The Cascade Blues Association’s 2014 Journey To Memphis competition is now set. The first round will happen on Friday, June 6th and Saturday, June 7th, at The Lehrer, 8775 SW Canyon Lane. Fourteen acts will vie against one another over these two nights in attempt to reach the finals at the Waterfront Blues Festival on Friday, July 4th and then the eventual winner will head to Memphis, Tennessee next January to take part in the International Blues Challenge.

Solo/Duo acts will be in competition alongside the bands each night. The top two highest scoring acts, regardless if solo/duo or band, from each night will advance to the final four at the Waterfront. The acts will be scored by three judges on five weighted categories: blues content, talent-vocals, talent-instrumentation, originality and overall stage presence. Acts will perform twenty minute sets.

Entry for each night is $10.00. All money taken in at the door will go to the prize funds to help the acts in their travel expenses to Memphis. There are no guest lists for this event, everybody pays unless performing on stage that night. This admission fee includes the acts’ family, friends, roadies, etc.

The schedule for this year’s first round is as follows:

Friday, June 6th:

8:30 pm – Pat Stilwell Band
9:00 pm – Hell Hounds
9:30 pm – Ben Rice & The iLLamatics
10:00 pm – Land Of The Living
10:30 pm – Anne Weiss
11:00 pm – Rae Gordon Band
11:30 pm – Papa Dynamite & The Jive

Saturday, June 7th:

8:30 pm – Martin Henry & The Blues Benders
9:00 pm – Tim Connor
9:30 pm – Angel Bouchet
10:00 pm – David Pinsky & Phil Newton
10:30 pm – Gabriel Cox
11:00 pm – Tevis Hodge Jr.
11:30 pm – Still Water Vibes

(Times are subject to change)

If you’re planning on taking part in the Cascade Blues Association’s Journey To Memphis competition to find a representative for the organization at the 2015 International Blues Challenge in Memphis, time has just about run out. You must turn in your applications no later than the CBA April General Membership Meeting on Wednesday, April 2nd. No late entries will be accepted.

To apply for the Cascade Blues Association’s regional competition, following the instructions detailed here:

1. First and foremost, all applicants must be a current member of the Cascade Blues Association. No act that has either won or has been nominated for The Blues Foundation’s Blues Music Awards may enter.
2.         Put together a promotional packet including:
•     A letter of intent
•     Band/Artist biography (including the names and ages of any members under 21 years)
•     A photograph for promotional use (must be a minimum of 300 dpi)
•     A CD sample of your music (please use full songs as your music may be used to promote the event on local radio)
•     Contact information including address, phone number and email address if available
•     $20 application fee. This fee will go toward the prize offered by the CBA to help defray travel expenses for the winning act. (Please make checks out to the Cascade Blues Association and note at the bottom “J2M” for our accounting purposes).

Depending on the number of applications received, one or two nights will be scheduled to hold preliminary competitions.  This year’s first round will be held at The Lehrer the first weekend in June, please keep these dates open if applying as time slots for the competition are drawn at random filling in the order as each act is drawn. Judges with qualified credentials in the music industry will score acts in five categories to determine the final four entries to compete at the Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival on the Front Porch Stage on the 4th of July. The winning act selected at the Waterfront will have the honor of representing the CBA at The International Blues Challenge in Memphis, Tennessee. Also included as part of the prize is a guaranteed paid set at the following year’s Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival, a set at the 2014 Muddy Awards and a cash prize based on the amount of admissions sold during the first round of the competition.

Please send application packets to: Journey To Memphis, c/o Cascade Blues Association, PO Box 14493, Portland, OR 97293. Or you may deliver your applications at the CBA monthly meeting at The Melody Ballroom. All applications must be received no later than the April 2nd CBA Membership Meeting, so we may have appropriate time to set-up semi-final dates in early June and to promote the acts in the BluesNotes that month. Absolutely no late entries will be accepted.

All rules used for the Journey To Memphis follow those outlined by The Blues Foundation. These can be found at their website www.blues.org.

Knowing that my announcements from the stage at Club 152 were being broadcast through speakers out on to Beale Street I told the people, “It may be cold outside, but the blues are burnin’ hot inside here.” And that in itself could have been the theme for this year’s International Blues Challenge. You just never know what to expect from the weather in the Mid-South and I have seen years when it has been a balmy 60 degrees and others that have witnessed ice and snow. Though we escaped the latter, which was raising havoc across a good deal of the country, contestants and blues fans braved airport closures and hazardous road conditions to make it to Memphis.

