Devices using ray tracing technologies, including those that assess the presence of higher order aberrations (HOA), allow for the detection of lens pathologies. Not every device that examines the presence of HOA allows for such analysis. The condition is that the corneal aberrations have to be separated from those in the internal optics. This device combines, among others, the function of corneal topography and aberrometer. Red Rocks Amphitheatre, Beachlife Festival, California Roots Festival, Sonic Temple, White River Amphitheatre, Hayden Homes Amphitheater, Ford Idaho Center, USANA Amphiteatre, Shoreline Amphitheatre, Petco Park Sublime with Rome has played in major festivals likeīeachlife Festival, California Roots Festival, Hangout Festival, Oceans Calling Festival, Sonic Temple, Art with Me Sublime with Rome has performed in venues such as:Īk-Chin Pavilion, White River Amphitheatre, Red Rocks Amphitheatre, Petco Park, Marquee Theatre, North Island Credit Union Amphitheatre, Amphitheater at White River State Park, August Hall, Azura Amphitheater, Bank of New Hampshire Pavilionįollow Sublime with Rome to get alerts about upcoming events and special deals! Follow Without further ado, here are Sublime with Rome top 10 tracks of all time: 1. One day, about two years ago, Bud Gaugh, the drummer for Sublime, one of the most beloved and commercially successful rock bands of the '90s, received a call from Eric Wilson, Sublime's bassist and Gaugh's long-time but somewhat estranged friend. Wilson said he had been working with a kid he thought Gaugh should meet - a 20-year-old singer and guitarist named Rome Ramirez. "Eric said, 'This guy Rome can play guitar like a mofo and he's got a platinum voice.' It really struck me because those are almost the exact same words he used before he introduced me to Brad." "The call came out of the blue, we hadn't talked in a couple of years," Gaugh recalls. "Brad," of course, is Bradley Nowell, the singer and guitarist who joined childhood friends Wilson and Gaugh in Long Beach, CA, in 1988 to form Sublime, which, over the course of its three albums - 1992's double-platinum 40oz. To Freedom, 1994's gold Robbin' the Hood, and 1996's 5x-platinum self-titled major-label debut - delivered an irresistible blend of ska, reggae, punk, surf rock, and hip-hop that captured the imagination of fans around the world, and has now sold more than 17 million albums worldwide. Nowell died of a heroin overdose two months prior to the release of Sublime, which reached No. 13 on the Billboard Top 200, sold six million copies, and spawned such hits as "What I Got," "Santeria," and "Wrong Way," which remain radio staples across with country. to Freedom, is the all-time most requested song on influential Los Angeles rock radio station KROQ, which has listed Sublime as its No. 3 act in its annual "Biggest Bands" list for the last six years.) Profoundly affected by Nowell's death, Sublime's two surviving members never considered performing the group's music live without their frontman. It took the talent and enthusiasm of Rome Ramirez - a genial, now 23-year-old newcomer and gifted songwriter and musician - to serve as a catalyst to bring the two old friends back together. Growing up in the Bay Area, Rome was introduced to Sublime's music by his uncle, and credits the band with inspiring him to first pick up a guitar and learn to play at age 11. "It was the first time I ever really wanted to make music as opposed to just listen to it," he says. Rome began singing and writing songs as a teenager and was playing solo gigs around the Bay Area when he met Wilson (the two were recording at the same studio).Īfter several months jamming out Sublime songs with Rome, Wilson made that call to Gaugh. Now Gaugh, Wilson, and Rome have formed Sublime With Rome, which will release its debut album, Yours Truly (produced by Butthole Surfers guitarist Paul Leary), and entertain fans with a set-list of new songs and Sublime favorites when the band hits the road over the next year. The trio knew they were on to something special after performing their first big show with Rome at Cypress Hill's Smokeout Festival in October 2009 for 20,000 people, followed by a sold-out tour in March 2010 that inspired spontaneous sing-alongs and writhing mosh-pits at every stop. "When we walked out on stage, there was a feeling of excitement," Gaugh recalls of Smokeout. "People were cheering and waving their arms and shouting 'We love you.' It took me by surprise. I didn't realize how emotional I was going to feel. I had to pause for a minute to settle down. My heart started racing and tears started welling up in my eyes because I was thinking of Bradley. Then we got started and it was just really cool. I knew then that it was definitely coming from a good place." Seeing the smile on Eric's face, and his excitement over playing this music again, that was enough for me.
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