Holiday Wishes 2

‘Holiday Wishes’ CD release concert set for Dec. 5

Written by Sarah Ottney | Managing Editor | sottney@toledofreepress.com

Music and Make-A-Wish will be the stars of the show at a CD release party celebrating the “Holiday Wishes 2” benefit CD.

The event is set for 6 p.m. Dec. 5 at The Blarney Event Center, 601 Monroe St.

Many of the local musicians and media personalities featured on the two-disc, 44-track CD will perform. There will also be hors d’oeuvres and a cash bar.

Tickets are $5 for adults. Children 12 and younger are free.

“We hope people will join us to meet the musicians, mingle with the Make-A-Wish families and organizers, and just have a great Christmas party,” said Michael S. Miller, Toledo Free Press editor in chief and the CD’s executive producer. “Last year, we saw Chrys Peterson sing live with Hepcat Revival and Ramona Collins singing Christmas songs with Voodoo Libido. We’re expecting even more jam sessions and surprises this year.”

Music will start around 6:30 p.m., said Greg Tye of Hepcat Revival, who is organizing the performers. Among other performers will be Chrys Peterson with Hepcat Revival, Kerry Patrick Clark, Kyle White, Krystal Monique, The Wanna Bees, The Sanderlings, Skoobie Snaks, Russ Franzen, Steven J. Athanas, Voodoo Libido and more.

“It’s going to be a great selection of talent and we’re trying to mix it in as best we can to make the magic happen that night,” Tye said. “There will probably be some sort of jam component for those artists who might not be able to have their whole group there. They’re all very talented people.”

The two-CD set will be available for $15. CDs are also available at area Panera Bread locations, select Levis Commons stores and as digital downloads.

All parts of the project, from the recording to the mixing to the cover art, were done locally. Because the CD was sponsored by GM Powertrain Toledo, UAW Local 14, WNWO, 101.5 The River, A&D Glass & Mirror, Levis Commons and Panera Bread, proceeds go directly to Make-A-Wish Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana to benefit children in the 21-county Northwest Ohio region.

Last year’s inaugural “Holiday Wishes” CD sold out quickly, raising more than $25,000 for Make-A-Wish.

Make-A-Wish, which grants wishes for children with medically life-threatening conditions, does not receive federal, state or local government funding. Wishes are paid for by donations and donations in kind, including gifted airline miles. The average cost of a wish is $8,000.

“We want to grant the heartfelt wish of every child,” said Emily Denholm, marketing communications coordinator for Make-A-Wish Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana. “Every wish is different. We really try to focus on the uniqueness of every wish.”

Tye said he hopes area residents come out to support Make-A-Wish and hear some great local music.

“I hope people walk away with an appreciation for how talented the musicians and performers are here in town and how passionate they are about supporting a good cause,” Tye said. “People will be exposed to some of the premier acts in town. It’s an opportunity to hear someone they may never have heard before. It may be a real ear-opening experience.”

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Lighting the Fuse

‘Holiday Wishes’ CD benefits Make-A-Wish

Written by Michael Miller | Editor in Chief | mmiller@toledofreepress.com

Pat Dailey’s “River of Stars” is not a Christmas song, yet it lends its title to this year’s collection of local holiday music benefiting Make-A-Wish Foundation.

The “star” connection is obvious. Make-A-Wish uses a bright blue star as its logo. Toledo Free Press uses a star in its masthead (a tribute to the owner’s connections to Texas). With two CDs containing 44 tracks, the river of local music stars is well represented. And the star is a shining symbol for the wish kids and families that benefit from the organization’s great work.

The song’s connection to Christmas is not as obvious.

This is the second year for the “Holiday Wishes” project and the second year Dailey and his manager Tom Brady have generously contributed a track. Last year’s Dailey song, “Here Comes The Cold,” was a natural fit. Another of his few winter-themed tracks, “Here In The North,” is one I hope to include next year. When I heard “River of Stars,” from Dailey’s “Squeaky Clean” collection, it immediately struck me as a perfect choice to set the tone for this year’s collection.

It begins with a light, sparkling twinkle of sounds that segue into gentle guitar. The first words Dailey sings may not have been written to evoke Christmas, but they certainly serve as a grand place to begin this year’s musical journey through the holidays: “I remember a night, so long ago/under a river of stars,” Dailey sings, with all the confidence of a master storyteller. And while Dailey may have envisioned Put-in-Bay harbor when he wrote the lyrics, they could just as easily describe a special night in the Bethlehem sky.

The song seems to be about an earthly relationship, but it culminates in imagery that clearly paints a picture of faith: “And so I row, row, row my boat once more/Until I find you waiting on a distant shore/With outstretched arms and upturned hands/You lead me into the harbor and back to the sand.”

