Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Alice Cooper “No More Mr. Nice Guy” Tour -Live at the Calvin Theatre in Northampton on Thursday, August 25th • 8:00 PM – Tickets on sale THIS Friday, April 29th.

 Without Alice Cooper, there might never have been the New York Dolls, KISS, Marilyn Manson, Nine Inch Nails, Motley Crue, Slipknot or Rob Zombie ... maybe not even David Bowie, or at least not Ziggy Stardust. It's been a long and illustrious career which began in 1969 with the release of Pretties for You on Frank Zappa's Straight label. The iconic hard rocker, who literally invented the concept of the rock concert as theater, returns to what he does best on the No More Mr. Nice Guy Tour performing songs from throughout the years with a full stage show bound to horrify and delight.

Tickets for Alice Cooper at the Calvin Theatre in Northampton on Thursday, August 25th at 8:00 PM are  on sale THIS Friday, April 29th at Northampton Box Office, 413-586-8686 and online at IHEG.com.

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Electro-duo Uh Huh Her to play Pearl Street Ballroom on Mother's Day, Sunday, May 8th capping Pride Weekend in Northampton

Uh Huh Her had a lot. They produced a hit album. They toured. They were living the music industry dream. And then they were dropped from their label.

Uh Huh Her was back at square one, but it's not over until the pop duo sings ... again.
Named after a PJ Harvey album of the same title, Uh Huh Her is comprised of band members Camila Grey and Leisha Hailey. The duo will bring its rock-infused electronic pop music to Pearl Street Ballroom on Mother's Day, Sunday May 8th at 8PM in anticipation of their latest, self-funded album release, "Nocturnes." Guest openers are Diamonds Under Fire. 

"We put all the passion and all the s--- we'd been going through into this record," Grey said. "It's definitely something we're really proud of because we put our hearts and souls into it and we did it on our own."

Released last month, the band's newest EP, "Black and Blue," was tailored specifically for this tour, Grey said.

"We did (the EP) all on our own. It was written, produced and then created in a week and a half. It was a last-minute thing that we wanted to do," Grey said. "We wanted to do something a little more up-tempo, a little more dance-driven for the tour."

The band plans to play "Black and Blue" in its entirety, as well as songs from "Nocturnes" and its first album, "Common Reaction."

"Nocturnes" is slated to be released sometime this summer, Grey said.
"We spent the better half of a year writing and recording and making it," Grey said. "We know the fans have been waiting quite a while."

Their first full album without the financial backing of a record label, "Nocturnes" is a very personal project, Grey said.

"Because we took so much time with it, ‘Nocturnes' is very organic, with live drums and live trumpets," Grey said. "It's very lush, thought-out stuff."

Because there has been such a gap between albums, fans of the band are looking forward to hearing the group's new sound.

"They make subdued but very melodic music, and that appeals to me," said Neilsa Dutken, a third-year in accounting and finance who is attending the show. "I'm looking forward to hearing the changes they make with their next album."

With ethereal vocals and driving beats, Uh Huh Her's music sets it apart from similar groups, said Erica McInnis, a third-year in sociology and sexuality studies planning to attend the concert.

"I think their sound is quite different from other girl groups that I listen to," McInnis said. "They have this electropop sound that's fun and sexy."

Aside from her involvement in Uh Huh Her, Hailey also starred on the television show "The L Word," and some of the band's fans are also familiar with her acting work, Grey said.

"When I was younger, I had listened to Hailey's band The Murmurs, but I became particularly interested in her music after her involvement with ‘The L Word,'" Dutken said.
While she appreciates their fans and is happy that people are eager to go to their concerts, Grey said she wants people to come for the music, not just to see the television actress.

"I play music. It's always what I've done," Grey said. "I hope that if people come (because they're fans of "The L Word") that they leave a fan of the music and of the band."  (Grace Ellis)

Diamonds Under Fire is the musical heart of singer/songwriter Vanessa Silberman. Taking major influences from 90's alternative groups, Diamonds Under Fire leads the way from where the few female fronted rock groups left off. Her surefire performance is akin to the confidence & spirit of Chrissie Hynde, the rawness of PJ Harvey, the bare bones rock 'n roll of Nirvana and the pop production sensibilities of Pink.

Tickets for Uh Huh Her plus Diamonds Under Fire on Sunday, May 8thth at 8PM in the Pearl Street Ballroom, Northampton are $15  at Northampton Box Office, 413-586-8686 and online at IHEG.com

Paula Poundstone brings 30 years of experience to Northampton’s Calvin Theatre on Saturday, May 14th at 8PM

Comedian Paula Poundstone can almost guarantee that her show at the Calvin Theatre on Saturday, May 14th will be physically safe.

