This blog is dedicated to music, live and recorded. I review shows and albums and also publish feature stories on artists.

Thursday, June 28, 2007

MUSICAL MOMENT: Paul Simon on PBS

Last night I caught part of Paul Simon’s Gershwin Award performance on PBS and let me tell you it is worth checking out.

In the last half hour alone he invited Ladysmith Black Mambazo up for Diamonds on the Soles of her shoes, Art Garfunkel for Bridge Over Troubled Water and Stevie Wonder and the Dixie Hummingbirds for Loves Me Like a Rock.

Each collaboration was fantastic and really showed the diversity that Simon has embraced as a performer over his career. His interaction with each artist was very friendly and showed a mutual respect that I had to admire as I watched.

While I will get to the moment that inspired me to write this in a minute I have to say that I was pleasantly surprised by Art Garfunkel. He really let go and brought the house down with a moving performance of a timeless song. His voice has suffered a bit over the years but his passion has only grown.

The final song of the broadcast, "Loves Me Like a Rock" featured Simon with The Dixie Hummingbirds and Stevie Wonder but it was the Hummingbirds lead man Ira Tucker who stole the show and even got to sing his verse twice (watch and you’ll see what I mean). It was incredible to see a man his age reinventing a modern classic as he poured his soul into the song. If you like, or even just respect, what Paul Simon has done for popular music over his career, don’t miss this special performance.

Click Here To Learn More

Click Here For Airtimes

Click Here For a Full Review of The Performance

Labels:

Monday, June 25, 2007

PICK OF THE WEEK: Stephen Stills - Thursday, June 28th - Boulder Theater, Boulder, CO

Why You Should Go: Stephen Stills has been performing Rock and Roll for more than 40 years. He was a a critical factor in the folk revolution of the 60's as a part of Buffalo Springfield and Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young. He has penned such legendary songs as "Suite: Judy Blue Eyes," "Love the One You're With," and "For What It's Worth" in addition to countless others over the years.


While Stills voice isn't what it was 20 years ago, his recent album Man Alive! exceeded expectations and proved that Stills is still a vital and contributing member to the genre that he helped to define.


It isn't often that a performer of Stills stature performs in a venue as intimate as The Boulder Theatre. Though the show is currently sold out, there are some tickets floating around on Craigslist (link below).


Take a look at his performance of "For What It's Worth" from Reading, PA in April of this year.





Venue: The Boulder Theater, 2032 14th Street, Boulder, CO 80302 - (303)786-7030

Doors:
7:00 PM

*Approximate Set Times:
Stephen Stills - 8:00 PM

*Price:
$46.50 - Reserved
$54.50 - Gold Circle
SOLD OUT - Check Craigslist for Tickets

*All times and prices are gathered from other sources and I am not responsible for mistakes or inconsistencies. They are intended only as guidelines. Please, always call the venue if you desire the most accurate information possible.

Labels:

Monday, June 18, 2007

PICK OF THE WEEK: Feist - Friday, June 22nd - Boulder Theater, Boulder CO

Why You Should Go: French Canadian songstress Feist has been making music for more than 15 years and has quite a eclectic history. She started out as part of pre-grunge/punk band, Placebo whose first gig was a festival slot alongside the Ramones. At age 20 she moved to Toronto and joined the fist-raising sing-along rock band By Divine Right as rhythm guitarist. Her first solo album, 1999's Monarch , heralded Let It Die's stripped down, multi-genre soundscapes. Later she appeared on stage at Peaches' shows as Bitch Lap-Lap, an incompetent rapper wearing Cuban aerobics outfits, sporting a sock puppet. Putting Lap Lap to rest (in a hammock somewhere), she toured through Europe for 2 years with Chilly Gonzales and is a founding member of the Canadian Indie-Pop collective Broken Social Scene.

Today she focusing largely on the kind of stripped down vocally focused songs that dominate her latest release The Reminder. Feist has been appearing on just about every late night talk show over the past couple of months and with a quick search of You Tube you can stumble across clips like the one below of her performing on a Santa Monica city bus for the Jimmy Kimmel show.

While her show at the Boulder Theatre almost certainly will not involve any busses, this humble Chanteuse will be sure to delight the audience with her speical brand of folk.

Be sure to arrive early to check out the indie rock upstarts Grizzly Bear who will open the show.



Venue: The Boulder Theater, 2032 14th Street, Boulder, CO 80302 - (303)786-7030

Doors:
8:00 PM

*Approximate Set Times:
Grizzly Bear - 8:30 PM
Feist - 9:30 PM

*Price:
$23.50
PURCHASE

*All times and prices are gathered from other sources and I am not responsible for mistakes or inconsistencies. They are intended only as guidelines. Please, always call the venue if you desire the most accurate information possible.

