Hudson Wisconsin Nightlife

June, 2016Archive for

Blues, rock, indie, funk, hip-hop, jazz, alternative, its all Booster Days country

Wednesday, June 29th, 2016

(For more Booster Days-related activities, in addition to music, see this web site’s Picks of the Week department).

Although its heavy on blues and classic rock, the soul of Hudson Booster Days music may be its diverse line-up, which also swings toward indie-rock, funk, hip-hop, jazz, alternative, and of course country.
The music acts at the annual celebration have been largely changed up from many previous years, giving listeners a wider range of entertainment to revel in. There is no cover charge for any of the live music during the festival at Lakefront Park, which runs June 30-July 3 and has lots of music acts — count ‘em, a total of eight — in the band shell. There also are other featured activities, some old and some new, such as the bean bag tournament, magic show at two different times, and kid’s pedal tractor pull.
The bands that will play, on order of appearance throughout three days of music, are the Alex Rossi Trio, Chris Lawrence, Kingsview, Cadillac Kolstad & The Flats, Paisan, The Sixes, Ross William Perry and of course, Uncle Chunk. Two of those bands are on Friday, and three each on Saturday and Sunday.
These are the bios of the bands:
– The Alex Rossi Trio is made up of blues, soul and funk music, with a twist.
Rossi has been performing professionally for over 15 years. With strong roots in the styles mentioned, Rossi has created what’s called a unique and recognizable sound from his diverse musical background, filling the dance floor. The band has been a mainstay of the Minneapolis music scene for a over a decade, for years holding down a popular gig at Gluek’s. Rossi’s talents were recognized when he was picked a finalist in the International Songwriting Competition. He has shared the stage with notable artists including Chicago, Steve Miller Band, Johnny Lang, Eric Hutchinson, Jimmie Vaughan, Blues Traveler, Morris Day & The Time, The Funk Brothers, Susan Tedeschi, Los Lonely Boys and others. Rossi has recorded five albums.
– Chris Lawrence is one of a number of singers with Hudson connections to go deep into the American Idol contest — twice, with his sultry R&B, soul, funk and a hint of hip-hop.
Lawrence, age 25, has been signed by Pitbull’s label imprint Mr. 305 Ent., and he’s already generated a buzz with his tender heartbreak single “Withdrawal,” as the song was on the nationally syndicated radio show “The Weekend Top 30,” which airs on KDWB. MTVhits, MTVu and VH1 have also aired the video, which includes a nod to Mobb Deep’s “Shook Ones.” The single was produced by Kay Gee of Naughty by Nature, and Lawrence recently finished off his full-length album with the help of Gee.
– Kingsview boasts alternative and indie-rock with catchy lead melodies and infectious harmonies, they say. The group is active in the local music scene and brings a new style to live songs, mixing original music with unique covers and a blend of today’s popular music. The set list played is often referred to as “a breath of fresh air” by staff and patrons during shows. The group prides themselves on energetic concerts tailored to the venue and the audience — like the band shell. The band has been writing and practicing material for their second record, due out mid-year.
– Cadillac Kolstad & The Flats features throwback rock and blues with a bit of boogie-woogie, especially on the piano. Kolstad says the name was “awarded” to him because he owns three 1964 Cadillacs, and he considers himself a history fan, which fits with his traditional roots style and the older and historic venues he often plays. Kolstad has released three albums — one with the band to be seen this weekend, one a solo album and one with Cornbread Harris. He performs his versions of roots and jazz standards, along with his own songs, and includes some subtle political commentary or views on current events — at times playing both impromptu and planned concerts in pubs around Ireland and in hotels in China.
