Refrain on the Road…Nashville, Tennessee!!

Posted: 21st October 2012 by refrainmusic in Concerts
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Nashville Airport – Welcome 2012

That’s right…Refrain is on the road in Nashville, Tennessee!  Nashville, music city, home of country music…it’s all that and so much more. From the moment you land in Nashville and find rocking chairs and guitars in the baggage claim at the airport things just seem to fit. From your first walk down the world famous Broadway Avenue in downtown, you realize that first and foremost this city is about the music. But you also start to see other nuances appear that show that the denizens of this city like more than just music, sports being a big one with LP Field and Bridgestone Arena just steps away from Broadway’s thriving music culture.

Nashville, TN – Music City

Nashville, TN – Music City – Whiskey Bent Saloon

There is a bit of awe as you first walk the downtown street where so many come to ‘make it’ in country music, for that matter, in music at all. That’s because as you’ll find as a surprise to some, that Nashville isn’t just about country music, there’s plenty of Blues, Rock, and many other things mixed in there too. But let’s face it, Nashville is mainly about country music. As you stroll down Broadway you can feel it, you can hear it in every bar all the way along until you reach Tootsie’s Orchid Lounge where Hank Williams would run across the alley from the Ryman to grab a drink between sets. You can see it in the many boot shops mixed in with the bars and restaurants, one shop you could even get three pairs of cowboy boots for the price of one, belts, hats…everything country. As you walk you see all the brightly lit neon of each watering hole featuring with a blast of music escaping the doorway of each with a hopeful performer looking to pull you in to places like Tootsies, the Whisky Bent Saloon, Tequila Cowboy, and The Stage. Just about every bar or restaurant has a live performer, The Stage has four shifts of performers each day…the opportunity for live entertainment is incredible.

Nashville, TN – Broadway St.

Everything is ‘grand’ in this city from the Opry Mills Mall which is massive, and of course I see a repeating theme…more boots stores. It’s a typical mall feel but it has a really cool ‘aquarium’ restaurant in it and an IMAX and a lego store. We even saw Americon Idol contestants Colton Dixon and Schyler Dixon in the food court while having lunch, which was our only ‘sighting’ of the whole week in music city. Another attraction that is of grand stature is the Gaylord Opryland Hotel, with it’s opulent gardens (four in total) that are set up like tropical rain forests inside this spectacular hotel. It has shops, and restaurants, and bars and clothing stores and souvenir shops…it even has a boat ride ‘in’ the hotel in one of the gardens. If you stayed here you’d almost not have to leave to have plenty to do, but that would be a shame with so much to offer outside these walls. The gardens are the feature point though, they are magnificent, with tropical forests and flowers, waterfalls, the aforementioned boat ride, colored fountains and rooms and restaurants overlooking it all.

Delta Garden – Opryland Hotel – Nashville, TN

Speaking of ‘grand’ (like that segue?)…right beside the Opryland Hotel…is the Grand Ole Opry itself. The ‘new’ opry, in it’s current location since 1974 was our Tuesday destination for the 100th Birthday Celebration of Minnie Pearl, or the women who created her, Sarah Ophelia Colley Cannon who was born October 25, 1912. Walking in to the Opry you can just feel the buzz of the building, the history, it’s electric. Tonight was a fantastic night with performances by Mel & Pam Tillis, Riders In The Sky, Amy Grant, and Vince Gill, what a line-up! The line-up is mixed in with comedic acts, tributes to Minnie, and comes complete with commercials as the Opry still to this day is a ‘radio’ show, broadcast live from the stage out to the world on 650/WSM AM radio. When the new Opry opened in March of 1974, a six-foot circle of oak was cut from the original stage at the Ryman Auditorium 9 miles away in downtwon Nashville, and inlaid into the stage at the new venue. This show I will not forget, a memory to treasure for sure.

Pam Tillis – Grand Ole Opry – Nashville, TN

Vince Gill – Grand Ole Opry – Nashville, TN

Before I spoke of things to do outside of Nashville, and this leads us to one of our day trips down to Lynchburg, Tennessee…home of Jack Daniels. Yes, that Jack Daniels…his distillery, and the spring that makes every drop of ‘Jack’ the is consumed in the world come from this one small county. It’s almost ironic where this distillery is, about an hour and a half drive from Nashville, we enter the ‘dry county’ of Lynchburg. Yes, that’s right, Lynchburg, the home of one of the biggest brewers of whiskey in the world is in a dry county. As you are guided around the distillery you learn about the various processes behind what goes into making Jack Daniels, I don’t want to give it all away as it’s a fun tour and I don’t want to spoil it for anyone. But you learn about the sugar maple using to make the charcoal, which is used to mellow the pure JD ‘moonshine’ down to the beverage we know of in stores and bars around the world. You visit the spring from which the water flows that makes Jack what it is, and you tour through Jack’s original office…a side trip I definitely recommend. Oh and don’t forget to drive into the town square to the JD retail store where you can purchase a plethora of JD emblazoned paraphernalia.

Lynchburg, TN – Jack Daniels Distillery

Lynchburg, TN – Jack Daniels Distillery

Day trip number two took us south west down Interstate 40, travelling through the Tennessee countryside where we saw our first real (and huge) ‘cotton field’, where of course we had to stop on the interstate to take pictures (I had to hop the fence and grab a couple cotton balls…sorry Mr. Farmer). But wait, where are we headed? The rockin’ blues city of Memphis, Tennessee that’s where! We were off to visit Elvis at Graceland. Graceland is a massive expanse in downtown Memphis that sits on two sides of the street, complete with the Heartbreak Hotel, the tourist center (that houses souvenir shops, the Elvis Car Museum, and Elvis’s two planes) all across the street from the mansion and it’s 13.6 acres in the heart of Memphis. Bought by Elvis at age 22 in 1957 for a around hundred thousand dollars it’s a beautiful home that again I don’t want to give away too much, but is totally Elvis. As you stroll through the mansion, and more importantly the awards hall, you realize (if you didn’t already know) just how important Elvis was to the world of music. Wall after wall of gold, silver, and platinum records, awards, and achievements adorn the walls and you tend to jaw drop and shake your head in amazement at the enormity of it all. The guided audio tour takes you finally to the meditation garden, to Elvis’s resting place, where his grave site (along with his parents, grandparents, and brother) rests beside a bubbling fountain in a serene corner of the estate.
Off next we went to the Gibson guitar factory, where some of the finest instruments are made and took a tour to see just how much of these guitars are still hand crafted today. Then it was on to the famous Beale Street in downtown Memphis. Like Broadway in Nashville, you can feel the electricity on this street, with bar after bar of live rock and blues pumping out, again just off Beale another stadium in the Fed Ex Forum (home of the NBA’s Memphis Grizzlies), and the street is alive…it’s a Wednesday night!? We decided to eat at BB Kings Blues Club, and listened to the house band the “King Bees” blast out a soulful set for us while we ate ourselves into southern BBQ bliss. Memphis was a day trip but will be a trip all of it’s own someday, back we go North, back to Music City!

