Category Archives: Clips

MUSIC: Suddenly, a forest of festivals

The Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, which kicks off its two-weekend run at the Empire Polo Club on Friday, April 10, marks the beginning of the ever-growing festival season in California and the United States. Rodrigo Pena, The Press-Enterprise

The Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, which kicks off its two-weekend run at the Empire Polo Club on Friday, April 10, marks the beginning of the ever-growing festival season in California and the United States. Rodrigo Pena, The Press-Enterprise

In July of 1999, riots marred the 30th anniversary reboot of the Woodstock festival in Rome, N.Y. The multi-stage, multi-genre music festival was, by many pundits, pronounced dead.

A few months later, on the other side of the nation, the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival was born at the Empire Polo Club in Indio.

And 16 years after that modest birth, the reports of the commercial demise of major music festivals appear to be greatly exaggerated.

Coachella, and its site-sharing country cousin Stagecoach Country Music Festival, comprise a three-week artistic and commercial juggernaut. And they have, in recent years, ignited an ever-expanding list of multi-day music events in Southern California and beyond.

“Popular demand is driving all of these festivals,” said Jason Lipshutz, associate editor at Billboard.com. “Not all of them have been successful. Some have shut down, but a lot of them are continuing to go.”

Among the established events are indie rock-oriented FYF and Jay Z’s Made in America in Los Angeles and the electronic dance music festivals Nocturnal Wonderland and Beyond Wonderland in San Bernardino.

And there are plenty of new kids on the block this year:

• The motorcycle-themed Lost Highway festival, topped by Toby Keith and Social Distortion, will launch at San Manuel Amphitheater in May.

• Also in May, the amphitheater will also christen the pot-smokers’ playground called Blaze ‘N’ Glory festival with Slightly Stoopid.

• More of a Coachella clone is trendy Kaaboo, which kicks off in Del Mar in September with No Doubt, The Killers and Zac Brown Band.

It’s a trend that’s being seen around the country, too, with new festivals popping up in nearly every state, from Delaware to Alabama.
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SHARK-O-METER: Which pop culture shark has the biggest bite?

The 40th anniversary of sea thriller “Jaws” is upon us. The Steven Spielberg-directed classic starring Roy Scheider and Richard Dreyfuss left its mark on pop culture for decades to come, from tongue-in-cheek comedy sketches to the most menacing movie music this side of the “Imperial March.” We’ve ranked some of the most notable sharks in pop culture from their most menacing to the most humorous with our Shark-O-Meter.

The stuff nightmares are made of
“Jaws”: Released in 1975, the suspense-ridden classic scared beachgoers and reminded us all that we’re gonna need a bigger boat.
Shark Week: Sharks are majestic creatures – and they can kill you. Discovery Channel’s popular annual shark programming reminds us of this and starts July 5.

Terrifying
“Open Water”: This 2003 psychological thriller has a scuba-diving couple left behind and battling those biters of the deep.
“Sharknado”: Ian Ziering of “Beverly Hills, 90210” fame battles a tornado of sharks in Los Angeles. You decide what’s more frightening – the concept or the acting.

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MUSIC: Neil Diamond paper dolls

Ontario’s Citizens Business Bank Arena opened in the fall of 2008 and in January it landed the concert of a big-name star–Neil Diamond.

When the show sold out and Diamond was unable to do an interview, I wanted to think of a way to create a whimsical cover story that would still grab readers. I had an idea for Neil Diamond paper dolls. We hired a freelance artist and I provided the text for what became one of our most popular covers. Readers even sent me photos of their Neil Diamond dolls.

Click on the image below or this link to see it in its full glory.

Neil Diamond paper dolls were a hit with our readers.

Neil Diamond paper dolls were a hit with our readers.

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MUSIC: The education of Gabriel Roth

Gabriel Roth,a Riverside native and bassist for Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings, performs in Solana Beach at the Belly Up Tavern on June 27, 2010.  (Vanessa Franko)

Gabriel Roth,a Riverside native and bassist for Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings, performs in Solana Beach at the Belly Up Tavern on June 27, 2010. (Vanessa Franko)

This story originally appeared in The Press-Enterprise on June 12, 2009.

BY VANESSA FRANKO
STAFF WRITER

When you add it up, Gabriel Roth has a pretty sweet gig.

The Riverside native is a critically acclaimed producer and songwriter, co-founded an independent record label that has a focus on actual vinyl records, engineered a Grammy-winning song and still finds time to play bass in soul outfit Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings, who perform at the Playboy Jazz Festival at the Hollywood Bowl on Saturday.

Granted, it is a bit off the original path for the husband and father who always wanted to be a high school math teacher. But his math training hasn’t been for naught – Roth uses those skills in his musical endeavors.

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MUSIC: Southwest Riverside County rides wave of talent

Divide the Day performs at Ace's Lounge in Austin, Texas on March 16, 2010. (Vanessa Franko)

Divide the Day performs at Ace’s Lounge in Austin, Texas on March 16, 2010. (Vanessa Franko)


This story originally appeared on A1 of The Press-Enterprise on May 13, 2010.

