Blog Post

Catching The Flow With Ben Harper And Friends

Award-winning multi- instrumentalist singer, songwriter, composer, producer Ben Harper has enjoyed a career spanning over four decades, with studio and live work presenting a dynamic range of genres, from true Americana folk to deep reggae. Harper began his career in the ‘80s as a teenager, playing slide guitar in the style of blues legend Robert Johnson. His first touring gig was with another blues legend, Taj Mahal. His first solo record, Welcome To The Cruel World, was released on Virgin Records in 1994. In 2020, Harper delivered a true solo album, Winter Is For Lovers, that he’s recently followed up…
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Marc Ribler: The Daily Vault Interview

A veteran of the rock ‘n’ roll industry, singer/songwriter/guitarist/producer Marc Ribler has shared the stage with the likes of Steven Van Zandt, Bruce Springsteen, Paul McCartney, Elvis Costello, and many more. His career began in the mid ’80s with the band Nightflyer. Their minor success opened the door to opportunities including opening for Sam & Dave, Sly And The Family Stone, and Rick Danko of The Band. Marc then settled into a rewarding career in the ’90s as a songwriter for RCA. His songs have charted in the Billboard Top 100, the American Top 40, as well as in Canada…
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Harry Chapin: When In Doubt, Do Something

Harry Chapin was one of the cheesiest, most pretentious singer/songwriters of the ‘70s but damn if he wasn’t one of my favorites. His song about the University of Texas sniper Charles Whitman is one of the best songs ever written. It’s high time that a full documentary has been made to honor his memory. 2021 will mark the 40th anniversary of his passing and this movie is the first full-length celebration of his talents. Unfortunately, it’s only half decent and I found myself thinking more and more about the VH1 Behind The Music that was made in the early 2000s.…
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2020: The Power Of Music

In the middle of a year that redefined the term “rolling disaster,” the world’s musical artists came through in a big way. Yes, by and large 2020 suuuuuuuucked—but the music didn’t. To the contrary, a number of artists stepped up to deliver some of their most pointed and poignant work ever, a testament to the power of music to engage and inspire, and the power of artists to transmute human experience into stories rich with meaning and resonance. Context Matters Award The Chicks – GaslighterThis long-awaited, somewhat uneven return might not make my top five albums of the year, but…
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2020: There Will Be Better Days

It’s been a year of losses, the profound ones and the small ones. It’s been a year of narrowing, of redistributing the weight of our lives. It was the year my dog and cat became my most valuable colleagues (and at the very least, it’s been the best year of their furry little existences). A year of long walks, finding pleasure and presence in the way the light refracted on the Hudson River, letting the water work its magic. I spent three months watching a family of ducklings in the pond near my apartment, counting the nine tiny puffs of…
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2020: Tom’s Top Ten

I was pleasantly surprised by the amount of great music that came out in 2020. I was also able to spend much more time listening to music this year than in previous years. Of course, when your work closes down for four months, that helps quite a bit. Here's my most visited albums from the year in no particular order, except Bob Mould; I played that one the most by far and consider it the best record of the year.Bob Mould – Blue HeartsToday's political climate has given Mould plenty of fodder for his bristling guitar-fueled anthems, where the intensity…
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All I Can Say

When the opening moments of a documentary about the tragic end of Blind Melon singer Shannon Hoon shows him in his hotel room talking to his girlfriend hours before he dies on a tour bus of a cocaine overdose, you know you’re in for a hell of a ride. Culled from hours of footage personally shot by Hoon over the last 10 years or so of his life before his death in 1995, the film chronicles the complete rise, fall, and demise of not only Blind Melon’s career but Hoon as a person as well. Being such a huge Melon…
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Becky Warren: The Daily Vault Interview

 Becky Warren the singer-songwriter is a whip-smart, take-no-prisoners, reflexively charismatic performer with a novelist’s eye and a rock and roller’s heart. Her music, whether you cast it as Americana or alt-country or “catchy, guitar-driven rock” (her words), is filled with memorable characters and addictive hooks, penetrating lyrics and self-deprecating humor.Becky Warren the person is both very much the same and completely different. Genuinely modest about her prodigious talents, she is also speaking publicly for the first time this year about a personal struggle with depression that has now lasted more than half her life. After a pair of albums fronting…
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Jean-Paul Vest of Last Charge Of The Light Horse: The Daily Vault Interview (2020)

 Jean-Paul Vest (Photo credit: Dustin Finn)The Sand Reckoner is the fifth studio album (plus one EP) from Last Charge Of The Light Horse, the vehicle for the music of songwriter Jean-Paul Vest. A native Texan long since transplanted to Long Island, New York, Vest’s painstakingly crafted songs combine the poetic intensity of Richard Thompson, the melodic intuition of George Harrison, the fearless complexity of XTC, and the willful experimentalism of Radiohead. Influences aside, though, Vest’s work is thoroughly original, each song a thoughtfully constructed statement, often both visceral and evocative.The new album is Vest’s fourth collaboration with Grammy-winning Los Angeles…
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Tied To The Whippin’ Post

When you think “Southern rock” or “’70s rock,” many bands may come to mind, but there was one who led the charge directly out of Macon, Georgia: The Allman Brothers Band. Founded by guitarist Duane Allman and his brother Gregg on keyboards and vocals, their two-guitar, two-drum sonic attack rewrote the rules for rock music, and despite numerous tragedies afflicting the band, they somehow managed to keep the music going up until Gregg Allman’s death in 2017. The Allman Brothers Band’s discography is vast, having provided listeners with nearly 50 years of music. But, unlike many other “worst to first”…
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