Copious Notes
The journal of a Kentucky culture vulture
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Jun17
Kentucky musicians were a significant part of Ichthus 2009
Filed under: Ichthus Festival, Music, Religion, Uncategorized, rc talk - Christian pop culture; Tagged as: Abe Parker, Allison Stafford, Amaris Blevins, Ascenxion Scout Competition, Centenary United Methodist, Disciple, Grant Ebright, Jonathan Mckeowen, Kevin Young, Landon Cunningham, Quest Community Church, Rookie, Shane Tracy Project, Southern Acres, Southland Christian Church, The Lee Roessler Band, Too Many DrummersNo Comments
Wilmore-based Rookie is Landon Cunningham, Abe Parker and Grant Ebright. Photos by Rich Copley | LexGo.
WILMORE — The trio Rookie did a lot of the right things when they started performing together.
They picked bandmates they liked hanging out with. They defined a sort of jazzy edge to their sound that they say makes them different from most other Christian rock acts. They jettisoned a meaningless name, Auburn, for one that said something: Rookie, they say, is a commentary on the clumsiness with which most people go about their faith.
And they got the director of the Ichthus Festival to come see their show.
OK, that last element isn’t necessarily part of the prescription for most bands. And a few years ago, it might not have yielded much.
But, while Ichthus’ calling card is still chart-topping international Christian bands such as Skillet and Family Force 5, Kentucky musicians have had a growing role in the festival, whether it’s competitors in the fest’s 3-year-old battle of the bands, local rockers invited to perform on secondary stages, area church leaders playing during late-afternoon worship sessions, or the occasional national artist who resides right here in the Bluegrass.
“My family got to come out,” Disciple frontman and Central Kentucky resident Kevin Young said of the band’s Thursday main-stage set. “That’s why I like Ichthus a lot, because I actually get to do this and my family is close by. My daughter is 81/2 months old, and yesterday was her first Disciple concert. I didn’t get to see her face, but my wife said she was kicking a lot, so apparently she liked the music.”
The biggest concentration of local talent was earlier that day on the worship stage where bands competed in the third annual Ascenxion Scout Competition. The first year of the competition, three bands were selected in an online competition to play Ichthus stages. The past two years, the competition’s finals have been live the opening morning of the festival, meaning even if they don’t advance, all the competitors can say they played Ichthus.
They included 16-year-old Radfordville resident Allison Stafford, who said when she saw Christian rocker’s BarlowGirl at Ichthus two years ago, “I decided I wanted to do that.”
Playing a festival like Ichthus gives local acts, as well as other less familiar bands, a chance for people to run across their music as opposed to concerts or club dates, where a lot of people who come are already familiar with the band.
“We got a really good crowd response,” Landon Cunningham, Rookie’s drummer, said the day after their Friday set on the Edge Stage. “It’s great that they are providing this kind of opportunity to local bands,” he added, noting some other area acts such as Wilmore’s Shane Tracy Project also got moments in the spotlight.
A few locals even got main-stage shots: The Lee Roessler Band, which won the Ascenxion Scout Competition, and Lexington’s Too Many Drummers, which got there via another competition.
But possibly the most prominent local musicians on the Ichthus stage this year were area worship leaders who led devotional times late each afternoon.
A group from Quest Community Church and then a worship “all-star team” — comprising musicians from churches such as Southland Christian, Centenary United Methodist and Southern Acres — took the stage in the evenings, where nationally known artists used to play.
“It’s different from church,” said Amaris Blevins, a singer at Southland who was part of the team. “It was a lot more people and a different energy from church.”
And while the worship all-star team isn’t looking for a recording contract the way bands might, the musicians did appreciate the opportunity.
“I like that they’re getting more locals involved,” Jonathan Mckeowen, a guitarist with the group, said. “It used to be kind of hard to get in here.”
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Jun11No Comments

Nathan Dickerson (in yellow) and Clayton Allender (white) of Maysville, joined Brittany Strong and Jillian Krouse of Lexington to dance and cheer on the Lee Roessler Band, which won the Ascenxion Scout Competition. Photos by Rich Copley | LexGo.com.
