MySpace
myspace music

The Word from Playonbrother

Alan Evans



Last Updated: 10/14/2009

Send Message
Instant Message
Email to a Friend
Subscribe

Status: Single
City: SOUTH DEERFIELD
State: Massachusetts
Country: US
Signup Date: 11/29/2005

Blog Archive
[Older      Newer]
 /  / 
Wednesday, October 14, 2009 

Current mood:Feelin Good
Category: Music
Hey everyone,

So Soulive has returned to the trio and we are really looking forward to the shows we've got coming up and we're getting ready to jump into the studio.  Hopefully we'll see you all somewhere in the world real soon.





Tuesday, September 08, 2009 

Current mood:  energetic
Category: Music
In light of the current state of the economy and the music industry (as certainly no exception) we thought what better way to do what WE can, to contribute to the ongoing careers and successes of independent artists, then to offer some special deals for studio time! We love the idea of streamlining the way music is distributed through modern day technology via ipods and the internet.  Saving the environment by eliminating so much of the packaging involved in physical CD's and working toward diminishing the need for the middle-man.  Hence the birth of the Royal Family for Soulive.

So in the spirit of sending some positive energy in the way of hooking up the MUSICIAN, we would like to introduce this new concept....

"Playonbrother Studios announces new rates in a struggling economy"

$275 a day (usually ends up being 8-9 hours)

$1500 for a 6 day block out

Hope all is well

Al

Tuesday, April 21, 2009 

Current mood:  accomplished
Category: Music
The first week of the Up Here tour has been crazy! We got the best crew ever and the band is sounding reeeeediculous especially with the Shady Horns and Nigel. Here is a little look at what's been goin down.

Al








Monday, December 22, 2008 

Category: Music
Just got finished with a real nice jazz session at the studio with Seth, Jane and Nelson of the Opus 3 Jazz Trio. I met Seth while I was doing the Mayercraft with Soulive last year. These cats are living the good life playing music and traveling all over the world. I'm really glad they could make it into the studio, it was a great hang.

Sunday, December 21, 2008 

Category: Music
Hey Everyone,

Just thought I'd add a song from the new Soulive album "Up Here". I also added a song from my new solo album "After Everyone's Gone" that I'm recording right now to my audio player. Check them out if you get a chance.

Hope all is well everyone,

Al
Tuesday, November 18, 2008 

Current mood:inspired

My Father, Willie Evans is number 48



ESPN is doing a feature about the '58 football team my father was on at the University at Buffalo. It will first "air" on the web this coming Thursday and then "air" on Sunday at 9 am (EST) on television. Don't know which ESPN channel at this point. Below is an article that appeared in the NY Times a few days ago on the subject..........

November 16, 2008
When Buffalo Declined the 1958 Tangerine Bowl Because of Racism

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
BUFFALO (AP) — Willie Evans does not know if his mind is failing or whether he has repressed the memories of 50 years ago. For the life of him, Evans is unable to remember the team meeting at which he felt the bite of racism and learned about the power of friendship to overcome it.

If the details have faded, it does not matter. When his University at Buffalo teammates retell the story, they can place exactly where Evans was sitting in the classroom when the team unanimously rejected a chance to play in the 1958 Tangerine Bowl, the university's first — and, it turns out, only — bowl bid.

"Well, I'm getting old," said Evans, a former coach and physical education director for Buffalo schools who turns 71 this month. "Maybe I've blocked it out. You really don't understand how your subconscious works all the time, or your conscious. But I really draw a blank."

Evans was the star halfback on the 1958 Buffalo team, which finished 8-1 to claim the Lambert Cup — awarded to the top small college program in the East. Buffalo initially accepted the Tangerine Bowl invitation.

But not long after the Bulls agreed to play, Tangerine Bowl officials informed Buffalo that the local school district, which operated the host stadium in Orlando, Fla., banned integrated games.

The players were left to decide whether to play without Evans and Mike Wilson — the two African-Americans on the team.

It was quickly evident which way the players were leaning. The vote was taken before ballots could even be distributed.

"It was: 'Shall we leave the Italians home? Oh my God, really?' There was a lot of anger," Jack Dempsey, an offensive tackle, said. "We just threw the ballots on the floor and left. It was, 'Let's get out of here and go get a beer.' "

Quarterback Joe Oliverio remembered how infuriated he was.

