Blues Brothers Tickets for all Blues Brothers Concerts    
Click here to view our Site Map
Your Location | Select Location
Home > Concert Tickets > Blues and Jazz Tickets > Blues Brothers Tickets  

Blues Brothers Tickets

All Shows


Blues Brothers
By boatindave from dallas on 10/16/2008

[...] The blues brothers may not be a truely legitimate band, but they sure are fun to see. The more you dance and get into it the better time you will have. We were on the floor and met some nice people. It was really loud though, my ears are still ringing!

Was this review helpful to you? Yes/No- You may also flag this review.
blues bros. corporate
By good times from dallas, tx on 10/16/2008

Blues brothers show was excellent great performance, although crowd was awful. Nothing but middle aged corporate [*], who reserved the middle section of the floor, a bar, and had their "i own the world" VIP passes around their rich [*] necks. I found it nauseating, and was almost kicked out b/c of a nest of whining old men who were upset about me standing (a general admission show) in front of them. The venue was clean and great. The bouncers thought they were of course above everyone. It would be better to see a classic performance with classic rock n rollers, not the fake krap I dealt with.

Was this review helpful to you? Yes/No- You may also flag this review.

Recently Viewed Events
 
Ani DiFrancoFinish Now and receive
5% OFF!
*Cannot be used on NFL & US Open Events
How Buying & Selling Concert Tickets, Theater Tickets & Sporting Events Tickets works at TicketsNow
TicketsNow Guarantee: Authentic Tickets Or Your Money Back! - TicketsNow
Click here for TicketsNow Terms and Conditions.
Insider Email Alerts
Sign up for TicketsNow emails, get 10% off your first order.
Hot Events

Blues Brothers Biography

Whether celebrated as a sincere tribute or derided as a tongue-in-cheek put-on, the Blues Brothers -- Joliet Jake and his silent brother Elwood -- was among the most popular groups of the late '70s what started as a skit on the hit NBC television sketch comedy series Saturday Night Live quickly snowballed to become a true phenomenon, complete with hit records, a sold-out concert tour, and even a feature film. Clad in vintage black suits, narrow ties, fedoras, and omnipresent wrap-around sunglasses, the Blues Brothers delivered spirited renditions of classic soul hits in the tradition of the signature Stax-Volt sound purists may still cringe, but if nothing else the group deserves credit for introducing any number of soul and blues classics to a new generation of listeners while also allowing some of the most gifted session men in the business a chance to shine on-stage and -screen.

According to Don Kirshner (actually Saturday Night Live bandleader Paul Shaffer in disguise), the Blues Brothers' history was as follows: In 1969, Marshall Checker, of the legendary Checkers Records, called me on a new blues act that had been playing in the small, funky clubs on Chicago's South Side....Today they are no longer an authentic blues act, but have managed to become a viable commercial product. In reality, however, vocalist Jake and harpist Elwood Blues were music lovers John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd, two of SNL's brightest stars who created their respective aliases in early 1976 to warm up crowds before performances of the hit series. The Blues Brothers made their national TV debut with Belushi and Aykroyd outfitted in the bee costumes they often wore for another sketch, performing (naturally enough) Slim Harpo's I'm a King Bee, and in the months to follow they grew in popularity, appearing on the program with increasing regularity.

The Blues Brothers' band included top Memphis session men like guitarist Steve Cropper and bassist Donald Duck Dunn, who together appeared on many of the original Stax label recordings of songs in the group's repertoire later incarnations also featured notables like bluesman Matt Guitar Murphy. While opening for comedian Steve Martin in Los Angeles in 1978, the Blues Brothers recorded their debut live LP, Briefcase Full of Blues the album quickly went platinum, launching Top 40 hit covers of Soul Man and Rubber Biscuit. They also toured in 1980 to promote their feature-length movie, The Blues Brothers, a sprawling musical comedy featuring cameos by everyone from Cab Calloway to Aretha Franklin, as well as their second LP, Made in America two more Top 40 hits -- Gimme Some Lovin' and Who's Making Love -- appeared that same year.

In 1981, The Best of the Blues Brothers was released, further solidifying their massive popularity however, on March 5, 1982, Belushi died in Hollywood of an accidental drug overdose, and the Blues Brothers' saga was effectively over. Or so it seemed as the movie remained a cult favorite and old Saturday Night Live sketches continued to run in syndication, the group's legend continued to grow, and, in 1988, Cropper, Dunn, Murphy, and other players re-formed the Blues Brothers Band for a world tour, often backing singer Eddie Floyd. In 1992, they even cut a new LP, Red White and Blues, which featured a guest appearance from Aykroyd/Elwood. Around the same time, Aykroyd also mounted his ~House of Blues franchise, an international chain of upscale blues joints he, actor John Goodman, and Belushi's brother Jim also appeared on occasion in a new Blues Brothers lineup. Finally, in 1998 a second movie, Blues Brothers 2000, was released to negative reviews and poor box office returns. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi