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moe. | SF Fillmore | Pics

Images by: Susan J. Weiand

moe. :: 01.27.11 :: The Fillmore :: San Francisco, CA


Setlist
Set 1: Rebubula, Silver Sun, Suck A Lemon > Wormwood > Okayalright > Bullet > Bring You Down
Set 2: Brent Black (1) > Californ IA (1) > Zed Nought Z, Understand > St. Augustine > Shoot First > Billy Goat
Encore: Queen Of The Rodeo, Wind It Up

1 = w/ Robert Randolph on pedal steel























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

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New Orleans JazzFest: Arcade Fire, Boni Jovi, Buffet, Wilco

Arcade
Fire



Bon Jovi



Jimmy Buffett



Kid Rock



John Mellencamp



Wilco



Robert Plant



Ms. Lauryn Hill



Willie Nelson



The Strokes



John Legend



The Roots

Arcade Fire, Bon Jovi, Jimmy Buffett, Sonny Rollins, Kid Rock,
John Mellencamp, Wilco, Robert Plant, Ms. Lauryn Hill, Willie Nelson,
The Strokes, John Legend & The Roots To Join Hundreds of Louisiana Greats at 2011 Jazz Fest in New Orleans

The New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival today announced the music lineup for the
2011 Festival scheduled for April 29 – May 1 and May 5 – 8. With twelve stages of virtually every style of roots music,
Jazz Fest presents one of the entertainment world’s most diverse music lineups, including its unparalleled showcase
of Louisiana’s unique culture. Hundreds of thousands of fans annually flock to the seven-day event that has been
called America’s best festival.

Arcade Fire, Bon Jovi, Jimmy Buffett, Kid Rock, John Mellencamp, Wilco, Willie Nelson, The Strokes, Robert Plant, Ms.
Lauryn Hill, Tom Jones, Jeff Beck, Sonny Rollins, John Legend & The Roots, The Avett Brothers, Cyndi Lauper, Wyclef
Jean, Mumford & Sons, Alejandro Sanz, Jason Mraz, Maze feat. Frankie Beverly, Lupe Fiasco, Arlo Guthrie, Jamey
Johnson, Fantasia, Kenny G, Michael Franti & Spearhead, The Decemberists, Gregg Allman Blues Band, Vickie Winans,
Lucinda Williams, Robert Randolph & the Family Band, Robert Cray, Bobby Blue Bland, Mighty Clouds of Joy, Edie
Brickell, Keb’ Mo’, Rance Allen, Ahmad Jamal, Fourplay, Ricky Skaggs, Amos Lee, Jesse Winchester, Michelle Shocked,
Tabou Combo, RAM, and Boukman Eksperyans of Haiti, Punch Brothers, Ron Carter Trio, Fisk Jubilee Singers, Ivan
Lins, Charlie Musselwhite, Maceo Parker with guest Pee Wee Ellis and more are all among the national and
international guest artists scheduled to appear at the 42nd edition of the Jazz Fest.

Hundreds of Louisiana artists, the heart and soul of the Festival, are scheduled to appear, such as: Trombone Shorty
& Orleans Avenue, The Neville Brothers, Dr. John, Allen Toussaint, Irma Thomas, Mystikal, Pete Fountain, Kermit
Ruffins & the Barbecue Swingers, Better Than Ezra, Rebirth Brass Band, Galactic, Tab Benoit, The Radiators, Cowboy
Mouth, Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk, Marcia Ball, The Dirty Dozen Brass Band, Ellis Marsalis, Walter “Wolfman”
Washington, Sonny Landreth, Henry Butler, Papa Grows Funk, Big Sam’s Funky Nation, John Boutte, Terence
Blanchard, Amanda Shaw, The New Orleans Bingo! Show, Jon Cleary, Partners N Crime with 5th Ward Weebie, Soul
Rebels Brass Band, Joseph Zigaboo Modeliste, Glen David Andrews, Anders Osborne, Buckwheat Zydeco, George
Porter, Jr. & Runnin’ Pardners, Big Freedia & Sissy Nobby, Preservation Hall Jazz Band, Johnny Sketch & the Dirty
Notes, MyNameIsJohnMichael, Rockin’ Dopsie, Jr. & the Zydeco Twisters, Zachary Richard, Warren Storm – Willie Tee
& Cypress, Honey Island Swamp Band, Bonerama, John Mooney & Bluesiana, Nicholas Payton, Irvin Mayfield & the New
Orleans Jazz Orchestra, Jeremy Davenport, Deacon John, Donald Harrison, Astral Project, Big Chief Monk Boudreaux
& the Golden Eagles, Banu Gibson, Shamarr Allen, Pine Leaf Boys, Mia Borders, Hot 8, Mahogany, New Birth &
Pinstripe Brass Bands, Roots of Music Marching Crusaders Band, The Creole Wild West Mardi Gras Indians plus many
more.

Quint Davis, producer/director of Jazz Fest said, “The 2011 Jazz Fest lineup will deliver an unprecedented balance of
the traditional and the contemporary, in all of the many music categories the Festival presents: from Bon Jovi, Sonny
Rollins and Arcade Fire to Jimmy Buffett, Kid Rock, John Mellencamp and Willie Nelson to Ms. Lauryn Hill, The Strokes
and Robert Plant and on and on, along with the unending list of New Orleans super talents. This lineup reminds us
that the artists we grew up with are now the icons of today, and that today’s new heroes are tomorrow’s heritage.
We’re honored to be able to once again celebrate the soul of America as only New Orleans and the Jazz Fest can.”