Tennessee Cotton Field

Graceland – Memphis, TN

Elvis’s Grave – Graceland – Memphis, TN

BB Kings Blues Club – Beale St. – Memphis, TN

Beale St. – Memphis, TN

As the week was passing us by we decided next to visit the Ryman Auditorium, the site of the original Grand Ole Opry from 1943-1974. The Ryman, was built by riverboat Captain Thomas Ryman who originally named it the Union Gospel Tabernacle, after Ryman’s death, the Tabernacle was renamed Ryman Auditorium in his honor. To stroll through the Ryman you can feel the energy, you can stand in the balcony and envision the crowds as they cheered for the band onstage, you can stage on that stage and almost feel the history pouring off of it. As your tour guide takes you through the changing rooms you think about who has gotten ready in these rooms and it starts to hit you where you are and the musical history the unfolded around these very spots. Johnny and June Cash met in this building, Neil Young recorded the Heart of Gold concert film here, tomorrow night plays host to an Alanis Morissette, and much more it’s mind blowing. After the Ryman we jaunted down to the Country Music Hall of Fame, but it was closing in ten minutes and apparently takes two to three hours to tour through, again unfortunately we never made it back here…something for next time! That night we took in more live music on Broadway at Honky Tonk Central, complete with a guest appearance by Elvis who appeared off the street to play with the band and perform a ‘very’ good rendition of “Suspicious Minds”.

Ryman Auditorium – Nashville, TN

Ryman Auditorium – Nashville, TN

Ryman Auditorium – Backstage – Nashville, TN

Honky Tonk Central – Broadway St. – Nashville, TN

Elvis!? – Broadway St. – Nashville, TN

Friday, our last day in Nashville we took in a couple of tourist attractions. First up, was the Belle Meade Plantation a historic plantation mansion whose grounds now function as a museum. Belle Meade Plantation consist of 30 remaining acres (originally it was 5600 acres!) and features a winery, visitor’s center, original outbuildings including the Harding cabin, dairy, carriage house, stable, mausoleum and a reconstructed slave quarters. The Belle Meade Plantation was a horse stud farm with some of their horses going all over the world, some famous decendants of Belle Meade are horses like Secretariat and Seabiscuit. The plantation is still absolutely stunning to this day and you can sense the history of the place as you walk through the well preserved plantation house. I highly recommend a visit to Belle Meade if you ever venture to the area.

Belle Meade Plantation – Nashville, TN

Next up we took in the Parthenon, the life size replica of the one in Greece that sits in downtown Nashville, built in 1897 as part of the Tennessee Centennial Exposition as Tennessee is known as the “Athens of the South” which influenced the choice of structure built for the expo. Today, the Parthenon which functions as an art museum, stands as the centerpiece of Centennial Park, a large public park just west of downtown Nashville. Inside sits a re-creation of the Athena Parthenos statue just as it was in ancient Greece. She is is absolutely massive, helmeted, carries a shield on her left arm and a small statue of Nike (Victory) in her right palm, and stands 42 feet high, a giant serpent shows its head between her and her shield.

The Parthenon – Nashville, TN

The Parthenon – Athena – Nashville, TN

One final stop that day took us to “Music Row” where such famous studios as RCA Victor, that recorded Elvis, Roy Orbison, Dolly Parton and more, call home. We took a quick jaunt through Owen Bradley Park to see the now famous statue of Owen Bradley who was one of the orignal producers in Nashvile who, along with Chet Atkins and Bob Ferguson, was one of the chief creators of the 1950s and 1960s Nashville sound. We also made a quick stop to the microphone bike rack (below), how cool is that!?

RCA Victor – Music Row – Nashville, TN

Owen Bradley Park – Music Row – Nashville, TN

Owen Bradley Park – Music Row – Nashville, TN

Microphone Bike Rack – Music Row – Nashville, TN

Nashville…thanks for a great week…we will be back for more! To those of you that are planning a trip, if you are a lover of music, country music…put Nashville on your list. The people are amazingly friendly, there are a ton of fun things to do…and the music never stops in Music City!

Kylee Epp – New EP & Interview!

Posted: 18th October 2012 by refrainmusic in Albums, Interviews
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Kylee Epp – Be Your Girl!

Kylee Epp is from the small town of Qualicum Beach, in British Columbia.  At an early age she was already known around town and sang and performed whenever she could singing national anthems at school assemblies, hockey games and baseball tournaments and by 15 was playing in local bars with her band.

Kylee recently released her first single, ‘Be Your Girl’ off her also recently released EP.  She toured for several years singing backup and playing acoustic guitar for Jessie Farrell and also appeared in a couple of her music videos. Now, she has stepped out of the background, with a music video of her own that is now on CMT Canada.  Kylee was also featured at this year’s CCMA’s and took part in the CCMA New Aritst Showcase on Thursday September 6 in Saskatoon and won the challenge to country fans across the country to be one of the performers at this year’s Fan Fest.

With her first single rising up the country music charts, doing interviews at radio stations across the country, I believe you are going to be hearing much more of the surfing country singer from the west coast in the not too distant future.

Kylee Epp

Interview: 

RM: Do you have any other loves other than music?

Surfing, Hiking, Trail Running…these all lend to my carefree style of music.  I love to perform live and entertain people.

RM: Who would you most like to open for?

Sheryl Crow (described her as a big influence)…..Keith Urban…I’ve been lucky to have opened for quite a few well known artists to date, Brooks & Dunn, Alan jackson, Faith Hill

RM: What’s most changed your career to this point?

