The TVD Storefront

TVD Radar: The Zombies, Begin Here (Mono Remastered) in stores 4/17

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductees and “British Invasion” pioneers, The Zombies, today share “The Way I Feel Inside (Mono Remastered)” off the forthcoming re-release of their debut album, Begin Here (Mono Remastered), which will be released via their own Beechwood Park Records on April 17th. The track is the second song released from the album, following “It’s Alright With Me (Mono Remastered).”

Begin Here (Mono Remastered), the second of four definitive physical reissues from their catalog, follows the release of Odessey & Oracle (Mono Remastered) and includes the classic songs “She’s Not There,” “Tell Her No,” “It’s Alright With Me,” “The Way I Feel Inside,” and their beloved version of George Gershwin’s “Summertime.” This definitive new edition combines all 17 tracks from the UK and US versions of The Zombies’ 1965 debut album, remastered in its original mono mix. The release is again being overseen by Matthew and Jamie White (sons of founding member Chris White), mastered by Reuben Cohen at Lurssen Mastering, and brand-new liner notes by the legendary David Fricke. The LP will be housed in a single-pocket jacket with poly-lined sleeves and an insert.

Colin Blunstone shares about the release, “Thinking of The Zombies first album, Begin Here, immediately triggers wonderful memories of late-night sessions in Decca’s West Hampstead studio fueled by pure excitement and adrenaline. These tracks changed all of our lives forever, and I am forever grateful. I look back on them with wonder and a great deal of affection!”

Rod Argent of the band also adds, “The Zombies’ Begin Here rerelease basically follows the American original, which adds the E.P. which came out in the UK soon after “She’s Not There” in the UK, but was never released in the US. Unbelievably, as was the way in those days, we had a day and a night only to record, and generally the songs were recorded as first takes!”

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TVD Radar: Pink Floyd, Live from the Los Angeles Sports Arena, April 26th, 1975 4LP, 2CD in stores 4/18

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Pink Floyd have confirmed the official album release of the rare live concert, Pink Floyd Live from the Los Angeles Sports Arena, April 26th, 1975.

The legendary recording, first captured as a bootleg during the band’s 1975 Wish You Were Here Tour across North America, will now be available for the first time on standalone CD and vinyl editions via Sony Music. A 4LP clear vinyl will be released exclusively for Record Store Day on 18th April, followed by a 2CD edition on 24th April, available for pre-order here. Both releases feature the full concert across 16 live recordings, newly restored and remastered by acclaimed producer and musician Steven Wilson.

Pink Floyd Live from the Los Angeles Sports Arena, April 26th, 1975 spotlights the band during their rapid ascent. The Dark Side of the Moon had taken Pink Floyd from a hugely successful breakout British band to one of the biggest rock groups on the planet. Arenas and stadiums would now play host to their performances.

The Wish You Were Here Tour was announced in early March 1975, just one month prior to commencing. The shows instantly sold out and broke box office records, including that of the Los Angeles Sports Arena, which in a single day sold all of its 67,000 ticket allocation for the scheduled four-night run. An extra fifth show signalled a residency, and sold out within a matter of hours.

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Graded on a Curve:
Black Oak Arkansas, Raunch ‘N’ Roll Live

Celebrating Jim “Dandy” Mangrum on his 78th birthday.Ed.

Black Oak Arkansas’ Jim “Dandy” Mangrum is the Ryne Duren of rock. Duren was the journeyman pitcher who could throw the ball like 167 mph. His only problem? He was legally blind. Not even Coke-bottle-thick glasses helped. From 1954-65 batters suffered nervous breakdowns at his appearance, because as famed Yankee manager Casey Stengel noted, “If he hit you in the head you might be in the past tense.” It didn’t improve batters’ nerves that Duren’s first pitch generally zoomed 20 feet over the catcher’s head. You never knew if Duren was going to hit the strike zone, the third base coach, or some poor kid in the bleacher seats.

