Live from Daryl's House


Live from Daryl's House is an online series that was first created in fall 2007. The show features singer-songwriter Daryl Hall performing with his band and various guest artists at his home in Millerton, New York. The show provides a performance space that is an alternative to live concerts and studio sessions for popular artists. This allows the artists to "…have fun and creatively spontaneous". The majority of shows include a segment in which Hall and the guest artist prepare food from different cuisines for everyone to eat. The food comes from various local restaurants and the chefs of those establishments walk Hall and guest through the preparation of the food. Live From Daryl's House expanded to broadcast TV but remained unchanged. Hall was quoted by Billboard.com as saying "it's an Internet show that is being shown on television, so I'm not adapting the show at all in any way to be a 'TV' show." The show debuted in 95 markets on September 24, 2011, with back-to-back half-hour episodes featuring Train and Fitz & the Tantrums. Starting with the 66th episode of Live From Daryl's House, the shows are filmed at Hall's club, Daryl's House, in Pawling, New York.

History

The first web show was a solo production which featured Hall and his backing band playing "Everything Your Heart Desires". It was not until the second episode that the show introduced its guest star format. Hall's long-time performing and songwriting partner John Oates was the first guest on the show with a Christmas episode entitled "Trimming the Tree".
Hall created Live from Daryl's House as a refuge from live touring on the road. He stated in an interview with Rolling Stone magazine that he wanted to bring the world to him, for a change. Hall wanted the opportunity to collaborate with contemporary artists, and this is his vehicle in which to do so.
Live from Daryl's House originally appeared on the program's website in November 2007. The initial episode was completely funded by Hall. In subsequent shows, costs were defrayed by corporate sponsors like Uline. Although some of those sponsored episodes are no longer available for viewing on the archive section of LFDH's website, they can still be found on YouTube and torrent trackers. In addition to corporate sponsorship, Hall routinely plugged local restaurants that provided catering for the shows. Often, the chef would teach Hall and the guest artist how to prepare at least one of the dishes that were served. When the program gained popularity, Hall's production company Good Cop Bad Cop Productions signed two syndication deals. In 2012, the Viacom-owned Palladia network took over the finances with help from a deal arranged by executive producer Jonathan Wolfson, who is also Hall & Oates's manager.
In July 2018 BMG announced a new partnership with Live From Daryl's House. The agreement includes worldwide rights to the entire 82-episode collection filmed from 2007 to 2016. The show's new production, which is slated to begin in fall of 2018, is again to be executive produced by Good Cop Bad Cop Productions’ Daryl Hall and Jonathan Wolfson, and Joe Thomas and Bob Frank for BMG. Sound Off Productions’ Domenic Cotter will continue as the show's producer.

Episodes

As of December 2016, 82 episodes of Live From Daryl's House have been filmed.
Episode No.Guest or episode nameDate
82Kenny LogginsJune 23, 2016
81GraceJune 16, 2016
80Chris DaughtryJune 9, 2016
79Anderson EastJune 2, 2016
78The O'JaysMay 26, 2016
77Elle KingMay 19, 2016
76Wyclef JeanMay 12, 2016
75Cheap TrickMay 5, 2016
74Aloe BlaccOctober 15, 2015
73Kitty, Daisy & LewisSeptember 15, 2015
72Aaron NevilleAugust 15, 2015
71Kandace SpringsJuly 15, 2015
70Ben FoldsJune 12, 2015
69Sammy HagarMay 15, 2015
68Darius RuckerJune 14, 2014
67Brett DennenMay 15, 2014
66Amos LeeApril 15, 2014
65JohnnyswimMarch 15, 2014
64Gavin DegrawFebruary 15, 2014
63Billy GibbonsJanuary 15, 2014
62Minus the BearJanuary 15, 2013
61Shelby LynneDecember 15, 2012
60Joe WalshNovember 15, 2012
59Live at the Borgata in Atlantic City, NJOctober 15, 2012
58Nick WaterhouseSeptember 15, 2012
57RumerAugust 15, 2012
56Chiddy BangJuly 15, 2012
55Jason MrazJune 15, 2012
54Butch WalkerMay 15, 2012
53The Dirty HeadsApril 15, 2012
52CeeLo GreenMarch 15, 2012
51Allen StoneFebruary 15, 2012
50Keb' Mo'January 15, 2012
49Blind Boys Of AlabamaDecember 15, 2011
48Daryl Hall Part 2November 15, 2011
47Daryl Hall Part 1October 15, 2011
46Nikki JeanSeptember 15, 2011
45Grace PotterAugust 15, 2011
44Booker T. JonesJuly 15, 2011
43Mayer HawthorneJune 15, 2011
42John RzeznikMay 15, 2011
41Dave StewartApril 15, 2011
40Todd RundgrenMarch 15, 2011
39New Year's Eve SpecialFebruary 15, 2011
38GusterJanuary 15, 2011
37José FelicianoDecember 15, 2010
36Neon TreesNovember 15, 2010
35Fitz and the TantrumsOctober 15, 2010
34Sharon JonesSeptember 15, 2010
33TrainAugust 15, 2010
32Retrospective July 15, 2010
31Rob ThomasJune 15, 2010
30Remembering Tom "T-Bone" WolkMay 15, 2010
29Maxi Priest and Billy OceanApril 15, 2010
28Toots and the MaytalsFebruary 15, 2010
27Eli "Paperboy" Reed featuring Alan GorrieJanuary 15, 2010
26Jimmy WayneDecember 15, 2009
25Patrick StumpNovember 15, 2009
24Diane BirchOctober 15, 2009
23Todd RundgrenSeptember 15, 2009
22Smokey RobinsonAugust 15, 2009
21Plain White T'sJuly 15, 2009
20ParachuteJune 15, 2009
19A RetrospectiveMay 15, 2009
18Robby Krieger and Ray ManzarekApril 15, 2009
17Matt NathansonMarch 15, 2009
16The Bacon BrothersFebruary 15, 2009
15Company of ThievesJanuary 15, 2009
14Kevin RudolfDecember 15, 2008
13John OatesNovember 15, 2008
12Eric HutchinsonOctober 15, 2008
11Finger ElevenSeptember 15, 2008
10ChromeoAugust 15, 2008
09Monte MontgomeryJuly 15, 2008
08Nick LoweJune 15, 2008
07Chuck Prophet and MutluMay 15, 2008
06Daryl Live at the SXSW in Austin TXApril 15, 2008
05KT TunstallMarch 15, 2008
04Travis McCoyFebruary 15, 2008
03Daryl HallJanuary 15, 2008
02John OatesDecember 15, 2007
01Daryl HallNovember 15, 2007

