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Fans Rejoice! Radiohead Announce Nine U.S. Shows – Onsale January 20th

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Radhiohead have confirmed a series of nine performances around America on Tuesday in addition to their two previously announced Coachella headlining gigs. This  tiny run begins March 30th in Miami and routes through Atlanta, New Orleans and Kansas City. After that, the band spends the rest of their time on the west coast. They’ll perform two nights back to back at the Greek Theatre in Berkeley in between the two Coachella shows.

Tickets for all shows go on sale on January 20th. Fans are limited to four tickets apiece, except for the show in Santa Barbara, where the limit is restricted to two tickets per order.

Radiohead U.S.Tour Dates

March 30 – Miami, FL @ American Airlines Arena
April 1 – Atlanta, GA @ Philips Arena
April 3 – New Orleans, LA @ Smoothie King Center
April 5 – Kansas City, MO @ Sprint Center
April 8 – Seattle, WA @ Key Arena
April 9 – Portland, OR @ Moda Center
April 11 – Santa Barbara, CA @ Santa Barbara Bowl
April 14 – Indio, CA @ Coachella Valley Music & Arts Festival
April 17 – Berkeley, CA @ Greek Theatre
April 18 – Berkeley, CA @ Greek Theatre
April 21 – Indio, CA @ Coachella Valley Music & Arts Festival

Photo by Andrew Bruss

The post Fans Rejoice! Radiohead Announce Nine U.S. Shows – Onsale January 20th appeared first on Glide Magazine.


Song Premiere: City Mouse Creates Restful Americana On ‘Bloodshot Eyes”

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Since forming in 2013, City Mouse’s persistence, enigmatic stage presence and originality—forged around the lyricism of frontman Brian Revels—has led to many a sold-out show. They’ve shared bills with bands like The SteelDrivers, Cicada Rhythm, The Howlin’ Brothers, Underhill Rose, Family & Friends, The Darnell Boys and more.

The trio (Revels, Jenna Mobley & Michael Hudgins) became a staple of the Atlanta Americana scene with their debut EP Joy of Life, and continues now—with help from a host of noteworthy Atlanta musician friends—as a Revels solo project. In the wake of extensive touring, co-founder and guitarist Hudgins needed a change of pace. The original trio’s split was amicable, and led to City Mouse partnering with Tony Terrebonne (head engineer of legendary Atlanta studio ZAC Recording) to cut two last songs with the original lineup (Mobley on violin, upright bass and vocals, Revels and Hudgins on electric guitar, banjo and acoustic guitar). The recordings, dubbed The Sanguine Sessions (coming Winter 2017), include “Bloodshot Eyes,” Hudgins’ poignant waltz about love being the catalyst for kicking bad habits, as well as the Revels-penned “Blood Red Youth,” City Mouse’s latest single. According to Revels, “Blood Red Youth” is a passionate, frenetic conversation between young lovers, a song, he says, “full of the nervous energy that comes with young love. As it goes on, the dialogue becomes more intertwined and it’s difficult to distinguish one voice from another. It’s a parallel to both the figurative and physical aspects of being in and making love.”

Glide is proud to premiere the stirring folk single “Bloodshot Eyes” off the The Sanguine Sessions (below). On this five plus minute beauty, City Mouse display the polished reflection of The Milk Carton Kids and presenting a modern distillation of Appalachian folk. The sweet acoustics and strings create an almost surreal landscape where regrets are pacified and hope persevered.

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No DMB Tour This Summer But Dave Matthews & Tim Reynolds Announce U.S. Tour

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Dave Matthews & Tim Reynolds will kick off a U.S. tour on May 3 at Tuscaloosa Amphitheatre in Tuscaloosa, AL. Since Dave Matthews Band is not touring this summer, the two musicians and longtime friends are instead taking the opportunity to play a rare series of stripped-down, acoustic dates together. The run will include two-night stands in Nashville, TN (May 6 & 7), Philadelphia, PA (June 2 & 3), Chicago, IL (June 10 & 11) and Saratoga Springs, NY (June 16 & 17). They will also perform at the Nikon at Jones Beach Theater in Wantagh, NY (June 6) and PNC Bank Arts Center in Holmdel, NJ (June 7). See below for full itinerary.

An online ticket presale for the tour will begin on Thursday, January 19, at 10:00 AM ET at www.warehouse.davematthewsband.comfor members of the DMB Warehouse Fan Association. Tickets will go on sale to the general public on Friday, February 10, at 10 AM local time.

Next week, Matthews & Reynolds will play a pair of sold-out shows in Texas. They’ll head to the Mexican Riviera in February to headline three concerts on Barceló Maya Beach as part of Dave Matthews & Tim Reynolds: Riviera Maya, an all-inclusive coastal concert vacation. Supporting artists include Aldo López-GavilánVusi Mahlasela and Carlos Varela. A limited number of packages are still available. For complete details, visit http://daveandtimrivieramaya.comMatthews & Reynolds will kick off a spring European tour with a two-night stand at London’s Eventim Apollo (March 20 & 21).

Dave Matthews & Tim Reynolds – 2017 Tour Dates

 

North American Dates

1/25                 Sugar Land, TX           Smart Financial Center

1/26                 Grand Prairie, TX       Verizon Theatre

2/23-25            Riviera Maya, MX     Barceló Maya Beach (all-inclusive concert vacation)

5/3                   Tuscaloosa, AL           Tuscaloosa Amphitheatre

5/6                   Nashville, TN             Ascend Amphitheatre

5/7                   Nashville, TN             Ascend Amphitheatre

5/31                 Alpharetta, GA           Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre at Encore Park

6/2                   Philadelphia, PA         The Mann Center

6/3                   Philadelphia, PA         The Mann Center

6/4                   Canandaigua, NY        CMAC

6/6                   Wantagh, NY              Nikon at Jones Beach Theater

6/7                   Holmdel, NY               PNC Bank Arts Center

6/10                 Chicago, IL                  Northerly Island

6/11                 Chicago, IL                  Northerly Island

6/13                 Clarkston, MI             DTE Energy Music Theatre

6/14                 Cuyahoga Falls, OH   Blossom Music Center

6/16                 Saratoga Springs, NY  Saratoga Performing Arts Center

6/17                 Saratoga Springs, NY  Saratoga Performing Arts Center

6/18                 Columbia, MD            Merriweather Post Pavilion

The post No DMB Tour This Summer But Dave Matthews & Tim Reynolds Announce U.S. Tour appeared first on Glide Magazine.

Film Bits: Dakota Fanning to Co-star in ‘The Alienist’; ‘Clowntergeist’ Trailer is Every Bit as Amazing as it Sounds

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Dakota Fanning Heads to TV in New Miniseries

Dakota Fanning

TNT’s The Alienist already had an impressive cast with the likes of Daniel Bruhl (Captain America: Civil War) and Luke Evans (The Hunger Games), but the latest casting adds a little more punch to the lineup. Dakota Fanning (American Pastoral) has signed on to play Sara Howard in the miniseries adaptation of Caleb Carr’s turn-of-the-century murder mystery. The series is being produced by Cary Fukunaga (True Detective) with Jakob Verbruggen (Black Mirror) set to direct. The Alienist is set to premiere sometime later this year on TNT.

(The Hollywood Reporter)

Will ‘Clowntergeist’ Be the Greatest Movie Ever Made? Probably.

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You know what? Cancel movies. 2017 just peaked and there’s no topping this. Try again next year, Hollywood. There’s no release date yet for this obvious masterpiece, but hopefully we get some more information soon. In the mean time, watch this trailer on loop.

