this monday at the hideout

Robbie Gjersoe and I will play a bunch of new compositions of mine, many of which are in the running for my next Bloodshot release, which I'm tracking the week following. Since the songs are mostly quiet and 100 people in a bar aren't, we're capping attendance at 60 and pre-selling tickets for this one; so if this is the kind of thing that interests you, I recommend buying in advance. Everyone will be seated, and no tapers, audio or video.

friday night at fitzgeralds

Tomorrow, or tonight, depending on when you're reading, but in either event April 17, 2015, I'll be doing something at the great west-suburban roadhouse in Berwyn that I rarely do there: my own thing. The standard presentation that I give when traveling to other towns, or now and again at the Old Town School or the Hideout in Chicago, is a quartet or quintet that plays stuff from my own records!

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acoustic high-falutin' weekend

As a tribute to my father-in-law, who on CBS-TV's Amazing Race program remarked to my son admiringly of a fellow contestant, "She's a smart girl -- she went to one of those falutin' colleges," I will be falutin' around the midwest this weekend with 4 other smart fellows. There's Robbie Gjersoe, the goofball multi-instrumentalist and Rodney Dangerfield impersonator, who is going to play resonator guitar this outing; Todd Phillips, bassist and co-founder of such enterprises as the David Grisman Quintet and the Tony Rice Unit; Shad Cobb, radically unassuming fiddler whose musical chops are matched only (symmetrically speaking) by his computer expertise; and Don Stiernberg, of whom -- enough!

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this friday and this monday at the hideout

Scott Stevenson, he of the outsized brain and intrepid fingers, has invited me to be a part of his Chicago all-star salute to Richard Thompson this Friday night. The master songwriter-musician turns 65 or 66, I forget which, on a date not far from this Friday night. I'd be happy to play these great songs on an excuse twice as thin.

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house concert, NC/VA?

Thursday might not be an ideal night for a party, but maybe an early-evening start time could make it fly. The date is Thursday May 14, and the area is north of Charlotte, south of DC, not closer than 60 or so miles to either. Raleigh, Richmond, or anywhere in between would be perfect. Acoustic trio: Robbie Gjersoe, Todd Phillips, and myself. Drop a line if interested.

 

this monday, and a movie

Hideout this week is Nora O'Connor and me, back with our two-human quorum.

I've added several March/April dates to the tour page, the soonest of which appear to your right. I'll call particular attention to the premiere of Kannapolis next week at Duke.

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this monday at the hideout

Western Swing night! Gonna be a ton of people onstage, to make it feel more like Tulsa in 1935. (In terms of the per-player payout, it'll feel amazingly like that.) Anna Jacobson, Alex Hall, Peter Seman, Beau Sample, Joel Paterson, K.C. McDonough, and I will throw some love to the late great Bob Wills and all who followed.

 

this monday at the hideout + house show + jw harding

First off, this Monday it's another of my yearly Doc Watson nights at the Hideout. I'll play the flattop and perhaps a little banjo, and Steve Doyle and Robbie Gjersoe will juggle bass, reso, uke, mandolin, and yet more flattop guitar. All three of us will sing tunes we've pulled off the records of the man who is my all-time country music hero.

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house concert?

I'll be in Stoughton, Wisconsin on April 11th with a stellar quartet of acoustic players, maybe quintet. I'd like to bring it into the Hideout the following Monday. If anyone would like to host us for a house concert on Sunday April 12, please send me a note. The approximate geographical area would be: N/S Appleton to Peoria, E/W South Bend also to Peoria

this monday at the hideout

Russellmania. All things Russell. Including, with typical generosity, "Russ." Gerald and K.C. and Brian and I will perform music by Russell Brand, Catherine Russell, Russ Kunkel, Arthur Russell, and many others, in the mold of our "House of Stuart" extravaganza last year. Russell-y prizes will be given those who can mentally "russell" up information on some of our more obscure selections, and anyone actually named Russell and can prove it will be admitted free of charge, nay, welcomed as a hero.

this monday at the hideout

I join the Modern Sounds. A longtime goal! The MS are Joel Paterson, Beau Sample, and Alex Hall. Their repertoire, which is mainly what we'll play, is guitar-centric 1930s-1950s R&B and small-group jazz. A/k/a the funnest music ever invented. As opposed to the music featured in Whiplash, which I saw tonight, and which, please don't see.

tonight's goddamn show

Given the unusual snowfall in Chicago yesterday, I thought I had better affirm that we are indeed plowing ahead with tonight's presentation at the fabled Hideout. Steve and I love playing so much that it doesn't bother us if only nine people listen.

the infancy of 2015 continues

Thanks for the couple of comments on my recent post about various projects. By way of reply, the large digital album I'm working on, a la 50-vc. Doberman, will be close to as many songs (50) as the older album contained. Could be exactly 50, or 49, or 52, we'll have to see. I guess my first thought was to go one higher or lower so I could retain the fabulous and widely beloved brand-name and just change the number. 

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this monday at the hideout

I'll do a set of Jesse Winchester songs in honor of the eccentric master (and, by the way, what isn't much acknowledged, a triple-threat dude, as natural and grooving as his nylon-strung guitar picking was; it's regrettable that his brand-name producers built castles around him rather than letting his own hands do more of the work) who died last April. The material will range from his first record in 1970 to his last, the posthumous release from 2014, though there will be a noticeable hump in the mid-period recordings, which are most familiar to me and most embedded. Playing with me will be Gerald Dowd, Steve Dawson, Brian Wilkie, Scott Stevenson, and, as special guest, Ingrid Graudins.

this monday at the hideout

I'll be duetting with Justin Roberts. Looks like we'll be touching on some of his certifiably excellent songs for children, as well as others written by us both; and we'll be picking out some interesting covers. As far as the child-friendly question that's come up on previous Justin Hideouts, the show won't be expressly aimed at youngsters, since it'll have some kids'-themed music in it here and there, and won't be obscene, it could be entertaining for certain children, those not very impatient or poorly reared.