Wednesday, July 15, 2015

Northeast Tour

We put the band back together for a trip to the Northeast last weekend, with dates in New York, Washington DC, and Connecticut.  It was a great trip and some great gigs!

Thursday:  the four of us pictured flew from Atlanta to New York (JFK).  Pete flew in from Indianapolis, Mark Cobb flew in from Nantucket, Nick was already in New York visiting his sister, and Kip and Zach had driven the van and trailer up to meet us.  Ugh!  JFK!


We ate at a restaurant in JFK that had iPads at every table for ordering.  You could also surf the web.  It seems like it would be convenient, but it turned out to be pretty annoying (you can't ask questions or make substitutions easily).  Plus...the food was pretty crappy.  Also, the internet kept crashing.  Plus, JFK sucks.


Our first gig of the run was in Great Neck, NY.  After the van rescued us from JFK, we drove out to Long Island with time to spare.





The original plan was to play outside with the marina in the background--perfect for us--but the forecast had rain as a significant possibility, so they moved us inside to the high school auditorium.  Pretty nice room!  Built in 1926.  Beautiful.


Right out of the trailer, I notice that my keyboard stand had a broken weld, rendering it unfixable.  I did my best to get through the gig with a mile of gaff tape.


Notable alumni of this high school:  Francis Ford Coppola, Kenneth Cole, and Andy Kaufman.


Light attendance.  It got a little better, but the rain certainly didn't help.  I guess we were lucky that the room was very dark and we could barely see anybody in the seats.  It reminded me of those scenes in The Last Waltz where The Band is performing on a sound stage with no audience.




Our green room.


This gig was a good warm up to the rest of the weekend--it'd been several weeks since the seven of us shared the stage.

Friday:  a long day of driving from Long Island to Washington DC for the evening's gig at The Hamilton (one of our favorite venues).

We've had good luck in the past with stopping for food as soon as we hit Delaware, and this find was no exception.  Tex-Mex and Cajun food.  Yes!  I had a bowl of gumbo and then shrimp étouffée.



The Hamilton is a wonderful room!  The crew is great, the room sounds good, the room looks good, the audience is always fantastic, the food is great...all good. Plus, this run had Zach and Kip on sound, so no problems at all on that end.  Our crew is awesome.

The gig sold out right around the time that we hit Washington D.C., and we were informed after the show that our gig had set the record for food and drink sales.  I guess that means we'll definitely be back!

My keyboard stand made it through one more gig without giving way.  I started thinking about this kid during the show:




However, at the end of the night, the wireless transmitter on my tenor went on strike, so to speak.  When I picked up the horn to play Born to Run, it said it had dead batteries (red light).  I grabbed the batteries from my alto pack--still dead it said.  I grabbed from my spare batteries in the back of my rack--still dead.  What the hell?  So I played through my vocal mic (and Kip was on it immediately).  After the gig, still dead, still dead, still dead, and then ten minutes later, it magically came back on (green light).  No logical explanation.  Maybe the White House blocked my signal or something.

Saturday:  another big drive back to New York--this time for the evening's gig in Manhattan.  We made it early enough to park (found a spot next to Gramercy Park) and go eat.

Photo shoot next to the van.  Nice shoes.  Both of you.


Instead of eating, Kip, Zach, and I went to Guitar Center for a keyboard stand (Kip bought some cheap adapters while we were there).  They didn't have the keyboard stand I wanted--they had the same crappy one I've had--twice--and both have eventually died.  I wasn't really excited about a third one, but it was all that was available.

After ten minutes of waiting, the dude still hadn't brought it out, so I walked out of the store.  We still had an hour before load in, so I decided to hoof it twenty blocks north to Sam Ash to try my luck there.  They DID have the keyboard stand I wanted (hah!  Suck it Guitar Center!).  The only tricky part was carrying the giant box back.  After some quick iPhone research, I figured out that if I could get a couple of avenues over, I could grab the N,Q,R at 33rd and 6th and ride the subway back down to Union Square, saving myself twenty blocks unnecessary pain.


We set up, sound checked...no problems.  The stage at Irving Plaza seems like it should be bigger.  I guess because it will hold more people (1,100, as opposed to our other usual spot--Gramercy Theatre--which holds 650), I think the stage would reflect that, but they're about the same.  It's not too tight, but I'd be disappointed if it were any smaller.  We had just over 650 in attendance--full without being packed.


It also has a small band bathroom.  You can brush your teeth while sitting down, though.


Anyway, the gig was electric!  New York is always a great crowd.  My new keyboard stand worked great, my wireless packs worked great, my in ears sounded great...great gig.  I wanted to high five everybody in the room.


And New York liked us back.  This was on the driver's side window when we came out to the van.



We spent the night in White Plains, just north of the city.

Sunday:  a short drive awaited us, so we went out to lunch before the gig.  Coming out of a gas station, the trailer took a hit.  Oops.


So...off to Connecticut to the Ridgefield Playhouse.  Another beautiful room.


We've never played a public gig in Connecticut, so the crowd was small in numbers, but they got into it.  There were a few handfuls of people who did know who we were, and you could see their captain's hats dancing in the seats.

When we got back to the White Plains, we noticed that the trailer tire was smoking.  Uh oh.  The hub had come off one of the axles and the bearings burned.  Not good!



Kip and Zach had the unfortunate task of dealing with that.  They made it back to Atlanta by Tuesday night.

