Big & Blue: 2014 TD Kitchener Blues Festival lineup announced

http://www.therecord.com/whatson-story/4450138-big-amp-blue-2014-td-kitchener-blues-festival-lineup-announced/

2014 Festival lineup

By Robert Reid

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The Chicago-based, blues legend joins Otis Taylor, BeauSoleil, Rick Derringer and Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Percy Sledge, among others, at the annual blues bash which unfolds across downtown Kitchener Aug 7-10.

Guy, who has maintained strong ties with Canada over the years, also is this year’s Mel Brown Award recipient.

Festival artistic director Claude Cloutier acknowledged Guy as “one of the last of the great blues artists to emerge after the Second World War.”

“There’s B.B. King and there’s Buddy Guy,” he asserted.

“The award recognizes all the work he has done over the years in the blues genre.”

The multiple Grammy winner is no stranger to Kitchener, having performed at Lulu’s Roadhouse, Pop the Gator and Centre in the Square on numerous occasions.

He endeared himself with local blues fans in 2006 when he invited Brown on stage during a Centre in the Square concert.

This year’s lineup was announced Friday at a Launch Party at the Walper Hotel, featuring popular Canadian blues musician Jack De Keyzer and local blues hotshots Jon Knight and Matt Weidinger.

Guy headlines the festival’s paid-admission, Kick-off Concert on Aug. 7 at the Clock Tower stage, in Victoria Park.

The opening acts include Kitchener-bred, Juno-winner Steve Strongman and Quinn Sullivan, a young American blues prodigy Guy has taken under his wing.

The festival’s paid-admission, Closing Concert on Aug. 10 at the Downtown Tent stage, in Victoria Park, features festival returnee Taylor and his band, along with Michael Doucet and BeauSoleil.

“Otis is more than a 12-bar, blues artist. His music transcends genres and cross-pollinates with Cajun music,” Cloutier observed.

He described BeauSoleil as “the granddaddy of Cajun music.”

The festival has always prided itself in showcasing Canada’s premium blues artists and acts influenced by the blues. But this year marks a new level of tribute.

Hamilton-based, roots-music, Renaissance artist Tom Wilson will perform with a trio of popular and influential bands he founded or co-founded including Junkhouse, Blackie and the Rodeo Kings and LeE HARVeY OsMOND.

Musical sidekicks Colin Linden and Stephen Fearing will join Wilson, along with an assortment of other musicians making up Junkhouse and LeE HARVeY OsMOND.

Cloutier recognizes that Wilson is not a pure blues artist. But his creative mandate has always extended beyond the blues in a narrow sense.

“Some blues festivals follow a strict formula, others range all over the map. My focus is keeping the festival fresh and interesting without straying too far from the blues,” Cloutier said. “I’ve always had an affinity to roots music.”

Cloutier expects Wilson “at some point” to be celebrated as “a Canadian music icon.”

“This is a good time to pay homage with a musical retrospective.”

Derringer’s lengthy music career was launched in 1965 when The McCoys’ released the chart-topping Hang on Sloopy. He went on the play with the Winter brothers, Johnny and Edgar. He made guest appearances on albums by Alice Cooper, Richie Havens, Todd Rundgren and Steely Dan, among others, and produced Canadian musical lampooner Weird Al Yankovic.

If Sledge had recorded just one song, When a Man Loves a Woman would have assured him a place in rock and roll history. But his tear-stained, gospel-tinged songs brought Southern soul into the mainstream of pop music.

rreid@therecord.com

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The Beat Goes On : The Rondelles Reunite after 50 Years

I had the privilege of transferring the original reel for Dennis Wallace about a year ago. The following article appeared in todays KW Record.

http://www.therecord.com/whatson-story/4403084-the-beat-goes-on/

By Greg Mercer
KITCHENER — Close your eyes, and you can almost hear time fading away.
The Rondelles haven’t played together in more than 50 years, and yet here they are, making music once again.
There’s Dennis Wallace leading the rhythm on his acoustic guitar; Joe Docherty leaning into the microphone, singing; Ray Taylor laying the foundation on his bass and Peter McCutcheon guiding it all on piano.The Rondelles 60s
In the early 1960s, their band was a teenage phenomenon in the Toronto area, playing rock ‘n’ roll shows at high schools to throngs of adoring girls. The group broke up in 1964, and they haven’t performed a note together in public since.
Until now.
This Saturday night, the Rondelles will play their first concert in five decades — a special reunion gig at the Kitchener Waterloo Naval Hall. It’ll all be recorded as part of a documentary that’s breathing new life into an old band.
The surviving Rondelles are in their early 70s now, with grey hair and their teenage years well behind them. They’re scattered across the country, too, with Wallace in Waterloo, Docherty in St. Thomas, Ont., Taylor in Vancouver and McCutcheon in Victoria.The Rondelles 2014
But on a recent afternoon, they shook off the rust and were rehearsing in Wallace’s living room, prepping for their concert. They’ve lowered the key in a few songs, to match their aging voices, but they say that old familiar feeling is coming back.

