Plank
Road Folk Music
Society
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Fox
Valley Folk Festival
returns!
Live
and in-person over Labor
Day weekend
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As
we enjoy our
participation in Plank
Road activities, we all
understand that there
are people behind the
scenes making these
things happen. One of
the most valuable of
these is Bill Lemos.
Much of what he does is
“behind the scenes,” and
some is right in front
of you, like being the
editor of our
QuarterNotes
newsletter.
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“Blame
it on
the
Kingston
Trio…”
That’s
how Bill
Lemos
explains
his love
of folk
music.
By
Bob
O’Hanlon
Bill
joined
Plank
Road
about 15
years
ago. He
began to
attend
the
Saturday
sing-arounds
and our
bluegrass
jam. He
had a
great
guitar,
a Martin
HD-28,
and was
a good
player
and
singer.
He is a
nice guy
and fit
right in
with the
regulars.
As PR
President,
I
thought
he would
be a
good
board
member
and he
joined
us in
2013.
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Bill
was born
in
Hinsdale,
then
moved to
Northbrook
before
his
family
moved to
South
Dakota,
where he
attended
high
school.
That’s
where he
first
heard
the
Kingston
Trio and
saw them
in
concert.
He
attended
college
at
Northwestern,
then
Southern
Illinois,
where he
graduated.
He also
met
Connie,
his
future
wife.
They
have two
married
sons and
a 2 year
old
granddaughter,
Zoey.
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After
he met
Connie,
Bill
moved to
Los
Angeles,
working
at a
newspaper,
and had
a long
distance
relationship
with
Connie,
who
still
lived in
Illinois.
He
eventually
moved
back
here to
be with
her. As
he puts
it, “I
loved
California,
but
loved
Connie
more” Aw,
Bill,
what a
romantic
you are.
They
currently
live in
Wheaton
and have
a second
home in
beautiful
Galena.
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Bill
has a
great
way with
words
and had
a career
in
advertising,
as a
copy
writer
and
creative
director
with
several
organizations.
He was
not
drafted
into the
military,
during
the
Vietnam
War due
to his
“flat
feet”,
which
finally
came in
handy
for
something.
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His
love for
music
can be
traced
back to
the
early
days of
rock ‘n’
roll and
the
short,
but
dynamic,
folk
music
craze in
the late
1950s
and
early
60s. The
Kingston
Trio was
the most
popular
group at
the
time,
and like
many of
us, Bill
bought a
baritone
uke from
Sears,
then a
nylon
string
Goya
guitar,
and
began
playing
and
singing
their
songs.
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At
Southern
Illinois,
he
became
seriously
involved
with
folk
music
and
joined a
trio who
performed
around
campus
and in
the
area,
expanding
from
Kingston
Trio
songs to
other
folk
groups,
plus Bob
Dylan
songs,
and some
country,
blues
and jug
band
music.
He also
began to
write
some of
his own
songs!
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Once
he was
married,
with a
family,
he
continued
to
follow
the
local
music
scene,
and
attended
concerts
at the
Earl of
Old Town
and Gate
of Horn,
and
played
when he
could.
Once he
retired,
he
treated
himself
to the
Martin,
took
some
lessons
at the
Old Town
School,
and
joined
Plank
Road. It
seems to
be a
perfect
fit. His
guitar
playing
keeps
getting
better
all the
time and
his
repertoire
keeps
expanding.
Bill
is a
valued
member
of the
Plank
Road
board of
directors.
He holds
two
offices,
Vice
President
and
Secretary.
As
previously
mentioned,
he is
editor
of
QuarterNotes
newsletter.
He also
handles
our
Plank
Road
merchandise
program
and
pitches
in on
many
other
activities
throughout
the
year. It
would be
hard to
operate
at our
current
level
without
him.
A
couple
more
personal
comments
from
me...he
is an
ideal
Plank
Road
person.
He loves
our
music
and
appreciates
our
culture
and
approach.
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Old-Time
&
Bluegrass
Workshop
Plank
Road
presents
Steam
Machine!
Sunday,
October
15.
