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NJCoast News

November 2001

What's Up This Month on the New Jersey Coast

Volume 2, Number 11, page 17

SHOREWORLD
(continued from page 16)
beamlength, go to www.shiftlessweb.moonfruit.com, or for a copy of the CD, address any requests to Rohan, at shiftlessmusic.@hotmail.com , and be ready to enjoy a bad day!

  .SATURDAY NIGHT I THREW MY CHERRY BOMB
       And it landed right in the middle of what I could only call "Pop Anthem Night" at the fabled Stone Pony, where we caught a deftly packaged, era-spanning show from prime members of 70's Supergroups The Bay City Rollers and The Runaways..

     The Sunday night show had an unusual aspect to it, one that was more commonplace in 'the old days', namely both Headliners shared the same local backing band, except for the drummer.

     Singing as if he'd just stepped off a Rollers' tour in 79, first act was Ian Mitchell and back-up band{featuring Sean Mars on guitar,backing vocals, Mike Jaffe, guitar Keith Roth, bass/backing vocals, Mike Jaffe, guitars and Clint Gascoyne (from Frankenstein 3000} on drums..

         First song  "Money Honey" rolled out in passionate angry form at this Sunday night concert, as Mitchell & the band ripped into the 70's hit with a hard rock spin, putting a jaunty vibe on this breakfast-in-bed classic as the band delivered a tight hard rock edge behind Ian's still-in-good form vocals..
(continued on page 18)

Dave Mac
(continued from page 16)
OF BLUES is particularly gratifying for Mac, because he has more programming control than most announcers.  It's his baby, and he has ultimately earned the right to decide what to play without any of the typical deference to music or programming directors that would be expected of most disc jockeys.  He takes pride in putting the show together every week, using the music of obvious blues masters (e.g. BB King, Albert Collins, Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown, John Lee Hooker, Jimmy Reed, etc.), contemporary blues men (think Eric Clapton, Jimi Hendrix, Kim Wilson, Dr. John, Roomful Of Blues, Keb Mo', Stevie Ray Vaughn, Johnny Winter, etc.) and  blues ladies (Susan Tedeschi, Rory Block, Koko Taylor, Etta James, Ruth Brown, Toni Price, Marcia Ball, E.C. Scott, etc.) as well as more eclectic artists who would get little or no radio airplay on most stations (e.g. Peter Green, Southside Johnny & the Asbury Jukes,

(continued on page 18)

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