Hello all!!
After much thought, and a rathar large 5 way trade with the hated Boston Red Sox, the Pittsburgh Pirates, the LA Dodgers and the Green Bay Packers we have reacquired our guitar player Jaime Chorba, from the Italian League.
Yes, this weekend, Jaime is back! Thanks to the other Chorba in our lives (John) for filling in so bravely and proficiently.
With Chorba #1 back, its time to kick it off Pearl Jam style at McGraths this Saturday. GOOD DEAL!! Drinky Drinky!! (Late night at Lenny's pool begins at 2:30 am)
BLISS AT MCGRATHS THIS SATURDAY!! At 4pm we have a special Saturday afternoon benefit to play- check MySpace for the details...
OH AND SEACRETS NEXT SATURDAY!!! WOOHOOO
Make sure you get out and enjoy music, whether from a cover band, an original act, or an acoustic act...
Dont forget BLISS on MySpace- lots of new stuff on out MySpace site..
BLISS on MySpace- http://www.myspace.com/blissarmyband
Remember no other band around plays more Pearl Jam, (old and new) Fuel, Rusted Root, Red Hot Chili’s, Modern Rock/Alternative fav's and, whatever else we feel like jamming to or throwing in there, than BLISS.
Please keep checking www.BlissArmy.com for all the updates, and get your friends on our mailing list.
We hope to see you Saturday at the McGraths, tell your friends! THIS MEANS YOU!!!
BLISS
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-BLISS
BLISS in 2006: Change Has Been Good
By Alan K. Stout- Weekender Editor
Being in a local rock band for more than 10 years can provide a group of musicians with plenty of fun memories, but for longtime modern-rock favorites Bliss, the best of times are right now. Though 2006 marks its 10th year as a working band, the group’s members say that since taking some time off from performing in 2001-2002 and reuniting in 2003, things have been better than ever.
Who says you can’t go home again?
“The first run wasn’t as much fun as what I’m having right now,” says vocalist Joey Stevens, who adds that he’s been completely surprised by the group’s longevity. “I thought we’d just be doing this for a year or two. I never had a musical background, like the rest of the band, so I just thought it would just be fun for a (while), and that would be it. It’s a complete shock to me, to put it mildly.”
Bliss was actually formed 11 years ago, in 1995, though they disbanded four years ago to focus on family and careers. In and effort to be accurate, the band does not include that time when calculating its history. Thus it notes 2006 as its 10th anniversary.
Though the group doesn’t perform as often as it did during its first six years together - mainly due to job responsibilities and because there aren’t as many local rock clubs as there once were - they still get together for a few gigs each month. The band features Brad Polidori on bass and Jim Graham on drums. Jamie Chorba has replaced original guitarist Joe Angeloni.
A quick glance at the band’s MySpace page reveals a pretty colorful history, or as they joke, “useless information.” The band has played in 10 states along the Northeastern region of the United States, including Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Delaware and Virginia. It once traveled more than 17,000 miles in one year to perform and it is estimated that the group has played to over 250,000 people. The band’s biggest show was at Seacrets in Ocean City, Md., in July of 2000 before a crowd of 7,800.
All good times, says drummer Jim Graham.
“There’s always been big shows for us, which we’re thankful for, but one of my fondest memories was playing the Fourth of July weekend down at LBI,” he says. “The vibe down at the beach is just amazing, especially during holidays. I remember there just being cases of beer stocked up in our room. We had a lot of guests come with us from the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre area, who would drive down, and if they didn’t get their own hotel room, they’d crash with us. It was like a core group of people. We got paid a good amount of money, but we probably threw it right back at the bar.”
Bliss’ covers include tunes by Pearl Jam, Blink 182, Dave Matthews, Panic at The Disco, The Killers and Hinder. The group had always done a good job at balancing its own personal tastes with songs it knows a crowd wants to hear and has enjoyed its role as sheer entertainers.
“I think playing covers is fun, just because I like the music,” says Graham. “I couldn’t be in a wedding band. I like Sinatra, but I don’t think I could cover his stuff all the time. I like playing Pearl Jam, Dave Matthews, R.E.M. and all sorts of stuff. Anything alternative modern-rock, I’m just into it. If I wasn’t playing in band, I’d be playing it in a garage. That’s what I’d be listening to.
“When we first started, it was sort of the end of the grunge era,” he adds. “You had a band like Hootie & The Blowfish be the biggest band in the world, then you had Oasis be the biggest band in the world. Then Hootie sort of faded, and Oasis sort of faded. You see the cycles. One day I ran across an old set-list of some of the songs we did that were totally one-hit wonders that you haven’t heard of. They had a good rock song that was on the radio for a couple of months and then they disappeared.”
The band has also seen changes in music, but also the way people act in the clubs. The changes, however, have been positive.
“When we first started, people used to get loaded, mosh all night, go out to the parking lot and throw up and drive home,” says Graham. “Now - and it’s a good thing - people aren’t getting as fall-down drunk as they used to. I think that’s been a huge difference. A couple of bar owners told us that the crowd that we get are good drinkers and good tippers … but everybody’s a lot more careful than they used to be.”
Stevens agrees. He says stricter laws regarding DUIs have affected the size of club crowds, but have also made the roads safer. “People try to stay closer to home,” he says. “People are still power-drinking, but they’re doing it closer to their house. The days of people driving to Wilkes-Barre to see us if they could see us in Scranton are over with, and vice versa.”
Still, Bliss can still pack ‘em in just fine and on any given weekend at a club like Tink’s they can still draw 400-500 fans. The band says it is thankful for such support among not only area music fans, but also fellow musicians. Times, they say, are better.
“When we first started as the young new bucks, there were a lot of cover bands with a big, big attitudes,” says Graham. “Now, you could be in a cover band one day, and then asked by Breaking Benjamin or whoever to fill in. Because it’s a small knit community of original people and cover people, who are constantly switching bands, but are still friends with each other. Everybody gets along more. Nobody’s fighting to be the biggest cover band or original band in the valley. Everybody just wants to get out there and play.
“It’s just a much better vibe.”
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