Come
join us
for a
very
special
Old-Time
and
Bluegrass
workshop
featuring
the
multi-talented
musicians
of Steam
Machine.
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+
Learn
new
fiddle
and
bluegrass
tunes
+
This
workshop
is open
to
everyone
+
Bring
your
instruments!
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Steam
Machine
is a
popular
Midwest-based
old-time/bluegrass
music
band
featuring
fiddle,
guitar,
banjo,
mandolin
and
bass.
Melody
and
rhythm
instrument
players
will
work in
separate
groups
to learn
the
tunes
and then
come
together
to play
as an
ensemble.
Don’t
miss
this
great
opportunity
to enjoy
playing
music
with
others!
Mark
your
calendar
now!
Sunday,
October
15
2:00
to 5:15
PM
The
Two Way
Street
Coffee
House
$30
Members
$35
Non-Members
Please
RSVP
with Jen
Shilt
— j.shilt@comcast.net
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Hello
Jim . .
.
farewell
Connie .
.
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Connie
Lawlor
retires
from
Plank
Road
board,
Jim
Scalone
joins as
new
Treasurer.
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Citing
new
commitments
in her
busy
life,
Plank
Road
board
member
Connie
Lawlor
has
decided
to step
down as
our
Treasurer.
Replacing
her on
the
board is
Jim
Scalone.
Connie
and
Kristen
Fuller
are
working
with Jim
to make
a smooth
transition
to his
new
role,
effective
mid-October.
Jim
will be
responsible
for
financial
reports,
paying
bills
and
collecting
income,
primarily
from
membership
fees. In
addition,
Jim has
been
assisting
Dottie
Lee with
technical
help,
such as
email
blasts
and
Facebook
updates.
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The
Board
thanks
Connie
for her
professional
expertise
as
Treasurer
. .
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.
. . and
welcomes
Jim in
his new
role!
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Remembering
Jeanne
M. Halama
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Jeanne
Halama, long-time member
of Plank Road, died
September 8. She was 87.
Here are some
memories...
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“Jeanne
was, of course, a long
and dear friend of all
of us at the Two
Way Street, and ran the
sound board for
many years. She also
sang, played Native
American flutes, drew
sketches of hundreds of
performers, and was our
poet-in-residence.”
- Dave
Humphreys
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“Jeanne
drew the cover artwork
for our Sing-Around
Songbook (her initials
‘JH’ are on it). All the
people in the
illustrations were
regular attendees of the
Sing-Arounds. She would
sometimes draw sketches
of the performers at 2WS
(especially artists that
played there regularly)
and usually gave the
drawings away to the
performers
themselves.
“She
usually played the
mandolin at the
Sing-Arounds. In
addition, she
occasionally played her
flutes. For many years
she ran the soundboard
for most the Friday
night concerts at
2WS.
“She
also was a talented
photographer who took
the pictures of the
traditional instruments
at an Appalachian museum
in TN that are displayed
on the bulletin board in
the 2WS hallway. I also
know that she wrote
several songs.”
- George
Mattson
“I
remember her well from
my earliest days with
Plank Road. Haven't seen
her in a long
time.”
- Bob
O’Hanlon
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“I
volunteered with her at
2WS many times but
she was so quiet that I
never got to know her
very well. She made the
Plank Road quilt that we
occasionally display at
our tent at the Fox
Valley Folk Festival,
and was also displayed
at our outdoor Annual
Meeting in
2022.”
- Jen
Shilt
“I
remember Jeanne from my
first year or two with
Plank Road, usually at
our Tuesday night BYOS
sessions. She played
mesmerizing Native
American tunes on the
flute. One night I
noticed her discretely
doing sketches of
people. I was surprised
when at the end of the
evening, without a word,
she handed me a small
piece of paper with a
sketch of
me.”
- Bill
Lemos
From
Jeanne’s
obituary:
“Jeanne
M. Halama of La Grange,
formerly of Waukesha, WI
was very active in the
community and was known
for her artwork, poetry,
writing books and
playing music. She was
able to pick up just
about any instrument and
learn how to play it.
She liked to save items
that reminded her of all
the things she
loved.”
