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BY GREG KOT | E-mail | About | Twitter | RSS

10 posts categorized "country"

June 10, 2011

Album review: Neil Young, 'A Treasure'

3.5 stars (out of 4)

The line on Neil Young’s “difficult” ‘80s period goes something like this: Young was struggling with family issues, battling with his record company, bouncing from style to style willy-nilly like a moth in a lightbulb factory. There were experiments in electronic music, rockabilly, blues and hardcore country. Even his own label sued him for making music “not characteristic of Neil Young,” whatever that means.

Young’s ongoing series of archival releases allows him to have the last word, or at least to frame what he was doing in a clearer context. “A Treasure” (Reprise) documents his country phase and makes the point that, no matter what his detractors and doubters say, it really wasn’t a “phase” at all, but one of his periodic and most fully realized immersions into the genre. The dozen tracks are drawn from a 1984-85 tour with an excellent eight-piece band he dubbed the International Harvesters. It included longtime collaborator Ben Keith, as well as such stellar Nashville instrumentalists as Rufus Thibodeaux, Spooner Oldham and Hargus “Pig” Robbins.

The set includes five previously unreleased Young songs, all of which present credible takes on Nashville traditions: the way cornball humor masks a broken heart in “Let Your Fingers Do the Walking,” the outlaw swagger of “Soul of a Woman,” the sweet celebration of a newborn daughter in “Amber Jean,” the hard-won spiritual wisdom of “Nothing is Perfect,” and the stomping, howling “Grey Riders” – a new, old classic.

What makes this album a must for Young aficionados is that the Harvesters are likely the most musically accomplished band the singer ever assembled. Thibodeaux’s fiddle and Keith’s steel-guitar complement Young’s craggy guitar; there’s an evident virtuosity, but it never comes off as slick. This band could light up any honky-tonk on a Saturday night.

Young revisits a couple of older tunes that clarify his intentions. There’s a twangy, chugging reconfiguration of the hard rocking “Southern Pacific” and also a reprise of Buffalo Springfield’s “Flying on the Ground is Wrong,” on which Richie Furay originally sang lead. In reclaiming “Flying,” Young affirms that for him country music wasn’t just another ‘80s mood swing, but an essential building block of his career.
       
greg@gregkot.com

April 22, 2011

Album review: Steve Earle, 'I'll Never Get Out of This World Alive'

2 stars (out of 4)

Steve Earle’s latest album, “I’ll Never Get Out of This World Alive” (New West), shares a title with a historical novel he was writing (to be published in May) and the last single Hank Williams wrote in his brief lifetime. Most of these 11 songs share Williams’ sense of mortality and try to glimpse at the world beyond the one we see. The performances are mostly stripped-down country-folk tunes, outfitted with sighing pedal steel and fiddle under the direction of producer T Bone Burnett. At times it feels like a period exercise, Earle and his accomplices evoking a hoedown in need only of a few hay bales (“Little Emperor”), ancient troubadours jamming around the Maypole (“Molly-O”), and over-served saloon denizens leading a jaunty sing-along (“Gulf of Mexico”). A few specific references to modern events are sprinkled throughout, but mostly Earle sings in unusually hazy generalities or clichés (“Every Part of Me,” “Lonely are the Free”). The tepid music doesn’t help, with only the distorted vocal and blues harmonica on “Meet Me in the Alleyway” disrupting the rocking-chair flow. Maybe working on a novel distracted Earle, but the feisty dust-kicker of old appears to have taken this one off.

greg@gregkot.com

March 22, 2011

Tonight's top show: Wanda Jackson at Lincoln Hall

Wanda Jackson: The pioneering rockabilly queen recently released a comeback album, “The Party Ain’t Over,” recorded with Jack White. It’s not her finest work, but any opportunity to hear her dig into early classics such as “Fujiyama Mama” and “Honey Bop” should not be missed, 8 p.m. Tuesday at Lincoln Hall, 2424 N. Lincoln Av, $20 ($25 at door); lincolnhallchicago.com.

greg@gregkot.com

January 13, 2011

Album review: Decemberists, 'The King is Dead'

3 stars (out of 4)

The Decemberists take a break from the grandiose, British-influenced rock of their recent albums on “The King is Dead” (Capitol), an unusually concise exercise in rustic Americana.

Wait a minute -- Colin Meloy and company pithy and understated? Who knew?