– Paisan plays high-energy, hard-charging rock and roll, and although you may have heard that before, they’ve been doing it since 2006, starting as an impromptu get-together for a local festival much like Booster Days to fill an open spot on the main stage. Since then, they’ve performed classic rock, country new and old, and of course oldies. They are best known for showcasing well-known artists’ less-known songs. However, the young group still plays the greats that everyone can recognize.
– The Sixes and Ross William Perry start off the next day, with first-off acoustic blues, followed by gritty blues and guitar. The Sixes play that acoustic music with an edge, bringing a very intimate atmosphere that is also engaging to songs about life, love, and everything in between. No particular genre defines them, as there are soft melodies and “moments of intense in-your-face bluesy rock.” The duo from both ends of Wisconsin is led by Dwayne Thomas and yes, they play the cajon, too.
Ross William Perry has been doing his homework since age four and it shows. Focused on a lifetime of playing his music, Ross has been a rising star on the Midwest blues scene since graduating high school in 1998. Blending blues, rock and jazz influences, Ross has created a sound that is distinctively his own.
– Uncle Chunk is a popular headliner of local fests and a fan favorite. They perform covers of more then 80 different bands on their 115-song play list, which is heavy on Green Day, among others, and also includes seven originals. For more than 20 years now, they also cover the best from all genres, they say, and back it up by virtue of the gigs they get.
Sponsors of the acts are, Demon Rum (two bands on Saturday) and Mallory’s Restaurant and Rooftop Bar (two Sunday bands). The Village Inn in North Hudson is sponsor of the bean bag tourney, The Giggle Factory Inc. is sponsor of the magician, and Frontier Ag and Turf is lead sponsor of the kid’s pedal tractor pull.
Two other featured events will find you in luck if you are in any of the first three places.
The new bean bag tourney, with players trying to slide their tosses to just the right spot, has registration from 11:15-11:45 a.m., ($20 per person, double elimination). There are cash prizes awarded to first, second and third place winners, with the other half of the money raised going to youth sports. Competitors are given two drink tickets each with entry.
The kid’s pedal tractor pull is an officially sanctioned event, which is demonstrated by the long-stretching girth of the competitors, taking place just south of the band shell. There are five divisions, boys and girls mixed: four years and under, five and six, seven and eight, nine and ten, and 11 and 12 years of age.
Registration is at 1:30 p.m. and pulling starts at approximately 2 p.m. There are trophies for first, second and third places, and a free treat for all participants. Places 1-3 in each division are eligible to move on to the State Pull. The event is run by Roger and Laurie Neumann of New Richmond.
These are the bands and other selected entertainment activities among the dozens available for people to enjoy at Booster Days:
Friday, July 1 — 5-8:15 p.m., Alex Rossi Trio; 9-12:30 p.m., Chris Lawrence Band.
Saturday, July 2 — 1:30-4:30 p.m., Kingsview; 1:30-3:30 p.m., kids’ tractor pedal pull; 5:15-8:15 p.m., Cadillac Kolstad & The Flats; 9-12:30 p.m., Paisan.
Sunday, July 3 — noon, bean bag toss tourney; 1:30–4:30 p.m., The Sixes; 3-7 p.m., Booster Days car show; 4:30-5 p.m., Acme Magic Factory magician, (new this year); 5:15-8:15 p.m., Ross William Perry; 8:15-8:45 p.m., Acme Magic Factory magician; 9-12:30 p.m., Uncle Chunk; at dusk, fireworks over the St. Croix River, sponsored by the city of Hudson.

