“We’re trying to figure out a way forward,” drummer Jody Stephens, the lone surviving original member of the band, tells Billboard.com.


One year ago, Noel Gallagher quit Oasis with "great relief" nearly two decades after founding the band with his brother, Liam. Though the two still haven't spoken since their massive final fight in Paris last August, both are moving ahead with music: Noel got back onstage in March, performing a …


FreeCreditScore.com scoured the country to find the hottest new band. After a  long and hard search, here are the four finalists vying for a chance to perform on the 2010 MTV Video Music Awards tour and have their music featured in the new FreeCreditScore.com commercial. Now it’s up to you to vote and to help decide which band will win! Each brings a unique style and sound to the table, so check them out and decide for yourself!

Evolove: This L.A. alternative rock band, which formed after meeting on Craigslist, prides itself on engaging performances throughout the West Coast at venues such as the Viper Room, Universal CityWalk and The Hollywood Palladium. Evolove’s vocals are fronted by lead singer Lucy Levinsohn and sound similar to the likes of Flyleaf and Rise Against. The group’s debut album, 2012: Countdown to the End, was released in October, along with videos for tracks “Toyshop Girl” and “2012.”

I Love Monsters: These New Yorkers named their band after a little boy they saw crossing Sixth Avenue, finger in nose, sporting a shirt that read “I Love Monsters.” The indie-rock group considers its sound to be a mixture of dance rock with pop. Influences include The Arctic Monkeys, Weezer, Phoenix, The Get Up Kids and The Beatles. A dream came true for the guys when they were given the opportunity to play at the Gramercy Theatre, and they have also recently released their Rescue EP.

The Poets Dance: The Poets Dance is an electro band from Chicago. Its sound has a unique twist of progressive club rock and synthesizers, along with percussion. The group has strutted its stuff on Midwest stages such as The Red Lion, Chubby Rain and Penny Road Club. Its inspiration comes from bands such as Taking Back Sunday, The Used, Angels & Airwaves and A Love Like Pi. Combining a passion for dance music with a poetic-like sound is how this group named its band and describes its style.

The Victorious Secrets:
This gang from Sterling Heights, Michigan, entered a rock competition in Detroit merely to see if they could win. When they did, they decided to take their music a little more seriously. The newfound band has won over a loyal following with their pop-rock sound and original style. The boys are launching their EP this summer and use The Beatles as their inspiration. Since their official formation, The Victorious Secrets have performed at The Fillmore Detroit and Comerica Park.

You have from now until August 9 to select your favorite among the four finalist bands.  Who will be the Free Credit Score band AND join the 2010 MTV Video Music Awards tour? Get clicking and find out!


When Fall Out Boy announced they were taking an indefinite hiatus last year, Pete Wentz decided his next project was going to be a total departure from his emo day job. He just had no idea what that might be. "I got kind of bummed out because I wasn't doing …


Green Day Rock Band

We’re just one week away from the release of “Green Day: Rock Band,” as one of the biggest acts in the world conquers an all-new medium: video games. It features 47 of the Berkeley boys’ greatest tracks, including all of Dookie, American Idiot and 21st Century Breakdown.

Recently, Buzzworthy had a chance to talk with Green Day about the game, the group’s all-time best MTV memories and some of the more painful events that have gone down while they were out on tour. We also asked them about the songs that aren’t included in “Green Day: Rock Band.” Of the songs that didn’t make the cut, only two are Green Day songs. One is “Stop Drop and Roll” by their recent side project The Foxboro Hot Tubs, and the other, as Mike Dirnt notes, is a Who cover. The last song that Billie Joe offers up is “Hungry Hungry Models” by The Network -– a band long rumored to be Green Day in disguise, though Green Day’s never confirmed its involvement in the group. Interesting … very interesting.

Watch Green Day discuss the music of “Green Day: Rock Band,” video games, plus their all-time favorite MTV moments, their sickest tour injuries and more in this exclusive interview. In the meantime, check out new “Green Day: Rock Band” video mods for “Know Your Enemy,” “Last of the American Girls” and “21 Guns.” And don’t forget: “Green Day: Rock Band” drops Tuesday, June 8!


There will be plenty of testosterone on stage at the CMT Awards next month. Tim McGraw, Brad Paisley and Zac Brown Band are now confirmed to perform.


