Category: Hudson Valley

  • Felice County Fair Coming To Arrowood Farms

    The Felice Brothers are throwing a party and you’re invited.  On Saturday, October 1, The Felice Brothers will host “The Felice County Fair” at Arrowood Farms in Accord, NY.

    The all day music event, curated by the Felice Brothers, will be headlined by Conor Oberst (Bright Eyes) and will feature supporting sets from The Felice Brothers, Hooray For the Riff Raff, Evan Stephens Hall (Pinegrove), Haley Heynderickx, Al Olender, and William Lawrence.  

    The event advertises a day of “unique and collaborative performances” and will also feature local food vendors and craft beer from the brewery.  Gates open at noon with music starting at 1pm.  

    Tickets start at $80 and can be purchased here.

    And be sure to check out our coverage of Follow The Arrow, Marco Benevento’s one day festival at Arrowood Farms this past June.

  • Flyday Music Festival Releases Schedule, Single Day Tickets

    Flyday, a music festival community that celebrates life and creativity, spirit, heart and soul, returns to the Catskills on September 29 for three days of music, art and movement from 22 regional and national bands on two stages.

    flyday music festival

    Taking place at the 100 + acre Blackthorne Resort (with more than 80 rooms and plenty of camping and RV sites), the music over September 29-October 1 at Flyday Music Festival will include funk, fusion, electrojazz, prog, rock, jamband, bluegrass, reggae, and comedy artists. And that’s in addition to a pool and tiki bar, creek, hiking, a bar and restaurant, a playground and play fields, and even a Haunted House.

    This year, Flyday Music Festival steps out of the jam-band box and has curated a lineup for a true music festival featuring truly original, creative, and virtuosic artists in the progressive, jazz-rock fusion, and funk genres.

    flyday music festival

    Artists performing over the weekend at Flyday Music Festival include Ghost-Note, Yam-Yam, Black Rock Funk All Stars (members of Kung-Fu, Deep Banana Blackout and Schleigho, Gnarbot, Screaming Headless Torsos, ShwizZ, Ampevene, Honker, Baked Shrimp, Glass Pony, The Magnetic Pull, Level: Memory, Dr Jah and the Love Prophets, Eugene Tyler Band, Children of the Judge, Laura Leigh & Denise Parent, Sungazer, Now vs Now, and K-Weef.

    These artists and special guests will perform on two stages, side-by-side for continuous music throughout the day and night. Among vendors you’ll find Veggie Oasis, Z’licious Caribbean Kitchen, Back Barn Brewery, a masseuse, Earth Tribe artisan vendors, workshops on glass blowing, tie dye and yoga, plus art installations, black light art galleries and live painting.

    Arrive on Thursday night for a early arrival funk dance party with improv jams and special guests.

    Tickets are $115 for a weekend pass, $60 for Friday only and $70 for Saturday only. Camping costs $25 per person for the weekend (with free showers, flush toilets and a charging station), with RV passes and rooms available via Blackthorne Resort.

    If you’re a music lover and dig creative, uber-talented original bands, do not miss Flyday. Tickets available here.

  • Postmodern Jukebox “Life In The Past Lane” Tour makes 4 Stops in NY in 2023

    Postmodern Jukebox embarks on their “Life In The Past Lane” Concert Tour this fall, celebrating the greatest 20th century musical genres, fused with the recognizable hits of our own modern era, for the perfect patina of “vintage” and “modern.” The group brings the PMJ Universe to life with a cast full of exciting vocalists, instrumentalists, and tap dancers, leading to a top-shelf entertainment experience for which PMJ is known.

    Postmodern Jukebox

    When New York City pianist Scott Bradlee created Postmodern Jukebox out of a basement in Queens in 2011, his goal was simple: to remake the pop hits of today into the classic sounds of the legends of yesterday. Miley Cyrus became The Platters. Bruno Mars became Frank Sinatra. The Spice Girls became The Andrews Sisters. Guns ’n’ Roses became Bessie Smith.

    Nearly a decade later, Postmodern Jukebox has grown to become a pop culture mainstay in its own right, having played over a thousand shows on six continents worldwide — including acclaimed venues like Radio City Music Hall, Sydney Opera House, and Red Rocks Amphitheater. In the process, PMJ has introduced audience to many of the world’s greatest singers, dancers, and instrumentalist — many of whom have gone on to become stars in their own right.

