College Football Predictions Week # 5 and a Celebratory Note of Thanksgiving

A prayer from my maternal grandfather.

Last night was wonderful.  My dear wife, Carrie, and I shared dinner with our son Jarrett and his lady friend, Sarah.  Pizza and salad made the menu.  Thanksgiving made for the dessert.

Jarrett just got back to the U.S.of A Thursday.  He has been working as a body guard for the Iraq Ambassador in Baghdad.  His flight schedule was Baghdad to Dubai to London to Chicago to Louisville.  That is a long road home.  He had a long stretch at the Embassy and is back home for some time off.  His stories are interesting and he goes about it all very nonchalantly.  He is as cool as the center seed of the cucumber.

As we were celebrating Jarrett’s return last night, the North Harrison Cougars football team lost a close one at Silver Creek.  14-13 was the final score.  Silver Creek is no slouch.  I have seen some of the video from the game and it looks like the field was a sloppy mess.  That is not good.  Still, both teams have to play on it.  The game put the Cougars at 4 wins and 3 losses for season and makes complete sense of Coach Mark WIlliamson’s declaration that NH is still “new money” as he put it, after being queried about Cougars status in the hierarchy of Mid Southern Conference.  Coach Williamson is a smart man.  I am glad he is our coach.  North should win the last two of the regular season and gain some momentum heading into the playoffs.

Week Five College Football Picks.

8 winners and 5 losers last week.  Season record 38-14.

I knew I was setting myself up for a couple clunkers last week.  In earnest, I was shocked I got 8 the way the afternoon was playing out.

Indiana beats Rutgers…A trip to Piscataway is no picnic.  Might as well make the most of it.  Look for huge offense from the Hoosiers today.

Alabama beats Louisiana L…What was The Pelican State thinking when they changed the names of those state schools?  Louisiana Monroe will always be NLU to me!

Clemson beats Syracuse…The land of whiny quarterbacks does not discriminate against the powerful.  Clemson should be glad they are at home this week.

Boston College beats Temple…May lose this one.  I still think BC will rebound.

NC State beats Virginia….Ryan Finley should have a big game as NC State is back home for the first time since Florence hit.  The Wolfpack will be ready for the home folk.

Florida State beats Louisville…It has to improve for FSU.  U of L is having a hard time.

Marshall beats Western Kentucky.

Michigan beats Northwestern…Hope Ryan Field is unkind to the Wolverines…but I doubt it.

Duke beats Virginia Tech….The Dukies start 5-0 for the first time since 1994 when they began the season 7-0.

Kentucky beats South Carolina…The Stadium is sold out in Lexington and for good reason.

Notre Dame beats Stanford…At South Bend under the lights, those golden domes look great.

LSU beats Ole Miss…Eventually Ole Miss will get 11 defenders on the field.  Hurts me.  Go Rebs!

USC beats Arizona…You just never know.  USC is finding itself. Both are 2-2.  Could be a Wildcat win.

No, I did not touch the Penn State-Ohio State game.  I would pick Penn State cos I want to see the Buckeyes get beat 100-0.

Speaking the rights…

Danny Johnson

 

Marshall 2018

We made it back.

Carrie and I made it to the Joan C. Edwards Stadium on the campus of Marshall University in Huntington, West Virginia last Saturday.    The Thundering Herd took on the North Carolina State Wolfpack.  NC State won 37-20.

It is a big deal when a school from a “power conference” comes calling to The Joan.  Carrie and I watched the Herd beat Purdue a few years ago.  That was fun.  We were in West Lafayette a couple years earlier  to watch the Herd get bested by the Boilers.

I have written in detail on these pages our affinity for games in Huntington.  Yes, there was a movie we appreciated.  There are people in Huntington we appreciate more.  I have been to more football stadiums than I can remember at the moment.  Not a one of them is as memorable as the Joan C. Edwards Stadium in Huntington.  Going to the game is a combination of celebration and homecoming each week.  There are some rounders there for sure.  They started selling beer at The Joan recently and I don’t like the idea…not at a college game.  That is not necessary.

Carrie and I had a sense of that celebration and relief.  It was good to be back.  We have been to at least one Herd game in Huntington the last 11 seasons.  One year we had season tickets.

Saturday in pictures…

Always the first view of The Joan when we get there.

I never met a goalpost that did not make me feel good.

Enjoying the game with a girl that knows what football is about.  Thank you Lord!

We were humbled to be in the presence of 1971’s Young Thundering Herd…yes, those guys that were depicted in the ashes to glory movie We Are Marshall.  They were here to honor their quarterback, Reggie Oliver.  Reggie died due to complications from a fall he took in August.

Young Reggie.

A Marshall legend, he will be missed.

The Joan.

It was Stripe the Stadium night.  Glad we were in the Green section 111.

