On Sale: Sat • Mar 15 • 5 PM
On Sale: Sat • Mar 15 • 5 PM
San Diego, CA
Overall Rating
4.6
By Annmarie0123
Boz Scaggs and America are amazing!
What a wonderful venue. Smooth entry and exit. The best and friendliest people working there. Now on to the music...the BEST and I do mean the BEST concert I have ever been to. My first but not my last Boz Scaggs concert! His voice is just as smooth as it has always been. And this is one of many concerts to see America. Dewey, Gerry, Rich , Ryland and Stephen do not disappoint. LOVE, LOVE, LOVE!!!
By Chamiehawk
Boz was amazing! He did my favorite song in the encore !!
By bobhumbug
boz skaggs great
Boz Skaggs was a great show. Wish to see him again soon. What an incredible talent both him and his band. He never fails to satisfy. There is something very special about this guy, I never get tired of him.
By JeraWalk
Best Boz Performance Ever!
This is my 4th straight year of seeing Boz perform, and I must say this year’s concert was his best so far! He didn’t have an opening act or share the bill with another artist, it was just Boz and his band. He performed for nearly 2 hours, with a mix of his classics and new music. His voice is still beautiful and strong, he still plays a mean guitar, and I feel like he still enjoys the stage. Thank you Boz for a great show, am looking forward to hearing your new music. Love you, hope to see you again next year!!!
By 1Medtech1
Boz
The last two times that we have seen Boz he has played his "new" stuff. We didn't come to hear the new stuff. Look at your crowd Boz! We are all in our 50's or 60's , maybe a few younger people....they were our children. We want to hear the old stuff! Send us back to the 70's. America was GREAT! People were leaving before Boz was over but America held everyone's attention. Thanks America, leave Boz home next time.
By annabeth63
Amazing Boz
It was such a thrill to see Boz Scaggs for the first time after being a fan since I was a kid. He did not disappoint. His voice is amazing and his guitar skills are fantastic. He and his band performed his very jazzy/bluesy new stuff, as well as old hits. America, who came on first, but was much more than an opening act, sounded great.
By doug3ddd
William Royce "Boz" Scaggs
Boz Scaggs just gets better and better every time I see him. He is such a gentleman, plays most everything you had hoped to hear along with some great surprises. Took my youngest daughter (her 2nd time) and she felt the very same. Thank you for the great, great music
By LSgrl
Smooth as Silk!
Boz hasn't lost a lick, unlike some others touring with their material. His band is great too. My only regret about this concert is that he didn't sing "Slow Dancer".
By SWHW
Boz Scaggs was amazing!!
This was my second time to see him at the Uptown Theatre. Looking forward to a third time!
By Nuge
One of the Best
I have seen Boz 3 or 4 times and every time he and his band are tight delivering awesome music and better than the recording sound .They play a blend of his greatest as well new and or some lesser known songs from his impressive catalog.I bought his new CD pre -release the next day after he played two great songs off it .I rarely enjoy new songs that I don't know without hearing them ahead of time .Wow I was fortunate to be in the front row and saw the great connection between Boz and his band .We see 25 shows a year and Boz is in my top five live performers Silk Degrees was a jjourney marker in my life and brings back great memories .Do not miss him if you get the chance
To sing the Great American Songbook convincingly, it helps to believe in chance. All
the legendary composers of standards - George and Ira Gershwin, Richard Rodgers and
Lorenz Hart, Harold Arlen, the list goes on - had something to say about life's
serendipities. Their songs are full of unexpected encounters, fine romances that blossom
out of nowhere. Their wistful and often impossibly beautiful melodies convey the magic
of happenstance and also its flipside, the capricious cruelty of fate. Their lyrics
celebrate the notion that life can change in an instant - when that vision of loveliness
steps out of a dream and you suddenly find yourself bewitched, bothered and
bewildered.
