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Posts Tagged ‘chuck’

Larry Hagman & The Original Ewings Join Josh Henderson Jordana Brewster In “Dallas” Reboot

In news that will have classic TV fans checking their calendars to be sure we haven’t taken a trip back to 1988, The Original Ewings are headed back to Southfork. Larry Hagman, Patrick Duffy, and Linda Gray –- have signed on to appear in the pilot for TNT’s upcoming reboot of the pioneering primetime soap [...]

Evening Crunch Crumbs: Girl Scouts Selling Fewer Cookies This Year; “The Geezer Bandit” On The Loose In California; Russell Brand-Chris Brown “SNL” Debut

-Some brands of Girl Scout Cookies are being discontinued. God, please don’t take our Samoas! -The Berenstain Bears are 50… -Corey Feldman says Corey Haim was omitted from The Screen Actor Guild Awards “In Memoriam” tribute. -According to DeadlineHollywood: Cameron Diaz is attached to star with Colin Firth in The Coen Brothers’ film Gambit…. -The [...]

Chuck Berry Collapses Onstage in Chicago

GET WELL SOON, CHUCK


Chuck Berry

Rock N’ Roll legend Chuck
Berry
collapsed onstage during a packed New Year’s Day performance at the Congress Theatre in
Chicago.

According to Rolling Stone, Berry was an hour into his set when he
slumped over his keyboard, saying “I’m struggling,” before venue staff members ushered him offstage for medical
attention. He returned 15 minutes later and attempted to tune his guitar, only to be escorted back offstage to be
examined by paramedics.

A review of the performance at Rolling Stone reports that he returned yet again, but this time the 84 year old Berry
relented and ended the show, saying, “Ladies and gentlemen, I’ve been trying to dig myself out of this hole that I’m
in. If I’m living next New Year’s, I’m gonna walk on this stage and do a whole new show. I want to apologize.”

Pollstar reports
that Berry’s agent, Dick Alen, is blaming the events in Chicago on exhaustion. He said Berry
was feeling “tired but good,” and heading home to rest in the St. Louis area. The New Year’s
Day gig was Berry’s third in two days. He played two shows on New Year’s Eve the night before at B.B. King Blues
Club in New York City.

Chuck Berry is scheduled to perform again on January. 19 at Blueberry Hill in St. Louis, MO, where he performs a
monthly set.

Chuck Berry
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“Chuck” Star Yvonne Strahovski PETA Ad Campaign

Yvonne Strahovski, who stars on NBC’s spy hit Chuck, has teamed up with animal rights group People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA). The holiday season is here, and next to electronics and fugly ties for dad, our fine furry and feathered friends often find themselves atop a many of Gift Wish List. This [...]

Evening Crunch Crumbs: Aretha Franklin Cancer Update: Idiot Changes Name To Captain Awesome; Beyonce Spends Bank For Jay’s B-Day

-Even as almost all major media outlets report that Aretha Franklin is battling some kind of cancer, two of Franklin’s closest relatives tell the Detroit Free Press that the legendary singer with a voice that’s been an American treasure for almost a half century is doing well as she recovers from an undisclosed medical procedure [...]

“Real World” Alum Jamie Chung Cast In “The Hangover 2″

And while we’re on the subject of Real World…..Former Real World: San Diego reality star Jamie Chung is adding a role in The Hangover 2 to her budding resume, The Hollywood Reporter has learned. The Hangover 2 finds stars Bradley Cooper, Zach Galifianakis, Ed Helms, and Justin Bartha back together on a trip to Thailand. [...]

Penn Badgley Bored of Gossip Girl

At the Hennessy Artistry concert at Cipriani Wall Street, Badgley (Gossip Girl’s Dan) revealed to the New York Post that work on gossip girl has become rather “routine”: “It’s the fourth season [of Gossip Girl]. It’s become routine.” He added that he’s “not friends” with Jessica Szohr or Ed Westwick: “I mean, we don’t double [...]

15 Stars Swimming Laps in the Celeb Death Pool

Like infants set loose on a floor of broken glass, anti-freeze and exposed outlets, they often live on the edge of death by stupidity and substance abuse. Be it drugs, alcohol, excessive plastic surgery or other such heinously unnatural things as old age, some have been scooting closer than others.

