DAN HICKS AND THE HOT LICKS
''LIVE AT DAVIES SYMPHONY HALL WITH SPECIAL GUESTS!''
JUNE 11 2013
78:08
1 - Overture Medley: News from Up the Street; The Innocent Bystander; How Can I Miss You When You Won't Go Away?; Pay Day Blues/00:04:18
2 - By Hook Or By Crook/00:03:22
3 - Dan’s Welcome/00:01:09
4 - Hummin’ To Myself/00:03:27
5 - Driftin’/00:05:14
6 - Evenin’ Breeze/00:00:47
7 - He Don’t Care/00:05:08
8 - Song For My Father/00:00:27
9 - Take The ‘A’ Train/00:06:10
10 - Beedle Um Bum/00:05:46
11 - I Feel Like Singin’Yardbird Suite/00:08:09
12 - I Scare Myself/00:05:57
13 - [Untitled]/00:12:33
14 - [Untitled]/00:12:43
Kent Benedict /Musician
Ray Benson /Guest Artist
John Brandeburg /Musician
Brian Cooke /Piano
Benito Cortez /Group Member, Mando, Violin
Roberta Donnay /Group Member, Kazoo, Percussion, Vocals
Naomi Ruth Eisenberg /Group Member, Violin, Vocals
Ramblin' Jack Elliott /Guest Artist
Bruce Forman /Guest Artist
David Grisman /Guest Artist
Charlie Gurke /Sax (Baritone), Sax (Tenor)
John Hammond, Jr. /Guest Artist
Dan Hicks /Arranger, Drums, Group Member, Guitar, Producer, Vocals
Rickie Lee Jones /Guest Artist
Jim Kweskin /Guest Artist
Sandy Lane /Musician
Jaime Leopold /Group Member, String Bass
Maria Muldaur /Guest Artist
Richard Olsen /Clarinet, Flute, Sax (Tenor)
Sid Page /Group Member, Mandolin, Violin
Van Dyke Parks /Guest Artist
Tom Poole /Trumpet
Maryann Price /Bird Whistle, Group Member, Vocals
Mike Rinta /Arranger, Trombone
Paul Robinson /Arranger, Group Member, Guitar
Roy Rogers /Guest Artist
Harry Shearer /Guest Artist
Brian Simpson /Drums
Paul Smith /Group Member, String Bass
Tuck & Patti /Guest Artist
Turtle VanDeMarr /Guest Artist
Sara Wasserman /Musician
Jon Weber /Group Member, Guitar
Wayne Whittaker /Musician
Dennis Williams /Musician
REVIEW
by Stephen Thomas Erlewine
A fixture in San Francisco since the late '60s, Dan Hicks celebrated his 70th birthday by throwing a bash at the Davies club. He had his Hot Licks and he invited a bunch of his friends, including Ramblin' Jack Elliot, Van Dyke Parks, John Hammond, Rickie Lee Jones, and Harry Shearer. With all this star power in tow, it's little wonder that Live at Davies generates a considerable amount of good cheer, but for as nostalgic as this can be -- and it is, hearkening back not just to the glory days of Haight-Ashbury, but even further, as most of this is indebted to pre-war blues -- it's not a lament for the past, it's a loping and loopy party for the present.
OFFICIAL BIOGRAPHY
Dan Hicks was born December 9, 1941 in Little Rock, Arkansas, the son of a career military man. The family moved to California when Dan was about five, eventually settling in what was then the small city of Santa Rosa, some 50 miles north of San Francisco.
Musically, Dan started out as a drummer, beginning while still in grade school. He played the snare drum in his school marching band, and by the age of 14 was playing gigs with area dance bands.
In High School, Dan developed an interest in broadcasting, and had a rotating spot on a daily 15-minute local radio program called "Time Out for Teens". He entered San Francisco State College in 1959, eventually earning a degree in Broadcasting. He took up the guitar around '59, and became part of the San Francisco folk music scene, playing and singing in local coffeehouses.
In the spring of 1965, Dan became the drummer for a nascent San Francisco folk-rock group called The Charlatans, who at that time were more of a concept than an actual working band. They did, however, find employment that summer as the house band at the newly-opened Red Dog Saloon in Virginia City, Nevada. The popular hallucinogen-fueled dances held at the Red Dog were the direct inspiration for the legendary psychedelic San Francisco dancehall scene that blossomed shortly thereafter.
In addition to drumming, Dan also played guitar and sang with The Charlatans, performing some of his original songs. The Charlatans played for several years at all the noted San Francisco halls, but never achieved the commercial success enjoyed by other groups that came on the scene after them, such as Jefferson Airplane, The Grateful Dead and Quicksilver Messenger Service. As Dan explains it, "The Charlatans were kind of dysfunctional anyway. There was no real management, and it was just kind of some loose guys".
Dan had other ideas about the kind of music he wanted to make, and began putting together an acoustic combo which included two female backup singers, who were dubbed "Lickettes". Billed as Dan Hicks And His Hot Licks, the group began as an opening act for The Charlatans. However, Dan soon left the Charlatans and focused his energy on the Hot Licks.
