Volume 13 — Issue 12
Transcription
Volume 13 — Issue 12
OPEN ALL YEA The Lakehouse Inn Winery R! Visit us for your next Vacation or Get-Away! Four Rooms Complete with Private Hot Tubs & Outdoor Patios Laurello Vineyards will be closed Dec. 31st – Feb. 5th 4573 Rt. 307 East Harpersfield, Ohio 440.415.0661 Three Rooms at $80 One Suite at $120 www.bucciavineyard.com JOIN US FOR LIVE ENTERTAINMENT ALL WEEKEND! Live Entertainment Fridays & Saturdays! Appetizers & Full Entree Menu www.debonne.com See Ba For F ck Cover ull Inf o See Back Cover For Full Info www.grandrivercellars.com 2 www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 July 17 - 31, 2013 VINTAGE OHIO WINE FESTIVAL The Details August 2nd & 3rd, 2013 • 1-10pm Each Day 18 Wineries/25 Wine Samples Lake Metroparks Farmpark, 8800 Euclid Chardon Rd., Kirtland, OH 44094 Ticket info at www.OhioWines.org 800-227-6972 Schedule of Activities 1:00 - 6:30 Meet the Wine Makers Experience Vintage Ohio Wine festival goers who are looking for a unique experience will meet some of Ohio’s most respected wine makers and enjoy light appetizers in an exclusive. In addition, they will sample 10 premium wines—all of which will be gold and silver medal winners, Ohiogrown, and designated as “Ohio Quality Wines” by the Ohio Department of Agriculture. There is a small additional fee of $15 for this special experience. Tickets are available in advance at www.VisitVintageOhio.com or at the Meet the Wine Maker Experience pavilion at the festival. (A ticket to the festival itself is also required for admission to the Meet the Wine Makers Experience.) Wine Education Schedule is the same for both days 2:00, 5:00 Chardonnay is grown in more regions of the world than any other grape. Learn about how “sunlight in a bottle” shines in Ohio. 3:00, 6:00 Cabernet Sauvignon is big in Bordeaux and king in California. Find out how Ohio wine producers succeed with this noble grape. 4:00 Vidal Blanc is a French Hybrid developed for cooler climates. Learn why so many Ohio wine producers are able to make memorable wines from this white grape. Cooking Demonstrations FRIDAY, AUGUST 2 2:30 Chef Amy Ryan – Summer Squash Napoleons 3:30 Chef Kim Taylor – Grilled Chicken Souvlaki w/ Tzatziki Sauce 4:30 Chef Christine Martello – Tortellini Salad w/ Baby Spinach & Artichoke Hearts 5:30 Chef Eric Wells – Pad Thai 6:30 Chef Christine Martello – Watermelon Cucumber Salad w/ Feta Cheese & Herbs SATURDAY, AUGUST 3 2:30 Chef Robin Blair – Corn & Pancetta Salad 3:30 Chef Kim Taylor – Grilled Chicken Souvlaki w/ Tzatziki Sauce 4:30 Chef Robin Blair – Roasted Yukon Gold Potato Salad & BBQ Chicken 5:30 Chef Eric Wells – Participating Wineries Tempura Vegetables w/ Soy Dipping Sauce Auburn Twin Oaks Winery, Chagrin Falls 6:30 Chef Amy Ryan – www.AuburnTwinOaks.com Grilled Pork Tenderloin w/ Peach Salsa Barrel Run Crossing Winery & Vineyard, Rootstown Entertainment (See pg.13 in What about Jazz?) Farmpark Activities During Vintage Ohio Schedule is the same for both days IN THE VISITOR CENTER Dairy Parlor: 2:30, 4:30, 6:30, 7:30 Milking by Hand 5:30 Milking by Machine Dairy Processing Room: 1:30, 3:00, 5:00 Cheese Making Courtyard: 4:00, 6:00 Ice Cream Making Barnyard: 1:00-dark Pony Rides $4 IN SHEPHERDS FIELD 5:30 Border Collie Demonstration INDOOR ARENA 3:00, 4:30, 6:30 Light Horse Demonstration 2:00, 3:00, 6:00, 7:00 Well Bred Shed Animal Encounter PLANT SCIENCE CENTER 4:00, 6:00 Scratch and Sniff Garden Tour 2:00 Hydroponics Garden Tour 3:00, 5:00 Vineyard Tours IN CHILDREN’S AREA 3:00 - 7:00 Face Painting 3:00 - 9:00 Balloon Twisting with Swifty the Clown 1:00 - 9:45 Meet Farm Animals July 17 - 31, 2013 www.BarrelRunWinery.com Breitenbach Wine Cellars, Dover www.BreitenbachWine.com Buckeye Winery, Newark www.BuckeyeWinery.com Candlelight Winery, Garrettsville www.CandlelightWinery.com Debonné Vineyards, Madison www.Debonne.com Deer’s Leap Winery, Geneva www.DeersLeap.com Ferrante Winery, Geneva www.FerranteWinery.com Grand River Cellars, Madison www.GrandRiverCellars.com Grape and Granary, Akron www.GrapeAndGranary.com It’s Your Winery, Akron www.ItsYourWinery.com Klingshirn Winery, Avon Lake www.KlingshirnWine.com Maize Valley Winery, Hartville www.MaizeValleyWinery.com Old Firehouse Winery, Geneva-on-the-Lake www.OldFirehouseWinery.com Old Mill Winery, Geneva www.TheOldMillWinery.com The Winery at Spring Hill, Geneva www.TheWineryAtSpringhill.com Valley Vineyards, Morrow www.ValleyVineyards.com Vinoklet Winery, Cincinnati www.VinokletWines.com VINTAGE OHIO WINE FESTIVAL Produced byy Ohio Wine Producers Association te f Ga f O ice of CV13 Pr e: NR // Codpires Ex August 2nd & 3rd, 2013 t 1-10 pm Each Day Lake Metroparks Farmpark t 8800 Euclid Chardon Rd. t,JSUMBOE0) 800-227-6972 t www.VisitVintageOhio.com Rolling hills, and groves of tall oaks provide a tranquil setting for the Vintage Ohio Wine Festival, the premier food and wine event of the year. 8JOFSJFTt8JOF4BNQMFTt$PPLJOH4IPXTt4QFDUBDVMBSFriday Fireworks! 3 Stages of Great Live Music: Friday, August 2 "OEZT-BTU#BOE3PDL $PMJO%VTTBVMUT#MVFT1SPKFDU#MVFT %PO1FSSZ4BYBQIPOJTU 'FTUJWVT1PQ3PDL%BODF 'PSFDBTU$POUFNQPSBSZ+B[[ 'PVS,JOHT5IF2VFFO.PUPXO3PDL -BSSZ4NJUI"DPVTUJD(VJUBS .JMFT#FZPOE.PUPXO3PDL#MVFT 5IF3PCFSUP0DBTJP'PVOEBUJPO 1SFTFOUT"IJOBNB-BUJO+B[[ www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 4BUVSEBZ"VHVTU #BOE4PGU3PDL+B[[3PDL3# %BWF4UFSOFS2VBSUFU+B[[ %BWF:PVOH1JBOJTU 'BDF7BMVF+B[[3PDL3# 'MPPSXBMLFST1PQ3PDL'VOL )PSOT5IJOHT$POUFNQPSBSZ+B[[ 4UBO.JMMFS$POUFNQPSBSZ+B[[ 4VNSBEB3PDLAO3PMM 5IF%JTDPWFSZ#BOE.PUPXO3# An Experience for All Your Senses 3 We would like to thank all of our sponsors and encourage our readers to patronize the fine businesses appearing in the North Coast VOICE. Publisher Carol Stouder Editor Sage Satori editorial@northcoastvoice.com Man of Many Hats Jim Ales Advertising & Marketing advertising@northcoastvoice.com Sage Satori Staff Writers Sage Satori • Cat Lilly Snarp Farkle • Don Perry Patrick Podpadec • Helen Marketti Westside Steve Contributing Writers Alex Bevin • Chad Felton • Lureena Larry Jennings • Pete Roche Tom Todd • Donniella Winchell Trenda Jones • Alan Cliffe • Steve Guy 5 ..... Multicultural Festival’s 3rd Year 6 ....................................... Wine 101 8 ....................................... Bluesville 12 ..................... What’s on the Shelf 13 ....................... What About Jazz? 16 .........C-Tavern Smokehouse Grille 19 ............ Music Review: Blackmore 20 .....Shinedown Frontman Brent Smith Interview 22 .... Rockin’ and Ridin’ for Recovery 23 .......................................Kickin It 24 ................................. Stay In Tune 25 .......Music Review: A Pirate’s Life 26 ............................. Movie Reviews 28 ........... Film Review: Moody Blues 30 ................................ Snarp Farkle 7KH&RROHVW 0XVLF6WRUH String Prices Lowest in Town! In-Store Repairs Over 50 Years of Musical Experience Karaoke Equipment Lighting Products Yorkville Amps Guitars & Bases WE BUY USED GEAR Lessons: Guitar, Bass, Banjo Mandoline & Piano 1493 Mentor Ave. Painesville Commons Shopping Center 440.352.8986 Photographer (OURS-ON4HURSAMPMs&RI3ATAMPM Amber Thompson • 2kgraphics08@gmail.com Entertainment Emcee • DJ Bands • Production Multimedia New... Media Transfer Service! VHS and SD Cards to DVD Vinyl and Audio Cassette to CD $20 per recorded hour, 2-4 day service (for Blu-Ray, call for pricing) DJ/Emcee, Trenda Jones now booking Spring & Summer Events • Private • Parties • Clubs 440-313-4801 trenda@TrendaRocks.com TrendaRocks.com Circulation Manager James Alexander Circulation Andy Evanchuck • Bob Lindeman Tim Paratto • Greg Pudder Martin Kavick • Tricia McCullough Dan Gestwicki TA KE II Playing 80’s Plus A Little Before & After! Fri. July 19 • 7-10 Deer’s Leap Sun. July 21 • 2:30-5:30 Winery at Spring Hill Graphic Design Linde Graphics Co. • (440) 951-2468 2KGraphics • (440) 344-8535 Please Note: Views and opinions expressed in articles submitted for print are not necessarily the opinions of the North Coast VOICE staff or its sponsors. Advertisers assume responsibility for the content of their ads. The entire contents of the North Coast VOICE are copyright 2012 by the North Coast VOICE. Under no circumstance will any portion of this publication be reproduced, including using electronic systems without permission of the publishers of the North Coast VOICE. The North Coast VOICE is not affiliated with any other publication. Fri. Aug. 2 • 7-10 Deer’s Leap Sun. Aug. 4 • 2:30-5:30 Winery at Spring Hill 4 with special guest, YOU “ The Shower Choir” 25+ years providing mobile DJ & Emcee services plus 15 years radio experience! Fun, Affordable, Professional, Reliable, Experienced! Some 2013 weddings dates still available and now booking for 2014. Also available for nightclubs, resorts, campgrounds, fundraising & corporate events, class reunions, birthday parties and more! MAILING ADDRESS North Coast VOICE Magazine P.O. Box 118 • Geneva, Ohio 44041 Phone: (440) 415-0999 E-Mail: magazine@northcoastvoice.com ENTERTAINMENT Featuring “Hunter” For Booking Call 330-889-0088 10-YEAR ANNIVERSARY! Saturday, July 20th Harpersfield Winery 7:30 til 10:00 Friday, July 26th Fowler's Mill 7:00 PM Friday, August 2nd Chardon Square Gazebo 7:00 til 9:00 All Beatles second set Saturday, August 10th Hooley House - Brooklyn 9:30 til Midnight Call 440-813-3336 Abbey Rodeo is now on Facebook! Friend Hunter NCEDJ on Facebook www.Abbeyrodeo.com www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 July 17 - 31, 2013 Multi-Cultural Festival Returns for Third Year By Carol Johnson, ADDA Board Member Ethnic food, beer garden, a Hawaiian wedding ceremony, the Light of Day Band, Lost Sheep Band, chalk art competition, cornhole, a puzzle leading to a grand prize, a variety of merchandise and cultural exhibits -- all will be featured at the third annual Multi-Cultural Festival, sponsored by the Ashtabula Downtown Development Association (ADDA). This year’s festival will take place Saturday, July 27, from noon to 9 p.m., and Sunday, July 28, from noon to 6 p.m. in Lance Corporal Kevin M. Cornelius Park. One of the more unique festival highlights will be the opportunity to get married or renew your vows in a traditional Hawaiian ceremony. The ceremony and renewals are scheduled for Saturday, July 27th during the time period from 4:30 to 6 p.m. To get more information, or to schedule a ceremony or renewal, contact Len Jury at aloha.hands@gmail.com or phone 440-964-2361 or 216-440-9019. To kick off the festival, there will be a performance by jazz pianist Bill Dobbins Friday, July 26, at 7:30 p.m. at St. Peter’s Episcopal Church. A multi-cultural parade will take place on Saturday, July 27, from 1 to 2 p.m. Ten windows have been decorated in a culture theme, and there will be 1000 passports given out at the event with a phrase puzzle to solve. The first 300 puzzles solved will get a free water bottle or bracelet and then will be entered into a grand prize drawing. There will be a variety of merchandise and services, including: Beach glass jewelry Handmade crafts by Columbian artists Bath/ beauty, massage products Herbal products by Maria Hungarian pastries by Kati Jewelry, Sunglasses Hair braiding Face painting There will be 20 sidewalk spaces available at $5 per square for a chalk art competition for 17 and under age groups. The grand prize will be a two-hour limo ride from Ducro Limousine Services. Second place will be two adventure zone passes. The ethnic food will include Jamaican jerk chicken, oxtail, fish, curry chicken patties, curry goat, stew, Mexican food (Truck: Chipotle curly fries), Puerto Rican cuisine (Alcapurrias, rellenos, potato balk, pastelillos, tropical beverages), Hawaiian food, Vegan food, sausages of the world, pulled pork. Other offerings will include sausage and ribs, kettle corn, hot dogs, burgers, fries, veggies, chicken, funnel fries, nachos, chips, lemonade and iced tea. July 17 - 31, 2013 www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 5 Now Open 7 Days-a-Week! Different food special featured each weekday! All beers, domestic & imports, $1.99! Gift Certificates MAKEGREAT gifts! %.*/9 PATIO DINING! ENTERTAINMENT Entertainment Fri & Sat: 7-11pm Sunday Open Mic 4:30-7:30pm Happy 23rd Birthday Katie!!! 4HURS*ULY%THAN,EGERÏ Home of the Original &RI*ULY%RNEST4"AND Wineburger! 3AT*ULY"ACONCAKE %NJOYTHESPECIALTYBURGEREVERYMONTH Sun, July 21: Open mic w/Susie Hagan /PEN-IC7EDs Thurs, July 25: Melissa Harvey Hosted by Susie Hagan &RI*ULY!LAN'REENE"AND Sat, July 27: Castaways Join us for 3UN*ULY/PENMICW%VERGREEN Winery Hours 403 S. Broadway Kitchen Hours Thurs, Aug 1: Jim & Rob Mon-Thur 3-9pm -ON4HUR Geneva Fri: 3-Midnight Fri, Aug 2: Incahootz Fri: 4-10pm 440.466.5560 Sat: Noon-Midnight Sat: Noon-10pm Reservations not needed Sun: Noon-9pm 3UN.OONPM 3AT!UG3TONE2IVER"AND but always a good idea! Sun, Aug 4: Open mic w/Jimmy Ales www.theoldmillwinery.com DEER R’S LEAP P WIINERY Full Bar • 27 different Beers! Steak & Seafood Restaurant Tasting Room Open Every Day! y! F Full u Restaurant 1 11:30-9 Daily! MONDAY: Mexican Monday 75¢ Tacos Half price Margaritas 5-7 WEDNESDAY: 35¢ Wings THURSDAY: Pasta Bar! EVERY SUNDAY BBQ SUNDAY GRILLED SWEET CORN & CHICKEN OR RIBS $4.99 By Donniella Winchell Vintage Ohio -- one of summer’s most fun filled events For wine lovers in this part of the country, the first Friday and Saturday of August has been noted on their calendars as THE time to celebrate, meet family and friends, and enjoy the offerings of some of Ohio’s finest wineries. Vintage Ohio is an annual event with 3 stages of music, twenty or more wineries, dozens of craft vendors, some great food [easy to enjoy festival food as well as a selection of gourmet Food Truck fare], a bit of education and lots more --- but mostly it is just FUN. Vintage, the ‘granddaddy of all Ohio outdoor festivals,’ was created to introduce the ‘new generation’ of Ohio wines to a general public which had not yet discovered the breadth and depth of what was being produced in the early 1990’s. Although it was not a ‘white table cloth’ event, it did --- and does -- showcase our Rieslings, Chardonnays and Cabs, this year again in our ‘Meet the Winemaker Experience.’ However, since most of the world drinks ‘sweet’ [about 80% of all wines sold in the US have a hint -- or more of residual sugar] -- and the fastest growing segment on grocery shelves includes Moscato under many labels -- Vintage also offers a huge selection of those styles too. There is truly a wine to appeal to every style of palate. The festival was always promoted as: a way to learn about wines in a non intimidating environment -- and unlike when you select a bottle off a retail shelf, a place to meet our winemakers face to face. Unlike many other events of its type, it also focused on offering every wine poured on the field for sale to go -- both so that the memories of the event could be replicated on a back deck one future day --and/ or to serve on the dining room table with a great meal at home. But with all that said, Vintage too can just be described as a fun filled event where thousands of folks come to enjoy the spectacular beauty of the Farmpark, sit at colorful tables under sunny skies and towering oak trees, sip some lovely wines be they very dry or luscious and sweet, watch a great Friday fireworks display -- and re connect with those who came along to enjoy their time together. MUSIC WEDS - SAT Wed. July 17: Tom Todd ALL SUMMER! Fri. July 19: Take II Sat. July 20: Sam and Gary Sun. July 21: D.J. Trenda Jones Wed. July 24: 732 Thur. July 25: Beach House Band Fri. July 26: First Class Trio Sat. July 27: Legacy Sun. July 28: Sam and Gary Wed. July 31: Chad Hoffman Fri. Aug. 2: Take II Sat. Aug. 3: InCahootz 1520 Harpersfield Road • Geveva • 440-466-1248 'ENEVA%XITOFF)3ON32sMILE (OURS3UN4HURSPMs&RI3ATPM -AIN3TREETs0ERRY6ILLAGE ,OCATEDATTHE2AILROAD4RACKSON.ARROWS2D 440-259-5077 4HURS*ULYTH Ladies Spa Night! 3PASERVICESPROVIDEDBY"ELLA,UCA 3ALON#OSTPP)NCLUDES!PPETIZERS YOUR&IRST'LASSOF7INE 0LEASECALLTOMAKEARESERVATION Coming Friday, Aug. 2nd &RANK$EANAND-OREWITH$AMIONAND3COTT $INNERANDSHOWPP0REPAYEVENTLIMITED SEATING-AKEYOURRESERVATION Live Entertainment $**IMMY0EPP "UCAR4UREK$UO ,ARRY3MITH -IKE7OJITILA,ISA Hours:7EDNESDAY4HURSDAYPM &RIDAY3ATURDAY.OONPM www.deersleapwine.com 6 www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 July 17 - 31, 2013 Buccia Vineyard Winery, Bed & Breakfast 518 Gore Rd. • Conneaut 440-593-5976 Sunshine = Wine on the patio! Join us for Corn Hole & Horse Shoes! SUMMER EVENTS! Aug. 17: Beef Roast Sept 7: Pig Roast All require reservations Bread & Cheese Plates or bring your own snacks! 10am-6pm Mon-Thurs later on Friday & Saturday • Closed Sunday www.bucciavineyard.com Gift Certificates! The Lakehouse Inn Winery p¦am=addF Book your Summer getaway at our Bed & Breakfast! Lakefront Jacuzzi Suites! Live Entertainment Sunday, July 21st…Larry Smith 5-8pm Thursday, July 25th…Phil Turk 6-9pm Sunday, July 28th…Larry Kadlub 5-8pm Winery Hours: Mon-Thur 12-8PM; Fri-Sun 12-9PM Crosswinds Grille Hours: Wed-Mon 5-9PM QQ!cF=2FmF¥!`pm`^F`!cF2TT«`T`GG Inquiries@thelakehouseinn.comsWWWTHELAKEHOUSEINNCOM amFamFam!zF3!3£d!!cFOpmFamV July 17 - 31, 2013 www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 7 By Cat Lilly Fifth Annual Kent Blues Fest Downtown Kent, July 19-20 The fifth annual Kent Blues Fest will take place on July 19th and 20th, and will feature free, live entertainment at 17 venues in downtown Kent. Some of the artists performing are Walkin’ Cane, Blue Lunch, Colin John, Memphis Cradle, the Wallace Coleman Band, the Wanda Hunt Band and many more. The kickoff concert will feature the Brighter Side Band at Acorn Alley Plaza from 5:15-8 p.m. on Friday, July 19. “This year’s event is bigger and better than ever,” says Mike Beder, owner of the Water Street Tavern. “The community has really embraced the Blues Fest as a great annual tradition.” Grammy-nominated guitarist Tab Benoit will headline the show at the Kent Stage on Saturday, July 20th, at 8 p.m. Benoit is a past winner of the B.B. King Entertainer of the Year Award and a committed environmental activist. (For more information on performers, locations and times visit, www.kentbluesfest.com. To purchase Tab Benoit tickets, visit www.kentstage.org.) Schedule Friday (free shows!) Acorn Alley Plaza Kickoff Concert The Brighter Side Band: 5:15pm – 8pm 157 Lounge Hoseff: 7pm – 9:30pm at Bar 145 Colin John: 6 – 7pm Long Tall Deb with the Werewolves of Alabama featuring Colin John: 8 – 10pm at Brewhouse Pub Wallace Coleman Band: 8pm – 11pm at Dominick’s Wanda Hunt Band: 9pm – 1am at Kent Stage Why Not Mike?: 8pm – 9pm The Numbers Band: 9:30pm – Midnight The Loft Bit-a-Honey: 8pm – 11am at Mugs The Juke Hounds: 8pm – 11pm Ohio Music Shop Guy Pernetti: 6pm Humbucker Blues: 8pm – 11pm Panini’s Bar and Grill Memphis Cradle: 6:30 – 9:30pm The Pub Jon Mosey: 5pm – 7pm Jim Dotson: 10pm – Midnight Pufferbelly Austin Walkin’ Cane: 5:30pm – 8:30 pm Ray’s Place Paul Borger: 7pm – 9pm Blue Lunch: 9:30pm – 12:30am Tree City Coffee & Pastry Rachel & the Beatnik Playboys: 6pm – 9pm Venice Café Roger Hoover: 8pm at Water St. Tavern Zydeco Kings Duo: 5pm – 7:30pm The Bluestones: 7pm – 10pm (rooftop) Armstrong Bearcat Band: 9pm – 11pm Zephyr Pub Ian Penter: 5pm – 7:30px Mike Lenz: 8:30pm – 11:30px Saturday, July 20 The Kent Stage 175 East Main St. Tab Benoit 8pm Tickets sales at www.kentstage.org Thurs. July 18, 7- 10 3LFNOHG3HSSHU¬*27/¬2SHQ0LF Sat. July 20, 12pm – 2pm 7HUUD/RFDO)DUPHU·V0DUNHW DWWKHROG*HQHYD(OHPHQWDU\6FKRRO Tues. July 23, 6:30 -9:30 *UDQG5LYHU0DQRU¬:LQJ1LWH Jim Ales Call me at (440) 417-2475 Tues. July 30, 6:30 -9:30 *UDQG5LYHU0DQRU¬:LQJ1LWH 6XQ$XJ² 2OG0LOO:LQHU\2SHQ0LF or find me on Facebook 8 www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 July 17 - 31, 2013 ZZ TOP September 1st Jacobs Pavilion at Nautica ZZ TOP (a/k/a “That Little Ol’ Band From Texas,”) lay undisputed claim to being the longest running major rock band with original personnel intact. And in 2004 the Texas trio was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Of course, there are only three of them – Billy F Gibbons, Dusty Hill, Frank Beard -- but it’s still a remarkable achievement that they’re still very much together after more than 40 years of rock, blues, and boogie on the road and in the studio. “Yeah,” says Billy, guitarist extraordinaire, “we’re the same three guys, bashing out the same three chords.” ZZ TOP is the same but always changing. Evidence of that consistency and adaptability is found in LA FUTURA, released in September 2012, their first studio album in nine years. Produced by Rick Rubin and Billy F Gibbons, it reflects the solid blues inspiration that has powered the band since the very beginning with a contemporary approach that underscores the group’s inclination to experiment and explore new sonic vistas. ZZ TOP’s music is always instantly recognizable, eminently powerful, profoundly soulful and 100% Texas American in derivation - the band’s support for the blues is unwavering both as interpreters of the music and preservers of its legacy. It was ZZ TOP that celebrated “founding father” Muddy Waters by turning a piece of scrap timber than had fallen from his sharecropper’s shack into a beautiful guitar, dubbed the “Muddywood.” This totem was sent on tour as a fundraising focus for The Delta Blues Museum in Clarksdale, Mississippi, site of Robert Johnson’s famed “Crossroads” encounter with the devil. ZZ TOP’s support and link to the blues remains is rock solid as the music they continue to play. They have sold millions of records over the course of their career, have been officially designated as Heroes of The State of Texas, have been referenced in countless cartoons and sitcoms and are true rock icons but, against all odds, they’re really just doing what they’ve always done. They’re real and they’re surreal and they’re ZZ TOP. More info: www.zztop.com Reserved Tickets $85, $65, $55, $42.50, $35 General Admission $25 Tickets are on sale now and available at www.ticketmaster.com, all Ticketmaster locations , charge by phone (800)-745-3000 “Bobby Blue Bland” R.I.P. Sat. July 27 Goddess Winery 8-10pm Sun. July 28 Open Mic Night @ Old Mill Winery 4:30-7:30 Mitch 216-513-0529 Jennifer 440-463-3951 A true legend, the great blues singer Bobby “Blue” Bland passed away on Sunday, June 23, at the age of 83 years, his death due to For future shows and complications from an ongoing illness. Bland died in his Memphis, Tennessee home surrounded by family. booking opportunities visit Bland’s smooth-as-silk vocal style successfully bridged the blues and R&B era of the 1950s and the soul era of the 1960s with a number www.facebook.com/ of hit singles like “Turn On Your Love Light” and “Further On Up The Road.” Along the way, Bland would influence scores of imitators and followers, including great soul singers like Otis Redding and Marvin Gaye, rockers like Van Morrison and Eric Clapton, and a generation of blues evergreen.acoustic.music singers. A contemporary of fellow blues legend B.B. King, Bland served as the guitarist’s valet and driver for a while before launching his career with singles for labels like Chess, Modern, and Duke Records, none of OPEN FRI. 4-12 which sold particularly well. After a brief stint in the Army, Bland returned to Duke SAT. 2-12 • SUN. 2-9 Records where he began his string of hits, as well as classic albums like 1961’s Two Steps From The Blues and 1963’s Call On Me. When Duke was sold to ABC Dunhill, Bland’s contract was part of the TRY OUR deal, and he continued recorded for the PERCH PANINIS label and its successor, MCA Records, well into the 1970s. Bland found a modicum of mainstream success during the 1970s to go along with his R&B chart domination, scoring a Top 50 hit with “This Time I’m Gone For Good” from his 1974 album Dreamer. During the 1970s the singer reunited with King and the two artists would become one of the most popular touring acts of the 1970s and early ‘80s. The musical partnership resulted in a pair of critically-acclaimed mid1970s releases,Together For The First Time...Live (1974) and Together Again...Live (1976), both of which were Top 10 R&B chart hits (the first album also hitting #43 on the pop chart). During the 1980s, Bland landed on Mississippi’s Malaco Records label, where he would stay for the rest of his career, the singer delivering some of his best work on albums like Members Only and First Class Blues. Bland continued to tour, both solo and with King, through the late 1980s and well into the 2000s until health problems took him off the road in 2011. A well-respected elder statesman of the blues, Bobby “Blue” Bland was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame in 1981 and the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1992. Capping off an amazing career that spanned seven decades, Bland received a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 1997. Bland’s 6827 Lake Road West • Geneva • 440-466-9127 influence on blues, rock, and soul music cannot be overestimated, and he will be missed. 2-1/2 miles west of Rt. 534 and Geneva State Park Music on our patio every Weekend! Best place to watch the sunset on the Lake! Sat, July 20......Ernest T. Band.............8:00 Sun, July 21.....Kristine Jackson & KJ Blues Band.........4:30 Fri, July 26......Rachel Brown and The Beatnik Playboys..8:00 Sat, July 27......Silver String Band.......7:30 Sun, July 28.....Becky Boyd Trio..........4:30 Sat, Aug 3........Bobbiedazzler..............8:00 Sun, Aug 4.......Spoon Too Soon...........5:00 Corner of County Line Rd. and Lake Road West. July 17 - 31, 2013 www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 9 Road Trip for Festivals! FESTIVAL LATINO (Admission is Free) When: August 10 & 11, 2013 from 11am - 8pm Location: Columbus, Ohio (Genoa Park by COSI) Phone: 614-645-3800 or 614-469-1045 This celebration of Latin American culture is the largest Hispanic/Latino event in Ohio! Celebrate Latin culture to the music of Salsa, Mambo, Flamenco, Merengue and Conjunto by some of the finest national and international Latino artists. Presentations also include traditional ballroom dancing and those brave enough can partake in a dance class to learn to Tango. Traditional Latin cuisines and festival fare are served and a marketplace provides cultural pottery, jewelry, arts and crafts. In addition, hands-on children’s workshops are offered. PARADE OF THE HILLS Open: August 14 - 17, 2013 Location: Nelsonville, OH Phone: 740-753-3525 This annual event will be featuring a Rocky Western tent sale. The Nelsonville Rotary will have a chuckwagon food booth, and the Nelsonville Chamber of Commerce will have an old time western photo booth for children. The event will also feature a tractor pull for children ages 12 and under. Now Available on iTunes PEMBERVILLE FREE FAIR (Admission is Free) Open: August 14 - 17, 2013 Location: Memorial Park, on the corner of Front and College Streets, Pemberville, Ohio 43450 Phone: 419-287-3832 This is one of the last free fairs in Ohio, includes two parades and offers the usual mix of animals, flowers, produce, quilts, needlework, bingo, hobbies, and yummy food, along with a horse pull, a kiddie tractor pull, a youth talent show, and a fun run. Each year, closely-guarded plans for kiddie costumes and floats (which get more and more creative) start far in advance of the parade date and winners not only get a small purse, they get bragging rights until the next year’s parade. BUCYRUS BRATWURST FESTIVAL (Admission is Free) When: August 15 - 17, 2013 Location: Downtown Bucyrus, Ohio Phone: 419-562-BRAT or 419-562-0720 or toll free 866-562-0720 This festival packs in three days of family-fun and more than 27 tons of the finest sausage cooking over open pits. The festival celebrates this small Ohio town’s German heritage with more than just bratwurst. It has more than 100 more delicious foods made from local family recipes that have been handed down from generation to generation dating back to “the old country.” www.RobCovertMusic.com NO EVENT TOO BIG OR SMALL! at Bilicic’s Busy Mart Call us or Stop in for all your Special Event & Party Needs! Tents Tables Chairs Keg Coolers Authorized Dealer Hand Crafted Wax Chips, Shaped Like Leaves and Flowers Available in a Wide Variety OF&RAGRANCESAND!SSORTED"URNERS/NEOUNCE"OX#OVERSSQFTFOR (OURSINTHE"URNEROR9EARSINA$ISH&OR$IRECT$ROP3HIPMENTS ,OGONTOWWW"ILICICS3CENTCHIPS$IRECTCOM 2T)s(ARPERSFIELD Phone: 440.466.9111 Fax: 440.466.7222 /PEN-ON3ATAMPMs3UNAMPM 10 FEAST OF THE ASSUMPTION (Admission is Free) When: August 15 - 18, 2013 Location: Little Italy’s Murray Hill neighborhood in Cleveland, Ohio Phone: 216-421-2995 Whether you’re Italian or not, this festival is popular for all walks of life. There is a traditional religious processional through the ethnic neighborhood streets following a mass at the church. Crowds are enormous as it seems all of northeast Ohio ascends on this little Italian-American community making it “Big Italy” if only for a few days. There is plenty of music, dancing, artwork, rides, and yes, great food. The area definitely is filled with an “old-world” atmosphere. The four-day celebration draws crowds of more than 100,000 annually. How can that many people be wrong? If you’re looking for old-world charm, culinary delight and beautiful cityscape, this is the place to see. FESTIVAL OF NATIONS (Admission is Free) When: August 17, 2013 from 2pm - 8pm Where: Between the Miami River Levee and back of visitor seating of THS Memorial Stadium in Troy in Troy, Ohio Phone: 937-657-6539 There’s no need to travel the world this summer because the world is traveling to Troy, Ohio’s Festival of Nations. Experience the fascinating cultures from around the globe through Food – Dance – Music – Storytelling – Interactive Displays – Arts & Crafts. This international melting pot of fun and intrigue is a celebration for all ages and offered for FREE! This year’s featured country will be Germany! For the kids, there’s face painting, games and activities. And everyone will enjoy getting back to their roots by visiting a display from their native countries, browsing the cultural souvenirs, and a food court offering local restaurants the opportunity to serve cuisine generic to their native countries, including mouthwatering Italian, yummy Japanese, tantalizing German and much, much more. Visit ohiotraveler.com to print and map all of these events. www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 July 17 - 31, 2013 OPEN DAILY 7am-2:30am! Open at 7am for Breakfast and cooking until 11pm, fryer may be available later. Most items available for take-out, too! FEATURING DAILY SPECIALS Happy Hour 1-9pm 95¢ Canned Beer & Well Drinks Mon.