Sports bar TV headlines take a header when it comes to unintended humor

Thursday, June 23rd, 2016

For Dad’s Day, he was given a whole bunch of things to be a curmudgeon about, including some absurdities about bad sports headlines as done by those great big networks. (You know dad is always right).
– In honor of the just celebrated Father’s Day, comes this ironic tidbit from the world of sports bar TV: Shown were the faces (mug shots?) of three young male athletes with also famous fathers who were sport stars, with survey results of who was the most prominent given by percentage, although that was buried deep on the wording on the screen. More prominent was the headline that blared “Who’s Your Daddy?” Ouch … is this Maury?

– Heading a short list of other sports bar TV snafus, is a reference to the Madison stadium that hosts Badger games. It was called the Cohl Center. Might want to change that C to a K. The prominent Wisconsin family that funded it might be annoyed.
– More humorous than annoying was the announcement on the Big Ten Network that Rutgers had named its new sports video coordinator. Must have been a slow news day. Except for the fact that the item was headed with the tag line “Big News.”
– This could be bigger news. A whole raft of NHL awards were announced the other day, and one even was for sportsmanship. Pro hockey and being a good sport? They must have looked the other way (like the refs) during that one-time punching flurry.
– Also, a Minnesota rock radio station had a commercial for Big Guys BBQ Roadhouse that said it was located in “North Hudson.” Might want to move that geographical reference even a bit farther north, closer to Houlton-Stillwater.
– The rock station also had a promo for its July 1 very popular Booze Cruise on the St. Croix River, saying that might even be topless women. Some guys I know say they recall the also popular good old days when boaters were allowed into Dick’s Bar and Grill not topless per se, but wearing only bikini tops.
– With the Fourth of July that’s coming being all about hot fun, it was interesting to see the goings-on a week or so ago when the weather finally got sultry and summer-like. It was super busy at some venues, and dead at others, about half and half. There were, get this, a whole bunch of guys in tuxes for a bachelor party, one of many such limo-lounging groups that night. Really … Not dressed in anything more radical?
Also, at the Village Inn in North Hudson: “Fresh fruit drink specials.” Now that’s more like it for the summer trove of party buses. One of those buses was noteworthy for doing a U-turn … In of all places, not the north sector, but the parking lot by the boat landing at the far south end of Lakefront Park. Also, electric car was seen doing a U-turn on Locust Street, with cars parked on both sides. It only could pull that off because it is so tiny.
– For the Fourth especially, a street-corner near Dick’s, in a private business along First Street, again has its huge, trademark Old Glory flying. It is positioned pointing down and that means the stripes of this Stars and Stripes take in a full Baker’s Dozen of 13 feet from top to bottom.
– Is The House in the house? Minnesota yet again considered, then failed to enact, a law to allow liquor store sales on Sundays, after the House of Representatives took up the debate. Maybe they should all go out for a beer and kick the idea around somemore in what might end up being a more productive legislative session.
– The Dweebs also are in the house, that venue being the WESTconsin Credit Union, where the iconic band stumped for their account monitoring program to prevent fraud. The ad ran on a regional TV channel. As far as other prominent local engagements, they had played the Smilin’ Moose earlier in May and in what could be seen as a coup for a smaller venue, also had done a gig at Not Justa Bar in Bayport, one of two such places in the Minnesota village that are expanding their operations outward to a second area location.

Booster Days offers a whole new slate of bands to get your Fourth weekend done right

Thursday, June 23rd, 2016

The music acts at the annual Hudson Booster Days celebration have been largely changed up from many previous years, giving listeners a wider range of entertainment to revel in.

There is no cover charge for any of the live music during the festival at Lakefront Park, which runs June 30-July 3.
These are the bands and other selected entertainment activities among the dozens available for people to enjoy at Booster Days:
Friday, July 1 — 5-8:15 p.m., Alex Rossi Trio; 9-12:30 p.m., Chris Lawrence Band, (a Hudson native).
Saturday, July 2 — 1:30-4:30 p.m., Kingsview; 1:30-3:30 p.m., kids’ tractor pedal pull; 5:15-8:15 p.m., Cadillac Kolstad & The Flats; 9-12:30 p.m., Paisan, (which will reprise its act at Pepper Fest).
Sunday, July 3 — noon, bean bag toss tourney, register from 11:15-11:45 a.m., ($20 per person, double elimination); 1:30–4:30 p.m., The Sixes; 3-7 p.m., Booster Days car show; 4:30-5 p.m., Acme Magic Factory magician, (new this year); 5:15-8:15 p.m., Ross William Perry; 8:15-8:45 p.m., Acme Magic Factory magician; 9-12:30 p.m., Uncle Chunk, (always a favorite headliner at local festivals); at dusk, fireworks over the St. Croix River, sponsored by the city of Hudson.
– This weekend at the Willow River Saloon you can get a steady dose of Steve, a fixture in Burkhardt, as one of his main bands Strangers plays there on Saturday night, June 25, and another group that he has his (guitar-picking) fingers in, Country Outlaws, is on the night before. This on top of running the sound board regularly at The Willow, and operating the convenience store across the street that bears his name. Strangers is heavy on ’70s classic rock, and Country Outlaws steers more toward, you guessed it, outlaw country.