"My high kicks aren't that high, and I don't do many. Plus, almost no one rushes the stage," she said.

With the matter of audience safety squared away, Poundstone goes on to explain just what her audience can expect: conversational humor and a spontaneous show. With 30 years experience as a stand-up comedian, Poundstone has plenty of material to pull from and performs without a set plan. In addition to touring as a stand-up comedian, Poundstone is also a frequent panelist on the NPR radio news quiz show "Wait, Wait … Don't Tell Me" which airs locally on WFCR/WNNZ. 

When Poundstone hits the stage, she's excited to talk to people and make them laugh. She said she works hard on developing new jokes, but sometimes finds she can't remember them after jotting them down.

"I've got a thousand pieces of paper with little cryptic notes –‘Small shampoos,' ‘I Can't Believe It's Not Butter,' ‘2009 driving manual,'" she said. "I glance at some of those notes just before I go on, hoping to be full of stuff to say. It often works, but sometimes I just spend the whole night thinking to myself, ‘What the hell does small shampoos mean?'"

Poundstone's favorite part of the performance is when she's able to interact with the audience. She'll ask someone where they are from and what they do for a living, and she enjoys getting to know them as well as a sense of the town she's performing in.

"In this way, little biographies of people in the crowd often emerge, or little details about the area, and I follow those little tributaries," she said. "I asked a woman what she did for a living once, and she told me she did squirrel rescue. It changed my life. Of course, on the other hand, people often tell me that they design computer software or, worse yet, sell computer software. That does something no human being on earth can understand."

Despite some of the hardships of constant traveling, Poundstone has found that getting on stage and making people laugh is worth it.

"I am exhausted most of the time. I do much of my sleeping on airplanes, with my head akimbo and my mouth open for all of the world to see," she said. "If I weren't exhausted, I'd have the good sense to be more embarrassed."

Still, Poundstone knows being tired isn't a characteristic unique to the comedian profession.

"The truth is, however, I was exhausted when I waited tables at the IHOP too, but I also had syrup all over me, and truckers staring at the crotch of my pantyhose that was always down around my knees," Poundstone said. "I have the greatest job in the world. I feel a little embarrassed even calling it a job in front of others. I get to stand on stage and say stuff to make people laugh. Who invented this? It's fantastic.” (Kelly Ardis/Oregon Daily Emerald)

Tickets for Paula Poundstone at the Calvin Theatre in Northampton on Saturday, May 14th 8PM are $35 and $25 at Northampton Box Office, 413-586-8686 and online at IHEG.com

 

Monday, April 25, 2011

UK satirist Neil Innes of Monty Python, Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band, Rutles brings Short Stories and Tall Songs to the Iron Horse, Wed. 5/11 at 7PM

What some people say:

A wry, poignant, humorous and topical one-man show, spiced with anecdotes of Neil’s life and times in the worlds of media and show business.  Neil Innes is best known for his collaborative work with Monty Python, the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band and the Rutles while his TV shows for BBC 2, 'The Innes Book of Records' have become cult classics. Neil’s solo shows tickle the emotions with a potent mix of fine musicianship and enlightened lyricism, packed with sharp observations celebrating the absurdities of modern existence.

What Neil says:

“Flawless sincerity, powerful drama, award-winning comedy and a sweet ukelele marmalade, flesh out an entirely honest but otherwise unpretentious musical bouquet, with a robust hint of vanilla and a lingering aftertaste of red currants. Good with children and animals.”

“If I could describe what it is I do on stage in a sentence or two, or even a cleverly constructed paragraph, then there would be absolutely no need for me to go on stage and do it.”
 
Tickets for Neil Innes on Wednesday, May 11th 7PM at the Iron Horse in Northampton are $17.50 at Northampton Box Office, 413-586-8686 and online at IHEG.com

Dweezil Zappa Plays Zappa celebrates the music of Frank Zappa on Saturday, August 6th at the Calvin Theatre in Northampton

Led by his eldest son on guitar, Dweezil Zappa Plays Zappa is devoted to performing the music of the late American composer and musician Frank Zappa.

Dweezil Zappa perfectly channels and captures the overwhelmingly oddball yet intricate musical prowess of his dad’s prodigious pop.  Leading a seven-top, always-grinning band of the highest caliber, Dweezil brings the muse’s musical tomfoolery to life, delivering a recital of the master musician’s biggest hits and rarities.

The band’s grab bag is vast, with more than 80 studio and live releases recorded before Frank Zappa’s death from prostate cancer in 1993 at age 52. For the last five years, the band has meticulously studied master tapes and offered selections played as true to form as possible. 

