Skip to main content

Waterfest Heads Back to the 1960s Tomorrow Night


Weekend preview: '60s night and Gallery Walk

July 29, 2009


WEEKEND PREVIEW: '60s NIGHT AND GALLERY WALK


The Buckinghams, Herman's Hermits and The Britins (a Beatles tribute band) will take the stage at the Leach Amphitheater, 303 Ceape Ave., Thursday for a groovy Waterfest concert. The gates open at 5:45 p.m.; cost is $5 before 6, $10 between 6 and 7, and $15 after 7.

This Saturday, more than 40 galleries and stores will be open around Oshkosh for the monthly Gallery Walk. The event is free and open to the public. The hours are generally from 6 to 9 p.m., though a few participants close early or are open a bit later.

Some highlights include Exhibits at Evergreen, which will display "From Our Perspective," a gathering of drawings made by kids from the Fox Valley Sibling Support Network; the Waters, which will feature the artist Kai at Art After Hours; and the Oshkosh Public Library, which will host watercolorist-turned-author Joye Moon.

For details and the complete listing of participating stores, see tomorrow's Oshkosh Northwestern.
Today's story found at: http://www.thenorthwestern.com/article/20090729/OSH0101/90729054/1128&located=rss

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

In Memory of John Poulos, March 31, 1947 - March 26, 1980

Five days before his 33rd birthday, we lost John Poulos, a dear friend who was like a brother to us, as well as The Buckinghams’ drummer. Often described as the heartbeat of our band, he was known to most Buckinghams’ fans of the 60s simply as Jon-Jon. To know John was to love him. With his outgoing personality, he never met a stranger. His talent is remembered best in the style he displayed on drum fills and riffs on our hits, including “Don’t You Care,” “Hey Baby, They’re Playing Our Song,” and “Kind of a Drag.” It’s not surprising that Jon-Jon was included as one of the Top 10 drummers in Modern Drummer Magazine. Contemporary MySpace profiles of aspiring amateur and professional musicians today include the name John Poulos among their musical influences. That’s an honor both fitting and accurate for a musician who was truly one of a kind. Nick and I recall that one of John’s own musical influences was Bobby Elliot, drummer for The Hollies, whose signature beret and tossing of his he...

Remembering Frank Tesinsky, Beloved Chicago Musician, Key to The Buckinghams' Characteristic Sound

Each time the opening notes to “Kind of a Drag” come on the air, whether it’s your car radio, your phone, or choice of streaming media, the first 23 notes you hear inform you immediately that not only are you hearing “Kind of a Drag,” but you are hearing The Buckinghams. That instant recognition, in turn, is thanks to the talent of musician Frank Tesinsky, who arranged the iconic tune for producers Dan Belloc and Carl Bonafede in a 1966 recording session in Chicago’s Chess Studios. The Buckinghams family was greatly saddened to learn of Frank’s passing on November 9. Catherine Johns, his wife of 32 years, was a beloved part of his life and part of Chicago radio as well. In February 1967 "Kind of a Drag" was #1 on the Billboard charts for two weeks, and it forever defined the sound of five young men from the northside of Chicago. Just 27 notes, right? And yet, it defined the magic of what would become known as “the horn sound” that The Buckinghams are b...

In Memoriam — Martin Joseph Grebb

On the first day of a new year and a new decade, friends and family of Marty Grebb read a post on his Facebook page that sparked instant concern. The composition he shared had required much thought, and in it, Marty shared his love, regard, concern, and caring for virtually every person he’d worked with professionally, loved in his lifetime, and showed how deep his feelings ran for an earlier day and time when his body and mind were not wracked in pain by the five types of cancer he said he’d battled over time. The outpouring of love and support, expressions of concern, reminders of so many who had friended him on Facebook and felt as though they’d really known him, were nothing short of amazing. Offers of “please call me” or “we are worried about you” or “hang on, brother, we are here” filled the comments section. If there were a point in time when he was wavering in his attitude about what his plan was, everyone did whatever they could yesterday, New Year’s Day, to show their supp...