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Top Country Stars
THE WEEK AHEAD: TEN THINGS TO DO TODAY?S TOP 10 EVENTS (Kansas City Star) There will be tender barbecue at the Royal (see cover) and just plain Tenderloin at Davey?s Uptown Rambler?s Club on Main. For two nights the band that took Kansas City rock international for a little while will hold a reunion there. Tickets cost $12 to the shows Friday and Saturday night. See ticketmaster.com (and Thursday?s Preview section) for more information. The wide open spaces infuse Bill Frisell's sound (Denver Post) When listening to one of the hundreds of recordings featuring guitarist Bill Frisell as a leader or a sideman, it's easy to visualize the expansiveness of the West and Colorado, Boomer or bust? (San Diego Union-Tribune) Oct. 5 (UNION-TRIBUNE): David Wells is finally getting what he always wanted. Evidently, what Mick Jagger wanted, too. Now he has to get what he needs. What the Padres need desperately. Even with the perfect game he threw at Yankee Stadium ? a specialty of Point Loma High alums ? Wells' résumé is most impressive when it comes to the postseason. Until today, though, the only relevance that had to Events Calendar (Oct. 5, 2006) (Bureau County Republican) PRINCETON ? The Perry Memorial Hospital Auxiliary will hold a book fair from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday, Oct. 6, in the north lobby of the hospital. PRINCETON ? The Perry Memorial Hospital Auxiliary will hold a bake sale from 7 a.m. to noon Friday, Oct. 6, in the north lobby of the hospital. Town & Country (Seattle Weekly) Oakley Hall steer clear of the alt. country tag. Local news briefs (Pensacola News Journal) The PATS Center will have an open house from 5:30 to 7 p.m. Monday at Brentwood Middle School, 201 E. Hancock Lane, for all parents of PATS students, teachers and staff members of district, charter, private and home schools. POP MUSIC REVIEW: Stones roll despite cold, rain (Lexington Herald-Leader) Well, what did you expect by staging a massive outdoor concert at the end of September? For last night's sold-out performance at the seemingly unlikely locale of Churchill Downs by the Rolling Stones -- the iconic British rock band's first Kentucky performance in 17 years -- you got Bluegrass weather at its most infamous: steady rain and pervasive cold. Globetrotting Stones roll in (Newsday) The Rolling Stones put themselves on autopilot for about half their two-hour show Wednesday, but the sold-out crowd of 48,000 wasn't complaining. When your drummer is 65 and your guitarist recently underwent brain surgery; when you've been circling the globe nearly nonstop since August 2005; and when you're playing your sixth concert in the New York area on a single tour, an off night seems No moss grows on these guys (The Star-Ledger) By all known laws of biology, the Rolling Stones should be slowing down. After 30 years: 'Satisfaction' (Louisville Courier-Journal) Upon entering the United Center an amazing feeling of excitement and relief swept over me. There was also this incredible sense of redemption! I was FINALLY about to witness a performance by one of the greatest rock and roll bands of all time. Newsfeed display by CaRP |