Finn Wolfhard‘s Calpurnia dropped their sugary, shambling debut single, “City Boy”, last month, giving the world its first taste of the young band’s forthcoming EP. Now, Wolfhard and co. have shared another song, “Louie”, as well as a June 15th release date for the record, which is called Scout.
Twin Peaks‘ Cadien Lake James helmed the EP, and also lends some “choir-boy harmonies” to “Louie”, which guitarist Ayla Tesler-Mabe describes as “written from the perspective of a guy who always leaves his partner, and though she does everything she can to hold down the fort at home, he never shows up.”
She adds, “The guitar solo is meant to convey the longing she feels for him to come home, and the loneliness she feels without him at her side.” Aw.
The song really is a showcase for Tesler-Mabe, who alternates between the melancholic strains of slide guitar and some rousing, Stones-inspired licks in the final moments. Wolfhard, meanwhile, provides some chill strums that intriguingly pair with his plaintive cries of “I feel cold!” Listen to it below.
THE Coachella 2018 music festival is almost ready to kick off as droves of arts and music fans from across the world head to California. Here is everything you need to know about Coachella dates, tickets, lineup and more.
Whenever anyone vows to “tell it like it is,” you can pretty much count on hearing a racist rant. That’s essentially what happened at what was ostensibly a tax reform roundtable event held in West Virginia on Thursday where President Trump made a show of tossing out his prepared remarks and commenced an impromptu rally…
The 1951 Fender No-caster (often called a Fender Broadcaster) is famed for being the best-known guitar with which Stevie Ray Vaughan learned his craft and began to make his first studio recordings. Acquired from his brother Jimmie Vaughan in 1966 when Stevie Ray was twelve, the guitar became known as ‘Jimbo’, thanks in part to that name having been scratched into the finish on the instrument’s rear finish.
As the story goes, Vaughan used the guitar (and even reportedly slept with it at times) from the mid-’60s until 1971, when he traded it to music teacher Geoff Appold for a red Epiphone, because many of his idols played that same guitar.
“[Jimmie] gave me a ’51 Tele, a cross between a Broadcaster and a Tele that I rebuilt and ended up letting someone talk me into selling and I’m still kicking myself,” said Vaughan in a 1989 interview. “Still looking for it, by the way! So if somebody finds a guitar that says ‘Jimbo’ on the back and it’s the right one, it’s the real deal – you can come rape me for it, or my pocketbook anyway!”
Sadly Stevie Ray Vaughan tragically passed away in a plane crash in 1990, having never reclaimed his guitar, but now a dedicated music fan has the chance to own this rare piece of musical history.
If you’re the lucky winner of this fabled instrument, you’ll also score two CD copies of unreleased live recordings by the late rocker, including one live set from his early band Liberation.
Needless to say, this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for rock fans, so if money isn’t an issue and you’re real keen on musical history, head on over to Heritage Auctions for more info.
Check out a closer look Steve Ray Vaughan’s first guitar below: