San Diego Music Awards 2005
"BEST AMERICANA ALBUM" Nominee
SDMusicAwards.com
ALL Profits from BOTH SHADOWDOGS CDs went (100%) to aid relief needed from
KATRINA via THE RED CROSS for the month of September. An incredible
$165,000 was raised by CDBaby Musicians and with CDBaby kicking an an
additional 40 grand it brought the total to over $205,000!!! THANK YOU!
We appreciate the great support we have received from San Diego and
are pleased to announce our return to the ADAMS AVENUE STREET FAIR Roots
Rock Stage on Sunday Sept. 25th at 11:45 AM (Adams & 33rd).
We humbly acknowledge this year's 2005 San Diego Music Awards Nomination
for "BEST AMERICANA ALBUM" for our debut CD "Somewhere South of the Clef". Thanks San Diego!
Find out What They Are Saying About Shadowdogs
CD Review
By: San Diego Troubadour - issue April 2005
SHADOWDOGS
"Halfway to Someday"
Mindful Eye Music
By Frederick Leonard
So, yer boots are a bit dusty, are they? Feelin' kinda parched, are ya?
Long day? Sounds like you could sit a spell, pop a brew, and mellow
out on the porch as you stare out over the high desert ridge in the
distance, listening to the new Shadowdogs release, Halfway To Someday.
This dreamy-drowsy Americana sound rolls through your personal space
like a tumbleweed in slow motion strolling down and old Arizona highway.
Halfway To Someday contains 14 very polished tracks that would take a
likely slot on the record store shelf halfway between the Allman
Brothers and the Eagles. Pedal steels and guitars are the signature of
this sound supported by a snappy rhythm section, piano, and generous
dosages of harmony. This is the kind of effort that explores the
traditions of the music the Shadowdogs love over any determination to
set new-fangled trends. You can hear respects paid to Dickey Betts and
Don Henley as well as Jack Tempchin - all the while the while remaining
true to the Shadowdog point of view.
Bruce Fitzsimmons, Franklin Jenkins, and Jon Scarantino do the bulk of
the writing and singing. Scarantiono plays bass while the other two
play a variety of guitars. Kevin Glassel keeps the band together on
drums and percussion, along with an able roster of special guests who
also contribute more guitar work. Steve Wetherbee is credited with
this slickly recorded bare-bones documentation of the sometimes
melancholy, sometimes dreamy, and at other times upbeat band.
The thing I especially like about the work is the constant element of
elegance. Every song is graceful and beautiful regardless of tempo or
mood. And every song - all overtly Americana in style - seems to
contain one extra layer of influence that lends its subtle complexity to
each track and, therefore, its own identity. Well done. You can see
where the tumbleweed wanders at Shadowdogs.com
Article
CityBEAT March 23 2005 - LOCALS ONLY
Notes from the local music scene [excerpt]
by Scoop Stevens & Ken Smith
Pedal steel player Rick Schmidt of local Americana band The Shadowdogs
got the opportunity of a lifetime on March 13 when he received a call
from an assistant producer on a video shoot for country superstar Shania
Twain. With a video being shot in an old Tijuana building for the tune
"I Aint No Quitter," director Wayne Isham (Metallica, Dave Matthews)
needed extra musicians for key scenes in the clip, and Schmidt fit the
bill. Schmidt's son Cole was also used as an extra, but a few hours of
watching Twain's dancers strut their stuff couldn't have been too
shabby, either.
SHOW ANNOUNCMENT
CityBEAT
On March 5, country-folk favorites The Mark Jackson Band release their second album,
Love May Take the Long Road Home, with a show at the Acoustic
Expressions Music Store. Opening up the show will be Shadowdogs,
featuring Bruce Fitzsimmons, who penned the album's opening track.
Admission price includes a copy of the CD signed by the band, with love.
CD REVIEW
North County Times - March 5th, 2005
"Halfway to Someday"
Shadowdogs
Mindful Eye Music
North County's Shadowdogs have a great new collection of songs on their
upcoming CD, they play those songs with virtuosity and a sense of fun, and
the band has some of the warmest vocal harmonies you'll ever hear.
The challenge?
Finding a niche for their music in today's radio formats.
Broadly classifying themselves as Americana, the Shadowdogs (opening for the
Mark Jackson Band on Saturday) are more country than most bands found under
that banner. But they're too rock for a country station.
Like Poco, the Shadowdogs inhabit the mellow side of country-rock. Not quite
as mellow as Pure Prairie League, the Shadowdogs can bring a bit of muscle to
their music. And on some songs, like "Best of Me," they even sport an updated
alt-country-rock sound not so far from, say, Widespread Panic.
Fallbrook's Bruce FitzSimmons (lead vocals, guitar) is a wonderfully melodic
songwriter. If we still had Top 40 and/or AOR FM radio stations like we
did when Poco was popular, "Abilene" would be all over the
radio. But FitzSimmons (who had his song "Two Hearts" covered by San Diego's
Mark Jackson Band on its new CD) is only part of what makes the Shadowdogs
so alluring. Franklin Jenkins also knows how to turn out hook-laden tunes
("Open Road" is every bit as radio-friendly as "Abilene"), provides the
lush vocal harmonies to FitzSimmons, and can also take on lead vocals.