    Postmodern Jukebox

    No matter your age, catch Postmodern Jukebox for a ride and an unforgettable trip through 100 years of timeless music.

    Postmodern Jukebox “Life In The Past Lane” Concert tourdates

    10-Mar-23 | Fri | Owensboro, KY | River Park Center
    | 15-Mar-23 | Wed | Troy, NY | Troy Savings Bank Music Hall
    | 16-Mar-23 | Thu | Keene, NH | Colonial Performing Arts Center
    | 17-Mar-23 | Fri | Great Barrington, MA | The Mahaiwe Theatre
    | 18-Mar-23 | Sat | Portland, ME | State Theater
    | 19-Mar-23 | Sun | Plymouth, NH | The Flying Monkey
    | 24-Mar-23 | Fri | New Haven, CT | College Street Music Hall
    | 25-Mar-23 | Sat | Bayside, NY | Queensborough Performing Arts Center
    | 28-Mar-23 | Tue | Akron, OH | EJ Thomas Hall
    | 30-Mar-23 | Thu | Poughkeepsie, NY | Bardavon
    | 31-Mar-23 | Fri | Verona, NY | Turning Stone
    | 4-Apr-23 | Tue | Charlotte, NC | Knight Theatre
    | 5-Apr-23 | Wed | Greensboro, NC | Piedmont Hall
    | 6-Apr-23 | Thu | Virginia Beach, VA | Sandler Center
    | 7-Apr-23 | Fri | Myrtle Beach, SC | House of Blues
    | 8-Apr-23 | Sat | Atlanta, GA | Woodruff Arts Center
    | 10-Apr-23 | Mon | Greenville, SC | Peace Center
    | 13-Apr-23 | Thu | West Palm Beach, FL | Kravis Center
    | 14-Apr-23 | Fri | Ft. Lauderdale, FL | Parker Playhouse
    | 15-Apr-23 | Sat | Clearwater, FL | Ruth Eckerd Hall
    | 18-Apr-23 | Tue | Melbourne, FL | King Center
    | 19-Apr-23 | Wed | Jacksonville, FL | Florida Theater
    | 23-Apr-23 | Sun | Sarasota, FL | Van Wezel
    | 24-Apr-23 | Mon | Orlando, FL | Disney Hall

  • Glenn Tilbrook of Squeeze Performs at City Winery Hudson Valley on September 15

    This September, Glenn Tilbrook of the critically lauded and much beloved 80s band Squeeze will embark on his first solo tour of the U.S. in years. While in New York, he’ll perform on September 15th at City Winery Hudson Valley, the beautifully restored factory on the Wallkill river in Montgomery.

    Glenn Tilbrook of Squeeze Performs at City Winery HV 9/15

    Glenn Martin Tilbrook is the lead singer and guitarist of the English band Squeeze, a band formed in the mid-1970s who broke through in the new wave era at the decade’s end. Tilbrook has earned his place at pop’s top table as one of our most cherished singers, guitarists, and songwriters. Not to mention, an in-demand and endlessly endearing live performer.  

    Squeeze made their recording bow with the Packet Of Three EP in 1977. Those three tracks led to such Tilbrook written pop classics as “Tempted,” “Take Me I’m Yours,” “Pulling Mussels From A Shell,” “Up The Junction,” and “Black Coffee In Bed,” not to mention landmark albums like Argybargy, East Side Story and Some Fantastic Place.  

    Glenn Tilbrook of Squeeze Performs at City Winery HV 9/15

    When the band went on pause in 1998 Glenn embarked on a solo career that spawned the albums, The Incomplete Glenn Tilbrook (2001) and Transatlantic Ping-Pong (2004). Thus, showcasing an ever-maturing songwriting talent (his first major works) without the input of lyricist Difford.

    Glenn Tilbrook of Squeeze Performs at City Winery HV 9/15

    Tilbrook then formed his new band, The Fluffers, who recorded Pandemonium Ensues (2009). Armed with ready wit, raucous vibes, and a shedload of grin-inducing great songs, there are few musicians able to connect with their audience on such an immediate and warm level.

    The show will be located at City Winery Hudson Valley on the outskirts of the small village of Montgomery. The venue has a lovely atmosphere in an historic and beautifully restored factory on the river. Wooden beams, antiques, wine casks and everything is spotlessly clean. Surrounded by the sights and sounds of the Wallkill River, with good drinks and vibes, enjoy a great performance by Glenn Tilbrook.

