Ticket Update
Ronnie Earl – SOLD OUT
Marshall Tucker Band – SOLD OUT
Martin Sexton SOLD OUT
Dave Mason Only 3 tickets remain!
The Stompers – SOLD OUT
Judy Collins – SOLD OUT
This Week
Thursday, December 10 WINTERBLOOM: Holiday Traditions Rearranged
Antje Duvekot, Meg Hutchinson, Anne Heaton, and Natalia Zuckerman are four great singer-songwriters touring the country. Come see what happens when they all come together for a night of music.
Friday, December 11 BELLEVUE CADILLAC
Jazz, Gospel, Blues and Soul in a swinging mix on top of Rock and Roll!
Bellevue Cadillac is celebrating its 16th year playing various stages around the world… Moscow, Russia… Shanghai, China (Olympic Opening Ceremonies) and all across the United States… You’ve heard Bellevue Cadillac’s music in major motion pictures like Shallow Hal, and numerous TV shows including The Sopranos, Brotherhood, Crossing Jordan, Las Vegas, Ed, Sex and the City, Touched by an Angel, Brimstone, Good and Evil, Promised Land, and All My Children. Bellevue Cadillac performances have been seen on Access Hollywood, CNN Showbiz, Hard Copy, and VH1.There have also been numerous positive reviews throughout the years in Rolling Stone, Jazziz, Blues Review, and People magazines.
Saturday, December 12 RONNIE EARL
This show is SOLD OUT.
New Bookings
Friday, January 22 EDDIE MONEY
Eddie Money is an American rock singer-songwriter who found success in the 1970s and 1980s with a string of Top 40 hits and platinum albums. In the 1970s, he charted with singles such as “Baby Hold On” and “Two Tickets to Paradise”. Money continued his successes and took advantage of the MTV music video scene in the early 1980s with his humorous narrative videos for “Shakin’” and “Think I’m in Love”.
Two years later in 1986 he returned to the mainstream rock spotlight with the album Can’t Hold Back, which featured “Take Me Home Tonight”, which reached the Top 10, along with the hit “I Wanna Go Back”. Money followed the album with another Top 10 hit, late 1988′s “Walk on Water”, but his Top 40 career ended when “I’ll Get By” charted in 1992.
Saturday, February 20 PURE PRAIRIE LEAGUE
Pure Prairie League is an American country-rock band whose roots began between 1964 and 1969 in Waverly, Ohio with Craig Fuller, Tom McGrail, Jim Caughlan and John David Call. The band’s name was chosen in 1970 by McGrail after a 19th century temperance union mentioned in the 1939 film Dodge City. The band has had a long run, active from the 1970s through to the late 1980s and was reborn in the late 90s and again in the mid 2000s. Their biggest hit was “Amie” an iconic country rock song about an on and off again relationship.
Sunday, February 21 POCO
After rising in 1968 from the ashes of the Buffalo Springfield, Poco began infusing the L.A. folk/rock sound with their deep-rooted lyricism and the instrumentation of country music, a revelation and inspiration for the Eagles, Linda Ronstadt, Jackson Browne, and other future headliners. Legend, released late in 1978, became the best-selling LP in their history, earning a gold record in the course of rising to number 14. The accompanying single, the ethereal “Crazy Love” became their biggest hit ever, reaching number 17 on the pop charts (and number one as an adult contemporary hit).
February 28 MINDY SMITH
After years of refining her craft behind the scenes, Mindy arrived fully-formed with her 2004 critically acclaimed debut, One Moment More, and its hit single “Come to Jesus.” Long Island Shores (2006) garnered still more raves from the critics: “Smith’s best songs sound like little miracles,” crowed USA Today. The following year, she brought that same level of excellence to My Holiday, which the New York Times hailed as, a “—thoughtful collection from a great singer-songwriter who knows how to evoke the feeling of warm rooms on cold nights.”
Sunday, March 7 THE RADIATORS
The Radiators were born during a transitional decade in the history of New Orleans music. The Meters, the premier funk band, had disbanded, the Neville Brothers formed, and in 1980 Professor Longhair, the father of New Orleans R&B and spiritual embodiment of Crescent City Soul had passed on. This decade would prove to be the fertile period of development when a unique blend of rhythms and sounds came together and “Fish Head” music was born. The Radiators, an extremely eclectic group of musicians, rely on a myriad of musical influences to create their own sound – “Fish Head Music”. At a Radiators show it is not uncommon to hear blues, R&B, jazz, country, Zydeco, soul, swing, and even gospel filtering through their original New Orleans Rock N’ Roll.
Friday, April 16 JOAN OSBORNE
Her break-out album was Relish, which became a hit on the strength of the single “One of Us”. The song was much more pop-oriented than the rest of the album, which was steeped in country, blues and folk music. “Right Hand Man” and “St. Teresa” were minor hits following the success of “One of Us”.
Joan was featured in the 2002 documentary film, Standing in the Shadows of Motown, and toured with Motown sidemen the Funk Brothers. She and her band accompanied the Dixie Chicks for a national tour in the summer of 2003, during which time she also joined veteran San Francisco jam-rockers The Dead as a vocalist, and released her fourth album, titled How Sweet It Is, a collection of classic rock and soul covers..



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