Date: Fri 01-Jan-1999
Date: Fri 01-Jan-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: SHANNO
Quick Words:
Road-1998-Pumpkins-Spinelli
Full Text:
ON THE ROAD/SHANNON HICKS: The Best & Worst Of 1998
(with photos)
Like the Cranberries said years ago: Everyone Else Is Doing It, Why Can't We?
Here for your reading pleasure, the fourth annual Top Ten Best & Worst Lists
for 1998. These are in no particular order.
Good Things To Remember
(1) BILLY JOEL, who, even with a scare earlier in the fall where he had to
postpone a September show, returned in December for his fourth sold-out show
of 1998 at the Hartford Civic Center. This tour by the Piano Man was easily
one of the best concerts to visit the state this or any recent year.
(2) Also doing a fourth straight sold-out show this year, only his shows come
at a once-a-year pace, was JIMMY BUFFETT, who visited the Meadows Music
Theatre in Hartford for the fourth summer in a row. Parrotheads loved him all
over again.
(3) CORY ROBERT SPINELLI, who joined his big sister, Danielle, and the rest of
his family in this big ol' world, on May 12.
(4) The X-Files goes big screen!
(5) I'll admit when I'm wrong, and after all my kvetching about waiting
forever for HOLE's long-long- long awaited follow-up to Live Through This ,
Courtney Love and band released Celebrity Skin . Not only did the band release
an album, but it's a very good one! And not only that, but the band then hit
the road last month and came to Danbury's O'Neill Center on December 4.
(6) Moody's Diner & Motel, on Route 1 in Waldoboro, MAINE -- truly
Vacationland. (Also "discovering" Camden, Me., a few miles further north. Long
live The Smiling Cow and Cappy's Chowder House!)
(7) Whether you've always enjoyed the original recordings or just began
listening to their contemporary counterparts, zoot suit skeedoo and whoopee
doo! Let's give thanks for the return of GLENN MILLER and COUNT BASIE's
popularity thanks to a strong boogie woogie/Big Band revival led by the likes
of THE BRIAN SETZER ORCHESTRA, THE SQUIRREL NUT ZIPPERS, BIG BAD VOODOO
DADDIES and INDIGO SWING, among them.
(8) Two words: JOHN GLENN!
(9) THE LILITH FAIR, which returned not only to the Meadows Music Theatre on
July 11, but also to the top of the list of the summer's most successful
touring festivals for the second year in a row. Performances in Connecticut
came from SARAH McLACHLAN, NATALIE MERCHANT, IMANI COPPOLA, HEATHER NOVA and
even Connecticut's own DONNA MARTIN.
McLachlan not only continued a very popular festival tour, but also an
extremely gregarious donation of proceeds from ticket sales on every stop of
the tour. This year, on behalf of the tour and taking $1 from each ticket sold
before the July 11 show started, McLachlan donated over $13,000 to Hartford
Interval House.
And (10) there was also the continuation of radio 104 BIG DAY OFF events (or
the similarly themed Jingle Bell Jam in December) at places like the Meadows
Music Theatre and Bushnell Park in Hartford, and Oakdale Theatre in
Wallingford. These events, sponsored by the Hartford-based alt-rock radio
station, bring concertgoers a rather sizable roster of bands for $20 a pop. In
1998, radio 104 sponsored concerts that presented the likes of SQUIRREL NUT
ZIPPERS, MIGHTY MIGHTY BOSSTONES, GARBAGE, FUEL, THE AMAZING ROYAL CROWNS, and
a ton of others.
Because I like to see more positive than negative, let's continue with some of
the better events that marked 1998: there was the IRELAND PEACE ACCORD; hurray
for ALISA MAHER & DENNIS LYONS, who became engaged on August 8; the TOWER OF
POWER St Patrick's Day show at Tuxedo Junction in Danbury; the GREG BROWN
concert at Edmond Town Hall in Newtown, November 12; a nice feather in his
cap: Newtown resident and bluegrass king ROGER SPRUNG played the opening set
for WILLIE NELSON when Nelson performed at the Ives Center in Danbury during
the summer; the smart thinking by organizers of WestConn's annual WestFest
Weekend, which moved a show by THE VIOLENT FEMMES that was to have been played
outdoors at the Ives Center indoors to Tuxedo Junction, just across town,
after a week of rain that continued the day of the show on May 9; and this
year, two sold-out shows by DAVE MATTHEWS BAND at the Meadows, July 31 &
August 1.
The Bad Parts of 1998
(1) A planned series of 20 free outdoor concerts that SMASHING PUMPKINS wanted
to put together across the country fell through. (However, the 15 charity
shows the band did manage to perform, and the $2.7 million proceeds produced
by the shows, netted donations for a number of charities across the country.)
(2) Two words: Linda Tripp. That woman gives being a so-called good friend a
bad name. The other three words that would accompany this entry would be The
Monica Ordeal.
(3) Losing FRANK SINATRA. Also ROY "The Singing Cowboy" ROGERS, who joined
Trigger in that Great Rodeo in the Sky this year, among other people who
passed away in 1998.
(4) Less than one year after music returned to The Chat House in Newtown (on
January 24), the coffeehouse's owners had to pull up stakes and close the
coffeehouse completely (Christmas weekend). That's Newtown's loss, yet again,
for a live music venue.
(5) The temporary -- one hopes! -- halt on the JAZZ SERIES AT McLAUGHLIN
VINEYARDS in Sandy Hook. That has always been a wonderful place to hear music,
relax with friends and family, and enjoy some terrific music.
(6) THE SPICE GIRLS brought their act not only to the country, but also to
Connecticut (July 3, Meadows Music Theatre) and showed us all how bad they
really are live.
(7) JOURNEY replaced its lead singer, Steve Perry, with Steve Augeri, who used
to sing with Tall Stories. Augeri was good with Tall Stories, but he's no
Steve Perry. Consequently, the band really doesn't sound like Journey any
more, which we learned in October when the band performed at the Oakdale.
(8) EL NINO, which may have given us a mild winter, but wreaked havoc
elsewhere, including statewide fires in Florida, a deadly heatwave in the
Midwest, and a brutally mortal tidal wave in New Guinea.
(9) A few abstract negatives: Gidget, a/k/a THE TACO BELL CHIHUAHUA;
TAMAGOTCHIS and FURBYS; and the continued selfishness of professional sports
players who go on strike because they want more money to play a game for a
living. I have no compassion for the NBA, neither the players nor the owners.
And (10) MARILYN MANSON.
Until next week, I'll be seeing you... on the road!