Dweezil Zappa Plays Zappa provides a chance for another generation to know the most exploratory musical innovator of his time.
At press time, the band features Scheila Gonzalez. Billy Hulting, Pete Griffin, Jamie Kime, Ben Thomas, Joe Travers, and Chris Norton.

Tickets for Dweezil Zappa Plays Zappa “Accept No Substitutes” on Saturday, August 6th at 8PM at the Calvin Theatre in Northampton are available at Northampton Box Office, 413-586-8686 and online at IHEG.com

Thursday, April 21, 2011

IHEG's Breakout! Emerging Artist Series focuses on concerts by exciting new acts on their way up.


The concept is nothing new.  Some musical artists are well known and popular and, depending on where they are in their career trajectory, they pack the Iron Horse, Pearl Street, Calvin Theatre, and Mountain Park with loyal fans.  We all have our favorite stories of seeing future greats at the Iron Horse playing to half-full houses.  The Breakout! Emerging Artist Series is simply our way of flagging shows we book by new artists that we think have that certain spark even if they aren’t yet household names; bands or solo artists or ensembles with artistic authenticity that we dig, regardless of genre, and think you will too.

The first two Breakout! shows we’ll tell you about happen the same night just across town from each other and are timed so you can catch both shows if you have the hunger. 

Nicole Atkins, Marc Pinansky -Friday, April 29th 7PM at the Iron Horse Music Hall

 Lots of things have changed from Nicole Atkins' debut, Neptune City. She was named one of the best acts at South By Southwest 2011 by SPIN Magazine. She has a new band, a new label and a new sound on Mondo Amore. Described with adjectives like "fierce," her sophomore LP is filled with dark songs (relatively speaking). Epic is a description so overused as to be leeched of meaning. So it’s not damning Nicole Atkins with faint praise to say that she's got an epic sensibility – and a voice to go with it. The title of her sophomore release implies that ambition, which comes wrapped up in tightly arranged 3- and 4-minute songs rich in instrumental texture and big-beat dynamics. This Jersey girl knows how to rock, but she's also got a lingering romance with classic 1960s pop. You know, the kind of condensed symphonic wallop and surging emotional force that made Phil Spector the Tycoon of Teen, amped up Bruce Springsteen's signature anthems, and gives this album its big, unbeatable heart. And she’s even better live, where her sheer presence in the room adds a level of awe and power to the music. Marc Pinansky of Boston’s well-respected band Township opens the show.

Yuck, NYC UFOs, Big Nils - Friday, April 29th 9PM in the Pearl Street Clubroom


Songs like "Automatic" and "Daughter" have brought much-deserved attention on UK band Yuck, marking them as a group with a penchant for beautiful, minimalist tracks. Those impressive works, and their performances opening for Modest Mouse and Pains of Being Pure at Heart brought them to the attention of the folks at Fat Possum, who signed the band. Lately they’ve been touring with Aussie psych pop outfit Tame Impala.  Yuck doesn't worry much about first impressions: Short of calling a band "We're Terrible," it's hard to imagine a name riper for dismissal. On stage, though, this is a remarkably assured young riser. Standing out for reasons far greater than just drummer Jonny Rogoff's heroically gigantic Afro, Yuck captures the frayed noise and hooky, guitar-driven melodies of '90s rock, even though its members, at 20, are too young to have experienced it firsthand.  Two of the area’s best local bands open; Big Nils and NYC UFOs.
 

Tickets are available at Northampton Box Office, 413-586-8686 and online at IHEG.com

Celebrate Cinco de Mayo with the joyful Mexo-Americana of David Wax Museum Thursday, May 5th at 7PM at the Iron Horse

Boston’s much-celebrated David Wax Museum is a  joyful Mexo-Americana fusion, with virtuosic musical skill and virtuous harmonies.  One of “Ten Acts That Rocked South By Southwest” they are poised to break out big time. The David Wax Museum sound was influenced by founder David Wax’s time in Mexico where he integrated their unique sound: a blend of folk, rock, Americana and Mexican folk music.  
This past year has seen the band’s profile take a meteoric rise with industry attention resulting from successful showcases at South By Southwest music conference and appearances on NPR’s World Café and on-line Tiny Desk Concert series (the latter invitation following a frenetic and fun set at last year’s Newport Folk Festival).  A busy year of over 200 live shows was capped off by a win at the Boston Music Awards for Americana Artist of the Year. The David Wax Museum is currently on tour in the United Kingdom and Europe in support of its recently released album, Everything Is Saved.

Get tickets for David Wax Museum on Thursday, May 5th at 7PM at the Iron Horse at Northampton Box Office, 413-586-8686 and online at IHEG.com

"Deadliest Catch" TV show to hold interactive show in Northampton on Thursday, June 16th at the Calvin Theatre


Three stars of the Discovery Channel's "Deadliest Catch" TV show are set to take stage at the Calvin Theatre for an evening billed as a total interactive event. Captain Sig and the Hillstrand Brothers will be appearing on Thursday, June 16th at 8pm.