  • WAMC’s Wanda Fischer to Celebrate Four Decades of “The Hudson River Sampler” at The Linda

    On September 18, 1982, WAMC debuted “The Hudson River Sampler” on Saturday nights. Hosted by Wanda Fischer, the show featured folk and acoustic music from 8-10 PM. Now, after four decades, the show is still running, and with the same host. 

    wanda fischer

    To mark the occasion, on Saturday, October 8, The Linda – WAMC’s Performing Arts Studio, will host a show to celebrate the occasion, featuring several prominent national and local folk music acts, including Anne Hills, Reggie Harris, Christine Lavin, Sawyer Fredericks, John Kirk and Trish Miller.

    The Linda is pleased to welcome the artists who will be here on October 8. These performers present a cross section of the music Wanda plays every week. This will be a special night.

    Peter Hughes, The Linda

    With a background that goes back many years, Fischer has been involved in this type of music since her father introduced her to it as a child. She’s also been a singer herself, having appeared at coffeehouses in the Boston area in the 1960s and ‘70s and has recorded an album titled Singing Along with the Radio. She and her husband Bill relocated to the Capital District in 1979. She held full-time jobs in the region while doing “The Hudson River Sampler” on Saturdays until her retirement from full-time work in 2014. During lockdown from the pandemic, she did her show live from the WAMC studio. 

    Fischer has been a volunteer on several boards of directors in the region, including Old Songs, Caffe Lena and the Eighth Step. She’s also a volunteer reader for the Reading is Fun program in the Schenectady City Schools and has published a novel and several short stories. A competitive local tennis player, she’s served as the captain of a United States Tennis Association team since 1988. 

    Additionally, the show will be broadcast live during The “Hudson River Sampler’s” normal time slot of 8-10 PM on WAMC’s network and streaming on wamc.org.

    Tickets for Wanda Fischer 40th Anniversary Live! Hudson River Sampler live at The Linda: WAMC’s Performing Arts Studio are $25 and on sale now through thelinda.org.

  • Ethiopian Band QWANQWA Announce New Dates For Debut U.S. Tour

    Five-piece improvisatory group, QWANQWA is making their debut in North America this fall; travelling on their first tour in the U.S. in over 20 states. Their performance locations feature a variety of memorable places, including Rochester’s Eastman School of Music, Flushing Town of Hall in Queens, Beacon’s Howland Cultural Center, Saratoga’s Caffe Lena, Buffalo’s Hallwalls Contemporary Arts Centre, and more.

    QWANQWA, based in Ethiopia’s capital and largest city, Addis Ababa, are dedicated to furthering the country’s unique musical tradition rooted in string – classical music blended with new styles influenced by new compositions. Having recruited some of the most prominent names in the country’s music scene, they’ve created room for exploration of new sounds while implementing traditional and region-based beats and moods.

    QWANQWA Profile Diredawa 1.JPG

    QWANQWA’s released works include three critically-acclaimed albums, Volume One (2014) and Volume Two (2015); and Volume Three (2020). The group has performed at two major European tours with knockout shows at the Roskilde and WOMEX festivals in 2016 and 2017 and members of QWANQWA have performed with some of the biggest names in Ethiopian music and beyond: Getachew Mekuria, Mahmoud Ahmed, Mulatu Astatke, The EX, Thurston Moore, Fred Frith, Butch Morris, and more.

    QWANQWA 2022 U.S. Tour Dates

    8/28 Brooklyn NY– Bindlestiff Flatbed Follies

    9/1 Washington, DC – Bossa Bistro & Lounge

    9/3 Waynesville NC — FOLKMOOT 

    9/4 Black Mountain, NC — White Horse 

    9/8 Durham, NC — Motorco Music Hall  

    9/9 – 9/10 Greensboro, NC — NC Folk Festival 

    9/12 Atlanta, GA — The 529

    9/15 Champaign Urbana, IL — Spurlock Museum of World Cultures

    9/17 Boston, MA — Boston University Global Music Fest

    9/18 Cedar Rapids, IA — Legion Arts 

    9/24 Chicago, IL — Hyde Park Jazz Festival

    9/25 Milwaukee, WI — University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Recital Hall

    9/26 Minneapolis, MN — Cedar Center (Global Roots Festival)

