Thursday, February 24, 2011

A Much Needed Update

Hello Friends,

Lots to catch up on.

It was great to see such amazing fans at our recent show in Boise, ID. We hadn't performed there in several years and it was awesome to be welcomed back. Often when GFT performs at high school and college jazz festivals, we will spend time working with school groups. We had a great time getting to meet and work with all of the fabulous choirs at Boise State University.

Last Friday was quite a day. It began for me at 6:00 am as my high school jazz choir traveled to Bellevue to perform at the Music Educators Northwest Division Conference. They hit the stage at 8:00 and were done by 9:15. A good time was had by all. Then I spent the rest of the day fighting off a cold just long enough to make it through our gig at Benaroya Hall in Seattle that evening. Peter and Brennan spent the entire day running sound for the All-Northwest jazz choir (of which five of my students were members, thank you very much). In spite of over half us being sick, the gig at Benaroya was a blast. Inviting our friend Randy Taylor to join us for his rendition of James Brown's "I Feel Good" was a real highlight for us. Thanks to all who showed up from far and near (especially those who came back a second time and brought friends or family with them). We appreciate those of you who made a serious trek (some from as far as California) to catch a GFT show. Know that we're working on bringing our show to you, wherever you are. If there is a venue or a festival in your area that you think would be a good fit for GFT, let us know.

Thanks also to Misha Berson at the Seattle Times for this awesome review of our first Benaroya Hall performance.

What's coming up for us? We'll be in Scottsdale, Arizona on March 18th performing at Pinnacle Presbyterian Church. Click here for more info. I'll be honest, now is the time of year  when a couple of days in Arizona is sounding pretty nice. It's snowing everywhere around Seattle as I write this.

And then something else we're really excited about. We will be performing two concerts with the University Of Oregon's On The Rocks in what we hope is the first of many collaborations with the friends we made on The Sing Off. Catch us at the Aladdin Theater in Portland, Oregon on April 2nd (tickets available here) and at Town Hall in Seattle on April 29th (tickets available this Friday, February 25th).

Other than that, we're hitting the studio working on some new tunes and moving forward with our next CD. Thanks to everyone who has chimed in on Facebook and Twitter. Keep it up, we love hearing from you!

Best,
Jeff
GFT

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Road to Benaroya

Hello all!

Now, I’m a little nervous... this is my first blog. So please don’t judge any typos or anything of the sort.

I’m going to tell you just how dedicated I am to all of you, especially to those of you who came to our Benaroya gig on January 14th!!! I’m going to tell you the tale of what it did to me just to get to that gig, and to our New Day Northwest feature the day before. Ready? You’re in for a long ride of laughing at me and my misfortunes. Okay? Here we go.

Just some background info to start: Right now I live in Ellensburg, where I am attending Central Washington University. Ellensburg is a tiny, teensy weensy college town which is over the mountains, and really cold and windy. Very pleasant.

Like all those in GFT who went to CWU before me (My dad, Jeff, Steph, and Brennan), I have to commute to GFT every Tuesday, a two-hour drive. It’s not so bad if the weather is fine.... turn up some music, crank the heat, and make sure you have a coffee before you go, makes a nice two hours! However, the week of our gig, the weather was not feeling too friendly...

Tuesday Night, GFT Rehearsal.... (Dun dun dun, Law & Order sound)

Rehearsal ends, I look outside. Snowing. Awesome. That means driving over the mountains will be immensely stressful, with almost no visibility, giant trucks going 80 mph instead of the suggested 35, and skidding on ice for the whole two-hour drive. So, I fill up my gas tank, grab a giant Red Bull, and start making my way. I’ve been driving for about twenty minutes, pretty edgy, when I see the lights of an ambulance and police cars up ahead. Slowly, I pass by a car that seemingly spun out and crashed into a ditch. Awww. That sucks!

So, I keep driving, hoping I don’t end up like that, but pretty confident that it’s one of those “That will never happen to me” things. Then I pass another ditched car.... and another, and another, until I’ve passed about seven cars in a row that are chillin’ in the ditch. I promptly take the next exit and drive back to Renton (my parent’s house) to spend the night. I decided to attempt this perilous drive the next morning instead.

Wednesday Morning....

