Porter Airlines Flight 701

April 30th, 2012

It’s not often I depart Canada on an airplane that does not have Air Canada written on the side of it. But today, myself, my wife, and son are all aboard a Porter Airlines Flight bound for a week of Family Time before all the madness begins. Porter flies direct into this wee holiday destination so we decided to make this rare journey off the Air Canada grid. We have just taken off from Billy Bishop Airport, also known as Toronto Island Airport. Very pleasant. The Prince especially enjoyed the very short Ferry ride to the Airport. A boat ride, a plane trip, a walk on a beach and a waterslide all in one day. He is in Heaven.

I am not far behind him as the excitement builds for all that lies in the immediate future. All thins being well, in less than a month the Boy on Bridge CD will be released, a video will be shot, a full Press Blitz will be under way, and the tour with the AD Band will have begun.

First up, a pile of phone interviews with print media across North America, so look out for an article online or in your fav newspaper or magazine. Hope the critics are kind. You never know.

On May 10th we shoot a music video for the single ‘I’ve Seen a Little’. I don’t want to give anything away about the concept for the video but it should be a fun and energetic wee movie to watch while listening to the song.

Myself and the AD Band are excited to be playing Live on the vastly popular Canadian Radio show Q on Friday May 11th. Hope you’ll tune in on your local CBC or NPR station, or online.

This should be followed by a bunch of Canadian TV appearances including Canada AM and a few others on May 14 and on release day, May 15.

If you recall, we shot a special for CMT a few weeks back. That special is due to air on May 16, the same night I’m due to be in Halifax doing an in store mini concert and CD signing at a local Costco. I’m doing a similar event at Costco in St. John’s on Saturday May 19th.

Then on May 20th, I make my way West to do some more press stuff in Vancouver, and on May 21, I should met up with the assembled AD Band to rehearse and do a tech set up.

Then the tour starts.

As I’ve mentioned here before, the tour includes stops in Seattle, Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton, Saskatoon, Winnipeg, Minneapolis, Chicago, Toronto, Buffalo, Montreal, New York, Washington, Philly, Boston, Moncton, Halifax, and finally home in St John’s. (Also excited to have been invited to Ottawa Bluesfest on July 4th)
Sounds like a lot, but I bet it will pass quick. Grab your tickets if you are near a show. There are still a few left for some shows and I’d love to see you there.

For all the info, best to consult the web page, www.alandoyle.ca, but I’ll try to keep the Tweets coming at @alanthomasdoyle as well.

In other news, congrats to my friends Allan Hawco and Perry Chafe for on the announcement of Season 4 of the Republic of Doyle. This show has been such a success that even with the cuts at the CBC, Republic of Doyle survives and prospers. Cheers gents. Could not be happier for you. Lets hope Wolf live on.

Captain just announced our descent. My wife and son are stirring from their napping. Over their shoulders and out the window I can see green hills parted by a blue and white stream running to a sandy beach and warm ocean water.

I am a Lucky Bastard.

Hope to see you all soon. Thanks for all the advance hype and excitement.

Cheers,
Alan

Home

April 16th, 2012

I am almost over the Jet Lag. For those of you who’ve never done it, its tough to turn your body clock effectively 12 Hours. Day becomes night and sleep happens when you body wants to wake up. Takes a few days, but I’m almost there. Here at the cabin, it makes it a little easier as you can kind of make you own hours. As I type the clock read 5:41 am. Pretty early, but I fell asleep at about 9 pm last night. Hopefully by Monday, and the resumption of the normal work/school week, I’ll be back on Newfoundland time.

Much ado in the planning for the Boy on Bridge release now a little more than a Month away. Looks like there’ll be a series of TV and radio appearances, starting around the 9th of May running until the start of the Tour on May 22. These appearances could include singing a few songs on Q on CBC Radio and Canada AM on CTV. There could be a couple of in-store appearances in at a few of my fav CD stores and COSTCO locations as well.

Also looks like we’ll be adding two concert dates as well. Stay tuned for an announcement for St John’s, and Buffalo as they join the list of cities on Boy on Bridge Tour. All the dates and tickets info are up here.

Love to see you make it out if you can.

Also looks like we’ll be shooting a music video for the single, ‘I’ve Seen a Little’. Details are to be decided this week, but the video will most be shot the first week of May. Keep you posted.

I’ve also been proofing the design for the Alan Doyle Bobblehead. I’m serious.

More information to flow out this and next week leading up to the launch date. Keep you posted.

I hear the stirring of the Prince. He’ll be up vying to have a popsicle for breakfast any minute now. Best go and prep myself for the debate. He’ll have an awesome argument ready, I guarantee it. If I don’t get my ducks in a row he’ll win. Again.

