Barbs and Bonds @ BB Kings

Well, it was another energetic evening at BB Kings on Saturday. Never a dull moment when Gary US Bonds joins Southside on stage. An absolute riot – the two of them trading irreverent insults like an old married couple – all the while belting out some great tunes. As always, there were fabulous covers and standout performances … Chris’s truly kick-a** solo on Fever, Eddie’s sax on Renee, a beautiful accordion solo by Kazee to close out Princess of Little Italy…

Continue reading

Back at the Basie

logo_backstreets.comBACK AT THE BASIE WITH BANDIERA, BONDS, BON JOVI, & MR. GRINCH – DEC. 22. 2008: Springsteen drops in to wish Red Bank crowd a Merry Christmas, Baby!

It’s all cold down along the beach… the wind’s whipping down the boardwalk… and it’s freezing in Red Bank, where Bruce showed up tonight to bring some extra warmth to the newly renovated Count Basie Theatre. Just as in 2006, with no area holiday shows of his own, Springsteen chose to join in the festivities at Bobby Bandiera’s Hope Concert.

On the bill with Bandiera’s Jersey Shore Rock-N-Soul Revue were Tim McLoone and the Shirleys, Brian Fallon, Nicole Atkins, Gary U.S. Bonds, Southside Johnny, and Jon Bon Jovi; Springsteen’s surprise appearance came at the end of the night, as he joined the house band and a few of the bill-toppers for a few Christmas songs, two classic covers, and one of his own.

The night’s format had crossover between artist’s sets: Gary U.S. Bonds (after notably performing Bruce’s “Action in the Street”) was joined by Southside Johnny for “This Little Girl” to segue into Southside’s set; Johnny was joined on his last song by Jon Bon Jovi for “This Time It’s For Real.” When it came to Bon Jovi’s last song, out came Springsteen to back him up on “Run Run Rudolph,” playing lead guitar and hollering backup on the final chorus.

“Happy holidays!” said Bruce, otherwise a man of few words tonight. (Leave the quotables to Southside: “I’d wish you a merry Christmas, but it would be out of character” and “I get so sentimental, I have to drink myself into oblivion.”) Springsteen opened his own set with a doubleshot of his holiday B-sides, “Merry Christmas, Baby” followed by “Santa Claus is Coming to Town.” Southside — “Mr. Grinch” — joined in on the latter, and LaBamba came downstage to take Clarence’s part, “you better be good for goodness’ sake.” (LaBamba and Mark Pender brought the horn section headcount to eight for Bruce’s set.)

After Bruce went it alone on “634-5789,” Bon Jovi came back out to split the vocals on “Tenth Avenue.” And a final encore, as Springsteen was joined by Southside, singing lead, and Bonds for a rousing “Havin’ a Party.” Weather outside: frightful. Inside: plenty hot.

Source: BACKSTREETS.COM

Bonjovi and Bruce keep Hope alive

RED BANK – There already was star power a-plenty on the stage of Count Basie Theatre in Red Bank Monday night, and then Jon Bon Jovi introduced Bruce Springsteen.

BY KELLY JANE COTTER – Music Writer – December 23, 2008

“It ain’t Santa Claus,” Bon Jovi said, announcing a special guest. “We got something better.” Like his fellow rockers at Monday’s Hope Concert, Springsteen took the stage in a low-key manner, providing guitar solos and backing vocals to Bobby Bandiera’s lead on “Run Rudolph Run.”

Springsteen soon took center stage, with back-to-back performances of “Merry Christmas, Baby” and his definitive version of “Santa Claus Is Coming To Town.” He directed the band and led the audience in cries of call-and-response. “Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out” soon followed, and all was merry and bright.

A finale of “Having a Party,” with Southside Johnny Lyon on lead, backed by Springsteen, Bandiera, Gary U.S. Bonds and the band, capped an evening that raised more than $250,000 for the Parker Family Health Center in Red Bank, as well as thousands of cans of donated food for the FoodBank of Monmouth/Ocean Counties.

This was the fourth Hope Concert, a tradition founded and organized by Bandiera, a longtime member of the local music scene who currently tours with Bon Jovi. Earlier in the night, Bon Jovi sang “Blue Christmas,” and then gave an optimistic wish for the new year and the new president, Barack Obama.

Continue reading

The IV. HOPE Benefit Concert (5 Videos)

Bobby Bandiera’s IV. HOPE Christmas Bash is over since just a few hours… and here’re already the first videos to come in via YouTube of what has been, as it seems like, another marvelous night at the Count Basie Theater in Red Bank, NJ.

