Date: Fri 16-Apr-1999
Date: Fri 16-Apr-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: SHANNO
Quick Words:
Treblehook-Spencer-Morgan
Full Text:
A New Hook For Fans Of Intimate Coffeehouse Settings
(with cuts)
BY SHANNON HICKS
The Sandy Hook trio Treblehook will be the featured act on Saturday, April 17,
for the first of what organizers hope will become a regular coffee house event
in Newtown. The band will be performing at the Newtown Congregational Church
House Memorial Room, 41-A Main Street in Newtown.
Treblehook was formed in 1996. Its members are Brian Morgan, who plays lead
guitar and vocals; Andy Spencer, guitar, banjo and vocals; and Alan Morgan,
guitar, vocals and harmonica. The band made up its name from the fact the
three members grew up in Sandy Hook (Brian Morgan now resides in Middlebury).
The band performs an entertaining mix of original songs and a traditional folk
and pop repertoire. Alan and Andy both compose songs, but their styles are
very different: Alan's music is reflective, serious and tender, while Andy's
works are more light-hearted and often have a comic twist.
Brian, the quiet member of the trio, often collaborates with his brother. He
also performs the occasional solo. Currently, Brian is learning 12-string
guitar.
Treblehook formed three years ago during the holiday season. The band's three
members have known each other most of their lives, and an appreciation of
music in each of the three men was bound to turn into something.
"I've known Alan since he was about five years old," Andy Spencer said this
week. "He was my youngest brother's best friend. I can remember him coming to
our house to play with my brother..."
Although he was raised in Newtown for 22 years, Alan moved away from town
shortly after he married his wife, Darlene. (Darlene Spencer is currently
clerk of the Borough of Newtown.) The couple stayed away for 17 years, but
when the Spencers moved back into town, Alan Morgan was one of the first
people to contact Andy. Alan mentioned he had been writing some songs and
wondered if Andy was interested in doing something involving music.
Andy was immediately impressed by what Alan had been doing, so the two started
getting together a few times each week, working on arrangements and more
songs. Alan started talking about his brother Brian, who was also interested
in doing something musically, but, says Andy, "Brian played guitar, I played
guitar, and Alan played guitar...I was not really in favor of having three
guitars."
But Brian showed up one night and "he was the missing piece of the puzzle,"
Andy admits. "Since then things have fallen together pretty nicely for us."
From his own days of playing with bluegrass bands, Andy Spencer has been
around musicians who could play the mandolin. The musician slowly picked up
how to play that instrument as well, and he now performs on mandolin in about
half a dozen of the songs Treblehook performs.
The band is far from a three-man guitar band. While their main credentials
list each Treblehook member as guitarist and vocalist, there is also bass
playing from Alan Morgan, harmonica from both of the Morgan brothers, and what
Andy terms "extremely minor percussion...sand shakers, for instance."
"We're doing a lot in terms of branching out to get away from just the
three-guitar set-up. We do work an awful lot on vocals," said Andy. "It is a
vocal band, which is another reason why I love it.
"Because they're brothers, Alan and Brian sing so perfectly and effortlessly,"
he continued. "It's a joy to listen to, and I just try to slide somewhere in
between, and we usually end up with a nice three-part harmony."
Unfortunately, says Andy, things like day jobs and other commitments keep the
trio from going after the music part of their lives as aggressively as the
band might like to. On the positive side, though, the group is beginning to
receive more opportunities to play. Treblehook has been invited to return to
the C.H. Booth Concerts on the Lawn summer series this year, and the group has
another coffeehouse-type performance next weekend in Woodbury.
Treblehook's first performance was 2« years ago, when they played at The Chat
House. The Newtown coffee house on Church Hill Road, now under new ownership
and called Coffee Delight, provided the stage for about half a dozen
Treblehook shows, in fact. The group has also enjoyed performing in Morris,
where a regular coffeehouse-style forum is presented monthly, as well as the
Booth Library summer series.
The band's performances include their own songs, which are group
collaborations, and some covers of American classics. Treblehook has two songs
it performs that have to do with Newtown. The first, "Before They Were
Nighthawks," refers to memories the three men have as boys while growing up in
Newtown.
"This is [a] vision of how things were and how they are now, and how different
things are," Andy explained. "As with every other song, it was a group
effort." Alan Morgan is the trio's principal songwriter. "He cranks out three
to my every one," laughed Andy.
The second song is, says Andy, a "very silly, funny song," called "Moms in
Minivans." The song is about what the center of town looks like on a typical
Saturday morning.
"It's not meant to offend," he insists. "It's just for fun."
While many people have picked up on the two Newtown songs, the band's full
repertoire does not necessarily have to do with things quite so local. There
are others that do have a local feel to them, however.
Alan once wrote a song called "The Man Under the Bridge." This was around the
time Alan and Andy were both working at Danbury Printing & Litho, about ten
years ago. There was a homeless man who lived under one of the bridges on
Kenosia Avenue, in the Mill Plain section of Danbury, and the men would see
him almost every day as they drove to work.
"Al was just so moved by the situation that he wrote this song," Andy said.
"It has to do with how you don't know how much you have, or how lucky you are,
until you see something like this."
"I think it's one of the best works he's ever done."
A message left on one of the band members' answering machine recently put the
band's hopes into focus. It was a call from the talent coordinator for the
Woodbury coffeehouse Treblehook will be playing at next weekend.
"We recently sent a demo tape to Woodbury, to the man who runs the St Paul's
coffeehouse. He left a message on [the machine] congratulating us on our sound
and our harmonies. He said, `This really sounds fabulous and we can't wait to
have you here.'"
"Every once in a while," said Andy, "you get an `Atta boy,' and it kind of
makes it all worthwhile."
The Coffeehouse
Admission to the coffeehouse is free. Home-baked goodies and coffee will be
available for a small purchase price.
The first hour of the evening will be reserved for open mic. Anyone with a
song to sing or perform is invited to attend and set up during this time.
Treblehook will take over at 8:30 pm, performing for the duration of the
evening, which is expected to run until about 10:30 pm.
Tina Mahoney, the aunt of Alan and Brian Morgan and a member of Newtown
Congregational Church, is helping organize the coffee house. Currently, the
Treblehook show is the only performance solidly planned, but Tina and others
are hoping to plan more shows in the future. There is already talk of a
performance by Kim Weber for July, and Treblehook plans to perform additional
coffeehouse events as the house band.
"We really don't have a permanent place for [the coffee house]," Ms Mahoney
explained. "We're trying to see how this show goes, because we're going to try
to find a place that we can do this regularly.
"We'd love to do it at the church house, but the church couldn't promise us
that we could use the building every month -- other people need to use the
building also." The Congregational Church House was a perfect starting point
for the coffee house, Tina explained, because she is a member of Newtown
Congregational Church, as are Andy Spencer and his wife.
"At this point," Tina said, "it's going to be a month-by-month venture. We
have some ideas for future performances."
"We're really at the initial planning stages, but it's something that I've
seen done successfully in other towns. We're hoping to get a good response in
Newtown so that we can present this kind of thing to the community on a
regular basis."
Anyone interested in helping in future events, whether with publicity or other
organizational duties, is invited to contact Tina Mahoney at 426-7192.
Performers are also encouraged to contact Tina, she said, so that future
events can be planned.
