INAUGURAL MCCALL JAZZ FESTIVAL HOSTED BY CURTIS STIGERS AUG. 10

mccall jazz festivalOn Aug. 10, Curtis Stigers will produce and host the inaugural McCall Jazz Festival in the picturesque mountain lake town of McCall. The festival will take place on the beautiful grounds of The McCall Golf Club among the Ponderosa Pines. Enjoy food, wine, beer and other beverages while listening to world class jazz musicians play their hearts out for a great cause!

The festival (3:30-9:30 p.m.) features:

CURTIS STIGERS & HIS BAND
THE PAUL TILLOTSON TRIO
MATT MUNISTERI
JOHN “SCRAPPER” SNEIDER

And more!

CLICK HERE FOR INFO AND TICKETS!

Note: The Friday Night Nosh & Sip at Rupert’s is SOLD OUT!!!

A portion of proceeds from ticket sales and food and beverage sales will benefit The Shepherd’s Home, located in McCall and providing foster care for children in crisis.

AT ALIVE AFTER FIVE: BLUES ROCK WITH TOO SLIM AND THE TAILDRAGGERS

too slim

This week’s Alive After Five headliner: Too Slim and the Taildraggers
Go Listen Boise local opener: Lee Penn Sky

ABOUT TOO SLIM AND THE TAILDRAGGERS

If Tim “Too Slim” Langford only played slide guitar, he would slither around most other blues guitarists and put a ferocious bite on their pride. However, as the sole six-string slinger, songwriter and lead singer of the power trio Too Slim and the Taildraggers, he is a total force of nature, leaving musical tracks for others to try and follow. Now with 16 albums and countless gigs, he remains as untamed and menacing as ever.

Tim “Too Slim” Langford, with his band the Taildraggers, has created an eclectic style of blues and rock that has become a genre all its own. The band’s ever evolving musical direction cannot be classified into any box or category. The eclectic nature of the band allows Too Slim and the Taildraggers to easily crossover and appeal to audiences of various musical tastes.

In 2012, Langford relocated from Seattle to Nashville, Tennessee. Too Slim is backed by the some of the best musicians Nashville has to offer: Scott Esbeck on Bass/Vocals and Jeff “Shakey” Fowlkes on Drums/Vocals.

Too Slim and the Taildraggers’ 2011 album Shiver was nominated for Blues Rock Album of the Year by the Blues Foundation at the 2012 Blues Music Awards in Memphi . Too Slim and the Taildraggers last three releases have also charted 20 plus times in the top 10 on Billboard’s Top Blues Album Charts. Too Slim and the Taildraggers have received Hall of Fame and Lifetime Achievement Awards from The Washington Blues Society, The Cascade Blues Society and the Inland Empire Blues Society. Band Leader Tim Langford has also received numerous Best Band, Best Guitarist, Best Album and Readers Poll Awards from all three Blues Societies and NW Media.

Too Slim and the Taildraggers music have also been featured on MTV’s series The Real World and Road Rules.

HERMIT MUSIC FESTIVAL FLASH SALE SATURDAY AND SUNDAY – SAVE $5-$15!

hermit festThe inaugural Hermit Music Festival takes place July 26-27, and this weekend The Record Exchange is holding a flash sale on Hermit Fest tickets!

Visit The RX Saturday or Sunday and save $5-$15 per ticket:

Weekend pass – $45 (regularly $60)
Weekend student/senior pass – $35 (regularly $50)
Friday ticket – $20 (regularly $30)
Friday student/senior ticket – $15 (regularly $25)
Saturday ticket – $30 (regularly $40)
Saturday student/senior ticket – $25 (regularly $30)

Hermit website: hermitmusicfestival.com
Hermit Facebook: facebook.com/pages/Hermit-Music-Festival/229342560540362

MOSES GUEST IN-STORE THURSDAY AT 5!

MosesGuest_photoMoses Guest will perform live at The Record Exchange (1105 W. Idaho St., Downtown Boise) at 5 p.m. Thursday, July 18. The band is performing a pair of Boise shows this week – Wednesday at Neurolux and Thursday at Reef and we have tickets for sale here at the store! As always, this Record Exchange in-store event is free and all ages!

ABOUT MOSES GUEST

Started in 1995, and named after founder Graham Guest’s fifth generation grandfather, Moses Guest is a Texas-based Southern Rock band that has just enough Pop, Jazz, Funk, and Country in its veins to appeal to audiences of all ages and origins.

The current lineup formed in 1998, was voted “Best Rock/Pop Band” in the 2001 Houston Press Music Awards, and has won numerous Battle of the Bands contests.

The band has been selling out shows in Houston since 1999 and concentrating hard on winning over their region, with frequent tours through the South and West.

The band has self-produced five records and one EP on its own record label, Aufheben Records.

Moses Guest has shared the stage with many great acts in the past few years: Moe. (twice), Steve Miller Band, JGB Band, Willie Nelson, Los Lobos, Leftover Salmon, String Cheese Incident, Robert Bradley’s Blackwater Surprise, David Nelson Band, Rebirth Brass Band, The Jayhawks, Lisa Loeb and Colonel Bruce Hampton and the Fiji Mariners (on H.O.R.D.E. 1998 sidestage in Antioch, TN).

