Posts Tagged concert

Two Paddy’s Day shows benefit local food bank

12 February 2012
Paddys Poster

Paddys Poster

What: Two Squid Jiggers concerts celebrating Maine’s Irish heritage and raising money and donations for the Lisbon Area Christian Outreach Clothing and Food Pantry, serving Lisbon, Bowdoin and Durham, Maine. A special St. Patrick’s Day menu will be available (not included in the ticket price) including corned beef and cabbage. The bar will be open and Guinness, Smithwick’s and other fine spirits will be available.

Where: Graziano’s Casa Mia Restaurant at the Corner of Route 196 & Mill Street in Lisbon, Maine 04250 (207) 353-4335

When: March 17, 2012; the first show is at 4pm; second show at 8pm

How much: $15 per person for one show or $25 for both

Tickets: Available at Graziano’s Casa Mia Restaurant, at any Squid Jigger show or call toll free 1-866-655-7171 with a credit card

Maine’s only cephalopod-inspired maritime and Celtic folk duo — The Squid Jiggers — return to Graziano’s Casa Mia for two full concerts on St. Patrick’s Day, March 17. The Squids will sing from their deep reservoir of Irish songs and stories while Chef Joe Graziano serves a special Paddy’s Day menu, including corned beef and cabbage. Fine beer and spirits — including Guinness stout — will be available at the bar.

“We’ll be digging deep and pulling out Irish songs no one’s ever heard us play before,” says Squiddy bass and whistle player Dave Rowe. “And we have enough material to keep going for hours without repeating ourselves.”

Troy R. Bennett, the duo’s guitar and concertina player, agrees, “We’re like an Energizer Leprachaun on St. Paddy’s Day. We just keep going and going.”

The dual concerts will raise funds and goods for the Lisbon Area Christian Outreach Clothing and Food Pantry (LACO) through a series of exciting raffle giveaways and general badgering by the band. Prizes include Graziano’s gift certificates, Squid Jiggers CDs and merchandise, and signed and matted photographic prints of Ireland taken by Squid Jigger (and pro photographer) Troy R. Bennett.

“I’ve been to Ireland a bunch of times, and even did some college time there, too,” says Bennett. “I have some knockout pictures nobody has seen and I’m happy to donate a few for this wicked good cause.”

To raise the stakes, and more cash fro LACO, The Squid Jiggers will auction off “Danny Boy” and other standard requests to the highest bidders — all to help LACO.

“Yep, we’re holding them for ransom,” says Rowe. “If you want to hear ‘When Irish Eyes are Smiling’ or ‘Danny Boy’ or ‘The Unicorn Song’ you’re going to have to cough up some money to feed hungry people.”

To enter the raffles and song auctions, concert goers should bring non-perishable food items or cash.

LACO is a non-profit organization founded in 1985. It is sponsored by churches of various denominations located in the Lisbon, Durham and Bowdoin communities. LACO operates a food pantry located at the Marion T. Morse Community Center in Lisbon. There are no financial qualifications for food assistance, simply proof of residence. For more information about the program, call Carol Day at 353-8019 or James Duley at 353-6002. Visit them on the web at www.lacopantry.org.

Release the CDs!

5 October 2011

From the Squid Central News Desk…

33 1/3

33 1/3

The Squid Jiggers release CD in tribute to records at three eateries

Maine folk duo The Squid Jiggers are celebrating the release of their second full-length CD — a tribute to vinyl records entitled “331/3” — with a three shows in October.

The first show, on Saturday October 22, includes a sumptuous, family-style Italian buffet dinner with a cash bar at Graziano’s Casa Mia on Route 196 in Lisbon, Maine. Graziano’s is a Maine landmark serving fresh, homemade food for 41 years. Dinner is at 6 p.m. and the show starts at 7 p.m. Tickets are $30. Call 1-866-655-7171 for reservations with a credit card.

The second show, on Wednesday October 26, is at Bull Feeney’s on Fore Street in the Old Port neighborhood of Portland, Maine. Bull Feeney’s serves delicious steaks, seafood and hearty Irish fare and has Maine’s most extensive selection of single malt Scotch and Irish whiskies. The show starts at 8 p.m. and is free with the purchase of drinks or a meal. Contact Bull Feeney?s at 207-773-7210.