-Thurs. (Holidays Excluded) DJ/KARAOKE EVERY FRI. & SAT. 8 PM-2 AM NO BOOKS! NO NUMBERS! NO HASSLES! Saturday, July 20th ÛiÀÌÊ"«iÀ>ÌÊUÊ9-Midnight Celebrate our Christmas In July Party. DJ and Karaoke to follow til 2am. Bring school supplies or a cash donation for our local elementary school. Dress in your worst! The ugliest Christmas top wins a prize! We are collecting school supplies and cash donations all month long for our local elementary school SEND US AN EMAIL TO RECEIVE OUR MAILINGS! Photo-of-the-Month Contest ALL PHOTOS GO ON OUR WEBSITE! Submit photos from High Tide or High Tide Events. Monthly winner gets a gift certificate for A DOZEN WINGS! Drop off a memory stick, cd, most camera memory cards or email to BettysBar@HighTideTavern.com! www.HighTideTavern.com Facebook & BettysBar@HighTideTavern.com 5504 Lake RoadsOn the StripsGeneva-on-the-Lake, Ohio s(440) 466-7990 O P E N EVERY DAY AT NOON MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY 29¢ WINGS HOT DOGS 2/$1 BURGERS Toppings Extra Add 25$ for Cheese 1 $ Drink Purchase Required. Dine-In Only. 8 Wing Minimum per Flavor 3 $ 10” CHEESE PIZZA Toppings Extra COUNTRY MUSIC NIGHT! HAPPY HOUR • 4-8pm • $2 DOMESTIC BOTTLES FRIDAY SUPER HAPPY HOUR $1 DOMESTIC BOTTLES 5-7PM LIVE MUSIC 9pm-1am July 17 - 31, 2013 SATURDAY LIVE MUSIC 3pm-7pm and 9:30pm-1:30pm SUNDAY LIVE BAND 3pm-7pm 7/18 - THURSDAY.......REDNECK INC 8:00PM 7/19 - FRIDAY..............BACONCAKE 9:00PM 7/20 - SATURDAY........LOST SHEEP BAND 3PM M80'S 9:30PM 7/21 - SUNDAY............SWAMP BOOGIE BAND 3PM 7/25 - THURSDAY.......SUNSET COUNTRY 8:00PM 7/26 - FRIDAY............. DAVE'S PLANET 9:00PM 7/27 - SATURDAY.......86K 3PM TBA 9:30PM www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 11 ALL ROAD S & TRAILS LEAD TO THE OPEN DAILY INCLUDING HOLIDAYS! ATM NETWORK VISA Mastercard ® ® GRAND RIVER MANOR 1153 Mechanicsville Rd. 'ENEVAs ->ÌÕÀ`>Þ]ÊÕ}ÕÃÌÊÎÊUÊ£ Ernest T Band Tuesdays: 40¢ Boneless & JUMBO Wings Live Acoustic Music with Jimmy & Friends 6:30 Thurs. BBQ Bike Night ,LÃÊUÊ*Õi`Ê*ÀÊUÊÛiÊÕÃVÊ>ÊÇ£ä Watch NASCAR & Indians on Our Big Screens! Friday Nite Fish Fry! FREE JUKEBOX! FOOD & DRINK SPECIALS! By Pete Roche Eric Clapton FAQ: All That’s Left to Know About Slowhand Author David Bowling It’s late in the evening…you’re wondering what book to read. “Guitar god” is a phrase you hear bandied about loosely in articles describing the six-string prowess of many rock and roll axe men. But there’s only one who’s been repeatedly referred to as THE “God.” Record aficionado journalist David Bowling does the unthinkable in the preface of his new Eric Clapton FAQ: All That’s Left to Know About Slowhand by pondering whether the world truly needs another book on the celebrated English guitarist. While researching for his fact-packed tome, Bowling turned up 10,400,000 Clapton-related hits on Google and over 650 previous books about the Stratocaster master for sale on Amazon. But few, if any, boast the streamlined completeness of FAQ. Which is precisely the concept underlying all of the FAQs available in the new (but rapidly expanding) series from Hal Leonard’s Backbeat imprint (400 pages). Series editor Robert Rodriguez—who assembled excellent FAQs on The Beatles—recruited other critics, musicologists, and experts to pen similar entries on other musical acts (KISS, Pink Floyd, The Doors, Neil Young), television icons (Three Stooges, Lucille Ball) and movie franchises (Star Trek, James Bond). Each author sifts through the wealth of information on his or her subject, separates wheat from chaff, and distills the results into a single portable volume. The resulting compendiums contain only the most pertinent, crucial, and verifiable data, their pages providing answers to the questions most often asked about the entertainer pictured on the cover. Thus, Bowling’s first full-length work might be regarded the definitive Cliff’s Notes on Clapton—the one you’d want to grab off the shelf to prepare for a college exam on the man and his music. The background history, career highlights, and discography are laid out smoothly—in rough chronological order—sans the clutter, minutiae, and tabloid fodder so common among today’s celebrity biographies. What you already knew about Clapton is reinforced. The stuff you didn’t will sink in effortlessly. The first two-thirds of the book are devoted to Clapton’s personal and professional affiliations, from mentors and family members to band mates and sidemen. Bowling mentions just about everyone who ever worked with Eric, inspired him, hired him or otherwise crossed paths with Britain’s most famous bluesman, and by the time the reader is hip-deep in Cream it becomes apparent how closely—and significantly—Britain’s most notable musicians (Jeff Beck, Jimmy Page, Mick Fleetwood, Mike Taylor) could be linked together in an informal game of Six Degrees of Eric Clapton. The author even prefaces Clapton’s early years with synopses of the blues movements (Mississippi Delta and Chicago Blues) that would so profoundly impact his style, and the men (and woman) who most influenced his chops, and whose work he’d cover throughout his career: Robert Johnson, Charley Patton, Howlin’ Wolf, Willie Dixon, Muddy Waters, and Memphis Millie. We learn of Eric’s unorthodox upbringing. The product of a short-lived dalliance between his teenage mom and a Canadian serviceman, Clapton grew up thinking his mother was his sister. He was indoctrinated by music vis-à-vis a wealthy friend’s record collection (“Hound Dog,” etc.) and received his first guitar at age thirteen. The acquisition of an Electric Double Cutaway (a knockoff of a Gibson ES-335) steeled his resolve to master the instrument, and by sixteen he was busking clubs with Dave Brock and gigging with The Roosters and Casey Jones & The Engineers. Of course, Clapton became a very public figure upon replacing Top Topham in The Yardbirds, whose smash hit “For Your Love” did little to motivate the guitarist’s interest in producing bubblegum pop-rock. He was able to stretch out more as part of John Mayall’s ~Continued on page 14 12 www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 July 17 - 31, 2013 Guitar Lessons By Don Perry Jazz and More at Vintage Ohio 2013 Beginner to In September of 2011, my wife Charleen and I had the pleasure of visiting the Temecula Valley wine region, in southern California. As we sampled Cabernets, Merlots and Malbecs at Vindemia Vineyard, we were talking with a local couple and they asked where we were Advanced from. We told them that we lived in Northeastern Ohio, near Cleveland. They told us that they had once been to the area and had attended a wonderful wine festival. I smiled and said “Vintage Ohio”, and they said yes, that’s it! Here we were 2,400 miles from home, in one of California’s most beautiful wine regions, talking about Vintage Ohio, How cool is that!! This just goes to show that the efforts of the Ohio Wine Producers Association are not going unnoticed. Electric The Lake Farmpark gates will open upon Vintage Ohio 2013 on Friday, August 2nd at 1 pm. The 2-day festival, now in its 19th year will host and 20 different wineries from across the state. Over 70 other exhibits and vendors will be on hand for your enjoyment, including restaurants, gourmet foods, and artisans. Acoustic Although Vintage Ohio is recognized across the country as a premier wine festival, featuring some of the area’s finest live music, I prefer to think of it as a premier music festival, featuring some of the regions finest wine makers. Live entertainment was a key component of the very first festival in 1995 and continues to be so, as the event has grown and changed. The inaugural year featured 1 classical music stage, with the Cleveland Orchestra among the featured groups. But just as a variety of wines appeal to a broader audience, so do a variety of musical styles, therefore, the following year a second stage was added. From 96 until recently, one stage has featured the music of Northeast Ohio’s most widely recognized jazz ensembles, while the second has featured area blues, R&B and classic rock groups. This musical format and 2-stage setup offers festival patrons a wider range of musical choices and a more festive atmosphere. The live entertainment begins when the gates open at 1 pm and continues until 9:30 pm. Schedule your In order to appeal to an even broader audience, a 3rd stage area was added 4 years ago, in a shaded area away from the center of activity to offer a softer more relaxing atmosphere to patrons who perhaps wish to discuss their wine preferences, while solo artists provide a more soothing lesson today! style of music. New this year is the Jazz Stage at the Meet the Winemaker Pavilion. Although this area is reserved for special ticket holders throughout My 30 years of experience can help the day, the pavilion will open at 7:30 both nights, to all festival attendees for the live jazz. Friday evening the pavilion stage will be Forecast you reach your musical goals! one of Cleveland’s finest and most recognized contemporary jazz groups. On Saturday evening the Pavilion Stage will host The Dave Sterner Quartet, another outstanding Cleveland ensemble that infuses fresh new energy into traditional jazz standards. Call or Text Rick Also new this year is the mixture of musical genres between the 2 main stages. In order to provide a more complete festival experience for patrons, both stages will feature a variety of musical acts. The intention is to encourage guests to explore the entire grounds and see all that Vintage Ohio has to offer. We don’t want you to miss a thing! Among the impressive list of performers who will grace the main stages of Vintage Ohio are 2 more jazz ensembles that you should add to you’re “must see” list. On Friday evening at 7:30 on Stage 2, The Roberto Ocasio Project will present perhaps the finest Latin Jazz Cleveland has to offer. Finally, this next group is Fri. among my very favorites of any group, in any genre in Northeast July 19th Ohio. Vintage Ohio veterans Harpersfield “Horns and Things” will be performing Saturday, on Stage 1 at Beef Roast Fri. 4:15. I spoke with my friend J.T. Lynch just the other day and he 8-12 Aug. 30th believes that HAT has performed every year at Vintage Ohio since Thurs. Conneaut 1996. They have become as much a July 25th part of the Cleveland landscape as Lake Park Vintage Ohio itself. “We may have Willoughby 9-1 missed one but I don’t think so.” J.T. said. Honestly, the opportunity to attend a performance of Horns & Things alone is worth the Gazebo price of festival admission! There is one dilemma though; Face Value will be performing on Stage 2 during the very 7-8:30 Sat. same time slot as HAT, so perhaps the biggest challenge of the day will be to locate the optimum spot on the festival grounds, where you can enjoy both groups equally, at the very same time. Aug. 3rd Let me teach you how to make music! 