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Now
streaming!
Down
the Old Plank Road -
Volume 3 can be
heard free of charge on most
streaming sites! Listen to
music by Mark
Dvorak, George Mattson
Trio, Ashley &
Simpson, and the
Plank
Road String Band,
plus tunes by other Plank
Road Members.
Just look
for Down
the Old Plank Road
Volume 3. (Be
sure to enter the complete
title.)
*
Apple Music * iTunes *
Spotify
*
Pandora * Amazon
Music
*
YouTube Music *
Bandcamp
*
And
many others!
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Two
Way Street Coffee House
— Friday Night Concert
Series.
Doors
open at 7:30pm and
concerts start at
8pm. You can also
view concerts online —
more information on
Two
Way Street Coffee
House
or Facebook.
Maple
Street Concerts.
Live
concerts have returned
to Maple Street Chapel
in downtown Lombard.
Concerts are subject to
CDC guidelines. Please
check the Maple
Street website
for concert listings.
Other
venues . . .
-
Acoustic Renaissance
Concerts
-
Old Town School Of Folk
Music
-
Tobias Music
Concerts
-
Friends of Lisle Library
Concerts
Some
venues have live
concerts — check their
websites to
confirm.
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George
Mattson Trio
gmtrio.com
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Mark
Dvorak
markdvorak.com
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Tobias
Music
www.tobiasmusic.com
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Andy's
Music
Trivia
Quiz
Thanks
for your
responses.
FYI: Henceforth
I will
put the
easiest
questions
first (my
subjective
estimate). This
is
supposed
to be
fun, so
use
whatever
resource
you
wish.
Bill
Mathews
got the
most
correct
this
quarter. Please
contribute
any
trivia
you
think
should
be
included. I
will get
them in
either
soon or
eventually.
Answers
to
previous
Quiz:
Q1. Who
wrote
"Different
Drum"
and
when?
A1. "Different
Drum,"
written
by
Michael
Nesmith
in 1964,
was
first
recorded
by the
bluegrass
band The
Greenbriar
Boys on
a 1966
album. Nesmith
offered
it to
the
Monkees,
but was
turned
down by
the
producers. Nesmith
did
perform
a short
comic
version
in an
episode
on
The
Monkees
show. The
Stone
Poneys
(Linda
Ronstadt)
took the
song to
#12 on
the cash
box
chart in
1967.
Q2. What
was the
shortest
duration
record
to make
#1 on
the
Billboard
100? Who
sang
it? When
was it
written?
A2. "Stay"
reached
#1 in
Nov.
1960
with a
duration
of
1:36. Maurice
Williams
and the
Zodiacs
was the
group,
with
Maurice
singing
lead,
and
Henry
Gaston
singing
the
falsetto
part. It
is
claimed
that
Maurice
wrote
the song
in 1952
at the
age of
15.
Q3. Who
Founded
Asylum
Records? Who
were the
labels
initial
stars?
A3. David
Geffen
and
Elliot
Roberts
relocated
from NYC
to LA,
were
frequent
visitors
in
Laurel
Canyon,
and
started
Asylum
Records
in 1971
(selling
it a few
years
later,
making
millions). Their
starting
line-up
was
Jackson
Browne,
Joni
Mitchell,
Linda
Ronstadt,
JD
Souther
and
Glenn
Frey.
Q4. What
1957
doo-wop
group
was
considered
a major
success
(they
had two
top 10
Billboard
100
hits),
though
encumbered
with
member
discontent,
and
legal
name
problems.
A4. The
DELL-VIKINGS
(name on
the
record
labels
on their
1957
hits
"Whispering
Bells"
(#9 on
BB100),
and
"Come Go
With
Me"(#5
on
BB100). Due
to
member
discontent,
changes
in their
U.S.
service
status,
and
legal
problems
with
their
recording
contracts,
multiple
similar
names
were
used:
the
Dell-Vikings;
the
Del-Vikings;
the Dell
Vikings;
and the
Del
Vikings. The
Diamonds
also had
two
top-10
hits
("Little
Darlin"
and "The
Stroll"),
but did
NOT have
the
member
problems
of the
Dell-Vikings.
