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Posts Tagged ‘Bruce Springsteen’

Greensky Bluegrass with Danny Barnes | NYE Run | Review

Words by: Sarah Hagerman | Images by: Josh Mishell

Greensky Bluegrass with Danny Barnes :: 12.30.10-12.31.10 :: Cervantes’ Other Side :: Denver, CO

Greensky Bluegrass by Josh Mishell

Denver certainly wasn’t short of choices in the New Year’s revelry department. One could have ushered in 2011 with Widespread Panic at the Pepsi Center, STS9 at the Fillmore, or Railroad Earth at the Ogden, and that’s just naming the bigger shows. But I think I made the right choice by spending it with Greensky Bluegrass and Danny Barnes at Cervantes’ Other Side . Nestled up in Five Points, a historically black neighborhood with a rich jazz history – and nowadays demonstrating the age-old story of rough-and-tumble urban center meets gentrification – the venue was somewhat removed from the neon and crowds of downtown just a few blocks away. It gave the show a semi-exclusive secret party vibe, and even The Motet thumping through the walls next door in the main room of Cervantes didn’t take away from the refreshing sense of intimacy. Not to say things didn’t get wild – when you’ve got one of the most fearlessly independent and creative musicians working today opening up for one of the most energetic, hard working acoustic roots outfits pounding that pavement, you know damn well some sparks are going to fly.

Danny Barnes by Josh Mishell

Barnes kicked off both nights’ festivities performing solo on the “barnjo” – a custom-made hybrid banjo/electric guitar that he debuted this summer at Northwest String Summit. Melding the hammering drive and fine detail of his banjo-work on an instrument that allows him to fully embrace plugged-in rock-and-roll aggression, it proved the perfect outlet for his own wonderfully mercurial musical nature. Unlike the FolkTronics approach he had previously taken with his music, where he used Ableton software to craft a broad palette with the banjo, looping the instrument and incorporating beats and samples, this method had a considerably more stripped-down aesthetic. But this was some pure diesel, as Barnes travelled between sonic moods and textures with a tight, dizzying quickness.

It was cool to hear the open-throttle versions of songs spanning his career over both nights, from Bad Livers (“Lumpy, Beanpole & Dirt,” “Little Bitty Town,” “Legend of Sawdust Boogers,” “Going Where They Do Not Know My Name,” “Love Songs Suck”) through his latest album, the brilliant Pizza Box. Take, “Sleep,” a claustrophobic tale based on a friend of Barnes who went to jail. He told Barnes he was relieved when the cops finally busted in his door, because he knew they were coming and he could finally get some sleep. On Pizza Box, it unfolds like an unhinged dream, but the barnjo interpretation tapped its murky, shuddering dread in direct, close-to-the-bone cuts.

Danny Barnes by Josh Mishell

Meanwhile during “Everything Fades,” on the line “Everything fades/That was made by a man,” Barnes simply let a lonely, lovely hum hang in the air, as if to emphasize that point, before spiraling down into some heavy Stooges-like stomping. Barnes utilized the instrument with equally potency on more delicate tunes like Things I Done Wrong‘s “Big Girl Blues,” which he nicely segued into T. Rex’s “Bang a Gong (Get It On)” on New Year’s Eve, and “Overdue,” where he let the notes gracefully float and dissolve in the air. Plus you have to appreciate a man who wrote “Love Songs Suck” – which lent itself to a crushing barnjo interpretation perfectly – writing “Overdue.” It’s a love song which, to put it mildly, in no way sucks at all. That’s how you show ‘em how it’s done.

The barnjo also allows Barnes to more-readily tap the punk rock heart that has always set him apart from the often-tired roots music scene. He even played Minor Threat on the first night of the run for, “All the designated drivers out there,” ripping out a vicious cover of “Straight Edge.” It was a pretty ballsy song choice, especially on the cusp of a holiday that’s become associated with getting as FUBARed as possible. Barnes has always had that element of subversion in his music, and this latest badass development is no exception.

Despite the “Bluegrass” in their name, Greensky aren’t trying to fit neatly into that category or cater to the IBMA crowd. They’ve obviously done their musical homework, but they pull from their own frames of reference in a way that keeps their sound fresh, rooted in a thoroughly modern sensibility rather than nostalgia. They are as likely to cover Bruce Springsteen or Michael Jackson as they are classic bluegrass tunes – and treat them with the same ace musicianship (not a lame Pickin’ On approach). Meanwhile, their original songwriting features a splendid attention to melody and old soul contemplations that dig deeper than the atypical road and mountain songs written by many acoustic roots bands.

Paul Hoffman by Josh Mishell

They also are one hard touring band. According to the stage banter, by mandolin player Paul Hoffman‘s math, the band has averaged 187 driving miles each day since 2007. But it’s so obvious that they love what they do for a living, that they are just flat out fun to watch. Take the jam out of ”Freeborn Man” during the first set on the first night, where they threw around musical references the way movie geeks throw around film quotes. This Jimmy Martin tune is one of those songs that is so oft-played that it can make for pretty tired covers, or dive into masturbatory bluegrass solo-passing territory. But Greensky kept things snappy and locomotive. Guitarist Dave Bruzza teased ‘The Simpsons’ theme, and dobro-player Anders Beck got down on “The Lion Sleeps Tonight” when he came up to bat. Hoffman jumped and boogied as he sang snatches of “Jump In Line” (an old calypso song made famous by Harry Belafonte), and later Beck and banjo player Michael Arlen Bont both riffed on Springsteen’s “Dancing in the Dark,” which Hoffman had led the band in a rousing cover of earlier in the set.