With the 18-minute single “The Tain” (2004), the multi-part suite “The Island” (from the 2006 album “The Crane Wife”), and the 2009 concept album “The Hazards of Love,” the Decemberists let their inner prog-rocker run wild. When the band roared in the face of potential preciousness, it worked. But the busy arrangements and Meloy’s penchant for Shakespearean syntax sometimes came off as overly labored and uninviting.

Now, the sound is a bit more muted and reined in: 10 songs in 40 now-you-hear-it-now-you-don’t minutes. Setting up in a barn outside their home base in Portland, the quintet brought in a few ringers to up the twang factor and enhance the friends-sitting-on-hay-bales aura of intimacy – vocalist Gillian Welch and R.E.M. guitarist Peter Buck. Indeed, the tunes on which Buck plays – particularly “Calamity Song” and “Down by the Water” – sound like chiming outtakes from the Georgia band’s classic ‘80s albums.

But most of the reference points come from a decade or more earlier, when American bands were first experimenting with country voicings. From the fiddle-driven hootenanny evoked on “All Arise!” to the peddle-steel melancholy of “Dear Avery,” the Decemberists sound relaxed but not slack. The melodies unfold gracefully, and the songs rarely overstay their welcome, most checking in under four minutes. In the company of harmonica, accordion, peddle steel and acoustic guitars, Meloy dials down the elaborate wordplay (the occasional reference to a “plinth” or a “barony of ivy” aside) in favor of more straightforward lyrics about the fragile negotiation between “progress” and nature. In “Rise to Me,” when Meloy addresses his young son by name, it’s one of the more moving moments ever on a Decemberists record.

Though the band's sixth studio album may be perceived as less ambitious than its predecessors, it arrives as a welcome and likely necessary detour for the band: a collection of sturdy folk-country songs played with simple, sometimes stirring directness.

greg@gregkot.com

November 12, 2010

Top weekend show: Flatlanders at Old Town School of Folk Music

Flatlanders: Texas cranks out great songwriters with stunning regularity, but Joe Ely, Butch Hancock and Jimmie Dale Gilmore are unbeatable as a collective. The Flatlanders put the alternative into alternative country in the early ‘70s – the humor, the metaphysics, the cosmic worldview – and their careers separately and together have lived up to that premise, 7 and 10 p.m. Saturday at Old Town School of Folk Music, 4544 N. Lincoln Av., $38 and $34; oldtownschool.tix.com.

greg@gregkot.com

September 26, 2010

Album review: Kenny Chesney, 'Hemingway's Whiskey'

2 stars (out of 4)

Kenny Chesney is the pin-up hunk for the post-Garth Brooks era of country. He wears a cowboy hat and talks with a Tennessee drawl, but he’s also a college-educated marketing major with an affinity for ‘70s singer-songwriters and arena rockers. Put it all together and you’ve got one of the biggest-selling artists of the last decade, a performer who routinely packs stadiums across the United States, much as Brooks did in the ‘90s.

Chesney doesn’t mess with the formula on his 14th studio album, “Hemingway’s Whiskey” (BNA). He’s a troubadour for the suburbs, a guy who sings about middle-class life with a plainspoken mixture of wistfulness and humor. He mixes nostalgia (the camaraderie of high school football in “The Boys of Fall,” the lessons learned and innocence lost of “Where I Grew Up”) with exhortations to cut loose from the routine (“Coastal,” “Reality,” “Round and Round”).

And routine is exactly what this album is all about, a competent professionalism that finds Chesney’s smooth voice and solid band never extending themselves. “Round and round we go,” the singer purrs while a guitar solo curls around him. There are a couple exceptions; he goes deeper than usual on the title song, written by Texan Guy Clark. And “Small Y’all,” a honky-tonk duet with the still slyly brilliant George Jones, is easily the most country-fried song Chesney has done in years. It’s also the friskiest moment on an album that’s more about keeping the franchise afloat than letting it really sail.

greg@gregkot.com

 

February 19, 2010

Top weekend shows: Booker T, Scott Lucas, Merle Haggard and Kris Kristofferson

Booker T: Even without the MG’s, the mighty Memphis soul group that he founded in the ‘60s, Booker T. Jones is a soul man with classically trained chops on the keyboards, 7 and 10 p.m. Saturday at Old Town School of Folk Music, 4544 N. Lincoln Av., $34 and $38; oldtownschool.tix.com.