In this, live, interactive event at the Calvin Theatre, the Bering Sea's so called toughest crew swap stories as they take the audience through some of the roughest situations the captain and crew have ever had to face on the high seas. From the treacherous weather and crew conflicts, to the triumphs of the team, Captain Sig and Johnathan and Andy Hillstrand bring the intimate world of crab fishing to a live audience. Radio personalities and fishing buddies Bob Kester from Springfield's Rock 102 and Pat Kelly of Lazer 99.3, will serve as co-MC's.

"Deadliest Catch" was released to the public in 2005 and is now one of the most popular shows in Discovery Channel history. According to a press release from promoters of the show: For the first time, fans across the country have a chance to hear the stories behind the show, view never before seen video, and partake in a question and answer session with members of the cast of "Deadliest Catch." New episodes of "Deadliest Catch" can be seen on Tuesday nights this Spring/Summer. For more information on the Captains, the tour, and much more, check out www.thecaptainstour.com.

Tickets are available at Northampton Box Office, 76 Main Street, 413-586-8686 and online at IHEG.com. A limited number of VIP tickets include a post-show meet and greet.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Heather Maloney celebrates release of new album “Time & Pocket Change” with her band on Sunday, May 1st at the Iron Horse


Heather Maloney’s 2011 release “Time & Pocket Change” is an album rich with quirks and passion. Rooted in indie-pop, the album is a play between the coffeehouse intimacy of folk and the dramatic narrative of opera.  Unfettered vocals and guitar lines move through daring arrangements and enforce her "stop-you-dead" lyrics. (Rochester City News) 

Since her head-first dive into the indie music world in November of 2009,  Heather has co-written with Grammy-nominated composer Hui Cox (Richie Havens, Baba Olatunji, Liza Minelli), played more than 200 shows, and shared the stage with many celebrated acts like Meg Hutchinson, The David Wax Museum, Guy Davis, Caravan of Thieves, Carsie Blanton, Mike & Ruthy, Jill Sobule, and The Stone Coyotes. 

Heather’s critically acclaimed debut album “Cozy Razor's Edge,” filled with “poetic and powerful” lyrics that “penetrate the core of humanity,” continues to be celebrated in the press, on the radio and in independent film. Its title track was voted by WRSI The River’s listeners as one of the best songs of 2009. 

Her new trio features drummer Patrick Murphy  aka Murph (Dinosaur Jr, The Lemonheads) and superb Western Mass. guitarist Joseph Boyle.
  

Heather Maloney with special guest Sandy Bailey plays the Iron Horse on Sunday, May 1st at 7PM. Tickets are available at Northampton Box Office, 76 Main Street, by phone at 413-586-8686,  and online at IHEG.com. Also at the door night of show starting at 5:30.
 
"I have not been this excited about a new act in a very long time." TMax | Noise Magazine | Boston
 
Time & Pocket Change is embellished with sonic flourishes and textures...at the heart of the album is Maloney's voice - a supple, expressive instrument..." Greenfield Recorder
 
 "Stunning folk-rock... emotional lyrics and tender moans tucked in tight with brisk musicianship." Worcester Magazine 

"Her songs are personal. Her passion is contagious. Her lyrics go beyond surface level and penetrate the core of humanity that we all try so hard to embrace, yet at the same time, ignore." Times of Trenton | NJ

 "Sharp, poignant lyrics housed in clever acoustic compositions, accented by Maloneys melodious, 'operatic' tendencies, are really what separates her music from straight ahead, folky pop tunes. You have to hear it to fully understand." Portsmouth Herald | NH

The Glitch Mob play Pearl Street on July 24th but May 10th is the deadline for their T-Shirt design contest


The Glitch Mob is excited to announce a new contest as they move full speed into their upcoming summer tour! Artist Joyce Su, did a killer job designing the tour poster. But we know there is a wealth of untapped creativity out there. So we’re opening things up and inviting you to design The Glitch Mob Summer Tour 2011 t-shirt!

As with the “Remix It Like You Stole It” contest, you’re free to use as little or as much of the original material as you wish. From classic tour tee vibes to abstract angular artistry, we welcome all styles, but only one design can triumph. Get started by downloading our logo source art HERE.

Our favorite submissions will be showcased on our Facebook page, where you will decide which design is immortalized on cotton - 1 Mobster, 1 vote. The chosen tee will be available for purchase on our website and at all of our Summer Tour shows (see dates HERE).

