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Home / Articles / Arts & Entertainment / Music - Tom Irwin /  At the center of it all
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Wednesday, October 31,2007

At the center of it all

Prairie Capital Convention Center is making a concert comeback

By Tom Irwin
Untitled Document Greetings, Springfieldians. Welcome to another preview of the terribly exciting musical happenings in our prairie capital. Speaking of that moniker for our city, remember the Prairie Capital Convention Center? It’s that big brownish building of concrete and steel, covering blocks of real estate in the eastern part of downtown. I remember when the community was invited to participate in a write-in contest to name the esteemed edifice. That’s where the catchy name came from. Whenever I think of the PCCC, I refuse to bemoan the fact that all our downtown theaters are destroyed and the only large live-music venue left is a building designed to house rodeos, sports events, conventions, and monster trucks yet be acoustically attractive for concerts, too. I said I refuse, didn’t I? For years the PCCC was responsible for the flashing sign on the corner of Ninth and Adams that looked more like a work of abstract performance art than the informative signage it was intended to be. Ah, the guessing games that sign encouraged. Standing tall among the building’s highlights must be the infamous 1980s Aerosmith show that sent lead singer and eternal partier Steven Tyler tumbling off the stage and straight into rehab, where he cleaned up and from which he led the group to its status as a top-selling band. Moving into the present, there is good news. The Center, as the PCCC staff has taken to calling the venue, is making a concert comeback. In the last few weeks major national acts the Blue Man Group, Soulja Boy, and Casting Crowns have all made appearances. Cool country star Dierks Bentley is scheduled for Friday, Nov. 16. Welcome back, PCCC! Here’s to many more successful and eventful concerts. Keep you and yours updated at www.springfield-pccc.com. The bluegrass craze that swept the nation in the wake of O Brother, Where Art Thou?, the 2000 film by those clever Coen brothers, has subsided somewhat, but the genre is still going strong. Need you any more proof, check out the 21st annual Greater Downstate Indoor Bluegrass Music Festival and Guitar Trade Show next weekend, Nov. 9-11, at the Crowne Plaza Hotel.
The surest sign of an event’s success is the caliber of the acts it draws, and the GDIBMF & GTS (whew!) books the top tier. Rhonda Vincent and the Rage, J.D. Crowe and the New South, the Grascals, Michael Cleveland and Flamekeeper, and the Dale Ann Bradley Band have all been the recipients of awards from the prestigious International Bluegrass Music Association. It’s really a fabulous event, astounding in range and character. Find out more at www.bluegrassmidwest.com. Hasta la vista, prairie capitalites.

Contact Tom Irwin at tirwin@illinoistimes.com.

 

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