X
How do I get paid? Learn about our new Secured Funds Program!
  View site in English, Español, or Français
The fair-trade ticketing company.
Sign Me Up!  |  Log In
 
Find An Event Create Your Event Help
 
Road to FolkFest Concerts presents RAY BONNEVILLE
UNICO Community Centre
Kingsville, ON
Share this event:
Get Tickets
There are no active dates for this event.


Event

Road to FolkFest Concerts presents RAY BONNEVILLE
RAY BONNEVILLE: Every now and then, you run across someone with a librarys worth of stories to tell. But unlike the raconteurs who regale friends with well-embellished versions of their exploits, these storytellers have lived so much, they reveal chapters of their hard-won wisdom slowly, carefully, like layers peeled from an onion.

Ray Bonneville didnt even open his storybook until his early 40s, some 20 years after he started performing. But with a style that sometimes draws comparisons to JJ Cale and Daniel Lanois, this blues-influenced, New Orleans-inspired song and groove man, as hes been so aptly described, luckily found his rightful calling.

On his fourth Red House Records album, Easy Gone, Bonneville delivers 10 reasons why patience pays off. In each, his guitarwork shimmers like stars emerging at dusk. His voice carries the rich, natural timbre of time, though underneath that pearl-like smoothness, one hears its gritty core. His harmonica rhythms add even more texture to his sound.

Produced by Bonneville and Justin Douglas, Easy Gone wears the faded denim of a man who knew when he said I do to a highway, as he sings in Who Do Call the Shots, that it wasnt going to be an easy marriage. But he also knew divorce was not an option, and affirms his vows in soulful lyrics that balance thoughtful observation, impassioned emotion and the restless soul of a wanderer.

Bonnevilles highway life began, more or less, at 12, when his parents moved their nine French-speaking children from Quebec to Boston. He learned to play a little piano, then guitar, but language and cultural challenges made school uninviting. But before getting expelled, he played weekend in New England with a young band that travelled in a 57 Cadillac ambulance.

At 17, he joined the Marines, mainly to escape his devoutly religious, oppressively authoritarian father. That was just before Vietnam began showing up on the nightly news. He wound up there for more than a year. Post-discharge, he discovered Howlin Wolf, Paul Butterfield, James Cotton and other bluesmen, and taught himself to play harmonica in-between fares while driving a cab in Boston.

Bonneville spent the 70s in Boulder, Colo., where he formed the Ray Bonneville Blues Band, an electric five-piece, and got over his fear of flying by earning a commercial pilots license. I was hooked bad right from the start, he says. When I was flying, I felt completely at home, like the planes wings were part of my body.

He headed to the Pacific Northwest  first Alaska, then Seattle  flying wherever he could and playing rowdy rooms where listeners wanted to get their groove on, which helped him evolve a delivery that covered all bases. My thumb became my bass player and my index finger became my lead guitar and rhythm player, he explains. My feet became my drums and with my harmonica and my vocal, made for a four-piece blues band.

In Seattle, he got hooked on something else: his old friend, cocaine. Escaping to Paris, where he knew the language and could avoid temptation, he busked and played for boozy late-night revelers, but for the first time, Bonneville also encountered audiences who sat in silence, truly listening.

It scared me, he admits. I realized that youd better have something to say if youre going to play in front of this kind of crowd.

Returning stateside in 83, he moved to New Orleans. Training pilots by day and playing at night, he was stirred by the citys hypnotic undercurrent of mystery and magic, which hangs in the humid air like a voodoo spell. In his six years there, it seeped into his sound  and still ripples through it today.
His post-Katrina ode, I am the Big Easy, was folk radios No. 1 song of 2008 and earned the International Folk Alliances 2009 Song of the Year Award, but Bonneville wasnt yet ready to write in New Orleans. That would take more living.

The romantic notion of becoming a bush pilot took him to northern Quebecs wilderness, where he shuttled sportsmen via seaplane and played Montreal clubs in the off-season. That is, until, flying in fog, he almost hit a power line, and with no fuel left, barely found water to land on. After a nerve-calming whiskey, he decided his bush-pilot days were done. At 41, he moved to Montreal and began to write. He also began touring and recording; his 1999 album, Gust of Wind, won a Juno Award.

In 2003, Bonneville moved again, this time to Arkansas, where the fly-fishing was good. He began recording for Red House Records, and adding his talents to albums by Mary Gauthier, Gurf Morlix, Eliza Gilkyson, Ray Wylie Hubbard and other prominent artists. Bonneville also has shared songwriting credits with Tim OBrien, Phil Roy and Morlix, among others. Slaid Cleaves placed Bonnevilles Run Jolee Run on his lauded 2009 album, Everything You Love Will Be Taken Away.

Bonneville headed to Austin in 2006, and released Goin By Feel, his second Red House album. Allmusic.com gave it four stars, the same as Gust of Wind, Roll It Down and Bad Mans Blood  which it calls his magnum opus, noting, With darkness and light fighting for dominance  hes stripped away every musical excess to let the songs speak for themselves.

I have roughly 12 lines to make a story, so every one has to trigger the listeners imagination, he explains. I want my songs to be believed, so I work on them until I believe them myself.

