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Show C-4 The Park Record Wed/Thurs/Fri, June 19-21, 2019 Leftover Salmon ages with grace Tony Furtado dives in with Salmon Jamgrass band plays the DeJoria Center on Friday His band will also open Friday night’s concert SCOTT IWASAKI SCOTT IWASAKI The Park Record The Park Record Leftover Salmon continues make big splashes in the jamgrass summer festivals and winter ski resort scenes after 30 years. That doesn’t mean, however, that trip has flowed smoothly, said mandolinist and founding member Drew Emmitt. “Keeping a band together is a big challenge on many levels,” Emmitt said. “You have to be able to power through all the things from constantly touring to dealing with everyone’s personalities and quirks and staying healthy.” Leftover Salmon — Emmitt, guitarist, singer and founding member Vince Herman, bassist Greg Garrison, drummer Alwyn Robinson and keyboardist Erik Deutsch — will continue to celebrate its 30th anniversary when it plays at 8 p.m. on Friday, June 21, at the DeJoria Center in Kamas. Americana multiinstrumentalist Tony Furtado will open the show. Furtado is also scheduled to PHOTO BY PAUL CITONE/KABIK PHOTO GROUP Jamgrass trailblazers Leftover Salmon will perform Friday at the DeJoria Center. The band is celebrating its 30th anniversary. play the banjo with Leftover Salmon that night because the band’s banjoist, Andy Thorn, had a prior commitment. (See Accompanying story). Furtado is no stranger to the band. He filled in for a few shows after original banjoist, Mark Vann, passed away in 2002. Emmitt said Vann’s passing took a toll on Leftover Salmon. “We did take a break for three years, starting in 2004,” he said. “Up until then, we had kept it going with some other players, Tony, Matt Flinner and Noam Pikelny. But it was not the same, Leftover Salmon with the Tony Furtado Band When: 8 p.m. on Friday, June 21 Where: DeJoria Center, 970 N. S.R. 32 in Kamas Cost: $20-$575 Web: dejoriacenter.com/ events/leftover-salmon and it was hard to keep it going at the rate we were going.” The band had become a touring machine, and the schedules were, Please see Leftover, C-7 When Leftover Salmon hits the DeJoria Center stage on Friday, banjoist Andy Thorn, due to a scheduling conflict, won’t perform in the show. So Tony Furtado, a twotime National Bluegrass Banjo champion and award-winning multiinstrumentalist, has been recruited to play with the jamgrass pioneers. Furtado is no stranger to Leftover Salmon. He was one of the few banjoists who helped out when the band lost its original banjoist, Andy Thorn, to cancer in 2002. In addition to playing with Leftover Salmon during Friday’s concert, Furtado and his band, with Luke Price on fiddle and electric guitar, Keith Brush on bass and Tyson Stubelek on drums, will open the show. Price is a three-time national fiddle champion who graduated from the Berklee College of Music in Boston and plays with his wife as part of the band Dean! which has an upcoming album. Brush has played with jazz artists such as the Blue Cranes and Stolen Sweets, as well as blues and soul singer Curtis Salgato, according to Furtado. Stubelek, who regularly tours with the folk duo The Shook Twins, is also known for his work with Americana songwriter Anna Tivel. Collaborating with artists of such high caliber inspires Furtado to “up his game.” “You can hear a song in a totally different way when a PHOTO BY ALICIA J. ROSE Tony Furtado and his band will open the Leftover Salmon concert Friday at the DeJoria Center before Furtado fills in on banjo for the P M jamgrass band. p drummer brings a new groove follow-up to his 2017 live re-t to it, and it can make you think of the phrasing differently,” he said. “Or when Luke comes and plays with me, just