The 2011 Festival will also host the largest celebration of Haitian culture in the U.S. since the devastating earthquake
one year ago. New Orleans and Haiti have shared a deep cultural connection for over three hundred years and many
of the local traditions and customs owe their roots to this complex Caribbean country. The Jazz Fest is proud and
honored to host the icons of Haitian music and culture including Wyclef Jean, Tabou Combo, RAM, Boukman
Eksperyans, Emeline Michel, Djakout #1, DJA-Rara and Ti-Coca & Wanga Negès. The many cultural connections will
be illustrated throughout all aspects of this year’s Festival. Some highlights include traditional Vodou drumming
performances, folk crafts demonstrations led by visiting master artisans and rara band DJA-Rara parading
throughout the Fair Grounds. With the support of the Green Family Foundation, the program will also include a
series of scholar-led panel discussions entitled Haiti & New Orleans: Cultural Crossroads as well as a listening station
featuring excerpts from the Grammy nominated recordings of Dr. Alan Lomax made in Haiti for the Library of
Congress in 1936-1937.

Tickets for the Festival, which takes place at the Fair Grounds Race Course, went on sale today. A limited number of
discount ticket packages including tickets to each day of a particular weekend of the Festival will be offered. Ticket
packages purchased for all three days of the first weekend (April 29, 30 & May 1) will be $120 ($40 per day), while
second weekend packages purchased for all four festival days (May 5, 6, 7, & 8) will be $160 ($40 per day). (Tickets
included in each package are day-specific.) Advance single day Jazz Fest tickets are only $45; the gate price is $60.
Children’s tickets (ages 2 – 10) are still only $5 and are available at the gate only. Single day tickets to Jazz Fest are
on sale by specific weekend, with each ticket valid for a single day’s attendance.


Tickets are available at www.nojazzfest.com and www.ticketmaster.com, at all Ticketmaster outlets or by
calling (800)
745-3000. Tickets can be purchased in person at the Jazz Fest ticket office located at the New Orleans Arena Box
Office. All Jazz Fest tickets are subject to additional service fees and handling charges.


Robbie Robertson Readies First Album in Over a Decade

HOW TO BECOME CLAIRVOYANT OUT APRIL. 5, 2011; FEATURES ERIC CLAPTON,
ROBERT
RANDOLPH, TOM MORELLO, STEVE WINWOOD, TRENT REZNOR


Robbie Robertson

On April 5, 2011, 429 Records will release How To Become Clairvoyant, Robbie Robertson‘s fifth solo
album and his first record in more than 10 years. Guitar virtuosos Eric Clapton (who co-wrote three tracks
with Robertson), Tom Morello and Robert Randolph guest on the album, which Robertson co-
produced with Marius de Vries. How To Become Clairvoyant also features Steve
Winwood
and Trent Reznor as well as vocalists Angela McCluskey, Rocco Deluca, Dana
Glover
and Taylor Goldsmith of Dawes. Bassist Pino Palladino and drummer Ian
Thomas
lay down the groove throughout.

On his last two albums, Music for The Native Americans (1994) and Contact from the Underworld of
Redboy
(1998), Robertson explored his ancestry. Now, with How To Become Clairvoyant, he takes on
his rock heritage, delivering his first-ever song about leaving The Band, the evocative “This Is Where I Get
Off.” You can preview “When The Night Was Young” off the new album by clicking here.

How to Become Clairvoyant Tracklisting:

1.) Straight Down The Line
2.) When The Night Was Young
3.) He Don’t Live Here No More
4.) The Right Mistake
5.) This Is Where I Get Off
6.) Fear of Falling

7.) She’s Not Mine

8.) Madame X

9.) Axman

10.) Won’t Be Back

11.) How To Become Clairvoyant

12.) Tango For Django

Robbie Robertson
Tour Dates

::
Robbie Robertson News
::
Robbie Robertson
Concert
Reviews


Bluesfest 2011 Sideshows

FEATURING TRUCKS & TEDESCHI, ROBERT RANDOLPH,
BLIND BOYS OF ALABAMA, MAVIS STAPLES,
IRMA
THOMAS


Mavis Staples

Bluesfest today announced its first run of
festival sideshows for Sydney, Melbourne and Adelaide based audiences. And, what an electrifying array of musical
delights it is, featuring some of the best world-class blues, roots, gospel, and soul talent announced so far for
Bluesfest 2011.

For the first show, Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Band will be ably supported by the amazing funk
soul pedal-steel master guitarist Robert Randolph and the Family Band in Sydney on April 21 at the Enmore Theatre,
and Melbourne on April 22 at the Palace Theatre.

This next show is ‘A Gospel Celebration!’ with Blind Boys of Alabama featuring Aaron Neville. Opening proceedings
will be none other than Rock & Roll Hall of Famer and legendary vocalist Mavis Staples. The dates are April 20 in
Melbourne at The Palais and April 25 in Sydney at the Opera House.

The third festival sideshow will include Irma Thomas. The soul queen of New Orleans will be traveling down under
for her first ever Australian tour. This “N’awlins Soul Sister No 1” is responsible for cutting some of the finest ever
soul music in the history of New Orelans music including “Time Is On My Side” later recorded by the Rolling Stones,
and “Ruler Of My Heart” which was changed to “Pain In My Heart” and recorded by Otis Redding. This sideshow is
scheduled for April 21 at The Factory in Sydney.

Click here for all information related to Bluesfest 2011
in Byron Bay, New South Wales, Australia.


