He’s hard to like. And yet every musician should love him.
Jason Bracelin
Jason Bracelin once went on tour with Kid Rock so you don’t have to. Prior to first being named the R-J’s music writer in 2006, Bracelin was the music editor for the Cleveland Scene alt-weekly. He is a graduate of the University of Illinois. A Decatur, Ill. native, Bracelin has lived in Las Vegas since 2006.
For 24 years now, the venue has built a reputation for booking tomorrow’s stars today.
Here are the best bets for concerts this week in Las Vegas.
Jewel’s explaining how Jewel occasionally gets on Jewel’s nerves.
Jesus, whiskey and inflatable chickens: Three shows, two nights in Las Vegas.
Longtime journalist Holly Gleason talks about the essay collection that she compiled and edited.
Scan a few pages of Ministry frontman Al Jourgensen’s auto-barf-ography, “Ministry: The Lost Gospels,” and you’ll wonder how the debauched-to-the-bone industrial rock forebear is still among the living.
He’s country music’s most bipartisan presence.
Jeff “Toad” Higginbotham had a “Drinkin’ Problem” problem.
Brian Saliba has booked hundreds of concerts in Las Vegas over the years, not to mention Reggae in the Desert, Extreme Thing and the Age of Chivalry Renaissance Fair.
Pop-punk mainstays Blink-182 will be settling down at the Palms with a 16-show stint at the renovated Pearl.
Forty-three million dollars and counting: That’s how much Bon Jovi’s “This House Is Not for Sale Tour” has earned.
He’s like Jean-Paul Sartre, only with a way deeper tan.
You knew it was about to go down when the dude went barefoot.
As festival seasons begins, here’s your handy guide to the biggest and best multi-day music gatherings.