remembering Sharon Jones

You’ve probably all heard about the passing of Sharon Jones already. If not, the sad news was announced yesterday on the Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings Facebook page:

I was lucky to see Sharon Jones twice at the Savannah Music Festival and once at Forecastle Festival in Louisville. The first Savannah performance was before her cancer, and Jones electrified the crowd with her ecstatic dancing, her dragging audience members on stage, her powerful voice. As good as that show was, the other two were even better — it seemed like cancer brought a new abandon to her performances. Stomping, scowling, laughing — Jones was simply mesmerizing to watch, but she always seemed so closely in tune with the audience. At one point in her final Savannah appearance, she encouraged audience members to fill the stage to overflowing, and then she posed for personal photos in the lobby — not many stars do that. What an inspiration.

And she was an inspiring figure for other reasons. From the obit in the NYT:

Ms. Jones was that rare music star who found fame in middle age, when she was in her 40s.

In addition to working as a correction officer at Rikers Island and an armed guard for Wells Fargo, Ms. Jones, who had grown up singing gospel in church choirs, initially dabbled in professional music as a session singer and the vocalist in a wedding band, Good N Plenty.

After meeting Gabriel Roth, the producer and songwriter also known as Bosco Mann, Ms. Jones made the leap from backup singer to main attraction. Desco Records released her debut 7-inch vinyl single, “Damn It’s Hot,” in 1996. She was 40.

A few shots from a couple years ago at Forecastle:

SharonJones&TheDapKings-5

SharonJonesPreview-1

SharonJones&TheDapKings-18

Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings at Forecastle Festival 2014

Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings at Forecastle Festival 2014

Larry Jack’s Magical Music Tour – 11/17/16 – 11/23/16

Hey guys,
There are some pretty good shows downtown this weekend. The music starts tonight, with a show at the Sentient Bean. After that, you can choose between reggae-rock at Barrelhouse South or punk and fun-rock at the Jinx. There are plenty of shows on Friday, I hope to catch City Hotel and the Hypnotics, then finish the night at the Jinx for the Talking Heads cover band, Same As It Ever Was (but be careful, the show usually sells out). Saturday looks like another night of multiple choices, I plan to mostly hang out at the Jinx for AM Rodriguez’s CD Release Party.  But I am sure I will be able to sneak out a catch a little bit of some of the other shows up and down Congress St. Be sure to get out for some music this weekend, it will be cold soon and you will use that an excuse to not go downtown.

Thursday 11/17
Glass Mansions, Britt Scott and Erin Armstrong, Craig TannerSentient Bean (7p)
Yamadeo, Cloud9 VibesBarrelhouse South ($10)
Baby Baby, Jeff 2 Names and the Born Agains, The GumpsJinx

Friday 18th
City HotelRail Pub  (6-9p)
Same As It Ever WasJinx ($10, 2 long sets)
Thomas Claxton, Ben Keiser BandBayou Cafe
Forrest and the FireCongress Street Social Club
Whitley Deputy, Ember CityBarrelhouse South
HypnoticsMolly MacPherson’s

Saturday 19th
Damon and the ShitkickersJinx Happy Hour
AM Rodriguez and His Damn Fine Band, Meagan Jean and the KFB, Dead Oak, Brandon Nelson McCoyJinx
4th Ward Afro-Klezmer OrchestraEl-Rocko
Five40, RipeBarrelhouse South
Bonnie BlueMolly MacPherson’s
Morning FattyCongress Street Social Club
Bounty HunterSavannah’s Music City Bar and Grill
Jonny LangLucas Theater

Sunday 20th
Paving GravyTybee Social Club (12-3p)
Kris Youmans Band, Josh Sanders Band, and Anders ThomsenTybee Post Theater (7p, $15)
Voodoo SoupCongress Street Social Club

Monday 21st
Craig Tanner & Mr Williams Open Mic Abe’s on Lincoln
Main Street TrioCocktail Co

Tuesday 22nd
Mitch & Friends Acoustic Happy HourWormhole
Ben Keiser BandBay Street Blues
Eric Culberson Open JamBayou Cafe

