Rockford Has Many Great Places To Enjoy Live Music Outside q985online.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from q985online.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
There is almost nothing I enjoy more than live music. As a fan, and a musician, I could not be more excited to have live music back as an option for a night out.
When chatting with friends about doing something fun this weekend, it s hard to come up with something to do that doesn t involve some sort of covid-related modification. Masks, social distancing, I m ok with having to do all of that and more, in order to do some of the things I love doing. There s just nothing like watching a band hit that sweet-spot in their set, live and in-person.
America s Got Talent alum, New Bedford local to sing Broadway virtually southcoasttoday.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from southcoasttoday.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Teen Fair The West Side Sound, which blended R&B and Latin influences, for example, was largely captured by Abie Epstein and his studio at 735 North General McMullen Dr. Epstein cut more than 900 45 rpm singles, many of which were recently reissued by Chicago’s influential Numero Group label. While he’s best remembered for his West Side soul releases, the studio owner also had an impact on the city’s garage scene, recording many of its best singles, including releases by the Mind’s Eye, the Argyles, and Robb London and the Rogues. Epstein was a force of nature on the city’s Hispanic West Side, but the focus of the garage rock scene lay primarily on the city’s largely Anglo Northern stretch. The undisputed impresario of that music scene was the visionary Sam Kinsey and his Teen Canteen. As a record shop owner, Kinsey had his ear to the ground. Although a few years older than his patrons, he was among the first people locally to recognize to recognize an explosi
NEW BEDFORD Student teacher by day and inspiring musical artist by night, Eric Santos (more popularly known as Ewreckage), has been climbing the charts all over the world with his music.
“I always consider myself a musical artist,” Santos, a 21-year-old New Bedford native, said. “Because I’m not a musician, per say. I don’t sing or produce that much… It’s all my ideas but embodied within the work.”
While studying English at Bridgewater State, Santos released his album “Eccentric” which has now charted at #1 in Portugal and India, #2 in Mongolia and #3 in the Philippines. Recently, he was awarded ‘Album of the Year’ by The Los Angeles Tribune.