EVENT:::
Edwin McCain
plus Maia Sharp
Keith Varon
DETAILS:::
Date: Sunday, May 22, 2005
Doors: 8:00pm
21 and up only
2 drink minimum
no audio/video equipment admitted
TICKET
INFO:::
advance tickets: $15.00
night of show: $18.00
to buy tickets click here
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Edwin
McCain's new album, Scream and Whisper, catches him on a second
honeymoon. It's a group of songs that arrived while he was falling
in love with music all over again, and thus finds him renewing
his vows with his life's passion.
If not lyrically, that's what this album is all about spiritually
for McCain. His first proper studio release since the end of a
long tenure at Lava/Atlantic Records, Scream and Whisper was created
at a time when the Greenville, South Carolina, singer/songwriter
was at a crossroads both personally and professionally.
Over 10 years with Lava, McCain tasted life at the top, racking
up platinum and gold albums on the backs of such popular singles
as "Solitude" and "I'll Be." As he experienced
life as a hit maker, McCain also eventually saw his spirit and
enthusiasm for making records ground up in the gears of the big
time music biz.
As he became more and more disappointed with how little the business
at that level actually had to do with music itself-songs, and
art-he began to go through the motions a little, letting others
sort of dictate his career path for him. Jaded, he found solace
in booze. But after a few eye-opening, soul-shaking moments he
sobered up, wised up, and realized that he was mistreating this
gift he's been given.
In its positivism and more so in its spirit, Scream and Whisper
documents that awakening, that realization. It finds McCain and
his longtime band mates playing with perhaps more conviction than
they've displayed in years. I approach the rest of my musical
life like it belongs to no one but me and my guys, the guys that
committed 10 years of their lives to me," McCain says.
And Scream and Whisper belongs to those guys more than perhaps
any of McCain's previous five albums. In addition to tracks penned
solely by McCain, the new album includes songs written or co-written
by guitarist Larry Chaney and new guitarist Pete Riley (formerly
of Treehouse). As a result, the album is a real affirmation of
how much of a true band he and his brothers in arms have become,
McCain says, noting, "It's so special to be able to share
this gift with them."
Two years later, the ballad "I'll Be," from McCain's
sophomore disc, Misguided Roses, became a smash, this paving the
way for he and his band mates to continue their marathon touring
schedule and two more albums for Lava/Atlantic, Messenger and
Far From Over. McCain broke with the major in December 2001.
And while initially the split was a bit crippling, it wasn't long
before he began to see it as the end of a really nice day. He
characterized it as such on his first post-Lava/Atlantic set,
2002's The Austin Sessions, a stripped-down, acoustic collection
of old and new songs.
While continuing to tour endlessly, McCain took some time after
the release of The Austin Sessions to host a radio program for
Sirius Satellite Radio called "The Spectrum," on which
he interviewed everyone from Phoebe Snow to Poison frontman Bret
Michaels. "I was trying to show that even though you have
so many ends of the spectrum, you have a real common thread. And
the common thread is that Phoebe has the same emotional connection
to her music as Bret Michaels does to his. The common thread is
emotion, personal attachment to music."
And that's one thing that has never changed in McCain's career,
despite any ups and downs. He's always loved the music. And right
now he's more smitten with it and its power than ever before.
While he went through a bit of a dark stretch after leaving Lava/Atlantic,
he wouldn't change a thing, he says. "Honestly, I'm so glad
that all that stuff happened because I wouldn't have the attitude
that I have now. I don't think I would understand how much I love
this, and how much I love playing…It's not about chart positions
or record sales or anything like that, it just has to do with
people coming together and sharing a moment, that's it."
"And that's all I ever wanted to do. I just love that moment
in the small club and bar where every single person in there has
a moment where it's silent and they get it and it's beautiful,
that moment where the music that's coming off the stage is much
more than the players and much more than the audience and something
happens and you're sitting there and your hair stands up. That's
it, man. I love it."
Opening the show is Miai Sharp and Keith Varon.
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