March 30, 2010

Style Files: 5 Wacky Pieces Of Band Merch

Author: webc

I don’t know about you, but I’m a sucker for band merch — and the weirder, the better. I love it when groups get creative and think outside the black T-shirt box. I was particularly impressed by the following wacky pieces of band merch. Start stretching, because you and your credit card are in for quite a workout. Plus, check out more consumer goodness after the jump!

1. Metric water bottle ($14): Dancing up a storm works up quite a thirst. Thankfully, Metric offers these handy — and eco-friendly — water bottles so you can hydrate while you express your “Stadium Love.”


2. The Avett Brothers skull flower slip mat ($10): Do you get all emotional every time you think of The Avett Brothers? Me, too. That’s why I thought this slip mat was so unique. Not only can you spin Ave Bros. on the 1’s and 2’s, but you can channel their lovelorn musical energy when you’re taking a break from the wheels of steel, too. All Avett, all the time.

3. Never Shout Never custom-beaded bracelet set ($15): By offering me this friendship bracelet, Christofer Drew totally wants to be my bestie, right? Right? RIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIGHT? [Bugs eyes, puts hands on hips, starts to breathe heavily in and out.]

4. Black Eyes Peas knuckle ring ($24.95): Good thing BEP tour manager Polo Molina wasn’t wearing this little piece of hardware when he allegedly punched Perez Hilton in the kisser. That would’ve left quite a mark.

5. Lady Gaga bubbles ($5): Sure, the label says that these magical bubbles are supposed to erase the line between audience and performer — or some kind of pretentious jargon like that — but I really think that Gaga is just expressing her love for Don Ho. “Tiny bubbles … in the wine … make me feel happy … make me feel fine.”


Photo: Kent/WireImage

Led Zeppelin have been turning down festival reunion offers left and right, and now we know why: Robert Plant will hit the road with his resurrected Band of Joy project this summer — and he’s currently recording a new album slated for release in early summer or late fall. The first leg of the 12-date tour kicks off July 13th in Memphis before wrapping up July 31st in Miami; a second leg is scheduled for the fall. As Zep fans probably know, Plant and drummer John Bonham were members of Band of Joy prior to joining Led Zeppelin.

For his new record and tour, Plant has rounded up an ace group of roots musicians and session players: Patty Griffith on vocals, multi-instrumentalist Darrell Scott, guitarist and co-producer Buddy Miller, drummer Marco Giovino and bassist Byron House. “It’s been a blast working on these new songs… and I’m enjoying such creativity and vitality,” Plant said in a statement. “It’s been a remarkable change of direction for all of us and as a group we all seem to have developed a new groove.”

The upcoming release will be Plant’s first LP since 2007’s Raising Sand, his multiplatinum, Grammy-winning collaboration with Alison Krauss. With Krauss busy working on recording and touring with her own band Union Station, Plant doesn’t plan to tour or record with her this year, although he does promise there will be an eventual follow-up to Raising Sand. “Alison and I get together quite often… and sometimes we dance,” Plant added.

Ticket info and on-sale dates for the trek can be found at Ticketmaster. Check out the dates tour below:

Robert Plant and the Band of Joy
July 13 – Memphis, TN @ The Orpheum Theater
July 15 – Little Rock, AR @ Robinson Center Music Hall
July 16 – Tulsa, OK @ Brady Theater
July 18 – Albuquerque, NM @ Sandia Casino Amphitheater
July 20 – Phoenix, AZ @ Dodge Theater
July 21 – Tucson, AZ @ Anselmo Valencia Amphitheater
July 23 – Dallas, TX @ Meyerson Symphony Hall
July 24 – Houston, TX @ Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion
July 26 – Austin, TX @ Stubbs Waller Creek Amphitheater
July 28 – Mobile, AL @ The Saenger Theatre
July 30 – Clearwater, FL @ Ruth Eckerd Hall
July 31 – Miami, FL @ Bayfront Park Amphitheater

Related Stories:

Led Zeppelin Turn Down Offer to Headline Download Festival
Rarely Seen Led Zeppelin Images Surface in New Photo Book


Neon Trees‘ “Animal” is one of the most incessantly catchy singles of the year. With its lush synths and insistent drumming it evokes an unforgettable night out in, say, London, running for cabs, partying with friends, hoping to stop time.

