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Las Vegas Doo Shots

Ted Stevens and the Doo-Shots play Las Vegas

LAS VEGAS – Ted Stevens and the Doo-Shots checked Viva Las Vegas off our band to-do list.

On Saturday, April 21, we played a well-received 45-minute set at the Bailiwick Pub inside The Orleans Hotel & Casino as part of the 21st annual Viva Las Vegas rockabilly weekend in Las Vegas, Nev.

Playing to a crowd that included a dozen or so friends and supporters from Florida, the afternoon show kicked off with “Hot Under the Collar.” The setlist consisted solely of original material written by Ted and included “Cursed Cadillac,” Cracked Dash,” “She’s Got All That Too and a Real Tattoo,” “Twice as Far,” “Exit Zero,” “16 Missed Calls,” “She’s Got a Bottle of Scotch …” and “Center Stage.”

As I sat there playing the drums, I felt deeply appreciative for the opportunity to play a gig in Las Vegas at the largest rockabilly festival in the United States – and appreciative that some of our friends were there to see it.

After the show, we made our way out to The Orleans Arena parking lot to check out the car show and the vendors while waiting for Jerry Lee Lewis to take to the large outdoor stage, followed by this year’s headliners, The Stray Cats.

Playing their first U.S. show in more than a decade, The Stray Cats played to a packed crowd and reminded everyone why they remain at the forefront of the rockabilly revival they helped start in the 1980s. Without The Stray Cats, Ted Stevens and the Doo-Shots might not exist, so it was really cool to see the band that inspired so many other rockabilly bands, including us.

This was my first trip to Las Vegas and my four-day stay afforded me the opportunity to check out the ultra-modern vibe on The Strip and the old-school sights, sounds and street festival atmosphere of Fremont Street in old Las Vegas.

One of the highlights of my trip was drinking a beer 106 floors above the city inside the circular, spaceship-looking Stratosphere Tower that provided a spectacular 360-degree view of Las Vegas at night.

They say what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas, but the fond memories we made there last week came back to Florida with us. And it’s good to be home.

Doo-Shots

Doo-Shots head to Vegas

ANNA MARIA ISLAND – Ted Stevens and the Doo-Shots’ next gig will be in Las Vegas at the 21st annual Viva Las Vegas rockabilly weekend.

On Saturday, April 21, the well-known local band will play a 45-minute set at the Bailiwick Pub, inside The Orleans hotel and casino. The Orleans serves as ground zero for the four-day festival that features more than 100 bands from around the world playing on multiple indoor and outdoor stages. Making their first U.S. appearance in nearly a decade, The Stray Cats are headlining this year’s festival, preceded Saturday evening on the big outdoor stage by 82-year-old rock and roll legend Jerry Lee Lewis.

Viva Las Vegas features one of America’s biggest car shows, a bowling party, a guitar show, dance lessons, a pin-up girl competition and a tattoo lounge. And weddings can be arranged for those who want to tie the knot rockabilly-style.

Back to Vegas

The Vegas gig brings lead singer, guitarist and bandleader Ted Stevens back to a city he knows well.

“I haven’t been to Vegas since I moved here almost 10 years ago. It’s a great city and a great place to be a musician. I was musical director for the Drifters, the Platters and the Coasters at the Sahara for almost seven years. The Sahara has been torn down since then and the city is constantly reinventing itself. It will be cool to see it again,” Stevens said.

“Playing Viva is a nice reward for the band. We got there with our songs and our live show. We have four CDs out and it’s nice that our original music helped get us there,” Stevens said.

Stevens’ debuted a new original song, “Back to Vegas,” Friday night at the Swordfish Grill in Cortez, and his song, “Baby I’m Yours,” is track #21 on the Viva Las Vegas 21-compilation CD.

“We have a lot of people flying to Vegas from Florida and other parts of the country just to see us. That’s pretty amazing – even more amazing than getting on the bill. Our friend Sven Frackelton first told me about Viva and this is our fourth attempt to get in. I wasn’t even going to try this year but our friend Heather Green sent me a Facebook post saying Viva was looking for submissions,” Stevens said.

“We have a dedicated band and the Doo-Shots give it everything they’ve got at every gig. We have a great niche working here in Florida, where people love rockabilly music. People say they’re amazed at how much fun we have when we perform but it’s a two-way street because we’re only as good as the audience we play to,” Stevens said.

Doo-Shots

Bass player and backing vocalist ‘Upright Butch’ Alan is making his first trip to Vegas.

“I’ve been wanting to go see Las Vegas and I’m really looking forward to playing Ted’s original music in front of a crowd that’s hungry for rockabilly music. We can play loud and fast, with all the intensity this music demands; and it will be nice to see bands from around the globe putting their spin on American music born in the 1950s,” he said.

As the band’s drummer, and the author of this story, the Vegas gig for me will be a fantastic musical adventure that provides an opportunity to explore a city I’ve wanted to see since I read Hunter S. Thompson’s “Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas” many years ago.

The band’s first post-Vegas gig will be at the Leesburg Bikefest on Sunday, April 29. On Saturday, May 5, the band will play the Rockabilly Ruckus at Skipper’s Smokehouse in Tampa. The band’s next Island gig will be at the Drift In on Friday, May 11.

Known originally as the Ted Stevens Band, with Charles “The Big Kahuna” Nardone on bass, the band’s first Bradenton Beach gig was in early 2011 at the old Back Alley, now the Blue Marlin Grill. The band’s been playing at Island Time and the Swordfish Grill since those venues opened. Stevens also performs as a solo act at the Swordfish Grill and he and Alan now perform as a duo at the Bridge Tender Inn.