You probably donāt notice, but when youāre watching your favorite TV show, those songs you hear in the background come from someone, and if your favorite shows include Greyās Anatomy, One Tree Hill, or Californication, youāve probably already heard the music of John Elliott.

The singer-songwriter may be unknown to many Central Coast residents, but heās played nearly every venue in Los Angeles, including a residency and regular shows at the famous Hotel CafĆ©. As front man to his band The Hereafter, he can definitely rock out, but heāll be playing an intimate solo acoustic set when he headlines Steve Keyās Songwriters at Play showcase on Thursday, July 4, at The Porch.
āHe has been described as a masterful songwriterācompared to Leonard Cohen and Bob Dylan,ā said showcase co-producer Bonnie Nelson.
The show runs from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m., is all ages, and is a pass-the-hat affair that features several other performers playing four-song sets.
Songwriters at Play continues on Sunday, July 17, with headliners Valerie Johnson and Al B Blue at Sculpterra Winery (1 p.m.; all ages; pass-the-hat). The Nipomo-based blues, jazz, and gospel duo is making an encore appearance, delivering āmusic that walks right into your heart and shakes hands with your soul.ā
Valerie, a Bay Area native, toured Europe with the Bitburg Gospel Messengers and sang gospel and blues in the Far East. In 1998, she also sang lead on tour with the band made famous by Janis Joplin: Big Brother and the Holding Company. Sheās also sung with āboogie woogie piano queenā Deanna Bogart, and the award-winning blues/gospel group, The Holmes Brothers.
Al, a classically trained pianist, formed a street corner doo-wop group in Camden, N.J., back in the ā50s, giving him his first taste of radio airplay. In California, he picked up the guitar, paid his dues, and eventually joined Big Black & The Congregation, an Afro-funk band, then toured the West Coast with Curtis Mayfield.
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Donāt miss this one!
As a special celebration of what would have been Woody Guthrieās 99th birthday, Songwriters at Play is coming to The Spot in the Village of Arroyo Grande on Monday, July 18, at 7 p.m. ($10). Come hear tunes made famous by the writer of āThis Land is Your Landā when host Steve Key, young string band Hayburner, father-son duo Young Ireland, Ted Waterhouse, Randall Lamb, Kelly Wildowsky, Regina Bartlett, and Don Lampson perform more than 20 Guthrie classics.
Finally, on Tuesday, July 19, That Evening Sun headlines the showcase at Kreuzberg (6:30 p.m.; all ages; pass-the-hat). According to co-producer Bonnie Nelson, That Evening Sun is her favorite new band: āWhen Paul Silva and Steve Kindel of The Woolies met up with Honeyguideās Shannon Savage and Ben Erchul, a dynamic new band emerged. That Evening Sun features three-part harmonies, three alternating lead singers, three distinctive writers, with three guitars, Benās jazz-rock bass, occasional mandolin, banjo, or bouzouki added to the mix. Often theyāre joined by blues harmonica ace Debra Windsong.ā
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Get connected

L.A.-based rockers The Connection are coming to The Pour House on Friday, July 15, from 8 to 11 p.m., with special guest singer-songwriter Andy Chanley opening.
The Connection features threeācount āem three!ānative Paso Roblans: Mike Wright-Brady, Billy Thompson, and Todd Andrew! The band also features producer-drummer Christian James Hand, whoās toured with Peter Gabriel and PM Dawn. Heās also the producer behind the bands Tainstick and Death! Death! Die!
Joining them on bass is Matt DiPanni of the band The Mowgliās, and together this energetic quintet has a āsound that mixes the hopeful storytelling of artists like The Gaslight Anthem and Bruce Springsteen with the rock beats of Tom Petty and The Cars.ā
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Let the good times roll again!
Months ago, Bon Temps Creole CafƩ experienced a devastating fire, which made it real hard for me to get my blackened pork sausage patties breakfast fix, my muffalettas lunch fix, and my jambalaya with shrimp and andouille dinner fix!
Well praise the lord, because proprietor Phil Lang has finally got his restaurant up and running again, and heās planning a daylong grand reopening bash from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. on Saturday, July 16.

Appropriately dubbed āThe Tardi Gras Party,ā the event features live music all day long from the likes of Billy & Charlie Foppiano, Valerie Johnson & Al B Blue, Karen Tyler, the Creole Syncopators, Cliff āCrawdaddyā Stepp, and Red Skunk Jipzee Swing Band.
Spicy music, spicy food, and spicy folks!
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YouTube sensation
Nearly 10 million YouTube viewers canāt be wrong, right? Because thatās how many people have watched Obadiah Parkerās version of Outkastās āHey Ya.ā Heās also sold half a million songs on iTunes, was featured on Howard Stern, and was an answer to a question on Jeopardy! And thatās not even his proudest achievement.
āItās the little things in life like an 8-year-old who can sing along at Obadiahās shows and know every word that feel like his biggest accomplishments,ā says his bio. āWhile his family knows him as Mat Weddle, the Phoenix native has been playing music under the name Obadiah Parker for six years and proving that no matter what you call him he is a force to be reckoned with.
āMy voice is my gift,ā he says. āSongwriting is my craft. Performing is my purpose.ā
Obadiah Parker is now on tour in support of The Siren and the Saint, his fourth independent release and first full-length studio album. See him Saturday, July 16, at Linnaeaās CafĆ© (8 p.m.; all ages; pass-the-hat).
Check out this performer who āaims for honest, universal songwriting that people can connect to the artist with and share a common experience.ā
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Beach pop!

