Grateful Dead founding member was 78
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The producer of Sob Rock says Mayer is the best arranger he has ever worked with – and he has the late Beatle’s gift for creating guitar sounds that transform a song
His nine-piece Pan-Detroit Ensemble, a jazzy jam band, will bring their massive sound to Ann Arbor's Blue Llama Jazz Club this weekend.
Few in music are as successfully eclectic as Don Was, a bassist, producer, bandleader and record label president.
“I was loath to say John's better than George Harrison,” Was says. “It ain't gonna sit well with people, but he might be better than George Harrison.” Indeed, Was’s time in the studio with Dylan and Harrison was an eye-opening experience, with Dylan sitting in the producer’s chair as the session got underway.
Don Was is a musician, a producer, a record label president, a radio host and a key figure in the music business going back to the 1970s. He's worked with everyone from Bob Dylan to Bonnie Raitt to Bob Seger to the B-52s to the Black Crowes, and that's just the Bs.
Last Friday, October 10, Don Was and The Pan-Detroit Ensemble delivered their highly anticipated album, Groove in the Face of Adversity, an introduction to the six-time Grammy award-winning bandleader and his nine-piece soul-jazz communal. To mark the ...
Six-time Grammy winner Don Was has had an illustrious career. As a producer, he won Album of the Year in 1989 with Bonnie Raitt; he has worked with mega stars including The Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, Carly Simon, Willie Nelson, Elton John, and Brian Wilson ...
Don Was answers the phone like a guy who has lived a full musical life, yet still sounds genuinely pleased that you called. That feels right. His hometown of Detroit has always been a city built on shared bonds,
The famed producer has worked with Mayer on three studio albums, and has highlighted the overlooked aspects of his musicianship