THIS TIME IT’S FOR REAL


.
Continue reading

Musicians play three nights of "light"

THE ASBURY PARK PRESS – 11/8/05 – BY RICHARD SKELLY – CORRESPONDENT – What do Southside Johnny, Robert Earl Keen, Soozie Tyrell, Gary U.S. Bonds, Pete Yorn, Joe Grushecky, Jess Klein, Richie “La Bamba” Rosenberg, Cindy Bullens, Willie Nile, Jesse Malin, Jeffrey Gaines and Garland Jeffreys have in common? All of them put their egos aside for the sake of a common cause this past weekend, at the annual Light of Day concerts to raise money for Parkinson’s Disease research.

Fund-raising concerts were held Friday night at The Stone Pony in Asbury Park and Saturday and Sunday nights at the Starland Ballroom in Sayreville.

Founded by Highland Park-based musical impresario Bob Benjamin, who has Parkinson’s, the annual shows are a way to spread awareness of the need for more research into the causes of the neuro-muscular disorder. Recent research has shown that embryonic stem cells may offer a cure for Parkinson’s and ALS, or Lou Gehrig’s disease. This year’s shows were dedicated to the memory of Joan Dancy, a longtime companion to Terry Magovern, who has worked closely with Bruce Springsteen for many years. Benjamin is proprietor of School House Records and manages musicians, including Grushecky, Joe D’Urso and Stone Caravan and Dawne Allynne, among others.

As often happens in this three-day musical marathon, there were as many musical high points as there were performers. The vibe throughout all three shows was a positive one. Musicians freely mingled with the audience before and after their sets, signing autographs and selling CDs, lending as much support as they could to their fellow musicians, putting up with occasional odd couplings on stage for the sake of a common cause.

One musician missing in action this year was Bruce Springsteen. Springsteen had performed at all five previous Light of Day fund-raising concerts, but since the shows have expanded this year to include a Dec. 12 event at House of Blues in Los Angeles and one later this month in Rome, the Freehold native — in the midst of a tour for his latest album, “Devils and Dust,” — may show his face yet.

High points from Friday’s show at the Pony included Bonds and Southside Johnny Lyon delivering spirited takes on two songs off Bonds’ latest album, “Back In 20.” Bonds traded vocals with Lyon, who offered up some tasty harmonica solos on “Murder in the First Degree” and “Fannie Mae.”

Inspired performances

Saturday night at Starland, Joe D’Urso and his Stone Caravan delivered a four-song set — most groups played only four or five tunes — that consisted of nothing but new songs that will appear on a forthcoming album.

Jeffreys and Yorn and their bands delivered inspired sets Saturday at Starland. Yorn, a native of Montville, opened with North Mississippi bluesman Junior Kimbrough’s “I Feel Good Again,” while Brooklyn-based Jeffreys and his band blended blues, classic R&B, rock and reggae with “Don’t Call Me Buckwheat,” “We the People” and an audience rousing take on the blues, “King Bee.” Jeffreys and his band closed with their take on ? and the Mysterians’ “96 Tears.”

After Jeffreys’ rousing set Saturday night, Benjamin got on stage and told the audience, “Rock ‘n’ roll is the tool that can change the world.”

Sunday night’s show at Starland was a totally different format, an acoustic show. Instead of the usual open floor space, patrons were encouraged to sit in chairs at tables. An extension of Gordon Brown’s successful “Writers in the Raw” series that was often held at Harry’s Roadhouse in Asbury Park, Sunday’s show included conversation and performances from Yorn, Grushecky, John Eddie, D’Urso, Malin and Jess Klein, among others.

More information on Parkinson’s Disease symptoms, possible causes, and research, is offered on the Web at www.pdf.org. More on Light of Day shows in Los Angeles and Italy can be found at www.lightofday.org.

The-Asbury-Park-Press
Copyright (c) The Asbury Park Press – 2005

Sharing a lot more than just the stage

THE BRICK TOWNSHIP BULLETIN – BY SANDI CARPELLO – MAY 07. 2003

Shore’s rock ’n’ rollers play to help out Brick resident’s son.

RED BANK — This time, they got together for a cause a lot closer to home. Bruce Springsteen, Jon Bon Jovi, Southside Johnny Lyon, Bobby Bandiera, Gary U.S. Bonds, the Max Weinberg 7 and other local musicians contributed their time and talents last week to “The Hope Concert.” The benefit show raised over $300,000 to cover medical care for Bandiera’s son Robert Bandiera Jr., 21, of Brick, who suffers from an undiagnosed neurological disorder.

During a four-hour, sold-out show at the Count Basie Theatre on April 29, the quintessence of the Jersey Shore rock scene played to an appreciative audience well-versed in the music they came to hear.

Continue reading