North Mississippi Allstars: New Dates Announced

NEW DATES ANNOUNCED; KEYS TO THE KINGDOM OUT FEB. 1, 2011

The North Mississippi
Allstars
are happy to announce they will be performing at the Dominion Theater in New York on January
27. Tickets for the show will go on sale this Friday at noon. The band is also pleased to announce they will be
performing at the annual SXSW festival in Austin, TX this March. Get more details on both shows at www.nmallstars.com.

In addition to the new shows, the North Mississippi Allstars recently announced a 15-day tour with Robert Plant and The Band of Joy.
This will be the first North American tour for Robert Plant since the triumphant release of his latest album, Band
of Joy
. NMA will be performing as a duo, featuring Luther and Cody Dickinson, as support
on all 15 dates. See the complete schedule below and stay tuned for more dates coming soon.

Their upcoming album Keys To The Kingdom is due out Feb. 1, 2011. Check out the video for
“Hear The Hills” below

TOUR DATES

12/28 Birmingham, AL WorkPlay

12/29 Atlanta, GA Variety Playhouse
12/30 Jackson, MS Hal & Mals
12/31 Chicago, IL House of Blues (w/ Robert Randolph & the Family Band)
01/18 Asheville, NC Thomas Wolfe Auditorium (w/ Robert Plant)
01/19 Pittsburgh, PA Peterson Events Center (w/ Robert Plant)
01/21 Ann Arbor, MI Hill Auditorium (w/ Robert Plant)
01/22 Toronto, ONT Sony Centre for the Performing Arts (w/ Robert Plant)
01/23 Toronto, ONT Sony Centre for the Performing Arts (w/ Robert Plant)
01/25 Boston, MA House of Blues (w/ Robert Plant)
01/26 Upper Darby, PA Tower Theatre (w/ Robert Plant)

01/27 New York, NY Dominion Theater
01/28 Mashantucket, CT MGM Grand at Foxwoods (w/ Robert Plant)
01/29 New York, NY Beacon Theatre (w/ Robert Plant)
02/01 Washington, DC Constitution Hall (w/ Robert Plant)

02/02 Raleigh, NC Memorial Auditorium (w/ Robert Plant)
02/04 North Charleston, SC N. Charleston Performing Arts Center (w/ Robert Plant)
02/05 Atlanta, GA Fox Theatre (w/ Robert Plant)
02/07 Charlotte, NC Ovens Auditorium (w/ Robert Plant)
02/08 Nashville, TN War Memorial Auditorium (w/ Robert Plant)
02/09 Nashville, TN War Memorial Auditorium (w/ Robert Plant)

03/16 – 03/20 Austin, TX SXSW

North Mississippi Allstars
Tour Dates

::
North Mississippi Allstars
News

::
North Mississippi Allstars
Concert
Reviews


Robert Randolph: Winter Dates

WE WALK THIS ROAD OUT NOW


Robert Randolph & The Family Band

Robert Randolph & The Family
Band
have announced Winter 2011 tour dates, beginning January 20 in Fayetteville, AR and ending in
Burlington, VT at the Higher Groundon February 20. Presale is happening now for the San Francisco, CA and Austin,
TX dates. Check out all tour dates below.

TOUR DATES

01/20/11 George’s Majestic Fayetteville, AR

01/21/11 Liberty Hall Lawrence, KS

01/22/11 Ogden Theatre Denver, CO

01/28/11 The Independent San Francisco, CA

01/29/11 The Independent San Francisco, CA

01/30/11 Crystal Bay Club Casino Crystal Bay, NV

02/01/11 El Rey Theater Albuquerque, NM

02/03/11 Gruene Hall New Braunfels, TX

02/04/11 Antone’s Austin, TX

02/05/11 Antone’s Austin, TX

02/17/11 House of Blues Boston, MA

02/20/11 Higher Ground (Ballroom) Burlington, VT

Robert Randolph
& The Family Band
Tour Dates

::
Robert
Randolph & The Family Band News

::
Robert Randolph &
The Family Band
Concert
Reviews


Bluesfest 2011: Dylan, ZZ Top, Costello, B.B., Harper, Toots

APRIL 21-APRIL 25 2011 IN BYRON BAY, NEW SOUTH WALES, AUSTRALIA


ZZ Top

Bluesfest from Byron Bay, Australia’s favourite counter-culture, family-orientated, artistically diverse
music festival,
today unveiled its second artist announcement. Tickets are on sale now here. The festival dates next year over Easter are from Thursday April 21
through to Monday April
25, 2011.

The second Bluesfest announcement for 2011 includes:

Jethro Tull
ZZ Top
John
Legend
Gurrumul (Bluesfest exclusive)
Toots & the Maytals
Pete Murray
Wolfmother
Funky
Meters
Irma Thomas
Booker T
Los Lobos
Kasey Chambers
Captain Matchbox Whoopee
Band
Tim Robbins & the Rogues Gallery Band
The Dingoes
Diesel
Trombone Shorty & Orleans
Avenue
B.B. & the Blues Shack
Joe Louis Walker
Phil Jones & the Unknown Blues
The
Snowdroppers
Ray Beadle
Nat Col & the Kings
Barrence Whitfield

The new names join the artists first announced in November which included:

Bob Dylan
B.B.
King
Ben Harper & Relentless7
Elvis Costello & the Imposters
Michael Franti & Spearhead

Rodrigo y Gabriela
The Cat Empire
Blind Boys of Alabama featuringAaron Neville
Derek Trucks &
Susan Tedeschi Band
Robert Randolph & the Family Band
Fistful of Mercy
Mavis Staples
Xavier
Rudd
Trinity Roots
Kate Miller-Heidke
Washington
Little Bushman
Tony Joe White

Indigo Girls
Eric Bibb
Ash Grunwald
Ruthie Foster
C.W. Stoneking
Jeff Lang
Saltwater
Band
RocKwiz Live


John Travolta fuming over gay slurs

John Travolta has been accused of picking up men in saunas. Writer Robert Randolph has written a book, ‘You’ll Never Spa In This Town Again’, in which he reckons he saw the Grease star, 56, getting it on with men in Los Angeles steam rooms. Randolph blasted Travolta as a serial cheater who makes philandering [...]

