Dark Star Orchestra rolled out more 2017 tour dates. The newly added East Coast performances include a handful of shows in New York, including DSO’s 20th anniversary celebration on November 11 at the Palace Theatre in Albany. The fall dates lead up to a Cosmic New Year’s Run which includes three nights at Philly’s Electric Factory from December 29 through New Year’s Eve. Details and tickets are available at DSO’s website.
Dark Star Orchestra Remaining 2017 Dates:
Sept.21 – San Antonio, TX – The Aztec Theatre
Sept. 22 – Austin, TX – Stubb’s Austin
Sept. 23 – Dallas, TX – House of Blues Dallas
Sept. 26 – Salina, KS – Stiefel Theatre for the Performing Arts
Sept. 28 – Boulder, CO – Boulder Theater
Sept. 29 – Boulder, CO – Boulder Theater
Sept. 30 – Boulder, CO – Boulder Theater
Oct. 2 – Omaha, NE – Slowdown
Oct. 5 – Cleveland, OH – House of Blues Cleveland
Oct. 6 – Cincinnati, OH – Taft Theatre
Oct. 7 – Columbus, OH – Express LIVE
Oct. 10 – Grand Rapids, MI – The Intersection
Oct. 12 – Detroit, MI – The Majestic
Oct. 13 – Chicago, IL – The Vic Theatre
Oct. 14 – Milwaukee, WI – Riverside Theater
Dark Star Orchestra Fall Tour – Part 2 (Newly Announced Dates):
Nov. 10 – Montclair, NJ – Wellmont Theater Nov. 11 – Albany, NY – Palace Theater Nov. 12 – Peekskill, NY – Paramount Hudson Valley
Nov. 14 – Northampton, MA – Calvin Theatre
Nov. 16 – Portland, ME – State Theatre, Portland, Maine
Nov. 17 – New Haven, CT – College Street Music Hall
Nov. 18 – Worcester, MA – Worcester Palladium Nov. 19 – Ithaca, NY – State Theatre of Ithaca
Nov. 21 – Concord, NH – Capitol Center for the Arts
Nov. 22 – Jim Thorpe, PA – Penn’s Peak Nov. 24 – Huntington, NY – The Paramount Nov. 25 – Huntington, NY – The Paramount
Nov. 29 – Richmond, VA – The National
Nov. 30 – Richmond, VA – The National
Dec. 1 – Norfolk, VA – The NorVA
Dec. 2 – Washington D.C. – The Anthem ( ** Recreating Grateful Dead’s 6/14/91 R.F.K. show **)
Dec. 28 – Montclair, NJ – Wellmont Theater
Dec. 29 – Philadelphia, PA – Electric Factory – with Dirty Dozen Brass Band
Dec. 30 – Philadelphia, PA – Electric Factory – with Keller Williams solo
Dec. 31 – Philadelphia, PA – Electric Factory – 3 sets of DSO
Trey Anastasio will bring his solo band on a six-night fall tour in Las Vegas and California in late October where the tour includes a Halloween show at the Wiltern in Los Angeles.
Trey Anastasio continues to keep his solo band busy. With four shows already scheduled in mid-September in Northern New England and New Brunswick, he recently announced a string of shows out west in October and November. The tour kicks off with two nights at the Brooklyn Bowl Las Vegas on Oct. 27 and 28. It continues on Halloween at The Wiltern in Los Angeles, only the fourth time the Trey Anastasio Band has played the holiday, the last time being two years ago. He hits up the Observatory OC in Santa Ana, California the next night on Nov. 1. After a night off to travel north, he finishes up his tour with two nights at the Fox Theater in Oakland, California on Nov. 3 and 4.
In addition to those dates, he also has a pair of orchestral dates in late September in Nashville and Atlanta.
Tickets for the fall tour are currently available through a realtime pre-sale, which ends Wednesday, Aug. 23. They go on sale to the general public on Friday, Aug. 25.