The entire band plays with confidence but not arrogance. Tasty guitar solos,
a rock-solid backbeat and intriguing interplay lend a touch of the Allman
Bros. to this release.
-Jim Trageser
Staff Writer - North County Times
INTERVIEW: JUNE 12th, 2003
SAN DIEGO UNION TRIBUNE / NIGHT & DAY
©Copyright SAN DIEGO UNION TRIBUNE PUBLISHING COMPANY Jun 12, 2003
The Songwriters Showcase concert - including Jack Tempchin and [Bruce FitzSimmons]
of the Shadowdogs - will benefit the Fallbrook Union High School District's education
foundation.
CRAFTSMEN WITH RHYTHM - Songwriters Showcase
a `benefit for a good cause,' promises skilled wordplay:
Marcia Manna.
The San Diego Union - Tribune. San Diego, Calif.: Jun 12, 2003.
The Eagles recording of "Peaceful Easy Feeling" became a Top 20 hit in
the 1970s, and fans sang along for the next three decades. Tomorrow, [Jack Tempchin]
will headline a Songwriters Showcase at the Bob Burton Center for the Performing Arts.
North County bands Shadowdogs and Peter Bolland With Broken Hills will join Tempchin
in a concert that benefits the Fallbrook Unified High School District's education
foundation.
When Jack Tempchin finger-picked the melody of "Peaceful Easy Feeling"
on a $13 Stella guitar, he was oblivious to the song's future staying power.
A woman beauty spotted at street fair inspired the final verse, scrawled on a
flyer in the parking lot of a Wienerschnitzel restaurant. I like the way your sparkling
earrings swing / Against your skin so brown / And I want to sleep with you in the
desert tonight / With a million stars all around. The Eagles recording of "Peaceful
Easy Feeling" became a Top 20 hit in the 1970s, and fans sang along for the next
three decades. Tomorrow, Tempchin will headline a Songwriters Showcase at the Bob
Burton Center for the Performing Arts. North County bands Shadowdogs and Peter Bolland
With Broken Hills will join Tempchin in a concert that benefits the Fallbrook Unified
High School District's education foundation.
Tempchin is an Encinitas resident and a hero to many North County songwriters,
who admire his success with songs such as "Already Gone" (Eagles), "Slow
Dancing" (Johnny Rivers) and "Smuggler's Blues" (Glenn Frey).
"I would like to pick his brain," admitted Bruce FitzSimmons, vocalist for
Shadowdogs. "I'd like to ask him about songs he felt strongly about and songs
that didn't work. If you listen to 'Peaceful Easy Feeling' you know that was a hit.
You hear it; it's just there."
Many of the songwriters performing at the concert have released albums this year.
The new Shadowdogs album, "Somewhere ... South of the Clef," is an Eagles-influenced
album bolstered with guest performances by guitarist-songwriter Jerry McCann and Dennis
Caplinger on fiddle, banjo and mandolin.
"I'm not so concerned about the album selling," said FitzSimmons, a
resident of Fallbrook. "We didn't go after a genre; I just hope people will enjoy
it."
"Somewhere ... South of the Clef" features five songs written by Rich
Maiorano, a childhood pal of FitzSimmons who plays acoustic guitar. Maiorano has written
songs and collected them in a shoe box for 20 years.
"I found the song 'Love Gives Up' and I was knocked out by it," said
FitzSimmons, who cites honest lyrics and emotion as the components of a good song.
"I built a studio two years ago and brought in Dennis and Rick. We built an album
around it."
The song was aired on the FM 102.1 "Music Without Boundaries" program
and critically acclaimed by radio host Kenny Weissberg. FitzSimmons looks forward
to performing "Love Gives Up" at tomorrow's showcase. The concert came about
when a group of North County songwriters began a discussion about performance venues
where they could introduce their work. They also share a desire to contribute to arts
in education and the 500-seat Bob Burton Performing Arts Center allows them to do
both.
"It's a benefit for a good cause," said Tempchin. "I'm hoping I
can draw enough people to make it worth everybody's while." Tempchin underestimates
his impact on songwriters who hope to attain his commercial success. And he knows
the synergy of a well- crafted song, radio airplay and public interest can be as unlikely
as drawing a row of cherries on a slot machine.
"I guess I would say that it's always been impossible to get a song placed
on the radio," Tempchin said. "It's not any different now than it's ever
been -- a billion to one. I'm one of the guys that made it from around here."
Concert Review
Fallbrook Village News
June 19th, 2003
ENTERTAINMENT
Time Travel
Nathalie Taylor
Staff Writer
The Eagles weren't in concert on Friday the 13th, but if you closed your
eyes you might have thought it was so. Jack Tempchin, writer of several Eagles hits
including "Already Gone", and "Slow Dancing", took concert guests
back in time with his exhilarating performance. Backed by his talented bass player,
Norman Sancho, Tempchin was in perfect form.