Boz Scaggs believes in this sort of thing. You can tell that from the opening stanzas of
‘Speak Low,' the sublime and sexy follow-up to his critically acclaimed 2003 standards
collection ‘But Beautiful.' Recorded in four days with the musicians playing live
together in the same room, Speak Low oozes the spontaneous essence of torch song. It's
romantic singing done casual and breezy - from the first notes, you sense that everyone
involved is alive to the possibilities of the moment. At the same time, it's a feast of
carefully wrought moods - here's Scaggs, owner of one of the most distinctive voices in
popular music, singing sweet and low in the thick shadows. About the lover who, he
discovered too late, was too good to be true.
Fittingly, ‘Speak Low' is the result of a chance encounter.
The multi-dimensional singer, whose 1976 album ‘Silk Degrees' was one of the
landmark pop titles of the decade, began working on ‘Speak Low' several years ago.
He'd settled on most of the material, and had developed a rough notion of the sound in
his head. "I had a few distinct elements I wanted to hear with my voice," Scaggs recalls.
"I knew I wanted reeds, bass flutes and clarinets. I wanted to try to sing with strings, but
I didn't want it to sound like generic strings." He needed an accomplice, an arranger
who could bring those textures to life; as part of his search, he flew from his home in
the Bay Area to New York to meet with some prospective collaborators. At first he was
discouraged - he remembers wondering whether he'd ever realize the sound he'd
imagined. And then one night, as he and his son were walking through the Village, he
experienced what he describes as a "remarkable coincidence." "It was raining, cold out.
We walked by the Blue Note and heard music coming out of the club. It was vibes,
string trio, a couple of horns - this was the sound I'd been hearing in my head, exactly.
Turned out to be the Gil Goldstein Septet. After the set we started talking, and it was
just a really nice meeting. When we got together around a piano, that was it. We knew."
In subsequent sessions, Scaggs and Goldstein concocted a sly, almost subliminal
approach that emphasizes openness - this is torch singing as it was practiced during the
crooner heyday of the 1950s, with each phrase guided by sensitivity and
understatement. Some tunes showcase Scaggs fronting an agile rhythm section, while
others, including the title track and a sultry "Invitation," are fleshed out ever so gently,
with clarinets burbling in the basement and delicate splashes of color from the strings.
Scaggs says he knew, from the beginning, that those fleeting textures were essential to
the enterprise: "So many people in the last decade have gone back to the standards, the
list is as long as my arm. Lots of them with big orchestras, too. It seemed pointless to
even go there unless we were going to do something to make these songs our own....We
had to find an emotional connection. It's a testament to the songs themselves that they
keep getting redone, but that makes it tricky, too. We played around a lot with different
tempos and feels, pushed the songs in different directions."
That sense of invention - coy, often oblique invention rather than radical reconstruction
- defines ‘Speak Low.' One example is Duke Ellington's "Do Nothing Till You Hear
From Me," which is most often rendered in a bouncy medium-tempo swing pulse. After
trying it that way, Scaggs and his crew slowed the tempo down dramatically, to a
captivating crawl. The possibilities, Scaggs says, suddenly multiplied. "When we tried
it like that, we were surprised at how the slow ballad tempo gave the lyrics more
emotional dimension. It's hard to sing that way - I call it ‘jumping from post to post,'
because there's a lot of area between the beats. But it really works."
And though Scaggs took care to avoid copying or emulating the classic interpretations
of these songs, in a few cases he found it nearly impossible. His "I Wish I Knew" draws
on the memorable rendition on John Coltrane's Ballads album: "That's where I learned
the tempo, and the phrasing. He legitimized that song for me." And then there's "She
Was Too Good To Me," which was recorded by jazz vocalist and trumpeter Chet Baker.
"It's very hard to escape Chet on that," Scaggs acknowledges. "It will be said that I
leaned on Chet, and I openly admit it. When he goes into that pure, unwavering place,
that's some of the most beautiful singing on the planet."
Scaggs has studied Baker and many other jazz figures, but makes clear that he doesn't
consider himself a jazz singer: "That's sacred ground," he says flatly, leaving no room
for discussion. "Me, I stick close to the melodies...I am enthralled with the melodies. I
don't go out and jump off the cliff, I try to find my place inside the tunes, by adding
little rhythmic elements." He looks forward to performing this material live on a regular
basis - he'll embark on a national tour of legendary jazz clubs in fall 2008- in hopes
that the experience will help bring him a bit closer to jazz. "What you have to remember
about the great singers, the Sarah Vaughan's and Billie Holiday's, is that they came up
doing this, creating these moments, every night. Imagine the number of sets and the late
nights they must have worked, five nights a week. All that became part of their music."
