Dylan and the Dead reunite! Well, not really, but His Bobness and the
not-dead-yet members of Jerry's old band are keeping strangely similar
schedules these days. In fact, you might even say the Other Ones are
shadowing Bob Dylan. Zimmy (as rock snobs like us call him),
who's been covering songs by Neil Young ("Old Man") and ailing Warren Zevon
("Mutineer") of late, brings his Never Ending Tour to the FleetCenter
(617-931-2000) in Boston on Saturday, then heads south to the Insurance Capital
of the World for a show at the Hartford Civic Center (617-931-2000) on Sunday.
He'll also hit the University of Rhode Island's Ryan Center (617-931-2000) on
Wednesday.
Meanwhile, the Other Ones, who've been covering songs by the Grateful Dead of
late, hit the FleetCenter (617-931-2000) for a two-night stand starting Monday,
a mere 48 hours after Dylan has left the building. Then next Friday, November
22, they too play the Hartford Civic Center ((617-931-2000). What's that
Emerson used to say about foolish consistency?
Groovesters who haven't gotten their fill of good vibes from hoary renditions
of "Estimated Prophet" and "Cryptical Envelopment" also might want to noodle on
down to any one of the shows put on by Galactic, who are traveling light
years across New England this week playing their joky Nawlins jazz funk in
many, many nightclubs. They're at Lupo's (617-931-2000) in Providence on
Saturday, the Roxy (617-931-2000) in Boston on Sunday, Pearl Street
(413-584-7771) in Northampton on Tuesday, the Higher Ground (617-931-2000) in
Winooski, Vermont, on Wednesday and Toad's Place (617-931-2000) in New Haven on
Thursday. At the Roxy Show, artists SKW and Doze will create a live mural as
the band perform.
On his new Mundo, salsa savior Rubén Blades adds more
ingredients to his already piquant recipe. A record that incorporates musical
idioms and instruments from the world over into his trademark Spanish-language
soul, Mundo features bagpipes, didgeridoo, and a Celtic-Afro-Cuban
version of "Danny Boy." The second-place finisher in the 1994 Panamanian
presidential election plays the Garde Arts Center (860-444-7373) in New London
on Saturday and then the Berklee Performance Center (617-931-2000) right here
in Boston on Sunday.
And Luciano is in town this week. No, not Pavarotti. Different guy. This
one is a thick-dreadlocked songster from Davey Town, Jamaica, who's a superstar
in his homeland thanks to his uplifting and intensely spiritual brand of
reggae. He loves life, he lives for performing, and his live shows are said to
be near-transcendent experiences. Luciano bestows his benison on the Paradise
(617-423-NEXT) in Boston tonight (Thursday the 14th), Lupo's (617-931-2000) on
Monday, and the Higher Ground (617-931-2000) on Tuesday.
Finally, doll-faced 24-year-old singer-songwriter Erin McKeown has put
an end to a year without a headline performance: she's undertaking a tour of
the eastern half of the United States that will bring her and her wistful,
winking multi-instrumental folk acousticisms to Arlington's Regent Theatre
(781-646-4849) on Friday, the Met Café in Providence (617-931-2000) on
Saturday, and the Iron Horse in Northampton (413-586-8686) next Friday, the
22nd.
Issue Date: November 15 - 21, 2002
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