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Posts Tagged ‘Louisville’

Jason Isbell: Spring Tour

TOUR STARTS MARCH 12 IN DESTIN, FL


Jason Isbell and The 400 Unit

Jason Isbell and the 400
Unit
have announced dates for their 2011 Spring Tour in support of their upcoming new album
Here We Rest, set for release on April 12 on Lightning Rod Records. The tour crosses the U.S.
from March 12 through April 23, including a performance at South By Southwest in Austin, TX on March 17.

2011 Spring Tour Dates

March 12 – Destin, FL – Harbor Docks

March 15 – Baton Rouge, LA – Manship Theater Studio
March 17 – Austin, TX – SXSW
March 18 – San Antonio, TX – Sam’s Burger Joint
March 19 – Alexandria, LA – Spirits Food & Friends
April 8 – Florence, AL – Shoals Theater
April 9 – Birmingham, AL – Zydeco
*April 13 – Greeneville, SC – The Handlebar
April 14 – Atlanta, GA – The Earl
*April 15 – Louisville, KY – Headliners

*April 19 – Raleigh, NC – Lincoln Theater

*April 20 – Charlottesville, VA – Jefferson Theater
*April 21 – Philadelphia, PA – World Cafe Live
*April 22 – New York City, NY – Bowery Ballroom

*April 23 – Boston, MA – Brighton Music Hall


* Co-headlining bill with Hayes Carll

Jason Isbell and The 400
Unit
Tour Dates

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Jason Isbell and The
400 Unit News

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Jason Isbell and The 400
Unit
Concert
Reviews


Ryan Bingham: Feb/March Tour

TOUR BEGINS FEBRUARY 4 IN VENTURA, CA


Ryan Bingham & The Dead Horses

Ryan Bingham & The Dead
Horses
have lined up a lengthy run of dates in February and March. Bingham’s most recent album,
Junky Star, was released in August 2010. The full itinerary is available below.

TOUR DATES

02/04/11 Fri Ventura Theater Ventura, CA

02/05/11 Sat El Rey Theatre Los Angeles, CA

02/06/11 Sun House of Blues San Diego, CA

02/08/11 Tue SLO Brewing Company San Luis Obispo, CA

02/09/11 Wed Tales From The Tavern Santa Ynez, CA

02/10/11 Thu Rio Theatre Santa Cruz, CA

02/11/11 Fri Great American Music Hall San Francisco, CA
02/15/11 Tue WOW Hall Eugene, OR
02/17/11 Thu The Rogue Theatre Grants Pass, OR

02/18/11 Fri Neumos Seattle, WA
02/19/11 Sat Wonder Ballroom Portland, OR

02/20/11 Sun Venue Vancouver, BC

02/22/11 Tue Egyptian Theater Boise, ID

02/23/11 Wed In The Venue Salt Lake City, UT
02/25/11 Fri Bluebird Theater Denver, CO
02/26/11 Sat Belly Up Aspen, CO

02/28/11 Mon Railyard Alehouse Billings, MT

03/02/11 Wed Aquarium Fargo, ND
03/03/11 Thu Varsity Theatre Minneapolis, MN

03/04/11 Fri Majestic Theatre Madison, WI

03/05/11 Sat The Rave/Eagles Ballroom Milwaukee, WI

03/06/11 Sun Vaudeville Mews Des Moines, IA

03/08/11 Tue The Waiting Room Omaha, NE
03/10/11 Thu Birdy’s Indianapolis, IN
03/12/11 Sat Headliners Music Hall Louisville, KY

03/13/11 Sun The Blue Note Columbia, MO

03/15/11 Tue Revolution Music Room Little Rock, AR
03/17/11 Thu Cain’s Ballroom Tulsa, OK

03/19/11 Sat House of Blues Houston, TX
03/21/11 Mon Varsity Theatre Baton Rouge, LA
03/22/11 Tue Tipitina’s Uptown New Orleans, LA

03/24/11 Thu WorkPlay Birmingham, AL
03/25/11 Fri The Loft Atlanta, GA
03/26/11 Sat Bijou Theatre Knoxville, TN

Ryan Bingham
Tour Dates

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Ryan Bingham News
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Ryan Bingham
Concert
Reviews


Rush Add Summer Dates

FINAL ROUND OF DATES BEGINNING JUNE 8 IN GREENVILLE, SC


Rush

Rush have added the final
dates to their “Time Machine Tour.” After the previously announced US and European dates in the Spring, the band
will hit the road for their final round of dates in the summer, starting June 8 in Greenville, SC. The tour features a
performance of the classic album Moving Pictures in its entirety. Click here for information on pre-sales and fan club packages.

TIME MACHINE TOUR DATES

03/30/11 Wed BankAtlantic Center Sunrise, FL

04/01/11 Fri Greensboro Coliseum Greensboro, NC

04/03/11 Sun Bridgestone Arena Nashville, TN
04/05/11 Tue KFC Yum! Center Louisville, KY
04/06/11 Wed Huntington Center Toledo, OH
04/08/11 Fri Giant Center Hershey, PA

04/10/11 Sun Madison Square Garden New York, NY

04/12/11 Tue United Center Chicago, IL
04/15/11 Fri Quicken Loans Arena Cleveland, OH

04/17/11 Sun The Palace of Auburn Hills Auburn Hills, MI

04/19/11 Tue Copps Coliseum Hamilton, ON

04/20/11 Wed Bell Centre Montreal, QC

04/22/11 Fri 1st Mariner Arena Baltimore, MD

05/04/11 Wed Hartwall Arena Helsinki, FI
05/06/11 Fri Stockholm Globe Arena Stockholm, SE

05/08/11 Sun Malmo Arena Malmo, SE
05/12/11 Thu The O2 Dublin, IR

05/14/11 Sat SECC Glasgow, GB

05/16/11 Mon Motorpoint Arena (formerly Sheffield Arena) Sheffield, GB

05/19/11 Thu Manchester Evening News Arena (MEN) Manchester, GB
05/21/11 Sat Metro Radio Arena Newcastle, GB

05/22/11 Sun LG Arena (NEC Arena) Birmingham, GB
05/25/11 Wed O2 Arena London, GB
05/27/11 Fri Ahoy Hall Rotterdam, NL
05/29/11 Sun Festhalle Frankfurt, GER

06/08/11 Wed Bi-Lo Center Greenville, SC
06/10/11 Fri New Orleans Arena New Orleans, LA

06/12/11 Sun Frank Erwin Center Austin, TX
06/14/11 Tue Don Haskins Center El Paso, TX
06/16/11 Thu US Airways Center Phoenix, AZ
06/18/11 Sat Cricket Wireless Amphitheatre Chula Vista, CA

06/20/11 Mon Gibson Amphitheatre Universal City, CA

06/22/11 Wed Gibson Amphitheatre Universal City, CA
06/24/11 Fri MGM Grand Garden Arena Las Vegas, NV
06/26/11 Sun Sleep Train Pavilion At Concord Concord, CA
06/28/11 Tue Sleep Country Amphitheater Ridgefield, WA

07/02/11 Sat The Gorge George, WA

Rush
Tour Dates

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Rush News
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Rush
Concert
Reviews


Widespread Panic Spring Tour

LOUISVILLE, D.C., ASHEVILLE, COLUMBIA, PELHAM ON SCHEDULE

Widespread Panic has announced a string of shows in April, including a return to Oak Mountain for the first time since 2002 – a run that produced the Live At Oak Mountain DVD.