Two of the best, a boxer and pro wrestler, were encountered prior to dying outside the ring

Friday, June 17th, 2016

A prominent law enforcement officer, who has passed on, had encountered an icon of his trade in one of The Greatest cafe moments in local lore:

– A recent tidbit surfaced that Muhammad Ali, the fantastic fighter who recently died, actually gave an autograph to the also passed on, then-local-deputy who later became a longtime sheriff, Paul Burch, who wasn’t sure who the boxer was when first seeing him at a St. Croix County cafe, but then approached him anyway. Ali was The Greatest long before the ultimate fighting craze took over at places like Buffalo Wild Wings. But as far as “heavyweights,” I’ll instead go with someone also recently deceased who was met via other exploits in the “squared circle,” indeed in the can and towering above it. That’s where a local bar stalwart met the late Dusty Rhodes, one of the best Old School pro wrestlers, albeit at the bar urinal the next stall over. That one with the less looming presence next went on to rub elbows with guitarist Joe Walsh, at a picnic and then at a second location that had no relationship. (It wasn’t the mansion of which the former Eagle forgot the price. To continue the theme, maybe that’s why Mojo Nixon lyrically called for the death, also, of one of that band’s members).
– In the same vein of people continuing to make their mark although now dead, a relative was in part a star of the show at the recent Willow River Cemetery Walk. His family’s grave area was the site of us reading a seven page monologue about their former doings locally. The connection with nightlife? That person was Lew Reid Micklesen the linguist, not Lou Reed the singer, although both icons deal with language. Actors portraying members of the period were asked to dress the part, formally, despite the 90 degree heat, even if that meant draping your suit-jacket over a chair and causing an observer to say it seemed to be missing its head. (And it’s true that dead men don’t wear plaid).
– And then there’s another synergy, North Hudson style. The sign at Season’s Tavern said Yummy in my Tummy and on the same main drag a mile up there is the aforementioned, Blue Yummy special of Miller Lite. One good beer deserves another.
– Speaking of NH, I’ll bet they wish this one-way wasn’t the only way. Wisconsin Street West in North Hudson has been temporarily made into a one-lane street taking you toward the Main Drag. I’d venture a guess that the people at the Mallalieu Inn, and possibly Starr’s Bar, which need the street to allow patrons access using the primary route, can’t wait for that “temporarily” to end. Of course there is the option on a long detour that first takes you to the other end of the village … At least the local planners appear to have made a decision to conduct all their road work in one fell swoop, git ‘er done and be done with it, meaning no more detours.
– Of course all this road construction means that fed up drivers will take liberties. One was the late-night guy (I’m assuming) who happened onto Second Street where it was closed off, than got back onto the area of the street that was open to traffic by going about a yard onto the curb to get around a barricade. If it would have been further into that grassy yard, he might have nicked a street sign. And then at the parking area in front of the Smilin’ Moose, where a few feet up the street was torn-up and guarded by sawhorses leaning toward the centerline, some bikers when parking used that as a license to ebb into the portion of street where traffic would normally flow. But no worries, it doesn’t now.
– A message on the marquee at the Agave Kitchen a couple of weeks ago proved prophetic, in a way that probably wasn’t anticipated. It read: “Down town Hudson has what you love.” That obviously doesn’t include road rehab. A subsequent Agave message, referring to the horrible massacre in Orlando, was more exacting: “There is no honor,” it read, in taking the lives of the innocent.
– Haven’t mentioned Woody’s in Bayport for awhile. It was there that on a slow sports TV night, patrons made a request to switch the tube to women’s softball, the ladies of which were putting on a modeling show, possibly during the Seventh Inning Stretch. The bartender, who knows a thing or two about this via her longtime work at Alary’s in St. Paul, where the evening uniform was for a long time basically a bikini, gave a big buildup to the player’s makeup, specifically long lashes.
– A friend of a friend was back dancing at Dick’s Bar and Grill, doing as bump and grind. That makes my recall a time during the cold of winter when she dragged by onto the dance floor and showed my in intricate detail how I could be a better dancer, from how not to shuffle my feet, to just how to circularly gyrate my midsection, and how not to do it. I didn’t know this Dancin’ Fool needed that much help.

