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Liam Gallagher (Oasis) & his love for eyeglasses

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There’s no better way to express what you feel through music and through what you wear. Musicians, out of all, have mastered this skill and some are even known for their flamboyant fashion sense.

Legends like Elton John, Madonna, Lady Gaga, Prince and many more love to express their beauty and rhythm through their custom-designed accessories.  Glasses are also one such statement that various musicians like to add to accentuate their look. John Lennon and his round glasses were one of the iconic looks that still gets copied by a lot of people.

One such musician who’s also known for his love for glasses, especially round ones, is Liam Gallagher from the band Oasis. In men’s glasses, the most popular ones were the regular oversized Aviators. Fortunately for Liam, the ’90s and even the current generation got a fresh style to play and adore.

The band was a household name in the 2000s where everything perfectly clicked from Liams Gallagher glasses to the white bucket hat of Noel, Liam’s younger brother. The band got popular for its signature elevation mass of sound, louder yet blissful melodies, ultimately overwhelming you with strong emotion.

Apart from the band’s growing popularity, the significant thing that marked the coolness of the member’s personality was the iconic choices of glasses Liam Gallagher put out on display at every appearance. Let’s take look at his John Lennon inspired glasses collection with his spin on it:

Round frames were undoubtedly Liam Gallapherer prime selection. He’s street fashion outfits and round shades worked for hand in hand in giving off a rebel with no cause look. The round frames were quite popular in the ’90s along with the oversized aviator’s frames.

For the male’s version of cat-eye, the 90’s introduced arced square frames which turned out to be quite popular than the fame of Liam’s Gallagher iconic live shows. Based out of Manchester, the band was known for their electrifying live performance. For instance, their 2005 appearance in Manchester itself created their legacy. After their musical performance, the band turned into a fashion mogul for being elite but mostly relatable through music and self-expression.

When we said, Oasis went with big, it didn’t restrict to their musical limits but also with their glasses. With their dark, an edgy, confrontational and gloomy musical track, the band created an aesthetic of the 90’s era to resonate better with the audience. Declaring the band’s motive and executing it beautifully was a complex part but Oasis was challenging each genre within every one of their albums. In their “Definitely Maybe” Oasis talent in creating a track-list that went with audience expectation of the music portrayed at its finest. Their other albums like “Live Forever”, “Supersonic” and “Cigarettes & Alcohol ” expressed their galvanic, rousing nature in continuity, which was rarely put-out by other artists popular at that time.

There’s no life without colour and coming from Liam Gallapheres, there are not enough tints to experiment with your look. Liam’s every lookbook is filled with candy-tinted shades which are getting prevalent among supermodels now. There’s nothing new under the sun anymore. Apart from playing with different tints, Liam was the greatest tambourine player. Unlike the rest of the members in the band who would whack the tambourine out of boredom, Liam went on to make the instrument his unique style statement.

There are only a few instruments that turned popular over the years in rock, apart from the usual ones like guitar and drum and infrequently the bass by the Red hot Chili Peppers Flea. Liam however, usually being the frontman of the group utilized the tambourine like an orchestra and went on to create a significant effect in his music.

Fan of Liam Gallagher and his signature glasses then we’ve got the perfect solution for you. Find quality designer glasses online at Specscart at the best price with extra coatings for free. From iconic 90’s women’s glasses to the latest eccentric one’s, each pair of glasses are truly magnificent. Specscart offers free shipping on all its prescription and nonprescription with 30 days free return. It’s time you channel your favourite singer’s iconic look and relive the nostalgia era of great music and rhythm.

Four local organizations receive Community Response Fund Grant for books from the Indigo Love of Reading Foundation

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Due to the unprecedented school closures associated with the COVID-19 pandemic, many children in high-needs communities have been left without access to learning resources and books, as many students from disadvantaged backgrounds rely on schools and support programs for basic necessities. The Indigo Love of Reading Foundation recognized this need and in April launched the Love of Reading Community Response Fund with a commitment of $1 million in grants to put books in the hands of kids during this time when they need it most.  The grants have been awarded to local non-profit organizations that serve children and their families in high-needs communities to purchase books and educational resources.

