Loading Events

« All Events

  • This event has passed.

Icons of Soul – Luke McMaster in Concert

March 15, 2020 @ 6:30 pm - 11:30 pm

$30

Experience an intimate evening & a taste of Motown in Humboldt with blue-eyed soul recording artist Luke McMaster as he brings his “Icons of Soul” concert tour to Humboldt on Sunday, March 15. Doors, cocktails, and appetizers (courtesy of HUMBOLDT SOBEY’S) at 6:30; showtime 7:15.

See the promo video here: https://vimeo.com/297558157

Tickets are $30 per person and can be purchased:
– online at http://2020humboldticonsofsould.eventbrite.ca/ (print at home; online service fee applies)
– by calling or texting Brian at 306-231-8284 (you pick up in Humboldt or he can deliver in Humboldt)

RESERVED SEATING – Eventbrite purchasers will be e-mailed about choosing their seats. VIEW THE SEATING CHART IN THE COMMENTS on the Facebook Event Page.

ALSO AVAILABLE – TABLES OF SIX, SEVEN, OR EIGHT ($27.50/seat)

Licensed event (wine, beer, hard liquor).

Huge thanks to Humboldt Sobeys for providing the hors d’oeuvres throughout the evening and to 107.5 Bolt FM for their promotional support!

Luke’s website: https://www.lukemcmaster.com/

Check these out:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KYK76ZhUYY4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xhok6IV81Mo
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yUUdSTyscoQ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UvM_e1JLUkE

ABOUT THE SHOW:

With ICONS OF SOUL, Luke McMaster has taken his Motown influenced style to a new level. Icons of Soul in concert is the ultimate, authentic musical experience of contemporary blue-eyed soul. A collection of brand-new tunes, created in collaboration with original hit makers, Felix Cavaliere of the Rascals (Groovin’, Good Lovin’) and Lamont Dozier (Stop! In the Name of Love, Baby Love). These songs are so much fun, you’ll feel like you’ve known them all your life. Plus, you’ll be treated to fresh covers of early Motown hits and previously untold stories behind the songs.

Luke McMaster is best known for “Good Morning, Beautiful,” his 2013 Top 3 Billboard AC smash hit with new age pianist, Jim Brickman and his impressive Canadian gold album run as a duo with Rob James in McMaster & James, (“Thank You,” “Love Wins Everytime,”) with media often referring to them as the “Canadian Hall & Oates.”

LUKE McMASTER BIO:

Icons of Soul, Luke McMaster’s ambitious new project, offers a
refreshing twist. For not only is Brandon, Manitoba-born purveyor of contemporary blue-eyed soul paying tribute to classic R&B songwriting legends on his upcoming fourth album: he’s recruiting them. “I’m collaborating with legends like Lamont Dozier and Felix Cavaliere on some new originals,” says McMaster, the Toronto based singer, songwriter and producer. “And what’s especially cool about this project is that they’re still hungry: as much as I’m learning from these masters who wrote unforgettable hits that have formed the soulful soundtrack of my life, they’re equally excited to work with me and my songwriting partner Arun Chaturvedi to write something fresh.”

Aside from covering some of the classic immortal chart-toppers
written by Rascals founder Cavaliere (“Good Lovin’,” “Groovin’,”
“People Got to Be Free”) and Motown sensation Dozier of
Holland/Dozier/Holland (“(Love Is Like A) Heat Wave,” “I Can’t Help
Myself (Sugar Pie, Honey Bunch),” “You Can’t Hurry Love”) – both
members of the Rock ‘N Roll and Songwriter Halls of Fame –
McMaster co-wrote two songs apiece with the prodigies at their
respective Nashville and Las Vegas homes, capturing the occasions
on camera for a corresponding Icons of Soul TV documentary series. “Lamont told me this great story about his inspiration for ‘I Can’t Help Myself,’” McMaster recalls. “It turns out his grandmother owned a beauty shop and his grandfather would be hitting on all the
ladies, saying things like, ‘Hello, Sugar Pie;’ ‘How you doin’, Honey
Bunch?’ When Brian and Eddie Holland asked him for some ideas for the song, he remembered his grandfather’s flirting and the rest is
history. “Stories like Lamont’s that I can now tell my audiences enable me to entertain them even more and offer them a unique and authentic perspective whenever I perform.”

Soul and R&B are no strangers to Luke McMaster, even during his
Brandon formative years. “In my small town, many of my friends were into hockey and metal like Iron Maiden, but I was always the one who sang pop music with an emphasis on Motown and soul,” McMaster explains. “I had a natural inclination to sing in that style and I loved it all – the falsetto, the major keys and the strong melodies – it just resonated with me.”

That proclivity continued in the late ‘90s and early ‘00s, when he
relocated to Winnipeg and enjoyed his impressive Canadian gold
album run as a duo with Rob James in McMaster & James, (“Thank
You,” “Love Wins Everytime,”) with media often referring to them as
the “Canadian Hall & Oates.”

When he turned solo in 2002 and launched a more focused
songwriting career and placing songs on multi-platinum and gold
albums by Rihanna, Nick Lachey, Nick Carter and Kalan Porter (7
million sales and counting), he also recorded a succession of EPs and albums (2008’s Time EP, 2013’s All Roads, 2014’s Heart of Soul and 2016’s Trending) that contained both originals and sensual
interpretations of such favourites as Stevie Wonder’s “Signed,
Sealed, Delivered (I’m Yours),” Roberta Flack’s “Feel Like Makin’
Love” and the Bee Gees “How Can You Mend a Broken Heart.”
Which brings us full circle to Icons of Soul, inspired in part by
publishing giant Leeds Levy, president of Leeds Music, a director of
ASCAP and a former president of Chrysalis Music Group and MCA
Music Publishing (Elton John, Elvis Presley, OutKast) who planted
the initial seed of the idea following a chance meeting with
McMaster in Los Angeles.

Levy made the calls that hooked McMaster up with Cavaliere and
Dozier, and is playing a prominent role in hooking the Icons of Soul
principal up with some other hopefuls on his wish list: Philly-based
soul architect Thom Bell and blue-eyed soul progenitor Daryl Hall;
prolific Brill building pop Barry Mann & Cynthia Weil and – fingers
crossed – Motown mainstays Smokey Robinson and Stevie Wonder.
McMaster himself says he wants to include two or three more guests before unveiling Icons of Soul to the public later in 2018, a work that will cast an eye to yesterday while focusing on the sounds of tomorrow. ‘This is what I love to do,” notes Luke McMaster. “And since I’m a constant student, I’m applying these lessons that you can’t learn from a book towards perfecting my own skills as a writer.
“This is something uniquely special that I want to take to another
level for those that love R&B, soul and Motown music – and give
them an experience they will never forget.”

Details

Date:
March 15, 2020
Time:
6:30 pm - 11:30 pm
Cost:
$30
Website:
https://www.facebook.com/events/641722973319423/

Organizer

Arts Humboldt
Phone
306-231-8284
Email
treasurer@artshumboldt.com
View Organizer Website

Venue

Jubilee Hall
619 17 Street
Humboldt, SK S0K 2A0 Canada
+ Google Map