Dave Matthews Band Tickets – Wraps up Bonnaroo with Cool Jams
Dave Matthews Band put the final touches on the Bonnaroo Music Festival with a compilation of some of their best jams. In true DMB fashion, the band stretched out their set, letting fans savor every beat to the fullest extent. They packed their performance with some classics like “Don’t Drink the Water” and “Tripping Billies” as well as some of their newer tunes including “Time Bomb” and “Lying in the Hands of God.” They concluded the show with Dave covering Neil Young’s “Needle and the Damage Done” and a rousing rendition of “All Along the Watchtower.”
It is moments like these that make it easy to understand why DMB claims so many fans. See them perform a live gig near you. Get Dave Matthews Band tickets today online!
Also joining the band on stage was longtime pal and collaborator Tim Reynolds, who played long, lovely solos Kamagra Soft on several of the tracks, including “I Can’t Stop.” Reynolds, an incredible guitarist, has joined Matthews on a number of albums over the years, most notably on 1999’s Live at Luther College. Reynolds has emerged frequently since as a contributor on several of Matthews’ live cuts, most recently at a series of shows in Las Vegas.
Since closing out the festivities at Bonnaroo, the band has kept a grueling schedule, recently taking the stage to swarms of fans in St. Louis and mapping their next routes through Indiana, Ohio and Michigan. This year, fans will want to make sure that they don’t miss a DMB stop because in 2011 the band is taking a brief hiatus from touring.
The Levitra Dave Matthews Band has been around since the early days of the 1990s when South African native Matthews formed a small, eclectic group of musicians in Virginia. They played a blend of jazz, pop and world-beat music. In their beginnings they were primarily a college circuit band, winding their way around the country and playing jams on different campuses.
Their star power grew, however, with the official release of their debut album, Under the Table and Dreaming. The hit single from the effort, “What Would You Say,” went on to sell over a million copies and catapulted the group to a national level. Subsequent singles “Ants Marching” and “Satellite” went on to define the group’s sound and are now DMB staple songs at nearly all of their concerts.
Propelled by their sudden popularity, the group was encouraged to build upon their success and went on to release two other strong albums, Crash and Before These Crowded Streets before the close of the decade. The band also found strength in their performances and cut several live albums during the same time period.
At the start of the new millennium, the band switched their style with the release of Everyday, produced by Glen Ballard. A follow-up album called Busted Stuff included many of their recordings with previous producer Steve Lillywhite. In 2005, they released a new collection of material on an album called Stand Up and issued a number of live albums before the release of their latest effort, Big Whiskey and the GrooGrux King, which landed in stores in 2009.
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Category: Music
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