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Dayton Music

Music Video Monday: September 27, 2011

September 26, 2011 By Juliet Fromholt Leave a Comment

In addition to being a fantastic blues guitarist, Noah Wotherspoon is also a very talented singer-songwriter.  Writing and performing under the name Noah and the Rescue Radio, Wotherspoon has been forging a different sound for himself, one I’m pretty fond of.  Check out this video created by Noah Wotherspoon & Jessi Bair.  If, like me, you’re a fan of the film The Science of Sleep, I think you’ll enjoy this one.

[yframe url=’http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bt2w2VOQbTU’]

Filed Under: Dayton Music Tagged With: Dayton Music, Music video monday, Noah Wotherspoon

Urban Nights Street Jams in Front of Feathers

September 16, 2011 By Juliet Fromholt Leave a Comment

Jay Madewell drumming in front of Feather's

Among the many cool things to check out during Urban Nights tonight, be sure to cruise by Feathers Vintage Clothing on 5th Street where Jay Madewell will present a street jam consisting of 7 different musical acts each backed by Madewell on the drums, an idea he got while hosting South Park Tavern’s Rock n’ Roll Play Date.

“For 8 months I provided a drumkit for others to use or I was available to sit in, my goal was to play 4-6 sets every Wednesday night to improve my drumming & help others w/their music,” says Madewell.  He then devoted Monday nights to music sessions with other players, to develop the music.  “I really enjoyed not having any idea what I was about to play at those open mics, yet I never felt as if I ‘fell on my face’ with any the songs.  It made me fearless as a drummer. I’ve met so many new friends through this experience. I like watching how people react to the various players’ songs; all of the performers are unique.”

Madewell says he’s considering starting a new Rock n’ Roll Play Date, something we’ll look forward to bringing you news of here on DaytonMostMetro.com.

Here’s the lineup for Friday night:

6:30 Ed Pittman (former Toxic Reasons vocalist!)
7:00 Scott J. Lee
7:30 Bucketmouth (Michael Todd Morrow)
8:00 Asides/Bsides (Aaron Altman & Bryan Beaupre),
8:30 E Ryan Roth
9:00 Brian Wells
9:30 Henrique Couto w/Joshua Egeland & Moriah Yux (of Jasper The Colossal!)

Filed Under: Dayton Music Tagged With: Dayton Music, Urban Nights

Ladyfest Dayton Celebrates Women in Music, the Arts

September 15, 2011 By Juliet Fromholt Leave a Comment

The idea of Ladyfest has been around since 2000 when the first event was held in Olympia, Washington and featured acts like Cat Power, Neko Case and the Gossip.  From there, the non-profit celebration of women in music and the arts has expanded into a network of community-based festivals around the world.  The Dayton community has been lucky enough to have our own Ladyfest since 2008, and the event has become a regular in the late summer/early fall lineup of festivals downtown.

The Fourth Annual Ladyfest Dayton will be help this weekend: Friday, September 16th and Saturday, September 17th at the Yellow Cab Building on E. Fourth Street.  The event will feature displays from visual artists, handmade and food vendors and a great lineup of music and performance on indoor and outdoor stages.  Although it’s called Ladyfest, the men of the Miami Valley are welcome and encouraged to attend.  As you’ll see from the performance line up below, Ladyfest Dayton has a wide variety of offerings:

Friday Live Music and Performance Schedule
Indoor Stage 5:30 Natalie McCollum
Performance 6:00 Fusion Crew
Indoor Stage 6:25 – 6:55 Michelle Bullock
Performance 7:00 Kira’s Oasis
Indoor Stage 7:20 – 7:50 Ashley Watson
Outdoor Stage 8:00 Eric Henry & Miss Lissa
Outdoor Stage 9:00 Vag Speak
Outdoor Stage 9:40 Wet Night
Outdoor Stage 10:20 Misunderstood
Indoor Stage 11:00 Paige Bellar
Outdoor Stage 11:35 The Dirty Socialities
Indoor Stage 12:30 DJ Mistress

Saturday Live Music and Performance Schedule
Indoor Stage 5:30 – Little Cub
Outdoor Stage 6:30 – A Shade of Red
Outdoor Stage 7:45 – The Rough Customers
Performance 8:20PM – Soul Fire Tribe
Outdoor Stage 8:45PM – Good English
Performance 9:30PM – Belly Dance by Bronwen
Outdoor Stage 10PM – The Seedy Seeds
Outdoor Stage 11:30PM – Jasper the Colossal
Indoor Stage 12:15AM – Szilvi J

Click here for a list of visual artists and vendors.

