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What Music are you listining to right now
Comments
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northGAcock said:GATraveller said:northGAcock said:GATraveller said:northGAcock said:GATraveller said:northGAcock said:GATraveller said:northGAcock said:northGAcock said:GATraveller said:@northGAcock How was the show last night? I'm going tonight.
Show as incredible......especially the second set. WOW. Such a good time!
https://youtu.be/-oqPbIqWQ14
https://youtu.be/6sFyRQPraJ8
"Social media gives legions of idiots the right to speak when they once only spoke at a bar after a glass of wine, without harming the community [...] but now they have the same right to speak as a Nobel Prize winner. It's the invasion of the idiots."
-Umberto Eco
2 Large
Peachtree Corners, GA -
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https://youtu.be/hAHjM6a9fYA
This is one incredible rock version of a country classic.
Check it out it's Awesome!"I'm stupidest when I try to be funny"
New Orleans -
George!
Steve
XL, Mini Max, and a 22" Blackstone in Cincinnati, Ohio -
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"Social media gives legions of idiots the right to speak when they once only spoke at a bar after a glass of wine, without harming the community [...] but now they have the same right to speak as a Nobel Prize winner. It's the invasion of the idiots."
-Umberto Eco
2 Large
Peachtree Corners, GA -
That whole stretch in '77 is the best Dead there possibly is.
The Cornell Morning Dew is amazing.Steve
XL, Mini Max, and a 22" Blackstone in Cincinnati, Ohio -
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I just like to hear his voice.
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"Social media gives legions of idiots the right to speak when they once only spoke at a bar after a glass of wine, without harming the community [...] but now they have the same right to speak as a Nobel Prize winner. It's the invasion of the idiots."
-Umberto Eco
2 Large
Peachtree Corners, GA -
This will be of interest to the musicians here, I know there's a few of us. Rick Beato just recently "dissected" Boston's first hit, More than a Feeling. This song has been in the background of my entire adult life, and it still gives me chills; yet, Rick showed a bunch of details that I've missed, certainly helps to have access to the original master tapes! Wow. Just, Wow!!
https://youtu.be/ynFNt4tgBJ0
___________"When small men begin to cast big shadows, it means that the sun is about to set."
- Lin Yutang
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Toad the wet sprocket
Big Head Todd and the Monsters
Fůck yeah"Knowledge is Good" - Emil Faber
XL and MM
Louisville, Kentucky -
YukonRon said:Toad the wet sprocket
Big Head Todd and the Monsters
Fůck yeah
Steve
XL, Mini Max, and a 22" Blackstone in Cincinnati, Ohio -
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"The pig is an amazing animal. You feed a pig an apple and it makes bacon. Let's see Michael Phelps do that" - Jim Gaffigan
Minnesota -
https://youtu.be/8pUE7zJB704
If you have not seen him live, you need to. Suzy and I caught him last night at the Ryman. He opened for Jonny Lang. Most incredible evening, the crowd was emotionally spent, leaving only about 750 people to catch Lang.
Most musicians will tell you what a fabulous honor it is to play the Ryman, and will tell you the pressure of sharing the stage with some of the worlds most influential musicians that came before them. They will tell you how important it is to honor them with their best.
There was zero shame, in his game. He did everyone before him, very proud. The old timers at the show, the regulars, all said this was amongst the best they had ever seen.
If there ever was a stage and an artist that were met for one another, the Ryman, with JJGrey and MoFro was it. It was like blues came from an evangelist mixed with James Brown.
He played a short set, being a country Florida boy, mixed funk, rock, blues and soul in a very southern and very unique style.
It reminded me of the traveling revivals, except it was indoors, sitting in a historic church turned into a historic stage. His music reached down to the grittiest part of your soul, and those beside you. There were many misty eyes in the audience.
I have never been part of an event such as this, it was the topic throughout Nashville afterwards and all day Saturday.
I really felt bad for Lang. He perhaps put on the best show I had ever seen from him, and Suzy and I have seen him dozens of times.
15 minutes into his set, 2/3 of the crowd was gone. Not because Lang was not his usual great virtuoso, he was awesome. It was just that the rest of the folks were so blown away by JJ Grey. They had nothing left to give.
