Johnny Winter: Live at Rockpalast
This DVD showcases Winter in a power trio format that suits his sound and style perfectly.
This DVD showcases Winter in a power trio format that suits his sound and style perfectly.
If you have the patience to give one more Christmas album a go, then you could do much worse than Crazy For Christmas. Hicks and his band mates roll triumphantly through a few classics (“Run Run Rudolph” and “Here Comes Santa Claus”), but it’s the originals that shine brightest and set this apart from other holiday offerings. “Santa’s Workshop” for one is a classic in the making with its signature sense of humor and witty word that we’ve come to expect from Hicks.
John Prine is one of those songwriters that makes songwriting seem easy; his words never forced and his wit never ending. Couple that with the simplicity with which he writes and I think most musicians would find his songs easily adaptable and ripe to be covered.
Soulive fans looking for an all-together-different side to Eric Krasno’s playing style on his debut solo record Reminisce will most likely be disappointed. This is far from a stylistic departure for Krasno as his knack for the groove comes through as sharp as ever, which, for most, is a good thing.
Mark Everett is back at it. His Eels have been quite busy in the last few years, recording a record in each of the last three years if you include the soundtrack to Yes Man, which was comprised mostly of songs by Everett. For those familiar with Eels music, this latest release, End Times, won’t provide anything new to the puzzle in terms of style or feel, though it may be the darkest release yet.
Season 2 Set Six from Jamcam Chronicles brings you a tasty performance from the Everyone Orchestra at the Crystal Ballroom in Portland, Oregon.
At Bumbershoot, as is the case with all the good festivals, many dilemmas arise when it comes to choosing which bands to see and which bands to skip. With no fewer than nine stages to see music (and another two for comedy and still a few other platforms for poets and performance artists), naturally one must make choices, such as between the upbeat rhymes of megastar Kanye West and the swampy New Orleans funk of Ivan Neville
Be Here to Love Me documents the life of one of America
Their most accessible to the run-of-the-mill hipster not necessarily looking for music to slit his/her wrist to.
With a list of duet partners that include Tony Rice, Doc Watson, Ricky Skaggs, Norman Blake, Earl Scruggs, and Jerry Douglas, among others, you get what you might expect out of Sutton