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Steve ForbertFriday, October 1, 2010 at 8:30 PM (ET)Hastings On Hudson, NY |
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Event Details
Nearly 28 years since
breaking into pop consciousness with his second album, Jackrabbit
Slim and its infectious hit Romeo’s Tune,
Steve Forbert remains a master songwriter.
The Place and The Time – Forbert’s compelling follow up to 2007's Strange
Names &
New Sensations, is full of the kind of
down
to earth songs with heartfelt vocals and engaging melodies that define
his
best work. It is an especially endearing set of songs that celebrate
and
recapture the magic of the mid 70’s sound that made his early hits so
appealing.
Growing up in Meridian, Mississippi, Steve Forbert first picked up the guitar at age
10
and spent his high school years playing in a variety of local bands.
Frustrated with his job as a truck driver, the restless
singer/songwriter
moved to New York City at 21, where he performed for spare change in
Grand
Central Station before working his way up through the Manhattan club
circuit. Performing at Folk City and eventually opening for artists
like
Talking Heads and John Cale at CBGB, Forbert became something of a
local
sensation and signed his first record deal with the CBS-distributed
label
Nemperor.
Released at the height of the new wave explosion, his 1978 debut Alive
On
Arrival offered a first look at his colorful mix of spare acoustic
introspection and scrappy rock ‘n’ roll and became one of the year's
most
acclaimed albums. While critics tagged him—like Bruce Springsteen and
John
Prine before him—“the next Dylan,” Forbert never put too much stock in
the
comparison and forged his own path, expanding his audience
substantially
with 1979’s commercial breakthrough Jackrabbit Slim and his era
defining hit
single, “Romeo's Tune.”
By this time, the heyday of the classic 70s singer- songwriters was
quickly
fading. Songs by America, Carole King, James Taylor and Gordon
Lightfoot
were quickly giving way on the pop charts to Van Halen, Foreigner and
Pat
Benatar. As the seventies gave way to the eighties, Forbert’s
plainspoken,
heartfelt early recordings were among the few keeping the joyful and
innocent spirit of the genre alive.
Given the mythic nature of Forbert’s early career, one can be forgiven
for
wondering what he’s done since parting company with Geffen Records
after
they released The American in Me in 1992. The fact is that Steve
Forbert has
never stopped writing, singing and performing and has released twelve
studio
albums, three live sets and four DVDs since 1978 - to say nothing of
the
several compilations and archival releases that are available through
his
website (www.steveforbert.com) The freedom to release music when he
chooses
to and follow his own muse without having to cowtow to the fickle whims
of
musical fashion has ironically resulted in his creating albums like
Evergreen Boy, Mission of The Crossroad Palms and Strange Names and New
Sensations that must surely be considered amongst the best releases of
his
career.
As the years pass, the indefinable honesty and dignity of Forbert’s
approach
to music continues to have an almost magical spell on his small but
loyal
coterie of fans. Undeniably, there is something immensely appealing in
his
laconic delivery and hesitant assertions which still draw listeners
into a
universe where common people make difficult choices and occasionally
win.
(as was proven when Forbert was inducted into the Mississippi Musicians
Hall
of Fame in 2006.)
Finally, Steve Forbert in 2009 is a songwriter who not only appears
comfortable with his place in life but who also — like the narrator of
his
early tune Steve Forbert’s Midsummer Night’s Toast — still rejects a
nine-to-five existence in favor of hewing to his own
road-less-traveled.
“Music should be truthful and real,” Forbert once said, “but it should
also
be uplifting and healing.” That’s a philosophy he’ll be honoring
throughout
2009 as he continues his very personal and spirited relationship with a
loyal fan base that is growing old gracefully along with its favorite
troubadour.
When & Where
James V. Harmon Community Center
44 Main Street
Hastings On Hudson,
NY 10706
Friday, October 1, 2010 at 8:30 PM (ET)
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Hosted By
Common Ground Community Concerts
Common Ground Community Concerts is a grassroots music production and event planning organization based in Westchester County NY. For the past eight years, Common Ground has produced its flagship Common Ground Coffeehouse series, sponsored by (and hosted by) The First Unitarian Society of Westchester, in Hastings-on-Hudson NY. Common Ground also hosts Common Ground @ South Church at South Presbyterian Church in Dobbs Ferry NY, The Common Ground Folk Series @ Lewisboro Library in South Salem, NY, and offers complete event planning and entertainment coordination services to non-profit, community based organizations such as United Way of Westchester and Putnam Counties, Greenburgh Nature Center, the Wolf Conservation Center, and others.