Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Faucett to perform at drive-in on Friday

- JACK W. HILL Faucett

Singer-songwriter-guitarist Adam Faucett will perform — live and in person — at the North Little Rock Drive-In on Friday. Gates will open at 8 p.m. and the show starts at 8:45 with a short set by William Blackart. “I’m currently working on a brand-new record and will be playing songs off of it that have never been played live before,” Faucett reports. Faucett, a Benton native who has released five albums, debuted with the self-released CD, The Great Basking Shark, in 2007, following that with Show Me Magic, Show Me Out in 2008, More Like a Temple in 2011, Blind Water Finds Blind Water in 2014 and his latest, It Took the Shape of a Bird in 2018. “Erin (Hurley) and I are building a stage (Monday) and Adam will be playing out to the cars over the same transmitte­r we use for the drive-in,” explains James Snyder, who once promoted shows with Hurley at Juanita’s, before and after it moved to the River Market District. The drive-in will also again screen movies: Judas Priest: Vengeance Live ’82 at 8:45 p.m. today and Road House at 8:45 and 10:55 p.m. Saturday. Gates open at 8 p.m. for the early showing and 10:25 p.m. for the second. Admission is $20. The site is the parking area of the former Windsong Performing Arts Center, just off Crystal Hill Road near the junction of Interstate­s 40 and 430 in North Little Rock. Other venues known for live music are not so sure about when they will return to do so again. And a couple of local musicians known for their love of performing are still cautious about resuming their calling. “I have nothing for the remainder of the month,” says Jason Lee Hale of North Little Rock, who has led the ironically named (for the covid-19 virus era) band, the Personal Space Invaders. “And I’m not sure that I have next month will actually happen.” Bill Jagitsch, known for making guitars out of cigar boxes and leading a band he calls Bluesboy Jag and the Juke Joint Zombies, expresses a similar outlook: “No place to play and even if there was I’m not sure I’d wanna take the chance with 300-400 new cases a day.”

JUNETEENTH JAM

Grammy-winning gospel group the Clark Sisters will headline Mosaic Templars Cultural Center’s virtual Juneteenth celebratio­n on Facebook (facebook. com/mosaictemp­lars/), 5-8 p.m. Saturday. Also among the 40 performers: trumpeter Rodney Block, soul singer Bijoux, The Big John Miller Band, Tania Kelley, Katrice “Butterfly” Newbill, and Amanda Katrice and comedian/magician Tommy Terrific. Jay Jackson, a Little Rock comedian, actor and musician, will be the emcee. Call (501) 683-3593 or email info@ mosaictemp­larscenter.com. There will also be a Family TikTok Challenge; send your best “savage” (dance) to TikTok for a chance to have your video aired live during the event. Email video entries to: info@ mosaictemp­larscenter.com The Juneteenth celebratio­n marks June 19, 1865, the day Union troops arrived in Galveston, Texas, bearing the news that the Civil War was over and that slaves had been freed.

HELM AT 80

Levon Helm fans, who treasure memories of one of Arkansas’ finest musicians (and a great human being, besides) will want to alert their devices, along with friends and relations) to “Levon 80: Levon Helm Studios presents a Newport Folk Revival” a threehour special, starting at 8:30 p.m. today on the website nugs. tv, where many other live shows are available to watch. The cost to view the event is $19.99. It will feature The Midnight Ramble Band, Helm’s former band leader, Larry Campbell, his wife, Theresa Williams, and special guests including Mavis Staples and Margo Price. The live webcast will raise money for the Levon Helm Studios in Woodstock, N.Y., and the Newport (R.I.) Festivals Foundation. Viewers can help out more by ordering a limited edition Levon 80 T-Shirt and poster or make an additional tax-deductible donation at levon80.squarespac­e.com. Helm would have turned 80 on May 26. The Newport Folk Festival, which was to have been held July 31 to Aug. 2, was canceled, as were most other music festivals, due to the coronaviru­s.

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