Which is kind of funny, since Neon Trees are based in Provo, Utah. Such is the charm of their updated New Wave sound, which can recall the great works of Duran Duran and The Psychedelic Furs as well as more modern purveyors of dance-friendly rock like The Killers.

We had to get to know the band behind this incredible song. The foursome, whose debut album, Habits, is in stores now, are an insanely personable bunch.

In this episode of “The 5,” the members of Neon Trees — Tyler Glenn, Chris Allen, Branden Campbell and Elaine Bradley — talk about the origin of their band name and how that name unintentionally led to Branden joining the band. Neon Trees also does a quick bit of Lady Gaga-karaoke to explain how Elaine and Chris were once an item (a “Bad Romance” that actually ended OK). They also go into detail about their various hometowns and the roads that led them to Utah.

Check out the interview below as well as their video for “Animal,” which is the jam.


A member of the pop group Girlicious has been charged in California with drug possession with the intent to sell after Glendale police allegedly found a dozen plastic bags of cocaine in her Gucci purse.


Photo: Getty

  • Beck’s next Record Club project will feature St. Vincent, the Liars and Os Mutantes, Pitchfork reports, though it’s unclear which classic album they’ve tackled.
  • If you’ve already mastered Rock Band 2, there’s good news on the horizon: Rock Band 3 will be out in time for the 2010 holidays. A statement on the game’s Facebook page promises the new title will “innovate and revolutionize the music genre once again.” Green Day: Rock Band will arrive June 8th.
  • In addition to being inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of Genesis next week, Phil Collins will be honored at June 17th’s Songwriters Hall of Fame gala in New York with the Johnny Mercer Award.

  • Already mastered The Beatles: Rock Band and looking for a new challenge? Harmonix, the makers of Rock Band 2, have launched their new Rock Band Network where indie artists can submit their own music to become downloadable content for the popular music video game. So far roughly 100 songs populate the Rock Band Network, including songs by the Shins, the Hold Steady, KMFDM and guitar virtuoso Steve Vai (good luck playing that on the expert level), but the real draw is the new technology that allows unknown bands to submit their own music for a chance to have their music playable on the Rock Band games. Artists who get their music loaded onto the RBN will receive a 30 percent royalty whenever their tracks sell.

    Check out a gallery of rock stars’ video game avatars.

    The Rock Band Network isn’t just beneficial to musicians but for indie music fans as well: Hardcore gamers are invited to join the network as a “peer reviewer,” meaning they’ll be able to test out the songs, leave feedback and help shape the final versions that will appear on the Network. New Rock Band Network tracks will debut exclusively on XBox 360 for 30 days before moving on to other consoles. Since its beta launch in January 2010, 4,300 gamers have already signed up for Rock Band Network, which should keep you occupied while you wait for the release of Green Day: Rock Band.

    Related Stories:

    “Green Day: Rock Band” Video Game Due in 2010
    “Rock Band Network” to Sell User Tunes as Playable Songs for Game
    “Rock Band” Franchise Exceeds $1 Billion In Sales Before Beatles Game Arrives


    Band Of Horses has set a May 18 release date for its third album, “Infinite Arms,” but Billboard.com can confirm that the project will not be released by Sub Pop, which put out the first two Band Of Horses albums.


    Photo: Davis/Getty

    James Taylor and Carole King flesh out their Troubadour tour, 30 Seconds to Mars declare This Is War on a spring trek and Steve Miller Band make plans to spend another summer singing “The Joker” and other hits. Full dates for all three jaunts are below.

    James Taylor and Carole King
    May 18 – Santa Barbara, CA @ Santa Barbara Bowl
    June 22 – Philadelphia, PA @ Wachovia Center
    June 23 – Washington, DC @ Verizon Center
    June 25 – Newark, NJ @ Prudential Center
    June 26 – Pittsburgh, PA @ Mellon Arena
    June 28 – Wilkes-Barre, PA @ Mohegan Sun Arena
    June 30 – New York, NY @ Madison Square Garden
    July 7 – Cleveland, OH @ Quicken Loans Arena
    July 9 – Chicago, IL @ United Center
    July 10 – St. Louis, MO @ Scottrade Center
    July 12 – Sun Valley, ID @ Sun Valley Center For The Arts
    July 14 – Denver, CO @ Pepsi Center
    July 15 – Salt Lake City, UT @ EnergySolutions Arena
    July 17 – Las Vegas, NV @ MGM Grand
    July 19 – Oakland, CA @ Oracle Arena
    July 20 – Anaheim, CA @ Honda Center

    30 Seconds to Mars
    Apr. 9 – Las Vegas, NV @ The Pearl Theatre
    Apr. 10 – Mesa, AZ @ Mesa Amphitheatre
    Apr. 11 – Tucson, AZ @ Pima County Fair
    Apr. 13 – Tulsa, OK @ Brady Theatre
    Apr. 15 – Milwaukee, WI @ Eagles Ballroom
    Apr. 16 – Chicago, IL @ Aragon Ballroom
    Apr. 17 – Detroit, MI @ The Fillmore
    Apr. 18 – Toronto, ON @ The Sound Academy
    Apr. 20 – Boston, MA @ House of Blues
    Apr. 21 – New York, NY @ Roseland Ballroom
    Apr. 23 – Washington, DC @ TBA
    Apr. 24 – Philadelphia, PA @ Electric Factory
    Apr. 25 – Charlotte, NC @ Uptown Amphitheatre
    Apr. 27 – Miami, FL @ The Fillmore
    Apr. 28 – Orlando, FL @ House of Blues
    Apr. 29 – Atlanta, GA @ Tabernacle
    May 1 – Frisco, TX @ Pizza Hut Park
    May 4 – St. Louis, MO @ The Pageant
    May 6 – Omaha, NE @ Sokol Auditorium
    May 7 – Denver, CO @ Fillmore Auditorium
    May 8 – Salt Lake City, UT @ Rail Event Center
    May 10 – Seattle, WA @ Showbox SoDo
    May 11 – Portland, OR @ Roseland Theatre
    May 13 – Oakland, CA @ Fox Theater
    May 14 – Santa Barbara, CA @ Santa Barbara Bowl
    May 15 – Los Angeles, CA @ Greek Theater

    Steve Miller Band
    Mar. 2 – Nashville, TN @ Ryman Auditorium
    May 21 – Henderson, NV @ M Resort Spa Casino
    May 22 – Palm Springs, CA @ Morongo Casino
    May 23 – Tucson, AZ @ Pima Fairgrounds
    May 28 – Robinsonville, MS @ Grand Casino Tunica
    May 29 – Bossier City, LA @ Harrah’s Louisiana Downs
    May 30 – Little Rock, AR @ Riverfest
    Jun. 4 – Summerside, PEI @ Credit Union Palace
    Jun. 5 – Halifax, NS @ Halifax Metro Centre
    Jun. 7 – Corner Brook, NL @ Pepsi Centre
    Jun. 8 – St. Johns, NL @ Mile One Centre
    Jun. 12 – Atlantic City, NJ @ Atlantic City Hilton
    Jun. 13 – Mashantucket, CT @ Foxwoods Resort Casino
    Jul. 3 – Chicago, IL @ Grant Park
    Jul. 15 – Troutdale, OR @ Edgefield Winery
    Jul. 16 – Bend, OR @ Les Schwab Amphitheater
    Jul. 24 – Pittsburgh, PA @ PNC Park
    Jul. 25 – Louisville, KY @ Churchill Downs
    Jul. 27 – Vienna, VA @ Wolf Trap
    Jul. 29 – Asheville, NC @ Biltmore Estate
    Jul. 30 – Alpharetta, GA @ Verizon Wireless Amphitheater
    Jul. 31 – Orange Beach, AL @ Amphitheater at the Wharf


    Just before the final song of Yoko Ono’s first performance in four decades with founding members of the Plastic Ono Band, at the Brooklyn Academy of Music on February 16th, her son Sean told a short story: At soundcheck that day, Sean remarked to guitarist Eric Clapton that he had never played slide guitar before and wanted to know how Eric and Sean’s father, John, played slide on the early, chaotic Plastic Ono Band records. Clapton replied that, at the time, he had no idea what he was doing.

