Southside Johnny brings acoustic side project to Ramapo College in Mahwah


BY JIM BECKERMAN – The Record – Southside Johnny is trying something materially different. “Southside Johnny” Lyon and the Poor Fools aren’t afraid to mix things up. “Everybody’s playing all sorts of instru­ments,” the influential Shore rocker says. If you see them Friday, you can expect to hear an eclectic range of tunes, too. For a start: different material.

“Parchman Farm,” by Mose Allison, “Shiver Me Timbers,” by Tom Waits, and “Shim Sham Shimmy,” by Champion Jack Dupree, along with B-sides, lesser-known original tunes and others that are off the beaten track, are all liable to turn up on the set list of Southside Johnny and the Poor Fools. “This is mostly doing good songs that I don’t normally do,” says “Southside Johnny” Lyon. “We’re doing a mix of material. Including some pretty obscure things.” But a new songbook isn’t the only thing that makes this latest side project of Lyon, Jersey’s quintessential Shore rocker, different from his flagship brand, Southside Johnny & the Asbury Jukes.

Read the full article at: NorthJersey.com

Rep review: Southside Johnny, Jukes party at Ribs Burnoff

By Dan Kane CantonRep.com staff writer

It has been two hours-plus since Southside Johnny & the Asbury Jukes launched their TGIF party at the Pro Football Hall of Fame Ribs Burnoff, and they’re still tearing it up over there at the Stark County Fairgrounds. I can hear it through my open window as I’m typing this on deadline. What a good-time blowout!

Southside Johnny Lyon is 60 and, well, who cares? Age clearly is not slowing this born entertainer, who onstage is a whirlwind of rock ‘n’ roll, rhythm ‘n’ blues and soul inspiration, singing as if his very life depended on it and blowing a mean harmonica not often enough. Backed by a high-energy eight-piece band, Southside hit the stage like he was shot out of a cannon, singing “Shake ‘Em Down” to a racing tempo, with a guy pounding the piano and another wailing on sax. Things only built from there.

Read the full article on The Repository…

Bringing The Heat - Southside brings big sounds

By JEFF MIERS – THE BUFFALO NEWS – July 22, 2011, 12:00 AM

In the wake of Clarence Clemons’ death, Thursday’s Square/Wharf show with Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes took on added poignancy. You could feel the Big Man’s presence in the humid air at the Central Wharf throughout Thursday’s killer show — particularly during the elegiac, burning saxophone solos.

Led by Southside Johnny Lyon and anchored by one of the most smoking horn sections in the non-jazz world, the Jukes tore it up big time Thursday before a crowd that seemed to be undaunted by the heat wave. We danced, we sang along, we felt the fiery blend of soul, R&B and rock that is this seasoned band’s stock in trade and we left as sweaty and fulfilled as one imagines the band members themselves were.

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Shore towns serve up different styles of July 4th fun

(…) By 1 p.m. Saturday, fans in Asbury were already lining up at the Stone Pony for the evening’s annual Southside Johnny concert. Jersey rock legend “Southside Johnny” Lyon has been doing this Independence Day show at the Stone Pony for at least 10 years — and each year, just as faithfully, the fans return for a rockin’ Fourth. “This is a tradition for us,” said Linda Thebold of Wanaque, who was camping out outside the Pony with her husband Matt. “I do love Ocean Grove because of the great boardwalk, but it’s more like a family destination. I definitely prefer Southside on the Fourth of July.”…

Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes at Club Soda - June 28, 2011

The obvious question Tuesday night was: with Southside Johnny, Trombone Shorty and Bootsy Collins all in town, why were electro obscurities Misteur Valaire presiding over the big blowout?

Let’s at least consider the case of Southside Johnny Lyon for now. Leading a stellar set of Asbury Jukes into the groove with handclaps, assisted by the Club Soda audience, the New Jersey R&B singer immediately got in front of the four-on-the-floor beat and opened with Trapped Again, from his classic 1978 album Hearts of Stone. And his three horn players drove it merrily home.

It was a night of juke joint rock n’ roll, Stax soul and barrelhouse blues, with the 62-year-old singer and his band barely stopping for a breath between songs as they revisited highlights from the Southside catalogue.

