Seems like some people really enjoyed the show at the Majestic. One of Phil's clients runs the Majestic as well as the Saenger in New Orleans and he sent Phil an email with a press release the Majestic put out regarding Joe's show that was written up in the San Antonio Express - News:
http://blog.mysanantonio.com/weekender/ … -majestic/
Joe Bonamassa filled the Majestic Theatre on Saturday for a display of acoustic and electric guitar wizardry.
SAN ANTONIO — Guitar hero Joe Bonamassa attracted more than 2,100 fans Saturday at the Majestic Theatre, a virtually sold-out house. That’s one more indicator of the venue’s spot-on booking and another example of how it will thread the needle once it’s no longer the home of the San Antonio Symphony in five months.That’s when the Tobin Center for the Performing Arts opens.Bonamassa, who served as his own opening act by dividing the show into an unplugged opening set and an electrified second half, is a telling case study. He is a cult star in a genre — the blues — that is not usually high profile.
But he stays current with a handful of ongoing, often ambitious, DVD and CD projects. With a recent No. 1 blues albums, he’s a rare guitar hero in the age of electronic dance music.
By contrast, Robert Cray and Los Lobos arrive at Aztec Theatre on April 13. If that show pulls half of Bonamassa’s tally, that will be considered a win at a new venue trying to establish an identity.
The difference is that the Majestic can deals with nostalgia or smaller shows, such as Tuesday’s Booker T. Jones concert, by booking them into the 890-seat Charline McCombs Empire Theatre.
On Saturday, Bonamassa showed off his prowess on acoustic guitar and on (mostly) his Gibson Les Paul electric guitars. Vocally, he revealed an affinity for Southern rockers like the Allman Brothers and the Marshall Tucker Band.
His higher vocal range, like his song structures, is well-matched for that branch of American blues rock.
For example, “Black Lung Heartache” is a shot-glass blues that’s propelled as much by mandola played by Gerry O’Connor (who also plays violin and banjo) and Mats Wester’s unusual, droning nyckelharpa as Bonamassa’s acoustic guitar.
Lenny Castro’s extraordinary percussion fills on a variety of drums and shakers anchored the opening set, as did pianist Derek Sherinian on upright piano on Tom Waits’ “Jockey Full of Bourbon,” a New Orleans-style vamp. Once the electricity was added, bassist Carmine Riojas and drummer Tal Bergman were brought into the mix, and O’Connor and Wester left the stage until the encore numbers.
Bonamassa is a masterful player, unafraid of bombast, but in total control of a style that can shift from Carlos Santana-like sustain to Jimmy Page riffing and B.B. King and Eric Clapton slow-hand blues. There are jazzier moments, too.
“Oh Beautiful” was the night’s most haunting song, its verse delivered in hushed tones. Howlin’ Wolf’s “Who’s Been Talking,” on the other hand, got the Led Zeppelin treatment. “Sloe Gin” reveled in Southern rock obsession, down to its “Free Bird” ending; “The Ballad of John Henry,” so steeped in distorted Hammond B-3 organ, recalled Deep Purple.
It was difficult to hush Saturday’s rowdy crowd, but Bonamassa nearly did it with his quiet “Django/Mountain Time.” which demonstrated his volume control mastery and coaxed violin-like runs from his electric guitar.
But there was a subtle difference between Bonamassa’s noisy fans and many other audiences: Few on Saturday seemed to be casual fans of the artist. They hung on his every word, lyric and guitar riff and called out for favorites.
The Majestic connected those fans to the cult artist. That’s a win all the way around