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Reggae on the River @ Eel River
#76
Gonna miss ya then.

He went doing what he loved.
the hands that guide me are invisible
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#77
I'm a festival junkie...

But every junkie's like a settin' sun...
Shadow boxing the apocalypse
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#78
Please don't be sad, if it was a straight life you had, we wouldn't have known you all these years.
the hands that guide me are invisible
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#79
Gonna miss me when I'm gone
Shadow boxing the apocalypse
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#80
Ain't no sunshine.....
As a matter of fact, my anger does keep me warm

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#81
Full line-up

[Image: ROTRLineUpInstaFinalDrop01.jpg]

For the record, Mean Gene is not me. I have no idea who that is...
Shadow boxing the apocalypse
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#82
Woohoo! I don't recognize a single name. I am an oldy oldster.
As a matter of fact, my anger does keep me warm

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#83
It’s more that you don’t know reggae. 

The top 3-4 rows are notable performers. The rest I don’t really know either. Looks a bit dancehall heavy, which is rougher. It’s not at the same venue tho - it’s upstream, right next door - where we did Reggae Rising, also where Northern Nights is held which I’ve never done.
Shadow boxing the apocalypse
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#84
I'm not up on reggae anymore either. I also don't know any of those names.
the hands that guide me are invisible
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#85
Rocker T or Sister Nancy doesn't ring a bell?

Anthony B was banned when we went to Jamaica, so we heard a lot of him. His recent stuff is middling, but Fire Pon Rome always brings back JA memories...

Shadow boxing the apocalypse
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#86
[quote pid="19337" dateline="1407955442"]
Drunk MonkFishbone: The bass player went to high school with one of our friends, so we had the opportunity to meet the band backstage just before they went on and share some warm-up libations.  I watched the whole set from stage.  It was fun as we were next to their agent and the performers kept sending stuff our way.  Plus there was another theremin.  Two Theremins in two days.  I was hoping that was going to go on all weekend. 
[/quote]

This was 10 years ago. Today...

Quote:Norwood Fisher Taking Legal Action Against Fishbone, Says He Was Kicked Out
[Image: Norwood-Fisher-1714406349.jpg]
Kevin Winter/Getty Images
NEWS APRIL 29, 2024 12:37 PM BY TOM BREIHAN
[/url]
For decades, the eclectic California ska-punk band Fishbone has operated as a model of sustainability. Musicians have come and gone from Fishbone’s lineup, but the band’s creative core — singer Angelo Moore and bassist Norwood Fisher — has remained consistent since the band started in 1979. Now, that creative core has broken down. Norwood Fisher, founding trumpeter “Dirty” Walter Kibby, and drummer John Seward are no longer members of Fishbone, and Fisher is taking legal action against his former bandmates.
Over the weekend, Fishbone posted an Instagram statement claiming that the band “may look a little different” during their upcoming tour and offering refunds to fans who “don’t want to give this line up a chance”:
Quote:At a certain point, adults have to agree to disagree and step away from the table in order to preserve the bonds that brought them together in the first place.
As a result, in May, Fishbone may look a little different, and we hope you’ll give it a chance knowing that we did not make any decision lightly or without due process.
If anyone who has purchased tickets to see Fishbone this summer and feel you don’t want to give this line up a chance, while bummed, we will absolutely help in making sure you are fully refunded.

After seeing that Instagram post, Q [url=https://qthemusic.com/p/fishbone-lineup-without-norwood-fisher-and-dirty-walt-kibby/]spoke with keyboardist/trombonist Christopher Dowd
, who told the magazine about a split within Fishbone. Dowd is a founding member of Fishbone who left the band in 1993 and then returned in 2018. Dowd didn’t like the way the band was portrayed in the 2010 documentary Everyday Sunsine, and when he rejoined the group, he says that he discovered that Norwood Fisher was “running everything.” Dowd was also frustrated that it took Fishbone longer to make new music and that they were playing smaller venues than when he left: “This went on for a very long time, and I noticed that, as time went on, some people were satisfied with the status quo. And in some regards I started to realize that people didn’t really want things to change or improve. They liked it.”
Dowd also felt that Fisher’s bass was mixed louder than anything else, both onstage and on record, and that “there was no transparency with what was going on creatively or financially… There were some financial shortfalls, and people were not taking responsibility for what was going on.” After group therapy, Dowd says that he and Angelo Moore wrote a letter to Fisher demanding “equity” in the band, and he says that Fisher denied them and that the band would continue to be a “dictatorship.” Dowd and Moore evidently took control of the band, which led to the departures of Walter Kibby and drummer John Steward. There’s a lot more in the Q article, which you can read here.
Shortly afterward, Norwood Fisher posted a response on Twitter:
Quote:I didn’t quit Fishbone. Neither did Dirty Walt or John Steward. Angelo called for a hiatus unless I agreed to his ultimatum. I chose the hiatus. They went forward booking shows as Fishbone, with promoters and talent buyers believing that Dirty Walt, John Steward and I would be present. Their management and booking agent knew this.
Fisher then posted a cease-and-desist letter from his lawyer, alleging trademark infringement and demanding unspecified payment and a formal settlement. The letter is addressed to Moore, Dowd, Fishbone manager Pablo Mathiason, and Ben Kweller, who is the founder of the management group the Noise Company.
Meanwhile Fishbone will be replaced by Puddles Pity Party on the upcoming Primus/Coheed & Cambria tour. “While we were looking forward to it, there are many unwritten codes in life,” the band writes. “In this case the bass code took effect.” Here’s their statement:
Quote:As it has been posted as of today, we will not be joining @primusville on the 10 shows we were slated to be on. While we were looking forward to it, there are many unwritten codes in life. In this case the bass code took effect. We respect that and accept it.Shout out to @coheed we were looking forward to meeting you and playing with you. As mentioned in previous posts, if anyone was planning on seeing Fishbone on any of these shows and would like refunds, I’m sure they will honor that. If there are any problems, please let us know via DM and we’ll try to assist any way we can. We WILL be playing No Values and any other shows that will be announced shortly. We spoke with all promoters and artists and they have no problem moving forward. We hope to see you soon and apologize for being removed from this particular tour, that was not our decision, but we were honored to be considered to be a part of such a great line up. We will always have nothing but love for Primus.

Norwood’s dub reggae project the Familyhood Nextperience released their single “To The Hilt” this morning.
Shadow boxing the apocalypse
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#87
All about that bass code…

—tg
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