Bonerama: Northeast Residency Tour

TOUR KICKS OFF TOMORROW IN NEWMARKET, NH

After a whirlwind month-long Northeast residency last October, Bonerama is at it again this year.
This year’s tour will include three weekly residency stops. Friday nights, Bonerama will hold court once again at
Sullivan Hall in the Village in New York City. On Saturday November 13 and November 20, the band will return to the
North Star Bar in Philadelphia for the first time since December of 2007. Sunday nights, catch Bonerama at the New
Orleans funk-friendly capital of Baltimore, MD, The 8×10.

Drummer Terence
Higgins
(Dirty Dozen Brass Band) will join the band on all November dates. Adam “Shmeeans”
Smirnoff
(Lettuce, Robert Randolph) will be welcomed to the stage on the
first weekend residency stops. Members of Morphine and Jeremy Lyons aka (Ever
Expanding)
Elastic Waste Band will open the New York City show on November 5. Guitarist Cris
Jacobs
(The Bridge) will join the Bones for the November 14th Baltimore show.

The band also deploys some secret weapons in the form of two jam band superstars. Keyboardist Kyle
Hollingsworth
(String Cheese Incident) and guitarist Steve Kimock (Crazy Engine, Zero, PRAANG, Steve
Kimock Band and KVHW) lend their talents to Bonerama’s wall of sound.

To open the final four dates of the tour, Bonerama welcomes their Boston-based friends and co-conspirators Nate
Wilson Group. This up and coming super-group features members of Assembly of Dust and Percy Hill.

Fans are encouraged to “Bone Up” and pick up their tickets in advance for this special run of shows. The Boner Donor
program is designed to provide the ultimate Bonerama fan experience. Opportunities to
purchase refillable flash-drives, private parties, back-stage passes and much more
enable the band to be closer to their fans than ever before. Existing Boner Donors are encouraged to bring their
official Hard Times Hard Drives out to the shows for free refills. New drives will be available on all gigs in
November.

Click here for full details on the Boner
Donor program.


November 4 The Stone Church Newmarket, NH
November 5 Sullivan Hall w/ Adam Smirnoff & Members of Morphine and Jeremy Lyons New York, NY
November 6 Market Street Live Wilmington, DE
November 7 The 8×10 w/ Adam Smirnoff Baltimore, MD
November 10 Wonder Bar Allston, MA
November 11 Narrows Center for the Arts Fall River, MA

November 12 Sullivan Hall w/ Jonathan Batiste New York, NY
November 13 North Star Bar w/ Jonathan Batiste Philadelphia, PA
November 14 The 8×10 w/ Jonathan Batiste & Cris Jacobs Baltimore, MD
November 16 Chico’s House of Jazz Asbury Park, NJ

November 18 Church of Boston w/ Nate Wilson Group Boston, MA
November 19 Sullivan Hall w/ Nate Wilson Group, Kyle Hollingsworth & Steve Kimock New York, NY

November 20 North Star Bar w/ Nate Wilson Group, Kyle Hollingsworth & Steve Kimock Philadelphia, PA

November 21 The 8×10 w/ Nate Wilson Group and Kyle Hollingsworth Baltimore, MD

Bonerama
Tour Dates

::
Bonerama News
::
Bonerama
Concert
Reviews


Robert Randolph/NMAS: New Year’s Eve in CHI

PRE SALE TODAY AT 10 AM CDT THROUGH THURSDAY 10 PM CDT

Robert Randolph and the
North Mississippi Allstars
will
celebrate the new year with a December 31 performance at the House of Blues in Chicago. Pre-sale starts today at
10
AM CDT and ends on 10 PM CDT on Thursday. General on sale begins Friday, October 22 at 10 AM CDT. The pre-sale password is “JamHOB”

Robert Randolph
Tour Dates

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Robert Randolph News
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Robert Randolph
Concert
Reviews


Soulive Live DVD Out 11/23

LIVE DVD FEATURES DEREK TRUCKS, WARREN HAYNES,
QUESTLOVE, RAHZEL, ROBERT RANDOLPH,
MARCO BENEVENTO & MORE


Soulive: Live at the Brooklyn Bowl

In March of 2010, the members of Soulive hauled their instruments through the doors of a newly-opened warehouse-
turned-music venue in Brooklyn that they would call home for the next two weeks. Eric Krasno, Alan
Evans
and Neal Evans called on a multitude of their closest friends and musical conspirators to join
them over the next fortnight – creating an incredibly broad guest lineup that included some of the pre-eminent
guitar virtuosos of our generation (Derek Trucks, Warren Haynes), some of the biggest names in hip-hop
(Questlove, Rahzel), and some of the most inventive improvisational players in modern rock n’ roll
(Robert Randolph, Marco Benevento, Oteil & Kofi Burbridge).