There’s plenty of pressure in performing in a battle of the bands in front of top record executives for the chance to play on the main stage at Ichthus and go on to another competition that could put you in line for a deal with a major label.
Add to that being woken up at 4:30 in the morning by a severe thunderstorm that makes you throw all of your stuff in plastic bags and sleep — if you can call it that — in your car for the rest of the night.
“Our campsite was flattened,” said Christina Conyers, one of the singers in CrossLife, one of the nine bands that competed in the Ascenxion Scout Competition Thursday morning at Ichthus.
Jones Beene, guitarist for Athens, Tenn. band Calling Glory, was in an actual home. But still, the thunder roused him around 5 a.m., and he decided to go ahead and get up.
But that is not all the competing bands had to deal with. Since the campsite was closed due to weather issues until after 10 a.m., the competition, which was supposed to start at 9 a.m., was moved to one of the worship stages in the campground and didn’t start until nearly 10:30.
“The good thing was we were too busy running around to get to the new place to have any time to get nervous,” said Eric Draine of Versailles based Eyesuponus.
The competition did offer up a variety of Christian pop styles, from the worship set of CrossLife, to the atmospheric sounds of Calling Glory, to the metal of Elizabethtown-based Wisdom’s Call.
The bravery award had to go to 16-year-old Allison Stafford of Radfordville, who took the stage and said, “I don’t have a band, but I’m going to get up here and sing anyway.”
She was a lone girl with a guitar in the middle of a bunch of dudes with bands, and she confessed it did intimidate her, but, “I knew God was with me.”
Stafford said she had been inspired by seeing BarlowGirl at Ichthus a few years ago, and she said, “I want to do that.”
She got onto the Ichthus stage via an online competition that narrowed the field down for the live showdown, that was really cordial for something billed as a, “battle.”
The ultimate winner was the Lee Roessler Band out of Alexandria, in Northern Kentucky.
“It’s great,” said Roessler, the head of the trio. “But I don’t view it as a competition. We’re all out here just praising God.”
It was a competition with a prize. Roessler will play the Ichthus main stage at noon Friday. Calling Glory, the runners up, will play the Edge Stage at 6:20 p.m. Saturday, and third place finisher’s Wisdom’s Call will play the Edge at 3:10 p.m. Friday.
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May28
rctalk: Mat Kearney review; Ichthus battle of the bands
Filed under: Ichthus Festival, Music, album review, rc talk - Christian pop culture; Tagged as: 7:13, Allison Stafford, Calling Glory, Chasing Canaan, City of Black and White, Crosslife, Divine Day, Eyesuponus, Ichthus Festival, Mat Kearney, review, The Lee Roessler Band, Too Many Drummers, Wisdom's CallNo CommentsReview: Mat Kearney — City of Black & White
Mat Kearney approaches sophomore album pressure in a different way: He sings about it . . . in the opening lines of the opening track of his sophomore album.
Here we go at it three years later
Will you help me to dream it all up again?
Tired of the same song everyone’s singing
Rather be lost with you instead
Kearney’s 2006 Columbia Records debut, Nothing Left to Lose, was a mainstream hit and also found the artist embraced by Christian listeners for his faith and songs that certainly had faith-based underpinnings. Now, the aforementioned three years later, Kearney is back with a new album that should reaffirm the Christian market’s faith in him as well as his status as one of the leaders in the current singer-songrwriter ranks that includes Jason Mraz and Gavin DeGraw.City of Black & White has some ambition, clocking in with 14 tracks that run around an hour. It also finds Kearney diversifying his sound and subject matter. The unity of the album is a steady echo, as if we are always navigating concrete and glass towers in an urban jungle. That best resolves in the title track, which ends in lonely threads that sound like dulcimer and slide guitar.
The lyrical content is empathetic, individualistic stories and portraits, Annie being the most immediate and memorable. Most of the songs have a spiritual interpretation, if not an overt message. With City of Black & White, Kearney has cleared the sophomore hurdle, and his future is sounding good.
The Ichthus Battle is set: Get your coffee, kids, because the Ichthus Festival’s Battle of the Bands will get started at 9 a.m. June 11, the first full day of the fest. Nine bands will be vying for a spot on the Ichthus Main Stage during the festival, and that winner will advance to a national competition between bands that win battles at other fests during the summer, with the possibility of a Word Records deal being the big prize.