Scott Lucas: The singer-guitarist in longtime hard-rock stalwarts Local H ventures out with his new group, Scott Lucas and the Married Men. Their debut, “George Lassos the Moon,” sets some of Lucas’ most personal and introspective songs yet against a more fully orchestrated backdrop, 10 p.m. Saturday with Sybris at Schubas, 3159 N. Southport, $10 and $12; schubas.com. 

Merle Haggard and Kris Kristofferson: A couple of legendary mavericks hanging out for an evening swapping songs – you could do a lot worse in exploring the core of Americana, 7 p.m. Sunday at the Rosemont Theatre, 5400 N. River Rd., Rosemont, Ill., $35, $45, $65; ticketmaster.com.

greg@gregkot.com

February 18, 2010

Album review: Johnny Cash, 'American VI: Ain't No Grave'

Jonnycash

Rating 3.5 stars (out of 4)  

In the final decade of his life, Johnny Cash revived his career by collaborating with producer Rick Rubin on a series of recordings that yielded five studio albums and a box set – one of the great final chapters authored by any pop icon in the last half-century.

Now, more than six years after Cash’s death in 2003, 10 more songs from those sessions have been collected on “American VI: Ain’t No Grave” (American Recordings/Lost Highway). Skepticism would be in order, given that the legacies of artists from Elvis Presley to Tupac Shakur have been marred by countless ill-considered, posthumous releases.

That is not the case with “VI.” Cash was determined to record as much as possible soon after the love of his life, June Carter Cash, died in May 2003. Over the next four months until his own death in September, the singer hunkered down with Rubin at Cash’s home studio in Tennessee, working feverishly against time and his own declining health. Rubin helped make Cash relevant again in the ‘90s by serving as a low-key cheerleader and facilitator; he helped pick the songs and the musicians for each of Cash’s “American” recordings. He recorded Cash in small-group settings, an approach that only enhanced the singer’s gravelly conviction.

Continue reading "Album review: Johnny Cash, 'American VI: Ain't No Grave'" »

January 30, 2010

Concert review: Rosanne Cash at Harris Theatre

    Rosanne Cash had a few laughs with her husband, John Leventhal, on the stage Friday of the Harris Theatre, mostly over how to tune a guitar. It seemed like a set-up: What? They couldn’t afford a guitar tech? How about bringing along an extra guitar or two?
   
    The quarreling couple’s light-hearted repartee not only enhanced the air of intimacy, but provided a necessary balance to a 95-minute, 19-song performance brimming with longing, heartache and death.

    Cash will always be referred to as the daughter of a legend, Johnny Cash. But her 30-year career is also a work of art, marked by her acutely detailed songwriting. On Friday, however, nearly half the concert was devoted to a list of songs her father gave her when she was 18, mostly country classics that served as her introduction to a deeper, darker world than the one she was experiencing on American pop radio, circa 1973.

    Accompanied only by Leventhal’s sparse, trebly guitar playing, Cash played curator rather than diva. Her subtle, nuanced performances put the image-rich stories center-stage. Clearly, her mission was to get out of the way of these songs, to present them with as little window-dressing as possible. At times, she could’ve stood to be a touch more assertive, but mostly her instincts were correct.

        On “Long Black Veil” she created minimalist aural cinema by keeping the focus squarely on the voice-from-the-grave narrative. She played Bob Dylan’s “Girl from the North Country” with a stately, Elizabethan restraint, allowing the song’s innate beauty to emerge. And she brought out the alternately sultry and queasy twists and turns of Bobby Gentry’s “Ode to Billy Joe” by keeping things lightly simmered, just like the matter-of-fact dinner-table conversation in the lyrics.

        The concert also demonstrated that Cash isn’t done growing as an artist. She always had a small but pretty voice. Now she is taking it places that it couldn’t go in the ‘80s, when she was a country hitmaker. It’s a voice that sneaks up on you, especially when she started stretching notes during an a cappella passage in “Radio Operator,” a song she wrote about her parents’ courtship. On the finger-snapping swing of Hank Snow’s “I’m Movin’ On,” she discovered her inner Billie Holiday.
       