Cheers,
Alan

Virgin Aus Flight DJ 845 Melbourne-Sydney

April 4th, 2012

GBS has now played on three continents. Forgive for patting myself and the lads on the back here, but that’s friggin cool. The gig at the Corner Hotel in Melbourne was a triumph in many ways. The band played and sang well (with the exception of me completely forgetting the words to the last verse of Scolding Wife) and the crowd seemed to have a great night out. It was a grand way to start what I hope a future filled with many concerts in Australia.

And to think it was very near to being a complete disaster and may not have even happened at all. The trouble lay in the fact that while we were in Melbourne ready to Rock, our gear was being held under the lock and key Australian Immigration. I’ll try to explain.

You need to know that Great Big Sea is not your typical band. I don’t mean this in some boastful, exclusive kind of way. I mean that we don’t play the kinds of instruments that most bands play and we don’t have a conventional equipment list or set up. Nine out of Ten Rock and Roll bands use a standard drum kit, a couple of amplifiers, electric guitars and basses, and maybe a keyboard or two. These things are readily available from almost every music store and rental agency in the world. GBS really has none of that stuff.

We have a drum kit and I play an electric guitar on a song or two, but that’s where the similarity ends. Our instruments are primarily quiet acoustic folk instruments that we have carefully and seriously modified so we can amplify them the volumes and tones required to play big festivals and hockey rinks. We have special microphones to attach to tiny tin whistles and mandolins to make them sound the way they do in big concerts. We use some very uncommon instruments, like tenor guitars and bodhrans. We use three different kinds of bouzouki’s in our show, for frig sakes.

So when our own gear does not show up. It is really difficult or impossible to get what we need from a local supplier. You know what I’m saying? Most Urban Music shops have a shite load of guitars and amps but you try running around Melbourne at 6 pm trying to find a low Celtic whistle in the keys of F and C. Or try getting three button accordions modified so Bob can play them upside down and backwards (which he does, you know). Or try explaining to a smirky know-it-all dude working at the Guitar store that a five-string and a four-string banjo are actually quite different.

Well that’s what I was doing at 5:45 pm last night. Our gear, you see had been flown from Canada and made it to Melbourne in plenty of time for the show. But recently there had been an incident where some African band had inadvertently brought some bugs in their unfinished wooden drums and Australian Customs is on high alert. So as our wooden acoustic instruments were going through their routine Customs check yesterday morning, they were deemed risky and were put in Quarantine. Yes Quarantine. Our stuff was in lock down and Customs would not release it till some high end fella showed up to make sure we had not smuggled in the Great Canadian beetle or something. When the Customs office closed for the day at 5pm, our stuff was still under wraps. We were hooped.

The promoter wondered if we would cancel the show. I said, Sir, we played a gig 10 hours after our tour bus flipped over. There is no way we came all this way to not play. If we have to do 90 minutes of Shanties, that’s what we’ll do. The promoters and local folks were awesome. We begged borrowed and rented two acoustic gtrs, the only button accordion in Melbourne, I think, and I bought the last pair of whistles and harmonicas at the local music store. Sean was going to tip a bongo on its side and use it for a bodhran. We line checked some of the stuff just before doors and we were ready to dive in for better or for worse.

You should have heard some of the chat in the dressing room, joking about our predicament. There was not a glum face in there, seriously. I was so delighted to see everyone rallying for the cause. Now, we still had a few verbal jabs at the Quarantine guys. Some one, ok me, ranted.

‘Does anyone else find it really ironic that they are worried that we might be trying to smuggle dangerous bugs into Australia? Isn’t this where dangerous things live? We just left the Canadian winter, where not a single bug has been alive since November. There’s 30 cms of snow on my back step. What could possibly be in my guitar case that would survive a mili-second in the Australian Bush or Outback? Smuggling dangerous insects into Australia is like smuggling pot into Amsterdam…..’ and on I went.

I was joking, of course, trying to keep the mood light. I’m sure the good folks at Customs had the best of intentions and know exactly what precautions to take. And in the end I should thank them as, just in the nik of time as the opening act was about to finish, an exhausted promoter rep burst though the back door saying, they came back in to clear the stuff. The truck will be here in ten minutes!

Our Brit and Andy and Johnny got our stuff on stage in record time and GBS hit the stage at 9:36 for a slated 9:30 show. Yes B’y.

The rest is history. Our first gig in Australia was awesome for many reasons, but in the end mostly because it was in Australia. Finally.

GBS. Three Continents. Friggin’ Cool. Thank You.

Cheers,
Alan