DIVERSE AND ECLECTIC FUN FOR YOUR EARS - 60s to 90s rock, prog, psychedelia, folk music, folk rock, world music, experimental, doom metal, strange and creative music videos, deep cuts and more!
Friday, March 13, 2026
Birth of Joy - The Sound
Birth of Joy is a Dutch rock band, founded in 2005 at the Utrecht-based Herman Brood Academy. After many live concerts in the Netherlands, the band was signed by Dutch indie label Suburban Records following a performance at the Zwarte Cross Festival in 2011. After further shows at the Rencontres Trans Musicales in France and the Eurosonic Noorderslag festival in Groningen, supported by Rockpalast, the group became known outside the Netherlands. The band played their (provisional) last concert on 3 January 2019 in Paradiso, Amsterdam, after more than 1300 live performances in the Netherlands, Europe and the US.
The band's music is influenced by the blues and psychedelic rock scene of the late 1960s and early 1970s, but also borrowed from rock 'n' roll and boogie-woogie.[citation needed]
The band chose L'Ubu club in Rennes, France (city of the Rencontres Trans Musicales) to record a live album during two evenings (29 and 30 January 2015). The band's name is a reference to Friedrich Nietzsche's The Birth of Tragedy. From: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birth_of_Joy
-
Such was the way of the music industry in 1970 that Free were back in the studio on August 21st barely a few months after the release of the...
-
Conversation has never really been my strong point. There was a time when I used to find myself doing interviews and hardly saying anything....
-
Pamela Connolly and Sarah Corcoran—joint vocalists, guitarists, and bassists for Pillow Queens—are reciting a list they made early in their ...
-
Todd Rundgren was already showing signs of being a one-man musical army when he settled in to make his 1972 album Something/Anything? He had...
-
Right after a band’s name, how a group comes together and not only grows, but sustains—and in the case of folk trio The Wailin’ Jennys, sust...