And hot blues music was truly at hand. When I first started volunteering to work the IBC for The Blues foundation twelve years earlier, there were only 70 bands, mostly from the United States, Canada and a couple from Australia competing in about a dozen clubs. This year saw a record 255 bands, solo/duos and youth acts from sixteen countries in 20 clubs and there is no sign it is going to slow down in the future. The Pacific Northwest was extremely well represented this year, with five blues societies from Oregon and Washington sending ten acts, and six of those advanced to the semi-finals and two going all the way to The Orpheum Theater for the finals. All three Portland-based acts advanced to the semis, Ben Rice & the iLLamatics and Tevis Hodge Jr from the Cascade Blues Association and the Rae Gordon Band representing Eugene’s Rainy Day Blues Society, with Ben Rice and Illamatics - Cascade Blues AssociationBen Rice making it to The Orpheum stage on Saturday.

It has been said by many that the blues should not be a competition. But let’s be real, everything in life has its own competitions and music is no exception. Whenever you try to book a gig or attempt to be signed by a label or push yourself through promotions, you’re in competition with everybody else trying to do the same thing. The real goal in Memphis is not winning the IBC. It is about the contacts you make and what can become of them. The IBC brings you to Memphis for this purpose. Nowhere else will you be performing for so many people in the industry that can push your career further. Record labels, festivals, promoters, agents, media outlets, radio personnel, blues societies and fans are all there to see what new talent can be found or acts they have never heard of that will catch their attention. It can surely be a win-win situation for all involved if approached the correct way. Thousands of acts compete world-wide to have this opportunity and as stated by producer Joe Whitmer, “they’re all winners before they even arrive in Memphis having won their own regional competitions.”

Out of the 255 who arrived Wednesday to begin the event, only seventeen make the finals, nine bands and eight solo/duos. Along with Ben Rice & The iLLamatics from the Cascade Blues Association, Arthur Migliazza, the solo act from the South Sound Blues Association in Tacoma also made it to the finals. But it was the Mississippi Delta blues musicians who won out this year in the bands with Vicksburg Blues Society’s Mr. Sipp taking first place and Memphis Blues Society’s Ghost Town Blues Band taking second (and it should be noted that both of these acts were finalists in the event last year). Billy The Kid & The Regulators from the Blues Society of Western Pennsylvania captured third place. In the solo/duo category Calgary Blues Society’s Tim Williams took the overall prize and Lucious Spiller from the Ozark Blues Society of Northwest Arkansas Inc. was second. Other prizes included Castro “Mr. Sipp” Coleman was announced the most promising guitarist in the band category and Tim Williams the guitarist in solo/duos. The Lee Oskar harmonica prize was awarded to Jerome Godboo from the Toronto Blues Society and the Best Self Produced CD prize was given to Hank Mowery and the West Michigan Blues Society for his release Account To Me.

Aside from the actual competition, there were plenty of other events taking place during the IBC, including the annual Keeping the Blues Alive ceremonies for non-performer achievements, seminars to help performers and societies, a free health screening for musicians, the International Showcase and Youth Showcases, special events held by various promoters, societies and groups featuring artists from around the world, and plenty of jams going late into the night that saw well established blues heroes like Bob Margolin, Sean Carney, Candye Kane, Dennis Jones, Janiva Magness, Jonn Del Toro Richardson, Brandon Santini, Rich DelGrosso, Tom Holland, Bob Corritore and many others taking part. All in all a sensational event, despite the cold weather.

This event is far larger than any blues festival. Where else will you find over 200 acts on 20 stages all taking place in one night? And the event goes on for five days. Keep in mind that The Blues Foundation has a paid staff of three full time and one part time employees and you can imagine the kind of work and detail going on behind the scenes. It takes a small army of volunteers, many traveling from all parts of the world, to make this event work. And the cooperation of the Beale Street Merchants and the event’s sponsors to provide the location and expenses to cover it all. It is truly an impossible work made possible that continues to grow annually and should be on every blues fan’s bucket list for must-do events.

By now you have certainly heard of the success that Northwest musicians had representing our various blues societies at the 2014 International Blues Challenge in Memphis. If you’d like to have your chance to play on Beale Street at the 2015 IBC before multitudes of blues industry people, here is your first step. Every act competing in Memphis must win a regional competition sponsored by one of their affiliated organizations and the Cascade Blues Association has held such competitions and sent musicians every year to Memphis since 1999.

To apply for the Cascade Blues Association’s regional competition, following the instructions detailed here:

1.         First and foremost, all applicants must be a current member of the Cascade Blues Association. No act that has either won or has been nominated for The Blues Foundation’s Blues Music Awards may enter.

