Local performer to debut songs

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Singer to share the tracks at Lourdes U March 3




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Local performer plans release concert for CD

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Temperance resident Sam DeArmond had a big interest in golf in high school and college, competing on teams — until a passion for music took over. He now performs regularly at area bars.


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A promising young area performer will debut songs from his first album in a concert slated at Lourdes University next month.

Singer/songwriter Sam DeArmond is serious about his music — so serious that he let it damage his golf game when he was a starting player at Bedford High School and Siena Heights University.

“Golf was a huge part of me before I started playing music,” he explained. “But the more time I spent on music, the worse my golf game kept getting. I don’t regret it.”

Indeed, the 23-year-old Lambertville resident has pursued music with a passion, playing in area venues such as M. T. Loonie’s Pub and Grill in Temperance, where he performs Wednesdays at 8 p.m., and the Blarney Irish Pub and Grill in Toledo. In 2009, he competed in Battle of the Bands against Crystal Bowersox, before she achieved American Idol fame.

Now he has recorded an album, “Last-Minute Man,” which he produced himself. He and his band have scheduled a release concert at the Franciscan Theater at Lourdes for March 3. Doors open at 6 p.m., with opening act the Icarus Account, an acoustic duo consisting of twin brothers from Fort Myers, Fla., playing at about 6:30. Admission is $10. Tickets can be purchased at the door or at samdearmond.com.

Mr. DeArmond will do guitar and vocals at the concert. The program will include all 11 tracks from his album and covers of recording artists he admires such as Bob Seger.

For Mr. DeArmond, a 2007 graduate of Bedford High, the album and concert are the culmination of a lot of time and effort.

Golf, however, was his true passion — until he got the music bug. He said he started playing with friends and family members when he was 16. “I picked it up fairly quickly,” he explained. “I started playing songs probably by the time I was 17. It was the summer going into my senior year that I became serious. I didn’t put the guitar down.”

He earned a partial golf scholarship to Siena Heights University in Adrian, but quit before graduating to pursue music.

“It’s not that I don’t still love golf. I do,” he said. “You can have a bad day on the golf course and it can bring you down for the whole day. But with music, there’s nothing to bring you down.”

Mr. DeArmond described himself as a self-taught musician who doesn’t read music. He has written hundreds of songs and said the process for him involved a lot of intuition and trial and error.

“I start with the music, then start singing words,” he said. “Once you start with the melody and you have this guitar line, the words come.”

His musical influences are eclectic and span generations: John Mayer, the Foo Fighters, James Taylor, the Doobie Brothers, the Gin blossoms, Third Eye Blind, and Marc Broussard.

“I’m all about real music, real music playing in a room,” he said.

The album is available on iTunes. Mr. DeArmond also has two videos on YouTube that have each attracted more than 200,000 views.

Music runs in his family tree. Harry DeArmond, who is a legend among music buffs as the engineer who designed guitar pickups, was his great-great uncle, he said.

Article source: http://www.toledoblade.com/West/2012/02/22/Local-performer-plans-release-concert-for-CD.html

Evans musician starts solo career

By
Jenna Martin





Copyright 2012 . All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Twitter @JennaNMartin

An Evans musician is jump-starting his solo career Friday with a concert and CD release launch.

Augusta Christian Schools graduate Dallas Duff said he’s ready to step out on his own after years of performing in bands, both locally and in California.

The concert starts at 7 p.m. at the Jabez Sanford Hardin Performing Arts Center in Evans. Copies of Duff’s first solo CD, The Good Life, can be purchased for $10.

Duff started playing the guitar in middle school and took lessons from Lady Antebellum’s Dave Haywood. He also played in a church youth band with Haywood.

Years later, Duff is teaching guitar lessons to young students at Portman’s Music Academy in Martinez.

“I hope to not only follow in Dave’s footsteps of being a guitar instructor, but also furthering into the performance aspect,” Duff said.

Duff’s band in high school, Daze of Haze, saw success in the area and even opened for Canadian rock band Three Days Grace. Duff was the group’s lead vocalist.

After four years in Los Angeles at the Musicians Institute, he lived in Texas before returning home about two years ago.

