Jorgensen Music

Entries tagged as ‘Blind Pilot’

Blind Pilot iTunes Sessions EP

January 3, 2010 · Leave a Comment

Blind Pilot released an EP that is available only on iTunes last week. We recorded the material at Portland’s fantastic Jackpot! studios with Tucker Martine (Decemberists, Death Cab, etc) manning the boards. Most of the songs are from 3 Rounds And A Sound- just rerecorded with the touring band all included-however there is a new tune and a Gillian Welsh cover. The most memorable thing about these sessions for me was Tucker’s complimenting the sound of my home-made mini Rhodes piano. Bringing a homemade instrument into a recording studio is pretty nerve wracking because you never know what sort of previously overlooked sonic defects Protools will bring to light. Buy it here.

Categories: Ever Evolving Blind Pilot Tour · Recording Projects
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The Baseball Interview

December 28, 2009 · Leave a Comment

MLB Part 1

MLB Part 2

MLB Part 3

While in New York with Blind Pilot in November, I ended up doing an interview for Major League Baseball’s website. It was quite last minute- for some reason I was the only band member that could make it- but it turned out to be a lot of fun. I got a chance to give some lip service to Wisconsin, The Brewers, Kieskagato, my family, and my wife; and I managed to avoid betraying Milwaukee’s true feelings about the new Brewers stadium.

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A few images from the last days on the road

December 22, 2009 · 1 Comment

w/ Mimicking Birds- Neumo's, Seattle

On air- KEXP in Seattle (photo from KEXP)

on air- KEXP Seattle (KEXP photo)

The Biltmore, Vancouver BC

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Settling into Portland

December 17, 2009 · Leave a Comment

The Hammond on a chilly afternoon

I’ve been settling back into Portland life. The weather has been awful- either painfully cold or very rainy. Our tiny little apartment is very tiny indeed, black mold grows on the window sills, and the cat can always be heard grooming himself. Aside from these minor gripes, it’s good to be back and settled into a routine-ish life. I’ve been cooking dinner every night, rediscovering the joys of listening to music on headphones, and making daily trips up to my friend Adam’s garage to practice trumpet. His garage gets quite chilly, so I burned quite a bit of propane last week to keep my face from freezing to the mouthpiece. I’ve also been reacquainted with my beloved Hammond Organ, which has been sitting idle at Adam’s since Blind Pilot started traveling last March. The harmonium was fun and all, but nothing beats the gritty tone-wheels and drawbars of a Hammond. As the new year approaches, I look forward to several new musical collaborations and getting down to some serious writing and recording.

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Anya Marina, Band Of Skulls

December 10, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Anya Marina

Having just awoke from my first post-Blind Pilot night of sleep,  I surprisingly got offered a gig playing trumpet for Anya Marina at the Crystal Ballroom. There’s something to make one feel good!

Anya Marina is a really awesome San Diego based singer and actress- she starred in the movie 100 Girls and is on Atlantic Records. I learned my song from an emailed mp3 that was very richly orchestrated (her record was produced by Britt Daniel of Spoon), so I was kind of surprised to show up on Tuesday to find only her, a guitar, and an iPod. Having never met or played together, we briefly talked through the tune as Band Of Skulls thrashed about on the stage before a sold out house. When they were done, the two of us stood on an otherwise empty stage in front of our microphones, Anya cued the iPod, and we played the song. I came in at the wrong place with my trumpet solo, but she was a champ and we powered through.  I don’t think many people noticed us – as Anya put it, her nightly mini-sets were the ‘palette cleanser’ between two hard rock bands.

Band of Skulls

After spending so much time in Blind Pilot’s ‘indie’ world, I really enjoyed watching Band Of Skulls. They really tore it up! They gave the audience everything they had (how very unhip) and I thought that they were a terrific band. Tomorrow I will play a second show with Anya- we’re playing between Black Joe Lewis and Spoon, a band I’m really excited to see. Should be a fun time!

Categories: gigs
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Done.

