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2022-07-26 21:31:28 By : Ms. Sammi Chen

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Backstage at Newport Folk 2022, the world's preeminent banjoist brushed off notions of supremacy in his field — and vigorously praised the awe-inspiring collaborators who make his bluegrass dream happen.

Imagine being told for decades upon decades that you're the finest in the world at whatever it is you do in this life. It happened to Béla Fleck , the banjo virtuoso (to trot out the word again) who ' s earned 15 GRAMMYs and 35 nominations across half a dozen genres for his trouble.

But, miraculously, all this veneration never went to his head. Partly because Fleck has very little use for it.

"It puts some pressure on you that doesn't really help anything," Fleck tells GRAMMY.com backstage at Newport Folk 2022, in a folding chair surrounded by moldering Civil War-era forts. "It means that things have worked in my career… but in truth: there is no best. There are people who have always done things better than me on the banjo and always will.

"I certainly work hard at it, and I take it very seriously," Fleck continues. "There are things that I've come up with and abilities I have that other people don't have, but that's the way it's supposed to be with everybody who's a serious player on their instrument."

Of course, he understands he's a leader in his field. But Fleck is far less interested in being "the best" than surrounding himself with musicians that inspire and galvanize him to be great. "It's never a job," he adds. "It's always like: "What's the best we can do? How can we propel each other?"

That’s exactly why Fleck does this — not to collect endless accolades. It was the animating spirit behind his "My Bluegrass Heart" performance at Newport Folk 2022, where he was flanked by first-call musicians who happen to be close friends — like fiddlist Michael Cleveland , dobro/lap steel player Jerry Douglas , and so many more.

As the dust of last weekend's Newport Folk settles, read on for an in-depth, career-spanning interview with Fleck about his performance at the historic festival, the cruciality of ripple and flow in his work, and what he wants to creatively avoid as he settles into his mid-60s.

This interview has been edited for clarity.

Tell me about your history with Newport Folk Fest.

I grew up in New York City, and we always heard about the Newport Folk Festival — the stories about Joan Baez and Bob Dylan going electric and Pete Seeger and everything.

So, I was very aware of it, but it was a long time before I finally got here. I think it was with New Grass Revival. I'm pretty sure we got to play here one year. Maybe it was a bluegrass-themed stage that year. But then I got to come back a number of times and play the Jazz Festival too.

It's a beautiful spot. But it's not just the place; it's the history and being part of what feels like a historical event and a legacy of great music being presented. Things ripple out from here. People hear about what happens at Newport.

I feel like as music fans, we're born programmed with Newport stories, even though half of them are probably apocryphal. Pete Seeger with the axe…

Yeah, maybe so. The stories about Pete getting up and tuning Dylan's guitar for him in the early years, and then being dismayed about how loud he was when he rocked out and all that stuff.

But the Jazz Festival, too, is just as impactful — all the stories from that.

Did you come in contact with George and Joyce Wein a lot?

I did get to know them a little bit. They used to book the Flecktones on European tours — those tours that [came about] from the Jazz Festivals. That was the goal as a jazz-oriented group — especially coming from outside the jazz world like myself.

Just to be on those jazz festivals — Montreaux Jazz Festival, North Sea, Molde, all these amazing festivals in the summer. We got on that circuit for a while thanks to the folks from George's office. 

I think he actually liked us, because at the time, I didn't think he liked us that much! But then, the last time I was here, he came over, riding up in a golf cart and said, "Oh, yeah! You guys are so great!" I was like, "Wow, we tried so hard to get you on our side — and it seems like you are!" So, it's nice when that happens.

Read More: 5 Reflections On George Wein: How It Felt To Be Around The Architect Of The Modern Music Festival

I only interviewed him once, and this is my first Newport Folk. But I wish he was riding up to us right now with his cane and cap.

Me too. Me too. He did a lot of good. He really, really did. I read his book, too [ Myself Among Others ].

