State Journal Register: “The Asylum Getting The Band Back Together”

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Springfield paper The State Journal Register published an article recently highlighting the importance of old Springfield music venue and hangout spot The Asylum and talked about the upcoming Asylum reunion. From the article:

The Asylum remains a fond memory for many Springfield and area teens who hung out there. On Thursday nights, they watched “The Simpsons.” There were movie nights. There were shows by local bands like The Timmys and The Gunga-Dins and from traveling acts like the Portuguese Rodeo Clown comedy troupe. Between Steve’s substantial presence and the self-policing by the teenagers, things went smoothly for the most part.

You can find the full article on the SJ-R website right here. In the article talks to former Asylum owner Steve Brink, who now lives in North Carolina but is coming back to town for the reunion. The Asylum reunion will be happening on Saturday, May 24th at VFW 211 Old Jacksonville Road. The reunion crew is still trying to raise money for their event, and you can contribute on the Asylum reunion website. You can also read more about the reunion and more about the Asylum on the Some Things Can’t Be Ignored blog.

The Asylum Reunion May 24th

02It looks like some type of reunion for old Springfield all ages music venue and coffeehouse The Asylum is being planned for May of this year. The Asylum was around near the intersection of Wabash and MacArthur and operated as a music venue/coffee shop from 1998-2001. You can check out a photo collage video for the old venue below. Organizers for the reunion are asking for donations to make the event possible on Saturday, May 24th. Proceeds will also go towards the St. Jude Children Hospital.

We have made plans for a large reunion that will take place at the VFW on Old Jacksonville Rd, and will feature food, drinks, and live bands; all to help everyone reconnect and revisit the people that helped inform and enrich our lives. We have set up a website, http://www.asylumreunion.com , where donations can be made towards making this reunion a success. There is a clear count of individual donations, when they were made, and by whom they are made. All proceeds will go directly towards the reunion, as the only interest for the Planning Committee is that we all have an amazing reunion and maybe re-live some old times. Any remaining money will then be given as a gift to St. Jude Children’s Hospital in the name of the Asylum Coffeeshop. Interested volunteers who would like to contribute time or materials in lieu of donations can contact the previously mentioned individuals listed above or send us an email.

The entire entry for The Asylum reunion can be seen on the Some Things Can’t Be Ignored blog right here. If you would like to contribute to the cause you can head over to asylumreunion.com. More info on bands and festivities will be posted later on once more is known about the reunion.

Videos: 2001 Asylum Footage

Screen shot 2014-02-05 at 9.23.47 AMIt looks like thanks to some active members of the 217 Hardcore The Way It Was facebook group, there has been a recent resurfacing of some old videos taken from an all ages Springfield venue of the past, The Asylum. The videos come from 2001 and feature old Springfield punk/hardcore bands Test Patterns and recently disbanded Pound For Pound. You can check out  a couple of those videos below or head over to the 217 Hardcore The Way It Was facebook group to see a few more along with some more old show videos and fliers.

More Old Black Sheep Photos

Our team of top archeologists and paleontologists are working hard continuing to uncover more secrets about Black Sheep’s mysterious past. Earlier this fall we brought you photos from our very first Black Sheep Fest in 2008 and photos from Black Sheep Fest 2010. You can check out all of those photos and more on our flickr page, which now has over 2,000 photos.

Today we are bringing you a mix of photos of around Black Sheep in our earlier days. These photos would have been taken sometime around the ancient years of 2006-2008. You can check out a few of the photos below, or see all of the new photos that have been added at our Black Sheep flickr set.

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Photos: Black Sheep Fest 2008

Today we are taking a step back into the past. Five years into the past to be exact. Our team of top archeologists have helped us uncover a batch of photos from the very first Black Sheep Fest, which was help on July 25th, 26th, and 27th in 2008. Yes, it was also the only Black Sheep Fest to span the course of three days. The photos we are showing you today are of a few bands who played the last two days of the fest. You can see the flier with all of the bands and a few photos below. For the complete batch of photos, head over to our Black Sheep Fest 2008 flickr set. For photos from our most recent Black Sheep Fest, check out our Black Sheep Fest 2013 flickr set. Extra special thanks to photographer Devin Softley who took the photos five years ago!

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Black Sheep 8 Years Old Today

7889739352_ebaa359d12_bHappy Tuesday everyone! Did you know that today is Black Sheep’s birthday? Today marks exactly eight years from when Black Sheep had our very first show in September of 2005. There are kids that are that old that are walking around and talking and going to school! In honor of today being Black Sheep’s eighth year as an all ages music venue in Springfield, we have a special message from owner Kevin Bradford.