Jim Dandy’s voice, same deal. I’d call it a wild pitch, but Mangrum has no pitch, and no control of his amazing instrument whatsoever. He might hit a note, or he might hit some stoned head in the 43rd row. But that’s what I like about Black Oak Arkansas; it managed to become one of the premier live acts of the seventies with a tone-deaf singer with mighty pipes, while playing a lascivious acid-fried hillbilly boogie you have to hear to believe.

Unlike its Southern Rock brethren, BOA was a band of bona fide freaks, LSD-soaked long-hair rednecks who lived off the land commune style (to avoid a felony warrant, basically) in the hills of rural north-central Arkansas. Black Oak played a whoop-ass psycho-boogie that might include Mangrum soloing on the washboard and drummer Tommy Aldridge playing the drums with his hands on such cosmic cornpone as “Mutants of the Monster” or “Lord Have Mercy on My Soul,” with its monologue by Jim “Aldous Huxley in bib overalls” Dandy about the Halls of Karma and how we can all be as one if we only do enough bong hits, like the one the boys do at the beginning of unreleased 1972 studio cut “UP, UP, UP.”

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Sammy Hagar,
The TVD Interview

Some interviews you prepare for. You build the questions, you do the research, you know exactly where you want the conversation to go. And then the person on the other end of the line says something that stops you cold—something that has nothing to do with the prepared question in front of you and everything to do with why you got into this work in the first place. That’s what a thirty-minute phone call with Sammy Hagar on a Wednesday morning will do to you.

I had just come off reviewing his Best of All Worlds Tour residency at Dolby Live at Park MGM in Las Vegas—a show that ran 145 minutes, covered 17 songs, and left me genuinely undone in the best way a rock and roll show can. I had left my camera at home that night and experienced it purely as a fan. By the time “Eagles Fly” came around, I wasn’t holding it together. By the time the house lights came up, I knew I needed to talk to this man.

Here at The Vinyl District, we write about music because we believe it matters—not as background noise, not as content, but as the thing that reaches into places language alone cannot touch. Sammy Hagar has spent sixty years proving that point, and this tour, with this band—Michael Anthony, Joe Satriani, Kenny Aronoff, and Greg Phillinganes—may be the finest chapter of the whole remarkable story.

What follows is a conversation about beginnings and legacies, about what it means to stand on a stage at seventy-eight and still feel something new, about vinyl and the records that shaped a life, and about a homeless man in Las Vegas who recognized the Red Rocker at midnight and quoted things he said onstage thirty-two years ago. It’s about a song called “Eagles Fly” that his mother asked him to sing at her funeral, and that mine would have loved just the same. It’s a conversation I will carry for a long time. I think you will too.

Take me all the way back to the very first time you stepped onto a stage. Not a rehearsal, not a garage—an actual stage in front of actual people. What did that feel like, and did any part of you in that moment know this was going to be your life?

I remember a few different early moments, but the one that really sticks was playing a party for five dollars at a little union hall for a car club called the Swampers in Fontana, California. My brother’s friend—an older guy, really hip, really into cool music—taught me how to play a couple of songs on rhythm guitar. We had one amplifier, two guitars, and a microphone, all running through the same amp. I was probably fifteen.

We played “Gloria” and some surf songs, and I just loved it. I got dressed up, I felt like a performer—and the second I stepped on that stage, it became official. There was an adrenaline rush like I had never felt in my life. I thought I wanted to do it long before I even knew how to play guitar, but I didn’t feel it until that moment. From then on, I knew this is what I’m going to do, by hook or by crook.

Every musician has a shortlist of artists who fundamentally rewired how they heard music—the records and performers that made them think, “I want to do that.” Who were yours, and is there one that stands above all the others?

Honestly, it was more about the people around me than any particular rock star. I was in my teens, and I had three or four friends who genuinely believed in me. We’d get together, listen to music, and I’d tell them I was going to be famous someday. I dressed the part—psychedelic clothes, the right hairdo, the language—and they’d introduce me to people at parties saying, “This guy is going to be a big star.”