BY VANESSA FRANKO
STAFF WRITER

Chris Allen and Tyler Glenn spent hours composing songs in the bedroom of Allen’s childhood home in Murrieta, honing the pop rock sound that would propel them to stardom.

Their band, Neon Trees, now has a major-label recording contract and has appeared on “Jimmy Kimmel Live.” On Saturday, the band makes its debut at Los Angeles’ famed Greek Theatre.

Neon Trees tops a bumper crop of professional musicians who started in the bedrooms and garages of southwest Riverside County.
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MUSIC: Cell phones get mixed reviews at concerts

Shakira fans takes photos and video while she performs during a concert at the Fantasy Springs Resort Casino in Indio. (2010/File Photo)

Shakira fans takes photos and video while she performs during a concert at the Fantasy Springs Resort Casino in Indio. (2010/File Photo)

This story originally ran on A1 of The Press-Enterprise on Nov. 29, 2010.

BY VANESSA FRANKO
STAFF WRITER

They’re phones. They’re appointment books. They’re calculators. They’re even glow sticks.

The rise of high-tech gadgets allows concert attendees to disengage from the experience to record shaky memories for posterity – and for posting on YouTube, much to some artists’ chagrin and to others’ promotional delight.

“The cell phone is the modern-day equivalent to a cigarette lighter,” said Robert Bledsoe, spokesman for Pechanga Resort & Casino in Temecula.
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NEON TREES: Success grows on trees

Tyler Glenn, singer for Neon Trees and a former Murrieta resident, performs at the Greek Theatre in Los Angeles on May 15, 2010. (Vanessa Franko)

Tyler Glenn, singer for Neon Trees and a former Murrieta resident, performs at the Greek Theatre in Los Angeles on May 15, 2010. (Vanessa Franko)

This story originally ran on A1 of The Press-Enterprise on April 15, 2011.

BY VANESSA FRANKO
STAFF WRITER

They’ve performed on “The Tonight Show with Jay Leno” twice in nine months. They’ve topped Billboard and iTunes charts. They’ve sold more than 1 million digital copies of their hit single. The song-happy cast of the top-rated Fox TV show “Glee” has paid tribute to them.

Who are they?

They’re Neon Trees, a pop rock band whose singer, Tyler Glenn, and guitarist, Chris Allen, formed the group while growing up in Murrieta.

The band’s ascendance in the past 13 months has earned them a coveted spot at the sold-out Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Sunday, along with big names like Arcade Fire, Kanye West and Duran Duran.

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RIVERSIDE: Fox gets opening year jitters

The Fox Performing Arts Center in Riverside. (2010/File Photo)

The Fox Performing Arts Center in Riverside. (2010/File Photo)

This story originally appeared on A1 of The Press-Enterprise on Saturday, Jan. 30, 2011.

BY VANESSA FRANKO AND ALICIA ROBINSON
STAFF WRITERS

The revitalized Fox Performing Arts Center, the crown jewel of Riverside’s downtown renaissance, opened one year ago after a $32 million renovation.

The city envisions the Fox as an outlet to attract high-quality entertainment to the area, a place for community groups to use and an economic generator to the downtown area, but the first year hasn’t always been smooth.

The theater that in 1939 hosted the first public showing of “Gone With the Wind” experienced bumps along the road to restoring its former glory. Broadway in Riverside, the local arm of Broadway producers the Nederlander Organization, downsized its opening season of touring musicals. Other shows canceled or switched dates. City officials said operator William P. Malone failed to return repeated calls – even about possible bookings – and they cited other operational woes, from a lack of cash registers to unpaid bills.

But as the curtain closed on the first year of the theater’s rebirth, bookings were on the upswing and downtown businesses and community members gave the Fox a hearty thumb’s up for its restoration and ambience. Some, however, had suggestions for improvement for management and programming.

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INLAND EMPIRE: Haven of heavy metal

Metallica fans cheer for the band in Anaheim in 2009. (Vanessa Franko)

Metallica fans cheer for the band in Anaheim in 2009. (Vanessa Franko)

This story originally ran on A1 of The Press-Enterprise on Saturday, April 23, 2011.

BY VANESSA FRANKO
STAFF WRITER

Nashville is the unchallenged capital of country music. Chicago can claim the blues, and Memphis has the Delta counterpart. Grunge? Seattle. Hip-Hop? New York and Los Angeles can duke it out.

If you were drawing the map of hard rock and heavy metal, you could make a case for putting the big red star right here in Inland Southern California.

After all, we’re the home of the Us Festival’s seminal heavy metal day in 1983. Ozzfest was born here in 1996. And a metal icon that hasn’t raged on an Inland stage is tough to name.

Now the area is about to make heavy metal history again as The Big 4 festival, featuring top bands Metallica, Slayer, Megadeth and Anthrax, makes its American debut at the Empire Polo Club in Indio today.

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