Filed Under: Dayton Music Tagged With: Dayton Music, Ladyfest Dayton, Yellow Cab

An Introduction to the Scene with Dayton Music Fest

September 15, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

Sad Cadillac performing at Dayton Music Fest (Photo by Don Thrasher)

Editor’s note: please welcome Justin Guinn, one of our Dayton Campus Connect interns.

The 7th annual Dayton Music Festival this past weekend allotted a surprisingly vast, wholesome and weird introduction into the Gem City’s live music scene.

Sad Cadillac kicked-off the noise Saturday night at the Oregon Express. Their sound was an excellent balance of crunchy rhythm and stellar lead guitar mixed with hard, smooth vocals. It’s somewhat reminiscent of Black Rebel Motorcycle Club knotted with a faint ‘90s grunge vibe. The three piece(two guitars and drums) laid it down right and left me yearning for a full length set sometime soon.

Oxymoronatron performing at Dayton Music Fest (Photo by Don Thrasher)

After Sad Cadillac, I made my way up 5th Street to catch Oxymoronatron at the Tumbleweed Connection. Little did I know of the strangeness that awaited. Oxymoronatron was unlike anything I’ve ever witnessed before. They come on like a traumatic dose of amphetamine and leave you confused and exhausted. These four performers bring an intensity that could, under the roof of a more appropriate venue, be instantaneously fun and contagious. But in the Tumbleweed, the band seemed cramped and reserved. The weirdness of Oxymoronatron came out of nowhere and moved in leaps and bounds. After their set, my auditory pallet was significantly over-saturated.

To distract my mind from the craziness of Oxymoronatron, I traced my steps back to the Oregon Express to check out Moon High. I was afraid I’d be stuck in an Oxymoronatronic daze, but immediately the beach-folk-Americana of Moon High calmed my nerves. Their sound was firmly driven, but in a smooth, natural way. They had this indie folk, SoCal beachy quality like a raw, modern CSNY that made me want to take a road trip to the coast, any coast. Their set was a perfect blend of peaceful serenity and harmonious musical talent. They definitely earned a top spot on my list of bands to watch.

Natalie Felker and Michael Campbell of the Fervor (Photo by Don Thrasher)

I could have easily floated downstream on Moon High’s beautiful sound all night, but they followed suit with a half-hour set and, of course, I had a job to do. I was still looking for a deep, driving, in-your-face rock band. My wish was granted at back the Tumbleweed. After meeting up with an old friend and ordering a Moe-garita, we made our way to the balcony to observe The Fervor. What a sight they were. I knew I was in for a good time when their lead girl, Natalie Felker threw a verbal right hook at a heckling, over-served patron. She is reminiscent of a Grace Slick/Zooey Deschanel mix with stellar piano skills. Add to that the impressive sound and energy of their guitarist, her husband, Ben Felker, and the result is pretty damn soulful. It was no surprise when I read on their MySpace that they teamed up with My Morning Jacket frontman Yim Yames to release their latest album, Arise, Great Warrior.

Each of these bands were entirely unique from the others, except that they all had this very apparent organic, “we do this because we love it” quality. I was blown away by the sounds they put out, and honestly, I didn’t think I would be. They all laid it down hard, leaving me wishing they had been slotted for full sets. The music was on point, but what really stood out to me was the Oregon District itself.

That .2 mile stretch between Patterson and Wayne is timelessly hip. Not in the sense of wayfarers, flannel and tight jeans, but in a freak power/destined for the edge way. It’s hospitable, but the air carries this slightly unstable energy capable of break at any moment. Come as you are, stay as long as you like, return soon or never, it doesn’t matter. It’s something every town/city ought to have, but something not all towns/cities could handle. I’m ashamed that I’m in my fourth year at UD and have just now discovered this magical place. Saddening, but at least I realize it. I got my first real dose of the Oregon District last Saturday and now I yearn for another.

Filed Under: Dayton Music Tagged With: Dayton Music, Dayton Music Fest

Spotlight on Huun-Huur-Tu

September 14, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

Photo by Vladislav Efimov

Back in February, lousy weather caused us to cancel the much-anticipated return of the amazing Tuvan throat singers of Huun Huur Tu. Happily, we were able to reschedule at a time when the weather is much less likely to be an issue: Tuesday, October 4. They will be in the intimate Boll Theatre on the University of Dayton campus.