“Gossip Girl” Season 4 Trailer

Set your DVRs, Television Fans. Gossip Girl — one of the most inappropriately-delightful primetime soaps heating up the small screen today — is gearing up for a fourth season full of fabulous French inspired outfits, romantic architectural backdrops, and ridiculously good-looking French guys. (We wonder if they’re hiring extras?!) Who’s that guy on the vespa [...]

Old Spice model makes it to Hollywood after ad success

A man, who has been starring shirtless in a number of ads for Old Spice body wash, has made his mark in Hollywood after the commercials became a success. According to New York Magazine, Isaiah Mustafa signed on to appear in the comedy film ‘Horrible Bosses’ alongside Jennifer Aniston, Kevin Spacey and Colin Farrell, on [...]

Linda Hamilton Joins “Chuck” Sept. 20

Linda Hamilton — best remembered for her role as Sarah Connor in the blockbuster Terminator films — has been cast in a recurring guest role on Season 4 of the NBC spy comedy Chuck.Hamilton will join the cast as former CIA agent Mary Bartowski, the long-missing mother of Chuck (Zachary Levi) and Ellie (Sarah [...]

Nicole Richie “Chuck” Encore

The upcoming fourth season of Chuck will feature a guest appearance from wildchild-turned-mellowed out mom Nicole Richie. Richie will reprise her role as CIA operative Heather Chandler in an episode to air in October, Entertainment Weekly said Wednesday.The Chandler character will be reintroduced to the series when “a prison transfer goes awry” and she is [...]

Rachel Dratch, Former “SNL” Star, Pregnant

Former Saturday Night Live star Rachel Dratch is expecting her first child, PEOPLE Magazine snoops have confirmed.Dratch is best remembered for her seven season stint on NBC’s long-running sketch comedy series from 1999 to 2006. Rachel’s other acting credits include guest spots on TV’s Ugly Betty and 30 Rock, in appearances in the [...]

Sasquatch! Festival | 05.29-05.31 | Washington

Words by: Mike Bookey | Images by: Kyle Johnson, Christopher Nelson & Jackie
Kingsbury

Sasquatch! Music Festival:: 05.29.10-05.31.10 :: The Gorge :: George,
WA

It’s about two hours before sunset on Sunday night on the massive green hillside that is
The Gorge when someone
starts a conga line. There’s nothing particularly groundbreaking about a conga line –
except for when it, like this one, involves maybe 300 people and is performed to music
performed live by LCD Soundsystem. This is what happens on day two of the
Sasquatch! Music Festival, and it’s a moment that seems to encapsulate the indie-
heavy and mostly youthful explosion of sound and culture that’s been taking place on the
banks of the Columbia River since 2002.


The Gorge by Christopher Nelson

So, this conga line heads up the hill and away from the main stage as LCD’s James
Murphy
continues to belt out “I Can Change,” just one of the excellently danceable
numbers from LCD’s recently released disc, This Is Happening, only to return, its
members – many of them with faces painted neon and feathers in their hair, the chosen
party uniform of the weekend – clapping in rhythm above their heads and coming to a stop
along the main concourse. Thousands of people join in, waving their hands, stripping down
to underwear, and most noticeably, dancing as if Betty White’s life depended on it. And
that, for the most part was Sasquatch.


Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros by Kyle Johnson

There was plenty more to the festival, which began with fans lining up late Friday night
and early into Saturday morning to reach the fabled Gorge campgrounds – the mowed field
that for the next three days would be a spot to relax after 12-plus hours of music and a
multi-acre spread for others to create their own personal round-the-clock discos. By
early afternoon on Saturday, fans were trickling into the music venue (separate from the
campgrounds) by way of a heavy pat down gate search to arrive in time for early
performances, including those by Seattle hip hop innovators Shabazz Palaces on the main stage and the
folk-driven grooves of Mumford & Sons on the secondary Bigfoot Stage.

As the crowds grew and the nine-dollar beers flowed, Edward Sharpe & the
Magnetic Zeros
took the Bigfoot Stage and drew a sizeable hoard of curious
onlookers who soon became fans of the gang of freak folk weirdos and their dynamic
namesake leader. By the time they got to their hit, “Home,” the place was bouncing,
making for the first big moment of the festival.


The Hold Steady by Christopher Nelson

With the sun setting, The Hold Steady jogged onto the Bigfoot Stage, with bespectacled,
well-groomed front man Craig Finn looking more like someone late for his kid’s
soccer game than the leader of one of most party-friendly rock bands on the touring
circuit. The band delivered a set full of fan favorites like “Chips Ahoy,” but also some
cuts from the new Heaven is Whenever album. Crowds soon gravitated toward the main
stage, where Vampire Weekend was about to go on. Ezra Koenig‘s overly
emotive face blown up on the massive vertical video screen may have been frightening, but
hits like “Oxford Comma” got feet stomping and hands waving en masse.