So, early on with the Flecktones, you were truly straddling both worlds when it came to Newport. It was a perfect fit.

Right. There was one year when I played the Folk Festival with my bluegrass trio. And then, a few years later, I came back and played the Jazz Festival with Jean-Luc Ponty and Stanley Clarke .

It was at Newport that year that Ted Kurland came up to me; he was the booking agent for Pat Metheny and Chick Corea . He said, "Oh, Chick Corea's thinking about doing duets next year! Would you be interested in being one of his duet partners?" I was like, "Whoa!" It changed my life.

So, I remembered that happening right behind the main stage, when I was walking by today. That's where it happened, and I got to play with him for a decade, or a decade and a half — make records and learn so much about music from Chick, being in his orbit.

I have great memories of that. He was an incredible inspiration, but also he became a very dear friend and mentor to me. It was a loss, but I'm still amazed that it even happened.

I just think of his light . Nobody I've ever talked to has ever had a bad word to say about him.

Yeah, but he had a work ethic, too.

Of course! He made, like, seven billion records!

Just flying from one situation [to another].

I remember when we made our record together, [2007's] The Enchantment . We worked really hard for four or five days in the studio. And as we finished the last take of the last song, instead of going in to listen to takes, he pulled out the music for the next gig and started practicing. I was like [grins] " That's the way you do it! That's how you stay great your whole life!" It's all about the music.

Read More: In Remembrance: Chick Corea Played In More Ways Than One

Tell me about your lineup for this particular gig at Newport Folk.

This is the dream team of dream teams, in terms of the bluegrass community. And when I say "bluegrass," you have to extend your imagination of what bluegrass is, because these are musicians who can play anything and do play anything with all kinds of people.

So, folks like Sam Bush and Jerry Douglas , who are our special guests today — they're known for all the genre-bending that I am. They move seamlessly in and out of rock 'n' roll and jazz situations.

That's always kind of been your MO. You're playing with people like [The Flecktones'] Jeff Coffin and Victor Wooten , who are musical universes unto themselves.

Right. You don't expect that so much from folks in the bluegrass world, but it's just as prevalent. These are folks who are just as curious and just as able. They're lifelong fans of music and learning.

There's a lot of joy when we're all together, because we all feel that way. It's never a job. It's always like: "What's the best we can do? How can we propel each other?"

So, anyway, those are our guests. But the basic band is fabulous, too — the biggest stars [chuckles] , I guess, if you can look at it that way, in the bluegrass world. 

Our fiddle player, Michael Cleveland , is a stunner. He's come up in the tradition. He's a Kentucky guy, and he's blind — just happens to be blind. He plays like — I don't know — Kenny Baker on steroids? This old way of playing, but with this youthful spirit. He really wants it, like every solo is the last one he's ever going to play. He's so good.

Then there's Bryan Sutton , who's kind of the reigning king of bluegrass flat-picking guitar these days. He's also constantly playing on all kinds of music. He's very able in all areas. And he's one of the biggest online teachers out there; he's got hundreds of thousands of students. So, he's a big presence in that world as well. But as a player, he's just stunning.

Mark Schatz — he's a bass player. I've been playing with him since 197...4, I believe? Maybe '75?

Oh, no. I moved up to Boston in '76. So, '77. And we were in a lot of bands together before I joined New Grass Revival with Sam Bush in the '80s. Then, he went on to play with Tony Rice for many years, and Tim O'Brien , and Nickel Creek . So, he's just a premier, first-call bass player who happens to be my roomie from when we were still in our late teens, early 20s.

Then, we've got Justin Moses. Justin is a multi-instrumentalist, and he's a stunner, because he can play pretty much as good as any of the other people on stage on their instruments.

We do double-banjo stuff, and he can cut it just fine with me. He goes up and hits the double-fiddle stuff with Michael, and it's perfect. He can get up and do double-mandolin stuff — intricate stuff. He can play guitar; he can sing. Mostly, he plays dobro with us, because that's what we need. But he can play anything. He's a very musical character.

On this tour, we have different mandolin players. Previously, we had Sierra Hull , but she wasn't able to come out with us this time. So, we found a relative unknown, compared to some of the other guys: Jacob Jolliff. But he's been in a lot of great bands; he played with Yonder Mountain [String Band] and he had a band called Joy Kills Sorrow.

He's just one of these effortless, speed-demon mandolin players. I'm not always a fan of the word "shred," because it feels a little demeaning to me if you're really trying to play music. But he can shred . I mean, he can really burn it on the mandolin. He has no speed limit. But, also a very musical character, and he sings well.

So, it's a power pack, man. Oh, and also, Noam Pikelny , one of the great banjo players of the current time. He's going to join us for a triple-banjo number as well. He plays with Punch Brothers . It couldn't be a better band.

It doesn't seem like you had to delicately curate the band. It seems like most of these guys are just friends of yours, and it naturally fell together.

Right. The thing that makes it easy to be friends is that everybody has that work ethic. If there was somebody who didn't want to work on it and make it as good as it can be, it's harder to be friends, because resentments would start to creep in.

That's the secret to Chick's nature: He surrounded himself with people that were willing to do the work, and showed up knowing the music. So, they could just be pals. He wasn't like, "Hey, you've got to work on that. That's not up to snuff."

You’re not naturally magnetized to anybody who just sloughs it off.

That's the thing about all of this. You can be really great friends if the other stuff is not … [Trails off] I mean, if you're good enough friends, you can deal with anything. But what I'm saying is there's something very comforting about the fact that we don't have to worry about the music. Because we're going to work on it; not because it's just there .

Everyone's willing to do whatever it takes to make it happen, and then you can just have a great time together. It's just joy, because that's all taken care of.

I love that record you made with [Malian kora player] Toumani Diabaté , The Ripple Effect . What do you appreciate about playing with him?

Well, he's one of the most elegant musicians I've ever played with.

It's all about the flow. And banjo playing is all about flow and rippling, too.

So, when you get two ripplers from different continents together and try to find a way to ripple together, it's going to work or it ain't, you know? And the reason it worked is because he's just such an elegant listener and supportive player. He's a stunning soloist, but he doesn't seem to want to solo as much as he wants it to feel amazing.

Music needs to dance. Instrumental music has to have a feel, or it's not going to work. It's got to create emotion. I'm very rhythmically inspired. If the rhythm is good, the ideas will come. If the rhythm isn't good, it's a struggle and a pain in the ass to play music.

So, making the music dance is a must, whether it's the Flecktones or playing with Toumani or this bluegrass band. Every chromosome needs to swing and dance. Then, you add to that some amazing, melodic playing on top of it — or whatever the song calls for — and you've got something. It makes you feel something.

And I would say that dance can be debated, too. It doesn't have to be a dance ; it has to be a feeling. I like that stuff that grooves along, because I play a banjo with short notes. But it can just as easily be the slowest thing in the world. It just has to have a sensibility, feel and mood.

The records of yours I grew up on were UFO Tofu and the self-titled. Any memories of that time in the music business you can share?

It's funny: I hear people say, "Oh, it was so much easier when the Flecktones came out. You could have an instrumental band do really well." And I'm just like, [incredulously] "Easy?! What are you talking about! We're playing in 27/8!"

Honestly, we did have an amazing run. Not that we're not going to play together. But that run-up when we first came out and how well it did was a shock to everybody. It's not like it was common; it didn't happen to a lot of instrumental acts.

It was something about the chemistry and the makeup of the band and all the different boxes we checked that made it appealing. It was fun to watch. Victor spinning his bass and Future Man playing his drumitar and me up there with a banjo — "What are you doing up there with those guys?" — and Howard [Levy] with the harmonica and piano.

