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Tuesday Quartet

Wow!  Another amazing night playing with my friends.   Tyrone Jackson on keyboard, Kevin Smith on bass, and Marlon Patton on drums. Tonight we tried a new tune of mine (twice). Here's the audio: Here's a few photos of the very hip backdrop: davidfreemanmusic.net

The Loft

Yacht Rock played a gig last night at The Loft on West Peachtree (part of the Center Stage/Vinyl complex).  I'd never played there before (I played a sad little solo sax gig out front years ago), so I was excited to see the inside.  The Loft, it turns out, is a big concrete bunker--not a great room at all.  It makes me wonder why the front of house added so much reverb on everything when we were basically playing in a cave. The gig was for Have a Heart Foundation .  While we were setting up, a few speakers told their stories to the audience.  It was pretty incredible stuff.  While I was plugging stuff in, a woman told of how her son died in the hospital and gave away his organs (and he helped something like thirty people because of it).  The next lady got up and said that she was walking around with THAT GUY'S HEART!  Wow.  Amazing! The sound on stage was not very good.  I don't know if it was because of all the concrete or the fact...

Thursday

Last night was extra exciting for me--it was my big debut playing Lonely Boy with the A band.  Up til now I've only played it (twice) with the B band at Wild Wing Cafes way outside of the perimeter.  Since Nick was not there (Kevin Spencer subbing), we were able to add it to the set list.  It went really well, if I do say so myself!  The spot in the breakdown where'd I'd messed up last weekend came and went without a hitch (as we approached that part of the song, I was suddenly very aware of how much I was sweating!).  No problems, though.  I was pumped.  It was fun.   On saxophone, I had one of those "do no wrong" kind of nights.  My solo on Biggest Part of Me  was definitely one of the five best attempts I'd ever had at that song.  Everything I played sounded right and logical, and I had no technical hang ups.  I felt like I could have gone on another five minutes and still played meaningful stuff.  It was very cool....

Monday

Monday night I played with the Schooner on a gig for Sam Adams, brewer/patriot.  These gigs are super easy for me, because my only responsibility is to show up and play saxophone.  The Schooner guys pack all the sax songs into the first set, so I usually show and blow, and I'm home before the gig's over! Once again, I played very well with these guys backing me up.  I could hear really well, and I just went for it on every song.  It was really fun.  The band sounded really good.  Shannon Pengelly in particular played some really rippin' stuff, especially on the second solo on Peg.   Yeah, man! After my set, I stayed because they had free Sam Adams.  I drank at least a six pack.  I was very entertaining. davidfreemanmusic.net

Saturday and Sunday

I found this clip of us playing  Careless Whisper  at the Reagan Rock prom . Saturday night I played with the Yacht Rock Schooner (our b band), covering the second keyboard part as well as the sax/flute duties.  Also subbing in were Mark Bencuya and Greg Lee.  I asked Greg if it was difficult to sing without playing bass at the same time--I remember Sting saying that some songs are very difficult to perform if he is used to playing at the same time.  He said no--it was difficult to sing songs he's never sung before! Since it was the Schooner, we got to play Lonely Boy , which as you might know is one of my personal favorites.  It's a fun song to play, and I like the fact that I get to be an essential part of the band on that one. The usual mode of operations is for Bencuya to handle the most essential keyboard part;  I am am much better suited to string parts and things of that sort which cannot derail the band when I suffer the inevitable d...

Yacht Rock plays pool

Yacht Rock played a post-rehearsal dinner party at a place in Buckhead called The Pool Hall .  A pretty grungy place it was--no door to the men's room--you just walk around the corner and there's a urinal.  Nice!  The back room had four pool tables (only three functioning last night).  It's the kind of place where trash is dropped on the floor and picked up at the end of the night. The stage was approximately thirty feet wide, but only about eight feet deep, so we set up shoulder to shoulder.  I assume Mark Bencuya played the gig, though I never saw him when we were on stage.  Actually, the set up was not bad.  I could hear everything ok.  I'm not sure how it sounded to someone walking the length of the stage.  You probably got a good shot of whomever you were standing near. We played the same set list that we'd played the previous night.  Not much saxophone--I think I played sax on two songs in the first set and one in the second. ...

Thursday

Last night was the usual 10 High gig for Yacht Rock.  All in all, not a bad gig!  The crowd wasn't interested in what we were doing, and I think that kind of wore on us after a while. We went through some of our Reagan Rock stuff again.  Still got it! davidfreemanmusic.net