Monday:  We flew home on a small, bouncy jet.  Clowns to the left of me...


Jokers to the right.


Our next gig is this coming Saturday, July 18, at the Carrolton Amphitheater ("The Amp at Adamson Square").  http://www.pleaserock.com/shows/yacht-rock-revue-12  FREE SHOW!!!!

Thursday, July 2, 2015

Hawaii

The Yacht Rock gig in Hawaii was pretty incredible.  Basically, we traded a five day vacation for an hour of music (split between two gigs!), plus we met Kenny Loggins!

I brought my family along for this one, our first vacation in several years.

Thursday:  First time on a 747.  Very cool.  It's a nine hour flight, during which I watched Guardians of the Galaxy, Unbroken, and Silver Linings Playbook.  I tried to watch Birdman, but I couldn't get into it.


The view from our hotel room at the Prince Waikiki Hotel, looking out over the marina.


The first day (afternoon) was spent acclimating ourselves to Hawaii (the time change kind of squashed us).  We walked a bit down the Waikiki Beach, ate, and went to bed pretty early--it was unavoidable.

Friday:  Beach day #1!


We had lunch at a place called the Goofy Cafe, down the main drag from our hotel.  They specialize in local organic food, and serve breakfast all day.  Here's my french toast with pineapple, bananas, and papaya, which I washed down with a pineapple and banana smoothie.


After lunch, we walked down the main drag past lots of high end stores and restaurants.  At the other end of Waikiki from our hotel, we found these incredible trees growing on the edge of the beach.


We ate dinner near our hotel and checked out the Hilton's koi fish.


Friday night at sunset, there were fireworks over the beach.  I have no idea what we were celebrating, but it looked beautiful.


Saturday:  A short beach day.  We went to a state park to the west of the marina.


The Island Hoppers/Magnum P.I. helicopters would occasionally fly by on tours.


Sing along!



After lunch, it was time to go to work.  Our gig in Hawaii was short and sweet, backing up Mickey Thomas and Steve Augeri, opening for Kenny Loggins.  As I was heading to soundcheck, I got a text from our sound engineer/tour manager Kip.


I hadn't brought any saxophones (I hadn't brought anything other than my compact flash card for one of my keyboards, in fact), so I couldn't do it.  Kip even tried to find a saxophone for rental, but none were available.  Based on the set list, it probably would've been on Your Momma Don't Dance.

Kenny Loggins' soundcheck.  The way they progressed through their check left us with the impression that they don't play together very often.

We got to hang out with him for a few minutes before we took the stage.  It was surreal.


Our turn to soundcheck.  We played at the Hawaii Convention Center--a pretty big room.  I think there were five or six thousand people in there.  The slap of sound from the back wall was almost a full second of delay.


The gig was intense, mostly because we'd never met Mickey Thomas, and though we'd rehearsed his four songs (all Starship songs:  We Built This City, Jane, Nothing's Gonna Stop Us, and Sara), we hadn't played them in over a week.  It took an immense amount of active concentration--wish we could've been more relaxed!  Mickey seemed really cool about everything and sang great.

Our show was ruined for me when I failed to transpose my keyboard down a half step for Nothing's Gonna Stop Us and played three or four horrible notes in the wrong key.  I was pretty miserable after that.

The Steve Augeri/Journey stuff was easy for me as there was barely any second keyboard in the chosen songs (Any Way You Want It, Separate Ways, Faithfully, and Don't Stop Believin').  I mostly just sang background vocals.

When I came off stage, Kenny Loggins told me I was awesome, though, which made me hate myself a little bit less.  His show was pretty cool to see.

After the show, he even posed for a quick picture with my wife.


Sunday:  Pearl Harbor day.  We took an all day tour that included the U.S.S. Arizona, the U.S.S. Missouri, the Pacific Aviation Museum, and the U.S.S. Bowfin.  Well worth it.


Kenny Loggins was also on the Arizona part of the tour.  He recognized me and gave me the nod.  Very cool.





A Japanese Zero at the aviation museum.


Aft torpedo tubes on the Bowfin.


Monday:  We rented a jeep and checked out a little bit of the eastern and northern parts of Oahu.



Scenic vistas.


Incredible beaches.


Fantastic drives through the mountains.



After lunch, we'd planned to find a good beach for boogie boarding on the north shore, but the only place we found with any waves also had lots of rocks.  The pieces of the plane were no longer there (same beach!)



On our way back to the hotel, we stopped at the Dole Plantation.  Fields and fields of pineapples.


 More koi fish.


...and, of course, lots of pineapples.


The other part of our Hawaii gig was a fifteen minute disco medley (Carwash, I Will Survive, You Should Be Dancing, Disco Inferno, and YMCA), accompanying a group of dancers.  We had rehearsal Monday afternoon.  It went well, and I buried a little bit of my shame about the Starship disaster.

Tuesday:  The medley was quick and painless.  I also liked the fact that the gig ended and I got  to stand up and walk away--no gear to pack up.  That has never happened to me before.


For our final hours in Hawaii, we went back to the beach for some paddle boarding.


We began the long flight home at 4 PM Tuesday.


Sunset over the Pacific.


Crossing the California coast in the middle of the night.  This is San Fransisco or San Jose, I think.


I watched 12 Years a Slave and the movie about Roger Ebert titled Life Itself.

We landed in Atlanta at 6:30 AM.  Hello jet lag.