Other highlights on the first night included a spacious, swirling jam out from “Just to Lie,” off their 2008 album Five Interstates that drove straight on into Benny Galloway-penned “”Train Junkie,” featuring some particularly fierce playing by Bruzza and Beck. I also enjoyed Bont channeling Dwayne Allman on the banjo for the encore of “One Way Out,” a perfect choice for Bruzza’s strong whiskey-and-leather vocals.

But the standout of the night, and maybe all the Greensky sets over the two nights for me, was the Beck-penned “Tarpology.” “I wrote this for Sound Tribe to play, but they haven’t gotten back to me,” he laughed. Stretching well over ten minutes, the song had a perceivable pulse to it, building to mini-peaks and then crashing down again, moments of expanse giving way to tight, fist-pumping fury. It also displayed some killer use of the effects pedals by Beck and Hoffman, pushing the sound way out into bloinky, sci-fi territory. At one point, Beck’s dobro splintered over the drive of the band and then swooped in low and loud, a striking example of the tooth-baring rock and roll approach he takes to the instrument. When it was over, Beck said, “We were Greensky Bluegrass, in case you forgot.”

If Greensky on the 30th was all fire, New Year’s Eve seemed to move in snapshots, with each section of the show having a slightly different, albeit consistently joyful, vibe. After first set opener “What’s Left of the Night,” Barnes joined the band for “Groundhog” and Bad Livers’ “Deathtrip,” where he got deliciously freaky over Mike Devol‘s bruising bassline. Bruzza watched intently as he ripped it up on the barnjo, and Beck grinned wildly, obviously excited to have him on the stage. “Groundhog” dropped down into a disco-like thump for a while, before Bont picked up the tempo, giving Barnes and Bont the chance to exchange a little banjo/barnjo interplay. After Barnes’ exit, Greensky busted out a stretch of Beatles songs, including “Got to Get You Into My Life,” “Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds,” “Help” (which lent itself to a fast bluegrass interpretation incredibly well), “A Day in the Life,” and the entire B-side of Abbey Road to take us up to set break.

Dave Bruzza & Vince Herman by Josh Mishell

The band came back in the nick of time to ring in 2011 with “Stop That Train,” the balloons falling, couples kissing, glasses raising all around us. The second set clocked in at over two hours, and featured some favorite Greensky songs, like the heart-wrenching “Reverend” and the pick-your-head-up “All Four,” an uplifting way to welcome the New Year as the balloons popped around us at our feet. They were also joined by some friends, specifically, a clean shaven Vince Herman , and later, Boulder-based singer/songwriter Pete Kartsounes, who wailed on the harmonica and picked Bruzza’s guitar while Bruzza drank champagne from the bottle, passing it to people in the front row.

Herman always brings a party to the stage. He shook his head so hard during “Way Up on the Hill Where They Do the Boogie” that his New Year’s hat tumbled off. Later in the song, his mic’s boom arm began to sink downwards. Caught up in the spirit, Herman kept singing into it, following it as went down, before Bruzza reached over and caught it, propping it back upright. Herman then kicked off a round of “Salty Dog,” a song that always gets decidedly dirty. It’s a number you bust out at a late night jam when the kids are in bed and everyone left standing is half in the bag. After passing around a few ribald verses, Herman cried, “Let’s all pick the shit out of this boys!” as Greensky rallied around him. After Herman’s exit, the band would keep up that infectious energy, propelling us past the 2:30 am mark with gusto.

It was a two-night stand that satisfied both my yee haw and punk rock factors, as we bid adios to the foul year of our lord and welcomed the clean slate possibilities of 2011. As I’m writing this, a few days into the year, 2011 is already shaping up to be a rough year. But as a friend of mine recently said to me, “The arts are mankind’s maybe one get out of jail free card.” I don’t know about you, but I take comfort in the fact that there are joyful road warriors and inventive badasses out there, adding to the collective spirit that may just be our one shot at redemption, if we’re smart enough to recognize it.

Greensky Bluegrass Tour Dates :: Greensky Bluegrass News :: Greensky Bluegrass Concert Reviews


JamBase | Ramblin’
Go See Live Music!


Sirius XM NYE Broadcasts

FURTHUR, BISCUITS, DBT, AVETTS AND MORE

Eminem

SIRIUS XM Radio announced yesterday that it will celebrate the new year with a wide-ranging lineup of live concerts, special performances, exclusive DJ sets, a special New Year’s Eve music channel and various year-end countdowns. Here’s the rundown:

-Eminem’s “Home & Home” concert – featuring guest appearances from 50 Cent, Drake, B.O.B. and Dr. Dre, was recorded live at Comerica Park in Detroit, MI, and will play exclusively on his Sirius XM channel Shade 45 and XM channel 66 on Friday, December 31 at 8:00 pm ET.

-A special encore broadcast of Paul McCartney’s performance from the Apollo Theater from December 13 will air on The Bridge, SIRIUS channel 33 and XM channel 27, on Friday, December 31 at 9:00 pm ET.