440-413-0247 Friday, August 2nd Saturday, August 3rd Stage 1: 1 – 3:30 pm 4:15 – 6:45 pm 7:30 – 9:45 pm Stage 2: 1 – 3:30 pm 4:15 – 6:45 pm 7:30 – 9:45 pm Stage 3: 1 – 3:30 pm 4:15 – 6:45 pm Pavilion Stage: 7:30 – 9:45 pm 1 – 3:30 pm 4:15 – 6:45 pm 7:30 – 9:45 pm Stage 2: 1 – 3:30 pm 4:15 – 6:45 pm 7:30 – 9:45 pm Stage 3: 1 – 3:30 pm 4:15 – 6:45 pm Pavilion Stage: 7:30 – 9:45 pm Four Kings & The Queen Andy’s Last Band Festivus Colin Dussalt’s Blues Project Miles Beyond Roberto Ocasio Project Don Perry Larry Smith Forecast July 17 - 31, 2013 Sumrada Horns & Things The Discovery Band 147 Band Face Value Floorwalkers Fri. July 26th Ferrante Winery 6-9:30 Dave Young Stan Miller Dave Sterner Quartett Vintage Ohio 4:15-6:45 Fri. Aug. 2nd Ferrante Winery 6-9:30 For full schedule DonPerrySaxman.com or www.facevaluemusic.com www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 13 ~Continued from page 12 Bluesbreakers and in jam trio The Gland, whose ill-fated European tour forced Clapton to rethink his prospects. After producing a few songs with Steve Winwood in Powerhouse, Eric accepted an offer to join fellow virtuosos Jack Bruce and Ginger Baker in Cream. Bowling wades through each Cream album (Fresh Cream, Wheels of Fire, Goodbye), every studio and live track (“Wrapping Paper,” “Sunshine of Your Love,” “Badge,” “Spoonful,” “Tales of Brave Ulysses,” etc.) and all notable gigs—like the legendary concerts (and reunions) at The Fillmore, Royal Albert Hall, and Madison Square Garden. He even reviews Martin Sharp’s psychedelic sleeve art and uncovers the source of the enigmatic 1967 album title Disreali Gears. We go behind the console with producer Felix Pappalardi (Mountain) and engineer Tom Dowd, scribble in notebooks with lyricist Peter Brown, and negotiate album contracts with RSO mogul Robert Stigwood. We bounce through Blind Faith—which reunited Clapton with Winwood—join Eric at a John Lennon concert in Toronto in 1969, and tour with Delaney & Bonnie. We venture to Florida for the making of Derek & The Dominoes, whose first and only proper album yielded the classic “Layla,” and revel in the release of E.C.’s eponymous solo debut. Bowling discusses the string-picker’s growing addictions and broken relationships with kid gloves, confining his remarks to their affects on the guitarist’s productivity. He picks favorites (461 Ocean Boulevard, Slowhand, Just One Night) among Eric’s ‘70s output and critiques others: He refers to There’s One in Every Crowd as “mundane,” describes E.C. Was Here as “average,” and writes off 1978’s Backless as being “just a little too mild.” Eric ties the knot with Patti Boyd, gets clean and sober for the ‘80s, and assembles a new backing band for Money and Cigarettes. He turns another corner in ’85, tapping producers Phil Collins and Ted Templeman to give Behind the Sun, August, and Journeyman a modern sheen, and surrounds himself with ace players like synth guru Greg Phillinganes, bassist Nathan East, and drummer Jeff Porcaro—but it’s his Unplugged session at MTV London that reminded everyone of Eric’s brilliance. And though he was on a new label, Clapton’s old handlers at RSO / Polydor cashed in whenever the guitarist crested, flooding the market with Best-Ofs and compilations like Timepieces, Chronicles, and The Cream of Eric Clapton. Again, Bowling offers his two cents on each. The FAQ also explores E.C.’s movie scores and songs, beginning with the television program Edge of Darkness and sci-fi blockbuster Back to the Future and winding through the Lethal Weapon films and Rush soundtrack (“Tears in Heaven”). Sifting through the ‘90s-‘00s catalog, Bowling isn’t afraid to say when he thinks a title is mediocre: He says 1998’s Pilgrim “sounded better at the time” and feels Clapton should have performed Me and Mr. Johnson all by his lonesome, without a session band, like Johnson himself. Riding With the King 2000, Reptile 2001, and Clapton 2010 receive high marks, and the 2 CD Live from Madison Square Garden is hailed “an essential listen.” The discography section surveys everything Clapton committed to tape, wax, and CD, including his countless guest appearances—whether credited or not. Almost everyone knows E.C. soloed on The Beatles’ “While My Guitar Gently Weeps” and popped up on later releases by Lennon, McCartney, and Harrison. But did you know he played on Aretha Franklin’s Lady Soul? Or that he recorded with The Crickets, Bobby Whitlock, Freddie King, Stephen Stills, Roger Waters, and Rod Stewart? All the singles, hits, and “misses” are accounted for, replete with dates, labels, and catalog numbers. In the segment “How Many Times Must We Tell the Tale” [from “Forever Man”] Bowling gives capsule summaries of Clapton’s most important gigs and guest appearances. A later chapter inventories Clapton’s instruments and profiles his most famous Fenders, Gibsons, and Gretschs—the Telecasters, Jazzmasters, and Les Pauls. We’re given a lineage of “Blackie,” the axe E.C. made by cannibalizing parts from other Strats and can be seen playing in videos for The Rainbow Concert and The Last Waltz. Bowling also scans Clapton’s acoustic guitars (readers can get acquainted with the Martin 000-42 the maestro used for MTV’s Unplugged special) and reveals what became of them: Some of Eric’s most recognizable guitars fetched between $500-800,000 at charity auctions. Other titles in Backbeat’s FAQ series include The Beatles, Beach Boys, Led Zeppelin, Bruce Springsteen, Black Sabbath, and U2. The publisher plans on releasing new FAQs for additional Rock and Roll Hall of Famers—like Metallica and Rush—this fall. www.claptonfaq.halleonardbooks.com www.faq.halleonardbooks.com 14 www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 July 17 - 31, 2013 Dry Dock The Ashtabula Lighthouse Restoration and Preservation Society Annual Fish Fry Saturday, July 20, 2 pm – 7 pm it is being held at the Lake Shore Park Main Pavilion, St. Rt 531, Ashtabula. Donation $10 Dinner includes: Fish or shrimp, baked potato or french fries, coleslaw, roll and butter and beverage. Music by Bev Newbold. Lots of Raffles! Tours will also be offered to and through the Ashtabula Lighthouse. All proceeds go to the restoration and preservation of the Ashtabula Lighthouse. For More information call Deb or Joe 440-224-0750 or email santiana@ roadrunner.com The 2013 East Side Avant-Garde Art & Craft Show is Sunday, July 21, from 12:00pm - 5:30pm. Come celebrate summer with a one-of-a-kind craft show featuring over 100 artists and crafters selling local and handmade items. These vendors sell original and eclectic items that range from jewelry and candles, to home decor and yard art. The show is being held at the Terry Macklin Entertainment & Event Centre at 6200 Enterprise Parkway, Solon, OH 44139. Admission is $3.00, and children under 12 are free. There will be a concession stand and full bar on site. A portion of all the proceeds will go to benefit the Cleveland Animal Protective League. Terra Local farm market will be open each Saturday through October 26th from 10am-2pm on the future home of Pairings Wine and Culinary Center at the corner of Park and Eagle Street in Geneva. This unique market is the first of its kind in the area, offering a consigned venue where produce, meat, eggs, honey, syrup, value-added products like jelly and more will be presented for sale in a consolidated format by the team at Terra Local. This style is also a lucrative opportunity for small hobby farmers who may not produce a volume necessary for success at a traditional market. Establishing a connection between consumers and farmers is very important to the mission of the organization. Consumers enjoy the convenience of selecting products from several different farms and paying once. Terra Local accepts cash, check, credit and SNAP benefit payment options. In addition to locally grown foods Terra Local offers an Artisan Market with a selection of local artists and craftsman offering handmade items such as soap, candles, artwork and furniture. Winslow will be performing a FREE SHOW at the 2013 Conneaut Dockfest, taking place at the Conneaut Public Dock, on July 27th starting at 6 p.m. This will mark Winslow’s first performance in Conneaut since 2010 with Conneaut native Maurice Martin. The 6-piece dubbed “Cleveland’s Best Local Band” teamed up with Grammy-Award Winning Producer Edwin “Tony” Nicholas (Barry White, Mary J Blige, Gerald Levert) and Grammy-Nominated engineer Nick Chahwala (Katy Perry, Mariah Carey, Gym Class Heroes) to produce the new album, Left to the Right, released March 26th. The album has received features by MSN.com, AOL.com, Relix Magazine, Guitar World Magazine, and Modern Drummer Magazine. This sound, combined with the groups polished and passionate live show has led them to sharing the stage with many major acts. The album recently has received 15 National television licenses to have music placed with MTV, VH-1, E, The Discovery Networks, E! and Oxygen. Winslow’s unique blend of soul, rock and pop has been described by many members of the press and fans alike as a musical breath of fresh air. Maurice Martin was a 2002 graduate of Conneaut High School. He served as band captain, choir president, and class president in his years in Conneaut. Following a stint at Kent State University majoring in music, Maurice co-founded the band Winslow. Maurice was voted Cleveland’s Best Vocalist by in the 2010 Cleveland Music Awards and was named one of Ashtabula County’s Top 25 Most Interesting People by Ashtabula Living Magazine. Martin was called a soul singing icon in waiting by Cleveland.com. ~Continued on Page 15 "Fun is like life insurance; the older you get, the more it costs." ~Kin Hubbard We Offer the Personal Service You’ve Missed Lately BAR & GRILL $).%). PLE, /2#!,,!(%!$ GREAT FOOD, GREAT PEO GREAT LIVE MUSIC EVERY #!229/54 OTHER SATURDAY! HAPPY HOURs45%3&2)ss$/-%34)#$2!&4"/44,%3 Tues Night: 7ING.IGHT`sPM $OM$RAFT"EERSPM$INEIN Try our Freshly made Pizza, Fresh Wings with Sauces made Daily, Subs & Daily Specials! NEW BIGGER BURGERS on Pretzel Buns! Now Serving Draft Beer -ILLER,IGHT"UD,IGHT ,ABATTS'REAT,AKES#HRISTMAS!LE WEDNESDAY OPEN MIC -IDNIGHT July 24th: The Dudeski’s July 31st: Dan Powell & April Ely August 7th: Arnel of 4 KIngs THURSTY THURSDAY PM $OMESTIC$RAFT"EERONLYA ,IVE$*+ARAOKE#OUNTRY2OCKAM Every other Saturday live music, our patio is open, music outside weather permitting July 20th: Marion Avenue August 24th: Marion Avenue 9-1 Sept 21st: Face Value 9-1 Sat. Oct. 19th: In Kahootz 1421 Hubbard Rd. Madison • 440-983-4028 4UES4HUR/PENATPMs&RI3UNAM Please join us for an extended vacation or just spend a weekend in the northeastern most portion of the state! July 18 - Kelly Miller Circus Lakeview Park 4:30 & 7:30 pm July 20 - Feed Our Community Festival Ramblin Rose Alpaca Farm Root Road • Noon-4pm July 27 - 5 K Windmill Run/Walk Conneaut Arts Center Buffalo Street • 9am July 27 - Dock Fest Port of Conneaut Broad Street Extension 11am-8pm Home Auto Business Life TREEN INSURANCE 3TATE2OUTE.s3UITE *EFFERSON/HIO 576-5926 (440) SCATREEN SUITENET July 17 - 31, 2013 Scott Treen Lighthouse Cruisers Cruise-Ins! • Conneaut Township Park Every Thursday • 6pm-9pm Conneaut Railroad Museum Open thru Labor Day Friday Night Racing at Raceway Seven Sunday Evening Free Concerts Conneaut Art Center • Newcomb Perfoming Terrace Visit us at www.visitconneautohio.com www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 440-593-2402 15 C-Tavern Smokehouse & Grille By Cat Lilly Exiting Route 90 and traveling north, you may have noticed a large building at the intersection of Routes 534 and 84. A sandwich board and the smell of smoking meat beckons you to stop in and enjoy the home cooking at C- Tavern Smokehouse Grille, and I guarantee that if you do, you will not be disappointed, as they deliver just what they promise. John, Mike, and Tony Campofredano grew up on Cleveland’s west side, and later the family moved to Murray Hill on the east side. The three brothers never dreamed they would someday become co-owners of a restaurant in the small town of Geneva, some sixty miles to the east. But it’s funny how life turns out – that is exactly what happened and the Campofredano brothers are the proud owners of C- Tavern Smokehouse Grille. John Campofredano spent thirty-five years working in Coconut Grove. Rocky River to THE DECK IS OPEN! Smokehouse Wed. July 24th Psychic Medium Julie gives reading with dinner! Call for details. DAILY DRINK SPECIALS HAPPY HOUR 3-6PM EVERYDAY! WEDNESDAY Mens Night...ALL NIGHT! Miller Lite $1.50 Great Lakes Dortmunder on Tap $3 THURSDAY DAILY FOOD & DRINK SPECIALS Grille HOURS: Sun & Mon 3-10pm Tues-Sat noon till? Mon. & Weds. 4 Runners, Choice of Sauce, Basket of Fries, and a Pint of Miller Lite $6.50 Triple Taco Tuesday with a Margarita $6.50 Ladies Night...50% OFF ALL NIGHT! (Excluding Bottles of Wine) Raspberry Martini $3.75 FRIDAY Long Island Iced Tea $3.75 SATURDAY Chocolate Covered Cherry Martini $3.75 Sunday Big Bowl of Spaghetti with Meatball & Salad $8.50 11 South Ridge Rd. East, Geneva 440-361-4135 www.ctavern.com 16 the restaurant business, as a chef for Holiday Retirement in Florida, and Franz and Joseph’s in He moved back to Ohio and spent eight years at Hiroshi’s Pub in Beachwood. He relocated from Madison and fell in love with the quaintness of the location while shopping around for a place to open his own restaurant. The tavern opened less than one year ago, and staff has been providing service with a smile since the beginning. John enlisted the aid of brothers Tony and Mike to help out at the restaurant. Tony works at Cleveland Airport by day and handles the financial end of the business at C-Tavern in his spare time. Mike is the resident artist, and the walls are adorned with his sketches of not only celebrities like the Beatles and the Who, but historical figures like Geronimo and Crazy Horse, and even scary monsters like Frankenstein and Dracula. Chef John handles the daily operations, preparing appetizers, lunch and dinner specials and ever-changing homemade desserts that are to die for! Everything at the restaurant is prepared from scratch, made to order the old-fashioned way, with Come taste our New Releases 2012 >À`>Þ and Óä£ÓÊ ÀiÌ ÕÞÊÓ£\Ê >Ê Û}Ì]ÊÓx ÕÞÊÓÇ\ÊiÊiiÌi]ÊÓÈ ÕÞÊÓn\Ê/ÀiÀÃÊ£nÈ]ÊÓx ÕÞÊΣÊUÊÈ\Îä\Îä -ÕÃ Ê } ÌÊLÞÊÕÀiÊÃÌÀ $90/plus tax & gratuity Prepaid non-refundable. Reservations required. È£ÎÊ-"1/Ê,6,Ê,°ÊUÊ 6 www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 July 17 - 31, 2013 fresh produce bought locally whenever possible. In fact, John Campofredano is giving a cooking demonstration at Terre Local in Geneva on Saturday, July 20th at 10:00 a.m. He will be demonstrating for the public how to make pork tenderloin and fresh mozzarella. C-Tavern provides catering services as well, both on and off premise. Recently John catered the M Cellars premiere of their new red wine, Noiret, which was a huge success. Many of the recipes have been handed down through the family, such as the spaghetti and meatballs. C-Tavern is known for its smoked meats - meatloaf, pulled pork, beef brisket, and wings, which are smoked daily on the deck. Barbecued Ribs and Grilled Salmon are also dinner favorites. A staple on the menu is the Outrageous Shepherd’s Pie, with beef brisket, pulled pork or chicken in a homemade garlic-rubbed bread bowl, topped with smashed potatoes. Chef John keeps things interesting, with appetizer specials like Smoked Salmon Spinach Dip and dessert specials like Pecan Raisin Bread Pudding. All the desserts are homemade - try the Italian specialty canoli or tiramisu, along with the cheesecake - simply delicious! The menu features seven very different eight -ounce ground steak burgers, all named after the place of origin. For instance, the New York burger is topped with pastrami, cole slaw, cheddar, and whole grain mustard. The Ohio is topped with a sausage patty, Amish fried egg and baby Swiss, and a beerbattered onion ring. The Louisiana is topped with Andouille sausage, pepper jack cheese, remoulade sauce and a battered tomato slice. Burgers are served on a grilled pretzel bun with a generous portion of French fries. Fried Calamari is a popular favorite appetizer, served in a giant martini glass. The crab-stuffed mushroom mornay is an excellent way to start off your meal, as are the stuffed banana peppers. The Italian Flatbread is a house specialty, with prosciutto, Genoa salami, and Parma ham. A typical entree would be the Oven Roast Italian Sausage with potatoes, peppers, onions, and Kalamata olives. The menu features Catch of the Day, prepared with Great Lakes beer batter ($15.00) and also a Steak of the Day meal at market price. ~Continued on Page 18 *ROI$YH*HQHYD2Q7KH/DNH¬ .