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May

Junior Brown
+ Mike Farris
Friday, May 9th

DeVotchKa
+ Basia Bulat
Wednesday, May 14th

North Mississippi Allstars
+ Alvin Youngblood Hart
Friday, May 16th

Local Showcase
Saturday, May 17th

Presidents of the United States of America
Sunday, May 18th

MPAC Benefit Concert
Friday, May 23rd

She Wants Revenge
+ Be Your Own Pet, The Virgins & Switches
Saturday, May 24th

X
+ Detroit Cobras
Wednesday, May 28th

10 Years
+ Rev Theory & One Less Reason
Thursday, May 29th

Over The Rhine
+ Mary Gauthier
Friday, May 30th

Private Event
Saturday, May 31st

 

June

Railroad Earth
+ The Codetalkers
Wednesday, June 4th

Cross Canadian Ragweed
Saturday, June 7th

Matt Costa
+ Delta Spirit
Monday, June 9th

RED
Tuesday, June 10th

Rilo Kiley
+ Thao with the Get Down Stay Down & Benji Hughes
Wednesday, June 11th

The Breeders
+ Magic Wands
Thursday, June 12th

Robert Randolph's Revival
Friday, June 13th

Marc Broussard
+ Sons of William
Sunday, June 15th

Lizz Wright
Sunday, June 22nd
Just Announced

Eric Church
Thursday, June 26th

 

July

Del McCoury Band
Thursday, July 10th


 

March

May | June | July

The Dirtbombs

plus Kelley Stoltz
Monday, March 31st
9:00 PM (8:00 PM doors)
$10.00 advance / $12.00 door
Ages 18+


One of Mick Collins' many post-Gories projects, for years the Dirtbombs seemed to exist more in concept than in reality. As if in reaction to the bass-less sound of the Gories, the band brought together two drummers, two bass players, and Collins on vocals and guitar. And other than consistently loud volumes and lots of noise, the Dirtbombs actually had a surprisingly diverse sound, composing across a broad spectrum of styles from garage rock, punk, and glam, to classic soul and R&B. They began primarily as a 7" band, putting out five singles before Larry Hardy of In the Red convinced them to record a full-length, 1998's Horndog Fest. After another handful of singles the Dirtbombs released their sophomore album, Ultraglide in Black, in May 2001, a set devoted primarily to vintage R&B covers. The album won them a growing following in Europe, aided by frequent overseas touring (including a jaunt with the White Stripes). Collins and company returned to a tougher, more rock-oriented sound for 2003's Dangerous Magical Noise, and came back in 2005 on a split album with King Khan and his Shrines, Billiards at Nine Thirty. In May of that year In the Red put out If You Don't Already Have a Look, a double-CD, 52-track singles compilation that also featured six new songs. Though the band's relatively short lifespan had seen at least ten lineup shifts, by the point of Have a Look it had more or less solidified around Collins, drummers Ben Blackwell and Pat Pantano, and bassists Ko Shih and Troy Gregory.

 

 

Band WebsiteMyspace Page

May | June | July