As you may know this little piece is about Black Sheep turning eight years old as of today. As most of you also know, saying this feat is a type of miracle is no exaggeration. I think nobody including myself thought it would last this long or mean this much to people over the years. If anybody thought we had an A-class business plan or a secret patron they would be wrong. We’re here because despite our flaws and imperfections, people believed in the message and mission of this place. We never had the best sound, lighting, or (insert other notable music venue kitsch) at our disposal. We have been and still are a DIY venue in the purest sense of the term.

Eight years ago a group of people in a few small local bands with absolutely no business knowledge on music venues other than the idealized passions of youth, started a music venue in the shell of a former jewelry store, sand blasting shop, and whatever else it was, next to Skanks Skates. With little more than paint, rollers, and some new carpet (thanks Marty!) we set about fixing the building up that for the next eight years would be affectionately know as, “The Sheep”. None of us had a long term plan we just knew we had to do it, to me personally it felt like fire in the guts, (y’know like that burning passion stuff people talk about), I can’t really speak for everybody else though, maybe they just had heartburn? Either way we did it and miracle after miracle occurred that first year that enabled us to do it (I know our jaded post modern culture scoffs at a term like “miracle” but whatever dude). It was hard at first to even get people to come down to South Town to even see a show. The neighborhood had a bad rap (which I still view as greatly unjustified) and the only vestige of music culture was Skanks at that point (which wasn’t having a great deal of shows at the moment), so as you can see we had our work cut out for us. By the end of the first year all original four owners (besides myself) had quit for various reasons. We had a steady base of show goers and bands that played here, without which of course there can be no music scene (come to shows kids!). Therefore the bones of what grew into the modern Black Sheep were beginning to take shape.

One of the first things I did when everybody else quit was to simplify (no more shows everyday kind of thing), and realized that even if we lack all of the extra stuff most traditional music venues have we can embellish and accentuate the stuff we do have. Putting an emphasis on community and making Black Sheep a safe gathering place for people became the emphasis. Really, that can never be a placard on a wall or a mission statement, that’s something you just do. It is in fact that “doing” that became our motto. Instead of talking about this or that idea, just do it. We lack this or that, so what? We just will “keep on keeping’ on”, and I guess it worked because we’re still here.

So looking back on then and now is a trip for me. From the days of a smelly grey carpet (the cheapest we could find) to the present smelly stage (I’m convinced it’s the punk rock stink in the air), we have indeed come far! Every good thing we have has been given to us: the amazing people who help, the bands, and the people who have come out here over the years have been the oil in the gears that keep us turning. Black Sheep was an experiment for me and I always kept at it with support from so many (George being a big one). All of the characters that make up our local scene and the stories concerning them (you can’t even make some of this stuff up) are what makes things like this work.

It isn’t a business that we do, for all intents and purposes we are more like an anti-business. There are some tremendously talented people that help out here and do so much for Black Sheep that I am eternally grateful and extremely humbled by it. There are people who help me that could move away and make a decent career but care about Springfield and Black Sheep and stay here. I am absolutely convinced you can make your town better if you really try. Springfield doesn’t have to suck. Long live South Town.

Grace and Peace, Kevin

To read a little more on what Black Sheep is about and what our story is, you can check out our about us page. Want to find out what else you can do to get involved in making our space what it is? Check out our get involved page!

Central Illinois Music in the 1960s

ReactionsClippingHere at blacksheepspringfield.com headquarters our team of top archeologists have been hard at work over the past year or so under-covering crucial information on music scenes of our past. Today we bring you some gems of the past that have been pulled out of an old music blog called Garage Hangover. If you head over here to the Illinois section of bands you might find some lengthy entries on some bands that came from our state back in the 1960s. We went ahead and did most of the work for you by pulling out most of the bits that mention Springfield or talk about bands in our great city. You can read those bits below.

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1085488_10201591207049739_1465187633_nFor all of the full entries that go along with those bits, you can head here. Are you interested in digging deeper into music of Springfield’s past? You might want to check out the Springfield music blog Some Things Can’t Be Ignored!

 

 

60 Year Old Checks and Receipts Uncovered During Deep Clean

During the Black Sheep Deep clean two weeks ago (and ongoing) our team of cutting-edge scientists and paleontologists were working hard to savor any artifacts that could be found among the rubble.  There were old encyclopedias, plenty of bouncy balls, old fliers, plenty of loose change, and even an oven.  The oldest find would probably have had to been these old checks from the years 1952 and 1953.  They come from a time when Black Sheep was a jewelry store and Harry S. Truman was president.