It was compelling almost as a circus act. But then the music would hopefully have enough to make you want to stay with it and come back and hear the next record.

Hopefully. I don't mind the pop element if it makes you listen enough for the real stuff under the surface to dig in. Music needs those layers. There needs to be something that makes you want to listen to it again or you go, "Oh, that was cool," and never listen to it again.

There needs to be enough melodicism or a hook or groove or something that makes you go, "Wow. I want to hear that again." And as you continue to listen, you hear all the things that are under the hood that make the music so good.

That first impulse sometimes isn't what you listen to anymore, but without the first one… we wouldn't still be talking about the Beatles and all the underlayers and subtle production elements if it didn't have that pop element that made us listen to it so many times that we know every single chromosome of what's in that music.

I think that's true of everything. It has to have those layers.

You've been described as a virtuoso for as long as I can possibly remember, but I'm sure you still feel you have a ways to go, decades in. I'm sure there are still mountains you want to climb. It's not like you reach the peak early and then just plateau.

Yeah. I mean, I have my frustrations with things I haven't been able to pull off technically. A certain level of ability. If I was able to go all the way into jazz, I'd be a better jazz player. If I was to go all the way into Indian music and do the things I learned from Zakir [Hussain] , I'd be a way better Indian player.

And then there are techniques where, as I get older, I have to maintain my level. It's not as easy at 64 as it was in my 40s and 50s.

More stretching, more exercising, more practicing?

Well, more just playing all the time, whereas I used to put it down, do other things, come back to it and be right there. But now, I really need to stay on top of my thing if I want to be at that level.

And yet, I have a better idea of what I want to play. Like they say: "If I could be 15 and know what I know now." The things that I know I don't want to sound like. The curation of my playing is better now. Better choices. But sometimes the ability can be scary: "I don't know if I can pull this off. I could pull this off 10 years ago." So, hopefully, my playing will change as I get older, to find the right way to play for that age and not try to do things I can't do.

I remember Bill Monroe keeping the songs in the same key he sang them as a young man. He couldn't keep the pitches; it was really hard to listen to. I don't want to be like that: "Oh, you need to hear the old stuff." I want it to be: "He's aging well, and he's doing things he didn't do before that have their own worth." That's the goal. We'll see what happens.

I'm so lucky I get to spend my life doing this, because if I sit with the banjo, I'm happy. I like to study and learn, and the sound it makes in my lap. There's always more to explore and more to try.

Newport Folk Festival 2022 Recap: Taj Mahal, Brandi Carlile With Joni Mitchell, Paul Simon & A Crowdsurfing Singer

Tony Bennett, Coldplay, Foo Fighters, Alicia Keys, Diana Krall, Alison Krauss, Norah Jones, Katy Perry, James Taylor, and Neil Young among artists added to performance lineup for GRAMMY Week MusiCares Person of the Year tribute

An impressive star-studded cast will come together to honor 2012 MusiCares Person of the Year honoree Paul McCartney during a sold-out gala on Feb. 10 in Los Angeles, two days prior to the 54th Annual GRAMMY Awards.

Hosted by actor/comedian Eddie Izzard, artists set to perform are current GRAMMY nominees Tony Bennett, Coldplay, Foo Fighters, Alison Krauss & Union Station featuring Jerry Douglas, and Katy Perry; GRAMMY-winning artists Duane Eddy, Norah Jones, Alicia Keys, Diana Krall, James Taylor, and Neil Young with Crazy Horse; two-time Latin GRAMMY-winning artist Sergio Mendes; and the cast of Cirque du Soleil's "Love" Beatles tribute show. The evening will also feature a special performance by McCartney. 

The MusiCares Person of the Year tribute is one of the most prestigious events held during GRAMMY Week. Proceeds from the dinner and concert will provide essential support for MusiCares, which ensures that music people have a place to turn in times of financial, medical and personal need.  

Past MusiCares Person of the Year honorees include: Bennett, Bono, Natalie Cole, Phil Collins, David Crosby, Neil Diamond, Gloria Estefan, Aretha Franklin, Don Henley, Billy Joel, Elton John, Quincy Jones, Luciano Pavarotti, Bonnie Raitt, Paul Simon, Sting, Barbra Streisand, Taylor, Brian Wilson, Stevie Wonder, and Young.

The 54th Annual GRAMMY Awards will take place live on Sunday, Feb. 12 at Staples Center in Los Angeles and will be broadcast live on the CBS Television Network from 8–11:30 p.m. ET/PT. 

Follow GRAMMY.com for our inside look at GRAMMY news, blogs, photos, videos, and of course nominees. Stay up to the minute with GRAMMY Live. Check out the GRAMMY legacy with GRAMMY Rewind. Explore this year's GRAMMY Fields. Or check out the collaborations at Re:Generation, presented by Hyundai Veloster. And join the conversation at Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube.

Photo: Rick Diamond/WireImage.com

Béla Fleck pays tribute to pioneering GRAMMY-winning bluegrass musician

(In 2008 GRAMMY winner Earl Scruggs was honored with The Recording Academy's Lifetime Achievement Award. The following tribute penned by Béla Fleck ran in the GRAMMY Awards program book that year. Scruggs died today at the age of 88.)

Earl Scruggs is the man who brought the five-string banjo front and center in the American consciousness. Throughout his career his creativity has played a major role in crafting some of the most startlingly original forms of American music.

His innovative three-finger style first stood the world on its ear in 1945. When he joined the historic "first bluegrass band" (the Bluegrass Boys) with Bill Monroe, Lester Flatt, Cedric Rainwater, and Chubby Wise, a musical explosion was heard 'round the world.

His banjo made the group stand out from everything that was going on in country music, and everything that had come before. That sound also drew in people that might never have had anything to do with country or folk music and made them into lifelong fans.

He and Lester left Monroe's group to launch Flatt & Scruggs, which took the music to incredible new heights. Even before they played in New York at Carnegie Hall in 1962, The New York Times had dubbed him the "Paganini of the five-string banjo."

You can easily understand the Paganini reference when you hear Earl's nonstop cascade of notes, as well as the unpredictable use of spaces in between each plucked tone. He uses accents to great effect, keeping the listener captive to his every move. When you hear that slurpy rising sound, it is quite possible that he is sliding up the strings on his fingernail. The melody to the song is nearly always reflected in his playing and yet he rarely plays things the same way twice. And, when you watch him, it looks like he's hardly expending any effort at all.

Continuing to make banjo history after Flatt & Scruggs, he embraced the "new music" of the '60s and searched for his own place within it. Going "electric" with his talented sons Randy, Steve and Gary (along with drummer Jody Maphis) in the Earl Scruggs Revue, and with the help of the business savvy of his wife, Louise, he brought the music to college crowds and collaborated with folks like the Byrds and Bob Dylan and, in later years, Elton John, Sting and so many others.

It was a long way from where he started, in Flint Hill, N.C., in 1924. Interestingly, the man who single-handedly created the bluegrass banjo tradition has never been bound by it himself. While every banjoist after him tries desperately to play exactly the way Earl did on a particular recording, he himself plays it differently every time, and to this day is finding new and eloquent ways to play the banjo. He continues to speak with his banjo, and we all listen gratefully.

Oh yeah, and he rocks.

(One of music's top banjo players, Béla Fleck has won 13 GRAMMY Awards. His most recent GRAMMY came in 2011 for Best Instrumental Composition for "Life In Eleven.")

Welcome to The Set List. Here you'll find the latest concert recaps for many of your favorite, or maybe not so favorite, artists. Our bloggers will do their best to provide you with every detail of the show, from which songs were on the set list to what the artist was wearing to which out-of-control fan made a scene. Hey, it'll be like you were there. And if you like what you read, we'll even let you know where you can catch the artist on tour. Feel free to drop us a comment and let us know your concert experience. Oh, and rock on.