        She two-stepped through “Tennessee Flat Top Box,” a rare upbeat number, and Leventhal’s percussive guitar playing brought a rock intensity to her devastating “Dreams are not my Home.” But mostly, Cash and Leventhal kept things lean and understated. This is a couple who may not know how to tune a guitar efficiently, but they sure don’t waste any time or notes finding the heart of a song.

greg@gregkot.com

Rosanne Cash set list Friday at the Harris Theatre

1. I'm Movin' On (Hank Snow)
2. Miss the Mississippi and You (William Heagney)
3. Long Black Veil (Danny Dill & Marijohn Wilkin
4. Sea of Heartbreak (Hal David & Paul Hampton)
5. Motherless Children (Traditional)
6. Heartaches by the Number (Harlan Howard)
7. Runaway Train (John Stewart)
8. Black Cadillac (Rosanne Cash)
9. Radio Operator (R. Cash, John Leventhal)
10. The World Unseen (Rosanne Cash)
11. Dreams are not My Home (Rosanne Cash)
12. Tennessee Flat Top Box (Johnny Cash) 
13. Ode to Billy Joe (Bobby Gentry)
14. Girl from the North Country (Bob Dylan)
15. Bury Me Under the Weeping Willow (A.P. Carter)
16. Seven Year Ache (Rosanne Cash)

Encore
17. If I Were a Man (Rosanne Cash)
18. Blue Moon with Heartache (Rosanne Cash)
19. The Wheel (Rosanne Cash)

Sponsored Link: Amazon's Rosanne Cash Store

June 05, 2009

Kenny Chesney: The making of a franchise in a cowboy hat

Chesney     COLUMBUS, Ohio --- What music defines Middle America? On a summer-like May evening, all roads led to a soccer stadium packed with 25,000 celebrating fans in this university town. At center-stage: a fist-pumping, cowboy-hat wearing, guitar-strumming songwriter named a Kenny Chesney who likes to rock it with a suburban-hillbilly twist.

    Kenny Chesney? Perhaps you’ve heard of him as one of those celebrity hit-and-run headlines. He was married for a cup of coffee (actually, nine months) back in 2005 to actress Renee Zellweger, a flirtation with the Hollywood jacuzzi crowd that left him (and a few of his fans) shell-shocked. After that, he retreated to his boat in the Caribbean, wrote some songs, and disappeared from public view --- only to return the next year to continue one of the hottest runs in country music since the Garth Brooks era.

        Now casual passersby may know Chesney as that guy in a beer commercial with his hands on an acoustic guitar and his feet stuck in the sand. He strums a little campfire ditty beneath a palm tree. The shorthand: “The country Jimmy Buffett.

    And like Buffett, Chesney owns an extremely lucrative corner of the musical world right now. He has been recording for nearly two decades, and has quietly become a money-making juggernaut. Last year he earned nearly $96 million in revenue from touring and recorded-music sales, the third-ranked entertainer in North America behind only Madonna and Celine Dion, and ahead of Coldplay, Bruce Springsteen and the Eagles, among others. He was $20 million ahead of the next-closest country act, Rascal Flatts. On June 13, he’ll headline Soldier Field, one of the few performers in any genre capable of filling a stadium of that size.

    Like Brooks in the ‘90s, Chesney has redefined mainstream country for the first decade of the 21st Century, a man who sings with a Tennessee twang but plays a high-energy brand of ‘70s-style arena rock, flavored with acoustic folk, reggae, a dash of R&B, and, yes, country.

    “He’s a country singer with a lot of gritty guitar,” is how Chesney’s drummer, Sean Paddock, sums it up. “He loves the attitude of rock; he loves the island thing; it’s a conglomeration of music but at heart he’s a country singer.”   

    And today country really means the suburbs, the vast spaces between cities populated by a middle class who grew up with Bon Jovi and Foreigner. This is the audience Chesney speaks to because he once belonged to it: “a very ordinary guy,” as he says, “who had an extraordinary thing happen to him.”

       At Crew Stadium in Ohio, it’s a typical night at the office for the headliner. Backstage he commands a small army: 11 buses, 20 semitrailers, 115 crew, staff and musicians, plus assorted high-profile fans from the sports world. NFL linebacker Mike Vrabel, ESPN commentator Kirk Herbstreit, and former major-league pitcher Kent Mercker shake his hand, exchange hugs and toast their pal with beers (Chesney abstains pre-show, limiting himself to a low-cal dinner and water). He gathers with his band in a dressing room, where a newspaper photographer is waiting outside to snap a few pictures as they make their way toward the stage.

    “Slowly,” he commands his bandmates as they turn the corner to face the camera. “And be iconic.”