2014

2013

2012

2011

2010

2009

2008

2007

Syndication

Live from Daryl's House gained traction on Rural Media Group's channels, and the Palladia network through a deal brokered by the show's Executive Producer Jonathan Wolfson, Rick Krim, and Ben Zurier.
The show currently continues to air on, VH1, MTV Live , RFD-TV and Family Net, and on the Live from Daryl's House website. The show's website continues to premier the latest episodes from the series, and holds an archive of some of the past episodes. In an announced agreement, 2014 will see the show continue to air on Viacom Media Network's Palladia music channel and new episodes will appear on all previously mentioned outlets.
The series has led to Daryl Hall touring a live version of the show with Sharon Jones and Allen Stone, amongst others.

The "House"

From the inception of the show until the 64th episode, Live from Daryl's House primarily took place at Hall's home in Millerton, New York. This home consisted of two Connecticut Valley Houses that were built between 1771 and 1781. These houses were disassembled in their original locations and shipped to Millerton, New York where they were reassembled back into their original structures and saved from degradation. The houses now sit as one on Hall's 250 acres of farmland, which is located 50 miles to the west on the New York/Connecticut border.
Episode 4 of the series was filmed at Hall's London Townhouse where he performs "Let's Give Them Something to Talk About" with K.T. Tunstall.
Episode 6 was filmed at the SXSW Austin, TX.
Episodes 28 and 29 were filmed in Jamaica.
Episode 40 was filmed at Todd Rundgren's home in Hawaii.
Episode 69 was filmed at the Cabo Wabo in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico.
Episode 64 was the last show to be filmed from Hall's Millerton, New York, residence. In October 2013, Hall began leasing and renovating the Pawling building that once housed the Towne Crier nightclub in Pawling, New York. Having remodeled the venue to look like his old home, even naming it Daryl's House, the 65th episode of Live From Daryl's House was filmed at the new location.
Long known for his passion of restoring historical homes, Hall produced another television show titled Daryl's Restoration Over-Hall. This series appeared on DIY Network and was executive produced by Hall, Michael Morrissey and Jonathan Wolfson. The show focused on restoring Hall's colonial-era home in Sherman, Connecticut.

The band

The house band consists of Hall and a core of key members along with several guest musicians based on the genre of the guest star. Until his death in 2010, bassist T-Bone Wolk was the musical director. After Wolk's death, guitarist Paul Pesco was the musical director until early 2014. After this, Hall replaced Pesco as musical director with guitarist Shane Theriot.
From the first episode, Wolk's house musicians were guitarist/keyboardist Eliot Lewis, drummer Shawn Pelton, percussionist Everett Bradley, and bassist Zev Katz, who frequently ended episodes with a "Moment of Zev." Through Pesco's tenure and into Theriot's, the band coalesced around Lewis, drummer Brian Dunne, bassist Klyde Jones, and percussionist Porter Carroll; Dunne, Jones, and Lewis played together in the Average White Band in the 2000s. A frequent guest throughout the series is saxophonist Charles DeChant.

Differences between the web series and the TV airings

  • On LFDH.com, the Cee-Lo Green song "Forget You" is unedited on the website, but is heavily edited on Palladia and RFD-TV airings.

    Awards

In 2010, Live from Daryl's House won the "Best Variety Series" Webby from the Webby Awards Group. The series was also nominated for a Music Webby in the same year.
The show won an MTV O Music Award in 2010 for "Best Performance Series".