PeppermintPatty
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Sowwy
Sowwy
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You are most welcome. Four of the 5 Band members were Canadians. Richard Danko, Robbie Robertson, Garth Hudson, and Richard Manuel. Ronnie Hawkins was a hard task master, and he ran the Hawks like a military unit. Fines for showing up late on stage, fines for not wearing a clean shirt each night, play a 4 hour bar set, then practice a further 4 hours into the early morning hours.Wow that's great. I am very familiar with the Band and have always been a fan, but I didn't know that interesting bit of history. Thank you for sharing that.
What an interesting inside story. It sounds as if you were directly affiliated with the Band and Ronnie Hawks in some ways other than just a member of the audience or an adoring fan.You are most welcome. Four of the 5 Band members were Canadians. Richard Danko, Robbie Robertson, Garth Hudson, and Richard Manuel. Ronnie Hawkins was a hard task master, and he ran the Hawks like a military unit. Fines for showing up late on stage, fines for not wearing a clean shirt each night, play a 4 hour bar set, then practice a further 4 hours into the early morning hours.
Hawkins arrived in Toronto in 1956 with Levon, looking for steady music gigs. Within 4 months they had put together the first of many Hawks lineups. Ronnie's biggest attribute was being able to spot raw talent, bring it on stage with him, and mold the musician to his formula. Hawkins eventually became the unofficial "Mayor of Younge street " which was Toronto's main downtown drag where all the hot music bars were located.
Hawkins knew a lot of people in the music business, and by the early 1970s he was friends with a huge number of stars in various style of music, from Jerry Lee Lewis, to Bo Diddley, to Gordon Lightfoot ( they played across the street from one another for years in Toronto ) to Bob Dylan. Dylan came to Toronto to play a concert at Maple Leaf Gardens, and the after party was at Gord Lightfoot's Toronto house. Hawkins and the Hawks met Dylan that night.
Within 3 weeks, Bob Dylan was offering a huge amount of money to lure the Hawks away from Ronnie, and become his back up band. This was just as Dylan was moving from acoustic folk to electric rock. The Hawks took the bait, and left Hawkins high and dry. He never forgot that, and his relations with Levon were strained from then on.
Hawkins rebuilt the band with some of the best Toronto players, and continued to pack the bars. He also opened the Hawk's Nest which was a NO booze club for teen agers. At that time in Ontario the legal age to drink was 21. The Nest was a gold mine for Hawkins, who owned it, and he also booked the bands who played there. Hawkins booked many US acts for national tours in Canada, under the name Big Town Music INC. He was a multi talented guy.
Some of Ronnie's friends were jerks. John Lennon and Yoko Ono stayed at Ronnies country home west of Toronto for 3 weeks. After the main Beatle and his wife left town, Ronnie found out Lennon had stuck him with a $9000 long distance phone bill. He was never able to get Lennon to pay it back.
Here is a link to a Youtube Ronnie Hawkins and the Hawks title.https://www.bing.com/videos/search?pglt=43&q=ronnie+hawkins+and+the+hawks+youtube&cvid=067ef112ec9944a2ab8276a2e8751eba&gs_lcrp=EgZjaHJvbWUqBggCEAAYQDIGCAAQRRg5MgYIARAAGEAyBggCEAAYQDIGCAMQABhAMgYIBBAAGEAyBggFEAAYQDIGCAYQABhAMgYIBxAAGEDSAQkyNDMyOGowajGoAgCwAgA&PC=U531&ru=%2fsearch%3fpglt%3d43%26q%3dronnie%2bhawkins%2band%2bthe%2bhawks%2byoutube%26cvid%3d067ef112ec9944a2ab8276a2e8751eba%26gs_lcrp%3dEgZjaHJvbWUqBggCEAAYQDIGCAAQRRg5MgYIARAAGEAyBggCEAAYQDIGCAMQABhAMgYIBBAAGEAyBggFEAAYQDIGCAYQABhAMgYIBxAAGEDSAQkyNDMyOGowajGoAgCwAgA%26FORM%3dANNTA1%26PC%3dU531&view=detail&mmscn=vwrc&mid=F59084F5625BBEC3AC09F59084F5625BBEC3AC09&FORM=WRVORC
Enjoy. Jimb.
If family is everything, I've got nothing.There's something to be said for being a 'Steady Eddie'. Perhaps that's what you are?
My Father is the most responsible person I've ever known. He isn't leaving any great legacy...only that his whole family adored and respected him. At the end of the road, family is everything.