Wednesday 23rd
The Sound ExperimentBarrelhouse South
Eric Culberson BandBoomy’s

A.M. Rodriguez releases debut e.p. – check out the title track

A.M. Rodriguez sends his debut e.p. into the world Saturday, releasing the Dead Dogs and Dried-Up Dreams cassette at a Jinx show with Megan Jean and the KFB, Dead Oak and Brandon Nelson McCoy. Both Connect Savannah and Do Savannah can bring you up to speed nicely on the details, but long story short, A.M. hunkered down with the Train Wrecks‘ Jason Bible and put 9 songs from his back catalog to tape, 5 of which make up the new release with the other 4 tracks slated for future use. A.M. played almost everything on the tunes, with Bible adding some slide guitar and harmonica on a couple songs. Jason also handled the recording, mixing and mastering duties.

We’re happy to preview the title track, “Dead Dogs and Dried-Up Dreams” at hissing lawns. The song begins with spare finger picking and A.M.’s gritty country vocals, with some pretty piano and harmonica creeping into the background after a bit, adding up to a haunting, reflective listen. Even if you can’t make the show Saturday (a pretty strong lineup top to bottom, btw), the song is definitely worth checking out.

Deaddogs

Savannah Stopover announces 40 bands for 2017, including Kishi Bashi, Lee Fields & The Expressions, & Jeff The Brotherhood

Earlier today, Savannah Stopover Music Festival announced the first wave of bands for the 2017 version of the indie music festival, which is scheduled for March 9th to 11th. Dozens more bands, including more headliners and the Savannah-based bands, will be announced in January.

2017_SSO_LineupAnnct

As Tom has said in posts on this blog, Savannah Stopover is all about discovery. Stopover parent company MusicFile Productions has an impressive track record of bringing up-and-coming bands that are poised for much bigger things.

Kishi Bashi will headline the festival’s Opening Night Event at Ships of The Sea’s North Garden. A former member of of Montreal, Kishi Bashi released his 3rd album Sonderlust in September to critical acclaim.The high-energy soul act Lee Fields & the Expressions, supporting their recent November release Special Night, will headline Friday. Other acts with top billing include Jeff The Brotherhood, Ezra Furman, and City of the Sun — all three are awesome.

Lee Fields at the 2013 Savannah Music Festival

Lee Fields at the 2013 Savannah Music Festival

We’ll eventually see more than 80 bands on the schedule — the last couple years have featured about 100 — so it’s a dizzying three days for those of us who love live music.

Kishi Bashi at Geekend

Kishi Bashi at Geekend

Passes are now on sale — 3-day passes are $79, VIP passes $149, 1-day passes $34, Friday-Saturday passes $59. Bands can still submit themselves for Stopover consideration via SonicBids.

Here’s the full list of bands confirmed today:

  • First Wave Confirmed Acts:
  • AJ Dávila – San Juan, Puerto Rico
  • Alanna Royale – Nashville, TN
  • Allison Crutchfield & The Fizz – Philadelphia, PA
  • Becca Mancari – Lynchburg, VA
  • Big Jesus – Atlanta, GA
  • Blue Healer – Austin, TX
  • Chain of Flowers – Cardiff, Wales
  • Charly Bliss – New York, NY
  • Cicada Rhythm – Athens, GA
  • City of the Sun – New York, NY
  • Crocodiles – San Diego, CA
  • Daddy Issues – Nashville, TN
  • Ezra Furman – Chicago , IL
  • Gibbz – Bohemia, NY
  • Half Waif – Brooklyn, NY
  • Hoops – Bloomington, IN
  • Jeff The Brotherhood – Nashville, TN
  • Kane Strang – Dunedin, New Zealand
  • Kelsey Waldon – Nashville, TN
  • Kishi Bashi – Athens, GA
  • Lee Fields & The Expressions – Brooklyn, NY
  • Major and the Monbacks – Norfolk, VA
  • Muddy Magnolias – Nashville, TN
  • Nellie Pearl – Louisville, KY
  • pronoun – Brooklyn, NY
  • *repeat repeat – East Nashville, TN
  • River Whyless – Asheville, NC
  • Ron Gallo – Philadelphia, PA
  • Ruby Amanfu – Nashville, TN
  • Tall Heights – Boston, MA
  • The Bones of J.R. Jones – Rosendale, NY
  • The Dig – New York, NY
  • The Paperhead – Nashville, TN
  • Upright Man – New York, NY
  • Vagabon – Cameroon/New York
  • Valley Queen – Los Angeles, CA
  • Vita and the Woolf – Philadelphia, PA
  • Walker Lukens – Austin, TX
  • Wreckless Eric – Newhaven, England
  • Yoke Lore – Brooklyn, NY

You can read more about the bands and sample music on the Stopover website, and here’s a Spotify playlist that’s definitely worth a few listens:

I know almost half the acts in this impressive first wave, and I’m already excited about the March event — and as always I’m wary about the inevitable touch choices that will have to be made because of the whirlwind schedule.

