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    Perpetual Groove, All News
     
    May 1, 2007
     
    Perpetual Groove nominated for Athens’ Flagpole Music Award
    image Perpetual Groove has been nominated by this year's panel of judges for the 2007 Flagpole Athens Music Awards. The ballot represents the panel's thoughts on the past year in local music and who's accomplished the most, made the best music and generally contributed to the past year in the Athens scene. Flagpole readers will vote over the next month, and can also write in their own nominations if they desire. The week before the awards show, Flagpole will announce the top three vote recipient finalists in each category, and the winners will be announced at the show, which takes place on Thursday, June 21, and kicks off Athfest. You can vote online at http://flagpole.com/Awards and it will be in the paper starting this week and every week from now until June. Please take a moment to fill out the voter form, and feel free to also nominate Perpetual Groove for album of the year and performer of the year. You can also spend 15 extra seconds by nominating Brock Butler in the solo category. A confirmation email will be sent to you with a link that you must click in order for your to be counted. Thanks for the support!

     
    April 28, 2007
     
    Upcoming Brock Shows
    image If you're feeling the need to confess your sins, then you just may have your chance. The Reverend Choppin' Brockly will be performing a few shows around the South in the next couple of weeks. Brock will be opening up for our friends The Seepeoples in Huntsville, AL on May 19th. And don't be surprised to see a few of Brock's co-horts from the PGroove congregation making an appearance. Rumor is that the Reverend will also be testifying in Statesboro the night before and quite possibly at The Georgia Theatre the night before Perpetual Groove's performance at Athefest. Stay tuned for more information!

