Tag: Palace Theatre

  • Best of NYS Music 2015: Staff Picks for Best Venues in New York State

    Most bands and performers have goals to play their music, record albums, have fun, and entertain thousands of fans in the largest of venues that host our favorite bands.  It takes years of dedication, hard work, and constant creativity to pursue these dreams and goals.  For almost every performer, they have to start their careers in the smaller clubs and work their way to the large venues.  Here we have our Top NYS Music Staff Picks for the Best venues in New York State for 2015.

    Best Club in New York StateBrooklyn Bowl (Brooklyn, NY)

    This bowling alley and live-music venue fully embraces the bowl-a-rama theme park idea. This is a great place to kill a few hours by your-self or with a group of friends.  You can down a pitcher of Brooklyn Brews, chew your way through the food menu from the Blue Ribbon team (delicious fatty brisket, Old Bay–fried chicken) lane-side between frames, while listening to/watching some the best music from around the world on their music stage.  This establishment is also certified L.E.E.D Green with use of 100% wind energy, all beverages being on-tap only (No cans and bottles), cork and recycled truck tire flooring, and energy efficient electronics and appliances.  There’s no wonder why this was voted the best club.

    “Basically, Brooklyn Bowl is the Pimp My Ride of music venues. It has a 16-lane bowling alley with big-ass HD TV screens situated above the pins. “Rock. And Roll. Fries” and the “Really Sloppy Joe” are on the Blue Ribbon-supplied menu. And they book wonderfully odd and unexpected novelty shows such as Lebowski Fest, the Regional Air Guitar Championships, and Snoop Dogg. Most of the time, however, the Bowl brings out the latest in indie rock, punctuated by seasonal specialties like Questlove’s weekly DJ residency. Their couches are really comfortable, too.”  – The Village Voice

    moe.yearsBest Theatre in New York StatePalace Theatre (Albany, NY)

    The top pick by our staff for best theatre turned out to be a good one.  The Palace Performing Arts Center is a Baroque-style theater dating to 1931 hosts concerts, classic movies & the Albany Symphony Orchestra.  This theatre is a favorite among many bands and performers visiting the capital region with its 2,800 person capacity, beautifully carved moldings, and painted ceilings. It holds events that spawn from broadways the Nutcracker to celebrating New Years Eve with the progressive jam-band Moe.  The theater has also been profiting tremendously for the last 4 years straight since under new management.

    Best Arena/Amphitheater in New York StateSaratoga Performing Arts Center (Saratoga Springs, NY)

    With a close race in this category, SPAC came out on top for our staff pick of the best large venue in New York State.  The Saratoga Performing Arts Center is a complex with a large Amphitheatre and smaller theatre that hosts every single kind of music known from around the world and also hosts banquets and events for local high schools and companies.  This year of 2016, SPAC is celebrating its 50th anniversary and is also up for its contract renewal with New York State.

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    Best NEW Venue in New York StateLakeview Amphitheater & Funk ‘N’ Waffles Downtown (Syracuse, NY)

    Tied for Top Pick of the best NEW venue in New York State by our staff are two venues located in Syracuse, NY.   The Lakeview Amphitheater was built this year and opened to the public in late summer, hosting one of Country music’s biggest stars, Miranda Lambert.  The all-new state of the art venue seats over 17,000 people and has a picturesque view of Onondaga Lake.

    Funk ‘N’ Waffles Downtown was established in late 2014 and is located near Armory Square in downtown Syracuse.   The 2nd location is an offshoot of the original restaurant-slash-club located on Marshall St, near the University.  The downtown spot is set up to hold 100+ people and divided into two sections (Coffee shop and Bar with live music).   They serve a wonderful selection of local and popular NYS beers, have state of the art technology for their visiting musicians, and have an original tasty concoction of waffles to choose from.   NYS Music is also co-sponsoring Wednesday Nights with live music every week in December.

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  • Tony Bennett is Coming to The Palace Theatre this Fall

    The legendary Tony Bennett will grace the stage of The Palace Theatre in Albany on Sunday, October 18 at 7pm, with special guest Antonia Bennett.  Tony Bennett’s artistry and accomplishments are applauded here at home and all over the world from people from 11 to 90 years old.

