A Saskatchewan musician is seeing a swell of support two provinces west in Vernon.
Jack Semple, a bluesy-rock guitarist raised on B.B. King, is being brought to the Okanagan for a Thursday, June 9 show at 1516 Pub and Grill.
鈥淵ou need to go watch this guy; he is in class of his own when it comes to music,鈥 said Russell Haubrich, a long-time Vernon and Silver Star resident who is originally from Saskatchewan and is known for his own guitar talents. 鈥淵ou have to see it to believe it.鈥
Haubrich is just one local fan, joined by the Dah鈥檚, who own several local restaurants and are eager to support the musician and rock the lake.
鈥淢e and my Uncle Russ saw Jack play six or seven years ago in Armstrong. My husband, who loves live music, insisted we go because he saw him play in Regina 30 years ago. We are like, 鈥榳ait, what?鈥 But we went, and it was amazing,鈥 said Katie Dahl, owner of 1516 Pub and Grill. 鈥淣ow look at this, he is playing live at our newest location, 1516 Pub!鈥
Semple admits he was not a fan of playing the electric guitar early in his career. In his teens, he had studied classical and flamenco styles. He only reluctantly picked up an electric later on and it was strictly for practical reasons.
鈥淲hen I first heard B.B. King, even as a young kid, I thought 鈥榃ow, this guy is speaking a language,鈥欌 he says. 鈥淚 wanted to learn that language. I got into electric guitar and then I got into playing in a lot of country bands. In the late 鈥70s and early 鈥80s, all the gigs in my area were country gigs. You could play six nights a week, endlessly. Those days are gone, but back when I was in my 20s, I would get on the road and play six nights a week for months and months and months. That鈥檚 a great way to learn your chops.鈥
Semple serves up a healthy mix of music that springs from the blues and its various cousin genres. That includes 2018鈥檚 Can鈥檛 Stop This Love, which featured everything from the soulful R&B of the title track to the funky leanings of Dance of the Undivided, acoustic folk of Walkin鈥, and charging blues-rock of Workin鈥 Overtime.
鈥淚 love instrumental guitar music, particularly solo,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 use a pick. I have a classical-flamenco right-hand technique. I play the bass line and the melody at the same time and lots of open-tuning stuff. A lot of that music is really inspired by where I live. I grew up on the Prairies right next to the Qu鈥橝ppelle Valley, which is a very beautiful, fertile area in Saskatchewan. It鈥檚 where I spent my boyhood. I go out there with my guitar and recollect the good old days and strum away and write music that way.鈥
Semple has been a travelling musician ever since those early years playing six nights a week at local honky-tonks. Inspired by the 1980s blues revival, and particularly the work of Texas master Stevie Ray Vaughan, Semple began dedicating more time to blues in his mid to late 20s. He eventually moved to Toronto where he played in the progressive R&B band The Lincolns for a few years. But it wasn鈥檛 long before he moved back to his hometown and began spreading his talents to soundtrack work in TV and film. The 1990s were a fertile period for the artist. The solo work won acclaim and also earned him a Juno Award and two Western Canadian Music Awards. He earned two Gemini Award nominations for his soundtrack work.
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