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A Flamingohead

Enjoy The Ride!!

Name: Private | Gender: M | Member Since September 3, 2007
Current Level: Superstar | Email: citizentom@yahoo.com
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Posted on: April 11, 2008 12:34 am
Edited on: April 15, 2008 6:59 pm
 

Upcoming Tour Dates for Tommy Emmanuel

Check out maybe the best guitar player in the world - See him on youtube, www.tommyemmanuel.com or better yet, see him live. He's playing in Canada and the US in May and June, so now is your chance. By the way, get your tickets early, because they won't last.

  • 5/1 - Montreal
  • 5/2 - Ottawa
  • 5/3-4 - Toronto
  • 5/6 - Syracuse
  • 5/7 - Rochester, NY
  • 5/20 - Indianapolis (Tickets go on sale 4/11)
  • 5/21 - Louisville, KY
  • 6/5-7 - Newport News, VA
  • 6/11 - Phoenixville, PA
  • 6/12 - Alexandria, VA
  • 6/15-16 - Beach Haven, NJ

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Do-b7eHd72o      Tommy playing Guitar Boogie

Posted on: April 10, 2008 1:55 pm
 

Great Shows in Ohio and Indiana this month

If you have the chance to catch Michael Kelsey, an extraordinary performer and guitar wizard, you should do so. He'll be in Ohio and Indiana this month. Here's where:

4/11 in Miamisburg, OH at Miami Valley Community Church

4/12 in Lexington OH at Bucks

4/19 in Columbus Indiana at 4th Street Bar

4/25 in Lafayette IN at Lafayette Brewing Co

4/30 in Terre Haute, IN at The Coffee Grounds

You can see videos on youtube or check out www.michaelkelsey.com for more info

 

Posted on: February 22, 2008 11:46 am
 

Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival

 Found this article by Joel Selvin, Senior Pop Music Critic of the San Francisco Chronicle, about the Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival in San Francisco. Don't know exactly when this is, but it looks and sounds incredible. And it's free!!

October 8, 2007

Joel Selvin

Banjo player Warren Hellman may have thought he tucked away on the schedule the performance by his bluegrass group the Wronglers early Sunday morning with the dew still on the grass at the Porch Stage of the Hardly Strictly Bluegrass festival in Golden Gate Park, but several hundred supporters - "fans" might be a little strong - showed up to cheer on the festival's benefactor.

His guest guitarist, Ron Thomason of the professional bluegrass outfit Dry Branch Fire Squad, told the audience how tough Hellman was, training for his horse-riding hobby while recovering from a broken leg.

"That just shows you what sort of person turns to the banjo," Thomason said. "And at the end of this thing, someone's gotta say, 'check, please.' "

The partisan crowd rained a standing ovation on the seated Hellman, who conducted himself more like a reject from "Hee-Haw" than a financier, joking and telling stories on himself. "This is simple music," he told the crowd, "played by complicated people."

From the opening Friday afternoon performance by Nashville guitarist Buddy Miller to the traditional finale by Emmylou Harris late Sunday afternoon 52 hours later - after 72 acts appeared on the five stages, after most of the festival artists stayed up all night Saturday playing music at a private cast party, after dozens of festival artists made appearances at other festival artists' shows - Hardly Strictly Bluegrass No. 7 goes down in the books as another miraculous weekend, a gift from country music's most beloved amateur banjo player to the city where he lives.

Police told Slim's and Great American Music Hall general manager Dawn Holliday, producer of the sprawling event, that they thought more than 500,000 people filled the entire west end of the park from 25th Avenue out.

With each year, Hellman's million-dollar bash embeds itself more deeply into the San Francisco cultural calendar. Inevitably paired with Fleet Week - with the Blue Angel Jets buzzing the concert site - Hardly Strictly has become an annual community celebration of simple but profound values.

With the festival stretched over three meadows and five sites along John F. Kennedy Drive - Lindley, Speedway and Marx Meadows - festivalgoers thronged the roadway moving from stage to stage. Dogs and children were everywhere.

"This is Jack Casady on bass - he's played here before," said guitarist G.E. Smith of Moonalice introducing the Jefferson Airplane bassist as the band thundered into a revamped "Somebody to Love."

His Airplane and Hot Tuna bandmate, guitarist Jorma Kaukonen, was also on hand, playing gentle, deft versions of country blues on the Rooster Stage in Marx Meadow, where the program was largely devoted to acoustic singer-songwriter type performers. The annual Songwriter Circle - this year featuring Ray Wylie Hubbard, Chris Smither, David Olney and Steve Young - is always a Rooster Stage highlight.

