Date: Fri 05-Dec-1997
Date: Fri 05-Dec-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: SHANNON
Quick Words:
road-McLachlan-Allen-Globe
Full Text:
ON THE ROAD FOR DECEMBER 5, 1997
Excellent news heard this weekend. No date yet, but the wonderful (no
favoritism here, oh no!) SARAH McLACHLAN will be coming to The Oakdale Theatre
in Wallingford next year. Hopefully sooner than later.
A reminder: entry to the Connecticut Independent Police Union-sponsored
concert Monday night by THE MARSHALL TUCKER BAND is by advance ticket purchase
only. The show, at Crossroads Cantina in Waterbury on December 8, is a benefit
for the police union, a non-profit organization with members across the state.
Tickets are $20; call 925-8497. That number will put you in touch with the
Shelton Police Union; ask for Sgt Tom Adams, Officer Mike Madden or Officer Ed
Dobbins. The cantina is at 210 Meadow Street (telephone 573-9458 for
directions, but don't call the club for tickets; sales are only through the
police union).
Jim Allen, a Newtown musician, will be performing at The Towne Crier, Pawling,
NY, on Friday, December 12. Allen will be accompanying singer-songwriter
Terence Martin. The duo will be opening for British guitarist Martin Simpson.
Allen's new release, One More Mile , will be available at the show. Showtime
is 9 pm; tickets are $15. For additional information, contact the Crier at
914/855-1300.
The Globe Theatre in Norwalk has reopened. One of the first shows to be booked
at the venue is by a band called CORK, which features the talents of Jimi
Hendrix Experience bassist Noel Redding, Mountain drummer Corky Laing and Spin
Doctors guitarist Erik Schenkman. The all-ages show has been announced for
December 20. Tickets are through the Globe's box office, 852-0088.
When FIONA APPLE plays at CCSU's Welte Auditorium on Sunday (Dec 7), opening
will be BEHAN JOHNSON. The singer/songwriter duo has managed to combine pretty
disparate backgrounds into a melting pot resulting in a folk-jazz-pop hybrid
for its RCA Records debut.
Behan is a lithe, down-to-earth short-cropped blonde from Watertown, NY. A
godchild of hippie fugitive Abbie Hoffman, Behan counts among her influences
Neil Young, Bob Dylan and Carol King.
Behan was introduced to L.A. native Deron Johnson, a multi-sport star with
dreds raised on the music of Stevie Wonder and James Brown. As a teenager,
Johnson was hand-picked by the legendary jazz trumpeter Miles Davis to play
keyboards in his last band. The duo's album is wide-ranging thematically, with
songs like "Cypress Hill," about an imaginary place "under the Cypress trees
where star-crossed lovers can finally come together for eternity"; "Nothing,"
a pointedly political song from the first-person of a Ku Klux Klan
sympathizer; "Someone To Call My Own," about Behan's experiences in Hollywood;
and "Song For Abbie," a eulogy for the godfather Behen never really knew until
after his death.
Welcome to the holiday season. Until next week, I'll be seeing you... on the
road.
