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Category: News

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  • I’ve just discovered Joanna Connor!

    I’ve just discovered Joanna Connor!

    Sometimes Facebook is good for things other than drama! Thanks to Facebook, I’ve just discovered Joanna Connor!

    If you’re like me, the name Joanna Connor may not mean much the first time you hear it. And actually, the first time I heard this legendary rock-blues woman play, she wasn’t immediately identified by name. Someone posted a video of her playing a wicked guitar solo at a blues festival with the caption “She might not look like the typical rock star but GOOD LORD can this lady shred!”


    I watched this and my mouth dropped open in astonishment…

    Being a woman in my 40s who is musical and not very fit, I immediately admired Joanna Connor for just being confident, talented, and freakin’ awesome! It’s clearly all about the music and she appears to LOVE what she does. I’ve seen some really great musicians play live who look like they’d checked out of the performance and were playing by rote. Not Joanna Connor. That woman really does “shred”.

    I had to find out more about Connor, so I visited her official Web site. I was surprised to find it very simple and uncomplicated. I would expect someone who plays like Joanna Conner to have a beautiful site extolling her tremendous gifts. But no… her Web site is very down to earth. And having watched a few more of her videos, it looks like she’s down to earth, too. I find that as refreshing as her virtuoso guitar playing is.


    Can you imagine being in someone’s backyard listening to this? According to the uploader, the neighbor turned on the sprinklers. What a buzz kill!

    Joanna Connor is a native of Worcester, Massachusetts, but in October 1985 moved to Chicago to play blues. Not only does she play a killer blues guitar infused with rock and roll, she is also quite the singer.


    Here she is singing “Little Wing” last year at a club in Chicago.

    She’s also appeared with some pretty legendary rock and blues stars like Jimmy Page, ZZ Top, Etta James, Joe Cocker, and Susan Tedeschi, among many others. I can tell she can hold her own with any of those people. She’s definitely in their league.


    A little acoustic guitar magic from Joanna Connor.

    Now, at this point, I don’t own any music by Joanna Connor, but I may have to remedy that issue very soon. She’s an artist who’s been around for a long time and I’m just now getting to know her. So many thanks to the random Facebook friend who shared the video that introduced me to Joanna Connor and her awesome band. This makes me want to go to Chicago and hang out in a blues club!

  • Mr. Smith Wins The Grammys

    Previously on NCIS Los Angeles, I mean the 2015 Grammy Awards.  Here’s a video package of last year’s show in case you forget what we do.

    LL Cool J opens this year’s show with shots from last year’s instead of the show’s history. Then AC/DC shows up forty years too late to open the show. As Gaga wraps herself around Tony Bennett in the audience, James says there are 22 more performances.

    Tonight!?

    8:09: Taylor Swift bitches about not winning Best New Artist, which she quickly announces goes to Sam Smith. Sam beats out Iggy Azalea, and somewhere, Tom Petty smiles. Sam is charming. It might be a very long Sam Smith night.

    Arianna Grande quickly follows with her own performance. 21 to go. Wow.

    8:20  Songwriting couple extraorinarre Cynthia Weil and Barry Mann win a Trustee Award. Tom Jones and Jessie J cover “You’ve Lost that Lovin’ Feeling”. Jessie screams, Tom growls, and they eventually stop to award Best Pop Solo Performance to Pharrell Williams’ “Happy”.  Yes, last year, but this is “live” version.

    8:35: Country tart Miranda Lambert appears in front of a fan wearing black leather and boots. She’s a hard-looking 31. Angry hard-looking. Blake Shelton clapped, duh.

    Barry Gibb appears for the first time since he lost his brothers because The Bee Gees won a lifetime award. Barry and chaperons Petatonix then award Best Pop Vocal Album to Sam Smith, and we’re in danger of a Christopher Cross Grammy show. Sam Smith says his music was only heard when he stopped trying to lose weight and sing songs that weren’t him. His plunge into authenticity aside, Ed Sheeran looks stunned that he didn’t win.

    8:45: Kanye has 57 Grammy nominations? Wow. He performs understated in a purple outfit over a grate billowing smoke and half-lit on the stage with voice by AutoTune. It really was understated, but you had to be there. True to James’ promise, there’s less than a minute until Madge takes the stage. She’s AutoTuned too and knows how to create spectacle with a vintage Madonna performance featuring men dressed as demons and a ride out of the pit.

    8:55: Sam Smith isn’t nominated for Best Rock Album so Beck wins for “Morning Phase”, a nice change of pace.

    9:05: Niles Rogers and Smokey Robinson give George Harrison a Lifetime Achievement Award. Macca, who already has one, appears wistful. They also give Best R&B Award to Beyonce and Jay-Z.

    Zoom to the next performer, Ed Sheerhan, who has proven in two years that he isn’t a flash in the pan with three nominations tonight. He performs with a bespectacled John Mayer, Herbie Hancock on piano, and always on-the-beat Questlove.

    Ed immediately throws to ELO, who performs “Evil Woman” and joins the classic rockers for “Mr. Blue Sky”. The best moment may have been McCartney jumping up in the audience and singing along, pleased that a contemporary was singing another 1970s hit. Scoring at home? One song from the ’60s and two from the ’70s played so far, and those are just the songs.

