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Wanda Jackson with Jack White | Los Angeles | Review | Pics

Words & Images by: L. Paul Mann

Wanda Jackson :: 01.24.11 :: El Rey Theater :: Los Angeles, CA

Wanda Jackson & Jack White by L. Paul Mann

Wanda Jackson, the Queen of Rockabilly, played a pair of sold out shows at the El Rey theater, January 23rd and 24th. The showcase concerts featured the Third Man Band, led by Jack White, in support of their new album with Jackson, The Party Ain’t Over.

From the first minute he stepped onstage, to the last moment he left, there was no question that White was the master maestro, molding the sound of the Third Man Band into a musical powerhouse. The mercurial musician has reinvented himself time and again, in a vast array of collaborations, but this new endeavor suits him perfectly, showcasing his strongest skills as a masterful and innovative lead guitarist. The immensely talented 11-piece band, featuring local drummer Joey Waronker from San Luis Obispo, Ca., and phenomenal pedal steel guitaristst Rich Gilbert, as well as a complete horn section and backup singers that Miss Jackson called her cupcakes.

But even with this impressive thundering wall of sound behind her the 73-year-old Jackson had no problem holding her own as the lead singer, living up to her legacy as the first woman to sing rock ‘n’ roll. The charismatic singer belted out country, gospel and rockabilly tunes from her more than 50 year career. Although she joked about a senior moment when she forgot a few lines of a song, there was nothing stodgy about her feisty performance or memories that she shared between songs.

“If the King of Rock can have notes then so can the Queen,” she quipped.

In fact one of her first tours was as an opening act for Elvis Presley, and the two were briefly linked romantically at the time. But Jackson does not linger very long in the past, and embraces her new mentor Jack White with equal feisty passion. Under White’s tutelage, the band has reworked many of Jackson’s songs into a more contemporary, relevant sound. Elvis was actually credited as dubbing Wanda Jackson the “First Lady of Rockabilly.” After a string of hits in the 50s and 60s, Jackson moved into country music when rockabilly fell out of favor in popular American music. In the seventies she produced another slew of hits, this time in the country and gospel worlds. But in the eighties, with the reemergence of rockabilly, Jackson began returning to her roots. In 2009, Wanda Jackson was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Then she met Jack White and a whole new chapter of her life evolved.

Wanda Jackson by L. Paul Mann

The El Rey concert featured many of the songs on her new album, with reworked hits coming from all phases of her career, as well as some classic covers. The chemistry between Jackson and White was remarkable, sort of like Hugh Hefner embracing Viagra for the first time. The tiny septuagenarian would bounce, physically and mentally, off of the tall, lanky guitar hero.

“He’s a velvet covered brick,” Jackson quipped about White. “He’s going to get his way, but he does it so sweetly.”

Then the band launched into a raunchy version of “Busted.” The classic “Fujiyama Mama” followed, her first Number One hit in Japan in 1959. The first role model of a strong, independent woman in the male dominated world of rock and roll, Jackson became an international star early in her career. Jackson’s mother was credited with developing her fashion sense, hand making her trademark white fringed, rhinestone-encrusted jackets and short skirts.

When the bad launched into Little Richard classic “Rip It Up,” she let her fringe fly while nailing the gritty lyrics. As the non-stop 75-minute set came to a close it was evident that there were three distinctive elements on display during the evening’s rock and roll frenzy: first, there was the rebirth of the rockabilly career of Wanda Jackson; second, the genius of producer and rock phenom Jack White; and finally and most importantly, there was a good old fashioned rock and roll road show, encapsulated in Wanda Jackson with The Third Man Band.

Continue reading for more pics of Wanda Jackson, Jack White and the Third Man Band…


JamBase | Howlin’ Good

Go See Live Music!


“Law & Order: Los Angeles” Cancelled?

Is it the end of the road already for Law & Order: Los Angeles? On Tuesday, NBC confirmed that it is pulling the West Coast incarnation of Dick Wolf’s groundbreaking crime procedural from the primetime network — effective next month. Uh-oh. The last time The Peacock made a move like that it was shortly before [...]

Los Lonely Boys: Rockpango

LOS LONELY BOYS CONFIRM NEW ALBUM ROCKPANGO OUT MAR 29


Los Lonely Boys

Los Lonely Boys have
confirmed the March 29 release of their new album Rockpango. The album stands as the most
personal work yet by the Grammy-winning Garza brothers–Henry, Ringo, and Jojo–who
wrote, recorded and produced it themselves.