Other NYE performances being broadcast live on Sirius XM include:

-Furthur from Bill Graham Civic Auditorium in San Francisco, CA
-The Disco Biscuits from the Tower Theatre in Philadelphia, PA
-Southside Johnny at Count Basie Theatre in Red Bank, NJ
-Patti Smith at Bowery Ballroom in New York City, NY
-The Avett Brothers at Ashville Civic Center in Asheville, NC
-Phil Vassar from downtown Nashville, TN
-Drive By Truckersfrom Terminal 5 in New York, NY
-Pitbull from House of Blues in Las Vegas, NV
-Little Feat at the Keswick Theatre in Glenside, PA

Sirius XM will also broadcast historic and special concerts by Bruce Springsteen, Willie Nelson, Frank Sinatra, David Bowie, Flaming Lips, Jack Johnson, Phoenix, Bachman & Turner, Peter Noone, Gerald Albright and Vampire Weekend.

For dance music fans, Sirius XM will broadcast DJ Paul Oakenfold live from Rain in Las Vegas and Swedish House Mafia’s Steve Angello will DJ live from Roseland in New York, NY. In addition, listeners can hear DJ sets by Paul van Dyk, Armin van Buuren, Swedish House Mafia’s Axwell, as well as a special presentation of Tim Berg presents “Avicii LEV7LS” on New Year’s Eve. The DJ sets will air on Electric Area, Sirius channel 38 and XM channel 80.

Real Jazz, Sirius channel 72 and XM channel 70, will present NPR’s 30th “Toast of the Nation” featuring live jazz, coast to coast, with performances from Dianne Reeves, Lionel Loueke Trio, Jon Faddis Jazz Orchestra with Nnenna Freelon, Jimmy Heath, Cyrus Chestnut, Nicholas Payton and Benny Green.

Metropolitan Opera Radio, Sirius channel 78 and XM channel 79, will present a live broadcast of the new production premiere Verdi’s La Traviata.

Sirius XM’s New Year’s Nation channel, Sirius channel 3 and XM channel 23, has been custom-created to serve as the soundtrack to New Year’s Eve parties around the country and will feature party hits from genres across Sirius XM’s music platform. The channel will launch on Friday, December 31 at 12:00 pm ET and will air through Saturday, January 1 at 11:59 pm ET.


Watch Bruce Springsteen: Songs from The Promise Live

THE BOSS LIVE IN ASBURY PARK PERFORMING SONGS FROM THE PROMISE

Bruce Springsteen and the E Street
Band
performed a rare concert event last week in Asbury Park, New Jersey’s historic Carousel House,
playing never-before performed songs live from the new 2-CD set, The Promise. Beginning
today, five songs from the show will stream online. The concert will be available until January 1. Check out
the session below.

Filmed before an audience of approximately sixty fans, “Songs From The Promise” was directed and edited by
Grammy- and Emmy-winning filmmaker Thom Zimny and mixed by Emmy-winner Bob
Clearmountain
. The concert features the world premiere E Street Band performances of four tracks from ‘The
Promise,’ plus “Blue Christmas.”

“Songs From The Promise” Setlist:

“Racing in the Street (’78)
“Gotta Get That Feeling”
“Ain’t Good Enough For You”
“The Promise”
“Blue Christmas”

Bruce Springsteen
Tour Dates

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Bruce Springsteen News
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Bruce Springsteen
Concert
Reviews


“Last Christmas;” “All I Want For Christmas” Top Most Annoying Christmas Songs Poll

One holiday shopper’s soundtrack is another’s kryptonite: “Last Christmas,” British pop group Wham!’s hit 1984 single about unrequited love during the holidays, has been annointed the Most Annoying Christmas Song of All-Time in a poll of Bulgarian music lovers. And you thought nothing could be worse than “Grandma Got Run Over By A Reindeer!” A [...]

Dawes and The Moondoggies | California | Review

Words by: Dennis Cook | Images by: John Margaretten

Dawes & The Moondoggies :: 11.20.10 :: The Independent :: San Francisco, CA

Dawes :: 11.20.10 by John Margaretten

Organized religion is a psychological hornet’s nest built on hierarchies, fairytales and guilt grafted onto basically good ideas. At the core of most of the world’s major spiritual practices is the notion that human beings are flawed and must atone to a creator that we disappoint on a daily basis. It’s a lousy setup, especially for highly individualized folks given to questioning stated truths and power structures. Still, it’d be a lie to suggest that there isn’t an ache inside all of us for greater meaning, a larger sense of the universe and one’s place in it, not to mention a hope – however mustard seed small – that compassion, kindness and love are stronger than all the dark forces that seem to hold sway so many places. This ache need not lead one to “God” or anything like it, but it hums in our skulls when night comes and the day’s crush and chatter subsides. So, where then does one turn to slake this ontological thirst? Where do doubters and cynics gather to bolster their spirits?

One potential answer could be found at The Independent, where two bands that dig their hands deep into this rich, complex mulch put on a concert that was as close to holy as rock ‘n’ roll can manage. Los Angeles-based Dawes and Seattle’s The Moondoggies each delivered everything a four-piece combo can in terms of spirit and skill on a rain dappled autumn evening, each proving painfully honest and resoundingly hopeful, not to mention dead solid songwriters, performers and musicians. When churches and temples prove unfriendly to modern people it’s left to other avenues to nourish us in ways that go beyond entertainment. Each group put on a fine rock show, but if you slipped off your armor and bared your breast to them then something more occurred this night, something all the outstretched arms and heaven-reaching singing in the crowd testified to – something rare from bands that have only a handful of recordings and a few years under their belts, but such is the immediate, tangible power and grace of what they do.