– And maybe some of the summer of love for Prince has run its course. At Guv’s Place in North Hudson, the bartender suggested a “happy song,” unlike the then-playing Toxicity by System of a Down (again, death imagery). So, someone else suggested a Prince tune, to which the response was that he’s been overplayed — anything but that. Spin some country instead. And that’s happy, came the retort? The musical answer came up next: Humble and Kind by Tim McGraw.

If your taste for original music finds you thirsty, this week’s for you

Friday, June 17th, 2016

An off-shoot of a venerable and longtime local music group means that if you’re thirsty for some Thirsty Camel, you have more options to see its mainstays playing in the St. Croix Valley than just in North Hudson. This is part of this weekend’s slate of veteran area musicians, who even play a lot of originals:
– Tom Wavra of that band will play Mallard’s in Bayport on Saturday evening, June 18. He started playing guitar at age 13 in his hometown of Grand Forks, North Dakota, far from North Hudson. As a vocalist his first solo performance came at six. By the mid-1980s, Tom was performing around the region in several bands, singing everything from Johnny Cash and Elvis to Led Zeppelin and Judas Priest.
In 1991, he moved to Minneapolis and knew he had to get back to what he loved — and that was music, as part of a progression that helped him develop North Hudson ties. In 1992, he joined an area band called Myth. The band changed the name to Thirsty Camel and been together with the same four members — which include Brad who is the owner of Seasons Tavern in North Hudson and is the site of many Thirsty Camel shows — for over 20 years.
Besides having a CD of originals, the band played classic rock from the ’70s and ’80s. Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, Rush and AC/DC are just some of the bands covered. Clubs they played over the years include The Fineline Music Cafe, O’Gara’s, Dibbo’s in Hudson, Mirage, Iron Horse, Amelia’s, Pepper Corns, McGovern’s and many smaller clubs around the metro region. They also played at Grand Old Days in St. Paul and other community events. Thirsty Camel continues to perform throughout the Twin Cities, as well as North Hudson.
Tom is performing solo acoustic shows virtually every weekend and has for the last five years. Starting with his ’60s and ’70s rock roots, Tom has added a wide range of crowd favorites like Bob Seger, Neil Diamond, Doobie Brothers, Tom Petty and more. With nearly 400 songs he covers something for nearly everyone. It takes a big vocal range to go from Johnny Cash to Led Zeppelin, and other many musical surprises, he says.
– In an another facet that helps constitute the rare opportunity of being able to see bands on back-to-back nights that are relatively new to the Hudson area, Jose James plays Mallards on Friday evening, June 17, having won a best Minnesota Music Award for brass and reed instrument back in 1994. He performs R&B, electronic music, contemporary jazz and neo-soul.
– In their next foray into the new offering at Season’s Tavern in North Hudson, (that being live music every other Thursday evening, at least throughout the summer, in this case June 23), Sarah and Eric Van Valkenburg who form the duo Practical Goods will take the stage. Being a married couple, they both even take their guitars with them on work (she’s a first-grade teacher and he’s a pilot). What also makes them a bit different is that — depending on the needs of the venue and how well the crowd knows them and clamors for what they play — the band performs plenty of their original songs as part of their Americana and other styles. Sarah says their music mix goes back to the ’60s and tends to incorporate many genres and decades. And at Season’s, the fit is there to allow them wide rein to play their original music, she says. “It’s about having something to say, or a story to tell.”
– And you thought you didn’t know Jack. “The perfect wingman,” reads a sign hawking liquor at the Village Inn in North Hudson, is none other than Apple Jack Cider. Might that wingman be the apple of your eye? OK, that’s going too far.

New music isn’t becoming old, and a tried and true band opens a new patio

Friday, June 10th, 2016

 

You won’t end up empty, as their are plenty of bands and other forms of music on deck for this weekend:
– Empty Arms will as of Friday night, June 10, do something that is rare at the Willow River Saloon in Burkhardt — being a new act to grace their stage for a second time in just over two months. The band plays traditional and Texas blues, rock and rockabilly, and their sound has a synergy with some noteworthy national acts, which makes even their cover songs diverse and original in style.
In much the same vein, as far as frequency, the relatively new band Stagecoach is on again on June 18. (They before had played The Willow for their second time this spring, but there had been a hiatus prior to that). Goes to show what a loyal following can do. Like their name, the band has visual and musical imagery that relates to the Old West, with skull-and-crossbones type fare added in.
– The grand opening party of the patio facing the St. Croix River at the Smilin’ Moose, a facet that opened late last year and has two very different styles on two different levels, will be Friday night. Tim Sigler is the featured country music act for the party, (even though he will be playing indoors, not on either level of the patio).
– And of course, Dick’s Bar and Grill has a beer of the month special worth highlighting. That would be the Coors Stubby, billed as being made with 100 percent Rocky Mountain water. (Despite that claim, being from the state of Colorado, I wonder if there might be something else in that water).
– And the Village Inn in North Hudson, featuring karaoke on the second Saturday of every month, will be at it again on June 11. Being an avid singer who once got a tentative offer to front a heavy metal band, as an aside, the owner recently praised my rendition there of Heaven and Hell by Black Sabbath, and a patron of my take on Turbo Lover by Judas Priest. Check out some other class acts that are fast becoming regulars there come Saturday.

They knew causes about Prince pronto: medical examiner’s findings predicted

Friday, June 10th, 2016

(For other local brushes with fame, the death of squared circle stalwarts Ali and Dusty Rhodes — and a Hudson man at a Cemetery Walk where actors went back well over 100 years — are revived for posterity in this web site’s Notes From The Beat department).

How did Prince die? An overview of that cause was well-known by certain musicians with local ties only days after his death — well before the local Medical Examiner recently made his reports.
Between sets at a concert within a week after Prince was found dead at his Paisley Park home, a musician source who plays locally and who requested to remain anonymous, said that Prince had been taking large amounts of painkillers to deal with the toll that years of spinning stage moves had taken on his 57-year-old body. The one that was mentioned as being the crux was Percocet — far more benign then the accidental overdose by self-injection of Fentanyl that was later listed as the cause of death.
The same source said he’d been in touch with a third musician, who knew Prince, by phone about two weeks before the death, and who said that he and the superstar musician had recently experienced a falling out. The reason for the disagreement was not broached.
It also was said at that time that Prince had been checking out several metro area chain-store pharmacies shortly before his death. His reason for doing so was not certain.
It should not be surprising that Prince was found in an elevator after he died, as sources said that his home was sprawling and consisted of more than one studio used for recording, making it a chore to get around, especially for someone who is ailing. One source who is a contractor said similarly, that almost 20 different shower heads were specially installed in its bathrooms to meet specifications of the sometimes quirky musician. The contractor said that Prince, true to his reputation, didn’t speak as much as he sings, and upon meeting someone would only be addressed by name if he was the one introducing the greeting. You didn’t call him by name (Symbol?) or talk directly to him.
All this is not to throw Prince under the bus after his untimely and unfortunate death. Indeed, this view is based on my own medical history, specifically Tourette Syndrome and its accompanying symptomology. I understand both the need to take medication for chronic pain — to the point where you occasionally say to yourself that you need to DO SOMETHING within a few seconds to get relief or you will have no choice but to kill yourself, as many with my medical circumstances eventually do — and the way it feels to be a bit different, misunderstood and thusly analyzed by people where if they knew the back story would not be nearly so suspicious.

However, Prince’s demise underscores the wisdom of holding off as long as feasible before resorting to taking pain medication, gutting it out for a while first.