Rockpango, which will also be available in a Deluxe
Edition
featuring three bonus songs, behind the scenes video, and a fold-out poster of the cover art, marks the first full-
length studio release of original material on the band’s own Lonely Tone imprint for Playing in Traffic Records. More
info and spring tour dates, including SXSW, to come soon.

Rockpango Tracklisting:
1. American Idle

2. Fly Away

3. Love In My Veins

4. Road To Nowhere
5. 16 Monkeys

6. Rockpango
7. Smile
8. Baby Girl

9. Change The World
10. Porn Star
11. Believe

Los Lonely Boys
Tour Dates

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Los Lonely Boys News
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Los Lonely Boys
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“Law & Order: Los Angeles” Cast Shakeup: Skeet Ulrich, Regina Hall, Megan Boone Leaving Show

Three regular cast members will leave Law & Order: Los Angeles at the end of the show’s first season as part of a series revamp, The Hollywood Reporter has learned. Series regulars Alfred Molina and Terrence Howard are expected to remain with the program, while Skeet Ulrich (Det. Rex Winters), Regina Hall (Evelyn Price), and [...]

Marc Anthony Tax Debt: J. Lo’s Salsa Singer Husband Owes $3.4 Million In Back Taxes

Inquiring minds with the Internal Revenue Service want to know where Marc Anthony’s money is. The salsa singer best known for being Jennifer Lopez’s husband is in trouble with tax officials in Nassau County, Long Island officials over back taxes they say the “I Need To Know” crooner failed to pay in 2009. New York [...]

George Lopez Los Angeles Mayor?

George Lopez to Run For LA Mayor: MyFoxLA.com From Late-Night to Mayor of Los Angeles? Funny guy George Lopez looked as serious as a bed bug outbreak as he discussed his intention of running for mayor of one of the nation’s three largest cities…in eight years, of course. “I’m going to run for… Although I [...]

Tiger Woods Scandal Finds Its Way To “Law & Order: Los Angeles”

The Law & Order franchise is teeing up its notorious Ripped-From-the-Headlines approach and aiming it squarely at shamed golfer Tiger Woods. The plot on Wednesday night’s edition of Law & Order: Los Angeles includes a philandering golf star and his club-wielding wife. When police arrive on the scene, the bleeding athlete says his spouse was [...]

Cheryl Cole ‘planning to move to Los Angeles’

Cheryl Cole 3Cheryl Cole will apparently move to Los Angeles as soon as the 6-million-pound Surrey mansion she shared with love-rat footballer Ashley is sold. The ‘Girls Aloud’ singer had also clinched a one-year 3-million-pound deal to be a judge on the US version of the X Factor. American dancer Derek Hough’s stepdad Aaron Nelson recalled how [...]

Watch Kobe Bryant and the Los Angeles Lakers Online For Free Posted By : Paddy Chang

Live Internet TV | Online TV technology allows you to watch over 4,500 HD channels right on your PC.

FYF Fest | Los Angeles | Pics

Images by: Scott Dudelson

FYF Fest :: 09.04.10 :: Los Angeles State Historic Park :: Los Angeles, CA

With a $30 ticket price and classic punks 7 Seconds & Circle Jerks alongside indie kings like Panda Bear, The Rapture and Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti, the hipper-than-you’ll-ever-be Southern California festival gathered an even more impressive than usual assortment into a single day this year.

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Rock The Bells | Los Angeles | Pics

Images by: Scott Dudelson

Rock The Bells :: 08.21.10 :: NOS Events Center :: San Bernadino, CA

The 2010 installment of the annual hip hop traveling circus Rock The Bells might have been the most ambitious yet, with bonafide all-stars like Wu-Tang Clan, Rakim, KRS-One, A Tribe Called Quest, Snoop Dogg and more recreating legendary albums in their entirety in four cities around the U.S. Even notorious recluse Lauryn Hill came out to play in the sunshine. And on the side stage underground faves Jedi Mind Tricks, Supernatural and rockin’ standouts Street Sweeper Social Club killed it for smaller crowds. Lucky for us SoCal photographer Scott Dudelson was on the scene for this year’s Bells opener.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”6″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=128″);}); 8/21/10 – Rock The Bells @ NOS Event Center (San Bernadino, CA) View Photos

JamBase | City of the Angels
Go See Live Music!


Primus to Play Frizzle Fry in Los Angeles

FRIZZLE FRY PERFORMANCE SEPTEMBER 16 IN LOS ANGELES


Frizzle Fry

As part of a special two night run at Club Nokia in LA on September 16 and 17, Primus has decided to play Frizzle
Fry
in its entirety on Thursday and do a completely different show on Friday night. Frizzle Fry was
released 20 years ago in 1990.