(The Hollywood Reporter)

‘Hidden Figures’ Retains Box Office Dominance; ‘Star Wars’ Drops to Fifth

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Hidden Figures topped the box office charts this three-day weekend, raking in $20.8 million and retaining its top-of-the-charts throne for the second week in a row. Damien Chazelle’s Golden Age throwback La La Land jumped from fifth place to second place, earning $14.5 million, while the animated Sing stayed in the third place position with $13.8 million. Newcomer The Bye Bye Man took fourth place with $13.5 million while the latest Star Wars movie, Rogue One, fell from second place to fifth place with a box office total of $13.3 million.

  1. Hidden Figures-$20.8 million
  2. La La Land-$14.5 million
  3. Sing-$13.8 million
  4. The Bye Bye Man-$13.5 million
  5. Rogue One-$13.3 million
  6. Patriots Day-$12 million
  7. Monster Trucks-$10.9 million
  8. Sleepless-$8.3 million
  9. Underworld: Blood Wars-$6.1 million
  10. Passengers-$5.3 million

(Box Office Mojo)

The post Film Bits: Dakota Fanning to Co-star in ‘The Alienist’; ‘Clowntergeist’ Trailer is Every Bit as Amazing as it Sounds appeared first on Glide Magazine.

Neil Fest Texas -Norah Jones, Shakey Graves, Nikki Lane, James Petralli, Charlie Sexton, Alison Mosshart Aboard

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Two legendary Texas theaters in Austin and Dallas, along with more than 25 acclaimed artists will converge to honor Neil Young on February 18th and 19th with Neil Fest. Ticket sale proceeds will benefit Refuge Foundation for the Arts, a non-profit organization supporting the creation of music and art. “We are going to throw two Texas-sized parties for our hero Neil Young,” says Best Fest founder Austin Scaggs. “All Neil, all night, with an incredible cast of musicians. The cherry on top is that we’ll raise money for Refuge Foundation, and everyone onstage and in the audience will help in supporting and nurturing a new wave of musicians and artists. That’s what really makes this all worthwhile.”

As always The Best Fest’s acclaimed house band, The Cabin Down Below Band, will host a prodigious cast of musicians, including Norah Jones, Shakey Graves*, Boz Scaggs, Erika Wennerstrom of Heartless Bastards, The Flatlanders** (Jimmie Dale Gilmore, Butch Hancock, Joe Ely) Featuring Terry Allen**, Alison Mosshart of The Kills, Charlie Sexton, Alex Maas of The Black Angels*, Nikki Lane, White Denim’s James Petralli, Danny Masterson & Adam Busch, Jonathan Tyler, Eric Pulido of Midlake, TheMidnight Stroll, Robert Ellis, Cory Chisel, My Jerusalem’s Jeff Klein, Adriel Denae, Carson McHone, Matthew Logan Vasquez*, Paul Cauthen**, The Texas Gentlemen, The Candles and many many more surprises. Tickets go on saleFriday January 20th.

All Artists to perform at both shows except where notated*Performing Feb 18th ONLY /**Performing Feb 19th ONLY. Artists and line up subject to change without notice.

The Best Fest is proud to continue its partnership with Refuge Foundation for the Arts, which was founded in response to the lack of resources available to artists today, and is honored to support their mission: “Helping Artists Create.”

neilbest

 

 

The post Neil Fest Texas -Norah Jones, Shakey Graves, Nikki Lane, James Petralli, Charlie Sexton, Alison Mosshart Aboard appeared first on Glide Magazine.

Spoon Return to Matador Records With New LP ‘Hot Thoughts’

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Months of speculation come to an end today as details of the new Spoon album can be confirmed: Austin’s most esteemed rock ambassadors will release their ninth album, Hot Thoughts, March 17 on Matador Records.

Reuniting the band with the label that released their 1996 debut, Telephono, and following on Spoon’s streak of three consecutive Top 10 albums — Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga (2007), Transference (2010) and They Want My Soul (2014) — Hot Thoughts is nothing short of an epic. With Hot Thoughts, co-produced by Spoon and Dave Fridmann, the quartet has created the bravest, most sonically inventive work of the catalogue that has made it the most critically acclaimed act of the first decade of the new millennium (http://www.metacritic.com/feature/best-music-of-the-decade). Within the space of 10 songs, Hot Thoughts creates a musical universe of its own, with individual worlds ranging from the kaleidoscopic opening title track—available to stream here or as an instant download with all pre-orders placed at http://smarturl.it/Spoon_Hot_Thoughts — through the gargantuan stomp of “Do I Have To Talk You Into It” and ubiquitous wiry hooks of “Can I Sit Next To You” to the bittersweetness of “I Ain’t The One” (which recently received a surprise reveal in the penultimate episode of the current season of Showtime’sShameless) and beyond.

Having recently sneak previewed Hot Thoughts material in a surprise hometown warm-up, Spoon has also confirmed a three-night release week SXSW residency for which the band will resurrect the original, classic Austin venue Emo’s location, currently referred to as “The Main” on March 14, 15 and 16. The band will curate a unique line up each night and will stubbornly be referring to the venue as “Eno’s”.

See below for Hot Thoughts track listing and details on the Austin SXSW residency. Please continue to check spoontheband.com for updates. ​

Track listing:

1. Hot Thoughts
2. WhisperI’lllistentohearit
3. Do I Have To Talk You Into It
4. First Caress
5. Pink Up
6. Can I Sit Next To You
7. I Ain’t The One
8. Tear It Down
9. Shotgun
10. Us

South By Southwest Residency at The Main a/k/a Eno’s:

Tuesday, March 14
Wednesday, March 15
Thursday, March 16

curated by Spoon
with special guests

The post Spoon Return to Matador Records With New LP ‘Hot Thoughts’ appeared first on Glide Magazine.

New Pornographers w/Neko Case Announce Spring Tour- Waxahatchee To Open – New LP Due

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Having wrapped up touring in support of Case, Lang, Veirs; Neko Case is ready to hitch on with one of her other bands. Critically acclaimed Vancouver-based group The New Pornographers are set to tour the U.S. this spring, kicking off the run of dates at Minneapolis’ storied First Avenue on April 18. The tour includes dates at The Metro in Chicago, New York’s Terminal 5 and Washington, DC’s 9:30 Club, wrapping up at Stubb’s in Austin on May 6. See below for a complete list. The band will be performing songs from their forthcoming seventh full-length record, details to be announced soon.

THE NEW PORNOGRAPHERS LIVE
All shows with Waxahatchee

April 18                                                   Minneapolis, MN                                            First Avenue
April 19                                                        Chicago, IL                                                    The Metro
April 20                                                     Milwaukee, WI                                            Pabst Theater
April 21                                                        Chicago, IL                                                    The Metro
April 22                                                     Columbus, OH                                  Newport Music Hall
April 25                                                       Boston, MA                                            House of Blues
April 26                                                      New York, NY                                                 Terminal 5
April 27                                                    Philadelphia, PA                                         Union Transfer
April 28                                                    Washington, DC                                                 9:30 Club
May 1                                                          Raleigh, NC                                                              Ritz
May 2                                                           Atlanta, GA                                        Variety Playhouse
May 3                                                      New Orleans, LA                                                 Tipitina’s
May 4                                                          Houston, TX                                White Oak Music Hall
May 5                                                           Dallas, TX                                            Granada Theater
May 6                                                           Austin, TX                                                         Stubb’s

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Band of Heathens Unites In Purpose With ‘Duende’ (ALBUM REVIEW)

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bandofheathensAs one might expect of a collective of sorts, Band of Heathens worked their way into the spotlight fairly quickly. It wasn’t that they had any grand designs, or even any thoughts about becoming a band in the first place. What initially began as a series of Wednesday night jam sessions at a club in their native Austin — an event they dubbed “The Good Time Supper Club” — eventually coalesced into an ensemble made up of several established musicians, one that subsequently gained notice and scaled the heights of the Americana charts. All the elements were there from the very beginning, thanks in large part to their pair of seasoned singer/songwriters, Ed Jurdi and Gordy Quist, both of whom were capable of penning material well suited to the group’s combined talents.

