![]() ![]() Trombone Shorty (photo by Mike Stampalia) No saving-the-good-stuff-for-the-end here, these were numbers and solos hitting the very highest of highs, with every member of the band masterfully and excitedly contributing to the frenzy. Thankfully, his shows are memorable enough to easily recount retroactively.Ī couple of burners from 2017’s Parking Lot Symphony, The Meters’ “It Ain’t No Use” and the impossibly catchy “Where It At,” allowed for early showcases (respectively) for BJ Jackson on tenor sax, and Shorty on trombone. You just put everything down, get off your seat, and start to move. It’s damn near impossible at a Trombone Shorty show. When I review shows, I try to be fairly meticulous, take notes as I go along, etc. From there, it was simply a non-stop party for the next 90 minutes. 1” lasting perhaps only a minute before launching into the frenzied “Buckjump”. They took the stage in dramatic fashion – all 10 of them – with the slow buildup of “Laveau Dirge No. Trombone Shorty (f) and Tracci Lee (photo by Rudy Lu)Īndrews and the band were actually kicking off this leg of the tour with this performance. ![]()
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