Primus
Tour Dates

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Primus
Concert
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Los Lonely Boys: Acoustic Live Album

NEW ALBUM CAPTURES MOMENTS FROM THE “ACOUSTIC BROTHERHOOD” TOUR


Los Lonely Boys

On September 28, Grammy-winners Los Lonely Boys will release Keep On Giving: Acoustic Live!. The
high-energy album captures the most inspired moments from the multi-platinum band’s recent “Acoustic
Brotherhood” tour, including collaborations with fellow Texans Alejandro Escovedo and Carrie
Rodriguez.

The band will embark on a U.S. tour this fall. See below for complete dates.

TRACKLIST:

1. Senorita

2. Staying With Me

3. Oye Mamacita

4. Hollywood
5. Evil Ways
6. Friday Night
7. More Than Love
8. Loving You Always
9. Crazy Dream

10. She Came In Through The Bathroom Window
11. Man To Beat
12. Beast Of Burden w/ Alejandro Escovedo and Carrie Rodriguez
13. Heaven w/ Alejandro Escovedo and Carrie Rodriguez
Digital Bonus: I’m A Man

FALL TOUR DATES:

Sept 17 – Lake Jackson, TX @ The Clarion @ Brazosport College

Sept 30 – Lubbock, TX @ South Plains Fairgrounds
Oct 3 – Santa Fe, NM @ Buffalo Thunder Resort & Casino
Oct 15 – Youngstown, OH @ Stambaugh Auditorium
Oct 16 – Marion, OH @ Palace, Theatre
Oct 17 – Schaumburg, IL @ Prairie Cente for the Arts

Oct 19 – Burgettstown, PA @ Pepsi-Cola Roadhouse
Oct 21 – Ridgefield, CT @ Ridgefield Playhouse
Oct 22 – Lebanon, NH @ Lebanon Opera House
Oct 23 – Bethel, NY @ Bethel Woods Center for the Arts
Oct 24 – Harrisburg, PA @ The Forum Auditorium
Nov 26 – Dallas, TX @ Granada Theater

Nov 27 – Houston, TX @ House of Blues Houston

Los Lonely Boys
Tour Dates

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Los Lonely Boys News
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Reviews


Los Lobos: Burn It Down

By: Dennis Cook

Los Lobos 2010 by Drew Reynolds

Press play on Tin Can Trust (released August 3 on Shout! Factory), the 13th studio album from Los Angeles-based titans Los Lobos, and one would never guess it was the output of a group that’s been chugging away for 36 years and counting. An atmosphere of complete, engaged excitement permeates the 11 new tracks, which are both instantly identifiable as Los Lobos and sumptuously different in hard to pinpoint ways. This band’s creative gusto is slippery like that; a patient process that’s still evolving after nearly four decades, but still inescapably forward rolling at all times. Tin Can Trust ranks as one of their best and offers proof of their continued vibrant relevance.

There’s a subtle trust built with their dedicated fan base, many of whom have been on this ride nearly as long as David Hidalgo (vocals, guitar, violin, accordion), Louie Perez (guitar, drums, vocals), Cesar Rosas (guitar, vocals), Conrad Lozano (bass, vocals) and “new guy” Steve Berlin (keys, saxophones), who joined in 1984. In every regard, these guys are top-notch players with nearly unerring instincts, and they possess one of the under-sung songwriting teams of the past 25 years in Hidalgo/Perez. Like kindred spirits the Grateful Dead, Los Lobos hungrily and uniquely melds diverse American musical elements, creating a sound that draws from the blues, country, classic rock, Latin, soul and experimental fields without being stuck in any of them – thus truly making rock ‘n’ roll live up to its original, expansive, rules shattering intentions.

Steve Berlin sat down with us to discuss their latest offering, finally nailing the Dead’s “West L.A. Fadeaway,” the freedom at the core of the band and more.

JamBase: What I really like about Tin Can Trust is there’s a sustained energy. It feels like an album, which is becoming less the norm. Often it’s a song here, a song there, digested in bits through downloads. In general, Los Lobos has always made albums that hang together as a collection or moment in time.

Steve Berlin: We’re album guys. God knows we spent every minute of our formative years listening to records and appreciating it that way. So, when it came time to make our own I couldn’t imagine we’d think to do it any differently. It’s built in to us. But it is a lost art. Nobody seems to give a shit about it anymore.

What I notice, too, is people import things into the iTunes or MP3 library and [albums] go in backwards, so the last song plays first and you’re literally listening to it in the exaxt OPPOSITE order than the artist intended. I stress out a lot over it, and the guys in my band hear about it a lot, but I’m glad some people appreciate the effort [to make albums] because sometimes it feels like you’re yelling into a void.

