Little Feat Premiere “Long Distance Love” Video with Amy Helm
Ween Tease Something, Terrapin Roadshow’s Stacked Summer Tour

February 4, 2026
EXCLUSIVE
Video Premiere: Little Feat Share “Long Distance Love” featuring Amy Helm, Add Summer Dates to The Last Farewell Tour
As previously reported, Little Feat have announced The Last Farewell Tour. The group clarifies, “Our intention is to retire Feat’s trusty bus and stop touring, although definitely not stop playing.” The spring leg of dates will begin on April 10 and extend through May 9. The band has just added another series of shows that will kick off on May 24 at Dark Star Jubilee and continue through August 22 at the Paramount Theatre in Denver. Tickets to most of these performances will go on sale Friday, February 6.
NEWS
Ween are up to something. Yesterday, the legendary avant-rock outfit sent a shock through their fervent following with an understated post to their social channels: a picture of their Boognish symbol captioned, “Is this thing on, mang?”
A Jerry Garcia doll and a Chia Pet together suggest both a tribute figure and a living-plant accessory. The combination is quirky and reflects the kind of merchandise that emerged once Dead culture achieved broader commercial appeal. This isn't just memorabilia. These are artifacts from the moments that shaped rock history.
NEWS
Grahame Lesh and Terrapin Crossroads’ beloved Terrapin Roadshow traveling concert series will return in 2026 for another reverent, community-forward outing, this time expanded to 11 dates in five cities across the West. Lesh, son of the Grateful Dead’s legendary bassist and now the foremost torchbearer for the band’s immortal music and message, will revive their expansive songbook in amphitheaters in the company of a revolving ensemble of celebrated peers.
"Phil Lesh and Friends" project brought together musicians from multiple traditions to explore the Dead's musical legacy while creating new possibilities. The Warfield, a San Francisco venue, hosted these 2008 shows, representing a homecoming of sorts. This set of five posters from multiple shows, each with distinct artwork, reflects the poster art tradition, in which each night of a multi-night run receives its own visual treatment. Collecting all five provides a comprehensive document of the artistic vision behind the series.
NEWS
Bruce Hornsby has unveiled Indigo Park, his ninth solo studio album, due for release via Zappo Productions/Thirty Tigers on April 3. After first heralding the project in January with a slate of summer tour dates, the storied singer-songwriter has now formally introduced his latest work with its title track and full tracklist, which notes features from Ezra Koenig, Bonnie Raitt, Blake Mills and the late Bob Weir, his longtime friend and collaborator.
FEATURE
“I live most of my life with my head down, traveling towards a goal,” Tom Hamilton observes, while musing on the process that led him to record his new album, I’m Your Vampire. “A lot of my life just kind of happens to me while I keep going. It’s very dissociative in a lot of ways. Then after some amount of time, it gets to the point where the pot is going to boil over and I have to tend to it. I need to reflect and process what I’ve gone through. So in order to do something with it, I turn it into music.”
NEWS
After six decades on the road, the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band have formally announced the final leg of their All the Good Times farewell tour. To cap off their live legacy, the legendary country-rock outfit will ride again for nine dates from June 5 to June 18 in a sprint fittingly titled 60 Years of Dirt.
REVIEW
As on the nose as it may be for Los Lobos to play the Wolf Den, a performance space centered on the casino floor of Connecticut’s Mohegan Sun, it makes it no less the ripping good time it was on the final Saturday night in January. With over five decades of a catalog to delve into, the iconic original five wolves and their touring drummer ran the gamut of the band’s history. From high-tempo rockers, to classics, to album cuts, the veteran band even worked in a poignant nod to two of its favored, departed influences—the Grateful Dead’s Bob Weir and Jerry Garcia.
GALLERY
On Saturday, Jan. 31, Taper’s Choice returned to Brooklyn, N.Y.’s Brooklyn Bowl for their first engagement at the local haunt since they hosted the star-studded Relix 50 anniversary concert last January. To greet their East Coast fans, the California-based “subversive jamband” supergroup of Darkside guitarist Dave Harrington, Real Estate bassist Alex Bleeker, Vampire Weekend drummer Chris Tomson and Arc Iris keyboardist Zach Tenorio let loose with a setlist packed with fan-favorites. After serving up a scalding serving of “Mahi Mahi Fish Stew,” the band bolted through other originals “Wild Eternity,” “Doner Wrap,” “Walking Around,” “See Them Shine,” and “Close Encounters,” then reached atmospheric heights of impprovisation in a medley of “So Bright a Vision” and “Song Hat” before a grand finale of “Mesa Blue.”