Remember the name Ryan Finley.  He is the NC State qb and he will be playing on Sundays one day.  His downfield accuracy is as good as I have ever witnessed.  I have seen many good ones.

I will leave you with a field goal…it was good!

Speaking the rights…

Danny Johnson

 

 

 

 

College Football Predictions Week #4…and some sad words.

The Cougars win tonight!  North Harrison 35  Eastern 7.  So says my Twitter page.  I was not able to make the game tonight.  I will be very glad to look at the video later tonight.

I just finished listening to the Brownstown Central Braves get beat by the Seymour Owls on my WJAA app on my phone.  I told my Dad last night that the Owls would best them.  He did not believe me.  At halftime I told my dear wife, Carrie, Seymour was sandbagging in the first half.  The Braves were ahead at halftime.  I told Carrie the Owls were saving their best running back for the 2nd half.  Whilst he carried the ball 9 times for 21 yards in the first half, he gained over 200 yards in the second half.  I knew it was coming.

The Owls outscored the Braves 20-0 in the 4th quarter.  Final score: Seymour 44 Brownstown Central 34.

Carrie and I drove Interstate 64 Eastbound this evening.  We are going to watch the Marshall Thundering Herd play host to the North Carolina State Wolfpack tomorrow night.  It will be hard not to root for the Wolfpack with all the heartache the folks in North Carolina are going through.  But we will be in green in Section 111 as we Stripe the Joan with green and white for the 7 PM kickoff.

As we drove East we passed the Winchester, Kentucky exit, looked at the sign that indicated such.  I took a couple deep breaths and shook my head.  My sister-in-law, Emily, has a brother, Ben Shemwell, that lives in Winchester with his family.  Last Saturday Emily and Darrell’s nephew, Marco Shemwell, was hit and killed near Kroger Field in Lexington by an 18 year-old drunk driver who was a student at the University of Kentucky.

Tomorrow, before the UK home game against Mississippi State, there will be a moment of silence for Marco before the National Anthem.

The 18 year-old that hit Marco pleaded not guilty.  Of course he did.

I wish folks in this country were as interested in stopping the mindless drunk driving deaths the same way they get worked up about keeping people out of the country and building walls.  We’d all be a hell of a lot safer than any wall could make us.

For the College picks this week…I am 30 winners and 9 losers so far.

Just picks.  I am in no mood for attempts at clever commentary.

Ole Miss beats Kent State

Michigan beats Nebraska

Notre Dame beats Wake Forest

Pitt beats UNC

Louisville beats Virginia

Alabama beats Texas A&M

South Carolina beats Vandy

LSU beats Louisiana Tech

Kentucky beats Mississippi State

Marshall beats NC State

Auburn beats Arkansas

Indiana beats Michigan State

Iowa beats Wisconsin

 

Speaking the rights…

Danny Johnson

College Football Predictions Week #3 and a Cougar Note

I suppose this is the week I stub the toe.  After a 20 winner 6 loser start in the first two weeks, there are a couple of I picked them with my games on the list this week.  That usually gets me.  I did not pick Ole Miss to beat Bama.  I didn’t say the heart was stupid.

Friday morning as the sun comes up

Pregame

Thanks to the Ramsey VFD.

The sun goes down.

Last night was a tough evening for NH Cougar fans.  The Cougars were defeated by the Brownstown Central Braves 42-0.  This was the first time the Cougars suffered a shutout since 2013.  That is a long time and nothing to be ashamed of, if you know a thing or two about Cougar football history.  I know a little.

Last night a friend  of mine was playing armchair quarterback and second guessing this and that as the Cougars struggled a bit.  I looked at him sternly and said, “This is the sixth time we have been beaten in the last four years.  So I don’t want to hear that.”

I am sure there are a few folks that wish I would chime in and put in a critical word when THEY think the opportunity presents itself.  I will tell them also…this is the sixth loss in four years.  I don’t have a critical word.  Enjoy it!

Yeah, I wish we would have attempted a field goal at Charlestown but that is the kicker in me talking and if that kick would have been good it would have done two things.  One, it would have made the score a 21-18.  Two, and selfishly I say, I would have seen a 38 yard field goal (there was a stiff breeze at the kicker’s back) go through the uprights and that has not happened for NH since 1985. I had a good place to watch that one.  Again, that is the kicker in me.  I have faith in our coach and those around him.

I congratulate the Braves for their victory last night and I know the Cougars are going to be fine.  They are in good hands.

College Football Picks for this week.

Indiana beats Ball State…I am in a hurry this Saturday morning cos my dear wife, Carrie, and I are meeting friends in Bloomington for this one.

FSU beats Syracuse

Kentucky beats MState Racers

UT neats UTEP

Notre Dame beats Vandy

Duke beats Baylor

LSU beats Auburn

Virginia beats Ohio

Alabama beats Ole Miss

Mizzou beats Purdue

USC beats Texas

UCLA beats Fresno State

Louisville beats WKU

The Marshall Thundering Herd was to play at South Carolina and that game was cancelled due to the Florence Storm.