JamBase: I’m always struck by the sonic curiosity of Los Lobos’ studio work. You guys seem interested in keeping sound alive and engaged. You definitely use the studio as another member of the band.

Steve Berlin: We have our own little quirks we’ve discovered over the years that make us happy [laughs]. There’s a certain quality, though this [new] record sounds different to me; it doesn’t sound like anything we’ve done, period, really. It’s not like we set out to do anything differently but I can’t quite pinpoint or understand yet what exactly that difference is.

I have the same sense, though pinning it down in words is a much more slippery prospect. It reminds me of my initial reaction when Kiko came out, and I went, “Wow, this is unique!”

That one we knew was unique. We knew it as we were doing it as it came together in this really interesting way. These days, we spend zero time planning. We just pick a day on the calendar and all show up at the studio. So there was no sense of overarching mission. It was just really time to make a new album and we pushed it to the 11th hour, 59th minute, as we usually do [laughs]. So, we just went after it and the whole record came together. Always, always, always, up until the minute it’s actually done, I done have any sense of it being “really there.” We’re always sweating it to the last possible second.

new album

And in some cases, like this one and the last one [The Town and the City (2006)], we get to the end and realize there’s a track or a vibe missing, something we need to address. With this one, we really fell in love with the room at this studio in East L.A. that had no-frills whatsoever. A ping-pong table was our dining area, and it’s a really funky place but it sounded great. There wasn’t anything to do but work in there – no Xboxes or internet – so it kept everybody’s brain engaged. So, listening back to it, we had three other songs in the oven, but none of them were recorded live – they were basically done from David’s demos, which is one of the things that make us sound the way we sound. Whenever we use one of David’s demos it has a very identifiable quality to it. He uses some really ancient technology to get his sounds. You can hear it on “On Main Street,” “Do The Murray” and “27 Spanishes” on this one as way of illustration. So, we had 2 or 3 of those in various states of readiness but the feeling was, as cool as these were – and some of them were extremely cool – we really wanted to get one more track that captured that room. And that’s where “The Lady and The Rose” came from, and it’s one of my favorite songs on the record.

The whole last stretch on Tin Can Trust from “West L.A. Fadeaway” down just glides and that song slots in perfectly.

It’s a really cool one, and with that one it really was 11th hour, 59th minute. I think we had to hand it in on a Tuesday and it was Friday that we decided to write a song, record it, overdub and mix it by the following Tuesday. But we did it! And the exact same thing happened on the last record with “The Road To Gila Bend” and “Free Up,” both of which were really important to that record. The craziest one ever was for Good Morning Aztlán, which didn’t have that [title track] on it. It was Friday morning of the last week and it had to be handed in that afternoon or the next day. That was crazy but David said, “I’ve got something.” It was Friday in L.A. on a holiday weekend, I thought it probably wasn’t going to happen but called around to see. Lo and behold, the studio was available and [drummer] Pete Thomas was available. All these miraculous things came together and the whole track went from conception to completion in about four hours. And by inception I mean a sketchy chord sequence that became a finished track.

It’s cool that veterans like you still compose on-the-fly like that.

It’s not the way to do it! It’s stupid [laughs]! I’m not sure it would have been any better if we’d had the luxury of time, but my point is there’s always something that seals the deal at the very end of every record.

Has that become a superstition in the band?

I really wasn’t aware of it until I sat down and started thinking about it today.

Sorry to stir that up! But the missing ingredient that arrives at the final moments of creation has a long tradition in music and art in general. It’s often the final catalyst to make a work really live.

I think this new record shows a sense of hope amid the ruins. That’s probably little too heavy, but hope amongst the current economic state, at least. The whole notion of “Tin Can Trust” is you got nothing but love to give.

I’ve always had the sense of Los Lobos as a working band. Other than that one brief period during La Bamba, the sense has been of a band putting their shoulder into it to make a living and doing what they want creatively.

You certainly have that right! It’s what we do. A real let’s-go-do-it work ethic; no one has to tell us to work. It’s a fairly rare trait. Once a lot of bands get a record deal I think it’s not hard work. It shouldn’t be a death march but I don’t there’s anything wrong with showing it’s a process born of workmanship. We have a lot of really amazing moments where we get a magical first take, but they were set up by hours & hours of work. We got that first take because we did a lot of thinking and preparation, at least psychically, to get us to that place.

You guys have managed to go your own way for an awfully long time. In fact, I don’t think Los Lobos has ever played to any sensibilities outside the band, but ever more so as the years have piled up.