Closing out the night, as they have at so many festivals over the years, was My Morning
Jacket
, who came out amidst darkness and cranked out a wall of feedback before the
lights came up enough to reveal Jim James in what appeared to be skeleton moon
boots playing the intro to “One Big Holiday.” By the time MMJ closed down the stage,
they’d jumped through their catalogue, playing a reverb-drenched “Off the Record” and a
crowd-pleasing “I’m Amazed” before sending fans off to chill/party/build a teepee in the
campground, or check out a wildly lit set from party purveyor Deadmau5.


Jim James of My Morning Jacket by Kyle Johnson

By noon on Sunday, Sasquatch! was shifting back into gear with early sets from Langhorne Slim, Midlake and Local Natives, to
name a few. One of the youngest bands on the lineup, Avi Buffalo
dished out an impressive set of quirky folk-inspired, Fleet Foxes-ish pop rock on the
smaller Yeti Stage, playing their breakout song “What’s In It For” to an appreciate and
equally young audience. From there, it was a sprint – Sasquatch’s close stage setup
allows for such act-to-act darting – to catch the end of Kid Cudi‘s super-
charged hip hop, and then a fill-in set by the bombastic and excellently named indie
rockers of Mt. St.
Helens Vietnam Band
before settling down at the main stage to see the end of Tegan & Sara and
prepare for the aforementioned LCD Soundsystem extravaganza.

Long after the conga line had dissipated, Pavement – a band
many at the festival had come specifically to see – took the stage and announced that it
was Stephen Malkmus‘ birthday, then said something about how much champagne LCD had
backstage. The beginning of the set was full of screwups, but “Cut Your Hair” proved
excellently nostalgic, and also, who cares if Pavement sounds sloppy? They’re supposed to
be sloppy – they’ve made an awesome career out of it.


Pavement by Kyle Johnson

From there it was over to the Bigfoot Stage to settle in for Public Enemy as
night fell and a few sprinkles dripped down. Public Enemy eventually came on stage,
complete with military escorts and busted into “911 Is a Joke” with Chuck D having
hardly lost a step and Flava Flav, well, being Flava Flav.

The night finished with Massive Attack, who rolled out their patented trip-hop stylings,
complete with a ridiculously huge screen behind them that listed one digital number after
another – things like the number of deaths that resulted from Hurricane Katrina and the
national debt. Intense? Absolutely. When that concluded it was either off to the late-
night Booka
Shade
set or off to the campgrounds to sleepÂ…or make announcements on megaphones
all night.

Monday was almost completely void of the last day-of-the-festival sort of vibe that often
shadows over big events like this. Sure, there were some indications that the fun was
ending, like the two college-aged girls who walked through the festival with a sign that
read: Our ride lost his mind on acid. We need a ride back to Eugene, Oregon.
Yikes. There was still fun to be had on Monday, which began with soulful sets from The Heavy and
smooth talking cheeseball-in-a-suit Mayer Hawthorne
on the main stage. Then, there was a dance rock show from Phantogram on the
Yeti Stage right before the dusty, dirty, bloody Southern rock of Drive-By
Truckers
, who seemed like they might end up proving out of place amidst the hipsters,
but were appreciated in the end as Patterson Hood‘s growl echoed down the canyon
walls.


Band of Horses by Jackie Kingsbury

Dr. Dog
proved that their sound isn’t relegated to Beach Boys-esque harmonies by turning plenty of
their numbers into high-flying, loud-as-hell rockers, even though most of the festival was
across the hill dancing to Passion Pit. With the day wearing on and time running out on the
festival, She & Him’s Zooey Deschanel ran onto the stage and wasted no time busting
out plenty of the band’s sunshiney pop numbers, with M. Ward looking
cool (as always) in his shades and nonchalant demeanor. The main stage stayed packed for
the rest of the night, with Band of Horses playing in their typical booming style, followed
closely by MGMT‘s dance-your-ass-off jamboree.

Ween closed
things down in their typical zany, impossibly eclectic style, and then Sasquatch was over
- except in the campgrounds, where there was still at least eight hours of partying and
megaphone announcements to be found. And hopefully those two girls made it back to
Eugene. We may never know.