They really believed it and they had me convinced too. Having that circle of people around you who see what you’re going to become before you’ve become it—that’s the thing that drove me. I could already play a few songs from that guy who taught me when I was fourteen, and I could sing them. I just hadn’t started a band yet. But those friends, that belief—that’s what lit the fire.

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Graded on a Curve: Bloodrock,
Bloodrock 2

I was going to open this review of West Texas hard rock band Bloodrock by saying something withering, like they weren’t even fit to open for Grand Funk Railroad. Then I discovered Bloodrock did indeed open for Grand Funk Railroad in 1970.

Although the more I think about it, the more I think opening for Grand Funk Railroad makes Bloodrock even worse than I thought.

1970’s Bloodrock 2 was the band’s only taste of success, thanks in large part to “D.O.A.,” a plane crash song inspired by guitarist Lee Pickens’ brush with an actual plane crash. “When I was 17, I wanted to be an airline pilot,” said Pickens. “I had just gotten out of this airplane with a friend of mine, at this little airport, and I watched him take off. He went about 200 feet in the air, rolled and crashed.”

I’m assuming Pickens saw this and decided that remaining earthbound as a rock and roll guitarist was a safer career path.

I’ll get to “D.O.A.” later—the first thing I want to say is that Bloodrock, who I really wanted to like because I’m the world’s foremost expert on and biggest fan of plane crash songs, are an unfortunately mediocre proposition. Bloodrock 2 has its moments, but there’s no ignoring its host of flaws, the most impossible to ignore being that it has too many weak songs, and the songs that have a modicum of punch are saddled with lyrics so funny bad they’re worth quoting at length.

In short, Bloodrock 2 is a plane crash of an album, and the amazing thing is that it not only charted but stayed on the charts for several months.

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A morning mix of news for the vinyl inclined

In rotation: 3/30/26

Aotearoa, NZ | Gen Z is driving the resurgence of vinyl in Aotearoa New Zealand: In the past 20 years, vinyl sales in New Zealand have increased 100-fold, with more than half of all tracked vinyl sales occurring in the last four years. Gen Z is embracing the authenticity, collectability and the all-around experience vinyl offers. Auckland University of Technology (AUT) student and avid vinyl collector JD Kim says the main reason he collects vinyl is for the sound quality, as it beats digital streaming. “And a separate perk is the physical, permanent copy.” Flying Out Records on Auckland’s Pitt Street has seen an increase in Gen Z customers buying records, according to employee Hunter Keane. He says many of these customers are drawn to records for reasons that go beyond convenience.

Cincinnati, OH | From vinyl records to retro video games, the appeal of physical media: According to the Pew Research Center, 83 percent of American adults use streaming services to watch television and movies. And streaming services aren’t limited to those categories — you can listen to music, play video games, and read newspapers without ever touching a physical version. But there are those who say that collecting physical versions of your favorite forms of media is an important thing to do. On Cincinnati Edition, the physical media collecting craze.

UK | ‘Undertale’, ‘Cyberpunk 2077’ and ‘Pokémon’ soundtracks to get vinyl Record Store Day 2026 release: The 19th annual Record Store Day UK takes place April 18. Record Store Day takes place next month and gamers can expect vinyl releases of Undertale, Cyberpunk 2077 and Pokémon soundtracks. The 19th Record Store Day is set to take place on Saturday April 18, celebrating independent record shops and vinyl culture in the UK. More than 300 UK and Ireland record shops will be taking part alongside thousands of indie retailers worldwide, selling an array of exclusive physical releases.

Amersham, UK | Rob Brydon’s new BBC comedy filming at Amersham Record Shop: A new BBC comedy series starring Rob Brydon has started filming at a Bucks town record shop. Parking suspensions are in place in Amersham New Town, and The Record Shop has closed for the filming of Bill’s Included, featuring the Gavin and Stacey actor. The show is about a well-meaning but overenthusiastic divorcee who rents his spare rooms to students to stay afloat. Photos shared by Liberal Democrat councillor for Amersham and Chesham Bois, Mark Roberts, show film crews setting up outside the shop and production vans along Hill Avenue. Cllr Roberts stated: “You may have noticed that there is filming going on today in Top Amersham. This shoot is for a BBC Comedy—”Bill’s Included”—and they’ll be filming at the Record Store today and tomorrow.