On Easy Gone, songs like When I Get to New York, Mile Marker 41 and Love is Wicked percolate with hints of something sinister and sexy. In the bluesy Wicked, you can almost hear the finger-poppers lurking in the clubs corners  the ones who might get a little wicked themselves later on. Even the albums lone cover, of Hank Williams classic, Im So Lonesome I Could Cry, carries a groove and momentum thats Bonnevilles alone. Its haunting, like many of his songs. He populates a lot of them with societys fringes: the desperate and dangerous, damaged and vulnerable.

I like the criminals and the lost people, he says. Thats why I love Flannery OConnor and those kind of writers. Cause Im lost myself.

Whether thats true or not, he knows how hard it can be for our internal compasses to lock on the direction in which we might need to go. Thats the subject of Where Has My Easy Gone, written with drummer Geoff Arsenault. In it, he sings, In the heart of a seeker a needle swings/homing on some elusive thing/I looked in the endless sky down along the sea/I could not find my easy.

With just a few simple words, Bonneville clearly expresses his thoughts, while allowing space for multiple interpretations. Which, of course, is the essence of great songwriting, the kind that earned him an International Blues Challenge solo/duet win in 2012. He doesnt pretend to understand how he finds that essence, however.

The whole songwriting thing, to me, is mysterious, and I want to keep it that way, Bonneville says.

Ultimately, what matters is knowing how to translate the mystery into music, and that, he understands perfectly.
http://raybonneville.com

MANITOBA HAL: For over 15 years, Canadian blues artist Manitoba Hal has been forging a career as one of the countrys most preeminent roots and blues multi-instrumentalists. With 14 recordings under his own name and appearances on countless others, guitarist, ukulele master and singer-songwriter Manitoba Hal is a musical renaissance man.

Known for his deep baritone voice and mastery of his instrument  whether it be on guitar or his trusty ukulele - Manitoba Hal takes his audience from the deep south to the islands with songs that are mournful, hopeful, silly, romantic and introspective. His original songs have become modern classics and his take on standards and popular blues songs of the past have brought him to the forefront of the blues scene. Manitoba Hal has been influenced equally by artists such as Gordon Lightfoot and Stephen Fearing as much as blues forefathers Robert Johnson and Muddy Waters. These influences offer a uniquely Canadian sound to Hals blues and work to tie together the exceptional prose in his lyrics with grit and spirit of blues music.

Beginning his career as a guitarist, Manitoba Hal began to play the ukulele when he inherited a 1955 Martin uke from his beloved grandfather who told him you can have it if you learn to play it. And so, he did, continuing to master the tiny instrument, thus proving that the ukulele can be small but mighty as he pulls out powerful riffs and melodies adding background beats with looping technology showcasing the blues in all its passion and groove. His approach to playing is simple  theres not a lot of flash, just a brilliant understanding of the music, the mood and his audience. In an average year Hal performs over 150 shows throughout Canada, Europe and Australia. Be it a crowd of one or 1000, Manitoba Hal gives 100% of his energy and ability at each performance to ensure a night to remember.

Manitoba Hal isnt just an amazing musician and songwriter - the former bus driver for the city of Winnipeg is a craftsman, educator, DYIer and loving, dedicated son. When not on the road, Manitoba Hal can be found renovating his 120-year old home in his adopted hometown of Shelburne, Nova Scotia where he relocated to in 2010. For the past five years Manitoba Hal has been at the centre of a stellar team that runs the Dock Street Uke Camp, which is dedicated to providing a unique quality ukulele instruction experience on the harbour front of beautiful Shelburne.

Looking ahead, Manitoba Hal already has several projects on the go, including working on new material for 2018 with an internationally recognized producer, extensive touring and recording. Whether on four strings or six, Manitoba Hal is one of Canadas most versatile, engaging, expressive and down-to-earth blues artists.
https://www.manitobahal.com

Location

UNICO Community Centre (View)
37 Beech Street
Kingsville, ON N9Y 1A9
Canada

Categories

Music > Blues
Music > Folk

Kid Friendly: Yes!
Dog Friendly: No
Non-Smoking: Yes!
Wheelchair Accessible: Yes!

Contact

Owner: Kingsville Music Society
On BPT Since: Nov 22, 2015
 
Road to FolkFest Concerts
www.kingsvillefolkfest.org...


Contact us
Email
support@brownpapertickets.com
Phone
1-800-838-3006 (Temporarily Unavailable)
Resources
Developers
Help
Ticket Buyers
Track Your Order
Browse Events
Locations
Event Producers
Create an Event
Pricing
Services
Buy Pre-Printed Tickets
The Venue List
Find out about local events
Get daily or weekly email notifications of new and discounted events in your neighborhood.
Sign up for local events
Connect with us
Follow us on Facebook
Follow us on Twitter
Follow us on Instagram
Watch us on YouTube
Get to know us
Use of this service is subject to the Terms of Usage, Privacy Policy, and Cookie Policy of Brown Paper Tickets. All rights reserved. © 2000-2024 Mobile EN ES FR