Alex Bevan Explained

Alex Bevan (born 1950) is an American guitarist, singer, songwriter, poet, radio personality, and music producer.

Early life

Bevan began his musical career playing the French horn with his teacher Ruffier at Chambers Elementary School. In 1965, while at Shaw High School in East Cleveland, he acquired a six-string classical guitar. He played local night clubs and various coffeehouses in the Cleveland area such as "La Cave" and "Faragher's Back Room". His first position in a group was as a backup musician with Irish folk singers Gusty & Sean at Fagan's Beacon House in the Flats of Cleveland, Ohio. While a student at the University of Akron, Bevan was introduced to his first producer, Eric Stevens, who signed him to Big Tree Records. His first album, No Truth to Sell, was released in 1971 along with the single "Linda's Song" b/w "Brady Street Hotel", which got some airplay. Between 1971 and 1979, Bevan performed as an opening act for such headliners as the Earl Scruggs Review, Pure Prairie League, The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Jerry Jeff Walker, Jimmy Buffett, The Clash, Bo Diddley, Livingston Taylor, Billy Joel and others.

Musical career

The release of the album Springboard got him some public recognition due to the local hit song Skinny Little Boy. In 1977 he performed on the air on Cleveland's WMMS Radio with a band called Alex Bevan and the Buzzard Band, featuring DJ Matt the Cat on guitar.[1] He performed in the mid-1970s with an acoustic trio consisting of two guitars and electric bass, and opened for such acts as Seals and Crofts, The Michael Stanley Band, The Doobie Brothers and Hall & Oates. He soon added David Krauss from the band Tiny Alice to the group, supplying percussion and harmonica. They toured either under the name Grand River Band or Alex Bevan and Friends from 1979 until 1981, and produced the albums The Grand River Lullaby, Alex Bevan and Friends Live, and Simple Things Done Well. In the early 80's Bevan produced the direct-to-disk digital solo album Tales of the Low Tech Troubadour Vol. 1. He played in the band Alex Bevan & Cuttlefish from 1984 through 1986. In the late 80s to early 90s, he produced the albums Best Kept Secrets, Cuttlefish Live, and Watersongs.

His latest releases include South Shore Serenade, Rules of the Road, Fall & Angels and Live at the Kent Stage. An avid producer of folk music, he has produced five recordings for the popular Put-in-Bay/Key West performer Pat Dailey, and written over one hundred radio and TV commercials. He still plays many venues, including the Hessler Street and Coventry Street Fairs in Greater Cleveland, Ohio, the Starwood Festival, Put-In Bay, the Burning River Festival, Cain Park, and Kelleys Island.

Bevan organized a benefit for fellow Cleveland area singer-songwriter John Bassette on 19 May 2002 at the Beachland Ballroom & Tavern in Cleveland, OH, featuring Jim Ballard, Charlie Wiener, Michael Stanley, Jim Schafer, and many others.[2] In 2007 a tribute CD for Bassette, Been Through So Much Together: The Songs of John Bassette, was released by Skylyne Records, which featured Bevan and others. The tribute album was produced by Akron Songwriter and Producer and Bevan pal, Jim Ballard. Around the same time, Bevan released a posthumous collection of previously-unreleased songs by John Bassette called Rainbow Colored Clouds. He also plays for the Roots of American Music Annual Benefit for Education.

Radio

Bevan appeared on the premiere broadcast of Cleveland's WNCR Radio station's Sunday night live concerts from Agency Recording in 1971. He was a frequent guest artist on WMMS' Coffeebreak Concerts, and co-hosted a show with David Spero called A Folk Special for a Sunday Afternoon. He also hosted a Saturday morning radio show on WMMS Cleveland for a short time.[3]

In 1988 Bevan did a series of musical radio advertisements for the Cleveland Browns. A new song each week of the season recapped the game from the week before and set up the upcoming game. Each week's song was in a different musical style.

Children's programs

Bevan collaborated with David Young on his first children's album, a musical fairytale with an environmental message titled Who Killed the Dragon?. This was followed by two award-winning critically acclaimed works: Magic Moments from the Children's Nature Schoolhouse (produced for the Lake Metroparks) and All the Rivers Run (Produced for the Cuyahoga Valley Environmental Education Center).

Personal life

Bevan and his wife Deidre reside in North Madison, Ohio. Bevan has a son, with a different wife named William Cody Bevan. The couple owned and operated two businesses: a line of home-grown gourmet pickles called Skinny Pickles[4] and Stone Dragon Bakery. Those businesses are now closed.

Awards

Bevan won an Emmy award for his postscore of The Rustbelt Blues (1987), the final segment of NBC’s American Promise documentary series.

Discography

Also appears on

Filmography

Bevan performs in the TV special The Return of the Cuyahoga (2008) – Florentine Films/Hott Productions Inc., America's River Communities, Inc., and WVIZ/PBS ideastream[5]

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Radio Daze: Stories From the Front in Cleveland's FM Air Wars by Mike Olszewski (2003) Pg 137
  2. http://www.folknet.org/bassette.html John Bassette: Rest in Peace by Larry Bruner Folknet Website
  3. Radio Daze: Stories From the Front in Cleveland's FM Air Wars by Mike Olszewski (2003)
  4. Web site: A Fine Brine: Musician Bevan's Latest Gig Hits Right Note With Pickle Lovers by Michael Heaton, Plain Dealer Reporter – January 07, 2009 Cleveland.com Website . 12 May 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160303193839/http://www.cleveland.com/living/plaindealer/index.ssf?%2Fbase%2Fother%2F1231320799304950.xml&coll=2 . 3 March 2016 . dead .
  5. https://web.archive.org/web/20121022054930/http://movies.nytimes.com/person/1577707/Alex-Bevan/filmography New York Times Movie Website