    Yoko turned to the BAM crowd with a coquettish grin. “I knew what I was doing,” she cracked. Then she leaped into the white-noise boogie of “Don’t Worry, Kyoko” from 1969’s Live Peace in Toronto with rusted shrieks and air-raid-siren whoops as Sean and Clapton played twin grinding slide guitars over a steady thundering rhythm section: original Plastic Ono bassist Klaus Voorman and drummer Jim Keltner, who played on John and Ono’s 1972 album Sometime in New York City.

    Coming two days before her 77th birthday, “We Are Plastic Ono Band” was a two-set revue of Ono’s musical life, with the first half focused on her new album, Between My Head and the Sky. The second part featured friends and disciples performing songs from her previous records, as far apart in temper and touch as “Mulberry” – a wordless memoir of Ono’s World War II childhood in Japan, in raw ecstatic yelps to the free-guitar discord of Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore and Kim Gordon – to Bette Midler’s canny rearrangement of “Yes I’m Your Angel” from Double Fantasy into a saucy sister of “Makin’ Whoopee.” You could almost hear the clinking of martini glasses amid the brass and penthouse-party piano.

    The connective momentum in Ono’s art is her declarative instruction and participatory assurance, from the early-Sixties action works shown in a biographical film at the start of the night – Cut Piece; the ceiling painting with a microscopic “Yes” at the center – to recent songs in the first set like the victory mantra “Rising” and “Higa Noboru,” a ballad from the current album. “I write/I light/My message/On an invisible wall/Of prison cell hell,” she sang in the latter, in a tender but direct voice to Sean’s firm piano work. And inside the extreme confrontation of records like 1970’s Yoko Ono/Plastic Ono Band and 1971’s Fly was always a love of surging rhythm. At BAM, her new Plastic Ono Band – led by Sean, now 34, and including drummer Yuko Araki and Yuka Honda on keyboards – updated the railroad racket of Ono’s 1972 single “Mind Train” with percolating dancefloor electronics. Ono shimmeyed to the beat as she wailed.

    Performance artist Justin Bond turned “What a Bastard the World Is” from 1973’s Approximately Infinite Universe into a blur of gender: a man dressed like a 1920s ingenue, singing a song of feminist outrage, in a hard deep tenor dotted with girl-ish flutter. Paul Simon and his son Harper, made a short poignant medley of “Silverhorse” from 1981’s Season of Glass, the album Ono made after John Lennon’s death, and his “Hold On,” from John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band record. Played like a pair of traditional English folk ballads, with familial harmonies and two acoustic guitars, the songs captured, without melodrama, the weight of Ono’s loss and her faith in unbroken connection.

    The three-song set with Sean, Clapton, Voorman and Keltner was hardly as ragged as that ‘69 Live Peace show. But it was good rough fun – Voorman was beaming all through “Yer Blues,” the only Beatles song of the night – and Clapton soloed in the Approximately Infinite Universe blues “Death of Samantha” with sharp tortuous cries, like the song was an old Mississippi Delta lament.

    The evening ended with Ono and Sean leading a full-cast singalong to “Give Peace a Chance.” But the audience gave its own encore too: a spontaneous rendition, for Ono, of “Happy Birthday.” Her “Yes” piece had come to life.


    The Best New Artist category is traditionally the hardest  of Grammy Awards winners to predict. This year, with breakout superstar Lady Gaga ineligible for the prize due to an early single’s nomination in 2009, the field is particularly wide-open.


    My Morning Jacket, the electrifying rock band that took nearly a year away from touring, is set to hit the road in April for a 9-date outing through several Southeastern states.


    Photo: Gavan/Getty

    Jeff Beck announces the first leg of his Emotion & Commotion tour, the Allman Brothers Band extend their residency at New York’s United Palace Theatre by five more dates — that’s 13 total now — and Breaking artist Mayer Hawthorne opens for Passion Pit and heads to SXSW on a spring trek that’ll conclude with a set at Coachella. Full dates for all three artists below.

