Well, The Dick Ellis Revival lives on. We've pretty much settled on the name, if for no other reason than the fact that we can't find any other name that we like better. A tip for all you kids in bands out there: if, after 10 months of searching, you still haven't decided on a band name, you're not going to find one. For godsakes, people make babies in less time. And name them!
My recent suggestion didn't go over very well. I don't know, I kind of like Courtesy Flush. Maybe a bit too punk.
Things are going pretty well, though. Our monthly Thursday-night residency at Grossman's continues. We played there this past Thursday, and it went pretty well, except that our Queen of the Keys, Bertie, was sick and couldn't make the gig. We really missed her. The beginning of "Orange Juice Blues (Blues For Breakfast)" suffered for it. But we soldiered on.
We've booked a real rehearsal space for Sunday night because we've got a big gig coming up. Next Saturday, November 5th, we're returning to The Legendary Horseshoe Tavern, opening for the great gospel-blues-roots group, The Holmes Brothers. It should be a great gig. We're both drawing from the same well, so to speak: a mix of blues, soul, gospel, country, rootsy rock. We've designed our hour-ish set to be a compact, punchy run-through of our best stuff. At least half of the songs will be originals. I think it'll go over well with the Holmes Bros' audience. I'm really looking forward to it. Three hours in the rehearsal space tomorrow night and another in-home rehearsal later in the week, combined with the fact that we've been playing every month at Grossman's, we should be able to get it together nicely and do a good job.
And we've added a link on our website where you can check out our upcoming gigs.
Saturday, October 29, 2005
Monday, October 24, 2005
Dylan For 0 Dollars
AOL has some free streaming footage of Dylan and The Band doing "One Too Many Mornings" from their 1966 tour.
They also seem to be rotating other streaming content (on the right). You can also see Dylan doing "Just Like A Woman" with George Harrison and Leon Russel from The Concert For Bangladesh. You might need Netscape 7.1 or Safari.
They also seem to be rotating other streaming content (on the right). You can also see Dylan doing "Just Like A Woman" with George Harrison and Leon Russel from The Concert For Bangladesh. You might need Netscape 7.1 or Safari.
Wednesday, October 19, 2005
Trailer Lark Boys
Just have to pass this on. Got this from my friend Heather. Apparently these are from a competition in which film editors (judging from their e-mail addresses, I assume they were students from a public school in NYC) were asked to recut an existing film trailer, using only footage from the film, to recast the film in a completely different genre. I love "Shining", especially when Solsbury Hill kicks in...
"Shining"
"West Side Story
"Shining"
"West Side Story
Monday, October 10, 2005
"Become an NHL star at home, at your own pace"
Now that NHL hockey is back, and "cost-certainty" has hopefully introduced a measure of parity across the league, it's great to know that you, too, can become an NHL star. How, you say?
With NHL Academy!
I did very well in all modules, except the goaltending simulator. But I think I was screened on some of those point(setta) shots.
Good luck!
With NHL Academy!
I did very well in all modules, except the goaltending simulator. But I think I was screened on some of those point(setta) shots.
Good luck!
Sunday, October 02, 2005
Keys To Jimbuck2
Spent most of the day rearranging my living room to accommodate my new acquisition. I picked it up at the annual bargain basement sale at Long & McQuade last weekend. It was pretty cheap, and I had been thinking of getting a keyboard for a few years now, so I figured at this price, I had to pull the trigger.
It's quite a cool little keyboard. Obviously it's not a professional-level instrument, but the piano sounds are quite impressive, and of course I can dial up several varieties of electric piano and organ, as well as various kinds of strings, wind instruments, brass, vibes, marimba, percussion, etc. I'm not a keyboard player by any stretch, and I have no illusions of becoming the next Billy Preston, but I can hack out a few chords, so maybe this will help me upgrade my skills to the point where I can carry a song. Plus, with all the other instruments on board, it'll be a great tool for home recording.
"Gimme something in a bouncy C!"
It's quite a cool little keyboard. Obviously it's not a professional-level instrument, but the piano sounds are quite impressive, and of course I can dial up several varieties of electric piano and organ, as well as various kinds of strings, wind instruments, brass, vibes, marimba, percussion, etc. I'm not a keyboard player by any stretch, and I have no illusions of becoming the next Billy Preston, but I can hack out a few chords, so maybe this will help me upgrade my skills to the point where I can carry a song. Plus, with all the other instruments on board, it'll be a great tool for home recording.
"Gimme something in a bouncy C!"
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