Support our efforts, sign up to a full membership!
(Start for free)
Register or login with just your e-mail address
Country 14/09/2004

The Mavericks 'Live In Austin' set for September 28th release

Hot Songs Around The World

Beautiful Things
Benson Boone
260 entries in 26 charts
Stick Season
Noah Kahan
374 entries in 20 charts
Lose Control
Teddy Swims
411 entries in 25 charts
Yes, And?
Ariana Grande
203 entries in 27 charts
Anti-Hero
Taylor Swift
622 entries in 23 charts
Texas Hold 'Em
Beyonce
189 entries in 22 charts
Greedy
Tate McRae
701 entries in 28 charts
Water
Tyla
333 entries in 20 charts
Petit Genie
Jungeli, Imen Es & Alonzo
173 entries in 5 charts
Lovin On Me
Jack Harlow
337 entries in 23 charts
Overdrive
Ofenbach & Norma Jean Martine
196 entries in 14 charts
Si No Estas
Inigo Quintero
310 entries in 17 charts
Until I Found You
Stephen Sanchez
224 entries in 16 charts
NASHVILLE, TN. (MCA Records) - On September 28th, Mavericks fans will, for the first time-ever, have a chance to re-live the electrifying concert experience of a Mavericks live show with the release of The Mavericks Live in Austin live CD & HD concert DVD. Recorded on June 2, 2004 on the legendary stage of Austin's (Tex.) Stubbs' Barbecue, the 16-song showcase of the band's fun, grand show features stunning renditions of several of the best-loved songs in the band's catalog, along with an eclectic mix of band and fan favorites.

Over two hours in length, The Mavericks Live In Austin DVD features the night's concert in it's entirety, plus interviews with each band member and behind-the-scenes footage from the show. The live CD has been edited to include selected songs from the evening's show and has a running time of 70 minutes.

The Mavs' live show, considered by many to be the band at its finest, was recorded live to 48 tracks of 24-bit PCM audio using the RADAR hard disk recording system. These tracks were mixed digitally, with no sweetening tracks, via the Sony OXFORD mixing console to 24 bit masters. Stereo and 5:1 mixes were separately mixed for the appropriate format.

All of the hallmarks of the fevered pursuit of entertainment that is a Mavericks live show - horns and tequila, Spanish and English, pure, unadulterated diversity, and of course, the band's trademark fusion of latin, rockabilly and soul, are featured in the live performances captured on Live In Austin, illustrating why the band's live shows have been garnering universally rave reviews worldwide for over a decade. Beautifully performed and extremely diverse, the set for this evening of music was based on the band's personal choice, rather than any desire to produce a "greatest hits" - themed package.

Performances on the live CD include:
Dance The Night Away
Because of You
Think of Me
Things You Said To
Here Comes The Rain
San Jose
I Want To Know
What A Crying Shame
There Goes My Heart
Shine Your Light
Save A Prayer
Siboney
I Said I Love You
Every Little Thing
Volver Volver
All You Ever Do Is Bring Me Down

Performances on the live DVD include:
Dance The Night Away
Because of You
Think of Me
Things You Said To
Here Comes The Rain
Fool Number One
San Jose
I Want To Know
I'm Wondering
Love Me
What A Crying Shame
All That Heaven Will Allow
Time Goes By
Pretend
There Goes My Heart
Shine Your Light
Save A Prayer
Besame Mucho
Siboney
I Said I Love You
Every Little Thing About You
Volver Volver
Tonight The Bottle Let Me Down
All You Ever Do Is Bring Me Down

The Mavericks were joined for this live concert by the following acclaimed and respected musicians:
Jerry Dale McFadden (piano, organ, backing vocals)
Robert Chevrier (piano, organ, acoustic guitar, backing vocals)
Matt Nygren (trumpet, arranger)
Nichol Thomson (trombone)
Steve Patrick (lead trumpet)
Jeff Coffin (tenor saxophone)
Tom Lewis (drums, percussion)
David Carrol (upright bass)
Alberto Salas (percussion, piano)

The release of The Mavericks Live In Austin adds another chapter to the band's incredible saga. Starting as a club band in Miami, The Mavericks hit Nashville in the early 90's, taking the music scene by storm with their unique brand of cutting-edge alt-country. In a time when the country radio airwaves were dominated by "hat-acts", the Mavericks broke new ground with their distinctive balance of vintage music and contemporary attitude. Hailed by critics and beloved by fans for their creatively restless methods of recording and songwriting that not only pushed format boundaries, but openly defied them, The Mavs had an extraordinary four-record run on MCA Nashville, earning Grammy, CMA, and ACM Awards and racking up album sales in the millions.

The band toured relentlessly, crossing the globe many times over, igniting critics and audiences worldwide with their high-octane, richly-textured, genuinely different live shows.

By the late 1990's, the band's musical horizons had grown broader, but commercial country radio's had not. The same creative restlessness that fueled the band's musical innovations, paired with the tension of ten years of touring and togetherness, precipitated a hiatus-turned-breakup. The Mavericks un-officially went their separate ways, each pursuing "non-Mavericks" musical interests, and all finding success in their individual creative outlets.

By 2002, feeling a bit of a Mavericks void that was too compelling to ignore, the band reunited (with new lead guitarist Perez) to record their first CD in six years, 2003's critically-acclaimed The Mavericks (released on Sanctuary Records). The supporting tour crossed the globe, with the band receiving high marks for their live show from critics worldwide. "The Mavericks' live show...returns the band to prime, honky-tonk form. [Malo] remains one of the best singers in the Roy Orbison tradition, a big strong tenor singing songs of weak and wronged lovers," espoused Daily Variety. "Onstage, the Mavericks...maintain an upbeat sense of showmanship that's as compelling as their sterling musicianship," raved Time Out New York. "Hallelujah-the Mavericks have reunited!" enthused The Village Voice, "The country-rockin' boys are back as lively as ever!" The Washington Post deemed an October, 2003 show "sublime," praising the band's "'we'll play anything attitude'" as the stuff of "great live shows." The Cincinnati Enquirer touted The Mavericks' "loose, rocking party", and the Atlanta Journal-Constitution says it's "a joy to see them back... Malo could sing a tax form and make an auditor believe every word."






Most read news of the week


© 2001-2024
top40-charts.com (S4)
about | site map
contact | privacy
Page gen. in 0.7404521 secs // 4 () queries in 0.0048272609710693 secs


live