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Search results for 'mermaid and avenue'
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Ink 19 :: Sonic Youth and Wilco
Sonic Youth calls in sick and Wilco offer a languid performance. No, it wasn't all bad. It just could've been better. Rob Walsh was there.
...to begin with) for a refund? Or, do I go in anyway and make the best of an unfortunate situation? I saw Wilco several years back (during the first Mermaid Avenue tour) and they put on a pretty good show, so I decided to make the best of it. In Sonic Youth's place was a droll "local" rock (I guess) band...
Ink 19 :: Billy Bragg and Wilco
August 1998 :: Music A-B :: Billy Bragg and Wilco (Brent Dey)
Billy Bragg and Wilco Mermaid Avenue Elektra Old letters in a box. Stories and songs scrawled on pieces of paper, written in the late '40s and early '50s by one of America's premiere songwriters. Paper yellowing, years passing. Notations in the margins about how the songs could be played, but no notes ...
Ink 19 :: Dropkick Murphys
Dropkick Murphys' bassist Ken Casey talks with Rob Walsh about nearly eight years of giving a voice to the man on the street.
...on the Warped Tour, in support of their latest record Blackout. The album's title comes from an unreleased Woody Guthrie song that here gets the Mermaid Avenue treatment, Dropkick style. It should be no surprise that this band would want to give life to the lyrics of Guthrie. After all, they have brought...
Ink 19 :: The Guinness Fleadh
August 1998 :: Live Ink :: The Guinness Fleadh (Brent Dey)
...Thompson (but not much more). He was joined by Wilco to perform interpretations of Woody Guthrie songs they recorded together on the upcoming LP, Mermaid Avenue (also reviewed in this issue). Lacking his usual wit and banter, Bragg played a straight-forward set, making only quick references to his own...
Ink 19 :: Ian McLagan
From Howlin' Wolf to the Small Faces to Billy Bragg. One man has made the Hammond B-3 hoot and holler with all three -- Steve Stav introduces us to the many faces of Ian McLagan.
..., smiling from ear to ear. It was fantastic." "Pretty soon after that," McLagan goes on, "Billy was coming to America in support of the Wilco album, Mermaid Avenue. He was without a band -- for some reason, Wilco wasn't touring with him. He had put together a band in England, but they didn't have visas...
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