Get up, pack my things, set out at 8:45. It’s not too bad.... just really snowy. But I’d take snowy over icy any day, it’s much easier to drive in. I’m about half-way to school when I see one of those big stupid trucks barreling up behind me, probably going about 70 mph? In a 35 MPH ZONE!!!! Ugh. So I don’t know if he doesn’t see me, or what. Maybe he was just messing with me. But he decided not to get over until the last possible second, right about when I thought I was going to die by truck. So I swerve to the right slightly, trying to avoid sudden death. Of course, that was the wrong move.... my right tire got caught in some deeper snow, I spun out, crashed into a huge snow drift, and slammed my face into the steering wheel. Of course, I wouldn’t have hit my face had I been sitting in my normal position, but my seat was much higher and closer to the steering wheel so that I could see out of the non-snowy part of my windshield.

I call my professors for my 12:00 class and my 1:00 class to let them know that I’ll either be late, miss class, or die of cold and be absent for the rest of the quarter. Of course, my first teacher is never in his office, never answers his phone, and doesn’t have a voice mail (he so fondly informed his students). But my choir director, bless him, let me off with a “That’s okay if you’re late, but you’ll have to read the Russian piece in front of class tomorrow”. Seemed like a fair punishment to me, so I was happy with my current situation.

After hanging up the phone, I struggled to dig out the snow from behind and in front of my tires with my hands, to no avail. Then some giant alien-looking contraption pulls up behind me. A snow plow!!!! Yay!!!! He helped me dig, and towed me out of the deep snow drift. I thanked him and went on my way. A little worse for wear, with a huge fatty lip and a blood blister on top of it, but happy that I was on my way again.

I made it to school (the drive had taken me almost four hours), on time for my 12:00 Chamber Choir class. Right when I walk in the door, my blood blister explodes all over my face, making me look like I had been in the Texas Chainsaw Massacre. Naturally, everyone cares and is making a huge fuss about it, to my growing embarrassment. All I wanted was to stop the bleeding and go to choir. So I unsuccessfully tuck my fat lip under my lower one, trying to be inconspicuous. Of course, I stand in the very front row, smack in front of Dr. Weidenaar (my director). So he stops warm up, asks me if I’m okay, and insists that I sit out, the sweet guy that he is. Unfortunately for me, that’s not what I wanted at all.... but, he’s in charge. So I spent the rest of the hour sitting in front of the whole choir, trying to hide my fat lip but still sing.... you can guess how that went.

As soon as that class and Vocal Jazz after it was over, I had to head back over the pass to spend the night at my parent’s house before our New Day Northwest debut. I left at roughly 3:00. And what now? My truck wouldn’t switch out of four wheel drive low, leaving me to go about 25 mph on the freeway, chugging along. I call my dad and let him know what’s going on. Then I search on my GPS for a truck repair shop, hoping they can just get it un-stuck and make it work! I select the closest one, about 17 miles away.

Wednesday Night...

What seems like an hour later: I pull into a clearing in a forest, just off the road. It’s dark,  and it seems like there’s no one here among these sheds and giant trucks. I’m hesitant by my car, wanting to see someone but not wanting to be the dumb chick in a horror film and go looking in the darkness for them. I figure someone will see my headlights and come out.

Sure enough, a sketchy, bearded man in overalls and a truckers cap appears out of the darkness. Not the kind of person a lone girl wants to run into when she’s having car trouble at night. I mean, this guy is freaky. No offense to him. Maybe if he shaved the beard he would look a little more normal. ANYWAYS. He asks me what I’m doing there, and I tell him about my car trouble. He says he only works on big trucks, and I say okay, thanks for your help. Heck, I didn’t care if he could fix it, I just wanted to get out of there. He stands there looking at me without saying anything, so I go back to my car to leave.

Dead. Nothing. No turning over, no lights, no nothing. I’m freaking out a little bit, since the guy is still just standing there looking through my windshield, so I pulled out my phone to call someone.

Dead. Phone is dead because I had spent the night at my parent’s without a phone charger. Awesome.

From all the evidence, I should be dead and stuffed somewhere by now, but it turned out the creepy truck guy was actually nice, and he jumped my car and I went on my way.