Bowlive: Live at the Brooklyn Bowl is out on DVD November 23.

Track Listing:

Introduction
What is Bowlive?

Hat Trick feat. The Shady Horns & Danny Sedownik

Nigel Hall

Too Much feat. Nigel Hall, Ivan Neville, Danny Sedownik & The Shady Horns

The Shady Horns
El Ron feat. The Shady Horns

Ivan Neville

Jesus Children of America -> If You Want Me To Stay feat Ivan Neville and Nigel Hall

Kofi and Oteil Burbridge
Butter Biscuit feat. Oteil Burbridge, Kofi Burbridge & The Shady Horns
Robert Randolph

Crosstown Traffic feat. Robert Randolph & The Shady Horns

Questlove
Give It Up Or Turnit Loose feat. Questlove, Nigel Hall & The Shady Horns
Made You Look feat. Rahzel, Questlove & The Shady Horns
The London Souls
Lucille feat. Tash Neal & The Shady Horns
Sunshine feat Raul Midon, Nigel Hall & The Shady Horns
Susan Tedeschi & Derek Trucks

Soul Serenade feat. Susan Tedeschi, Derek Trucks, Kofi Burbridge & The Shady Horns
Warren Haynes

Born Under a Bad Sign feat. Warren Haynes, DJ Logic, Nigel Hall & The Shady Horns
Conclusion
Credits
Robert Randolph

Soulive
Tour Dates

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Soulive News
::
Soulive
Concert
Reviews


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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John Travolta Gay Cheating Whispers Surface

John Travolta’s family has been dealed another blow as reports emerge that the veteran actor has been allegedly cheating on his wife — engaging in “lewd sex acts with other men” as part of a “secret gay spa subculture.”“John Travolta has been cheating on Kelly for years!” says Robert Randolph, author of the memoir, You’ll [...]

Robert Randolph: Fall Tour Dates

TOUR STARTS OCTOBER 6 IN TULSA, OKLAHOMA


Robert Randolph & the Family Band

Robert Randolph & the Family
Band
are happy to announce new fall tour dates. Pre-sale for the following dates begins 9/1 at 9am. You
can find ticket links for these shows on the tour page. Public on sale begins on 9/9.

10/29 – Washington, DC – 9:30 Club

10/30 – Washington, DC – 9:30 Club

Ticket links and pre-sale information for the following shows will be available soon. Please check www.robertrandolph.net for details.

10/6 – Tulsa, OK – Cain’s Ballroom

10/9 – New Orleans, LA – Tipitina’s
10/11 – Baton Rouge, LA – Varsity Theatre
10/12 – Birmingham, AL – WorkPlay Soundstage

10/16 – Atlanta, GA – Buckhead Theatre
10/17 – Lexington, KY – Busters

10/19 – Bloomington, IN – Bluebird Nightclub
10/20 – Columbus, OH – Newport Music Hall
10/22 – Baltimore, MD – Ram’s Head
10/23 – Albany, NY – Hart Theatre @ The Egg Center for Performing Arts
10/24 – Pittsburgh, PA – Carnegie Music Hall
10/27 – Toronto, CA – The Mod Club
11/11 – New Haven, CT – Toad’s Place
11/12 – Philadelphia, PA – Theatre of Living Arts
11/13 – New York, NY – Terminal 5

Robert Randolph
& the Family Band
Tour Dates

::
Robert
Randolph
& the Family Band News

::
Robert Randolph &
the Family Band
Concert
Reviews


Gathering of the Vibes Preview

By: Dennis Cook
JamBase Associate Editor

Gathering of the Vibes :: 07.29.10-08.01.10 :: Seaside Park :: Bridgeport, CT

Once again the pilgrimage to the Vibes begins as folks gather along the Connecticut shoreline to enjoy headliners including Primus, Furthur, Robert Randolph & The Family Band and Damian “Jr. Gong” Marley & Nas. With Wavy Gravy as colorful MC, this weekend is filled with two stages packed with some of the best the jam world has to offer. Here’s five recommendations beyond the big names to consider if you’ll be Vibin’ it in the days ahead.

1. Hot Day At The Zoo :: Thursday :: 12:45-2:00 PM :: Green Vibes Stage

Put directly, Hot Day is one of the best string bands out there. Full of feisty energy, wicked chops, increasingly together songwriting and a good nose for covers, New England-based HDATZ offer a slightly sophisticated take on country comfort with no small measure of individual personality to boot. Well worth having your campsite set up early so you can attend and fully get into it with the Zoo.

2. Leroy Justice :: Thursday :: 4:15-5:30 PM :: Green Vibes Stage

One of NYC’s finest, classic-minded outfits should be the perfect score to get your first solid drunk on for the weekend. There’s something raw ‘n’ real about Leroy Justice that makes a person want to bend an elbow and get down into the muck with ‘em. Anyone with a sweet tooth for Black Crowes style meat ‘n’ taters rock – especially from guys who write way above par original material and deliver it with significant muscle and flair – are in for a treat this Thursday. Leroy Justice also put out one of the great sleepers of 2009 called The Loho Sessions, which was produced by mixing board maestro John Siket. Read the JamBase rave here.

3. Jackie Greene :: Friday :: 1:40-3:10 PM :: Main Stage

Bay Area boy Greene is on a pretty hot roll right now. His new album, Till The Light Comes (see review here), is an end-to-end corker, his band is tight, he’s grown into one of the strongest interpreters of the Dead catalog around, and his beard is coming in nicely. Greene is quality bang for your buck, and with Furthur on the festival grounds the same day chances of a Phil sit-in are pretty decent.