%72%$5#%$,)15/2-)8%$$2).+02)#%3 ."ROADWAYs'ENEVAs Full Bar w'REAT"URGERSw !PPETIZERSw 7INGS /PEN-ON3ATAMTILLAM LOUNGE (!009 (/52 -/.&2) 0- &2)xCOWBOY DONNIE #/5.429 3!4x86K BAND #,!33)#2/#+ ,!3434/0&/22/!2/.4(%3(/2%")+% 25."BEER FOR THE DEER"%.$3!4 34!2,)4%,/5.'%!002/80FREE MUSIC 3!4xWYLD RYDE #/5.429 www.starlitelounge.org July 17 - 31, 2013 /.!,,.)'(43 "!.$3!2% ./4 0,!9).' &/20)#3$!),9 !#4)6)4950$!4%3 MONDAYS: FREE POOL !,,.)'(44!#/3 TUESDAYS: /0%.-)#")+%.)'(4 *!-3%33)/.37)4( ,)6%"!.$3s`7).'3 WEDNESDAY: ,!$)%3.)'(4,).%$!.#).' ,%33/.3 THURS. KARAOKE 7-11 ,!2'%34!'%).(/53% 3/5.$,)'(43934%- ,//+!.$3/5.$,)+%!02/ FRIDAY !9#%&)3($)..%2 (!.$"2%!$%$0/,,)#+ &2%%0//,!-0- HIGH 32:(5 /,4825<($5 5281' `>ÞÃ\Ê$3 Margaritas & Mojitos /ÕiÃ`>Þ\Ê$2 16 oz. Drafts 7i`iÃ`>Þ\Ê$1.50 Domestic Bottles $ 5 Burgers +DSS\+RXU7XH)UL 76KLUWV +RRGLHV $YDLODEOH 2II$OO'ULQNV 2II$Q\$SSHWL]HUV "* Ê",Ê1 Summer Hours: 1:30am-2am Everyday www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 Sat 7/20…Ài>Êx£ Sun 7/21…ivvÊ7>à 3-7 Sat 7/27…ÕiÊÌÊÕià Sun 7/28…LLi`>ââiÀÊ3-7 FRIDAY KARAOKE 7/Ê /Ê-/,<ÊUÊ* THURSDAYS "* Ê Ê-ÊUÊÇ£ä* ÇÉ£nÊÊÞÊiÃÊ ÇÉÓxÊÀi`Ê>ÀÀ}iÀ 17 Outdoor Flea Market & Craft Show Every Saturday 9am to 5pm. May 25 thru Sept. 7 Geneva-on-the-Lake Recreational Park 5536 Lake Rd. Geneva-on-the-Lake www.visitgenevaonthelake.com d epte s acc on can) n o i t i a t (Don dona g of n i s s pa Earn a 65HIRT at 3 GOTL Strip Crawls! 3 - 7 Outside!! Thurs. July 25 Geneva Pavilion Sun. July 28 Call for space reservations 440.466.8600 at Sat. July 20 Sportsterz • GOTL 7 - 8:30pm Sponsored by the G.O.T.L. Visitors Bureau FREeErts y ConcTuesda Every 7pm by LOST SHEEP BAND Ashtabula Multi-Cultural Festival 1 - 2:30 www.lostsheepband.com 2013 Lakefront Summer Concert Series Geneva Township Park Geneva-on-the-Lake July 23...... Cadillac Lilly, Little Big Band July 30...... Erie Heights Brass Ensemble Aug. 6 ...... Madison Band Aug. 13...... Young & Blue Aug. 20...... Linda Fundis “Let Me Entertain You” Classic Country & Showtunes 1. The Lake Erie Monster Crawl Memorial Day thru Labor Day 2. Thunder on the Strip Thunder Week 3. Halloween 2013 Monster Crawl September & October Sponsored by the Geneva-on-the-Lake Visitors Bureau 18 ~Continued from Page 17 History The 90-year-old building which houses C-Tavern is rich with history. The site it stands upon, part of the Western Reserve, is said to have been a stagecoach stop. In the early 1800’s, Harpersfield Township included all the territory within its limits plus Trumbull, Hartsgrove, and Geneva Township. But in 1816 a small group of settlers just north of Harpersfield Village decided to withdraw from Harpersfield Township and at a mass meeting named their new community Geneva, after the beautiful little town of Geneva, New York. Many of the first settlers had left the craggy, rock-laden eastern seaboard states to farm the rich sandy soil of the Lake Erie shore. Over a period of seven years, fifteen families settled on the land that is known as the South Ridge (present-day State Route #84.) They built along the banks of Cowle’s Creek, named after Noah Cowles, one of the original homesteaders. Fruit orchards abounded, and the little settlement was known as “Eagle Hill”, the site of the first business, a tannery and boot-making shop, as well as the first schoolhouse. In these early years, the South Ridge was the main road, as the town built northward toward the lake. The intersection of Rt. 84 (then called Center Rd.) and Rt. 534 (then called Harpersfield Rd.) became known as “Twin Bridges”, named for the two matching bridges spanning Cowle’s Creek. By the early 1900’s, Geneva had a population of about 3500. The town was thriving, with a handful of churches, two railroads, a bicycle factory, a piano factory, a Metal Wheels works, two banks, two groceries, one dry goods store, two clothing establishments, two hardware stores, three jewelers, two bakeries, two meat markets, two drugstores, a flour mill, a laundry, a firm of funeral directors, the telephone system, the electric light company, and the Walter Main Circus Headquarters, home of the famous showman who made his winter quarters in Geneva. In 1914, Rt. 534 was paved with brick from Geneva to Trumbull. In 1920 the building which today contains C- Tavern was constructed. Information on its origin is sparse, but it is believed to have been built as a combination trailer camp/service station stopover for weary travelers. Cabins in the back were rented out for the night, and the main building contained an eatery and a tavern, as well as a small fireworks store. A business card recovered from that era reads “Barber’s Tavern”- GOOD EATS & GOOD BEER- and lists the phone as 784, recalling a simpler time when Geneva had three-digit phone numbers. The business changed hands many times over the years between 1920 & 1960, when it was purchased by Irene Long and operated under the name “Rainbow Inn” for the next thirty-five years. The cabins in the back were torn down, and the gas pumps taken out, but the establishment remained a full-scale tavern serving burgers and fish dinners. Irene raised her four children there, adding the third floor with extra bedrooms as her family expanded. In the early 90’s, blues bands would play at the Rainbow Inn once a month and the tiny bar would be jam-packed. My friend Kathy Brown was raised there and has many happy memories of her childhood growing up on the corner. The food at C-Tavern is delicious, reasonably priced, and the portions are generous. The tavern has a full-service bar and daily drink specials. The bar features local wines from M Cellars and Harpersfield Winery, along with a great beer selection, including imports and microbrews. The restaurant just acquired ten new craft beers on tap, and the brothers have plans for an outdoor bar. There is a sunny little patio for those who prefer to dine outdoors, and soon there will be a wood-fired brick pizza oven on deck, for specialty pizzas made to order. The atmosphere at C-Tavern is cozy and relaxed, and the staff is friendly, as well as experienced and capable. So if you’re looking for a great meal at a reasonable price, served up with some friendly conversation, or just want to unwind over a few cocktails after work, check out the corner once called “Twin Bridges”, and visit C-Tavern Smokehouse and Grille. (C-Tavern, 11 South Ridge Road, Geneva 44041, phone 440-361-4135. Hours Sun. & Mon. 3-10pm, Tues. thru Sat. noon til??) www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 July 17 - 31, 2013 on the By Pete Roche Blackmore’s Night Dancer and the Moon He’s the guitar-wielding iconoclast behind “Smoke on the Water” and “Man on the Silver Mountain,” the Stratocaster scorching rock legend whose work in Deep Purple and Rainbow inspired countless imitators. She’s a blonde bombshell who developed her mesmeric singing voice and enchanting stage presence in a household filled with show tunes and big band music. When Ritchie Blackmore met Candice Night on a soccer field some seventeen years ago, it was more than love at first sight. It was the start of a new musical journey for both—a shared vision of folksy pastorals, rustic reels, and timbres borrowed from an era when men settled their differences by donning chain mail and pulling sword from scabbard. Theirs was a unique alliance whose chords charts (and wardrobe) effectively wed the pageantry of medieval times with 20th century rock and roll flair. Blackmore’s Night was born. With eight acclaimed studio albums (including a holiday-themed disc) and three live sets behind them, the renaissance rockers paused somewhere between Secret Voyage (2008) and Autumn Sky (2010) make their nuptials official. Now Ritchie and Candice are parents as well as musical partners. On the heels of last year’s live album A Knight in York, the couple entered the studio again for another round of merriment with its mirthful band: Bard David of Larchmont (keyboard), Lady Kelly DeWinter (French horn), Earl Grey of Chimey (bass / guitar), The Scarlet Fiddler (violin), and the Troubadour of Aberdeen (percussion). The result, Dancer and the Moon, is another terrific entry in a catalog devoted to the faithful preservation (rather than mere mimicry) of a musical style thought lost to the ages of dungeons and dragons, a potent curry of unplugged, stripped-down maypole melodies and sweet, lilting vocals with a dash Round Table rock and roll zeal. Think Robin Hood meets Robin Trower, and you get the idea. Plucked from the Beaches movie soundtrack, the Randy Newman-penned “I Saybrook Township Park 5941 Lake Road West K@L9:MD9c Hello Summer! Open 7-Days-A-Week! 1=<F=K<9QN=FAF?K9LHE AFF=JKOADD:=9N9AD9:D=9LHE July 17th Erie Heights Brass Ensemble Big Band July 24th Allison Lehr Gospel Roasted Corn-on-the Cob Corn Dogs • Sausage • Pulled Pork Hot Dogs • Fresh Cut French Fries Hamburgers • Nachos Cheese-on-a-Stick • Cheese Cakes July 31st Cadillac Lilly Swing/Blues August 7th Magic Buttons Polka LOCATED ON THE STRIP GENEVA-ON-THE-LAKE RESORT ~Continued on Page 28 July 17 - 31, 2013 www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 19 Interview with Shinedown Front man Brent Smith Coming to Jacob’s Pavilion August 13th By Pete Roche COMING SOON TO MENTOR! Shinedown has accomplished more in twelve years than most bands will in a lifetime. Formed in 2001 by singer Brent Smith and drummer Barry Kerch, the Jacksonville band secured a coveted opening slot with Van Halen in 2004 that drew attention to their debut album Leave a Whisper. With 2005’s Us and Them and 2007’s The Sound of Madness the group notched another batch of Top 5 singles—including the inescapable smash “Second Chance.” Last year’s acclaimed Amaryllis saw the guys headlining the Rock Star Energy Drink Uproar Tour while “Bully” and “Enemies” scored frequent airplay on alternative and mainstream radio. When the seemingly tireless Shinedown aren’t on the road, the quartet can be found in the studio writing and recording with Smith and Kerch joined by guitarist Zach Myers and bassist Eric Bass. Most recently, the band surveyed Facebook fans for their all-time favorite songs by other artists and tracked a handful for an acoustic covers EP (and possible forthcoming full-length). Shinedown may have nothing left to prove, having already sold in excess of 6 million records, notched 17 singles, and become next to a household name—but they’re not resting on their laurels. Smith wouldn’t have it. Having developed a nasty predilection for pain pills on the road— and then sugary sweets and booze—the 35-year old vocalist is now on a fitness kick. He dropped 70 pounds, shunned alcohol, and regularly goads his band mates into working out with him backstage and in hotel rooms to the popular “Beachbody” Insanity DVDs. As a result, Smith looks and feels better than ever. He’ll need that extra stamina onstage this summer when Shinedown top-lines Monster Energy Drink’s Carnival of Madness Tour with Skillet, In This Moment, and We As Human. Alt-rock heavyweights, Sevendust, will also appear on several dates subbing for Papa Roach. The traveling circus pitches its tents at Jacobs Pavilion on August 13th. We caught up with Smith during a rare Shinedown respite and enjoyed a twenty-minute phone chat with the songwriter. He sounded humble, grateful, enthusiastic, and reinvigorated by his radical lifestyle change. Smith is—to cop one of his go-to phrases—a super-rad dude who is refreshingly dispossessed of the arrogance and entitlement so common among established rock star singers. He’s earned every ounce of success, takes nothing for granted, and knows Shinedown must keep plugging away to mark more creative and commercial milestones in the future. NORTH COAST VOICE: We’re looking forward to the Carnival tour. We caught you last year when Uproar swung by Blossom Music Center over the summer. What can fans expect from Shinedown on this year’s package event? BRENT SMITH: Well, for some kids this will be their first real rock show that they go to this summer. We want families to be aware that this is a very family-oriented show. It’s still dangerous, still wild, still a bit of what we call “controlled chaos.” But it’s supposed to be fun, man! It’s not supposed to be weird and evil and awkward and strange and all that kinda stuff! It’s more like this amazing…experience. That’s what it is this year, more than anything. As far as production is concerned on this tour, we’ve all worked together—the bands on this year’s Carnival tour. We’ve never done a full tour, so it’s a major thing for us all to come together and do the Carnival. We talked about doing double stages, and then triple stages—but we just didn’t want to have fifteen bands on the road. And we didn’t want to make it a long day for the public, either. We just wanted to put the crème of the crop on a main stage and focus on just those bands totally bringing their A-games. As far as Shinedown goes, it’s definitely the most massive production we’ve ever built as a band. And hopefully there’s going to be a bunch of collaborations on the tour, where a lot of us singers will be able to get onstage with each other and do songs with each other, and there might be a giant jam at the end of our set—which we’re trying to put together right now. So it’s just going to be a wild, wild experience, man! NCV: Shinedown has done all kinds of shows, from playing indoor sports arenas and midsize concert clubs to headlining massive outdoor festivals. Do you have a preference for the kind of forum you play in, and the size of your ideal audience? BS: It depends on the type of tour that we’re doing. I mean, when we’re doing large-scale production, dude, I’m the guy who wants to play in the desert and have everybody show up! 20 www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 July 17 - 31, 2013 You know? I always wanted to be bigger and better. The way I look at it is, we write songs because it’s cheaper than therapy. That’s what we do for a living. And we love it, and we’re very honest about it. We wouldn’t have written the songs if we didn’t want the whole world to hear them. So the bigger the venue, it’s always gonna make me smile. But when you’re doing intimate shows, yeah, that puts you on your game. When you’re in a smaller venue you’re definitely under more of a microscope. I had a lot of health issues in recent years, where I really let myself go—but I lost seventy pounds last year. I needed to get healthy again, and get focused again. So