The winner will receive a one-off signed and framed lithograph of your artwork, a collection of every piece of available The Glitch Mob merchandise, and VIP tickets for you and three friends the next time The Glitch Mob is in your town (festival shows excluded). A portion of proceeds from sales of the t-shirt will be donated to our partners Music For Relief.

Submissions must be emailed to competitions@theglitchmob.com by Noon (PST) on Tuesday, May 10. Download competition terms and conditions HERE.

We can’t wait to see what you guys come up with. Be creative! Let's make some beautiful art. And best of luck... bring it!


Tickets for The Glitch Mob plus Phantogram amd Com Truise at Pearl Street at 9PM on Sunday, July 24th are available at 413-586-8686 and online at IHEG.com. 

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Inés Arrubla presents Son Flamenco 2011- Contemporary Flamenco, Latin, Jazz, and original Flamenco choreography at the Iron Horse Friday, May 6th at 7PM


Inés Arrubla, internationally acclaimed Flamenco dancer and choreographer, once again transforms the Iron Horse for SON FLAMENCO 2011. Born of the turbulent cross-currents of many cultures and traditions, SON FLAMENCO fuses contemporary Flamenco with Latin, Jazz music, and original Flamenco choreography. 

An Amherst resident since 1998, Arrubla has performed and choreographed in Europe and the United States for the last twenty years, garnering great acclaim both at theaters and festivals and with audiences and the press. 
 For SON FLAMENCO 2011, Arrubla has brought together Grammy winner and UMass Director of Afro-American Music and Jazz Studies Program Jeff Holmes (trumpet, piano); famed gypsy flamenco guitarist Chuscales (flamenco guitar); José Cortés (vocal), a charismatic singer who has toured throughout the world with leading Flamenco dancers and companies; Jo Sallins (bass, piano) acclaimed musician and Valley resident, who is also composer, clinician, and a passionate educator. Very talented local young percussionist Simon Moushabeck and dancer Libby Styles will appear as guests.

Tickets for Son Flamenco on Friday, May 6th at 7PM at the Iron Horse in Northampton are available at  the Northampton Box Office, 413-586-8686 and at IHEG.com 

Ben Demerath: The 194 Main Street Secret. An artist profile by Kevin Moore in anticipation of this Friday's 4 Toads in a Basket show at the Iron Horse in Northampton


This Friday, April 22nd at 7PM the Iron Horse presents 4 Toads in a Basket. "The Toads" are four valley favorites joining forces in an acoustic and amphibious super-group that claim to croak well together, warts and all. They are Dave Chalfant-guitars, bass, vocals,  Ben Demerath-guitar, mandolin, bass, vocals,  Tracy Grammer-guitar, violin, percussion, vocals, and Jim Henry-guitars, bass, vocal. 

Kevin Moore, a journalism student at UMass-Amherst, wrote a feature profile piece on Ben Demerath for one of his classes and we present it here, for the first time anywhere (not counting when he turned it into the professor.)

The Musical Warden

Nestled in the shadow of Mount Tom is a typical New England boarding school with arrogant and sarcastic prepsters whose lives are restricted to the confines of the scenic campus. For many of them life in dorms seams like prison, and in each prison there is a warden on the premises… a faculty member who is entrusted to look over the fifty plus students. Night in and night out this faculty member endures behind the back comments that only know-it-all teenagers could dish out. What the students at the Williston Northampton School in the all freshman 194 Main Street Dorm don’t know is that their dorm parent happens to be a rock star.

“I’m just the guy they roll their eyes at when I give them a unit ya know, or tell them to tuck their shirt in the dining hall” said “that dorm parent”.

That dorm parent is Ben Demerath. The students and faculty know that Mr. Demerath is a musician where he has been teaching music at the boarding school since 2001 when he left Bement School. What his students don’t know is how good he really is.

Demerath has been a critically acclaimed Folk singer/songwriter since the early ‘90s. In that time as a professional musician he has released two solo albums, and toured with some of the best folk and bluegrass musicians of all time.

“I knew that I also wanted to teach and that’s when I go the job at Bement, because Bement needed a hockey coach. I said if you let me teach music I’ll coach your hockey team and that’s how I got into teaching.”

Watching Ben Demerath teach is like being in the presence of a music encyclopedia. Think of a musician or song in any music genre from classical to hip-hop and chances are the passionate, animated teacher has heard them, and if he hasn’t it is only a matter of time before he learns about them.

“It has made me a much stronger musician, “ said Demerath, “but also it I think it’s been so good for me to have my eyes open to stuff that I normally wouldn’t hear. I am not in a vacuum here in this job in terms of the music I am exposed to. The stuff that I hear that students bring me to listen to is so great.”