It is a spiritual image of hope and comfort that captures the feeling of Christmas without needing a single direct word.

Musical treasures

There are many surprises and musical treasures on this year’s CDs. Jon Hendricks contributes an original song, “The Gift,” that sounds as if it could be found on a Frank Sinatra holiday CD. Listening to the track for the first time with Dave Mariasy at Audio Matrix Recording Studio was transporting. Music is mostly listened to through tiny earbuds, computer speakers or car stereos. To listen to Hendricks and a single piano through Mariasy’s high-tech studio speakers was akin to hearing music for the first time. It was a revelation. Hendricks’ voice simultaneously weaves tensile strength with an aching fragility.

A new tradition

For Christmas 2011, Toledo Free Press produced “Holiday Wishes,” a CD of holiday songs performed by Northwest Ohio musicians. The CD was a 25-track compilation and raised more than $25,000 for Make-A-Wish. It was underwritten by Toledo Transmission and UAW Local 14, so every dollar raised, through sales at Panera Bread locations, went directly to Make-A-Wish.

Although Toledo Free Press had produced two previous CDs, one collecting historical recordings and one from a Toledo songwriting contest, neither approached the scale or complexity of “Holiday Wishes.”

The 2011 CD included contributions from such Northwest Ohio stalwarts as Dailey, Jamie Farr, Mannheim Steamroller, Sheri LaFontaine, Candice Coleman, the Toledo Symphony Orchestra, Crystal Bowersox and Alyson Stoner. It also featured new recordings from Kerry Patrick Clark, Jeff Stewart, Kyle White, Ramona Collins, TAPESTRY, Chrys Peterson and Hepcat Revival, Voodoo Libido, Mighty Wyte and Jameil Aossey, among several others.

With tremendous media support from FOX Toledo, WPOS, 101.5 The River and many of our media friends, the CD sold out and even before 2012 started, we were thinking about a second volume.

Rather than start in late July, as we did in 2011, the 2012 compilation process started in January. Lexi Staples gave us a copy of a track her father, the late radio personality Dennis Staples, recorded of Dr. Seuss’ “How The Grinch Stole Christmas!” That required tracking down permission from Random House Publishing, Warner Bros. Studios and the estate of Dr. Seuss. With all those rights now granted, it is a great honor to include that track on this year’s CD.

Another late performer is remembered as the Johnny Knorr Orchestra, led by Johnny’s son, Jerry, plays “Auld Lang Syne” for the 2012 CD. Johnny died in August 2011.

LaFontaine has allowed us to include “Toledo, My Hometown” on this year’s collection. It is a contribution that raises the bar for all the participating artists. “Toledo My Hometown” is a seasonal staple on The River, and it is an honor to have it on this year’s CD. The tune has added poignancy as we wish LaFontaine well in her new city of Nashville, Tenn.

There are several artists returning from last year. Stewart and White perform a revelatory version of John Lennon’s “Happy Xmas (War is Over).” The great Chip Davis allowed us to use Mannheim Steamroller’s “Fum Fum Fum.” Coleman did double duty, singing “Santa Baby” with Chris Brown’s band and “Merry Christmas Baby” with Buck69. Peterson and our friends in Hepcat Revival cover Harry Connick Jr.’s “Pray On Christmas.” Voodoo Libido, Skoobie Snaks and The Wanna Bees all contribute rocking tracks. The Polka Floyd Show took “Run Like Hell” from Pink Floyd’s “The Wall” and “Santa Claus Is Coming To Town” and created a mashup that has already attracted regional attention.

VH1 favorite Tatiana Owens wrote and recorded a stunning new song, “Winter Holidays,” that could be played alongside any modern classic.

Local media veterans Jerry Anderson, Fred LeFebvre, Mary Beth Zolik and Rick Woodell recorded dynamic readings on par with Farr’s interpretation of “A Visit From St. Nicholas” from last year. We wish Zolik a speedy recovery as she undergoes treatment for cancer.

This year’s CD will include a number of exciting new artists, from young country singers such as Connor Rose to emerging rockers like The Sanderlings.

Not that every wish comes true; a few notable Toledo entertainers did not bother to respond to requests, even with a “no.” The Danny Thomas estate declined permission for a track, and Sony Legacy would not provide gratis rights to a Teresa Brewer track we were hoping to include.

But even with those very few disappointments, we still had so many quality submissions we had to start saving them for 2013. Great tracks by Arctic Clam, Krystal Monique, Mitch Kahl, Tim Ellis, Andrew Z’s Morning Crew and a few others are waiting in the wings.