JamBase | Bigfootin’
Go See Live Music!


The Gorge by Christopher Nelson


Planning and Scheduling Software Making the Right Choice Posted By : Chuck Ciarlo

Approximately 70 percent of a call centers total budget is spent on staffing. Thats a staggering statistic, but smart call center managers are drastically reducing those staffing costs by implementing planning and scheduling software solutions. Planning and scheduling software completely automates the complex tasks of forecasting and scheduling, creating an efficient, streamlined call center that is laser-focused on meeting service levels and exceeding customer satisfaction.

Staff Scheduling Software Reduces Costs and Makes Spreadsheets Obsolete Posted By : Chuck Ciaelo

Implementing staff scheduling software is the first move smart call center managers make when they want to reduce costs, improve productivity, and increase service levels. Unlike using spreadsheets, staff scheduling software automates the entire forecasting and scheduling process to give call center managers more flexibility and control.

Daniel Radcliffe Cast In Broadway Musical; Steven Seagal Sexually Harassed Jenny McCarthy; Eminem In “Recovery” & Other Crunch Crumbs

-Can you believe its been 20 years since the premiere of In Living Color? Here’s one of my favorite clips from the Wayans-produced sketch show, which helped launch the careers of Jim Carrey, Jamie Foxx, and former “Flyy Girls” Carrie Ann Inaba, Rosie Perez. and Jennifer Lopez. Oh, here’s another funny one!-Daniel Radcliffe will make [...]

Jeremić on two-day visit to Jamaica

Serbian Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremić will embark on a two-day bilateral visit to Jamaica this Monday, the MFA announced. Jeremić will confer with Jamaican Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade Kenneth Baugh and Speaker of the House of Representatives Delroy Chuck.

Snoe.down Photos & Review | 03.26-03.28 | VT

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”0″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=10″);}); moe. | Snoe.down 2010 | Rutland, VT moe. celebrates Snoe.down 2010 in Rutland, VT with Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings, The Bridge, Moonalice, The McLovins and more… View Photos

Words by: Bill Clifford | Images by: Rob Chapman

Snoe.down :: 03.26.10-03.28.10 :: Killington Resort & Spartan Arena :: Rutland, VT


Sharon Jones and The Dap-Kings

Live music fans celebrated the arrival of spring in New England with the return of Snoe.down, a winter sports and music festival, hosted by
moe., at Killington Ski Resort. A glorious weekend full of inspiring artist and the wonders of nature, for many this was the start of festival season.

Friday, March 26

The Bridge was the second act to perform on Friday at Bear Mountain. This mid-Atlantic band has been garnering quite a following over the last several years at festivals large and small, and I come away more impressed with each performance. Guitarist and lead singer Chris Jacobs has a sultry, honeyed voice that carries some of Lowell George’s soul. Fans were getting down to the New Orleans boogie of “Old White Lightning 95,” led by Mark Brown‘s ivory tickling. And the Southern jazz of “Bury My Bones In Baltimore” featured the horn of Patrick Rainey. Once again, The Bridge proved to be one of the most alluring yet under appreciated bands on the circuit.

Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings were the opening act at Spartan Arena on Friday night and played to a thin crowd that slowly sauntered in. The Dap-Kings, an eight-piece ensemble, took the stage sans Jones and warmed up the crowd with some instrumentals. But the show really got hot when Jones, a stout, fiery performer, lit up the stage. She promenaded from one wing of the stage to the other, enticing the crowd to sing along with her. When raising her powerful, gospel voice, she sang with deep emotion, writhing and contorting her body. Jones and the Dap-Kings are reviving the classic sounds of Motown and Stax recording artists, and Jones is clearly a leader of the scene.

moe. is currently celebrating its twentieth anniversary and have been performing shows filled with classic moe. songs since Halloween. Friday night’s first set was a bit by the numbers; not boring but nothing really stood out. “Mexico” made a fine opener, warming up both the crowd and the band as vocalist/guitarist Al Schnier‘s fingers raced up and down the neck of his guitar. Bassist Rob Derhak‘s pop nugget “Captain America” was played in a faster time signature than normal, but then slowed for a long, improvised segue into “Four,” a meandering dirge. The set closed with an upbeat note on “Shoot First,” featuring percussionist Jim Loughlin on MalletKat. That found its way into fan favorite “Moth,” with guitarist Chuck Garvey‘s searing notes drawing an ovation from the arena, about three quarters full.