4. Assembly of Dust :: Saturday :: 2:40-4:10 PM :: Main Stage

AOD’s tunes have the quality of fantastic lost singles – easy to dig right away and better loved with repetition – and the band plays with a level of care and technical dexterity that’s rare today. Assembly’s whole aura draws one in and reminds one of an era when real musicians with genuine artistry made pop music. If radio weren’t the corporate wasteland it is then AOD’s music would already be bumping shoulders with Tom Petty, Sheryl Crow and the other mainstays on the FM dial. However, folks can enjoy their craftsmanship on a sunny Saturday at the Vibes and imagine how much better the airwaves would be with AOD on them.

5. Martin Sexton with the Ryan Montbleau Band :: Sunday :: 3:25-4:40 PM :: Main Stage

Sexton’s new album, Sugarcoating, is perhaps his most tuneful and readily appealing song cycle to date. So it makes a certain cosmic sense for him to hook up with Montbleau and his populist leaning crew. What’s in store is an hour and change filled with fleshed out, nicely rockin’ pop with tasty covers from the likes of Zeppelin and The Beatles. And by Sunday afternoon this might be just the ticket to get you to the finish line for Vibes 2010.

Gathering of the Vibes Music Schedule

Gathering of the Vibes Directions

Gathering of the Vibes Official Site

JamBase review of 2009 Gathering of the Vibes

JamBase | Seaside
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Robert Randolph & The Family Band If I Had My Way Video

NOW THIS IS GOSPEL WE CAN GET DOWN WITH!

While most of us won’t be lucky enough to catch Robert Randolph & The Family Band in a tiny bar, we can experience what it might be like in this swell new clip from their new album, We Walk This Road (released June 21), where they reconfigure Blind Willie Johnson’s gospel standard by removing Sampson and substituting Daniel in the lion’s den. Clever folks and heavens can they play!

For more on Randolph & The Family Band’s latest, check out our recent interview with Robert.

Robert Randolph & The Family Band Tour Dates :: Robert Randolph & The Family Band News :: Robert Randolph & The Family Band Concert Reviews


XPoNential Fest Sched: Dr. Dog, Grace Potter, Greyhound

ALEJANDRO ESCOVEDO, GRACE POTTER, ROBERT RANDOLPH, FELICE BROTHERS, &
MORE


Dr. Dog

The 2010 XPoNential Music Festival has announced details of their day by day schedule. The festival is
being held at Wiggins Park in Camden, NJ on July 16-18. Early bird tickets and three day passes are available now
through July 9. Click here for more information.

Friday

Camden County River Stage

6:50 pm Alejandro Escovedo
8:00 pm Grace Potter & the Nocturnals

9:35 pm Big Head Todd & The Monsters

JerseyArts.com Marina Stage

5:30 pm Toy Soldiers
6:10 pm Dutch
7:40 pm Ben Arnold
8:55 pm Free Energy

Saturday

Camden County River Stage
1:00 pm Harper Blynn
2:15 pm Nicole Atkins
3:45 pm The Walkmen
5:20 pm Yo La Tengo
6:55 pm Rosanne Cash
8:50 pm The Felice Brothers

JerseyArts.com Marina Stage
12:30 pm Birdie Busch
1:35 pm Bobby Long
3:00 pm Joshua James
4:35 pm Diane Birch
6:10 pm Robert Francis
8:00 pm Ben Vaughn

Sunday


Camden County River Stage
1:00 pm Blood Feathers
2:15 pm Dawes
3:45 pm Cowboy Junkies

5:20 pm Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros
6:55 pm Dr. Dog
8:45 pm Robert Randolph and the Family Band

JerseyArts.com Marina Stage
12:30 pm The Great Unknown
1:35 pm Fool’s Gold
3:00 pm The Holmes Brothers

4:35 pm These United States
6:10 pm Amy Correia
7:55 pm Earl Greyhound

Kids Corner

Saturday
1:00pm Steve Pullara & His Cool Beans Band
2:00pm Two of a Kind & The Give ‘Em A Hand Band
3:00pm Bubboon’s Tunes
4:00pm John Hadfield
5:00pm Yosi & The Superdads

Sunday
1:00pm Joanie Leeds
2:00pm Billie Kelly
3:00pm Recess Monkey
4:00pm Ham And Burger
5:00pm John Flynn


Elton John & Leon Russell: The Union Out 10/19

ALBUM FEATURES GUESTS NEIL YOUNG, BRIAN WILSON AND ROBERT RANDOLPH


Leon Russell

Direct Current is reporting that Elton John and Leon Russell have finished recording an album of new material. The
Union
is scheduled for an October 19 release on Decca Records. The album is produced by T Bone Burnett
and
features fifteen original songs written by the duo of Elton John and Bernie Taupin, together with Leon
Russell.

Taupin’s website states: “The trio has cut fifteen songs ranging from Stones-like rockers, country tinged ballads,
gospel and even a Sinatra like weepy similar to something torn from the grooves of ‘In the Wee Small Hours’. As
reported before it’s varied in scope and drenched in a rich tapestry of atmospherics. Don’t expect to hear the old
EJ/BT sound; this is organic recording unlike anything you’ve heard from our duo before.”

