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Popular Threads
Let's try to be helpful, not critical.
Poi Dog Pondering (are they still a band?)
Mister Meyers
Keb Mo
Beasoleil
Brian Wilson touring as himself, not the Beach Boys, their time has passed but Brian alone rules.
More blues, more soul acts, less country-pop.
On the grandstand, get one of the most entertaining, hard-working, amazing shows I've ever seen:
Weird Al Yankovick.
A hysterically funny show for all ages. He's once again hot right now.
Also he's got a new album out this year, and if he's touring to support it, Cat Stevens would be incredible for us old hippies to see.
The harder answer is to pick from the list of groups and acts that have announced summer tours; the fair isn't goong to go find an act and try to talk them into coming. You basically get to pick from a buffet menu of who has tours planned that can divert to Springfield or add it to their existing itinerary, so it is fun to make suggestions but without the list of who is touring, it's just a fun exercise.
Others that I'd travel downstate to see: Buddy Guy, Mastodon, Wilco, ZZ Top, Ozomatli, Public Enemy, The Roots, Hank III...
And bringing Willie Nelson or Merle Haggard to Springfield would make me reconsider my opinion of the Blago administration.
Cheap Trick
Eleventh Dream Day
Waco Brothers
Ernest Dawkins
Bottle Rockets
Chuck Berry
Kelly Hogan
1. Cheap Trick
2. REO Speedwagon
3. The Breeders (Drummer from IL)
An IL theme for the IL State Fair...a novel idea.
The New Pornographers
The Decemberists
Gnarls Barkley
Al Green
Beck
The White Stripes
Clap Your Hands Say Yeah
Norah Jones
Loretta Lynn
The Magic Numbers
The Killers
and (non blues)I gotta put in my vote for Wilco
Black Keys - two man blues band from Ohio - Hendrix inspired Delta Blues
Mr. Blotto, another good local band.
Steve Miller's last tour was great too; greatest hits for the main set, all blues for the encore. Love to see him at the State Fair.
Squideshi--Good one!! I would take Green Day (The BAND)
It's sorta quirky stuff.
And titles like I Love You More Than Cigarettes, Baby and I'd Love My Baby If She Had Two Heads.
What folks need to keep in mind is that the State Fair has a very tough job trying to (a) draw the most possible fans on (b) a very limited budget for talent. [Or, well, I assume (b) to be true. Rich, you should ask Bliefnick about their talent budget. I bet a band like Wilco would want in the range of 25-50k. And the bigger acts mentioned here - the Stones, Tim McGraw, Killers, etc. - would make even that look very cheap.]
That said, Buddy Guy's a good pick ... somebody who I think would draw a nice crowd for not a terribly outrageous amount of money.
What about Jimmy Buffet?
Let's face the venue sorta sucks for any group that has music you need to hear
In all seriousness, The Dave Mathews Band does a pretty good job of appealing to a fairly wide array of fans and is well known. They should do a good job of filling seats.
classic rock'n'roll.
www.hotpropertyband.com/
John Mellancamp!
Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers (if they're tourning)!
Let's say that Ozzfest organizers want $500,000 to book the show. As expensive as that sounds, you could charge the requisite amounts normally charged at larger venues and still come out ahead. The Missouri State Fair draws big-time acts and charges high ticket prices but still has sell out show on a regular basis and that's with two amphitheatres, two arenas, the Edward Jones Dome and a large concert campground in the boothills.
I just want to see diversity in the lineup. If there are going to be three country acts, what's wrong with booking a hard rock show?
Dave Matthews Band would be a huge draw, but it sounds like they are locked into 2 shows at Wrigley and 2 at Alpine Valley, as well as 1 in St. Louis already.
Dave Matthews! What a great idea! Any band who craps on Chicago is fine with me!!
LOL
Elvis turned 72 yesterday, maybe he will come out of retiremnt.
Minikiss... http://www.minikissonline.com/Pictures.php
U2 tribute band in Chicago http://www.tribute2u2.com/
Jimmy Buffett band
http://www.landsharksband.com/
http://www.b2bband.com/
http://www.a1a-live.com/
Beatles
http://beatlemaniaalumni.com/TRIBUTE_BANDS.htm
Rich, I'm with you 100% on Wilco. Chicago band with downstate roots. Man, that would be such a welcome change from the washed-up, different line-up garbage that normally plays the grandstand.
I'd like to add the eclectic, always entertaining live show of The Flaming Lips. Hey, they played the Minnesota State Fair last year.
Please no REO. Please. Worst thing to ever come out of Chambana.
