Reader issue #647 When the lineup for the third River Roots Live festival was announced, I know I wasn't alone in my reaction: America?!

AmericaIn retrospect, everything turned out well, but Dewey Bunnell was skeptical when America was presented with an opportunity to record its first album for a major label in more than 20 years.

"I had my hesitations in the beginning," Bunnell said in a phone interview last week, "'cause it had been so long, and we had suffered disappointments with the previous projects of all-new material in the '90s. ... Nothing much happened with those, so I was very guarded going into this."

Charlie HunterIf you casually watch the Charlie Hunter Trio on stage, something might nag at you. It sounds like there's a bassist, but ... there's no bassist. Just Hunter and his guitar, drummer Simon Lott, and keyboardist Erik Deutsch playing jazz fusion with the direct appeal of rock music.

Some other details might get under your skin. Hunter's hands don't move in quite the same way as a typical guitarist's, and if you look closely, you'll notice that his instrument has seven strings.

William Elliott Whitmore If you've ever heard William Elliott Whitmore's singing - or read reviews of his work, which typically note that he has the weathered pipes of someone at least twice his age - you might snicker at this statement from the singer-songwriter: "I always wished I could sing like Frank Sinatra, or Morrissey, or fucking Dean Martin - those real crooner guys," he said in a phone interview this week.

Reel Big Fish Reel Big Fish's new record, Monkeys for Nothin' & the Chimps for Free, features "Another F.U. Song," which begins "Hey kids! It's time to use the 'F' word!" and includes, among its tamer phrases, "with a big rusty pole or a splintery post." You can guess the context in which those words are sung.

But it's a gleeful minute-long screed, not at all bitter. And that's quite a change for the California ska-punk band, which spent most of this millennium on a record label that wanted nothing to do with it.

Alice CooperIt's a safe bet that most everyone is familiar with the heavily made-up shock rocker Alice Cooper, who brings his latest stage project, "The Psycho-Drama Tour," to Davenport's Adler Theatre on August 23.

Perhaps less familiar is the Alice Cooper who finds the time to play golf nearly every day - even while touring - and who hosts the Alice Cooper Celebrity Golf Am, now in its 11th year.

(Editor's note: The August 20 show has been cancelled.) Paul Rishell & Annie Raines

 

"Little" Annie Raines, 38, is from the Boston area, so she didn't learn how to play harmonica at the knee of anyone in the cotton fields.

"I started playing the harmonica when I was 17 just for something to do," she said in a recent phone interview. "I was looking for a book on juggling - called Juggling for the Complete Klutz - and the bookstore was out of it. But they had Harmonica for the Musically Hopeless, so I got that instead. And that's how I got started playing harmonica."

Corey Wilkes When was the last time a Quad Cities venue featured a performance that included a jazz band with a dancer? I have lived in the Quad Cities for 30 years and have never heard of anything like that happening here.

That will change on August 19 at the River Music Experience's Redstone Room, when acclaimed 27-year-old trumpet player Corey Wilkes and his Abstrakt Pulse band will conduct a workshop at 3 p.m. and a matinée performance at 6 p.m.

Justin Morrissey, A War of WillsIf Chris Isaak traded in his rockabilly shtick for some country duds, the result would probably sound a lot like Justin Morrissey's new CD, A War of Wills.

Tim StopulosIn his biography, Bettendorf native Tim Stopulos lists influences that range from Beethoven to Maroon 5, a bit of youthful overreaching that you might expect from a 23-year-old.

Yet there's a quote in the bio that strikes a chord, and puts Beethoven and Maroon 5 in a context that makes sense in light of his second album, The Long Drive Home. Music, Stopulos says, "definitely became an emotional outlet for me, but I also fell in love with the mathematical and logical side of the music as well."

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