    9/28 Boulder, CO — Dairy Arts Center  

    10/1 Ivins, UT — Kayenta Center For The Arts

    10/2 Springdale, UT — Z-Arts

    10/3 Las Vegas, NV — Sahara West Library 

    10/4 Las Vegas, NV — Whitney Library

    10/5 Las Vegas, NV — Winchester Cultural Center 

    10/7 West Hollywood, CA – Petit Ermitage

    10/8 Topanga, CA — Corazon Center for Arts

    10/13 Santa Cruz, CA — Kuumbwa Jazz Center  

    10/14 Berkeley, CA — Freight & Salvage 

    10/15 Healdsburg, CA — Little Saint

    10/16 Mount Shasta, CA – Jefferson Center  

    10/17 Eugene, OR — WOW Hall 

    10/18 Portland, OR — Mississippi Studios

    10/21 Seattle, WA — Town Hall

    10/22 Boise, ID — The Olympic

    10/27 Rochester, NY  — Eastman School of Music Presents 

    10/29 Flushing, Queens, NY  — Flushing Town Hall

    11/1: Bar Harbor, ME – College of the Atlantic

    11/2:  Brooksville, ME – Tinder Hearth

    11/2 Belfast, ME — Colonial Theatre  

    11/3 Portland, ME — Space Gallery 

    11/4 Keene, NH — Nova Arts Fiddle Madness

    11/5 Beacon, NY — Howland Cultural Center

    11/6 Saratoga Springs, NY — Caffe Lena 

    11/8 Buffalo, NY – Hallwalls Contemporary Arts Cente

    11/9 Pittsburgh, PA — City of Asylum

    11/10 Elkins, WV — The Old Brick Playhouse

    11/11 – 11/12 Marlinton, WV — Pocahontas County Opera House

    11/13 Richmond, VA – Richmond Music Hall

    11/14 Washington DC – Hill Center

    11/15 Philadelphia, PA – Boot & Saddle

    11/16 New Haven, CT — Café 9

    11/17 Hartford, CT — Real Art Ways  

    11/18 Putney, VT — Next Arts

    11/19 Amherst, MA — The Drake

    QWANQWA performing in Berlin, 2018
  • Twiddle Announce Jam Packed Tour, with Shows in Port Chester

    Vermont-based jam band Twiddle announced a fall tour, with a lineup of artists including Of Good Nature, Dogs In A Pile, and Neighbor. There are multiple dates in Port Chester at the Capitol Theatre.

    twiddle tour

    The band includes Mihali Savoulidis [vocals, guitar], Ryan Dempsey [keys, organ, synth], Brook Jordan [drums], and Zdenek Gubb [bass]. They have 18 years of touring under their belt and are celebrating their fifth full-length album Every Last Leaf on this tour.

    The Twiddle tour features 23 shows in 19 cities, with two shows in Port Chester, with one show being their annual Frendsgiving celebration on Nov. 25 with support from Dogs In A Pile. The next day, they will have another show at the Capitol Theatre with support from Neighbor.

    Tickets for Twiddle’s Fall Tour are on sale now.