Labels:

Thursday, June 07, 2007

FEATURE: The Police Put Ego and Fighting Aside to Reunite for Massive Summer Tour

It isn’t often that the cry "The Police are coming" generates as much excitement as it did in January of this year when Sting, Andy Summers and Stewart Copeland announced the much anticipated reunion tour of The Police. The tour " the band’s first since the globetrotting Synchronicity publicity caravan came to a halt in March of 1984 " has sold out within minutes in many markets and is sure to be one of the highest grossing tours of the year.

Known for fierce fighting and massive egos, many thought that a Police reunion was something that would never materialize. In fact, Sting’s infamous quote, "If I ever reformed the Police, I’d be certified insane," ranks right up there with Don Henley saying The Eagles would get back together "when hell freezes over." Apparently hell froze over back in 1994, and now it seems Sting has been fitted for a straitjacket.

While the legacy of The Police has always remained strong, the members have, until recent years, been very quiet about the band. In the last two years, both guitarist Andy Summers and drummer Stewart Copeland have broken the silence about the band’s tumultuous history and The Police have bubbled to the surface again.

Summers has recently published two books. In 2006 his memoir One Train Later hit shelves and his most recent, a collection of photographs entitled I’ll Be Watching You: Inside The Police, 1980-83, dropped in March of this year. Copeland chose another medium to share his thoughts, and his documentary film Everyone Stares: The Police Inside Out premiered at The Sundance Film Festival in January of 2006.

Listen Up Denver! recently caught up with Stewart Copeland in Vancouver Canada, while the band was rehearsing for their world tour. Copeland was able to shed some light on the current state of The Police and what led to the reformation of one of the most popular bands of the last 30 years. "In the dark canyons of Sting’s mind a creature arose from the slime. It was the monster known as The Police," Copeland said. "What caused this arousal? No one knows. It may have been the noise made by my little film about the group; it may have been Andy’s book. One day, Andy and I were in a meeting with the record company to discuss the Police catalogue and the phone rang. It was Sting, with a proposal that we light up the band again for a full world tour. We said ‘yes.’"

In a March interview with London’s Sunday Times, Sting shared his side of the story when he discussed what drove him to make that phone call. "I meant it when I said it would be a sign of insanity if it ever came back. I said that every day before I made the decision to get back together. But one day I just woke up and thought, ‘Let’s do that.’ My instinct said this is what you should do. My instincts have nothing to do with logic. The logic of leaving the band when it was the most successful band in the world was odd," said Sting in March.

Finally, more than 20 years after their abrupt departure from the world’s stage, these three men returned as The Police with a single song performance that kicked off the 2007 Grammy Awards in Los Angeles. "We’re The Police, and we’re back," was all Sting said before the trio launched into "Roxanne," the single that broke the band in the United States nearly 30 years ago.

"The first seconds of any show are all music," said Copeland, recalling that night in LA. "After a few moments, when the engine is running, it is possible to look up. What we saw was a large crowd of our flinty eyed peers, but their eyes were full of tears, their arms upraised. There was a wave of emotion in the cavernous arena."

This "wave of emotion" will be sweeping around the globe with the band as they plan to play nearly every major market on the planet. While there has been some skepticism as to whether the band will live up to their legacy, Copeland is supremely confident. "This has always been a band that rose to the occasion," he said. "We feel so human in rehearsals, but when we get in front of an audience, we are overcome by the voodoo of it all. Something much larger than ourselves rises up among us and we become servants of this greater entity."

One of the things that may keep Copeland’s confidence up is the fact that The Police aren’t writing any new songs at this point. For now, as they prepare to hit the road, all three are holed up together in Vancouver, focusing on relearning the songs that made them the household name they are. "We have so much to do rebuilding our group consciousness and we have so much great material to play, that new stuff just doesn’t seem to be part of the program," he said.

In his Sunday Times interview, Sting echoed Copeland’s thoughts when he said, "There is a lot of work to be done. I have developed a lot of these songs as a solo performer, so they are very different. There are rhythmical and structural differences I’ve woven in and haven’t shared with the others, and they were like, ‘What’s this?’ They said they want to do it the way it was in 1982. I said I want it to represent who we are now as musicians. We had a negotiation about the way to keep things fresh and also respect what we did before. And that’s ongoing and I think it’s exciting. We never really wrote songs together, that was part of the problem. I wrote in isolation " brought them a finished product. When you start a band, your roles aren’t defined but they get defined pretty quickly, causing all kinds of machinations and alliances, but it’s hard. I’m a singer/songwriter. Stewart’s a great drummer, and Andy is a great guitarist. Within those roles we can move forward, but at first it was difficult."

It is clear that while they have respect for each other, the members of The Police do not have the best of relationships. "We drive each other nuts, but we all know that we are good for each other," said Copeland, before going on to confess that "the rehearsals have been brutally cheerful. We all love to work. We don’t waste a minute; we don’t deviate. We don’t even jam because there is so much to do."