We continue to pray and hope for the best as the folks in the Carolinas are up against it like we can’t imagine.

Speaking the rights…

Danny Johnson

 

 

 

Stormy Times

Written as I listen to Bruce Springteen’s CD The Rising.

My mind keeps wondering to places I have been and things I have seen with my dear wife, Carrie.

This past summer Carrie and I visited the 9/11 Memorial in New York City.  It is where the Twin Towers sat.  Today was the first 9/11 to come around, obviously, since we were there this summer.  I didn’t know today would come with so many memories and haunting sights and sounds that we gave a short glimpse to that day.  At least, I didn’t expect to feel this way.

When my friend Robert Becker played songs on his radio station this morning in Seymour, Indiana, he played songs from The Concert For New York.  The lives of members lost from Ladder Company 3 were mentioned before a song by The Who was played.  Immediately my mind came back to the moment I took this picture above.  A tear came to my eye.

You will never find a place with more people that is as quiet as this place.  It is amazing.  There is a presence there for sure.  You feel it.

Another place on my mind is the home away from home Carrie and I found together about fifteen years ago.  It is our place.  We have shared it with others, but it is our place.  That place is the North Carolina Shore.  Topsail Island, North Carolina to be specific.  With Hurricane Florence coming straight toward Topsail, pronounced Top-sul and not Top-sail, I am afraid Carrie and I will be dealing with the possibility of a place we will have to remember.  When we get back, I have no doubt it will be a different place.

Sunrise

That Sky.  I wrote a song about it a year later.

The town of Topsail Beach.

Writing one of those songs.

 

A fortunate man.

I took this last Spring.  I hope that pier makes it.

I hope this place makes it too.  Good fish.  Great people.

Faith Harbor United Methodist is closing up Wednesday and they hope to get back Monday.  I pray for all my Topsail friends.

I love to look back fondly on things of the past.  The idea of only being able to look back at some of the places, faces, and sights we have grown to love scares me.

God be with all in the path of this storm.

Speaking the rights.

Danny Johnson

 

 

College Football Predictions Week # 2

A tale of two fields…

North Harrison High School Friday morning 9/7/2018.

Charlestown High School Friday evening 9/7/2018.

The North Harrison Cougars were bested by the Charlestown Pirates last night.  The final score was 34-22.  That is always a tough place to play.  Now the Cougars need to put this one behind them and get ready Brownstown Central.  The Braves come calling to Ramsey next Friday.  One Brave friend has been calling the game “epic” for three weeks.  That is his version because North beat the Braves up there last year.  Me, I am just looking forward to another Cougar victory.  They can play better than they did last night for sure.

College Football Picks…

Last week yielded 10 winners and 3 losers.  I’ll take that in week one.  A couple of the games I picked out of meanness, of course.  I will pick against West Virginia til the cows come home.  And this week I will do something questionable again. Only this time, I feel it…or is it a case of transferred angst?  Both, I would surmise.  Either way it is still good fun.

Speaking of good fun, next week my dear wife, Carrie, and I will be in Bloomington to watch the Indiana Hoosiers take on Ball State a.k.a Testicle Tech.  At least that was that I was told many years ago.  Carrie and I are meeting up with old friends I used to work with at Meodra Schools.  I am looking forward to it.

This week…

Duke beats Northwestern…My allegiance to Coach Cut knows no boundary even Lake Michigan.

Michigan beats Western Michigan…How’s that for a segue?

Notre Dame beats Ball State…Wake Up The Echoes.

Nebraska beats Colorado…Good to see them playing again.  Been eight years since this rival game was played.

North Carolina beats East Carolina…UNC needs a victory and ECU needs help.

Ohio State beats Rutgers…Love to pick against the Buckeyes but even I am not that stupid.

Ole Miss beats Southern Illinois…Play everyone, Coach Luke.  Bama is next week.

Iowa beats Iowa State…Great times in Iowa for all.  West Virginia take note.  You should man up and play Marshall every year home and home.  It would be great for all of West Virginia.

Kentucky beats Florida…I did it.  UK might do it.  I think they will and Coach Smarty Mullen will have a great post-presser.

Indiana beats Virginia…The Hoosiers will be a soaking mess tonight.  He would holds on to the ball will win.  Go IU!

Penn State beats Pitt…Might be the best game of the day.  Could be some big scoring numbers pending on the weather.

USC beats Stanford…This too will be a good game.

Marshall beats Eastern Kentucky….Go Herd or Go Home!

Speaking the rights…

Danny Johnson

 

 

 

A Big One NH v. Charlestown JV Game 1982

1982 is a season in North Harrison High School Football history that some folks still look back on fondly.  Football was a fledgling sport at the time.  Only in its fifth season, the team had been very competitive the previous two years and anyone who knows how difficult it is to be competitive in the early stages of a football program knows there were some good things happening.  A few more touchdowns would have brought a few more victories in many close games.  But that is but my personal lament.  Losing to Brownstown Central in overtime in 1980 by the score of 9-6 will do that to a fella.  Me more than most.

In 1982 the North Harrison Football team finished the season with a record of 7 wins and 3 losses.  An Eddie Bagley Clarksville run just beyond the outstretched grasp of Jeff Brown who ran after him for 60 yards with his arms extended trying to catch him was the difference.  13-8  Clarksville wins.  Going into week 8 the Cougars were 6-1.  An undefeated Brownstown Central highly ranked team was next.  The trip to Brownstown was kind.  NH 27 BC 14.  I will never forget it.

Being the only Brownstown native on the NH roster that season, you’d think that was the most important game to me that year.  Well…it was.

But this morning as I was walking the track,  my mind hearkened back to that 1982 season.  I was a freshman.  I played center on the JV team and spelled a defensive tackle now and again.  At this point in my high school career, I had not thought about kicking a football.  My how things change.

This morning I thought fondly on the first JV football game of the 1982 season.  The NH team was playing host to the Charlestown Pirates.  In earnest, the Pirates got off the bus probably thinking they would be playing a bunch of hayseeds that didn’t know a blitz from a quarterback sneak.

Little did they know.

We, the North Harrison JV team,  beat the Charlestown JV team 20-0 that night.  I remember it well.  I was in pain the whole game.  I had an ear infection.  I was sick as a dog, so they say.  While I was enjoying the result, I remember leaving the locker room that night.  As I walked past the coaches office on my way out, Coach Tim Harbison called my name out.  “Cheeze, get in here!”  He extended his hand to me.  I shook it.  “I know you were hurting tonight.  You were a hell of a football player tonight.  You were a man.”

Thirty-six years later those words put a lump in my throat this morning as I made laps around the field where it all happened.

You want some context?  Charlestown was a team that, in the early days, routinely put a beat down on NH.  We won our JV game 20-0 in 1982.  The first North Harrison varsity victory over Charlestown came in 1999.  How ’bout them apples?

This Friday night the North Harrison Cougars varsity team looks to run its record to 4-0 in a game at Charlestown.  I have no doubt that the Cougars can take care of business.

I know what that feels like.

Speaking the rights…

Danny Johnson

 

The Julie Ragins Interview. . . Music Schools Pay Attention!