Q5. What
21st
century
certified
platinum
song
about a
father's
death
was
later
dedicated
to both
the
victims
of
Hurricane
Katrina,
and the
9/11
attacks?
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A5. "Wake
Me Up
When
September
Ends" by
Green
Day,
released
on June
13,
2005,
was
written
by front
man
Billie
Joe
Armstrong
about
the
death of
his
father
when he
was 10
years
old. The
song
peaked
at #6 on
the U.S.
Billboard
100 and
was a
hit in
many
countries. It
depicted
a sense
of loss
in the
afore
mentioned
disasters,
as well
as Iraq,
and
others
worldwide.
Q6. Who
wrote
"Little
Darlin"?
What
group
sang it
first?
A6. 16
year old
Maurice
Williams
wrote
"Little
Darlin." His
group,
the
Gladiolas,
released
it
first,
making
#41 on
the
Billboard
100. A
month
later in
Feb.
1957 a
white
Canadian
group
(the
Diamonds)
released
a cover
which
went to
#2 on
the
Billboard
100, and
was
overall
the #3
record
for
1957.
NEW
Trivia
Quiz:
Q1. What
Buddy
Holly
song was
the
first big
Rolling
Stones
hit in
the
U.S.?
TRIVIA
SNIPET: Buddy's
Cricket
drummer
J.I.Allison
recalls
that
when
playing
"Peggy
Sue"
Buddy is
the only
guitarist
who
played
it with
only
DOWN
STROKES,
he was
so good!
(From
"Listen
to Me"
by
Jeffrey
Smith
p.85.)
Q2. David
Seville
was
quite
famous
with the
Chipmunk
Song. Who
wrote
the
song,
and what
other
hits did
he
have?
Q3. Name
2 of
Lavern
Bakers
top 20
pop
hits?
Q4. What
song did
the
Ran-Dells
make and
when?
Q5. What
song did
the
Rondells
make and
when?
Q6. What
popular
doo-wop
song was
based on
an early
19th
century
poem?
Q7. Where,
when and
what was
Elvis
Presley's first single?
(2
different
answers
acceptable
that I
know
of.)
Q8. What
is a
Celesta? On
What
Buddy
Holly
hit is
it used,
and who
plays
it?
Q9. What
do the
following
hit
songs
have in
common? 1."Heartlight"
- Neil
Diamond;
2."Arthur's
Theme" -
Christopher
Cross;
3."It's
My Turn"
- Diana
Ross;
4."Nobody
Does it
Better"
- Carly
Simon;
5."That's
What
Friends
Are For"
- Dionne
Warwick;
6."Midnight
Blue" -
Melissa
Manchester;
7."When
I Need
You" -
Leo
Sayer;
and
8."Groovy
Kind of
Love" -
Mindbenders.
Keep
those
responses
coming
in:
pictq@yahoo.com
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Jimmy
Buffett
He
was a singer, sailor,
songwriter, author and
entrepreneur. Jimmy
Buffett, whose brand of
island escapism on hits
like “Margaritaville”
and “Cheeseburger in
Paradise” made him
something of a folk
hero, died September 1
at age 76.
Buffett’s
genial, self-deprecating
songs conjured a world
of sun, salt water and
nonstop parties,
animated by the calypso
country-rock of his
Coral Reefer Band. His
live shows were a
perennial draw on the
summer concert circuit,
where he built an ardent
fan base.
No place
was more important to
his career than Key
West. He first visited
the island at the urging
of Jerry Jeff
Walker, his sometime
songwriting and drinking
partner, after a gig
fell through in the
early 1970s.
“When
I found Key West and the
Caribbean, I wasn’t
really successful yet,”
Buffett said. “But I
found a lifestyle, and I
knew that whatever I did
would have to work
around my
lifestyle.”
Those
locations also led to
the creation of a
tropical-themed business
empire that included a
restaurant franchise, a
hotel chain, boutique
tequila, T-shirt and
footwear lines — all of
which made him a
millionaire many times
over. Forbes has
estimated his net worth
at $1 billion.