Show number three takes place at the Black Bear Cafe in Naples, Maine on Friday night October 28 at 8 p.m. Hosts John and Susan Bohill serve up the best gourmet pizza in the state, along with pasta, seafood, steak and other tasty surprises in an intimate, tin- ceilinged building on Route 302. The show is free with dinner. Seating is limited, arrive early. Call the Black Bear cafe at 207-693-4770.

The Squid Jiggers — folk veterans Dave Rowe and Troy R. Bennett — have played nearly 250 shows and released a debut album since forming in March 2010. They play a hearty mix of traditional and tradition-inspired music from Ireland, Scotland, Atlantic Canada, and Maine, sprinkled with a dash of Downeast wit.

Their latest collection of old and new songs is a CD about records. Called 331/3 in a nod to the rotational speed of long-playing discs, it seeks to capture the warmth and style of the vinyl records the Jiggers grew up on. The CD cover recalls a 1960s Columbia Records release, complete with tracks listed on sides one and two. The disc itself looks like a miniature, grooved record.

The resemblance doesn’t stop there. Recorded at Squid Jigging vocalist and bass player Dave Rowe’s recording studio in Raymond, the CD even sounds like a record.

“We would have loved to release this album on vinyl,” said Rowe. “But the cost was just too prohibitive.”

So, they used vintage equipment, and a little studio trickery, to evoke the sounds of the familiar black spinning platters instead. The album opens with the sound of a tonearm being activated. Then the needle hits the “record” and a few stray crackles and pops are heard before the first track. The music is notably warmer, more live and without the crisp digital edge of a standard CD.

“I’m not at liberty to divulge our methods,” said Bennett with a grin. “Let’s just say it involved two elderly, quarter-inch tape machines, a Dual 1229 turntable, some sophisticated software and an old Glenn Miller album.”

Rowe is similarly mum. “My lips are sealed,” he said.

But why go to all the trouble?

Because they owe a lot to records.

Bennet and Rowe (the son of a well-known folk musician Tom Rowe, of Schooner Fare) say records were their biggest connection to the wider world of folk music while growing up. Bennett recalls combing the cutout bins in Portland record stores, looking for the kind of music he wasn’t going to hear on the radio.

“As soon as I got my license, I was driving to Portland every week, looking for Clancy Brothers, Dave Mallet, Christy Moore and, of course, Schooner Fare records,” said Bennett. “I spent every dime I had on records, gas, girls and guitar strings.”

In the days before eBay, iTunes, Youtube and Google searches, finding non-mainstream music was a challenge. He’d stop at scores of yard sales every summer, looking for folk music he hadn’t heard before. He borrowed records by the dozen, transferring them to cassette.

Rowe distinctly remembers “needle dropping” Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem records over and over again, trying to discern the lyrics.

“It’s the same thing my Dad did when he was a kid,” said Rowe. “He’d listen to Kingston Trio records and learn all three harmony parts, and the guitar and banjo parts, too.”

Aside from the technical details, The Squid Jiggers are proud of the music on 331/3, as well.

Their first CD, Greatest Hits, was a collection of well known and traditional songs from the celtic genre. Their newest offering is roughly half original material and half traditional. The songs range from jaunty sing-alongs from Newfoundland, to Irish playground taunts, to original songs about larger-than-life seafaring heroes and sailors looking for ladies ashore.

Up Jumped the Dancers, a song penned by Bennett, describes the joyous effects of a fiddler and his instrument. It’s an uptempo number, but conveys a sense of sadness mixed with revelry as the fiddler brings happiness while his own remains out of reach.

“It’s a mostly true story,” said Bennett. “I wish it wasn’t.”

Just in time for the 150th anniversary of the American Civil War, Rowe and Georgia songwriter Dennis Goodwin tell a true tale of kindness in a new song called The Stranger. In 1862, a family in Gray, Maine waited for the body of their son, who died of wounds suffered in the battle of Cedar Mountain, to be shipped home to them. When the coffin arrives, they find the body of a young Confederate soldier in his place. Instead of sending him back, they bury him as their own.

“I got the idea for the song from my late friend Harvey Weinstein,” said Rowe, “and writing it with Dennis, who is down in Georgia, seemed like a natural idea. We?ve got the North and South thing going on.”

The album is rounded out with songs from Scotland, a couple more Newfoundland tunes and an irresistible sing along shanty from the Chesapeake Bay decked out with new verses by Bennett and a chorus of friends and colleagues.

The new CD will be available at all concerts after the kickoff at Graziano’s on October 22, and at their website www.squidjiggers.com shortly thereafter.

Three Amigos

Three Amigos

33 1/3 track listing

1. Jack Was Every Inch a Sailor is a lively traditional song from Newfoundland. It probably started life as a music hall number before passing into the public domain. The Squid Jiggers get vocal support here from a group of friends and colleagues dubbed the “Calamari Choir.”

2. This short medley is a pairing of Mairi?s Wedding, a well-known Scots wedding song sung while walking from church to parish hall, and I?ll Tell Me Ma, an Irish children?s playground ditty from Belfast.

3. The Bonnie Ship the Diamond was a real Scottish whaling ship, launched in 1812 and skippered by Captain Thompson. Despite the bravado of this song, it was lost in 1819 after taking 8 whales in the Arctic.

4. Up Jumped the Dancers is a new song written by Troy about a fiddler with the ability to lift spirits and set feet in motion. Though he brings joy to drinkers and dancers alike, his own happiness is harder to find.

5. Based on a true story, The Stranger tells the tale of a fallen Confederate soldier mistakenly shipped to a family in Gray, Maine who bury him like he was their own. It is appropriately written by Dave in Maine and Dennis Goodwin of Georgia.

6. Paddy Lay Back is a salty call-and-response capstan shanty made for toiling aboard ship and hauling anchor. The Calamari Choir joins in here, making this one a real shouter.

7. The Mingulay Boat Song concerns a tiny Island in the Outer Hebrides, off the west coast of Scotland. Without a harbor and with a dwindling population, it was abandoned in 1912. The song comes from the imagination of Sir Hugh S. Roberton, who wrote it in 1938. It’s about coming home.

8. Troy wrote Come Down Ye Roses by combining parts of a traditional shanty chorus collected by Alan Lomax in the Bahama?s in 1935 with a brand new song idea. His home port of Portland used to have weekly steamship service to Liverpool and scads of shops catering to every “need” of sailors ashore.

9. The truly romantic Lovers Often Do comes from an old poem Troy wrote in college about longing for adventure and love. It?s coupled with an adapted traditional tune and performed on guitar and tin whistle.

10. The Star of Logy Bay and I’ze the B’y are a couple of authentic Newfoundland dance tunes. The former is a lovely waltz rendered here on concertina and tin whistle. The latter is a mostly nonsensical jig. It?s probably the best known song from ‘Da Rock.

11. Dave’s father, Tom Rowe, wrote Molasses for Schooner Fare’s 1985 album “We the People.” Among other details, it chronicles Boston’s great molasses flood of 1919 where a 50-foot vat of the sticky sweetener burst, drowning more than 20 of souls.

12. Hamish Henderson was a Scottish poet, songwriter, scholar, soldier and intellectual. He served in North Africa during WWII. He oversaw the drafting of Italy’s surrender order. The Banks of Sicily is adapted from his Scots dialect poem about going home at the end of the war.

13. Dave wrote The Ballad of Howard Blackburn in tribute to the Nova Scotia born pride of Gloucester, Massachusetts. He was, without a doubt the port’s most famous fingerless transatlantic sailor, bravest back room bootlegger and unlikely Yukon prospector.

14. The album concludes with the return of the Calamari Choir, singing and swaying with The Squid Jiggers on the Chesapeake Bay fishing shanty, Sweet Rosyanne. This traditional song sports brand new verses, written by Troy.