Bearing that in mind, it’s not surprising that Duende, their fifth studio album to date, sounds so assured. Accessible to a fault, it flows with a natural ease that offers the impression these songs have been around forever. “Green Grass Of California” in particular boasts immediate appeal, sounding like one of those mellower melodies that might have wafted down from Laurel Canyon in the latter part of the ‘70s.

That said, most of the music seems to originate from darker realms, like the bluesy “Sugar Queen.” the tangled “Last Minute,” and the swampy “Daddy Longlegs.” Taken in tandem, they add an air of intrigue. Likewise, when the band puts a pedal to the metal and rocks with unabashed intensity, as they do on the rugged “Trouble Came Early,” it puts things firmly in focus. If Band of Heathens succeeds due to the sum of their parts, Duente suggests that they are united in purpose as well.

 

The post Band of Heathens Unites In Purpose With ‘Duende’ (ALBUM REVIEW) appeared first on Glide Magazine.


Cracker and Camper Van Beethoven Keep It Stripped Down & Revved Up in Charlotte (SHOW REVIEW)

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David Lowery may be several decades removed from the agony of teen angst, but when he takes the stage with Cracker and Camper Van Beethoven, the emotion that fueled early fan favorites like “Get Off This” and “Teen Angst (What the World Needs Now)” is as real and raw as it was a quarter century ago.

Lowery is the common founding member of Cracker and Camper Van Beethoven, two California bands with distinctly different sounds, connected by the thread of Lowery’s trademark nasal snarl and unmatched lyrical style. Camper Van first made waves on college radio in the mid-1980s with their debut album Telephone Free Landslide Victory, a patchwork of upbeat melodies and unexpected influences infused with the kind of clever, irreverent, ridiculous brilliance that put them on par with bands like the Dead Milkmen.

When Camper Van splintered in 1990, Lowery went on to create Cracker with guitarist, vocalist, and co-songwriter Johnny Hickman. Driven by their country-tinged garage sound, Cracker found a home on the alt-rock charts while mocking everything about the collective attitude of the grunge generation. The band remains one of the few heavy-hitters from that era that continues to make music together, while Camper Van took roughly a decade off before returning in 1999, stronger than ever.

25 years after Cracker’s first album was released, a small not-quite dive bar (The Neighborhood Theatre), in a trendy section of the Queen City (Charlotte), seems like the perfect place for fans to gather to see whether these guys still have what it takes. The audience is as eclectic as the music they’ve come to hear, from well-dressed middle-aged couples to country boys in ball caps and flannel, barely drinking age. The room is dim and the floors are sticky and the sound system is almost loud enough to overcome the shouted conversation of the selfie queens who have stationed themselves front row, center.

Camper Van Beethoven takes off like a shot with the instrumental “Waka,” fueled by powerful performances from bassist Victor Krummenacher and violinist Jonathan Segel. There aren’t many people who can wield a violin with the elegance of a classically trained concert musician while shredding hard enough to embarrass most wanna-be thrashers into giving up and going home, but Segal has mastered the art. The band barely seems to have time to take a breath between songs, running full-speed ahead from instrumental classics like “R ‘n R Uzbekistan” through the Black Flag cover “Wasted,” proving that punk rock is all about attitude and has nothing to do with how high your mohawk is spiked or how many safety pins are holding your leather jacket together. The highlight of Camper Van’s set is the aching melancholy of “All Her Favorite Fruit,” Lowery’s crescendo toward desperation rising over the sweet melody of some half-remembered ‘70s ballad and then backing off, falling away as he draws the audience into contemplation of what might have been, and questions never answered.

Camper Van Beethoven are a hell of a tough act to follow, but if anyone can pull it off, it’s Cracker. Lowery, Hickman, and pedal steel guitarist Matt “Pistol” Stoesser start things off with the darkly inspirational “Dr. Bernice” and a rendition of the Grateful Dead’s “Loser” that makes you wonder if Cracker missed their calling as a legit jam band. The rest of the set is a spectacular mix of radio hits, obscure tracks, and material from their latest album, a double composition entitled Berkeley to Bakersfield, an homage to two California towns that influenced the band’s unique style.

Lowery’s gruff stage presence and occasional scowl aren’t enough to hide the clear passion he has for his art, and he absolutely destroys any idea that he might be burned out when he launches into the intense and blues-infused “One Fine Day.” Johnny Hickman is a born showman, and his exuberance is infectious as he connects with the audience, propping one foot up on a stage monitor and smiling for the cameras. Every bit of the band’s early attitude is present when they belt out the chorus of “Low,” Hickman proves his musical and storytelling prowess on the somber “Another Song About the Rain,” and they bring the whole thing to a close with the raucous and rowdy “King of Bakersfield,” led by a smiling Lowery and leaving the audience spent and satisfied.

If there were ever any questions about whether Cracker and Camper Van Beethoven could still hold their own with the next generation nipping at their heels to get out of the way, this performance stops them in their tracks. Experience has only made both bands tighter and more cohesive, and it doesn’t look like they’ll be ready to stop anytime soon. Let’s hope not.

The post Cracker and Camper Van Beethoven Keep It Stripped Down & Revved Up in Charlotte (SHOW REVIEW) appeared first on Glide Magazine.

Tales From The Golden Road: Jamie McLean Preps For East Coast Tour With Marc Broussard

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Plenty of people go to see bands when they come through their town, but most people don’t think about everything that it takes to get those bands to their favorite club. Being on tour for a musician is both enlightening and daunting, as physically and mentally draining as it is stimulating. And no matter what, there are always stories to tell. In Tales From The Golden Road we let musicians tell their own stories of life on the road to get a behind-the-scenes, up-close look at what really goes down between each show. 

Jamie McLean is best known as the former guitarist for New Orleans’ legendary Dirty Dozen Brass Band and his own Jamie McLean Band are set to release a new album later this year that was recorded at the famed Sound Emporium studios in Nashville. The album is produced by former Wilco and Uncle Tupelo member Ken Coomer and features Sam Bush and Jeff Coffin of Dave Matthews Band. Jamie and his band are excited to share these new tunes with audiences up and down the East Coast over the next couple of weeks, and Glide Magazine is excited to be right there with them. Jamie will be sharing behind the scenes dispatches of life on the road while he tours with Louisiana singer-songwriter Marc Broussard…

On The Road

When I was a teenager I was drawn to Jack Kerouac and the Beat generation. There was something about that pull towards the open road and the freedom to do whatever it is that really moves you that resonated with me. I took a cross country trip after college but it wasn’t until recently that I fully realized my life is actually imitating art and my career as a musician has literally become On The Road. I’ve been lucky enough to tour the world playing music and there is nothing like pouring your heart out to strangers from a stage. Let’s go shall we……?!

