Sound Tribe Sector 9

For the space shuttle mission, see STS-9.
Sound Tribe Sector 9 (STS9)

Sound Tribe Sector 9 at Denver's Fillmore Auditorium 2015
Background information
Origin Santa Cruz, California
Atlanta/Athens, Georgia
Genres Livetronica[1][2]
Years active 1998present
Labels 1320 Records
Website www.sts9.com
Members Hunter Brown (guitar, midi keyboard)
Alana Rocklin (bass guitar)
Jeffree Lerner (percussion, handsonic)
David Phipps (keyboards)
Zach Velmer (drums)
Past members David Murphy (bass guitar, midi controller)

Sound Tribe Sector 9 (STS9) is an instrumental band whose sound is based heavily on instrumental rock and electronic music, funk, jazz, drum and bass, psychedelia, and hip hop, originating in Georgia, United States. Self-described as "post-rock dance music,"[3] the band mixes standard live rock instrumentation with electronics, favoring group rhythm over individual solos.[4]

STS9 has released 11 albums, two remixed albums (Artifact: Perspectives and Peaceblaster: Make it Right Remixes), and multiple live DVDs (Live as Time Changes, Axe The Cables, and various live performances) on their own label, 1320 Records.[5] STS9 has toured the US nationally and internationally, ranking among Pollstar Magazine's list of top-grossing touring acts, with a heavy presence in the music festival circuit.

Some of their recent past accomplishments include headlining stages at some of the country's major music festivals festivals (including Bonnaroo, Wakarusa, Electric Forest, and Suwanee Hulaween), playing for sold-out concert venues around the country (playing as both an acoustic set-up in opera houses and as an electronic act in amphitheaters), performing with the likes of Jay-Z in Denver of 2010, running an independent record label, and using their voice as a platform for change, along with raising significant amounts of money towards activism efforts. STS9 is also known for pushing musical boundaries, mixing different music influences and sounds by using both acoustic and electronic means.

History

Since forming in Atlanta, instrumental electronic rock band STS9 has experienced an unceasing meteoric rise to the forefront of the international music scene.

The band consistently lands themselves on Pollstar Magazine's top touring charts in the country, with a recent average attendance of over 5,000 fans per city on full-fledged tours. STS9 boasts a list of opening acts including Snoop Dogg, NAS, Bassnectar, Ghostland Observatory, the Glitch Mob, Thievery Corporation, Pretty Lights, and Big Boi of Outkast.

STS9 has headlined stages at festivals such as Summer Camp, Wakarusa, Moogfest, Bonnaroo, Outside Lands, Regeneration, Lollapalooza, and Electric Forest Festival. The group has raised significant amounts of money towards activism efforts, including $150,000 to the Make it Right Foundation, paving the way to rebuild a house in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans.

The band's last studio EP, When The Dust Settles (the eleventh album in their full discography), keeps with XLR8R Magazine's claim that STS9 is "one of the country's most intriguing, innovative outfits around." It debuted at #1 on the iTunes Electronic Charts and in Billboard's Top 25, while the first single, "Scheme", was downloaded over 100,000 times in its first week alone.

STS9's self-owned record label, 1320 Records, was founded on the principles of collaboration, cooperation, and community. The label currently boasts over 300,000 unique downloads and over 1,000 releases by over 100 artists including Bassnectar, Pretty Lights, Big Gigantic, ESKMO, and the Glitch Mob.

On January 14, 2014, it was announced that founding member and bassist David Murphy was leaving the band. Alana Rocklin was recruited as his replacement.[6] Rocklin performed a whole set with the band for the first time on March 28, 2014 at McDowell Mountain Music Festival in Phoenix, Arizona, having previously made a guest appearance performing "Gobnugget" on December 29, 2013 at the Tabernacle in Atlanta.