    In the past 10 years alone, Bennett has sold over ten million records, a testament to his longevity and artistic achievement that has long been a part of his life since growing up in Astoria, NY. Upon being discovered by Bob Hope, his career took off and the rest is history. Among the honors Bennett has received are 17 Grammy awards, including a 1995 Grammy for Record of the Year for his MTV Unplugged album, which introduced his music to new generation, as well as a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award.  He has had 24 songs in the Top 40, including “I Wanna Be Around,” “The Good Life,” “Who Can I Turn To (When Nobody Needs Me)” and the signature, “I Left My Heart In San Francisco,” garnering him two Grammy Awards.

    One of the few artists to have new albums charting in the 50’s, 60’s, 70’s, 80’s, 90’s, 00’s and 10’s, he has recently collaborated with pop star Lady Gaga on Cheek to Cheek, a collection of jazz standards. Having toured the world to sold out audiences with rave reviews whenever he performs, Bennett was recently observed by former President Bill Clinton as, “Now in his seventh decade of singing, Tony Bennett has somehow kept his unique voice, with its beauty and range, its strength and style, and still in perfect pitch.  But as talented as he is, Tony’s most impressive quality is his giving spirit!”

    Tickets for this special performance range from $60.50 – $128 and go on sale Friday, June 26 at 10am at The Palace Theatre.

  • Jason Bonham Serves The Capital Region Some ‘Rock And Roll’

    Tribute and legacy acts are big business for concerts in today’s industry. The baby boomer generation has gotten older and wants that feeling they had growing up listening to the music that was the soundtrack to their lives.

    You also have the newer generation who may not have had the chance to experience the great music, and are interested in seeing what their parents got to see.

    In the case of Jason Bonham’s Led Zeppelin Experience you get the best of both worlds. Jason, son of Led Zeppelin drummer, John Bonham, celebrates the music that he did not have much of an opportunity to see. Performing to audiences who are starving to see it in person.

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    “The Song Remains The Same” starts the concert with a bang, and the energy never left the Palace Theatre for the next two hours. Stringing together both hits and rarities, Jason and his band kept the crowd in their palms with ease. Jason told funny stories about his father and the feeling he got playing in London with the surviving members of Led Zeppelin in 2007.

    He also spoke about how the band is never trying to act as if they are Led Zeppelin. For most of the evening that last part was true, but about three-quarters of the way through the show the audience was invited to crowd the aisles and to have a “fucking good time.” After this request and for most of the rest of the evening lead singer James Dylan began to channel more than just Robert Plant’s vocals. Lead guitarist Tony Catania similarly did more than evoke Jimmy Page’s guitar work. Moving about the stage like two legends for the rest of the evening. James and Tony had been doing just fine with their great vocal and guitar playing respectively and did not need to change what they had been doing.

    During “Thank You” video screens showed videos of John, receiving some of the loudest cheers of the night. An acoustic “Going to California” had the loudest sing along. “Kashmir” ended the set to a standing ovation and the band came out for a one-two punch of “Rock And Roll” and “Black Dog” to end the evening.

    There is a fine line for a tribute or legacy act to walk on, so as not to become a caricature of the band they are paying their respect to.

    For most of the night the musicianship on stage during Jason Bonham’s Led Zeppelin Experience spoke for itself, but for a small part of the show the line became a little too blurred.

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  • An Interview with Director of the Albany Symphony Orchestra, David Alan Miller

    The Albany Symphony Orchestra kicks off its 86th year in October with a gala performance from world-renowned pianist, Emanual Ax. Securing the Grammy-winning artist shows ASO Music Director David Alan Miller won’t be letting off the throttle to promote the brand of the orchestra he first joined in 1992.

    david alan miller directorThe past handful of years has made for an historic timeline for the orchestra. Miller and his performers debuted at Carnegie Hall in 2011, and have since played again. Less than two years later, the ASO welcomed world famous cellist Yo-Yo Ma to play with them in Albany. And, last January, the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences of the United States recognized the orchestra with a Grammy Award.

    Last June, the Orchestra also earned their 31st American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) Award, receiving the John S. Edwards Award for Strongest Commitment to New American Music.  The honor is bestowed upon orchestras of any size, pitting Albany’s troop against those from the metropolises of New York City, Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago and Los Angeles. The 31 awards the ASO has earned, is more than any other orchestra in the country.