Teaching has not only showed him new artists and types of music, but it has also made him a better musician and songwriter.

“I think it’s really good for me as a musician. Its very humbling, but I also think at the same time it really is good fuel for your fire as an artist ‘cause your teaching stuff and as your going through the process of teaching music to people I think its also in turn inspiring you.”
 
Riding the Oboe

Playing the oboe is a lot like being the lefty specialist in the bullpen for the Boston Red Sox. Seldom are you the star but you are always needed, and it is a skill that can take you to some great things. For Ben Demerath that led him to Northwestern University in Chicago.

“I played oboe and sang all the way through high school. I was an oboe major in college, it was the oboe that basically got me into college.”

Before Demerath evolved into musician of popular music he was trained classically. It seemed like he was destined to be a concert musician, shredding the music of the likes of Mozart and Vivaldi on his oboe.

“My freshman year I’m out in Chicago studying with one of the best oboists in the world, the principal oboist of the Chicago symphony. And playing it 6 hours a day, and making oboe reeds, that was my grade my freshman year of college, but it was the first class that we took was ethnomusicology.”

Ethnomusicology is as Mr. Demerath puts it is a “social science being applied to the study of music” and looks at music’s role in culture. That class would change the path of the young Demerath and lead him into developing into the musician he is today.

“That became my thing. I knew right away ok, I like too many different kinds of music to just play obo and classical music all the time. So I picked up a guitar and I started to teach myself the guitar. I switched my major to ethnomusicology. I did not want to be a performance major any more.”

Playing in a Traveling Band
Playing in a Traveling Band.Yeah!
Well, I'm flying 'cross the land, try'ing to get a hand,
Playing in a Traveling Band. 
– Playing in a Traveling Band by CCR

Ben Demerath is a New Englander through and through. He grew up locally in Amherst, attending Amherst Regional High School and his father was a professor at UMass-Amherst, while his mother taught special at Marks Meadow Elementary School in Amherst.

Demerath credits his parents as why he got into music, “Is it my dad bringing home a Credence Clearwater Revival album? Or The Beatles Abbey Road and me playing it on my toy record player while I’m scratching it listening to it? Or is it me listening to all the stuff in the car on the radio?”

That first CCR record to hit Demerath’s ear waves more than likely included their hit “Playing in a Traveling Band”, a song that would foreshadow what it was like for Mr. Demerath in his first year as a professional musician.

His junior year at Northwestern Demerath was a self-taught guitarist in the band Scotia Nova, and then later a spin off band called Artistic Feet. But upon graduation Demerath made his way west.

“I was in San Francisco the year after I graduated, and I really got into writing songs out there. But I didn’t think I would be a musician. I still thought I was just sort of gonna see where I would fit in” said Demerath. “Maybe I was gonna work in a recording studio, or be an engineer. I didn’t know what I wanted to do, but I ended up getting into song writing.”

In 1992 Mr. Demerath was introduced to a banjo player by the name of Tony Furtado, a two-time winner of the National Bluegrass Banjo competition. At Furtado’s second album release the seed was planted for Demerath’s budding career as a popular musician. Furtado asked Demerath to be on his release tour. One of the songs Ben had to sing was “I Will” by the Beatles in the same key that Alison Krauss had sung on the album.

“We’re talking like ball busting way up there high. I don’t think I’ve recovered from singing that high, I’m still scarred from it,” said Demerath.

On that tour, a first for Demerath he met mandolinist Matt Flinner and bassist Sally Truet. Along with Furtado the wheels began to spin in forming what would end up being one of the premier bluegrass bands of the early ‘90s, SugarBeat. Within two days of forming the band SugarBeat had won the Telluride Festival band contest.

“This is a huge festival I had no idea what this meant until I got there. I look back on it and I think God I’m so lucky I got to do that, and it sort of took off from there. We decided to make an album and we booked a tour ourselves that winter. That basically took us all around the west,” said Mr. Demerath.

The tour took them to college towns across the U.S. and Canada, and their album came together in a whirlwind comparable to how the band was formed. SugarBeat was playing a festival in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania sometime in June 1994 when they  “went to the Pittsburgh Airport, rented a Ford Aerostar and drove to San Francisco in 36 hours. Recorded this album in one week” said Demerath.

“So we made this great album, which has yet to be on ITunes. It has been totally out of print but we are gonna get it out there” said Demerath. “We were like the cool hot “newgrass” band.”

Despite Demerath’s newfound success with SugarBeat, which lasted until 1996, he did not feel like a true bluegrass musician. Even after he delved into listening to bluegrass legends Bill Monroe and Ralph Stanley.