Music is a great thing most of the time.  We gravitate to it on many occasions.  Happy Birthday?  There’s a song.  Before a ball game?  There’s a song.  During the ball game?  Songs are playing.  Holidays?  Songs.  Going to a dance?  You dance to songs.  Want to impress the girl?  Write her a song.  You get the idea.
Julie Ragins and Curtis Brengle are the group Pear Duo.  They know a thing or two about music.  Obviously they enjoy playing together.
    When you write and record music like I do, you have a sense of duty to support other musicians at times.  I originally got acquainted with Julie Ragins’ music through The Moody Blues.  Yes, that group I have often referenced here and shared with you about.  Julie has been on-stage support talent for The Moody Blues for a number of years providing keyboard, backing vocals, and other instrumentation.  Julie has the voice of an angel and musical sensibilities that most would be delighted to have a little more of.  She is a great addition to any stage she walks on to, no-matter who’s playing on it.
    While traveling and playing with Justin Hayward during his solo shows, I had the opportunity to purchase a couple of music CDs Julie made.  Her solo effort, 7 Fairway Drive and her Duo CD with Curtis Brengle who happens to be her husband as well.  Husband and wife making beautiful music.
   When I heard their tunes, I was so inspired by a sound I felt could relate to as well as enjoy listening to.  I wrote about my discovery on these pages some time ago.  I passed those words, all musicians enjoy hearing good things, to Julie and Curtis and they appreciated it.   Those words were reprinted on their website: www.pearduo.com.  Over the last few years Julie and I have stayed in touch, thanks to music.
   I am delighted to announced here at speaktherights.com that Pear Duo is hitting the road this fall with a unique opportunity they want to share with music students in colleges and universities across the country. Julie and Curtis are going to impart their experience to music students by giving them real-world traveling professional musicians to learn from in a Master Class that will be a difference maker for those in the room.  Curtis and Julie  will give students the straight talk version of a business that is a tough one to crack but they can also relate to students as to how it can be done.
   I am a high school guidance counselor and a former English teacher with a penchant for writing.  That is why I do this page.  I just write whatever is on my mind because that is what I do.  When I heard that Julie and Curtis were presenting these classes, I just thought of all the young musicians that will have the chance of a lifetime to hear from these two.  In addition to being gifted musical talent, they are just plain good people.  Yes, that helps too.
   I would be remiss if I did not disclose my personal hope of one day taking Pear Duo to Al Fresco’s Place Recording Studio to put a tune down with my friend and recording ace, Jeff Carpenter.  That is a record that needs to be made.
    Curtis and Julie have credentials that are most impressive.  Curtis has performed with Ray Charles, Sheena Easton, Barry Manilow,  The Pointer Sisters, and Engelbert Humperdinck and many others.  Julie has performed with many artists including The Moody Blues, Justin Hayward, Sergio Mendes, Queen Latifa, and The Glenn Miller Orchestra and many others.
   Being a fan of The Moody Blues, I have seen Julie perform many times with the group including concerts at two of the most iconic musical venues in the world:
Red Rocks outside of Denver
The Ryman Auditorium in Nashville
   On August 24th my dear wife, Carrie, and I caught up with Julie Ragins in Kent, Ohio before she performed that night with Moody Blues’ singer-songwriter-guitar virtuoso Justin Hayward.
Justin Hayward, Mike Dawes, and Julie.
   Inspired with the hope to help open a few doors to music programs at colleges and universities, I decided to use that as an excuse to interview Julie!
   So, the first interview on speaktherights.com featuring Julie Ragins.
STR:  When was that flashing light moment for you that told you that you were going to make a career in music?  Was there one?
JR:  Nope.  No flash.  No Moment.  In fact, until my early 20’s  I really resisted the idea.  I was a sax player through college, and all I saw where great musicians struggling to make a living.  I didn’t want to spent my life struggling.  It wasn’t until the universe took it’s big old boot and kicked me into singing that the idea clicked.  After that I planned on pursuing session singing.  But once again the universe had other ideas for me.  But thru it all I completely feel like I am in exactly the right place.  I love how my life has turned out so far.
STR: Where are you originally from and where did you get your musical start?
JR:  I was born and raised in Fairbanks, Alaska.  I started playing in the school band when I was 9.  I took to it right away and at 12 I started playing the piano.  My parents were very supportive of it all, and there was a woman in town, Jo Scott, who was hellbent on bringing music and arts to our little town.  She single-handedly started the Fairbanks Summer Arts Festival.  Between that and the University of Alaska, Fairbanks summer music program I spent a great deal of my summers from age 12 on playing sax.  The really funny part about that is everyone had to take choir.  I hated it, and frankly skipped it about 90% of the time.  I did not think singers were real musicians and I was a musician damnit!  I just think that is hilarious!
STR: I get a sense that you can provide a class of music students a tangible opportunity that is rare and probably unfathomable to some educators that something like this really can happen. What are you and Curtis trying to bring to others with your Master Class Presentation?
JR:  Being a musician is a very interesting thing. Many musicians and artists don’t get a college education.  Those that do learn to play their instrument, but with only a hand full of exceptions, universities do not develop music students to think about HOW they are going to get the job or the gig they dream of.  They just teach them how to play the instrument, or sing.  The truth of the matter is this…. If you don’t know how to sell yourself you are going to get nowhere.  You are a selling product like any other business, but you are selling yourself.  Doesn’t matter if you want to be a session singer or the next Beyonce.  If you don’t understand some basic ideas about branding, marketing, and social behavior you will never be able to sell yourself.  What do you want?  Who is your audience?  How are you going to get people to pay attention?  Nobody ever asked me these questions.  I had to figure it out for myself over decades.