    Miller’s focus on playing contemporary American music has been stead-fast through the majority of his near 23-year career with the ASO. Miller said, this focus is what sets the ASO apart from other orchestras.

    I was able to steal Mr. Miller away for a brief interview during a recent press conference at The Albany Palace Theatre.

    Michael Hallisey: What has you most excited about the upcoming season?

    David Alan Miller: I’m most excited about Emanual Ax kicking off the season, but I’m also particularly excited if you look at February, March. You’ve got all Beethoven for a solid week in February. Then you have this incredibly adventurous thing in March that is really as edgy as any orchestra is doing.  To me that kind of reflects who and what we are. We’ve got the grand tradition of Beethoven, Tchaikovsky and Sibelius, and we’ve also got really exciting new things happening that other orchestras aren’t even beginning to try.  I feel that’s what makes us so special. That’s what’s so exciting about is.

    He’s been one of my absolute favorite artists for my whole life. And, he plays the classical repertoire – Mozart, Beethoven, Brahms, Chopin –  better than anybody, I think. And, he’s never played with us, so I’m really excited to have him play with us.  It’s a funny thing when we have these great artists like Yo Yo Ma or Josh Bell, it elevates our orchestra and our community. In a way, when you sit on the stage with Yo Yo Ma, suddenly the orchestra becomes virtually Yo Yo Ma level. The same with Manny Ax.  So, having an artist of that stature and with that depth of knowledge and musical skill just elevates who and what we are, and makes us play like that. It’s a great educational tool for me and for the players, but it’s also a great community building thing to see the home orchestra with artists of that caliber and that stature really elevates who and what we are.

    MH: The orchestra won a Grammy last year. What kind of opportunities present themselves with such an achievement?

    DAM: It’s about building the brand and it’s about the perception, because not many orchestras in the country – especially when you go past the Big Six or the Big Seven – not that many orchestras have won Grammys. And, Grammys, as you know, people of all walks of life watch the Grammys and follow the Grammys. So, you’re in there with Beyoncé and Paul McCartney.  Winning a Grammy sort of elevates us in a somewhat different way from playing with Yo Yo Ma. But, it’s all part of the same thing. If I had to list the three most important things we’ve done to enhance our visibility and brand in our community, and nationally, recently, they would be the two visits to Carnegie Hall for Spring for Music. We were the only orchestra to ever visit twice, so that really elevated our stature here. And, then playing with artists like Yo-Yo Ma, and then, as well, the Grammys. So those are three different ways to enhance the visibility of the orchestra in the community and in the larger, national discussion. They’ve done different but equally, powerful valuable things for us.

    MH: You said yourself, the ASO has achieved so much even when compared to orchestras of larger cities. What do you attribute as the reason behind that success? Is it simply community support?

    DAM: The community has absolutely supported the orchestra so generously; mainly by coming. That’s the best thing to do if one wants to support the local arts. You have to attend. And, we so appreciate the community in that. I also attribute our willingness, and our eagerness, and our commitment to do the best, living American music. Many orchestras spend 95 percent of their time playing dead Europeans, all of whom are great. We spend 50 percent, or 60 percent of our time playing dead Europeans and the rest of our time playing living Americans. And, so, all of our recording activities have been of new pieces that are not otherwise available, or haven’t been recorded. All of our commissioning and work, has really elevated our visibility. … So I attribute all our national successes to the daring, artistic projects we pursue.”

  • Finale at The Palace Theatre: Umphrey’s McGee Closes Out Winter Tour in Albany

    As they closes out their Winter Tour, Umphrey’s McGee wrapped things up at The Palace Theatre on February 21 alongside TAUK, a great pairing of bands both rising and established. For the first time, Umphrey’s was brought to the Palace and out of the doldrums of Upstate Concert Hall, and finally, Jefferson Waful’s lights could properly shine and the band could show they could fill a theatre in Albany-proper.

    umphreys mcgee winter closercOpening up was the instrumental funk of TAUK, who only a year ago were playing Parish Public House to 100 or so fans. The growth of this band over the past year was remarkable and now a tour with Umphrey’s has only solidified their ascendance among the jam world. To cap the set, TAUKwas joined by Joel Cummins, Ryan Stasik and Andy Farag during “Mindshift”. TAUKis incredibly talented and worth seeing in any capacity.

