http://archive.org/details/moe2001-04-22.dpa4021s.ad1000.shnf Timmy Tucker saga and a quality second set. Anybody else go see them last night at the tabernacle? I got a taste but now I need Spoiler: yep, you guessed it some moe.
Rusted Root playing in Bham in April. I've wanted to see them since college but they don't seem to play in the south very often. Has anyone seen them? Good show?
Umphreys put on another fantastic show last night. 5/5 on coming away from an UM show and being blown away. They go hard on every song it seems like. Pretty pumped I get to see them again in a month at Hangout Fest. First time I saw them was 2011HF. Should be great Taylor Hicks was surprisingly solid as a guest appearance singing and playing harmonica on Can't You See. One of the last people I expected to see up on stage with UM
Same here. I've probably seen them 10 times and they were good every time. I met Taylor Hicks a few weeks ago at a show. Seems like a really nice guy.
LOL at Orange Beach Widespread pain? Wharf's booking of jam band ticks off Orange Beach officials PrintEmail By Marc D. Anderson | [email protected] Follow on Twitter on April 22, 2015 at 11:47 AM, updated April 22, 2015 at 12:58 PM 0 Reddit In this 2009 Press-Register file photo, Widespread Panic lead singer John Bell performs at The Amphitheater at The Wharf in Orange Beach, Alabama. The jam band is scheduled to return to The Wharf on May 22, 2015, and city officials are not happy due to the group's Grateful Dead-esque following. It's been four years since perennial jam band Widespread Panic played at The Amphitheater at The Wharf and despite Orange Beach officials' push to keep them away, the band will be back in town next month. On Monday, Birmingham-basedRed Mountain Entertainment announced the band will return to the venue on May 22 for a one-night show at the start of the Memorial Day holiday weekend. At Tuesday night's council meeting, Mayor Pro Tem Jeff Silvers laid into Wharf General Manager Jim Bibby over the booking. Silvers said the band's fanbase has pushed the city's fire and police services to the limit, calling a past three-day stint "pure mayhem." Despite an email sent about two weeks ago by Mayor Tony Kennon to Red Mountain and Art Favre, owner of Wharf Retail Properties LLC, expressing the city's concerns about a possible concert, Silvers said "apparently the message didn't get out." "We're still not happy that this has been announced," Silvers said. "The maximizing that it puts on our resources, our police and our fire department on a busy weekend -- Memorial Day weekend, Jim -- we can't have that. We don't promote that style of living and floppiness that's happened, that they will bring. And they will be here, living in vacant garages, living in the streets, showering down at the beach. Jim, we can't have it. We can't put up with it. So please whoever didn't get that message needs to hear from all of us up here." The band's first stint at the Amphitheatre was a two-night gig in 2007, which was the 10,200-seat venue's first double sellout. A three-night stint in 2008 turned out to be the busiest for police, with 147 arrests ranging from underage drinking to felony drug possession. Another three-night stand in 2009 only saw 37 arrests, according to news reports. Widespread Panic's two-night performance in early May 2010 failed to sell out, which was unusual but it was the early and uncertain days of the BP oil spill. Since that time, Kennon said he was under the impression that the city had an agreement with Wharf officials that acts like Widespread Panic were not welcome in Orange Beach. "I think people know that I'm a very vocal opponent of the music festival in Gulf Shores," Kennon said. "I don't believe for a minute that it's who we are. It's not our brand. It's not what we're trying to sell as a family-friendly destination. That is who we are and the minute we start prostituting that because of money or whatever reason then the next weekend can be prostituted and the next weekend and then it ends up we're Panama City. And that's not who we are if I can help it." Kennon said he hoped the booking was "an oversight" by management. "We'll have a sit down with management and the leadership and hopefully fix this for good," Kennon said. "The Wharf and Orange Beach are a team in a lot of ways but I want to go on the record and I think all of us our unanimous. I don't speak for anybody but that is not who we are and it's not what we want our city to become or represent." Bibby said he understood the city's concerns and would relay the message. "We will address it," he said. "We will be glad to talk."
Well Dave brings a bunch of normal, civilized patrons to the area with his shows. Not a horde of wookies looking for handouts and a public shower
Terrible. Both bands are more than capable of both sucking and kicking ass. I've heard many phish jams on JamOn that were never-ending garbage. Panic does the same thing.
A handful of Grateful Dead songs in Hebrew https://thepromisedland1.bandcamp.com/album/sagol-59-ami-yares-the-promised-land
I was standing behind some girl at Lockn late one night and we overheard her say Wombat was her favorite Phish song. We made fun of the rest of the weekend.
Lizards is the first song that got me into Phish. I wore out the first set of 7-16-94 back in the day
Did we just become best friends? Divided sky got me into Phish, in fact the parallels in that song and what I heard in the studio version of Jigsaw Earth got me more into the Disco Biscuits. It was like I could hear trey's influence on Jon in that song. John McGuirk