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Ultimate Classic Rock critic Chad Childers rated "Mama Kin" as Aerosmith's 7th best song of the 1970s. [5] Ultimate Classic Rock critic Michael Gallucci said that unlike most of the songs on the album, "Mama Kin" is "bursting with train-kept-a-rollin' locomotive action, even if it "sounds tentative at times, not sure if it should take that next step, and the rhythm's start-stop progression ...
The Get a Grip Tour was a concert tour by American hard rock band Aerosmith that lasted over eighteen months, from early June 1993 to mid-December 1994. The tour was put on in support of the band's third consecutive multi-platinum album Get a Grip, released in April 1993.
SoFA (South First Area) is an arts, cultural, and entertainment district of Downtown San Jose, California.Home to numerous cultural institutions, art galleries, and theatre companies, including the Institute of Contemporary Art San José, the San José Opera, and the Silicon Valley Symphony, SoFA bills itself as "Silicon Valley's Creative District".
The tour came on the heels of the band's platinum album Just Push Play. [2] Aerosmith was riding a wave of popularity, having played the Super Bowl XXXV Halftime Show, [3] been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, [4] and scored a Top 10 hit, [5] all within the first half of the year.
A Little South of Sanity is a live album by American hard rock band Aerosmith, released on October 20, 1998, by Geffen Records.The two-disc album features recordings taken while the band was on the Nine Lives Tour, which began in 1997 and was still ongoing at the time of the live album release, and the Get a Grip Tour, which the band was on tour with from 1993 to 1994.
Mama Kin's first released recording was an EP, Papoose in 2008, followed by a single, "Tore My Heart Out", [1] released in 2009. [2] Her debut album, Beat and Holler , written almost entirely on an old Wurlitzer organ [ 1 ] and recorded at The Compound, Fremantle and released in 2009.
In 2003, the San Jose City Council considered a bill to rename King Road, named for an 1851 settler to San Jose, after Martin Luther King Jr. The proposal was generally supported by the African American community and opposed by the Hispanic population. The city council eventually rejected the proposal. [6]
California Jam II (also known as Cal Jam II) was a music festival held in Ontario, California, at the Ontario Motor Speedway on March 18, 1978, and produced by Leonard Stogel, Sandy Feldman, and Don Branker.