    Umphrey’s dove in deep for their tour closer and resurfaced only briefly for air in what was an entire rocker of a show. After an introductory “Dump City” the relatively light “Piranhas” and heavier “Educated Guess” off Similar Skin mixed the set up early, as well a shredding “Atmosfarag”. A 14 minute “Plunger” was a clear highlight of the first set, dropping into an exploratory jam that segued into “Andy’s Last Beer”. The fluidity exhibited by Umphrey’s is one of their musical trademarks amid what some may perceive as musical chaos and overly complicated compositions; what they are missing is the core of this prog-rock jam band and soaring peaks and valleys of songs and jams that few bands can come close to replicating.

    “Wappy Sprayberry” with TAUK’s Alric Carter (keys) and Isaac Teel (drums) sitting in was a chance for these incredibly talented musicians to shine under a brighter spotlight. A clean segue into “Pay the Snucka” with a shredding ending capped a superior first set.

    An abbreviated “All in Time” opened up the second set, seguing into the lyrically and musically powerful “Hajimashite” which launched into a great expanse of a jam, one not seen too often in “Haji”. The jam that ensued worked off of Pink Floyd’s “Breathe” and dipped into the funk of “Day Nurse” accented by Joel Cummins’ airy synth framework.

    “Phil’s Farm” took some huge swings and had a great pay off, with a bonus of the drummer from local band moe., Vinny Amico, sitting in on drums. Working back into August and into the closing of “All in Time” made for a filling second set sandwich and capped off a monster set from start to finish. A big “Bad Friday” encore was the icing on Umphrey’s first ever performance at the historic Palace Theatre, a perfect venue for them for the foreseeable future.

    Set 1: Dump City, Piranhas, Educated Guess, Atmosfarag > Plunger > Andy’s Last Beer, The Weight Around, Wappy Sprayberry* > Pay the Snucka

    Set 2: All in Time > Hajimashite > Day Nurse, Ringo, Phil’s Farm^, August > All in Time

    Encore: Bad Friday

    * with Isaac Teel and Alric Carter of TAUK

    ^ with Vinny Amico of moe.

    Download the show on Archive.org or at UMLive.

    After the show was over, fans flooded Pearl Street looking for their late night fix and a sold out crowd found just that at The Hollow. With Mister F performing, friends stopped by for a few songs, including Joel Cummins’ sitting in next to Scott Hannay on “Answer the Dog”, and an extended “Vocoder” jam featuring Alric Carter and Isaac Teel of TAUK as well as Justin Henricks of Beau Sasser’s Escape Plan.

    Joel Cummins sitting in with Mister F @thehollowalbany #postumphreys #umphlove

    A video posted by pete mason (@phanart) on

  • Umphrey’s McGee to Play Syracuse, Albany This Week

    Umphrey’s McGee, the midwestern-based progressive jam rock band, will be playing shows in Syracuse and Albany on their current North American tour. The dates follow recent appearances at The Beacon Theater in New York City and The Paramount in Huntington, where reported on two consecutive nights of fantastic performances.

    The sextet’s first Upstate stop will be the Landmark Theatre in Syracuse on February 20. Tickets are on sale now, priced through Ticketmaster at $39.90. Umphrey’s will be supported by Long Island act, TAUK.

    The tour will make its way to Albany’s Palace Theatre the following evening. Tickets for the show can be purchased for $36.55. An official aftershow at the Hollow will feature local band, Mister F.

    While Umphrey’s McGee is known for its tight, high-energy live sets, the band’s latest studio release, Similar Skin, offers a genuine, accurate presentation of their signature sound. Getting to know the album is a helpful preface to seeing Umphrey’s live show; it can be streamed on Spotify or purchased on iTunes. Additionally, Umphrey’s surprised fans with a release of The London Session, recorded at the famed Abbey Road Studios in 12 hours time.

    Follow for upcoming coverage on both the Syracuse and Albany concerts on Twitter and Instagram.

  • Upstate’s Joe Bonamassa Gives Albany the Blues

    Joe Bonamassa may have been born in Central New York, but his guitar prowess has taken him around the world many times over. In the blues community, Bonamassa built up a name for himself before it was legal for him to have a beer.

