NEW YORK, Nov. 13 2012—Life begins at 60 for Live from Daryl’s House as the critically acclaimed, award-winning web-to-cable series celebrates its latest milestone with a visit from legendary Eagles and James Gang guitarist Joe Walsh, who combines with Daryl Hall for a mighty rave-up that also includes learning how to combine 42 ingredients into a tasty chicken mole. For the 60th and latest edition of the show, now available on over-the-air syndication, Daryl and Joe trade guitar licks and verses on the latest episode, which premieres Nov. 15 simultaneously at www.lfdh.com and Viacom’s high-definition music channel Palladia.
Daryl
and Walsh hit it off right away, with roaring versions of the latter’s
“Rocky Mountain Way,” cranking out his famed talk box, and “Life’s Been
Good” that featured the two feverishly trading verses and guitar licks.
The two perform a pair of Hall solo numbers in “Somebody Like You,” the
VH1 Behind the Music update of “Someone Like You,” from his 1986
solo album, Three Hearts in the Happy Ending Machine” and a take on
“Wrong Side of History,” from his recent Verve Music Group solo album, Laughing Down Crying. Walsh also played “Wrecking Ball,” a track from the recently released Analog Man,
his first solo album in two decades, and “Funk 49/50,” a gem from his
early days in the James Gang. In between, everyone dined on a delicious
chicken mole, cooked up by Julieta Ballesteros, the chef at New York
Mexican restaurant Crema.
“I was a kid in the
Temptones back in Philly when I first heard ‘Funk 49,’” recalls Daryl.
“Joe was one of the first to take that blues-rock groove and really funk
it out. He’s one of the great guitar legends, an amazing musician. I
couldn’t wait to play with him.”
Joe, who
clearly enjoyed the experience, was equally enthused to play with Daryl.
“He’s been a favorite of mine for a long time,” he said. “And I finally
wound up on the East Coast with enough time to get up to Daryl's and
represent. It was great to finally play some music with him. The band's
great, the production crew's great, and I totally support the home-grown
concept. Hope everybody enjoys the show as much as I did.”
Walsh
took time during the show to tell of getting his first guitar, a $40
Sears & Roebuck Silvertone model after originally playing trombone
and clarinet growing up. “I stumbled across the guitar, because I needed
something I could play that wasn’t in my mouth, and that I could write
music on,” he laughs. “I was never going to get any girls playing
clarinet. Not that I got any playing guitar, but it was a lot more fun.”
Taking a cue from the title of his latest album, Analog Man, Walsh criticizes the “digital recipe” of most pop music today, explaining, “It’s all about the magic of a human performance.”
And there’s no better example of that than the interaction between Walsh and his host on the latest edition of Live from Daryl’s House,
which turns Hall’s living room into a garage, with a slam-bang version
of “Wrecking Ball” ending in what Daryl dubs, “a Neil Young moment.”
There were more than several of those over the course of the episode.
The past five years have marked a steady stream of superlatives and recognition for Live from Daryl’s House,
with Hall receiving a Webby Award for Best Variety series from more
than 10,000 entries at the 14th annual ceremony at N.Y.’s Cipriani Wall
Street before garnering an O Music Award from MTV last year.
Along with airing every Thursday night at 11 p.m. (ET/PT) on Viacom’s high-definition music channel Palladia, Live from Daryl’s House is
syndicated nationally by Good Cop Bad Cop Productions. Executive
producers for the show include Hall along with his manager Jonathan
Wolfson.
The 59 previous episodes of Live From Daryl’s House have featured a mix of well-known performers like Jason Mraz, The Voice’s Cee
Lo Green, Booker T and the MGs, Blind Boys of Alabama, Rob Thomas,
Train, Smokey Robinson, The Doors’ Robby Krieger and Ray Manzarek, Toots
Hibbert, Nick Lowe, K.T. Tunstall, Todd Rundgren, Keb Mo, Dave Stewart,
Goo Goo Dolls’ John Rzeznik and Fall Out Boy’s Patrick Stump along with
newcomers such as Nick Waterhouse, Rumer, Chiddy Bang, Allen Stone,
Nikki Jean, The Dirty Heads, Grace Potter & the Nocturnals, Mayer
Hawthorne, Eric Hutchinson, Chromeo, Matt Nathanson, Parachute, Plain
White T’s, soul diva Sharon Jones, Diane Birch, L.A. neo-R&B party
band Fitz & the Tantrums, hot new alternative band Neon Trees and
veteran alternative mainstays Guster.
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