āThis summer, Iāll be the only girl with two dudes in a van for two months, going across the country, playing shows, and crashing on peopleās couches (and staying in the occasional hotel room),ā said Paper City front woman Marisa Predisik. āShenanigans to ensue? Absolutely.ā
The Long Beach-based indie-pop act will deliver an evening of their breezy tunes at Kreuzberg on Monday, July 18, at 7 p.m. Featuring Predisik (vocals-ukulele), Ben Swenson (bass), and Dave Waterman (drums), the trio says their sound is āreminiscent of ā60s beach pop resurrected in modern time.ā
The unsigned act has two full-length albums and two EPs, and they continue to spend a lot of time in the studio recording their quirky, charming tunes. Theyāre currently on a 23-state tour to promote Popular Talk, their newest. Theyāve also been working on videos for their singles āThen You Arriveā and āHoliday,ā and they covered the Nick Lowe song āRollers Showā for a promotional video for the Long Beach Roller Derby Girls.
This is an act that promises to charm the pants right off you!
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More music ā¦
Grammy winner Louie Ortega and local singer-songwriter Lance Robison team up every Thursdayāyes, that includes Thursday, July 14āto play McLintockās in Paso, from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Grab some grub or grog, settle in, and remind yourself what terrific performers these two guys are.
Oslo plays Frog and Peach on Thursday, July 14, as part of their seven-date West Coast tour. āBack after a few year hiatus, they have two mini-albums scheduled for release for this year,ā said their publicist Tim Broun. āThey have the contemporary punch of bands like Arctic Monkeys, Muse, and Placebo, while recalling various UK post punk bands like the Comsat Angels, the Sound, and the Cure ⦠with a pinch of Alice In Chains!ā

Fans of Mary Meserve-Millerās Legends series may have lamented their disappearance from the SLO Little Theater, but you canāt keep a good legend down. Sheās constructed a new show, Viva La Diva!, which chronicles music from Ethel Merman to Jimi Hendrix and everything in between! Past Legends shows generally focused on the biography and career of one performer, but this new show is more of a cabaret that features a live orchestra, more than 20 dancers, 10 singers, and eight mini-videos. This FUNdraiser for Nipomo High Schoolās Drama Fund opens Friday, July 15, and runs through Sunday, July 31, at the Clark Center. Call 489-9444 or visit ClarkCenter.org for ticket information.

The U.S. Coast Guard Band performs a free concert of American music Saturday, July 16, at 8 p.m. in Harman Hall of the Performing Arts Centerās Christopher Cohan Center. In addition to John Philip Sousa marches, expect other patriotic and classical works including a wind ensemble arrangement of Aaron Coplandās aria āThe Promise of Living,ā Alfred Reedās āArmenian Dances,ā Morton Gouldās āSanta Fe Saga,ā and Frank Ticheliās āWild Nights.ā Also, soprano soloist musician 1st Class Megan Weikleenget will sing Samuel Augustus Wardās poignant āAmerica the Beautiful,ā with other surprises. The concert is free and open to the public. Tickets, however, are required; call 756-2787.
San Diego-based reggae and rock act Jet West hits Frog and Peach on Friday, July 15, from 10:30 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. The band says its music is āinspired by the tan girls, good waves, and great weather of SoCal.ā Hell yeah!
The Atascadero Main Street program continues on Saturday, July 16, with Bremen Town from 7 to 10 p.m. in the historic downtown Colony District. āThe music is one more way we work to entice locals and visitors into downtown Atascadero in the summer,ā said Main Street manager Steve Martin, who noted that the concerts are free. Iāve never heard of Bremen Town, the band, but their name comes from a Brothers Grimm folktale about a donkey, dog, cat, and rooster who leave their respective farms, decide to travel to Bremen, Germany, to become musicians, but instead upset some robbers ransacking a cottage, where the animals eventually take refuge and live out their days in peace.
If you find yourself up near Ragged Point Resort on Sunday, July 17, between 1 and 4 p.m., I highly recommend stopping in to catch the Don Lampson Outfit at work. Featuring Don Lampsonās gritty voice and sparkling fret work, Charlie Kleemannās slap happy standup bass, and multi-instrumentalist Eric Brittainās utter virtuosity, this is a trio that really delivers the goods. The show is free!
On Sunday, July 17, the Cadillac Angels will bring their rootsy, rockabilly, surf sounds to Grover Beachās Sizzlinā Summer Concert Series from 3 to 6 p.m. in Ramona Garden Park. This bandās got more than a dozen albums under its belt and features seriously awesome guitar work from front man Tony Ridge, who uses vintage guitars, amps, and FX.

San Francisco-based Slow Trucks return to the Frog and Peach at 9 p.m. on Sunday, July 17, joined by local band, smAlls. Slow Trucks is currently touring in support of Hard, their debut on 20 Sided Records, a sweet collection of jangly alt-pop tunes, some of which veer off into punk goofiness, like on āSteve the Bellyā: āHello/ My name is Steve/I am a big belly/And Iām feeling very hungry/So wonāt you please feed me?ā If youāre a fan of The Dead Milkmen, King Missile, or Ween, youāll find something to enjoy here.
In case you missed TED at Last Stage West the other day, fear not, for the Long Beach act returns to the area with a 10 p.m. show on Monday, July 18, at Frog and Peach. Featuring Tom, Evan, and Don (TED, get it?), the group features Tom Harmon (guitar), Evan Anderson (mandolin), and Don Rowan (upright bass) producing crowd-pleasing acoustic Americana and bluegrass.
Keep up with Glen Starkey via twitter at twitter.com/glenstarkey, friend him at Myspace.com/glenstarkey, or contact him at gstarkey@newtimesslo.com.
This article appears in Jul 14-21, 2011.


