Brandi Passante is remembering her dad on his “heavenly birthday.” The Storage Wars star shared a sweet tribute to her late father on social media. Her post included some heart-warming throwback photos of the two of them. Fans were eager to show their support for the reality TV star in the comments. Read on to see what Brandi Passante shared with fans.
Brandi Passante Shares Touching Tribute For Dad
Despite losing her father over three years ago, Brandi Passante is still mourning the devastating loss.
On Monday, Brandi shared a video to Instagram. The clip showed a series of photos of her with her dad throughout her life. Over the video, she wrote, “Happy heavenly [birthday] Daddio! I miss you terribly! I hope you’re enjoying a Road Soda in a paper bag & a cheap smoke.”
Instagram/Brandi Passante
At the end of the clip, there is a card reading, “In...
Brandi Passante Shares Touching Tribute For Dad
Despite losing her father over three years ago, Brandi Passante is still mourning the devastating loss.
On Monday, Brandi shared a video to Instagram. The clip showed a series of photos of her with her dad throughout her life. Over the video, she wrote, “Happy heavenly [birthday] Daddio! I miss you terribly! I hope you’re enjoying a Road Soda in a paper bag & a cheap smoke.”
Instagram/Brandi Passante
At the end of the clip, there is a card reading, “In...
- 4/25/2024
- by Amanda Blankenship
- TV Shows Ace
For the majority of John Oates’ professional career, solo work was a means to keep busy and creatively fulfilled between the Daryl Hall & John Oates projects that took up most of his time. But now that the duo has hopelessly fractured after more than 50 years of partnership, Oates has the time to concentrate all his energies on his own music, beginning with his new LP, Reunion, out May 17.
The album is the culmination of years of work and features original compositions he wrote with A.J. Croce, Keith Sykes, Jim Lauderdale,...
The album is the culmination of years of work and features original compositions he wrote with A.J. Croce, Keith Sykes, Jim Lauderdale,...
- 4/10/2024
- by Andy Greene
- Rollingstone.com
Robert Downey Jr.’s tumultuous past with addiction might’ve made him the perfect actor to help Gwyneth Paltrow with this role. When Paltrow was tapped to play an addict, she figured she could seek inspiration from Downey Jr.’s own experiences.
Robert Downey Jr. gave Gwyneth Paltrow great advice when it came to addiction Gwyneth Paltrow and Robert Downey Jr. | Frazer Harrison/Getty Images
Paltrow did a lot of research to get into the mind of an addict for her 2010 feature Country Strong. She played troubled country singer Kelly Canter in the flick, who’d spend most of the film battling her self-destructive lifestyle. The film required Paltrow to step out of her comfort zone in multiple ways. She wasn’t a fan of country music, so she had to familiarize herself with the genre to better prepare for the role.
“I grew up in New York City where...
Robert Downey Jr. gave Gwyneth Paltrow great advice when it came to addiction Gwyneth Paltrow and Robert Downey Jr. | Frazer Harrison/Getty Images
Paltrow did a lot of research to get into the mind of an addict for her 2010 feature Country Strong. She played troubled country singer Kelly Canter in the flick, who’d spend most of the film battling her self-destructive lifestyle. The film required Paltrow to step out of her comfort zone in multiple ways. She wasn’t a fan of country music, so she had to familiarize herself with the genre to better prepare for the role.
“I grew up in New York City where...
- 4/3/2024
- by Antonio Stallings
- Showbiz Cheat Sheet
SXSW 2024 kicked off its first full day of music on March 12 with a smattering of must-see shows around town, plus some tension in the air thanks to the festival’s relationship with the U.S. Army. (When Texas Gov. Greg Abbott chimed in on social media, it was the kind of noise that no one needs.) While a number of acts cancelled their official showcases, many of them continued to play unofficial shows for the audiences that SXSW brought to town, and several spoke out in support of the Palestinian people and against war.
- 3/13/2024
- by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Christian Hoard, Angie Martoccio and Simon Vozick-Levinson
- Rollingstone.com
“American Idol,” the iconic series that revolutionized the television landscape by pioneering the music competition genre, has returned to airwaves for another season on ABC. Helping determine who America will ultimately vote for to become the next singing sensation are music industry forces and superstar judges Luke Bryan, Katy Perry and Lionel Richie. Emmy Award-winning host and producer Ryan Seacrest returns to the beloved competition series for the show’s seventh season on ABC and 22nd overall.
Tonight we continue the nationwide search across Los Angeles, Nashville, and the judges’ very own hometowns to find the next idol. The aspiring stars will sing their hearts out in hopes of earning a golden ticket to Hollywood. Will the next American Idol be among tonight’s auditions? Read our full recap of Season 22 Episode 3, airing March 3 (8:00 – 10:00 p.m. Et/Pt on ABC), below.
See ‘American Idol’: Abi Carter receives...
Tonight we continue the nationwide search across Los Angeles, Nashville, and the judges’ very own hometowns to find the next idol. The aspiring stars will sing their hearts out in hopes of earning a golden ticket to Hollywood. Will the next American Idol be among tonight’s auditions? Read our full recap of Season 22 Episode 3, airing March 3 (8:00 – 10:00 p.m. Et/Pt on ABC), below.
See ‘American Idol’: Abi Carter receives...
- 3/4/2024
- by Denton Davidson
- Gold Derby
Ten years ago this summer, Kelsey Waldon was named one of Rolling Stone Country’s inaugural Artists You Need to Know. She’s been on a roll ever since, releasing acclaimed albums like 2022’s No Regular Dog, and signing with John Prine’s Oh Boy! Records. On May 10, Waldon will release her latest project, There’s Always a Song, a duet album that finds the Kentucky native interpreting the country and bluegrass songs she listened to while growing up.
Waldon previews There’s Always a Song with the release of “Hello Stranger,...
Waldon previews There’s Always a Song with the release of “Hello Stranger,...
- 2/27/2024
- by Joseph Hudak
- Rollingstone.com
Everybody loves a good indie-rock origin story — like Paul Westerberg holding it down as a janitor in the office of a Minnesota senator before joining the Replacements, or Dayton, Ohio’s Robert Pollard teaching grade school while biding his time before Guided By Voices became a thing. Here’s a new one for you: Meet Mike Maple, a mailman in the small college town of Marquette, Michigan who spends his time walking the postal beat dreaming up relentlessly fun punk-rock tunes to play in his band Liquid Mike. “Given what...
- 2/7/2024
- by Jon Dolan
- Rollingstone.com
The music business is all about the next big act, the next big performer. Who’s going to break out. Who’s going to be the next household name. The Grammys, over the years and to varying degrees of success, has delivered that prediction with its Best New Artist prize.
Starting with Bobby Darin in 1960, the award has been the harbinger of who’s going to be topping the music world … some of the time. Darin didn’t do too bad in his long music and acting career. In 1965, a little combo from the UK made the cut and The Beatles went on to become one of the greatest bands ever.
Some other highlights of the Best New Artist roster. In 1962, Peter Nero was the first jazz musician to win. Bobbie Gentry was the first woman to win in 1968. The Carpenters, Richard and Karen, was the first duo to win...
Starting with Bobby Darin in 1960, the award has been the harbinger of who’s going to be topping the music world … some of the time. Darin didn’t do too bad in his long music and acting career. In 1965, a little combo from the UK made the cut and The Beatles went on to become one of the greatest bands ever.
Some other highlights of the Best New Artist roster. In 1962, Peter Nero was the first jazz musician to win. Bobbie Gentry was the first woman to win in 1968. The Carpenters, Richard and Karen, was the first duo to win...
- 2/5/2024
- by David Morgan
- Deadline Film + TV
John Prine made eight separate appearances on Austin City Limits over the course of his career. On Saturday, new episodes of the long-running live-music series return with a show devoted to Prine’s posthumous induction into the Acl Hall of Fame.
Ethan Hawke inducts Prine in a hat-tipping speech but it’s the performances from artists like Tyler Childers, Valerie June, Nathaniel Rateliff, Allison Russell, Kurt Vile, and Prine’s son, Tommy Prine, that make the hour such a moving tribute. Childers’ reading of “Yes I Guess They Oughta Name...
Ethan Hawke inducts Prine in a hat-tipping speech but it’s the performances from artists like Tyler Childers, Valerie June, Nathaniel Rateliff, Allison Russell, Kurt Vile, and Prine’s son, Tommy Prine, that make the hour such a moving tribute. Childers’ reading of “Yes I Guess They Oughta Name...
- 1/11/2024
- by Joseph Hudak
- Rollingstone.com
To mark what would have been David Bowie’s 77th birthday today, Wilco have shared their live rendition of the music icon’s “Space Oddity.”
The cover was recorded during the band’s visit to Mountain Stage, NPR Music, and West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s long-running live radio show and features as the opening track on an upcoming compilation highlighting performances from the series.
“As a gratefully, if not begrudgingly, Earth-bound band, it’s always an honor and a challenge to tackle any of David Bowie’s space-soaring arrangements,” Wilco said in a statement.
The cover was recorded during the band’s visit to Mountain Stage, NPR Music, and West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s long-running live radio show and features as the opening track on an upcoming compilation highlighting performances from the series.
“As a gratefully, if not begrudgingly, Earth-bound band, it’s always an honor and a challenge to tackle any of David Bowie’s space-soaring arrangements,” Wilco said in a statement.
- 1/8/2024
- by Daniel Kreps
- Rollingstone.com
Monday, January 8th, would’ve been David Bowie’s 77th birthday. To mark the occasion, Wilco has shared their rendition of Bowie’s 1969 hit, “Space Oddity.”
The release hails from Wilco’s 2023 performance on Mountain Stage (a public radio show distributed by NPR Music), and will be included on an upcoming compilation announced today titled Live On Mountain Stage: Outlaws and Outliers, due on April 19th via Oh Boy Records.
Presenting a wonderfully Wilco-esque take on “Space Oddity” — itself named the 43rd best song of all time by Consequence in 2012 — the band settles into an acoustic arrangement, allowing Jeff Tweedy’s vocals to masterfully convey the tune’s enduring appeal for humanity.
Speaking about the performance in a statement, the band said: “As a gratefully, if not begrudgingly, Earth-bound band, it’s always an honor and a challenge to tackle any of David Bowie’s space-soaring arrangements. Striving to reach...
The release hails from Wilco’s 2023 performance on Mountain Stage (a public radio show distributed by NPR Music), and will be included on an upcoming compilation announced today titled Live On Mountain Stage: Outlaws and Outliers, due on April 19th via Oh Boy Records.
Presenting a wonderfully Wilco-esque take on “Space Oddity” — itself named the 43rd best song of all time by Consequence in 2012 — the band settles into an acoustic arrangement, allowing Jeff Tweedy’s vocals to masterfully convey the tune’s enduring appeal for humanity.
Speaking about the performance in a statement, the band said: “As a gratefully, if not begrudgingly, Earth-bound band, it’s always an honor and a challenge to tackle any of David Bowie’s space-soaring arrangements. Striving to reach...
- 1/8/2024
- by Jo Vito
- Consequence - Music
In its third season, "Yellowstone" did something unusual: it included an in-memoriam title card for an actor who had never worked on the show. The star in question was Wilford Brimley, the former Western actor who appeared in touchstones of the genre like "True Grit," "Gore Vidal's Billy the Kid," "Lawman," and more. Though Brimley hadn't actually appeared on Taylor Sheridan's wildly popular Montana-set drama before he died in 2020, he still earned a farewell note within the show. "In loving memory of Wilford Brimley," a title card accompanying the penultimate episode of season 3 read, continuing: "A cowboy, an artist, and a damn good friend."
There don't seem to be any links between "Yellowstone" and Brimley, aside from the fact that the former clearly takes inspiration from classic Westerns like those the legendary actor starred in throughout the 20th century. Series star Kevin Costner never acted alongside Brimley and...
There don't seem to be any links between "Yellowstone" and Brimley, aside from the fact that the former clearly takes inspiration from classic Westerns like those the legendary actor starred in throughout the 20th century. Series star Kevin Costner never acted alongside Brimley and...
- 1/6/2024
- by Valerie Ettenhofer
- Slash Film
Prepare for a musical celebration as the 9th Annual Austin City Limits (Acl) Hall of Fame pays homage to the legendary John Prine. Tune in at 8:00 Pm on January 13, 2024, on PBS, as actor Ethan Hawke takes the stage to induct the iconic singer-songwriter into the prestigious Acl Hall of Fame. The evening promises not only to be a heartfelt tribute but also a showcase of outstanding performances by an array of talented artists.
Viewers can anticipate soul-stirring renditions by acclaimed musicians such as Tyler Childers, Allison Russell, Nathaniel Rateliff, Valerie June, Kurt Vile, and Tommy Prine. Each artist brings their unique style and interpretation to Prine’s timeless songs, creating a memorable musical experience. Whether you’re a longtime fan of John Prine or discovering his work for the first time, this Acl Hall of Fame special is sure to be a captivating journey through the musical legacy of a true icon.
Viewers can anticipate soul-stirring renditions by acclaimed musicians such as Tyler Childers, Allison Russell, Nathaniel Rateliff, Valerie June, Kurt Vile, and Tommy Prine. Each artist brings their unique style and interpretation to Prine’s timeless songs, creating a memorable musical experience. Whether you’re a longtime fan of John Prine or discovering his work for the first time, this Acl Hall of Fame special is sure to be a captivating journey through the musical legacy of a true icon.
- 1/6/2024
- by Jules Byrd
- TV Everyday
In her song, “At the Holiday Party,” St. Vincent describes a convivial scene in which everyone celebrating loosens up, maybe takes a few pills, and lets down their guard. It’s about enjoying a safe space and being yourself, and she brought that same vibe to Jack and Rachel Antonoff’s ninth annual Ally Coalition Talent Show on Tuesday. Video from the event shows her performing that track, off her 2021 album, Daddy’s Home, with some of the night’s other performers, including Jack Antonoff on piano and Bartees Strange on guitar.
- 12/20/2023
- by Kory Grow
- Rollingstone.com
One of the hottest nominees for the Grammys’ best new artist trophy, Noah Kahan, will be seen Dec. 14 in a free, one-time stream of his “Austin City Limits” taping, which fans will otherwise have to wait till 2024 to see in its television broadcast premiere.
The preview stream begins at 9 p.m. Et/6 p.m. Pt — aka 8 p.m. in the actual city of Austin — on the “Acl” YouTube channel. Kahan fans who miss the show as a stream can catch the episode when it premieres as a regularly scheduled TV broadcast on PBS on Feb. 10, 2024.
Kahan’s performance runs for an unedited full hour and includes 16 songs, including “Dial Drunk” and other favorites from his breakthrough album, “Stick Season,” along with stories behind the songs. (See the full setlist below.)
The second half of the 49th season of “Austin City Limits” officially kicks off Jan. 13 with a Hall of Fame...
The preview stream begins at 9 p.m. Et/6 p.m. Pt — aka 8 p.m. in the actual city of Austin — on the “Acl” YouTube channel. Kahan fans who miss the show as a stream can catch the episode when it premieres as a regularly scheduled TV broadcast on PBS on Feb. 10, 2024.
Kahan’s performance runs for an unedited full hour and includes 16 songs, including “Dial Drunk” and other favorites from his breakthrough album, “Stick Season,” along with stories behind the songs. (See the full setlist below.)
The second half of the 49th season of “Austin City Limits” officially kicks off Jan. 13 with a Hall of Fame...
- 12/13/2023
- by Chris Willman
- Variety Film + TV
‘Tis the season for holiday music, and Bright Eyes have contributed to the festivities with a new cover of the John Prine yuletide classic “Christmas in Prison.”
For their rendition of the song, Conor Oberst, Mike Mogis, and Nate Walcott give it a bit of a beefier instrumental, though the spirit of Prine’s original is still very much present — especially since the recording boasts a sample of his voice from 1993’s A John Prine Christmas. (The singer-songwriter died in April 2020 of complications stemming from Covid-19.)
“It is strange to get a chance to share a track with a hero of mine who has passed on,” Oberst said in a statement. “Normally not something I would do. I don’t like holograms. But I have so much love and affection for John as a person and his music. He really changed my life on a lot of levels. When I...
For their rendition of the song, Conor Oberst, Mike Mogis, and Nate Walcott give it a bit of a beefier instrumental, though the spirit of Prine’s original is still very much present — especially since the recording boasts a sample of his voice from 1993’s A John Prine Christmas. (The singer-songwriter died in April 2020 of complications stemming from Covid-19.)
“It is strange to get a chance to share a track with a hero of mine who has passed on,” Oberst said in a statement. “Normally not something I would do. I don’t like holograms. But I have so much love and affection for John as a person and his music. He really changed my life on a lot of levels. When I...
- 12/6/2023
- by Abby Jones
- Consequence - Music
Bright Eyes have released a cover of John Prine’s 1973 song “Christmas in Prison.” The song features a sample from “A John Prine Christmas,” off 1993’s A John Prine Christmas EP. Listen here.
Proceeds from the single will go to Prine’s charity, The Hello In There Foundation, an initiative established by his family to honor his memory. It aims to “offer support for people who are marginalized, discriminated against or, for any reason, are otherwise forgotten.” The single will benefit four beneficiaries of The Hello In There Foundation’s...
Proceeds from the single will go to Prine’s charity, The Hello In There Foundation, an initiative established by his family to honor his memory. It aims to “offer support for people who are marginalized, discriminated against or, for any reason, are otherwise forgotten.” The single will benefit four beneficiaries of The Hello In There Foundation’s...
- 12/6/2023
- by Emily Zemler
- Rollingstone.com
With Lionsgate’s “The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes” looking to continue its reign at the top spot of the box office, it’s time to consider the most sonorous secret to its success: its original, bluegrass-tinted song selection, including a theme written and produced by Dave Cobb (with lyrics from “Hunger Games” author Suzanne Collins), and sung soulfully by the film’s star, Rachel Zegler.
Reaching back to the 2020 prequel novel by Suzanne Collins that the movie is based on, Zegler points out how clearly Appalachian Lucy was, and how her accent exists in that vernacular throughout the duration of the novel, something that was destined to carry over into the music.
“District 12, where we exist canonically, lies in North Carolina and the Appalachian Mountains,” says Zegler, speaking from New York. “I’m glad Francis wanted to explore that — he even sent me the trailer for...
Reaching back to the 2020 prequel novel by Suzanne Collins that the movie is based on, Zegler points out how clearly Appalachian Lucy was, and how her accent exists in that vernacular throughout the duration of the novel, something that was destined to carry over into the music.
“District 12, where we exist canonically, lies in North Carolina and the Appalachian Mountains,” says Zegler, speaking from New York. “I’m glad Francis wanted to explore that — he even sent me the trailer for...
- 12/1/2023
- by A.D. Amorosi
- Variety Film + TV
As The Voice completed its Season 24 Playoffs Tuesday evening, John Legend’s team members competed to remain in the contest after their coach cut his lineup in half. Did he make better selections than, say, Niall Horan (whose elimination of Alexa Wildish is sure to irritate me all the way through the finals) and Gwen Stefani (who kept Bias and Tanner Massey instead of Stee and Rudi)? Read on and find out!
Azán, “Adorn” — Grade: A | I’m giving John’s Super Save artist an “A” for her Miguel cover even though I kinda wasn’t crazy about it. She sang beautifully.
Azán, “Adorn” — Grade: A | I’m giving John’s Super Save artist an “A” for her Miguel cover even though I kinda wasn’t crazy about it. She sang beautifully.
- 11/29/2023
- by Charlie Mason
- TVLine.com
The only way to reach Todd Snider is to call his landline. He’s never had a cell phone. Never cared to own one, either. If you want to find him, hopefully he’s home when you ring or you’re lucky enough to run into him by happenstance.
“I’ve always been into being a troubadour. I love the chaos, that life of adventure — that’s what struck me. I had a predisposition for it,” the singer-songwriter tells Rolling Stone from his Nashville home. “I was [already] a hitchhike and sofa circuit person.
“I’ve always been into being a troubadour. I love the chaos, that life of adventure — that’s what struck me. I had a predisposition for it,” the singer-songwriter tells Rolling Stone from his Nashville home. “I was [already] a hitchhike and sofa circuit person.
- 11/27/2023
- by Garret K. Woodward
- Rollingstone.com
The coaches of The Voice — and the fans watching from home — have heard hundreds of hopefuls try out for the show with their spins on songs made famous by other artists. But which of those songs have gotten the most chair turns? With Season 24 upon us, researchers from ActionNetwork.com compiled those stats after reviewing more than 1,000 blind auditions from the NBC singing competition’s first 23 seasons. Here are those hit audition selections, as well as fun facts about their origin stories. “Angel From Montgomery” by John Prine: 12 chair turns Prine told Bluerailroad in 2012 that he came up with this song after imagining a middle-aged woman who feels older than she is. “I had this really vivid picture of this woman standing over the dishwater with soap in her hands, and just walking away from it all,” he said. “She lived in Montgomery, Alabama, and she wanted to get out of there.
- 10/9/2023
- TV Insider
Zz Top were never really a ballad band. Think “La Grange,” “Tush,” and “Legs.” But for 1986’s Afterburner they tried their hand at a power ballad with “Rough Boy” — this was the Eighties after all. Earlier this week in Nashville, Keith Urban put his own spin on “Rough Boy” at a special event honoring Zz Top’s Billy Gibbons.
Urban was in attendance for the annual BMI Troubadour dinner, an industry event held each September by the performing-rights org to salute a select artist as its “Troubadour.” Last year’s went to Lucinda Williams,...
Urban was in attendance for the annual BMI Troubadour dinner, an industry event held each September by the performing-rights org to salute a select artist as its “Troubadour.” Last year’s went to Lucinda Williams,...
- 9/20/2023
- by Joseph Hudak
- Rollingstone.com
Director Sam Jones won plaudits earlier this year for his HBO documentary “Jason Isbell: Running With Our Eyes Closed,” one of the best-regarded music docs since his own “I Am Trying to Break Your Heart: A Film About Wilco” back in 2001. He also got attention this year for his HBO documentary series “Smartless: On the Road,” with Jason Bateman, Will Arnett and Sean Hayes. But he doesn’t go on-camera himself with those particular doc projects, the way he did in his long-running talk show “Off Camera With Sam Jones,” which ran for 220 episodes on DirecTV from 2013 through 2020.
Now Jones putting himself back in the formal host role with a new series he’s begun shooting intermittently at the Hotel Café club in Hollywood, titled “The Talent Show.” The types of guests he has and the strength of his interviewing chops will seem recognizable to anyone familiar with “Off Camera,...
Now Jones putting himself back in the formal host role with a new series he’s begun shooting intermittently at the Hotel Café club in Hollywood, titled “The Talent Show.” The types of guests he has and the strength of his interviewing chops will seem recognizable to anyone familiar with “Off Camera,...
- 9/17/2023
- by Chris Willman
- Variety Film + TV
One of the immediate highlights from Zach Bryan’s brand-new self-titled album is “I Remember Everything,” a somber duet with Kacey Musgraves.
The aching, simmering ballad recounts a past summer beach romance in an ’88 Ford, with a verse each from the perspective of the two past lovers. “A cold shoulder at closing time/You were begging me to stay ’til the sun rose,” Bryan, and then, later, Musgraves, sings as the two vocalists alternate leads on each subsequent chorus. “Strange words come on out/of a grown man’s mouth...
The aching, simmering ballad recounts a past summer beach romance in an ’88 Ford, with a verse each from the perspective of the two past lovers. “A cold shoulder at closing time/You were begging me to stay ’til the sun rose,” Bryan, and then, later, Musgraves, sings as the two vocalists alternate leads on each subsequent chorus. “Strange words come on out/of a grown man’s mouth...
- 8/25/2023
- by Jonathan Bernstein
- Rollingstone.com
Jason Isbell will mark the 10th anniversary of his commercial breakthrough, Southeastern, this fall with an expanded deluxe edition of the record, including demos and live recordings. The three-cd or four-lp package, out Sept. 29, also includes a remastered version of the original album — and a new album cover that depicts an older, leaner Isbell than the 34-year-old photographed on the original.
Southeastern, which contains several reflective songs that have become set-list staples for him — “Cover Me Up,” “Traveling Alone,” and “Super 8” — helped establish Isbell as a unique voice in country,...
Southeastern, which contains several reflective songs that have become set-list staples for him — “Cover Me Up,” “Traveling Alone,” and “Super 8” — helped establish Isbell as a unique voice in country,...
- 8/8/2023
- by Kory Grow
- Rollingstone.com
Okemah, Oklahoma, native Evan Felker plus Jason Isbell’s “King of Oklahoma” equals an only-at-Newport moment. On Saturday, the Turnpike Troubadours leader joined Isbell and the 400 Unit onstage during their Newport Folk Festival main-stage set to sing lead on both verses of “King of Oklahoma,” a highlight of Isbell’s latest album Weathervanes.
Just before his own band, Turnpike Troubadours, closed out the festival’s largest stage, Felker jumped up to sing Isbell’s powerful tale of a man whose life slips away after getting injured on the job and...
Just before his own band, Turnpike Troubadours, closed out the festival’s largest stage, Felker jumped up to sing Isbell’s powerful tale of a man whose life slips away after getting injured on the job and...
- 7/30/2023
- by Jonathan Bernstein
- Rollingstone.com
With the Rocky Mountains of Western Montana in the distance and a Bnsf freight train rolling down the tracks nearby, Luke Grimes, the Yellowstone actor and emerging singer-songwriter, gazed across a sea of faces during his Friday evening performance at the Under the Big Sky festival.
“This is, by far, the biggest crowd I’ve ever played to — holy shit,” Grimes marveled at the crowd, estimated around 20,000 in attendance.
At this year’s installment of Under the Big Sky, the three-day gathering showcased arena acts (Zach Bryan, Caamp, Hank Williams Jr.), marquee names (Charley Crockett,...
“This is, by far, the biggest crowd I’ve ever played to — holy shit,” Grimes marveled at the crowd, estimated around 20,000 in attendance.
At this year’s installment of Under the Big Sky, the three-day gathering showcased arena acts (Zach Bryan, Caamp, Hank Williams Jr.), marquee names (Charley Crockett,...
- 7/19/2023
- by Garret K. Woodward
- Rollingstone.com
Welcome to our weekly rundown of the best new music — featuring big singles, key tracks from our favorite albums, and more. This week, Billie Eilish leans into the existentialism of the Barbie movie for its soundtrack, Karol G enters her “bichota season” in her new electrifying track, and Gucci Mane enlists Lil Baby to set the next generation straight. Plus, new music from Troye Sivan, Pink Pantheress, Rita Ora, and more.
Billie Eilish, “What Was I Made For?” (YouTube)
Karol G, “S91” (YouTube)
Gucci Mane feat Lil Baby, “Bluffin” (YouTube)
Pink Pantheress,...
Billie Eilish, “What Was I Made For?” (YouTube)
Karol G, “S91” (YouTube)
Gucci Mane feat Lil Baby, “Bluffin” (YouTube)
Pink Pantheress,...
- 7/14/2023
- by Rolling Stone
- Rollingstone.com
Bruce Springsteen released his debut album in 1972, a decade after Bob Dylan released his first. Springsteen’s album was well-received by critics, but some reviews drove him to change up his writing style. Springsteen admired Dylan and had for years. Still, he didn’t want to put out music that sounded too much like him. Here’s why comparisons to Dylan convinced Springsteen to avoid this in the future.
Bruce Springsteen said 1 of his albums sounded like Bob Dylan
When Springsteen signed to Columbia Records, he was meant to put out music that sounded Dylan-esque.
“John Hammond, Clive Davis, and Columbia had thought they’d signed a folk singer-songwriter,” Springsteen wrote in his memoir Born to Run. “The stock was way up on singer-songwriters in those days. The charts were full of them, with James Taylor leading the pack. I was signed to Columbia, along with Elliott Murphy, John Prine and Loudon Wainwright,...
Bruce Springsteen said 1 of his albums sounded like Bob Dylan
When Springsteen signed to Columbia Records, he was meant to put out music that sounded Dylan-esque.
“John Hammond, Clive Davis, and Columbia had thought they’d signed a folk singer-songwriter,” Springsteen wrote in his memoir Born to Run. “The stock was way up on singer-songwriters in those days. The charts were full of them, with James Taylor leading the pack. I was signed to Columbia, along with Elliott Murphy, John Prine and Loudon Wainwright,...
- 6/17/2023
- by Emma McKee
- Showbiz Cheat Sheet
Christian Lopez recorded his just-released album Magdalena in self-imposed exile in a remote corner of New Mexico. But for his new video “Harpers Ferry,” the singer-songwriter-guitarist went home again.
A West Virginia native, Lopez would frequently visit nearby Harpers Ferry, a historic site in the U.S. Civil War and beyond, as a kid. When he returns now, for a video directed by his frequent collaborator Steve Jawn, Lopez has an evolved perspective on Harpers Ferry’s innate beauty. It’s a feeling we all have for places dear to us.
A West Virginia native, Lopez would frequently visit nearby Harpers Ferry, a historic site in the U.S. Civil War and beyond, as a kid. When he returns now, for a video directed by his frequent collaborator Steve Jawn, Lopez has an evolved perspective on Harpers Ferry’s innate beauty. It’s a feeling we all have for places dear to us.
- 6/9/2023
- by Joseph Hudak
- Rollingstone.com
The first time Grammy-winning Americana/bluegrass act Steep Canyon Rangers played the Spirit of the Suwannee Music Park in Live Oak, Florida, the group was adorned in full suits and encircling a lone microphone.
“It was probably around 2004,” Rangers singer-banjoist Graham Sharp tells Rolling Stone backstage at the recent Suwannee Spring Reunion festival. “We’ve been able to trace our band and its evolution through this festival, from being a traditional bluegrass band to being whatever the hell we are now — this place is a natural home for that.”
Sandwiched...
“It was probably around 2004,” Rangers singer-banjoist Graham Sharp tells Rolling Stone backstage at the recent Suwannee Spring Reunion festival. “We’ve been able to trace our band and its evolution through this festival, from being a traditional bluegrass band to being whatever the hell we are now — this place is a natural home for that.”
Sandwiched...
- 4/2/2023
- by Garret K. Woodward
- Rollingstone.com
Standing behind a large curtain at the Cultural Center Theater in the small Appalachian city of Charleston, West Virginia, Kathy Mattea readies herself to welcome another audience to NPR’s Mountain Stage.
“[Mountain Stage] has reinforced and magnified my long-held belief that music is really important,” Mattea, a Charleston native, tells Rolling Stone backstage. “Music and hospitality — that’s what it’s all about. And those two things? That’s West Virginia right there.”
With snowflakes falling onto the mountains cradling the state capitol on this particular January night, Mountain Stage listeners...
“[Mountain Stage] has reinforced and magnified my long-held belief that music is really important,” Mattea, a Charleston native, tells Rolling Stone backstage. “Music and hospitality — that’s what it’s all about. And those two things? That’s West Virginia right there.”
With snowflakes falling onto the mountains cradling the state capitol on this particular January night, Mountain Stage listeners...
- 3/25/2023
- by Garret K. Woodward
- Rollingstone.com
David Lindley, the dexterous and elfin multi-instrumentalist who died yesterday at the age of 78, could delight in sharing a few tales about his days on the road with Jackson Browne, James Taylor, and the other leading troubadours and songwriters he backed during the Seventies and Eighties. There was the time, he told me in 2013, that he saw one of them talking up a backstage female visitor. Lindley grabbed a bottle of apple juice, went over to his boss and told him his urine sample was ready. Needles to say, the...
- 3/4/2023
- by David Browne
- Rollingstone.com
For Rolling Stone’S Third annual Icons & Influences feature, we asked eight of our favorite artists and entertainers to pay tribute to the women who have inspired them, in life as well as in their careers. Not only is Emmylou Harris one of Miranda Lambert’s major songwriting influences, the country star also views the legendary singer as her primary model for what it means to have a long, meaningful career.
My dad introduced me to Emmylou, John Prine, Guy Clark, David Allan Coe, that whole era. When you hear...
My dad introduced me to Emmylou, John Prine, Guy Clark, David Allan Coe, that whole era. When you hear...
- 2/25/2023
- by Jonathan Bernstein
- Rollingstone.com
Towards the back half of Maggie Rogers’ set at Radio City Music Hall, the singer put on a blazer and made an announcement: “Ladies and gentlemen,” announced the singer, “For one night only, please welcome David Byrne!”
Byrne then joined Rogers on stage for a thrilling, light-hearted performance of “Strange Overtones,” a highlight from Everything That Happens Will Happen Today, Byrne’s 2008 album with Brian Eno. The duo traded off verses and teamed up for a lightly choreographed dance.
Last night’s performance of “Strange Overtones” was one of several...
Byrne then joined Rogers on stage for a thrilling, light-hearted performance of “Strange Overtones,” a highlight from Everything That Happens Will Happen Today, Byrne’s 2008 album with Brian Eno. The duo traded off verses and teamed up for a lightly choreographed dance.
Last night’s performance of “Strange Overtones” was one of several...
- 2/16/2023
- by Jonathan Bernstein
- Rollingstone.com
“So who is Bonnie Raitt?” read the first sentence of a headline on the UK’s Daily Mail newspaper website this morning.
You wouldn’t have known from the shocked reaction throughout the music world – and especially throughout England, where they seemed to take it personally that Harry Styles didn’t take home every award he was eligible for – that Raitt isn’t exactly some wannabe newbie. Pretty much the precise opposite, in fact. She’s a living legend, one of the most respected and decorated makers of music of all time. More on that in a moment.
But first…it speaks to both the depth of the surprise and the utter graciousness of Raitt that she was so utterly stunned by her Grammy Awards victory Sunday night for Song of the Year, which was truly astonishing when you consider that her tune “Just Like That” had to beat out...
You wouldn’t have known from the shocked reaction throughout the music world – and especially throughout England, where they seemed to take it personally that Harry Styles didn’t take home every award he was eligible for – that Raitt isn’t exactly some wannabe newbie. Pretty much the precise opposite, in fact. She’s a living legend, one of the most respected and decorated makers of music of all time. More on that in a moment.
But first…it speaks to both the depth of the surprise and the utter graciousness of Raitt that she was so utterly stunned by her Grammy Awards victory Sunday night for Song of the Year, which was truly astonishing when you consider that her tune “Just Like That” had to beat out...
- 2/7/2023
- by Ray Richmond
- Gold Derby
Harry Styles’ Harry’s House found a home at the 2023 Grammys, winning album of the year on the same night Beyoncé became the most decorated artist in Grammy history.
“Shit,” Styles said Sunday at the Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles. “I’ve been so, so inspired by every artist in this category with me … I listen to everyone in this category when I’m alone.”
Styles — who also won best pop vocal album — went on to say “there is no such thing as best in music” and that artists don’t make music thinking about “what is going to get us one of these [awards].”
“This is really, really kind. I’m so, so grateful. This doesn’t happen to people like me very often,” he continued.
Beyoncé lost the top three prizes but she still had a historic night by winning 32 Grammys. She won four awards, breaking the record set by conductor Georg Solti,...
“Shit,” Styles said Sunday at the Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles. “I’ve been so, so inspired by every artist in this category with me … I listen to everyone in this category when I’m alone.”
Styles — who also won best pop vocal album — went on to say “there is no such thing as best in music” and that artists don’t make music thinking about “what is going to get us one of these [awards].”
“This is really, really kind. I’m so, so grateful. This doesn’t happen to people like me very often,” he continued.
Beyoncé lost the top three prizes but she still had a historic night by winning 32 Grammys. She won four awards, breaking the record set by conductor Georg Solti,...
- 2/6/2023
- by Mesfin Fekadu
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Bonnie Raitt’s “Just Like That” was crowned song of the year at the 2023 Grammys on Sunday, as the artist racked up her third award of the night.
Raitt was nominated alongside Gayle’s “abcdefu,” Lizzo’s “About Damn Time,” Taylor Swift’s “All Too Well (10 Minute Version) (The Short Film),” Harry Styles’ “As It Was,” Steve Lacy’s “Bad Habit,” Beyoncé’s “Break My Soul,” Adele’s “Easy on Me,” DJ Khaled’s (featuring Rick Ross, Lil Wayne, Jay-Z, John Legend and Fridayy) “God Did” and Kendrick Lamar’s “The Heart Part 5.”
The veteran musician appeared shocked to hear her name called.
Whereas record of the year focuses on a specific recording of a song and recognizes the artists, producers and engineers who contribute to it, song of the year looks at the composition of a song and recognizes the songwriters who wrote it.
Accepting the honor from First Lady Jill Biden,...
Raitt was nominated alongside Gayle’s “abcdefu,” Lizzo’s “About Damn Time,” Taylor Swift’s “All Too Well (10 Minute Version) (The Short Film),” Harry Styles’ “As It Was,” Steve Lacy’s “Bad Habit,” Beyoncé’s “Break My Soul,” Adele’s “Easy on Me,” DJ Khaled’s (featuring Rick Ross, Lil Wayne, Jay-Z, John Legend and Fridayy) “God Did” and Kendrick Lamar’s “The Heart Part 5.”
The veteran musician appeared shocked to hear her name called.
Whereas record of the year focuses on a specific recording of a song and recognizes the artists, producers and engineers who contribute to it, song of the year looks at the composition of a song and recognizes the songwriters who wrote it.
Accepting the honor from First Lady Jill Biden,...
- 2/6/2023
- by Kirsten Chuba
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
As one of the biggest nights in music, the Grammy Awards highlighted songs from Beyoncé, Adele, Lizzo, and other chart-topping artists. On Feb. 5, 2023, Bonnie Raitt earned the award for Song of the Year.
‘Just Like That’ by Bonnie Raitt wins the 2023 Grammy Award for Song of the Year Bonnie Raitt accepts the Song Of The Year award for ‘Just Like That’ during the 65th Grammy Awards | Kevin Winter/Getty Images for The Recording Academy
Legendary songwriter Bonnie Raitt earned the Grammy Award for Song of the Year. That’s thanks to her original, “Just Like That.”
While Record of the Year recognizes the production behind an original track, Song of the Year highlights the songwriting behind hits of the previous year.
Song of the Year nominees for the 2023 Grammy Awards
Several songs made a splash in 2022, including TikTok viral songs like “About Damn Time” and “Bad Habit.” This year, Kendrick Lamar,...
‘Just Like That’ by Bonnie Raitt wins the 2023 Grammy Award for Song of the Year Bonnie Raitt accepts the Song Of The Year award for ‘Just Like That’ during the 65th Grammy Awards | Kevin Winter/Getty Images for The Recording Academy
Legendary songwriter Bonnie Raitt earned the Grammy Award for Song of the Year. That’s thanks to her original, “Just Like That.”
While Record of the Year recognizes the production behind an original track, Song of the Year highlights the songwriting behind hits of the previous year.
Song of the Year nominees for the 2023 Grammy Awards
Several songs made a splash in 2022, including TikTok viral songs like “About Damn Time” and “Bad Habit.” This year, Kendrick Lamar,...
- 2/6/2023
- by Julia Dzurillay
- Showbiz Cheat Sheet
Bonnie Raitt took home the award for Song of the Year for “Just Like That” at the Grammys.
“This is just an unreal moment,” Raitt said in her speech. “Thank you for honoring me, the only academy that surrounded me with so much support and appreciates the art of songwriting as I do. I was so inspired for this song by the incredible story of the love and the grace and the generosity of someone that donates their beloved organs to help another person live.”
She added: “The story was...
“This is just an unreal moment,” Raitt said in her speech. “Thank you for honoring me, the only academy that surrounded me with so much support and appreciates the art of songwriting as I do. I was so inspired for this song by the incredible story of the love and the grace and the generosity of someone that donates their beloved organs to help another person live.”
She added: “The story was...
- 2/6/2023
- by Charisma Madarang
- Rollingstone.com
He might not have had the same kind of commercial success as his peers, but classic rock lost a legend when Jeff Beck died at age 78. His music will live on, and so will the awards he won when he was alive. He might add another piece of hardware, too. Beck could win at the 2023 Grammy Awards for a guest spot on Ozzy Osbourne’s 2022 album Patient Number 9 in a category that nearly eluded him his entire career.
Jeff Beck | Martin Philbey/Getty Images Jeff Beck earned his 17th Grammy Awards nomination for an Ozzy Osbourne song
Jeff Beck found fame early in his career. He starred for the Yardbirds when Clapton left the group. When he tired of that group, he started the Jeff Beck Group and recorded two groundbreaking albums before the dawn of the 1970s — Truth and Beck-Ola.
Several Beck songs earned Grammy Awards nominations over the years,...
Jeff Beck | Martin Philbey/Getty Images Jeff Beck earned his 17th Grammy Awards nomination for an Ozzy Osbourne song
Jeff Beck found fame early in his career. He starred for the Yardbirds when Clapton left the group. When he tired of that group, he started the Jeff Beck Group and recorded two groundbreaking albums before the dawn of the 1970s — Truth and Beck-Ola.
Several Beck songs earned Grammy Awards nominations over the years,...
- 2/2/2023
- by Jason Rossi
- Showbiz Cheat Sheet
Gold Derby recently hosted a poll about which overlooked male artist should be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame for 2023. With an excellent number of over 17,000 people voting worldwide, Phil Collins is the top selection in our poll results (with 47.13) over George Michael (in second place with 31.41) and Peter Frampton (in third place with 18.31).
You can also view our recent female artist poll, in which Cher was in first place, followed by Cyndi Lauper and Mariah Carey. A poll featuring snubbed bands will be published soon.
The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame voters will be making their 2023 selections soon. Solo male artists recently inducted have included Eminem (2022), Jay-Z (2021), The Notorious B.I.G. (2020), Lionel Richie (2022) and Todd Rundgren (2021).
Here are the poll results for the 15 male artists we offered for your votes:
Phil Collins (47.13)
Eligible since 2006 (inducted with Genesis in 2010). Top songs include “Against All Odds,...
You can also view our recent female artist poll, in which Cher was in first place, followed by Cyndi Lauper and Mariah Carey. A poll featuring snubbed bands will be published soon.
The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame voters will be making their 2023 selections soon. Solo male artists recently inducted have included Eminem (2022), Jay-Z (2021), The Notorious B.I.G. (2020), Lionel Richie (2022) and Todd Rundgren (2021).
Here are the poll results for the 15 male artists we offered for your votes:
Phil Collins (47.13)
Eligible since 2006 (inducted with Genesis in 2010). Top songs include “Against All Odds,...
- 1/16/2023
- by Chris Beachum
- Gold Derby
The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame voters will be making their 2023 selections soon. Solo male artists recently inducted have included Eminem (2022), Jay-Z (2021), The Notorious B.I.G. (2020), Lionel Richie (2022) and Todd Rundgren (2021).
But there are still quite a few solo men that have been overlooked for too long. Vote in our new poll below about which of these 15 male rockers deserves induction in 2023. Watch for other poll soon for groups, plus check out our recent poll for female artists, which was won by Cher with strong support also for Cyndi Lauper and Mariah Carey.
SEERock and Roll Hall of Fame 2022: Complete list of every performer, presenter and inductee
Bryan Adams
Eligible since 2004. Top songs include “Cuts Like a Knife,” “Heaven,” “Run to You,” “Summer of ’69.” Nominated for 15 Grammy Awards with one win.
Beck
Eligible since 2019. Top songs include “Blue Moon,” “Loser,” “Where It’s At.” Nominated for 22 Grammy Awards with eight wins.
But there are still quite a few solo men that have been overlooked for too long. Vote in our new poll below about which of these 15 male rockers deserves induction in 2023. Watch for other poll soon for groups, plus check out our recent poll for female artists, which was won by Cher with strong support also for Cyndi Lauper and Mariah Carey.
SEERock and Roll Hall of Fame 2022: Complete list of every performer, presenter and inductee
Bryan Adams
Eligible since 2004. Top songs include “Cuts Like a Knife,” “Heaven,” “Run to You,” “Summer of ’69.” Nominated for 15 Grammy Awards with one win.
Beck
Eligible since 2019. Top songs include “Blue Moon,” “Loser,” “Where It’s At.” Nominated for 22 Grammy Awards with eight wins.
- 1/10/2023
- by Chris Beachum
- Gold Derby
In February, Iris DeMent will release Workin’ on a World, an album of love letters to the promise of a better future and to historical heroes like John Lewis, Jesus Christ, and Mahalia Jackson. The project, set to arrive Feb. 24, came out of the uniquely dark past half-dozen years of American history.
“I kept hearing a lot of talk about the arc of history that Dr. King so famously said bends towards justice,” DeMent said in a statement. “I was having my doubts. But, then it dawned on me, he...
“I kept hearing a lot of talk about the arc of history that Dr. King so famously said bends towards justice,” DeMent said in a statement. “I was having my doubts. But, then it dawned on me, he...
- 1/10/2023
- by Jonathan Bernstein
- Rollingstone.com
Country star Tanya Tucker and her friend and producer Brandi Carlile are as ready as they’ll ever be to be considered for film awards, as a song they co-wrote for a documentary they both starred in this year is in the mix of current contenders. That song, “Ready as I’ll Never Be,” a very personalized ballad about watching the next generation up pass on, is a heart-tugger, and should be under consideration if voters get a chance to hear it — which Tucker admits she very much hopes they will.
“I’d love for the world to hear it,” Tucker tells Variety. “I just want the opportunity to be heard. And then if they don’t like me, that’s fine, but just listen to me, just for three minutes.” And, she adds in characteristic fashion, “If the Oscars are gonna give me a nod or a kick in the ass — either one,...
“I’d love for the world to hear it,” Tucker tells Variety. “I just want the opportunity to be heard. And then if they don’t like me, that’s fine, but just listen to me, just for three minutes.” And, she adds in characteristic fashion, “If the Oscars are gonna give me a nod or a kick in the ass — either one,...
- 12/15/2022
- by Chris Willman
- Variety Film + TV
Country Christmas songs can be as saccharine as a holiday cookie. Not “Lonely on Christmas,” Brit Taylor and Mike and the Moonpies’ wonderfully melancholy new collab. “You know it’s time to make a change, when your whole family’s estranged,” Taylor and the Moonpies’ Mike Harmeier harmonize, lamenting the physical and emotional distance between a couple.
The country singers — Taylor’s from Kentucky, the Moonpies from Texas — bring the isolation to life in the song’s music video too. Taylor filmed her part remotely at a content house in Nashville,...
The country singers — Taylor’s from Kentucky, the Moonpies from Texas — bring the isolation to life in the song’s music video too. Taylor filmed her part remotely at a content house in Nashville,...
- 12/11/2022
- by Joseph Hudak
- Rollingstone.com
This story about Brandi Carlile and Tanya Tucker first appeared in the Race Begins issue of TheWrap’s awards magazine.
It began with a conversation about death. After the making of “The Return of Tanya Tucker—Featuring Brandi Carlile,” the Oscar-eligible documentary that chronicles the comeback of country firebrand Tucker with an album co-produced and largely written by Carlile, the two women were having a quiet dinner in Nashville when the conversation turned to the people they’d lost during Covid.
“We’d lost John Prine, and she lost Billy Joe Shaver, who was a real friend of hers,” Carlile said to TheWrap. “I said to her, ‘Tanya, I’m really sorry about Billy Joe passing away,’ and she said, ‘Oh, I’m the youngest of all those guys. I’m gonna have to watch them all get their wings before me. I guess I’m ready.’ And then she looked at me and said,...
It began with a conversation about death. After the making of “The Return of Tanya Tucker—Featuring Brandi Carlile,” the Oscar-eligible documentary that chronicles the comeback of country firebrand Tucker with an album co-produced and largely written by Carlile, the two women were having a quiet dinner in Nashville when the conversation turned to the people they’d lost during Covid.
“We’d lost John Prine, and she lost Billy Joe Shaver, who was a real friend of hers,” Carlile said to TheWrap. “I said to her, ‘Tanya, I’m really sorry about Billy Joe passing away,’ and she said, ‘Oh, I’m the youngest of all those guys. I’m gonna have to watch them all get their wings before me. I guess I’m ready.’ And then she looked at me and said,...
- 11/21/2022
- by Steve Pond
- The Wrap
A new generation has discovered the joys of wintry, isolation-fueled ballads, but Greg Brown has been wallowing in them for four decades. With songs that straddle folk and country and resist outsized hooks in favor of gaunt, gently rippling chord changes, the Iowa-based troubadour, who’s released over two dozen records, has been a cult figure for a reason. He’s only approached a degree of mainstream exposure here and there (appearances on Prairie Home Companion and taking on the voice of Hades on Anaïs Mitchell’s original Hadestown album). But along the way,...
- 11/2/2022
- by David Browne
- Rollingstone.com
To live in Nashville is to love John Prine, so it never sat right how quarantine robbed the late singer, songwriter, and hometown hero of a proper in-person memorial when he died of Covid complications in April of 2020. Prine finally got the wake he deserved this week in Nashville with a string of celebratory concerts titled “You Got Gold,” which featured an all-star, cross-generational casts of admirers covering songs and exchanging anecdotes about the man.
On Sunday, performers and presenters remembered Prine’s generous spirit and the way he modeled...
On Sunday, performers and presenters remembered Prine’s generous spirit and the way he modeled...
- 10/12/2022
- by Charlie Zaillian
- Rollingstone.com
Even though 91-year-old troubadour Ramblin’ Jack Elliott didn’t feel like getting out of bed this morning, there was a gig to play. Another chance to dust off his cowboy hat, grab the guitar case, and make it to the show on time.
“I didn’t know if I could play at all this morning. I spent the whole day in bed,” Elliott tells Rolling Stone backstage after at a sold-out gig at the Grey Eagle in Asheville, North Carolina, earlier this month. “But it’s the enthusiasm, all these...
“I didn’t know if I could play at all this morning. I spent the whole day in bed,” Elliott tells Rolling Stone backstage after at a sold-out gig at the Grey Eagle in Asheville, North Carolina, earlier this month. “But it’s the enthusiasm, all these...
- 10/8/2022
- by Garret K. Woodward
- Rollingstone.com
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