Chuck Garvey – moe. :: 03.26 :: Snoe.down 2010

Set two had a bit more to offer the average moe. fan. The lovely ballad “Faker” began slow and mellow but picked up the tempo later, led by Garvey’s lead guitar bending notes. It then busted into a rarely played verse of the song, an upbeat, funky interlude that featured triple vocal harmonies from Garvey, Derhak and Schnier. Another bust out was their cover of James Bouchard’s “Cape Cod Girls,” played here with a slow, rumbling bass line and the cadent drumming of Vinnie Amico, which rolled right into “Water,” highlighted by Garvey’s mercurial guitar solo. As “Hector’s Pillow” bounced seamlessly into “Timmy Tucker,” the crowd sensed a set closer and began to sway and sing along in the high point of the evening. Mid-song, moe. brought the tempo to a lull, giving both the band and the fans a moment to breath, and then led back into a rousing peak by Loughlin’s MalletKat. The two-song encore of “She Sends Me” and “Spine of a Dog” was played short and sweet due to the curfew.


Saturday, March 27

I began Saturday at the K1 Lodge, with vaulted ceilings, exposed beams, stunning views of the slopes, and The McLovins onstage. The Saturday crowd was noticeably larger than the previous day, and the barroom was at standing room only capacity as the band began with “Milktoast Man.” The musical growth in this teen trio was evident immediately. “Deep Monster Trance” was announced as a new song on the band’s upcoming full-length CD, and is every bit as up and down in tempo as its title suggests. A long, improvised guitar solo from Jeff Howard, with languid notes drawn out on a whammy bar stirred the crowd. The McLovins also premiered their cover of Paul Simon’s “Diamonds on the Soles of Her Shoes,” which enticed the crowd to shake their butts and move their feet. These youngsters have come a long way in a short time.


The McLovins :: Snoe.down 2010

Over at Bear Mountain, we caught the second half of Hot Day at the Zoo. Again, the bar was wall-to-wall packed. There was an absolute, insatiable energy coming from the jamgrass quartet onstage, and I was immediately struck with the string bending of the mandolin and banjo players, as well as the group’s tight harmonies. While there was no percussion player, there was enough foot stomping and guitar slapping to make up for the lack of drums. The faster and harder this band played, the more the crowd hollered and danced along. HDATZ certainly gained more than one new fan from their performance at Snoe.down.


From the lodge it was a short walk to an outdoor stage for an afternoon performance from moe. After welcoming fans to Snoe.down, Schnier quipped, “This is fantastic. It’s a whole lot better than playing in single digits on Whiteface Mountain,” referencing a frigid outdoor performance in Lake Placid at the previous Snoe.down in 2006. Today, there was a crystal blue sky above and temps were easily in the high 60s to 70s. From my vantage point ten rows back, Chuck side, I glanced upwards towards the slope at a the surreal scene: a sea of heads bobbing and shaking, fans in t-shirts and sunglasses, skiers and boarders shredding the slopes.


Amico’s rat-a-tat-tat drumming began “St. Augustine” and immediately the horde was set in motion. On the pop nugget “OkayAlright,” Derhak could be heard laughing as he sang the words, “Smoking joints in the parking lot,” bringing its usual roar from the crowd. “Akimbo” was a rare afternoon bust out. Schnier and Garvey traded lead and melody parts before Derhak stepped up for a bass solo. Not to be outdone, Amico and Loughlin hammered at their respective kits behind it all.


moe. & family :: 03.27 :: Snoe.down 2010

Derhak drew a laugh when he noted that someone had “just wiped in the half-pipe!” With dusk settling, “Happy Hour Hero” was an obligatory choice late in the set, which segued into “Seat of my Pants.” Late in the song it seemed to take on the sound of an ’80s metal band as Schnier scratched a pick along his strings while Garvey wailed. As quick as flipping a light switch, moe. moved into “Sensory Deprivation Bank,” one of its oldest songs, to close the set. Ever the family values band, moe. invited their kids to dance to the encore, “Down Boy,” where they playfully laughed and interacted with the kids and fans.