Social work

STS9 has partnered with a variety of non-profit organizations throughout their career. Over the last decade, they have partnered with Conscious Alliance to bring food drives to various concerts and festivals on their tour. In exchange for fan participation in these events, STS9 and Conscious Alliance thank patrons with limited edition artwork posters, often created by the same artists who accompany the band on stage. In 2005, STS9 put on a benefit concert where they raised over $20,000 for Hurricane Katrina victims.[7]

Beginning in the fall of 2006, as part of their Live as Time Changes tour, STS9 traveled across the country in a carbon neutral tour bus and powered their live concerts using renewable energy. The band hoped to offset 100%, or about 138,000 pounds, of their carbon dioxide emissions from their tour by donations of Renewable Energy Credits from their partnership with environment-friendly companies.[8]

STS9's remix album, Peaceblaster : The New Orleans Make It Right Remixes, features 30 remixes of material from their 2008 album, Peaceblaster. All proceeds from this album went to the Make it Right Foundation, in an effort to build a home in New Orleans, which has since been completed and taken up by a family displaced by Hurricane Katrina. The home has many eco-friendly features, including solar panels, high efficiency HVAC system, wire-free lighting panels, tankless water heater, dual flush toilets, low emissivity windows and doors, a rainwater collection system, and water-absorbing native landscaping. For protection against future storms, the home has walls that can withstand 130 mph winds, Kevlar hurricane shields for the windows, and a roof hatch in case an escape is necessary.

Notable concert performances

STS9 has gained acclaim, as well as a distinctly loyal fan base over the past decade. Their 2005 album Artifact reached #12 on Billboard's Top Electronic Albums.[9] They have moved from playing and opening in small clubs and bars to headlining major music venues and festivals. In 2003, the band reached new heights by opening for The String Cheese Incident in their first amphitheater performance, at majestic Red Rocks Amphitheater in Morrison, Colorado. A concert scheduled for the previous night at the Fox Theater in Boulder, Colorado sold out in less than fifteen minutes. The band has now sold out numerous headlining Red Rocks shows, along with many other venues across the country.

In the San Francisco Bay Area, the band has built a following with frequent performances at The Fillmore, Warfield Theatre, and the historic Regency Center. They have performed at the Fillmore on ten occasions, including three two-night stands, a three-night stand for Halloween in 2004, and a four-night stand in early 2009. They have performed at the Warfield Theatre on five occasions, including a two-night stand. STS9 performed at the Regency Center on five occasions, including two consecutive New Year's Eve shows in 2002 and 2003. The band has also put on performances at the Independent, Great American Music Hall, Golden Gate Park, and the Stern Grove Festival. STS9 also performed at the Boulder Theater in Boulder, Colorado, for a five-night stand in March 2007.

Santa Cruz, California has been home to various members of the band since moving to California. STS9 has performed at the Catalyst on nine occasions since 2002, including two two-night stands. The band frequently played a club named called Palookaville, until it closed in 2002. In 2003, the band headlined the Santa Cruz Civic Center.

In their home state of Georgia, the band continues to ride their popularity. On October 3, 2006, the band marked the ninth anniversary of their first ever show with a celebration at the historic Georgia Theatre in Athens. The band has performed many multiple-night stands at the Georgia Theatre since 2002. For many years they have performed at the Tabernacle in Atlanta on New Year's Eve as part of multiple-night stands.

STS9 has also built a fan base in Chicago, Illinois, after performing multiple times at North Coast Festival and Lollapalooza with late night performances at the House of Blues Chicago. Also making frequent trips to the Aragon Ballroom and the Congress, STS9 has made Chicago a go-to city for performances.

STS9 chose Denver as the host for their three 2009 New Year's Eve concerts. December 29 marked the band's first acoustic show ever, called "Axe the Cables." The band performed two sets at the University of Denver's Gates Hall. The remaining two nights were standard "electric" shows played at the Wells Fargo Theater. STS9 returned to Denver for New Year's Eve 2010, playing three shows at the Fillmore Auditorium. The December 29, 2010 show opened and closed with a cover of the Grateful Dead's "Shakedown Street".

For New Year's 2011, STS9 returned to the Tabernacle in Atlanta. They performed a five-night run starting on December 27. STS9 has continued to perform in Atlanta and Denver for New Year's since 2011.

In the summer of 2013, the band co-headlined a 14-city tour with Umphrey's McGee, alternating the closing slot each night.[10]

To end the year of 2013, STS9 played a three-night run at the Tabernacle in Atlanta.

On March 28, 2014 the band returned for their first concert following their split with David Murphy. This show was held in Phoenix, Arizona during the McDowell Mountain Music Festival, and was the first time the band played with new bassist Alana Rocklin.

In September 2014, STS9 returned to Red Rocks Amphitheater in Colorado to play two nights to a sold-out crowd. This run included two Axe The Cables sets with new bassist Alana Rocklin.

