Joan Jett Runs Away in San Diego

It’s hard to find a voice in rock and roll as loud and true as Joan Jett’s, and there can’t be a better time to hear her play live and loud than this 4th of July. It’s a free show, at the Del Mar Fairgrounds for the San Diego County Fair . The fair’s been around a lot longer than rock and roll, but the history of each institution is pretty electric.

The fair began in the 1880s as an agricultural event, so that the farmers in the area could share secrets and showcase their successes. They added a racetrack in the 1930s, to generate more income. That was a fairly easy stretch, because the horses had already been shown at the fair since its beginnings, and the west coast is a spectacular place for races.

Joan Jett’s beginnings weren’t as calm and wholesome as a fair, but that’s rock and roll. The new biopic this year, the Runaways , goes through the early years in Jett’s career, and her band before she went solo with the Blackhearts. The Runaways were an experiment that went well, and ultimately went in too many directions at once. With the likes of Lita Ford and Cherie Currie in the lineup, there were plenty of arguments about the artistic direction, and the band split after just a few years of working together.

Meanwhile, Jett was off and running with her journeys into punk rock styles, and these turned out to be the perfect touch to her special blend of 3-chord classic rock. It gave her an edge that no one else could ever touch, and it will be a great thing to see at the free show for San Diego’s Independence Day . Locals will get a great treat, and out of town guests with bookings at hotels in San Diego are in a perfect position to take advantage of a rare opportunity.

San Diego loves rock and roll!

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Michael Buble Isn’t Surprised at Success

There has been a lot of talk about Michael Buble as of late. At the recent Juno awards he took home a number of the ones he had been nominated for. This came in the middle of his world wide tour that started last March and is set to continue on until sometime next year. However, he says that he didn’t really want to sing the songs that he put into his last album, not because they were bad, but because they were showing off the true him inside at that moment. It was a moment of complete openness with his audience, and while it didn’t take away the pains of the break up, it somehow made it a little less. He had a lot more to say as well, and some of it can be found here.

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Ray LaMontagne On Tour In Boston

Ray LaMontagne is doing great with his eighth studio album coming out and getting ready to head back out on tour. This time it’s not a very large tour, but he definitely covers some ground fast. He will start off in Boston in August and will travel down through Arizona by September. Although it will be short, the tickets have been flying off the shelf since they went on sale, so if you want to see him, you are going to have to act fast.

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New CD Release Wide Spread Panic on a New Tour

Wide Spread Panic has put out their new CD, Dirty Side Down, and set off onto a new tour. Ok, they haven’t set off quite yet, but they have the dates set out and they are ready to get out of there and meet some more of their fans. They did kick off the tour at the New Orleans Jazz festival, which they are invited back to often, and the tour plans on going on through July. Some of their songs are available for streaming on their website.

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Rescue Me Comedy in NYC

The kid from Boston keeps kicking it out in New York City. Denis Leary rocked the comedy world in the early 90s, and became a voice of the city very early on in his career. If one can call the mid-thirties early. He’d struggled as an actor in Boston for years before scoring a break for MTV, becoming the fast-talking face for a series of short films that got attention. He was certainly seeking attention, and the delivery was so urgent, so impatient, and so impeccably funny, that people were compelled to listen, and the years of struggling started to pan out.


Years later, it’s still panning out. He became a celebrity known for his acting ability finally, after he’d switched from film to television, and became the voice of firefighters during a particularly rough time in an already rough history. Just because he’s hit the big time being what he loves to be, doesn’t mean he’s not still the fast-talking, angry, side-splitting comic. The Rescue Me Comedy Tour certainly proves that the iron is still hot, very, very hot. The show is coming to New York City for two dates at the end of June, and that’s more than enough reason to start booking the city hotel now.

Seeing him play in New York is a very different thing than seeing him anywhere else. The jokes are terribly, terrifically funny in Houston, Phoenix, and Los Angeles, but there are references to the city that only speak to the ones who live here. And the exaggerated bravado, and testosterone-heavy rants, seem to be echoing a sensibility of the east coast while they are also mocking it. That’s one of the most appealing things about this great mind, that he can skirt that line between inhabiting a role and simultaneously pointing out its hypocrisy.

That’s a line that few actors are able to walk, and in the lineage of stand-up comics, the list is even smaller. Sometimes Lenny Bruce could do it, and Moms Mabley may have invented it, but right now Denis Leary is living in it, and we get to enjoy the ride with him.

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Rush Hits New Mexico, Illinois and Washington

Rush is on tour again and this time they are starting in New Mexico and moving on up across the country. Those people who live in the far southwest of the country are specially grateful for this. They will be hitting up New Mexico, Illinois, Washington, and many other states. Hopefully they are coming to a city near you because this is a band you must see in person. There is a video below, but they are definitely better if you watch them live.

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NYC Grateful Dead Back from Beyond

Some of the greatest moments in history pass by without the participants recognizing the importance of the moment. This is true in politics as it is in art and music. In the strange case of the Grateful Dead, the fans that swelled and stayed with them throughout their touring history seemed to recognize that they were participating in something important and life-changing. It’s possible that it was their very participation that made it historical, bringing up questions about the perceiver affecting the perceived on a large scale, and these kinds of questions have entertained deadheads into the wee hours of the morning while on the road following the band.

They attracted followers wherever they went, lured by the music, the enormous charisma of the band members, and also the scene the followers brought with them. It happened in every city, but the phenomenon had a particular weight on the coasts. New York was not their home, but it was one of their centers of gravity, and New York Deads have a particular charm that doesn’t exist anywhere else. Old fans as well as young people wondering what it was all about will get a chance to revisit the days of the dead this May at the New York Historical Society .

This is as good of an excuse as any to book time in a hotel in the city , and enjoy the rest of the urban atmosphere. It will be particularly interesting, though, to hear what the active fans have to say about the exhibit. The Grateful Dead: Now Playing brings together a ton of material from the UC Santa Cruz archive, and will be one of the biggest events of the band’s career. Large marionettes will be on display, recalling some of the visual splendor of the concerts (because, let’s be honest, they didn’t move around a whole lot and we had to look at something). There will also be plenty of ephemera and memorabilia, recalling the days of sunshine daydreams and the Doodah Man.

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London Globe Shakes History

There are always a hundred reasons to visit London on any given day, but there are some moments that seem a little weightier than others. The city has a fabulous mix of the past and present, with a long and complex history that’s complemented by local scenes that are nothing less than absolutely modern. Art and fashion are always up to date, and usually way ahead of the trends, and there are historic sites everywhere to make the contemporary seem uncanny.

But this fall offers something peculiarly exciting, and something that will bring even more good reasons for guests wondering about a visit here, with a stay in one of the stylish hotels that characterize the city. This would be the premiere of a new play. There are few cities in the world where new plays attract much attention these days, much to the disappointment of those whose lives are devoted to the lively art, mostly due to the sense that it’s become outdated or too expensive.

In London, however, the people know plays, and understand why live theatre is an art form that no other media could ever match. In terms of being outdated, however, it might be true, considering that the Old Globe hasn’t had a single female playwright on the boards in its 400 year history. Until now.

Nell Leyshon’s Bedlam , a costume drama that interrogates the divide between art and madness, is the first commissioned play that saw the Bard’s work back in the day. Directed by Jessica Swale, this promises to be a fairly momentous occasion, and it’s worth visiting to see part of the run. There’s not only the historical interest because of the breakthrough here, but also because Leyshon’s reputation as a writer has been growing ever since she turned to writing plays. A love story and a tragedy set in an asylum is the perfect way for her voice to move from intimate and intense, to booming, and it speaks for who we are, at this moment in time.

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