Sal Belloise
It's amazing how far an acoustic guitar, a VW bus and 40 songs can take you.
From the late 1960's at Beaux Arts Coffee house in Florida where Jim Morrison
and Mic Jagger sang to present day digital recording sessions it's been a good trip.
In the 1970's, it was college campus clubs and play anywhere you could.
Opening act for a few big name bands, Dave Mason, Taj Mahal, Rita Coolidge,
Little Feat, Leon Russell, Pure Prarie League and others. A stint in the
Virgin Islands rounded off the decade. It was exciting being one of
Fantasma Productions first acts when they were just getting started.
They're huge now. Standing on the stage of a Holiday Inn lounge in the 1980's
playing to a happy hour, chicken wing eating, drunk crowd or a loud restaurant
packed with families of screaming kids directly in front of the stage, I was there.
Lot's more opening acts and 20+ years of nightclub work, much of it with my brother
in arms, Mark Zumberg [alias Zoom]. As an acoustic duo you can get a lot of work
if you're brave enough to take it. I can't imagine a situation we haven't seen and
dealt with from the stage. Club owners with no cash at the end of the night to pay
you, to girlfriends shouting obscenities at you from the audience. Here's a secret
about guitar players I'll let you in on: the real reason you buy an expensive guitar
is because they play themselves when you're drunk. I remember performing one
night until 1AM in South Carolina, breaking down all the sound gear and loading
it into the van, driving all night to Tampa, Florida, playing an 8AM morning
television show [you know none of your friends are awake to watch], then driving
to Sloppy Joe's in Key West for the 5PM happy hour gig only to arrive and find the
band house is already occupied by the friends of the drug dealer / biker who
lives in the back apartment. It's funny now. Play in a European country where
no one speaks English and you'll find yourself changing words to famous songs to
break up the monotony. I wrote some great songs doing that. This is why there's a
brotherhood of performing musicians. "He who shares the stage and lives the day
will surely be my brother." It was a highlight to play the Woodstock 25th reunion
at the original site in 1994. If you were around in the sixties, you'd know what a
big deal that is for an old hippie. Nowadays I'm finally recording the songs I've
written over the years spurred on by the inspiration of Grammy recipient and good
friend Billy Dean. I just released 13 tunes and I'll follow up with 14 more in a
couple of months. I'm also playing live dates, I can't stop myself.
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