The reception of “Be Your Girl”…

RM:  Which artist did you enjoy seeing as a fan the most?

Springsteen (surprised, me with that one, she said it was one of if not her favorite live shows)…Brooks & Dunn

RM:  What’s it like for a new country artist to go to, first go to Nashville, but to be in a Nashville performing?

Feel like you’ve arrived…there is so much talent…everyone you meet has a story in Nashville, so many people there are working to make their dream happen.

RM: If you weren’t singing, what would you be doing?

Not an option, from a young age I knew that wasn’t an option.

RM: For those that have never heard you…describe your sound?

Pop-country music…female Keith Urban, Shania Twain

RM: If you had to give advice to an artist on how to get their career going, what would that advice be?

Hard work, push, only you can make it happen…

RM: Guilty pleasure song…you know the one you sing when no one is listening 😉  

Katie Perry California girls…I like so many styles of music so there would be many of these.

RM:  You have your music on iTunes, how has downloadable music changed the music industry in your opinion? 

Huge way…reshaped forever, independent artists are not controlled by a suit in an office, I even have my own iPhone app now!

RM:  Do you remember what you were doing when you decided, ‘hey, I think this is what I want to do for a living’?

I was about 11-ish and still living in Qualcom Beach, BC…

RM: What’s your biggest pet peeve about touring/travelling to play…what’s your favourite thing?

Favorite thing…a tour bus.  Missed sleep…love to travel, meet new people, but the lack of sleep is killer…much better with a tour bus!

RM:  What’s next for Kylee? (Refrain is trying to convince her and Lindsay Broughton to tour out here together next year!)

Promoting the new EP and planning a touring in the spring  ( hopefully she get’s a bus!…come out to the East Coast!)

We want to take the time to thank Kylee for speaking with us and Refrain looks forward to when she can perform for us on the East Coast.    Follow her journey on her Facebook & Twitter pages, as well as her home page and download her app from iTunes!:

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/kyleeepp

Twitter:  @KyleeEpp

www.kyleeepp.com

Refrain On the Road…to the 2012 Harvest Jazz & Blues Festival!!

Posted: 13th September 2012 by refrainmusic in Concerts
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2012 Harvest Jazz & Blues Festival!

Now that I’ve had some time to look back on this year’s Harvest Jazz & Blues Festival (and sift through a ton of pictures) I feel the same way that I did when I was there. This has to be one of the best run and most organized music events that I’ve ever experienced. From the wide spread groups of events that get all ages involved, the closing of an entire major downtown street, food vendors that get your mouth watering for many different and delicious delights…oh, and did I mention an amazing amount of fantastic music!

Tedeschi Trucks Band, Charles Bradley, Jaimoe’s Jassz Band, The Record Company, Sharon Jones, Cris Kirby, Matt Scholfield, Matt Anderson, Maceo Parker, Charlie A’Court, Sharon Jones, Royal Southern Brotherhood and more!  If you’ve never experienced Harvest I highly suggest that you try it out.

I lived in Fredericton back in 1991 when it all started and my how it has grown, how the city has gained a sense of pride with the slogan (and twitter hashtag) this year being “my harvest” with the volunteers from the festival being exemplary, friendly, helpful, efficient, and fun…bravo!

The music, well, was nothing short of spectacular. I saw some of the tightest bands backing up some of the most amazing vocal talent I’ve ever seen. The crowds obviously had their favorites, but also were won over by many acts early. One of the many acts that stood out for me was Charles Bradley who blew me away, with his James Brown styled soul, and a connection with the crowd (many that didn’t know who he was) that was nothing short of incredible. Bradley started chasing his dream at 63 years old, has one album (which I bought on very cool vinyl at the merch table) and was simply amazing to watch. His connection with the crowd was such that he climbed down off the stage during his final song, the band continued to play, as Charles walked through the crowd hugging the fans who scrambled to hug back.

Derek Trucks and his wife Susan Tedeschi blew us away on Friday night with the Tedeschi Trucks band, Trucks is currently ranked 16th on the Billboard top 100 guitarists of all time and lives up to that ranking for sure, his wife Susan is no slouch either on the guitar and has a stellar vocal. The band with them was outstanding, and meshed well with the husband and wife team.

Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings simply blew the roof off the Blues Tent on Saturday night, Jones being an entertaining firecracker that stopped moving once she hit the stage only long enough to kick off her heels. When talking to her backstage I asked her where she got her energy at 56 to do what she does, and she just said it was “a blessing”, for us too!

On and on it went, I got to see an Allman (Devon) and a Neville Brother (Cyril) give us a southern rock buffet straight from New Orleans in the group Royal Southern Brotherhood. Chris Kirby and Charlie A’Court brought us a pub set surrounded by thunder and rain that kept us hopping. Maceo Parker, who’s career has spanned more than fifty years, performing with the likes of James Brown and Parliment Funkadelic, supplied us with “2% jazz & 98% funk”! The week was one of the best musical experiences I have been too and am already making plans for next year.

I highly suggest that if you like great live performances, music that spans genre’s, and just an all around good time I suggest that you head to ‘Harvest’ next year and we’ll see you there!!

http://www.harvestjazzandblues.com/

Twitter Hashtags: #myharvest #refrainmusic

 

Cool Sax Player – Tedeschi Trucks Band

 

Derek Trucks – Tedeschi Trucks Band

Susan Tedeschi – Tedeschi Trucks Band

Street Artist – 2012 Harvest Jazz & Blues Festival

Fire Buskers – 2012 Harvest Jazz & Blues Festival

The amazing “screaming eagle of soul”, Charles Bradley!

The amazing “screaming eagle of soul”, Charles Bradley give me a smile!

Jaimoe’s Jasssz Band

Charlie A’Court

Chris Kirby

Said The Whale

Said The Whale

The energetic & entertaining Sharon Jones & The Dap Kings

One of the “dapettes” from Sharon Jones & The Dap Kings

Sharon Jones & The Dap Kings

Devon Allman – Royal Southern Brotherhood

Cyril Neville – Royal Southern Brotherhood

The funky & fantastic Maceo Parker!

The funky & fantastic Maceo Parker!

