June 2011

Prince/Esperanza Spalding: The Forum, Inglewood, CA 5/06/11

It was early April when Prince called-in to George Lopez’s late night talk show and announced that he would be playing a 21-night run in the Los Angeles metropolitan area, and over the course of the next month and a half, the region would be under what you could only call a “Purple Reign.”

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The Head: Hang On

With rock solid playing and a freshly melodic spin on 70's AM radio rock this young group shows of a rare ability to channel an older tradition but play it with a full slate of personal inspiration.

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Briefly: Panic En La Playa Doubles Capacity

Rooms for Panic en la Playa, Widespread Panic’s first all-inclusive destination event, go on sale tomorrow at noon ET. The promoters have just announced that the capacity of the event has

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Picture Show: Phish in Raleigh

Phish @ Time Warner Cable Music Pavilion, June 18

Photos: Brad Worsham

Phish’s penultimate gig of the recently completed first leg of Summer Tour 2011 took place this past Saturday night at the venue formerly known as Walnut Creek. Photographer Brad Worsham was on hand and has delivered a batch of stellar shots.

[All photos by Brad Worsham]


Head here for the setlist and The Skinny from Raleigh.

READ ON for a full gallery of Phish Raleigh photos…

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Review: Ray LaMontagne @ Red Rocks

Ray LaMontagne @ Red Rocks, June 17

Words: Jonathan Kosakow
Photos: Matthew Speck

Nearly every concert at Morrison, CO’s Red Rocks Amphitheater finds the performer reaching for the right words to express his or her gratitude at playing such a spectacular venue. From their perch on Stage Rock, as they stare up at rows and rows of people framed by Ship Rock and Creation Rock – the two monoliths that stand together at an angle to form the perfect amphitheater, the perfect view, the perfect sound quality – each and every musician wants to say something unique. Somehow, though they are no less sincere than the person who came before them, it always ends up sounding the same.

[All photos by Matthew Speck]


Not that it matters – for those of us lucky enough to have Red Rocks as our backyard concert venue, we consider it a gift every time we climb the entrance ramp, find our favorite seat along the wooden benches, and watch the moon rise over Denver behind the stage. We understand the struggle to say the right words, it truly is not possible to express. It is beautiful. For Ray LaMontagne it was fairly simple, though: between each song, he’d lean in to his microphone and mumble six words: “Thank you very much. Thank you.”

Dressed in miner’s Sunday best, just as they were in the album art for the latest studio release God Willin’ and the Creek Don’t Rise, Ray LaMontagne and the Pariah Dogs stood in a semi-circle, facing the crowd but focused more on each other. LaMontagne stood on a small square of carpet to the left of his band members, and strummed his guitar and sang from just a little off center. In their 90-minute set, the song list was nothing to be surprised about: they played nearly all the songs you’d expect, sans You Are The Best Thing, and threw in a couple extras.

READ ON for more about Ray LaMontagne at Red Rocks…

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No Nukes Concert: 2011 Style

One of the biggest series of concerts in the late ’70s took place in September of 1979 when a group called Musicians United for Safe Energy (MUSE) rocked Madison Square

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