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TVD Los Angeles

TVD’s The Idelic Hour with Jon Sidel

Greetings from Laurel Canyon!

Good morning / This is your warning / This is your warning / You’re gonna appear before a stranger / I don’t know if you’ll be in any danger / For some are not pulled into moving cars / Some are not dragged down Fifth Avenue by the hairs in their ears / Some get away with it, some get away with it for many years / And are not punished, but some are

I’m not gonna think too much about what I’m writing this morning. After all, baseball season started yesterday, and it’s still March Madness. You might not be a sports fan, but baseball can be magical because watching it has a way of transporting a man back to the emotional state of his childhood.

Despite all the the “madness” of this March, I’ll leave this morning at that.

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The TVD Storefront

TVD Radar: Flyboys,
The Complete Flyboys 1978–1980 in stores 4/10

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Los Angeles power pop/punks Flyboys and Frontier Records, Sun Valley’s premiere punk rock label since 1980, announced today the release of the definitive collection, The Complete Flyboys 1978-1980 on April 10, 2026.

The 14-track, digitally remastered album contains the band’s first, self-titled EP—Frontier Records’ first release in March 1980—now expanded to include seven tracks making their LP and CD debut: Both songs from Flyboys’ second 7” single (“Square City”/”Crayon World”) plus five previously unreleased demos from 1979. The album will be released on limited-edition white vinyl, compact disc, and digital streaming and is now available for pre-order from indie distributor, Independent Label Distribution.

Pasadena’s Flyboys were a power pop/punk band that began in 1977 with singer/songwriter John Curry and Jim “Trash” Decker from The Crowd (and tangentially, Jay from The Simpletones, who would later sign to Posh Boy). Flyboys gigged all over the Southland, paying their dues opening for every national and local punk band from Huntington Beach to Hollywood. They were anything but typical punks with their day-glo clothes, Cuban heels, and maddeningly catchy songs. Infectious hooks and John Curry’s bleached-blonde pompadour were the band’s trademarks.

Lisa Fancher interviewed Flyboys when she was a rock scribe at the Los Angeles Herald Examiner. The band’s lack of traction in the LA scene gave her the notion to finance an EP with the band and release it herself. The recording began in 1979 at Leon Russell’s Paradise Studios in North Hollywood, California (where Concrete Blonde’s Johnette Napolitano was the receptionist) with Jim Mankey (from the original Sparks) as the engineer and Dickies’ manager Scott Goddard as producer.

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TVD Radar: Where
The Willow And The Dogwood Grow
, Words and Music: Tom Waits and Kathleen Brennan
in stores 5/29

VIA PRESS RELEASE | With undeniable cultural gravity, the team of Tom Waits and Kathleen Brennan join luminaries such as Bob Dylan, Chuck Berry, Randy Newman, Carole King and Gerry Goffin, Leonard Cohen, Lee Hazlewood, Brian Wilson and Laura Nyro in Ace Records’ long-running series of multi-artist compilations celebrating the great American songwriters of the modern era. Hundreds of artists from all walks of music have recorded songs from Waits and Brennan’s matchless catalogue, 19 of the finest of which comprise this hand-picked selection, including many chosen by the songwriters themselves.

Few artists have remapped the terrain of popular music, and culture at large, like Tom Waits. Over the course of five decades, he has forged a singular aesthetic that defies genre and turns the marginal into myth. His work is neither fully inside nor outside the mainstream tradition but moves restlessly between them, drawing from vaudeville, blues, jazz, folk, theatre—and just about anything else that catches his ear—to craft something wholly his own. His influence reverberates not just through the underground and avant-garde, but across theatre, film, literature, and visual art.