The Moondoggies :: 11.20.10 by John Margaretten

Taking us “way out in the tidelands” and probing complex notions like “what’s exactly inside a man,” The Moondoggies played first, their cracking good rhythm team – bassist Robert Terreberry and drummer Carl Dahlen – actively reaching out and sucking one into their cavernous, harmonious spaces. There’s something of vintage CSNY and the 1970s Laurel Canyon bunch to them, but stripped of the hippie drippiness and lackadaisical jamming. Their inquiry is pointed and their songwriting melodic and free of much fat, often settling into a riff or refrain because it needs repeating for proper impact – one of the basic truths of the blues or classic folk often overlooked in contemporary rock. Drawing heavily from their ace sophomore album Tidelands (released October 12 on Hardly Art/Sub Pop), the set was infused with gospel-like energy set free of holy book brow beating. Not to overplay a metaphor, but their music held an oceanic pull to it – horizon filling, elemental, natural. More than once I kept conversations at bay as the audience grew throughout their hour onstage so I might focus and absorb everything they were laying down.

At the heart of The Moondoggies’ music lies the songwriting and open-wound voice of Kevin Murphy, who repeatedly succeeds in pulling the veils off commonly held illusions, revealing what’s really going on rather than what we think is happening. The others in the band, rounded out by keyboardist Caleb Quick, delivered harmonies that brought their live presence up to the high standards of their studio recordings. As the lights came up one felt they’d witnessed a wonderful group of searchers that handcraft music as a walking stick for a journey that won’t be long or easy. But, when they cried, “Wake up, wake up, let me drink from your cup,” the sense was that they would not go thirsty or without friends wherever they might wander, reminding us that “man ain’t meant to crawl/ feel like he’s nothing at all” and delivering music of utter conviction that’s truly uplifting.

Normally I wouldn’t envy a headliner having to follow such a set but Dawes is no normal headliner. Despite having just one album to their name – the tremendous North Hills (JamBase review) – Dawes is rapidly building a cult following whose eyes burn bright, a chorus of ragged voices grown hoarse but happy by show’s end. I caught a glimpse of this fervor at Outside Lands this past summer but it was a pale shadow of the ecclesiastical bent of The Independent crowd. Looking around at the number of people who knew every line, even to the unreleased tunes, one felt they were in on the ground floor of something big, something rising in the same way as past greats like Neil Young and Bruce Springsteen, and their performance backed up this impression in every way.

Dawes :: 11.20.10 by John Margaretten

The lightning rod in Dawes is singer-songwriter-guitarist Taylor Goldsmith, a future legend in the making possessed of abundant charisma, a heartbreaking voice capable of roaring power, and a knack for nuances that ensnare an audience – sly grins, hip swivels and pauses and conscious tics that punctuate the already great music in ways that make one hoot and connect with the moment at hand. Shoulder-to-shoulder with him are Tay Straithairn (piano, keys), Griffin Goldsmith (drums) and Wylie Gelber (bass), who serve this music with immaculate intuition, taking possession of it and delivering fine performance after fine performance. Yes, they are a new, quite young band but it feels like they’re in for the long haul – in a number of ways. These songs are not passing fancies. They are streetwise hymns to haunt our ear buds and solitary listening time, and then later enjoyed in good company with our fellow travelers, glasses and spirits raised high as Dawes drives us into fevered jubilee. Reflective music – and Dawes surely makes that sort – is rarely well served in the live setting, but this band makes it work in spades. In fact, the band-audience synergy with Dawes is one of the most striking I’ve ever encountered, and again, only seems to be the tip of the iceberg.

Like The Moondoggies, they hit all their marks, building on the sturdy bones in their songbook but not settling for an “okay” rendition when they might blow the doors off the joint. From a purely spectator perspective, Dawes is a goddamn blast to watch. The battle scarred instruments and lunging energy onstage speak to guys willing to do the miles and club crawling to forge something solid and lasting. The new songs in SF were uniformly excellent and worthy additions to the eleven gems on their debut, and one suspects there’s a pile more waiting in the wings. One killer had this memorable couplet: “If I wanted someone to cut me down/ I’d have handed you the blade/ I want you to make the days move easy.” Zing!

Things built to a heady pitch with set closing “When My Time Comes,” where the whole audience seemed to inch forward, pulled in by the song’s gravity and the band’s searing, absolutely engaging playing. It is a tremendous tune, a balm for those of us who’ve lived “less like a workhorse and more like a slave.” The struggle of existence and the inevitable end that awaits us all writhes inside this one, and you could see a number of folks breaking through to something unspoken and perhaps unspeakable as they pitched in on the intentionally rhetorical chorus. Who’s to say what will happen when their time comes? Isn’t it better to leave the question mark hanging flagrantly in the air, a cry of “whoa-oa-oa” standing in for certitude as nuggets of wisdom fall from Murphy’s lips? “You can judge the whole world on the sparkle that you think it lacks/ Yes, you can stare into the abyss but its staring right back.”