December 6, 2009 · Leave a Comment

an empty wonder ballroom

After 52,000 miles, over 100 shows, and the better part of a year’s time, the Blind Pilot tour is over. Until, that is, a new record appears to tour in support of. In the meantime, it’s great to be back in Portland with the people we love, reunited with our estranged pets, and getting reacquainted with the concept of personal space.

After Salt Lake City, every show was sold out. Audiences were amazing and it felt fantastic to approach the West Coast in such a triumphant manner. Returning to Portland, the fact that our two Wonder Ballroom shows sold out was a sobering reminder of how far we’ve come in 2009 and how lucky we’ve been. It seems like yesterday that we were playing Dante’s for the CD Release show and were blown away that 100 people showed up.

In the upcoming downtime, I’m looking forward to reconnecting with my Portland friends and musical cohorts, starting up some new projects, writing new material, and possibly getting into some studio work. Even more than this, I look forward to regular sleep patterns, time with my wife, cooking, and exercise. Hopefully by the time the next round of touring starts, I will be completely rejuvenated.

ryan and kati, ready for home

ian makes a goodbye card

This year has been the best yet in my life. The Blind Pilot family (Israel, Ryan, Luke, Kati, Ian, Joel, Shawn, Kristine, Jason, Stu, Kevin, Mike, Sarah, Miki, Cozy, Kate, Kevin, Alex, Anthony) is a great group of people and I’ve enjoyed getting to know all of them. The bands we’ve met and played with (Decemberists, Broken West, Gomez, Langhorn Slim, The Low Anthem, Local Natives, Laura Viers, Laura Gibson, Peter Bjorn and John, Josh Ritter, 3 Leg Torso, Pink Martini, M Ward, Gillian Welch, Hockey, Point Juncture WA, and who could forget Sir Mix A Lot) have been enlightening and inspirational. The support of my wife and family has been indispensable. It’s been a great trip so far and I appreciate how lucky I am every day. Thanks all!

Categories: Ever Evolving Blind Pilot Tour
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Salt Lake City

November 30, 2009 · Leave a Comment

We’ve been through Salt Lake City quite a few times this year, and more than any other place in America, it possesses a dominating atmosphere. There are surveillance systems in all public spaces, architecture is uniform to a draconian degree, and there are an unnerving amount of young adults heading huge families  It’s taken me a while to come to terms with just what it is that creeps me out so much about the place.  Things finally clicked this trip- possibly with the help of the gracious hospitality of the Mimicking Birds- and I finally ‘got it.’ There is nothing about the LDS religion itself or its practitioners that bothers me- actually, they tend to be the nicest people I’ve ever met. As we sped away from the venue and out toward our friends’ house in the suburb of Herriman,  I was first struck by the way that the regional Temple structure was lit up to look like it was a white glowing ball of energy perched on the hillside. But then I really got to concentrating on the roads themselves. Salt Lake’s road system is definitely the best in America- six lane highways radiate far from the city in regular intervals, ring roads provide inter-suburban transit, and smaller (four lane) feeder roads branch off into vast suburbs of identical beige homes, each with a neighborhood church within a block or two. Within the city limits, one can drive for several minutes at 55 mph between stoplights and outposts of Big Box stores- much of the space between is completely empty. These roads are overbuilt to such a ridiculous degree  that it seems clear that Salt Lake is planning to become not only America’s next mega city, but also the world’s.  I can only assume that the other major infrastructural systems are equally robust, and if this is true it seems reasonable to assume that the city is planning for an influx of about 20 million people in the next 50 years. What’s the point of thinking about this? I guess there’s none- whether or not the people of Salt Lake believe that their city will become the world’s next Jerusalem or Mecca in the coming century is their business alone. Pretty interesting though..