It is that work ethic that has kept these men extremely busy in their years apart. While Sting has been the most commercially successful of the trio, with albums like The Soul Cages, Ten Summoner’s Tales, and Brand New Day, both Summers and Copeland have been prolifically creative in their own right. Aside from being a father to seven children, Copeland has managed to score more than 40 films for iconic directors like Francis Ford Coppola, Oliver Stone and John Hughes, and form a power trio with Trey Anastasio (Phish) and Les Claypool (Primus) that they dubbed Oysterhead.

Copeland counts his participation in Oysterhead as the one project that stands out the most to him in his musical life outside The Police. "Oysterhead is the opposite of The Police. The Police experience is about singing along with tightly crafted music that you know. Oysterhead is about a wild adventure into the unknown. Anything can happen at an Oysterhead show," Copeland said.

While Oysterhead has been dormant since their 2006 performance at The Bonnaroo Music Festival, Copeland has stated that he would like to do something with the band every couple of years. While jamband fans wait with bated breath, Copeland seems comfortable in his familiar place behind the kit of the band that he started in 1977, resurrecting the tightly crafted music of The Police.

As their tour begins its way around the globe, the group signed on for support duties on the U.S. leg is the little-known British band Fiction Plane. Joe Sumner, the front man for the quartet, is the son of Gordon Sumner, better known to Police fans and the rest of the world as Sting. "You probably think this is nepotism," Sting told the Sunday Times. "He is aware of this and it is a huge problem for him. He says he doesn’t want to be associated with me. But this is a huge opportunity for him to shine."

Apparently, despite his aversion to a helping hand, the offer from Dad was too good to pass up. This summer, arenas full of flinty (and not so flinty) eyed Police fans will have an opportunity to see if Joe is following in his father’s footsteps and cranking out infectious pop tunes that will stand the test of time.

Labels:

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

PICK OF THE WEEK: Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Soul Stew Revival - Saturday June 9th - The Paramount Theatre, Denver, CO

Why You Should Go: Just 27 years old, Derek Trucks has forged a name for himself over the years as an innovative guitar virtuoso, recently featured on the cover of Rolling Stone for their "New Guitar Gods" issue. In 2006 Trucks was asked to join guitar legend Eric Clapton's world tour as a featured soloist in his band, a tour extending into the Spring of 2007 and supported by rave critical reviews. On the road over 300 days per year, Trucks currently divides his time between The Derek Trucks Band, The Allman Brothers Band, and his new gig sharing the stage with Clapton.

In the years since Susan Tedeschi captured the public's musical imagination with her 1998 breakthrough album Just Won't Burn, the multi-talented musician has established a formidable reputation as a deeply expressive singer, a prodigiously talented guitarist and distinctive songwriter. A four-time Grammy Nominee, Tedeschi won a large and loyal audience for her ability to craft elements of classic blues, rock, R&B, folk and gospel into a distinctly individual style that honors rootsy musical traditions without being subservient to them.

Derek Trucks and Susan Tedeschi have combined forces for a summer outing, touring together for the first time as one musical group: Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Soul Stew Revival. The guitar-slinging couple - married since 2001 - have recorded on each other's albums and toured together with their respective bands on occasion, but this will mark the first tour with the two side by side leading one amazing ensemble.

Fans can expect a mixture of material from both artists' repertoire along with a batch of songs worked up especially for this tour, steeped in blues, roadhouse rock and American roots.

The Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Soul Stew Revival consists of acclaimed slide guitarist Derek Trucks, soulful vocalist/guitarist Susan Tedeschi, saxophonist Ron Holloway from Susan's touring outfit and current members of The Derek Trucks Band, Todd Smallie (bass), Yonrico Scott (drums), Kofi Burbridge (keys & flute) Mike Mattison (vocals), Count M'Butu (percussion). The Soul Stew will also debut Derek's younger brother, 18 year old Duane Trucks on second drum kit. Duane graduates high school this year and will continue his "education" with older brother and sister-in-law on the road. Both Tedeschi and Trucks are known for their amazing live performances and along with the impressive individual talents of this band, it promises to deliver a high energy night filled with new and familiar grooves.

The evenings opener, Scrapomatic, features Mike Mattison, the lead vocalist of the Derek Trucks Band and his partner in crime Paul Olsen on guitar. They deliver a stunning mixture of potent blues, foot stomping jazz and sweet soul.

Venue:
The Paramount Theatre, 1621 Glenarm Place, Denver, CO 80202 - (303)623-0106

Doors:
7:00 PM

*Approximate Set Times:
Scrapomatic - 8:00 PM
Soul Stew Revival - 9:00 PM

*Price:
$42.50 Reserved
$50.00 Golden Circle
PURCHASE

*All times and prices are gathered from other sources and I am not responsible for mistakes or inconsistencies. They are intended only as guidelines. Please, always call the venue if you desire the most accurate information possible.

Labels: