Archive for the Music Category

Bruce does Philly

Posted in Music, Politics with tags , , , on October 5, 2008 by macmystery
Bruce played Saturday to a crowd estimated to be as large as 50,000 in Philadelphia.

Bruce played Saturday to a crowd estimated to be as large as 50,000 in Philadelphia.

Bruce Springsteen played a free acoustic gig in downtown Philadelphia Saturday as part of a voter registration drive for the Barack Obama campaign.

The crowds was estimated to be as large as 50,000. You can read the wire story here. Or you can check out Bruce’s official site.

The songs included: “Promised Land,” “The Ghost of Tom Joad,” “Thunder Road,” “No Surrender,” “Does This Bus Stop at 82nd Street,” “The Rising” and Woody Guthrie’s “This Land is Your Land.”

Here’s what Bruce had to say to the crowd.

“Hello Philly,

I am glad to be here today for this voter registration drive and for Barack Obama, the next President of the United States.

I’ve spent 35 years writing about America, its people, and the meaning of the American Promise. The Promise that was handed down to us, right here in this city from our founding fathers, with one instruction: Do your best to make these things real. Opportunity, equality, social and economic justice, a fair shake for all of our citizens, the American idea, as a positive influence, around the world for a more just and peaceful existence. These are the things that give our lives hope, shape, and meaning. They are the ties that bind us together and give us faith in our contract with one another.

I’ve spent most of my creative life measuring the distance between that American promise and American reality. For many Americans, who are today losing their jobs, their homes, seeing their retirement funds disappear, who have no healthcare, or who have been abandoned in our inner cities. The distance between that promise and that reality has never been greater or more painful.

I believe Senator Obama has taken the measure of that distance in his own life and in his work. I believe he understands, in his heart, the cost of that distance, in blood and suffering, in the lives of everyday Americans. I believe as president, he would work to restore that promise to so many of our fellow citizens who have justifiably lost faith in its meaning. After the disastrous administration of the past 8 years, we need someone to lead us in an American reclamation project. In my job, I travel the world, and occasionally play big stadiums, just like Senator Obama. I’ve continued to find, wherever I go, America remains a repository of people’s hopes, possibilities, and desires, and that despite the terrible erosion to our standing around the world, accomplished by our recent administration, we remain, for many, a house of dreams. One thousand George Bushes and one thousand Dick Cheneys will never be able to tear that house down.

They will, however, be leaving office, dropping the national tragedies of Katrina, Iraq, and our financial crisis in our laps. Our sacred house of dreams has been abused, looted, and left in a terrible state of disrepair. It needs care; it needs saving, it needs defending against those who would sell it down the river for power or a quick buck. It needs strong arms, hearts, and minds. It needs someone with Senator Obama’s understanding, temperateness, deliberativeness, maturity, compassion, toughness, and faith, to help us rebuild our house once again. But most importantly, it needs us. You and me. To build that house with the generosity that is at the heart of the American spirit. A house that is truer and big enough to contain the hopes and dreams of all of our fellow citizens. That is where our future lies. We will rise or fall as a people by our ability to accomplish this task. Now I don’t know about you, but I want that dream back, I want my America back, I want my country back.

So now is the time to stand with Barack Obama and Joe Biden, roll up our sleeves, and come on up for the rising.”

It’s official … BruceBowl 2009

Posted in Music, Sports with tags , , , on September 30, 2008 by macmystery

Well, unlike the whole Democratic National Convention finale  and Barack Obama speech story, these rumors have been confirmed: Bruce Springsteen will play halftime at the Super Bowl.

The NFL and NBC made the offical announcement on Sunday night. Just as an aside, my favorite headline for the story came from The Los Angeles Times: “Springsteen to play Super Bowl; No ‘Nipplegate’ expected.

The Chicago paper is already soliciting ideas about what the song selection shold be.

Maybe Shakira would have been a better choice

Posted in Music, Politics with tags , , , , , on September 25, 2008 by macmystery

Take a look at these two pictures. First this one …

Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin meets Pakistan's President Asif Ali Zardari on Wednesday in New York.

Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin meets Pakistan's President Asif Ali Zardari on Wednesday in New York.

… and then this one …

Colombian pop singer Shakira meets with Mexican President Felipe Calderon, right, and El Salvador's President Tony Saca, not pictured, during a conference Wednesday on childhood poverty and development at Columbia University in New York.

I just found this ironic, I guess. This week is the first time Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin has met heads of state from other countries. And here’s a pop star doing the same thing … only she’s been doing it for years.

And if you can’t tell, in the picture, she’s answering questions from the media. If Palin had her way, the media wouldn’t have even been around for her meetings. (read)

As a UNICEF ambassador and the founder of the Pies Descalzos Foundation, this is the third year in a row Shakira has been involved in the United Nations’ conference with numerous heads of state.

In 2007, she gave $40 million to the Clinton Global Initiative to care for victims of natural disasters worldwide. She gave an additional $5 million to be split between four Latin American countries for education and heath purposes.

Earlier this year, she spoke before U.S. Congress (something Palin has never done), met with British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and World Bank President Robert Zoellick, all in the name of the Global Campaign for Education.

Palin? Well she can see Russia from her house, or something like that.

Obviously, Shakira could never be vice president … she’s no American citizen. And I’m not saying Palin should have been undertaking the humanitarian efforts Shakira has. She’s the governor of Alaska, not a philanthropist.

But, it says something that Palin has far less experience dealing with world leaders than a singer that many would simply write off as a sex symbol. And I think any one who refuses to admit that Palin’s choice as John McCain’s running mate is suspect is being dishonest.

Happy 59th Bruce

Posted in Music with tags on September 24, 2008 by macmystery
The Boss ... born Sept. 23, 1949.

The Boss ... born Sept. 23, 1949.

Keep on doing what you’re doing.

Americana honors its own

Posted in Music with tags , , , , , , , , , , on September 20, 2008 by macmystery
Allison Krauss and Robert Plant

Allison Krauss and Robert Plant

The Americana Music Association held it’s awards ceremony Thursday night at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville and strange-but-beautiful bedfellows Robert Plant and Allison Krauss were the big winners, taking home the Album and Duo/Group of the Year awards.

Peter Cooper — a former co-worker of mine, a talented musician and songwriter in his own right and the music writer for the Nashville Tennessean newspaper — wrote about the ceremony here.

Levon Helm, formerly of The Band, Buddy Miller, Joan Baez, John Hiatt and Nanci Griffith were among others honored, and Jerry Garcia was honored posthumously.

Helm is a treasure. He’s returned from cancer to make a great album. While Robbie Robertson may have written the songs, it’s Helm’s voice that made The Band great with songs like “The Weight” and “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down.” And he did a hell of a job as Loretta Lynn’s daddy in “Coal Miner’s Daughter.”

Everyone has heard a John Hiatt song, whether they realize it or not: Bonnie Raitt’s “Thing Called Love,” B.B. King and Eric Clapton’s “Riding With the King,” Roseanne Cash’s “The Way We Make a Broken Heart” are a few of his songs others have recorded.

Americana music, which isn’t really a genre because it encompasses so many styles … blues, rock, country, folk, bluegrass … continues to thrive despite virtually no radio airplay at all.

And I’m glad, because if i was forced to listen to most of the crap on the corporate commercial radio now, I’d likely become one of those old white dudes listening to other old angry white dudes talking on the radio all the time.

And we’ve already got way too many of those, especially here in South Carolina.

The Americana Music Associations’s 2008 honors and awards

Album of the year: Alison Krauss and Robert Plant, Raising Sand
Artist of the year: Levon Helm
Duo/Group of the year: Alison Krauss and Robert Plant
Instrumentalist of the year: Buddy Miller
New emerging artist of the year: Mike Farris
Song of the year: “She Left Me For Jesus,” written by Hayes Carll and Brian Keane, and performed by Hayes Carll
“Spirit of Americana” Free Speech In Music: Joan Baez
Lifetime Achievement/Songwriting: John Hiatt
Jack Emerson Lifetime Achievement/Executive: Terry Lickona
Lifetime Achievement/Performance: Jason and the Scorchers
President’s Award: Jerry Garcia
Lifetime Achievement/Instrumentalist: Larry Campbell
Trailblazer: Nanci Griffith
Lifetime Achievement/Producer/Engineer: Tony Brown