Los Lobos 2010 by Drew Reynolds

Part of what you’ve said is true. We certainly appreciate the people who support us, but we’re not really thinking about whether the fans will support an idea or song, and I’ve worked with bands for whom that’s all-day work, where each session is full of, “My fans won’t understand this or why I’m doing it” or “This is too crazy for my fans.” Sheesh, give ‘em a break. Just be an artist for god’s sake. They aren’t going to kill you or throw you back just because they don’t like you putting a fuzz-box on your voice. Some people get very protective of what they think their fans will or won’t accept, and we’ve always assumed – literally assumed – that wherever we wanted to go a healthy portion, if not all, of our fans will like to go there, too, because that’s where we wanted to go.

Sure. A lot of my favorite Los Lobos stuff is the weird corners of the catalogue. I have an enduring fondness for the strangest cuts on Colossal Head. I like when Los Lobos just opens the box of mayhem.

So do we [laughs]. I think that comes from the sense that people won’t flip out on us or call us crazy. We care but at the same time we think people will take our lead and let us go wherever our muse thinks it’s a good idea to go.

There’s little comfort points, too. You guys have become known as interpreters of the Grateful Dead catalog. You choose your points well, like the version of “West L.A. Fadeaway” on the new album, which is a song that suits you well.

Honestly, we’re fans but I have friends that are completely obsessed. They can hear three-bars and know what show it is. It’s amazing, that level of respect, but we’re not obsessives. Our homage is as much about our friendship with them, especially Jerry, as much as being fans of the band. And as we get on, we see in the Dead where we’d love to be – a band that can make quality music year after year and never look back. It ain’t easy. So, the respect for us is really profound, and we wanted to do ["West L.A."] for them and the fans, since we obviously share quite a few. We’d trying playing it for a long time and really screwed it up like you wouldn’t believe [laughs]. I think it was Cesar that said, “Why don’t we actually learn the song, if for no other reason that whenever we play it we won’t keep fucking it up?” We thought that was a pretty sound strategy.

Los Lobos seems to have fun when you tackle other people’s material, and that’s tangible to listeners.

We don’t feel any compelling reason to do it the same way they did it, like a Richard Thompson or Tom Waits, which is the best it’ll ever be. But, if there’s a song that inspires us – and again, it’s as much about friendship as it is anything else – we’ll give it a try. They’re our pals, and when the opportunity comes up to do one of these things we say, “Sure!” and then we take it apart and put our own spin on it. We wouldn’t try to do anybody’s song, friend or not, and have it sound like them. We want it to sound like us. That’s what we’re here for. That’s what it ought to be.

That’d be a tremendous traveling caravan – you guys, Richard Thompson and Tom Waits – like a modern day version of Dylan’s Rolling Thunder Revue.

Yeah, that’d be fun. I’d shell out a few bucks for that.

What do you think has contributed to Los Lobos’ longevity? You’ve been there for about 26 years and everybody else has been there since the early seventies.

Number one, we don’t think about it all that much. There’s not like a calendar with pages flying off of it. I think it harkens back to not being kept in one place by anything – fans, labels, managers – none of the stuff that halts your artistic expansion. There’s never been a time when we felt we had to do something we didn’t want to do. That helps a lot because you’re never trapped by anything, which promotes artistic growth. And part of it is the fact that we look at it as a really cool job and we like going after it. There’s not anything we’d rather be doing or doing it any different way.

And the other component would be that when we do and do it right it sounds really good. It’s really filling and fulfilling and gives you hope that the next show, next album or next track will be just as thrilling. Sometimes you get there, sometimes you don’t but I saw the Dead enough to see those nights happen. I’m not saying we’re the Dead or anything like it, but there’s a place you can get to after this much time that’s above and beyond any place you’d get to by the simple sum of the parts.

Los Lobos Tour Dates :: Los Lobos News :: Los Lobos Concert Reviews


LAPD Concerned About Google Apps

The end of last month marked the deadline that Google had been given to fully implement Google Apps into the city of Los Angeles’ various departments. However, because Google has since missed the deadline, it may end up costing an additional $135,000 to complete the upgrade. In turn, Google may have to reimburse the city [...]

Los Lobos: New Album & Tour Dates

TIN CAN TRUST OUT AUGUST 3; CD RELEASE PARTY AT NEW YORK CITY’S BOWERY BALLROOM
STREAMED ON WFUV; LOS LOBOS ON TOUR THROUGHOUT THE U.S. THIS SUMMER AND FALL


Los Lobos

The Grammy-winning East L.A. band celebrates the release of Tin Can Trust with a very special
performance at New York City’s Bowery Ballroom on August 3 (full show details and complete Summer tour schedule
are listed below). WFUV Public Radio will be on site in NYC to record the show and stream back in its entirety at a
later date. In the meantime, get a sneak listen of the band’s new material: download a free track from the album at
www.LosLobosTinCanTrust.com.

