The vamping rhythm of “Sharecropper’s Son” was the building groove that revved the enthused audience.
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The Wood Brothers are a must-see live band and one that Chicagoans who caught them at Thalia Hall and Fitzgerald’s will not soon forget.
The band displays a varied compositional range that keeps the album engaging.
Some bands cannot be contained. Those bands are built for stardom. Dirty Honey is standing on the precipice of such heights.
The Wood Brothers recently rolled into Philadelphia to play the Union Transfer, the former luggage transfer station next to the Reading Railroad.
She doesn’t simply play the guitar, she wields it with the precision of a surgeon and the fire of Prometheus.
More than twenty years on and My Morning Jacket is still resonating with its audience.
There are only a few shows remaining on this tour before Rateliff relaunches his “And It’s Still Alright” solo tour that was cancelled because of the pandemic.
Drive-By Truckers didn’t let up the entire evening, burning through their set like 350 heads on a 305 engine.
A band from Boston came in and shook up the hipsters in Chicago with their own brand of down and dirty blues.