As usual, I’m sure we’ll have some previews here at hissing lawns as Stopover approaches, so keep on the lookout for those.

Jeff The Brotherhood at Forecastle Festival

Jeff The Brotherhood at Forecastle Festival

New Music Monday – 11/14/16

Well, it’s been a quick, busy, and stressful week since our last New Music Monday, so let’s get right to the picks this week from our contributors. Today’s lineup includes work by:

  • Blake Rainey & His Demons
  • This Becomes Us
  • The xx
  • Leonard Cohen

Blake Rainey & His Demons
Atlanta, Georgia
“Losing My Way”

One of my favorite discoveries this year has been Blake Rainey in all of his various musical outfits. This longtime Atlanta performer crosses a variety of genres from harder edged rock to alt-country tinged soulfulness. This track is from his latest effort, and the band will be having an album release for ‘Helicopter Rose’ on December 8th at the Earl in East Atlanta. – Jon

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This Becomes Us
London, UK
This Becomes US

The brainchild of Future of the Left’s Julia Ruzicka, This Becomes Us is a scuzzy, fuzzed out journey that takes quite a few surprising twists and turns along the way. Featuring a slew of guest artists from other projects that provided their own lyrics as well as talents to the album, This Becomes Us is impressive not only due to Julia’s phenomenal work on the bass, but also due to the sheer variety that the album exhibits. – Petee

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The xx
Wandsworth, London
“On Hold”

The xx exploded onto the indie-pop scene in 2005 and while they’ve been relatively quite since the release of their sophomore album, they’ve still remained as a prominent band on the scene. Their latest track, On Hold, from their upcoming release, I See You, shows that their hiatus from recording was well worth the wait. – Petee

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Leonard Cohen
Westmount, Quebec/Los Angeles/This World and the Next
“You Want It Darker” off the new album of the same name, released less than a month before his death

This dark and beautiful new song was released in September. I just listened to it for the first time today. From the lyrics:

“Magnified, sanctified, be thy holy name
Vilified, crucified, in the human frame
A million candles burning for the love that never came
You want it darker
We kill the flame

If you are the dealer, let me out of the game
If you are the healer, I’m broken and lame
If thine is the glory, mine must be the shame
You want it darker”

-bill

Larry Jack’s Magical Music Tour – 11/10/16 – 11/17/16

Hey guys,

This week looks pretty good.  The week starts with the Sav’h Music Festival Announcement Show tonight (Thursday), then there’s time to finish the night with the show at the Jinx.  There’s plenty of music all weekend, depends on your taste as to where you end up.  I am pretty sure you will have a good time if you end up at any of these shows.  Be sure to say “hello” if you see me around.

Thursday 11/10
Ray Lundy – Ruth’s Chris Steakhouse (6-10p)
Flatt Lonesome (bluegrass) – Charles Morris Center Sav’h Music Festival Announcement  (7:30p)
Hillbilly Casino, Wave SlavesJinx
Dave Jordan and the NIABarrelhouse South
Riot Ten (TX electronic dance music), Midnite Panda. Ellen DegenerateSEED Eco Lounge

Friday 11th
Rock-A-LiciousSavannah’s Music City Bar and Grill (8p)
Country Gentlemen Tribute BandWormhole
Bask, Death HourEl-Rocko
Isaac Smith, Jake Xerxes Fussell, Mount MoriahJinx ($10/15)
Sumilan, Atlas Road CrewBarrelhouse South
ZaleMolly MacPherson’s

