Richard Thompson An unscientific survey of River Cities' Reader employees revealed that many people have never heard of Richard Thompson.

The lack of recognition is not exactly a surprise, because Thompson has never been able to parlay intense respect into sales. But he is an important artist, and one who has no difficulty bridging the gap between folk music and hard-edged rock. He also has a fantastic sense of humor, a rarity among "serious" artists.

So allow me to introduce him.

great_american_taxi.jpg Fans of the self-described "polyethnic Cajun slamgrass" band Leftover Salmon have reason to rejoice this summer, as the outfit is reuniting for a few festival dates in July. But washboard player, vocalist, and guitarist Vince Herman said those shows aren't a sign that the band is back together. His priorities are elsewhere.

EOTO When I put the album from the electronic duo EOTO in a CD player at work, my office mate Mike Schulz asked - after about five seconds of music - "You're not watching porn, are you?"

I'm guessing that question would please Jason Hann, a percussionist with jam-band/bluegrass favorites String Cheese Incident and half of EOTO. While he's more than happy to talk about the impressive technical elements of the live-looping project - which will be performing at the Redstone Room on Monday, May 28 - he'd rather you just dance.

Chris Botti You'd never know it by listening to him, but every time Chris Botti picks up his instrument, he's wrestling with it.

The jazz trumpeter coaxes soothing, true sounds out of his instrument, and they woo and lull you.

But it ain't easy.

Kyle Ferguson Most everybody knows that Blur song as "Woo Hoo," even though its proper title is "Song 2." Neither is particularly meaningful.

But Kyle Ferguson, a senior philosophy major at Augustana College, called one of his songs "Notes from a Solipsist," and that title frames the song's lyrics. Solipsism is a belief that one can only know what one directly experiences - that there might not be a world outside of your own mind.

"You identify your experience with the world," Ferguson explained. "So there's no reality external to your experience."

smile.jpg A country-music performer's decision to move to Nashville is typically the product of a dream. For Suzy Bogguss, it was eminently practical.

In the early 1980s, the Aledo native and Illinois State University graduate was knocking around the country, doing gigs at coffeehouses and ski resorts. She lived in the Quad Cities, Kewanee, Peoria.

She didn't envision a future as a respected and popular country singer. She didn't aspire to the gold and platinum records she would eventually earn.

"It just never really occurred to me that that's what my goal was going to be," she said in a phone interview last week, in advance of her May 12 performance with the Quad City Symphony Orchestra at the Adler Theatre. "It was just fun."

Future Appletree logoThe concept of record-label samplers is to introduce a listener to the sound and artists that a label offers. But too often, these compilations are nothing more than a hodge-podge of material tied together by a company name: Either everything sounds the same, making it difficult to tell one artist from the next, or the compilation is so disparate that it's impossible to settle in and sit through all of the songs.

The Marlboro Chorus, Returning with its most pop-friendly album to date, The Marlboro Chorus knocks out nine rock-and-roll numbers on American Dreamers. Drawing influence from Buddy Holly, Pink Floyd, and Bill Haley, American Dreamers sees The Marlboro Chorus putting aside art rock in favor of a straightforward album complete with guitar solos, magnificently simple lyrics, and a raw sound. From the black-and-white cover to the title of the record itself, American Dreamers feels so easy, but it was a long time coming.

Issue 629 Cover I'm looking for the secret heart of blues singer John Németh's blindsiding vocal soulfulness.

It probably doesn't come from his surroundings, because he's a native of Idaho.

And it probably doesn't come from experience, because he's only 30 years old.

But the unaffected soulfulness of this singer, songwriter, and harmonica player comes through in his performances both live and in the studio.

Carrie Newcomer Singer-songwriter Carrie Newcomer tells about a friend who leads a group of people who knit for the local food bank. They'll set up somewhere and knit with a sign that reads, "Knitting for the Food Bank."

"People will come and talk to them," Newcomer said in a phone interview last week. "Folks who might not maybe go up to someone on the corner and talk to somebody who has a sign will sit down with a group of women knitting and talk about the issue. 'What's happening with the food bank?'"

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