"They insulted two of our teammates, and we were going to hit them back between the ears by refusing to go without our teammates," he said.

History will show that East Texas State defeated Missouri Valley, 26-7, in the Tangerine Bowl that year. To the Bulls, they had scored a big victory, too.

"Someone asked me if we ever talk about the incompleteness of the season because we didn't go as far as we could have," said Phil Bamford, an offensive lineman and linebacker. "I think now looking back, if we had given in, caved in, gone to the game and won the game, we would have never had the camaraderie we have now. We would have always felt we let our buddies down."

And Evans was definitely present for that meeting, his teammates said.

"Absolutely, I can picture where he was sitting, and Mike Wilson," Dempsey said. "I can remember walking out and players putting their arms around" Evans.

He added: "I can remember it vividly. It wasn't like hearts and flowers. We just walked out, let's get out of here."

For Evans, his first memory of learning what had happened came a day later, when he picked up the newspaper to find his and Wilson's pictures on the front page beneath a headline, "UB Turns Down Bid to Tangerine Bowl."

"I started reading it and said, Damn, this is weird," Evans said.

Evans grew up in an integrated neighborhood in Buffalo, a multiethnic manufacturing city at the time, with a lively downtown core.

Evans does not recall much in the way of racial tensions growing up, although he remembers vividly the graphic coverage in 1955 of Emmett Till's slaying in Mississippi, which helped to mobilize the civil-rights movement.

But that occurred in the South, a faraway place for Evans, who was voted the student president of his integrated grammar school and attended a high school in the predominantly Polish part of town.

He played basketball and football on integrated teams. And when the assistant principal attempted to track down Evans and his friends for cutting class to buy doughnuts at a Polish bakery around the corner, the owner, Ziggy, would let them sneak out the back.

It was not a perfect life. Black men in his neighborhood who had returned from World War II faced barriers to being considered for civil-service jobs. And yet Evans had not experienced such flat-out bigotry until Buffalo received the Tangerine Bowl bid.

The experience led Evans to avoid visiting the South for many years despite having many relatives in Virginia and Mississippi.

"It wasn't a grudge; it was an I-don't-care attitude," Evans said. "I just didn't want to deal with it."

Wilson, his African-American teammate who was a backup on defense, died several years ago.

It was not until the early 1990s when Buffalo was scheduled to play a game against Central Florida in Orlando that Evans accepted the team's invitation to make the trip.

Perhaps it is some sort of cosmic karma, but 50 years later, the Bulls (6-4) — after years of futility and a stretch in which the university pulled football altogether — are in contention to earn a bowl bid this season. The '58 Bulls get together fairly often, and there is talk of another reunion if Buffalo gets a postseason bid.

This year's team is split about evenly between African-Americans and whites and is led by a black coach, Turner Gill. The athletic director, Warde Manuel, is black.

Evans was interviewed on Election Day, hours before the ballots were counted and Barack Obama became the first African-American elected president. Sitting at his dining room table in a well-appointed condominium in a tony part of the city — around the corner from where he went to grammar school — Evans reveled in America's transformation.

The opportunity to cast a ballot for Obama outweighed the outcome, Evans said, because what mattered most was that a black man had earned the right to win or lose the race for president.

And that is all Evans and his teammates were asking for all those years ago — the chance to succeed or fail on an even playing field.

"Being confronted with the situation of not being allowed to play because you're black, I'm saying to myself, Well, I didn't do nothing to these folks," Evans said. "In talking with the fellas, we laugh about it now. And we sum it up and say, 'It was just dumb.' "


Friday, November 14, 2008 

Category: Music


One of my musician heroes has passed away, I really wish I could've met this cat. Some other place I guess.......

Al




PORTLAND, Oregon (AP) -- Mitch Mitchell, drummer for the legendary Jimi Hendrix Experience of the 1960s and the group's last surviving member, was found dead in his hotel room early Wednesday. He was 61.


From left, Noel Redding, Jimi Hendrix and Mitch Mitchell arrive at Heathrow airport in London in 1967.