Tuvan throat singing is truly one of the most amazing things I’ve ever heard. The range of sounds they’re able to make with their voices is mind-boggling. The last time they were in Dayton, they told the Standing Room Only crowd that the music originated from Tuvan reindeer herders who used it to give each other directions. They sang the landscape to each other! Fascinating. But enough superlatives from me. Here are some YouTube videos that will show you what I mean better than my words can.

[yframe url=’http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RxK4pQgVvfg&feature=player_embedded’]

[yframe url=’http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NuqiOMdoP2c&feature=player_embedded’]

Filed Under: Dayton Music Tagged With: Cityfolk, Dayton Music

Music Video Monday: September 12, 2011

September 12, 2011 By Juliet Fromholt 3 Comments

Sometimes, especially on a Monday, you just need to take a moment to rock out.  Today’s video will aid you in just that.  It comes to us from Back Stabbath, (via our friends at The Music Seen) and was performed at Blind Bob’s 3rd Anniversary weekend.  Enjoy!

[yframe url=’http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xjRpvL346oc&feature=player_embedded’]

Filed Under: Dayton Music Tagged With: Back Stabbath, Dayton Music, The Music Seen

Downtown’s Biggest Street Party Is Getting Bigger

September 12, 2011 By DowntownPartnership 1 Comment

A child paints the street as part of an interactive component of Urban Nights.

If you are looking to take your weekend to new heights, look no further than downtown Dayton.

Urban Nights will be back with even more fun activities on Friday, Sept. 16, from 5 to 10 p.m. New this year is Over the Edge, a challenge that combines fundraising with adventure. Participants who raise at least $1,000 will be given the opportunity to rappel over the side of the 27-story KeyBank Tower. All proceeds will benefit Big Brothers Big Sisters of the Greater Miami Valley. Space is limited; for more information, call 220-6857.

Urban Nights has plenty of live entertainment. Check out the stage featuring Celtic and folk music, including performances by  Norman’s Conquest. Back by popular demand is the Community Stage. For the first part of the evening, local bands and performers will be allowed 10-minute slots on the stages. The second half will feature karaoke, when anyone can take a turn at the mic.

Urban Nights is filled with interactive activities. The public pianos that debuted

A street performer juggles fire.

during the fall 2010 Urban Nights are also back by popular demand. Hauer Music will provide four pianos to be placed on street corners throughout downtown, which pedestrians are invited to play. Other interactive activities will include an opportunity to help create a work of art with jelly beans, a chalk walk on the sidewalk, and a chance to learn how to break dance and juggle.

K12 Gallery for Young People, 510 E. Third St., will host Round 1 of Art-Off, a new fundraising event in which individuals battle to create the greatest art-making spectacle in an Iron Chef-like competition. Participants will receive materials (announced the night of the event) to create artwork within the theme “chaos vs. order.” Ten artists will compete during six 30-minute time slots from 6 to 9 p.m., and audience members will vote on each time slot’s winning artist based on the artists’ performances in crafting their pieces, as well as their finished products. To sign up to participate, contact Kelly Sexton at 461-5149 or [email protected].

Winning entries from the Downtown in Focus amateur and professional photography contest will be on display in the Kettering Tower lobby during Urban Nights. One amateur winner and one professional winner were selected in each of the following categories: My Downtown Favorite, Downtown at Night and Abstract Downtown. A panel of judges awarded a $250 cash prize to the Best in Show winner in each division. In addition, City of Dayton Mayor Gary Leitzell selected one photo that best represents the City’s “Dayton Originals” motto.

The weekend-long Taste of Miami Valley will kick off during Urban Nights at RiverScape MetroPark. Guests can sample food from more than 30 area restaurants. Admission is free, and most tastes are $3 each.

A street painter illustrates the vibrant downtown atmosphere.

A map of participating venues and a complete performance schedule, including a listing of all participating locations’ events and specials, is available online at www.downtowndayton.org. Follow Urban Nights on Facebook at www.facebook.com/UrbanNightsDayton for regular updates and more information.

The best way to see as much as possible during Urban Nights is to walk, and many of the destinations are just a short distance from each other. Greater Dayton RTA also will provide free event trolleys to help visitors get around. In addition, cyclists will gather at 5:15 p.m. at Don Crawford Plaza in front of Fifth Third Field for Urban Bikes @ Urban Nights, a community ride through the action hosted by Bike Miami Valley.