“For me the whole time I’m thinking, God I’m just a singer who knows how to play the guitar. I don’t know how to play bluegrass for real. What the hell do I know about bluegrass? I’ve just been thrown into this. It was really cool to get to do all that stuff. And people were really helpful.”

With SugarBeat, Demerath was on the road eight months out of the year for three years. “The sacrifices that people make and the choices that people have to make in order to do that… it’s really amazing what people give up,” said Demerath. Despite the great successes he was having with SugarBeat Mr. Demerath’s heart was always back home.

“I wanted to return to New England, and as luck would have it that sort of where the best coffee house scene was. Cause with all that driving… “Oh its just 12 hours from Salt Lake City to San Francisco”, where as here if I need to go to Boston I’m there in an hour and a half.”

Return to the Valley
“I was chomping at the bit to have a viable folk career where I could play coffee houses and festivals. So I came back to New England and started working on a solo album here.” – Ben Demerath

In 2000 Demerath released his second solo album “Jack of Fools”.  This album is Demerath’s greatest musical production. His melodic tenor voice reminds you of everyone and no one. You could spend an entire day making comparisons that somehow just do not fit. 

His songs have the chill feel of Jack Johnson, the soulful rasp of Jakob Dylan, but with the twang of the current country scene. You wonder how this album did not catapult him to success outside of the folk/bluegrass niche?

If you go back to the year 2000 you realize the music scene was radically different than it is now. Country was not a pop crossover, and the mellow singer/songwriters like the Jack Johnson’s of the world were not having mainstream success. You get the sense that if “Jack of Fools” was released now that it would have some sort of chart success.

“I still just love that album, I’m still really proud of it. Just like the other stuff it was really fun to do. Any time you get to make an album in the studio and come up with these cool arrangements, and have people come in and play on it and sing on it and you have these guests that are amazing. God your so lucky to do that,” said Demerath.

Demerath’s solo album got him on the road again however, this time it was less crazy and more intimate, “I drove all over the country once again. But this time it was fun because it’s you and your wife and your driving to a festival, seeing old friends, and playing at festivals, and stuff like that. It was great.”

The Day the World Changed

It is possible September 11th 2001 was the day Mr. Demerath’s budding solo career halted. He was introducing himself to his new school, Williston with a performance of the Traffic tune “Empty Pages”, at the weekly Tuesday morning assembly when planes were flown into the World Trade Center in New York City.

Demerath explain how after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, “People didn’t want to go see live music, its tough to get people to go out and buy it anymore, and I felt really lucky that I was in a situation to have a new band that asked me to front it.”

That band was the bluegrass band Northern Lights who got their start in the mid 1970s. Their longtime singer Taylor Armerding had left the band, and Ben was able to step in and fill the void; allowing him to get away from the craziness of getting your name out their as a solo artist.

“I was able to come in and try to do something different. It was foolish to try to do what he did,” said Demerath.

During his 6-year run with Northern Lights which ended in 2008 and he was apart of 2 albums with the band, New Moon in 2005 and One Day in 2008. Both albums are extremely catchy and rock like only bluegrass can. Shortly after Demerath’s departure from the band the 30 plus year run of the band ended on March 13th 2010.

The Best They Say
Soon I’ll have my age
Of siliver not of grey
I hear it’s good the best they say
Will I still be strong
To let all come on
Please don’t let me feel it’s wrong
-          “Age” by Ben Demerath

It has been a decade since “Jack of Fools” was released. The hectic schedule of teaching, raising his four children with his wife Mary, and getting his masters degree has, “really taken a bit out of my song writing,” as he puts it.

“But I think there’s hope there. My kids are getting a little older, I’m almost done with my masters,” said Demerath.

Currently Demerath is in what people in the area are calling a super group, although he scoffs at that notion. Instead he sees the band as a really fun project where him and band members Jim Henry, Tracy Grammer, and Dave Chalfant play “anything anyone wants to play.”

The “supergroup” is called Four Toads in a Basket, and Demerath and Chalfant are writing together which as Demerath puts it, “this is why I’m excited about songwriting.” Four Toads in a Basket plans on playing gigs in the near future at the Iron Horse Music Hall in Northampton, Mass. as well as some festivals and in Boston. Demerath has hope that something will be recorded down the road.

With things seemingly settling down Demerath has been thinking about releasing a 3rd solo album, and even Demerath himself cannot put a label on his style.

“I don’t know, it will probably be more of the same of me just allowing myself to not hold back from doing a tune because its too out there or too weird. Ya know, I think it will probably be a fun mix of stuff that’s built around acoustic instrument. But it has bass and drums and electric guitar, and good sort of rootsy sound to it. I’m always gonna be into roots music, and that acoustic sort of organic sound, I like that. “

If this next solo album materializes through the hustle and bustle of life and his new band it could be Demerath’s best project yet, a project that could make a dent in the ITunes of the students who learn from the passionate musician. Imagine an older, more well rounded Demerath who has come of age because he can incorporate all he has learned in the last ten years of teaching.