Saturday 12th
Amythyst Kiah and Her Chest of GlassStopover in the Yard at The Grey ($25, 12nn, includes food and a drink)
Ray Lundy & Kyle YardleyTelfair Square Art Show (4-5)
Damon & The ShitkickersJinx Happy Hour (6p)
Larry Stephenson BandRandy Wood Guitars ($28, 7:30p)
City Hotel Molly MacPherson’s
Jimkata, Little StrangerBarrelhouse South
Mothers, Sunglow, Jeff ZagersJinx ($10/12)
Funk ArkCongress Street Social Club
Britt Scott and Craig TannerAbe’s On Lincoln (11p)

Sunday 13th
Ray Lundy & Kyle YardleyGoorin Bros Hat Shop (1:30-4:30p)
Violinist Ricardo Ochoa and pianist Paolo Gualdi – Lecture recital examining the psyches of great classical composers – Skidaway United Methodist Church (5-6p)

Monday 14th
Paint Fumes, Cray Bags, Rude Dude And The Creek FreaksEl-Rocko
Craig Tanner & Mr Williams Open MicAbe’s on Lincoln

Tuesday 15th
Ben Keiser BandBay Street Blues
Eric Culberson Open JamBayou Cafe

Thursday 17th
Glass Mansions, Britt Scott + Erin Armstrong, Craig TannerSentient Bean (7p)

Savannah Music Festival announces super 2017 schedule

The 17-day Savannah Music Festival is so good from year to year that it’s easy to get complacent about the stellar lineups and uniformly excellent production values.

Still, depending on your musical tastes, some years really do end up being more exciting than others, and there are tons of shows that I’m excited about for 2017 (March 23rd to April 8th). And keep in mind that there will almost certainly be some additional pop and rock shows added at a later date.

For starters, the SMF is making another foray into dance in 2017. We don’t get enough dance here in Savannah, so BalletCollective‘s performance of What Comes Next is especially exciting. I don’t know much about the Argentinian dance ensemble Che Malambo, but I’ll almost certainly be buying tickets to that one too.

Che Malambo by Diane Smithers

Che Malambo by Diane Smithers

As they did a few years ago for the SMF, The Avett Brothers will do two performances at the Johnny Mercer Theatre. Not our favorite venue (understatement), but the Avetts put on a heck of a show.

The Avett Brothers at Shaky Knees in Atlanta

The Avett Brothers at Shaky Knees in Atlanta

Jason Isbell will also be back in town — his most recent Savannah shows at the SMF and the Lucas were sublime — and the SMF once again has some spectacular double bills.

Nikki Lane and Parker Millsap (yes!) share a bill, and so do the brilliant Richard Thompson and Sarah Jarosz.

Jason Isbell

Jason Isbell

The Pakistani rock band Sounds of Kolachi and Hiss Golden Messenger are also paired for one of the festival’s only-in-Savannah double bills.

The festival’s closing night will include Bruce Hornsby & the Noisemakers and a finale show by The Wood Brothers.

Parker Millsap at Revival Fest

Parker Millsap at Revival Fest

One of the more intriguing performances during the 17-day event is surely going to be the return of the Ukrainian band DakhaBrakha — they’re mesmerizing — playing an original score for the 1930 Dovzhenko silent film, Earth.

Bluegrass offerings include Russell Moore & IIIrd Tyme Out and Flatt Lonesome. And the Earls of Leicester will be back for a show too.

Hiss Golden Messenger at Savannah Stopover

Hiss Golden Messenger at Savannah Stopover

Jazz fans will be no doubt be excited for a star-studded performance — with Marcus Roberts, Terell Stafford, Jason Marsalis, and Ron Westray — celebrating the 100th birthdays of Dizzy Gillespie and Thelonious Monk. There are plenty of other jazz offerings. of course, and under the guidance of festival director Rob Gibson and associate director Daniel Hope, the classical programming is as strong as usual.

World music offerings include Sufi vocal warrior Sanam Marvi from Pakistan and a double bill with Haitian-American cellist/singer Leyla McCalla (formerly with the Carolina Chocolate Drops) and the Haitian vodou drum and dance ensemble Chouk Bwa Libète.

Leyla McCalla

Leyla McCalla

I’m leaving lots of stuff out, so be sure and check the full schedule, in addition to the coverage in Do Savannah and Connect Savannah.

Tickets go on sale at 10 a.m. on 11/11.

How about a classic from Richard Thompson to close out the post:

Shellac and Shannon Wright at The Mammal Gallery – photos

If Shellac isn’t my favorite current live act, they’re certainly pretty damn close to it. The problem is that they rarely tour, prefer weird venues, and almost never hit the South. Over the past 10 years, I’ve traveled to Chicago to see them play in a rainy parking lot, to the Catskills to see them perform in a waaay past its prime super weird Dirty Dancing/The Shining hybrid resort, and to Asbury Park to see the trio play a bowling alley. So, when they announced they were coming to Atlanta, it was a no-brainer to set an alarm on my phone to buy tickets as soon as they went on sale. Last time they played the city, they performed at The Clermont Lounge (seriously), this time we were headed to The Mammal Gallery.

We bailed work early on the Friday before Halloween, made the mind numbing drive to the ATL, checked into the hotel, got kinda drunk at the Mexican joint next door and Ubered to the show. They weren’t letting people into the venue yet, but, lo and behold, there was a bar upstairs! Okay, here’s where we made a tactical error. Unbeknownst to us, while we were getting slightly drunker upstairs, a pretty damn sizable line was forming outside on the street. Once we made it inside, we worked our way forward as far as possible without being dicks about it. The Mammal Gallery was packed to its sweaty gills.

Shannon Wright opened with a thoroughly enjoyable set of raw, noisy rock, starting as a guitar/drums duo and then joined on bass by Shellac’s Bob Weston. Shellac was unsurprisingly great. They play their singular, spare, noise rock with such power and precision it’s insane. Their signature question and answer crowd interaction while members were tuning was also hilarious, as it always is. Great, great, night. Set spanned their catalog and included Wingwalker, A Prayer to God, Canada, Copper, The End of Radio, My Black Ass, Crow, Steady as She Goes, and….uhhh, did I mention I was drunk?

Pictures are kind of samey, because it was basically impossible to move around, but here you go.

Shellac-10

Shellac-6

Ghost Alley Music Festival – photos

Another super late post, but kudos to Timothy Walls and Coastal Rock Productions for organizing the first Ghost Alley Music Festival at Dollhouse Productions at the end of September.

Tom and I managed to get some photos of the second half of the daylong fest, which was headlined by the moody, textural rock of O’Brother and the southern gothic sounds of Roadkill Ghost Choir. We also got some photos of strong sets by Dikembe, Brother Hawk, and Holy+Gold.

Coastal Rock Productions has a show coming up on Nov. 11 with Bask and The Death Hour at El-Rocko Lounge.

Click on through for more of our photos from Ghost Alley Music Festival:

O'Brother-3

O'Brother-5

RoadkillGhostChoir-1

New Music Monday – 11/7/16

This week’s New Music Monday features work from:

  • Surfer Blood
  • Japandroids
  • Flaming Lips
  • The Murderburgers
  • Muuy Biien

We’ll see you on the other side of election day. Enjoy.

Surfer Blood
West Palm Beach, FL
“Six Flags in F or G” from Snowdonia due Feb.3 on Joyful Noise Recordings

When I first saw Surfer Blood, I thought I was seeing an amazing up and coming indie band with a great future ahead of them. Grabbed their debut album, and yep, sure enough, pretty great. Then a run of shit luck culminating with the loss of founding guitarist Thomas Fekete to cancer at the age of 27 left the band rebuilding. This is the first single from the retooled Surfer Blood, and is both fairly interesting and encouraging, old school indie rock with unexpected guitar interplay and tones. I’m rooting for them. – Tom

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Japandroids
Vancouver, BC
“Near To The Wild Heart Of Life” from the album of the same name coming January 27 on Anti

The lead single from the upcoming Japandroids album sounds exactly like I thought it would, and that’s not necessarily a bad thing. Driving drums, straightforward guitars, upbeat, earnest lyrics, group vocals on the chorus, some “whoa’s” here and there……you know, a Japandroids song. – Tom

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Flaming Lips
“The Castle”, first single from Oczy Mlody, January 13th on Warner Bros.

