Category Archives: Choctaw Casinos

Blue Twenty2s, Scott Rankin Band — a night at Choctaw

For more pix, click on the links provided below.

It was just a another weekend night at the stages inside Durant’s Choctaw Casinos. Who’s kidding… the weekend nights are always fun there, with great music and no cover charge at the Parrot Bar (inside the southern-most building) and Gilley’s Durant, (inside the center/hotel/new building).

Blue Twenty2s

This past Friday nigh (Sept. 28)t, the Blue Twenty2s graced the Parrot Bar stage, and this band had perhaps a record crowd, complete with dancers and song-requesters. The Blue Twenty2s presented a variety of music complete with Texas and classic country, reggae, classic and alternative rock and pop, and other crowd-pleasing sounds. Its members are Shane Parker on lead vocals, Lolesio Pua on keyboards, Peter Grothe on bass, and the Key brothers, Rodney on drums and Brack on lead guitar and sometimes vocals.

Over in the Gilley’s Durant dance hall, The Scott Rankin Band kept the dance floor filled with its upbeat country music. This band, like Blue Twenty2s, is not a stranger to Texoma, having been a regular house band at Cutter’s Bar & Grill in Denison, and several other dance halls in the Metroplex area. Like two-steppin’ — get out to Gilley’s Durant for a good time any Thursday, Friday, or Saturday night, where there’s always live music.

For Blue Twenty2s Photos, click here

For Scott Rankin Band photos, click here

 

Deryl Dodd, Choctaw Gilley’s

Short story and pix by Mary Jane Farmer. More photos available on link below.

Deryl Dodd

Deryl Dodd and his Homesick Cowboys played a full two-hour set recently to a record crowd at the new Gilley’s Bar & Grill in Durant. Mickey Gilley said on opening day that he hoped the music being brought in would honor his name, and Deryl Dodd’s music did just that. Dodd played to a room full of fans and made some new ones, taking time to acknowledge every single person he could with a smile or a hug.

Dodd charted nine singles, including “One Ride in Vegas” and “That’s How I Got To Memphis” on Billboard’s charts while signed to a record contract in Nashville, but was forced to give up that career when he developed viral encephalitis. Two years later, with much medical help and rehabilitation, he jumped back into the middle of the stage, where he’s been ever since, first still in Nashville, but then after returning to his native North Texas a few years ago.

For more photos, click here:

Turnpike Troubadours, Dirty River Boys to hit Choctaw’s CenterStage

Turnpike Troubadours

CHOCTAW CASINO RESORT IN DURANT, OKLAHOMA, HOSTING OKLAHOMA-BRED TURNPIKE TROUBADOURS ON AUGUST 17

The Dirty River Boys, the up-and-coming Outlaw Folk-Americana
band from the western tip of Texas, will open 

The Turnpike Troubadours, the Red Dirt/Country-leaning roots rock band out of Oklahoma, as well as the up-and-coming Outlaw/Folk/Americana band The Dirty River Boys, will perform live at Choctaw Casino Resort in Durant on Friday, August 17. The show will take place at Choctaw’s CenterStage venue, with the doors opening at 7 p.m. and the performance beginning at 8 p.m. Tickets start at $15 and can be purchased by phone at 1-800-585-3737 or online at www.ChoctawCasinos.com
The gritty Turnpike Troubadours at their best synthesize the populist, political folk of Woody Guthrie and the outlaw-styled honky-tonk of Waylon Jennings with doses of bluegrass, Cajun and straight-out rock dynamics. Fronted by singer and guitarist Evan Felker and including bassist R.C. Edwards, fiddler Kyle Nix, guitarist Ryan Engelman and drummer Giovanni Carnuccio, the group celebrates and explores modern rural life with a full awareness of history, delicately avoiding being ornate revivalists. 

