Guy Davis

Blues musician Guy Davis is the son of legendary actors Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee. His 1998 CD You Don't Know My Mind led the San Francisco Chronicle to rave, "Davis' tough, timeless vocals blow through your brain like a Mississippi dust devil." His 2003 release Chocolate to the Bone received a W.C. Handy Award nomination for Best Acoustic Blues Album, one of nine W.C. Handy nominations Davis has received during his career.

 

So it comes as something of a surprise when Davis, during a recent phone interview, says, "The first time I remember hearing the blues, it was being played by white college boys.

 

   Tomy Temerson

   For contemporary American audiences, the zither begins and ends with the soundtrack to the 1949 film The Third Man - which famously featured the instrument in its opening. (See the credits at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n4JpDUMXBqo.) The tune was a number-one hit in the United States in 1950.

 

But the stringed instrument has a rich history in Europe and Asia and dates back more than two millennia.

 

Throw Me the Statue Throw Me the Statue's debut album, Moonbeams, was largely built by one man, and you can hear it in the synthesized beats, the emphasis on front-loaded keyboards, the occasionally oddball instrumentation, the aggressive processing, and a complete disregard for the concept of "enough."

 

Cowboy Junkies The Cowboy Junkies first made a name for themselves with The Trinity Session, recorded live with a single microphone in a Toronto church in one night for a couple hundred bucks.

 

To mark its 20th anniversary this year, the Cowboy Junkies did it again.

 

Reader issue #675 Since his big-screen debut in 1981's Ragtime, and particularly since his 1983 breakthrough in Terms of Endearment, Jeff Daniels has been one of America's most familiar and sought-after character actors, with memorable roles in such films as The Purple Rose of Cairo, Something Wild, Arachnophobia, Speed, Dumb & Dumber, Pleasantville, The Hours, The Squid & the Whale, and Good Night, and Good Luck.

Bo Ramsey If you're a fan of Bo Ramsey - the Iowa-based guitarist and producer - you take what you can get in terms of records bearing his name.

Kevin CroninREO Speedwagon lead singer and primary songwriter Kevin Cronin said the band spent more than three years making Find Your Own Way Home, which came out last year. "There was no pressure to release it sooner," he said last week. "There was no record company, no contract, none of that bullshit. It was strictly a labor of love on our part."

dri.jpg Although singers/songwriters Adrianne "Dri" Verhoeven and Suzannah Johannes both call Lawrence, Kansas, home, their styles and their paths to musical careers couldn't be more different.

Verhoeven has been involved with a wide variety of music her entire life, while Johannes just discovered her love for the guitar in the past few years. Verhoeven works with neo-soul beats, while Johannes primarily writes with her guitar.

The two women will perform February 13 at Huckleberry's pizza parlor in Rock Island in a show presented by Daytrotter.com.

Montana Skies When the two performers in the cello-guitar duo Montana Skies - Jennifer and Jonathan Adams - began playing together in 1997, the impetus was "curiosity," Jennifer said in an interview last week.

The classical repertoire for guitar and cello is small, and they therefore didn't have much in the way of an example. So over the past decade they've developed a catalog of original compositions and covers of popular songs - everything from the Beatles to Pink Floyd. They're as adept at energetic flamenco as they are patient, spare melodies.

Ra Ra Riot The future of Ra Ra Riot sounds as if it's in doubt.

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