    On January 19th, Joe Bonamassa brought the blues to the gorgeous Palace Theatre in Albany. The two-set show was comprised of an acoustic first set, and an electrifying second set. Playing his hits, the crowd starting tapping their feet and bobbing their heads as soon as the first notes of “Dust Bowl” flowed until the end of the three song encore “Hey Baby”, “Oh Beautiful” and “So, What Would I Do”.

    Joe Bonamassa wasn’t the only living legend playing the blues on stage in Albany either. Reese Wynans (keys), who will be entering the Rock ‘n Roll Hall of Fame this year with Stevie Ray Vaughan & Double Trouble, Carmine Rojas (bass, David Bowie, Rod Stewart, Stevie Wonder), Lenny Castro (percussion, Toto, Adele, Steely Dan), Tal Bergman (drums, Billy Idol, LL Cool J), Derek Sherinian (keys, Buddy Miles, Kiss, Dream Theater), Mats Wester (strings), Gerry O’Connor (strings) and an incredible horn section.

    Acoustic Set: Dust Bowl, Trouble Town, Still Water, Stones in My Passway, Slow Train, Different Shades of Blue, Black Lung Heartache, Happier Times, Athens to Athens

    Electric Set: Never Give All Your Heart, Hidden Charms, Living On the Moon, Can’t Be Satisfied, Double Trouble, Love Ain’t a Love Song, Gave Up Everything for You, One Less Cross to Bear, Sloe Gin, Ballad of John Henry

    Encore: Hey Baby, Oh Beautiful, So What Would I Do

  • An Amazing moe.Year’s eve in Albany

    A grown man dressed like a baby, nearly an hour of “Time Ed>Meat,” a bust-out, new covers and teases galore – it was definitely a New Year’s Eve run to remember at the Palace Theatre. moe. rang in their 25th year as a band with two shows at the Albany landmark that left fans exhausted and satisfied from so much smiling, dancing and partying.

    There were a number of highlights throughout the run that blew fans away, but a major one was an “Ugly American” bust out, a song moe. last played twice in 2010, and before that not since 1999, when it was in regular rotation.

    moe.Year's eveThe Dec. 30 show started with a set from Twiddle, which drew an enthusiastic crowd. Then moe. didn’t waste any time getting into it, starting out with a cool “Skrunk” that segued into a “Timmy Tucker” that got the crowd going early. The show also included “Kids” playing into a “Bones of Lazarus” that veered back toward the old-school way of playing the song with a full into and a pause before the lyrics, though there was no “Ricky Marten” section. Many fans have been asking for old-school “Lazarus” since it was stripped down to its bones a few years back.

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    Farmer Satan and the gang

    Tuesday was one of the first times moe. has really stretched out “This I Know” and jammed it out. The song off the band’s latest album has largely been kept around five minutes, except for on their West Coast tour this fall.

    Bassist Rob Derhak’s son Zach joined the band onstage to give us more cowbell for a cover of Blue Oyster Cult’s “Don’t Fear the Reaper” during the encore.

    “Four” and “Recreational Chemistry” were written into the original setlist, but they were both left out.

    The New Year’s Eve show was all about nostalgia and celebrating the last 25 years of moe. Band members repeatedly thanked their fans, friends, family, crew and colleagues for the support over the years. They also talked a lot about how they consider Albany one of the band’s homes, since they moved to Albany in the ’90s to pursue music full-time.

    “Tonight is special in so many ways,” guitar player Al Schnier said in one of his song intros.

    The show began with the band rising out of the pit at the front of the stage to play a full acoustic set. As they rose to stage level, the band played an old folk song called “Low Bridge” about working on the Erie Canal. Bassist Rob Derhak said the song felt especially appropriate, since the band started in Buffalo then moved to Albany and played the circuit between those cities for years. Guitar player Chuck Garvey’s overalls and hat gave him a farmer look, Rob wore a bow tie, drummer Vinnie Amico played a wooden box with a hole in it, and percussion player Jim Loughlin was dressed in a vest, all of which made the old-timey folk tone of the acoustic set work extra well.

    moe.Year's eve“Chromatic Nightmare” played with acoustic instruments sounded even more than usual like a creepy old-time carnival with bearded ladies and evil clowns lurking in every corner. The song also featured a “Carol of the Bells” tease that drew a huge cheer from the crowd. The full song was on the original setlist, but the band played a fun “Shoot First” instead.