For more information, contact Krystal Luketic at 937-224-1518 ext. 227 or [email protected].

Urban Nights is presented by the Downtown Dayton Partnership, Culture Works, Montgomery County and the City of Dayton, with additional support from WDTN-TV2, DP&L, Greater Dayton RTA, Budweiser Select, the Downtown Priority Board, Clear Channel and Mix 107.7-FM, Wright Dunbar, Inc., Generation Dayton and the Ohio Arts Council.

Filed Under: Arts & Entertainment, Street-Level Art, The Featured Articles, Visual Arts Tagged With: art, Dayton Music, live music, Photography, Urban Nights

Dayton Music Fest TONIGHT and TOMORROW

September 9, 2011 By Juliet Fromholt Leave a Comment

So what are your plans for this weekend?  If you’re a music fan, I hope that Dayton Music Fest is on the agenda.  This 2 day event is great way to see a variety of the best music in Dayton, including some acts that you probably haven’t seen before.  The action begins tonight with a free, all-ages showcase at Omega Music on 5th Street and then moves to Canal Street Tavern.  Tomorrow is the big day with music at 6 local venues starting with an all-ages (paid) show at South Park Tavern.  Festival wristbands are $10 and are good for both days.

Here’s the lineup from the DaytonMusicFest website.  I suggest going there and printing out the page to take along with you on Saturday night in particular.  Who are you most excited to see?

FRIDAY, SEPT 9

OMEGA MUSIC

  • 07:00 – R. RING
  • 08:00 – JASPER THE COLOSSAL

CANAL STREET TAVERN

  • 09:30 – WAKE UP MORDECAI
  • 10:30 – NEW VEGA
  • 11:30 – C. WRIGHT’S PARLOUR TRICKS
  • 12:30 – BUFFALO KILLERS

SATURDAY, SEPT 10

SOUTH PARK TAVERN

  • 05:00 – DAN RARIDAN & THE CALIENTES
  • 06:00 – THE WHITE SOOTS
  • 07:00 – THE FAIR SHAKES

TROLLEY STOP

  • 09:00 – PAIGE BELLER
  • 10:00 – FATHER’S DAY
  • 11:00 – BJSR
  • 12:00 – AL HOLBROOK BAND

TUMBLEWEED CONNECTION

  • 09:30 – OXYMORONATRON
  • 10:30 – THE FERVOR
  • 11:30 – ROLEY YUMA
  • 12:30 – THE NORTHWEST ORDINANCE

BLIND BOB’S

  • 09:30 – FOOTBINDER
  • 10:30 – GRENADES!?
  • 11:30 – OH CONDOR
  • 12:30 – ASTRO FANG

OREGON EXPRESS

  • 09:00 – SAD CADILLAC
  • 10:00 – MOON HIGH
  • 11:00 – NATHAN KALISH & THE WILDFIRE
  • 12:00 – MAGIC JACKSON

CANAL STREET TAVERN

  • 09:00 – SLEEP FLEET
  • 10:00 – ME & MOUNTAINS
  • 11:00 – FLOTATION WALLS
  • 12:00 – LEGBONE

Filed Under: Dayton Music Tagged With: Dayton Music, Dayton Music Fest, Things to Do

WSWO Holds Annual Record Sale

September 8, 2011 By Juliet Fromholt 1 Comment

Vinyl junkies, start your engines!  This weekend promises to be full of good finds.  WSWO is holding their annual vinyl record sale.  It’s a chance to get your hands on some classic albums for a great price (everything is $4 or less).  It’s also a chance to support a great community radio station.

If you aren’t hip to WSWO, they’re a low power radio station broadcasting out of Huber Heights at 97.7FM and 101.1FM.  They’re a community station meaning that all of their DJs are volunteers and the station is considered a non-profit.  So purchases at the record sale do go back into helping the station with day to day operations (and trust me, running a radio station isn’t cheap).  But the best part is most certainly the music.  WSWO broadcasts “ultimate oldies” tunes from 50s, 60s and occasionally the early 70s.  They also play big band music on Saturdays and broadcast Wayne Warriors sports events.

The WSWO vinyl sale is Saturday, Sept 10 and Sunday, Sept 11, noon to 6pm at the Huber Center in Huber Heights (6182 Chambersburg. Rd.)