The Record Company

The Record Company

 

John Fogerty – Moncton Coliseum – 09/11/12

Posted: 12th September 2012 by refrainmusic in Concerts
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Driving into the coliseum for tonight’s  John Fogerty concert I saw a a long line-up which I thought bode well for the crowd level tonight, only to find out that it was security doing bag checks and they only had one of the main doors open.  My ticket was high up in the balcony and due to the set-up of the band and the coliseum I got re-seated to one of the top four rows at the back of the bowl when asking an attendant where my seat was located, off I went to pick a seat.

First up was Lukas Nelson and the Promise of the Real.  Son of more well known Willie Nelson, there is definitely a similar vocal sound between father and son, with son being more of a bluesy vocal ‘growler’ and that’s pretty well where the similarities stop.   More of a blues guitarist, a very good one, Lukas and his band rocked out tune after tune of guitar dripping, head swinging songs that the Fogerty fans ate up.   Thinking back I don’t think I ever saw Willie play an electric guitar blues solos with his nose…which Lukas did, a couple of times.   Tight percussion and throaty base lend itself to Nelson’s guitar playing for a fun and enthralling blues rock experience.

The age gamut was what I expected tonight with a majority of the crowd ranging from around mid-thirties and well up from there.  One thing I didn’t expect to see at a Fogerty show was a guy in a cowboy hat and a kilt, but hey, to each their own!   Getting something to drink in the ever warm coliseum was once again a challenge as vendors are limited to a single mezzanine and the vendors are far from speedy (I later found out from the server, that they are forced to open even a plastic bottle of coke to pour in a glass, silly) but mission accomplished, coca-cola in hand, on with the show!

Next up was the former CCR front man on his “Cross Canada Revival” tour, nice play on the lettering there.

The show started with a lengthy video montage chronicling Fogerty and his career.   It talked about him laying away his first guitar at Sears when he was 14,  and how he now has 300 (25 of which come on tour with him).

The show kicked off with the appropriate ‘Travelling Band’ and right into ‘Looking Out My Back Door’ and never looked back from there.  Fogerty has plenty to draw from having 18 gold records to his credit, sevens albums with CCR.  Fogerty made his first appearance on tv at 14 and has been writing and recording ever since except for a ten year hiatus after the pain of break-up of CCR was too much.  ‘Centerfield’ in 1985 brought him back to the limelight and he played it tonight on his trademark ‘slugger’ baseball bat inspired guitar, this started the dancing in the aisles.

Backed by a prolific band, that included rock drumming legend Kenny Aronoff (who is amazing), Fogerty played hit after hit from the last forty plus years never missing a step.   The stage show was more energetic and pyrotechnic and flame throwing than I expected from the sixty-seven yea old rock and roll hall of famer.  Complete with a fairly elaborate stage set-up and three large video screens the group kept you well entertained.  A career that was inspired by Elvis and the Beatles , who fifty years ago this month stepped into Abbey Road for their first studio recording, is showing no signs of slowing down now (obviously his jogging six miles a day is doing wonders)!

Dedicated to his little girl Kelsey, “Have You Ever Seen The Rain” turned into a sing-along-song with the small and enthusiastic crowd and rolled right into an inspired “Pretty Woman” that had the crowd on their feet.

The tempo turned up it was obvious we were nearing the climactic point of the show as ” Down On The Corner” belted from the band.

Just before the two hour mark the band left the stage, only to be pulled back by the small and mighty crowd for a three song encore that featured “Bad Moon Rising” and of course “Proud Mary”.

I was presently surprised at how much I enjoyed this show tonight, right from the get-go, I encourage you to check out both bands if you get the chance as I thoroughly enjoyed both.  Until next time.

Bruce Springsteen – Magnetic Hill – 08/26/12

Posted: 28th August 2012 by refrainmusic in Concerts

Bruce Springsteen Wrecking Ball Tour 2012

A beautiful day for a concert…unlike last year for the U2 360 tour’s final show that was a damp yet amazing spectacle, this show was going to take place under a day of blazing sun and more than balmy temperatures.  The ‘Boss’ was bringing his Wrecking Ball tour, one of few canadian dates, to the Magnetic Hill concert site.  That is where the comparison’s should stop with this show, where the big show last year was as much about the spectacle as the music…with Bruce and the E Street band, it’s all about the music.

As much as I rave about the Magnetic Hill concert site, in my opinion the best outdoor site in Atlantic Canada, there are still a few improvements that I feel could be made.  We chose to park on Gorge Rd. this time as we read the site map produced by the local paper which showed an entrance to the site at the top of the hill only to find when arriving that there was an entrance, but it fed you into the same bottleneck as every other entrance to the solitary gate that every patron must pass through.  This, in my opinion is a flaw, I understand it is easier for security, but it’s a nightmare for fans that bake in the sun like herded cattle.  There should be at least one other gate allowing access to the site, which would speed up the process and have vendors selling their wares inside the site at a much faster rate.  Also on the published map were two ‘exits’ in the top right corner of the site (facing up the hill), but these are for crew, vendors, and media, etc, not for the general public.  If you head for these exits you run into a fence, and security ushering you to the same exit points as when you came in, herded again out of a bottleneck.  That said there were a few things that were different this time that I was impressed with.  The ease at which, if you chose, to come out of the grandstands and venture into the area in front of the stage was improved.  The food offerings were much improved over the past where you could only get unhealthy, deep fried gut rotting items, and added to those were fresh fruit (with gals walking the long line-ups selling cups of various fruits), seafood, healthy-ish wraps, chili, and ‘salads’…yes salads (which was very well received).  As was to be expected the beer prices were a bit high ($7) per glass, but one huge improvement was that there was no designated beer ‘area’ which I always found led to over-drinking by many.  Another improvement in the beer area was the fact that there were ‘vendors’ walking the fields/grandstands so you didn’t have to go to a beer stand to get it.  Thank-god there are no silly rules, like at other venues I’ve been at, that you have to stand in one line to get ‘tokens’ for beer/food, and then stand in another line to ‘get’ the actual beer/food.  Yet another welcome addition, was the site allowing foldable chairs into the venue in designated areas, bravo.  The RCMP were utilizing a new ‘traffic plan’ which seemed to work well as traffic congestion was at a minimum, just as I’ve said, the ‘access/exit’ point of the show need to be improved.  Oh, and turning the lights up on the overhead poles during the encore, didn’t like that.