"You can go home but you can never go back." Temchin told the audience
at the Bob Burton Center for the Performing Arts during the benefit concert for the
Fallbrook Unified School District Education Foundation. His performance, Punctuated
with clever stories about where and when he penned his songs, gave listeners a peaceful
easy feeling.'
The energetic evening began with entertainment by San Diego veteran songwriter
Peter Bolland leading his band Broken Hills, through a delicious trove of mellow alt-country
tunes.
Jerry McCann who has performed in concert with Credence Clearwater Revival. Chicago
and several other popular groups, gave a soulful performance of songs from his new
CD All Lit Up Like The Moon.'
Fallbrook's own Shadowdogs with Bruce FitzSimmons (vocals/guitar/piano),
Jon Scarantino, Kevin Glasse, and pedal steel guitar master Rick Schmidt, thrilled
the audience with sounds from their alt-country repertoire. "I particularly liked
FitzSimmon's vocals and Rick's playing." Said jazz vocalist Robin Adler
who had a chance to sit in the audience Friday evening.
Despite the efforts of Michael Jones and Brenda Montiel, the auditorium was not
filled to capacity, However many of those in attendance are hoping another concert
will be coming soon. Rick Gord, who records the Padres broadcasts on Channel 4, was
glad he came. "All I can say is wow!" he exclaimed. Over $500.00 was raised
during a raffle for a beautiful Taylor guitar, won by Larry Robinson. The concert,
which lasted almost three hours, was recorded to video and 32-track digital.
CD REVIEWS
"Somewhere South of the Clef"
Shadowdogs
Released By: Mindful Eye Music
Bill Fark
For the North County Times
On the Shadowdogs' debut CD "Somewhere South of the Clef", the
new Fallbrook-based alt/country band takes the country-western genre in a slightly
different direction.
The group (which has performed locally at the Fallbrook Farmer's Market)
performs songs in traditional style, along with a mix of others influenced by genres
from blues to rock. Shadowdogs are a five-member ensemble Bruce FitzSimmons,
Rich Maiorano, and Rick Schmidt, playing various guitars, bassist Jon Scarantino and
drummer Kevin Glasselbut for this CD, guests boost the number to 11. This makes
for a full-bodied sound and some very interesting arrangements.
"Until You Smile" demonstrates the extent of guitar possibilities. It
features spectacular fingering by guest guitarist Jerry Glassel playing an acoustic
instrument, as well as guest Ed Casey on pedal steel guitar, and FitzSimmons on a
second acoustic guitar. The trio team again on the sentimental "Lean On Me",
and Glassel switches to electric guitar on "Baby Don't Like to Be Left Alone,"
with Maiorano (who wrote the piece) on acoustic guitar.
FitzSimmons is the most versatile musician. He wrote eight of the 14 songs and
collaborated on another. He is also the principal vocalist and plays acoustic guitar
on all but two tracks.
Maiorano shares creative honors on five of the songs. His "One More Drink"
is in typical Western style, with novelty dobro passages. His other numbers are "Dancin'"
and "Love Gives Up". Other guest musicians, soloists in their own right,
are Dennis Caplinger, on fiddle, mandolin, and banjo, and Scott Sekol, Jim Hollingsworth
and Jerry McCann on various guitars.
SAN DIEGO TROUBADOUR
Alternative country, Americana, roots,
folk, gospel, and bluegrass music news
Vol. 2, No. 10
July 2003
SHADOWDOGS
Somewhere...South of the Clef
By Phil Harmonic
Shadowdogs is a very talented country-rock group with a sound spawned in Southern
California by such bands as Poco, Buffalo Springfield, the Byrds, Eagles, and Flying
Burrito Brothers. Their new CD, Somewhere... South of the Clef is right out of
the mold shaped by Gram Parsons, Chris Hillman, et al. The group, headed by Bruce
Fitzsimmons, is made up of well-seasoned musicians, including such notable guests
as Dennis Caplinger and the late Jerry Glassel.
Fitzsimmons wrote nine of the songs and Rich Maiorano wrote the remaining five.
Besides handling all the lead vocals, Fitzsimmons also mixed and produced the CD.
His voice is pleasant and quite suited to this style. Bassist Jon Scarantino is listed
as the only background vocalist and, if this is so, adds excellent well-balanced,
full textured harmonies that remind me of Timothy B. Schmidt and Randy Meisner, two
accomplished bass-playing vocalists who both played in Poco and the Eagles.
The lush sound is extended and embellished by Rick Schmidt's pedal steel
guitar and Dennis Caplinger's fiddle, mandolin, and banjo. Normally I don't
like to see musicians produce and mix their own work, because they tend to overproduce
and polish. However, Fitzsimmons, also a multi-instrumentalist, delivers a fine effort.
With a wonderful substance that shows through. There is a lot of good listening here,
and it is good listening music when you're hangin' around the house. It
has pick-me-up flavor that's uplifting. There are also slower songs that create
a more melancholy feel, but all in all, this is feel good music, which will find you
bouncing in your chair.
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