By Marina Martinez Franklin, Tenn.

June 1 marked a historic night of music for Franklin, Tenn. — the kickoff benefit concert to fund Cross-County Lines, the Americana Music Association's summer festival, which will be held annually in Franklin beginning June 2014. Franklin is a charming yet cosmopolitan town in the heart of Williamson County, approximately 30 minutes from Nashville. The festival was hosted at Liberty Hall, a music venue inside the Factory, a historic building filled with art galleries, boutiques and quaint restaurants.

The festival was modeled after the popular BBC Scotland series "Transatlantic Sessions," during which an all-star house band performs with a series of guest artists for a night of musical community and camaraderie. GRAMMY-winning dobro player and "Transatlantic Sessions" co-host Jerry Douglas served as musical director and co-host for Saturday's festival, along with fellow GRAMMY winner Alison Krauss, one of the preeminent bluegrass/country vocalists and fiddle players of our generation.

The night started with Krauss on fiddle playing a slow, Celtic-inspired instrumental number. The song then transitioned into a full-on jam session, a celebratory introduction to a night during which music was the spotlight. Then Krauss joined Douglas for a performance of Bob Dylan's "I Believe In You."

Douglas then introduced the first guest artist, British folk musician Teddy Thompson, son of Richard and Linda Thompson. Thompson performed his "In My Arms" and, later that night, a cover of the song made famous by the late George Jones, "She Thinks I Still Care," to an enthusiastic audience.

Other performers included Amos Lee, Angel Snow and GRAMMY winner Shawn Colvin. Lee performed a couple of songs from his forthcoming album with his signature raspy, soulful vocals.

One of the highlights of the night was a performance by Texas singer/songwriter Sarah Jarosz. At only 22, Jarosz commanded the stage with a confidence that belied her years. She brought the room to a hush when she played the banjo with the skill of a seasoned pro and sang a haunting bluegrass/folk-styled tune. She then switched to guitar and sang her own Dylan cover, "Ring Them Bells." I suspect Jarosz is going to be an even more phenomenal artist in the years to come. 

Another standout moment came when Krauss sang "Ghost In This House" with very sparse accompaniment. Her voice was almost otherworldly and the crowd seemed to be hanging on every word.

The house band included a who's who of Nashville greats, including Gabe Dixon on keys, Viktor Krauss on upright bass, Bryan Sutton on guitar, Andy Leftwich on fiddle and mandolin, and Shannon Forrest on drums. The band was on point and several of the musicians had a chance to shine during solos on their respective instruments. Dixon even performed his song "All Will Be Well."

The evening was one for the books and I cannot wait until I head back to Franklin next year to see what surprises the Cross-County Lines Festival and the Americana Music Association bring to the people of Tennessee.

For more information on the Americana Music Association and Cross-County Lines, click here.

(Marina Martinez lives in Los Angeles where she manages the American Roots Music Field for The Recording Academy. Martinez also writes a music and culture blog where she digs deep to find and share all types of roots music from Texas blues and Brazilian rap to Bakersfield country and Ethiopian jazz. Connect with her at www.rootnotemusic.com or on Twitter.)

All the GRAMMY winners news, including a trio of artists' collective 33 Billboard Music Awards nominations

(The GRAMMY Insider keeps you up to date about news on your favorite GRAMMY winners, including new album releases, tour updates, notable TV appearances, interviews, and more.)