The show started almost right on time, at a couple minutes past four, promoter Donald Tarlton stepped onstage to welcome the crowd and bring to the stage Antigonish, Nova Scotia’s, The Trews.  The Trews, having recently put on a free concert at the city market during ECMA Week 2012, are always well received in the city with their upbeat rock music with very singable choruses.  The Trews always put on a fun show, with great songs like “Not Ready To Go”, “Tired of Waiting”, “Poor Ol Broken Hearted Me”, and their great tribute song to a fallen soldier “Highway of Heroes”.

The Trews

A flash back to the late 80’s and early 90’s, Tom Cochrane & Red Rider were up next after a brief change over of equipment on stage, launching into “Lunatic Fringe” right off the bat.   Playing a modest ten song set that included classic songs like “White Hot”, “Boy Inside The Man”, “Big League”, and “No Regrets” the crowd rocked and sang along with a very energetic Cochrane.  At one point he gave a shout out to Bruce, saying “I probably wouldn’t be here today if not for him”, and also to his wife and daughters who were watching from the wings.  He had a brief intro before his final song saying ‘this wasn’t a Rascal Flatts song, I wrote this song” before they kicked into the anthemic “Life Is A Highway” to end his set.

Tom Cochrane & Red Rider

“No Surrender” was a great song to start off this show with, as once it started there was no looking back.  With no introduction or announcement “The Boss” took the stage at a little after 7:30pm and the crowd surged forward for a better position.  For most it was their first time seeing Bruce, for others like one in my party, it was one of many (for my friend it was his 3rd)…for one whom even had a special song dedicated to him, a solo performance on piano of “If I Should Fall Behind”, it was his latest in his over 200 plus Springsteen shows.

Bruce, I discovered, is an entertainer that leaves it mostly up to the music, but also feeds off his crowd.  I’d heard the story of the ‘signs’ just before the show but now got to see it in action.  Bruce will gather a number of fan signs from the crowd that have his songs on them, show them to the band, and launch into them, playing “stump the band”.  That is a testament to the E Street Band and the fact that they’ve done this so long together.  One lady even got creative and made a $ symbol, complete with batteries and flashing lights, asking Bruce to play “Pay Me My Money Down”…which after holding it up to the band and asking “you think you’ve got that in you”…they blasted it out, getting the crowd to sing along…one should note this song is six years old from the Seeger Sessions and likely doesn’t get played very often.

But that’s what Bruce did, catered to his crowd, getting them involved, telling stories about “Magnet” Hill and a time from his youth where he used to visit “Gravity Hill” with a pretty girl and park your car at the bottom and roll uphill, how he thought it was the only one until he got here…”So here’s to Gravity” shouted Bruce.

Bruce Springsteen – Magnetic Hill, Moncton, N.B. – 2012

The concert that went on for hours seemed like no time at all, with a rendition of “Because the Night” with a frantic Nils Lofgren guitar solo, it was a classic night of the E Street Band, with guitarist Steve Van Zandt and bassist Gary Tallent supplying backing vocals and Roy Bittan dazzling on the keys, a great horn section and they all were riding the wave over a Max Weinberg drum beat.

There was a missing piece though, the longtime member, the late Clarence Clemons, known as “The Big Man”…as they rolled through a late song we heard; “this is the important part”…the band slowed, Bruce stopped singing, and a very moving tribute to Clarence began on the video screen to which the crowd roared appreciatively!    With those big shoes to fill, Clarence’s nephew Jake, has stepped in admirably and done his late uncle proud.  Jake is an accomplished sax player of his own right and it showed as he figured prominently in the show and played his heart out for the Moncton crowd of 30,200 (according to DKD on Monday).

Bruce Springsteen – Magnetic Hill, Moncton, N.B. – 2012

Only considering myself a modest Springsteen fan beforehand, I was blown away by this show, as were many, many others.  After three hours and ten minutes of music, including 6 encore songs that had the crowd screaming in excitement, which also included Bruce pulling the Trews and Tom Cochrane back on stage for a rousing version of Twist & Shout…it was all over.  Everyone left the stage as Bruce shook hands and patted them on the back…he was the last to leave, triumphantly raising his guitar in the air to the roar of of an exhausted and ecstatic crowd.

Set list:

1. No Surrender

2. Workin’ On the Highway

3. Hungry Heart

4. We Take Care of Our Own

5. Wrecking Ball

6. Death To My Hometown

7. My City of Ruins

8. Spirit In the Night

9. Pay Me My Money Down

10. Jack of All Trades

11. Because the Night

12. Lonesome Day

13. Darlington County

14. Shackled & Drawn

15. Waitin’ On a Sunny Day

16. The Promised Land

17. If I Should Fall Behind (solo piano)

18. The River

19. The Rising

20. Badlands

Encore:

21. Thunder Road

22. Born To Run

23. Glory Days

24. Dancing In the Dark

25. Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out

26. Twist & Shout (with The Trews and Tom Cochrane & Red Rider)

Comments Off on Random Musical Thought #10 – It’s “Springsteen” week in Moncton! (Review to follow!)

That’s right…it’s time for “The Boss” and his band to roll onto Magnetic hill for what’s sure to be a fantastic show! Also added last week were Canadian acts Tom Cochran & Red Rider, and The Trews!  Here are a few details for you concert goers (courtesy of Moncton.ca)…

Bruce! – Live At Magnetic Hill – August 26th / 2012

Tickets

Grandstand and General Admission Tickets – $115.00 (taxes included, +service charge)

Tickets on sale:
Online at tickets.moncton.ca
By phone: 506-857-4100 and 1-888-720-5600
In person at the Moncton Coliseum Box Office (377 Killam Drive)

Produced by: AEG Live and DKD

 Rules

Allowed / Disallowed Items:
The following items WILL NOT be permitted:

  • Alcoholic beverages (brought from outside)
  • Food & Beverages from outside of the site
  • Illegal Drugs and drug paraphernalia
  • Plastic bottles, Glass bottles and cans
  • Umbrellas
  • Rigid Thermos, coolers or other hard plastic containers
  • Megaphones
  • Weapons or fireworks
  • Inflatables, beach balls, balloons, etc…
  • Skateboards
  • Animals (except Seeing Eye dogs)
  • Large backpacks (camping style)
  • Tents
  • Video Equipment
  • Professional photo equipment (SLR cameras, i.e. removable lens cameras)
  • Audio Recording equipment
  • No items intended for sale/promotion
  • Illegal merchandise of any description
  • Banners, Flags (No poles) or anything bigger than letter (8.5/11 – A4) size
  • Laser pointers, flashlights, glow (fluorescent) sticks, etc.
  • Costumes, with sharp items i.e. crystal balls, wire, spikes etc
  • Any object that can be used to cause bodily harm
  • All non-foldable chairs

The following items WILL BE admitted on the site:

  • Raincoat / poncho
  • Small beach towels
  • Small back packs and bags/ purses (Note: all bags will be searched)
  • Sunscreen
  • Lighters/Cigarettes
  • Foldable chairs

One 1L bottle of water allowed per patron.  Water will be available on site.

Springsteen Concert Map 2012 – Magnetic Hill (courtesy of Moncton.ca)

Transportation

Park N’ Ride
The Park N’ Ride program will leave from the Moncton Coliseum Parking Lot (377 Killam Drive) and take concert-goers on direct transit route to the concert site. The shuttle drop off zone will be at the entrance to the concert site, and will allow concert-goers to
walk directly to GATE 1. The pick-up zone at the end of the concert, for bracelet holders, will be at the entrance to the Magnetic
Hill Park on Mountain Road.  The road will be closed to thru traffic, and RCMP officers and medical officials will be on hand to
ensure public safety.

Bracelets will be available for purchase on event day at the Park ‘N Ride booths in the Moncton Coliseum lot (cash only) –
$10/person (tax included)
Bracelets cannot be purchased following the concert nor will cash be accepted following the concert – bracelets are the only
valid way to access the Park ‘N Ride shuttles
Carpooling is encouraged!
Taxi service will be available from these lots, following the concert
Park ‘N Ride shuttles will travel from designated lots to the concert site beginning at 12:00 noon
Park N’ Ride shuttles will travel from the concert site to the designated lots beginning at 9:30 p.m. until all paid customers
have been shuttled.
Bracelets will be sold on a first come, first serve basis

Bicycle Access
Those concert-goers who wish to bike to the event can access the bike lock-ups for the event. In order to use these lock-ups,
cyclists can access the concert grounds by entering the main gate to the Magnetic Hill attraction (located on Mountain Road).
From there, cyclists will proceed through the attraction grounds, and bike lock-ups are located before the GATE 1 entrance.

Walk-Up Access
Concert-goers who wish to walk to the Event can access the concert grounds by entering the main gate to the Magnetic Hill
attraction (located on Mountain Road). From there, pedestrians will walk through the attraction grounds, and have direct
access to GATE 1 of the concert site.

Taxi
For the 2012 concert season, the Event is pleased to be partnering with Moncton’s Taxi Association to provide better taxi
services to and from the concert. There will be a designated taxi drop-off and pick-up zone. Those concert-goers who wish to
take a taxi to the site are encouraged to consult any of Moncton’s taxi companies to request services for the day of show.

Parking
There will be no official on-site parking for the event. As in previous years, private entrepreneurs will be offering paid parking
around the vicinity of the concert site.

Charter Bus Parking
Charter Busses will be required to pay a flat rate to park within the Magnetic Hill attraction site. This parking will give passengers
direct access to the main concert gate. Bus operators who wish to purchase a parking pass for the event can do so online or call
Magic Mountain at 1-800-331-9283 or Coach Atlantic at 1-888-599-4287.

More details at:

http://www.moncton.ca/Visitors/City_Attractions/Magnetic_Hill_Concert_Site/Springsteen.htm

http://www.dkdevents.com/

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http://www.tomcochrane.com/

http://www.thetrewsmusic.com/

Maroon 5 – Overexposed – Album Review

Posted: 16th August 2012 by refrainmusic in Albums
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Maroon 5 – Overexposed

 

Right from the first track of Overexposed it gives you a pretty clear idea of what to expect out of it, extremely radio-friendly pop music, that seems a bit overworked.  That said this is not a bad album, it’s not, it’s a solid album that will spawn chart friendly hits (and already has) that will keep Maroon 5 at the forefront of current popular music…but, this is no “Songs About Jane” either.  “Songs About Jane” was their first studio album that burst Maroon 5 onto the scene back in 2002 with songs like “Harder To Breathe”.  Now not saying they weren’t a pop-band back then, but not in the traditional sense, with frontman Adam Levine’s unusual but alluring falsetto vocals, the bands rock edge and great writing, ‘Jane’ was a great album…but has Maroon 5 been ‘overexposed’ to the pop machine for too long?

The album starts off with the reggae tinged “One More Night” which I enjoyed right off the bat, is arguably one of the better songs on the album, and I’d be very surprised if many weren’t singing it in their car as it blasts from their favorite pop radio station at some point in the near future.  Another point that must get a mention too is that it has a pretty cool video out for it already as well featuring Levine as a boxer.  The first single off the album, Payphone (how many of you kids out there have never actually seen a payphone?) is a chart topper with it hitting number two in the US Billboard charts and topping the charts in Canada and the UK .  Payphone is another great song on the album and was a smart first release, the only unnecessary thing in the song is the guest appearance by Wiz Khalifa, while it works for the most part, the song likely could have done without it.

At this point the album get’s decidedly “poppy and synthy” which to me, is a bit uncharacteristic of the band, and caters more to their selection of pop producers used on the album.  Lost in the production are the sounds of a ‘band’, the instruments ground down by the auto-tuning soundboard workings of wizard hit makers, at times it sounds like Levine is in a sound booth singing to a track.  While they progress into pop-land they will pull in more fans that joined their following with the hit “Moves Like Jagger”, but will they push away the “Jane” crowd?

The song “Tickets” was almost made for a remix, while it almost doesn’t need one to be a club hit, it should end up being a hit just the same.  “Sad” is where the album focuses on Levine’s vocals a bit more, and there is a single ‘instrument’ in a piano, where you can almost picture Levine sitting in a darkened room at the piano while rain falls against the window in the background.  This is another tune on the album that has potential, with decent lyrics and an actual instrument with Levine’s signature vocals.

