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My Band Had Another Show Tonight

Juice Box

Diamond Member
The Last show rocked big time, we are gonna rock even more tonight, longer set and more timre to prepare....

The Band name is Doppelganger

Heres the set:

Tenacious D- Wonderboy
Bad Religion- Don't Sell Me Short
The Darkness- Get Your Hands Off My Woman
The Mars Volta- Son Et. Luminere into Inertiatic E.S.P.
Cream- Sunshine of your Love
An Original our Lead Guitarist Wrote
Jimmy Hendrix- Voodoo Child
Biscuit Man (The very first song the band wrote..... it is interesting)

we are recording the show, and Ill post the video later on once I get it uploaded. we'll have pics this evening for sure.... I think itll go really well!
 
http://www.music.msn.com/artist/?artist=16073199

For about six years, from 1968 through 1975, the Band was one of the most popular and influential rock groups in the world, their music embraced by critics (and, to a somewhat lesser degree, the public) as seriously as the music of the Beatles and the Rolling Stones. Their albums were analyzed and reviewed as intensely as any records by their one-time employer and sometime mentor Bob Dylan. And for a long time, their personalities were as recognizable individually to the casual music public as the members of the Beatles.
The group's history went back nearly as far as the Beatles, to 1958 (just about the time that the formative Beatles gave up skiffle for rock & roll). Ronnie Hawkins, an Arkansas-born rock & roller who aspired to a real career, put together a backing band that year that included his fellow Arkansan Levon Helm (born May 26, 1942), who played drums (as well as credible guitar) and had led his own band, the Jungle Bush Beaters. The new outfit, Ronnie Hawkins & the Hawks, was recording by the spring of 1958 and gigged throughout the south and also up in Ontario, Canada, where the money was better than in their native American south. It was the fact of being based in Canada late in 1959, coupled with pianist Willard Jones leaving the lineup, that got Hawkins to start looking at some of the local music talent in Toronto; Hawkins approached a musician named Scott Cushnie about joining the Hawks on keyboards. Cushnie was already playing in a band with Robbie Robertson (born in 1944), however, and would only join Hawkins if he came along.

 
Originally posted by: cavemanmoron
http://www.music.msn.com/artist/?artist=16073199

For about six years, from 1968 through 1975, the Band was one of the most popular and influential rock groups in the world, their music embraced by critics (and, to a somewhat lesser degree, the public) as seriously as the music of the Beatles and the Rolling Stones. Their albums were analyzed and reviewed as intensely as any records by their one-time employer and sometime mentor Bob Dylan. And for a long time, their personalities were as recognizable individually to the casual music public as the members of the Beatles.
The group's history went back nearly as far as the Beatles, to 1958 (just about the time that the formative Beatles gave up skiffle for rock & roll). Ronnie Hawkins, an Arkansas-born rock & roller who aspired to a real career, put together a backing band that year that included his fellow Arkansan Levon Helm (born May 26, 1942), who played drums (as well as credible guitar) and had led his own band, the Jungle Bush Beaters. The new outfit, Ronnie Hawkins & the Hawks, was recording by the spring of 1958 and gigged throughout the south and also up in Ontario, Canada, where the money was better than in their native American south. It was the fact of being based in Canada late in 1959, coupled with pianist Willard Jones leaving the lineup, that got Hawkins to start looking at some of the local music talent in Toronto; Hawkins approached a musician named Scott Cushnie about joining the Hawks on keyboards. Cushnie was already playing in a band with Robbie Robertson (born in 1944), however, and would only join Hawkins if he came along.
lol

 
Originally posted by: tjaisv
there was a rock group called The Band?

Song Title Time Album Title Rating Price


The Weight
4:33 Greatest Hits


Up On Cripple Creek
4:34 The Band (Remastered)
Album only

The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down
3:32 Greatest Hits


Up On Cripple Creek
4:31 Greatest Hits


The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down
3:33 The Band (Remastered)


The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down...
4:16 The Band (Remastered)


I Shall Be Released
3:11 Greatest Hits


 
Good luck, and here's hoping you've got a better photographer this time 😉
Gotta work 21st Century Digital Boy into the set one of these days, though
 
Update: The SHow sucked.... It wasnt even funny. THe 2 guitarists had a little fight during the pre-show practice and the lead got new strings so he got WAY out of tune after EVERY song..... we looked like morons up there..... and then the backup guitarist is all like "I didnt really like any of the songs we chose to play" and im like WTF, why didnt you say that th BEGIN WITH??? I dont know whats gonna happen...I mean, it wasnt TERRIBLE, but it was def not good..... Ill post pics/video tomorrow
 
Originally posted by: digitalsnare
Update: The SHow sucked.... It wasnt even funny. THe 2 guitarists had a little fight during the pre-show practice and the lead got new strings so he got WAY out of tune after EVERY song..... we looked like morons up there..... and then the backup guitarist is all like "I didnt really like any of the songs we chose to play" and im like WTF, why didnt you say that th BEGIN WITH??? I dont know whats gonna happen...I mean, it wasnt TERRIBLE, but it was def not good..... Ill post pics/video tomorrow
That sucks, I'm sorry to hear... 🙁

Having said that, I've never played with anyone else in front of a lot of people, so I can't really comprehend how hard it is. I'm looking forward to the pics and/or video anyway. 🙂
 
yeah, like everyone that said theyd be there for us didnt show up, so we were forced to paly for a bunch of emo goth kids who were complete dumbasses there to see this hardcore Scream-O band..... not good at all...
 
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