Continue reading “The Beat Goes On : The Rondelles Reunite after 50 Years” »

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Arcade Fire Leads mtvU Woodie Award Nominees

Read more: http://www.ctvnews.ca/entertainment/arcade-fire-leads-mtvu-woodie-awards-nominees-with-3-1.1682652#ixzz2uYjX0zHL

Win Butler, right, and his wife and bandmate Regine Chassagne, left, of Arcade Fire, perform Oct. 24, 2013 at the Little Haiti Cultural Center in Miami. (Eric Kayne / THE CANADIAN PRESS)

NEW YORK — Arcade Fire is the top nominee for the 2014 mtvU Woodie Awards.

The Montreal-based band has three nominations for the March 13 awards show celebrating music embraced by college students, while Pharrell, Jay Z, Imagine Dragons, Chance the Rapper and Disclosure pulled down two apiece.

The 10th annual Woodies will be recorded during South By Southwest and aired March 16. Fans can vote in categories such as Did It My Way Woodie for innovation and Breaking Woodie for best new artist at the awards show’s website.

Drake, Pharrell, Lorde, Imagine Dragons, Zedd and Disclosure are up for top honour Woodie of the year. Other nominees include Beyonce, Bob Dylan, Kendrick Lamar, Daft Punk, Tyler, the Creator, and Avicii.

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@chachi_on_acid – We’d Have a Quiet Riot Doing Heroin – Studio Outtake

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@Chachi_On_Acid – studio outtake

I had the good fortune of tracking the fine gentlemen from Chachi On Acid this past Saturday night. Here’s a little teaser for all you Chachi fans.

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Japan’s Beethoven Says He’s Regained Hearing

Read More: http://www.ctvnews.ca/entertainment/man-once-lauded-as-japan-s-beethoven-says-he-s-regained-hearing-1.1682362

This 2011 file photo shows Mamoru Samuragochi, the man once lauded as Japan’s Beethoven. (AP Photo/Kyodo News, File)

TOKYO — The man once lauded as Japan’s Beethoven said he can partially hear in a new disclosure Wednesday following the stunning revelation last week that his “Hiroshima” symphony and other famed musical compositions were ghostwritten.

Despite astonishment and outrage to the ghostwriting scandal, music credited to Mamoru Samuragochi is surging in sales. “Hiroshima” was No. 1 in classical CD sales in the latest Oricon weekly ranking and surged to No. 27 overall in Japan, selling more than 2,000 copies over the past week. His label has said it will stop sales.

In his eight-page handwritten statement, released to the Japanese media through his lawyer, Samuragochi said he had regained part of his hearing three years ago. He apologized for the scandal and for failing to explain to his fans sooner.

The scandal erupted last week when his ghostwriter revealed he wrote music credited to Samuragochi for 18 years.

“(My hearing) has recovered to the level I can catch words when someone speaks close to my ear clearly and slowly, although it still sounds a bit muffled and distorted,” Samuragochi wrote. His hearing is more impaired when his physical condition isn’t good, he said. He stood by his identity as a Hiroshima native and his parents were survivors of the 1945 U.S. atomic bombing.

Samuragochi, 50, confessed to the collaboration the day before a tabloid magazine published an interview with the ghostwriter. Takashi Niigaki, a 43-year-old lecturer at a music college, said he has believed all along his partner could hear, given the way the pair discussed his compositions. Samuragochi has said in his biography that he had completely lost his hearing in both ears at age 35, but no clear explanation of how it occurred has been given.

He is classified as having severe hearing loss and has a certificate for his disability, by which he is entitled to health benefits. He said he wouldn’t mind taking a hearing test, and would return the certificate if the results prove otherwise.

Niigaki said he couldn’t keep the secret knowing Olympic figure skater Daisuke Takahashi was set to use the Samuragochi arrangement “Sonatina for Violin” for his short program at the Sochi Games.

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