 

According to recent Nielsen SoundScan numbers, vinyl was the fastest-growing musical format in 2010, with 2.8 million units sold, the format’s best year since

SoundScan began tracking sales in 1991. Nielsen says Vinyl sales increased 37 percent in the beginning of 2011 over the same period last year. Vinyl sales also rose 14.2 percent in 2010, although they only accounted for 1.2 percent of physical sales.

The Squid Jiggers would have loved to release 331/3 on vinyl but production costs make it financially prohibitive. But, fans of vinyl can take solace in the fact that there is no shortage of vintage, and just plain used, records out there.

The top 10 reasons The Squid Jiggers love old vinyl record albums.

1. They force you to slow down and actually listen to the music. You can?t listen to a record in the car, while you are grocery shopping or while you’re jogging.

2. Homeless records are a real value. There are literally millions of records out there just waiting for you to take them home with you — often for a little as a dollar. That’s a dozen songs or more, for a buck. iTunes can’t beat that.

3. Used records equal excitement. Pawing through boxes of used records is like going on a treasure hunt. Whether in your grandmother’s basement, a roadside yard sale or a overstuffed thrift store, you never know what you?ll find.

4. It?s all in the sound. Records are warm and fuzzy. Digital files are cold and crisp. Which one would you rather cuddle up with?

5. Records are fun to watch. Push the lever and the platter starts to spin. The tonearm lifts via unseen hands and hidden gears. The needle hits the groove with a pop and followed by three exciting seconds before the music starts.

6. When you get tired of an album you can turn it into a snazzy clock, or soften it up in the oven and twist it into a stylish fruit bowl. It’s true. We’ve done it.

7. Size matters. They’re bigger than CDs. Would you rather have a 5×5 or 12×12 picture of Herb Albert’s Whipped Cream and Other Delights? We rest our case. They?re heavier, too. A crate of records in the back seat of your car gets you more traction in a blizzard than a crate of CDs.

8. Record grooves are time machines. They are the physical remains of sounds and songs sung long ago. The needle drags them back into the present. HG Wells liked records. A lot.

9. You can’t just skip to side B at the push of a button. You have to wait. It builds character.

10. They’re cool. We’d tell you why, but if we have to explain it, you wouldn’t understand.

Where to hunt for albums, 45rpm singles and even older, 10-inch 78rpm records

- Flea markets and yard sales

- Your parents’ or grandparents’ cellars and attics

- Thrift stores Any one of the fine retailers in the area:

- Vinylhaven Records, 147 Maine Street Brunswick, ME 04011(207) 729-6513

- Wild Rufus Records, 135 High Street Belfast, ME 04915 (207) 338-1909

- Music Plus, 140 Main Street Biddeford, ME 04005 (207) 283-2927

- Enterprise Records, 650 Congress Street Portland, ME 04101 (207) 773-7672

- Sounds Absurd, 55 Oak Street, Portland, ME 04101 tikisong@gmail.com

- Bill’s Stuff, 405 College Street Lewiston, ME 04240 www.billstuff.com

Friday at the BBC cancelled

13 September 2011

Hi folks, due to a scheduling error at the Black Bear Cafe in Naples, our Friday night show has been cancelled. Our apologies. Why not come see us at the Saco Coffee House Saturday night instead?

 

 

Whew! 150 gigs and counting. Let’s do another one in Lewiston while we’re at it.

29 March 2011

WHO: The Squid Jiggers with special guest Larry Irwin

WHAT: Concert, crepes and cash bar

WHERE: Franco-American Heritage Center’s Heritage Hall

46 Cedar St Lewiston, ME 04240 (207) 783-1585

WHEN: Saturday night April 16, 2011 at 7:30 p.m.

HOW MUCH: $10 at the door or call 207-689-2000 for advance tickets

Fresh from a St. Patrick’s Week tour through Maine, northern New Jersey and western Pennsylvania, we’re are back home to celebrate a successful year with a show at the historic Franco-American Heritage Center on Cedar Street in Lewiston. Believe it or not, we’ve  performed nearly 150 shows and released an album since forming one year ago and show no signs of slowing down. In fact, the coming year looks to be even busier, with more concerts and a followup CD due out this summer.