Filed Under: Dayton Music Tagged With: Dayton Music, WSWO

Dayton Band Playoffs: Semifinals This Week

September 7, 2011 By Juliet Fromholt Leave a Comment

It’s time for the Final Four! No, I didn’t forget what month it is.  We’re talking Dayton Band Playoffs, not March Madness.  This week it’s up to you, local show goers, to pick which bands will compete in the championship show on September 24th at Canal Street Tavern.  The semifinal shows are Wednesday, September 7 and Thursday, September 8 at Canal Street.  Here’s the breakdown:

Wednesday, September 7: Blue Moon Soup vs. The Outliers

Thursday, September 8: Market Street Dream vs. Gathering Mercury

And just in case you need more enticement to attend these shows and place your vote, here’s a taste of each band performing live:

Blue Moon Soup:

[yframe url=’http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=46452sUDsmg’]

The Outliers

[yframe url=’http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-YkB1HFAqJ0′]

Market Street Dream

[yframe url=’http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IXvJJZiF6bw’]

Gathering Mercury

[yframe url=’http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=918j7RRL7Co’]

Filed Under: Dayton Music Tagged With: Canal Street Tavern, Dayton Band Playoffs, Dayton Music

Kim Waters brings smooth jazz to Gilly’s

September 7, 2011 By Juliet Fromholt Leave a Comment

Friday night marks the return of smooth jazz saxophone player Kim Waters to the Miami Valley.  Waters and his band combine jazz, R&B and soul with original compositions and new interpretations of classic songs.  Kim Waters will perform two shows on Friday, September 9th at Gilly’s in downtown Dayton at 7 and 10pm.  There are still some tickets available for each show at the following locations: Omega Music, The Record Gallery (both in the Oregon District), Half Priced Books and Huber Music and Video.  Tickets may also be available at the door (depending on advanced sales).

[yframe url=’http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=tbNPuYWLlUU’]

Filed Under: Dayton Music Tagged With: Dayton Music, Gilly's, Jazz

Music Video Monday: September 5, 2011

September 5, 2011 By Juliet Fromholt Leave a Comment

Although fall doesn’t officially start for a few more weeks, I’ve already started getting excited for orange leaves, pumpkin-flavored everything and upcoming fall releases from some of the region’s best bands.  In that spirit, today’s video is a sneak peek of just one of the great local releases coming this fall, The Motel Beds’ Tango Boys.

[yframe url=’http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2VCalYPZXqw’]

Filed Under: Dayton Music Tagged With: Dayton Music, The Motel Beds

Remembering Irish Dance Teacher Ann Richens

September 1, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

by Cityfolk Founder Phyllis Brzozowska

I was shocked and broken hearted receiving the news this week that Ann Richens had died. I can’t begin and actually don’t want to imagine the world without her.

One of my fondest memories of Ann Richens is seeing her dance with John Timm on the stage of the Victoria Theatre. It was during one of the Rhythm in Shoes concerts that Cityfolk produced in the early nineties. She danced with such joy, grace, precision and the embodied beauty of the Master dancer and teacher she was. It was a rare treat to see her on the big stage. Her role as teacher usually had her standing in the wings or coaching from the sidelines or judging at a competition.

I was still in high school when I first met Ann. My cousins, Mary and Bridget Palmer, took Irish dance lessons from her. I went to a number of feis (Irish dance competitions) to see Bridget and Mary compete and you couldn’t help but to get to know Ann. She knew everyone. She had an open and welcoming way, a pixie-impish beaming smile, an energy that seemed inexhaustible and an organizer’s skill that you couldn’t say no to.

In 1978, before Cityfolk was formed, I was doing a Celtic music radio show on WYSO-FM and a band I knew from Pittsburgh called “Devilish Merry” was coming through town. They were a great dance band that played ole’ timey music and Irish traditional music and I thought, “they could probably do a great ceili.” So, I called up Ann and suggested the idea. Ann was all for it. Ann and I together organized what I think was the first ceili with live music in Dayton at the Dayton Leiderkrantz Club on E. Fifth Street. We had a blast!

In the very beginning years of Cityfolk, (the early eighties) a lot of the Irish music we presented was in bars, Gilly’s and Canal Street Tavern, even the long defunct Sam’s. When we wanted to make the leap to go into a concert hall, I asked Ann and group of other local Irish and Scottish cultural supporters to act as “guarantors.” Ann led the way and was the first to step up to the plate with backing money which allowed us to take the concert into the auditorium at the Dayton Art Institute. Ann and all the guarantors got their money back and the Cityfolk Celtic Series was off and running. In just a few years, it moved into the Victoria Theatre with our very first presentation of the Chieftains and of course, Ann was in the audience along with many, many of her dance students and their families.