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This week we kick off a tour up and down the East Coast with our good friend Marc Broussard. Marc and I became friends while I was a member of the Dirty Dozen Brass Band and we were both living in New Orleans. We both share a love for the culture and music and soul of New Orleans and these shows should be filled with great energy. There are a lot of fun cities on the tour schedule and we are always excited to hit the local restaurants, record stores and coffee shops. I went to school in Boston and I wrote a song called “Virginia” so you know there is love there. I’ve also heard great things about some new restaurants in Portland, Maine, so those are all circled on the itinerary.

Leading up to the start of tour I’ve been tying up loose ends before we set sail. The Jamie McLean Band recorded a new album in Nashville with Ken Coomer of Wilco that will be coming out later this year. I believe this is our best album yet. I couldn’t be more excited for it to release but there is work that needs to be done to get this baby out into the world. I’ve been running around NYC taking meetings with some industry folks (YouTube anyone?) as well as filming a photo and video shoot and wrapping up some new recordings. The band is doing some last minute tightening up with a couple of rehearsals and I’m always trying to write the next song. The guitars are strung, the drums are tuned, and there’s gas in the van. First stop is Boston…

The Jamie McLean Band kick off their tour with Marc Broussard tonight at The Sinclair. For tickets and info visit jamiemcleanband.com.

Check out a full list of tour dates below and stay tuned for more installments of Tales From The Golden Road! 

Jan 18 – The Sinclair Boston MA
Jan 19 – Port City Music Hall – Portland ME
Jan 20 – Tupelo Music Hall – Londonderry- Londonderry NH
Jan 21 – Shalin Liu-Center- Rockport MA
Jan 24 – Rams Head On Stage – Annapolis MD
Jan 25 – Musikfest Cafe – Bethlehem PA
Jan 26 – World Cafe Live at The Queen – Wilmington DE
Jan 27 – The Tin Pan Richmond VA
Jan 28 – Harvester Performance Center – Rocky Mount VA

 

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SONG PREMIERE: Romantica Share Twangy Rambler “Cecil Ingram Conor”

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Sprawling Minnesota ensemble Romantica have spent the last seven years on hiatus following a dispute with their former label. Fronted by Irish-born singer-songwriter Ben Kyle, the group has nurtured a cult following with their heartfelt and melodic alt-country. On February 10th Romantica make a triumphant return with the release of Shadowlands on Last Chance Records, the label that is home to talented acts like American Aquarium, John Moreland, and Tim Easton. The album may be the group’s finest effort to date and the title reflects the darker times that have been a presence in Ben Kyle’s life since Romantica’s last release. But as much as it’s about the shadowlands we all venture through from time to time, the album is also uplifting in its message of making it through those shawdowlands. Throughout, we are given lush, twangy instrumentation, heartfelt lyrics, and soulful harmonies.

Today Glide Magazine is excited to share an exclusive first listen of one of the standout tracks on Shadowlands. “Cecil Ingram Conor” is a rambling, pedal-steel driven meditation on the tragic life of Gram Parsons. It is also one of the most fun tunes on the album, with plenty of piano and group singing, bringing to mind the more country efforts of Ryan Adams and Bright Eyes’ Conor Oberst.

Ben Kyle offers up the story behind the song, saying, “I was driving home from the secondhand book store where I had just picked up my first Gram Parsons compilation album. It was the middle of summer and I had the windows rolled down in my navy blue cutlass station wagon and the speakers were blaring. I was thinking to myself, ‘I’ve been looking for this sound all of my life and I didn’t even know it existed!’ I was euphoric. I soon read Gram’s biography and was heartbroken that he died so young and I would never get to hear him sing. O Lord, My Lord, no angel had a voice could ring like that!”

LISTEN:

 

Romantica release Shadowlands on February 10th. For more music and info visit romanticamusic.com.

You can also pre-order the album here: https://lastchancerecords.merchtable.com

The post SONG PREMIERE: Romantica Share Twangy Rambler “Cecil Ingram Conor” appeared first on Glide Magazine.

Song Premiere: The Soul of John Black Gets Groovy & Slinky With “Can’t Be Helped”

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“I have very eclectic musical taste, so I draw from all areas of music as well as everything else I come across in my daily life,” says John Bigham; “JB” – as he’s known to friends on his latest album as The Soul of John Black. His new eclectic mix of blues, soul, jazz and funk with slices of hip-hop grows arms and legs as it spins on the record player. Early In The Moanin’ will be released on February 3, 2017, on Cadabra Records through CD Baby.

After eight years in Fishbone and a stint with Miles Davis, The Soul Of John Black calls Early In The Moanin’; his “love letter to the blues. I’m taking it back to Mississippi to the Delta, in my own way.”

John himself produced and recorded Early In The Moanin’at Tiger One Studio in Los Angeles bringing in some ace session players like Jake Najor (Big Daddy Kane), Mark Levy (Duradero Drums), Greg Camp (Smash Mouth) and Curtis Sanford (The Deele). The slice of Hip-Hop comes from the genius mind of Richard “Segal” Huredia, a well-known sound mixer, known for his work on Dr. Dre’s seminal album, The Chronic. 

“I learned about music from my friends, my parents, and the radio,” JB says. “In Chicago a lot of soul-blues was popular and even doo-wop, but when I got turned on to Jimi Hendrix and Led Zeppelin, as a guitar player there was no turning back.”

After eight years in Fishbone and a stint with Miles Davis, The Soul Of John Black calls Early In The Moanin’; his “love letter to the blues. I’m taking it back to Mississippi to the Delta, in my own way.”

Glide is proud to premiere “Can’t Be Helped,” (below) a slinky number that recalls the fierceness of Gary Clark Jr and the relentless soul of Kenny Wayne Shepherd. On this track JB simply but eagerly insists – “I was thinking about old school blues.” Old school it may be, but it still retains a modern urgency that fans of guitar driven rock will relish.

JB will be performing solo at the Folk Alliance International Conference February 17,18 in Kansas City, Mo and recently had a chance to play with Dexter Storey, Kamasi Washington and a bunch of other local L.A. greats on at tribute to the Wattstax event from the ‘70s.  As he recalls about playing with the great Miles Davis -” he made me more confident because he gives you the space and the trust be who you are and be at your best.” Early in The Moanin’ certainly champions greatness in its own art form of smokin’ blues/soul and stinging guitar leads that leave a lasting impression.”

 

 

 

 

The post Song Premiere: The Soul of John Black Gets Groovy & Slinky With “Can’t Be Helped” appeared first on Glide Magazine.

Conor Oberst Announces ‘Salutations’ LP – Companion Piece to 2016′s ‘Ruminations’

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Conor Oberst will release a new album, Salutations, on Nonesuch Records, on March 17, 2017. The album is a companion piece to 2016′s lauded Ruminations. When Oberst wrote and recorded the songs on Ruminations, entirely solo – with just voice, piano, guitar and harmonica – he intended to ultimately record them with a full band. In the midst of putting together that band – upstate New York’s The Felice Brothers plus the legendary drummer Jim Keltner (Neil Young, Jackson Browne, George Harrison, Bob Dylan, John Lennon, and many more) – the passionate responses Oberst was getting to those first solo recordings, from friends and colleagues, encouraged him to release the songs as-is, in their original sparse form, as his seventh solo album.

obertsMeanwhile, Oberst simultaneously moved ahead with his plans to record with the band, heading to the famed Shangri-la Studios in Malibu to record Salutations – co-produced with Keltner and engineered by long-time musical compadre Andy LeMaster. Guest contributions come courtesy of Jim James,Blake MillsMaria TaylorM WardGillian WelchGus SeyffertPearl CharlesNathaniel Walcott, and Jonathan Wilson.

 Salutations includes full band versions of the ten songs from Ruminations, plus seven additional songs, some from an additional session at Five Star Studiosin Echo Park in fall 2016 (complete track list below). Oberst, with The Felice Brothers as his backing band, will tour in celebration of Salutations beginningMarch 9 in his hometown of Omaha, with stops at LA’s Greek Theater in May and Celebrate Brooklyn Festival in July (full schedule below). Oberst has partnered with Plus 1 so that $1 from every ticket sold will go to supportPlanned Parenthood and their work delivering vital reproductive health care, sex education, and information to millions of women, men, and young people in the US and worldwide.

 Check out the video for “A Little Uncanny,” directed by Josh Rawson (The Felice Brothers), below,..

Oberst says of the Salutations sessions: “Jim was really the captain of the ship and the spiritual leader of the project. We leaned heavy on his fifty-plus years of musical insight to get us to where we needed to be. He brought such depth and dignity to the proceedings that made everyone else involved rise to the occasion. It was a true stroke of luck that he got involved when he did.”

 Conor Oberst Tour Dates:

 February

27        Sydney, AUS @ Sydney Opera House

March

9          Omaha, NE @ The Waiting Room Lounge

10        Kansas City, MO @ Madrid Theater

11        Memphis, TN @ Minglewood Hall

12        Tulsa, OK @ Cain’s Ballroom

14        San Antonio, TX @ Paper Tiger

16        Spicewood, TX  @ Luck Reunion

17        Houston, TX @ Warehouse Live

18        New Orleans, LA @ The Civic Theatre

19        Macon, GA @ Cox Capitol Theatre

21        Asheville, NC @ The Orange Peel

22        Chattanooga, TN @ Track 29

23        Atlanta, GA @ Variety Playhouse

24        McMinnville, TN @ Bluegrass Underground

25        St Louis, MO @ The Pageant

26        Iowa City, IA @ The Englert Theater

 

May

12        Oakland, CA @ The Fox

13        Los Angeles, CA @ The Greek Theater

19        Austin, TX @ ACL Live at The Moody Theater

 

July

14-16   Louisville, KY @ Forecastle Festival

20        Brooklyn, NY @ Celebrate Brooklyn

21        Boston, MA @ The House of Blues

 

March dates go on sale starting January 21 at noon EST

May and July dates go on sale starting January 27 at noon EST

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Film Bits: Amazon Scores Grateful Dead Doc

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Grateful Dead Takes ‘Long Strange Trip’ to Amazon

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Director Amir Bar-Lev’s six-part documentary chronicling the career of the Grateful Dead, Long Strange Trip, which makes its premiere at Sundance later this week, has been acquired by Amazon’s streaming service. The documentary, which is being produced by Dead members Phil Lesh, Bob Weir, Mickey Hart, and Bill Kreutzmann, features archival footage, still photos, audio interviews, and live footage that has never before been seen. Long Strange Trip premieres on Amazon Prime on May 26.

(The Hollywood Reporter)

‘All Eyez on Me’ Confirms Release Date

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Tupac Shakur biopic, All Eyez on Me, has officially been given a release date, June 16 of this year. The day marks what would’ve been Shakur’s 41 birthday. The film stars newcomer Demetrius Shipp Jr. as the iconic rapper and follows his rise to superstardom and all the turmoil that surrounded his career. The film also features Jamal Woolard, who reprises his role as Biggie Smalls from the film Notorious. Shakur’s life was one full of contradiction and inspiration, and a properly done biopic has the potential to be one of the best films of the year. Here’s hoping the film does the rapper justice.

(Morgan Creek Entertainment)

Woody Harrelson Shines in Latest ‘Wilson’ Trailer

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It seems we’re in the midst of a Woody Harrelson rejuvenation. Lucky us. Not only do we have his appearance in the Han Solo anthology movie to look forward to next year, we’ve also got Wilson to look forward to in the coming months. Based on the comic series by Daniel Clowes (Ghost World), Wilson follows an aging man who finds new meaning in life after discovering his ex-wife gave up his child for adoption 17 years ago. He and his ex (Laura Dern) take a journey to meet their daughter with awkward results. Wilson opens March 24.

(Fox Searchlight)

Netflix Unleashes Trailer for ‘The Discovery’

The Discovery

It may not reveal much, but the trailer for Netflix’s latest acquisition, The Discovery, hits all the right notes. Premiering at Sundance, the film stars Rooney Mara and Jason Segel in a world where the scientific existence of an afterlife has been proven. Robert Redford also stars. Honestly, it’s hard to glean much from what we’re given here, but it does look like another knockout coup from Netflix, who has been giving independent film a boost in the last couple of years. The film premieres March 31.

(Netflix)

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Mandolin Orange Announce 2017 Spring Tour Dates

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Hailed by No Depression as “one of the most talented acts making music today,” North Carolina-based duo Mandolin Orange—Emily Frantz (fiddle/vocals) and Andrew Marlin (mandolin/vocals)—announce spring tour dates in support of their critically acclaimed album, Blindfaller. The tour includes notable appearances at Merlefest, Red Rocks, Bonnaroo, Forecastle, and Pickathon. A full list of dates is below.

The duo’s “mesmerizing” (Wild Honey Pie) Blindfaller fall tour drew rave reviews and included 16 sold-out shows in Chicago, Denver, Boston, Nashville, Philadelphia, Raleigh, Durham, and Chapel Hill, NC.

Debuting at #3 on Billboard’s Bluegrass Album Chart and #7 on Heatseekers, songs from Blindfaller have garnered over 6 million album streams, with 3.5 million streams on Spotify for the single “Wildfire” and 1.2 million for “Hey Stranger.”

No Depression raves, “The voices of Andrew Marlin and Emily Frantz were seemingly destined to make music and beautiful sounds together in harmony…the music they make is nothing short of perfection.” Their single, “Hard Travelin’,” previously premiered with PopMatters who called the track, “a delightful mix of Americana, bluegrass and country.

Founded in 2009, Mandolin Orange’s 2013 release This Side of Jordan garnered critical acclaim with NPR calling the album “effortless and beautiful.” Their 2015 follow-up, Such Jubilee, garnered further press praise with Rolling Stone including the album in “30 Great Country Albums of 2015 You Probably Didn’t Hear” and NPR’s Folk Alley’s “Best of 2015 Listener’s Poll.” The record was #1 on Magnet’s “Top 10 Indie Roots Albums of 2015” and Paste called it “an album full of blissful moments.”