"Knowledge is Good" - Emil Faber
XL and MM
Louisville, Kentucky -
I really felt bad for Lang. He perhaps put on the best show I had ever seen from him, and Suzy and I have seen him dozens of times.
15 minutes into his set, 2/3 of the crowd was gone. Not because Lang was not his usual great virtuoso, he was awesome. It was just that the rest of the folks were so blown away by JJ Grey. They had nothing left to give.I watched the video before reading the text. I had already reached the conclusion that he was better than Lang.Lang came from the generation that was purported to be the next big thing.Thanks for turning me on to this new talent. -
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GregW said:
I really felt bad for Lang. He perhaps put on the best show I had ever seen from him, and Suzy and I have seen him dozens of times.
15 minutes into his set, 2/3 of the crowd was gone. Not because Lang was not his usual great virtuoso, he was awesome. It was just that the rest of the folks were so blown away by JJ Grey. They had nothing left to give.I watched the video before reading the text. I had already reached the conclusion that he was better than Lang.Lang came from the generation that was purported to be the next big thing.Thanks for turning me on to this new talent.
I have seen this group about 6 times in the last 12 months.
Worth it too."Knowledge is Good" - Emil Faber
XL and MM
Louisville, Kentucky -
YukonRon said:https://youtu.be/8pUE7zJB704
If you have not seen him live, you need to. Suzy and I caught him last night at the Ryman. He opened for Jonny Lang. Most incredible evening, the crowd was emotionally spent, leaving only about 750 people to catch Lang.
Most musicians will tell you what a fabulous honor it is to play the Ryman, and will tell you the pressure of sharing the stage with some of the worlds most influential musicians that came before them. They will tell you how important it is to honor them with their best.
There was zero shame, in his game. He did everyone before him, very proud. The old timers at the show, the regulars, all said this was amongst the best they had ever seen.
If there ever was a stage and an artist that were met for one another, the Ryman, with JJGrey and MoFro was it. It was like blues came from an evangelist mixed with James Brown.
He played a short set, being a country Florida boy, mixed funk, rock, blues and soul in a very southern and very unique style.
It reminded me of the traveling revivals, except it was indoors, sitting in a historic church turned into a historic stage. His music reached down to the grittiest part of your soul, and those beside you. There were many misty eyes in the audience.
I have never been part of an event such as this, it was the topic throughout Nashville afterwards and all day Saturday.
I really felt bad for Lang. He perhaps put on the best show I had ever seen from him, and Suzy and I have seen him dozens of times.
15 minutes into his set, 2/3 of the crowd was gone. Not because Lang was not his usual great virtuoso, he was awesome. It was just that the rest of the folks were so blown away by JJ Grey. They had nothing left to give.
Kirkland, TN2 LBGE, 1 MM -
The_Stache said:YukonRon said:https://youtu.be/8pUE7zJB704
If you have not seen him live, you need to. Suzy and I caught him last night at the Ryman. He opened for Jonny Lang. Most incredible evening, the crowd was emotionally spent, leaving only about 750 people to catch Lang.
Most musicians will tell you what a fabulous honor it is to play the Ryman, and will tell you the pressure of sharing the stage with some of the worlds most influential musicians that came before them. They will tell you how important it is to honor them with their best.
There was zero shame, in his game. He did everyone before him, very proud. The old timers at the show, the regulars, all said this was amongst the best they had ever seen.
If there ever was a stage and an artist that were met for one another, the Ryman, with JJGrey and MoFro was it. It was like blues came from an evangelist mixed with James Brown.
He played a short set, being a country Florida boy, mixed funk, rock, blues and soul in a very southern and very unique style.
It reminded me of the traveling revivals, except it was indoors, sitting in a historic church turned into a historic stage. His music reached down to the grittiest part of your soul, and those beside you. There were many misty eyes in the audience.
I have never been part of an event such as this, it was the topic throughout Nashville afterwards and all day Saturday.
I really felt bad for Lang. He perhaps put on the best show I had ever seen from him, and Suzy and I have seen him dozens of times.
15 minutes into his set, 2/3 of the crowd was gone. Not because Lang was not his usual great virtuoso, he was awesome. It was just that the rest of the folks were so blown away by JJ Grey. They had nothing left to give.
Saw his group a few times, and they just kept getting better. Caught up with him again after relocating to Louisville, he did a studio session with the NPR station here in town (WFPK, listener supported broadcasts).