With his long-time creative partner and wife Kathleen Brennan, he has dismantled and reassembled the idea of song itself, crafting works that exist as both raw expression and high art. This collection honors not only the extraordinary versatility of Waits and Brennan’s songwriting, but the importance of an artist who continues to haunt and inspire from the edges inward.

Ace’s selection is sequenced chronologically by song, opening with Bruce Springsteen’s live recording of “Jersey Girl,” Waits’ ode to Brennan from 1980’s Heartattack And Vine, and closing with folk matriarch Joan Baez’s version of Waits and Brennan’s anti-war “Day After Tomorrow” from Waits’ more recent Real Gone.

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Graded on a Curve:
Seals & Crofts,
Greatest Hits

Remembering Dash Crofts.Ed.

Seals & Crofts have moved into our house! It’s true! And here’s how it happened. Yesterday we got a knock on our door. I had no intention of opening it because most likely it was our crazy neighbor from across the street who’s been accusing our garden gnome of shitting on his lawn. Then I caught a whiff of jasmine and said to myself, “No way is it the legendary soft rock duo whose gossamer thin sound has enriched the lives of so many.”

But it was! Seals & Crofts in the flesh! And they were wondering if they could move in with us for a couple of days because times were tough and they were tired of living in a lean-to by the railroad tracks running past the lake of toxic sludge near the abandoned nuclear reactor.

And of course I said YES! Who wouldn’t? And they couldn’t express how grateful they were because everyone else had slammed their doors in their faces, including our neighbor from across the street who accused them of shitting on his lawn.

“How could anyone think that?” asked a perplexed Jim Seals. “In the bushes by the railroad tracks, sure. But that’s out of sheer necessity.”

“Where’s your stuff,” I asked. All they had with them were their acoustic guitars.

“We had to hock everything,” said Dash Crofts, “including our gold record for ‘Summer Breeze.’ I don’t know if you’ve heard, but the railroad hobo economy is in the tank.”

“Would you like to take a shower?” asked my wife. “You’re caked with coal dust and radioactive slime. And I’m catching the distinct aroma of urine.”

“That would be me,” said Seals. “And that shower would be much appreciated.”

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TVD Radar: Camera Obscura, Biggest Bluest Hi-Fi 25th anniversary reissue in stores 5/8

VIA PRESS RELEASE | On May 8, 2026, Camera Obscura will celebrate the 25th anniversary of their debut album, Biggest Bluest Hi-Fi, with a vinyl reissue via Merge Records.

Out-of-print on the format since its initial UK release on Andmoresound in 2001, the 25th anniversary edition is the most definitive version of Biggest Bluest Hi-Fi ever pressed to vinyl, featuring both “Eighties Fan” B-sides—“Shine Like a New Pin” and “Let’s Go Bowling”—which were later added to expanded CD reissues of the album.

In addition to the black LP available from Merge Records, a limited edition, green and gold swirl vinyl edition, which includes a band-signed facsimile of the flyer advertising the release of “Eighties Fan,” is available exclusively from Glasgow’s Monorail Music.

“We’ve been working towards a re-release of this album for some time now,” says Tracyanne Campbell, “so we’re really delighted that it’s happening and pleased that folk can finally have their own vinyl copy.”

Biggest Bluest Hi-Fi first reached Stateside in 2004, after the success of Camera Obscura’s 2003 Merge debut Underachievers Please Try Harder. New fans who weren’t keyed in to the UK import market or to what John Peel was spinning on his BBC Radio programs would be forgiven for mistaking Biggest Bluest Hi-Fi as a follow-up to their breakthrough album as opposed to their first.

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Graded on a Curve: Happy Flowers,
Making the Bunny Pay

Has a single interesting thing ever happened in the state of Virginia? Sure, my old friend Steds broke his jaw after falling flat on his drunken face in a McDonalds’ bathroom during Spring Break at Virginia Beach, but hundreds of people must break their jaws every year after falling flat on their drunken faces in McDonalds’ bathrooms at Virginia Beach during Spring Break.