2. Nickelback
3. Miranda Lambert
4. Rascal Flatts
5. George Strait
6. Journey
7. Carrie Underwood
8. Phil Vassar
9. Toby Keith
10. Kenny Chesney
2. Ted Nugent
3. Eric Clapton
4. Gay Cowboys in Bondage
5. Moody Blues
John Hiatt
Pork & the Havana Ducks if yet intact
Duke Tumato & AllSatr Frogs
Buckinghams
Cryan Shames
Mitch Ryder & Detroit Wheels
Tom Jones
David Allan Coe
Merle Haggard & The Dixie Chicks
Local:
Wilco
Umphrey's McGee
Dark Star Orchestra
The Smoking Popes
Non-Local:
Widespread Panic
Tea Leaf Green
Cat Power
Ween
Brighteyes
Robert Earl Keen
Chris Daughtry would have good mainstream appeal
Don't forget Survivor now that Rocky VI is out!
Weird Al might be fun, too. IF he is allowed to have some fun with Illinois!
The other thing that's a problem for Amy is, the fair never draws many people from more than about a 50-mile radius, no matter if you got the Beatles to reappear, no matter how big the ad budget or no budget at all. Everybody living in reasonable driving range of the fair already knows what it is, where it is and more or less WHEN it is every year. They're only mildly curious about the details of the grandstand and any new feature act or activity. A very big name may draw a bit from Champaign, Bloomington-Normal, "maybe" St. Louis, depending on who it is, but without the bux to hire real currently-hot national-level superstars, you are depending on regional draws to regional tastes. Ergo, so much of that country-pop music I hate, but which is popular and sells well in this neck of the woods, and conversely, the dearth of soul, R&B, hip-hop, and rap acts.
I have long championed the idea of an all-day alternative 'palooza-type' event on one of the otherwise dark days, based on the rodeo area so as to keep the very lucrative horse racing going as well. If you have the palooza at the rodeo, you sell ten regional/local bands for ten bucks via wristband, with a pretty big headliner to finish as an anchor act. The audience comes and goes thru the day, but spends all their time and money that day on vendors and the like on the grounds. Nine of the bands can be just good local/regional bands, and they share the stage and amps and etc so it could well be fairly cost-effective.
Amy PLEASE bring back the Chicago Blues stage with lots of great blues and BBQ's, this was by far the most fun for me every time it was active at the fair.
For an more adult grandstand night, the Bob & Tom morning radio Show has multiple comedy tours rolling the midwest like Barnum & Bailey's trains; you could book in a night of their redneck and white-collar comedians and count on a lot of free radio promo via their syndicated morning shows.
If there's a national tour for "High School Musical", like they once had for "Dirty Dancing" the teenyboppers would swarm that. My kid won't shut up about it, has all the soundtracks and etc.
I like Buddy Guy, but his big venue shows bite. Big Bill Morganfield carries on the Chicago Blues and his father's mantle. Let's add Delbert McClinton to the blues list.
Allison Krause & Union Station would be great. Toronto newcomers Martha's Trouble would be a great pick to open for them.
And let's not forget The Dixie Chicks!!!
Finally, please God, let's not book Ted Nugent again. I don't want to see my tax dollars subsidizing the wingnuts.
"Ralph's World is the musical place where little guys and gals and their folks can rock rock rock and sing sing sing along without overdosing on sucrose. You can go to the bottom of the sea to the driver's seat of a big rig to swinging on a jungle vine in just a few songs.
It's the creation of indie rocker and songwriter Ralph Covert, now residing in the Disney universe. The leader of Chicago's top local pop-rockers of the last decade, The Bad Examples, takes the same high energy and McCartney-esque super-melodic approach to children's music- basically only the lyrics are changed for the ears of the innocent.
The universal critical acclaim includes The New York Times, NPR, Parents Magazine, and a Grammy nomination for last year's 'Green Gorilla' disc. His new CD-DVD from Disney Sound, 'Welcome To Ralph's World!,' was released October 3rd."
I'll echo some good suggestions:
Steve Earle
Wilco
White Stripes
Green Day
Buddy Guy
Allison Kraus
Bring back Willie Nelson and George Thurogood
Modest Mouse
Lucinda Williams
Ziggy Marley
Ryan Adams
How about Cheap Trick (they do a good show).
The Music Box (A Genesis Lamb Lies down on Broadway show tribute band, I might be the only guy to go but you asked).
Dick Holliday and the Bamboo Gang & Mr. Blotto
Rush
As for the "High School Musical" there is a tour but I think it is in Chicago early in the year, but "White and Nerdy" is right it would be huge with the tweens.
Bottle Rockets
Wilco
Son Volt
Steve Earle
Willy Porter
Kermit Ruffins
Robbie Fulks
Mighty Mighty Bosstones
Sufjan Stevens (not your typical fair guy, but the Illinoize album would be fitting)
North Mississippi AllStars
Fountains of Wayne
Living Colour
Spearhead
Hank Jr.
Amy Mann
Shawn Colvin
For the Kids:
Dan Zanes
Laurie Berkner
Poi Dog
Ricky Skaggs
I've heard he's in the hospital, but Ralph Stanley
Gourds
Yonder Mountain String Band
Cap Fax comments section = alt-country convention c. 1998? Who'da thunk it.