having a fiddle in the band makes me want to play more banjo to get more of that pairing.” A few years ago, Furtado played with a band he called The American Gypsies with bassist Myron Dove, who previously played with Santana, and drummer Tom Brechtlein, who has worked with Chick Corea and Wayne Shorter. “That rhythm section was so intense,” Furtado said. “It made me think more rhythmically, because I had to be right there with them.” The two musicians also pushed Furtado to improve his playing. “It made me become more explosive with soloing,” he said. “They were doing it, so I thought I had better do that, too.” Friday’s gig will be Furtado’s first performance with Price, Brush and Stubelek as a group.“I don’t know what will happen, but I’m looking forward to it,” Furtado said. In the meantime, Furtado is currently writing music for the lease, “Cider House Sessions.” “We’ll have to see if what IC do becomes a heavily instrumental album or two different albums,” he said. Until then, Furtado hopes people are enjoying “Cider House Sessions,” which he recorded over a period of six nights at Reverend Nat’s Cidery and Public Taproom in Portland, Oregon. “I originally had five shows booked, and I wanted to do it there because while they nor-/ mally don’t showcase music,J the vibe of the place is great,”C he said. Furtado made the mistake ofu wanting to both produce andB record the concerts himself. e “I’m not an engineer, so thate was a bad idea,” he said with ab laugh. “I stressed every nightw up until showtime, and then Id would ask for a pint of ciderw and began playing.” h Furtado said there weren’tr many songs that came from the performances that soundedL good enough to put on a live album. “A month later, I decided“ S s s Please see Furtado, C-7 a Continued from C-1 Farmer’s Market is open The L.A. Times crossword puzzle “CAN YOU DIGIT?” By PAM AMICK KLAWITTER Across 1 Prepared for a selfie 7 Pizzeria chain, familiarly 11 Grey Cup gp. 14 ER figures 17 What worms help do, soilwise 18 Rowling teacher 19 Brewpub choice 20 Silk on the Seine 21 Unite in a common cause 23 Extinct bird 24 Duds 25 Official fuel of NASCAR since 2004 26 Unobstructed view 29 You, in the Bible 32 Mustard, e.g.: Abbr. 33 Bruins legend 34 Lacking freshness 35 Place to find a hack 38 Blood prefix 40 Problem for the weary 41 Eight hours per day? 42 Nods from NASA 43 Loner of a fish? 44 Prospecting tool 45 Laryngitis docs 46 Post-Civil War economic growth period 51 Food service trade org. 52 Midsummer arrivals 53 Vintage autos 54 Kid __: reading genre 55 Shopper’s indulgence 58 Newspapers 60 Lord’s domain 61 Audi’s rings, e.g. 62 Fortuitous 64 On a lark 66 Co-star with Goldie, Ruth, Henry, et al. 67 Courtroom attention-getter 68 Reference volumes 69 Musical markings 70 Toon bartender 71 Circle makers 72 Sham 73 Phishing target, briefly 74 With no time to spare 77 Nero’s 902 79 Six-pack muscles 82 “__ Walked Into My Life”: “Mame” song 83 Love interest of 58-Down 84 Liability 86 Aussie leaf munchers 89 “Yeah, right!” 90 Front door, usually 91 Week attachment? 92 Banned bug spray 93 Fla. NBA team 94 Barcelona bears 95 What “I don’t wanna” do, in a Zayn/Taylor Swift hit 99 Crew member 102 Butcher’s cut 103 __ Today: magazine for teachers 104 5 1/2 and 8 3/4, e.g. ... and a hint to this puzzle’s circles 109 RSVP cards, say 110 Terrible start? 