On the Banjo Stage, traditional country holds sway, like banjo great Earl Scruggs or Doc Watson, the 84-year-old blind guitarist from Deep Gap, N.C. Mandolinist David Grisman brought out Curly Seckler, a veteran of Bill Monroe and the Bluegrass Boys, who did a song he recalled having heard sung by Charlie Monroe, Bill Monroe's older brother.

On Saturday, a parade of authentic bluegrass musicians crossed the Banjo Stage. The New Lost City Ramblers, a group crucial in bringing traditional music out of the hills, made one of its infrequent reunions, this filmed for a documentary being made about the 50-year-old bluegrass band. The Roan Mountain Hilltoppers, out of the Smokey Mountains, featured the spunky vocals of washtub bassist Janice Birchfield, a short, rotund, red-headed spitfire.

Ricky Skaggs, Nashville's leading neotraditionalist, joined forces with sometime Grateful Dead sideman Bruce Hornsby for a rousing collaboration based on their recently released duo bluegrass album, followed by Gillian Welch and Steve Earle, two regular members of the Hardly Strictly lineup.

An all-Lone Star bill ran down the meadow on the Arrow Stage, with Texas troubadours James McMurtry and Jimmy LaFave sharing the stage with the Flatlanders, a hard-rocking collaboration between songwriters Jimmie Dale Gilmore, Joe Ely and Butch Hancock, made all the more so when joined for the occasion by the king of twang, guitarist Bill Kirchen. T Bone Burnett returned from his triumphant Friday appearance with guest John Mellencamp to put on his own rock show to end the Arrow's day.

On the Star Stage, John Prine pulled a huge crowd down the road, while Nick Lowe played a marvelously assured, low-key solo acoustic set across the street at the Rooster Stage. With Hardly Strictly produced by his nightclub operation at Slim's and the Great American Music Hall, Boz Scaggs has wanted to join the proceedings for years. After many rehearsals and a warm-up show Thursday at the Music Hall, Scaggs accounted for himself admirably, of course. Wearing straw hat and blue jeans, he mined his Texas youth for a set of old Hank Williams and George Jones tunes backed by a band that included the stellar Buddy Miller on guitar and the amazing Jon Cleary on keyboards.

Los Lobos brought the afternoon to a close as shadows fell across the Star Stage with the band's trademark mariachi rock, following a sensational set of modern bluegrass instrumentals by Bela Fleck and the Flecktones.

Category: General
Posted on: February 1, 2008 12:50 am
 

The Music Lovers Thread

Have to make my first blog entry about the best thread going, started by a gentleman named RockFlorida from, well, Florida, and It has grown to over a hundred pages in a very short period of time. An incredibley diverse and knowledgeable group of music lovers have contributed regularly and we've all found out about a ton of artists with whom we were unfamiliar or simply had neglected for too long. I've decided this blog might be the best place to keep track of these amazing musicians so I can look them up later. You can find this thread - What Are You Listening To? - by clicking on my messages page on my profile. I recommend that you start from the beginning, but I certainly understand if you want to go straight to the last page

Here is a short list of recommended musicians from this thread: Son Volt, Drive-by Truckers, Two Cow Garage, Deadstring Brothers, Old Crow Medicine Show, Bruce Cockburn, Blind Albert, the Del Fuegos, the Trailer Park Troubadours, Antsy McClain, Southern Culture on the Skids, Alison Krauss and Robert Plant, and many more. I've left off all the major stars who this group has listened to and discussed at length.

In addition, there are many sites where you can find streaming music, live shows, free downloads, etc. that are brought up. Some of those are yeproc.com, archive.org, wolfgangsvault.com, emusic.com, last.fm, and of course, youtube. This is a sports site, and everyone on this thread is a pretty avid sports fan, but music is at the forefront here and we've had nothing but a great time on this thread.

I don't know exactly how this blog works, so if you can comment on it with other music suggestions, or if you're a regular WAYLT (What Are You Listening To?) contributor, and want to add to the many suggestions I've missed and can't remember, please do so.

Meanwhile,

Enjoy The Ride!

Category: General
Tags: music
About Enjoy The Ride!!
We all take our sports pretty seriously around here, maybe a bit too seriously. We're all in this to have fun, and if I can keep up with what's going on, I'll point out what makes our professional sports so fun to watch, whether it's a big name wide receiver crying after his season just ended, or seeing a rookie come out and set rushing records or lead the league in tackles. And if we need to take a time out from all the sports mayhem, listen to some good music. This blog will keep you up to date on some compelling artists that may not be in the mainstream, but demand your attention if you are lucky enough to discover them. I contribute to some threads that are the place to go to learn about new, and old, music that you should know about. Enjoy The Ride!
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