Widespread Panic

WSP Spring Tour Dates

April 1 The Palace Louisville, KY

April 2 The Palace Louisville, KY

April 3 Kovalchick Convention Center Indiana, PA

April 5 Warner Theater Washington, DC

April 6 Warner Theater Washington, DC

April 8 Civic Center Asheville, NC*

April 9 Civic Center Asheville, NC*

April 12 Township Auditorium Columbia, SC

April 15 Oak Mountain Amphitheater Pelham, AL**

April 16 Oak Mountain Amphitheater Pelham, AL***

*with JJ Grey & MOFRO
*with Charlie Daniels Band
***with Big Gigantic


Widespread Panic Tour Dates :: Widespread Panic News :: Widespread Panic Concert Reviews


Menomena Announce Lineup Changes & Tour Dates

US TOUR STARTS MARCH 3 IN MINNEAPOLIS

After 10 years, Brent Knopf has decided to part ways with Menomena to focus on Ramona Falls and other creative
pursuits. The upcoming US tour will feature Paul Alcott rounding out the group.

TOUR DATES

03/03/11 Thu University of Minnesota Minneapolis, MN
03/05/11 Sat Maintenance Shop Ames, IA
03/06/11 Sun The Mill Iowa City, IA

03/09/11 Wed The Blue Note Columbia, MO

03/10/11 Thu Gargoyle St. Louis, MO
03/11/11 Fri Headliners Music Hall Louisville, KY

03/12/11 Sat Orange Peel Asheville, NC

03/15/11 Tue Republic New Orleans New Orleans, LA
03/16/11 Wed Warehouse Live Houston, TX

Menomena
Tour Dates

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Menomena News
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Menomena
Concert
Reviews


JJ Grey: Solo Tour Dates

TOUR STARTS FEBRUARY 24 IN SEATTLE, WA


JJ Grey

JJ Grey has announced a
string of solo dates in February and March. The 16-date solo tour begins in Seattle, WA at The Tractor Tavern on
February 24, and ends in Nashville, TN at 3rd and Lindsley on March 26. Sunny War will open all West Coast dates
and Shannon McNally will support at
the East Coast shows. Check out all the tour dates below.

JJ Grey Solo Dates

February 24 Seattle, WA—The Tractor Tavern
February 25 Portland, OR—Mississippi Studios
February 26 Arcata, CA—Humboldt Brews

February 27 Chico, CA—El Rey Theater

March 1 Petaluma, CA—McNears Mystic Theatre
March 2 San Francisco, CA—The Independent
March 3 Santa Cruz, CA—Moe’s Alley Blues Club

March 4 Los Angeles, CA—Hotel Cafe

March 5 San Diego, CA—Anthology
March 16 Boston, MA—Paradise Rock Club
March 17 New York, NY—City Winery

March 18 Tarrytown, NY—Tarrytown Music Hall (opening for Levon Helm)
March 20 Charleston, WV—Mountain Stage

March 22 Evanston, IL—Evanston SPACE

March 25 Louisville, KY—Headliners
March 26 Nashville, TN—3rd and Lindsley

JJ Grey
Tour Dates

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JJ Grey News
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JJ Grey
Concert
Reviews


Sepultura: North American Tour

TOUR STARTS APRIL 18 IN TORONTO


Sepultura

Brazilian metal icons Sepultura are set to hit the road for
a North American tour beginning April 18, 2011 at the Opera House in Toronto. Their most recent album, A-
Lex
, the first not to feature the involvement of at least one Cavalera brother, was released in
2009.

TOUR DATES

4/18 — The Opera House — Toronto, ON
4/19 — Imperial de Quebec — Quebec City, QC

4/20 — Club Soda — Montreal, QC
4/22 — The Palladium — Worcester, MA
4/23 — Starland Ballroom — Sayreville, NJ
4/24 — The Trocadero — Philadelphia, PA
4/25 — The Gramercy Theatre — New York, NY
4/26 — Tremont Music Hall — Charlotte, NC

4/27 — The Club at Firestone — Orlando, FL

4/28 — Culture Room — Ft. Lauderdale, FL
4/29 — The Masquerade — Atlanta, GA
5/1 — Clicks — Tyler, TX
5/2 — Scout Bar — Houston, TX
5/3 — Trees — Dallas, TX
5/5 — Jake’s — Lubbock, TX
5/6 — Sunshine Theater — Albuquerque, NM
5/7 — The Clubhouse — Tempe, AZ (w/ D.R.I.)
5/8 — Club DV8 — Tucson, AZ (w/ D.R.I.)
5/9 — House of Blues — San Diego, CA
5/10 — The Knitting Factory — Reno, NV
5/11 — The Grand Ballroom at Regency Center — San Francisco, CA
5/12 — Hawthorne Theater — Portland, OR
5/13 — El Corazon — Seattle, WA
5/14 — The Knitting Factory — Spokane, WA
5/16 — Gothic Theater — Englewood, CO
5/18 — Station 4 — St. Paul, MN
5/19 — Reggies Rock Club — Chicago, IL
5/20 — Blondie’s — Detroit, MI
5/21 — Montage Music Hall — Rochester, NY
5/22 — Peabody’s — Cleveland, OH
5/23 — Expo Five — Louisville, KY
5/24 — The Rave — Milwaukee, WI

5/26 — The Zoo — Winnipeg, MB
5/27 — The Exchange — Regina, SK
5/28 — Dickens — Calgary, AB
5/29 — Starlite Room — Edmonton, AB
5/31 — Rickshaw Theater — Vancouver, BC

Sepultura
Tour Dates

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Sepultura News
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Sepultura
Concert
Reviews


MMJ’s Jim James & Patrick Hallahan at ear X-travaganza

TICKETS AVAILABLE EAR X-TACY AND HEADLINERSLOUISVILLE.COM


Jim James

On Dec 26th, Jim James
and
Patrick Hallahan of My Morning Jacket will be performing at
the
ear X-travaganza benefit show to support Louisville’s ear X-tacy record store. This is an all ages show at the
Headliners Music Hall. Doors are at 7pm with the show starting at 8pm. Tickets are $20 and available at ear X-tacy and www.headlinerslouisville.com.

My Morning Jacket
Tour Dates

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My Morning Jacket News
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My Morning Jacket
Concert
Reviews


Rush Announces 2011 North American Dates

TOUR STARTS MARCH 30 IN FT. LAUDERDALE


Rush

Rush have confirmed The
Time Machine Tour will visit new cities throughout North America and play a few
return engagements beginning March 30 in Ft. Lauderdale and running through April 22 in 2011 with dates in
Greensboro, Nashville, Louisville, Toledo, Hershey, New York’s esteemed Madison Square Garden, Chicago,
Cleveland, Detroit, Hamilton, Montreal and Baltimore. The tour also returns to North America in June with
performances in select markets that will include cities such as New Orleans, Austin, Vancouver and a very special
return play in Los Angeles – more information on these dates and more soon.