        The singer is clad in a sleeveless T-shirt, tight jeans and a palm-leaf straw cowboy hat. He leads a 13-piece band, replete with horns, percussion and as many as five guitars. At the foot of the three-tiered drum riser, a dozen brightly colored bras dangle from a stand, collected as offerings from the audience. That’s about as risqué as the show gets. Chesney is a PG entertainer, his two-hour concert slamming rapid-fire from one hit to the next as he surveys a 15-year career that has produced 20 No. 1 country singles, from the hackwork “She Thinks My Tractor’s Sexy” to Everyman anthems such as “Back Where I Come From.

       Not bad for a guy who came to music relatively late in life. As a kid he was obsessed with sports. As a baseball player, he modeled his game after “Charley Hustle” --- the now-disgraced baseball star Pete Rose who made his reputation with his all-out style.

    He grew up hustling in Luttrell, Tenn., outside Knoxville, the son of a hairdresser mother and a schoolteacher father. His parents divorced when he was young, and his mother remarried to a construction worker. He describes a humble life that revolved around “friends, family, school, church … and girls.” He was one of 135 students in his 1986 high school graduating class

    “We were lower-middle class and everyone I knew was --- we didn’t know there was anything different,” he says in his tour bus a few hours before the show. “I have this theory … this is a bit of curveball, but people who are really good kissers never have anything given to them. People who can’t kiss had everything given to them. I guess what I’m trying to say is, I’m a helluva kisser.”

    Chesney laughs uproariously. In public, he wears his cowboy hat (or, in his more casual moments, a baseball cap) 24-7 to cover up a scalp that has been balding since he was 19. His muscular torso belies his smallish 5-foot-7-inch frame. Backstage, the 41-year-old singer could pass for a kid half his age, dressed down in baggy basketball shorts and hatless after a morning workout. He is a bundle of tightly wired energy with boyish, almost elfin facial features and ears. He is fighting a cold, but becomes animated in conversation, pondering questions while rubbing his face until it flushes red.

    He loves music, and has a strong grasp of great songs and artists through the decades in a variety of genres, from Johnny Cash to Bob Marley. But he didn’t pick up a guitar until he started attending East Tennessee State in Johnson City.

        “We were typical country boys who liked music, everything from classic rock to Hank Williams Jr.,” says his boyhood friend and longtime road manager, Dave Farmer. “Kenny never had a lot of patience for anything, so when he first picked up the guitar I thought it would last a day or two. But then I saw him playing even when his fingers were bleeding. He kept a notebook of songs and chords. He picked up that guitar one day and he never put it down.”

        Chesney explains the motivation with disarming transparency: “I realized I could write a song about a girl and it might change my luck.” After graduating with a degree in advertising and marketing, he moved to Nashville in 1991 to make a go as a singer-songwriter, and struggled. He was a car valet by night, a starving songwriter by day, until he finally scored a record deal and put out his debut album in 1994.

        He was a pedestrian talent at first, a pretty boy in a cowboy hat with a decent baritone voice.

       “It took me awhile to find my place,” Chesney says. “I never felt I was a puppet, but looking back I realized I made songs to get on the radio. There was the chemistry and makeup of a hit record at the time in Nashville, and I tried to conform. I was just making records to get on the radio, I didn’t give a [expletive] what they said.”

        He wanted to be George Strait, but so did just about everybody else in country music at the time. “I had a greatest hits album and nobody knew who I was,” he says with rueful chuckle. But as he let his true influences creep into his music and retooled his band, a more distinctive sound and personality began to emerge.

    “He wanted a new look, a new energy --- controlled chaos, basically,” says his longtime keyboardist Wyatt Beard. “He went from a traditional country-style band with guys who stood and played their instruments to bringing in guys from out of state who didn’t know what the rules were. He allowed us to have fun, he dared us to outdo him. It took him awhile to get there, but he knew exactly what he wanted and how we wanted to present his music.” 

        He also personalized his songwriting by giving it a few flavors outside the traditional Nashville menu. His 2002 breakthrough song, “Young,” on the “No Shoes, No Shirt, No Problems” album was in the heartland, coming-of-age mold forged by Bob Seger’s “Night Moves” and John Mellencamp’s “Jack and Diane” as much as the Nashville tradition.

