Jackson Browne‘s show at the Beacon Theatre was well received by the Village Voice’s Eric Sundermann.
Unsurprisingly, the live version of Jackson Browne sounds exactly like the recorded version: clean and precise. Watching him handle a six-string is like watching a skilled doctor perform surgery: His hands float back and forth on the fretboard with ease, carefully and meticulously plucking away at riffs both old and new, and his voice doesn’t sound like it’s aged a bit. Those soaring moments on “Something Fine” or “A Child In These Hills,” both from his self-titled debut, still fly confidently, his vocals just as full and powerful as they were in 1971.
Read the entire review here.
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About Corey Blake
Corey Blake does things on the Internet, and sometimes even in real life. As a comic book pundit, advocate and educator, he regularly contributes to the Comic Book Resources blog Robot 6 and runs the web-magazine The Comics Observer, which provides a variety of perspectives on the comic book art form and industry. He also advises for the award-winning documentary and comics advocacy movement Dig Comics, and is a recurring member of the podcast Part-Time Fanboy. As a comedic performer/actor, Corey has been seen in online web-series such as The Jeff Lewis 5-Minute Comedy Hour (Best Web Comedy-Episodic, Clicker.com), The Starmind Record (Best Direction and Editing, LA Web Series), and Poopdog Entertainment’s Mayer for Mayor (Funny or Die featured video). He is a founding member of the improv comedy group The You Convention, a house team at The Improv Space. See http://www.coreyblake.com for more.