    After a timeless performance by Adam Levine and Gwen Stefani, Hozier arrives to take everyone to church. This version is slower and Annie Lennox helps create vocal magic. The pair get my first, “I’d buy that” comment of the night. Then they segue into “I Put A Spell On You” and I immediately said, “Forget the other one. I’ll take this”.

    That’s when this year’s Grammys get even more random. Miranda Lambert grabs a country award while Pharrell, classical superstar Lang Lang and Hans Zimmer perform a dystopian “Happy” with dancing choirs, violinists decked out in yellow, and Pharrell decked out as a hotel bellman channeling Mickey Mouse.

    9:45: President Obama on video calls for an end to domestic violence and plugs ItsOnUs.org , follwed by domestic violence victim Brooke Axtell with a powerful slam poem that gives way to Katy Perry singing a haunting “By the Grace of God”.

    10:05: Stevie Wonder’s show is plugged and Usher sings an amazing version of “If It’s Magic” backed only by a harpist to retrieve Stevie from a darkened stage so that the master can hit his harmonica solo. Amazing.

    10:15: After performances by country throwbacks Eric Church and then Brandy Clark, Rihanna, Kanye and Macca perform the single that dropped two weeks ago. It’s really a Rihanna single, but those are two decent collaborators. Rihanna is harmonizing brilliantly with Kanye. Sir Paul acquits himself damn well for a guy 9 years older than the other two’s combined ages.

    10:30: Many long commercials, and Taylor Swift intros Sam Swift and Mary J. Blige. Sam had earned the right to sing his song alone, but somehow Mary J gets verse 2 and the chorus with the choir. They give way to Juanes, making his second straight Grammy performance. I’ve always liked him, but wonder if Latin fans think he’s their Keith Urban.

    10:40: Prince, presenting Album of the Year utters a classic line, “Albums, like black lives, matter”. Grammy isn’t Grammy without one political line. Then Beck’s “Morning Phase” shocks everyone, even Beck’s wife, with a win. As Beck reaches the stage, Kanye jumps up and reaches for the mic. The audience laughs, and Kanye’s redemption cycle is complete.

    10:55: Sia’s “Chandelier” with Sia dopplegangers is done, and Enrique Iglesias presents Song of the Year. Taylor Swift producer Max Martin is name checked as Producer of the Year. It’s Sam Smith’s “Stay with Me” again.

    On more performance by Beck with Coldplay’s Chris Martin takes us closer to the big awards.

    11:05: Jamie Foxx and Stevie Wonder come out to sing, err, present, uh, goof off and plug the show. Jamie Foxx becomes Ray for a minute until Stevie announces “Stay With Me” wins Song of the Year. Sam Smith gets off the line thanking the man who broke his heart giving him the impetus to write the song that won the night. At this point, the audience is restless and it feels like every cutaway shot of Jay-Z shows him channeling mob-connected era Sinatra.

    After the obligatory Memoriam and talk of an artist alliance to win back royalties, the stage is given to Beyonce to sing “Take My Hand, Precious Lord” and then John Legend and Common performing “Glory” to close out the show.

    Tally:  Sam Smith 4, Beck 2 but a big one, America, eh, maybe 1 1/2.  When the Grammys try too hard to fit everyone in, they simply become a version of putting your playlist on shuffle. The Grammy moment is plugged too hard, but there are several each year. When we look back, however, 2015 will be remembered as the year Sam Smith asked you to stay with him.

  • Today would have been Bob Marley’s 70th birthday…

    Today would have been Bob Marley’s 70th birthday…

    Bob Marley was born on February 6th in 1945. Today would have been his 70th birthday…

    And throughout 2015, in honor of his 70th birthday, Bob Marley’s fans are going to have the opportunity to listen to some heretofore unreleased and rare material. Starting February 17th, Tuff Gong International, in partnership with Caroline, will offer the first of the previously unavailable recordings as well as deluxe editions of Marley’s best known works. I am thrilled to have the opportunity to sneak an early listen to the first commemorative release, Bob Marley & The Wailers- Easy Skanking in Boston ’78.

    Bob Marley died May 11, 1981 in Miami, Florida after a bout with metastatic skin cancer that eventually spread to his lungs and brain. He was just 36 years old at the time of his death. Despite the brevity of his life, Bob Marley made an indelible and unquestionable mark on reggae music. His music is still much beloved by generations of people around the world and has influenced and inspired countless creative people. Indeed, Bob Marley, who’s sold more than 20 million records, is considered an “ambassador” of reggae music.

    I didn’t discover Bob Marley & The Wailers until 1990, when I was a college freshman. I had a roommate for one week who liked his music and played it constantly. That roommate and I ended up being totally incompatible, but I did take away a sincere appreciation for Bob Marley and the Wailers from the otherwise unpleasant but mercifully brief experience of living with her. After I moved out of our room, I went out and bought his eponymous greatest hits album, Legend: The Best of Bob Marley & The Wailers. I’ve enjoyed Bob Marley’s music in the almost 25 years since! I guess I have that failed roommate experience to thank for that, though I feel pretty certain that I would have become a fan anyway. Bob Marley’s music is everywhere and it’s infectious!

    I will take the weekend to give Easy Skanking in Boston ’78 a thorough review from start to finish. In a later post, I’ll offer my thoughts about this exciting new release. Until then, please have a look at this video, which offers more information about this upcoming release in honor of Bob Marley’s 70th birthday.