30 years ago in Los Angeles there were tons of places to play and there was a great and supportive community of musicians.  We looked out for each other, jammed together, shared gig and contacts.  Today the scene is small and cutthroat.  I don’t feel like this new generation has the support I had coming in as a new player, so they need the information even more.
Today is in some ways harder, and in some ways easier that it was when I started out.  Then you could still get “discovered in a smoky bar”.   You needed a label, a manager, a booking agent.  It was big bucks to record an album, you needed a distributor, and there were A&R reps that developed artists.  But you had to get those people to believe in you.  Today you can do everything yourself.  You can record an album in your garage, distribute it yourself through CD Baby, build your own website, make your own video and post it to YouTube.  Social media has forever changed how we consume music.  And labels expect you to do it all before they will take you seriously. So you better be a hell of an entrepreneur.  You can do it all yourself now which is amazing.  But you have to do it all yourself… which can be overwhelming.
STR: You and Curtis have a long list of folks you have collaborated with over the years,  how nerve-racking is an audition process and how do you suggest students  approach that aspect of the business?
JR:  Auditions are an interesting beast.  I think the number one mistake people make is not doing enough research and homework going into an audition.  Know who you are going to audition for.  What sort of music is it?  What sort of people have done it in the past.  Do you know of anything specific they are looking for?  You cannot be too prepared for an audition.  But you also need to be yourself.  Don’t pretend to be something or someone just to get the gig.  You won’t keep it.  Be genuine.  Be helpful but don’t be a know it all (fine line there).  A friend who is a genius at marketing once said to me “Be the solution to someone else problem”.  This makes you valuable.  And if you have a big audition with someone you are potentially star struck with, keep that stuff locked away tight.  Remember they are a person just like you are and they are looking for a colleague, not a fan.  Lastly, you learn something every time you do an audition.  There is an art to doing it.  Take every opportunity you can, audition for anyone who will listen to you, even if you don’t think it is a gig you want.  You might be surprised, and if nothing else you just might learn something valuable.
STR: How long have you and Curtis been Pear Duo?
JR:  It started about 2 1/2 years ago with the idea to make a CD that I could sell at Justin Hayward’s solo tour shows.  After we made the CD, we got the idea to do house concerts, so we did some research, and started reaching out to Moody Blues fans to see if we could get some interest and it worked.  We did 30 concerts the first year and this year have added our master class into the equation and hope to double that number.
STR: What was the inspiration for the name of your duo?
JR: It was a simple play on words. That’s it.  We were trying to find something simple, that was easy to remember, and something that could be strong visually as well.
STR: What is the largest crowd you have performed for with any group?
JR:  Twice in my life I got to play the Hollywood Bowl.  I think it holds 18,000.  Last year with the Moodies and in the mid 90’s with Sergio Mendes.
STR: I know you have worked with The Moody Blues since 2010 and you also play with Justin Hayward, Moody Blues front-man, during his smaller solo gigs.  How are they different?  Which do you enjoy more?  (I have to ask)
JR:  Actually I did my first tour with the Moodies in 2005, subbing for their back ground singer.  The end of 2006 I subbed again and stayed on until early 2009.  Then I came back in 2010 and have been there ever since.
I cannot say I like one more that the other.  They are so very different.
I love the Moodies’ show because it’s a full on rock concert.  It’s good fun.  About 5 years ago John Lodge asked me to play saxophone on a few of his songs.  I had not played in 20 years.  It was terrifying and exhilarating.  Like being reacquainted with your high school sweetheart.  I will be forever grateful to him for bringing that back into my life.
Now Justin’s show is totally different.  Much more introspective.  Much smaller.  Extremely intimate.  And since we are only a three piece group everything you do matters.  Being the sole keyboard player has stretched me to say the least, but Justin is very gracious and patient with me.  And singing with him is truly a joy.  Our voices work very well together and I love the challenge of finding that place where I can duck in on a background part and my voice almost disappears into his.  You hear the parts but not so much the individual voices.  Especially when singing in unison.  You cannot do that on a big, loud gig.  On smaller stages you can find an emotional connection that is very difficult, if not impossible to find in a large venue.  Then again it sure is fun to rock out!
STR: What instruments have you learned and who were your teachers?
JR:  I have messed around with a lot over the years.  Each instrument taught me something unique.  I played sax first.  I think my most influential sax teacher was Mike Monaghan.  He came to Fairbanks every summer for the arts festival.   He is still an active player in Boston and was truly inspirational.  When I went to Musicians Institute in 1989 to pursue voice, I found my vocal teacher, Kevyn Lettau.  She taught me how to use my instrument.  I could not do what I do without her knowledge and guidance.  I learned to sing with good technique and to this day I do not lose my voice from singing.  I still study with her when I can.  Also at MI I met a wonderful teacher who did the ear training and sight singing classes, Dick Hamilton.  I studied piano privately with him.  He let me join in on a sight singing group he led as well.  We are still friends.  Over the years I have also learned to play guitar, and have only dabbled here and there with lessons.  I also messed around with some bass, and recently took up harmonica for a song in Justin’s solo show.