We may understand on an intellectual level that we’re all in the same boat but feeling it in your bones is another matter entirely. The combination of Dawes and The Moondoggies made for a community, however briefly gathered, that understood on some level that existence is shared and our dreams and fears are not so different from one another in the final accounting. Most longings are universal and that truth has few better songsmiths and messengers than these two bands at this moment.

Dawes Tour Dates :: Dawes News :: Dawes Concert Reviews

The Moondoggies Tour Dates :: The Moondoggies News :: The Moondoggies Concert Reviews


Jimmy Fallon (Neil Young) Bruce Springsteen “Whip My Hair” [VIDEO]

Willow Smith (That’s Ms. Swaggerlicious Stylista-in-Training to you. Please address her as such!) solidified her place as the latest addition to the Young Hollywood elite with the premiere of her infectious debut single, “Whip My Hair” earlier this fall. But nothing screams “You’ve Arrived!” like having your song covered by The Boss and Neil Young [...]

Bruce Springsteen: The Promise 3 CD/3 DVD Box Set

INCLUDES REMASTERED ALBUM, NEVER-BEFORE-SEEN STUDIO & LIVE FOOTAGE, 80-PAGE NOTEBOOK,
21 PREVIOUSLY-UNRELEASED SONGS, AND FEATURE LENGTH DOCUMENTARY


The Promise

On November 16, Columbia records will release The Promise: The Darkness on the Edge of Town
Story
, a 3 CD/3 DVD box set chronicling the making of Bruce Springsteen‘s landmark 1978
album, Darkness on the Edge of Town. Media contents are packaged within an 80-page notebook
containing facsimiles from Springsteen’s original notebooks from the recording sessions, which include alternate
lyrics, song ideas, recording details, and personal notes in addition to a new essay by Springsteen and never-
before-seen photographs.

The set will include a digitally remastered version of Darkness on the Edge of Town, live concert footage
from a 1978 Houston show, a special 2009 performance of the album in its entirety at Asbury Park, a critically
acclaimed 90-minute documentary The Promise: The Darkness on the Edge of Town Story, which offers
never-before-seen footage of Springsteen and the E Street Band shot between 1976 and 1978, including home
rehearsals and studio sessions, with new interviews with Springsteen, E Street Band members, manager Jon Landau,
former-manager Mike Appel, and others closely involved in the making of the record.

Darkness was my ‘samurai’ record,” Springsteen writes, “stripped to the frame and ready to rumbleÂ…But
the
music that got left behind was substantial.” For the first time, fans will have access to two discs containing a total of
21 previously-unreleased songs from the Darkness recording sessions, songs that, as Springsteen writes,
“perhaps could have/should have been released after Born To Run and before the collection of songs that
Darkness on the Edge of Town became.” The tracklist is available below.

As of right now, you can stream 15 of the 21 tracks over at NPR.com.

Containing a wealth of previously unreleased material, The Promise: The Darkness on the Edge of Town
Story
offers an unprecedented look into Springsteen’s creative process during a defining moment in his
career.

THE PROMISE (DISC 1)
1. Racing In The Street (’78)
2. Gotta Get That Feeling
3. Outside Looking In
4. Someday (We’ll Be Together)
5. One Way Street
6. Because The Night
7. Wrong Side Of The Street
8. The Brokenhearted
9. Rendezvous

10. Candy’s Boy

THE PROMISE (DISC 2)
1. Save My Love

2. Ain’t Good Enough For You
3. Fire
4. Spanish Eyes
5. It’s A Shame

6. Come On (Let’s Go Tonight)
7. Talk To Me
8. The Little Things (My Baby Does)
9. Breakaway
10. The Promise

11. City Of Night

Bruce Springsteen
Tour Dates

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Bruce Springsteen News
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Bruce Springsteen
Concert
Reviews


Solomon Burke Dead at 70

GRAMMY AWARD WINNING SOUL SINGER DIES OF NATURAL CAUSES


Solomon Burke

Soul legend Solomon Burke
passed away on Sunday, October 10 at Schipol Airport in Amsterdam. He was
70 years old.

Burke was best known for classic hits like “Everybody Needs Somebody to Love” and “Cry to Me”. His songs has
been covered by The Rolling Stones, Bruce Springsteen, Wilson Pickett and Otis Redding, among others. Inducted
into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2001, his final album, Hold On Tight, is due out later this month.

From TheKingSolomonBurke.Com

“Early this morning, Sunday, October 10, 2010, the legendary King of Rock & Soul, Solomon Burke, our father,
passed away due to natural causes.

Solomon had just arrived at Schiphol Airport in Amsterdam, the Netherlands for a sold out show at Paradiso with
Dutch band, De Dijk. He was on his way to spread his message of love as he loved to do.

This is a time of great sorrow for our entire family. We truly appreciate all of the support and well wishes from his
friends and fans. Although our hearts and lives will never be the same, his love, life and music will continue to live
within us forever. As our family grieves during this time of mourning, thank you for respecting our privacy.

Family of Solomon Burke”


“South Park” New Jersey Spoof Oct. 13

New Jersey is getting the South Park treatment. “Joisey” — as the natives call it — is joining the brigade of pop culture heavyweights, including The Jonas Brothers and Kanye West, who have been raked over the coals by South Park writers. In the past year, The Garden State — home of Bruce Springsteen and [...]