Categories: Ever Evolving Blind Pilot Tour
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More blur- toward points west

November 29, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Denver, CO

The blog has fallen seriously behind. We are currently in Salt Lake City, Utah, and I believe the last post concerned New York. The shows have been going very well and we’ve been having a lot of fun, but things have blurred together quite a bit. Our Denver show was one of the best of tour- a sold out theater full of those friendly Colorado hippie folks that we’ve grown to enjoy so much. Some memorable experiences: staying with Kati’s Dad and Stepmom’s friends in Ann Arbor (amazing food, a Blind Pilot vs Mimicking Birds pass the pigs match, pool tutorials from Gary), staying with my Aunt and Uncle and Parents outside of Chicago (terrific Thanksgiving dinner, football, and multitudes of Sandhill Cranes migrating overhead throughout the day), staying with various friends of our manager in assorted McMansions throughout the midwest (rarely used exercise rooms, acres of marble counter tops, rec rooms bigger than my whole house). As tour comes toward an end and we face a long break to make a new album, we continue to enjoy each opportunity to meet and perform for new people because we know that we’ll greatly miss it in a month or so.

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A Blur of East Coast

November 22, 2009 · Leave a Comment

seedy yet glamorous- the Bowery Ballroom

This past week has been just that- a blur. We played five shows, slept very little, partied too much, walked many miles through the streets of New York, lived off of $3 pizza slices, and now we have a day off. Here’s what I remember:

In Hoboken, some of the band took a bus into Manhattan to be in the Colbert Report audience. Kati, Luke, and I stayed behind and spent the pre-show evening drinking beer in the venue’s restaurant and playing Pass The Pigs. At the beginning of this, the restaurant was empty, but by the time we finished our game and had some pints in our bellies, we were an island of chaos amidst a room full of Hoboken yuppies. The Mimicking Birds appear and disappear on our bills somewhat randomly throughout the tour, but they were present and in great form for this show. They got really excited about Pass The Pigs, and we ultimately had an inter-band game at the Bowery Ballroom in New York.

The next day we woke up in our hotel in Princeton and spent some time wandering around town before driving to Philadelphia. Having spent time in Princeton visiting my sister in the past, it was fun and a bit odd to be back, if only for an hour. The World Cafe venue in Philadelphia was the nicest place we have played to date- every aspect of the hall was perfect. Here’s some video. The crowd was a lot older though- it was essentially an NP-rock dinner theater- and were very polite but not too responsive. Afterward, the response in the lobby was surprisingly massive- it felt like we signed enough cd’s and posters to stretch back to New York.

We played two shows in New York this time, one at the Bowery Ballroom in Manhattan and one at The Bell House in Brooklyn. Both were fun shows- great, rowdy crowds and decent performances. I was quite excited to be able to meet up with some old friends from High School, both of whom are professional artists now, and show them my foray into pop music. Another fun diversion was the opportunity to do a video interview with Major League Baseball for their website. Apparently up and coming bands are Baseball’s new PR strategy and I was the only one available, so I got to tell them all about going to Brewers games as a kid and make lots of band-sports team comparisons. It was a lot of fun though- I’m curious to see how they edit my rambling into a coherent piece.

Leaving New York, all of us were a bit foggy and quite relieved to be heading west. The show in Pittsburgh was nice- Laura Viers’ band sounded especially nice- but the really amazing thing about the night was how unbelievably drunk people were in the streets. Everywhere we looked, there were groups of young people so drunk they could hardly walk: falling in their spiked heals, almost getting hit by cars, lifting their shirts, etc. Israel couldn’t get a slice of pizza because there had been a big fight at the pizza place and the cops had sealed everything off. Pretty crazy- people sure like to get wasted in Pittsburgh.

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North Hampton

November 18, 2009 · Leave a Comment

The Citadels game

After playing at the Iron Horse Music Hall, we had a few days off. Finding that our lucky streak of finding secluded cabins had come to an end, we Pricelined a hotel in North Hampton for a few days of relaxation. The easiest way to get into town on foot was by walking the railroad tracks, and this made for several Stand By Me situations. Luke and Kati went to a gaming cooperative in Amherst and bought a card game called Citadels, which involves building empires of medieval cities, and the band rapidly became hooked. Aside from a trip to the Ye Olde Watering Hole Beer Can Museum and Pub, both of our nights were spent huddled over the game table, role-playing and drinking from Berkshire Brewery growlers. Such is the sophisticated life of musicians.

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