        “When ‘Young’ came out, it was the first time there was a unique, true investment in the audience in me,” he says. “It was the first time I became something more than a song on the radio that they sang in the shower. It meant something to them. You could feel it out here [points outside to the stadium]. We would go into ‘Young’ and it was a definite moment. I focused hard on that. After that, I wanted to be the best I could be at this, in every phase. I started really trying to get better as a songwriter. I had never worked at it that much before, but I concentrated more than ever to find some commonality with emotions, to take some common experience and make it unique as well as universal.

        “We were playing state fairs about a year before all that. I remember opening for George Strait at a stadium in Detroit, and the next day I was playing a club in Brownsville, Texas, and, I swear to God, there was no one there. Talk about a dose of reality. And a year later we released ‘No Shoes,’ and our lives changed. It was something none of us could’ve dreamed.”

        He began spending more time sailing in the Caribbean and cultivated a love of Jamaican music --- hence the Buffett connections. The fans partying in the parking lot six hours before showtime attest to the notion that Chesney has developed a lifestyle and persona to go with the songs. They are hard-drinking college students and young adults who set up elaborate tiki bars in the afternoon sunshine, but there are also moms and dads with their sons and daughters.

        Tori Wilson of Somerset, Ohio, was attending the show with her cousin and four daughters, ages 19, 16, 12 and 6. “He’s one of us,” she says of Chesney. “The songs speak for each of us.”

        Another fan, Kristin Pauley of Cincinnati, saw Chesney’s songs as a soundtrack for her life and dozens of friends who regularly attend “three or four” Chesney shows a year. “He sings everything we’ve been through,” she says.

        Her friend, Charlie McIntosh, of Eaton, Ohio, concurred. He is recently divorced, and took solace in Chesney’s break-up songs. “I’ve got two teen daughters, and how’s the [Chesney] song go? ‘There goes my life,’ ” he says. “That’s why I’m here today, because his music helps me deal with this stuff.”

    But as Chesney has gotten more popular, his more reflective songs play a much smaller role in his concerts. Is he concerned that he might become a caricature like Buffett, who rakes in the big bucks by playing the goofy party meister but at the expense of showcasing his talents as a songwriter?

    “I’m perfectly capable of being two different people,” he says. “There’s a part of me that wants to do a completely different tour, with different atmosphere, a different [lower-key] energy. But this outside here, it’s a whole different animal, and that’s how we built it and I feed off it. I think I was smart enough to record a song like ‘She Thinks my Tractor’s Sexy’ and I also was smart enough not to record another one like it.”

    So, what’s more important, to be a great artist or a popular one?

    Chesney pauses and smiles. “Is that a trick question? I’ve worked real hard to get better as a singer, songwriter, musician. Popularity … time has taught all of us that popularity fades. So it’d be really important to be good when it does.”

    And then this tour-bus troubadour put on his cowboy hat and went to work.

        greg@gregkot.com

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•  Album review: Neil Young, 'A Treasure'
•  Album review: Steve Earle, 'I'll Never Get Out of This World Alive'
•  Tonight's top show: Wanda Jackson at Lincoln Hall
•  Album review: Decemberists, 'The King is Dead'
•  Top weekend show: Flatlanders at Old Town School of Folk Music
•  Album review: Kenny Chesney, 'Hemingway's Whiskey'
•  Top weekend shows: Booker T, Scott Lucas, Merle Haggard and Kris Kristofferson
•  Album review: Johnny Cash, 'American VI: Ain't No Grave'
•  Concert review: Rosanne Cash at Harris Theatre
•  Kenny Chesney: The making of a franchise in a cowboy hat

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• Grammy Awards
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• Grammy Awards 2011
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• Grateful Dead
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• How to Destroy Angels
• HoZac Records
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• Ian MacKaye
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• Lollapalooza 2010
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• Lollapalooza_
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• Pitchfork festival 2010
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• Riot Fest 2010
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• Rock
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• Roots
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• Roxy Music
• Run-D.M.C.
• Rush
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• Summer preview 2010
• Summer preview 2011
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• Super Bowl 2011
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• SXSW
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• SXSW 2011
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• T Bone Burnett
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• Taste of Chicago
• Television
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• The Head and the Heart
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• The xx
• Them Crooked Vultures
• Thom Yorke
• Ticket fees
• Titus Andronicus
• Tom Jones
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• Top albums 2009
• Top albums 2010
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• Torche
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• Weezer
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• Winter preview 2011
• Wire
• Wolf Parade
• Wrigley Field
• Wu Tang Clan
• Yakuza
• Yeasayer
• Yo La Tengo
• Zooey Deschanel


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