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The Seahorse Restaurant in Pass-A-Grille is only open for breakfast and lunch, but what a fabulous place! The food is outstanding, but so is the view, as the restaurant sits directly across from the bay, and while you won’t see any seahorses, you will see plenty of pelicans.

The Entertainment Networking Summit will be held June 18, 2011 at the Brinkley Convention Center in Brinkley, Arkansas. The event begins at 3 PM. This is a great opportunity for artists from the entire Mid-South region to get some needed knowledge and advice about the current state of the music business.Be there!

The North Mississippi Hill Country Picnic is an annual two-day outdoor concert at which most if not all of the living hill country blues performers appear, as well as many younger artists from the hill country of Mississippi, many of whom play styles of music influenced heavily by the hill country tradition. But unfortunately, not everyone has the time or money to travel to Marshall County, Mississippi in June for the picnic, so it is fortunate that Devil Down Records has issued a North Mississippi Hill Country Picnic Volume 2 sampler, which amounts to an aural record of the 2010 picnic. There is gospel here by artists like Rev. John Wilkins and Duff Dorough. There is music on the thin line between alternative rock and country, such as “Little Hand, Big Gun” by Jimbo Mathus, or “Midnight in Mississippi” by Blue Mountain. There are aggressive, rock-influenced readings of hill country blues by artists such as Eric Deaton, Duwayne Burnside, Hill Country Revue and North Mississippi All Stars, and there are traditional blues performances by Alvin “Youngblood” Hart, T-Model Ford and Robert Belfour. Of course, no recording can perfectly capture the thrill of being present at such a history-making concert, but this sampler satisfies with consistently-good music throughout. A hidden final track is R. L. Burnside telling a joke from many years ago, like a reminder of his spiritual presence giving approval to the picnic, and this recording. 

Pass-A-Grille, or “Pass of the Grillers”, is a quaint old Florida beachside village that took its name from the fact that Indians used the narrow peninsula to grill their fish. Although it is today part of St. Pete Beach, it has retained its small-town look and feel, and is home to several great restaurants as well as interesting shops.Â