Moses Guest was recently voted into the Homegrown Music Networks “Hall Of Fame“.  One of only a handful of bands that have been bestowed this coveted award.

AT ALIVE FIVE: THE LEGENDARY DAVE ALVIN PLUS GLB OPENERS AKA BELLE!

dave alvinThis week’s Alive After Five headliner: Dave Alvin
Go Listen Boise local opener: a.k.a. Belle

ABOUT DAVE ALVIN

The rules Dave Alvin has followed throughout his 24 years as a solo artist were discarded during the creation of his 11th album, Eleven Eleven.

For the first time in his career he wrote songs while touring and recorded during breaks on his tours in 2010 with the Guilty Women. He used musicians he had not recorded with since his days in the Blasters, and for the first time ever, he sang on a record with his brother Phil, the lead singer of the Blasters.

“While we were growing up there was a firm line between Phil and me,” Dave says, referring to Blasters’ division of labor: Phil sang, Dave wrote the songs and played lead guitar. “The main reason I decided to have him sing with me was that we’re not going to be here forever; we might as well have fun. Life is too short.”

Eleven Eleven features three duets: Phil and Dave on the simmering blues “What’s Up With Your Brother”; Dave and Christy McWilson from the Guilty Women on the gentle country number “Manzanita” and the whimsical song, “Two Lucky Bums,” the final recording of Dave and his best friend, the late Chris Gaffney. The rest of the material, rich in stories that stretch from R&B royalty to labor history to Harlan County in Kentucky, was written over the course of seven months. As he says with sly chuckle: “The songs are not necessarily true, but they’re all autobiographical.”

“It is the first album in which every song was either written or conceived on the road,” Dave says. “When I go on the road, I shut off that part of my brain. It’s really hard for me to write while touring, but I wanted to try something different on this album.”

“Whenever we had a break and I’d return home, I’d call my revolving cast of the regular guys, see who was available to go in and record, cut a song, and head back on tour. With the exception of (the late legendary R&B saxophonist) Lee Allen, I had never used anybody from the Blasters on my solo records. Then I thought, well why not use them?”

While the backing cast varies, the constant through Eleven Eleven is Dave’s assured guitar-playing, whether it’s finger-picking on an acoustic against an accordion on “No Worries Mija” or blazing riffs on electric over a Bo Diddley beat on “Run Conejo Run.” Eleven Eleven reunites Dave with pianist Gene Taylor, whose barrelhouse blues sound has not been heard on an Alvin project since the final Blasters album, 1985′s Hard Line.

Taylor was one of several blues veterans who would pass through the band Dave and Phil Alvin founded in their hometown of Downey, Calif., in the late 1970s. Beginning in 1980 with the Blasters’ debut album, Dave’s songwriting pioneered the marriage of punk attitude with blues, California country and rockabilly. The brothers called it “American music”; it would eventually be labeled by others as roots rock.

The Blasters released four studio albums between 1980 and 1985 and Dave’s songs “Marie, Marie,” “Border Radio” and, of course, “American Music” became staples of the burgeoning genre.

Dave’s solo career began with 1987′s Romeo’s Escape and in 2000 he won the traditional folk Grammy for his collection of songs from the early part of the 20th century, Public Domain: Songs From the Wild Land.

Soon thereafter he began recording for Yep Roc, which released his last three albums, West of the West, Ashgrove and Dave Alvin and the Guilty Women.

“The songs on Eleven Eleven, Dave says, “are all about life, love, death, loss, money, justice, labor, faith, doubt, family and friendship. The usual stuff.”

“Mortality has been an issue on my mind ever since Ashgrove. Since finishing that album, I lost some great friends — Gaffney, Amy Farris and Buddy Blue of the Beat Farmers. That weighed on me.”

The result is an album with songs rich in vivid stories, taking listeners on a bounty hunt in “Murrietta’s Head,” a tawdry scene of seduction in “Dirty Nightgown” and a true crime recollection in “Johnny Ace is Dead.” Dave’s guitar work punctuates each tale, reinforcing moments of urgency, remorse and reflection.

Despite making the album with different musicians at sessions separated by weeks of time, Dave was consistent in getting a gritty, bluesy feel from start to finish. The studio, and engineer Craig Adams, played significant roles in getting that feel.

He recorded the album at Winslow Court Studio in Hollywood, the same studio where West of the West and Ashgrove were recorded, both of which Adams engineered.

“Winslow Court is an old Foley studio from the 1930s,” Dave says. “It’s about the size of Sun Studios and you can have everyone in a circle so you can make eye contact. A lot of the musical dynamics and the arrangement on the record comes just from being able to see each other. If everyone were in a cubicle you wouldn’t get that vibe.”

It’s also the one studio where Dave can place his amp beside him and turn up the volume to capture the essence of a live recording.

“All great records, up to a certain point in time, were just a bunch of guys in a room. The Blasters tended to record the same way, but because of concerns of engineers I wouldn’t get my amp right next to me. The way Craig won me over was during the recording of Ashgrove. I asked ‘mind if I make it louder?.’ That was one of the few times an engineer has said ‘turn it up.’”