The 11 tracks on Tin Can Trust offer the perfect balance of Los Lobos’ parts: the band’s lineup has
remained uninterrupted since 1984, when saxophonist/keyboardist Steve Berlin joined original members
Louie Perez (guitar, drums, vocals), David Hidalgo (guitar, violin, accordion, percussion, vocals),
Cesar Rosas (guitar, vocals) and Conrad Lozano (bass, vocals), each of whom had been there
since the beginning in 1973.

Seven songs on the album are distinguished and genius Hidalgo-Perez collaborations, including the opening track
“I’ll Burn It Down,” which features a guest vocal harmony from blues-rocker Susan Tedeschi. Three others were
written in whole or in part by Rosas – including the album’s two Spanish-language numbers: the cumbia “Yo Canto”
and the norteño “Mujer Ingrata” – and display Los Lobos’ signature seamless infusion of Mexican folk songs into
rock music. Also included in Tin Can Trust – a cover of the Grateful Dead‘s “West L.A. Fadeaway” –
offering
a nod to the bands’ shared history that extends back into the 1980s when the Angelenos befriended and opened
shows for their northern peers.

As with every new recording Los Lobos makes, Tin Can Trust moves Los Lobos into yet another new dimension while
simultaneously sounding like no one else in the world but Los Lobos. Los Lobos’ unified vision and strong work
ethic are evident throughout the self-produced album, but so is something even greater: “an intuitiveness,” says Los
Lobos songwriter/multi-instrumentalist Louie Perez, “that happens only from being in a band for so long.” As
Rolling Stone once wrote, “This is what happens when five guys create a magical sound, then stick together
for 30
years to see how far it can take them.”

For more information on the record release show at the Bowery Ballroom in NYC, please click here.

Los Lobos Tour Dates:

Wednesday, July 14 – Thursday, July 15 Minnesota Zoo – Weesner Amphitheatre Apple Valley MN
Friday, July 16 Sioux Falls Jazz Fest Sioux Falls SD
Saturday, July 17 Grand Targhee Resort Alta WY
Friday, July 23 Door Community Auditorium Fish Creek WI
Saturday, July 24 Hillside Festival Guelph ONT
Friday, July 30 Tropicana Field St. Petersburg FL
Saturday, July 31 Music on the Green Festival New Haven CT

Tuesday, August 3 Bowery Ballroom New York NY Record Release show
Wednesday, August 4 Clayton Opera House Clayton NY
Thursday, August 5 Thursday At The Square Buffalo NY
Friday, August 6 Flood City Music Festival Johnstown PA
Saturday, August 7 North Carolina Museum of Art Raleigh NC
Sunday, August 8 Birchmere Alexandria VA
Monday, August 9 Ram’s Head On Stage Annapolis MD
Thursday, August 12 Sandia Amphitheatre Albuquerque NM with John Hiatt & The Combo
Friday, August 13 Arvada Center Arvada CO with John Hiatt & The Combo

Saturday, August 14 Chautauqua Auditorium Boulder CO with John Hiatt & The Combo
Friday, August 20 Visalia Fox Theater Visalia CA
Saturday, August 21 Rodney Strong Winery Healdsburg CA with John Hiatt & The Combo
Sunday, August 22 Mountain Winery Saratoga CA with John Hiatt & The Combo

Saturday, August 28 Eagle River Pavilion Eagle ID with John Hiatt & The Combo
Sunday, August 29 Evergreen State Fair Monroe WA
Monday, August 30 PNE Centre Vancouver BC with John Hiatt & The Combo
Wednesday, September 1 Winspear Centre For Music Edmonton ALB with John Hiatt & The Combo
Thursday, September 2 Jack Singer Auditorium Calgary ALB with John Hiatt & The Combo
Friday, September 3 Casino Regina Show Lounge Regina Sask. with John Hiatt & The Combo
Saturday, September 25 Plaza Guadalupe San Antonio TX
Friday, October 8 Folly Theater Kansas City MO
Wednesday, October 13 University of California – Davis Davis CA

Sunday, October 17 – Sunday, October 24 Rhythm & Blues Cruise San Diego CA

Friday, December 3 One World Theatre Austin TX

Los Lobos
Tour Dates

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Los Lobos News ::
Los Lobos
Concert
Reviews


OJ Simpson Set To Marry Prison Pen Pal

They say there’s someone for everyone….The lonely and desperate have OJ.Shamed sportsman and long suspected killer OJ Simpson is set to wed a woman he’s never met, tattling snoops spilled to GLOBE last week. Simpson, who is serving a 30 year prison sentence in Nevada for a 2007 armed robbery, has proposed to a woman [...]