The MVPs

The best news for the project was the return of three people who are behind the scenes, but integral to the process; indeed, without them it would not have happened last year and would not happen this year. Christopher Stoll, engineer at Audioflare Productions at Zeta Recording Studios, donated studio time and his finely attuned ears to the project. He earned MVP status this year, recording tracks ranging from Irish folk to German choirs. Matt Feher engineered the CDs, ensuring the discs are produced to the highest standards. Larry Meyer navigates the legal and publishing issues to make sure every “T” is crossed and every “I” is dotted.

Special thank-yous this year go to GM Powertrain Toledo, UAW Local 14, WNWO, 101.5 The River, A&D Glass & Mirror, Levis Commons and Panera Bread. All proceeds will go directly to Make-A-Wish Ohio, Kentucky & Indiana to benefit children in the 21-county Northwest Ohio region.

Make-A-Wish development officer Ellie McManus is a dream to work with and is a constant inspiration and reminder of Make-A-Wish’s mission. Toledo Free Press Sales Manager BJ Rahn has also been an invaluable help.

I am personally grateful to have strengthened some friendships and made new ones. I may never have met McManus, Clark or E.J. Wells without this project, and my life would be a bit dimmer without their creativity.

Summertime project

The project has also inspired an offshoot. For summer 2013, Toledo Free Press will produce a CD of upbeat summer party songs for the American Red Cross of Northwest Ohio to use as a vehicle for summer safety information. If you are a local musician interested in getting your Beach Boys vibe on disc, contact me before we get too far into January.

Thank you again to every musician and person who donated their time and talent to this project. If you would like to see the recipients of your labor, join us at 6 p.m. Dec. 5 at The Blarney Event Center for our second annual “Holiday Wishes” benefit concert. There will be food, friends and a lot of smiling faces at the public event.

In the meantime, I am going to start working on convincing Ramona Collins to record “What Are You Doing New Year’s Eve?” for the 2013 collection …

Michael S. Miller is editor in chief of Toledo Free Press and Toledo Free Press Star. Email him at mmiller@

toledofreepress.com.

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Fundraiser

OSCAR Night to benefit local Red Cross

Written by Brigitta Burks | News Editor | BBurks@toledofreepress.com

Toledoans can walk the red carpet the same night as Meryl Streep and George Clooney at OSCAR Night 2012, benefiting the Greater Toledo Area Chapter of the American Red Cross.

“OSCAR Night is one of our biggest events of the year. It’s an opportunity for people to get together and enjoy grazing and entertainment,” said Communications Officer Jason Copsey.

The Feb. 26 event at Owens Community College’s Center for Fine and Performing Arts gives guests a chance to watch the 84th Academy Awards on a movie screen while sampling appetizers from 20 area eateries, including Cake in a Cup, The Beirut, Java Sensations and Super Suppers.

When guests enter the black-tie-preferred event, they walk a red carpet complete with an interview by WTOL’s Chrys Peterson and Jerry Anderson — and a crowd of cheering volunteers to fawn over them celebrity-style.

“It’s a way to come out and walk on the red carpet while you’re watching celebrities walk on the red carpet,” Copsey said.

Owens goes all-out transforming itself into a version of Kodak Theatre. “The Center for Fine and Performing Arts gets decked out in Oscar decorations,” Copsey said.

Guests have a chance to win jewelry from Harold Jaffe Jewelers, a $400-valued Martha Stewart gift basket and a football signed by Urban Meyer at a raffle and auction. Hepcat Revival and Johnny Rocker and the Hitmen will also entertain guests.

OSCAR Night has long been a staple on Toledo’s social calendar. The event went through “a few different versions” before settling on an Academy Awards theme about nine years ago, Copsey said.

“OSCAR Night has turned into an event people look forward to all year,” he said. Last year about 500 attended OSCAR Night, which typically raises between $75,000 and $80,000.

Event sponsors include Mercy, Columbia Gas of Ohio and KeyBank.

The Toledo Chapter of the American Red Cross educates the public on first aid and CPR and responds to natural disasters, among other activities.

OSCAR Night 2012 is 6-10 p.m. Feb. 26. Tickets are $100, $50 of which is tax deductible. To purchase tickets, call (419) 329-2619.

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Holiday Wishes

Holiday Wishes: Chrys Peterson, Hepcat Revival play favorite Elvis holiday tune

Written by Sarah Ottney | Managing Editor | sottney@toledofreepress.com

Chrys Peterson said there was no question which holiday tune she would contribute to “Holiday Wishes.”

Since childhood, the WTOL Channel 11 news anchor has loved Elvis Presley’s “Santa, Bring My Baby Back To Me.”