Says John via his website: “I can’t stress enough how significant an influence Leon Russell was on the music of Elton
John and Bernie Taupin. In 1970, when we first went to America and I played The Troubadour, we were obsessed by
Leon’s music, and looked up to him as some kind of musical god. On the second night of the Troubadour concerts
he was there in the front row, but luckily I didn’t spot him until near the end of the show, otherwise I would have
been a nervous wreck.”

The album features a stellar backing band of drummers Jim Keltner and Jay Bellerose,
Dennis Crouch on bass,
guitarist Marc Ribot and Keefus Ciancia on keyboards. Joining in on the fun will be guest spots
by Neil Young, Brian Wilson, Robert Randolph, and Booker T. Jones.


Robert Randolph: Shot of Love

By: Dennis Cook

Robert Randolph

As Robert Randolph & The Family Band approach their first decade together, all evidence is their game is tighter than ever. Boldly emerging from the gospel community, Randolph – easily the greatest innovator on his weapon of choice, pedal steel guitar, since Red Rhodes reshaped the instrument with Michael Nesmith in the ’70s – has always hummed with abundant spirit and Holy Ghost energy. This has never been clearer or more finely etched than third studio album, We Walk This Road (released June 21 on Warner Bros.). Produced with a sure hand and great sonic curiosity by T-Bone Burnett, this set nails the Sly & The Family Stone vibe Randolph has been hovering near for years. Less slick and more sharply drawn than 2006′s Colorblind, the new album mingles the voices of the past with a decidedly modern edge. This is gospel music for people who like life to be rowdy and lil’ freaky.

JamBase got to sit down with Randolph to discuss tackling Dylan, the roots of this album in the last Presidential election and more.

JamBase: We Walk This Road is your most together studio work to date. This feels like a classic album rather than a bunch of songs thrown together. There’s a through-line and intelligence to the sequencing, song choices, etc.

Robert Randolph: That’s what we set out to do with T-Bone, just come together and make this sort of thematic record of all sorts of inspirational songs and a lot of very cool sounds, and lyrically just trying to uplift people. And then going back and going back and finding all these old gospel and blues songs – which is really the roots of what I do anyway coming from the church – and taking them and making them into this new sort of Robert Randolph sound with new lyrics that relate to today.

JamBase: For many, gospel music is something of the past and not exactly relevant to today. I think it has the potential to be modern and relevant but often isn’t.

Robert Randolph: In one of the first conversations I had with T-Bone we talked about really digging into these songs, because this is all the same stuff that made Zeppelin become Zeppelin, Dylan become Dylan. They listened to all these old recordings and realized they needed to dive into these things because this is where the roots of American music come from. Whether it’s rewriting or rearranging these old songs, it’s just putting your own music stamp on this but using the bones of it.

For instance, take “Dry Bones” off the record – “Them bones, them bones, them dry bones.” It’s really just an old field recording we took and just looped to it and had like a 30-minute jam. There was a lot of stuff going on all over the place, but we started to think about what they were really talking about with “them dry bones,” and we figured out some new lyrics that addressed the bones of a thousand generations laughing in our messed up midst. And this was before BP blew up in the Gulf!

Randolph and The Family Band

A lot of older material is heard but not actually comprehended. By inserting a contemporary twist you make this stuff live.

Of course! And that’s what we set out to do [with this album]; make this music relevant to everybody. And regardless of what songs are recorded, when we play live this song will some sort of 12-minute anyway!

You’ve never obeyed rules about time limits or staying within any one genre throughout your career.

That’s what happens, and really the magic of playing shows. When these things happen, the crowd is smiling and the next minute the bass or guitar does something else that sparks something else emotionally. And that’s the vibe we went after on this album, by way of exploring the bones and roots of gospel music and try to find a way for this music to relate to people today.

You made some great choices of the material. A lot of people, including the man himself, shy away from Dylan’s Christian period, but you guys murder “Shot of Love.”

Thanks! What was strange about that was one day we were sitting in the studio with T-Bone trying to find just one big, strong song we could just lay down the guitar heavy on and deliver a message. And I finally said, “There’s got to be a Dylan song that nobody did before that I can do what Hendrix did to ‘Watchtower.’” And T-Bone was like, “Yeah, everybody tries that but there’s only one Hendrix. But let’s see.” We chose this one because it had this powerful message in there, and we all sat around and jammed to it.

We started this record coming out of the Bush Administration. Every break we’d watch the 2008 Presidential debates because T-Bone is a big Obama fan, and one of the other guys was a McCain fan. So, we’d sit there just watching & watching and we just realized how screwed up everything is! All the messages on this record, particularly “Shot of Love,” well, we ALL need a shot of love right now. People are hurting with all the lying that’s been going on. The song “Keep On Talking” (“Keep on talking, I’m not listening”) was written as a direct result of that campaign. We were sort of afraid that the song might not age well with all the negative stuff in it, but there’s still plenty more liars and crooks.

Oh, I don’t think we’ve even begun to turn over the rocks in this country [laughs]!

Robert Randolph by Rod Snyder

Oh yeah. We really wanted to make a strong statement without pissing too many people off and hopefully uplifting most of them.

Speaking truth is always a little uncomfortable, but if you can do it in a way that makes people want to raise their hands and get into it and actually work on this stuff, well that’s the way to do it, not just sit there and bitch and moan.

Look at Wall Street and BP, and then you look at this Tea Party stuff. Geez, where we going in this country?

We can’t seem to join hands and do things together as a country like we used to. You don’t pick your neighbors; you just happen to live near each other. But, you can pick the relationship you have with your neighbors.