I suspect that the reason Prince overdosed was that he’d been in too much pain, with too little medication, for too long and when he finally found a way to remedy it, erred on the side of relief and took too much. So it may be our society and government’s partial paranoia concerning drug usage — and inability to distinguish between use and abuse — that eventually killed Prince, or at least contributed to his death.
– First there were the round of tribute shows and memorials to Prince, and then came the special magazine editions. One of them, from an Indie publication in Minneapolis, talked and memorialized about one of Prince’s first bands, interestingly enough called 94 East. How far east on the freeway one might add? Hudson, perhaps? It was during that era, as was mentioned earlier on this site, that a friend Jean saw Prince play at a rally at her high school. “He looked like any other teenager,” she said. However, the aformentioned publication, Insight News, said that especially at that point early in his career, he stood out because of his flamboyant style of dress and hair.
– This is a new take on “Raspberry” Beret. Indeed, it involves a horse of a different color. A longtime local bartender — you’ll know her from various venues — is in the latter stages of beating breast cancer through undergoing chemo. She looks just great in her new beret. You go girl!

Free music this weekend is not a folk myth, and you can pick it at The Willow

Thursday, June 2nd, 2016

Reach out and touch someone, or something, for free, and that just might mean petting a dog:
– Imagine the freedom this free night will give you. You can pick pretty much any song you desire in a free
TouchTunes night at the Willow River Saloon in Burkhardt on Saturday night, June 4. TouchTunes is the largest
in-venue interactive music and entertainment platform, featured in more than 71,000 bars and restaurants across
North America and Europe. A press release says the network supports a growing portfolio of location-based
digital solutions that encourage social interactions through shared experiences. (Wow that’s a mouthful). They
have the technology to highlight the songs, artists and search results that are most relevant. TouchTunes also
has renewed their exclusive jukebox license featuring The Beatles.
– Dogleg Left will return to play their folk, indie music and light rock at Dick’s Bar and Grill on Friday  evening.

They are known for being original, in both their style, tunes played and compositions. They are said to sound like

The Jayhawks and have been signed by the label South Channel. The bio of the Twin Cities band is informative, if

not satirical: “After touring the country for more than a decade and playing nowhere, Dogleg Left has returned

home to record their first work in years.”

– Also at Dick’s, participate in a “threesome,” although that much indulgence might be intoxicating. A set of
three flyers in a row advertise liquor in the forms of Surly on one side and Lagunita IPA on the other, each
featuring a leggy, scantily clad woman in almost exactly the same pose. The flyer in the Middle is for Jim Beam
(lucky guy). Only one of the women, however, is smoking a cigarette, (and I thought that came afterward).

Variety from various decades, along with killer music resumes, make Good Neighbors