MANDOLIN ORANGE TOUR DATES
March 2 – Legends – Boone, NC
March 3 – Warrenton Armory – Warrenton, NC
March 17-18 – Anastasia Music Festival – St. Augustine, FL
March 23 – Music Hall of Williamsburg – Brooklyn, NY
March 24 – Weinberg Center for the Arts – Frederick, MD
March 25 – Broadway – Richmond, VA
March 26 – Mountain Stage Radio Show – Charleston, WV
March 30 – Don Quixote’s International Music Hall – Santa Cruz, CA
March 31 – Slim’s – San Francisco, CA
April 1-2 – WinterWonderGrass Festival – Squaw Valley, CA
April 4 – O.P. Rockwell – Park City, UT
April 5 – Covellite Theatre – Butte, MT
April 6 – Top Hat Lounge – Missoula, MT
April 7 – Eagles Ballroom – Bozeman, MT
April 8 – The State Room – Salt Lake City, UT
April 19 – Dada – Dallas, TX
April 20 – Old Settlers Music Festival – Driftwood, TX
April 22 – Rockefellers – Houston, TX
April 23 – Gasa Gasa – New Orleans, LA
April 25 – Saturn – Birmingham, AL
April 26 – City Winery – Atlanta, GA
April 27 – MerleFest – Wilkesboro, NC
April 28 – Harvester Performance Center – Rocky Mt., VA
April 29 – Greenfield Lake Amphitheater – Wilmington, NC^
May 21 – Red Rocks – Morrison, CO+
June 11 – Bonnaroo – Manchester, TN
July 15 – Forecastle – Louisville, KY
August 3-6 – Pickathon – Happy Valley, OR
August 26 – Fayetteville Roots Festival – Fayetteville, AR

^co-bill with Chatham County Line
+w/Elephant Revival, The Oh Hellos

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Eclectic Roots Rocker Otis Taylor Announces New Album ‘Fantasizing About Being Black’

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Following his 2015 psychedelic masterpiece Hey Joe Opus/Red Meat, the new album from visionary roots music songwriter and bandleader Otis Taylor, Fantasizing About Being Black, is a stark and poetic lesson on the historical trauma of the African American experience, from the voyages of slave ships to the Mississippi Delta. Taylor simultaneously travels back in time while moving forward as a musical artist. Blending his unique songwriting and the compelling musical approach that he calls “trance blues,” the recording — on Taylor’s Trance Blues Festival label — inspires with stories of the enduring human spirit, letting its hypnotic sound as well as Taylor’s lyrics tell a story of continuing struggle. Street date is February 17, 2017.

The artist explains that his 15th album is about “the different levels of racism in the African American experience that are unfortunately still with us today. The history of African Americans is the history of America,” Taylor says.

“After 15 albums, I’ve taken all of my thoughts about the history of racial injustice and created a musical interpretation for modern times. When I started recording in 2015, I had no idea the topics would become even more relevant,” Taylor says.

Musically, Taylor produces a unique sound that draws on African American culture but is innovative in the instrumentation and arrangement. “I experimented with banjo and fiddle because slaves on the southern plantations played those instruments and I wanted to include the richness of the early African slave instrument sounds throughout the record.”

“If you close your eyes you can imagine the past, yet see the connections and relevance to what’s happening now,” Taylor says.
Typical for the artist, he’s found a unique way of expressing ideas in a work that honors musical traditions yet moves the genre forward in a creative mix that has an intellectual and emotional impact.

The songs on Fantasizing About Being Black comprise a bold and thought-provoking 11-part statement on the African American experience.
The album introduces seven new songs. “Banjo Bam Bam,” the story of a slave in shackles, feels like West African trance rhythms with a dose of Chicago; “Tripping on This,” an ode to an unlikely father-son reunion, evokes John Lee Hooker; “D to E Blues” recalls the constant yearning for freedom in an acoustic blues style so intimate that you feel like you are sitting in the same room; “Jump Out of Line” pays homage to the ever-present fear in Civil Rights marches in a style that touches on Mississippi Hill Country blues; “Just Want to Live With You” cites the hypocrisy of a public official keeping a black mistress and features melodic lead guitar accents from teenager Brandon Niederauer; “Roll Down the Hill” is a rally call to get up when you’ve been pushed down; and “Jump to Mexico” reflects the perils of interracial relationships in the recent past and highlights slide guitar master Jerry Douglas in a soft and heartbreaking Americana ballad.

Taylor also reinterprets some of his most compelling material. “Twelve String Mile,” from When Negroes Walked the Earth, is a song about how invisible blacks were in the 1930s, and demonstrates that blues is truly roots music. “Walk on Water,” about a black man who wants to renew his relationship with a woman of a different race, is an acoustic power-driven whaler’s sleigh ride, with seamless interplay of guitar and cornet; it appeared previously on Truth Is Not Fiction and Pentatonic Wars and Love Songs. “Hands on Your Stomach,” in which a slave woman with a dream of being free, combines Taylor’s signature trance music with textured psychedelic leads from Brandon Niederauer. “Jump Jelly Belly,” about black soldiers in WW2 who had the dangerous job of transferring cargo between ships on the English Channel, sounds like Charley Patton meets James Brown. These last two are from Respect the Dead.

Band members include violinist Anne Harris, who often plays melodic and textural foil to Taylor’s idiosyncratic, mesmerizing guitar, drummer Larry Thompson, and bassist Todd Edmunds. Their expertise is complemented by special musical guests Jerry Douglas on koa wood lap guitar, cornetist Ron Miles, and young lead guitar virtuoso Brandon Niederauer.

A thread of social justice always runs through Taylor’s work. His 2013 album, My World Is Gone, explored the struggles of Native Americans and enlisted the guitar of Indigenous frontman Mato Nanji, who is a member of the Nakota Nation. Recapturing the Banjo was a brilliant effort to recognize the African roots of the banjo and move it forward with a group of stellar contemporary blues artists. The powerful single “Ten Million Slaves” was picked up for the Michael Mann movie Public Enemies in 2009.

Taylor has been pursuing his own singular musical vision — a fusion of the primal hum of raw, primitive blues and contemporary, free-ranging expressionism — since the 1960s, when the banjoist, guitarist, bassist and harmonica player first toured the U.S. and Europe with a variety of blues-based bands including Zephyr, for whom Taylor played bass, and T&O Short Line, which included the late legendary guitarist Tommy Bolin.

Taylor left the music business in 1977 to pursue dealing in art and antiques, and to raise a family. He also pursued his passion for bicycle racing, as a coach. During the ’90s, Taylor was drawn back into music making by friends in the Boulder area. By 1996 and the arrival of his debut album Blue-Eyed Monster, he was performing once again. With the release of his next two discs, When Negroes Walked the Earth and White African, Taylor began to emerge as a singular voice in the American roots scene, acclaimed here and abroad for his riveting music and his unflinching honesty in writing about racism, struggle, freedom, heritage and the complications of human life.

To date he has received 16 Blues Music Award (BMA) nominations. White African captured a BMA for best debut album. Taylor is also nominated regularly as an instrumentalist for his banjo playing, and won a Blues Music Award for his original style in 2009, following the release of Recapturing the Banjo. His albums Double V, Definition of a Circle and Recapturing the Banjo all won DownBeat’s Best Blues CD award in 2005, 2007 and 2008, respectively. He also took the magazine’s Critic’s Choice Award for Best Blues Album for 2003’s Truth Is Not Fiction. In 2000, he was awarded a fellowship from the Sundance Institute’s Composers’ Lab, and Taylor has been nominated two times for the prestigious Académie Charles Cros award in France, winning the Grand Prix du Disc for Blues in 2012. Three years ago, Contraband — his 12th album — took theDownBeat Critics’ Choice award again for Blues Album of the Year. His most recent album, Hey Joe Opus Red Meat is on display in the new Smithsonian Museum of African American History and Culture.

Following extensive touring in Europe, including six tours opening for the late Irish guitar legend Gary Moore, Taylor began his Trance Blues Festival in 2010. The annual event, held in November at Boulder’s eTown Hall, brings a broad cast of professional and amateur musicians together for performances, jams and workshops.

https://www.otistaylor.com

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Iron Maiden ‘The Book Of Souls’ Tour Returns To U.S.