At any rate, who needs that stuff at the fair when Springfield folks can just make the short trip to this?
How about a song for Rod about all of his program proposals called "How Do You Afford Your Illinois Proposals?"
: )
John Fogerty would fill the place.
FREEBIRD!
I hadn't realized Dan Fogelberg has advanced prostate cancer.
Poi Dog Pondering are working on a new album and occasionally playing local. Forty bucks a pop for the New Year's Eve show at The Vic.
If Buddy Guy was to play the fair, I would eat a dozen deep fried Snickers. He don't do fairs.
Elvis Costello
Saw Doctors
Cake
David Byrne
Smoking Popes
John Hiatt
They Might Be Giants
Fountains of Wayne
Soul Asylum
Ben Folds
Ryan Adams (not Bryan Adams)
George Thorogood
Great Big Sea
Matthew Sweet
The Bens
or any combination of the above-mentioned.
Or . . . best of all . . . the rumored reunion of The Police (like that's going to happen)
Shawn Colvin
My Morning Jacket
Modest Mouse
The Roots
Neil Young
Woodbox Gang (my homer choice)
Lucinda Williams
Raconteurs
Be Good Tanyas
Dwight Yoakum
Soul Rebels Brass Band (or any good NOLA band)
Old 97s
Reverend Horton Heat
Dianna Krall
Ben Folds
Jamie Cullum
Wilco is the logical choice.
Sting
Rolling Stones
Jackson Brown
Neil Young
Cold Play
Bob Seger
Green Day
Wilco, Bottle Rockets & Cheap Trick just make sense.
Foo Fighters, Green Day, +44 would be dreamy
Artic Monkeys & Pink Spiders too
Can't advise as to pop country, 'don't like it!
The Hold Steady (for Rod)
Spoon (too bad we all
need to be fed)
AC Newman or Neko Case (in case all the New Pornographers are are pushing the envelope)
Dressy Bessy (Women's Leg Caucus)
All Girl Summer Fun Band (we could all use a laugh this session)
Calexico (Latino Caucus)
Star Room Boys (for those who like their country strait up)
Ted Leo and the Pharmacists (Pharmacy Refusal folk)
The Raconteurs (aren't we all?)
M. Ward (for me)
Portastic (fun)
OK Go (fun)
Also, how long ago did the Little Corporal close? I went by there last year some time and noticed it was defunct.
But...every Kankakee native should know the story. Here it is, from da man himself:
"We had been on the road for about three months when (a female lounge singer) was offered a job in the musical "Sweet Charity." We decided she should take it because it paid well and since the show was winding up in Chicago, we made plans to meet there."
"I found myself an agent and waited for a call as pianist in a bar in Chicago. Hal, the agent, called and said that before he could book me there, he'd have to try me out in a smaller town. I tried to tell him he should just trust me, that I had done this kind of thing dozens of times, but he didn't buy it."
"Truth was I had never played solo in a piano bar. So Hal booked me into a piano bar in Kankakee, Illinois. The Little Corporal Lounge is in a shopping mall, the clientele is local and they usually get roaring drunk. They had put me in a dismal motel across the street from the Lounge, and I was nervous, I had never ever done anything like this in my life. I had always worked in the backround; behind the lead singer, never, ever as a soloist."
"I put on my new tuxedo in this dreary motel room, slicked back my hair and walked to the bar with my attache case filled with music. The piano was on a platform behind the bar, so I could look down at all the people drinking and they could talk to me and request tunes."
"When I walked into the club on that first night, I felt numb. I had never felt quite so numb. It was like being in a coma with none of the advantages. I climbed up to the piano as if a dream. When I sat down on the piano stool, I found it was too low and I couldn't see anybody, so I asked for a bar stool."
"I still sit on a bar stool when I play piano. As far as the customers were concerned, I was invisible. I remember starting off with Meditation, a bossa nova. Very timidly. It was as if I weren't there at all. Nobody looked up. Nobody reacted."
"Somehow I got through the first hour set. When I returned after my break, there were a few people around the piano and they were complimentary. I was surprised. But then the strangest thing started to happen to me. Every time I went back to the piano, I felt a little stronger; when I left it I became invisible."
"By the end of the evening, I was joking with the patrons, playing as they sang, and I even sang a few songs myself. But then every time I left the piano, I became invisible again."
"At the end of my first week there, I would walk into the place feeling invisible, climb up to the piano, click on the spotlight with my foot, and I would become attractive, worldly, witty. Woman started coming on to me, guys bought me drinks. I realised that the piano player is always the most attractive person in a place."
"By the end of my two-week stand at the Lounge, the transformation would begin in my awful little motel room. There I'd stand in front of the mirror, like John Travolta in Saturday Night Fever, combing my hair, putting on my tux, changing from Invisible Barry to Barry Manilow at the Keyboard, like it said outside the club."