Bruce Springsteen “Glee” Tribute

The voices of McKinley High’s New Directions could soon find themselves belting out “Dancing In The Dark” and boogeying to “Born In the USA,” if a Glee insider is to be believed. Word on The Curb has it that Bruce Springsteen, 61, is in talks to appear in a tribute episode of the Emmy-nominated Fox [...]

Presidential approval

Bit of a bunfight getting in to the Paris Show this morning. President Sarkozy was paying a visit and I counted at least a dozen police vans stuffed full of ‘Les flics’ on the way in and all heavily armed.

I didn’t see the great man personally but I’m told he arrived with an enormous entourage, which swelled exponentially as a vast media scrum followed him around.

And being French of course, le President resolutely stuck to a Gallic agenda - bystanders told me he visited Peugeot, Citroen and Renault – but whether neighbouring Ford was paid a visit remains a mystery.

The Show opens its many doors to the public in the morning for a fortnight – they’re expecting more than a million visitors, petrolheads and enthusiasts – as well as tomorrow’s consumers – to pour in.

I wasn’t here two years ago but people assure me the mood is much improved from those gloomy days – although there’s a long way to go.

As I write this on the oasis-like calm of the Saab stand – all icebergs and cool Scandi imagery – I can hear the Chevvy stand opposite belting out AC\DC and Bruce Springsteen. Horses for courses.

Pearl Jam Frontman Eddie Vedder Married Jill McCormick In Weekend Wedding In Hawaii

Pearl Jam singer Eddie Vedder married his longtime girlfriend, model Jill McCormick, in a weekend wedding in Hawaii.The Saturday afternoon ceremony was attended by approximately 70 guests, including Oscar winner Sean Penn and White Stripes musician Jack Johnson, who are friends of the groom. The couple got engaged in December 2009 when the 45-year-old singer proposed [...]

Hungerthon 2010 Auction

TWENTY-FIFTH ANNIVERSARY WILL BE OPEN TO MORE PARTICIPANTS THAN EVER
BEFORE

Over the past 24 years, WhyHunger – the non-profit
organization founded by Harry Chapin and Bill Ayres – has made their annual November Hungerthon auction a premiere charitable
event and institution in NYC. To date, the auction has raised over $11M to put a stop to hunger and poverty
worldwide.

To celebrate Hungerthon’s 25th anniversary (Nov. 20 & Nov. 23), WhyHunger will go national opening the auction to
more participants than ever before. Past items included donations from Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band,
James Taylor, Billy Joel, Eric Clapton, B.B. King and Sting.

Stay tuned for announcements of celebrity-donated items and all other information related to the auction.


Bruce Springsteen: Darkness On The Edge of Town Box Set

MASSIVE EXAMINATION OF LANDMARK ALBUM ARRIVES IN NOVEMBER

Columbia Records will release Bruce Springsteen‘s The Promise: The Darkness on the Edge of Town Story on November 16. The Deluxe Package comprises over six hours of film and more than two hours of audio across 3 CDs and 3 DVDs. The media contents are packaged within an 80-page notebook containing facsimiles of Springsteen’s original notebooks from the recording sessions, which include alternate lyrics, song ideas, recording details, and personal notes in addition to a new essay by Springsteen and never-before-seen photographs. The Promise: The Darkness on the Edge of Town Story will additionally be released as a 3CD/3 Blu Ray disc set. The set will also be available as The Promise, an edition which consists of only the unheard complete songs on two CDs or four LPs, along with lyrics and the new essay by Springsteen.

The previously unheard song “Save My Love” and an excerpt from the documentary are streaming here.

The Deluxe Package includes Darkness on the Edge of Town, digitally remastered for the first time.

CD 1: REMASTERED DARKNESS ON THE EDGE OF TOWN
1. Badlands
2. Adam Raised A Cain
3. Something In The Night
4. Candy’s Room
5. Racing In The Street
6. The Promised Land
7. Factory
8. Streets Of Fire
9. Prove It All Night
10. Darkness On The Edge Of Town

Darkness was my ‘samurai’ record,” Springsteen writes, “stripped to the frame and ready to rumble…But the music that got left behind was substantial.” For the first time, fans will have access to two discs containing a total of 21 previously-unreleased songs from the Darkness recording sessions, songs that, as Springsteen writes, “perhaps could have/should have been released after ‘Born To Run’ and before the collection of songs that Darkness on the Edge of Town became.”

All 21 songs have been mixed by Springsteen’s long-time collaborator Bob Clearmountain. According to long-time manager/producer Jon Landau, “There isn’t a weak card in this deck. ‘The Promise’ is simply a great listening experience.”

CD 2: THE PROMISE (DISC 1)
1. Racing In The Street (’78)
2. Gotta Get That Feeling
3. Outside Looking In
4. Someday (We’ll Be Together)
5. One Way Street
6. Because The Night
7. Wrong Side Of The Street
8. The Brokenhearted
9. Rendezvous
10. Candy’s Boy

CD 3: THE PROMISE (DISC 2)
1. Save My Love
2. Ain’t Good Enough For You
3. Fire
4. Spanish Eyes
5. It’s A Shame
6. Come On (Let’s Go Tonight)
7. Talk To Me
8. The Little Things (My Baby Does)
9. Breakaway
10. The Promise
11. City Of Night

The Deluxe Package also features “The Promise: The Making of ‘Darkness on the Edge of Town,’” a documentary directed by Grammy- and Emmy Award-winning filmmaker Thom Zimny. The ninety-minute film combines never-before-seen footage of Springsteen and the E Street Band shot between 1976 and 1978–including home rehearsals and studio sessions–with new interviews with Springsteen, E Street Band members, manager Jon Landau, former-manager Mike Appel, and others closely involved in the making of the record. Advanced word on the documentary is so strong that it was invited to debut at the prestigious Toronto Film Festival on September 14 and will make its television debut on HBO on October 7.