And then there’s the mystery of the lost colony of Roanoke Island in Virginia, but that cryptic message they left behind (“Croatan”) tells me everything I need to know—Croatan was obviously the name of a doom metal band, and the entire colony got lost on their way to see them at Virginia Beach during Spring Break.

But to answer my own question, one interesting thing has happened in the state of Virginia, and that’s Happy Flowers, the lower-than-lo-fi duo of cheerful chaos agents Mr. Happily Charred Infant (aka John Beers) and Mr. Anus (aka Charlie Kramer). Happy Flowers got their start at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville, Virginia, and quickly established their signature shtick—primitivist songs about childhood that are as amusing as they’re hard to listen to unless you’re an aficionado of cheerful caterwaul. These guys make the Butthole Surfers sound like Steely Dan.

The 1987 compilation Making the Bunny Pay (which has a simply wonderful cover) comprises the band’s first two releases: the 1984 EP “Songs for Children” and the 1986 EP “Now We Are Six.” It includes their first and possibly greatest song, “Mom, I Gave the Cat Some Acid,” which makes the EP worth owning all by itself. (Sonic Youth did a cover, but their version is but a shadow of the original.) Happy Flowers would release four subsequent full-lengths before breaking up, although they’ve briefly reunited to enthralled listeners on several occasions, reminding us that horrible noise is its own reward.

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A morning mix of news for the vinyl inclined

In rotation: 3/27/26

Penn Yan, NY | Owner of new Penn Yan business says ‘everyone deserves music in their life.’ A new store on Main Street offers a delightful antidote to our increasingly digitized, virtual world. It delivers on the commitment that “everyone deserves music in their life.” WaxPax Records, which opened March 14, offers new and used vinyl records, vintage media, playful merchandise, and a store full of surprises. Owner and creator Mark Collier is crazy about music, art, and monster movies. Patrons can’t mistake that passion the minute they enter his shop. …“I will never, ever shame anybody for coming in and looking for music they love,” he exclaimed. “This should be open to anybody. So, anyone who walks through that door looking for the Grateful Dead, I got you. Slayer, I got you. Stray Cats, I got you.”

Philadelphia, PA | Doorfront to Storefront: SOOK Vinyl & Vintage: For Rashied Amon, owner of SOOK Vinyl & Vintage, Mt. Airy is the perfect location to have a business. “I love having a business in this neighborhood,” Amon said. “The people here are very personable, it’s very walkable, and there’s a lot of synergy among the businesses.” In 2026, Amon and other small business owners in Mt. Airy will try to use this synergy to their advantage. With the semiquincentennial (America’s 250th birthday), the FIFA World Cup, and the MLB All-Star Game all set to bring plenty of people to Philadelphia this year, there are countless opportunities for businesses to benefit from this influx of tourism. However, with many of these events happening downtown, businesses in the Northwest neighborhoods are faced with a unique opportunity: drawing tourists. Amon is up for the challenge.

Mahoning Valley, OH | The Vindys, Poobah in Free Concerts on Record Store Day: Free concerts by The Vindys, Poobah and other regional rock bands will take place on Record Store Day—Saturday, April 18—at two local shops. Two Mahoning Valley record stores are planning free concerts and a festival atmosphere at their celebrations. Hundreds of limited-edition vinyl album releases by major artists will be made available at the event. The Vindys, Demos Papadimas and his band and Radio Lark will perform outdoors at the Record Connection, in Pine Tree Place shopping center, McKinley Heights. Doors will open at 10 a.m., and music will start at 10:15 a.m. Vendors at the Record Connection will include Avo-Ritto, Modern Methods Brewing, Global Awakening Roasters and Radio Hoop. Poobah will play at 3 p.m. at Fat Hippy Records, 7188 Warren Sharon Road, Brookfield. Doors open at 10 a.m.