STS9 ended 2014 with a four-night stand at the Fillmore Auditorium in Denver. The band turned New Year's Day into a benefit for Conscious Alliance, inviting 600 fans to a sit-down dinner and a full improv set.[11] This performance was later released through BitTorrent with the full 2014 catalog.[12]

Returning to Red Rocks Amphitheater in Colorado in September 2015, the group once again sold out both nights.

Festival appearances

STS9 has a steady presence in the music festival circuit, headlining several festivals across the country each season.

In 2007, STS9 announced they would return to Deerfields for a new festival titled Re:Generation. The two-day festival included additional performances from the Join and Telefon Tel Aviv. According to the band's website, this event promised to be "a unique celebration of music, nature, family, mind, body, and spirit." In 2011, STS9 re-created the Re:Generation festival in its second incarnation held at Horning's Hideout in North Plains, Oregon, with a lineup that included Bassnectar, Glitch Mob, Beats Antique, and Tycho.[13]

In May 2008 STS9 performed at the Summer Camp Music Festival in Chillicothe, Illinois.

On Saturday June 7, 2008, STS9 headlined the Sun Down Stage at the Wakarusa Music Festival at Clinton State Park, Lawrence, Kansas.

At Rothbury 2008, STS9 performed a three and a half hour show, which packed a capacity crowd.

In June 2011, STS9 performed at Bonnaroo in Manchester, Tennessee. They began at 2:30am and played until the sun rose.

In 2012, STS9 performed at the Hangout Music Festival, Electric Forest, High Sierra Music Festival, and North Coast Festival.

From 2013 to the present, STS9 has performed at festivals including High Sierra Music Festival, Moonrise Festival, Suwannee Hulaween, Pemberton Music Festival, All Good Music Festival, Bonnaroo, Wakarusa, Summer Camp Music and Camping Festival, BUKU, Hangout Music Festival, Beale Street Music Festival, Counterpoint, Summer Set Music Festival and McDowell Mountain Festival.

STS9 has performed live at the following events:

Discography

  1. Moon Socket (10:05)
  2. Hubble (7:10)
  3. Wika Chikana (12:56)
  4. H. B. Walks to School (6:00)
  5. Four Year Puma (6:39)
  6. Tap-In (2:45)
  7. Quests (5:36)
  8. Evasive Maneuvers (5:50)
  1. Tap-In
  2. T. W. E. L. V. E.
  3. Kamuy
  4. Frequencies Peace 1
  5. Frequencies Peace 2
  6. Frequencies Peace 3
  7. Surreality
  8. Lub Duh Earf
  1. Foreword (0:22)
  2. Squares and Cubes (6:10)
  3. Otherwise Formless (6:13)
  4. Kamuy (5:34)
  5. Water Song (3:40)
  6. Common Objects Strangely Placed (2:19)
  7. ...And Some Are Angels (6:16)
  8. Turtle (3:16)
  9. Mischief of a Sleepwalker (5:37)
  10. Inspire Strikes Back (8:05)
  11. EB (10:33)
  1. A Gift for Gaia (12:13)
  2. Jebez (15:28)
  3. Ramone & Emiglio (19:18)
  4. Satori (10:51)
  5. Good for Everyday (8:34)
  6. Equinox (8:41)
  7. Kaya (12:17)
  8. Eclipse (5:13)
  9. Thread (15:40)
  10. Breach (2:57)
  1. Intro (0:48)
  2. Kotamo (2:47)
  3. Manatee (5:33)
  4. L1nQs (2:02)
  5. Since 7th (1:48)
  6. Luma Sunrise (5:30)
  7. Believe (2:07)
  8. Haiku (2:14)
  9. Oceans Ride (3:40)
  10. N'terlude (0:23)
  11. Havona Ascent (2:09)
  12. Midwest (6:11)
  13. Midwest Sky (1:31)
  14. Egil (5:57)
  15. Like That ? (1:14)
  16. Purity Too (3:50)
  17. Linguistics (4:41)
  18. Care Too (2:44)
  19. Power Is The People (2:29)
  20. Tact (4:00)
  21. Summit (7:08)
  22. Drone Slowly (a Walk Through Philly) (3:35)
  23. Slight Shift (Firetrucks Outro) (1:19)
  1. musical story, yes (0:28)
  2. Better Day (4:49)
  3. By the Morning Sun (3:35)
  4. Tokyo (7:03)
  5. ARTiFACT (2:12)
  6. Native End (4:31)
  7. ReEmergence (5:01)
  8. Peoples (4:19)
  9. GLOgli (5:20)
  10. Today (4:21)
  11. Tonight the Ocean Swallowed the Moon (2:51)
  12. Forest Hu (0:50)
  13. Somesing (6:49)
  14. Trinocular (4:44)
  15. Vibyl (3:00)
  16. 8 & a extra (1:28)
  17. Possibilities (3:45)
  18. Peoples part II (4:02)
  19. first mist over Clear Lake (0:56)
  20. Music, Us (3:11)
  21. Bonus track: Tokyo (radio edit) (4:04)
  1. Better Day Remix (Sub-id) (4:05)
  2. Tokyo Remix (Machinedrum) (5:01)
  3. Possibilities Remix (Collective Efforts) (3:47)
  4. Tokyo/Better Day Remix (Ming+FS) (5:07)
  5. By the Morning Sun Remix (Slicker) (5:31)
  6. Somesing (Eustachian 24hr. White Knuckle Mix) (3:45)
  7. Possibilities Remix (Eliot Lipp & Leo 123) (4:17)
  8. Better Day/Trinocular STSDevine Remix (Richard Devine) (6:03)
  9. By the Morning Sun Remix (Metrognome) (5:04)
  10. Possibilities Remix (Mr. Lif) (3:38)
  11. Tokyo Shinjuku Flashback Mix (Bill Laswell) (9:12)
  12. Somesing Remix (Bassnectar) (2:38)
  13. ReEmergence, Beat the Science Remix (Karsh Kale) (6:43)
  14. Peoples, Cause & FX Remix (Lowpro Lounge: Audio Angel & ill45) (5:49)
  15. Better Day Remix (Genetic) (4:19)