    Jeff Beck
    Apr. 16 – San Francisco, CA @ Nob Hill Masonic Centre
    Apr. 17 – Los Angeles, CA @ Nokia Theatre LA Live
    Apr. 18 – Temecula, CA @ Pechanga Resort & Casino
    Apr. 19 – San Diego, CA @ 4th & B
    Apr. 24 – Houston, TX @ Verizon Wireless Theatre
    Apr. 25 – Dallas, TX @ Nokia Theatre at Grand Prairie
    Apr. 27 – Tulsa, OK @ Brady Theatre
    Apr. 28 – Kansas City, MO @ Starlight Theatre
    Apr. 29 – St. Louis, MO @ Fox Theatre
    Apr. 30 – Memphis, TN @ Beale Street Music Festival
    May 1 – New Orleans, LA @ Jazz Festival

    The Allman Brothers Band
    Mar. 11 – New York, NY @ United Palace Theatre
    Mar. 12 – New York, NY @ United Palace Theatre
    Mar. 13 – New York, NY @ United Palace Theatre
    Mar. 15 – New York, NY @ United Palace Theatre
    Mar. 16 – New York, NY @ United Palace Theatre
    Mar. 18 – New York, NY @ United Palace Theatre
    Mar. 19 – New York, NY @ United Palace Theatre
    Mar. 20 – New York, NY @ United Palace Theatre
    Mar. 22 – New York, NY @ United Palace Theatre
    Mar. 23 – New York, NY @ United Palace Theatre
    Mar. 25 – New York, NY @ United Palace Theatre
    Mar. 26 – New York, NY @ United Palace Theatre
    Mar. 27 – New York, NY @ United Palace Theatre

    Mayer Hawthorne
    Mar. 4 – New York, NY @ Webster Hall
    Mar. 5 – Baltimore, MD @ Ottobar
    Mar. 6 – Northampton, MA @ Pearl Street
    Mar. 7 – Boston, MA @ Paradise Rock Club
    Mar. 9 – Philadelphia, PA @ First Unitarian Church
    Mar. 10 – Washington, DC @ Rock and Roll Hotel
    Mar. 12 – Virginia Beach, VA @ The Jewish Mother
    Mar. 13 – Atlanta, GA @ The Loft
    Mar. 15 – New Orleans, LA @ House of Blues
    Mar. 16 – Dallas, TX @ The Loft
    Mar. 17 – Houston, TX @ Warehouse Live Studio
    Mar. 22 – Oxford, MS @ Proud Larry’s
    Mar. 23 – Nashville, TN @ Exit/In
    Mar. 24 – Louisville, KY @ Zanzabar
    Mar. 26 – Detroit, MI @ St. Andrew’s Hall
    Mar. 27 – Toronto, ON @ Wrongbar
    Mar. 18 – Austin, TX @ SXSW
    Mar. 19 – Austin, TX @ SXSW
    Mar. 20 – Austin, TX @ SXSW
    Mar. 28 – Buffalo, NY @ Town Ballroom
    Mar. 29 – York, PA @ Pullo Center
    Mar. 30 – Cleveland, OH @ House of Blues
    Mar. 31 – Columbus, OH @ Newport Music Hall
    Apr. 2 – Chicago, IL @ Congress Theatre
    Apr. 3 – Milwaukee, WI @ Turner Hall
    Apr. 4 – Minneapolis, MN @ First Avenue
    Apr. 5 – Kansas City, MO @ Beaumont Theatre
    Apr. 7 – Denver, CO @ Ogden Theatre
    Apr. 8 – Salt Lake City, UT @ In the Venue
    Apr. 10 – Eugene, OR @ McDonald Theatre
    Apr. 11 – Vancouver, BC @ Commodore Ballroom
    Apr. 12 – Portland, OR @ Roseland Theatre
    Apr. 14 – Davis, CA @ Freeborn Hall
    Apr. 15 – San Francisco, CA @ Warfield
    Apr. 18 – Indio, CA @ Coachella


    January 26, 2010

    Dave Matthews Band Announce Huge Summer Tour

    Author: webc

    Photo: Natkin/WireImage

    It’s not summer unless the Dave Matthews Band are roving the country, and the Big Whiskey and the GrooGrux King band promise to deliver again in 2010 with a massive four-month tour starting Memorial Day weekend in Hartford, Connecticut. The band will also stage a two-night stand at New York’s Citi Field in mid-July, a three-night affair at George, Washington’s the Gorge in early September and pretty much visit every corner of the continental U.S. DMB will be supported by a wide variety of artists throughout their trek, including the Zac Brown Band, Sharon Jones & The Dap Kings, Govt. Mule, and Ben Harper & Relentless7.

