This week we get a double douse of great, local music
because July 4th falls on a Thursday,
Bob Campanell, a South Jersey native
who earned his stripes in Asbury Park
in its hey days, has been a staple of classic rock music in this area for
decades now. A founding member and front man of the Shakes, with original
E-Street drummer Vinni Lopez, Bob has been playing the special July 4th Somers
Point Beach concert for many years now, and can probably hold down that gig for
as long as he wants it.
I remember seeing the Shakes for the first time in the late
1970s at Mothers, which was an after hours joint just on the other side of the
bridge on the Longport Blvd. ,
and interviewing him between sets in a closet, which he had converted into an
off stage dressing room. Covered with sweat from his riveting performance, Bob
pulled some guitar strings from an old tin Beatles lunch box, the kind you took
to grammar school, and was telling me how great the music scene was at Asbury
Park, but how he wanted to expand his fan base.
That was the summer the Shakes’ original tune “Pour It Out,”
was included on the WMMR “Breakout” album, a song that Bob should bring back
and play again, as it still holds up well.
Later that summer I set up a small cassette tape recorder
and captured a set of Bob and the Shakes live, a tape that I still play once in
awhile when I want to flash back to that time and place, and you can hear the
glasses tingling, the background conversations and laughter, and then the band
kicking in and kicking butt.
Like Bruce the Boss, and other Asbury Park veterans, they
occasionally will introduce a song with a little story, told while the bass and
drummer kept up a steady beat, and one night Bob told the story of how the
Shakes got an audition at the legendary nightclub on Bay Avenue, where the sign
above the door read: “Through these doors walk the most beautiful girls in the
world,” but when they played an original song, got the boot from Tony, who
often said to his bands, “Get at a here you bums!” before breaking into “Hit
the Road Jack.”
But Bob Campanell did come back, after playing a few years
as the house band at Merrels in Margate ,
which became Gilhooleys.
With a wide repertoire of classic rock and roll songs, a
great guitar and powerful voice, Bob now has a new band, usually including
Danny Eyer on lead guitar.
And besides playing the annual July 4th gig at the Somers
Point Beach ,
can also be found frequently at the Tuckahoe Inn in Beesleys Point and on
occasional weekends at the Library IV on the Black Horse Pike in Williamstown.
Keep up with Bob’s gigs, as well as Danny Eyer, via Facebook.
Free live music outdoors on the beach two nights in a row
isn’t too much to handle, especially when the regular Friday night beach
concert features another great, local South Jersey band - Jeremiah Hunter, an
upbeat party band that includes some of the guys who were in the Soul
Survivors.
One of them, Kenny Jeremiah, a musical consultant for the
movie, “Eddie and the Cruisers,” has been playing the Jersey
Shore since Bob Campanell was in
school. I remember them playing high school gyms and breaking in to the pop
charts in the late 1960s with the hit song, “Expressway to Your Heart.” Beep
Beep, “I’ve been trying to get to you for a long time….”
Double dynamite, back to back, classic rock, local fan
favorites, Thursday and Friday nights, July 4th and 5th, on the Somers
Point Beach .
[Bill Kelly can be reached at billkelly3@gmail.com (609) 425-6297]