Tickets go on sale in select markets beginning December 6 at LiveNation.com. Tickets for the Rush performances
will go on sale in Hershey, Detroit and Baltimore beginning Monday, Dec. 6, with additional on-sales to follow. To
benefit the relief efforts in Haiti, one dollar of each ticket sold will be donated through several charities including
“Doctors Without Borders”. Rush will also contribute a portion of their proceeds at the culmination of the tour.

For Rush Fan Club tickets, as well as fan club exclusive merchandise offers, click here.

For Rush Time Machine packages, click here.

2011 TOUR DATES

Mar 30/11 Ft. Lauderdale, FL Bank Atlantic Center 
April 1/11 Greensboro, NC Coliseum  
April 3/11 Nashville, TN Bridgestone Arena  
April 5/11 Louisville, KY KFC Yum! Center    
April 6/11 Toledo, OH Huntington Center

April 8/11 Hershey, PA Giant Center   
April 10/11 New York, NY Madison Square Garden
  
April 12/11 Chicago, IL United Center  
April 15/11 Cleveland, OH Quickens Loans Arena
  
April 17/11 Detroit, MI Palace of Auburn Hills   

April 19/11 Hamilton, ON Copps Coliseum  
April 20/11 Montreal, PQ Bell Centre  
April 22/11 Baltimore, MD 1st Mariner Arena
 
May 4 Helsinki, Finland Hartwall Arena
May 6 Stockholm, Sweden Globe
May 8 Malmo, Sweden Malmo Arena
May 12 Dublin, Ireland O2
May 14 Glasgow, Scotland SECC
May 16 Sheffield, UK Motorpoint Arena
May 19 Manchester, UK MEN Arena
May 21 Newcastle, UK Metro Radio Arena

May 22 Birmingham, UK LG Arena
May 25 London, UK O2
May 27 Rotterdam, Holland Ahoy Arena
May 29 Frankfurt, Germany Festhalle

Rush
Tour Dates

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Rush News
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Rush
Concert
Reviews


Miss World 2010 Alexandria Mills Nude Photo Scandal

Miss World winner Alexandria Mills has gone from pageant underdog to star of the web’s latest naked snap scandal. The former Miss United States, 18, beat out projected winner Miss Norway to snatch a victory at the 2010 Miss World pageant contest at the Beauty Crown Cultural Center in Sanya, China on Oct. 30. Success [...]

Girl Talk: Extensive 2011 Tour

2011 SHOWS BEGIN IN CLEVELAND IN JANUARY

“Mr. Gillis aims to please. His music is a collage of hits, recent and old, that are instantly recognizable to just about everyone in the crowd. Each one – from Jay-Z to Styx to the Ramones to Missy Elliott to Nirvana – draws a cheer within a few notes. Mr. Gillis samples the songs’ obvious hooks. He isn’t a hipster showing off how deeply he’s dug into his collection; he’s a fellow fan, reactivating remembered pop pleasures.” – Jon Pareles, The New York Times

With almost 300 shows under his belt, and hardly a full week off, since Feed The Animals was released in June 2008 and Girl Talk (aka Gregg Gillis) has announced another 40-city tour, all set to take place in 2011 before March is even over!

Girl Talk by Chris Monaghan

Girl Talk 2010/2011 Tour Dates

Fri. 11/12/10 – Omaha, NE @ Sokol Auditorium
Fri. 11/19/10 – Buenos Aires, Argentina @ Hot Festival
Sat. 11/20/10 – Sao Paulo, Brasil @ Planeta Terra Festival
Fri. 12/3/10 – Pittsburgh, PA @ Stage AE
Sat. 12/4/10 – Pittsburgh, PA @ Stage AE
Wed. 01/05/11 – Cleveland, OH @ House of Blues
Thu. 01/06/11 – Columbus, OH @ LC Pavillion
Fri. 01/07/11 – Covington, KY @ Madison Theater
Sat. 01/08/11 – Louisville, KY @ Expo Five
Mon. 01/10/11 – New Orleans, LA @ House of Blues
Thu. 01/13/11 – Houston, TX @ House of Blues
Fri. 01/14/11 – Austin, TX @ Austin Music Hall
Sat. 01/15/11 – Dallas, TX @ Palladium
Mon. 01/17/11 – Memphis, TN @ Minglewood Hall
Tue. 01/18/11 – St. Louis, MO @ The Pageant
Thu. 01/20/11 – Birmingham, AL @ Workplay
Fri. 01/21/11 – Atlanta, GA @ Tabernacle
Sat. 01/22/11 – Charleston, SC @ Gaillard Municipal Auditorium
Mon. 01/24/11 – Knoxville, TN @ Valarium
Tue. 01/25/11 – Charlotte, NC @ The Fillmore
Thu. 01/27/11 – Raleigh, NC @ Disco Rodeo
Fri. 01/28/11 – Norfolk, VA @ NorVa
Sat. 01/29/11 – Richmond, VA @ The National
Mon. 01/31/11 – Baltimore, MD @ Ram’s Head
Tue. 02/01/11 – Washington, D.C. @ 9:30 Club
Fri. 02/04/11 – Philadelphia, PA @ Electric Factory
Sat. 02/05/11 – Montclair, NJ @ Wellmont Theatre
Thu. 02/24/11 – New York, NY @ Terminal 5
Fri. 02/25/11 – Providence, RI @ Lupo’s
Sat. 02/26/11 – Boston, MA @ House of Blues
Mon. 02/28/11 – Portland, ME @ State Theater
Mon. 03/01/11 – Montreal, QC @ Metropolis
Thu. 03/03/11 – Royal Oak, MI @ Royal Oak Music Hall
Fri. 03/04/11 – Chicago, IL @ Congress
Mon. 03/07/11 – Madison, WI @ Orpheum
Tue. 03/08/11 – Minneapolis, MN @ First Ave
Fri. 03/11/11 – Denver, CO @ Ogden Theatre
Mon. 03/14/11 – Missoula, MT @ Wilma Theater
Tue. 03/15/11 – Seattle, WA @ Showbox
Thu. 03/17/11 – Portland, OR @ Roseland
Fri. 03/18/11 – Oakland, CA @ Fox Theater
Sat. 03/19/11 – Pomona, CA @ Fox Theatre
Mon. 03/21/10 – Los Angeles, CA @ Palladium
Tue. 03/22/10 – San Diego, CA @ SOMA
Wed. 03/23/10 – Tempe, AX @ Marquee

Girl Talk Tour Dates :: Girl Talk News :: Girl Talk Concert Reviews


Over The Rhine: Album & Dates

THE LONG SURRENDER PRODUCED BY JOE HENRY OUT JANUARY 11


Over The Rhine

The Long Surrender is the new studio album from the southern Ohio-based husband-and-wife
team of multi-instrumentalist/vocalist Linford Detweiler and vocalist/multi-instrumentalist Karin
Bergquist
, otherwise known as Over the Rhine. The fan-funded record, to be released January 11, 2011 on OtR’s own
Great Speckled Dog label (named for the couple’s Great Dane, Elroy), marks 20 years since their 1991 debut. It’s the
result of a collaboration between the couple and Joe Henry, whose songs they’ve long admired.

