Barry Tashian winces every time he hears that his mid-1960s Boston rock band, Barry & the Remains, "stood at the door of stardom but never made it through." These days, those words come from Peter ...
Forty-eight years ago, the Remains first schlepped their gear across Kenmore Square to play a basement show at the Rathskeller. They went on to record at least two classic singles, open shows for the ...
With every passing year, the members of the band the Remains have come to appreciate the special bond they share -- from their whirlwind start in the 1960s to the more recent reunions that brought ...
With every passing year, band members of the Remains have come to appreciate the special bond they share -- from their whirlwind start in the 1960s to the more recent reunions that brought them to ...
New music from Bruce Cockburn; Norah Jones' songwriter Jesse Harris; Dreamy Brazilian pop from Celso Fonseca; Violin virtuoso Andrew Bird; New bluegrass from Blue Highway; Post punk from New York's ...
Barry Tashian was a Connecticut teenager visiting England in the summer of 1964 when his world was turned upside down. After seeing and hearing bands like the Rolling Stones for the first time, ...
In case you missed the memo: THE REMAINS ARE PLAYING TOMORROW NIGHT AT THE BASEMENT!!! No really, that's what the memo says. Caps-lock, exclamation points and all. And I got to interview head Remain ...
Ladies and gentlemen ... the legendary Remains. Cool tune. In 1964, they took Boston by surprise. Says so right on their Web site. I wasn't alive in 1964 and, if I had been, probably wouldn't have ...
It’s been a long and winding road for Barry Tashian from opening for The Beatles, to touring the world with Emmylou Harris, to the Grand Ole Opry, and now to Mansfield’s Rose Garden Coffeehouse for a ...
Chicago. Detroit. Cleveland. Washington D.C., Philadelphia. Toronto. Boston. Memphis. Cincinnati. St. Louis. New York. Seattle. Los Angeles. San Francisco. "Fourteen ...
Although he wouldn't have admitted it a couple of years ago, Barry Tashian is now a devout believer in the adage that absence makes the heart grow fonder. More than three decades ago, Tashian broke up ...
New music from Bruce Cockburn; Norah Jones' songwriter Jesse Harris; Dreamy Brazilian pop from Celso Fonseca; Violin virtuoso Andrew Bird; New bluegrass from Blue Highway; Post punk from New York's ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results