RYAN BINGHAM AND THE DEAD HORSES LIVE AT THE EGYPTIAN THEATRE FEB. 22; TICKETS GO ON SALE AT THE RX NOV. 20

Idaho Live presents Oscar winner Ryan Bingham and the Dead Horses (with special guest TBA) live in concert at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 22, at The Egyptian Theatre, 700 W. Main St., Boise.

Ryan Bingham won the Academy Award for best original song for “The Weary Kind,” the hauntingly beautiful song from the film Crazy Heart starring Jeff Bridges. Bingham is coming back to Boise for a headlining show after opening for Willie Nelson last summer at the Idaho Botanical Garden.

Tickets are $18 advance and $21 day of show for general admission seating. Advance tickets go on sale at 10 a.m. Saturday, Nov. 20, at The Record Exchange, The Boise Co-op, The Egyptian Theatre box office and egyptiantheatre.net.

“Bingham, an ex-rodeo bull rider, is electrifying in a somebody-might-take-a-pool-cue-to-the-head kind of way. This convergence of charisma, energy and songwriting suggests what Springsteen might have been like had he come up in Billy Bob’s instead of the Stone Pony.” – Esquire Magazine, “9 Live Shows a Man Should See”

In “Strange Feelin’ in the Air,” a crooked guitar riff stalks, offering a feeling of apprehension as sure as the shifty outsider bursting through the swinging doors of the townie saloon. It’s pure Ryan Bingham, a conjurer of atmosphere, a gift that he put to good use for “The Weary Kind,” his Oscar-winning song featured in Crazy Heart. – The L.A. Times, Junky Star album review

At this year’s Americana Music Association’s awards show, Bingham won two well-deserved awards, taking home custom made plaques for Artist of the Year and Song of the Year for “The Weary Kind (Theme From Crazy Heart),” which he co-wrote with T Bone Burnett. Bingham was the only artist to receive multiple awards at this year’s conference, and provided one of the evening highlights with the performance of his new song “Hallelujah” with the house band, which consisted of Buddy Miller, Don Was and Greg Leisz, to name a few.

For some artists, winning an Oscar would represent reaching a pinnacle. For Bingham, it instead represented a crossroads and a decision about which path to take.

“When there are a lot of people around saying ‘look, you have to capitalize on this and do something really commercial,’ you might think about it for a second,” admits the LA-based singer-songwriter. “But at the end of the day, there’s not a chance in hell I could do that. It made me sick to my stomach just thinking about it. I couldn’t get up in front of people and play a bunch of stuff that didn’t mean anything to me.”

Bingham puts that philosophy to the test in a big way on Junky Star, his third album on Lost Highway, which was recorded in a matter of days with producer T Bone Burnett, his collaborator on the Crazy Heart soundtrack. The disc delivers a bracing fusion of pensive, gravelly ballads – like “Hallelujah,” which is not a Leonard Cohen cover, but his own take on mortality, delivered from the other side of the veil – and raw, rock‘n’roll cuts that showcase Bingham’s incisive, darkly compelling lyrical bent.

Bingham channels a number of unique spirits over the course of the album, leading with his sensitive side on “The Poet” and kicking out the jams on the Waylon-meets-Keith Richards “All Choked Up Again.” Elsewhere, as in songs like “Depression” – a vivid evocation of our current social climate that’d have Woody Guthrie nodding in approval – and the album’s poignant title track, Bingham applies his wizened rasp with precise strokes, wringing emotion from every note.

“I’ve always been passionate about the situation of homeless people and kids having to survive on the streets, so some of these songs come from that, from looking at what people need to do to survive,” he explains. “So Junky Star doesn’t have anything to do with drugs or anything like that, it’s more about finding the beauty in what might at first appear to be rough around the edges. You can see that beauty in someone on the street, like some guy just raving and be like ‘I wonder what this guy has been through to get to that place?’”

Listen to Ryan Bingham on All Things Considered HERE.