    Check out photos of Dave Matthews Band onstage with Willie Nelson at Fenway Park.

    There is one curious hole in the itinerary: a week-long gap between a June 8th show in Mansfield, Massachusetts and the June 15th show in Cincinnati, Ohio. Are DMB going on a quick vacation mid-tour, or are they maybe performing at a certain Tennessee music festival that takes place June 10-13th? We’ll find out soon. Until then, get the full Dave Matthews Band tour details below:

    Dave Matthews Band
    May 28 – Hartford, CT @ Comcast Theatre
    May 29 – Hartford, CT @ Comcast Theatre
    Jun. 1 – Toronto, ON @ Molson Amphitheatre
    Jun. 2 – Darien, NY @ Darien Lake Performing Arts Center
    Jun. 4 – Saratoga Springs, NY @ Saratoga Performing Arts Center
    Jun. 5 – Saratoga Springs, NY @ Saratoga Performing Arts Center
    Jun. 7- Mansfield, MA @ Comcast Center
    Jun. 8 – Mansfield, MA @ Comcast Center
    Jun. 15 – Cincinnati, OH @ Riverbend Music Center
    Jun. 16 – Maryland Heights, MO @ Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre
    Jun. 18 – Noblesville, IN @ Verizon Wireless Music Center
    Jun. 19 – Noblesville, IN @ Verizon Wireless Music Center
    Jun. 22 – Columbus, OH @ Huntington Park
    Jun. 23 – Clarkston, MI @ DTE Energy Music Theatre
    Jun. 25 – Cuyahoga Falls, OH @ Blossom Music Center
    Jun. 30 – Camden, NJ @ Susquehanna Bank Center
    Jul. 1 – Camden, NJ @ Susquehanna Bank Center
    Jul. 3 – East Troy, WI @ Alpine Valley Music Theatre
    Jul. 4 – East Troy, WI @ Alpine Valley Music Theatre
    Jul. 9 – Hershey, PA @ Hersheypark Stadium
    Jul. 10 – Pittsburgh, PA @ PNC Park
    Jul. 13 – Bethel, NY @ Bethel Woods Center for the Arts
    Jul. 14 – Scranton, PA @ Toyota Pavilion at Montage Mountain
    Jul. 16 – New York, NY @ Citi Field
    Jul. 17 – New York, NY @ Citi Field
    Jul. 20 – Virginia Beach, VA @ Virginia Beach Amphitheater
    Jul. 21 – Charlotte, NC @ Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre Charlotte
    Jul. 23 – Washington, D.C. @ Nationals Park
    Jul. 25 – Louisville, KY @ HullabaLOU Festival
    Jul. 27 – Atlanta, GA @ Aaron’s Amphitheatre at Lakewood
    Jul. 28 – Tampa, FL @ Ford Amphitheatre
    Jul. 30 – West Palm Beach, FL @ Cruzan Amphitheatre
    Jul. 31 – West Palm Beach, FL @ Cruzan Amphitheatre
    Aug. 14 – Wichita, KS @ InTrust Bank Arena
    Aug. 17 – West Valley City, UT @ USANA Amphitheatre
    Aug. 20 – Chula Vista, CA @ Cricket Wireless Amphitheatre
    Aug. 21 – Irvine, CA @ Verizon Wireless Amphitheater
    Aug. 23 – Los Angeles, CA @ Hollywood Bowl
    Aug. 25 – Concord, CA @ Sleep Train Pavilion at Concord
    Aug. 27 – Marysville, CA @ Sleep Train Amphitheatre
    Aug. 28 – Mountain View, CA @ Shoreline Amphitheatre
    Aug. 31 – Boise, ID @ Taco Bell Arena
    Sept. 3 – George, WA @ Gorge Amphitheatre
    Sept. 4 – George, WA @ Gorge Amphitheatre
    Sept. 5 – George, WA @ Gorge Amphitheatre
    Sept. 10 – Woodlands, TX @ Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion
    Sept. 11 – Dallas, TX @ Superpages.com Center
    Sept. 14 – Omaha, NE @ Qwest Center
    Sept. 15 – St. Paul, MN @ Xcel Energy Center


    E Street Band saxophonist Clarence Clemons says he’s “in great spirits” after undergoing back surgery.

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