    Twiddle Fall 2022 Tour

    Oct. 25- Charlottesville, VA @ The Jefferson Theater *

    Oct. 26- Charlotte, NC @ The Underground

    Oct. 27- Live Oak, FL @ Suwannee Hulaween

    Oct. 28- New Orleans, LA @ Tipitina’s #

    Oct. 29- Tuscaloosa, AL @ Druid City Music Hall #

    Nov. 2- Fayetteville, AR @ George’s Majestic Lounge #

    Nov. 3- Dallas, TX @ Deep Ellum Art Co. #

    Nov. 4- Houston, TX @ Last Concert Cafe #

    Nov. 5- Austin, TX @ Mohawk Austin #

    Nov. 8- Omaha, NE @ The Waiting Room Lounge #

    Nov. 9- Minneapolis, MN @ Varsity Theater #

    Nov. 10- Chicago, IL @ Park West #

    Nov. 11- Covington, KY @ Madison Theater #

    Nov. 12- St. Louis, MO @ Delmar Hall #

    Nov. 25- Port Chester, NY @ The Capitol Theatre #

    Nov. 26- Port Chester, NY @ The Capitol Theatre =

    Dec. 6- Grand Rapids, MI @ Elevation =

    Dec. 7- Indianapolis, IN @ The Vogue Theatre =

    Dec. 8- Nashville, TN @ Brooklyn Bowl =

    Dec. 9- Atlanta, GA @ Variety Playhouse =

    Dec. 10- Asheville, NC @ Salvage Station *

    Dec. 16- Burlington, Vt @ Higher Ground

    Dec. 17- Burlington, Vt @ Higher Ground

    *Of Good Nature

    # Dog In A Pile

    = Neighbor

  • Santana and Earth, Wind & Fire Rekindle Woodstock Spirit at Bethel Woods

    On the 53rd anniversary week of his career-making performance at Woodstock, Carlos Santana was back at the original site of the 1969 festival, the muddy field of happenstance hippie production transformed into the remarkably well-oiled and gorgeously appointed concert venue/museum now known as Bethel Woods. Once again, the Latin blues and jazz-inflected guitarist demonstrated that his passion for music, and his mission to use it to impart a message of love, peace and unity has not cooled one degree.

    Photo: Kevin Ferguson/Bethel Woods

    I have had the pleasure of seeing Santana live on at least five occasions. The first two were in the early and mid-‘70s respectively, shortly before and then after his embrace of guru Sri Chimnoy and his legendary guitar battles with another Chimnoy acolyte, jazz fusion great John McLaughlin. My third live experience was when he was even deeper into his jazz phase, a 1988 performance at the Saratoga Jazz Festival with a band co-led by Miles Davis and Weather Report saxman Wayne Shorter. The fourth was also at Bethel Woods, in the summer before Covid-19 descended to darken stages and our lives. Each and every time, Santana would rise to the occasion and spit with his guitar “sapphire bullets of pure love,” quoting McLaughlin. As always, he was again backed by an ace band that served up the crowd-pleasing hits and a few surprises.

    The show Sunday, August 21 at Bethel Woods was made even better by the staggering 90-minute plus opening set by Earth, Wind & Fire. Though they are enshrined in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame and have earned a boatload of Grammy Awards and other honors, Earth Wind & Fire just don’t seem to get the respect they truly deserve. They are one of the most successful acts in history, selling over 90 million albums, with a litany of Billboard charting singles that betters most acts of their era. These are songs that have lived on as samples powering hits by new generations of artists, from Drake to A Tribe Called Quest to Bjork. Even without the presence of their founder and leader, the late Maurice White, the 12-piece band put on a staggeringly energetic and hit-packed show. The focal points are the three founding members still performing today – the always smiling bassist Verdine White, percussionist and vocalist Ralph Johnson and the extraordinary lead vocalist Phillip Bailey.

    Photo: Kevin Ferguson/Bethel Woods

    They hit the ground running at Bethel with an uninterrupted string of eight high-energy hits including “Shining Star,” “Getaway,” “Serpentine Fire,” “Sing A Song” and “Got to Get You Into My Life.”
    The most striking aspect of an EW&F performance is the undiminished state of Phillip Bailey’s soaring falsetto voice. Even at 71, Bailey hits all the high notes, probably the highest of high notes in all of music, at least since they stopped cranking out operatic castratos in the 17th Century! His son, Phillip Bailey Jr., shares both the lead duties and otherworldly vocal instrument of his father.

    The entire band is as tight “as a mosquitoes’ tweeter” to quote another great musician, Nina Simone. The whole affair seems largely directed by the powerful centerstage presence and thumping bass of Verdine White. The band then cooled things down by serving up some of their hit ballads including “Head to the Sky,” “That’s the Way of the World” and “After The Love Has Gone,” before upshifting to more high-energy favorites – “Boogie Wonderland,” “Let’s Groove” and the set closer “September.”

    Photo: Kevin Ferguson/Bethel Woods

    Santana’s performance began with a throwback to Woodstock ’69, with video of the famous rain chant segueing into a shortened but nonetheless powerful performance of “Soul Sacrifice,” one driven by Santana’s super talented drummer wife Cindy Blackman. The band then performed more early classics, “Jingo,” “Evil Ways,” “Black Magic Woman/Gypsy Queen” and “Oye Como Va.” With his jazz improviser’s heart, Carlos evolved his approach to these well-worn songs, providing bluesy B.B. King-like lines darting around the vocals, a quote from Steely Dan’s “Do It Again” in “Evil Ways” and Wes Montgomery-like octave runs on “Black Magic Woman.”