Over the Rhine will preview The Long Surrender over a series of fall tour dates, the centerpiece of which is
“Over the Rhine Across the West” , a five-day music festival held November 5-10 aboard railroad cars from Los
Angeles to Santa Fe, across the Mohave Desert, tracing the lines of Route 66, “the Mother Road,” and then by
chartered motor-coach to the Painted Desert, the Petrified Forest, Winslow, AZ and the Grand Canyon, before re-
boarding for the return trip. Also featured are Lucy Wainwright Roche, Mickey Grimm and
Swan
Dive
, as well as
photographer Michael Wilson and naturalist Lynn Neal.

OTHER TOUR DATES:

Fri., Nov. 12 LOS ANGELES, CA Troubadour *

Sat., Nov. 13 SAN FRANCISCO, CA Great American Music Hall *

Mon, Nov. 15 EUGENE, OR W.O.W. Hall *

Wed., Nov. 17 PORTLAND, OR Aladdin Theater *

Fri.-Sun., Nov. 19, 20 & 21 SEATTLE, WA Triple Door *

Fri., Dec. 3 MARION, OH Palace Theatre

Sat., Dec. 4 KENT, OH Kent Stage

Sun., Dec. 5 ANN ARBOR, MI The Ark

Tues., Dec. 7 COLUMBUS, OH Lincoln Theatre

Fri., Dec. 10 LOUISVILLE, KY Bomhard Theater

Sat., Dec. 11 CHICAGO, IL Old Town School of Folk Music (7 & 10 p.m.)

Fri., Dec. 17 CINCINNATI, OH The Long Surrender Premiere at the

Jarson-Kaplan Theatre (in the Aronoff Center)

Sat., Dec. 18 CINCINNATI, OH Taft Theatre (with special guest Joe Henry)

Sun., Dec. 19 NORWOOD, OH St. Elizabeth’s



(*shows with special guest Lucy Wainwright Roche)

Over The Rhine
Tour Dates

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Over The Rhine News
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Over The Rhine
Concert
Reviews


My Morning Jacket: Fire Still Burns

By: Dennis Cook

See a track-by-track discussion of MMJ’s debut here
See a video salute to MMJ’s debut here
See full details on MMJ’s Terminal 5 shows here

The Tennessee Fire

1999′s The Tennessee Fire would be an auspicious debut for any band – a haunting yet happily shuffling blast of ideas woven together by strange poetry and gutbucket invention. It is what rock ‘n’ roll at its best aspires to but often gussies up too much these days. For My Morning Jacket it was the first solid footstep in a journey that’s cemented them as one of the most ceaselessly creative, fearless and engaging bands of the modern era – a group able to ascend to the heights of pop culture awareness without losing their tenacious, fiercely independent spirit that makes no concessions to trends, critics or anyone outside their ranks. One would be very, very hard pressed to find five musicians – Jim James (singer, songwriter, guitar, grand vision), Carl Broemel (guitar, sax, vox), Bo Koster (keys, vox), Tom Blankenship (bass, vox) and Patrick Hallahan (drums, percussion) – with more raw talent, obvious determination or sympathetic interconnectivity.

This week MMJ will tackle their entire catalog one album at a time at New York City’s Terminal 5 beginning tonight, October 18, with a run through The Tennessee Fire. We sat down with Tom Blankenship (aka Two Tone Tommy) to discuss their debut and the experience of preparing for the Terminal 5 shows.

JamBase: In revisiting your debut, it dawned on me that you’re the only guy besides Jim that’s been on every single album. In getting ready for the Terminal 5 shows, does it occur to you, “Yeah, I have been on this whole weird trip.”

Tom: I get reminders about it every once in a while. People will say, “Weren’t you a founding member?” I get that more & more as the years go by. It isn’t something I necessarily think about because the five of us with Carl and Bo have been together for almost seven years, which is the majority of the band’s lifespan. So, it feels like two different bands; the first three or four years we were together and then there’s this band.

JamBase: Has it been fun to explore these older records, to go back and say, “Wow, look at what we made!”

Tom: It’s really cool to go back to those records. We just spent a week in Louisville, just the five of us, rehearsing all the stuff that hasn’t been played live like “Butch Cassidy,” “If All Else Fails” and a couple other acoustic numbers from At Dawn, where Jim had done them by himself but we’d never done them as a band where we’re creating some kind of atmosphere like on the record. It’s a fun trip down memory lane. A lot of times I’m pleasantly surprised that the performance I gave are better than I remembered and some of the mistakes on the albums are now kind of charming.

I picked up on the same thing listening to The Tennessee Fire again. The tendrils of what this band would become are all already germinating in that first batch of material.

My Morning Jacket by Dave Vann

To try and revisit those things again today is sometimes strange because sometimes when I close my eyes I have flashbacks to being onstage when the band was just a four-piece. But I quickly realize the sounds we’re making are not the same and we’re not the same people. And Jim’s voice has changed SO much from that album to today. But there’s still a piece of the feeling I had making that record, the personal connection I made to those songs, whether it was the music or lyrics. A piece of that’s still there, but it mostly feels fresh and new playing it with this lineup.

How do you find the material transforming with this lineup tackling it?

10 or 11 years ago we just played as hard as we could because we were excited to be playing live, period. So it was more raucous and us just having fun, and now it feels more moody and atmospheric. There are songs I’m playing on live that I’ve never played on before, just to beef things up here & there and give things a different kind of voicing. It’s weird to say but it feels like this very adult version of the songs.

Mature or adult are dirty words in our youth obsessed culture, especially in rock ‘n’ roll, except they aren’t really. To play music well and to evolve one’s earlier efforts are good things, and that can only happen over time. But right from the start you guys were anxious to complicate what it meant to be My Morning Jacket.

One of the reasons I’ve always liked the name is because it doesn’t sound like anything at all. Nothing comes to my mind except, “That’s kind of a weird name for a band [laughs].”

There’s some weird echoes of stuff on The Tennessee Fire but I couldn’t exactly say that you guys sounded like ANYONE else from the beginning.

I had the same impression when I first got the demo tape given to me by the drummer Jeremy maybe 6 or 8 months before I joined the band. Most of the album had already been completed. Number one: I was blown away by this guy Jim, who was the same age as me but could write these haunting yet kinda poppy sounding songs. What I loved about the album was that it had all these familiar elements that I’d never heard put together before. I couldn’t put my finger on what the sound was or how to describe.

Listening back again before this talk, I picked up on the cool Phil Spector-ish elements and echoes of vintage soul inside these strange new shells. It doesn’t play to the popular sensibilities of the era it came out in, choosing instead to seek out the classic and the enduring as its influences, something Jim does a lot in his songwriting. It’s a good trick if you can make people scratch their head and still keep listening.

Keep it interesting enough that it will take people a while to figure it out.

One thing I noticed looking at the liner notes was Sir Patrick T. Hallahan shot the photos used on The Tennessee Fire. So well before he became the drummer, he had a presence in MMJ.

The Tennessee Fire inside cover

Oh brother, I haven’t looked at those notes in forever. I think his name appears on all the albums even if he wasn’t in the band. I love the back cover shot with all of us with the cigarettes in our mouths and the fedoras.