Ann’s dancers have graced the stages of Cityfolk concerts and the Festival more times than I can remember.

John Timm performs with
Cherish the Ladies at the
2005 Cityfolk Festival.
Photo by Andy Snow.

I actually took some Irish dance classes, myself, with Ann for a few years. I remember loving it. Ann was an extraordinary teacher. It was inevitable that the world champion John Timm would come from her school, along with numerous others after him qualifying and ranking as top Irish dancers in the world. She had the ability to perceive each person’s ability, communicate and demonstrate exactly what they needed to take them to the next level and to keep growing to higher and higher levels of excellence. Dedicated and hard working sound wimpy when used to describe the fierce focus she brought to her life’s passion.

I take some comfort in knowing that her incredible skills have been passed to the next generation of teachers. Still, the world has lost a most exquisite gem, a glorious emerald of an artist, cultural treasure and brilliant human being.

I only got to glimpse a small portion of Ann’s rich and full life but it seems to me, to paraphase Rumi, “the beauty she loved was what she did.” I know the gifts I received from knowing and working with Ann will always stay with me. And, I’m eternally grateful her support and the collaborations that lead to the formation and growth of my passion– Cityfolk. She was a partner at every major turn and Dave Barber tells me she was involved in projects that have yet to happen.

May the grace and beauty Ann cultivated and nourished continue to shine in the countless lives she touched and may that light surround and carry her as she “sevens and threes” now with God.

Filed Under: Arts & Entertainment, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Cityfolk, Dayton Music

Local Drummers: Get Ready for Battle of the Moons

September 1, 2011 By Juliet Fromholt 1 Comment

Goodnight Keith Moon by Bruce Worden & Clare Cross has taken the world by storm.  The rock and roll parody of the beloved children’s book sold out its printing, but if you haven’t gotten a copy for you and everyone you know, never fear.  The second printing of the book will be in stock at Omega Music in Dayton when it’s released later this fall.

In celebration, CatEye Media, the authors of Goodnight Keith Moon and Omega Music are sponsoring a “Battle of the Moons!”  Drummers of all sizes, shapes and ages are invited to participate in a full on Keith Moon impression on October 28th at Omega Music.  You’ll be judged on:

Performance as a Drummer
Best Imitation of Keith Moon
Best Costume, Make-up & Hair.

2 finalists will then compete in a drum off for the grand prizes including a signed copy of the book “Goodnight Keith Moon,” an Omega Music gift certificate and a video of the winning drummer’s performance on the book’s website.  More details will be announced throughout the fall, but you can visit the Facebook page for the event to sign up for the competition.

[yframe url=’http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KMmse0x3G6Y&feature=related’]

Filed Under: Dayton Music Tagged With: Dayton Music, omega music

Urban Nights Entertainment Schedule Announced

August 31, 2011 By Juliet Fromholt 1 Comment

Can you believe this week marks another First Friday?  That means that September 16th and the return of Urban Nights are right around the corner.  We’ll have more on downtown’s biggest party next week here on DaytonMostMetro.com, but in the meantime, check all of the great performances you’ll be able to experience:

Main Stage
Courthouse Square
Sponsored by: DP&L

5 to 5:45 p.m.                     Jasper the Colossal
6 to 6:45 p.m.                     Jake Speed & the Freddies
7 to 7:45 p.m.                     Dayton Gay Men’s Chorus
8 to 10 p.m.                        U.S. Air Force Band, Systems Go

Community Stage/Karaoke
Second & Jefferson streets by the Kettering Tower

5 to 7 p.m.                           Performances by a variety of local artists and community groups
7 to 10 p.m.                        Karaoke

World Music Stage
Dave Hall Plaza, Fourth Street between Main and Jefferson streets

6 to 6:45 p.m.                     Jerry Gillespie
7 to 7:45 p.m.                     Jim’s Red Pants
8 to 8:45 p.m.                     Norman Conquest
9 to 9:45 p.m.                     Chazz

Wright Dunbar Stage
Southwest corner of Third & Williams streets

6 p.m.                                   Gospel
6:45 p.m.                             Chey Butta Band
7:45 p.m.                             Audio Show Band

