@GrandPorchParty celebrates local musicians

By Linda Givetash

Grand Porch Party

WATERLOO — The normally quiet streets of an uptown neighbourhood were transformed into a series of concert venues enticing people to get outside and connect with their community.

The third annual Grand Porch Party featured an array of local musicians from the children’s music group Skalywags to Kitchener alternative rock band The Short Films.

The Sunday afternoon event saw hundreds of people gather around the 20 different porches — located between Roslin and Euclid Avenue just south of Erb Street West — that acted as stages for the many musicians.

Thompson, who hosted her Roslin Avenue porch for students from the Adrian Jones Music School, said she is glad to see the community involvement grow since the inaugural porch party in 2011.

“We have a lot more volunteers involved this year,” she said.

Not only was the event an opportunity for neighbours to connect and enjoy the outdoors, the porch party provided musicians with a unique opportunity too.

“People who might not even know that the Grand Porch Party is even happening, they’ll hear the music and come and see it,” said Adam Horrocks, 20, after performing his original song You’ll Always Like That.

While Horrocks is no stranger to performing in front of a crowd — often gracing the stage at Maxwell’s Music House with his band Lancaster — he said having a porch as a stage introduced him to a new audience.

Horrocks was among almost 40 students from the Adrian Jones Music Schoolthat performed at Thompson’s porch to a growing audience that spilled across the street.

“It’s cool for the community to come together like this,” Horrocks said.

The unique setting is the reason Adrian Jones said he decided to have his students’ recitals incorporated into the porch party.

“Every time I do a recital I try to find a venue with a really good vibe,” Jones explained. “When the opportunity came to do it here I jumped at it.”

And it was an opportunity he hopes to repeat for his students next year.

lgivetash@therecord.com

 

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@GrandPorchParty 2013 Performers #GPP2013

 

http://grandporchparty.wordpress.com/Grand Porch Party 2013-map

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Get to know the musicians of #KBF13 @kitchenerblues

via 2013 Lineup | Kitchener Blues Festival.

Andre Williams with The Sadies

Big Sugar

Bobby O’Brien’s House Band

Booker T. Jones

Brendan J. Stephens

Charity Brown

Cheryl Lescom and The Tuscon Choir Boys

Chris Thomas King

Conor Gains

Daddy Long Legs

David Wilcox

Danny Brooks and The Brotherhood

Devin Cuddy Band

Digging Roots

Erick Traplin

Elliott BROOD

Errol Blackwood

GRBS Blues Camp

Grady Champion

Great Lake Swimmers

Harrison Kennedy

Irene Torres and The Sugar Devils

Joel Johnson Band

John McKinley

Kim Simmonds and Savoy Brown

Lee Rocker

Lighthouse

Mad Dogs and Englishman Tribute

Matt Storch and The Usual Suspects

Matt Weidinger and Jon Knight

Miss Angel and The Homewreckers

Murray Porter

Oli Brown

Otis Taylor

Paul James

Sean Pinchin

Shawn Kellerman

Shemekia Copeland

Steve Earle and The Dukes

Tanika Charles and The Wonderfuls

Tom Lavin and the Legendary Powder Blues 35th Anniversary Tour

The 24th Street Wailers

The Harpoonist and The Axe Murderer

The Lowrider Band sponsored by Lee Oskar Harmonicas

The Sadies

Too Slim and The Tail Draggers

Wide Mouth Mason

 

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@Eodmusic : Fledgling band has a sound that makes people take notice

http://www.therecord.com/living-story/3251346-fledgling-band-has-a-sound-that-makes-people-take-notice/

rbowman@therecord.com

KITCHENER — On a drizzly evening in early May, Micheala Clair hurries across the parking lot and slips through the nondescript entrance of a red brick building in the Kitchener downtown core.

Tall and thin, dressed in black sandals, dark blue skinny jeans and a hot pink Blink 182 T-shirt, she ascends a creaky staircase to a dimly lit recording studio filled with vinyl records and the aromatic traces of the vegan café below.

Clair is a member of the pop- rock trio Every Other Day, and for the past five months this studio, The Sound Distillery, has been her home away from home.

At 19, the Kitchener native is by age the senior member of the band — and the only member old enough to have a drink at the venues where it performs. She is also the band’s newest member, having joined in January.

Unlike many teenage garage bands, which begin when friends decide to make music together, Every Other Day evolved from individual musicians who went looking for others to join them.

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Religiously Recorded – Why The Studio Is Still Relevant

http://www.musicthinktank.com/blog/religiously-recorded-why-the-studio-is-still-relevant.html

This piece is sure to be the enemy of home studio manufacturers, yet it’s something that must be said. Call me orthodox, but I still find the process of constructing a studio record to be imperative to superior quality music production. While the digital revolution has made it possible for recording technologies to be made available to the masses, there are so many reasons why producing a top notch album can only come from hours spent in the live room. Artists who take the studio experience seriously will find that the ritualistic nature of this process adds an enormous amount of non-tangible value to a record.

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The 10 Commandments of Social Media for Brands

BY SCOTT STEINBERG MAR 13, 2013

Looking to enhance your corporate social media efforts? Here are 10 simple rules every corporate social networking team should follow to better connect with fans and maximize the value of their online presences.

1. Thou shalt be patient and considerate.

While many campaigns seem to go viral overnight, it’s important to remember that businesses rarely experience instant breakthroughs or meteoric audience growth on social media. More important than chasing huge follower or subscriber counts is to consistently and meaningfully engage an audience by creating helpful and insightful content that addresses key concerns or speaks to consumer needs.

Over time, through constant two-way dialogue with users, this commitment will help your business build a loyal and involved following, the influence of which may far outstrip that of larger, less engaged audiences.

Be relevant, generous and sincere. While doing so may not seem as sexy or instantly gratifying as posting a viral video or infographic, it will help you build trust, empathy and, most importantly, relationships, the currency of the modern social realm.

2. Thou shalt not be indifferent to the voice of thy customer.

When you engage in social media, you commit to playing a role in very public customer conversations. This entails consistently having to acknowledge other parties’ opinions, and embracing both the good and the bad, including harsh or critical feedback.

Instead of looking the other way when someone posts something unflattering, take a moment to objectively assess the feedback. Constructive criticism not only presents opportunities to improve our efforts to serve end-users; it also presents a chance to engage in human exchanges, and apologize and appease the situation.

In other words, the goal is to create conversations, not critiques, and optimize the level of customer support and service provided to your audience. Sometimes, simply taking a moment to acknowledge others’ voices, or answer questions directly can bridge gaps that threaten to build a gulf between you and end-users.

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