1. First off, please name off the bands you've been a part of and when you played your first gig.

2. When did first you decide, "Hey, I want to get up in front of people and play music"?

3. Try to narrow it down to three - which bands/artists have you been most influenced by in your playing and why?

4. If your routine before a show had a theme song, what would it be?

5. Give us a story of the most memorable thing you've seen - from the stage - at a show.

 

Cory Folz, County Line Road native:


Cory Folz.jpg

 

1. Teacher's Pet, Psycho Hop, Mr. Chug, pre 9 Stitches, Amy's Shadow, The Brown Sisters, Troy Miller, now I'm playing with Big Slick, the Whiskers, and the Echo-Plexes. My first gig was at a Mt. Vernon High School talent show with Jay Parnell and Mark Schelhorn. We all did solos and then ripped into “Purple Haze.” I remember hearing girls squeal and thinking that this is what rock and roll is all about!

 

2. I had been singing and performing at church and school and it seemed to be the only way that the girls would notice me. I enjoyed studying music and it brought me attention so I went for it. Any man who says that he started playing for anything but the affection of someone is not telling the truth!

 

3. I'm a bass player so a lot of my influences are a little less known than the other traditional "band" instruments. Bob Moore- he played on a lot of 50s, 60s and 70s country classics. Andy McDonald- he has played on all the Bon Jovi records. That cat has an amazing way of tying the melody line with a propelling rhythm. Sting- again somebody who always plays to the song.

 

4. “ManahManah” – The Muppets.

 

5. One night in a bar in Chandler a 40-ish woman who was a "little person" was having a very obvious argument with her geriatric (70-ish) husband. To make him jealous she started shaking what she had directly in front of me while I tried to deliver a rendition of "Red House" by Jimi Hendrix. I almost couldn't finish when she dropped to her knees and began gyrating during the 3rd verse. Thankfully she and her husband reconciled their differences before the set was over!

 

Jason Lee McKinney, Evansville native


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1. The first band I ever played in was Teacher’s Pet when I was 15. Our first gig was a battle of the bands at the old Kramer's Lake. I was actually the drummer in that band though I sang a few songs. I then started the band that became SpinAround which was the first of my national bands. We toured the country, slept on floors, went on the road with everyone from POD, to Switchfoot, to a very young Katy Perry. After seven years of working our butts off, then signing the "standard rich and famous contract" followed by the clichéd crash and burn, I had to start over again. I spent some time as a solo artist but that evolved into the band Lost Anthem which is where I spent my next five years. We actually owned our own nationally distributed label and had a good run of hype, got a lot of radio play, a whole lot of video spin but not much cash. Then I had a four year break; I left music but it didn't leave me. I am now back at it as a solo thing though the guys I am playing with are some great guys so we might tag it with a "and the" name here soon.

 

2. Actually I had that epiphany moment when I was eight. My Dad took me to see Purple Rain in the theater and at the end of movie when Prince played the song “Purple Rain” and played that solo, I remember thinking I wanted to make people feel the way he made me feel in that moment for the rest of my life. Cheesy I know, but it is true.

 

3. Well I am not much of a player but in songwriting my biggest influences have always been Bob Seger, Prince and Don Henley. Prince because he is a melodic genius and Bob and Don because they have the ability to cut straight to the emotion in common everyman experiences that is really profoundly simple yet thought provoking and emotional.

 

4. That’ss easy – “Turn the Page”

 

5. The most memorable thing I have seen from stage is 10,000 people screaming my band’s name for an encore, under the lights in an open amphitheater in the cool summer air and then when I started the encore song they all sang the words back to me. I have never felt anything like that. It was better than sex; it was amazing. I went through a time that I was really bitter that I didn't get to experience it more and that I was always the opening act on these tours but now I am just grateful that I got to experience it at all. Most guys who take to this music thing never get to do half of what I have done and I wasted far too much time being mad at the world because some of my friends were richer, or more famous. Now I realize I am a lucky man that I even get to play music on any level.

 

McKinney returns to town February 12 and 13 to Club Royale for an EP release party for his new effort, Strangers, Stages, Cheap Hotels.

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Photos Courtesy of the Artists