The following organizations have received grants:

Native Child and Family Services in Toronto – $25,000

  • Native Child and Family Services in Toronto are extremely dedicated to fostering a love of reading for high-needs Aboriginal children and youth in Toronto – many of who are now experiencing barriers to learning as schools, day care centres and other vital community spaces remain closed due to the pandemic. The organization strongly believes that connecting young people to their culture and history is key to overcoming adversity. The funds will help offer their communities access to books that will enrich their relationship to their culture, history and Aboriginal identity. They were able to distribute books to 1,000 Aboriginal families and homes across Toronto, including children and youth who access their programs.

The Children’s Book Bank – $12,500

  • The Children’s Book Bank provides literacy support to children and families in high-needs neighbourhoods across the GTA. In the last two months, they have distributed more than 25,000 books to children. With most schools, camps and libraries closed this summer, their services are needed now more than ever. Books are essential tools for children to continue learning and nurturing their imagination. The funds allowed them to help fill in some gaps for book donations. They were able to distribute books with diverse titles, representing the many communities that visit the Book Bank and benefit from their service.

The Leacock Foundation – $12,500

  • The Leacock Foundation provides fully funded literacy programming after school, on weekends and in the summer for three priority communities in Toronto. However, as the pandemic hit, many families in their communities faced barriers in providing reading resources for their children as the organization also temporarily closed. One of the ways that the Leacock Foundation put the funds to work was by including books in learning packets for their virtual LEAP into Literacy Summer Camp, which helped reinforce literacy at home. Putting books in the hands of students in their communities isn’t temporary but more lasting, as they will improve their reading and writing skills which will help them over the course of their lives.

Birkdale Portfolio Shelter – $4,165

  • The Birkdale Portfolio Shelter provides much-needed services to families in high-needs communities. However, they needed to find an alternative way to keep children engaged while fostering family interaction in a non-traditional way, as communities were locked down in social isolation. Many of the children who were in isolation were without electronic devices as TDSB moved from in class learning to e-learning. The funds helped offer children  new books to keep their imagination active while they remained in a one bedroom with multiple family members during the social isolation period. This was also a profound way for children to expand their minds and develop critical thinking while reading, as well as allowed older siblings to read to their younger siblings which increased family bonding.

 

To continue these impacts, Indigo pledged recently pledged to donate 1% of the annual net proceeds[1] from the sale of every children’s book purchased to the Indigo Love of Reading Foundation. Now, when Canadians purchase children’s books at any Indigo, Chapters, Coles or on Indigo.ca, they are also helping to provide books to children in need across the country.  This initiative will enable the Foundation to continue offering supports like the Community Response Fund to children in high-needs communities across Canada.

Photo Gallery: Walk Off The Earth with Harm & Ease at Toronto’s OLG Play Stage

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All photos by Mini’s Memories. You can contact her at minismemories@hotmail.com

Walk Off The Earth
Walk Off The Earth
Walk Off The Earth
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Walk Off The Earth
Walk Off The Earth
Walk Off The Earth
Walk Off The Earth
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Walk Off The Earth
Harm & Ease
Harm & Ease
Harm & Ease
Harm & Ease
Harm & Ease
Harm & Ease

Joni Mitchell Announces Extensive Archive Series Starting In October

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Since her debut album arrived in 1968, Joni Mitchell’s songs have been embraced across generations, inspired multitudes of artists around the world, and earned every conceivable accolade. She is now opening her vault for the first time to create the Joni Mitchell Archives, a new series of boxed set releases that will span the next several years, featuring deep dives in to unreleased content from different eras of her storied career. Mitchell has been intimately involved in producing the archive series, lending her vision and personal touch to every element of the project.

The series debuts on October 30 with JONI MITCHELL ARCHIVES VOL. 1: THE EARLY YEARS (1963-1967), which features nearly six hours of unreleased home, live, and radio recordings that flow chronologically to paint a rich portrait of Mitchell’s rapid growth as a performer and songwriter during the period leading up to her debut album. This treasure trove of unheard audio includes 29 original Mitchell compositions that have never been released before with her vocals. The collection will be available as a deluxe 5-CD set as well as digitally.

