Andy Frasco Comes Alive at Northlands, and Other Takeaways from the Eclectic Festival
From Goose’s new drummer to a tribute to Dickey Betts, the best things we saw at the New Hampshire fest
In the mountains of southern New Hampshire, mandolin virtuoso Sierra Hull weaved through a cover of Tears for Fearsâ melancholic tune âMad World,â a crowd of thousands at the Northlands festival captivated by her songbird voice: âAnd I find it kind of funny, I find it kind of sad, the dreams in which Iâm dying are the best Iâve ever hadâŠâ
âParticularly today, in the world weâre living in, it feels very relevant,â Hull tells Rolling Stone backstage about the 1982 melody. âWe live in such a weird world, where we donât know whatâs real and whatâs fake, and thereâs just something so real about seeing people standing up there playing acoustic instruments.â
In its third installment, Northlands showcased marquee names in the rock/jam realms â Goose, Greensky Bluegrass, Andy Frasco & the U.N., Big Something, Pigeons Playing Ping Pong, and Eric Krasno & Friends.
âI experienced jam music at a formative age and had such a perception-altering experience watching a band choose their own adventure, and feeling like a true participant in the crowd,â says Pigeons guitarist Greg Ormont. âSo, to pay that forward to the next wave of music fans is surreal.â
The gathering also featured up-and-coming acts like Kanika Moore, Cool Cool Cool, and Super Sonic Shorties.
âThe songs that Iâm singing? I know the story and I can tell the story,â says Moore, whose mesmerizing, powerhouse vocals echoed throughout Northlands as its artist-at-large. âI donât tuck my mood down. Whatever mood Iâm in, thatâs how Iâm telling the story.â
Set at the Cheshire Fairgrounds on the edge of the small town of Swanzey, Northlands emerged from the drive-in concerts that became popular during the pandemic. In just a few years, the festival has established itself as a jam-band bastion at a time when many similar events have disappeared nationwide.
âItâs all about the love,â says Northlands co-founder Jen Meyerhardt. âThat feeling of community, where youâre with your friends and making new friends, and everyone is watching magic happen onstage.â
Hereâs the best things we saw.
Goose debut a new drummer.
With its new drummer, Cotter Ellis, behind the kit and a renewed sense of self, Goose ripped through a slot on the Mountain Stage. Amid its whirlwind concoction of intricate, improvisational savvy jams and soaring tones from lead singer/guitarist Rick Mitarotonda, a galvanizing cover of the Whoâs âEminence Frontâ bubbled up to the surface midway through the second set.
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âThereâs a lot of language that gets built over time in a band, and with playing with Cotter out of the gate, there was a ton of connection,â Mitarotonda says. âIt was very clear from the get-go that it was a whole new thing â the runway feels kind of limitless.â
As the band itself is seemingly the heir apparent torchbearers of the jam scene, Goose was coming in red hot to Northlands after a recent gig at the Fiddlerâs Green Amphitheatre in Colorado, an audience of thousands in attendance.
âItâs been mind-blowing,â Ellis adds. âEspecially with a big crowd like [Fiddlerâs Green], itâs something I thought I would never experience.â
The Connecticut group is headlong into its summer tour, which also coincides with its 10th anniversary â a period of time where the ensemble went from relative obscurity and grassroots growth to now selling out massive venues coast-to-coast.
âWhy youâre creative, why you create, itâs just like any other relationship â life will happen and itâs easy to stray from the original reason you did it,â Mitarotonda says. âPart of whatâs going on right now is returning to the reasons why weâre doing it.â
Andy Frasco & the U.N. bring chaos the mountains.
Whether itâs jumping into the audience and sparking a mosh pit, smashing up his gear or spewing whiskey onto his bass player, the most volatile, eye-opening set belonged to Andy Frasco. The front man roars across the stage like a Tasmanian devil. As a raw and real performer or merely a completely unique human being, Frasco is in a league of his own.
âIâm just trying to make people happy,â Frasco says with a cigarette dangling from his lips. âEveryone asks me what genre I am. I call it âorganized chaos.â Iâm not in the jam scene. Iâm not the folk scene. Iâm just this anomaly that tries to glue everything together, so we can all play in the same playground.â
To witness Frasco live is to observe, and possibly also participate in, a moment of sheer pandemonium. The show veers erratically from rock to punk to country and back again, with Frascoâs mashup of Eddie Rabbitâs âDrivinâ My Life Awayâ and Black Sabbathâs âWar Pigsâ a prime example of his artistic risk-taking.
âYou donât know how much time you have on this earth. The importance of living life to the fullest and doing what you love is what keeps us in the moment,â Frasco says. âAnd the moment is being alive. If we can appreciate being alive, then maybe we could appreciate happiness for what it is and not just this idea.â
Eric Krasno & Friends honor Dickey.
Paying homage to late Allman Brothers Band guitarist Dickey Betts, who died in April, six-string ace Eric Krasno offered up a touching rendition of âIn Memory of Elizabeth Reed.â Krasno dueled it out with former Twiddle guitarist Mihali under a fading sun on the Echo Stage.
â[Dickey] was super creative. He blended southern rock and soul with jazz,â Krasno says. âAnd he studied all sorts of players, from acoustic flatpicking to bluegrass to straight up Albert King Blues and then delved into jazz â I was trying to do the same thing coming up.â
Throughout the tribute, Krasno invited a slew of friends onstage to join in, including Greensky Bluegrass mandolinist Paul Hoffman for a rambling take on the Robert Hunter/Jerry Garcia number âDeal.â Closing the set, Krasno brought up Moore and Frasco to tear into Jimi Hendrixâs âFire.â
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Annie in the Water surface in the campground.
At its core, Northlands aims to uplift those smaller jam outfits grinding it out around New England and the greater northeast â Dopapod, Hayley Jane, Jatoba, and Annie in the Water.
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One of the first acts to perform at Northlands, Annie in the Water led the charge on the Switchback Camp Stage, the small, cozy platform surrounded by a sea of tents, RVs and vendor booths. A heady mix of rock, indie-folk, and soul elements, the Saratoga, New York, band wowed the masses, with many in the crowd laying eyes and ears on the sextet for the first time.
âWeâre doing pretty much everything on our own to make it in this industry, so it was a big dice roll for the festival to give us this slot,â guitarist Michael Lashomb says. âBut once everyone starts coming in and everythingâs clicking, the trainâs moving and everyoneâs part of it, itâs overwhelming.â