Trey Anastasio Band Tour Dates
Sept. 15 – Harvest Jazz & Blues Festival, Fredericton, NB
Sept. 16 – Thompson’s Point, Portland, ME
Sept. 17 – Grand Point North Festival, Burlington, VT
Oct. 27-28 – Brooklyn Bowl, Las Vegas, NV
Oct. 31 – The Wiltern, Los Angeles, CA
Nov. 1 – The Observatory OC, Santa Ana, CA
Nov. 3-4 – Fox Theater, Oakland, CA
Trey Anastasio Orchestral Dates
Sept. 27 – Shermerhorn Symphony Center, Nashville, TN
Sept. 29 – Atlanta Symphony Hall, Atlanta, GA
The Chenango Blues Fest will celebrate its twenty-fifth anniversary on Aug. 18 and 19 at the Chenango County Fairgrounds in Norwich, New York headlined by the North Mississippi Allstars with John Medeski. The event kicks off with a free show on Friday night beginning at 6:00 p.m., with stylish showman Reverend Shawn Amos.
Following Amos will be 2017 International Blues Competition Best Band Winners, Dawn Tyler Watson & the Ben Racine Band. Headlining the opening night will be twenty-time Blues Music Award nominee Lil’ Ed & the Blues Imperials. Lil’ Ed Williams continues the lineage of such Chicago slide guitar masters as Hound Dog Taylor, Elmore James, and Williams’ uncle, J.B. Hutto. The fan favorite, fez-wearing, toe-walking showman is not to be missed.
Saturday’s ticketed event ($25 advance, $35 day of show) has a jaw-dropping amount of talented musicians. Acts will alternate between the main infield stage and the tent stage.
Main Stage:
11:30 – Gracie Curran & the High Falutin’ Band
1:45 – Muddy Magnolias
4:00 – Mannish Boys Allstars
6:30 .- Tommy Castro & the Painkillers w/s/g Magic Dick
9:00 – North Mississippi Allstars w/s/g John Medeski
Gracie Curran, Muddy Magnolias, and the Ghost Town Blues Band all continue to confirm the Chenango Blues Festival’s ability to identify and feature emerging artists that captivate audiences and quickly become fan favorites, as the GTBB demonstrates with their third Norwich appearance since 2015. Alvin Youngblood Hart’s powerful vocals will kick things off on the tent stage, where he will be followed by Jason Ricci and JJ Appleton. Ricci is one of the most talented and creative harmonica players playing anywhere. Blues harp fans will come from far and wide to hear him. He teamed with Appleton on the 2015 acoustic blues release, Dirty Memory.
The Mannish Boys Allstars is a dream team of veteran award-winning bluesmen including lead vocalist and front man extraordinaire Sugaray Rayford, guitar wizard Kid Ramos, Anthony Geraci on keyboards, and the rhythm section of Willie J. Campbell and Jimi Bott.
Tommy Castro & the Painkillers will add harmonica ace Magic Dick Salwitz, known best for his work with J. Geils Band, to their lineup.
Closing out the tent stage will be 2017 BMA Pinetop Perkins Piano Player of the Year winner Victor Wainwright, appearing with his eight-piece project, Victor Wainright and the Wildroots. This band won the 2016 BMA Band of the Year Award. This group is a full-blown aural onslaught replete with piano, organ, guitar, bass, drums, horns, harmonica, and backup vocals.
Headlining the main stage for the second time are the North Mississippi Allstars. The duo of brothers Luther (guitar, vocals) and Cody Dickinson (drums, piano, synth bass, vocals) are steeped in the traditions of Mississippi hill country blues music and will be complemented by in-demand keyboard virtuoso John Medeski. Expect the unexpected with this collaboration.
More details on the 25th Chenango Blues Fest can be found here.
It is officially time to prepare for this year’s Nights Of Fire: A Conscious Evolution festival. Hosted by Spun Out Productions, the annual music festival kicks off on Thursday, August 17, and runs through the morning of Monday, August 21. Located at The Woods at Bear Creek, a “glamping”–glamorous camping–ground in Franklinville, NY, Nights of Fire will offer it’s patrons an educational exploration through fire dancing, art, live music, and workshops.
As eloquently described on the Nights Of Fire Event Page: “Nights Of Fire is a FIRE, Art, Music, & EDUCATIONAL RETREAT. We invite all likeminded individuals and those who seek to learn and do more to improve themselves and the world around US. NIGHTS OF FIRE is an educational retreat where YOU can come study many different forms of FIRE SPINNING, FLOW, DANCE, DRUMMING, PAINTING and much more. Evolve with us at night as we will teach you how to celebrate life and simply being alive through song and dance with live music.”