That night he did Waterfront Wednesday, and we worked his booth for him. That show, I think, got the word out. He sells out every venue he plays around here, and it seems he prefers the smaller intimate settings.
The largest crowd I had been in to catch his performance was at Bourbon and Beyond, last year. Lot of A' performers at that show, but his crowd, was by far, the largest when he was on stage. Impressive because it was raining so hard, you were standing in sloppy mud up to your ankles.
The guy is multi talented, can play any instrument, and works as hard as James Brown. The only song I have ever heard him cover is John Anderson's 1994 hit, "Seminole Wind", and being a back country Florida boy, it is more about the anthem tribute to his home, than the cover. He does it in a very bluesy rocking manner. He has yet to record it, but if he does, the royalties, will keep Mr J. Anderson happy in retirement, and likely get JJ Grey abd MoFro a nicer tour bus.
Suzy and I are thinking on heading up to Cincinnati to catch him up there on August 8. It is a Thursday night up and back, couple hours each way.
Lucky to live in Louisville for a fan of live music. We have several great towns around us within driving distance to catch shows. (Indy, Nashville, Cincinnati, Lexington. All are just a couple hours or less, St Louis and Chicago are doable as well.)"Knowledge is Good" - Emil Faber
XL and MM
Louisville, Kentucky -
YukonRon said:The_Stache said:YukonRon said:https://youtu.be/8pUE7zJB704
If you have not seen him live, you need to. Suzy and I caught him last night at the Ryman. He opened for Jonny Lang. Most incredible evening, the crowd was emotionally spent, leaving only about 750 people to catch Lang.
Most musicians will tell you what a fabulous honor it is to play the Ryman, and will tell you the pressure of sharing the stage with some of the worlds most influential musicians that came before them. They will tell you how important it is to honor them with their best.
There was zero shame, in his game. He did everyone before him, very proud. The old timers at the show, the regulars, all said this was amongst the best they had ever seen.
If there ever was a stage and an artist that were met for one another, the Ryman, with JJGrey and MoFro was it. It was like blues came from an evangelist mixed with James Brown.
He played a short set, being a country Florida boy, mixed funk, rock, blues and soul in a very southern and very unique style.
It reminded me of the traveling revivals, except it was indoors, sitting in a historic church turned into a historic stage. His music reached down to the grittiest part of your soul, and those beside you. There were many misty eyes in the audience.
I have never been part of an event such as this, it was the topic throughout Nashville afterwards and all day Saturday.
I really felt bad for Lang. He perhaps put on the best show I had ever seen from him, and Suzy and I have seen him dozens of times.
15 minutes into his set, 2/3 of the crowd was gone. Not because Lang was not his usual great virtuoso, he was awesome. It was just that the rest of the folks were so blown away by JJ Grey. They had nothing left to give.
Saw his group a few times, and they just kept getting better. Caught up with him again after relocating to Louisville, he did a studio session with the NPR station here in town (WFPK, listener supported broadcasts).
That night he did Waterfront Wednesday, and we worked his booth for him. That show, I think, got the word out. He sells out every venue he plays around here, and it seems he prefers the smaller intimate settings.
The largest crowd I had been in to catch his performance was at Bourbon and Beyond, last year. Lot of A' performers at that show, but his crowd, was by far, the largest when he was on stage. Impressive because it was raining so hard, you were standing in sloppy mud up to your ankles.
The guy is multi talented, can play any instrument, and works as hard as James Brown. The only song I have ever heard him cover is John Anderson's 1994 hit, "Seminole Wind", and being a back country Florida boy, it is more about the anthem tribute to his home, than the cover. He does it in a very bluesy rocking manner. He has yet to record it, but if he does, the royalties, will keep Mr J. Anderson happy in retirement, and likely get JJ Grey abd MoFro a nicer tour bus.
Suzy and I are thinking on heading up to Cincinnati to catch him up there on August 8. It is a Thursday night up and back, couple hours each way.
Lucky to live in Louisville for a fan of live music. We have several great towns around us within driving distance to catch shows. (Indy, Nashville, Cincinnati, Lexington. All are just a couple hours or less, St Louis and Chicago are doable as well.)Ellijay GA with a Medium & MiniMax
Well, I married me a wife, she's been trouble all my life,
Run me out in the cold rain and snow
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