Their debut album, the self-released “Bossier City,” was released in 2007. The follow-up, “Diamonds & Gasoline,” was produced by veteran songwriter Mike McClure and released in 2010.  Their latest album, “Goodbye Normal Street,” is known to be more inward, hunkering down and honing more on hard country. This understated nature can mean that “Goodbye Normal Street” doesn’t grab hold upon its first listen, but it is, as they say, a grower, the kind of record that slowly reveals its depths and eventually seems like an album that you’ve always known by heart. 

The quintet’s front man, Evan Felker, also writes most of the band’s lyrics. He finds his inspiration for his songs in everyday life. What is unique about the Troubadours’ songs is that they are about real people and about themselves, which allows the band to relate to their audience and create the rowdy, toe-tapping rhythms of songs like, “Before the Devil Knows We’re Dead,” “Gin, Smoke and Lies,” and the Americana favorite “Every Girl.” While they are known for setting the tone for a lively atmosphere, they also manage to integrate raw and touching songs that deeply resonate with their audiences like “Blue Star” and “Wrecked.”  

With their ability to relate to their fans and create an atmosphere that is sure to get boots out on the dance floor, the talented Turnpike Troubadours will keep fans singing and dancing all night long. 

The Dirty River Boys, can proudly claim to have recorded their first album acoustically. For a band to do so with success, they would need raw-vintage talent, a ballsy temperament and just the right amount of dirty faith. Throws these together along with a lively rock show and you get The Dirty River Boys.

The band has quickly won over audiences of all ages with three-part harmonies and traditional but manipulated musicality, by redefining genres and uniquely fusing classic folk and hints of bluegrass with a modern rock edge. 

Band members Nino Cooper, Travis Stearns and Marco Gutierrez bring stories of personal experience and heartbroken outlaws to life with their poetic verses. The Dirty River Boys also deliver whiskey-slamming, foot-stomping energy to classic instrument combinations of acoustic guitar, mandolin, harmonica, fiddle, cajón, snare, and banjo. The Dirty River Boys remind those listening that rock and roll is here to stay as long as it is kept a little dirty.
ABOUT CHOCTAW CASINO RESORT IN DURANT, OKLAHOMA
The AAA Four Diamond Choctaw Casino Resort in Durant includes 330 hotel rooms, a natatorium, fitness center, business center, full-service spa, and three retail outlets. In addition, there is a 175-seat amphitheater, five restaurants and 110,000 square feet of gaming space, including over 4,100 slot machines, 30 poker tables, and 48 table games. For more information, visit www.ChoctawCasinos.com or www.Facebook.com/ChoctawResort.

Kevin Costner/Modern West at Choctaw CenterStage

 More pix, lots of pix, maybe too many pix, at the end of this story.

Only once before has this reviewer has been at a loss to describe the magic that went on in a room, opting instead to say “You just had to have been there,” and that was with guitarist Monty Montgomery.  It’s tempting to just go that route again, but I’m gonna give it the ol’ redneck try and say, “You just gotta be there the next time.”

You know that feeling you get when you walk into a room and at least one “somebody” is so glad you are there? Kevin Costner made me, and countless others “somebodies” in the Choctaw CenterStage room know he was glad we were there.

Kevin Costner and his band, Modern West, wowed the sold-out crowd through its two-hour set, mid-July, with mostly original songs, a band replete with amazing talent, and tales of how all that music came into being.

Joining Kevin on stage were Sara Beck on vocals, Jason Mowery on fiddle, John Coinman, Park Chisolm, and Teddy Morgan on guitars, Blair Forward on bass, and Larry Cobb on drums.  Costner interacted with each of them in a way that showed he was as much in awe of their talents as the crowd was.

The show kicked off with film clips from many of Costner’s movies, put together with a momentum that sped those years by. The band’s entrance on stage during that time was hardly noticed. Then, it was time for Costner to get on stage, and he arrived by strolling down the center aisle, greeting somebodies as he ambled, stopping for photos and autographs, or just smiling and shaking hands as he moved.