The album closes out with “Beautiful Goodbye”, which is hopefully not prophetic, which is likely the third biggest hit on the album after ‘One more Night’ & ‘Payphone’.  It’s catchy, has decent lyrics, solid vocals, and the whole band is present, if it were me this would be the third release off this album after ‘One More Night’.

While not their best work, this is still a decent album that will have yet another string of hits off of it, but I would love to see the band step back into making music from their “Jane” days, the days that made them popular in the first place.  While overexposed is still a good album Maroon 5 has produced better, even their last album “Hands All Over” was a few steps ahead of this one.  Even though I am disappointed with some of their choices on this album I am still willing to give it a three and a half out of five.  Hopefully the bands ‘overexposure’ stops and they can continue to produce more fresh pop-rock laden music in the future.

1. “One More Night” (3:39)
2. “Payphone” (featuring Wiz Khalifa) (3:51)
3. “Daylight” (3:46)
4. “Lucky Strike” (3:05)
5. “The Man Who Never Lied” (3:25)
6. “Love Somebody” (3:49)
7. “Ladykiller” (2:46)
8. “Fortune Teller” (3:26)
9. “Sad” (3:14)
10. “Tickets” (3:30)
11. “Doin’ Dirt” (3:33)
12. “Beautiful Goodbye” (4:18)

3.5 / 5

 

Lindsay Broughton – Album Review & Interview

Posted: 9th August 2012 by refrainmusic in Albums, Interviews
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Lindsay Broughton – New Release August 14th / 2012

Album Review:

Dropping on to iTunes yesterday (and landing at number 62) with a full release slated for August 14th, Ontario native Lindsay Broughton is about to make us sit up and take notice.  Her eight song EP is spread across the spectrum, her new single “Restless As The Rain”, is a catchy country radio friendly song that should have country fans taking notice of this new artist.   The album produced by Kevin Savigar, who wrote “Forever Young” for Rod Stewart is a smooth modern country offering that is sure to please many a fan.   Several writing trips to Nashville spawned the album that was eventually recorded wholly in Canada, with some great studio guitar work, great lyrics, and full sound, a sound you don’t here on a lot of artists first EP.  Lindsay is a personable young gal, and that shines through in her songs, her songs about life, about experiences…like a good country song should be.  I highly recommend to country fans everywhere to check out Lindsay Broughton’s new EP on iTunes and to see her live and in person if you ever get the chance!

Lindsay Broughton – Restless As The Rain…on iTunes now!

The Interview:

Right on time at eleven am this morning my phone rings and on the other end is a very lively Lindsay Broughton.  I say very lively because it’s ten am in her home province of Ontario and this young lady doesn’t, to my surprise, drink coffee!  She comments that many have said they don’t know how she does it, she opened for Chad Brownlee last night and then had a ten am interview with me today, with no coffee, bravo!  Right away you can tell Lindsay is a down to earth, easy going gal, that puts you to ease in a conversation.   We have a nice little chat while circling around my pre-planned questions and talk about her live performance and how she likes to keep it upbeat with a couple of ballads thrown in, she feels it’s her job to entertain and keep you interested, I look forward to the chance to take in her show someday.

RM: Do you have any other loves other than music?

Animals…at times I saw myself being a vet if I wasn’t doing music…I’m very much a dog lover…

RM: Who would you most like to open for?

The Judds, Wynona…hands down.

RM: What’s most changed your career to this point?

My drive, I can’t slack off for a second, you have to go, go, go.

RM: What’s your current single that fans may hear on the radio?

Restless as the Rain…a song I really can’t wait for everyone to hear!

RM:  Which artist did you enjoy seeing as a fan the most?

When I was younger (she’s the ripe old age of 23) I was really into pop music so then it was Britney Spears…recently though it would have to be when I saw Brad Paisley’s H20 Tour…tickets that I was given as a gift.

RM:  What’s it like for a new country artist to go to, first go to Nashville, but to be in a Nashville performing?

Overwhelming, even the waitresses sing in Nashville, there is a very high concentration of talent….it’s a big eye opener…having been there 7-8 times writing…it can make you realize the level of talent out there and how much your really have to work to get to where you want to be

RM: For those that have never heard you…describe your sound?

Mixture….pop-rock-country…each slightly different.  The person I get compared to a lot is Miranda Lambert…(RM: I heard a lot of Carrie Underwood in her music style too)

RM: If I picked up your iPod, what would I find in your most ‘recent played’ list?

Dean Brody, Spice Girls (guilty pleasure), John Mayer, Black Crowes, Lee Brice….I have a diverse group of music that I draw from, I think it’s important that you appreciate lots of styles of music as an artist.  My biggest thing is I love to write music, and there are many different ways of expressing yourself and it’s good to experience how different styles do that.

RM: What do you do in your downtime, to relax, to get away from the music business?

Homebody…movies…I know you said no music but, play guitar…walk my dogs, hike…just try and relax as much as possible in order to recharge as life can get pretty hectic.

RM: If you had to give advice to an artist on how to get their career going, what would that advice be?

I’d ask them a question…Do you have perseverance…do you see yourself doing anything else in your life?  If so, stay away from the music industry if you don’t have perseverance.  There are so many ups and downs, I know it’s cliche, but the music industry is really, really tough…

RM:  You have your music on iTunes, how has downloadable music changed the music industry in your opinion?

It’s two sided, it makes it so a new artist can be listened too easy in some regards, potential fans can get that one song and experience someone new relatively cheaply without having to buy a whole album…makes us more accessible.  But on the other side it makes it hard for an artist to recoup their cost when they only sell one song…also, fans may not take the time to listen to the rest of the album because they got that one song they heard on the radio, not hearing those other songs, they may miss out on one they love.

RM:  Do you remember what you were doing when you decided, ‘hey, I think this is what I want to do for a living’?

I was in a group…in school…called Sass.  I’d been writing poems since I was small and also playing guitar, and this group helped me learn to put my poems to music.  We travelled around doing recitals, when I sang in my first recital I was so nervous, but when I left the stage I felt this rush…this is where I want to be I told myself…I was about 16/17.

RM:  What’s next for Lindsay?

