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SUMMARY:Alan Doyle in Concert - Campbell River
URL:http://www.harbourliving.ca/event/alan-doyle-in-concert-campbell-river/
LOCATION:Tidemark Theatre :: 1220 Shoppers Row Campbell River, V9W 2C8
DESCRIPTION;ENCODING=QUOTED-PRINTABLE:<p>Alan Doyle chalks up a lot of where is he right now&mdash;with both his third solo album and his second book released in October 2017&mdash;to luck. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m the luckiest guy I&rsquo;ve ever even heard of,&rdquo; he says. &ldquo;This was all I ever wanted, a life in the music business, singing concerts. I was lucky to be born in the family I was, in Petty Harbour. I was lucky that Sean, Bob and Darrell found me and asked me to join their band. I was lucky the Canadian music fans were into it.&rdquo;<br /><br />And yet, one listen to A Week at The Warehouse makes it plainly clear that there&rsquo;s a lot more than luck at play in this decades long, awards-studded career. This album, recorded live off the floor with Doyle&rsquo;s &ldquo;beautiful band,&rdquo; as he calls them, with producer Bob Rock at the helm, is chock-a-block with country-tinged, radio ready tunes that bring with them the flavour of some of Doyle&rsquo;s favourite artists, from John Mellencamp to Rock&rsquo;s own band, Payolas (In fact, Doyle covers a Payolas tune on this album, Forever Light Will Shine, with that band&rsquo;s singer, Paul Hyde appearing as a guest vocalist.)<br /><br />In addition to Rock&rsquo;s work with Payolas, Doyle loved the metal albums Rock produced in the eighties, and his more recent work with the Tragically Hip, Jann Arden, and others. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a real treat to get to meet your heroes and they turn out to be nicer than you ever imagined,&rdquo; Doyle says. &ldquo;A couple things about Bob, he&rsquo;s first of all, still a massive fan of a good song, for a man who&rsquo;s seen hundreds and thousands of them, he&rsquo;s still thrilled to get a chance to work on a good song with a good band in a good studio, that&rsquo;s still a perfect day for him. And secondly he&rsquo;s just a wonderful motivator to get great players to play at their best.&rdquo;<br /><br />That kind of ease and experience&mdash;plus the incredible talents of Doyle&rsquo;s touring band&mdash;made recording A Week at The Warehouse a relative breeze. Of the band, Doyle says, &ldquo;I am so by far the worst person. I wish I was being modest. They&rsquo;re an incredible band to sing with every night. I look around the stage and I can&rsquo;t believe my luck.&rdquo;<br /><br />Doyle&rsquo;s desire was to have an album that sounded and felt like the live show, and A Week at The Warehouse does just that. Lead single Summer, Summer Night is a cowrite with long time collaborator Thomas &ldquo;Tawgs&rdquo; Salter. Doyle had it in mind to write a Celtic country song about summer nights in Petty Harbour when he was a young adult, playing guitar and singing with his friends around a bonfire on the beach&mdash;and teaching his friend Jimmy to play &ldquo;one song, he figured he could get that one girl to go out with him. I showed him how to play Dirty Old Town and if memory serves correctly it was very successful. It&rsquo;s a fun song about letting yourself go the way you could when you were that age.&rdquo;<br /><br />Then there&rsquo;s the ukulele and whistling ditty Beautiful to Me, also co-written with Tawgs Salter. This one, Doyle says, is a response to an attempt in North Carolina to limit the access trans people have to bathrooms in schools. &ldquo;I was drawn to write a song that told people on the outside that they were certainly welcome in my place,&rdquo; Doyle says. &ldquo;If you&rsquo;ve got love in your heart, that&rsquo;s all that matters to me. It&rsquo;s such a simple little song. It&rsquo;s gentle. I just want everyone to know that if you feel like you&rsquo;re on the outside, you&rsquo;re not on the outside in this group&mdash;my arms and doors are open wide.&rdquo;<br /><br />In effort to balance the sound of album with something more rooted in Doyle&rsquo;s own history, he dug out an older tune, one he&rsquo;d written for the Robin Hood film in 2010. Doyle remembered the film had used the chorus and parts of two different verses of Bully Boys, but he couldn&rsquo;t remember which. So he took to YouTube, hoping to find the scene. &ldquo;I found dozens if not hundreds of versions of that song, from Spain, Croatia, China, the UK,&rdquo; he says, astonished. &ldquo;People have written their own verses in the old traditional way, it has made its way around the world as a sea shanty. It&rsquo;s the old way of spreading a folk song, but using the Internet.&rdquo; Doyle knew he had to finally record the song himself.<br /><br />And there&rsquo;s more of Doyle&rsquo;s history in Somewhere in a Song, a tribute to his parents, who &ldquo;made us feel like we could handle anything life gave to us,&rdquo; Doyle says, adding he didn&rsquo;t realize till he was an adult that his family had been poor. The song&rsquo;s opening line is one Doyle heard his father say, when someone asked how the elder Doyles had gotten together. &ldquo;My father said, &lsquo;that&rsquo;s simple I suppose, she could play and I could sing.&rsquo; It&rsquo;s a simple homage, a celebration of my mom and dad&rsquo;s attitude that you spend exactly none of your time worrying about the stuff you don&rsquo;t have and exactly all your time making the most of what you do have.&rdquo;<br /><br />It&rsquo;s an ethos Doyle has adopted whole-heartedly.<br /><br />&ldquo;I still think of myself as a person that has one job, a guy who plays in a band for a living, that&rsquo;s me. If someone asks me to write songs, I guess I&rsquo;m a songwriter too. If someone asks me to produce a record for them, then I guess I&rsquo;m a record producer too. I never looked for an acting job in my life&mdash;they come to me. Someone calls who needs a hairy, Irish-looking fellow to bully someone or play the lute, come throw rocks at Colin Farrell, okay, sounds fun. It&rsquo;s a laugh. Books came to me the same way, Random House said, we&rsquo;ve been reading your blog, why not write a book, so I thought okay!&rdquo; There&rsquo;s more to it than all of that, for certain, but Doyle parries it off, in his usual way. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m grateful to do all of it. It&rsquo;s a wonderful life and I&rsquo;m very lucky to have it.&rdquo;</p>=0D=0A=
<p><a href="http://tidemarktheatre.com/event/alan-doyle/">http://tidemarktheatre.com/event/alan-doyle/</a></p>=0D=0A=
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DTEND:19700101
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