Pre-sales for the festival are no longer online, however, you can pick up a $75 ticket thru a ticket rep, or grab one for $100 at the gate! The ticket includes camping and parking.
If you peek even farther below, you’ll find an episode timestamp, and Nights Of Fire’s daily schedule.
Enjoy!
— Timestamp: 00:00: Roots Of Creation- Different 04:12: Episode Introduction 09:56: Roots Of Creation- Row Jimmy 15:23: Freekbass– Put It In A Letter 18:42: Freekbass- Milkhunt 23:25: The Mantras- Here We Go 29:27: The Mantras- Dirt Nap 35:26: Madam Bliss Remix- Notorious BIG “Dead Wrong” 39:15: Madam Bliss Remix- Erykah Badu “On And On” 44:10: Dixon’s Violin- Ignition (Correction! Jade Dragon is the album name)! 46:31: Dixon’s Violin- Night Spirit 50:56: Stereo Nest- Gradient Peak 55:03: Stereo Nest- Elder Ladder 59:39: Subsoil- Joe Rogan 1:03:24: Subsoil- Great Unknown 1:07:34: Space Junk- Ascension 1:14:31: Haewa- Chem De-Vision 1:18:15: Haewa- Swampin’ 1:23:35: Episode Closing Comments 1:26:46: Flux Capacitor- Big Bad 1:36:29: Flux Capacitor- Unit
Every August there are a variety of Woodstock 1969 tribute events, the last major one being the Heroes of Woodstock tour with many of the original festival performers in 2009 for the 40th anniversary. This Friday and Saturday Aug. 18 and Aug. 19, several of the original Woodstock performers and key figures will be appearing at Brooklyn’s newest outdoor music and event space, the Brooklyn Mirage. 48th
Leading the two day event is the co-creator and founder of Woodstock, Artie Kornfeld, a Brooklyn native himself. Friday’s event is a speaking engagement with Kornfeld featuring a discussion about Woodstock. Doors open at 5 p.m., tickets are available for general admission ($10) or seated ($20).
Saturday’s event will feature music by Arlo Guthrie, Billy Cox Band of Gypsys Experience, Melanie, and Leslie West (of Mountain). Kornfeld will be back to host the evening of music and there will also be an appearance by Wavy Gravy and special guests. Tickets for Saturday are $49 (general admission) and $69 (seated); doors are at 4 p.m.
Blabbermouth reports on a recent Aaron Lewis interview by Chris Mathews from the South Carolina classic rock radio station 104.9 The Surf. In the interview, Lewis was asked if he’s ready to return to the road with his old band Staind, which last toured together in 2011, but seems content on where he is in his solo country music career for the time being.
Lewis was asked about the “touring machine” that is Staind: He replied:
The touring machine, as you call it, of Staind will never be again. Not like that, no. Never. Never. I could never go back to playing six shows [a week] eight weeks in a row. I can’t do that. I have grown in my age and become very accustomed to playing Thursday, Friday and Saturday and being able to go home for a few days and unwind and try to kind of have a life aside from doing this. I worked really, really, really hard to get to this point where I can play three days a week and still do just fine.
In another recent interview conducted by Planet Weekly, Lewis once again talked about the future of Staind. He stated:
I definitely see it staying on hold for a while. I’ve got to stay focused on this [country career]. I’ve got to take this to where it needs to get to before I can start risking things with the good ole boy network reception and throwing in a handful of Staind shows in the summertime along with all of my country shows. But that’s down the road. I can’t even think about that right now.
Without reading too much into this, Lewis recently reunited with his old bandmates at his Aaron Lewis and Friends charity benefit concert on Aug. 4, at the Pines Theater in Northhampton, MA. The band played an encore, three-song acoustic set, that included the songs “Outside,” “Something To Remind You,” and “It’s been A While.”
Lewis released seven studio albums with Staind, and two solo efforts, The Road (2012), and Sinner (2016).
Bruce Springsteen will make his Broadway debut in his “Springsteen on Broadway” run of shows in New York City. The marathon run of shows takes place throughout October and November.