     
    April 27, 2007
     
    Perpetual Groove rocks the Roundhouse for a pet cause
    This weekend, internationally known psychedelic rock band Perpetual Groove (or P-Groove as they’re known to their fans) will play a large scale two-night outdoor gig at the Historic Roundhouse Museum just off MLK, Jr. Blvd. downtown. The band, which formed years ago in Savannah —and cut its teeth on countless marathon shows at the now-defunct jam-band showcase JJ Cagney’s— has gone on to become one of the more notable U.S. acts in its genre. They are regularly featured at major outdoor music festivals, and headline clubs, theatres and halls nationwide. According to industry sources, over the past three years, P-Groove averaged over 400 audience members at each of their own shows, and just a few nights before the following interview took place, they played their first-ever arena gig, drawing somewhere in the neighborhood of 3,000 folks to Clemson, S.C.’s Littlejohn Coliseum. That sort of growing draw, combined with a successful tour of Japan a few years back can be traced directly to the group’s mesmerizing combination of a trance-inducing, improv-leaning hybrid of British rave and Southern boogie music and its dazzling, high-tech light show (a visual component which the band works hard to design and maintain. However, despite such momentum and popularity, the group (now based in Athens, Ga.), which plays close to 200 live shows annually, has rarely appeared in Savannah for the past several years. Now, in the wake of their just-released sophomore studio album LiveLoveDie (a more rock-oriented CD that is perhaps the first ever “Green disc” produced and manufactured using primarily renewable energy sources), they’re returning to Savannah to help benefit The Jolly Foundation, a locally-based non-profit organization to which the band feels a special bond. Guitarist Brock Butler and keyboardist Matt McDonald took a break from their road schedule to speak with Connect about these upcoming ALL-AGES shows, and the band’s enduring connection to Savannah. Tell us about the Jolly Foundation. Brock Butler: Mary Ellen McKee and her family are life-long friends of mine. Mary Ellen was in an accident. Struck by a car. The Jolly Foundation are her priorities put to use. Sea turtles, supporting the arts, research for brain trauma, etc... Savannah is where she lives, so I feel that’s where the Jolly Foundation is. Definitely the reason to come to town, and really bring something extra. Because it’s an extra special cause. Matt McDonald: Everyone should visit their website (http://www.jollyfoundation.org) and learn Mary Ellen’s incredible story. She’s a true inspiration to us all. What makes this new studio album different from your previous recorded output? Brock Butler: I would say it’s the most focused and concise record we’ve made. We went in with the attitude of (really) using the studio. I guess we figured, the whole reason we’re paying for a nice studio is to use it. I think the album is a good blend of that and our live show energy. Matt McDonald: First and foremost, what makes this album different is we’ve become a real band that’s been together for over five years. That might not sound like much, but anyone who’s been in a touring band knows it’s not an easy task to live on the road with the same people day in and day out. We all feel this is some of our best work. This band’s reputation has been made much more as a live act than as a studio group. How important is one aspect to the other? Matt McDonald: Live playing and studio performance are two completely different animals that (performance-wise) can’t even be compared. A band like us uses improvisation nightly. Our shows aren’t rehearsed “performances.” Songs, approach, everything changes nightly. Even production! Many longtime fans may be a bit surprised by the more straightforward rock direction the band seems to be moving into. Brock Butler: There’s always been a little more rock sneaking into our choice of covers. Eventually, that made its way into our songwriting. I think we were all pretty aware of the direction we were taking. How is P-Groove a different band than it was four years ago, or even further back? Brock Butler: We bond, go through good and bad times. There’s no faking that. Matt McDonald: It’s a much better band, that’s for sure! I have a hard time listening to shows from one year ago, much less four! When you play with the same guys as often as we do, you start to get some mind-reading type shit going on. Plus, we now have the greatest crew in rock’n’roll. Do you enjoy yourself more these days, or on some level, did you have more fun back when the group was essentially a bar band? Brock Butler: I certainly like playing what I consider appropriate rooms. There were fun times in sweaty dives, but I like for Jason (Huffer, lighting director) to have the physical space to achieve his vision. Matt McDonald: I enjoy the larger audiences. There’s nothing else like playing to that many people and that kind of energy coming back at you in a big beautiful room... Our first arena show was this past weekend. It sounded the best we ever have. Most acts in the jam-band movement earn a lot of instant fans by plugging into that demographic, yet many seek to distance themselves from that label. Is your stylistic shift a step away from the jam-band community? Matt McDonald: I’ve had a problem with the over generalization of the term “jam-band.” Artists like Karl Denson, Bela Fleck, Robert Walter’s, bands like Soulive, Yonder Mountain String Band, Disco Biscuits, and us all get lumped into this category — yet no one sounds the same. We all use improvisation and that’s really all we have in common. If we must give it a new label, then P-Groove is “trance arena rock.” Was “greening” this CD worth the trouble? Brock Butler: All of it’s worth it to me. I get to do my favorite thing in the whole world for a living. How modest or glamorous a living? Stay out my business. Just playin’. Many still think of P-Groove as a Savannah band though you’re now based in Athens. Why has the band has been so absent? Brock Butler: Savannah is an awesome city. I lived there for nine years, and as of right now there doesn’t seem to be a room that’s just right for us. I think we’re still waiting for just the right situation. Matt McDonald: The band met in Savannah and spent its early years there, so in some ways it will always be a Savannah band. We have most definitely not avoided Savannah. There aren’t any “clubs” or music theatre rooms that cater to bands like ours there. Fortunately, there are places like the Roundhouse, the Lucas Theatre, and the Trustees Theatre that have allowed us to do some special shows in Savannah. I’ve heard that in some ways P-Groove felt a bit ignored or shortchanged by Savannah’s music scene. Is that correct? Brock Butler: I actually feel that there isn’t a real big scene in Savannah. It’s not a huge city. To its charm, but that’s not good if you’re trying to grow. I’ve always felt love from the audience, but I know almost all of them by name. When you can name every person in your crowd that’s a sign of something. I think we hit our ceiling (there). Atlanta and Athens just have more numbers for us to try and turn on to our music. Why do you think some folks have a hard time describing P-Groove’s music? Brock Butler: I think it is one of the greater compliments, if someone can’t completely wrap you up in only a few adjectives. Matt McDonald: Because it’s unique. We are lucky to have that problem I think. For those readers who’ve never seen or heard P-Groove before, what would you say to try and entice them to come see this show? Matt McDonald: We never do the same show twice, or repeat any songs when we do a two-night run like this. It’s time to come home and pull out all the stops and, yes, we do have plenty up our sleeves. We’ll make you dance, pump your fist in the air, laugh, maybe cry. More than anything else, people continually go to show after show of ours because they get something emotional out of it — something they carry with them. That’s what I’m told most by fans, that they feel something real during our shows that keeps them coming back. ƒç P-Groove plays 8:30 pm, Friday and Saturday at the Historic Roundhouse, downtown behind Parker’s on MLK, Jr. Blvd. by the Visitor’s Center. Proceeds benefit The Jolly Foundation. $25 advance tickets to these ALL-AGES shows sold at http://www.pgroove.com.

     
    April 19, 2007
     
    Attention Poster Collectors!
    image We've saved the best for last and she's beautiful. Our Cinco De Mayo pin-up is the last in this Spring's trilogy of pin-up themed show posters by Jeff Wood and Johnny Thief. She'll be available at the May 5th Gramercy Theatre show in New York City for $25.00

     
    April 17, 2007
     
    Matt & Brock on WQNR 99.9 FM in Auburn @6PM Tonight!
    Tune in to 99.9FM tonight at 6PM if you are in the Auburn, AL are to hear Brock & Matt live, on the air with Wildman Steve!

     
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