111 “Come-faithful” filler 112 Clavell’s “Shogun” sequel 113 Deli choice 114 People fixers: Abbr. 115 TV’s “New Girl” 116 Involve the opportunity to get outside and enjoy the fresh produce, local vendors and mountain scenery together.” Ritzinger said he would love to continue working with PCMR if possible. “If Vail has space for us somewhere — maybe back at Canyons cabriolet lot — we would love to stick around,” he said. “In the meanwhile, we’re still looking.” One of the lots Ritzinger likes is located at Richardson Flat, near Quinn’s Junction. “The lot is built on Summit County property, but Park City maintains and pays for the paving,” he said. “The space is big enough so everybody from Park City, Kamas, Coalville and Heber can get together and enjoy the market.” There are restrictions of how the lot is to be used, according to Ritzinger. “It says in the rules that no special events are allowed to set up on the lot, but I don’t think the Farmer’s Market is a special event for personal use,” he said. “It’s for the whole community, because we bring in better, healthier food and good-quality items.” Closing the Park City Farmers Market is not an option, Ritzinger said. “We need to have the Park City Farmer’s Market here,” he said. “So I’m going to find a place no matter what it takes. We will find some place. We SUDOKU Down 1 Hangdog 2 Cousteau’s sea 3 Nest egg letters 4 Action in a legal thriller 5 Words from Caesar 6 Cole of “Angie Tribeca” 7 Incalculable 8 “Guess again” 9 GM subsidiary until 2017 10 LPGA star Pak in the World Golf Hall of Fame 11 Smartphone feature 12 It’s underfoot 13 Foliage element 14 Dr. Howser of ’80s-’90s TV 15 They involve responsibilities 16 Largish combo 18 Difference between winning and losing, maybe 20 Word in an iconic cocktail order 22 Small racer 27 Asian menu promise 28 Inedible wraps 29 ’Vette roof option 30 Maui’s scenic __ Highway 31 Babe’s relatives 36 Wilson of “Walker, Texas Ranger” 37 Brown of publishing 38 Snack cake brand 39 Scratches (out) 40 React to a boring speech 42 “This is only __” 43 Comes down hard? 47 Angelou’s “And Still __” 48 Up in the air 49 Movement in some Bach suites 50 Stiff collars 51 Snow in le Alpi 52 Kay of “Rich Man, Poor Man” 55 Longtime SeaWorld orca 56 Eva of Argentina 57 Used Yelp, maybe 58 Love interest of 83-Across 59 Baseball’s Pee Wee 60 Blow one’s top 61 Scientologist Hubbard 63 Bridge positions 64 Stand-up fare 65 Risky kind of kick 68 Mystic’s deck 71 Kennel double talk? 72 Let go 73 __ Féin 75 Actresses Brennan and Davidson 76 Vehicle for Hulu and Roku 77 Pretense 78 E-file alternative 79 Talent show entries 80 Pressure: Pref. 81 Northern __: apples 85 How much space debris travels 86 Sullivan’s pupil 87 Like some bagels 88 It may be unwanted 89 Things to aspire to 90 Walks unhurriedly 92 Hardly look forward to 96 Bar words that make you smile 97 Key with four sharps: Abbr. 98 Tick off 100 Renaissance instrument 101 Yemen neighbor 105 Tee sizes 106 92-Across banner 107 Bollywood star Aishwarya __ 108 Popular skit show, for short f have to.” u Ritzinger has seen a growth l in the number of farmers who f send in applications over the m years. “I have noticed a lot of people who were in the Army and Navy have retired and decided to go into growing vegetables,” he said. “So we have a bunch of veterans who have joined us.” Once Ritzinger gets a stack of applications, he visits the farms to see how they operate. “I want to make sure they don’t use GMOs and that they are fully organic,” he said. Many of the applicants know Ritzinger’s criteria, because the Park City Farmer’s Market has been around for more than two decades. “Even the new people who do apply have an idea of what we’re about,” he said. Ritzinter said he approves almost all of the applications. “The ones we didn’t approve are only because we have an abundance of the same products,” he explained. “While we try to get as many farmers as we can, we usually accept two vendors of the same product. It’s a balancing act. I don’t like to say ‘no,’ but I have to.” This year, marketgoers can expect to see cheese, meat and pastry vendors. “We also have furniture vendors, leatherworks, knives and live music,” he said. |