Bruce Springsteen will play a total of 39 shows as part of his “Springsteen on Broadway” run of shows at New York City’s 960 seat Walter Kerr Theatre. The intimate shows will combine stories and music from his career, which began with 1973’s Greetings from Asbury Park, NJ. Springsteen is quoted on the “Springsteen on Broadway” website:
“I wanted to do some shows that were as personal and as intimate as possible. I chose Broadway for this project because it has the beautiful old theaters which seemed like the right setting for what I have in mind. In fact, with one or two exceptions, the 960 seats of the Walter Kerr Theatre is probably the smallest venue I’ve played in the last 40 years. My show is just me, the guitar, the piano and the words and music. Some of the show is spoken, some of it is sung. It loosely follows the arc of my life and my work. All of it together is in pursuit of my constant goal to provide an entertaining evening and to communicate something of value.”
While “The Boss” has kept busy over the course of his career, last year was a big year for him with The River Tour 2016 being named the top global tour according to both Billboard and Pollstar, the release of his memoir Born to Run and its companion album Chapter and Verse in September and being awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in November.
Previews for “Springsteen on Broadway” begin on Oct. 3. The official opening is Oct. 12. The shows take place Tuesday through Saturday at 8 p.m. with a final performance on Sunday, Nov. 26 at 3 p.m. to make up for taking Thanksgiving Day off. The show is expected to last approximately two hours.
Tickets for “Springsteen on Broadway” are being sold through Ticketmaster’s VerifiedFan program and go on sale at 10 a.m. on Aug. 30. Fans wishing to attend the shows must register with Ticketmaster by 10 p.m. on Sunday, Aug. 27. Verified fans will be confirmed on Tuesday, Aug. 29 and will receive a special code by text message on Wednesday, Aug. 30 prior to the 10 a.m. on sale time.
Glen Campbell, a country artist who successfully bridged the pop and country worlds in the late ’60s and early ’70s died from complications of Alzheimer’s disease Tuesday at the age of 81. Campbell’s Facebook page confirmed the death Tuesday afternoon.
Image: Getty Images
Campbell was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s in 2011 and was public about it as he embarked on a farewell tour backed by three of his children. What was supposed to have been a short five week tour, morphed into 151 shows, with his final show occurring in Napa, CA on Nov. 30, 2012. That tour was chronicled in the 2014 documentary, Glen Campbell: I’ll Be Me.
The film followed Campbell on that final tour and revealed the up close and personal experiences of a person suffering through the various stages of Alzheimer’s and its effects on loved ones. Campbell’s daughter, Ashley, who played keyboard and banjo on the tour, told The New York Times in 2014, “It was almost like a game of roulette. You’d have a great show and then a difficult show, and you’d start to wonder, ‘Oh no, is this getting towards the end?’”
Photo Credit: Henry Diltz
Following that tour, Campbell retreated to Nashville where he received long-term care until his death. His final studio album Adios! was recorded following the farewell tour. He was accompanied by such artists as Vince Gill and Willie Nelson, covering songs from Nelson, Bob Dylan and Harry Nilsson, and his longtime collaborator Jimmy Webb. The album was released this past June.
Campbell was the seventh of 12 kids, born to an Arkansas sharecropper on April 22, 1936. He began playing guitar at the age of four with a Sears and Roebuck guitar and was performing on local radio by age six. Campbell quit school, obsessed with Django Reinhardt at the age of 14 and moved in with his uncle, Dick Bills, who had a band in Albuquerque.
A move to Los Angeles in 1960 at the age of 22 kick started a professional career that had Campbell performing with the infamous Wrecking Crew, a loose-knit group of LA studio musicians who became Phil Spector’s house band. The Wrecking Crew acted as the backing band for dozens of the most popular artists of the ’60s, including Frank Sinatra, Nat King Cole, Bobby Darin, the Monkees, Merle Haggard, Elvis Presley, the Mamas and the Papas and the Beach Boys.
According to Rolling Stone, “In 1963 alone, he appeared on 586 cuts and countless more throughout the decade, including the Byrds’ “Mr. Tambourine Man,” Elvis Presley’s “Viva Las Vegas,” Merle Haggard’s “Mama Tried” and the Righteous Brothers’ “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feeling.”