So, this is a band from Louisville, Kentucky but their first album is called The Tennessee Fire. Why is that?

Before I joined the band, I remember pulling up to the studio in Shelbyville. I was in a band called Winter Death Club at the time, and we’d have practice after My Morning Jacket practice. At the time MMJ was just a 3-piece of two guitars, drums and vocals. They even played a few shows with that lineup, which is how [The Tennessee Fire] was mainly recorded. I remember pulling up and hearing that Jimmy had got a record contract with Darla but he didn’t know what to name the band. I think he maybe wanted to call the band The Tennessee Fire at one time. As far as I know, that’s how it came about, that and the picture inside the album of the Tennessee fireworks store where the ‘works’ is cut off.

Another thing that came up for me listening back to the Morning Jacket catalog recently is how sly and darkly funny Jim is. There are traces of that right from this first slab. Despite his whole rep of being this serious artiste, he’s never failed to bust me up each time we’ve spoken.

Anyone that’s met him in real life sees that he’s constantly joking. The first time I met him we were playing in a storage garage in Lexington, Kentucky, his band Month of Sundays and Winter Death Club. I arrived early and Jim was sound checking by himself and he kept playing “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On,” but he didn’t know any of the lyrics. He just kept saying, “Whole lotta shakin’ goin’ on,” for what felt like 15-20 minutes. He did it so much that eventually everyone had to laugh. His humor has always been if you say it enough eventually people will laugh. They might hate you in between but they’ll come around to see the humor.

Finally, how are you feeling about tackling the entire catalog in the space of a few days? That’s a daunting task for any band.

Above all else, it’s been a bit stressful. But Carl put it into perspective. He said, “The morning you wake up for that show all you need to worry about are the songs for that night. And you can tackle the other nights as they come.” If you compartmentalize it like that it’s not too bad. It’s been fun to revisit covers from each era. It’s been cool because we were doing songs I can’t believe we ever did! Hopefully people will feel like they got a unique experience.

Continue reading for Tom’s track-by-track commentary on MMJ’s debut album…

My Morning Jacket bassist Tom Blankenship’s reflects on the band’s 1999 debut, The Tennessee Fire.

Heartbreakin Man
I don’t think I even had a full band version of this when I first heard it. It was Jim on a 4-track with all those crazy vocal harmonies laid on top of each other. It was so different from the finished product, and the whole vibe of it was haunting, like ghosts flying over your head and some of them were laughing at you and some were there to help you out. Some of the spirit of that made it to the final version. I think it’s a great start to the record, where you hear that ka-shhh and then the band crashes in.

They Ran
It’s just predominantly bass ‘n’ drums. I thought “Heartbreakin’ Man” was a great intro to Jim’s vocals but the treatment of his vocals and the harmonies and the way they layer themselves one after another at the beginning of “They Ran” is the perfect showcase of what Jim is capable of vocally. All those vocals are his and still sound distinctly different. I think he’s always been really good at making up characters that he does vocally song-to-song, especially on the last album [2008's Evil Urges]. But even in a subtle way like “They Ran,” each harmony has a different feel to it.

The Bear
It has that perfect Motown intro. That drumbeat has probably been used on hundreds of songs, yet it’s still one of my favorite intros to any song we’ve done. We’ve done some pretty rockin’ versions of it live, too..

Nashville to Kentucky
I don’t why I’ve always had this image in my head of Jim literally driving from Nashville to Kentucky, and it is one of the most boring drives EVER to go from Louisville to Nashville. You’re just on 65 pretty much the whole way and there’s really not a lot to see. There’s Dinosaur World about halfway, a Corvette manufacturing plant with a museum, and not much else. I imagine that it’s at night and completely dark and he can barely pick up any radio stations – just the reality of it.

Old Sept. Blues
When I first got the demo tape I listened to “Evelyn” and “Old Sept. Blues” on repeat, just those two songs over & over & over again. So, it’s always been one of my favorite songs. It’s just a perfectly crafted nugget, where all the fat’s been trimmed off.

If All Else Fails
Oh man, I’m gonna have to skip this one.

The Tennessee Fire

It’s About Twilight Now
It’s the most rock song on Tennessee Fire, which is funny because it has no bass on it at all. I think it’s just the two guitars, drums and vocals. It takes me back to that studio in Shelbyville where everything was done on ¼-inch tape. It’s the sound you’d get there if you were trying to be really raucous like we were in the punk hardcore bands we were in before [MMJ]. That was the way drums and everything would blow up on tape. I always loved that song and thought it was going to have a different life. It became such a different piece when played live. It was still raucous but it was so brutal. At the end we’d slow down and it was like stoner rock.

Evelyn Is Not Real
I think it’s the hook that gets me. That guitar line is definitely a hook, and it’s kind of a take on the country tradition of mourning the loss of a love or a love that isn’t real. In a way, it’s always felt a touch tongue in cheek but sincere at the same time. We’re kind of poking fun at the genre but doing so with love. I don’t know if that was ever Jim’s intention but that was the way I first felt about this song. It’s kind of like that song “Faraway Eyes” by The Rolling Stones, where it’s a great song but it’s also grinning at convention.

War Begun
I always loved this bass line. I think John played bass on it. Listening back to it now, it reminds me of JJ Cale, where the guitar solo is kind of tiny sounding but still powerful. And the lyrics are brilliant – “Whenever your war gets out of hand I’ll take it on.” Everything about it I just loved. It gets requested a lot and it’s kind of a substitute for “Lay Low” or anything like that.

Picture of You
It’s got this lyric, “I’ve got a house in a court” but then, “I’ve got a car and a door and a big left arm.” That’s one of the strangest lyrics ever [laughs]. The lyrics all over this song are brilliant – “You don’t say I’ll wait up” and “You know I’m sorry/ You know I’d give you anything on a dime.”

I Will Be There When You Die
The original version of it sounds like a chair is being knocked over and a tape recorder is being walked through a room. Jim’s in one corner of the room playing and it’s like the tape recorder is coming to him. I love any recording where you get a sense of the room it was recorded in and the time and place. So, the original version I had on the demo tape had about a minute long intro where it was just guitars on top of guitars and chairs falling and this craziness. That was THE song when we first started touring Europe. I think there were a couple nights when Jim played it twice. He’d always step away from the mic and sing it in the crowd. Everybody would be dead silent, and a couple of us would take our smoke break during this song. There was something so beautiful about rolling a cigarette and smoking and experiencing the song the exact same way the crowd was. You didn’t really feel like a band member at that point; you’re just another member of the audience. You try not to search out these kinds of moments because you can’t force them, but it’s hard not to think, “How can I get back to this place?”

The Tennessee Fire inside cover

The Dark
This has always been one of my favorites to play live. We used to start shows with this song for years and years. It’s got some pretty funny lyrics in it as well. The whole tinkling on the cymbals and the spaced out guitar in the intro has an incantation vibe to it.