Video

STS9 side projects

Tzolkin (acid experimental alter ego)

On several occasions, STS9 has billed themselves under the name "Tzolkin". A promotional flyer put out by the band advertising the 2001 performance reads: "A New Sound Expression from Tzolkin". Tzolkin consists of all five members of STS9. These very experimental concerts have been used to debut brand new material in a live setting without having the audience expectation of hearing existing STS9 material. "Tzolkin" means "sequence of days" and refers to a 260-day harmonic module calendar cycle.

Tzolkin performed live on:

Landscape and Breath

Landscape and Breath consists of STS9 members David Phipps (keyboards/laptop) and Hunter Brown (guitar/laptop/midi keyboard). The group's sound is very similar to that of STS9. Steeped in ambience and without drums and bass, the sound is softer and lighter. This side project has been known to work through raw material and ideas that eventually become STS9 compositions.

Landscape and Breath is credited with producing four songs on the STS9 2005 release Artifact. The duo also contributed four different songs to the Low Pro Lounge 2004 release, The Most Hi-Fi. Other Landscape and Breath compositions can be found on the STS9 2004 release Live At Home, although the songs are credited individually to Phipps and Hunter.

Landscape and Breath performed live on:

Santa Cruz Hemp All-Stars

Santa Cruz Hemp All-Stars (S.C.H.A.S.) is a side project that includes the STS9 rhythm section of Jeffree Lerner (percussion and effects) and Zach Velmer (drums). STS9 member David Murphy (bass) has also appeared with the band on four occasions.

S.C.H.A.S. performed live on:

L.I.F.E.

L.I.F.E. (Love In Full Effect) was a short-lived side project that included STS9 member Zach Velmer (drums) plus Max Malone (drums, bass) from The Free Energy Project. According to the band, "The intention of L.I.F.E. is to perform music as an uplifting experience of transformation to a higher vibration of love. Through selected tones and rhythms, the music is performed as a cycle of life recognizing our journey from birth to death, spring to winter, as circle, vibrating higher after each revolution to experience Love In its Fullest Effect."[17]

L.I.F.E. performed live on:

Root Science

Root Science was a short-lived side project that included STS9 members Zach Velmer (drums) and David Murphy (bass). The band also included DJ James Christopher, lyricists Lost and XQR, and female vocalist Syrene. A promotional flyer put out by the band advertising the event read: "Root Science is a classic drum and bass tracks interpreted live in an improvisational atmosphere. As a group, the performers will recreate and simultaneously reinvent the sounds at the roots of the modern jungle."

Root Science performed live on:

References

External links

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