After sitting in on some Beach Boys sessions, Campbell became a touring member of the band, replacing Brian Wilson, who had suffered a nervous breakdown. Campbell toured with the band through 1965.
His late ’60s collaborations with Jimmy Webb brought Campbell’s biggest success, with songs such as “Wichita Lineman,” “Where’s the Playground Susie,” “By the Time I Get to Phoenix” and “Galveston.” His popularity and status as a crossover artist took off in 1968 when he hosted a summer replacement show for The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour. The gig led to his own variety show, The Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour, hosting such musical luminaries as Johnny Cash, Ray Charles, the Beatles, Neil Diamond and Linda Ronstadt on CBS. The show ran from 1969 through 1972.
Webb wrote a heartfelt tribute to his “big brother” in a post to Facebook.
Campbell’s career stumbled a bit in the early ’70s as problems due to alcohol and cocaine use created issues both personally and professionally. In 1975, he resurfaced with several of his most well-known songs topping both the country and pop charts. The Allen Toussaint-penned “Southern Nights” and his signature song, “Rhinestone Cowboy” both hit number one on the Billboard charts during this period.
His later years were spent championing younger country artists such as Keith Urban and Alan Jackson and recording albums of gospel music. He was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2005. The album Ghost on the Canvas was released in 2011 and featured collaborations from indie rock icons Paul Westerberg of the Replacements, who wrote the title track, Smashing Pumpkins frontman Billy Corgan and Jakob Dylan of the Wallflowers.
Campbell is survived by his fourth wife Kimberly, their three children, Cal, Shannon and Ashley, Debby (from his first wife, Diane Kirk), Kelli, Travis and Kane (from his second wife, Billie Jean Nunley) and Dillon (from his third wife, Sarah Barg.
Webb eulogized, “Let the world note that a great American influence on pop music, the American Beatle, the secret link between so many artists and records that we can only marvel, has passed and cannot be replaced.”
Papa Roach frontman Jacoby Shaddix, once again had to go under the knife to fix his vocal cords, prompting the band to scrap the rest of its summer tour dates. No stranger to vocal cord surgery, Shaddix had a similar operation in 2012 to remove a nodule on his vocal cords which Shaddix stated in a past interview with Rolling Stone was like having a callus you would get on your hands, but on your vocal cords instead.
Canceled dates due to the surgery include Aug. 11 at the Douglas County Fair in Roseburg, OR; Aug. 19, at Moonstock 2017 in Carterville, IL and Aug. 25 at the Alaska State Fair in Palmer, AK. Fans who hold tickets for those events are instructed to contact their local ticketing company. Papa Roach hopes to return for their overseas run, and continue to tour in support of the band’s ninth studio album, Crooked Teeth, on Sept. 9, at The Circus, in Helsinki, Finland.
Papa Roach posted the following statement on social media:
It is with a heavy heart that we are forced to cancel our upcoming shows in the Oregon, Illinois and Alaska this month due to the need for Jacoby Shaddix to have immediate vocal cord surgery and rest.
This week, Jacoby was advised by his doctors and vocal specialists to have surgery on his vocal cord and to give his vocal muscles enough time to heal before Papa Roach resumes their current touring schedule in September. Jacoby had a similar surgery about five years ago.
Fortunately, the diagnosis was made early and full recovery should be soon. The vocal cords are a muscle and like any athlete, muscles can get injured in the course of their profession and we appreciate your understanding this diagnosis.
We wish to thank all of our fans in advance for your prayers and good wishes. We know some of you had travel plans and we will return next year to perform for you.
Please contact your local ticketing company for more information on the following shows.
Thanks again,
Jacoby, Tobin, Jerry, Tony, & Team Papa Roach
Rap metal heavyweights, Hollywood Undead and metalcore band Butcher Babies recently announced their North America 2017 tour. Anthology in Rochester will be one of their stops on Friday Nov. 17.
Both bands have new unreleased albums but only Hollywood Undead have officially released details on their new album titled Five (stylized as V), while Butcher Babies have only stated on social media that they have finished recording a third full length album only referred to as BB3, presumably Butcher Babies 3. Tickets go on sale Friday July 28 at 10:00 a.m., with prices ranging from $25 to $30. This show will be 16 and up.