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Another little cool moment: Just signed up a new client, originally from here, moved back recently after 21 years in Macon. Saw the addy on her previous employer's paperwork, mentioned the Jam.
She digressed into life in Macon, said it was common for herself and fellow employees to take time off, go spend hours at Rose Hill when life's trials got to them. She said she didn't know how it started, just something they all did at times, and everybody understood.
welcome aboard Randy..
I signed this book about 2 1/2 years ago and recently got back on the internet. I have been an Allman Brothers fan for a long time and have recently bought a couple of Derek Truck's band CD's. HE is really an awesom player and I saw with the band on the HBO special Peakin at the Beacon a couple years ago I have always wanted to see the Allman Brothers in concert but never got the chance. I now live in Indiana and still haven't seen them. I hope to soon. I have been a guitarist for 20 plus years off and on and retired military (Navy) of 24 years. This is a great site and a chance to chat an interact with more fans. Thanks and god bless, Randy
Lana....
Was wondering if it were possible to add a search feature within the PM field to allow one to search through their PM's...thanks
Rick
Good Monday to everyone....
Wanted to check in to see if anyone has Birmingham Mule tickets available. Please PM me if you do. Need 2. Thanks.
Rick
Great day... have two tics for a knicks game 11/4, if anyone is interested let me know...email me. center court, one level up, Pacers. Can not go as I wil be going to see Jamio in Simsbury CT!
How about that? Derek on the front page of the Leisure section in the Miami paper. Too cool.
Even though Derek spent significant time as a teenager playing on stage in Atlanta and his entire dTb bandmates are from ATL, he can hardly even get a mention here. The Atlanta paper hasn't written beyond a paragraph on any member of the Allmans since a review of the first Fox show in 1998. Prior to that, the Allmans were regularly featured in the AJC including individual features on Jack & Oteil when they joined the band.
You would think with Derek's personal story (child prodigy grows up to join the Allmans & marry Susan T) and the accolades he gets from everywhere, he'd be one rock/blues/jazz guy they'd like to cover.
Tim
Got a cool call a few minutes ago....don't know if any of you watch CNBC, but our chief strategist, Jeffrey Saut, is a regular. He saw Duane twice in Piedmont Park, watched the EC show in Orlando from onstage. He's on board now, says Derek is phenomenal. Said it several times. Wonder how often this scene has been repeated around the globe this year?
EAPFP
I was fortunate to meet the Great Captain at a DTB show in San Diego. He exists! Happy belated b-day..
Many thanks to Terri B and Sherry for the great accompaniment of Gregg on what was a crystal clear multi-colored lady....
Off to Burlington Vermont tomorrow for a few hours of work.... any recommendations?
peace and love---Scotty
Hi everybody! Anyone in the New England area: This Thursday Oct.26th Pete Scheips Band with special surprise guests will be playing at Sully's Pub 2071 Park St.
Hartford,CT.(860)231-8881 www.sullyspub.com
Hope to see you there!
PS
Randy (Bupp), Check your PMs please!!
:birthday: Capt. :birthday:
Thanks for allllll the awesome music you've shared over the years.
Belated wishes to everyone I've missed. Sista's been under the weather & under the covers.
Lynn & Karen, hope you still have the msn email addy. I sent you a card. Love you guys!! :love:
LoveNPeace,
Ce
Belated Happy Birthday to my amigo, Captain Skipper. Hope you have many, many more!
Did you kick back, relax and put on your favorite Manilow? :laugh:
Interesting that All My Friends showed up in Gregg's setlist. Prophetic??
Belated Birthday Greetings to the Republic of Tea.
Jamgram, I think you are talking about Matt Grondin sitting in with the Codetalkers Sat night.
thanks Leah! You know I love that man....Ca
Hi Carol - I sent your love to Floyd this weekend and he sends it back.
Had a fantastik time this weekend - first time seeing Daniella Cotton and was blown away by the power in her voice.
I just want to THANK everyone who made this weekend possible and so special - you're all a great bunch!
:birthday: Nicole!
:birthday: Mrs Sav!
:birthday: to Capt Skip...I believe the great LIVE Dickey/Bonnie/Vassar show I listen to religiously is one of the Capt remasters...
who's that singing Good-hearted Woman? Ya'll should have seen Jackie and Bonnie at that Waylon tribute....only the best.
:cowboy: everytime you mention Aint No Sunshine you take me back to a little club on the outskirts of Hot 'Lanta, our own beautiful Libby, Kevin and I and an old used to be friend, eyes shining , Lee Roy was playing maybe the best I ever saw.
He was so missing his beautiful wife that late night, treated us to Aint No Sunshine, 'bout fell to his knees with passion.
We finally met his sweetheart, a few shows later, and he sang it to her onstage, but with her sitting pretty right there next to him, it somehow came out like the sunny days Sesame Street song of joy....anyway, its makes for a great memory, and I thank you for triggering it.
Go Motor City Tigers! Ca
I will have to agree with JNB, Bobby Lee and the gang with Joe Craven were just unbelievable. They rocked the weekend for me. The Sat nite set which finished up with Josh Pinkham and Matt ? van Zandt sitting in was just too much!
I too am turned on to Toubob Krewe ,very different and "world music" percussion.
Such a great weekend , great friends and fantastic venue. We really came home tired and satisfied.
Yeah. I read that piece on Derek this morning on the train. Very good article and a suprise as Derek actually got the cover of the Tropical Life section as well as a good spread w/pictures.
