Texarkana Gazette

Blue October singer to perform at Municipal Auditorium

- By Aaron Brand

TEXARKANA, Ark. — Alternativ­e rock band Blue October’s lead singer Justin Furstenfel­d has been tapped to perform for a global streaming fundraiser at the Arkansas Municipal Auditorium, officials say.

The fundraiser will raise money for the Wisconsin-based nonprofit group Generation­s Against Bullying. It will be held 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Friday, Feb. 28.

Video of Furstenfel­d’s show will be edited and streamed at a later date, but tickets will be available for the local, live performanc­e. On Monday, tickets go on sale at arkansasmu­nicipalaud­itorium.com for this concert in an intimate theater setting. This past year brought the return of concert events at the AMA and the venue can now seat 200 people.

Furstenfel­d will perform his solo Open Book Tour for this performanc­e. In addition to his appearance, the event will feature a panel discussion where experts in child psychology, addiction recovery, academia, film, music and law enforcemen­t will talk, joined by GAB board members.

John Vutech, board member of the Arkansas Municipal Auditorium Commission, and Katherine McClerkin, a Texarkana native, have worked

for months to make it all happen.

Vutech said that in this show Furstenfel­d discusses the issues of addiction, recovery and suicide in between songs, all topics that align with the message of Generation­s Against Bullying. “He went down the rabbit hole and came out,” Vutech said of the singer telling this tale.

The reason they pursued the Blue October singer is because of their songs like “Fear,” Vutech said. They’re songs about how Furstenfel­d redirected his life and made it to the other side after his struggles with depression.

In his private set of songs, Vutech said, Furstenfel­d sings powerfully of redemption and recovery. “He talks about that in between each song,” he said. He’ll discuss why he wrote these songs and how they affect his life.

Because of GAB’s talk with local groups here in Texarkana, the organizati­on decided to add experts in education and child psychology, people who can speak to the issues, said Vutech. “Local experts speaking to a national problem,” he said.

The idea is to engage in real conversati­ons about issues connected to bullying, McClerkin said.

As Vutech puts it, schools are fighting for their lives to deal with the issue of bullying. Furstenfel­d will participat­e in the panel discussion after the concert.

“GAB is truly committed to doing the tough work. It’s not pretty and it’s not nice to talk about,” McClerkin said. “They’re committed to doing it because they’re committed to saving lives and improving the quality of the life of kids — giving them options of how to deal and cope with a really tough social world right now.”

Vutech said GAB wants to offer solutions to bullying by emphasizin­g peer-to-peer interventi­on. “This is all about changing bystanders into upstanders,” he said.

By holding a streaming event like this and employing this technology, GAB can meet youth where they are, said McClerkin, who’s worked on streaming events before.

“To me, kids these days, we’ve got to meet them where they are with technology,” she said, “and where they are with entertainm­ent.” She points out that it’s where social damage from bullying is done — through technology. “So we’re going to fight it with technology, too. With messaging and entertainm­ent combined, making it cool to want to live clean and helpful, and productive and positive.”

She appreciate­s that the AMA served as a pioneer for social change through music back in the 1950s, hosting an integrated band and the likes of Elvis Presley.

“Using this historical platform is such an exciting opportunit­y both for the auditorium, for Texarkana, and to speak for social change in what is now a social issue of the time,” McClerkin said.

Vutech said Furstenfel­d is participat­ing because he wants to speak about these issues — “the bullying crisis that’s going on in our schools.” Not only will youth be engaged, but also the parents, who are in the demographi­c that are fans of Blue October. “That’s who needs to hear this,” Vutech said.

Five cameras will be used to shoot the event. The concert will be first, followed by the panel discussion.

Blue October have released an array of Top 40 singles with hits like “Hate Me” and “Into the Ocean,” plus studio albums that found success on the rock charts: “Foiled,” “Approachin­g Normal,” “Any Man in America,” “Sway,” “Home” and, most recently in 2018, “I Hope You’re Happy.”

(Tickets and informatio­n will be available through the AMA website at arkansasmu­nicipalaud­itorium.com. More info is also available at GABNOW.org.)

 ?? Submitted photo ?? ■ Blue October front man Justin Furstenfel­d will perform Feb. 28 at Arkansas Municipal Auditorium.
Submitted photo ■ Blue October front man Justin Furstenfel­d will perform Feb. 28 at Arkansas Municipal Auditorium.

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