STR: What did these teachers bring to the process of learning that made things better?  Anyone make things worse?
JR:  I think the greatest thing a student can experience is the joy and heart a good teacher brings to the table.  There is a great quote…. “students don’t care how much you know until they know how much you care.”  I have had some dismal music teachers over the years, but the good ones make up for it in spades.   I can’t say any of them made things worse.  The bad ones just made me search harder for the good ones, and maybe I would not have found them if I wasn’t looking hard enough, so who can say.
STR: Aside from the tangible aspect of  professional touring musicians being in the room, what “it factor” will your Master Class bring  music students?
JR:  The “IT” is to get students THINKING about what they want.  We are not here to say “do it this way and you will succeed”.  That is impossible.  There are so many ways to find success in today’s music world.  But if you don’t start asking yourself the right questions you can never find any answers.  We ask each person in our master class “WHO ARE YOU AND WHAT DO YOU WANT”.   The vast majority cannot answer the question.  If I add to it “AND WHY SHOULD I CARE?”  pretty much everyone folds.  The truth is until you have a compelling answer to these questions you are going to flounder.  Your answer could change over time, but you need to start with some sort of a focus.  That is what we offer.  Tools to help students help themselves.
STR: Having done for so many years in front of so many crowds, do you ever find youself in awe when singing harmony with Justin Hayward on a song like “NIghts n White Satin”?  It is your gig too.
JR:  My wow moments come from a different place than you might think.  With Justin I never think it is my gig because it’s not.  Once in a while someone will say to me “I wish I could have heard you better” after a gig.  The truth is, it is my job to support Justin, or whoever else I am working for.  If I am sticking out I am not doing my job.  My wow moments come when I do a good job.  When I play well, and when my voice blends perfectly to the point in becomes almost invisible.  When the sum is greater that the individual parts.  When we all feel it together on stage and the magic happens.  Those are my wow moments.
STR: The first song that ever got my attention outside of church music was Billy Swan’s “I Can Help” in 1974 when I was six years old.  Things changed so much hearing those sounds and those words.  My friend and collaborator Tim Krekel was playing and touring with Billy Swan around that time so that made it even more special later in life for me when I was working with him.  Sort of a full circle thing.  What song on the radio “grabbed you and took you along” for the first time?  Was there one?
JR:  Wow, that is hard.  I’m not sure I can define any one song in that way.  My musical childhood was pretty schitzo.  My father loved jazz and was always playing his records in the house. I played jazz sax, and classical piano.  Then I was listening to music with my friends starting probably in the late 70’s.  Hard rock was big in my circle.  The first album I ever bought was AC/DC Back in Black.  That blew my mind.  I certainly am a product of the 80’s.  Justin says it, we will always love the music of our youth.  So late 70’s to the early 90’s was hugely influential to me.  But one specific song… no.
STR: You are an accomplished recording artist.  I am familiar with your work and enjoy it very much.  When you record, do you have a full song ready to go or do you improvise as you go along?  When I am in the studio recording a song and I am not feeling it, I move on and try to feel better.  I don’t know if it is the cost of studio time or the cost of my ego getting beat up (probably both) when I throw up my hands and say “next song!”  How do you deal with that?
JR:  When I have written, I will finish a song and come into the studio with it ready to go.  Production changes and evolves, but I feel like it’s my responsibility to have the writing done so I am not wasting peoples time.  For the most part I sing a song, maybe do several takes and then walk away.  I usually find the one I like best as a whole and then if there is a line or a work I want to improve I can pull it from another take.  Once in a while I will just punch in something I want to improve.  If I am really hitting a wall, I may just stop and come back to it later but that is very rare.  I usually will just plow through it.
STR: Music brings folks together.  Be it in a room, in a concert hall, or a place in the heart.  Thankfully my listening to The Moody Blues and Justin Hayward and attending their concerts led me to be acquainted to your music, your songwriting, your counsel (as you have critiqued some of my songs), and I have been able to closely follow your music career.  You are married to Curtis Brengle, your Pear Duo partner.  Did music play a part in getting you two together?
JR:  Sure did! I hired him for a gig!  I love playing with him.  But he makes me laugh and doesn’t take my shit.  I love him and respect him for those qualities.  I also admire his musicianship greatly.   He is a joy to play with.
STR: How has the Master Class presented by Pear Duo been received so far?  Where have you presented it? What notable responses have you gotten back from students yo have met along the way.
JR:  We started off doing a general master class on commercial music at Anderson University in South Carolina.  We did not really prepare anything.  Students started asking us questions, and they were good questions.  When we got done we thought, there must be a way we could put together something, a sort of crash course 101 in how to find your way in the music industry.  So we started tweaking it, and trying it out at some other places and it began to take shape.  Then last winter the director of commercial music at Anderson called us up and said “We have had several big names come in and give master classes in the last school year.  When we asked the students who they would like to have come back, hands down they said Pear Duo.”  So this fall we will be returning to Anderson to do a week of classes.
STR: You recently moved from Los Angeles to Austin, TX. Is there a good music scene in Austin?