Buffett
was born in Mississippi.
He flunked out
of Auburn
University and later
attended the University
of Southern Mississippi.
He also began performing
in local nightclubs. He
graduated with a degree
in history in 1969
before moving to New
Orleans and playing in a
cover band on Bourbon
Street.
in
1970 He moved to
Nashville, hoping to
make it as a country
singer while working as
a journalist for
Billboard magazine.
(Buffett was credited
with breaking the story
about the disbanding of
the pioneering bluegrass
duo Lester Flatt and
Earl
Scruggs.)
In
1985 Buffett opened the
first of his many
Margaritaville stores.
That was the year his
bass player Timothy B.
Schmit (who later became
a member of the Eagles)
coined the term “Parrot
Heads” to describe Mr.
Buffett’s legion of fans
— most of whom were baby
boomers.
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Sinead
O’Connor
Sinead
O’Connor, who courted
controversy throughout
her long career, died
July 26 at age 56. She
rose to fame with her
1990 rendition of the
Prince song “Nothing
Compares 2 U,” which hit
No. 1 that
year.
O'Connor,
who was born in Dublin,
made as many headlines
for her activism and
provocations as she did
for her
music.
In
1991 she said she would
boycott the Grammy
awards, claiming the
Recording Academy
awarded artists based on
commercial success. In
October 1992, she
infamously tore up a
photo of Pope John
Paul II and said "Fight
the real enemy," as she
performed as a musical
guest
on Saturday
Night Live.
She said the move was in
protest of child sexual
abuse in the Catholic
Church — and was met
with an onslaught of
high-profile criticism,
including by the
Anti-Defamation League.
“I’m not sorry I did it.
It was brilliant,”
O’Connor said in 2021.
“But it was very
traumatizing.”
In
her lengthy career, she
released 10 studio
albums, kicking off with
her 1987 alternative
rock debut, “The Lion
and the Cobra.” Even
though she declared that
she was not a mainstream
pop star, she was
nominated for several
Grammys and won for best
alternative music
performance for “I
Do Not Want What I
Haven’t Got” in
1991.
Her
17-year-old
son, Shane
O’Connor,
died of an apparent
suicide last year. She
announced his passing in
January 2022. For
much of her career, she
spoke candidly and
openly about her
spiritual life,
political views and
struggles with mental
health, which she
detailed in her
2021 memoir, Rememberings.
In
2018,
O'Connor converted
to Islam and
changed her name to
Shuhada.
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Robbie
Robertson
The
Band’s lead guitarist
and songwriter, Robbie
Robertson, died August 9
at age 80. His classic
songs, including “The
Weight,” “Up On Cripple
Creek” and “The Night
They Drove Old Dixie
Down,” helped reshape
American music.
Robertson
was born Jaime Royal
Robertson in Toronto in
1943. His mother was a
member of the Mohawk
Indian tribe, and
Robertson became
interested in playing
music as a child on the
Six Nations Reserve in
Ontario.
He
played guitar in high
school bands in his
early teens, and at age
16 joined The Hawks, the
backup band for American
rockabilly singer Ronnie
Hawkins. It was there
Robertson met the band’s
drummer and musical
director, American Levon
Helm, and fellow
Canadian bandmembers,
Rick Danko, Richard
Manuel and Garth
Hudson
In
1964, they struck out on
their own. And a year
later legendary manager
Albert Grossman signed
Robertson to be
guitarist for Bob Dylan.
The group soon became
Dylan’s touring band
(minus Helm for most
dates) during Dylan’s
tumultuous first
electric tour.
Following
the tour, Dylan went
into seclusion with his
family in Woodstock, NY
after a serious
motorcycle accident. In
early 1967, the group,
still minus Helm, rented
a pink ranch house in
Woodstock where they
began informal recording
sessions with Dylan,
known as the “basement
tapes,” at “Big Pink”
and at Dylan’s nearby
home.
In
1967 they reunited with
Helm and the “Hawks”
became “The Band.” They
signed with Capital
Records and in 1968,
shot to fame with their
first two
albums, Music
From Big
Pink and The
Band.