We’ve been right out straight. But we like it that way. It’s better than staying home, watching the boob tube. We figure, the best way to celebrate a stupendously squiddy year of shows is to put on another one. Opening the show for us is local singer-songwriter Larry Irwin. Refreshments, including crepes and a cash bar will be available. Nous vous y voir!

 

Saturday’s show at Graziano’s is sold out.

25 January 2011

Well folks, we’ve run out of space at the inn. If you snoozed, you loozed. The early birds got the worms with fettucini and alfredo sauce. This Saturday’s show at Graziano’s Casa Mia Restaurant is completely sold out. People will be eating on the sidewalk (kidding) and in the mens room (us) as it is. We wish we could fit more folks, but we can’t.

But, don’t worry.

We have a hunch we’ll be repeating this adventure again, sometime, in the not-so-distant future. So, for those of you who got a golden ticket, thank you. Mr. Wonka and his Squiddaloompas will be seeing you shortly. For the rest, we hope this will be a learning experience for you, one you will emerge from wistful, wiser and a little richer for the experience.

Stay tuned for more Italian food and concert announcements.

- TROY & DAVE

The Graziano’s show tickets are not really tickets, let me explain…

24 January 2011

As of 2 a.m. January 24, 2011, there are less than 10 tickets left for our three-course, family-style Italian dinner and Squid Jiggers concert at Graziano’s Casa Mia Restaurant in Lisbon, Maine on Saturday January 29 at 6 p.m. And while we’re on the subject, we need to clear something up. If you called The Squid Jiggers’ hotline at 1-866-655-7171 and reserved/bought tickets, you won’t be getting anything in the mail. There are no actual paper tickets. There’ll be  a master list with your name on it at the door. Just bring your Maine ID, passport, birth certificate and your proof of rabies vaccination and our helpful door staff with crosscheck your ID with the US government no-fly list. If you check out, and the bouncer likes the looks of you, you’ll be welcomed in, past the velvet squid rope.

Ha! We kid! We’re kidders!

Seriously, there are no paper tickets. If you’ve got reservations, your name will be on the list and you’ll get a table. Remember: dinner is served at 6 p.m. and the show will start somewhere around 7 p.m., give or take a few minutes while Dave finishes his cannoli and Troy dabs the marinara sauce out of his beard.

- TROY & DAVE

Nice folks in South Windsor, CT

19 January 2011

South Windsor

Here's a picture of the great crowd in South Windsor, CT. Can you spot our biggest fan? Clicky, clicky to see it bigger.

We couldn’t have asked for a better crowd than the one we had at the South Windsor Public Library Saturday night in Connecticut. They were lively. They smelled nice. They sang along. They even threw their hands in the air and waved them around like they just didn’t care. Our sincere thanks go out to Mary and Pat for giving us the call, getting us in the game and taking such good care of us. We hope we’ll see you again, soon.

- TROY.

A drop of Sunshine in the Bucket

30 November 2010

John and Susan Bohill, Dave and myself went to Camp Sunshine this morning in Casco, Maine to deliver the money we raised at the benefit show a few weeks back at the Bohill’s Black Bear Cafe. After handing over the loot — all $1200 — were treated to an eye-openeing tour by Events Coordinator Ashley Riley. I knew they provided summer fun, joy and respite to kids with life-threatening ailments and their families, but I didn’t realize how beautiful the campus was on the shores of Sebago Lake.

In addition to the things you expect to find at a summer camp, they had 18 holes of mini golf, a full disc golf course, a herd of yurts, indoor and age-appropriate game rooms and homemade quilts on every bed. Around-the-clock medical support  is provided in their own clinic. There’s also psychosocial and bereavement programs. The staff and volunteers do it all year round, for kids from all over the country and around the world. And everyone comes for free.

Our little check is just a drop in the big bucket they need to fill to keep Camp Sunshine going and growing, but we are humbled and proud to lend even a small hand to support such a squidtastic organization. Learn more about them, and where to mail your own check by going to: www.campsunshine.org.

- TROY.

Benefit show for Camp Sunshine

25 October 2010

camp sunshine poster

What: Pizza buffet and Squid Jiggers concert at The Black Bear Cafe to benefit Camp Sunshine

Where: 215 Roosevelt Trail (Route 302), Naples, ME 04055

When: November 19, 2010, doors open at 6:30 p.m., concert at 8 p.m.

How much: $20 in advance or at the door

Tickets: At the Black Bear Cafe, or buy with a credit card at 1-866-655-7171

Camp Sunshine – www.campsunshine.org

Nestled alongside the shores of beautiful Sebago Lake, Camp Sunshine provides respite, support, joy and hope to children with life-threatening illnesses and their immediate families through various stages of a child’s illness. The year-round program is free of charge to all families, and includes 24-hour onsite medical and psychosocial support. Bereavement groups are also offered for families who have lost a child to an illness. In 2010, nearly 800 families from across the nation and around the world attended Camp Sunshine.

Black Bear Cafe – www.theblackbearcafe.com

The BBC is an authentic Irish pub in the heart of the Lakes Region. Created in the spirit of country pubs in southern Ireland, the Irish owner, John Bohill, formerly of County Waterford, Ireland, assures the tradition and ambiance of a true “public house” is presented to each and every guest that visits. All staff have been trained to pour a perfect pint, and while they are devoted to traditional Irish Fare, they also embrace good food including steaks, salads, seafood, burgers and seriously good pizza — using the best ingredients, with great pride. The goal is to create an exceptional experience every time you visit in an environment that is fun, friendly and exuberant; in Ireland this is called “craic.”

Omaha, Nebraska

20 September 2010

Aside from my raging head cold and less-than-stellar airplane service, it was a darn nice trip. We performed at the College of St. Mary’s as part of heritage week. The college was founded by the Sisters of Mercy, who were founded by Catherine McCauley, who was Irish.

The audience was right there with us, singing up a storm, just the way we like it. Bill, our guide and ride, put us up in an A+ hotel and showed us a few of the sights on our drives to and from the airport, venue and hotel. He even drove us over the Missouri River into Iowa at my request, so I could hum that line from “Shenandoah.” You know, “across the wide, Missouri.” Well, I thought it was cool.

Virgil and Terry, our sound and light folks, whom Dave knew from his last trip to this venue, were absolutely world class. The lights were snazzy, the sound was strong and clear and their utili-kilts were an authentic touch. Linda was there to document the whole thing, too. Thanks very much. They also provided unrivaled hospitality in the green room.

Dave was chosen for “additional screening” by the TSA when we checked into Logan Airport in Boston. That meant myself and Jake had to get searched, too, since we were traveling together. What is it about bass players?

When we were on the plane, they announced there’d be a delay because the cargo hatch was stuck shut. We could see our checked case, with our merchandise, sitting on the cart out the window. As the minutes ticked away it looked like we’d miss our connection in Milwaukee. Then they had us get off the plane. They said they’d send us on an alternate route to Nebraska via Washington, D.C. While we waited for them to give us new tickets, Jake, our road manager, threw his Milwaukee to Omaha boarding pass in the garbage. Then, they announced the cargo hatch was fixed, so we should get back on the plane. He had to fish his ticket out of the can.

It still took forever to get off the ground. When we landed in Milwaukee, we only had minutes to get to the next flight. We raced off the plane as fast as we could, heeding neither toddler nor senior citizen. Breathless, we asked the guy at the ticket counter where our next plane was.

“Omaha?” he asked.

“Yes,” we said in three part unison.

“Have a seat. It’ll be boarding in just a few minutes,” he said blithely, waving his hand towards the plane we  just got off.

Yep. The same plane was going all the way to Omaha, so there was no real way we could have been late for it. Such are the shenanigans associated with air travel theses days.

The flights home were much less eventful — except for one very snooty flight attendant who made sure we were aware he was doing us a favor, letting Dave and me take our instruments aboard, even though they fit very nicely in the overhead bin. At that point, with my head cold and repeated (re)pressurizations, I couldn’t hear much. I said thank you and ordered a Diet Pepsi.

- TROY.

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