“I’m just really lucky to be in a community like this where I’m just one of many that are here to learn while teaching or learn while being a student,” said Demerath.

“That’s the other thing about teaching, it’s really good for you as an artist to think of you, yourself as a learner and being hungry to learn other things. Jesus, I had to learn had to play tenor saxophone last month. We didn’t have a tenor sax player and I had to sit down and learn the fingerings and practice, and play tenor sax in the concert band, while I was conducting [laughs],” said Demerath. “If that isn’t good for you I don’t know what… its gonna build…I don’t know if its gonna build character but its good for your musicianship to have to do that.“

If and when Demerath releases a third solo album chances are you will hear a sound that is all his own. Just like “Jack of Fools” it will remind you of everyone and no one, and when the time comes the word will spread around the 194 Main Street Dorm like wildfire. His students will finally understand the talents of their dorm parent, not to mention unknowingly make a prophet out of the Ben Demerath of 2000 who penned “Age”. The students will ask each other “Did you hear Mr. D’s new album?” and the reply will always be, “No, I haven’t yet, but I hear it’s good the best they say.”  -Kevin Moore

Ben's trip to Ghana, a blog.

Tickets for 4 Toads in a Basket this Friday at 7PM at the Iron Horse in Northampton are available at Northampton Box Office (NBO), 76 Main Street, 413-586-8686 and online at IHEG.com.  
 

Monday, April 11, 2011

Mountain Park in Holyoke welcomes Lucinda Williams & Amos Lee on Saturday, July 23rd at 7PM. Tickets on sale this Friday, April 15th.

 Lucinda Williams never backs down from a challenge, whether collaborating with surprisingly kindred spirits like M. Ward and Flogging Molly or putting her own spin on iconic tunes like Bob Dylan’s “Positively 4th Street” and Jimmy Webb’s classic “Galveston.” She’s taken that same approach to her most recent recordings as a solo artist as well: The 2006 release West and 2008’s buoyant Little Honey - which Paste hailed as “an album that brims with varied, impeccable writing” - made for an ethereal emotional travelogue that takes in both great loss and the sort of discovery one can only make when emotional barriers are taken down. Her new album Blessed, recorded at the end of what Williams calls “a really big writing streak that gave me enough to make two albums,” reveals some of the most straightforward songs she’s ever written. While it’s not a concept album as such, Blessed – recorded with producer Don Was – brings together a dozen masterfully-crafted pieces that fall into place beautifully, their welcoming sonic tenor offering an ideal foil for the conversational narrative that runs through the dozen short stories – tales that take in plenty of topical territory, but invariably end up offering the listener a sense of affirmation.
 Since the release of the Amos Lee album in 2005, the Philadelphia-born and –based former schoolteacher has been one of his generation’s most celebrated songwriters. After being named one of Rolling Stone’s “Top 10 Artists to Watch,” Lee quickly went on to tour with such giants as Bob Dylan, Merle Haggard, Paul Simon, and Elvis Costello. His third album. Mission Bell, released at the beginning of 2011 and produced by Joey Burns of the acclaimed band Calexico, displays both range and cohesion, an array of emotions unified by Lee’s eclectic taste and distinctive vocals. It’s easily Lee’s richest and most fully formed album to date.  Willie Nelson who guests on the album says “Great songwriters don’t come around that often. Amos is an exceptional artist, a true story teller, unique to his generation.” Other guests on the album include Lucinda Williams, Sam Beam (Iron & Wine), James Gadson, Priscilla Ahn, and Pieta Brown—with the musical backing of Calexico. Mission Bell marks the arrival of Amos Lee as a mature artist who continues to explore his musical and thematic interests.

Tickets for Lucinda Williams and Amos Lee on Saturday, July 23rd, 7PM at Mountain Park in Holyoke are $55.00, $45.00, and $30.00 and go on sale this Friday, April 15th at Northampton Box Office, 76 Main Street, 413-586-8686 and online at IHEG.com. This is a co-bill with both artists playing complete sets. Lucinda will close the show.

Tickets also go on sale this very same Friday, April 15th for Alison Krauss and Union Station featuring Jerry Douglas at Mountain Park in Holyoke on Sunday, July 24th  (the night after Lucinda and Amos) and Return To Forever IV- Hymn of the 7th Galaxy Tour featuring Chick Corea, Stanley Clarke, Lenny White, Jean Luc Ponty, Frank Gambale  at the Calvin Theatre in Northampton on Friday, June 24th.