The
music was “distinctly at
odds with the commercial
currents of the day.”
Their second album,
climbed to No. 9 and
solidified the group’s
reputation. The
rollicking “Up On
Cripple Creek” (sung by
Helm), became a No. 25
hit, while the Civil War
narrative, “The Night
They Drove Old Dixie
Down,” was taken to No.
3 by Joan Baez in
1971.
Drawing
from a stream of genres
it had a huge influence
on American roots
musicians. The mood
of their music was
“intimate, the lyrics
alternately playful,
cryptic and yearning,
drawn from blues,
gospel, folk and country
music.”
However,
The Band began to flag
creatively in the
mid-70s due to its
members’ escalating
substance abuse
problems, and Robertson
effectively disbanded
the group
with The
Last Waltz,
an extravagant, all-star
1976 concert in San
Francisco — captured on
film by Martin Scorsese
and released as a
documentary in
1978.
Robertson
continued to perform as
a solo artist, and
worked with Scorsese as
composer, music
supervisor, and music
producer on many other
Scorsese films,
including the
soon-to-be-released Killers
of the Flower
Moon.
Robertson
and The Band were
inducted into Canada's
Music Hall of Fame in
1989 and the Rock
and Roll Hall of Fame in
1994. They received
a lifetime
achievement
award in
2008.
Garth Hudson
is the only surviving
member. Manuel committed
suicide during a 1986
tour, Danko died in
1999, and Helm in
2012.
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Peter
Paul
&
Mary
had
a
huge
hit
with
“Leaving
On
a
Jet
Plane”
.
.
.
but
they
weren’t
the
original
artists.
The
song
was
originally
recorded
by
the
Mitchell
Trio,
which
included
the
guy
who
replaced
Chad
Mitchell
—
John
Henry
Deutschendorf,
Jr.
The
Chad
Mitchell
Trio
consisted
of
three
sophomores
at
Gonzaga
University
in
Spokane,
WA
—
Chad,
Mike
Kobluk
and
Mike
Pugh.
They,
like
so
many
other
folk
artists
of
that
era,
were
inspired
by
the
Kingston
Trio.
With
guitar
and
banjo
backing
by
fellow
Gonzaga
student
Jim
McGuinn,
the
band
became
a
hot
attraction
on
the
college
circuit.
Jim
McGuinn
later
became
a
founding
member
of
The
Byrds.
In
1965
Chad
left,
and
the
group
became
the
Mitchell
Trio.
Chad’s
replacement
was
a
singer/songwriter
known
as
John
Henry
Deutschendorf,
Jr.
—
who
later
gained
fame
as
John
Denver.
In
1967
The
Mitchell
Trio
released Alive,
an
album
that
included
Denver’s
composition,
“Leaving
On
A
Jet
Plane.”
Peter
Paul
&
Mary
heard
the
song
and
recorded
their
version
which
shot
to
No.
1
in
December
1969.
PP&M
continued
to
release
albums,
but
“Leaving
On
a
Jet
Plane”
was
their
last
No.
1
single.
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Buddy
Holly - Part 1
The
Day the Music
Died
By
Andy
Malkewicz
|
Don
McLean wrote and sang an
anthem about it
("American Pie") in
1971. February 3,
1959 is the date that a
plane crash near Clear
Lake, Iowa marked the
loss of rockers
Buddy
Holly,
Ritchie
Valens,
and "The
Big Bopper",
as well as the pilot
Roger
Peterson.
Though
the Crickets were
advertised, Buddy's band
consisted of Waylon
Jennings, Tommy Allsup,
and Carl Bunch on this
"Winter Dance Party"
tour across the Midwest.
Drummer Carl Bunch
however, spent that
night in the hospital
due to frostbite
incurred on the tour's
badly maintained
bus.
Buddy
had chartered a plane
for him and his band to
go to their next stop,
avoiding the cold
bus. The Big Bopper
and Ritchie Valens were
already sick from the
poorly heated bus.