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Iron Maiden’s hugely successful The Book Of Souls World Tour will return to North America for an extensive series of arena and amphitheater shows in summer 2017. The mammoth tour opened in Florida last February playing fourteen sold-out shows in the U.S.A and Canada along with a further 58 concerts in 34 other countries around the globe.

The full list of dates:

JUN 03                  BRISTOW, VA                                            JIFFY LUBE LIVE

JUN 04                  PHILADELPHIA, PA                                  WELLS FARGO CENTER

JUN 07                  NEWARK, NJ                                             PRUDENTIAL CENTER

JUN 09                  CHARLOTTE, NC                                       PNC MUSIC PAVILION                      

JUN 11                  TAMPA, FL                                                 AMALIE ARENA

JUN 13                  NASHVILLE, TN                                         BRIDGESTONE ARENA

JUN 15                  CHICAGO, IL                                              HOLLYWOOD CASINO AMPHITHEATER

JUN 16                  MINNEAPOLIS, MN                                  XCEL ENERGY CENTER

JUN 19                  OKLAHOMA CITY, OK                              CHESAPEAKE ARENA

JUN 21                  HOUSTON, TX                                           TOYOTA CENTER

JUN 23                  DALLAS, TX                                                AMERICAN AIRLINES CENTER

JUN 24                  SAN ANTONIO, TX                                    AT&T CENTER

JUN 27                  ALBUQUERQUE, NM                               ISLETA AMPHITHEATER

JUN 28                  PHOENIX, AZ                                             TALKING STICK RESORT ARENA

JUL 01                   SAN BERNARDINO, CA                            SAN MANUEL AMPHITHEATER*

JUL 03                   LAS VEGAS, NV                                         T-MOBILE ARENA

JUL 05                   OAKLAND, CA                                           ORACLE ARENA

JUL 07                   SALT LAKE CITY, UT                                  USANA AMPHITHEATER

JUL 09                   LINCOLN, NE                                             PINNACLE BANK ARENA

JUL 11                   KANSAS CITY, MO                                     SPRINT CENTER

JUL 12                   ST LOUIS, MO                                           HOLLYWOOD CASINO AMPHITHEATER

JUL 15                   TORONTO, CANADA                                BUDWEISER STAGE

JUL 16                   QUEBEC CITY, CANADA                           VIDEOTRON CENTRE

JUL 19                   MANSFIELD, MA                                      XFINITY CENTER

JUL 21                   BROOKLYN, NY                                         BARCLAYS CENTER

 

Steve Harris commented; “We are really looking forward to returning to North America for a full tour. We had always planned to go back there and to the UK as last year, due to the global nature of the tour and the period it took, we just didn’t have time to cover them properly and we do still like to get to fans in as many places as possible!

 

So this year we’re able to reach many more cities in America, including a return to places Maiden haven’t played for many, many years like Lincoln Nebraska, Minneapolis, Oklahoma City and Oakland California. We also welcome playing in Brooklyn for the first time.

 

We will, of course, be bringing the full production with us including all the Eddies and the Maya-themed stage sets. There’s been a great reaction from everyone to this tour’s theme, people really seem to love it. We’re still deciding on the final set-list and we’ll work that out once we get into rehearsals. Most of our North American fans haven’t seen the show yet so as we want to give them the same Book Of Souls live experience that we took around the world, it’s unlikely we’ll change much. And of course we know our fans appreciate us playing a lot of the older songs too, so we will continue to do that!”

Tickets start going on-sale Friday, January 27 – check www.ironmaiden.com for market specific infoAs usual, there will be an exclusive pre-sale for IRON MAIDEN Fan Club members, details of which can also be found on www.ironmaiden.com along with information on how Fan Club members can participate in the draw to be “First To The Barrier.”

IRON MAIDEN are delighted to welcome Ghost http://ghost-official.com/ as their Special Guests for the North American leg of The Book Of Souls World Tour.

*There will also be some further bands added to the show at San Bernardino.

 

 

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VIDEO PREMIERE: Justin Levinson Displays Essential Piano Pop On “Together Forever”

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Influenced by the greats of the 60’s, Justin Levinson creates self-described “power pop” that draws elements from his favorite artists of that era – the Beatles, The Zombies, and The Beach Boys. He has even drawn comparisons to Ben Folds. Playing five instruments, Justin sets out to make music that is authentic to him. His new album, Yes Man, (released January 7th) achieves just that.

Drawing from his life experiences, “Yes Man” tells the story of a lost soul taken advantage by only being able to say yes. Justin believes that this album shows an uncompromised voice and vision that he hopes his audience hears. The album was produced and arranged by Adam Popick who plays with Madi Diaz, William Fitzsimmons, and the Sugar and Hi-lows. It also features Rich Hinman (Sara Bareilles and Ben Kweller) and Stein Malvey (Four Freshman).

Glide is premiering the video (below) for “Together Forever” which exhibits Levinson’s knack for vintage keyboard playing with a crisp fusion of pop hooks and feel good harmonies. “Together Forever” spoke to the euphoria of falling in love…It’s by far the best feeling on earth. I hope I captured that for listeners,” says Levinson.

Justin’s first break came when the great Lester Bowie and Fontella Bass came to his high school to conduct a workshop. They saw his talent from the start and snatched him from school to take him on tour. While on tour with Bowie and Bass, Justin developed an insatiable taste for touring and performing. He knew that he could do nothing else and that he needed to become a musician inspiring audiences, even if it meant packing up his tiny car and hitting the road.

After touring with Bowie and Bass, Justin returned to the Northeast where he attended Berklee College. This is where Justin made his transition into songwriting and released his first album, 1175 Boylston. Off the album, his single, “City With Two Streetlights,” was the breakthrough he needed. The song spent eight weeks in the top 25 of CMJ Charts. It also garnered airplay from 350 stations across the nation.  After his time at Berklee and his newfound success, Justin took his talents on tour. The tour took him across country to college campuses and coffee houses. As Justin’s career develop, it has allowed him to go on tours with Tyler Hilton, Anna Nalick, and Howie Day to just name a few.

‘Yes Man’ Links:

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Foxygen Get 40 Piece Orchestral On Ambitious & Divine ‘Hang’ LP (ALBUM REVIEW)

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foxygenhangHang opens like Mick Jagger covered in glitter telling you to just be yourself. Foxygen’s fourth official record picks up where they left off. The last song on their previous album …And Star Power, is this gentle 70’s tune that would fit somewhere right between the Stones’ “Wild Horses” and “Angie.” It’s titled also “Hang.” And that’s probably not an accident. So that might mean that this album is in some ways a continuation of their last. Like chapters in a book. A part of a whole.

…And Star Power caught a lot of people off guard. It was long, we’re talking 24 songs. But amongst the experimental madness there were some really beautiful moments. Hang sounds like those pieces. A darker and more lyrically relevant Foxygen that is still soaked to the bone with classic rock and glam. They’re using a symphony orchestra this time around and while that might seem strange to envision a rock band with an orchestra it simply adds to their grandeur. Let me comfort you by saying they sound much more like funk than anything classical. The strings and horns really add to “Avalon” which, while this is a term that has been used by countless creatives, I can’t help but want to think this is in some way a Roxy Music reference. If not for anything else, simply because Foxygen seem to be such a modern incarnation of the glam rock scene of the 70s. Winds and brass come in toward the end of the anti-nationalistic “America” and make it swing so that one almost forgets the ominous intro and cynical lyrics about how “If you’re already there, then you’re already dead. If you’re living in America.” Which couldn’t seem more fitting for the present time.

