This Week @ Knuckleheads Comedy Night, The Rumblejetts, Eric Sardinas, Commander Cody, Double Clutch Band, The Low Rider Band, Lil' Ed & the Imperials
Tuesday 9/26
Comedy & Talent Night
Come show YOUR talent at our open mike night! 7pm No Cover
Wednesday 9/27
The Rumblejetts
Swing Dance lessons 7:30pm No Cover
Thursday 9/28
Eric Sardinas
8 pm tickets $12 adv $15 dos
Friday 9/29
COMMANDER CODY
with special guets The Double Clutch Blues Band
8pm tickets $15
Saturday 9/30 Open Jam 1pm till 5 pm
The Orginal Low Riders
Remember War?
Remember songs like "Lowrider","Slipping Into Darkness", "Why Can't We Be Friends", "The World Is A Ghetto", and "Spill The Wine"? Then you'll remember Lee Oskar, Harold Brown, Howard Scott & BB Dickerson, the 4 remaining originals who brought you these songs, and many more. They're back together now, as the Original Low Riders.
Eric Burden & War
Appearing with very special guest >Lil Ed & the Blues Imperials at 8 pm
Tickets $25 adv $30 dos
Comedy & Talent Night
Come show YOUR talent at our open mike night! 7pm No Cover
Wednesday 9/27
The Rumblejetts
Swing Dance lessons 7:30pm No Cover
Thursday 9/28
Eric Sardinas
8 pm tickets $12 adv $15 dos
Friday 9/29
COMMANDER CODY
with special guets The Double Clutch Blues Band
8pm tickets $15
Saturday 9/30 Open Jam 1pm till 5 pm
The Orginal Low Riders
Remember War?
Remember songs like "Lowrider","Slipping Into Darkness", "Why Can't We Be Friends", "The World Is A Ghetto", and "Spill The Wine"? Then you'll remember Lee Oskar, Harold Brown, Howard Scott & BB Dickerson, the 4 remaining originals who brought you these songs, and many more. They're back together now, as the Original Low Riders.
"Once Upon a Time in The West," there was a septet out of South Central Los Angeles that was not afraid to inhale - to soak up the vibrations and the multi-cultural make-up of its surrounding community. Like a mirror held up to the light, they refracted the sensual and joyful lopes of the Latin diaspora, the earthy blues of the Black Experience, the rootsy fruit of the Afro-Cuban contingent and (via their Danish soul mate on harmonica) the enchanting melodies of a not-so-distant promised land.- A. Scott Galloway
Bound by brotherhood and sense of purpose, these men hand-crafted a conscience-scalding musical melting pot, churning out worldwide `70s million-sellers such as "The World is a Ghetto," "Slippin' into Darkness," "The Cisco Kid" and the anthem "Why Can't We Be Friends." Their albums were jazz-soaked travelogue soundtracks that reacquainted listeners with the four cornered rooms of their minds, teasing their imaginations with tales of outlaws and senoritas from the River Niger to Far Out places in space.
Their songs sprang from communal jams in which seeds and stems were sown into soul symphonies. And each member contributed his singular element to its essence: the crack cadences of Harold Brown's trap drums, the winding bass lines of B.B. Dickerson, the taproot sting of Howard Scott's wicked guitar, the soaring solos and peppery tandem lines of Charles Miller's saxophones and flutes and Lee Oskar's tangy harmonica, the ancient mystic rumblings of Papa Dee Allen's congas and timbales, and the rhapsodic tapestry of Lonnie Jordan's keyboards.
Eric Burden & War
Appearing with very special guest >Lil Ed & the Blues Imperials at 8 pm
Tickets $25 adv $30 dos
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