By My Car
We always joked that we were going to put a sticker on At Dawn that said, “From the band that brought you ‘By My Car.’” Not that it was an unremarkable song at all, but we thought it was funny because it was one of the last songs on the record and we’d only played it live a few times. Again, this has some great lyrics in it. I love Jim’s hilariously violent lyrics and I think that started with this song. This has the line about wanting to kick his head in but it’s said with a sincerity that makes you wonder how serious he is. You just don’t know.

Butch Cassidy
I’m really excited to play this live. It’s always been one of my favorites, and I don’t think I’ve heard Jim play it until we were doing the rehearsals [for the Terminal 5 shows]. It has one of my favorite lyrics, not just by Jim, but of all-time: “‘Cause a soldier’s death is so much better than defeat just hanging around.” That’s such a gorgeous line, and like the best songs on this record, the song is just haunting and dark but done in a way that doesn’t feel like total despair. There’s still a little bit of hope.

I Think I’m Going to Hell
This brings back a memory of one of the first shows we played. It was outside on a hillside at a college campus, and we ended that show, like a lot of shows at that time, with this song. And there’s that line, “Lovers and children beware, devils and demons are coming to take me to hell.” And in the field beyond the crowd was this little girl skipping through the field with a kite tied to her hand. And I remember how fucked up and evil it was that Jim was screaming these lyrics with this little girl out there. That’s always stuck in my brain ever since. This song feels like Halloween.

While much of the Terminal 5 run is sold out, a handful of tickets remains for The Tennessee Fire and At Dawn performances. Find tickets here.

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MMJ Play Late Night TV & Live Webcast

5 ALBUMS IN 5 NIGHTS AT TERMINAL 5


My Morning Jacket

My Morning Jacket will be
taking over New York the next two weeks with multiple late night TV appearances leading up to their five-night
stand at Terminal 5. Tonight, guitarist Carl Broemel will be sitting in with The Roots on Late Night With Jimmy
Fallon
. Click here for more info
on Carl’s new solo album, All Birds Say (ATO Records), which is in stores now.

The full band will then be the musical guest on Wednesday’s episode. Click here to enter the show’s “Band Bench”
sweepstakes for a chance to attend that taping. Tomorrow night, the quintet will perform on the Late Show With
David Letterman
and as an added bonus will do a set for Live on Letterman. Starting at 8pm EST, the
guys will kick off an hour-long performance that fans can watch live over at the webcast’s official site.

Beginning next week on Monday, October 18, MMJ will kick off their feverishly anticipated run of five shows at
Terminal 5. Each night they will play one of their five beloved full-lengths from beginning to end. This is the first
time the ever-evolving band’s entire, eclectic catalogue can be experienced live in the span of a week. The guys will
also be playing in Louisville, KY on 10/29 and are proud to have The Louisville Youth Orchestra on hand to both
open and collaborate with the band.

My Morning Jacket Live Dates:

10/15: Portland, ME @ State Theatre

10/18: New York, NY @ Terminal 5
10/19: New York, NY @ Terminal 5
10/21: New York, NY @ Terminal 5
10/22: New York, NY @ Terminal 5
10/23: New York, NY @ Terminal 5
10/29: Louisville, KY @ KFC YUM! CENTER

My Morning Jacket
Tour Dates

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My Morning Jacket News
::
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Concert
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Nicole Scherzinger felt uncomfortable in Pussycat Doll outfit

Nicole Scherzinger has revealed that in her initial days she felt uncomfortable in her Pussycat Doll outfit- because the band”s racy stage costumes were a far cry from her own “conservative” wardrobe. The girl group originated as a burlesque dance troupe, known for its members” sexy outfits. But lead singer Scherzinger admits she”d never seen [...]

Zac Brown Band: Play The Road

By: Dennis Cook

Zac Brown Band

Success often makes new listeners wary of a band. Too many hits too fast and one may wonder if an artist is a flash in the pan and unworthy of a serious music fan’s attention. However, sometimes a truly talented, hard working group breaks through and the world is simply wise enough – for a rare change – to recognize a good thing when it lands in their lap.

In 2008 it seemed the Zac Brown Band came out of nowhere to pulverize the country charts, racking up four number one singles and double platinum album sales for what many thought was their debut, The Foundation. But, two self-released albums preceded this first major label release, along with a tour schedule that had kept the band away from home for as many as 200 gigs a year since 2002. All that wood shedding and club humping rings out in the confidence and craftsmanship of The Foundation, and the past two years where they’ve become a major headlining draw and a fixture on CMT and country radio shows in the utterly confident, absolutely winning follow-up You Get What You Give (released September 21 on Southern Ground/Atlantic), which opens with a scene full of hippie-esque wisdom played out over chord-skipping acoustic guitar and playful fiddle that ride a shuffling beat.

Spent the night with a friend of mine and a handle of good whiskey
Picked guitars and talked about how the glory days went missing
It didn’t take too long to find the truth inside that bottle
Cast a-sea so long ago was a message from my father

You keep your heart above your head and your eyes wide open
So this world can’t find a way to leave you cold
No, you’re not the only ship out on the ocean
Save your strength for things that you can change
Forget the ones you can’t
You got to let it go

You Get What You Give is a record with a huge potential audience, not just the country establishment that’s already embraced them. Within this talented bunch lays many points of connection for jam band aficionados (high level musicianship, broad cover tune sensibilities, a 420-friendly attitude, shifting setlists), Americana purists (dead solid songwriting, twang that’s stretched into interesting new forms) and straight-up mainstream rock fans.

ZBB @ Bonnaroo ’09 by Dave Vann

“We realize that country radio and TV is the way they’re selling this music and the way we’re connecting with our fans but only during 4 or 5 songs in our live set do we even think we’re a country band,” says multi-instrumentalist Clay Cook. “I think we’re more concerned with songs than genre. Sure, we’re telling stories in our songs but it’s more of a southern approach than a strict country one.”

Like the best southern bands in the modern era, ZBB scoops up a wide array of influences and gives them a below-the-Mason-Dixon accent. Ronnie Van Zant-era Skynyrd did this well, as do contemporaries like JJ Grey & Mofro and Hill Country Revue, both of whom have more in common with the Zac Brown Band’s general vibe than most of what’s coming out of Nashville today. At the core of this group is one of the strongest emerging songwriting teams out there, namely Zac Brown and lyricist Wyatt Durrette, who possess a Tom Petty-like populist feel that’s VERY hard to resist.

“The way Zac approaches performing songs is so much different than anything I’ve been involved with before. You just really believe every word he says with the way he sings it,” says Cook. “I feel very lucky to be where I am in this band, especially because of the way we connect with audiences, and that stems from Zac.”

The band doesn’t hesitate to place their originals next some of the finest songwriting of the past 50 years, regularly covering tunes from The Band, Bob Marley, Van Morrison, Ray LaMontagne and other heavy hitters, with the company they keep reflecting the larger ambitions of the band. One also sees this in the high powered patronage of certifiable icons like Jimmy Buffett, Dave Matthews and Kid Rock, who’ve taken the band under their wing and welcomed them as openers and kindred spirits.