Their efforts resulted in a recording contract with Epic Records. "Original Recordings" was released in 1969, but Epic's promotion of the album and the group was lackluster, and it was not a commercial success.
After some personnel changes, and a deal with Blue Thumb Records, what had then become the "classic" Hot Licks ensemble went on to produce the critically acclaimed and commercially successful albums "Where's The Money?", "Striking It Rich" and "Last Train To Hicksville". But, owing to pressures both internal and external, Dan broke up the Hot Licks in 1973, at the height of the band's popularity.
Dan then began a low-key solo career of acoustic performances. He wrote music for commercials, television, and movies-- including the music for a never-released Ralph Bakshi animated film. That music was eventually packaged and released in 1978 by Warner Bros. Records as "It Happened One Bite", with cover artwork by Dan.
In the 1980s, he formed The Acoustic Warriors, a male combo with whom he toured. In 1994, they recorded the superb (and now out-of-print) live CD "Shootin' Straight", for the Private Music label.
Dan signed with Surfdog Records in 1998. "Beatin' The Heat", Dan's first studio opus since 1978, was released in August of 2000. It featured a return to the Hot Licks name and format - complete with new Lickettes. It garnered rave reviews, and was chosen by Time.Com as one of the Top Ten CDs of 2000. A live CD ("Alive & Lickin'") soon followed.
In September of 2003, Surfdog released a DVD/CD package featuring much of Dan's 60th Birthday Bash concert, as well as interviews with musicians of note speaking about Dan's influence.
2004 saw the release of "Selected Shorts", a dynamic and critically acclaimed studio CD, featuring contributions from such stars as Jimmy Buffett, Jim Keltner, Gibby Haynes, Van Dyke Parks and Willie Nelson.
"Tangled Tales", also on the Surfdog label, was released in 2009 to glowing reviews.
2010 saw the long-anticipated release of a Dan Hicks & The Hot Licks Christmas CD, and it was all Hicks fans had hoped for - and more! "Crazy For Christmas" was lauded by NPR's Fresh Air, the NY and LA Times, and The Washington Post. Called one of the Best of 2010 by the Village Voice, "Crazy For Christmas" also landed on Billboard's Heatseekers Chart.
Today, Dan tours worldwide with an updated version of the Hot Licks, and occasionally gigs at various jazz venues in the San Francisco Bay Area, as a vocalist with his swingin' combo Bayside Jazz.
Not only does Dan Hicks continue to delight his long-time fans, he has earned the attention of a whole new generation of music lovers.
''LIVE AT DAVIES SYMPHONY HALL WITH SPECIAL GUESTS!''
JUNE 11 2013
78:08
1 - Overture Medley: News from Up the Street; The Innocent Bystander; How Can I Miss You When You Won't Go Away?; Pay Day Blues/00:04:18
2 - By Hook Or By Crook/00:03:22
3 - Dan’s Welcome/00:01:09
4 - Hummin’ To Myself/00:03:27
5 - Driftin’/00:05:14
6 - Evenin’ Breeze/00:00:47
7 - He Don’t Care/00:05:08
8 - Song For My Father/00:00:27
9 - Take The ‘A’ Train/00:06:10
10 - Beedle Um Bum/00:05:46
11 - I Feel Like Singin’Yardbird Suite/00:08:09
12 - I Scare Myself/00:05:57
13 - [Untitled]/00:12:33
14 - [Untitled]/00:12:43
Kent Benedict /Musician
Ray Benson /Guest Artist
John Brandeburg /Musician
Brian Cooke /Piano
Benito Cortez /Group Member, Mando, Violin
Roberta Donnay /Group Member, Kazoo, Percussion, Vocals
Naomi Ruth Eisenberg /Group Member, Violin, Vocals
Ramblin' Jack Elliott /Guest Artist
Bruce Forman /Guest Artist
David Grisman /Guest Artist
Charlie Gurke /Sax (Baritone), Sax (Tenor)
John Hammond, Jr. /Guest Artist
Dan Hicks /Arranger, Drums, Group Member, Guitar, Producer, Vocals
Rickie Lee Jones /Guest Artist
Jim Kweskin /Guest Artist
Sandy Lane /Musician
Jaime Leopold /Group Member, String Bass
Maria Muldaur /Guest Artist
Richard Olsen /Clarinet, Flute, Sax (Tenor)
Sid Page /Group Member, Mandolin, Violin
Van Dyke Parks /Guest Artist
Tom Poole /Trumpet
Maryann Price /Bird Whistle, Group Member, Vocals
Mike Rinta /Arranger, Trombone
Paul Robinson /Arranger, Group Member, Guitar
Roy Rogers /Guest Artist
Harry Shearer /Guest Artist
Brian Simpson /Drums
Paul Smith /Group Member, String Bass
Tuck & Patti /Guest Artist
Turtle VanDeMarr /Guest Artist
Sara Wasserman /Musician
Jon Weber /Group Member, Guitar
Wayne Whittaker /Musician
Dennis Williams /Musician
REVIEW
by Stephen Thomas Erlewine
A fixture in San Francisco since the late '60s, Dan Hicks celebrated his 70th birthday by throwing a bash at the Davies club. He had his Hot Licks and he invited a bunch of his friends, including Ramblin' Jack Elliot, Van Dyke Parks, John Hammond, Rickie Lee Jones, and Harry Shearer. With all this star power in tow, it's little wonder that Live at Davies generates a considerable amount of good cheer, but for as nostalgic as this can be -- and it is, hearkening back not just to the glory days of Haight-Ashbury, but even further, as most of this is indebted to pre-war blues -- it's not a lament for the past, it's a loping and loopy party for the present.
