A&E
June 20, 2011 | Nekesa Mumbi Moody, AP Music Writer
Dave Matthews has just started a telephone interview when the shrieks of a child interrupt his thoughts and he has to go to another room to escape the commotion. “It’s not easy to find a quiet place in my house,’’ quips the leader of the Dave Matthews Band. “There’s a lot of action.’’ But it’s that kind of action with his 3-year-old son and two 9-year-old daughters that Matthews was craving when he decided last year, after spending 20 years on the road, to take a hiatus from touring.
A&E
November 10, 2010 | Scott McLennan, Globe Correspondent
Dave Matthews opened the first of his two shows at the TD Garden by informing the crowd that he was feeling lousy. If he didn’t confess, nobody would have suspected, as the Dave Matthews Band played a solid show that surpassed the two-hour mark and covered many chapters of the band’s nearly 20-years-long journey. With the DMB planning a year off in 2011, perhaps Matthews was feeling a little nostalgic last night, opening with vintage tunes “Proudest Monkey,’’ “Satellite,’’ and “Don’t Drink the Water.’’ The playing...
A&E
August 20, 2010 | Jonathan Perry, Globe Correspondent
VARIOUS ARTISTS MUSIC HITS HOME Rounder There have been some huge disappointments surrounding Red Sox star Kevin Youkilis lately — a season-ending thumb injury; his split from spouse/S.O. Enza Sambataro — but this eclectic compilation benefiting “Hits for Kids,’’ a children’s charity cofounded by both Youkilis and his ex, isn’t one of them. Tracks by touring titans the Dave Matthews Band (who kick things off with a muscular, and until-now unreleased, live version of “Why I Am’’)
A&E
June 9, 2010 | Scott McLennan, Globe Correspondent
MANSFIELD — Dave Matthews Band may be going on vacation once this current tour ends, but at Monday’s show at the Comcast Center (the first of two nights), they certainly did not look like a group in need of some rest. Rather, the DMB played a fiery two-plus-hour set that spanned the band’s catalog, with extra emphasis placed on last year’s “Big Whiskey and the GrooGrux King.’’ A song-in-development, “Break for It,’’ was the night’s only real lull, as frontman Matthews and his crew couldn’t beef up a lightweight trifle.
A&E
June 1, 2009 | James Reed, Globe Staff
It looked like your typical Friday night at Fenway Park. Lansdowne was clogged with people in Sox attire, throwing back Sam Adams wherever they served them. Scalpers wanted to know who needed tickets, and the usual chants of "Let's go Red Sox!" rippled outside the ballpark. Inside Fenway, though, the merch tables peddled jerseys with names other than Pedroia and Wakefield. They read "DMB" and "MOORE 41," proud salutes to Dave Matthews Band, the night's entertainment, and LeRoi Moore, the band's saxophonist who died in August.
A&E
May 29, 2009 | Jonathan Perry, Globe Correspondent
The stage, rather than the studio, is where the Dave Matthews Band has always shone brightest. In fact, much like the grandaddy of jam bands, the Grateful Dead (or DMB's improvisation-minded contemporaries Phish), the veteran outfit's expansive live approach tends to outdo its more conventionally structured, middle-of-the-road recorded efforts. The same can be said for "Big Whiskey and the GrooGrux King," the group's sixth studio album, out Tuesday and named in honor of late Dave Matthews Band cofounder and saxophonist LeRoi Moore ("GrooGrux" refers to him, apparently)