C’mon, you already know what you’re about to hear, don’t you? It’s the Flaming Lips, ya’know? I guess if I were to describe this song, I’d say it’s a throwback to their Yoshimi era sound with fairly standard song structure. They’ll probably release the album in some totally weird way, like say in a giant gummy skull, and the shows will be like, totally mind meltingly epic, man. The Flaming Lips do their own thing, and their own thing is pretty fun. – Tom

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The Murderburgers
Scotland
The 12 Habits Of Highly Defective People

When it comes to pop punk, it’s hard to expect something terribly new and innovative when it comes to sound. I mean, music really only needs three, maybe four chords at most, right? At any rate, while it certainly doesn’t reinvent the wheel, the latest release from The Murderburgers is a great listen. While the catchy riffs pull you in, their songs deal with the golden standards of self doubt and apprehension about what the future may hold. – Petee

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Muuy Biien
Athens
Age of Uncertainty



Is this a punk band? Sometimes it’s hard to tell. I can say their high-energy live shows feel like a punk show. The last time they played Savannah, I remember thinking they sounded more like local punks Cray Bags than anything else. It’s rad for sure. Boarding psychedelic, the new joint offers some strange twist and turns, and is filled with their traditional odd harmonic juxtapositions. It’s interesting to listen to, albeit a little slower than their last album, “D.Y.I.” I’d say, experimental punk with a little Americana influence. Bass heavy foundations, fuzz-laden guitars, lo-fi vocals, occasional horn and string instrumentation, and stellar drum work all create a strangely wonderful vibe on this record. If Jim Morrison had survived being awesome, I imagine his music would sound similar to this. Dig it. -Joshua

Painter & Poet at Roasting Room Lounge & Listening Room – photos & link

Roasting Room Lounge & Listening Room continues to be one of the best intimate venues in the region, with no shortage of talented acts passing through it’s doors. This past weekend brought out a good crowd for Savannah performers Painter & Poet, with opener Nikko Raptoulis.

Here are a few photos with more after the jump, as well as a link to hear a sample track.

1

Painter & Poet

Painter & Poet

Painter & Poet

Painter & Poet

Larry Jack’s Magical Music Tour – 11/3/16 – 11/9/16

Hey guys,
Hopefully most of us made it through Halloween without any major damage. Don’t forget that the Rock & Roll Marathon is this Saturday, it causes problems all over town, but there may be a band playing somewhere near your house. This Marathon will be one of the few that have a decent headliner, Old Crow Medicine Show will be playing at Forsyth Park early on Saturday.  It looks like things have slowed down a little this week, but this is a list of some of the other shows around downtown this weekend.

Thursday 11/3

Joe McMahon, Billy Liar, AM Rodriguez– Jinx
Roxy Roca – Barrelhouse South
New Breed Brass Band, Ambrose – Lucas Theater  ($25)

Friday 11/4
Twisty Cats, Jeff Zagers, COEDS, Richard Leo Johnson, Miggs Sony DaddyGraveface Anniversary Party (5-11p)
Joe Nelson & James PittmanFoxy Loxy Cafe  (6:30p)
Electric Soul Pandemic, Cha WaBarrelhouse South
Velvet CaravanWyld Dock Bar
The MercersBlowin’ Smoke
Damon & The ShitkickersJinx
AccomplicesCongress Street Social Club
Thomas Claxton, HitmanBayou Cafe

Saturday 11/5
Old Crow Medicine ShowForsyth Park R&R Marathon (11:30a-12:45p)
Damon & The Shitkickers Jinx Happy Hour
Ray LundyRuth’s Chris Steakhouse (5p)
Lady LadyBlowin’ Smoke
Twist Cats, Grace Joyner, GoldEl Rocko
MZG, Leisure Chief, Kenny George BandBarrelhouse South
Little Stranger, The NormCongress Street Social Club
Liquid GingerBoomy’s
SkaryokeJinx

Sunday 11/6
Linda McRae, Craig Tanner, Meg Marie, Tom CoolerTybee Post Theater  (7p, $10)
Voodoo SoupCongress Street Social Club

Monday 11/7
Main Street TrioCocktail Co
Craig Tanner & Mr Williams Open MicAbe’s on Lincoln

Tuesday 11/8
Mitchell & Friends Acoustic Happy HourWormhole
Eric Culberson Open JamBayou Cafe
Ben Keiser BandBay Street Blues

Wednesday 11/9
Eric Culberson BandBoomy’s