    Photo: Kevin Ferguson/Bethel Woods

    Santana then shifted the mood with his fantastic ballad, “Europa.” It boasted a delightfully hesitant rendering of the soaring melody and unexpected avenues in his solo, when he rolled the treble off his guitar giving it what Clapton called “the woman tone.” On this and every number, Santana was supported by a first-rate row of players including longtime bassist and former Miles Davis sideman Benny Rietveld, keyboardist David K. Mathews, percussionists Karl Perazzo and Paoli Mejias and vocalists Andy Vargas and Ray Greene.

    After “Europa,” Carlos went into a long rap about Woodstock ’69. He humorously reminisced about praying to God to help him keep it together during the performance, one he played while high on L.S.D. given to him by Jerry Garcia, with a guitar whose neck was turning into a snake! Making jest of the old adage that “if you were high at Woodstock, you probably wouldn’t remember it,” he said: “If you were as high as I was, you would never forget it!” He added: “What I think we need is more of that Woodstock spirit in the world today, something to help get rid of the fear and division that is destroying society.”

    Photo: Kevin Ferguson/Bethel Woods

    Santana really hit his electric stride on “(De La) Yaleo” from his career-revitalizing disc Supernatural and the lovely acoustic ballad from the same album, “Put Your Lights On,” the latter sung here admirably by the band’s second guitarist Tommy Anthony, who swapped in for Carlos on several numbers. Santana again saluted Woodstock ’69, with video clips from the fest of now deceased performers like Jimi Hendrix, Johnny Winter, Joe Cocker, Richie Havens, Alvin Lee and organizer Michael Lang, during a soulful reading of the Youngbloods’ hit, “Get Together.”

    The band finished out their lengthy set with some the latter-day highpoints from Santana’s discography, including “Corazon Espinado,” “Maria, Maria” and “Smooth.” After a fiery drum solo from Blackman and an introduction of Michael Carrabello, the original Santana conguero who is now back touring with the band, they closed out the evening with a seamless medley including bits of the James Bond Theme, The Doors’ “Roadhouse Blues,” The Chambers Brothers “Love Peace & Happiness” and Sly’s “I Want To Take You Higher.” In keeping with the spiritual nature of this and every Santana concert I have attended, he ended with a positive message, urging the audience to take on a new job: “We all need to become weapons. Weapons of mass compassion.”

    Sal Cataldi is a musician, writer and publicist living in New York City and the Hudson Valley,. He is
    President of Cataldi PR and leader of the band Spaghetti Eastern Music and member of the duos Guitars A Go and Vapor Vespers.

  • In Focus: Phil Lesh & The Midnight Ramble Band at Bethel Woods

    Phil Lesh and The Midnight Ramble Band joined forces for a recent gig on Saturday, August 20 at Bethel Woods Center for the Arts. With the Midnight Ramble Band featuring names like Larry Campbell, Teresa Williams, and Amy Helm (daughter of Levon), the powerhouse ensemble delighted all with a mix of The Band and Grateful Dead material. NYS Music’s Howard Horder was in attendance and captured some of the magic with the photos below. And check out archive.org for an audience recording of the show if the setlist below appeals at all.

    Phil Lesh & The Midnight Ramble Band Bethel Woods Center For The Arts – Bethel, NY 8/20/22

    Set 1: Tennessee Jed, Rubin & Cherise, Scarlet Begonias > Not Fade Away, Brokedown Palace, Franklin’s Tower, Ophelia, Sugaree

    Set 2: Shakedown Street, Playing in the Band, Eyes of the World, Chest Fever, Unbroken Chain, Atlantic City, River Deep, Mountain High

    E: Donor Rap / Band Intro, The Weight

  • Inaugural Backroads Blues Festival Showcases Generational Talent at Bethel Woods

    On the eve of the 53rd anniversary of the 1969 Woodstock Music and Art Fair, blues/rock artist Kenny Wayne Shepherd brought with him living blues legend Buddy Guy and up-and-coming blues man Christone “Kingfish” Ingram to the Bethel Woods stage for three sets of incredible music. The showcase of three generations of blues musicians is the inaugural edition of the touring Backroads Blues Festival. In addition to a remarkable evening of music, Shephard spoke with us about the tour and the entire interview can be seen at the end of this article.