2.         Put together a promotional packet including:

•           A letter of intent

•           Band/Artist biography (including the names and ages of any members under 21 years)

•           A photograph for promotional use (must be a minimum of 300 dpi)

•           A CD sample of your music (please use full songs as your music may be used to promote the event on local radio)

•           Contact information including address, phone number and email address if available

•           $20 application fee. This fee will go toward the prize offered by the CBA to help defray travel expenses for the winning act. (Please make checks out to the Cascade Blues Association and note at the bottom “J2M” for our accounting purposes).

Depending on the number of applications received, one or two nights will be scheduled to hold preliminary competitions.  This year’s first round will be held at The Lehrer the first weekend in June, where judges will determine the final four entries to compete at the Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival on the Front Porch Stage on the 4th of July. The winning act selected at the Waterfront will have the honor of representing the CBA at The International Blues Challenge in Memphis, Tennessee. Also included as part of the prize is a guaranteed paid set at the following year’s Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival, a set at the 2014 Muddy Awards and a cash prize based on the amount of admissions sold during the first round of the competition.

Please send application packets to: Journey To Memphis, c/o Cascade Blues Association, PO Box 14493, Portland, OR 97293. Or you may deliver your applications at the CBA monthly meeting at The Melody Ballroom. All applications must be received no later than the April 2nd CBA Membership Meeting, so we may have appropriate time to set-up semi-final dates in early June and to promote the acts in the BluesNotes that month. Absolutely no late entries will be accepted.

All rules used for the Journey To Memphis follow those outlined by The Blues Foundation. These can be found at their website www.blues.org.

The Journey To Memphis is the Cascade Blues Association’s regional competition to select the acts that will represent our organization and region in the next year’s International Blues Challenge in Memphis, TN that will be held in early 2016. Up to 250 acts from around the world converge on Beale Street to perform before the music industry looking for new talent, with the chance to win recognition and prizes that include major festival performances and more. But the only way an act may participate is to win a regional competition held by one of The Blues Foundation’s affiliated societies like the Cascade Blues Association.

The Journey To Memphis will be held in two rounds. The opening round will take place over two nights at The Lehrer on Friday, June 5th and Saturday, June 6th. Acts are scored by a trio of judges selected for their backgrounds and knowledge of the blues. The two highest scoring acts each night advance to the finals held at the Waterfront Blues Festival on July 4th.
Applications to participate in the competition will be accepted now until Wednesday, April 1st at the Cascade Blues Association membership meeting. No late applications will be accepted. All eligible acts that meet our criteria as described below will be able to compete. We will adjust the time schedule to ensure all are included. Each act will perform either Friday or Saturday and are scheduled as drawn at random, so we request that you do not schedule other gigs until you know which night you are scheduled.
Here’s what you need to do to enter:

• Entry fee is $25.00 (This is an increase from last year and is the first time we have raised the fee in more than ten years. This is to stay consistent with what other societies have been charging – though still less than many – and all fees collected go to the prize money to the competition’s winners to help cover travel expenses.)
• Each act must have at least one person in the band who is a member of the Cascade Blues Association.
• Only acts located within the region of Oregon, Washington or Idaho are allowed to enter the Journey To Memphis.
• Any act that has been nominated for or received a Blues Music Awards from The Blues Foundation are ineligible to compete.
• Any act that has competed in the International Blues Challenge two consecutive years, regardless whether with the same society or as a solo/duo or band act, must sit out a year before being allowed to compete again.
• Along with your $25.00 application fee, send an up-to-date band bio including names of all members, a 300 dpi photo of the band, full song samples of the band’s music (this may be used on a radio broadcast to promote the event), and we need to be made aware of any band member who may be under 21 years of age at the time of the competition so the venue is aware ahead of time for Oregon Liquor Commission laws.
• We require that any act that moves forward in the competition must use the same band members that they won the rounds with. In other words, if you won with a certain bass player or drummer at the Waterfront Blues Festival, that bassist and drummer must be in your band to compete in Memphis. Exceptions will made in rare circumstances when not under control of the act, such as health issues.
• We do not prevent acts competing with the Cascade Blues Association from doing so with other societies. All that we ask is that if you win another group’s competition before ours is held, or if you win ours before theirs, then you remove yourself from further competitions to allow other acts the chance to win the right to go to Memphis.