DVD 1: “THE PROMISE: THE MAKING OF DARKNESS ON THE EDGE OF TOWN

In addition, the set features more than four hours of live concert film from the Thrill Hill Vault, including the bootleg house cut (the footage that appeared on-screen at the concert) from a 1978 Houston show, and a 2009 performance of Darkness on the Edge of Town in its entirety from Asbury Park. The special performance in Asbury Park was shot in HD without an audience and successfully recreates the stark atmosphere of the original album.

DVD 2: DARKNESS ON THE EDGE OF TOWN (PARAMOUNT THEATER, ASBURY PARK, NJ, 2009)
1. Badlands
2. Adam Raised A Cain
3. Something In The Night
4. Candy’s Room
5. Racing In The Street
6. The Promised Land
7. Factory
8. Streets Of Fire
9. Prove It All Night
10. Darkness On The Edge Of Town

THRILL HILL VAULT (1976-1978)
1. Save My Love (Holmdel, NJ 76)
2. Candy’s Boy (Holmdel, NJ 76)
3. Something In The Night (Red Bank, NJ 76)
4. Don’t Look Back (NYC 78)
5. Ain’t Good Enough For You (NYC 78)
6. The Promise (NYC 78)
7. Candy’s Room Demo (NYC 78)
8. Badlands (Phoenix 78)
9. The Promised Land (Phoenix 78)
10. Prove It All Night (Phoenix 78)
11. Born To Run (Phoenix 78)
12. Rosalita (Come Out Tonight) (Phoenix 78)

DVD 3: HOUSTON ’78 BOOTLEG: HOUSE CUT
1. Badlands
2. Streets Of Fire
3. It’s Hard To Be A Saint In The City
4. Darkness On The Edge Of Town
5. Spirit In The Night
6. Independence Day
7. The Promised Land
8. Prove It All Night
9. Racing In The Street
10. Thunder Road
11. Jungleland
12. The Ties That Bind
13. Santa Claus Is Coming To Town
14. The Fever
15. Fire
16. Candy’s Room
17. Because The Night
18. Point Blank
19. She’s The One
20. Backstreets
21. Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)
22. Born To Run
23. Detroit Medley
24. Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out
25. You Can’t Sit Down
26. Quarter To Three


Springsteen Joins Escovedo Onstage

STREET SONGS OF LOVE OUT NOW

Last Friday, Bruce
Springsteen

joined Alejandro Escovedo
onstage for a three song encore during Escovedo’s performance at The Stone Pony in Asbury Park, NJ. They
performed “Always a Friend,” “Faith,”
and “Beast of Burden.” “Faith” is a duet with Springsteen featured on the latest Escovedo album, Street
Songs of
Love
, out now. Check out a video of the duo performing the Stones classic “Beast of Burden” (first time
ever performed by The Boss) below.

Alejandro Escovedo
Tour Dates

::
Alejandro Escovedo News
::
Alejandro Escovedo
Concert
Reviews


Jon Bon Jovi Furious Over Forbes Magazine Snubs?

Jon Bon Jovi was furious he failed to make two of the famed Forbes lists for musicians, snoops for The New York Post’s Page Six Column spilled Monday.First, the Bon Jovi frontman left off the Forbes Power 100 list of the world’s most powerful celebrities –- lead by Oprah Winfrey — in June. Then just [...]

U2 ‘World’s Highest-Earning Band’

Irish rock band U2 has been named the highest-earning band in the world. According to Forbes.com, they are estimated to have made 84.9 million pounds, including ticket and merchandise sales and a steady-selling back catalogue, the Telegraph reported. U2 also signed a 12-year deal in March 2008 with Live Nation worth an estimated 50 million [...]

The Avett Brothers Live CD/DVD New Video & Tour Dates

LIVE, VOLUME 3 OUT OCTOBER 5; “HEAD FULL OF DOUBT/ROAD FULL OF PROMISE” VIDEO
PREMIERES TODAY


The Avett Brothers

American/Columbia recording artists The Avett Brothers will release Live, Volume 3 on CD and DVD on
October 5, 2010. This electric performance was recorded on August 8, 2009 at Bojangles Coliseum in Charlotte, NC.
A special thrill for the band after seeing artists like Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band, Queen and Bob Dylan grace this same stage.
Live, Volume 3 will feature material culled from their decade-long career including their most recent,
critically acclaimed album I and Love and You. Live, Volume 3 showcases the amazing live
performances
that have helped The Avett Brothers build a legion of loyal fans; growing exponentially with each release,
performance and appearance. Live, Volume 3 is available for pre-
order at www.theavettbrothers.com/us/livevol3

A new video for “Head Full of Doubt/Road Full of Promise” premiered on NPR Music’s All Songs Considered blog (www.npr.org/allsongs) today. Comprised of artwork
painted by Jason Ryan Mitchum and inspired by notable modern artists such as Phillipe Halsman and William
Kentridge (who just put on a major show at the Museum of Modern Art in New York), the video displays the
importance of fine art in The Avett Brothers’ work, furthermore demonstrated by Scott Avett‘s burgeoning
art career. His own original artwork, “Julianne in Vain”, served as the cover art for The Avett Brothers’ 2009
American/Columbia release, I and Love and You.