“When we’re picking covers we pick things we want to play, the songs we’re listening to on our iPods. This is the music we love. It’s stuff we’re intimately familiar with and huge fans of. We feel like it’s our duty to do a good job,” says Cook. “We’ve been playing Bob Dylan’s ‘I Shall Be Released,’ and I can’t tell you how many other versions are out there. But when we get onstage to play that song, I feel like we’re only the second or third band to ever attempt it, just by how we love it SO much. It’s a weird feeling, but we think we do that with certain songs, really live inside them and make them somewhat our own. Otherwise, we’ll play a song once and never again.”

Zac Brown Band

On the Deluxe Edition of You Get What You Give, they do a fantastic cover of Ryan Adams’ “Oh My Sweet Carolina” (off Ryan’s solo debut Heartbreaker).

“It’s a live version and we did it in Louisville. And it was one of those situations where everyone felt so good about it, even though it was only the second or third time we’d attempted it in two or three years,” says Cook. “The only reason we played it in Louisville is it’s got a line that goes, ‘I miss Kentucky and I miss my family.’ Zac said, ‘Let’s just play this one!’ and we did and it was just beautiful. We had somebody mix it and throw it on the Deluxe Edition.”

The band mixes up their song selections nightly very much in the spirit of the never-repeat-yourself ethos of the jam scene.

“We kinda have to but the lighting and video guys really wish we’d stick to the same setlist [laughs]. But if we did the same setlist three nights in a row, by the third night we’d be fit to be tied. We’d be ready to do something different or even change [the arrangements of] songs up if we couldn’t change the setlist, changing up sections of songs as we’re playing them,” says Cook. “It forces you to be creative in different ways. We’ve had to feed from our record that’s been out there for a while. It’s been two years since The Foundation came out, and we have to play stuff from it because that’s why people bought tickets to see us. At least half the people in the audience have never seen us before and don’t know they’re going to see a real live show. And then hopefully the other half of the show is new stuff and covers. Unless we have three hours to play, we really have a hard time boiling down what we want to play every night.”

“At this point, we have six songs that are singles and that’s half an hour already. You have to play those songs. Then you have a few covers you’ve been playing that are working, so you have to play those because if we feel good about them at the moment we want to capitalize on that feeling. And the next time we come around [to a city] we’ll have a whole new set of covers. Then you want to play the stuff off the new record, and we also have special guests on this tour. Like Robert Randolph is opening for us, so we want to play a song with him. So, pretty soon the two-and-a-half-hours for our setlist is pretty full. It’s actually easier to write a three-hour setlist than a two-hour setlist.”

Zac Brown @ Bonnaroo ’09 by Dave Vann

“A pop artist just wants to play their hits and get off the stage. They want to play a 90-minute set and anything more than that is unbearable to them. I remember talking to this country group Lady Antebellum, who came up to us at one of the awards shows. They just released their second album earlier this year, and they heard we were playing three and four hour shows and said, ‘Why are you doing this to us?’ They’ve only got about 90-minutes of material without covers, and that’s only if they play everything off both records. I said, ‘Well, we’re not a country band.’ We’re a live experience mainly.”

One area they excel at, live and in the studio, is in their rich harmonies. The overlap of voices, not just Brown’s own powerful, flexible pipes, is a lovely alternative to the Clean Room pristine quality of most of today’s auto-tuned, Pro-Tools enhanced “singing.”

“When they did the harmonies on the previous record [before Clay Cook joined ZBB], they had to work really hard on the vocals. And that record was cut almost four years ago with two of the vocalists that are here now and one that’s gone. Now, we sing SO much that I don’t think it took two days to get the background harmonies on [You Get What You Give]. We were just knocking them out. It was almost comical at one point when we realized that a great deal of these harmonies were done in one take,” says Cook. “We didn’t spend a lot of time in the studio tracking [anything on the new record]. A lot of the time spent was between gigs, where we’d go a month without doing anything because we’d be on the road. When we were off the road everybody wanted to go home for two or three days, so we couldn’t jump right back into the studio. And then we were on the road again!”

“We’ve taken measures to fix that on the next record. We’re building a studio in Zac’s backyard,” reveals Cook. “I think we’re gonna try to do this next record live, the solos and everything except maybe the vocals. We care a lot about the vocals and it’d suck to get all the way through an awesome take as a band and discover that two of the vocalists were a little bit off. At worst, we’ll record the entire band live and go back and capture the vocals, OR we’ll be just as gutsy as I hope we’ll be and just capture EVERYTHING live in the studio.”

Perhaps the best way to think of the Zac Brown Band is as the next generation of Great American Music bands in the spirit of the Grateful Dead, Little Feat and Goose Creek Symphony, where the inflection of their music can lean one way or another but the language they’re ultimately speaking is their own. What separates Zac Brown and his collaborators from these ancestors is an almost unerring knack for sinking deep into the pop vernacular. Spin You Get What You Give for almost anyone, regardless of their primary listening habits, and by the last track there’s bound to be one or more cuts that float their boat. It’s a broad, readily appealing reach that hints at a future cult following the likes of which Buffett, Rock and the Dave Matthews Band enjoy.

Zac Brown Band Tour Dates :: Zac Brown Band News :: Zac Brown Band Concert Reviews

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Hill Country Revue: Fall Tour

TOUR STARTS OCTOBER 8 IN LOUISVILLE, KY


Hill Country Revue

Hill Country Revue is
excited to announce more dates have been added to their upcoming Zebra Ranch tour. Last month the band
announced shows with the Drive-By
Truckers
followed by a string of dates with Robert Randolph & the Family Band in October. The new dates include visits to Austin, Denver,
Chicago, St. Louis and more. Get the complete schedule below.

TOUR DATES:

10/08 Louisville, KY Brown Theatre (w/ Drive By Truckers)

10/09 Atlanta, GA Buckhead Theatre (w/ Drive By Truckers)

10/11 Baton Rouge, LA Varsity Theatre (w/ Robert Randolph & the Family Band)
10/12 Birmingham, AL WorkPlay Theatre (w/ Robert Randolph & the Family Band)

10/13 Knoxville, TN The Valarium (w/ Robert Randolph & the Family Band)

10/15 Charlotte, NC Visulite Theatre

10/16 Greenville, SC The Handlebar

10/17 Lexington, KY Buster’s (w/ Robert Randolph & the Family Band)
10/19 Bloomington, IN Bluebird Nightclub (w/ Robert Randolph & the Family Band)

10/20 Columbus, OH Newport Music Hall (w/ Robert Randolph & the Family Band)

10/22 Baltimore, MD Ram’s Head Live (w/ Robert Randolph & the Family Band)
10/23 Albany, NY The Egg (w/ Robert Randolph & the Family Band)
10/24 Pittsburgh, PA Carnegie Music Hall (w/ Robert Randolph & the Family Band)

10/26 New York, NY Mercury Lounge
10/27 Washington, DC DC9
10/28 Durham, NC Casbah
10/29 Charleston, SC The Pour House

10/30 Pompano Beach, FL Southern Monster Smash

11/03 Houston, TX Bronze Peacock

11/04 Austin, TX Continental Club
11/05 Austin, TX Continental Club
11/06 Dallas, TX Cambridge Room

11/09 Santa Fe, NM Santa Fe Brewing Co.
11/11 Denver, CO Cervantes

11/12 Breckenridge, CO three20south

11/13 Aspen, CO Belly Up

11/16 Lawrence, KS Bottleneck
11/17 Columbia, MO Mojo’s

11/19 Chicago, IL HOB Back Porch Stage

11/20 St. Louis, MO Old Rock House

Hill Country Revue
Tour Dates

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Hill Country Revue News
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Hill Country Revue
Concert
Reviews


Sade: First Tour in Ten years

ADDITIONAL DATES TO BE ANNOUNCED SOON


Sade

Following the platinum selling success of Soldier of Love, Sade announces their highly
anticipated return to the world’s stage. The North American leg, produced by Live Nation, begins on June 16 in
Baltimore, Maryland at the 1st Mariner’s Arena. Tickets go on sale in select markets beginning October 16 at
LiveNation.com with additional dates to be announced soon.