that’s what I did. I’m 35 years old now, and I feel better now than when I was 25. Somebody was talking about me the other day and said, “Brent’s not getting older. He’s just getting better.” And that’s so nice, but that’s the way I wanted to present myself. Be a better front man, a better singer and performer. It was just something that I needed to do. NCV: Shinedown songs have been used on TV and in movies, like Alice in Wonderland. More recently, Sylvester Stallone had you tailor-make a song—“Diamond Eyes”—for the first Expendables movie. What was that like? BS: Yeah, he gave us a call one afternoon and was like, “I want you to write me a song for this movie I’m doing, where it’s like, the ultimate action film of all time.” He was very specific, and actually very helpful with writing it because he knew exactly what kind of song he wanted, and told us the rhythm he wanted. That whole thing with “boom-lay” came from this poem [by Vachel Lindsay, 1912] called “The Congo” that he based the film off of to begin with, so that’s why you hear the phrase, “Boom lay, boom lay, boom!” in the song. But he was super-rad, and he took us into his studio in Beverly Hills when they were finishing the director’s cut for the film and put the song in. NCV: That makes Shinedown like, the Survivor of the 2010’s. It sounds like what happened to them with Sly and “Eye of the Tiger” back in ’82. BS: That’s it. And yeah, he’s very thorough; a total artist, very in tune with what he wants, quite a methodical guy, very tender, a very sweet guy, very soft-spoken, but in fantastic shape. I think he’s sixty-something now, and he looks awesome. When we met him I was just like, “This dude is freakin…wow.” It was one of the coolest experiences I’ve had in the entertainment industry, and he’s one of the most genuine guys you could ever meet. He’s a freakin’ rock star, man. Cool as hell. NCV: And now you’re on a health kick, too. How’d you drop so much weight so quickly, and how has it helped with your voice and your energy onstage? BS: A lot of it is just…you just drink a ton of water all the time. You try to eat as clean as you can, as healthy as you can, and try to stay away from sugar and sodium and sodas and alcohol and all that. I haven’t had a drop of alcohol since November 2011. When I stopped, everyone was like, “Oh! You had a problem!” Well sure, I always had a problem with drinking [laughs]! But the reason I quit was because there’s an ungodly amount of empty calories in alcohol, and there was no way I was gonna lose weight if I didn’t eliminate it. But yeah—you gotta make a decision, man. It’s like, “Do I want to kick ass on stage, or do I want to fall on my ass in life?” You have to make a conscious decision to get healthy. With my voice, it’s just like an athlete. You have to train and take care of yourself, and do it day-in and day-out. This is what I do for a living, so I have to be rehearsed. NCV: You guys recently recorded a bunch of “unplugged” cover songs. The picks are diverse, but all of them are tunes everybody knows. How’d that project come about? BS: That was our fans. We did a thing on Facebook where we said, any song you ever wanted [Shinedown guitarist] Zach [Myers] and Brent to cover acoustically, submit the song. Some six thousand songs were submitted, then it was narrowed down by percentage to 20, and then those 20 were pitted against each other for two weeks, and the fans got to pick the songs. We did Adell’s “Someone Like You,” Soul Asylum’s “Runaway Train,” “Nothing Else Matters” by Metallica, “In the Air Tonight” by Phil Collins, “Sitting on the Dock of the Bay” by Otis Redding. We did Kenny Wayne Shepherd’s “Blue on Black,” and Kenny was actually in town, so he came over and did it with us. NCV: At past Shinedown shows I’ve seen you did this neat little “benediction” type thing near the end, where you pause and address the crowd and sort of recognize that everyone there is together for that single moment in time. It’s kind of a neat gesture, and I wondered how that developed in your show. BS: I usually do it near the beginning, but yeah, I know what you’re talking about. I tell everybody, “Turn to your neighbor, I want to see you high-fiving everybody!” Honestly, man, it came from Kid Rock. I saw him do that once on a Storytellers show he did in Los Angeles, and he got it from all the preachers from back in the day, when he was getting versed in R&B and soul music. I’m influenced by that as well, and with preachers in the South, one of the first things they have you do is stand up and meet your neighbor. And there’s nothing quote-unquote “spiritual” about it per se, it’s just about, “Hey, we might not have known each other coming in, but we do now.” It’s about being together, and having that unity and that great vibe, and hanging out with your brother and your sister. Tickets at livenation.com www.shinedown.com www.carnivalofmadness.com HAPPY HOUR $).%). /.,9 $ MON.- FRI 10:30am-7pm $/-%34)#37%,,$2).+3 3 Cheeseburger & Fries! MONDAYS TUES. & THURS. 30¢ A WING 7.00 Buckets of Beer $ NEVER A COVER CHARGE $).%). /.,9 WEEKENDS FRI. JULY 19: THESE DAYS SAT. JULY 20: BACK 4 MORE FRI. JULY 26: T.B.S. FRI & SAT BANDS AT 9PM SAT. JULY 27: ELM STREET BLUES BAND ,AKESHORE"LVDs7ILLOUGHBY !TTHEINTERSECTIONOF,AKESHORE,OST.ATION2Ds July 17 - 31, 2013 www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 21 ROCKIN’ AND RIDIN’ FOR RECOVERY! By Trenda Jones Helping thousands of Lake and Geauga County residents since 1971. And now, bringing the community together for a motorcycle run, Lake-Geauga Recovery Centers has a great summer day in store! Sponsored by Western Reserve Harley Davidson of Mentor and Carlton Harley Davidson of Mantua, “Rock’n & Ridin’ 4 Recovery” takes place July 27, 2013. Registration begins 9:00am at Western Reserve and first bike out at 10:00. Cruise to Carlton and return to WRHD for music, food, vendors, Chinese auction and raffles. At the same time, reinforcing a positive, sober lifestyle! A full day of entertainment includes: DJ Trenda - 9am-1:30pm Streetwyze - 2-3pm Brickhouse Blues Band - 3:15-4pm Lake Geauga Recovery Centers; a non-profit organization providing a wide range of services to individuals and their families affected by alcohol and substance abuse or by mental illness. The agency provides hope as well as recovery through education and various programs. Services include FREE community education, Outpatient Services: assessments, individual and group counseling and dual diagnosis, and Residential Treatment Programs that offer a place to recover, heal and begin a new life! No one is refused services due to inability to pay. For detailed information and success stories, please visit www.lgrc.us/ Get help now by calling: (440) 255-0678 (Mentor) or (440) 285-9119 (Chardon) *emergency appointments are available* 22 www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 July 17 - 31, 2013 Outlaw: Waylon, Willie, Kris, and the Renegades of Nashville Author Michael Streissguth Review by Pete Roche Today’s country music scene wouldn’t be blossoming like junipers outside a freeway rest stop were it not for yesterday’s musical pioneers. Now available from Harper Collins, Outlaw: Waylon, Willie, Kris, and the Renegades of Nashville, surveys the colorful history of country’s biggest names and tells—often in exquisite detail—how these maverick men (and women) upset the recording industry’s status quo and became the stuff of legend. Michael Streissguth, professor at the Department of Communication and Film Studies at LeMoyne College in Syracuse and author of numerous books on Johnny Cash and his daughter, argues for the existence of a bona fide “outlaw movement” in Nashville—a cultural phenomenon characterized by rugged individualism on the part of struggling musicians who (circa 1965-1980) took to blazing their own trails in the business long before the labels began packaging their rebellion as a sales gimmick. Splicing stories of the arrivals and ascent of Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, and Kris Kristofferson out of Tennessee with narrative tangents on other insiders and hangers-on (musicians, producers, managers, lovers), Streissguth gives a better sense of who these godfathers-of-gutstrings were (and still are, in the cases of Nelson and Kristofferson) while providing a fairly comprehensive overview of the era in which they left their mark. Like a twopart of Dukes of Hazzard (whose theme Jennings performed), Outlaw is marinated in misadventure, generously seasoned by beer-soaked tales of payola, murder, and addiction, fried in the malaise gristle of a paranoid, post-Vietnam nation—and garnished by the parsley of the genre’s best music ever. Using the 1964 death of country crooner Jim Reeves as an entry point, Streissguth renders the literary equivalent of a Norman Rockwell painting of downtown Nashville in the wake of desegregation. Conservatism still ruled in schools and soda shops alike, but blacks—emboldened by Brown v. Board of Education—increasingly tested new social parameters, and whites were more willing to accommodate them. The country recoiled from JFK’s LOCAL DATES: assassination and braced for a controversial military incursion overseas. Spearheaded by those lads from Liverpool, the British Invasion rejuvenated America’s youth like an adrenaline shot to the heart. People were inspired; social activism and artistic expression (particularly in music) were July 18 & Aug 15 SBG Sportsterz Geneva 8pm encouraged. And nowhere was Nashville’s shifting zeitgeist more manifest than in the student body at nearby Vanderbilt University. Elvis Presley had demonstrated the primal power of turbocharged country music (it wasn’t referred to as rock and roll just yet)—but he’d been July 20 Lake Effectz Madison 9:30pm conscripted. With Reeves joining Hank Williams in the dead-too-soon club, popular country music was left in the hands of “safe” singers like Eddie Arnold and producers like Chet Atkins, who—despite his guitar prowess—had a reputation for pumping out innocuous, cookie cutter records for RCA. August 2 St. Mary’s Mentor Festival 8pm Rock enjoyed a healthy infancy. But the evolution of country music was stymied until the rise of the Man in Black—Johnny Cash—whose Folsom Prison concert and take-no-shit attitude started turning heads. Taped at Ryman Auditorium, Cash’s ABC television show became the single most important forum for breaking new artists (1969-1971), and it was here, with frequent guest spots, that ex-Airborne Ranger Kristofferson (who’d already Aug 23 & Sept 27 & 28 written songs for Cash and others) first won national attention. Jewels Dance Hall Austinburg 9pm Check website for regional dates at redneckincmusic.com Streissguth argues that Nashville had no place for a wordsmith like Kristofferson, a helicopter pilot-turned-bard who wielded a pen with the poeticism of William Blake. Only later would the honky-tonk styling of Hank Williams seep into Kristofferson’s heady relationship sonnets, inspiring Roger Miller and Ray Price but scaring off producers who were convinced Bob Dylan-like lyrics didn’t belong in country. Undeterred, Kris kept playing nightclubs and writing classics for other musicians until his appearances on Cash’s program forced record execs to rethink their approach. Kristofferson knew he was a good songwriter—but he wasn’t as confident about his singing and guitar playing, and could hardly believe it when a label offered him a contract as both writer and performer. Meanwhile, Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson played pubs and small-hall shows between thirdshift DJ stints. Nelson had already written classics like “Crazy” for Patsy Cline but was unable to parlay KELLYSJEWELSDANCEHALL such triumphs into record sales until he fled RCA for Atlantic—and returned home to Texas. Jennings was already a celebrated, pompadour-headed string-picker by the late fifties and famously gave J.P. Richardson his seat on the doomed flight that killed the “Big Bopper” (along with Buddy Holly and Ritchie Valens), but he felt constricted by Atkins’ soft touch at RCA and wanted to explore electric country music with his band, The Waylors. Following Cash’s footsteps, Jennings issued RCA an ultimatum: He’d record whatever he wanted where he wanted, with whatever musicians he wanted to use, or he’d jump ship. The label buckled, and within a few years RCA and other major companies had sold most of their studios to focus solely on the distribution and marketing aspects of the business. Jennings had set the trend, attracting up-and-coming Wednesday "The Most Fun You Can hopefuls to Nashville’s Music Row. The East / West Square neighborhoods blossomed in the late ‘60s Karaoke 8pm and early ‘70s like a southern adjunct to NYC’s Greenwich Village. The paradigm shift was too much Have with Your Boots On" for Atkins, whose cancer worsened almost immediately, prompting his retirement. Thursday Packed with outlaw anthems written by Billy Joe Shaver, Jennings’ 1973 long player Honky Tonk Line Dance Lessons with Heroes effectively ushered in the era of the gun-slinging guitarist. Nelson’s Red Headed Stranger (1975) Dee 7pm was another early classic, and the all-star compilation Wanted: The Outlaws! (1976) nudged both Waylon and Willie to the fore—along with Glaser and Jessi Colter—becoming country’s first-ever platinum album. “Waylon redefined country rock, [but] Willie’s remained the soul of country music,” the author writes. “He embodied the original pulse, the link to rural beginnings…bridged the gaps between those all-toofew golden moments when country music meshes the present with tradition.” The book’s second half picks up speed, with Nelson circling his wagons after a fire at his ,OOKINGFORGOODCOUNTRYBANDS farmhouse and Jennings staying awake for days on end, buoyed by alcohol and amphetamines. Steissguth transports us to the christening of the new Grand Ole Opry in ’74, where disgraced President Nixon played piano, and to cowboy haunts like Hillbilly Central—where bored musicians threw One of this Area’s Original Country Dance Halls knives for sport. We visit the Red Dog Saloon, the Exit / In, and the Burger Boy, where Waylon and Glaser pumped thousands of dollars into pinball machines—one quarter at a time. We meet eccentric entertainers like David Allen Coe (who lived out of a hearse and claimed others’ songs as his own) and Lee Emerson Bellamy, a womanizing crook shot dead by Sgt. Barry Sadler (“Ballad of the Green Berets”). The 288-page tome contains scattered black and white images and lengthy footnotes and