Have you ever dreamed of playing in Memphis, Tennessee on Beale Street? The storied location that has seen the rise of many of the most prominent blues artists of all time such as BB King, Howlin’ Wolf, Bobby Bland, Muddy Waters.  Now imagine having industry representatives from around the blues world in attendance: record labels, festivals, venues, media, agents, promoters and blues societies. You will never find so many seeking out new talent all in one place at the same time. Well, that opportunity just may be yours. It all begins with your application to take part in the Cascade Blues Association’s Journey to Memphis competition to select our representatives in the 2015 International Blues Challenge

Applications for entry into the 2014 Cascade Blues Association’s Journey To Memphis competition are now being accepted. Here’s how to apply:

1.      First and foremost, all applicants must be a current member of the Cascade Blues
Association. No act that has either won or has been nominated for The Blues Foundation’s Blues Music Awards may enter.
2.   Put together a promotional packet including:

  • A letter of intent
  • Band/Artist biography (including the names and ages of any members under 21 years)
  • A photograph for promotional use (must be a minimum of 300 dpi)
  • A CD sample of your music (please use full songs as your music may be used to promote the event on local radio)
  • Contact information including address, phone number and email address if available
  • $20 application fee. This fee will go toward the prize offered by the CBA to help defray travel expenses for the winning act. (Please make checks out to the Cascade Blues Association and note at the bottom “J2M” for our accounting purposes).

Depending on the number of applications received, venues and dates will be scheduled to hold preliminary competitions to select the final four entries to compete at the Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival on the Front Porch Stage on the 4th of July.. The winning act selected at the Waterfront will have the honor of representing the CBA at The International Blues Challenge in Memphis, Tennessee. Also included as part of the prize is a guaranteed paid set at the following year’s Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival, a set at the 2014 Muddy Awards and a cash prize based on the amount of admissions sold during the first round of the competition.

Please send application packets to: Journey To Memphis, c/o Cascade Blues Association, PO Box 14493, Portland, OR 97293. Or you may deliver your applications at the CBA monthly meeting at The Melody Ballroom. All applications must be received no later than the April 2nd CBA Membership Meeting, so we may have appropriate time to set-up semi-final dates in early June and to promote the acts in the BluesNotes that month. Absolutely no late entries will be accepted.

All rules used for the Journey To Memphis follow those outlined by The Blues Foundation. These can be found at their website www.blues.org.

Ben Rice

Ben Rice

Come out to Duff’s Garage on Sunday, December 15th and help raise needed funds for both The Ben Rice Band and Tevis Hodge Jr for their upcoming trip to Memphis this January as they will compete in the International Blues Challenge. This event is a full afternoon and early evening of first rate blues as many of the local area’s finest acts will be dropping by to help out. In no particular order, these friends will include Kevin Selfe, Karen Lovely, Franco Paletta & The Stingers, The Portland Blues Divas featuring Lucy Hammond and Melissa Buchanan, Bridge City Blues Band and Jeff “Drummerboy” Hayes. And of course, Ben Rice & The iLLamatics and Tevis Hodge Jr.IMG_8359 small

Doors open at 2:00 pm and the fun will begin at 2:30 pm. Aside from the music, there will also be a raffle and door prizes that include items such as CDs, T-shirts, Ben Rice Barbecue Sauce and even cigarbox guitars. Admission is a suggested donation of $10.00, remember it is not inexpensive to travel to Memphis, so every bit helps. Duff’s Garage is at 1635 SE 7th.

 Mark your calendars for Sunday, November 24th to help support Ben Rice and his bandmates with their expenses to travel to the International Blues Challenge in Memphis this coming January. Ben has put together an all star line-up that will be playing starting at 2:00 pm at The Lehrer Pub & Eatery, 8775 SW Canyon Lane, Beaverton.

Not just one band going to Memphis will be involved, but three entries representing t Read more

As part of the International Blues Challenge’s series of events happening in Memphis every winter, a competition amongst self produced CDs has been taking place since 2005. The Cascade Blues Association has participated in this competition since its inception and have done nicely with our entries, several making the semi-finals and especially well with the two discs we have submitted by Joe McMurrian, who placed in the finals in 2007 and winning the overall prize in 2010 with his disc Get Inside This House.

The Cascade Blues Association opened entries for the 2014 event at the end of August with a deadline for submitting in early October. We received eight entries: Dave Mathis’ In Your Face, Franco Paletta & The Stingers’ I Like It Just Like That, Hank Shreve Band’s I’ve Had Read more

Tevis Hodge Jr - photo by Greg Johnson

Tevis Hodge Jr – photo by Greg Johnson

Tevis Hodge Jr. is the Cascade Blues Association’s winner of the Journey To Memphis in the solo/duo category and will be representing the organization and region in Memphis, TN at the International Blues Challenge this coming January 2014. Though he will receive a cash prize from the CBA to help offset some of his expenses traveling to Memphis, it is not inexpensive and he will need to raise more funds to ensure he makes it back.

The first fundraiser that Tevis Hodge Jr. will be holding to help him raise funds will take place at The Central Hotel (8606 N Lombard, easy access right off the St. Johns Bridge in the heart of downtown St. Johns) on Saturday, August 17th. Show time is 7:00 pm with a $5.00 cover. This Read more