Driving home again, my lights shut off. My radio is turning on and off. My car starts rattling and shaking. The battery is literally dying while I am driving on the freeway. Oh wait, not dying - dead. My car is dead. But I’m still rolling, and there’s a downhill exit! I take it, coast down the hill, and partially into a gas station. Awesome. So I charge my phone in the gas station, call my mom, tell her what happened. She calls triple A, and I’m to wait for a tow truck, and ride home with the driver. My mom says I can sleep in the car, the driver won’t talk, she knows I’m exhausted. Etc. So about an hour and a half later, I’m rescued!!!.... by the most conversational stranger I have ever met. But you know what? That random chatty stranger made my day. We talked about tons of things, some that I didn’t care about at all, but I still had a good time.

I get home, 8:00 PM. FIVE HOURS TRYING TO GET HOME!!!! AHHHHH!!!! But at least I’m alive.

Thursday Morning....

New Day Northwest with a fat lip. And also an accompanying bruise that makes me look like I have a mustache. The audience was probably thinking, “Wow, they really do make people look different on TV... that chick is a dude!!!” In answer to the now wondering question in your head, no, I am not a dude. Nor do I have facial hair. It was a bruise. Okay? A bruise. And yes, they do make you look better on TV.

I decided to skip school for the rest of the week and stay put.

Friday Night....

A kick-a** gig for the best dang audience I’ve ever seen!!! That night made my week bearable, even if I had to go through hell to get there.

I love you guys!!!! All who came to the gig, awesome. So glad to see you all there. Anyone who missed their chance, you better hurry up and buy some tickets for February 18th! Don’t miss out!

I’ll write when another series of unfortunate events occurs...

-Amanda

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Getting Ready for January 14th

Hello Friends and Family,

If you haven't heard already, we were able to completely sell out Benaroya Hall for our upcoming January 14th performance. Not trying to toot our own horns or anything (toot toot), but we try to keep you all informed--and maybe toot our own horn a little bit. If you are anything like my own personal friends and family and assumed that you would be able to just waltz in and buy your ticket at the door (looking at you Mom and Dad) and now you're starting to freak out because you live in Seattle and this was the perfect opportunity to see us and you're going to miss it, relax. We've added another performance on February 18th for people just like you. (Yes, I know that that was a run-on sentence, but we're exciting professional reality TV stars baby. Who cares about sentence structure? Not this guy.)

We've been working our collective tails off trying to put together a show that proves to you all how much we've appreciated all the support. It's been a lot of hard work, but it's always totally worth it when we get the chance to perform for you all. We've got a lot of surprises in store, and I, personally, think it's going to be a lot of fun. We're looking forward to seeing you all, and I mean all. If you still haven't gotten your tickets for the February 18th performance (Mom), don't make the same mistake twice. Order your tickets here today. Do it now or don't come complaining to me that you "didn't get a ticket." You were warned.

So our last bit of news for today is pretty exciting for us: we are officially part of the Single Source family. We have an agent (of the booking and not the secret variety)!  Why should you care, you ask? This means we have access to contacts, venues and festivals that we've never had before. So all of you that send us tweets like "I wish you were coming to [insert your city's name here]," you may now actually see us at a venue near you. I know. It's exciting. Calm down please. Is the screaming and crying really that necessary?

We've been blessed to be able to hear from so many of you this past month. I don't think any of us were expecting such an overwhelmingly positive response, and it has really warmed our hearts. Thank you all for making us feel appreciated and loved.

Peter
GFT

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

The Sing-Off: Episode 3


Well, it was a fun ride. We all knew that our trip on the Sing-Off roller coaster had to come to an end; and if we leave the stage having a blast to one of the happiest songs of all time, then so be it!

The Sing-Off was one of the most challenging experiences Groove for Thought has ever faced. We sang our hearts out, took flying leaps out of our comfort zones--and even without that $100,000 recording contract, we made some new fans along the way. Thank you, all you groovers, who have supported us during this process. We've grown musically as well as personally, and we can't wait to show you all the new Groove.

And hey; just because our time is up, that doesn't mean it's all over! Keep showing your support to those guys and girls who are left; because singing is singing, and every single musician on that show is pretty great at it. Tune in on Wednesday at 8 PST / 7 ET, and don't forget about the live finale on Monday, December 20th!

Now that we're back to our usual (slightly improved) selves, we'd love to catch up. Drop in and see us on January 14th at Seattle's Benaroya Hall (tickets are on sale now). We can't wait to see you there!