Industry Awards A trio of GRAMMY winners, Fun., Maroon 5 and Taylor Swift, lead the Billboard Music Awards field with 11 nominations each. Swift and Maroon 5 will square off for the Top Artist prize. Other GRAMMY winners garnering nods include Adele, David Guetta, Rihanna and Skrillex. … GRAMMY winner will.i.am will receive the CLIO Honorary Award on May 15 in New York in celebration of his efforts to "push the boundaries of creativity in advertising and beyond." … GRAMMY winners Leonard Cohen and Mumford & Sons were among the winners at the 2013 Juno Awards on April 21. Cohen, who is a Recording Academy Lifetime Achievement Award recipient, picked up Artist of the Year and Songwriter of the Year honors. Mumford & Sons won International Album of the Year for their GRAMMY-winning Babel. Four-time GRAMMY winner k.d. lang was honored with an induction into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame.

Charts Pink earned her fourth career No. 1 hit with "Just Give Me A Reason," a track featuring Fun.'s Nate Ruess. Pink's first No. 1 hit came in 2001 for "Lady Marmalade" with Christina Aguilera, Lil' Kim and Mya. The song also garnered Pink her first career GRAMMY for Best Pop Collaboration With Vocals. Rihanna has become the first artist in Billboard's Nielsen BDS-based Mainstream Top 40 radio airplay chart to score 10 No. 1 hits, with "Stay" featuring Mikky Ekko topping the chart. Lady Antebellum's "Downtown" topped Billboard's Country Airplay chart. The track is featured on Lady A's forthcoming album, Golden, due May 7.

Coachella Music discovery site Noisey ranked the names of this year's Coachella performers from best to worst. Near the top of the list were GRAMMY winners such as Latin act Café Tacuba and reggae artist Lee "Scratch" Perry, while Red Hot Chili Peppers were deemed to have the second worst name at the festival. The site also ranked acts that simply use their given names, such as GRAMMY winners Janelle Monáe and Lou Reed, who fell in the middle of the pack. For the record, the best name went to Australian DJ Tommy Trash and the worst to rock act Stars. The site provided no apparent criteria on which it based the ranking, and commenter Rory Biller may have summed up the exercise, posting "this is inane."

On The Road On June 1 the Americana Music Association will host the inaugural Cross County Lines Music Festival in Franklin, Tenn. Headlined by Alison Krauss and Jerry Douglas, the concert will serve as a fundraiser for the association, which is dedicated to advocating for the authentic voice of American roots music worldwide. … The venerable Bob Dylan will headline the Americanarama Festival of Music, a bill that will also include GRAMMY winners Wilco and Ryan Bingham, with the latter appearing on select dates. The tour is scheduled to kick off June 26 in West Palm Beach, Fla., and continue through early August. … Mumford & Sons will headline their biggest concert to date at London's Olympic Park on July 6. How long will their set be? Mumford & Sons may have to observe a 10:30 p.m. curfew, according to a Belfast Telegraph report. … Steely Dan have announced the Mood Swings: 8 Miles To Pancake Day tour, a jaunt that will kick off July 19 in Atlantic City and run through September.

Passings On the heels of the just-completed celebration of Record Store Day comes another sign of the dichotomy happening in the independent music world. Just days before the culture of independent music retailers was enjoying its biggest day of the year, the famed New York record outpost Bleecker Bob's closed its doors forever. The shop's history says much about what music retail used to mean: Bleecker Bob's was where, according to The New York Times, GRAMMY winners such as Jimmy Page and Frank Zappa would occasionally tend the register.

Merchandise Coldplay have digitally released the first three issues of their Mylo Xyloto comic book series. Based on the GRAMMY-winning album of the same name and penned by filmmaker Mark Osborne with input from the band, the six-part saga depicts an "Orwellian society ruled by a supremacist government that controls the population via fear tactics and overstimulation through media and propaganda."

#howmuch? What is the going rate for the opportunity to lock lips with the legendary GRAMMY winner Betty White? At the 2013 GLAAD Media Awards, a kiss with White netted $8,000 during the awards' auction, with the winning bid coming courtesy of actress Cloris Leachman. Apparently, actor Alex Pettyfer didn't get the memo since he stole a kiss from White onstage for free. 

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