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Barrence Whitfield & The Savages with Tiger Bomb

INFO
Thursday, March 21 2024
8:00pm
doors at 7:30pm
TICKETS
$20 advance
$25 day of show
$2 off for SPACE members
 

Boston legends of classic rock & roll and high-octane garage punk return to Maine to celebrate 40 years as a band!

Back in 1983, Barry White (a.k.a. Barrence Whitfield) and Peter Greenberg were working at Nuggets, a record store, in Kenmore Square in Boston. Greenberg, who had previously played guitar in DMZ and The Customs, had recently quit his job playing guitar with Lyres and had begun to form an instrumental rock n’ roll band with ex-Lyres Phil Lenker on bass, Howie Ferguson (and Real Kids too) on drums. Once Barry White began some impromptu singing at the record store, Barrence Whitfield and the Savages took off—killing any idea of an instrumental group.

The first iteration of the Savages went on to record two critically acclaimed, blockbuster LPs that combined the best of 50/60s rocking R&B with high-octane garage/punk. The first LP, Barrence Whitfield and the Savages was released on Mamou Records in 1984 and was re-released in 2010 on Ace Records with additional material. John Swenson wrote in the Ace liner notes “that in the dark days of the early 1980s… The Savages kept rock n roll alive.” The original Savages recorded a second LP in 1985, Dig Yourself on Rounder Records that also rocked in an Esquerita-like manner.

Live on Later… with Jools Holland (9/27/2013) with Pixies, Janelle Monae, Chvrches, and Tony Joe White

According to Andy Kershaw of the BBC’s Old Grey Whistle Test, “What positioned Barrence and the band way beyond any other rock’n’roll of the era was a unique marriage of Barrence’s personality and R&B shouter elan to the bounce and insolence of Peter Greenberg’s essentially rockabilly guitar style. With the addition of much ill-mannered saxophone, we have here a band which embodied the heart and soul of rock’n’roll.”

In 1986, Greenberg and Lenker moved on, and the original Savages disbanded soon after. Little did they know that this would be temporary. Thankfully, Barrence kept it alive over the years producing a wide- range of mighty-fine recorded output while continuing to tour worldwide and becoming internationally renowned for his wild performances.

Barrence Whitfield & the Savages “Let’s Go To Mars” (Official Music Video)

In 2010, after a 25-year hiatus, Whitfield, Lenker, and Greenberg decided to hang out in the desert and play some shows in the Southwest. This led to the recording of the Savage Kings LP in Cincinnati in December 2010. Cincinnati, Ohio, home to King Records, served up the chance for the Savages to honor and channel their heroes who recorded on King as well as produce a great rock & roll record.

Since their reunion, the Savages have released six records, including 2019’s Barrence Whitfield and the Soul Savage Arkestra: Songs from the Sun Ra Cosmos and 2023’s Glory. Now signed with the famed Bloodshot Records, they extensively touring Europe and the USA, headlining legendary clubs and festivals alike.

Barrence Whitfield and the Savages on BBC (1985)