Great American Music Hall
Show Info
Cat Power
Cat Power (SOLO ON 4/27)
Dirty Three


**Please note that Dirty Three will close the shows on 4/25 & 4/27, and Cat Power will close the show on 4/26. She will perform solo on 4/27**

Date: April 25 & 26, 2003
Doors:
8:00 PM
Show:
9:00 PM

Date:
April 27, 2003
Doors:
7:00 PM
Show:
8:00 PM

Tickets: ALL THREE NIGHTS ARE SOLD OUT
$19
General Admission

**Tickets already purchased for April 25 or April 26 will be honored at the Door**


Dinner Ticket $37.95

Download ticket fax form here


Tickets available on-line at Virtuous.com and Tickets.com

Tickets also available at Tickets.com outlets including Rasputin Music & Giants Dugouts. To find a complete listing of ticket outlets online, click here

Tickets also available via phone at 415-478-2277

Age Restrictions: All Ages Always
Kitchen:
Regular Menu Available
Seating:
Limited
 
Artist Links

Cat Power Website
 

Cat Power's Chan (pronounced "Shawn") Marshall exists on a plane somewhat different than yours or mine, as anybody who has heard her sing knows. Her voice is unlike anyone you've heard before, combining raw intimacy with a gruff, chalky confidence, and while any attempt to interpret her lyrics comes up short, their plain-spoken lines belie an otherwordly perspective on primal human emotions. She's abstract, but always honest and true. That awareness has caused a tidal wave of adulation for Chan from her giant fan base, one that has tripled with each new record released. They'll go anywhere with her, trusting that it always leads to a familiar place that will never seem the same.

Recorded by Adam Kasper (Queens of the Stone Age, Foo Fighters, Pearl Jam), You Are Free is Chan's first record of original material since 1998’s Moon Pix, and she's at the apex of her talents. She's fascinated with American music, as heard through her covers of songs by Dylan, Lou Reed, Moby Grape, and traditional folk on her last release, The Covers Record, and has absorbed its history into her own. Broken down to their essentials, songs like "Good Woman," "Fool" and "Speak For Me" could have been written sixty years ago on a rural Mississippi back porch, but Chan ably personalizes the traditional so it sounds handmade for the modern day. You Are Free represents a breathing history of music as seen through the eyes of a skilled musician on her way to becoming a national heirloom.

 

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