-Stephanie
GfT

Thursday, December 9, 2010

The Sing-Off: Episode 2

Hello All.

See anything good on TV last night?

We were so excited for this episode to hit the airwaves. To be honest, we were a little worried when "Cooler Than Me" was assigned to us for the "Big Hit" episode as none of us had ever heard the song. How about a hand for Kelly Kunz for turning that dance/pop tune into one of the "coolest" vocal jazz charts I've heard in a long time. Apologies for the Lachey-esque pun. By the way, if you get a chance, check out Ben Folds' blog. He's full of insightful things to say after every episode. I gotta say, it's a huge thrill for me to get critique from Ben Folds. I used to rock out to Ben Folds Five in high school and have been a big fan of his for more than ten years now.

Now, on to the "Guilty Pleasure" tunes. Any Hall and Oates fans out there? #GFTSings

Don't forget to spread the Groove For Thought word to all of your friends and family. We really appreciate the flood of support that's been coming our way. Reading people's comments on our facebook page and Twitter is really awesome.

Stay tuned.

Jeff
GFT

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

The Sing-Off: Episode 1

Hello friends and family.

First off, thanks to everyone for all of your love and support. Facebook and Twitter have been blowing up with words of encouragement, and I can't even begin to explain how much we appreciate every single one of you! Even those of you that didn't shout your GfT love from a mountain (substitute "mountain" for "Facebook" and "shout" with "spelling Groove for Thought in all caps"), we know how you really feel. We got those supportive vibes you were sending.

That being said, I think we learned some valuable lessons during this first episode that we'll be taking with us into episode two:

1.  I should never wear yellow.
2.  We should have utilized our mastery of all things choreography--more.
3.  We do not like being the last to be called "safe."

If you want to hear us really reflect on our performance last week, you can watch this video. (Make sure to watch Brennan specifically. Trust me.) On the off chance that you may have accidentally missed the show last night (and I'm giving you Brennan eyes right now), you can watch the whole thing on hulu right now.

We're one show down and ready for tomorrow night when we'll be singing Mike Posner's "Cooler Than Me." Let us know how you feel about our song assignment! Is there a hit song that you feel would have been better for us?  Let us know on Twitter (make sure to include the #GFTSings hashtag), Facebook, or Myspace. We're looking forward to hearing from you!

Peter
GfT

Friday, November 19, 2010

'The Sing-Off: Harmonies for the Holidays'

I'm going to try to keep this one short and sweet (much like myself). There have been a couple exciting announcements made about the Sing-Off. The Sing-Off. You remember. That little announcement we made last month about us being on a little reality show on FREAKING NBC! For the record, that caps lock was used in excitement and not out of anger.

Digital Journal and SunHerald posted articles about "The Sing-Off" and the upcoming holiday release that is sure to rock your socks: The Sing-Off: Harmonies for the Holidays. (WARNING: Groove for Thought shall not be held responsible for socks that are not rocked due to lack of socks being worn.) "But we already knew you were going to be on 'The Sing-Off' on NBC starting on December 6th 8-10pm E.T., and we also know about the exciting holiday album 'The Sing-Off: Harmonies for the Holidays' being released on November 30th that is sure rock our socks," I hear you saying. What you may or may not know (depending on your link clicking habits) is the official track listing for said holiday album that is... well, you know...

...sure to rock your socks. You can pre-order your copy today from Amazon to ensure that you get your copy before all of your friends. Bragging rights are a big deal people. This is one of those links I would encourage you to click before reading the rest of this blog. Go for it. Its just sitting there. Looking all pretty.

Epic Records has announced that they will be "releasing digital tracks of each group's performance online the day of each episode". That is just as exciting as it sounds. You will be able to purchase your very own copy of each and every GFT performance on The Sing-Off stage. "Whoa! This is too exciting. I'm not sure I can handle any more exciting news" said the overly excitable blog reader. Then you might want to stop reading right now.

Pop Tower has some official pictures from the show. If you just can't wait to get an insider sneak peek at the show (or you were just one of those people that kept clicking on that link in the official NBC release in vain), here is your opportunity. Enjoy.

Did I mention there are videos?  Because... yeah, there are videos.




Peter
GFT