“I’m not sure if this is my favorite Christmas song of all time, but it certainly ranks right up there,” Peterson said. “When I was a little girl, my mom had three or four Christmas records she would put on the turntable and they would slip down one at a time and play, and one of them was Elvis’ Christmas album. This was my favorite song. I would stand up and try to do the Elvis scowl with my lip. It’s just peppy and kind of uplifting and I’ve just always loved it. It was the first song that came to my mind.”

Chrys Peterson

Peterson enlisted the help of her friend Greg Tye, lead singer of Toledo group Hepcat Revival.

“He just jumped in with no hesitation and worked with me on this,” Peterson said. “They are the most talented musicians — really fun guys and they have hearts of gold. It was a blast working with them. I don’t think they knew the song, but now they all love it too.”

Trumpet player Vince Krolak said the group took the original Elvis tune and “Hep-ified” it.

“The original didn’t have horn parts so we added tenor sax and trumpet sounds and also opened it for instrumental solos between verses to change it up and give it a little more blues flavor. We also changed the key to suit her vocal range,” Krolak said. “With the way Chrys did her vocals you can still hear the Elvis, so it just came together really nicely.”

Peterson said she didn’t feel pressure to live up to The King.

“It’s kind of easy when you’re a woman doing a cover of a man’s song; no one expects you to sound like him. The whole gender thing put a different twist on it,” Peterson said. “Hepcat changed the score just a little bit, but we really wanted to stay true to that rockabilly Elvis style and just put our own talents into it, so that’s what we did.”

Peterson sang in high school choruses and worked her way through college singing with an ’80s rock band, but said she doesn’t sing much beyond the shower now.

“I’m grateful for the opportunity to come out of the shower,” Peterson said, laughing. “There is so much musical talent in the Toledo area; I don’t know what the heck I’m doing on this CD! We are so blessed to have all this talent surrounding us in Toledo and this is the perfect showcase for the talent that is here and the generosity of those people to donate their time and talents to help the kids in Northwest Ohio.”

Toledo Free Press Editor in Chief Michael S. Miller, who compiled the CD, said he thought of Peterson from the project’s inception.

“I have heard Chrys sing at the Red Cross Oscar gala a number of times, and thought it would be a treat for people to hear what a talented vocalist she is,” Miller said.

As a former board member for the Make-A-Wish Foundation, Northwest Ohio Chapter, Peterson has had the chance to see the wish-granting process up close.

“It’s such an amazing organization,” Peterson said. “I get choked up talking about it. I really believe in the power of hope when you’re healing from an illness like that, and I think what Make-A-Wish does for those kids is offer hope. I truly believe that might be the difference that helps some of these kids turn the corner with their illnesses or move through whatever they are dealing with. So to know the money raised from these CDs alone will grant several wishes for kids in Northwest Ohio, that’s really special.”

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Sound Trek

Local music — at warp speed

Written by Jason Mack | | jmack@toledofreepress.com

The Arts Commission of Greater Toledo (ACGT) is highlighting the local music scene July 22 with Downtown SoundTrek, an event featuring more than 30 bands at 13 venues in Downtown Toledo.

SoundTrek is a new take on the former Toledo Jazz Festival. The cost of admission provides access to all 13 locations and bus rides between venues. The shows are split between the Warehouse District and the Uptown District.

“We were looking for ideas and ways to expand our services to the performing arts community,” said Ryan Bunch, performing and literary arts coordinator at the ACGT. “We wanted to present Toledo’s music scene in a new way. Instead of reinventing the wheel, we took the model we had from the Jazz loop. We made it a tighter bus loop and more multigenre. It’s representative of what’s going on in venues Downtown.”

According to Bunch, the main goal of SoundTrek is to showcase musicians in Toledo. There are only three bands performing from outside the Toledo area.

“These are Toledo musicians in venues that are working to present live music in the community,” Bunch said. “It’s about elevating and highlighting that. It’s getting people to come down and see the wealth of venues, how close they are, how walkable they are and what a diverse range of music there is. It gives the community a chance to get a broad sampling of everything going on in one night.”

Ryan Bunch

One of the artists the community can see is Kyle White as the acoustic rocker kicks things off at PizzaPapalis at 519 Monroe St. White is releasing her second CD “On With the Show” on July 24.

“Toledo is full of extremely talented people,” White said. “The music scene in Toledo would rival any big city. I was in a suburb of Chicago in April, and on a Tuesday night there wasn’t anything going on anywhere. In Toledo, you can go out any night of the week to numerous places and find live music.”

Old State Line guitarist Thomas Barden is excited  about the promotion SoundTrek provides for local venues. His band is opening at the Glass City Cafe.

“It gets more people out in the neighborhood going to things,” Barden said. “Glass City Cafe is great, but it’s hard because people don’t know about it. It’s a great place. The management is wonderful. After Friday night, a lot more people will know about it.”

