If Sunday’s Dave Matthews Band show winds up being the group’s last they certainly went out on a high note.
Vermont jam act Phish ended their summer and this year’s Dick’s run with an extremely potent, all-killer no-filler affair in Denver.
There’s just one show left before biggest hiatus of Dave Matthews Band’s career. Here’s a look at Saturday’s show & news on TNT airing of Charlotteville concert.
We’ve reached the end of Gov’t Mule’s Smokin’ Mule Tour with Blackberry Smoke, but oh what a tour it was.
Jeff Tweedy & Wilco’s second of two shows in Seattle featured a special guest and a hand of bust outs.
On Saturday Phish did something they hadn’t done in 28 years to start the show and did something they’ve never done to end it at Dick’s Sporting Goods Park in Colorado.
The Dave Matthews Band kicked off their final post-hiatus run on Friday night with a little help from an old friend.
Vermont jam quartet Phish delivered one of the best second sets of the year and a jam in the first set to kick off this year’s Dick’s run in Colorado.
Through 18 shows Blackberry Smoke and Gov’t Mule have collaborated on different covers each night of the Smokin’ Mule Tour.
Watch highlights from the first Revolution concert in four years including a bevy of Prince classics.
Chicago rockers Wilco showed off a stripped-down setup and new stage design as part of bust out and debut-filled show in Boise.
Watch “Steve” Ween, aka Ween guitarist Mickey “Dean Ween” Melchiondo, sit-in with The Claypool Lennon Delirium.
Watch highlights from last night’s tribute to Rob Wasserman featuring Bob Weir & RatDog, Lukas Nelson, DJ Logic and Gov’t Mule.
Watch portions of last night’s Smokin’ Mule Tour encore featuring Gov’t Mule with members of Blackberry Smoke.
Watch Les Claypool honor Gene Wilder with “Pure Imagination” and Claypool Lennon Delirium jam on Primus with Yoko Ono at Irving Plaza.
On Tuesday night Gov’t Mule busted out covers by Neil Young, Al Green and Led Zeppelin in Saratoga, California as part of the Smokin’ Mule Tour.
It took over 80 minutes into the second longest concert of Bruce Springsteen’s career for him to play a song written after 1973.
After 25 years together, the Dave Matthews Band finally welcomed a member of the Grateful Dead to sit-in on Tuesday night.