    The Backroads Blues Festival’s inaugural run is visiting six venues between the Northeast and Virginia and included two stops in New York. Christone Ingram, a Mississippi native who goes by the nickname Kingfish, has had an impressive career so far for only being only 23 years old. While he has a bit of a name for himself, the show was a fantastic introduction for new fans. Though a younger musician, he blazed through his guitar work with emotion as if the blues were his primary language.

    Kenny Wayne Shepherd, who conceived the idea of this festival and curated the show, took the stage with his own band between Kingfish and headliner Buddy Guy. Shepherd is a musician who knows the business and how to draw his audience in to his music and guitar with his stage presence. Shepherd’s set included not only his own work, but concluded with a hat tip to the legendary B.B. King with “You Done Lost Your Good Thing Now.” Headlining the show was Buddy Guy, who celebrated his 86th birthday over the summer. There is a lot to be said for seeing and hearing Buddy perform which is why his shows are not just a performance, but an experience. He works the crowd with his wit, humor, and a sharp sense of being in the moment with his band to deliver pure, unfiltered blues.

    Before the evening concluded, both Shepherd and Kingfish joined Buddy Guy on stage to trade solos and do some call and response traditional to the style. As Buddy Guy usually does at the end of his shows, he set his guitar down and let his band (along with Shepherd and Kingfish) jam and play him out while he paraded around the stage to toss some guitar picks into the crowd.

    The Backroads Blues Festival was a unique experience of listening to three generations of musicians fit into a touring concert format. The crowd was left energized by the music with conversations about each of the three performers drifting through the air when the lights came back on. While the festival tour is wrapping up this weekend, we’re looking forward to the future versions of the Backroads Blues Festival coming back around to New York.

    Interview with Kenny Wayne Shepherd

    Steve Malinski: You mentioned during the show that the, this touring festival’s kind of been a dream of yours for a few years. So what inspired that dream to bring a few gen generations of blues musicians together like that?

    Kenny Wayne Shepherd: Well, I felt like there’s something, you know, there’s an opportunity for something like this. There’s kind of a void and I was looking to fill it. When I was a kid, there was an annual touring blues festival that B.B. King did. And, you know, I went to it several times over the years as a spectator, as a fan and saw some of the greatest talent in blues from Etta James, B.B. King, Joe Cocker, Stevie Ray and Jimmy Vaughan, Robert Cray, Buddy Guy. I mean, the list goes on and on, right. And then not too long after I joined it as an artist and did the tour myself with my band several times over the years. So, I mean, I just have a lot of really fond memories of that festival and those kinds of experiences. And I think I wanted to give the fans the opportunity to have their own experience like that, you know? I also think the genre still needs something like that. The multi-generational approach where you had three different generations of kind of the hottest names in blues. But I mean, the goal is just to have the best bands that are out there right now. I mean, it doesn’t necessarily always have to be representative of three generations, but I thought that was a really perfect way of kicking off the tour.

    SM: Yeah, it’s kind of a neat way of doing that.

    KWS: Yeah, I think it was good. I mean, Kingfish, he’s one of the big up and comers, he just won a Grammy. I mean, he’s kind of really blazing a trail and making a name for himself. And then, I’m the generation before and then Buddy’s, obviously the generation before that and everybody’s kind of at the top of their game. And so, it was a really strong lineup.

    SM: So how’s the experience been so far with it having a few shows in the books already?

    KWS: I think it’s great. I mean, to be honest with you the first night in Providence was completely packed. And it was a really great opening night. Bethel had a great crowd as well, but, you know, we were getting constant feedback. My people who were out in the merch area and the crew that was scattered throughout the venue and even myself at the end of the night… all the people that were working at the venue as they were leaving were just extremely complimentary about the show, said it was one of the best shows that they had there all season.

    So you know, that’s great. I mean, obviously, this is my project and it’s very important to me, but I mean, I’m telling you every single person that walked outta that venue that walked past me told me how great the show was. So that’s really satisfying. It’s very encouraging, especially because we’re trying to establish the brand here, because we want to move forward with this on an annual basis. They said they would love to have us come back again.

    SM: Yeah. One of the things I was going to say is I see huge potential for this growing into something more than just the limited run of shows you’re doing this summer.

