Posts Tagged ‘San Diego Music’

Steve Poltz 50th Birthday Bash & cd release @ Belly Up Tavern 2/19/2010

Wednesday, February 17, 2010 @ 08:02 PM
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Steve Poltz 50th Birthday Bash & cd release @ Belly Up Tavern 2/19/2010

Steve Poltz 50th Birthday Bash & cd release @ Belly Up Tavern 2/19/2010

Event Location: Belly Up Tavern

Event Dates(s): 2/19/2010 – 2/19/2010

Event Time(s): 9:00 PM – Finish

Cost: $20

Phone Number:(858)481-8140

Website/Tickets: (Click Here!)


Event Details:

Fri, Feb 19th
Steve Poltz 50th Birthday Bash & cd release for \”Dreamhouse\” with The Rugburns, Steve Poltz and the Cynics, Mojo Nixon, Anya Marina, Berkley Hart, Lisa Sanders, A.J. Croce and Gregory Page
Staff Pick

9:00 PM Doors at 8:30 PM

$20.00 / $22.00 day of show

Poltz co-wrote the longest-running song on the Billboard Top 100, had a debut solo album that earned three and a half stars in Rolling Stone, and was awarded the title of “San Diego’s Most Influential Artist of the Decade” at the San Diego Music Awards. What you end up with is one of the most engaging, twisted, and prolific songwriters of our time – Steve Poltz. (Courtesy of BellyUp.com)


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Winter Blackout 2010 featuring The Expendables @ House of Blues 2/20/2010

Winter Blackout 2010 featuring The Expendables @ House of Blues 2/20/2010

Event Location: House of Blues

Event Dates(s): 2/20/2010 – 2/20/2010

Event Time(s): 7:00PM -

Cost: $20.00 – Gen Admin Standing Advance $22.00 – Gen Admin Standing Day of Show Ages: all

Phone Number:(619) 299-BLUE

Website/Tickets: (Click Here!)


Event Details:

Expendables
House of Blues San Diego is a general admission standing venue with limited seating for select shows. For more information on seating or to make dinner reservations for before the show, please contact our box office at (619)299-2583.

Ask about our Pass the Line program!

Important!! Please read!! This is an all ages show. Please be advised that all persons under the age of 18 must be accompanied by a parent, guardian, or by a responsible adult 25 years of age or older who has written authorization from a parent or guardian. Thank you for your cooperation!

Additional Info:
* : tickets subject to all applicable facility fees and service charges
: applicable fees and charges apply to all ticket (Courtesy of Houseofblues.com)


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The 13th Annual Super Blues Fest @ Humphrey\'s Backstage Live 2/6/2010

The 13th Annual Super Blues Fest @ Humphrey\’s Backstage Live 2/6/2010

Event Location: Humphrey\’s Backstage Lounge

Event Dates(s): 1/6/2010 – 1/6/2010

Event Time(s): 6PM – 10PM

Cost: $15.00

Phone Number:619·224·3577

Website/Tickets: (Click Here!)


Event Details:
Missy Anderson/w Heine Anderson, Lady Star, Johnny V. Vernazza, Michele Lundeen, Len Rainey, with Walter Gentry, Larry Logan, and more (Courtesy of Humphreysbackstagelive.com)
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Los Lobos w/Tomorrow’s Bad Seeds @ Belly Up 1/9/2010

Tuesday, January 5, 2010 @ 12:01 AM
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Los Lobos w/Tomorrow's Bad Seeds @ Belly Up 1/9/2010

Los Lobos w/Tomorrow’s Bad Seeds @ Belly Up 1/9/2010

Event Location: Belly Up Tavern

Event Dates(s): January 9th, 2010

Event Time(s): 9:00PM, Doors open at 8:00PM

Cost:
$35.00 / $37.00 day of show

Phone Number: (858)481-8771

Website: Click Here



Event Details:


Over the past 35 years, The East L.A. five-piece Los Lobos has assembled a body of work diverse enough to cripple most bands and to captivate fans world wide. Along the way, they’ve redefined how a rock band—and rock music—can sound. Los Lobos’ own journey started in 1973, when David Hidalgo (vocals, guitar, and pretty much anything with strings), Louie Perez (drums, vocals, guitar), Cesar Rosas (vocals, guitar), and Conrad Lozano (bass, vocals, guitarrón) were still roaming the halls of East L.A.’s Garfield High. After graduation they made their bones playing souped-up Mexican folk music in restaurants and at parties. By the early eighties, however, they’d tapped into L.A.’s burgeoning punk and college rock scenes, landing on bills with bands like the Circle Jerks, Public Image Ltd., and the Blasters, whose saxophonist, Steve Berlin, would eventually leave the group to join Los Lobos, cementing the line-up that still holds today. (Courtesy of BellyUp.com)



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Mavis Staples @ Anthology 1/14/2010 – 1/15/2010

Monday, January 4, 2010 @ 10:01 PM
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 Mavis Staples @ Anthology 1/14/2010 - 1/15/2010

Mavis Staples @ Anthology 1/14/2010 – 1/15/2010

Event Location: Anthology

Event Dates(s): January 14th-15th, 2010

Event Time(s): 7:30PM

Cost:
$7-$66 per person ($15 Food & Beverage minimum per guest.)

Phone Number: (619)595-0300

Website: Click Here



Event Details:

Mavis began her career with her family group in 1950. Initially singing locally at churches and appearing on a weekly radio show, the Staples’ scored a hit in 1956 with Uncloudy Day for the VeeJay label. When Mavis graduated high school in 1957, The Staple Singers took their music on the road. Led by family patriarch Roebuck ‘Pops’ Staples on guitar and including the voices of Mavis and her siblings Cleo, Yvonne, and Pervis, the Staples were called “God’s Greatest Hitmakers.”

With Mavis’ voice and Pops’ songs, singing, and guitar playing, the Staples evolved from enormously popular gospel singers (with recordings on United and Riverside as well as VeeJay) to become the most spectacular and influential spiritually-based group in America. By the mid-1960’s The Staple Singers, inspired by Pops’ close friendship with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., became the spiritual and musical voices of the civil rights movement. They were the first Africam-America artists to record a Bob Dylan song, 1963’s A Hard Rain’s Gonna Fall and also cut a version of Stephen Stills’ For What It’s Worth–Mavis reprises on her Hideput set. These songs helped bring their moving and articulate music to a huge number of young people.

As Mavis put it in the liner notes to her 2007 critically-acclaimed and Ry Cooder-produced album We’ll Never Turn Back (ANTI-), “When we started our family group, The Staple Singers, we started out mostly singing in churches in the south. Pops saw Dr Martin Luther King speak in 1963 and from there we started to broaden our musical vision beyond just gospel songs. Pops told us, ‘I like this man. I like his message. And if he can preach it, we can sing it.’ So we started to perform ‘freedom songs, like Why Am I Treated So Bad, When Will We Be Paid for the Work We’ve Done, Long Walk to DC, and many others. Like many in the civil rights movement, we drew on the spirituality and the strength from the church to help gain social justice and to try to achieve equal rights.”

She continues: “We became a major voice for the civil rights movement and hopefully helped to make a difference in this country. It was a difficult and dangerous time (in 1965 we spent a night in jail in West Memphis, Arkansas and I wondered if we’d ever make it out alive) but we felt we needed to stand up and be heard.”

“So for us, and for many in the civil rights movement, we looked to the church for inner strength and to help make positive changes. And that seems to be missing today. Here it is, 2007, and there are still so many problems and social injustices in the world. Well, I tell you – we need a change now more than ever, and I’m turning to the church again for strength.”

“With We’ll Never Turn Back, I hope to get across the same feeling, the same spirit and the same message as we did with the Staple Singers – and to hopefully continue to make positive changes. We_ve got to keep pushing to make the world a better place. Things are better but we’re not where we need to be and we’ll never turn back.”

(Courtesy of MavisStaples.com)



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