I was both a fan and an associate. I was one of the roadies for Jay Smith and the Majestics starting around 1963. Jay was a tremendous voice, and he was hired by Ronnie as an opening act when they went on the road doing 4 nights a week in the other towns in southern Ontario. For me that morphed into a steady job with Ronnie as an "odd job guy " .What an interesting inside story. It sounds as if you were directly affiliated with the Band and Ronnie Hawks in some ways other than just a member of the audience or an adoring fan.
In the early 70's, 4 of us went to a New Year's event hosted by Ronnie Hawkins. For some odd reason, people were not on the dance floor .. except for a Janis Joplin look-alike who danced every set alone. Near the end of the evening, a female duo danced together.I was both a fan and an associate. I was one of the roadies for Jay Smith and the Majestics starting around 1963. Jay was a tremendous voice, and he was hired by Ronnie as an opening act when they went on the road doing 4 nights a week in the other towns in southern Ontario. For me that morphed into a steady job with Ronnie as an "odd job guy " .
My duties were varied, sort of like in the military, drive the equipment van, move equipment, pick up the dry cleaning, take musical or sound equipment to Long and McQuade for repairs. Make sure that everyone was happy with their rooms on the road, hand out flyers advertising that night's show at the local auditorium, and deliver new 45's to the local radio stations in the smaller Ontario towns for air play. Drive Ronnie home late at night, and pick him up the next day. The benefits ? Lots of late night poker games with some of the leading stars of the era, backstage at the Hawk's Nest.
Jimb.
What a fun gig! We had Roadies for some of our gigs when we traveled a lot but mostly we did smaller venues, nightclubs and such. Always tried for the house band jobs. Got to open and share the stage with a few well known acts along the way, Allman Brothers, Jimmy Buffet, Bertie Higgins, Little Feat, others. Some of the best times were traveling and playing the little hole-in-the-wall places for a week or two at a time. I still remember how the hair on my arms would stand on end as I counted off the first song of the night. Nothing in the world quite like it!I was both a fan and an associate. I was one of the roadies for Jay Smith and the Majestics starting around 1963. Jay was a tremendous voice, and he was hired by Ronnie as an opening act when they went on the road doing 4 nights a week in the other towns in southern Ontario. For me that morphed into a steady job with Ronnie as an "odd job guy " .
My duties were varied, sort of like in the military, drive the equipment van, move equipment, pick up the dry cleaning, take musical or sound equipment to Long and McQuade for repairs. Make sure that everyone was happy with their rooms on the road, hand out flyers advertising that night's show at the local auditorium, and deliver new 45's to the local radio stations in the smaller Ontario towns for air play. Drive Ronnie home late at night, and pick him up the next day. The benefits ? Lots of late night poker games with some of the leading stars of the era, backstage at the Hawk's Nest.
Jimb.
I think you will enjoy this article. It covers Ronnie's life better than I could . link. https://www.cbc.ca/news/entertainment/ronnie-hawkins-obituary-1.6470162What a fun gig! We had Roadies for some of our gigs when we traveled a lot but mostly we did smaller venues, nightclubs and such. Always tried for the house band jobs. Got to open and share the stage with a few well known acts along the way, Allman Brothers, Jimmy Buffet, Bertie Higgins, Little Feat, others. Some of the best times were traveling and playing the little hole-in-the-wall places for a week or two at a time. I still remember how the hair on my arms would stand on end as I counted off the first song of the night. Nothing in the world quite like it!
hypothetically most people want a legacy to be remembered by. I am a black hole of events and achievements therefore rather than ’I am’ I am just the opposite.
I have 2 wonderful daughters and a wonderful wife so obviously some substance there. however nothing dynamic or meaningful in the real world.
Perhaps I feel cheated for losing out on 30 yrs of productivity and social growth. I appreciate my come back years from 2005 forward.
Comparably, the time and opportunity to leave my mark as a reference to be remembered by has long passed and forgotten.
Most my former school mates are dead, perhaps I will take one of their marks should one go on sale.HA! As a youngster, I was going to change the world. Looking back, like you, I'm inconsequential. Even writing that, it seems like self-aggrandizement. In reality, no one individual can expect to have an impact that has far reaching effects. I'll die, and no-one will know or care. Not my idea of a glorious life, but a realistic one.
You know, civilization is chock full of people like me. How many people from your past do you really know about? What they went through, how they felt, what they thought? We, as humans, start with huge potential, but we most often end with... well, a puff of smoke.
There is not much in life more meaningful than raising children to do well in life....
You would rather they raised useless troublemaking brats who make life miserable for all around them like so many have been doing? If you are going to have them, do it right. That IS part of who YOU are.That makes life inconsequential. Parents have their kids as a legacy, but they also still have a personal life, personal dreams, and goals, no?
You would rather they raised useless troublemaking brats who make life miserable for all around them like so many have been doing? If you are going to have them, do it right. That IS part of who YOU are.