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My Morning Jacket
Today In History
June 6th
0 shows
0 tapes
Years
2026
1 show
1 tape
2025
1.6k
PlaybackListensHours
48h716
7d29629
30d1.6k155
14 shows
27 tapes
2024
46
PlaybackListensHours
48h00m
7d00m
30d464
4 shows
6 tapes
2023
459
PlaybackListensHours
48h515
7d647
30d45948
19 shows
36 tapes
2022
184
PlaybackListensHours
48h212
7d121
30d18419
17 shows
35 tapes
2021
190
PlaybackListensHours
48h00m
7d431m
30d19022
12 shows
15 tapes
2019
155
PlaybackListensHours
48h364
7d556
30d15517
9 shows
12 tapes
2018
141
PlaybackListensHours
48h00m
7d00m
30d14113
10 shows
13 tapes
2017
186
PlaybackListensHours
48h162
7d333
30d18620
13 shows
25 tapes
2016
398
PlaybackListensHours
48h421m
7d294
30d39843
14 shows
27 tapes
2015
344
PlaybackListensHours
48h741m
7d11m
30d34435
40 shows
51 tapes
2013
29
PlaybackListensHours
48h00m
7d550m
30d293
14 shows
15 tapes
2012
112
PlaybackListensHours
48h233
7d374
30d11212
25 shows
32 tapes
2011
181
PlaybackListensHours
48h475
7d11912
30d18118
30 shows
54 tapes
2010
103
PlaybackListensHours
48h00m
7d131
30d1039
11 shows
22 tapes
2009
4 shows
5 tapes
2008
194
PlaybackListensHours
48h16m
7d353
30d19417
23 shows
35 tapes
2007
34
PlaybackListensHours
48h00m
7d210m
30d343
11 shows
20 tapes
2006
189
PlaybackListensHours
48h262
7d564
30d18917
35 shows
45 tapes
2005
38
PlaybackListensHours
48h942m
7d313m
30d383
29 shows
38 tapes
2004
142
PlaybackListensHours
48h00m
7d182
30d14214
17 shows
20 tapes
2003
36
PlaybackListensHours
48h00m
7d222
30d363
12 shows
13 tapes
2002
3
PlaybackListensHours
48h1259m
7d316m
30d316m
20 shows
20 tapes
2001
13
PlaybackListensHours
48h00m
7d00m
30d1354m
10 shows
10 tapes
2000
63
PlaybackListensHours
48h00m
7d101
30d634
15 shows
18 tapes
1999
22
PlaybackListensHours
48h00m
7d418m
30d222
1 show
1 tape
Sources
Taper: Mark Devish
52:12
Taper:
Mark Devish
Transferrer:
Peter W. King
SHNID:
mymorningjacket2004-09-18.mbho.flac16
Source:
mbho 603a/ka200n > sound devices mp2 > modSBM > d8
Lineage:
soundforge 9.0 (tracking, fades, resample) > flac 1.2.1b
Taper Notes:
View Noteslength expanded size cdr WAVE problems fmt ratio filename 1:07.31 11891756 B --- -- ---xx flac 0.3596 mymorningjacket2004-09-18_mbho_t01.flac 6:02.03 63863900 B --- -- ---xx flac 0.5867 mymorningjacket2004-09-18_mbho_t02.flac 5:45.18 60900380 B --- -- ---xx flac 0.5540 mymorningjacket2004-09-18_mbho_t03.flac 5:11.64 55010972 B --- -- ---xx flac 0.4948 mymorningjacket2004-09-18_mbho_t04.flac 4:59.61 52887116 B --- -- ---xx flac 0.5009 mymorningjacket2004-09-18_mbho_t05.flac 5:09.67 54665228 B --- -- ---xx flac 0.5893 mymorningjacket2004-09-18_mbho_t06.flac 9:20.06 98798156 B --- -- ---xx flac 0.5121 mymorningjacket2004-09-18_mbho_t07.flac 7:24.24 78378092 B --- -- ---xx flac 0.5686 mymorningjacket2004-09-18_mbho_t08.flac 7:16.54 77037452 B --- -- ---xx flac 0.5646 mymorningjacket2004-09-18_mbho_t09.flac 52:17.28 553433052 B 0.5422 (9 files) from http://www.austin360.com/xl/content/xl/acl2004/acl2004saturdayacts.html My Morning Jacket (Saturday, 6 p.m., Bank of America Stage) An indie band from a low-profile city like Louisville gets a major-label contract and puts out a career-making record. Pretty clear what it does at a big-time rockfest, right? Start off with a barn-burning anthem, work the major-label record, throw in a few old faves to reward the hardcore fans and close down with another barn-burning anthem. Well, two out of four ain't bad. My Morning Jacket opened its afternoon set with the epic "One Big Holiday" and closed with the Quicksilver Messenger Service-worthy guitar freakout "Run Thru." But unless my ears deceived me — and this band's murky catalogue often does deceive me — it only played one other song off the latest record: "Mahgeetah," which came right before the set-ender. The rest of the time, the band played less familiar and less over-the-top material, squandering the not inconsiderable momentum it built right away with "Holiday." The band certainly looked rocking enough. Leader Jim James came dressed in a brown blazer, white T-shirt and hair — lots of hair. At times, with his scruffy mane blowing across his face, he looked like Venus on the Half Shell on a bad hair day. And Patrick Hallahan has down the "stupid drummer" look that Aerosmith's Joey Kramer perfected so many years ago. But the set featured a lot of slow, dirge-y numbers, some acoustic stuff and one genuinely odd song that featured no guitars (surely an MMJ first) and spotlighted synthetic drums (some of them programmed?) that suggested James has been listening to Trio's "Da Da Da" lately. It was, in truth, a gutsy set to play for an outdoor festival crowd that came to rock out. Even so, the fans showed their love for MMJ, even if that love was tested pretty hard. Wonder if the execs at RCA are quite so indulgent. — Jeff Salamon