The contendah’s are:
Eyesuponus of Versailles, which won a secondary stage spot in Ichthus’ first band battle in 2007.
7:13 of Paintsville
Crosslife of Owingsville
Too Many Drummers of Lexington
The Lee Roessler Band of Alexandria
Allison Stafford of Bradfordsville
Chasing Canaan of Shreveport, La.
Calling Glory of Athens, Tenn.
Those seven acts got in through online voting in the Ascenxion Scout Competition. Two additional bands made it through preliminary competitions.
Wisdom’s Call of Elizabethtown won a competition in Tennessee.
Divine Day, which was an Ichthus winner last year, won an Ohio competition.
The whole festival, numero 40 for the fish, is now under two weeks away. Keep checking in here and on my Twitter page for updates, stories and info. At Twitter, we use the hashtag #ichthus.
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May13
rctalk: Newsboys and Sarah Reeves reviews, Ichthus news
Filed under: Ichthus Festival, Music, album review, rc talk - Christian pop culture; Tagged as: 7:13, Allison Stafford, Ascenxion Scout Competition, Battlelion, Crosslife, Deep End Stage, Ed Cash, Eyesuponus, Ichthus, In the Hands of God, Lee Roessler Band, Matt Brownlee, Michael Tait, Newsboys, Peter Furler, Sarah Reeves, Shane Tracy Project, Sweet Sweet Sound, Too Many DrummersNo CommentsReview: Newsboys, In the Hands of God
Out of the weirdness that has been the Newsboys of recent months comes a new album — a new album with the old guy on lead vocals. Or is he the old guy, or just the singer who will no longer travel with the group? It’s a murky picture, but what we do know is the Aussie group has released its first album since frontman Peter Furler announced he would not be touring with the band anymore and former dc talk member Michael Tait took over the mike.In the Hands of God was recorded before that, and it is unmistakably Newsboys in sound and tone. You get the feel of an act wanting to take one last sweep through its current state before everything changes, such as the late-90s humor in The Way we Roll and the more recent worshipful nature of the title track. Problem is it all sounds like classic Newsboys, but nothing is quite as compelling as the best of the band’s catalog. Maybe it was time for a change.
Review: Sarah Reeves, Sweet Sweet Sound
Sarah Reeves could have titled her debut album “Getting to Know You,” if she didn’t have a nice little title tune to bing off of. Her short debut — maybe EP most accurately describes this offering — is a sextet of nice personal songs co-written by Reeves that leave a strong impression of a young woman very devoted to worship and looking for direction in how to use her gifts.While none of the tunes are terribly distinctive or instant classics, the 19-year-old Alabamian had a pretty cool opportunity to write with longtime hitmakers Ed Cash and Matt Brownlee. And the voice we hear is young, earnest and full of hope. With Sweet Sweet Sound, we can say we’ve been introduced to Sarah Reeves, and we hope to hear more from her.
Ichthus tick-tock: Time is running out on two things you can act on with Ichthus.
1. The latest ticket-price increase is being held off until May 22. So, until then, full weekend tickets are $98, single-day tickets are $53, single evening tickets are $56 and children ages 7-10 are $57 for the weekend and $37 for a day. After the 22nd, the weekend adult tickets pop up to $108 and all other tickets increase too. You can order tickets at the festival website or by calling (859) 858-3001. Ichthus is also advertising payment plans for tickets.
2. There are only a few days left in voting for the Ascenxion Scout Competition. The Top 5 acts will be on the Deep End Stage the first day of the festival, and the top act, as chosen by judges during those performances, will get to play Ichthus’ Main Stage July 12 and the Deep End July 13.
The 8 Kentucky acts in the 13-band competition are:
Versailles’ Eyesuponus
Paintsville’s 7:13
Owingsville’s Crosslife
Paintsville’s Battlelion
Bradfordsville’s Allison Stafford
Alexandria’s The Lee Roessler Band
Wilmore’s The Shane Tracy Project
Lexington’s Too Many Drummers
Voting ends May 15.