Wednesday, June 1st, 2016

For a relatively small town, Roberts has some big-time bands with extensive resumes that feature a lot of variety and draw from various decades, when it puts on Good Neighbor Days from June 2-5.
The main thrust behind the annual festival in the middle of St. Croix County is the Roberts Lions Club, which has celebrated its 50th anniversary of service.
The bands in order of their performance are: The marching band from St. Croix Central High School starting at 7 p.m. Thursday, Maiden Dixie at 7 p.m. Friday, The Drop at 7 p.m. Saturday, Rock Godz at 9 p.m. Saturday, and Thorns and Roses at 3 p.m. Sunday.
– Minneapolis-based Maiden Dixie has toured for a year in support of UNSAFE & SOUND, their critically acclaimed sophomore studio project that spent two weeks on the featured release list for iTunes New and Noteworthy Contemporary Country. Notable tracks Honest Man’s Wage, Bullets In The Gun and The Road became programmers’ favorites on radio outlets across the U.S. and Europe.
In addition to a full slate of YouTube videos, the band released two music videos. The Road, Maiden Dixie’s first full-length concept video, was directed by Zack Dyer, programmed on multiple music video channels and outlets across the country and viewed more than 100,000 times on the Maiden Dixie YouTube channel.
Maiden Dixie performed over 100 live concerts on their UNSAFE & SOUND Tour, and even got praise for the regular guy appeal of having a man on a garden tractor happen into their video shoot and shoot the breeze.
The band’s first Christmas single, O Come, O Come, Emmanuel, got extensive country radio airplay and accolades, including a DisCovery Award from Robert K. Oermann in his Music Row Magazine DISClaimer column.
Maiden Dixie still found the time to return to the studio for their latest release, Wrecked (NAV10026). Working with producer Makoa Johnson and engineer Eric Blomquist, the EP again highlights the songwriting of Channing Himes and Jonathan Krentz, the vocals of Jesse Becker and the musicianship of Zachary Scanlan, Tyler Kloewer and Andrew “Tank” Sherman. Wrecked takes the “signature kinetic blend” of country, pop and rock that Maiden Dixie unveiled on UNSAFE & SOUND and packs it with new songs.
It begins with Freedom Feels Like, then ventures into the first notes of the haunting The Whiskey’ll Miss Me, then moves into the lighthearted commentary on surrendering to the addiction of love in Today Ain’t It, and at last slides into the searing guitar and soaring vocals of Wildcard. Wrecked takes the fans of real music on a ride through the human condition. And they ask, what other country band gives you songs with bongos and a theremin?
– As co-headliners, the group Rock Godz are dressed like ’80s glam rockers, and their all ages show is billed as taking the audience “on an over-the-top, wildly fun trip through the best eras of rock and pop music.” The ’80s-focused production, which is combined with classic and current rock and pop, lets listeners sing along to Def Leppard, Bon Jovi, Motley Crue, Journey, Guns N’ Roses, AC/DC, Poison, Prince, Bryan Adams, Led Zeppelin, Theory of a Deadman, Quiet Riot, Buck Cherry, Steel Panther and more.
Rock Godz is made up of veteran musicians who have toured regionally and nationally with acts such as Jonah and the Wales, Wild Side, Mortal Chaos, Shameless Desire, Hollywood Blvd, 13th Step, Si6ks, A:POD, 80-D and Driven By Design. Their extensive experience as rockers has let them share the stage with national acts including Dokken, Great White, Ratt, Slaughter, Firehouse, Jackyl, Saliva, Joey Belladona, Sevendust, Candle Box, Seether, Skid Row, Alice In Chains, Shinedown, Vince Neil, Brett Michaels, Krokus, American Head Charge out of Minneapolis and others. Members have rocked some of the biggest stages around including Target Center, The Myth, First Avenue and Whiskey a Go-Go in L.A.
– As essentially their warm-up band, all the young dudes in The Drop look a little grungier and steer more toward modern rock.
– Rose ‘N Thorns also is a sextet and also is known for Eagles songs, just like Maiden Dixie. What started as a laid back trio of acoustic pop has grown into a six-piece high energy band that mixes up genre styling from rock and blues, to country and folk. Rose n’ Thorns covers the music of their generation (Baby Boomers) with a blend of humor and enthusiasm that even excites those who can’t name the four Beatles, they say.
The members come from backgrounds so diverse, and cover so many genres, that it’s impossible to fit Rose n’ Thorns into a single style. Whether it’s the soul needed for a Lucinda Williams ballad or the throaty wailings to pull off Neil Young, someone in RNT rises to the challenge, they say. In addition to over 100 cover songs, the group has produced many originals that are now as readily requested as the old standards. But names you might recognize are Jimmy Buffett, Van Morrison, The Band, Bob Dylan, Jackson Browne, Creedence Clearwater Revival and the Grateful Dead.
Among the other events you can check out at the fest include the Friday evening tractor pull, the Saturday 5K and fun run, as well as the car show, truck pull and coronation pageant, and the Sunday demo derby and parade through the middle of town, which has a new starting time of 11 a.m.
But its not all music and fun. The Lions invite listeners to stop by the park building and drop off used eye glasses and hearing aids so they can be refurbished and donated to those in need.
For more information, visit the Good Neighbor Days and Lions online sites and their Facebook page.

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