Live on Five
Oregon Arts District next to the Trolley Stop

6 to 6:45 p.m.                     SMAG Dance Collective
7 to 7:45 p.m.                     Ape the Ghost
8 to 8:45 p.m.                     Al Holbrook
9 to 9:45 p.m.                     Bottoms Up

Taste of Miami Valley
RiverScape MetroPark Pavilion

Stage 1 –
5 to 8 p.m.                           Debonte Brothers
8 to 11 p.m.                        Spungewurthy

Stage 2 –
5 to 8 p.m.                           Blind Karma
8 to 11 p.m.                        Uncle Rico

Filed Under: Arts & Entertainment, Dayton Music Tagged With: Dayton Music, Things to Do, Urban Nights

Life Is So Strange When It’s Changin’ – A Look At Life, Liberty And Lucidity With Lynyrd Skynyd

August 30, 2011 By J.T. Ryder Leave a Comment

A Look At Life, Liberty And Lucidity With Lynyrd Skynyd

We may view our lives as a linear passage of time, as if we were tiredly gazing through a car window as the lackluster landscape as our lives flew by, a vista of relatively repetitive sameness that is only occasionally broken by the intermittent roadside sign or mildly interesting landmark or two. We make stops along the way, from mildly significant sojourns to epochal events that change the course of our lives. There are very few things that can bring back the memories from the past with any clarity. It’s like trying to remember the innocence of your first kiss and, the more desperately you try to bring it into focus, the quicker is blurs and skitters away into an aching sense of loss.

Conversely, the wafting scent of perfume, a distantly echoed giggle or the chorded melody from a long lost song can drag you backwards in time, suddenly forcing you to relive that moment. Most of our lives are lived with a barely audible soundtrack, a constant companion that etches itself within the furrows of our minds and, when a song from our past comes on the radio, we remember with utter clarity the first time we heard it, maybe coiled beneath the covers with a transistor radio drawn close to our ears allowing a world bigger than our own to enter our consciousness.

I remember the fist time I heard Lynyrd Skynyrd’s Free Bird. I was sitting on the porch of an abandoned farmhouse near my home with a Realistic AM/FM radio echoing past the nonexistent front door and inside the vacant structure. I had previously been occupied with doing a good amount of nothing and had planned on extending that agenda far into the afternoon. The sun was high and the day’s warm breeze caused the chest high (to me…I was like nine years old) bearded grass to brush against the rusted remnants of discarded washers and dryers that had been unceremoniously dumped in the overgrown driveway, resulting in a sound not unlike a brushed high hat…nature was accompanying my musical selections. Free Bird came on with no announcements or warnings: just a stark, churchlike organ slicing through the midday haze, sounding ominous and comforting all at once. The building of sporadic percussion and straying strums of the guitar ended suddenly with the moaning slide of a Coricidin cough medicine bottle along the neck of a guitar. I was hooked. I listened raptly, through the pining lyrics, past the pressure cooker build up and all the way through the violent release of triple lead guitars, all the way to the fade and into the hissing open dead air of real radio. I sat through an interminable amount of commercials, waiting for the DJ to come back on and tell me what I had just experienced. Of course he didn’t and I was left clueless until I sat in a friend’s basement and he handed over the still glossy cover of an album mysteriously titled Pronounced ‘Lĕh-‘nérd ‘Skin-‘nérd, which I still managed to mispronounce because I suck at phonetics.

Over the years, that song will come on the radio and, regardless of what I am doing, I will crank it up and listen to it until the fade out (unless some industrious DJ manages to put on the version from Skynyrd’s Innyrds, which has a more bombastic ending altogether). The keening wail of the guitars, the simplicity of the message and the organic way in which it all fits together seems to take me back to a time of innocence. Not necessarily my own, but a more overall innocence. A time before record companies created cookie cutter hit makers and allowed their artists to create. A time when AOR (Album Oriented Rock) radio stations ruled the airwaves and would allow the DJ’s and the listeners to dictate what was played, as opposed to being spoon fed the latest popular pabulum. It was a time of originality and exploration, instead of following a format or a formula to dispense with the next grandstanding standard.

I was able to talk to Rickey Medlocke (one of the original drummers for Lynyrd Skynyrd, guitarist in the current line-up as well as creator, guitarist and lead singer of yet another monster Southern rock group, Blackfoot) several times over the years, which has been both daunting and exhilarating. One of the things that I wanted to ask him was whether or not I was romanticizing the era, extrapolating my own innocence onto a whole decade or if there has been a shift within the music industry.

