Station list changes
We lost our Missoula MT outlet this month. “We’ve gone to a more classic Hits position,” said the station manager. On the other hand, we’re about to add a station in Missouri. Details soon. Current station list.
A weekly audio postcard from the wide musical world of America’s best-loved band!
We lost our Missoula MT outlet this month. “We’ve gone to a more classic Hits position,” said the station manager. On the other hand, we’re about to add a station in Missouri. Details soon. Current station list.
Just a reminder that Dead to the World is permanently archived on KPFA’s web site. Last night’s show (11/5/08) was worth checking out: photographer Jay Blakesberg in the first hour, and Berkeley musical treasures Eric and Suzy Thompson in the second. Listen here. The first hour of October 29 was a salute to Merl Saunders, … Read more
Down to Eugene – David Gans, The Ones That Look the Weirdest Taste the Best Interview with photographer Jay Blakesberg, whose new book is called Traveling on a High Frequency: Photographs 1978-2008. Music Is Love – David Crosby, If I Could Only Remember My Name All You Need Is Love – Steven Bernstein‘s Millennial Territory … Read more
The Tao of Wood Dennis Rae Fine Art welcomes Mickey Hart to San Francisco November and December 2008 Friday November 21st, 2008: 7pm-9pm Special VIP reception, closed to the public Saturday November 22nd, 2008: 7pm-9pm Premier of the Mickey Hart Art Show. If you are interested in attending any of these special events with Mickey … Read more
The Ones That Look the Weirdest Taste the Best is now available on CDBaby!
Soon this will all be integrated into an actual web page, but for now, here are samples of the eleven tracks on my new CD The Ones That Look the Weirdest Taste the Best: 1. Shove in the Right Direction 2. Down to Eugene 3. An American Family 4. That’s Real Love 5. Save Us … Read more
Jay-Z said this: ROSA SAT DOWN, SO MARTIN COULD WALK. MARTIN WALKED SO OBAMA COULD RUN. OBAMA IS RUNNING SO OUR CHILDREN CAN FLY…
Ben Ratliff in the NYTimes: The old Phil Lesh and Friends, begun in 2000, was a step away from the gentle, cobwebby sound-world of the Grateful Dead, the band with which the bassist Mr. Lesh spent 30 years. It was loud and dense, full of Warren Haynes’s white-soul singing and red-meat Southern-rock guitar improvising. This … Read more
My dear friend Beth Livingston posted this on her blog, and I want the world to see it!