Los Lobos: Summer Tour

NEW ALBUM ARRIVES AUGUST 3

Los Lobos

Los Lobos, the Grammy-winning East L.A. band, is on tour this summer in support of a brand new studio album. The new release, titled Tin Can Trust, will hit streets on August 3, 2010. The band’s summer schedule brings them coast to coast, including a run of select shows with John Hiatt & The Combo and two dates with the Steve Miller Band.

Tour Dates

Friday, June 11 Dinuba High School – Dinuba Car Show “Cruise Night” Dinuba CA
Sunday, June 27 Saskatchewan Jazz Festival – Bessborough Garden Mainstage Saskatoon SK
Tuesday, June 29 Taste of Chicago Chicago IL
Friday, July 2 Hop Farm Festival Kent ENGLAND
Saturday, July 3 Cavea Auditorium Rome ITALY
Sunday, July 4 Latino Americano Milan ITALY
Monday, July 5 Castello Udine ITALY
Tuesday, July 6 Teatro Communale Brescia ITALY
Saturday, July 10 Santa Barbara Bowl Santa Barbara CA With Steve Miller Band
Sunday, July 11 Greek Theatre Los Angeles CA With Steve Miller Band
Wednesday, July 14 – Thursday, July 15 Minnesota Zoo – Weesner Amphitheatre Apple Valley MN
Friday, July 16 Sioux Falls Jazz Fest Sioux Falls SD
Saturday, July 17 Grand Targhee Resort Alta WY
Friday, July 23 Door Community Auditorium Fish Creek WI
Saturday, July 24 Hillside Festival Guelph ONT
Wednesday, August 4 Clayton Opera House Clayton NY
Thursday, August 5 Thursday At The Square Buffalo NY
Friday, August 6 Flood City Music Festival Johnstown PA
Saturday, August 7 North Carolina Museum of Art Raleigh NC
Sunday, August 8 Birchmere Alexandria VA
Thursday, August 12 Sandia Amphitheatre Albuquerque NM with John Hiatt & The Combo
Friday, August 13 Arvada Center Arvada CO with John Hiatt & The Combo
Saturday, August 14 Chautauqua Auditorium Boulder CO with John Hiatt & The Combo
Saturday, August 21 Rodney Strong Winery Healdsburg CA with John Hiatt & The Combo
Sunday, August 22 Mountain Winery Saratoga CA with John Hiatt & The Combo
Monday, August 30 PNE Centre Vancouver BC with John Hiatt & The Combo
Wednesday, September 1 Winspear Centre For Music Edmonton ALB with John Hiatt & The Combo
Thursday, September 2 Jack Singer Auditorium Calgary ALB with John Hiatt & The Combo
Friday, September 3 Casino Regina Show Lounge Regina Sask. with John Hiatt & The Combo
Friday, October 8 Folly Theater Kansas City MO
Wednesday, October 13 University of California – Davis Davis CA
Sunday, October 17 – Sunday, October 24 Rhythm & Blues Cruise San Diego CA

Los Lobos Tour Dates :: Los Lobos News :: Los Lobos Concert Reviews


Los Lobos Cancel Arizona Performance

SHOW AT TALKING STICK RESORT CANCELLED IN RESPONSE TO SB 1070 IMMIGRATION
LAW


Los Lobos

Grammy Award winning roots-rock band Los Lobos has decided to cancel their scheduled performance at The
Talking Stick Resort
on June 10, 2010. The band has made this decision based on the current call to boycott
Arizona in response to SB
1070.

Through their management, Los Lobos issued the following statement:

“We support the
boycott of Arizona. The
new
law will inevitably lead to unfair racial profiling and possible abuse of people who just
happen to look Latino. As a
result, in good conscience, we could not see ourselves performing in Arizona. We regret
the inconvenience this may
have caused the Salt River Pima Maricopa Indian Community, Casino Arizona, Talking Stick
Resort and our fans, but
we feel strongly that it is the right thing to do.”

The members of Los Lobos are Steve Berlin, David Hidalgo, Conrad
Lozano
, Cesar
Rosas
and Louie Perez.

