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Killer Mike reveals five things you didn’t know about him to Billboard. Killer Mike:What’s up? This is Michael Santiago Render. You didn’t know my name was Santiago, but here are five other things you didn’t know about me. I’m a big guy, so people think I’m short, but I’m actually six foot three. So I’m […]
Britney Spears speaks out on social media following the news of her divorce from Sam Asghari. Travis Scott stays on top of the Billboard 200 with his latest album ‘Utopia’ for the third week in a row, while Oliver Anthony Music’s viral song “Rich Men of Richmond” goes to No. 1. Everything you missed this […]
Pedro Capó plays Never Have I Ever with Billboard. Pedro Capó:Hey, this is Pedro Capó, and this is Never Have I Ever. … Drunk DM’d an ex:Oh my god, of course I have! I am only a human being! … Clogged someone else’s toilet and left:No, I have not. Have I clogged it? Yes, but […]
Jon Batiste reveals five things you didn’t know about him to Billboard. Jon Batiste:Hello, I’m Jon Batiste, and this is five things you might not know about me. I just learned how to swim last year. Still working on it. But I know how to swim now. I was a basketball national champion before I […]
Jon Batiste talks about his creative process for his new album World Music Radio, potentially becoming an EGOT winner during his career and more! Jon Batiste:Everything will fall into place for you. So that’s a message to everybody you know, whatever you doing whatever you creating, there’s no pressure. Just be you, walk your path. […]
Billboard was at Kelly Clarkson’s Las Vegas residency, the Jonas Brothers’ tour opener at Yankee stadium, Quavo’s performance in Atlanta for the Braves game and more during this week’s All Access. Jon Batiste talks about his new album ‘World Music Radio’, working with Jon Bellion, potentially becoming an EGOT and more. J-Hope drops a new […]
Nas shares his thoughts on female trailblazers such as Queen Latifah, Roxanne Shanté, MC Lyte and the up-and-coming female artists he thinks are the ones to watch. Nas:I can’t believe I’m here. Fifty calling in 50 years. I’m just happy to be here to witness it as a fan, to be honored. It’s like, “No, […]
Peter Case hasn’t done a coast-to-coast tour with a band since 1989 — and he wouldn’t have it any other way.
Part of the reason is financial, the critically acclaimed singer-songwriter tells Billboard’s Behind the Setlist podcast. His national tour in support of his second solo album, The Man With the Blue Post-Modern Fragmented Neo-Traditionalist Guitar, was “a fun tour” but “a bad deal on a van that we’d rented,” and a few canceled shows for health reasons meant the outing lost money. So after talking to his agent, Case went back on the road as a solo act. This time, though, Case came home with more money than he spent.
The way Case sees it, musicians have long toured as solo artists for the financial benefits. “Part of the reason Woody Guthrie played solo all the time was because he couldn’t afford a band,” says Case, who released his 16th solo album, Doctor Moan, in January through Sunset Blvd. Records and is the subject of the 2023 documentary Peter Case: A Million Miles Away, directed by Fred Parnes.
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Case, a native of upstate New York, was influenced by solo musicians since his formative days spent in San Francisco, where he went from busking on street corners to co-founding the band The Nerves in 1976, and later Los Angeles, where he co-founded The Plimsouls in the 1979.
“I came from a time when solo players were really a thing,” he says. “I remember going to see James Taylor in 1969, I think it was. He would just play solo, you know, and he’d be great. He was a really great guitar player. He had really good songs on his first couple albums. It was great. Or you’d see John Hammond Jr. and he’d be rocking the house, stomping his feet and blowing this incredible harmonica. He played 12-string guitar and he was great. I saw [American folk singer] Dave Van Rock. I saw [singer-songwriter] Laura Nyro play solo. I saw [blues musician] Lightnin’ Hopkins play solo.”
Case likens his first solo shows, at McCabe’s Guitar Shop in Santa Monica, to “throwing a cat into a tub of cold water.” The audience at the intimate venue wasn’t going to be “blown away by the lights and the smoke and the volume” of his amplifier. All he had was his guitar and his songs. As the musician John Hiatt once told him, “When you play solo, it really plugs you into the worth of what you’re writing.”
Listen to the Behind the Setlist’s interview with Peter Case below, or on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, iHeart, Amazon Music, Audacy, Podbay, Podtail and Audible.
Britney Spears and Sam Asghari’s marriage is headed for divorce, Ed Sheeran explains why he doesn’t see himself doing the Super Bowl halftime show anytime soon, Armani White talks about performing with Billie Eilish, Becky G drops a new song and Gonza clothing line perfect for summer, we take a look back at the songs […]
As any musician knows, it’s a tough task to score a top 10 hit on the Billboard Hot 100. The feat requires some blend of the following key ingredients: a strong song; a charismatic artist; consistent promotion and marketing effort,; an engaged fan base; and maybe even a viral live performance, meme or other stroke […]