    For the second set, the band moved back into the main stage area and plugged back in. After a few hot songs, Al introduced the Conehead Buddha horns — people, he noted, that they’ve been playing alongside since the early days of the band. “This one goes about 25 years back,” Al said, and they launched into the “Ugly American” dance party.

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    Jim traded his normal Yankees hat for a more subdued black-on-black one for the evening.

    The Conehead Buddha horns went on to prove a lot of haters wrong. Some moe.rons were growing concerned that the horns joining a performance meant the same stale setlist over and over, but they barely played any repeats from their performances with moe. over the last year, and they rocked the songs they played on for the first time.

    The horn section — Shannon Lynch, Terry Lynch and Shaun Bazylewicz — rounded out “Ugly American” well and added a whole new level to “Same Old Story” to make it even better. Then they joined moe. in another new cover, “My Old School” by Steely Dan. When the horns took the stage again in the third set, they were a great fit on the super sexy “Dr. Graffenberg” that included Al and Shannon teasing “I Want You (She’s So Heavy)” by the Beatles.

    The CB horns were also a part of a fun family time “Happy Hour Hero” in which a handful of the band members’ children and other relatives joined the band onstage. Chuck’s nephew killed it on guitar, and the other kids added extra texture on percussion and horns.

    moe.Year's eve
    Oh baby.

    “Twenty-five years ago, they were but a twinkle in our eyes; none of these people existed,” Al said as he welcomed the kids to the stage.

    The band took the stage very close to midnight unveiling a costume change: They had all put on some version of a silver jacket. Rob led a slightly off countdown, then at midnight a bald man dressed as a New Year’s baby — a diaper with a studded belt around it, a 2015 sash, a silver bow tie and a silver top hat — ran onto stage with a flying V guitar. It was Peter Prince, of Peter Prince and Moon Boot Lover, a Buffalo-based band that has been around on and off since the early ’90s. He ripped into a fast-paced and fun “Stone Free” by Jimi Hendrix, the third and final new cover of the evening, then he made the crowd join him in singing “Happy Birthday” to moe.

    moe. then used up nearly the first hour of 2015 on a “Time Ed>Meat” that were super intense with lots of ebbs and flows, builds and releases, including a jam that teased “In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida” by Iron Butterfly.

    The encore of Pink Floyd’s “Time” into “Tubing the River Stix” into “The Pit” was appropriate: The first song, of course, since it time was such a big part of the night’s celebration, and “The Pit” was a good bookend to the beginning of the show with the band rising out of the pit.

    Overall it was a stellar show with a number of high points and very few lows. If this is a sign of what’s to come throughout moe.’s 25th year, it’d be best not to miss a show.

    Setlist – December 30, 2014
    Set 1: Skrunk > Timmy Tucker, Do Or Die > Water >(nh) Puebla > Wind It Up
    Set 2: 32 Things >(nh) Paper Dragon, Kids > The Bones Of Lazarus, This I Know, Buster
    Encore: Don’t Fear The Reaper, Captain America

    Setlist – December 31, 2014
    Set 1: Low Bridge#, Queen Of Everything, Smoke >(nh) Chromatic Nightmare, Shoot First, White Lightning Turpentine, Waiting For The Punchline
    Set 2: Downward Facing Dog, Billy Goat > Bullet > Silver Sun, Ugly American*##, My Old School*%, Same Old Story*, Happy Hour Hero*^$
    III: Stone Free$%%, Time Ed > meat., Little Miss Cup Half Empty*, Annihilation Blues*, Dr. Graffenberg*
    Enc: Time > Tubing The River Styx > The Pit
    {First set acoustic
    * w/ Conehead Buddha horn section: Shannon Lynch on saxophone, Terry Lynch on trumpet, Shaun Bazylewicz on trombone
    ^ w/ Marley Amico on sax, Madison Amico on percussion, Eddie Derhak on trumpet, Ayla Schnier on keys, Ben Schnier on drums
    $ w/ Peter Prince on guitar & vox
    # FTP – (cover – traditional / Thomas S. Allen)
    ## LTP – 7/15/10
    % FTP – (cover – Steely Dan)
    %% FTP – (cover – Jimi Hendrix)}