Los Lobos
Tour Dates

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Los Lobos News ::
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Reviews


Stanton Moore Trio | 05.06 | Los Angeles

Words by: Jamie Dewaele | Images by: Brigitte Bard

Stanton Moore Trio with Anders Osborne :: 05.06.10 :: The Mint :: Los Angeles, CA

Stanton Moore Trio :: 05.06 :: S.F.

Funk is a genre of music that emphasizes the ‘down’ or ‘off’ beat. It is usually played with the expressed purpose of inciting the audience to get up and dance. Music legends like James Brown, Little Richard, George Clinton, and the Funky Meters are credited with creating ‘funky’ music. Today there is a rich tradition of funk carried on by performers such as Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe, the Greyboy Allstars, and Soulive. Galactic is one funk band that has been playing for nearly 15 years. One of Galactic’s founding members, drummer Stanton Moore, is currently touring with his trio in support of their new album, Groove Alchemy (released April 13 on Telarc). On this album, Stanton Moore (flanked by Robert Walter on keys and Will Bernard on guitar) explores the roots of funk drumming to provide a blueprint for those drummers out there that would like to grasp the art of funk drumming. In fact, Stanton released a DVD and wrote a book that accompanies the album.

Stanton was born in New Orleans and attended Loyola University, where he was awarded a BA in music and business. Stanton remained in New Orleans where he learned from and was influenced by musicians such as Dr. John, Professor Longhair, and The Meters. In 1996 he helped found Galactic, recently labeled in David Simon’s new show Treme as “a white version of The Meters.” Stanton’s list of collaborators reads like a who’s who of improvisational musicians: John Scofield, Chris Wood, Charlie Hunter, Skerik, Donald Harrison, Dr. Lonnie Smith and Marco Benevento, just to name a few. Two musicians that he has teamed up with more recently to form his trio are Robert Walter and Will Bernard. Walter is easily one of the most talented jazz-funk keyboardists around. Walter grew up in San Diego, where he attended the School of Creative and Performing Arts. It was in San Diego that he helped to found the legendary jazz-funk revival group, the Greyboy Allstars. After touring extensively and establishing himself with the Allstars, Walter founded the 20th Congress. Since then, he has played with such notable musicians as Melvin Sparks, Reuben Wilson, Mike Clark, and Steve Kimock.

Anders Osborne :: 05.06 :: S.F.

Berkley native Will Bernard is a fantastic guitarist who straddles many different genres. He has been involved with everything from jazz to funk to world music to hip-hop and beyond. Bernard has played in many different bands, including Motherbug, Frequinox, and the Will Bernard Trio. He is a Grammy-nominated guitarist whose style compares favorably to that of the legendary Grant Green. He has collaborated with such amazing musicians as Dr. Lonnie Smith, Charlie Hunter, Zigaboo Modeliste and John Medeski.


At The Mint, these three talented musicians began their tour as the Stanton Moore Trio with very special guest, singer-songwriter Anders Osborne on guitar and vocals.

The Mint was absolutely packed. In fact, there was a line of about 30 people outside hoping for a chance to get in and see the show. The Trio took the stage at 10:15 p.m. and Stanton announced that they would play a couple of tunes as the Trio, then bring out Osborne for the rest of the first set, and then the second set would be all Trio. Right from note one of the opener “Pie-Eyed Manc,” the crowd got to dancing and ate up every note of music that came off that stage. They played three songs as the Trio before Osborne came out. Anders Osborne is a guitar player with a very southern-fried style, and he absolutely shreds on the guitar. In fact, he turned the Trio into a southern rock band for the next six songs. For the most part, his songs were very high energy, prompting Stanton to leap off his stool to bang on his cymbals and bass drum. This Trio is so much fun to watch because of the enthusiasm coming from Stanton Moore and Walter’s ability to play bass notes and organ notes at the same time.


After a 30-minute breather, the second set began and there was a lot more room in The Mint. They opened the set with a tune off Groove Alchemy called “Squash Blossom,” which contained some really good interplay between the three musicians. This tune showcased the fact that they have been playing together as a trio for a long time.

The highlight of the second set and perhaps the entire evening, was a Stanton original called “Sprung Monkey” featuring Ephraim Owens on trumpet and Shelley Carrol on saxophone that clocked in at 12 minutes! Next was a James Booker tune called “Keep On Gwine” that featured Bernard using his slide skills. This tune was followed by a Galactic original called “Who Took the Happiness Away?” that included a devastating guitar solo by Bernard. They closed the set and the evening with a song called “Late Night at the Maple Leaf” that sent the crowd out into the streets of L.A. in high spirits.

This show was a lot of fun and the sold out crowd danced for the duration. Which was no surprise because the type of music these three guys play when they’re together makes it impossible to keep one’s feet still.

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