Assembly of Dust was the opening act at Spartan Arena on Saturday night, and initially took the stage to a disappointingly sparse crowd. AOD opened with the sultry “Sinner,” one of bandleader/lead singer/songwriter Reid Genauer‘s oldest songs, going back to his days with Vermont’s Strangefolk. Lead guitarist Andy Terrell‘s dulcet harmony tones stood out on “Sinner” while the band’s three-part harmony vocals shined on “Edges” and “Telling Sue,” the latter highlighting their ’60s pop influences. “Whistle Clock” was a driving rock song with lots of room for improvisation, and Terrell’s guitar cried while the rhythm section of drummer Andy Herrick and bassist John Leccese was thunderous. AOD closed where it started: “Sometimes,” another gem from Genauer’s Strangefolk days. Again, Terrell proved himself to be a versatile sideman, going from mellow and hushed to wailing when needed. The crowd had grown since the band began and gave rousing applause as AOD left the stage.


Railroad Earth followed AOD and their set was a highlight of the weekend. Opener “Mighty River” is a lovely folk melody laced with Tim Carbone‘s eloquent violin. Like many mighty rivers, the tune has a meandering yet deliberate tempo, which flowed directly into “Like A Buddha,” which featured sweet flute interludes from Andy Goessling. The gorgeous acoustic ode to breaking down walls, “Bird in a House” was filled with sweet violin and mandolin, a lovely waltz that got feet moving, and the more straight ahead rock protest song “Warhead Boogie” kept the energy at a high. The rollicking “Long Way To Go” brought the set to a rousing close, and left fans eager to get down with some moe. Lest I forget, Railroad Earth’s new bassist, Andrew Altman was stellar the whole set. You’d have never known he was a recent addition to the band based on his playing.


moe. Sunday Brunch :: 03.28 :: Snoe.down 2010

moe. saved its best for Saturday night, beginning with “Wind It Up,” featuring Loughlin’s MalletKat fills peppered throughout. He’s one of the most talented multi-instrumentalists on the scene, but I pay special attention when he tinkers away on the MalletKat. Mid-set, the band revived its cover of The Meters‘ “Cissy Strut,” not played since 2001, sandwiched inside their own “Stranger Than Fiction,” and Derhak and Amico laid down a thick funk for Garvey’s melodious guitar flourishes. This was the highlight of the first set, which then closed with a long, improvisational excursion through “Plane Crash,” a high-energy rager that left fans exhausted but eager for set two.


From that high point forward moe. never really mellowed. The second set was an upbeat run through classic moe. beginning with “Threw It All Away.” The jaunty highway song “The Road” transitioned seamlessly into the funk-rooted “Lazurus,” where Schnier’s scorching guitar swells seemed to float through the dense din of the arena crowd. Jason Huffer‘s lights illuminated the arena coming back into “The Road,” as violet, yellow and royal blues splashed on the ceiling and walls. His lighting throughout was fantastic, but one could certainly lose themselves in the dither of colors at that point.


I heard the opening guitar and bass strains to my personal favorite moe. song and moved into the horde to get lost in “Opium.” While some may find it a dark, heavy song, I love to set myself adrift, eyes shut, on the soulful, slinky groove and mellow spaces of this particular tune. Garvey’s swirling slide guitar was a purple haze and Derhak’s deeply resonating bass and passionately bellowed vocals filled the arena. Coming down, they moved seamlessly into a carousing “32 Things” to close, drawing a cheer from the crowd happy to have something to dance to again. Up close for this jam, I took notice of the interaction between Loughlin and Amico, their heads nodding in agreement as Loughlin moved from drums to shakers to tambourines, as the set ended on an emotional high. After wishing a happy birthday to Loughlin’s dad Bill, moe. encored with a soulful rendition of Little Feat‘s “Willin,’” and then ended the evening with a rambunctious run through “New York City.”


moe. closed the weekend with a 10 a.m. brunch for V.I.P. ticket holders, though, unfortunately, this critic wasn’t privy. And despite Leroy Justice and Red Rooster both being booked on Sunday afternoon, there was a long drive to Connecticut after an exhausting but joyful weekend. moe. seems to have found a wonderful new home for Snoe.down in beautiful Central Vermont, where some of the kindest folks graciously welcomed us moe.rons.

moe. Tour Dates :: moe. News :: moe. Concert Reviews

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Anne Hathaway Adopting New Dog

Anne Hathaway is shopping for a new dog.

The Oscar-nomianted actress – who is already mom to a beloved two-year-old chocolate Labrador, Esmeralda – accompanied boyfriend Adam Schulman to Molly’s Mutts and Meows volunteer animal rescue center in West Hollywood on Saturday, where the couple checked out several pooches in need of forever homes.
Adam and [...]