OFFICIAL BIOGRAPHY
Dan Hicks was born December 9, 1941 in Little Rock, Arkansas, the son of a career military man. The family moved to California when Dan was about five, eventually settling in what was then the small city of Santa Rosa, some 50 miles north of San Francisco.
Musically, Dan started out as a drummer, beginning while still in grade school. He played the snare drum in his school marching band, and by the age of 14 was playing gigs with area dance bands.
In High School, Dan developed an interest in broadcasting, and had a rotating spot on a daily 15-minute local radio program called "Time Out for Teens". He entered San Francisco State College in 1959, eventually earning a degree in Broadcasting. He took up the guitar around '59, and became part of the San Francisco folk music scene, playing and singing in local coffeehouses.
In the spring of 1965, Dan became the drummer for a nascent San Francisco folk-rock group called The Charlatans, who at that time were more of a concept than an actual working band. They did, however, find employment that summer as the house band at the newly-opened Red Dog Saloon in Virginia City, Nevada. The popular hallucinogen-fueled dances held at the Red Dog were the direct inspiration for the legendary psychedelic San Francisco dancehall scene that blossomed shortly thereafter.
In addition to drumming, Dan also played guitar and sang with The Charlatans, performing some of his original songs. The Charlatans played for several years at all the noted San Francisco halls, but never achieved the commercial success enjoyed by other groups that came on the scene after them, such as Jefferson Airplane, The Grateful Dead and Quicksilver Messenger Service. As Dan explains it, "The Charlatans were kind of dysfunctional anyway. There was no real management, and it was just kind of some loose guys".
Dan had other ideas about the kind of music he wanted to make, and began putting together an acoustic combo which included two female backup singers, who were dubbed "Lickettes". Billed as Dan Hicks And His Hot Licks, the group began as an opening act for The Charlatans. However, Dan soon left the Charlatans and focused his energy on the Hot Licks.
Their efforts resulted in a recording contract with Epic Records. "Original Recordings" was released in 1969, but Epic's promotion of the album and the group was lackluster, and it was not a commercial success.
After some personnel changes, and a deal with Blue Thumb Records, what had then become the "classic" Hot Licks ensemble went on to produce the critically acclaimed and commercially successful albums "Where's The Money?", "Striking It Rich" and "Last Train To Hicksville". But, owing to pressures both internal and external, Dan broke up the Hot Licks in 1973, at the height of the band's popularity.
Dan then began a low-key solo career of acoustic performances. He wrote music for commercials, television, and movies-- including the music for a never-released Ralph Bakshi animated film. That music was eventually packaged and released in 1978 by Warner Bros. Records as "It Happened One Bite", with cover artwork by Dan.
In the 1980s, he formed The Acoustic Warriors, a male combo with whom he toured. In 1994, they recorded the superb (and now out-of-print) live CD "Shootin' Straight", for the Private Music label.
Dan signed with Surfdog Records in 1998. "Beatin' The Heat", Dan's first studio opus since 1978, was released in August of 2000. It featured a return to the Hot Licks name and format - complete with new Lickettes. It garnered rave reviews, and was chosen by Time.Com as one of the Top Ten CDs of 2000. A live CD ("Alive & Lickin'") soon followed.
In September of 2003, Surfdog released a DVD/CD package featuring much of Dan's 60th Birthday Bash concert, as well as interviews with musicians of note speaking about Dan's influence.
2004 saw the release of "Selected Shorts", a dynamic and critically acclaimed studio CD, featuring contributions from such stars as Jimmy Buffett, Jim Keltner, Gibby Haynes, Van Dyke Parks and Willie Nelson.
"Tangled Tales", also on the Surfdog label, was released in 2009 to glowing reviews.
2010 saw the long-anticipated release of a Dan Hicks & The Hot Licks Christmas CD, and it was all Hicks fans had hoped for - and more! "Crazy For Christmas" was lauded by NPR's Fresh Air, the NY and LA Times, and The Washington Post. Called one of the Best of 2010 by the Village Voice, "Crazy For Christmas" also landed on Billboard's Heatseekers Chart.
Today, Dan tours worldwide with an updated version of the Hot Licks, and occasionally gigs at various jazz venues in the San Francisco Bay Area, as a vocalist with his swingin' combo Bayside Jazz.
Not only does Dan Hicks continue to delight his long-time fans, he has earned the attention of a whole new generation of music lovers.