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EGB (Evan Goodrow Band)



Last Updated: 12/22/2009

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Status: Single
City: CAMBRIDGE
Country: US
Signup Date: 2/21/2005

Blog Archive
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Friday, July 17, 2009 
Thought you all might like a heads up...
On the show this Friday night...
HARVARD SQUARE (Cambridge MA), EGB all night long, hope you can make it!  
Love!  E




Monday, June 15, 2009 
Mark your calendars!  EGB with Los Lonely Boys, Friday July 10th, 2009, 
LOWELL SUMMER MUSIC SERIES
For Tickets and more information, go HERE



Thursday, May 21, 2009 


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nDzz1gFSivs

Here you go, check out minute 8.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009 

This is an article that appeared in the Vermont Herald on April 2nd, 2009, thought you all might enjoy it.
E

By CLARA ROSE THORNTON Herald Correspondent - Published: April 2, 2009

Although southern Vermont has a vibrant music scene, by percentage it can be somewhat limited to similar, Eurocentric genres: folk, roots rock, hard rock. And of course, there are classic evenings of contra and New England fiddlers. It is rare that down-home, messy, slinky soul music finds its way to this trickle of the Appalachian Range.

Though Vermont is statistically both the second least populous and second least ethnically diverse state in the Union, musical energy does not have to suffer proportionately. Through fresh circulation of and open ears toward global sounds — as well as those of American pop music's back porch — Vermont can creep toward the wild diversity needed in entertainment to maintain that distinct hum of bluesy deference.

A way to begin with good marks on a "Vermont dirty soul music" report card is with the Evan Goodrow Band (EGB) this Saturday at the Latchis Theater in Brattleboro. Evan Goodrow and his trio of bluesy, funky, old-soul aficionados answered a call to bring a little "shake" to the hills.

Hailed by blues-circuit partner B.B. King as "exceptional," young Boston-based guitarist and vocalist Evan Goodrow is not exactly from the Delta, but his sense of the rawness of expression at the root of soul is evident.

"I would have to say that the essence of blues and soul music is specifically about feeling," said Goodrow in an early-morning interview from his hotel room in Miami. "I think there's something genuine about it, a certain honesty in expression that makes blues and soul good. I don't always see that honesty in pop music."

As a child Goodrow was steeped in the sounds of Ray Charles and Solomon Burke, then integrated a passion for Jimi Hendrix's electric mayhem into his burgeoning style. He pursued formal jazz training in Boston, though quickly took to the streets of the college town's underground cafés and clubs instead, honing an unidentified hybrid sound that would aptly become described, simply, as modern soul.

"If you're playing to jazz or blues purists that means you're recreating," Goodrow said. "And once you're recreating, you can't be creating and recreating at the same time. When you play something that's resurfacing a style or a genre — something that's already happened — you're actually making it worse. Because you can't necessarily make it better than it was. So the only way to make it relevant is to do something else with it — try to bring it to the next step. I think you pay homage to the musicians who come before you not by recreating their work but by creating new pieces that are inspired by them."

While opening for legend Buddy Guy in Lowell, Mass., last year, EGB was "discovered" by Gail Nunziata of the Brattleboro Arts Initiative and Latchis Theater, who decided that bringing him to southern Vermont was an imperative. Currently EGB is touring as a trio with drummer Phil Antoniades and keyboardist John Cooke, downsized from their previously robust four-piece.

Goodrow feels that the stripped-down aesthetic allows for less of a veil, less cushion for extravagance. There's "an honesty. It's that thing again about blues, soul and jazz. There's something so honest in it that I love. And I think that's what makes music timeless."


Tuesday, April 07, 2009 


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2JKxB3hVDpo

New song "Lover" done live onstage in Springfield MA.

Tuesday, April 07, 2009 

Relative Fun Facts about the BBShow.

1)      This will be the fourth time the band has played the North Shore Music Theater’s

       “spinning” stage.

2)      When B.B. was my age he was barely making a dollar per day picking cotton. 

3)      The first song that I recorded on my first CD (Red) was Little Willie John’s “Need your love so bad” and was inspired by B.B.’s 1964 version (that I first heard at 12).

4)      B.B., now 84, has cut his touring dates from 250 to 150 per year citing health reasons. 

5)      EGB Keyboard player John Cooke peed his pants when he heard about the show.

Monday, February 23, 2009 
Right up there with Eric Clapton, Steve Winwood, the Fray, Jennifer Hudson...
yeah!
http://officialfanclub.net/
Saturday, February 07, 2009 


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-nAQqXtCGhg

Rockin' the Casino in Verona NY! This is the new version of "Find My Way Back Home" (on the upcoming recording)

Monday, February 02, 2009 
http://www.youtube.com/user/evangoodrow
Wednesday, January 21, 2009 



 

Another casualty of the current economic storm, The NSMT closed it's doors after 55 years. 

EGBLIVE is a recording from the show we did with Peter Frampton and the entire record can be downloaded off our website store for $2.99 till Saturday.

Songlist:
1. Girls Dance With Girls
2. And You're Gone
3. It's Probably Me
4. You, You, You
5. Find My Way Back Home (slow and long version)
6. Sexy Lady 

Enjoy!
Evan