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WIN ADMISSION FOR 2 TO JOSH RITTER SOUNDCHECK MEET AND GREET; BUY RITTER’S LATEST CD, GET A FREE TICKET TO NOV. 6 KNITTING FACTORY SHOW!

Our friend Josh Ritter is returning to Boise on Saturday, Nov. 6, for a headlining performance at the Knitting Factory, and The Record Exchange is partnering with the Knit to offer customers a free ticket to the show with purchase of Ritter’s So Runs the World Away on CD or vinyl LP (while supplies last).

We’re also holding a photo contest to win admission to a Josh Ritter Soundcheck Meet and Greet before the show! To enter, take a photo of yourself holding a copy of So Runs the World Away in front of the Ritter mural on the outside wall of the Linen Building (1402 W. Grove St. in Downtown Boise’s Linen District) and post it on The Record Exchange Facebook page (facebook.com/recordexchange).

The winner will receive a pair of tickets to the show and admission to soundcheck, where he or she will get the chance to meet Ritter and his band!

The deadline to post your photo is midnight, Thursday, Nov. 4. The winner will be selected at random and notified on Friday, Nov. 5.

ANBERLIN FOR $9.99 PLUS A FREE TICKET TO KNITTING FACTORY SHOW!

From the “holy crap, can we really offer a deal that sweet?” department comes this: Purchase Anberlin‘s new CD Dark is the Way. Light is a Place for $9.99 at The Record Exchange, and we’ll give you a FREE TICKET to the band’s Oct. 13 show at The Knitting Factory.

Now, do some quick math on this one: A ticket at the door is $18 and doesn’t come with a CD. At The Record Exchange, you get the CD and a ticket for under 10 bucks. (You can also buy the deluxe edition CD or vinyl LP, which cost a little bit more than $9.99, and still get a free ticket.)

Naturally, this is a “while supplies last” sort of thing, so you better hurry before the free goodies are gone daddy gone.

BLITZEN TRAPPER RECORD EXCHANGE IN-STORE OCT. 20; BUY THE CD AT THE IN-STORE, GET FREE TICKET TO THEIR SHOW AT THE KNITTING FACTORY!

Blitzen Trapper will visit The Record Exchange for an in-store performance at 6:30 p.m. (NOTE NEW TIME) Wednesday, Oct. 20. As always, this Record Exchange in-store event is free and all ages.

Later that night, Blitzen Trapper will perform at The Knitting Factory, and if you buy Blitzen Trapper’s new album Destroyer of the Void at the in-store (on sale for $11.99), you’ll get a FREE TICKET (while supplies last) to the Knitting Factory show courtesy of your friends at The Record Exchange and The Knitting Factory! We also have some cool Blitzen Trapper koozies to give away with purchase, too.

Blitzen Trapper is based in Portland, Oregon. There are six of them in the band and they’ve been together since 2000. Over the course of their four full-length albums to date, including their revelatory 2008 Sub Pop release Furr, front man Eric Earley’s considerable poetic talents and his band’s hard-earned chops have gained them a growing international audience.

The band’s continuing exploration of American music that spans from the ‘60s folk movement to the country sounds of the ’70s, to the pop balladry and prog rock of the ’80s has earned it notice ranging from Rolling Stone magazine to late-night network television to Yo Gabba Gabba, among a great many others.

In January 2009 and again in January 2010, Earley and a few of his bandmates entered the attic studio of lauded Portland musician and studio engineer Mike Coykendall (Bright Eyes, M Ward, She & Him) to work on what would become Destroyer of the Void. And the resulting new album takes Blitzen Trapper further than ever before, building on the band’s seamless marriage of the familiar and the fantastic to, literally, create an otherworldly experience.

FREE GAELIC STORM TICKETS! FREE!

Our good friends at the Knitting Factory have given us some Gaelic Storm tickets to give away absolutely free — no purchase necessary!

All you gotta do is come in to The Record Exchange and get ’em — limit 2 per customer, while supplies last, yada yada yada. The show is Friday, Oct. 8. Let the thunder roll.