The collection begins in 1963 with her earliest-known recording as a 19-year-old Mitchell performs at CFQC AM, a radio station in her hometown of Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. The first song from this set, Mitchell’s take on “House Of The Rising Sun,” is available today as a digital single. The box culminates with a stirring, three-set 1967 nightclub performance recorded at the Canterbury House in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

Both of these performances will be available separately on 180-gram vinyl on October 30. The first, EARLY JONI – 1963 will be released as a single LP on 180-gram vinyl. Like several of Mitchell’s past albums, the cover for EARLY JONI features a self-portrait and marks her first new art in many years. The other, LIVE AT CANTERBURY HOUSE – 1967, is a 3-LP set and includes Mitchell’s entire three-set performance from October 27, 1967. Production of this 180-gram vinyl set will be limited to 10,000 copies.

To coincide with the JONI MITCHELL ARCHIVE series, Mitchell has launched an official website (www.jonimitchell.com), social media properties (Facebook, Instagram, Twitter), and YouTube channel. These platforms will be sources for news, photos, videos and other historical content as well as exclusive album release, merchandise, and more. Limited edition, colored vinyl versions of both EARLY JONI (1,500 copies on 180-gram clear vinyl) and LIVE AT CANTERBURY HOUSE – 1967 (1,500 copies on 180-gram white vinyl) are available for pre-order now exclusively at store.jonimitchell.com. Any music product purchased on the official Joni Mitchell store comes with an exclusive 7”x7” art print honoring the launch of the archive series.

 

Through a wealth of unreleased live performances, home recordings, and radio broadcasts, ARCHIVES VOL. 1 brings into focus the period when Mitchell was finding her voice artistically. It shows her moving away from the folk standards of her early days (“John Hardy” and “House Of The Rising Sun”) and starting to write and sing her own songs (“Day After Day” and “Urge For Going.”)

ARCHIVES VOL. 1 reveals just how prolific a songwriter Mitchell was at the time. In addition to early versions of songs that would appear on Song To A Seagull (“Michael From Mountains” and “I Had A King”), the set also features songs destined for later albums: “Chelsea Morning”  “Both Sides Now” (Clouds, 1969); “The Circle Game” (Ladies of the Canyon, 1970); and “Little Green” (Blue, 1971).

More than a just historic document, these recordings crackle with energy thanks to a vibrant and enchanting Mitchell. On many, you can hear her tuning her guitar and telling a story about the song before playing it. That includes her rare 1967 cover of Neil Young’s “Sugar Mountain,” a song she says inspired her to write “The Circle Game.”

The 5-CD collection includes a 40-page booklet that features many unseen photos from Mitchell’s personal collection as well as new liner notes featuring conversations between writer/filmmaker Cameron Crowe and Mitchell, who recently spent a couple of Sunday afternoons together discussing her archives. Crowe will continue to provide liners for future releases in the series.

Liner notes for both vinyl releases were each composed by people who were in the room when the original performances were recorded. Barry Bowman was working as a DJ at radio station CFQC in 1963 and provides the notes for EARLY JONI. Bob Franke, who was covering Mitchell’s show at Canterbury House for the Michigan Daily while also moonlighting as a doorman at the club, pens the liners for LIVE AT CANTERBURY HOUSE. His original review for the Michigan Daily is also included.

Looking back, Mitchell reflects on her early label of “folk singer”: “The early stuff, I shouldn’t be such a snob against it. A lot of these songs, I just lost them. They fell away. They only exist in these recordings. For so long I rebelled against the term, ‘I was never a folk-singer.’ I would get pissed off if they put that label on me. I didn’t think it was a good description of what I was. And then I listened and…it was beautiful. It made me forgive my beginnings. And I had this realization…I was a folk singer!

JONI MITCHELL ARCHIVES VOL. 1: THE EARLY YEARS (1963 TO 1967)

Full Track Listing

Disc One

Radio Station CFQC AM, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada (ca. 1963)

  1. “House Of The Rising Sun”
  2. “John Hardy”
  3. “Dark As A Dungeon”
  4. “Tell Old Bill”
  5. “Nancy Whiskey”
  6. “Anathea”
  7. “Copper Kettle”
  8. “Fare Thee Well (Dink’s Song)”
  9. “Molly Malone”

Live at the Half Beat: Yorkville, Toronto, Canada (October 21, 1964)

First Set

  1. Introduction
  2. “Nancy Whiskey”
  3. Intro to “The Crow On The Cradle”
  4. “The Crow On The Cradle”
  5. “Pastures Of Plenty”
  6. “Every Night When The Sun Goes In”
  7. Intro to “Sail Away”
  8. “Sail Away”

Second Set

  1. “John Hardy”
  2. “Dark As A Dungeon”
  3. Intro to “Maids When You’re Young Never Wed An Old Man”
  4. “Maids When You’re Young Never Wed An Old Man”
  5. “The Dowie Dens Of Yarrow”
  6. “Deportee (Plane Crash At Los Gatos)”
  7. Joni’s Parents’ House: Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada (February 1965)
  8. “The Long Black Rifle”
  9. “Ten Thousand Miles”
  10. “Seven Daffodils”

Disc Two

Myrtle Anderson Birthday Tape: Detroit, MI (1965)

  1. “Urge For Going”
  2. “Born To Take The Highway”
  3. “Here Today And Gone Tomorrow”

Jac Holzman Demo: Detroit, MI (August 24, 1965)

  1. “What Will You Give Me”
  2. “Let It Be Me”
  3. “The Student Song”
  4. “Day After Day”
  5. “Like The Lonely Swallow”

Let’s Sing Out, CBC TV: University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, Canada (October 4, 1965)

  1. “Favorite Colour”
  2. “Me And My Uncle”

Home Demo: Detroit, MI (ca. 1966)

  1. “Sad Winds Blowin’”

Let’s Sing Out, CBC TV: Laurentian University, London, ON, Canada (October 24, 1966)

  1. “Just Like Me”
  2. “Night In The City”

Live at the 2nd Fret: Philadelphia, PA (November 1966)

  1. “Brandy Eyes”
  2. Intro to “Urge For Going”
  3. “Urge For Going”
  4. Intro to “What’s The Story Mr. Blue”
  5. “What’s The Story Mr. Blue”
  6. “Eastern Rain”
  7. Intro to “The Circle Game”
  8. “The Circle Game”
  9. Intro to “Night In The City”
  10. “Night In The City”

Disc Three

Folklore, WHAT FM: Philadelphia, PA, (March 12, 1967)

  1. Intro to “Both Sides Now”
  2. “Both Sides Now”
  3. Intro to “The Circle Game”
  4. “The Circle Game”

Live at the 2nd Fret: Philadelphia, PA (March 17, 1967)

Second Set

  1. “Morning Morgantown”
  2. “Born To Take The Highway”
  3. Intro to “Song To A Seagull”
  4. “Song To A Seagull”

Third Set

  1. “Winter Lady”
  2. Intro to “Both Sides Now”
  3. “Both Sides Now”

Folklore, WHAT FM: Philadelphia, PA (March 19, 1967)

  1. Intro to “Eastern Rain”
  2. “Eastern Rain”
  3. Intro to “Blue On Blue”
  4. “Blue On Blue”

“A Record Of My Changes” – Michael’s Birthday Tape: North Carolina (May 1967)

  1. “Gemini Twin”
  2. “Strawflower Me”
  3. “A Melody In Your Name”
  4. “Tin Angel”
  5. “I Don’t Know Where I Stand”
  6. Joni improvising

Folklore, WHAT FM: Philadelphia, PA (May 28, 1967)

  1. Intro to “Sugar Mountain”
  2. “Sugar Mountain”

Disc Four

Home Demo: New York City, NY (ca. June 1967)