We can do that, and we’re really trying to tell people that in this record. Don’t forget the word ‘gospel’ means the good word. So, we’re ALWAYS trying to spread the good word. And the fact that we were able to tie all these different themes together, with segues from these old songs going into brand new ones, we’ve made Robert Randolph and the Family Band songs we’ll be playing for the next 40 years. It’s cool!

I like that you tap Prince on this album [a cover of "Walk Don't Walk" from Diamonds & Pearls]. People know all the songs about sex and dancing but spirituality and social conscience are reoccurring themes in his music, too.

By me knowing him and talking to him and being around him, I know he’s a real spiritual dude. His spirituality is in his music and his lyrics in songs like “The Cross.” We actually did a version of that one with the Blind Boys of Alabama that didn’t make it onto a record and we thought about doing it again for this one. But then Lenny Waronker, the guy who signed Prince and did a bunch of records with him, came by towards the end of this record and suggested “Walk Don’t Walk” as a way to tie this whole record together. I heard it one time and said, “Let’s go! Let’s record this NOW!” We just knew we could do this whole Family Band version of this song.

T-Bone is the man. He’s just all about capturing the recording and getting the message across. And he told us, “I guarantee you just by me telling people we’re recording together that people are going to want to come down.” Next thing you know Jim Keltner saying, “Hey, let me play on some tracks.” You got Robbie Robertson coming down just to sit in the studio, and Bob Dylan calling in on the phone. You got Robert Plant, Elton John and Leon Russell just hanging out playing piano. And all this stuff came out of inviting people to just come and hang, having an event they were welcome to. They knew we’d have great things to eat, and they just wanted to be part of it in some way.

That fits in with the general spirit of the record, which sort of says, “We’re all in this together. We’re all on the same block. WE walk this road. Not YOU walk this road. It’s WE.”

Robert Randolph

We walk this road together. We ARE all in this together. That’s basically what it is.

One of the best stories of this record was capturing our version of Blind Willie Johnson’s original version of “If I Had My Way.” T-Bone had given me this CD with all these old songs and he had this one on it. One day we took a shot at it and it turned into this 40-minute jam, guitars everywhere and this, that and the other thing. At one point we even had two different songs; one was a country song and the other was very different. I wasn’t sure it was gonna work, so we left it alone for 5 or 6 months. Then, Ben Harper comes in and we start jamming on guitars. We had a cool little thing already but he says, “Let me hear something you don’t have finished yet.” I put on “If I Had My Way,” and he said, “Is this like the Blind Willie Johnson thing?” and he went right into the vocal booth and started singing those choruses – “If I had my way, I’d tear the building down.” And everybody was like, “Well, well, let’s dive into this thing now!” It became this great, soulful song where we swapped out this story of Sampson & Delilah for the one of Daniel in the lion’s den. T-Bone and I went into the lounge with the Daniel lyrical concept while Ben was knocking out the choruses, and it turned out to be a great night.

You’re coming up on 10 years with the Family Band, and now more than ever, you’re one of the few modern equivalents to Sly & The Family Stone.

Don’t forget, Sly came out of the church, too. But I’d only barely heard Sly & The Family Stone, and then I saw an interview with Sly back in 2002 that made me think, “Well, we’re doing the same thing!” He said they were using all the sounds they grew up with in church but Sly said he just had more of a whacky, rock ‘n’ roll mind to tie all this stuff together. And I thought, “That’s me, too,” without even really trying to be like that. It’s just one of those natural things with me going from sitting in church and then going out to play those early shows at the Lakeside Lounge and Mercury Lounge in New York and places all over Boston and Philly. I realized this was a whole different universe to Planet Church. There’s people out here that want a good message, that want to be inspired and uplifted, and that will always be in us.

Robert Randolph & The Family Band Tour Dates :: Robert Randolph & The Family Band News :: Robert Randolph & The Family Band Concert Reviews

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Late Night TV Musical Guests: 6/21-6/27

Late Night TV Music Lineups



Can’t make it to any shows this week? We’ve got you covered. Check out our weekly schedule of late night talk show musical guests…

David Letterman Musical Guests


Tue, June 22- Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue
Wed, June 23 – Bettye LaVette
Fri, June 25 – Jay-Z and Eminem


Jay Leno Musical Guests


Mon, June 21 – Crystal Bowersox
Tue, June 22 – Robert Randolph & The Family Band
Wed, June 23 – Drake
Thu, Jun 24 – Sharon Jones and The Dap-Kings
Fri, June 25 – Lee Dewyze


Jimmy Kimmel Musical Guests


Mon, June 21 – Dierks Bentley
Tue, June 22 – Taio Cruz (Repeat)
Thu, June 24 – Drake
Fri, June 15 – Sublime with Rome


Jimmy Fallon Musical Guests


Mon, June 21 – Travie McCoy
Tue, June 22 – Herbie Hancock
Wed, June 23 – Macy Gray
Thu, June 24 – MGMT


Carson Daly Musical Guests


Mon, June 21 – Citizen Cope(Repeat)
Tue, June 22 – RJD2 (Repeat)
Wed, June 23 – Holly Golightly (Repeat)
Thu, June 24 – Daniel Merriweather (Repeat)
Fri, June 25 – David Gray (Repeat)


Other Shows of Interest


Mon, June 21 – Tavis Smiley featuring a performance by Herbie Hancock

Sat, June 26 – Saturday Night Live featuring a performance by Bon Jovi (Repeat)

Sat, June 26 – Austin City Limits TV Show featuring Sarah McLachlan and Duffy (Repeat)