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COOKEVILLE, TN || THE ORACLE || Page 5

Tuesday, September 12, 2017

ENTERTAINMENT SGA takes SOLO concert vote

BY GREGORY CHOATE & ISAAC WRIGHT Additional information provided by Anna-Grace Hull

Beat Reporters

With the fall semester underway, the Student Government Association is also in session, with SOLO concert voting having wrapped up Thursday. Freshman and new senators have begun their

office hours to allow students to meet their representatives. “The office hours [are] really a way that the senators can be a face to SGA,” Rachel Baker, chief of staff, said. Starting Sept. 11 the SGA plans to begin its weekly meetings. Meetings are intended to be held in Tech Pride Room in the RUC, unless otherwise announced. The first meeting is intended to be an introduction of the new student executives and senators. With freshman senators being new to campus, the plan is to bring them

before the senate for approval. An announcement was made on Aug. 29, 2017 through the Tennessee Tech SGA Twitter that this semester’s SOLO concert genre is country. Around campus there are mixed emotions about the genre because Tech had a country artist perform for a SOLO concert as recent as April 5, 2016. Each semester, Tennessee Tech SGA puts on a SOLO concert for students, with a different genre and artist, which SGA brings to preform

at Tech with extra SOLO funds. “This year’s genre was “other” so we get to collect a bunch of genres and have the student body vote on which one they would like to see as the concert” Madison Dittner, senator representing the College of Engineering said. Students are notified to vote through their student email and through the SGA Twitter page. “The voting [was open] for two days and the country genre had double the amount of votes than any of the

other genres listed” Madison Dittner, senator representing the College of Engineering said. Students received an email on Sept. 4, 2017 with a list of the artist they can vote on. They are also putting up posters in the UC of the artists to help advertise voting and the concert event. The students can vote from a wide range of country artist and the concert will be on Oct 3. The nominees are: Jon Pardi, Hunter Hayes, Rodney Atkins, Dan and Shay, Dustin Lynch and David Nail.

Photo courtesy of Andrew Smith

FACES - Jack Silverman (Left), Christian Grizzard (Center) and Will Harrison (Right) glance at the setlist during a song on Wednesday night in Backdoor Playhouse.

The Stolen Faces bring Grateful Dead to life By CAMERON FOWLER Entertainment Editor Familiar sounds of the Grateful Dead emerged on Wednesday from the Backdoor Playhouse, filling the cool air with a sense of community and comfort. In the newly renovated Playhouse, there was a revelation of sorts taking place. The Stolen Faces, a Nashville-based Grateful Dead tribute band, had taken the stage for a full-on, two-set-and-anencore night of Dead. However, the band’s performance was slightly altered they had decided to perform acoustically. While drums and the sonic blanket of electric guitars were missing, The Stolen Faces didn’t miss a beat. They performed a 7-song set of Dead rarities (China Doll, Ripple) and set staples (Cassidy, Tennessee Jed) with members Jack Silverman and Christian Grizzard on guitar and bass, respectively. Guitarist Will Harrison also joined in for the performance. In their three years as a band, this was their first-ever acoustic performance and first in Cookeville.

Tech English professor, Andrew Smith, the performance was a complement to a series of ongoing talks by Smith about the “Summer of Love.” “Really, what the Summer of Love was, was people your age deciding that they had enough war, enough hypocrisy and enough greed. They really wanted to try and live a new way,” Smith explained to the crowd. “The hippie lineage is wide and far and it’s a very good thing.” The Dead’s fingerprints are all over the musical renaissance that began in the late 60’s. Through their deep musical knowledge, they emerged as an alternative to the era’s other bigger bands who represented the psychedelic shift in sound signaled by the Summer of Love. “They created somewhat of an American songbook that will stand the test of time forever. The other part of it is they came along at the right time,” Grizzard said. By listening to the performance, it was clear to see how and why their tunes earned that status. Grateful Dead songs are timeless, but they require to a specific

“They [Grateful Dead] created somewhat of American songbook that will stand the test of time forever” - Christian Grizzard, Bassist of The Stolen Faces energy, which The Stolen Faces adapted to acoustic arrangements in an exciting, yet mellow way. “Jefferson Airplane and these other bands were great bands who had some great songs, but generally they went and played their songs and the Grateful Dead just kind of experimented,” Silverman added. Of course, the Dead would not be without their loyal fan base; Deadheads, as they’d prefer to be called. Smith was sporting a Wharf Rats shirt, a division of Dead fandom who remained clean and sober. “You could keep going because you never saw the same thing twice,” Silverman said of the road-tripping nature of their legendary tours. Other fans, clad in tie dye shirts, were dancing through the aisles as The Stolen

groovier territory. It not only added an electricity to the performance, but emphasized the versatility of the band’s music. People of all ages were present, from seniors in college to seniors in age. Every single one of them was visibly enlightened by the music. Smith argued that the “stigma” of

being a Dead fan had slowly died over the years, to which Silverman agreed. “I’ll confess that at times in the late or mid-eighties and the 90’s it was kind of depressing for me because I felt like they weren’t in their prime, and drugs were taking their toll, on Jerry [Garcia] particularly,” Silverman said. “It was easy to make fun of at that point because people would see it after he died and was dead for a few years, that was no longer Jerry Garcia. Jerry Garcia was who you saw on TV and who you remembered and who you loved from the greatest albums from his prime before his decline. To me, I think that’s a lot of

it, that suddenly you could take any part of it you want at that point,” he concluded. The beauty of bands like The Stolen Faces is the continuation of that idea. When the Dead created these songs and built their following, it was among the most original musical movements of the twentieth century. Now, with reunion tours such as Dead & Company, the feeling and appreciation will live on, even inside the walls of Tech. At one point, Smith interjected that “The music never stops.” As someone who’s lived on the other side of their influence, Grizzard agreed. “Yeah, the music never stops.”

Photo courtesy of Andrew Smith

FACES - Jack Silverman (Left), Christian Grizzard (Center) and Will Harrison (Right) perform as The Stolen Faces Wednesday night in Backdoor Playhouse.


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