  1. “I Had A King”
  2. “Free Darling”
  3. “Conversation”
  4. “Morning Morgantown”
  5. “Dr. Junk”
  6. “Gift Of The Magi”
  7. “Chelsea Morning”
  8. “Michael From Mountains”
  9. “Cara’s Castle”
  10. “Jeremy” (Incomplete)

Live at Canterbury House: Ann Arbor, MI (October 27, 1967)

First Set

  1. “Conversation”
  2. Intro to “Come To The Sunshine”
  3. “Come To The Sunshine”
  4. Intro to “Chelsea Morning”
  5. “Chelsea Morning”
  6. Intro to “Gift Of The Magi”
  7. “Gift Of The Magi”
  8. “Play Little David”
  9. Intro to “The Dowie Dens Of Yarrow”
  10. “The Dowie Dens Of Yarrow”
  11. “I Had A King”
  12. Intro to “Free Darling”
  13. “Free Darling”
  14. Intro to “Cactus Tree”
  15. “Cactus Tree”

Disc Five

Live at Canterbury House: Ann Arbor, MI (October 27, 1967)

Second Set

  1. “Little Green”
  2. Intro to “Marcie”
  3. “Marcie”
  4. Intro to “Ballerina Valerie”
  5. “Ballerina Valerie”
  6. “The Circle Game”
  7. Intro to “Michael From Mountains”
  8. “Michael From Mountains”
  9. “Go Tell The Drummer Man”
  10. Intro to “I Don’t Know Where I Stand”
  11. “I Don’t Know Where I Stand”

Third Set

  1. “A Melody In Your Name”
  2. Intro to “Carnival In Kenora”
  3. “Carnival In Kenora”
  4. “Songs To Aging Children Come”
  5. Intro to “Dr. Junk”
  6. “Dr. Junk”
  7. “Morning Morgantown”
  8. Intro to “Night In The City”
  9. “Night In The City”
  10. “Both Sides Now”
  11. “Urge For Going”

EARLY JONI – 1963

LP Track Listing

Side One

  1. “House Of The Rising Sun”
  2. “John Hardy”
  3. “Dark As A Dungeon”
  4. “Tell Old Bill”
  5. “Nancy Whiskey”

Side Two

  1. “Anathea”
  2. “Copper Kettle”
  3. “Fare Thee Well (Dink’s Song)”
  4. “Molly Malone”

LIVE AT CANTERBURY HOUSE – 1967

3LP Track Listing

Side One: First Set

  1. “Conversation”
  2. Intro to “Come To The Sunshine”
  3. “Come To The Sunshine”
  4. Intro to “Chelsea Morning”
  5. “Chelsea Morning”
  6. Intro to “Gift Of The Magi”
  7. “Gift Of The Magi”

Side Two

  1. “Play Little David”
  2. Intro to “The Dowy Dens Of Yarrow”
  3. “The Dowy Dens Of Yarrow”
  4. “I Had A King”
  5. Intro to “Free Darling”
  6. “Free Darling”
  7. Intro to “Cactus Tree”
  8. “Cactus Tree”

Side Three: Second Set

  1. “Little Green”
  2. Intro to “Marcie”
  3. “Marcie”
  4. Intro to “Ballerina Valerie”
  5. “Ballerina Valerie”
  6. “The Circle Game”

Side Four

  1. Intro to “Michael From Mountains”
  2. “Michael From Mountains”
  3. “Go Tell The Drummer Man”
  4. Intro to “I Don’t Know Where I Stand”
  5. “I Don’t Know Where I Stand”

Side Five: Third Set

  1. “A Melody In Your Name”
  2. Intro to “Carnival In Kenora”
  3. “Carnival In Kenora”
  4. “Songs To Aging Children Come”
  5. Intro to “Dr. Junk”
  6. “Dr. Junk”

Side Six

  1. “Morning Morgantown”
  2. Intro to “Night In The City”
  3. “Night In The City”
  4. “Both Sides Now”
  5. “Urge For Going”

 

Registration Now Open for CIMA and Indie Week’s Online Live Mentorship Program

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CIMA and Indie Week have partnered to present an online live mentorship program in October which will run for four weeks with a focus on becoming “Export and Business Ready”.

Over a total of 8 sessions participants will get the opportunity to:

• Learn how to pitch their company and artists to international delegates

• Learn how to compile all the appropriate assets

• Learn about and how to access different markets

• Understanding Metadata in markets

• Tune Up your Social Media

Each week participants will be given a tasks to complete and at the end of these sessions will be evaluated and will receive feedback.

***This opportunity is available to 40 CIMA members (20 artist-entrepreneurs and 20 companies) as well as 20 non-CIMA members (10 artist-entrepreneurs and 10 companies). CIMA Member fee will be $50, non-members, $75.

Attendees will also receive a free full conference pass to Indie Week Canada online 2020 in which they can participate in all of Indie Week’s programming as well as a Digital Swag Bag with a value of over $100.

Register here.

From Zappa To ZZ Top: Does The “Z” Have To Do With The Beards?

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Put Frank Zappa and ZZ Top in one picture. What you will have is a lot of beards in one picture. These artists made a name for themselves with their craft and their facial hair. But was there a time that these beards influenced their music? 

A Little About Frank Zappa

Not many artists can keep up with the workaholic Frank Zappa in delivering his craft. Frank had a 30-year music career and in that period, he released 60 albums. 

Frank Zappa’s road to success was not an easy one. It was filled with setbacks and years of little or no rewards. Before his breakthrough into the limelight, Frank Zappa had to leave his boyhood band, The Blackouts, to join The Soul Giants. After Frank joined his latest band, the name mutated into The Mothers on Mother’s Day. There, he recorded some measure of success, but it was still nothing to be compared with the success he enjoyed later in his career. Even then, it took the inclusion of Herb Cohen, who already had a remarkable history in music, to revamp the band.

Their first release was a double album, Freak Out, in 1966. It was this album that influenced The Beatles’ hit song, Sgt. Pepper Lonely Hearts Club Band. After this double album, the group grew in popularity until 1971 when it experienced some major setbacks, one of which affected Frank Zappa’s health. He fell from the stage during one of his performances and sustained serious injuries. And no. He was not high on drugs or anything. In fact, his resistance to drugs was one reason he left the band. But the injuries he had from the fall doomed him to a lifetime of back pain and left him with a crushed larynx.

Beard Influence In His Songs

One thing Frank Zappa had was what we can call one of the most outstanding beards of all time. You could never have this kind of beard and mix in with the crowd. Frank kept a thick moustache that framed his upper lips in a neatly trimmed fashion. His lower lip was not to be without support in the form of beards as the musician kept a thick rectangular patch of hair right under his lower lip.

His unique facial hairstyle lived on long after the artist died in 1993. You could even argue that his signature look outlived his songs. Today, there are still a lot of people who sport the Frank Zappa beard.

A Little About ZZ Top

ZZ Top was a band that comprised three artists, Billy Gibbons, Dusty Hill, and Frank Beard. Billy handled the guitar, Dusty did the bass, and Frank was the man on the drums. And with those three instruments, the trio ruled the worlds of rock-and-roll and blues throughout their time in the limelight, which lasted from the 70s to the mid-80s.

One thing the band was known for was its creativity in the way it delivered its songs and its videos. Its songs always stood out from the songs of other bands, and you could say that was what its fans loved about it. They never knew what was coming, but they were sure that whatever it was would blow their minds.

ZZ Top released its first album in 1970 and that was when they turned the ears of listeners towards themselves. However, what established the band was the hit single, La Grange in 1973. The song made its way to the top 20 on Billboard singles chart. Since then, ZZ Top went ahead to be a household name.

The year 1983 came, and the band released another album, Eliminator. This album was one of the most successful albums from ZZ Top, going ahead to sell 10 million copies all over the world. The band may not be as popular as it used to be, but it established its legacy in 2004 when it made it into the Rock-and-roll Hall of Fame.

Beard Influence In Their Songs

Music was not the only thing that made ZZ Top stand out in its time. Whenever you looked at the images of the trio, one thing that always stood out was the enormous beards hanging down the faces of two of the artists, Gibbons and Dusty. Ironically, Frank Beard was the only one of the three who didn’t have any beards. He, however, made up for the slack of beards with a well-trimmed moustache. 

The beards were so iconic that they could have been worth a million dollars if only the group had agreed to cut it off. Gillette, a renowned manufacturer of shaver products offered the bearded men that enormous amount of money if they would agree to shave it off for an advert. They refused. 

“No dice,” Gibbons disclosed in an interview with Bravewords.com. “Even adjusted for inflation, this isn’t going to fly. The prospect of seeing oneself in the mirror clean-shaven is too close to a Vincent Price film…a prospect not to be contemplated, no matter the compensation.”

If the beards were worth that much, you may then begin to wonder about the story behind them. The men revealed the secret when they described that they had both grown the beards coincidentally without planning it. After a long break in which the artists had limited contact with one another, the group returned to continue its music.

Tom Vickers, a music journalist, wrote that “[The manager] called a band meeting, and when the three members arrived, they noticed something had changed during their time apart. They had always had some form of facial hair, with Frank usually sporting a moustache, while Billy and Dusty had scruffy little beards no more than an inch or two long.”

“I walk into the room, and I’m lookin’ at a guy I think I know,” Gibbons said after the group re-converged. “My beard has grown to doormat proportions. And I realize that Dusty had done the same thing.”

“Z” for Beards?

Nope. While there aren’t many pictures of a time when Frank Zappa was without his trademark beards, ZZ Top already formed the band name long before the beards came. So, it wasn’t the beards that influenced the names or the arts of the artists. However, it makes a lot of sense to say that the beards of these artists formed important parts of their brands. I mean, these beards were celebrities living on the faces of celebrities!

 

Indie Weekly Free Online Panel: The Power of Online Radio – The ‘How To’ Session for Media, Radio and More

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Learn how to increase your online fanbase, followers, streams, and other opportunities through online radio! There are thousands of fans tuning in and listening from around the world – and they could be YOUR FANS!

Cashbox Radio has assembled a diverse panel from Sweden, Spain, Colombia and Canada with backgrounds in online radio, magazine, network TV, and artist management!
Industry Professionals discuss the new importance and value of online radio and media exposure on a global level.

Speakers are the fab Sandy Graham (Cashbox Radio / Cashbox Magazine), Peter Astedt (Cashbox Radio / Future Echoes), Grace Puluczek (Cashbox Radio / Three Notes Management), and Hector Mora (Colombian National TV & Radio Public Network).

Register for free here.

The smoothest guitar switch ever!

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When Stevie Ray Vaughan’s guitar tech used to change tires at NASCAR.

https://youtu.be/JIFdMbhCa94

Mood Mix With Senator Kamala Harris

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From a song that she needs to hear at a cookout to the track that reminds her of her college days at Howard, this Senator Kamala Harris’ Mood Mix.

My Next Read: How to Write One Song: Loving the Things We Create and How They Love Us Back by Jeff Tweedy

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There are few creative acts more mysterious and magical than writing a song. But what if the goal wasn’t so mysterious and was actually achievable for anyone who wants to experience more magic and creativity in their life? That’s something that anyone will be inspired to do after reading Jeff Tweedy’s How to Write One Song, out October 13.

Why one song? Because the difference between one song and many songs isn’t a cute semantic trick—it’s an important distinction that can simplify a notoriously confusing art form. The idea of becoming a capital-S songwriter can seem daunting, but approached as a focused, self-contained event, the mystery and fear subsides, and songwriting becomes an exciting pursuit.

And then there is the energizing, nourishing creativity that can open up. How to Write One Song brings readers into the intimate process of writing one song—lyrics, music, and putting it all together—and accesses the deep sense of wonder that remains at the heart of this curious, yet incredibly fulfilling, artistic act. But it’s equally about the importance of making creativity part of your life every day, and of experiencing the hope, inspiration, and joy available to anyone who’s willing to get started.