While Bunch is excited about the music around Toledo today, he’s also proud of the city’s musical past.

“Toledo has a remarkably long and rich history in music,” he said. “It’s the birthplace of Art Tatum and John Hendricks. You have the kind of garage blues renaissance that started here and worked its way up to Detroit. There’s a wide-reaching, broad range of music that’s happened here. It’s always been here. We haven’t quite gotten our dues as the next hip explosion, but it’s really rich. There’s a lot of talent here. I’m constantly astounded by how many people are not just talented at what they do but can work across genres. The music community is really well connected and supportive.”

With such a diverse history, Bunch wanted SoundTrek to represent as many genres as possible.

“If we were going to do this, it needed to be representative of the broad range of styles happening in the area,” he said. “As time goes on and digital music becomes more prevalent, the idea of genres is melting away anyway. If you took a sampling from most peoples’ iPods, there’s a broad range of stuff on there.”

Because of the wide array of musicians and venues in Toledo, the ACGT formed a committee to select the artists and where they would play.

“We were feeling our way through the dark to figure out how it was going to look and work,” Bunch said. “The committee put their heads together and tried to come up with something that is broad in scope. Since we’re working with a lot of established venues that present music, we wanted to make sure they were comfortable with the music they would be presenting. It was a collaboration between the committee and the venue owners to figure out how we could stretch the borders but not go too far with it. It’s been really fun getting to know a handful of venues and working with them. They’ve all really picked up the ball and been excited about it.”

One venue Bunch is particularly excited for is Bozarts Fine Art and Music Gallery.

“[Owner] Jerry Gray put together a killer lineup,” Bunch said. “He was already putting together a show when we contacted him, so it worked out. He has The Staving Chain, which is kind of a traditional Delta blues group. They have Dooley Wilson, who for my money is the best guitar player in the tri-state area. He’s a killer guitar player. Danny Kroha is playing with them, and he’s kind of a Detroit music legend. That should be an awesome lineup.”

The lineup also includes Boom Chick, a rock ‘n’ roll duo from Brooklyn with Moselle Spiller on drums and Frank Hoier on guitar and vocals.

“I’m super excited about the lineup we have,” Gray said. “It’s going to be mostly blues-oriented rock. Boom Chick contacted me online, and the date worked out. It’s their first time in Toledo. They are excellent.”

Bunch said the ACGT plans to use SoundTrek as an annual fundraising event. Proceeds will fund programs such as Artomatic 419!, the art walks and the gallery loops, all of which are presented free to the community. The event also serves as part of an effort to integrate the performing arts into the ACGT.

“The arts commission has always typically been visual arts heavy,” Bunch said. “There used to be a specific performing arts council in Toledo until about 10 years ago. Since then, the slack has not been picked up. It’s been interesting to go through and see what a really broad and diverse array of individuals and organizations there are that are working and haven’t been brought together yet.”

SoundTrek partnered with the first annual Toledo Music Expo, which is July 23 at the Erie Street Market. The event features live performances and provides networking opportunities for artists, venues and vendors.

“That was kind of a serendipitous aspect of the event,” Bunch said. “When we were brainstorming, we thought it would be cool to have a little expo of people who weren’t going to be on this loop. There are so many music related businesses and companies, so we thought we could have people come down and promote their business and show there is a wide network that reaches across the state. It seemed too daunting to take on for the first time. We just wanted to get the bus loop part right.”

“No sooner did we scrap that idea, and put it on the back burner for future years, than we were contacted. They pitched us an idea similar to what we were thinking. It made a lot of sense to cross promote each other’s events and show that over this one weekend there is a broad range of getting a sampling of the music scene. They very generously agreed to donate a portion of their proceeds back to the arts commission. We are incredibly grateful for it.”

The Toledo Music Expo is donating a portion of profits to ACGT and is offering a $5 discount to those who attend SoundTrek.

SoundTrek runs from 7 p.m. to 1 a.m. Wristbands for the event are $15 in advance and $20 on July 22, and admission to individual venues is available for $5. Visit www.ACGT.org for more information.

“If you’re a music fan at all, I think it’s a pretty easy sell,” Bunch said. “If you have any interest in getting to know your city or getting to know like-minded people, it’s all right here. You get to ride around on a bus Downtown and go bar hopping, which is not something you get to do every day.”

Sound Trek Spotlight: Kyle White reaches for the stars

Kyle White put her autobiography to music with her second album “On With the Show,” which she is debuting at a CD release party July 24.

The album is heavily influenced by White’s family. It features a variety of instruments such as violin, trumpet, dobro and mandolin. White’s father Don plays the banjo on three songs.

