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I get the blues when it rains

By Brien Lee
Sunday, Aug 10 2008, 10:34 AM

This weekend could be an instant replay of the same weekend a year ago: Balloon rally in Hartford, Arab World Fest in Milwaukee, last weekend for State Fair in West Allis, car show in Waukesha, Bluesfest in Delafield. Heck, it even rained on Saturday afternoon, same as last year! Guess you have to stick with what works.

A little nervous when I heard that the only change to Bluesfest, beside performers, would be the ticket prices. Not enough people showed for the first one and, though we enjoyed it, thought it would take something major to bring it back again this year. It was $37.00 for a one day ticket last year compared to $15.00 each for advance tickets this time.

The restaurants were the same as last year, vendors same, artists same. Same park, Naga-Waukee. OK, even the same person accompanied me, Mom-in-law. But are fourteen artists in a tent gallery enough of a distraction for a 9-1/2 hour fest? Is there anything for kids to do?

Yesterday I'd heard that Friday's crowd was pretty light. I was afraid of that. I wanted to see this work for people like myself who enjoy this type of music, and for Waukesha Rotary Club's Charitable Fund, recipient of the proceeds.

We arrived around 1:00 for it's start and found everything as we left it from last year. All eyes were on the people, ears on the music. Would more people show than last year, and did the lineup suffer from the ticket price cut? The same tent with the same amount of chairs were filled with a similar number of blues fans. But then something started happening. A couple decent local acts played and people started arriving. Portable chairs were set up, picnic tables filling, artists seeing customers. It was a relaxed atmosphere where us mainly middle-aged folk could go barefoot, smoke, drink or get the blues without much restriction. I didn't see anyone get out of hand, mom-in-law excepted.

By the time the first of the three head-liners played, the tent seemed to be 3/4 full. We were really getting into the artist born in Two Rivers who later moved to New Orleans. His nieces took the stage to toss Mardi Gras beads to us and I caught one for Ma. People started cheering for me and I didn't know why. Correction, people were cheering for Bryan Lee not Brien Lee and it was because his group was really great. He signed my t-shirt the same way I often sign my name, B Lee, a neat trick considering he's blind.

As the evening wore on the tent filled almost completely and I was satisfied the one change made to the ticket price was enough. Younger fans appeared as day turned to night. Many dancers were enjoying themselves, especially to the tunes of The Bel Airs. We had an enjoyable night and will go again next year.Bryan Lee, (no relation)


 

Singing in the rain

By Brien Lee
Sunday, Aug 5 2007, 11:20 PM
Joey was singing and playing guitar outside Steaming Cup yesterday during downtown Waukesha's Art Crawl 47. He wasn't the only one having to deal with the rain. There was also a drum circle outside Plowshares and a painter outside Almont Gallery trying to keep dry, not to mention the Wauk. Symphony Wind Ensemble, dancers, other artists and "crawlers," all trying to keep dry. Fortunately the rain was on the light side and not too cold.

I always enjoy "discovering what's new in Downtown Waukesha" and yesterday I visited several galleries, and a coffee shop, for the first time and revisited galleries I haven't been to in a while. I only rarely buy art but go to these crawls because, among other things, they're entertaining. Even in the rain.

Let me see if I have it straight; Jazz Wednesday, Civic Band performance Thursday, Friday Night Live on four stages Friday and lots of art and more music on Saturday? All free of charge? Can this be Waukesha?

 
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