bibliography (wherein Streissguth cites old Tennessean and Country News articles and interviews), and the number of names appearing in the index gives a better—if somewhat overwhelming—idea of the key (and peripheral) players involved in country’s most rambunctious movement. Live Music Every Fri. & Sat. 9-1 (OURS7ED4HURSMIDNIGHTs&RIs3AT 5QTT;\440-275-5332 July 17 - 31, 2013 www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 23 Fast, Reliable Turnover for Working Musicians If You Can Dream It, I Can Build It. Custom Designs Guitars Basses Acoustic Electric Mandolins Double Necks Harp Guitars Major Repairs “The Dreamcaster” Restorations Custom built Refinishing for Brian Henke Refretting Intonation Adjustments Acoustic Pickup Installs SUMMER SPECIAL $ 00 10 OFF ANY REPAIR With mention of this ad. Patrick Podpadec Luthier 440.474-2141 pat@liamguitars.com www.liamguitars.com 7ED*ULYsns$EERS,EAP7INERY 4HURS*ULYsn -AGIC4REEs"OARDMAN &RI*ULYsns"EACHCLUB'RILLE 3AT*ULYsn )NDIAN#REEK#AMPGROUNDs'ENEVA "UFFETT4RIBUTE#ONCERT 3UN*ULYsn (ARPERSFIELD&IRE$EPT -ON*ULYsn /LD&IREHOUSE7INERY 7ED*ULYsn $EBONNET6INEYARDS &RI*ULYsn /LD&IREHOUSE7INERY 3AT*ULYsns&ERRANTES7INERY 3AT*ULYsn 'OOD4IME)))#RUISE 3UN*ULYsn 4HE7INERYAT3PRING(ILL -ON*ULYsn /LD&IREHOUSE7INERY check out www.tomtoddmusic.com for more information & pictures 24 By Luthier Patrick Podpadec As I’m sitting down to write this article I can’t help looking outside every minute or so to appreciate the absolute beautiful day that it is outside. After about two weeks of rain everyday it’s finally just sunny and gorgeous without any humidity. It’s hard to be inside on the computer on days like this. Anyway, things have been going very good lately. The shop has been busy with many new projects and I have even been picking up some work outside of the shop too. The extra work is coming in handy because I’m getting ready to take my family (wife and son) over to the “Emerald Isle” for a vacation in late Aug. I am so looking forward to the trip. It will be my first venture overseas and I plan to go visit one of my favorite guitar builders named George Lowden. I have been admiring his lutherie skills for many years and it will be a pleasure to finally get a chance to meet him. Before jumping off to Ireland, I must tell you all about my upcoming event at The Madison Public Library. On Aug 10th I will be hosting a workshop about building guitars. It will be held from 1:00 to 3:00 or later if people want to stay later to ask more questions. I plan to bring a few of my “contraptions” that I have built and use over the years when I’m building different instruments. I am very glad that the Library staff is allowing me to showcase my work and to give me an opportunity to share my experience with the public. I can’t tell you enough about how the library has helped me throughout the years when researching and trying to read everything I could about building guitars. In the early days I would go to the library and get every book possible on the subject. Even though many of the books were not located at the Madison branch, they are affiliated with many other larger libraries across north east Ohio. I was able to find almost every book that has been published about lutherie. This gave me the opportunity to read all of them first before purchasing them. As with a lot of things, some reference materials aren’t worth spending an arm and a leg for. I was able to decide which ones were of good value and then I could purchase them after I read them for a couple of weeks. I now have quite a very good personal collection of reference materials that I have acquired over the years. Every year or so I check out new books that keep coming out on the market. Of course there is the internet now with YouTube and other data but I still enjoy the Madison Public library for all of its other activities that they host from time to time .They often have opportunities for small local businesses to showcase their services and are very supportive to members of our local community. I strongly recommend a nice visit to the library to enjoy all of the different events that they host, and please try to come to my workshop “A Day in the Shop of a Luthier” on Aug 10th . Recently I have been back to work on the “Harp guitar” that I started a few months back. Many times when a new or different project comes along I spend a lot of time “prepping” my next move in the building process. I believe that by going over the processes in my mind over and over many mistakes can be avoided before I actually start cutting up my very expensive wood. I don’t mind making an occasional mistake, but I like it a lot more when I don’t make one. If that can be avoided by repeating my procedures in my head or on paper time and time again, then so be it. To me it’s time well spent. Often by the time I do the thing that I have been worrying about doing for so long, it goes very well because I have “worried” out all of the problems from the process before I start it. Some people would say “That’s just an excuse to take your time.” Well that’s true! Good things take time. Remember that Rome was not built in a day and neither is one of my guitars. I have always been sort of a “Perfectionist” I’m not saying I think that I do perfect work, far from it, but I am constantly trying to improve my skills. I take great pride in the things I produce and hope that they last for generations to come. I feel that anything worth doing is worth doing well and so the extra time involved is really worth the extra effort. I do understand that there should be some sort of time frame attached to projects but I also believe that quality should take preference over a speedy delivery date. I also understand that time restraints are to be met in order to establish a reliable reputation, so it is this fine line that I walk. I have been very fortunate so far as to have very understanding clients. Another thing that I have trouble doing is saying “no” to some repairs that just eat away at my very limited time schedule. I have a soft spot in my heart for broken instruments. What can I say? I’m still always looking for a dedicated apprentice that is looking to learn a lifelong highly gratifying skill, so give me a call if you’re interested. Or come to the Madison Public Library on Sat Aug. 10th at 1:00. Hope to see you there, and until then please Stay in Tune! Thanks Again! Patrick from Liam Guitars/ Wood-n-Strings www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 July 17 - 31, 2013 By Lureena Hey Ho! It’s Westside Steve Simmons newest CD A Pirates Life Steve’s performing career began before he was old enough to drive; teen shows at the Eagles Hall in Carrollton, Ohio, garage gigs and dances in the ‘burbs which then led to nearly two decades as the front man for one of Ohio’s premier rock acts, the Easy Street Band, and another 25 years as a solo act favorite in the Midwest party capital, Put-In-Bay. 2013 marks Westside Steve’s 25th year as a solo performer and it also marks the release of Steve’s long awaited 3rd solo CD entitled A Pirate’s Life. This CD, like his previous two, Windward Crossing and Limestone Cowboy, are mainly compiled of Steve’s original music augmented by a few traditional tunes and some of his favorite songs of the Great Lakes. Guests that lent their talents to accompany Steve on A Pirate’s Life are: Brigid’s Cross virtuoso, Paul Baker, on fiddle for Scarborough Fair and Battle of Lake Erie. The lovely and talented, Sarah Wilfong, for the violin on Abilene. Lullabye features Tim Longfellow on piano and Maestro Mark Alan Schulz on cello. Renowned West Coast jazz guitarist Dan Goodman played the solo on Northern Lights and provided the audio mastering for this CD. Susan “Dumpling” Ebert sang harmony on Scarborough Fair and the Long Black Veil. The first title track “A Pirate’s Life” is fun, danceable, catchy and reminiscent of the sea shanty “Drunken Sailor”. Steve says “I wrote A Pirate’s Life last season when I found myself playing from bar to bar at Put in Bay after my usual venue was sold and changed directions.” The second track (Maryanne) and thirteenth (Lullabye) are love songs that slow the pace to pensive or even forlorn but they show another side of Steve’s talent and fit a mood that nearly everyone experiences from time to time (especially sitting alone with pint of whiskey and growler of beer). One of my favorite songs on the disc is number four, “Northern Lights”, written while Steve was in Canada. The Latin rhythm that makes it so fun is from the opposite direction but it works. An instrumental of this would also be inspiring. What would a CD titled A Pirate’s Life be without a couple of Celtic tracks? Steve’s Irish adaptation of an old English tune, Scarborough Faire, brings it full tilt from earlier versions. Thumbs up! Now I can actually like the song. Track ten, Cimarron, has the feel of a country two step, up-tempo and enjoyable. Steve says, “I had a lot of fun writing Cimarron; it was just one of those catchy little melodies that got stuck in my head and forced me to write it. I’m still not positive if Cimarron is a girl, an elf or a magpie.” I guess that statement tells you that it’s totally open for interpretation. Steve’s bluesy arrangement of the cover, “House of the Rising Sun”, brings it back to life with a diverse depth which fans of the song should really appreciate. The twelfth song can’t go without mention – “The Battle of Lake Erie 2013” is a song written by Steve three years ago about what went on at Put in Bay as the war of 1812 wrapped up. Brigid’s Cross’, Paul Baker, teamed up with the bearded Irishman to do an upbeat new recording in a different key for the bicentennial of that battle which is this year. As a summary; the disc doesn’t carry a load of Celtic and “blow me down, mate” type songs as the title would suggest. It has ballads of love and ships, a splash of Irish and Cha Cha, just enough fun to keep one from drowning in a bottle of Rye, and new twists on old favorites. Whatever genre of music you enjoy, the outstanding musicianship and mix of styles in these thirteen tracks will impress and entertain. A Pirate’s Life is available on all major digital download and retail sites as well as at westsidesteve.com and at his shows. If you’re an east sider don’t miss Steve’s next show at Old Firehouse Winery in Geneva on the Lake on Sunday, July 21st. Enjoy an awesome view of Lake Erie, roomy patio, and Westside Steve all in one place! July 17 - 31, 2013 Whooz Playin’ 7ED*ULs0Geneva Lodges&IRST#LASS4RIO &RI*ULs0Rounder'sIN-ENTORs&IRST#LASS4RIO 3AT*ULs!Geneva Lodges&IRST#LASS4RIO &RI*ULs0Deer's Leap Winerys&IRST#LASS4RIO 3AT*ULs0Laurello Winerys&IRST#LASS4RIO To Book: 440-796-3057 WWW.WHOOZPLAYIN.COM www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 25 By Westside Steve Simmons The Lone Ranger Westside Steve Sunday, June 21 Old Firehouse Winery 8:30 PM Geneva on the Lake Thursday, June 25 2OSES2UN##s0July 26 thru 31 4HE+EYSs0UTIN"AY !FTERNOONS %VENINGS Go to Facebook Westside Steve Simmons for up to the minute changes! www.westsidesteve.com 306 LOUNGE Home of the Hoover 2 HAPPY HOURS! 7:30-10:30am & 4-6:30pm Daily Specials /PEN$AYSsAMAM Full Kitchen Menu "REAKFAST3ERVEDAM 7377 Lakeshore Blvd. Mentor 440.257.3557 26 Disney Bruckheimer PG13 149 min So the first thing to be noticed is that the film starts out in the 1930s with a little kid in a Lone Ranger outfit strolling through the Wild West exhibit at a carnival. He comes upon a statue of the Native American apparently in his natural habitat. As it turns out this noble savage is a living breathing man, just very very old. It turns out that he is the legendary Tonto and he proceeds to tell the young fellow the story of how he and his famous partner started out. I couldn’t help but notice the obvious rip from Dustin Hoffman’s LITTLE BIG MAN but... The story itself turns out to be an adventure comedy told in flashback with plenty of action, actually more than plenty of action, and just enough plot to satisfactorily fill a 90 minute film. Unfortunately when we hit the 90 minute mark there’s still an hour left to go. A particularly evil (and cannibalistic) bad guy namely Burch Cavendish is being transferred via locomotive for sentencing. A whole bunch of other bad guys show up to wreck the train and rescue the SOB. A posse of Texas Rangers sets out to capture these desperados but are ambushed and killed. Along with one of the rangers is the clean cut brother, a bookish legal type of lawman who is actually left for dead. Tonto comes across the carnage and rescues the survivor thanks to the aid of a white “spirit horse” soon to be named, well, you know. Since the bad guys think all the rangers are dead he figures it’s a good idea for the remaining brother to wear a mask. At this point the film moves through periods of dull introspection and loud frenetic action. The good guys and bad guys are separated along politically correct lines, the bad guys are the US Army and the railroad corporate executives and the twisted desperados in their employ. This film reminds me a bit of a line from a folk song “one split pea in a 10 pound tub”. It’s really not a bad story but it’s awfully watered down. That seems to be a trademark of Gore Verbinski who is apparently Johnny Depp’s go to director. In a way, given the pacing and the tone, THE LONE RANGER reminded me a bit of the second PIRATES OF THE CARRIBEAN but with no great performance. Still I did not dislike this film by any means even if it dragged noticeably in spots. And honestly at the final scene when they cue the music it’s hard not to want to www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 cheer. Not quite a comedy or a thriller; and all in all it falls well short of expectations, hence the beating it took at the box office. Might still be the curse of Clayton Moore. C+ July 17 - 31, 2013 Despicable Me 2 Universal PG 98 min Hi folks. Well first the good news. If you were a big fan, like hundreds of thousands of others of the original DESPICABLE ME you will have a wonderful time watching DESPI- CABLE ME 2. Now for the bad news. Hey wait... Gee I guess there really isn’t any bad news. Well wait, I went to the 3D showing and it cost me 28 bucks for two tickets which works out to roughly 5 pints of quality beer but that’s not bad news for you. Anyway, it’s no easy task to come up with much of a review since there isn’t a lot that’s groundbreaking here. I will repeat, however, that Illumination Entertainment, the creative team behind this series, is heavyweight contender to the Disney championship belt. Not that there have been any knockout blows struck against mouse central and Pixar but these guys have actually landed a glove on the champ. This animated escapade is about as good as they get. Oh the plot isn’t particularly groundbreaking, many of the elements of the original have been warmed up and served in a casserole but this time replacing the bonding sequences with the children we have bonding sequences with a love interest, special agent Lucy (Kristen Wiig). In the last film Gru (Steve Carell) saw the error of his evil ways and is now a productive member of society working hard too perfect his own line of jams and jellies. The effort isn’t going very well and our hero is a bit frustrated. All of a sudden at anti evil organization recruits him to help get July 17 - 31, 2013 to the bottom of yet another sinister plan to rule the world. He is reluctantly teamed up with Lucy, a female agent and finds himself fighting an odd attraction. I’m not a huge fan of Carell but I must admit that the chemistry between Gru and Lucy shines through the animation and their repartee is clean and crisp. Not only that but he carries off the accent without a slip. And all of those little yellow minions we have come to know and love are just as mischievous and entertaining as ever. Other personal twists in this action feature involve young love between one of his daughters and a handsome young man as well as parting of the ways with his old sidekick Dr Nefario (Russell Brand) who is bored with the straight life. There’s plenty of silliness and fun for all ages and a nonstop pace that guarantees you won’t be bored. B+ WSS www.westsidesteve.com www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 27 ~Continued from Page 19 Think It’s Going to Rain Today” glistens with Night’s vocals, strident drums, thumping bass, and an elegant, uplifting hook wherein the chanteuse exchanges “broken windows and empty hallways” for an “overflowing” of human kindness. Siberian snow song “Troika” shimmers with the acoustic stringed instruments of Ukrainian folk. Boasting a shuffling bass, incidental percussion, flamenco flourishes, and morecomplex-than-they-sound guitar solos, the tune evokes images of Russian Cossacks dancing on tables in noisy beer halls. Ballad “The Last Leaf” finds Candice marking the passage of the seasons to Ritchie’s poignant nylon-string leads. The “tree in an open field” is an allegory for the human condition, of course, with each shivering leaf thereon a symbol of mortality, fragile and fleeting in the winds of time. The group rumbas through a reworking of Ken Hesley’s “Lady in Black,” with Night adorning the Uriah Heep tale of witches of war with plaintive pennywhistle. The music quickens as the sorceress abandons our heroine, the tone darkening as Blackmore introduces distorted electric guitar chords over punctuating, castanet-like handclaps. Another cover, “Temple of the King,” has Ritchie dipping into his Rainbow catalog on a song whose reimagining pays homage to departed singer Ronnie James Dio, who sang the original 1976 version. Buzzing slide guitar and tasty trills swirl over a clickety-clack rhythm, the bass undulating persistently. Night reengages Lady Luna on title track “Dancer and the Moon,” beguiling listeners with a lead vocal that swoops over Blackmore’s slick guitar riff and kick-drum stomp. It’s no secret Ritchie’s songbird has an affinity for the moon—having named several albums and songs for the satellite—but now Candice uses the glowing orb as the backdrop for a ritualistic gypsy courtship set to “the heartbeat of the night.” Fiddle, whistle, electric guitar, and a choir of Hey! Hey! Hey! Until the break of day! compels the dancer through her kinetic seduction, despite—or perhaps for the benefit of—her spectator’s “hungry eyes.” The whispering wind and meandering streams speak secret languages to Night in “The Ashgrove,” reminding her lovelorn maiden of a childhood spent frolicking “down yonder green valley” and meeting her dear one. “The Spinner’s Tale” is a melancholy lament whose subdued strumming and palm-muting picking mimic the weaving of “the fabric of time.” Attention Club Owners ... Performing FAMILY FUED at Cleats in Chardon, Fri. Feb. 22, 9-Midnight! Come & see how much fun ... Call for Details! TRY OUR EXCITING GAME SHOW! TRIVIA GAME/FAMILY FEUD SHOW Our complete game show system and professional game show host is guaranteed to get everyone involved in the fun! We do ALL the work while you enjoy a full house that will stay longer and come back more often. Attention Bar Owners: Get ahead of your competition today! Special pricing for Bars & Clubs. Great for Bar Nights, Private Parties, Graduation, Class or Family Reunions BOOK NOW & GET 10% OFF WITH COUPON. CODE NCV MUST BE GIVEN AT TIME OF BOOKING We’re not just... ALL KARAOKE Night pines for an ocean-bound sailor on the wistful shanty “Somewhere Over the Sea (The Moon Is Shining),” her vocal building, ebbing, and cresting like the waves that carry her partner further away. Keyboards well in the background, then Blackmore weighs in with another killer-tone electric guitar solo that caps the nautical ballad. The next track, “The Moon Is Shining (Somewhere Over the Sea)” is—as its inverted title implies—another take on the same song, only here Blackmore and the band take a rock and roll approach, imbuing the single with all the hallmarks of classic Rainbow (and a hypnotic dance beat). Composed while taking shelter from a New York blizzard, the instrumental coda “Carry On, Jon” is Blackmore’s salute to Deep Purple organist Jon Lord. The sprawling, majestic, baroque-meets-blues finale pits Ritchie’s crunching lead guitar against (producer) Pat Regan’s swirling synthesizer in a climactic duel that’ll leave classic rock fans salivating for more. The album also includes a pair of lovely classic guitar / mandolin instrumentals that showcase Blackmore’s fret board virtuosity. Aficionados fond of Steve Howe’s “Mood for a Day” and Steve Hackett’s “Horizons” will appreciate “Minstrels in the Hall” and “The Galliard”—the former for its Segovia-like flurry of string-raking and pull-offs, the latter for Ritchie’s graceful excursions beneath the dramatic, French horn-laden orchestration. There’s never been a more perfect soundtrack for traversing a moat, kicking in a castle door, and announcing “We’ve come to view the tapestries!” www.blackmoresnight.com www.candicenight.com ABOUT %15)0-%.4s3!,%3s3%26)#%s2%.4!,3 DJ & KARAOKE SERVICE FOR YOUR SPECIAL EVENT! 440-944-5994 www.All-About-Karaoke.com 28 www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 July 17 - 31, 2013 ~Continued from Page 15 CALLING ALL FILMMAKERS! THE 38th CLEVELAND INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL CALL FOR ENTRIES IS NOW OPEN. The CIFF has grown to attract more than 93,000 people annually, with over 340 feature length and short subject films that represent approximately 60 countries. Don’t miss out on this opportunity to showcase your work at one of the leading Film Festivals in the world and to be eligible for nearly $60,000 in cash prizes. The 38th CIFF will take place March 19 – March 30, 2014 at Tower City Cinemas. For additional information on the Cleveland International Film Festival, please visit www.clevelandfilm.org. HOUSE OF BLUES® CONCERT ANNOUNCEMENTS India Arie Wednesday, November 20 * doors at 7:00 PM Tickets: $29 - In Advance * 4-Packs: $87 On Sale: Friday, July 19 @ 10 AM World renowned award winning singer/ songwriter India Arie came onto the national music scene in 2001with her Motown Records debut Acoustic Soul. She followed up in 2002 with her sophomore release Voyage to India and then in 2006 released her third album, the more personally expressive Testimony: vol.1, Life & Relationship. Testimony vol. 2, Love and Politics, her fourth studio album, released in 2009. All four releases received critical acclaim and made India a highly respected and noted artist in a very short amount of time. She has sold an impressive 10 million albums worldwide and has received numerous awards and nominations including a staggering 21 Grammy nominations, 4 Grammy Awards, 3 NAACP Image awards, as well as awards from BET, Billboard, MTV, VH1, Vogue Fashion, Essence Magazine and others. India. Arie’s acclaimed fifth studio album SongVersation (Soulbird/ Motown Records) which released June 25th, received rave reviews and marks her fifth #1 on the Billboard R&B Album Chart and fifth top 10 debut on the Billboard Top 200 Chart. Artists Website: www.soulbird.com HOB 20th Anniversary Presents: Blue October – The Sway Tour Thursday, September 19 Tickets: $28.50 In Advance * 4-Packs: $84 On Sale: Friday, June 28 @ 10 AM Blue October, the San Marcos, TX-based band known for shimmering rock songs and haunting lyrics on albums such as 2009’s Billboard Top 15 debut, Approaching Normal, 2011’s Billboard Top Ten debut Any Man In America and the Platinum-selling Foiled, makes a triumphant return with Sway the band’s first album in two years. With lush, atmospheric songs such as “Bleed Out,” “Angels In Everything” and “Fear,” and the edgy rocker “Put It In,” the Texas four-piece comes back strongwith a revitalized energy and a positive outlook. As singer Justin Furstenfeld puts it: “This album is about why life is so beautiful. It’s about facing fears and recognizing miracles every day. It’s about enjoying yourself and realizing that life is not something you can half-ass.” Artists Website: www.blueoctober.com Pepper Tuesday, October 1 Tickets: $18 In Advance On Sale: Friday, June 28 @ 10 AM Pepper’s music is a melodic and accessible blend of alternative pop/rock, punk, and reggae. Pepper, who formed in 1997 and moved to the mainland from their hometown of Kailua Kona, Hawaii in 1999, pressed pause after the release of their fifth album, Pink Crustaceans and Good Vibrations, in 2008. There was a sense of fatigue and disunity amongst the three musicians, who took some time off from music both apart and together before rejoining to create an EP, Stiches, in late 2010. The songs on that release re-energized the group, revealing an urgent desire to make a new album that reflected where they are in their lives and career now. After some tour dates in support of the EP, Pepper sat down and focused on their sixth album, a self-titled released that swings open the door on this new chapter. Pepper has toured extensively with groups like 311, Slightly Stoopid, Flogging Molly and Sublime With Rome, and spent several summers on Warped Tour – and this live sensibility shows. You can almost feel the sand in your toes and the sun on your back as the album progresses, the musician’s amiable personalities palpable beneath the island rhythms and mellow tones. The band’s music – both live and on their releases – is really about enjoying life and being grateful for each experience, a sensibility that’s very familiar to the three musicians currently in their career. Artists Website: www.pepperlive.com July 17 - 31, 2013 www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 29 Quite Odd Indeed! I got involved in some really odd deep conversations with some local humans about all sorts of odd things like the theory of evolution, gravity, god, quantum physics and really smart blind people! One guy, we’ll call Sparky, was trying to convince the rest of us that gravity really isn’t pulling us down, it’s pushing us down! Umm… ok… who cares we’re still going down! Hehheh-heh! But then I thought about it for about 0.0000987 seconds and realized that if that was true then I sure am glad I live on this side of the earth because the people on the other side would be falling off the planet! AAAAHHHH!!! Then there was another guy, we’ll call Crass, a crotchety old bastard that was getting kind of offended by the response he was getting when talking about god! Well ya know… not everybody is going to be so intense about a being that claims to love you but will set you on fire and watch you burn for eternity if you don’t do what he says! I find that quite odd and I’m not kidding! Then another guy, we’ll call Numbers, was telling us how he worked with a really smart blind lady that could do calculus in brail, which of course set my deep cavernous mind into overdrive! heh heh heh! As I was listening to his story about how smart she was, I couldn’t help but to wonder how does he know if she is really blind or not? I mean, there are fakers out there that pretend to be blind, and I’ve run into them before! So I came up with a blind test which would immediately expose the blind fakers! Ok, here’s the thing, blind people are supposed to have heightened senses of smell, hearing and touch because… well they’re blind! And to catch a faker you have to take advantage of these ‘Spidey Senses’! The blind test is quite simple really, when they’re talking to you start making really weird faces at them, sticking your tongue out, and contorting your face! I learned this technique from watching a master ‘Weird Facial Blind Tester’ in action! I got it from Jim Carey’s movie ‘Pet Detective’ when he’d do the weird facial thing behind someone’s back, my favorite parts in the movie! This should stop any normal blind faker from being able to continue talking! They still could be faking it if they’ve been exposed to the ‘Weird Facial Blind Test’ before and have mastered the technique of… ‘Weird Facial Blind Test Blocking’, you’ll need to take an extra step to be sure your blind sympathies are not being wasted on some ‘Un-blind’ person! Just continue with the ‘Weird Facial Blind Test’ but move in really close within inches of their face while performing it! A real blind person should be able to detect this maneuver with their ‘Spidey Senses’ and stop talking to make sense of their space being invaded within a few seconds, whereas a blind faker will move back instantly! I call this technique the ‘Weird Facial Blind Test Closer Upper’! You may want to practice this technique with someone like your wife or girlfriend before administering it in a real blind test! I don’t mean to make fun of blind people, I’d hire a blind person in a heartbeat, but I wouldn’t sit them in a cubicle and give them some stupid job, I’d put them on a tow motor just to see how heightened those spidey senses were! Hmm… guess I am odd… quite odd indeed! ~Snarp www.snarpfarkle.com ~ Rick Ray 30 www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 July 17 - 31, 2013 July 17 - 31, 2013 www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 31 32 www.northcoastvoice.com • (440) 415-0999 July 17 - 31, 2013