Scaggs wasn't on the scene for the hot-and-heavy jazz years, but the singer and
musician has been associated with some of the most incendiary talents of the rock era.
Scaggs began his solo recording career in 1969, with an eponymous album for Atlantic
Records that features members of the famed Muscle Shoals rhythm section. That album
has achieved a kind of legendary cult status for the extended blues foray "Loan Me A
Dime," which features an incendiary guitar solo by the late Duane Allman.
In 1970, Scaggs began a long-term association with Columbia Records. His first three
efforts for the label - ‘Moments,' ‘Boz Scaggs and Band' and ‘My Time' - are loaded
with durable, insightful original songs. ‘Slow Dancer,' issued in 1974, emphasizes
understated textures and sleek, uptown grooves - a sound Scaggs would develop further
on his commercial breakthrough ‘Silk Degrees.' That album spawned several hit singles
("Lowdown," "Lido Shuffle," "Georgia," "We're All Alone" and "It's Over"), reached
number 2 on the Billboard album chart, and eventually sold over 4 million copies. It
also brought Scaggs a Grammy award: "Lowdown," which he co-wrote with David
Paich, was voted Best R&B song.
For ‘Silk Degrees' Scaggs relied on a small group of Los Angeles session musicians
including keyboardist Paich and drummer Jeff Porcaro. Shortly after that recording
those musicians formed the enormously successful ‘70s rock band Toto. Scaggs went
on to release ‘Middle Man' in 1980; it became his third consecutive platinum-selling
title. Later that year, the singer essentially withdrew from the music business, with very
little fanfare.
He couldn't stay away forever. Scaggs resurfaced in 1988 with' Other Roads,' which
contains the top 40 hit "Heart of Mine." In 1991, Scaggs joined Donald Fagan as part of
his New York Rock & Soul Revue. After signing a new contract with Virgin Records
and releasing several significant albums including ‘Some Change' (1994) and the blues
collection ‘Come On Home' (1997), Scaggs joined up with David Paich and Danny
Kortchmar on Scaggs' own favorite, ‘Dig' (2001), and followed that with his first foray
into jazz standards, ‘But Beautiful,' in 2003, which rose to the number one spot on
Billboard's jazz chart.
Scaggs credits the musicians on ‘Speak Low' - Goldstein, percussionist Alex Acuna,
bassist Scott Colley, vibraphonist Mike Mainieri and saxophonist Bob Sheppard plus a
small studio orchestra - with helping him realize the sound he heard in his head. "I'm
so incredibly lucky to work with players of this caliber," Scaggs says. "On really every
tune, we'd try different things, and they always landed in a really interesting pocket."
The singer adds that the airy, inviting feeling of the new album is partly due to the
atmosphere of the studio. The album was recorded at Skywalker Sound, a state-of-theart
studio that's part of filmmaker George Lucas' Skywalker Ranch complex. The room
is massive, a soundstage big enough to fit an orchestra. Yet ‘Speak Low' sounds like it
was made in someone's cozy living room. "The sense of intimacy you can get there is
quite remarkable," Scaggs says. "You sorta naturally think that you can get closer to the
music in a smaller room, but that's not always true. At Skywalker, the vastness brought
us all together......When you enter you go through these huge heavy doors, and the
enormous space and enormous quiet really gives you a sense of intimacy. The quiets in
that room are much quieter, and all of the dynamics are really vivid. It's a great room to
sing in."
Listening to the aptly titled ‘Speak Low,' it's obvious that Scaggs and his accompanists
enjoyed the superquiet quiets, the vivid contrasts. They seem to sense that these are
ideal conditions for making subtle music. You can tell they're listening intently,
savoring the little ripples, ready to take all kinds of chances and at the same time
moving gingerly, so as not to break the spell.