Duff describes his music as alternative country and said he is influenced by classic, Southern and modern rock musicians. He named artists Keith Urban, Jason Aldean and Brad Paisley as his country influences.

“I’m definitely influenced by lots of different kinds of music,” Duff said. “I think if you can hook people in with a good song it doesn’t matter what genre of music you fall in.”

Tickets are available at www.dallasduff.com. They cost $10, with special rates for groups.

The show will feature a mixture of upbeat songs and ballads, Duff said.

“Expect to hear catchy songs that hopefully, by the end of the night, will get stuck in your head,” he said.

 

Article source: http://newstimes.augusta.com/news/2012-02-22/evans-musician-starts-solo-career

Rufus Wainwright to (finally) release a pop CD

Rufus Wainwright to (finally) release a pop CD

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Rufus Wainwright is one of those recording artists about whom his fans always assume he is more popular than he probably is. His lushly overproduced albums — portmanteau CDs of lush, wrenching ballads and retro-glam set-pieces — are beloved by his supporters, but probably lead to head-scratching among the rest of the music-buying public. I can’t recall the last time I heard one of his songs on the radio.

But apparently Rufus is aware of that — and wants to fix it. His new album, produced by Mark Ronson, will be his “most pop album … ever,” he says. Out of the Game will be released May 1.

Not familiar with Rufus? You should be. Watch this performance of Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah.”

—  Arnold Wayne Jones

Article source: http://www.dallasvoice.com/rufus-wainwright-finally-release-pop-cd-10102111.html

O’Connell jazz CD release tonight

O’Connell jazz CD release tonight

Posted by: Emily Kratzer – Posted in Uncategorized on Feb 22, 2012

Bill O’Connell of Suffern has a gig tonight (Feb. 22), if you’re looking for something to do.
Something worth the listen – “I will be playing at the Zinc Bar (82 W. Third St.) with my trio with Dave Valentin on flute and Arturo Estable on congas. This is a CD release gig for my latest CD ‘Triple Play plus 3’ on the Zoho label. Sets are at 9, 10:30 and 12.”
Check into O’Connell’s bio – his is top-notch music. www.billoconnell.net or http://zincbar.com/homepage

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Article source: http://rockland.lohudblogs.com/2012/02/22/oconnell-jazz-cd-release-tonight/

Review of Commotio’s CD In the Heart of Things

Review of Commotio’s CD In the Heart of Things

By Nicola Lisle

Commotio’s latest recording — their fourth — is, quite simply, stunning. This exploration of the choral music of Francis Pott sees the choir in typically adventurous mood, eschewing the standard
choral repertoire for lesser-known fare and, as always, doing so exceptionally well. The fact that Pott has Oxford connections is an added bonus; he was a choral scholar at New College in the
1960s, and a lecturer in music at St Hilda’s from 1992 to 2001.

Pott’s sublime Mass for Eight Parts forms the framework for the CD, from the quietly compelling opening of the Kyrie eleison, with its intricate texturing, to the heartfelt Gloria in excelsis Deo,
and the poignant Agnus Dei, written in memory of former choir member Dr Anabela Bravo. There is some exceptionally eloquent and fluid singing from the choir, and some lovely, soaring solo passages
from soprano Grace Davidson, who rises effortlessly above the massed voices. This is an inspiring work, delivered here in suitably reflective mood, with conductor Matthew Berry clearly in
meticulous control.

Interspersed between the movements of the Mass is a selection of Pott’s other works, all handled with sensitivity and sincerity. The heartbreakingly beautiful Lament, a setting of Wilfrid Wilson
Gibson’s poem We who are left, is a moving plea to remember the dead, and was written in memory of an Afghan war hero. In contrast, Ubi caritas was written to commemorate a wedding anniversary, and
is both joyous and contemplative. There are also several pieces commemorating the Nativity, with Davidson making another welcome and passionate appearance in Balulalow.

Many of the works featured have been performed by Commotio at various Oxford concerts, and it is a treat to have them on disc. Listening to this CD is an unforgettable experience, and it is worthy
of a place on any music-lover’s shelf.

Visit www.naxos.com or www.commotio.org for further details.

Article source: http://www.oxfordtimes.co.uk/leisure/9546897.Review_of_Commotio_s_CD_In_the_Heart_of_Things/