“You gotta realize I was there for some of the stuff because I was one of the original drummers, so I was there and saw how stuff went down, and it went down so innocently and so pure. We just wrote songs, and had a magic about ourselves.” Expounding on the music scene now, Medlocke said, “Nowadays you’d be hard-pressed even find a band that even practices their instruments on their own. I’m a guitar player and I’ve had a love affair with my instrument ever since day one, and that’s what it’s all about. I didn’t get into this business to become a rock star; it just happened because we had great music, you know what I mean?”

Running with that line of thought, Medlocke went on to say that:

“Well, you’ve gotta understand, when we decided to do what we did for a living, it was two-fold. Record companies signed bands to create two careers; the record company’s and the band’s. They signed bands to build us up, which in turn built the record company’s career.” Comparitively, Medlocke said, “Nowadays, it’s not about that anymore. First of all, you don’t have near as many record labels as you used to;  everything is Internet. People want self-satisfaction right away. I look at it like this, back when I got signed and the band was formed, we looked forward to a good record company.  Now, the only thing that you sell records for anymore is for tickets and merchandising.”

In speaking with people worldwide, it has surprised me somewhat that Lynyrd Skynyrd is regarded as the definitive American sound, along with other genres created by the surf groups and country and western. Lynyrd Skynyrd has always had a prideful side when it came to their roots and country of origin, which comes out not only in their music, but in the core beliefs. Like the lyrics in their songs, Medlocke’s views on the country he loves are very direct and to the point.

“I mean, the one thing that I do know that’s going on in this world today is everything is so polarized, you know? It’s a damn shame, you know? It seems like our country is being pulled completely apart and, for Lynyrd Skynyrd, we’ve been the American band for all these years and it’s really sad for us to see how this country is being so polarized and pulled apart. When in reality a few short years ago, you couldn’t break this country apart…I mean, it’s interesting. Now, it’s like everybody’s losing their damn balls man, and nobody wants to stand up and do anything. So, you know, that’s the whole thing about it; instead of getting stronger, instead of having some damn balls about ourselves, the country’s getting softer, being weaker.” Medlocke went on to say that, “Myself, I don’t like to use the band as a platform to talk about politics, because I think that entertainers should definitely stay the hell out of politics. You know what I mean? Because, entertainers…we got our own kind of gig and a lot ofHollywood… those people don’t know what the hell they’re talking about when they get into politics. But the point of what I’m getting at is instead of pulling this nation apart, we should be pulling it together, you know? Whether you’re a Republican or a Democrat or an Independent or whatever, we’ve got one of the best countries in the damn world, and guess what? It seems like the damn thing’s being ripped in two.”

Paradoxically, the image of an airplane factors into the separation of bothAmericaand Lynyrd Skynyrd: a division of time wherein there is that hardscrabble climb out of the rubble to rebuild the icon that once was. In Lynyrd Skynyrd’s case, this epochal event came in the form of a Convair 240 passenger airplane ill-fatedly nicknamed Free Bird, which plummeted out of the Mississippi skies in 1977, killing Ronnie Van Zant, Steve Gaines, Cassie Gaines, assistant road manager Dean Kilpatrick, pilot Walter McCreary and co-pilot William Gray. The remaining street survivors of Lynyrd Skynyrd chose to stay the course in spite of their grave losses. For a long period of time after the death of lead singer Ronnie Van Zant, a lone, empty microphone stood, speared in the spotlights as the rest of the band played an instrumental version of Free Bird. This tradition lasted until 1989 when Ronnie Van Zant’s brother, Johnny stepped in to quell a near riot almost caused by fans needing the words to be sung, for the role of a leader to be filled.  Since then, arenas have been filled, records recorded and an homage paid to the creators of the most emblematic music to be pressed into vinyl and into the public’s consciousness. At the end of each concert, Lynyrd Skynyrd plays Free Bird and the audience erupts in unity. Lighters (or cell phones) are held aloft and one wonders if it is to pay tribute to the musicians, to guide those who are lost or who we have lost, or perhaps to try and light the image of our innocence, so that we may see it in utter clarity one more time.

[yframe url=’http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VX3cbFJ3lYU’]

Filed Under: Dayton Music Tagged With: Dayton Music, Freebird, J.T. Ryder, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Rickey Medlocke, southern rock, Van Zant

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