JR:  To be more precise, our STUFF recently moved to Austin.  We did leave Los Angeles with the intention of relocating to Austin eventually, but this year has been so crazy, and Curtis and I have been so busy that we decided to just be fabulously homeless for at least the rest of this year.  We are on the road so much it just did not make sense to rent a place. So far, I love the idea of Austin, but I don’t actually know enough about it.  There certainly is a lot of music there, but whether or not it is the right scene for us, we will have to dig deeper and that takes boots on the ground.  Maybe next year!
STR: As a songwriter I have been in a situation where a song I wrote meant so much to someone else.  They gave me an incredible backstory of the life event  that was very serious and difficult to listen to because it was sad and then they told me phrase for phrase how the song made them feel in relation to a tragic event.  My reaction was one of bewilderment.  I spent an hour writing it and was glad I did.  This person thought a great deal more about the song than I ever did and I wrote it.  Has anyone ever reacted to one of your songs in a way that opened your eyes?
JR:  Hmmmm.  I don’t know.  I have very little experience sharing my original music with people I don’t know.  I made the 7 Fairway Drive CD almost 20 years ago.  It’s the only time in my life I have ever written songs.  I don’t think of myself as a songwriter really.  It was just something I did once a long time ago.  My songs are hugely personal.  I think it would be very hard for them to mean more to someone else than they do to me.  But what a wonderful thing, to be able to touch someone else like that.  Music really can bring joy when people need it and if I can do that, I don’t really care if it is one of my original songs or a cover.  Joy is joy.
STR: My Moody Blues story is a good one.  Thanks to a back ailment I was in a department store after a doctor’s appointment the day I turned fifteen in 1983.  In an end-cap bin full of cassette tapes my eye was caught by the Days of Future Passed cover art.  I took it home and listened and found a sound to hang on to.  I have done so ever since.  I was so fortunate to be a senior in high school in the Spring of 1986 and The Moodies’ new song Your Wildest Dreams made me look very smart all of a sudden.  There is something to be said, and I have heard Justin Hayward say it, about hanging on to the music of one’s youth.  What was the music of your youth?  Have you held on to it?  (Funny how you got to this before I did in an earlier response!)
JR:  I touched on this in a previous question but the short answer is yes.  I think we all do.  The music of my high school and college years will stay with me forever.  Since I did not have an older sibling, I was not introduced to music from maybe the 60’s or early 70’s until adulthood. But 80’s rock will reign supreme with me forever.  You cannot escape the impact.
STR: Your song 7 Fairway Drive makes me smile every time I hear it.  I wish the world could hear it.  Which song of yours would you like to share with others if someone said “Okay, Julie, you got half of a million radio plays in the next three months.  Which song will it be?”
JR:  Wow.  That is hard.  I do think 7 Fairway Drive is a contender.  Soul Refill I think is a solid choice as well.  And Where Do We Go From Here.  I wrote that after my father died.  It is still hard to perform.  Even after 20 years, it is raw to me.  We have only done it a few times in our set.  That said La La Song holds a very special place in my heart since Curtis and I have made it part of our duo project.  If you ask me what the strongest hit is,  I think it would be that one.  But if you ask me what resonates emotionally with me, Where do We Go From Here and 7 Fairway Dr. are tied I think.
STR: We both know music artists that the world should know about.  My friend Tim Krekel comes to mind.   He made records called Underground, L & N, and Happy Town that had “it”. Give me your luck to talent ratio when all is said and done in the music business.
JR:  After I recorded the 7 Fairway Drive  CD I spent the next year trying to promote it and find a label.  In 1999/2000 that was what you did.  The closest I got was an A&R rep at a major label saying “hey, I like you and I like your stuff.  If you were 15 years younger I would give you a record deal”.  Man that pissed me off, and frankly knocked the wind out of my sails. I had made something I was really proud of, and the only people who would hear it would be my friends and family. I went on with my life while my little piece of art sunk to the bottom of the ocean like a rock.  Years later, and a bit wiser, I realized something.  I know so many hugely talented musicians that have CDs sitting in the bottom of the ocean along with mine.  I am in extremely good company down there.  There are more reasons that you can count why some people “make it” and some don’t.  You’re not going to have lasting success without talent.  And I don’t believe in luck.  I believe in serendipity and hard work.  I also believe nothing is an accident.  When I truly started to embrace that everything happens for a reason I became much happier in my universe.  When I don’t get things I want when I want them I know it’s not the right time.  Forge ahead.  The right thing will present itself.  I made a record that I believed in two decades ago.  According to a label exec I was too old then.  Now I’m 51 and people are buying that same CD.  It’s not luck, its not talent.  It’s timing.
STR: Speaking of timing….thank you for your time and your thorough answers.  There are  surely some music students out there who could learn a great deal from the experience, sensibility, and passion for music that you and Curtis, Pear Duo, can bring to a room. I was glad that my dear wife, Carrie, and I had a chance to visit with you recently before the Kent, Ohio concert and we wish you and Curtis all the best.
 
Take care and we’ll see you down the road!

JR:  My pleasure.  It never ceases to amaze me the way music brings people together.  People who would not normally connect.  Like with you, your wife, and me.  We never would have crossed paths if it weren’t for music.  

Performing always brings me a great sense of joy and satisfaction. Making other people feel good makes me feel good!  And teaching, sharing your knowledge, watching someone else run with it and find success, that is something powerful too.  It is a different sort of satisfaction and hugely rewarding.  
Thanks so much for having us be a part of your blog, and your life.  Best to you both!  
   Speaking the Julie Ragins interview rights…
    Danny Johnson