    KWS: Yeah, this tour is more to get the word out, establish the brand and kind of like a proof of concept for lack of a better term. But back in the day the B.B. King fest would have around four headlining acts and then they would also have local acts that would perform, you know early on in the day. I mean the whole thing would start, and the local act was playing at like 4, 4:30 in the afternoon, you know? So it was a bit of a longer event and I’m hoping that we can grow into that. And the goal is to be inclusive. We’re gonna have, the hottest women of the blues, the hottest artists. Also, it’s like everything doesn’t always have to be electric either. There might be, you know, some more acoustic driven blues artists that will be included in the bill going forward and things like that. But regardless, it’s gonna be the top performers in the genre for sure.

    SM: Awesome. So I’ve seen Buddy Guy a handful of times, and he always talks about learning, not from the book, but just from what he hears and picks up from others. What have you kind of picked up on as inspirations from working with Buddy Guy and Kingfish as you’ve gotten ready for this tour?

    KWS:  Well, I mean, I’ve learned a lot from Buddy Buy. And so has any other guitar player in the past, you know, 50 years probably. I mean, Jimi Hendrix was a huge fan of Buddy Guy’s. So Buddy influenced, you know, the guy who’s regarded as the greatest guitar player of all time. So people, whether they even realize it or not have been influenced and affected by Buddy Guy and who he is and what he does. So, I mean, the main thing is he’s just incredible at age 86, you know, that he can perform at the level that he’s still performing at. And he’s a true show. And I just, I try and absorb that to the best of my abilities and, and take, things from people like that and incorporate them into what I do. And, that’s the tradition for all of us.

    SM: As you know, the Woodstock anniversary is this week. So being on that historic site, were any special feelings that you had performing at Bethel Woods?

    KWS: Yeah. You know, I’ve gotten to play this venue more than a few times over the course of my career. And, I’ve been to the site and done that whole thing. It’s certainly cool. I mentioned it earlier on, I think on one of my social media posts, especially because we are doing a music festival and launching a music festival… It’s like that place is sacred ground for music festivals. It was one of the biggest of all time, one of the most historic music festivals of all time took place there. So I thought it was an amazing opportunity to try and do the inaugural run of my festival and play one of our dates at that location.

    SM: I noticed you have a tour coming up leading into next year to celebrate the 25th anniversary of your album Trouble Is…. So looking back to 1997 and before, when you signed your first record deal at a six as a 16 year old kid in the early 90s, how do you reflect back on that?

    KWS: The first album [Ledbetter Heights] came out in ‘95, right after I graduated high school. I had recorded that one when I was 17. And then the one that we’re celebrating is the second album Trouble Is…, and that came out when I was like 19 years old in 1997. I mean, you know, I was young by any means. To compare to anything that’s a very young age to start a career and have that kind of success. And now I’m 45 years old and certainly, you know, a lot of time has passed. I mean, I think one of the most satisfying things we have accomplished a lot – we’ve sold millions of records. I’ve got several golden platinum albums hanging on the wall, awards on the shelf, all of those great things that any artist could ever hope for. But to me, the biggest accomplishment is the fan base that we have acquired over the years. You know, because people that are fans of this music, the music is timeless. It’s not stuck in an era. So, it’s not like pop music that has a certain sound from a certain era which then people move on from that. This is timeless music. And generally people who become fans of this kind of music kind of dig it for life, you know? And so as a result, that’s why 30 years later I’m out here and we’re still accomplishing things and we’re still making new achievements and we’re still, you know, selling tickets to concerts and selling out venues and moving into bigger venues, into new markets and things like that. That’s the biggest accomplishment because without the fan base that we have, then, none of it would be possible. And so they’ve stuck with me and they’ve kind of hung in there with me for 30 years now and they continue to make it possible for me to pursue, my dreams.

    SM: Going off of that, have you run into a lot of younger musicians who are looking up to your middle generation of blues musicians as inspiration?

    KWS: So, everybody knows that I started so young. I mean, over the entire 30 years of my career, I’ve run into a lot of younger musicians that come because they heard about my story and, you know, they’re aspiring young guitar players and, and things like that. And so, there’s no shortage of young people that are interested in music and there’s never any void of young people that are interested in blues and for some, it’s a stepping stone and they move on to other genres. And for some people like Kingfish, they try and make a life’s career out of it. But, my job is to be a good example and to be encouraging to them and just kind of do what I can do while I’m here and make my contribution, you know, as solid as possible.