journal for Studies on Alcohol, the 1962 study was received with much skepticism. One research group in Toronto tried to replicate the results of the study, but wanted to observe the effect of LSD on the patients in isolation, so they blindfolded or tied up the patients before giving them the drug. Under such circumstances, the Toronto researchers determined LSD was not effective in treating alcoholism. The Saskatchewan group argued that the drug needed to be provided in a nurturing environment to be effective. However, the Toronto researchers held more credibility than the Saskatchewan researchers--who were led by a controversial, British psychiatrist, Dr. Humphry Osmond--and the Saskatchewan group's research was essentially buried. But Dyck believes there is value in the Saskatchewan group's experiments. "The LSD experience appeared to allow the patients to go through a spiritual journey that ultimately empowered them to heal themselves, and that's really quite an amazing therapy regimen," Dyck said. "Even interviewing the patients 40 years after their experience, I was surprised at how loyal they were to the doctors who treated them, and how powerful they said the experience was for them--some even felt the experience saved their lives." In spite of the promise LSD showed as psychotherapy tool, its subsequent popularity as a street drug, and the perception of it as a threat to public safety, triggered a worldwide ban in the late 1960s--including its use in medical experiments. However, the ban on its use in medical experiments appears to be lifting, Dyck noted. A few groups of researchers in the U.S., including a team at Harvard, have recently been granted permission to conduct experiments with LSD. "We accept all sorts of drugs, but I think LSD's 'street' popularity ultimately led to its demise," Dyck said. "And that's too bad, because I think the researchers in Saskatchewan, among others, showed the drug is unique and has some intriguing properties that need to be explored further." From University of Alberta Submitted by Ari Schaefer on Tue, 2007-06-12 23:50.
Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival Goes High-Speed WiFi - /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ Fountain Valley, CA - D-Link, the end-to-end networking solutions provider for consumer and business, today announced it is providing high-speed wireless Internet infrastructure for the Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival, held on 700 acres of farmland in Manchester, Tenn. In addition, D-Link is sponsoring a MediaLounge(TM) tent for the event, where attendees can access the Web and stay in touch with friends and family. ... [Cybergrass Bluegrass Music News] Submitted by admin on Tue, 2007-05-29 18:20.
Submitted by admin on Sun, 2007-05-20 02:35.
Podcast #058 - KVHW 'Down in the Wetlands' - I meet a lot of live music fanatics whose only exposure to Steve Kimock is his occasional affiliations with former members of the Grateful Dead in the late 90’s (Kimock played on the Further Tour with the Other Ones and occasionally with Phil Lesh and Friends). Other folks have seen various reincarnations of the Steve Kimock Band and maybe even seen his recent reunion shows with his old Bay Area band, Zero. But a lot of folks don’t know that Steve Kimock once had a near-perfect band: KVHW. Kimock, Vega, Hurtz, and White, was a two-year Kimock project from 1998 - 1999, involving bassist Bobby Vega, drummer Alan Hertz (now part of Garaj Mahal), and rhythm guitarist and ex-Zappa vocalist, Ray White. For our 58th podcast, I’ve pieced together some highlights from two nights of KVHW at the Wetlands, which basically was the unofficial ‘jamband HQ’ in New York City until its closing last year. These two nights capture KVHW at its peak as a fresh, energetic, and exploratory improvisational rock band made up of four amazing musicians. I hope you enjoy them as much as I do... Submitted by admin on Fri, 2007-05-11 02:48.
Dark Star Orchestra 5/8/07, Ithaca, NY - Since we rarely get reports from the field -- and frankly, never get them from Ithaca, NY -- I just had to post this quick one. As I mentioned yesterday, in honor of the Grateful Dead's much-hyped show at Barton Hall on 5/8/77, the Mayor of Ithaca made yesterday a holiday and the Dark Star Orchestra performed one of their patented re-creations of the famous concert in its entirety. As it turns out, Stanley T. Roper (Live Music Blog friend and frequent Phish Friday contributor), actually caught DSO's performance last night at the State Theatre. Here's his brief report... DSO had a tall order in reproducing what's widely considered to be one of the finest shows played by one of the greatest bands ever. They were up to the task. Hot, hot show. The crowd was electric, and there were several times (Dancin', NFA) when I was certain that the balcony was about to collapse. People would've died happy. Stan Roper, Ithaca, New York. Back to Whitperson in the studio. Whitperson? Obviously, the hype surrounding this one show has gotten a bit out of control. I'm not sure what is more surreal (or amusing): that a Grateful Dead cover band can sell out theatres and create such a large buzz or that the Mayor of Ithaca created "Grateful Dead Day." Submitted by mike on Tue, 2007-04-10 18:43.
Phil Lesh snuck up on New York City with a pair of shows at the legendary S.O.B.'s in lower Manhattan. That's right -- Phil Lesh and friends ride again! Last night's show got mixed reviews on philzone.com, but as Phil himself pointed out from the stage (again, according to PZ -- I wasn't there), the band had only one day to rehearse for these stealth shows. Phil's friends this round include Larry McCray and Larry Campbell on guitar and vocals, Christina Dufree on backup vocals, Jaz Sawyer on drums, and Steve Molitz on keyboard. John Molo is expected to make the show tonight; a bad bout of food poisoning made Sawyer the backup man of the hour. Interestingly, Phil's website contains no word on Phil's recent bout with prostate cancer, but we can only hope that he has returned to his previous form. joe russo | Marco Benevento | matt chamberlain dave driewitz stevenbernstein | Mike Gordon | reed mathis
Submitted by kikimartini on Mon, 2007-04-09 15:35.
Well, it's been many months since Marco wowed us all at Tonic with his immense talent and infectious love of music. I've been lucky to have been basking in the sights and sounds of his residency since then, as I've been editing the footage from each of those delicious Wednesdays last November (and weren't we all glad the calendar graced us with FIVE Wednesdays that month...)
VIEW HIGHLIGHTS FROM MARCO'S RESIDENCY HERE: The fine folks at Ropeadope are going to release much of the material on a multi-disc set this summer, and as you'll see in the clip, the range of Marco's material is vast. Thelonious Monk ditties sit beside Pink Floyd tunes, and little-known songs from Leonard Cohen and Elliot Smith will send you back to your record collection to revisit them. Marco's jazz chops being what they are, prepare to be floored by the free-jazz improvisations that he created each night alongside the likes of seasoned veterans like Matt Chamberlain or Steven Bernstein. your backstage pass to the 'netUser login |