Estadísticas
Biografía
Born in 1970 to Bob Dylan and Sara Lowndes, Jakob Dylan grew up in Los Angeles, however following his parents’ divorce studied at private schools across L.A. and New York, U.S. With that much music in his blood young Dylan formed the original Wallflowers in 1989 with guitarist Tobi Miller, keyboardist Rami Jaffee, bassist Barrie Maguire and drummer Peter Yanowitz. The band released their eponymous debut in 1992 on Virgin records, however the album sold poorly and the Wallflowers were dropped from the label shortly afterwards.
Undeterred, with a new line-up of Dylan, guitarist Michael Ward, bassist Greg Richling, keyboardist Jaffee and drummer Mario Calire, the group signed to Interscope, and enlisted the help of longtime Dylan family friend and producer T-Bone Burnett. The resulting album was the multi-platinum “Bringing Down the Horse” released in May 1996, which featured the popular singles “6th Avenue Heartache” and “One Headlight”, the latter of which earned the band a Grammy award for Best Rock Song.
After a four-year hiatus, letting the dust of their popular album settle, the Wallflowers released their third full-length album “Breach” at the turn of the new millennium. Despite earning positive reviews from critics, a sharper, keener sound, and Jakob tackling issues relating to having such an iconic father, the album passed-by largely unnoticed and was succeeded by the more accessible “Red Letter Days” in 2002.
The Wallflowers’ follow-up “Rebel, Sweetheart” was issued in 2005, peaking at No. 40 on the Billboard Album chart. The album marked a move away from Interscope records, the departure of keyboard player Jaffee and a slowing of the band’s touring and recording schedule. Jakob Dylan’s debut solo album “Seeing Things” was released in 2008, followed the year after by the Wallflowers’ compilation album “Collected: 1996-2005” and supporting tour. With a new line-up featuring Jaffee, bassist Greg Richling, guitarist Stuart Mathis, and former Pearl Jam drummer Jack Irons, the band released their sixth studio album “Glad All Over” in 2012.
Críticas en vivo
Alternative rock hit its popularity peak in the 90s, and The Wallflowers were a big part of it.
Starting the band in 1989, Jakob Dylan (yes, Bob Dylan’s son) teamed up with Barrie Maguire, Peter ‘Pedro’ Yanowitz and Rami Jaffee to start The Wallflower. Yanowitz soon left and was replaced by Greg Richling. Over the course of the band’s existence, the lineup changed significantly. However one thing remains the same -- Dylan is the frontman. From the early 90s to the present, they released six albums as well as a greatest hits record called ‘Collected: 1996-2005).’ After seeing them play the CBGB Festival earlier this year, two things were clear. First they sound better than ever. Two, Dylan has not aged a bit. Looking cool and calm in shades and a fedora, he and the rest of the band played their biggest hits and drew large crowds to the early afternoon set. And considering it was staged in the middle of Times Square in New York City, having a crowd of that size proves just how much of a legacy The Wallflowers have left. Listening to ‘One Headlight,’ ‘Three Marlenas’ and ‘The Difference’ brought me back to my primary school days when I would watch Dylan’s clear water blue eyes grace my television in one of their big music videos. You know when music videos actually still mattered? Either way, The Wallflowers still have it and are now bringing this hits on the road in hopes of bringing nostalgia to longtime fans and picking up a bunch of new ones.
The very fact that Wallflowers was brought into fruition by Bob Dylan’s son, Jakob Dylan, immediately sets the band up as being incredibly promising indeed. Born into the musical genes of an idol, Jakob Dylan created something special with the Wallflowers. The rock band’s line up may have changed significantly throughout the years, but their steady success has never faltered since they began back in 1989. The band saw their biggest hits in the 90s and many of these have become rock classics. The audience that had turned out to see the old school band perform was impressive to behold and was clearly excited beyond comprehension to see Jakob and the rest of the band. They did not disappoint. From the rock classic and epic hit ‘One Headlight’, which and the whole crowd signing along, to the slower ‘6th Avenue Heartache’, the band delivered hit after hit and their vocals and instrumentals were on point with each track. Dylan had appeared to not age a day and his voice sounded as rock god soulful as ever.
Long time fan. Might recommend rehearsing set list. Multiple gaffs. I suppose that is the charming quirkiness of live shows, my optimist could even call it romantic. Forgotten lines, mumbled verses, one song wholly unrecognizable as the vocals were completely unheard. Some of that I will put on the venue. Not a fan of the elementary school cafeteria style seating with nonfunctional spacing. Especially when at least 30% of the seats were unsold and the venue chose to neither remove the vacant seats to allow for more functional spacing, nor open the seating for other patrons. Not to mention the fact that the acoustics are terrible for anything but boot-scootin'.
It was my first as close as you can get to a concert!! Wallflowers was my husbands favorite band but I liked them very much too. Only thing negative was a very loud person hollarinf when no one was even on the stage! And then some asshole who requested to hear Jacob sing one of his dad's songs!! Other than that the fact I tried to order my tickets online took my money got NO tickets I had to go into Yellow Dog Discs and pay with cash. Have been the rounds with ticket fly and my bank! So far they cost me $151.73!!!
Good show overall, but hurt by two things: 1) The 10:30 start was late enough without the band pushing it to 10:50! No excuse for that with no opening band. 2) There was incredibly loud feedback for the 10 - 15 minutes before the game came back on for the encore. We were all plugging our ears. Not sure what the point of that was.
So again, the band was in fine form, but those two issues definitely took away from the experience.