Mitchell was a powerful force on the Hendrix band's 1967 debut album "Are You Experienced?" as well as the trio's albums "Electric Ladyland" and "Axis: Bold As Love." He had an explosive drumming style that can be heard in hard-charging songs such as "Fire" and "Manic Depression."

The Englishman had been drumming for the Experience Hendrix Tour, which performed Friday in Portland. It was the last stop on the West Coast part of the tour.

Hendrix died in 1970. Bass player Noel Redding died in 2003.

An employee at Portland's Benson Hotel called police after discovering Mitchell's body.

Erin Patrick, a deputy medical examiner, said Mitchell apparently died of natural causes. An autopsy was planned.

"He was a wonderful man, a brilliant musician and a true friend," said Janie Hendrix, chief executive of the Experience Hendrix Tour and Jimi Hendrix' stepsister. "His role in shaping the sound of the Jimi Hendrix Experience cannot be underestimated."

Bob Merlis, a spokesman for the tour, said Mitchell had stayed in Portland for a four-day vacation and planned to leave Wednesday.

"It was a devastating surprise," Merlis said. "Nobody drummed like he did."

He said he saw Mitchell perform two weeks ago in Los Angeles, and the drummer appeared to be healthy and upbeat.

Merlis said the tour was designed to bring together veteran musicians who had known Hendrix -- like Mitchell -- and younger artists, such as Grammy-nominated winner Jonny Lang, who have been influenced by him.

Blues-rock guitarist Kenny Wayne Shepherd, who is 31 and was part of the tour, said Mitchell was to the drums what Hendrix was to the guitar.

"Today many of us have lost a dear friend, and the world has lost a rock n' roll hero," he said.

Mitchell was a one-of-a-kind drummer whose "jazz-tinged" style was influenced by Max Roach and Elvin Jones, Merlis said. The work was a vital part of both the Jimi Hendrix Experience in the 1960s and the Experience Hendrix Tour that ended last week, he said.

"If Jimi Hendrix were still alive," Merlis said, "he would have acknowledged that."

During his career Mitchell played with the best in the business -- not just Hendrix, but also Eric Clapton, John Lennon, Keith Richards, Jack Bruce, Jeff Beck, Muddy Waters and others.

Mitchell performed with Hendrix and Redding at the Monterey Pop Festival in June 1967, the U.S. debut of the Jimi Hendrix Experience. He also was member of a later version of the band that performed the closing set of the Woodstock Festival in August 1969 -- where Hendrix played a psychedelic version of "The Star-Spangled Banner" before the band launched into "Purple Haze."

The Jimi Hendrix Experience was inducted into the Rock Hall of Fame in 1992. According to the Hall of Fame, Mitchell was born July 9, 1947, in Ealing, England.

Terry Stewart, chief executive of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum, said Mitchell transformed his instrument from a "strictly percussive element to a lead instrument."

"His interplay with Jimi Hendrix's guitar on songs like 'Fire' is truly amazing," Stewart said Wednesday. "Mitch Mitchell had a massive influence on rock 'n' roll drumming and took it to new heights."

Hendrix, Redding and Mitchell held their first rehearsal in October 1966, according to the Hall of Fame's Web site.

In an interview last month with the Boston Herald, Mitchell said he met Hendrix "in this sleazy little club."

"We did some Chuck Berry and took it from there," Mitchell told the newspaper. "I suppose it worked."
Friday, November 14, 2008 

Current mood:Inspired
Category: Music
Hey everyone,

Just finished a session with Trikuti out of NYC. These guys are really down to earth cats and man they came ready to rock. This was an old school session, one tune, one day, one great hang. They put together a video for the tune so check it out and check these cats when they are in your area, you'll definitely have a great time!

Al

Ocean Of Grace Video
Tuesday, September 23, 2008 

Current mood:sleepy
Category: Music


Check out the Royal Family Site for news on the new Soulive album.

Hope all is well,

Al
Thursday, September 11, 2008 

Current mood:Psyched for fall
Category: Music


I had the great pleasure of working with singer songwriter Seth Glier last month. It's so nice to work with someone who really wants to connect with people on an intellectual and emotional level with their music. It's really needed these days when so many people want to connect with a image or a product. Seth has written and performed some great music and I was really excited to be a part of this album. We mixed it over a couple of days.

Seth has some tunes from this soon to be released album at his myspace page. Stop by and check them out.