He actually up-staged Shakira and had the fron page of the Tropical Life section. Now in a town like Miami which is 60% Hispanic... THAT's Something!!!
It's kind of open to inturpetation, but in that second to last paragraph it appears that Derek might be pondering on making some changes for next year....
HEADLINE: BORN TO ROCK: Destiny propelled guitarist Derek Trucks to star status
By EVELYN McDONNELL
MIAMI HERALD
Talk about Pygmalion Syndrome. In Jacksonville in the 1970s, a roofer, Chris
Trucks, loved music so much that he named his son after one of his favorite
bands, Eric Clapton's rock powerhouse Derek and the Dominos. Nine years later,
Derek Trucks picked up a guitar and a child prodigy was born.
Tonight, Trucks, 27, plays Miami's AmericanAirlines Arena: as a member of
Clapton's band.
''My dad doesn't play, but he's one of those guys who's really affected by it,'' Trucks says over the phone from Minneapolis, the night before the tour's
first U.S. stop. ``I remember that having a huge effect on my playing. When you
see somebody in tears listening to music, it makes you realize how powerful it
should be.''
For a dozen years, Trucks has been one of Florida's most powerful, gifted,
inventive, and unusually humble musicians. By 10 years old, he had played with the Allman Brothers Band. A decade later, he became an official member of that seminal Southern rock group (a hire undoubtedly aided by the fact that his uncle, Butch, is the Allmans' longtime drummer). His own group, the Derek Trucks Band, has released six CDs, including Songlinesearlier this year.
During the rare times he's not on the road with one group or another, Trucks still makes his home in Jacksonville, where he lives with his wife, singer/songwriter Susan Tedeschi, and their two young children.
NO PEDALS OR PICKS
Trucks eschews effects pedals and picks and uses the kind of open tuning
favored by slide guitar players. This gives his tones a pure, raw sound. Trucks says he developed his distinctive style of playing because he was so young, he
didn't really know better. Later, he tried effects but ``it just seemed more of a worry.
''Pretty early on I decided I wasn't going to do it,'' he says. ``There's something about the sound of plugging straight into an amp, it's just so much more direct. I would notice the response you would get from the audience when the sound was right. It was completely different than when you had this processed sound. If people can't hear it and feel it, they're not going to
respond.''
Trucks has played with numerous veteran musicians, picking up tips and
techniques from people like Jimmy Herring (Aquarium Rescue Unit, Phil Lesh and
Friends) and Oteil Burbridge (Allmans).
''I would pick their brains,'' the affable guitarist with the long blond pony tail and sweet Southern accent says. ``The truly great musicians are always wide open about unloading their secrets. I've had some great teachers along the way.''
Playing with Clapton, of course, he has one of the greatest. The band includes Texas axman Doyle Bramhall II and legendary bassist Willie Weeks. The opening act is blues guitarist Robert Cray. The tour is an incredible meeting of guitar gods. In The Minneapolis Star Tribune, critic Jon Bream called the concert ``a ferocious rock performance for the ages.''
``Between the three of us, Eric plays standard tuning strummed right handed,
like a normal guitar player. I play in an open E all the time and Doyle is playing left handed upside down. It's three completely different ways of going
about it. Obviously, when you're playing with guys of that caliber, you're going
to pick stuff up and rip off licks here and there.''
Trucks says instead of the concert being a virtuoso competition, the musicians play together as a real band. ``When it's the Eric Clapton band, it's pretty obvious you let him do his thing. If he wants you to play, he'll nod or point. I don't think either me or Doyle are jockeying for position. There's enough mutual respect on stage. It's a really musical thing. No one is trying to show their worth, everyone's just excited to be here and play.''
The band first got together to rehearse in France. The set transformed during
those two weeks.
''He realized what the band's strengths were and catered the set toward that.It changed quite a bit from what the original idea would be. We started doing a lot more of the older tunes, Derek and the Dominos and that era. That's right where I'm coming from,'' Trucks notes ruefully because of his being named after Derek and the Dominos.
Trucks' dad came to London to see his son play with his hero at the Royal
Albert Hall. Clapton and the two Truckses had tea. ''It was a pretty wild,
full-circle moment that you don't imagine is ever going to happen,'' Derek says.
BLUES, WORLD MUSIC
Playing with Clapton has sparked Trucks' creative juices. 'With someone like Eric, who's had so many different careers basically, just seeing somebody's
catalog, it's inspiring. It makes you really want to get it on and write some
tunes where 30 years down the road you can say, `Look at me, I've got 40 great
tunes.' ''
Trucks' own music fuses blues with jazz and world music. Mixing original
compositions with classic folk songs and covers of Rahsaan Roland Kirk and
Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, Songlines takes its name from Aboriginal myths.
''I'm trying to paint this picture of different struggles put in a more universal context,'' he says. ``It's about freedom, but not in a stock way, the way you hear it on the news, but in a more personal, figure-it-out-for-yourself way.''
Trucks has had a busy year. He toured this summer with the Allman Brothers. ``It was one of the better tours I had with them. There's no struggle for power
anymore within the band.''
When he gets off the road with Clapton, he's going back on with Tedeschi; they play Pompano Beach Amphitheatre Dec. 29. ``This year, being so busy, the only way we can see each other and hang out is to book shows together.''
The musical couple are building a studio behind their house, so they can spend more time there. ''I feel like it's time to focus on getting my group out there,'' Trucks says. ``It's time to take a deep breath and figure things out.''
When he gets back home, he'll do the Florida thing: ``I told my brother to gas up the boat. It's nice to get out in the ocean where you can't see the shore.''