Thu Jun 16 Baltimore, MD 1st Mariner Arena Sat Oct 16

Sun Jun 19 Philadelphia, PA Wells Fargo Center Mon Oct 18
Tue Jun 21 Uniondale, NY Nassau Coliseum Mon Oct 18
Fri Jun 24 East Rutherford, NJ Izod Center Mon Oct 18

Tue Jun 28 Toronto, ON Air Canada Centre Sat Oct 16

Thu Jun 30 Montreal, QC Bell Centre Sat Oct 16

Wed Jul 06 Boston, MA TD Garden Mon Oct 18
Fri Aug 05 Chicago, IL United Center Mon Oct 18
Fri Aug 19 Los Angeles, CA Staples Center Mon Oct 18
Tue Aug 30 Anaheim, CA Honda Center Mon Oct 18

Additional dates will be announced in the following markets soon: Atlanta, GA; Charlotte, NC; Calgary, AB;
Cleveland, OH; Dallas, TX; Detroit, MI; Fort Lauderdale, FL; Houston, TX; Kansas City, MO; Las Vegas, NV; Louisville,
KY; Memphis, TN; Milwaukee, WI; New Orleans, LA; Oakland, CA; Orlando, FL; Phoenix, AZ; Pittsburgh, PA; Portland,
OR; Sacramento, CA; San Diego, CA; San Jose, CA; Seattle, WA; St Louis, MO; St Paul, MN, Vancouver, BC.

Sade
Tour Dates

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Sade News
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Concert
Reviews


Everest: Fall Tour

TOUR STARTS OCTOBER 1 IN NASHVILLE

Everest is going to
premiere single “Let Go” on Late Night With Jimmy Fallon on October 12, before joining friends My Morning Jacket soon after, to close
out their five-night run at Terminal 5 on October 23. The band’s first television performance in support of their
sophomore album, On Approach (Warner Bros./Vapor Records), will be surrounded by a handful
of dates with acoustic-pop threesome Guster, bluesy rockers Grace Potter and the Nocturnals as well as several solo headline shows. The fivesome will
then accompany Matt Costa for an extensive month-long North American tour. Check out all the dates below.

EVEREST ON TOUR

October 1 – Nashville, Tenn. @ War Memorial Auditorium *
October 2 – Charlotte, N.C. @ Fillmore Charlotte *

October 4 – Columbia, S.C. @ White Mule %

October 6 – Covington, Ken. @ Parlour Stage @ South Gate House %
October 8 – Columbus, Ohio @ Newport Music Hall *

October 9 – St. Luis, Mo. @ The Pageant *

October 10 – Indianapolis, Ind. @ Egyptian Room @ Murat Center *

October 14 – Louisville, Ky. @ Headliners Music Hall ^

October 15 – Asheville, N.C. @ Orange Peel ^

October 19 – Boone, N.C. @ Appalachian ^

October 20 – Pittsburgh, Pa. @ Club Cafe %

October 21 – New York, N.Y. @ Mercury Lounge – CMJ Show
October 23 – New York, N.Y. @ Terminal 5 w/ My Morning Jacket
October 25 – Minneapolis, Minn. @ Varsity Theater #

October 26 – Madison, Wisc. @ High Noon Saloon #

October 27 – Chicago, Ill. @ Double Door #
October 28 – Detroit, Mich. @ Magic Stick #
October 29 – Cleveland, Ohio @ Beachland Ballroom #

October 31 – Toronto, ONT @ Mod Club Theatre #
November 1 – Montreal, QC @ Le National #

November 3 – Boston, Mass. @ Paradise Rock Club #

November 4 – New York, N.Y. @ Bowery Ballroom #

November 5 – Brooklyn, N.Y. @ Music Hall of Williamsburg #
November 7 – Washington, D.C. @ Black Cat #
November 8 – Philadelphia, Pa. @ First Unitarian Church #
November 10 – Charlottesville, Va. @ Jefferson Theater #
November 11 – Carborro, N.C. @ Cat’s Cradle #

November 12 – Atlanta, Ga. @ The Loft #
November 13 – Nashville, Tenn. @ Exit/In #
November 14 – St. Louis, Mo. @ Firebird #

November 15 – Lawrence, Kan. @ Bottleneck #

November 16 – Tulsa, Okla. @ Cain’s Ballroom #
November 17 – Dallas, Texas @ Cambridge Room #
November 18 – Austin, Texas @ Stubb’s Jr. #
November 19 – Houston, Texas @ Bronze Peacock #

November 24 – Anaheim, Calif. @ House of Blues #


% headline show

^with Grace Potter and the Nocturnals
* with Guster

# with Matt Costa

Everest
Tour Dates

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Concert
Reviews


A Place To Bury Strangers: Video Contest & Tour Dates

NEW SINGLE & VIDEO OUT NOW


A Place To Bury Strangers

A Place To Bury Strangers
have launched a video contest for the track “Deadbeat” off their second album Exploding Head.
Fans and filmmakers alike can participate in the contest by clicking here to submit and view videos. The winner, selected by the band,
will receive an autographed 7” box set, four free tickets to a show of their choice, and will be credited with the
official “Deadbeat” video. The deadline to submit a video is November 1, 2010 with the winner being announced the
following day. To listen to “Deadbeat” click here.

A Place To Bury Strangers are back out on the road this fall playing a mixture of festivals and headline gigs across
the Midwest, Southeast, and Mexico. Check out the dates below.


9/28 – Kalamazoo, MI – The Strutt

9/29 – Louisville, KY – Zanzabar

9/30 – Nashville, TN – Next Big Nashville Festival at Exit In with Yeasayer, Waaves, & Javelin

10/1 – Durham, NC – Duke Coffeehouse

10/2 – Richmond, VA – Strange Matter with Ceremony & Soundpool (Killer Pimp Night)

10/3 – New York, NY – Le Poisson Rouge with Chapterhouse, Soundpool & Ulrich Schnauss

10/15 – Minneapolis, MN – Whole Music Club at University of Minnesota

10/26 – Brooklyn, NY – Death By Audio with Japandroids

10/30 – West Palm Beach, FL – Respectable Street

11/3 – New York, NY – Billboard Showcase at Gramercy

11/11 – Monterrey, Mexico – Escenica

11/13 – Mexico City, Mexico – Festival Sonorama

A Place To Bury Strangers
Tour Dates

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A Place To Bury Strangers
News

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A Place To Bury Strangers
Concert
Reviews