“He’s been a huge influence on me musically,” she said. “I’ve been surrounded by live music my entire life. My dad’s friends are all musicians. My grandfather [Robert White] is on the wall at the SeaGate Centre for the Lake Erie West Hall of Fame. My dad is an exceptional banjo player and a great bass player, guitar player and singer. It was great to have him on the CD. It’s something I’ll always have.”

The album was also heavily influenced by White’s sister Tamara. White wrote the song “Forever Friend” for her sister when she was sick.

Kyle White

“The album would have been done a lot sooner, but all of 2009 my sister was really sick,” White said. “We didn’t know exactly what was going to happen. I was sad and just wanted to write a tribute to her. She had to have a bone marrow transplant. There’s only a 20 percent chance a sibling will be a match, but luckily I was, so I was her donor. Out of the entire bone marrow floor at the Cleveland Clinic, only her and one other person made it. All of that was going on when I was planning on recording. I was driving to Cleveland every few days.”

Tamara made a full recovery.

“You would never even know anything was wrong with her now,” White said. “They said they’ve never seen anybody’s stem cells graft as fast as mine. I blamed it on all the Guinness I drink because it’s full of iron.”

The title track, “On With the Show,” was written as a not-so-subtle hint to her fiancé before they got engaged.

“We didn’t get engaged until we were together for five years,” White said. “I wrote that about a year and a half ago. It was kind of a message to him. It worked.”

Every song on the album comes from experiences in White’s life.

“I wrote a song about the river and sitting on my boat,” she said. “There’s a song called ‘August in Ohio’ about just hanging out on the front porch. I only write about my personal experiences. I’ve been writing for the past couple of years. I write sporadically. When a song comes to me, I just write it.”

Writing is still a relatively new experience for White. Her first album “Blue Holes in a Gray Sky” was released in 2009.

“I played covers for eight years before I ever wrote a song,” White said. “Singing so many different kinds of music hones you in to what’s going to come out of you.”

White might have never started a career in music if she hadn’t participated in a karaoke contest years ago.

“When I was 19, I worked at Primetime and they had karaoke on Sundays,” White said. “I used to sing ‘Me and Bobby McGee’ and win the contest. The prize was $50 to the bar, so I would get pizza and pop for my friends. When the cover band Tito Slack was starting out, my friend said, ‘My boyfriend has a band. Why don’t you come sing with them in the basement?’ I sang a couple of songs and I was in the band.”

After joining the band, White decided to take up an instrument.

“I didn’t just want to be a singer, so I started teaching myself guitar,” she said. “I played for a couple years before I played guitar at a show.”

White graduated from the University of Toledo with a degree in psychology. If she hadn’t participated in the karaoke contest, she might have been a school psychologist today.

“I was going to go back and get my masters in school psychology,” White said. “I decided to play music for a couple years and see how it goes. It never slowed down. I’m playing more and more. I’m lucky to be able to do something I love for a living.”

Along with her solo career, White also plays in a cover band called Johnny Rocker and the Hitmen. The band’s biggest claim to fame is playing at a John McCain rally.

“It’s a complete 180 from my solo gigs,” White said. “It’s so much fun. We play ’60s, ’70s and ’80s and we do costume changes for each era. Sometimes people don’t even know it’s me because I’m in a big blonde afro and a disco costume. They are really fun to play with.”

She also plays covers in her solo act and is happy to take requests. She learns two or three covers every week and has built a catalog of between 200 and 300 songs.

“I’ve always had the kind of memory where if I took notes in school, I never had to look at them again,” White said. “I just kind of remember things. I have a really good memory, especially for music.”

White has been playing in Toledo for 14 years and plans on sticking around, but she does love to travel. She has been to all but four of the 50 states and has traveled across Europe several times. The last time she went to Europe, she caught a surprise performance.

“We were jamming with these people at a bar in Amsterdam and Sublime showed up,” White said. “We didn’t know it, but they were playing at a place right next door to our hotel. They showed up to this open jam with only about 30 or 40 people and played a half hour set. I was jamming with the house band right before Sublime took the stage, so that was pretty cool.”

White’s CD release party starts at 7 p.m. July 24 at Mulvaney’s Bunker located at 4945 Dorr St. There is no cover, and the show features 17-year-old Claire Cooper as the opening act.

“I like giving younger people experience playing in front of people,” White said. “She’s a natural. It’s crazy. She is never the least bit nervous.”

White is also the opening act at PizzaPapalis on July 22 as part of Downtown SoundTrek. The event features more than 30 bands at 13 venues downtown from 7 p.m. to 1 a.m. Wristbands for SoundTrek are $15 in advance and $20 on July 22, and admission to individual venues is available for $5. Visit www.ACGT.org for more information.

Sound Trek Spotlight: Veteran pilots band to new heights

Mild-mannered college dean by day, guitar hero by night, Thomas Barden plays with Old State Line alongside his wife and a few of their friends.

Barden, dean of the Honors College at the University of Toledo, has performed for more than 40 years after starting in music at 16 in Virginia.

“It was the folk revival,” Barden said. “Everyone was playing. Peter, Paul & Mary and Bob Dylan were big. Their songs were simple. I got an old cheap guitar to start with and had a group in high school. When I got to college, there was an old-time music scene with fiddlers and all those old guys. It was great. I hung out in a coffeehouse instead of a fraternity. It was just the time it was.”

He stuck with the guitar for years, but Barden’s folk background eventually led him to pick up a mandolin.

“I avoided anything but guitar until I was around 50, thinking it might confuse me,” he said. “One of the old guys at a jam in Toledo told me, ‘it doesn’t confuse you, it just helps you get better. The chords are upside down and backwards.’ As soon as he told me that, I got one from Durdel’s Music and just started trying it. He was right. It makes your guitar playing better.”

Old State Line

Barden figured out the mandolin then took up another instrument called a dobro.

“The dobro was a Christmas gift from my wife and kids,” Barden said. “They said, ‘Okay, you’re so smart, figure this one out.’ That one is open tuned with a slide. It is tough. I only do a few tunes with it, only three or four, but it’s such a great country sound.”

After years of watching her husband play, Rayna Zacharias said she decided to learn to play bass guitar.

“She was looking for a way to relax,” Barden said. “She’s been around the band for as long as we’ve been married. She figures it’s easier to be in it than to be a roadie. She’s really good, that’s the thing. We weren’t sure. That was going to be a little tense in the family if she was crappy. We won’t have to have that conversation.”

Zacharias has brought new ideas to the band from her lessons at Durdel’s Music.

“We’re partners in everything else, and being music partners is great, too,” Barden said. “She has such a great teacher now in Jason Gahler. She brings home stuff that’s a real stretch, and I get to practice with her before we take it to the band.”

Old State Line also features Cindy Lipman on fiddle and vocals, Larry Meyer on drums and Ramsey Abu-Absi on guitar, mandolin and vocals.

“I’m married to the bass player and I’ve been playing with the fiddler for decades,” Barden said. “Everybody knew everybody anyhow. It was just an occasion for this jam to go public. Me, Cindy and my wife just did jams on Sunday afternoons. We talked to Larry about trying to drum, then Ramsey came in. He’s an incredible guitar player and a really good mandolin player, too. We just would do afternoon jams in our house, and it got so good we had to take it out.”

Before forming Old State Line, Barden and Lipman played together in other groups, such as Midnight on the Water and Ten Mile Creek.

“She started playing because she found her grandfather’s fiddle,” Barden said. “I was a guitar player so I backed her up while she got started with it. We’ve been in band after band for 20 years. Ten Mile Creek was more blue-grassy than we are now, because there was no drummer. What’s nice about Old State Line is we have Larry Meyer who is a drummer. It takes us into more of a rockabilly and Johnny Cash area than we were with Ten Mile Creek. It’s really fun.”

Old State Line is without Lipman for the summer while she vacations in Maine, so Abu-Absi’s co-worker Ted Whalen is sitting in with the band.

“He’s a really good fiddler, but he also plays the harmonica,” Barden said. “We’ll probably move more into the Bob Dylan direction since we have a harmonica player. We added more Dylan to the set list because we can hear Ted play that harmonica. It’s such a Bob sound.”

The band plays mostly old fiddle tunes and folk songs, and Barden described their sound as Americana.

“Our style can be really wide-ranging,” Barden said. “Kansas City is a style my wife’s bass instructor taught her. She came home playing the licks to ‘Sunshine of Your Love,’ so we threw that in, too. Right now it’s anything we can do that sounds decent.”

Old State Line is the opening act at Glass City Café or July 22 as part of Downtown SoundTrek. The event features more than 30 bands at 13 venues Downtown from 7 p.m. to 1 a.m. Wristbands for SoundTrek are $15 in advance and $20 on July 22, and admission to individual venues is available for $5. Visit www.ACGT.org for more information.

