[NEohioPAL] Tonight's Tim O'Brien Concert

The Kent Stage wrfaa at yahoo.com
Fri Jan 16 10:54:50 PST 2009


















January 16, 2009
330-677-5005 
www.kentstage.org
wrfaa at yahoo.com
 
 
   
Tonight's Tim O'Brien concert is ON! 
  

 






We have received a number of calls about tonight's concert.  
 
It is on!   
 
 
 We have prepared for the cold weather.  All five of the furnaces have been running at full capacity since Tuesday night.  The theater is very warm!  Tim is in town about to record a Folk Alley program for WKSU at Kent State.   The city streets are clear, the parking lot behind the theater is clear as well.  There is free parking on the streets and the lot behind The Kent Stage.  Doors open at 7PM and the concert starts at 8PM. (no opening act)  There are very good seats available at the door.  
 We live in Northeast Ohio and it gets cold in the winter! (Not that I like it, but I live here!)   
See you tonight! 
 
It may be cold outside, but we will guarantee you one hot night inside The Kent Stage this Friday Jan 16th when one of the greatest musicians to ever walk onto a stage returns to Kent.   
 
 A very special "Evening with Tim O'Brien!" 
 

Tim O'Brien is well known to anybody who follows acoustic music in its various incarnations as country, folk, and bluegrass, and he is a successful Nashville songwriter. As is rarely the case in that trade, his knowledge of genres other than commercial radio music is massive. At various times he has recorded, for example, Anglo-Celtic folk music, old-time mountain tunes, and a bluegrass tribute to Bob Dylan. He is also remembered fondly from his days with the fabulous Colorado-based bluegrass band Hot Rize and its alter ego Red Knuckles and the Trailblazers.

In short, he's a pro. He loves his music, and he keeps working at it, and he knows all the best musicians in Nashville and thus whom to tap when he enters the studio. Not only his playing, which was no small shakes to start with, gets better and better, so does his singing.

Tim's career has brought him down an amazing diverse path from the lonesome sound of hard core bluegrass, to a pinch of Celtic fiddle tunes, to old Country and cowboy tunes, to pure acoustic Americana folk. He's toured with Hot Rize and Red Knuckles and with his own bands. He's collaborated on many special projects plus performed in a duo with his sister Molly. After more then 30 projects, Tim has stepped back, took a deep breath, looked inside and brought it back to himself with a challenging solo project and tour. The Chameleon project showcases a broad spectrum of tunes most of which Tim performs during his show along with a bevy of tunes from past projects.At a point in his career where you'd think he'd be charging at full speed toward the next big thing, Tim O'Brien confounded expectations by doing something else: he took time--and plenty of it--to create the next small thing. Chameleon is an intimate project that, in its blend of virtuosity, wit
 and warmth, is unmistakably his. And this time around, it's literally his alone. 

"Back in January of 2006, I said to myself, I've got to do something different than flying every which way all year," O'Brien recalls. "And when I got the Grammy award in February, it sort of woke me up. It was so validating, because I'd already been feeling that pushing was not getting me anywhere, that I was just getting worn out and disillusioned--and when you get disillusioned doing what I do, something's wrong, because it's a great job. So winning the award was like hearing that I have been doing something, that I've got a body of stuff to rest on. And by June, I was telling people that no, I'm not going to be doing as much next year." 

Of course, even at his most relaxed, the veteran O'Brien continued to be more productive than most. He still offered occasional performances, both on his own and in various configurations, and he worked on the acclaimed Blind Alfred Reed tribute, Always Lift Him Up, both performing Reed's best-known song and sharing in the album's production. But mostly he wrote, both on his own and with collaborators--and, in August of last year, he began work on Chameleon with award-winning engineer Gary Paczosa. 

"Every time a recording comes around, I think about doing a solo record," O'Brien says, "but when I get to the time where I really have to decide, I juggle a bunch of concepts around, and when one falls into place the others just fall away, and doing it solo always wound up falling away. On several records, like Fiddler's Green, I've done a solo track or two, but this time I thought, it's just time to finally do it all on one record. If I'd done it the last time, it would have been a traditional record, but this time it was a songwriter record." 

Though he first won renown as a member of one of bluegrass's premiere bands, Hot Rize, O'Brien's been doing solo performances for a long time, and pressed for antecedents, he offers up figures like James Taylor and Joni Mitchell. "The folksinger with a guitar is a sort of an unassailable icon," he says with a laugh. "Dylan, Woody Guthrie--what can you say. And I remember that when I heard the first Doc Watson album, I thought, what does he need a band for? This guy has got it all. But what happens is that when you go into the studio, you can play with a band and get the juices flowing and maybe do things that you might not be able to do on the road. So there's a temptation to go that way. But this time, I thought, let's just bring it inside." 

Chameleon rambles from the autobiographical to the whimsical, and themes emerge, whether it's the nods to tradition found in the appearance of hoary lyric phrases in "Where's Love Come From" and the sly quotation from Bill Monroe in "Hoss Race," or the wry political observations in a trio of songs ("This World Was Made For Everyone," "When In Rome" and "World Of Trouble") planted in the back half of the collection. 

"Right toward the end of the time when I was writing and getting ready to record, I wrote 'Get Out There And Dance,'" he notes. "That's one of my favorite songs I've ever written, and it's totally fun. I really liked the idea: if you want to live life, you'd better get in it. And it's in 'The Only Way To Never Hurt,' too, which comes right before it: 'If you don't get on the floor and dance/You can't hope to win the game of love.' I used to lean toward ballads more with my writing, and when I tried to write funny things, it didn't work--but now I'm finding ways to do it, and it's nice."


Tickets $25.00 advance $30.00 at the door.  All Seats reserved.









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Location & Ticket InfoThe Kent Stage is located at 175 East Main Street in downtown Kent, Ohio.  There is FREE parking behind the theater and on all city streets.  Advance tickets are available at Woodsy's Music and Spin-More Records in Kent, or 24-hours a day at www.kentstage.org or call 1-800-595-4849.  Tickets will also be available at the door.  Doors open one hour before concert.  If you have any questions please email us at wrfaa at yahoo.com or information at kentstage.org or call 330-677-5005.  







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The Kent Stage/Western Reserve Folk Arts Association | 175 East Main Street | Kent | OH | 44240 


      
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