Waylon, and Allsup
deferred to Valens and
the Big Bopper for their
seats.
|
Jerry
Dwyer was the pilot
Peterson's boss. He
had acquired the 11-year
old plane the previous
year, had it completely
overhauled, and was
running
well. Peterson, 21,
had his pilot's license
at age
17, commercial
license at age 20,
accumulated 710 flight
hours (37 nighttime),
mostly on the overhauled
plane. However, he
was not instrument
rated.
Weather
was not good that night,
and they had some
misgivings. After
several weather checks,
they finally decided to
make the
journey.
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The
plane was warmed up for
10 minutes, and at
1:00am, with 15F temp,
and 35mph wind gusts,
they took
off.
It
also turned out Peterson
had already been up for
17 hours, was in awe of
the rockers, and did not
want to disappoint
them. Take-off was
smooth, but 2 minutes
later Dwyer stepped
outside, noticing the
aircraft was gradually
drifting
downward. No radio
contact could be
established . . .
The
music died shortly after
1:00am on February 3rd,
1959.
|
Buddy,
the youngest of 4
siblings was born Sept.
7, 1936, and was only 22
when he died. In
his short 18-month
professional career, he
had 10 singles in the
Billboard Top
100, 7 in the top
40, 3 in the top 10, and
one #1 — "That'll be the
Day".
They
were one of the first
caucasian bands to play
the Apollo Theater on
Aug. 6th, 1957. They
followed Clyde
McPhatter, and received
an underwhelming
reception to their
"white"
music. After 2
days, instead of opening
with "That'll be the
Day," they said, "Hell
with it" and opened with
the song "Bo Diddley,"
dancing and gyrating all
over the
stage.
They
won over the audience,
and were
accepted.
More
of Buddy Holly to come
in future
QuarterNotes.
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A
Special
Thanks
to our
Membership
Contributors!!
Sustaining
Members
-
John
J.
Allan
- Betsy
Anderson
- Carol
&
Fred
Spanuello
Supporting
Members
($50 -
$199)
-
Anonymous
-
Dan
Anderson
-
Bill
&
Mary
Boylan
- Frank
&
Helene
Clarke
-
Bob
Cordova
- Tom
Henry
&
Marian
Indoranto
-
Lora
Ilhardt
- Doris
Ireland
- Tony
&
Ann
Janacek
- Paul
Klonowski
- Ken
&
Pat
Lagerstrom
- Dottie
&
Gerry
Lee
- Bill
&
Connie
Lemos
- Andrew
Malkewicz
- Chuck
&
Susan
Maltese
- Bill
&
Sandhya
Matthews
- George
Mattson
- Gregg
&
Betty
Ann
Morton
-
Bud
&
Mary
Jane
O'Connor
-
Bob
&
Mimi
O'Hanlon
-
Rich
Pawela
- Jim
&
Cindy
Scalone
-
Joe
&
Pam
Schumacher
- Jennifer
Shilt
- Tobias
Music
-
James
Videbeck
- John
Wolaver
New
&
Returning
Members
-
Ruth
Bogan
-
Bill
&
Mary
Boylan
-
Jim
Chesney
-
Bethany
DeHaan
-
Tom
Henry
&
Marian
Indoranto
-
Sarah
Kierstead
-
Joseph
Michelotti
-
Patrick
Murphy
&
Margaret
Carioti
-
Wayne
Oestreicher
-
Gary
Rotramel
If
you
would
like to
become a
member
or just
need to
renew,
here is
a link
to
the renewal
form that
you can
print
and
mail.
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|
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Bob
O'Hanlon
-
President
reohanlon@gmail.com
(630)
702-0150
Bill
Lemos -
VP,
Secretary
lemos.bill@comcast.net
Jim
Scalone
-
Treasurer
2023
Board
Members
-
Dave
Humphreys
-
Kristen
Fuller
-
Jennifer
Shilt
-
Jim
Gilroy
-
Dottie
Lee
-
Technical
Support
|
Bill
Lemos -
Editor
Dottie
Lee -
Tech
Support
Bob
O'Hanlon
Andy
Malkewicz
Jen
Shilt
George
Mattson
Dave
Humphreys
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