IMG signs Steven van Zandt

Photo Credit: NBC PHOTO - HEIDI GUTMAN

NBC PHOTO - HEIDI GUTMAN

IMG will Also Consult for Van Zandt’s Underground Garage Music Business and Radio Show

NEW YORK, NY — (Marketwire) — 12/04/08 — Global sports and entertainment company IMG today announced that musician, songwriter, producer and actor, Steven Van Zandt, has signed with IMG for exclusive worldwide marketing representation.

In addition, IMG will also consult on the business expansion for “Little Steven’s Underground Garage,” Van Zandt’s music enterprise that celebratestraditional Rock and Roll, Garage Rock, and the most entertaining of Rock’sother sub-genres.

“Little Steven’s Underground Garage” includes a weekly syndicated radio show currently heard on more than 146 radio stations in202 markets across the U.S. and Canada with an audience of more than one million weekly listeners. International markets include national affiliates in Denmark, the Netherlands, Spain, and regional affiliates in Dublin, Gothenburg, Helsinki, Oslo, Stockholm, Padova/Venice, Milan, and Rome. The “Underground Garage” also broadcasts to more than 45 international markets via Voice of America and to bases around the world via the American Forces Network, reaching bases from Afghanistan to South Korea.

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Hope Concert IV at the Count Basie Theatre, Red Bank

logo_hope_2008Jon Bon Jovi and Southside Johnny will be among the performers at the Hope Concert IV, the latest in a series of benefits at the Count Basie Theatre in Red Bank.

Other performers will include Gary U.S. Bonds, Bobby Bandiera and his Jersey Shore Rock-N-Soul Revue, Nicole Atkins, Brian Fallon (of the Gaslight Anthem), and Tim McLoone and the Shirleys.

The show takes place at 8 p.m. Dec. 22, and tickets, priced at $100-$500, go on sale Dec. 3 at 9:30 a.m. Proceeds will go to the Parker Family Health Center in Red Bank.

Via: Jay Lustig/The Star-Ledger

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

The New Jersey Music Hall of Fame

PR NEWSWIRE – MONDAY, MAY 16, 5:57 pm ET

ASBURY PARK, N.J., May 16 / PRNewswire / — New Jersey’s rich musical heritage was on display today at the world-famous Stone Pony club in Asbury Park, New Jersey. Musicians and dignitaries gathered for a ceremony to announce the launch of the New Jersey Music Hall of Fame (NJMHOF).

The New Jersey Music Hall of Fame will include a museum that encompasses artists from throughout the state in every musical genre, musical inventions, and details of significant events in music history that took place here. The museum is scheduled to officially open in the summer of 2006.

“From the invention of Thomas Edison’s phonograph to Count Basie, Frank Sinatra, the Four Seasons, Bruce Springsteen, Bon Jovi, and up to current emerging stars like Fountains of Wayne, New Jersey has been at the forefront of musical innovation unparalleled by any geographic location in the United States and probably the world,” said John Scher, President, Metropolitan Talent/Hybrid Recordings.

The New Jersey Music Hall of Fame was created to preserve and promote the rich musical heritage of music in New Jersey, foster the growth of the next generation of musicians, and provide educational programs for students to experience music.

Asbury Park has been selected for the home of the New Jersey Music Hall of Fame because its central geographic location provides easy access to locations throughout the state as well as to Philadelphia, New York City and Washington, DC. In addition, Asbury Park has a long and illustrious history as one of the state’s leading music scenes.

“Asbury Park is the heart and soul of New Jersey’s music scene,” said Mayor Kevin G. Sanders, City of Asbury Park. “Music has been the thread that has kept this city together through the good and bad times. This is a memorable event at this point in the City of Asbury Park’s revitalization that the NJMHOF has decided to make it their home.”

The New Jersey Music Hall of Fame is confident that the state’s musical history will draw music fans from around the world to the museum. “Fans of Bruce Springsteen have been coming to Asbury Park for decades,” said Gary Wien, President of NJMHOF. “With the addition of artists like Frank Sinatra and Count Basie and inventions like the phonograph and electric guitar, the drawing power and prestige of this museum is enhanced dramatically.”

“There is always a latent demand in terms of music tourism (examples: Liverpool and Memphis) and I am so happy to see these dreams materialize in Asbury Park,” added Simon Osborne, Property Manager, Speke Hall, National Trust, United Kingdom.

“Everyone is more than aware of the impact that rock and roll has had on New Jersey, but the NJMHOF will build awareness that there exists a very broad cross section of music from opera to Bruce. Asbury Park is the perfect city for the NJMHOF and I am very excited to be a part of it!” said Tim McLoone, Restauranteur, Musician, and Founder of Holiday Express.

For more information go to http://www.njmusic.org

THANKS CAVI!