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Topic: Buddy Cage at Monmouth Park NJ 7/27 11:30 |
JB Arnold
From: Longmont,Co,USA (deceased)
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Posted 24 Jul 2003 5:47 pm
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With Blue Highways
27 – Monmouth Park Racetrack – Oceanport, NJ
w/Blue Highways www.bluehighwaysonline.com www.monmouthpark.com
By Car:
Take the Garden State Parkway to Exit 105, to Route 36 East. Follow
signs to MP. The NJ Turnpike connects with the Parkway at Woodbridge
interchange, Exit 11 on the Turnpike.
From the south and west, use the NJ Turnpike to Exit 7A to I-195 east
to the Garden State Parkway north, or Route 18 north to exit 13B.
From Long Island or Brooklyn, take the Verrazano Bridge and Staten
Island Expressway to the Outerbridge Crossing, to the Garden State
Parkway south to Exit 105.
Should be a great show. Wish I was there!
JB
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Fulawka D-10 9&5
Fessenden D-10 8&8
"All in all, looking back, I'd have to say the best advice anyone ever gave me was 'Hands Up, Don't Move!"
www.johnbarnold.com/pedalsteel
www.buddycage.net
http://www.nrpsmusic.com/index.html
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Bobby Snell
From: Austin, Texas
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Posted 25 Jul 2003 12:56 pm
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Lived right near Monmouth Park and Exit 105 for most of my...formative years.
Before the Lottery, horseracing was the only real legal gambling (yes, before Atlantic City got casinos, we're talking the 50's and 60's). People would wear their good clothes (tie and jacket in the clubhouse, please) and it was a big deal. Traffic to there and the nearby shore would be bumper-to-bumper.
Monmouth Park itself was kept in beautiful condition: flowering shrubs and green grass in the parking lots, where sections were divided by sparkling white fences. Nobody under 18 allowed (except for workers), so a big place with an air of mystery for a kid. We could send in small bets with local, small-time bookies, and then listen on the transistor radio for the results. hehe, wild youths.
But the Lottery and scratch-offs, etc., put a hurt on the horseracing and when I went back and looked at the old park, it seemed a little rough.
Would be real cool to see Buddy Cage there, though.
First time I saw him play was with NRPS in Asbury Park Convention Center in the early 70's. All those pedal and knees! Incredibly hot licks! But the opening licks of Powerglide had made me a big fan already.
Best wishes to everybody who goes. |
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Michael Johnstone
From: Sylmar,Ca. USA
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Posted 25 Jul 2003 1:22 pm
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Did Buddy ever get his stolen guitar back or some kind of reasonable replacement? |
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JB Arnold
From: Longmont,Co,USA (deceased)
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Posted 25 Jul 2003 1:40 pm
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Michael
At the moment he is playing an Emmons he borrowed. We are still working on the permanent replacement. Lots of prospective copedants being tossed around.
JB
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Fulawka D-10 9&5
Fessenden D-10 8&8
"All in all, looking back, I'd have to say the best advice anyone ever gave me was 'Hands Up, Don't Move!"
www.johnbarnold.com/pedalsteel
www.buddycage.net
http://www.nrpsmusic.com/index.html
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BobG
From: Holmdel, NJ
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Posted 25 Jul 2003 6:49 pm
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Nice way to kill a Sunday afternoon...Does anybody know where the band sets up an how long they play?
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Bob Grado, Williams D10 (lefty), Peavey 1000,
Profex ll.
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JB Arnold
From: Longmont,Co,USA (deceased)
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BobG
From: Holmdel, NJ
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Posted 27 Jul 2003 12:33 pm
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I just got back from the show.. Buddy sounded great!..What a great place to catch him.. An outside stage ..small crowd.. a couple of cold beers..a tip on a winning horse (thanks John).. and I got the chance to shoot the breeze with a fellow forumite and a steel legend .... Not a bad afternoon at all.
Unfortunately he never got his steel back.
He's playing an Emmons thru a twin head into a cabinet with two JBL 12"s.. The cabinet was built by the same guy who constructed the infamous "wall of sound" that the Dead used.. (I forgot his name).. It should be worth noting that for the most part he uses very little effects.. no delay and just a touch of reverb.
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Bob Grado, Williams D10 (lefty), Peavey 1000,
Profex ll.
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JB Arnold
From: Longmont,Co,USA (deceased)
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