This weekend I’m playing at the Boots & Hearts Music Festival in Bowmanville, ON…in Port Perry opening up again for Chad Brownlee and of course the CCMA’s in the fall…

I want to take the time to thank Lindsay for speaking with us and Refrain looks forward to when she can perform for us on the East Coast (she’s never been out here, we need to make that happen!).    Follow her journey on her Facebook & Twitter pages, as well as her home page:

Facebook Fanpage: http://www.facebook.com/LindsayBroughtonMusic

Twitter: @LindsBroughton

www.lindsaybroughton.com

Comments Off on Random Musical Thought – Where in the world are Carmen’s Guitar’s!?!?

Carment Townsend – ECMA Week 2012

(Update: All instruments were recovered!!) Some very precious musical instruments were stolen from local musician Carmen Townsend this week (right out of her own car!).  Spread the word and help her locate them, one she’s had since she was 19 years old and that memory can’t be replaced…help us stop the thieves and get Carmen back her guitars!

Carmen’s plea for assistance:

http://www.halifax.kijiji.ca/c-buy-and-sell-musical-instruments-guitars-CARMEN-TOWNSENDS-4-STOLEN-GUITARS-HALIFAX-NS-W0QQAdIdZ402912349

Stolen were a:

1965 Guild Starfire Cherry Red – serial # 666 – Returned!
Takamine Acoustic Brown cutaway – lots of cosmetic damages. – Returned!
Fender Strat brown – Long and Mcquade Rental – Returned!
Fender Squire Thinline Telecaster – light brown – white pickguard chip in top corner – Returned!

Francelle Maria – Interview

Posted: 27th July 2012 by refrainmusic in Interviews
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Francelle Maria Doiron – ECMA 2012

Recently featured as a top 40 finalist on Canada’s Got Talent, Francelle Maria and her band mate Mathieu Leger are on their way up.  Francelle, known for not only her great singing voice but her ability to ‘yodel’ is a unique country act that mixes both old and new styles of country together in one seamless set.  Catch her playing all around the area, across the country, on radio, tv anywhere you can as it is a great and unique live show.  The multi-talented singer graduated from Ontario’s Randolph Academy for the Performing Arts, where her skills in singing, dancing and acting were to be honed and make her into the performer she is today.

The Interview:

RM: Do you have any other loves other than music?

I LOOVE dark, Swiss chocolate!!  I also love to cook and eat homemade meals!  I hardly ever eat out, always a smellin’ good, home cooked meal.

RM: Who would you most like to open for?

Dolly Parton!

RM: How has being on Canada’s Got Talent changed your life/career?

It’s a bit easier to book gigs now because people associate and remember who you are!  Our month of April was busier than before, filled with lots of gigs, media related interviews like radio and print.

RM: How were the ECMA’s?  Did you discover any artists you hadn’t heard before?  Who did you enjoy seeing as a fan the most?

Yes…I loved the ECMA’s!  We met lots of great people and had a blast!  I got to meet Tonya Kennedy who is a wonderful singer and performer!  I got to catch up with Rik Reese & Neon Highway, Melanie Morgan, The Divorcees, Chris Colepaugh, Brendan Furlotte and many more!!

RM: If you weren’t singing, what would you be doing?

Simple…I’d be an Actress or a cook!

RM: Where did the “yodel” come from, you don’t hear that anymore, what incentive did you have to learn to do it?

I was in a karaoke competition when I was 15-16 and the host requested a yodel song. I thought it sounded unique and took it as a great opportunity to discover new things about my voice! After performing that song in competition, the reaction from the crowd was so overwhelming that it made me realize there was a real market for this talent. That’s when I really started to dig deep in the art of yodelling.

RM: How hard do you push yourself?

Hard…I work 24/7!

RM: What are the five things that you can’t live without?

Matt (band mate and main squeeze)/Family and Friends/Music/Smiles/Food

RM: What’s your motto/advice that you live by?

The power of the mind! If you put your mind to it, you will succeed! Hard work pays off!

RM: For those that have never heard you…describe your sound?

Dolly Parton, with a touch of Kristen Chenoweth!

RM: If I picked up your iPod, what would I find in your most ‘recent played’ list?

Songs that I need to learn for the next gig! 

RM: What do you do in your downtime, to relax, to get away from the music business?

Drink tea, eat dark chocolate, sit in a Jacuzzi, steam room, spend time with the family and friends, cook meals, watch TV!

RM: If you had to give advice to an artist on how to get their career going, what would that advice be?

Work 24/7! =) If you love it, it won’t feel like work! Practice makes perfect!

RM:  What’s it like for a new country artist to go to, first go to Nashville, but to be in a Nashville recording studio recording an album (what studio were you in?)?

County Q! It’s amazing to have all of these session musicians who have played with artists such as Reba, Rascal Flatts, Alan Jackson etc… You really get to see the level of their talent and it inspires you to practice more!

RM:  You have your music on iTunes, how has downloadable music changed the music industry in your opinion? 

I think technology will always be getting better and musician just need to adapt to these changes! It means more money for live performance which is what we love to do!

RM: What helped shape the Francelle we see today on and off the stage?

My wonderful supporting family and friends, my drive to succeed, Randolph Academy and my amazing vocal coaches, Monette Gould and Jeffrey Huard!

RM:  Do you remember what you were doing when you decided, ‘hey, I think this is what I want to do for a living’?

Singing on a karaoke machine my parents bought for me when I was 12 years old!

RM: What’s your biggest pet peeve about touring/travelling to play…what’s your favourite thing?

Pet peeve, trying to find healthy food! I love to discover new places and people! Making new friends and connections!

RM:  What’s the funniest thing that’s ever happened in your music career, something you’ll never forget?

Getting Zoink’d on YTV!

RM:  What’s next for Francelle?

Stay tuned!

Want to take the time to thank Francelle for speaking with us and Refrain looks forward to the next time we can get out and see Francelle & Matt live and in action.  Check the concert listings page to see if they are playing near your or at your favorite local watering hole or festival.   Follow her journey on her Facebook & Twitter pages, as well as her home page:

Facebook Fanpage: facebook.com/francellemariamusic

Twitter: @Francellemaria

www.francellemaria.com

Francelle Maria – ECMA 2012