Read the full story at The Montreal Gazette…

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Montreal Jazz Festival: Listen, it’s all about the music

MONTREAL – When Southside Johnny got on the road to promote a trio of classic soulful rhythm ’n’ blues albums with the Asbury Jukes in the second half of the 1970s, he was riding in the shadow of his friend and fellow New Jersey son Bruce Springsteen’s mega-breakout. And he had only one goal.

“I wanted to stick it to people,” the man born John Lyon said during a recent telephone interview. Lyon and bandmate Steven Van Zandt (now better known as Little Steven) were “very aggressive about that New Jersey being a joke state thing,” he said. “We thought ‘We’ll show you.’ We’d go onstage and the horns would hit that big chord. It was not like another band hitting two guitars. And I was a wild performer on stage. Iggy Pop was one of my heroes. So between Steve wanting to prove himself and me wanting to prove myself, that was the real bond. We really wanted to say ‘This is good and you have to pay attention.’

Read the full story at The Montreal Gazette…

From Jersey to New Orleans at Jazz Fest

Southside Johnny & the Asbury Jukes, perhaps the most-perfect street party band ever invented by Bacchus, brought out the big crowd as promised at Rochester’s Biggest Party, more modestly described in the literature as the Xerox Rochester International Jazz Festival.

With the big stage moved off of East Avenue, where it was in past years, and onto Chestnut Street, it was the same party, facing a different direction, as the longtime rock and R&B veterans with their tight, horn-powered sound opened with “This Time It’s For Real.”

A few moments later and it was on to “The Fever,” delivered perfectly by Southside Johnny Lyons, who still has one of the most compellingly soulful voices in rock. That one was written by Southside’s Asbury Park neighbor, Bruce Springsteen. Imagine being such a cool band, Springsteen tosses you a song and says, “Here, Johnny, I can’t use this one this week.”

By Jeff Spevak – Read the full story

Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes, Baby!

Show of the night: Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes, baby.

Soul, r& b, soul, rock ‘n’ roll, swing, and soul came careening off the East & Chestnut stage in a brass-filled blast of good old barroom cacophony.

I’ve been watching this band for years and this was the best it has ever sounded. Southside Johnny (John Lyon) is the band’s biggest fan, as he bounded around joyously and unselfconsciously in a way that makes Joe Cocker look like a ballerina by comparison. Oh, and did I mention the soul?

By Frank De Blase – Read the full story…

The Westside Sounds Of Asbury Park - Panel Discussion at the Atonement Lutheran Church in Asbury Park (8 Videos)

Panel Discussion on the history of race and music in Asbury Park, NJ. Nicky Addeo, moderator Daniel Wolff, Bobby Thomas, Southside Johnny Lyon and Bruce Springsteen (Note: The video sounds are a little low) Video by: stzapper

Reported by Stan Goldstein of The Star-Ledger: Bruce Springsteen was a surprise special guest at a panel discussion on Saturday afternoon at the Atonement Lutheran Church in Asbury Park. The roundtable talk was on soul, rhythm & blues and the history of race and music in Asbury Park. It featured author Daniel Wolff (4th of July Asbury Park) who was the moderator with guests: Southside Johnny Lyon, Bobby Thomas, Nickey Addeo and Springsteen who was not advertised as part of the panel. Continue reading

Asbury all-stars convene to celebrate city's music history at New Harmonies concert

Published: Monday, March 14, 2011, 3:25 AM – by Jay Lustig / The Star-Ledger

It was called a curated concert, and it certainly had an educational component, with historical readings between sets of music.

But Sunday’s New Harmonies concert at the Paramount Theatre in Asbury Park ended the way any concert attempting to honor Asbury Park music should end: with a stage full of musicians taking part in a freewheeling jam session. Every attempt to educate should feel so good.

There was Southside Johnny, barking out classic rock and blues lyrics and wailing on harmonica. There was his longtime musical partner Bobby Bandiera, trading stinging riffs with Asbury guitar heroes Sonny Kenn and Billy Hector, among others…

Read the whole article at: NJ.com