“Trauma” is loud and emotional in a really good way. And is basically saying everyone’s got issues, which is really connecting in a kind of depressing way. Steven Drozd of the Flaming Lips plays on the album as well as members of the Lemon Twigs. And there is a really strong show tune aspect running through a lot of the songs on the record, which isn’t necessarily new for Foxygen but it does seem a bit more prominent. There is also this sort of call to action element that I’ve never really heard from them but which is all over this album. The last song, “Rise Up” preaches to “follow your heart if nothing else and listen to your dreams, nobody else’s will do.”

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The Enduring Importance of ‘Pan’s Labyrinth’

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Ten years ago today, Guillermo del Toro’s masterpiece, Pan’s Labyrinth, was unleashed upon a wide audience. The buildup was slow, but steady. The film spent months on the festival circuit, premiering first at Cannes in May the previous year, before getting a limited release in American theaters that December. Strong word of mouth helped propel the film as it made its coast to coast march, solidifying del Toro as a prominent force within genre filmmaking.

A decade later, Pan’s Labyrinth remains del Toro’s best, most enduring work. Essential among his catalogue, it’s the first of his films that feels completely his own, where he’s at the peak of his talents and knows exactly how to use them. No film has ever quite captured that del Toro feel—that del Toro joie de film—quite like Pan’s Labyrinth.

 

Pans Labyrinth Pale Man

The terrifying imagery of The Pale Man helped solidify Pan’s Labyrinth in the collective consciousness of movie fans.

There’s also a certain relevance to Pan’s Labyrinth today that lends the film and its message more weight than it did just a decade ago. When we speak of Pan’s Labyrinth casually, we tend to remember the more magical elements of the film first and foremost. The Faun, the Pale Man, the fairies. Certainly those elements are full of del Toro’s neo-horror flair and penchant for the fantastic, but the heart of the story remains the struggle against the rising tide of fascist forces.

Told from the perspective of the 11-year-old Ofelia, Pan’s Labyrinth is a new kind of fairy tale. Grounded in the horrible reality of post-civil war Spain, a time of actual heroes and actual villains, the fairy tale conceit of the film becomes something grander and more alive than the arcane fables of our youth.

In classic fairy tale fashion, the bookish young Ofelia is subject to the whims of a wicked step-father, in the form here of a captain in Franco’s army, following the death of her birth father during the war. The first time we see her, in the car with her pregnant mother on the way to their new house in the woods, she is lost in books. She’s getting too old for fairy tales, her ailing mother tells her. Now is the time to grow up and to face reality, even if reality is a dark place.

Pans Labyrinth Vidal

The weighty oppression of Franco’s Spain as symbolized by Captain Vidal.

There was no darker time and place in the 20th century than Europe in the 1940s. The rise of fascism that begat World War II also begat a series of civil wars that further ripped apart and divided the continent. Ofelia would’ve had little memory of a world outside of war. From an early age she lived through the hardships of battle and witnessed the rise of fascist forces overtake the will of the people. Hers was a world filled with darkness and grief—not only over the life of her father, but of the life promised to her from youth. Ofelia has no escape, no refuge from the violent and oppressive state of the world around her, save for fairy tales.

It feels odd to say, but there are 11-year-olds in America today who’ve never known a life outside of war. The situations are vastly different, sure—as of yet, our country hasn’t had to suffer the horrors of war within our borders—but to those born around the year 2000, the idea of being at war is a concept they’ve grown up familiar with. Brothers, sisters, fathers, and mothers have all lost their lives in foreign lands, not unlike Ofelia’s father, whose death before the movie is an inciting event.

In this sense, Ofelia becomes a fairy tale heroine for the modern age—perhaps the first and most poignant fairy tale heroine since the time of the Brothers Grimm. In the Campbellian sense, fairy tales and myths are meant to guide humans along the path of life, filling the gaps of human understanding and providing light along otherwise dark trails. Del Toro tends to follow the Campbellian formula, laid out in The Masks of God, The Power of Myth, and Hero with A Thousand Faces, in a way that explores the purpose of story and creates a new fable for the modern era.

Pans Labyrinth Ofelia

Ofelia, the hero we need right now.

Our relationship to Ofelia, then, is not dissimilar to her relationship to the princes and princesses that populate her storybooks. Through her eyes, we, too, sense the evil in the midst, which serves as del Toro’s stance on fascists and fascism. This serves as a compelling starting point for del Toro to send the audience down a fantastical path of magic and horror, and Ofelia’s journey serves as a guide for how we should deal with an increasingly tyrannical society, just as her fairy tales give her the base understanding of good and evil, right and wrong.

In an ever changing world, it can be difficult to maintain that grasp. Where the adults that surround Ofelia in Pan’s Labyrinth have come to accept evil as the new good, Ofelia senses the patterns and knows something must be done. Sometimes, the morality of the real world is so muddled by shades of grey that we become like the adults whom Ofelia lives among. The new boss isn’t always the same as the old boss, but in the hustle and bustle of adult lives, we often form false equivalencies that shade out the nuance. Children, on the other hand, unjaded and still open to the idea of magic, can see so easily through the bullshit adults use to color their realities. Through Ofelia, del Toro dispels any notions of grey in Franco’s Spain, showing us its true colors.

Ultimately, that’s the power of Pan’s Labyrinth and what makes it resonate so clearly now, 10 years after its release. In a way, it almost feels like fate that we’re celebrating it today, of all days. Here in 2017, across the entire world, we’re once again seeing a rise in the kind of militant fanaticism that led to the horrors of 1930s and 40s Europe, and it’s disheartening to think that maybe we’ve forgotten the lessons we paid so dearly to learn. With Pan’s Labyrinth, del Toro wants to make sure we’ll never forget.

Captain Vidal Murders Hunter

Vicious and cruel, the forces of evil kill the innocent with no remorse.

These times of ours are full of angst and fear, just as Franco’s Spain was and just as Hitler’s Germany was. In terrifying times, people tend to act rashly, make poor decisions, and exalt leaders who ought not be exalted. It’s difficult not to see the correlation between then and now, but as darkness once again threatens to descend on us, it’s important to remember the lessons—and the refuge—that story can provide us.

Beyond serving as a critique against fascism, Pan’s Labyrinth is a loving ode to the power of story. Story can provide us with a place to turn when there’s nowhere left to go, and the mythical traditions offers a tangible compass with which to realign our sense of right and wrong. The citizens of Spain fell too easy for the promises of General Franco, and his rise was bloody and terrible. That’s not a path we need ever walk down again. Right and wrong are both encoded within our psychology, even if we need a little help to find them in the darkness.

Pan’s Labyrinth is as detailed a map as we can be given, reminding us both that we can find solace in story as well as guidance. As a movie, it provides us with both. Its fantasy-woven tale of good and evil works as pure escapism, but on a deeper level it shows us what to do when faced with the coming of evil. Wicked men must never be given an inch; they can be defeated. All it takes is a little bravery. In terms of role models to show us our courage, we could do far worse than Ofelia. For that, del Toro won’t soon be forgotten, as either a filmmaker or story-teller.

Pan's Labyrinth Moanna

Ofelia claims her birthright as Moanna.

The post The Enduring Importance of ‘Pan’s Labyrinth’ appeared first on Glide Magazine.

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