The Avett Brothers continue to tour in support of I and Love and You with notable headlining performances
at New York’s famed Radio City Music Hall, Los Angeles’ Nokia Theatre and culminating with two nights at
Nashville’s historic Ryman Auditorium (see below for full itinerary).

The Avett Brothers on tour:

7/17 Portland, OR Edgefield
7/18 Seattle, WA Paramount, Theatre
7/20 Spokane, WA Bing Crosby Theatre
7/22 Calgary, AB Folk Fest
7/24 Detroit, MI The Fillmore
7/25 Louisville, KY Hullabalou Music Fest.
7/31 Bristow, VA Jiffy Lube Live (formerly Nissan Pavilion) **
8/1 Newport, RI Newport Folk Festival
8/11 Bethlehem, PA Musikfest

8/13 Cuyahoga Falls OH Blossom Music Center **
8/14 Tinley Park, IL First Midwest Bank Amph**
8/15 Noblesville IN Verizon Wireless Amph**
8/19 Myrtle Beach, SC House of Blues
8/20 Myrtle Beach, SC House of Blues
8/21 Myrtle Beach, SC House of Blues
8/28 Quincy, WA The Gorge **

9/2 Las Vegas, NV Silverton Casino
9/3 Park City, UT Deer Valley Ski Resort
9/4 Morrison, CO Red Rocks Amphitheater
9/10 Atlanta, GA Chastain Park Amp

9/24 St. Louis, MO The Pageant
9/25 Kansas City, MO Crossroads KC
9/26 Oklahoma City, OK Bricktown Events Center
10/1 Los Angeles, CA Nokia Theatre
10/3 San Francisco, CA Hardly Strictly Bluegrass
10/8 Raleigh, NC Time Warner Cable Music Pavilion

10/13 New York, NY Radio City Music Hall
10/14 Boston, MA House of Blues
10/29 Nashville, TN Ryman Auditorium
10/30 Nashville, TN Ryman Auditorium

The Avett Brothers
Tour Dates

::
The Avett Brothers News ::
The Avett Brothers
Concert
Reviews


Evening Crunch Crumbs: Bruce Springsteen Gets Ellis Island Award; Archie Comics Introduces First Gay Character; 7-Eleven Beer?

-The Tribeca Film Festival opened in Manhattan on Wednesday night with the world premiere of Shrek Forever Ever, the fourth and final film in the Shrek film franchise….. -A new Hitler Parody…. -Ellis Island awarded “The Boss” Bruce Springsteen” with a Heritage Award on Thursday….. -Rebbie Jackson – AKA “The Normal Jackson” — is going on tour! -Madonna shoots [...]

Bruce Springsteen: Live DVD

COLUMBIA RECORDS TO RELEASE BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN & THE E STREET BAND’S
LONDON CALLING: LIVE
IN HYDE PARK
CONCERT FILM ON JUNE 22
RELEASE MARKS FIRST SPRINGSTEEN OUTDOOR CONCERT FILM AND
FIRST FROM A FESTIVAL SETTING

Bruce Springsteen

On June 22, Columbia Records will release Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band‘s London Calling: Live In Hyde
Park
concert film on one Blu-Ray disc and as a two-DVD set. Captured in London at the Hard Rock
Calling Festival
on June 28, 2009 in HD, the 163-minute film documents 26 tracks of live Springsteen that
begin in daylight and progress through a gorgeous sunset into night.

The setlist spans from the Born To Run-era to Working On a Dream and includes rare covers such
as The Clash‘s “London Calling,” Jimmy Cliff‘s “Trapped,” The Young
Rascals’ “Good Lovin’,” and Eddie Floyd’s “Raise Your Hand.” Springsteen also performs fan favorite “Hard Times
(Come Again No More),” written by Stephen Foster in 1854. Brian Fallon from The Gaslight Anthem joins the band as a guest vocalist on Springsteen’s own “No Surrender.”

LONDON CALLING – LIVE IN HYDE PARK:
1. London Calling
2. Badlands
3. Night
4. She’s The One
5. Outlaw Pete
6. Out In The Street
7. Working On A Dream
8. Seeds
9. Johnny 99
10. Youngstown
11. Good Lovin’
12. Bobby Jean
13. Trapped
14. No Surrender
15. Waiting On A Sunny Day
16. Promised Land
17. Racing In The Street
18. Radio Nowhere
19. Lonesome Day
20. The Rising
21. Born To Run

22. Hard Times (Come Again No More)
23. Jungleland
24. American Land
25. Glory Days
26. Dancing In The Dark
27. Music under end credit sequence: Raise Your Hand

BONUS MATERIAL:

The River (Glastonbury Festival, 2009)
Wrecking Ball (Giants Stadium, 2009)

Click here for cover art.

Bruce Springsteen Tour Dates ::
Bruce Springsteen News :: Bruce Springsteen Concert Reviews