July 22 Sound Trek schedule:

UPTOWN ENTERTAINMENT DISTRICT

1. Bretz Bar 2012 Adams St.

(419) 243-1900 www.myspace.com/bretzthebar

DJs and Drag Show featuring:

11 p.m.: Charlie Slick (electro-pop/dance from Ann Arbor)

12 a.m.: Feleciana Thuderpussy (drag show)

All night: DJ Rob Sample (DJ/dance)

2. Ottawa Tavern 1817 Adams St.

(419) 725-5483 www.otavern.com

7 p.m.: Balloon Messenger (indie)

8 p.m.: Microdot (shoegaze)

9 p.m.: Great Uncle (rock/pop)

10 p.m.: Great Lakes Crew (hip-hop)

11 p.m.: GoLab (electro-pop/rock)

12 a.m.: Matt Truman Ego Trip (glam rock)

1 a.m.: Frank & Jesse (rock n’ roll)

3. Truth Art Gallery 1811 Adams St.

(419) 460-1343 www.thetruthtoledo.com/gallery

8 – 11 p.m.: 4 Deep (jazz/blues/soul)

4. The Attic on Adams 1701 Adams St.

(419) 243-5350 www.theatticonadams.com

7:30 p.m. & 9:30 p.m.: Leyla & Raq the Casbah

10 p.m. – 12:30 a.m.: Big Blues Bob (Chicago-style blues)

Plus live magic and more!

5. Manhattan’s 1516 Adams St.

(419) 243-6675 www.manhattanstoledo.com

7:30 p.m. – 9:30 p.m. :DFR (funk/R&B)

10 p.m. – 1 a.m.: Tom Turner & Slow Burn (blues/rock)

6. Toledo School for the Arts 333 14th St.

(419) 246-8732 www.ts4arts.com

Enter on 15th St., across from Manhattan’s

7 – 9 p.m.: Glass City Steel (steel drum ensemble)

9 – 11 p.m.: Benny and the Bricks (rock)

11 p.m. – 1 a.m.: The Groove Associates (groovy)

7. Wesley’s Bar 1201 Adams St.

(419) 255-3333 www.wesleysbar.com

7:30 p.m.: Lance Hulsey (of Kentucky Chrome) (rockabilly)

8:30 – 10 p.m. – Mighthaveben (The Band) (jazz/folk/funk)

10:30 p.m. – 2:30 a.m.: Old School Fridays featuring DJs Todd Perrine, N.Matimoe and Folk (DJs/old school funk, soul, & hip-hop)

8. Toledo City Paper Offices 1120 Adams St.

(419) 244-9859 www.toledocitypaper.com

7 p.m.: Raine Wilder (hip-hop)

7:55 p.m.: Ben Barefoot and the Handshakes (indie rock)

8:50 p.m.: Decent Folk (folk/indie)

9:45 p.m.: Stonehouse (jam rock)

10:40 p.m.: Shit Dang Monstertrucks! (alt-country)

11:30 p.m.: Thirty Three & 1/3 (blues/indie rock)

12:20 a.m.: Gold (funk/rock)

9. Glass City Café 1107 Jackson St.

(419) 241-4519 www.glasscitycafe.com

7:30 – 10 p.m.: Old State Line (Americana)

10 p.m. – 12 a.m. Black Swamp String Band (bluegrass)

STADIUM/ARENA DISTRICT

10. The Blarney Bullpen/Toledo Free Press Star 601 Monroe St.

(419) 418-2339 www.theblarneyirishpub.com

Enter on Huron Street.

7:30 p.m. – 12 a.m.: Hepcat Revival  (swing/jazz)

11. Table Forty4 610 Monroe St.

(419) 725-0044 www.tableforty4.com

7 – 9:30 p.m.: Bobby May & John Barile (rock/blues)

10 p.m. – 1 a.m.: The Chris Shutters Band (rock/blues)

12. PizzaPapalis 519 Monroe St.

(419) 244-7722 www.pizzapapalis.com

7:15 p.m.: Kyle White (acoustic/folk)

8:15 p.m.: The Faux Paus (indie rock)

9:45 p.m.: Chavar Dontae (electronic/soul/rock)

11:30 p.m.: The Quickness (rock/blues/jazz)

13. Bozarts Fine Art & Music Gallery

151 N. St. Clair St. (419) 464-5785

7:30 p.m.: The ‘Leles (ukulele/folk)

8:30 p.m.: Thirty Three & 1/3 (blues rock/indie)

9:30 p.m.: Danny Kroha (formerly of The Gories) (acoustic blues from Detroit)

10:30 p.m.: The Staving Chain (featuring

Dooley Wilson) (traditional Delta-style slide blues)

12 a.m. – Boom Chick (blues-surf-rock from Brooklyn)

Partner Event: The First Toledo Music Expo!

The following day, Saturday, July 23, J&L Entertainment Services will host Toledo’s first Toledo Music Expo. A portion of proceeds from the event will benefit the Arts Commission of Greater Toledo. Save $5 at the door with your SoundTrek wristband. The First Toledo Music Expo will take place at the Erie Street Market in Downtown Toledo. This event is for local musicians, singers, songwriters, engineers, recording studios, videographers, and more. For more information visit them on the web at ToledoMusicExpo.com.

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