A hop up onto the stage, and it began. Costner rolled up his white dress-shirt  sleeves shirt, and got down to the business at hand — sharing the music he is passionate about.

He plays an acoustic guitar, or rather he held an acoustic guitar most of the time, and even had a pick in his hand at times, and

Park and Sara

waved that guitar around at times, but basically he left the instrumental tasks to those on stage with him.  And that was fine… no one in any band has to be “all of the above.” That’s why there other members in bands.

The songs Kevin Costner has written are of life, life on life’s terms, and so much of his dialogue explained how those songs came into being, done with direct eye-to-eye contact with those somebodies’ eyes in the up-front rows.  The lights in the room were dimmed over the crowd, and toward the end, Costner asked that they be raised by up so he could see his audience.

Sara Beck sang one of the songs from Costner’s recent television series “The Hatfields & The McCoys,”  the song being “I Know These Hills.” With that, everyone who held electric instruments on stage put them down, picked up acoustic including a banjo and the fiddle, and stood behind Sara in a semi-circle similar to the folk music of yore.

And speaking of Sara and her mesmerizing voice, when Jason Mowery cut loose on some fiddle/violin breaks, even Costner seemed to just let him go. In mid-song, Mowery interspersed “Amazing Grace,” then went back to the song at hand.

Jason Mowery

Another most-rememberable moment was his “The Angels Came Down,” which Costner dedicated to those families who lost loved ones in a Colorado theater shooting. He explained that people expected to feel safe when they go to the movies, and naturally the movies are most dear to his heart, and so it really hit him hard. At the end of the song, the man turned his back, walked to the drummer almost out of the spotlights, and wiped his eyes of tears before returning to the mic.

“90 Miles An Hour” he explained was about the freedom of driving a convertible with the top down as he chases a new start. “Ain’t nothing behind me but the cost of living….” And “Superman” was a tale of his youth, again a stroll through movieland. “Let Me Be The One,” with Sara, nearly brought the roof down.

Two hours of similar charm, graciousness, and meaningful music presented effectively and without pretense later, Costner popped a bottle of champagne and toasted his audience, those somebodies who went home richer for the experience.

Some of those songs, listening lengths, are available on his MySpace, along with the chance to purchase by download any that  hit the heart. Cafeteria-style selections of just which Kevin Costner songs fit the individual lifestyles, and also ITunes, Amazon, and probably more.

As promised, lots more pix, click here

http://www.myspace.com/kevincostnerandmodernwest/music/songs/backyard-album-version-32294837.

 

Kevin Costner a musician? Yes!

Kevin Costner

Choctaw Casino Resorts in Grant and Durant, Oklahoma, are hosting actor/ singer/ songwriter Kevin Costner and his band, Modern West. The concerts will be Friday, July 20, in Grant and then move to the Durant/Calera casino’s CenterStage on Saturday, July 21.  Tickets start at $35 and can be purchased by phone at 1-800-585-3737 or online at www.ChoctawCasinos.com.  The doors will open at 7 p.m. and the shows will begin at 8 p.m.

Costner formed Modern West in 2007 with the encouragement of his wife, Christine.  The band released their debut album, Untold Truths, in November of 2008.  The album peaked at #61 on the Billboard Top Country Chart and #35 on the Top Heatseekers Chart, which ranks the top-selling albums by new or developing artists.  Three of their singles, including “Superman 14,” “Long Hot Night,” and “Backyard,” have been released to radio with critical acclaim.  The group has toured worldwide with stops in renowned cities such as Istanbul and Rome.

Kevin Costner began his acting career in 1974 and has gone on to win two Academy Awards, two Golden Globe awards, and has also been nominated for three British Academy of Film and Television Arts awards.  He is best known for his roles in movies such as Dances with Wolves, Field of Dreams, Bull Durham and The Bodyguard.

NOTE:  This event will be covered and reported as a feature here in Scene In Town and on HeraldDemocrat.com following the concerts.