IA | How many vinyl record stores are there in Eastern Iowa? With Record Store Day on the way April 18th, we’re taking a look at some of the record stores that are thriving here in Eastern Iowa! 2025 was a HUGE year for vinyl. Deadline recently reported that, for the first time since 1983, the Recording Industry Association of America says it surpassed the $1 billion sales mark! In a world of streaming, it’s shocking to see how many people are still turning to physical forms of music. As a bit of a collector myself, I think that many people enjoy the nostalgia of it, as well as the warm, crackly sound of the record. Wondering where you can get new and used records here in Eastern Iowa? There are plenty of options!

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The TVD Storefront

TVD Live Shots: Wilmington Roots
Music Festival at the Queen, 3/21

WILMINGTON, DE | As I drove into Wilmington, Delaware, for the festival, I made a meaningful stop—visiting the home once owned by Bob Marley’s mother, a place where Bob himself spent time over the years. It felt only right, a quiet moment of reflection before celebrating the 50th anniversary of Rastaman Vibration. This was going to be a special show highlighting roots and reggae in the Northeast, and one that I could not miss.

The evening was curated by local reggae artist Kenny Vannella, who assembled an exceptional band and welcomed a couple of true legends to the stage. But this wasn’t just a night of reggae—it was a community-driven event, with proceeds benefiting The Music School of Delaware. Opening performances by Cecilia Grace and Lower Case Blues brought diverse musical textures that enriched the night. Hosting duties were handled by Kenny’s friend, Sahr Abu, who kept the energy flowing.

Personally, my anticipation extended beyond the music. As a longtime fan, the opportunity to see—and meet—former Wailer saxophonist Glen DaCosta and Bob Marley’s cousin Jimmy Malcolm made the night even more special. The evening delivered on every level.

Cecilia Grace opened the show with a voice that was bold, clear, and angelic, yet grounded in a raw emotional honesty. Her ability to shift between powerful, slightly raspy belts and soft, controlled tones gave her performance real depth. Whether performing original songs or covers, she held the crowd effortlessly. Her guitar work was equally impressive—dynamic and rhythmic, creating a full sound that made it feel like more instruments were present. She was the perfect tone-setter for the night.

Next up was Lower Case Blues, a powerhouse trio featuring Jake Banaszak (guitar), B.J. Muntz (bass/vocals), and Tristan Gilbert (drums). From the moment they hit the stage, they brought an explosive energy that had the crowd fully engaged. Their sound was massive for a three-piece, blending blues, funk, and rock with an improvisational edge.

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TVD Radar: The Visitors, Motherland ‘Top Shelf’ reissue in stores 5/29

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Jazz Dispensary returns with another sought-after rarity from Craft Recordings’ deepest vaults: The Visitors’ spiritual jazz masterpiece, Motherland.

Out-of-print since its initial release in 1976, Motherland showcases the genius of saxophonist brothers Earl and Carl Grubbs, who led their band (pianist Joe Bonner, bassist John Lee, drummer Victor Lewis) through heady originals and beloved standards. As with all releases in Jazz Dispensary’s album-centric Top Shelf Series, Motherland features all-analog (AAA) mastering by Kevin Gray at Cohearent Audio and is pressed on 180-gram vinyl at Fidelity Record Pressing. Rounding out the package is a stylish tip-on jacket that faithfully reproduces the album’s original design. Motherland, which arrives May 29th and is available for pre-order, will also make its long-awaited debut on streaming platforms in standard and HD audio.

Motherland is the second release in a year-long slate of anniversary programming from the curators at Jazz Dispensary, with more out-of-print cult classics, groove-forward compilations, special releases, global listening events, and additional surprises set to roll out throughout 2026.

Formed in Philadelphia in the early ’70s, The Visitors were a short-lived but highly respected spiritual and free jazz quintet, led by saxophonists and brothers Carl Grubbs (alto) and Earl Grubbs (tenor and soprano). The brothers often drew comparisons to John Coltrane—and for good reason, as their cousin Naima was the iconic saxophonist’s first wife. In their youth, the Grubbs were fortunate enough to learn from the best, with Coltrane and fellow jazz legend Eric Dolphy both serving as mentors.

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  • SUPPORTING YOUR LOCAL INDIE SHOPS SINCE 2007


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