Yellowcard just released their latest album Paper Walls and now they're coming to Canada to tell us all about it! Catch them on MTV Live on September 12. If you're in the Toronto area, email liveaudience@mtv.ca or call 1.888.491.6888 for free tickets!
Eagle Vision will release a precedent-setting boxed set of Rory Gallagher—Live At Rockpalast: 5 Concerts 1976-1990 —nine hours of footage on three DVDs. Gallagher (1948-1995) scaled international heights of electric blues fame when he married hard rock to urban blues in the course of a brilliant career that tragically ended at age 47 from complications of liver surgery.
Starting with power trio Taste in 1969 London, his fetish for American blues artists like Buddy Guy, Freddie King, Albert King, Muddy Waters and John Lee Hooker turned into an obsession. Three Taste albums later, he ventured solo in 1971 to fully explore his blues fascination. Fourteen albums later, he was hailed as one of the finest living practitioners of the art form.
These three discs show Gallagher at the height of his artistic powers on a series of German television shows between ’76 and ’90. This amazing set is in stores now.
In 2003, the classic Yes line-up: Jon Anderson (vocals), Steve Howe (guitars), Chris Squire (bass), Rick Wakeman (keyboards) and Alan White (drums) made their first appearance at the Montreux Festival. It was a triumphant night and is regarded by both the band members and fans as probably the finest Yes gig ever to be recorded.
Jethro Tull is one of the most successful British acts of all time with a career reaching from the late sixties to the present day. In 2003 they made their first (and so far only) visit to the Montreux Festival. Split into a semi-acoustic first half and a full on electric second half, the concert was a triumph combining newer songs such as “Dot Com”, “Pavane” and “Budapest” with classic favorites including Living In The Past, Aqualung and Locomotive Breath
A Night At The Family Dog -- The Ultimate 1960s Venue, with Jefferson Airplane, Grateful Dead and Santana, Gets DVD Treatment Complete with Upgraded Sound
This concert, held on February 4, 1970, featured the brightest three lights of the Bay Area, Jefferson Airplane, Grateful Dead and Santana. These three bands would define a scene that had the whole world wondering what exactly was going on in the Haight-Ashbury section of San Francisco.
The internationally renowned Ralph J. Gleason produced several television specials to tell and show Middle America what the Bay Area youth were up to. Night At The Family Dog first aired on December 13, 1970 on The National Educational Television Network.
Carlos Santana and his band were riding high on the wave of their classic 1969 self-titled debut. Their second album had yet to be released. Grateful Dead was already four albums strong. Their fifth, Working Man’s Dead would be released in May. The band was at the height of its power, with keyboardist Ron “Pigpen” McKernan still alive. Jefferson Airplane was the headliner, at that time the biggest band in the land. Volunteers, their politically-charged sixth album, had yet to be released.
Sunday, September 9, 2007 10:00pm The Shaye Show, E! Channel Nationwide 10:00PM EST docu-reality show focussing on how the girls balance their crazy personal lives, solo careers and Shaye!
Tuesday, September 11, 2007 Speaking Topic - Post Partum Depression