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Feeling
romantic? Well, why not. It is February. And if you want the feeling to last
once the blush of Valentine’s Day is over we have just the thing for you. Piano
soloist Steve LaManna released his fifth album, Lady Fair in November and the CD
accomplishes two things – it brings the sound of Cape May into your living room
as well as the feeling of romance all in one listening.
LaManna is virtually a Cape May institution. He came to the island
nearly 20 years ago. We talked to him via the phone just recently and he told us
how it all got started.
“When I decided I wanted to do piano solo, I went out and got
business cards made with the intention of passing them around to anyone who
looked like they might want a pianist for their restaurant. My first stop was
the Virginia Hotel.”
His business card depicted a keyboard with a knife and fork over it which
read; “Music
for
hungry lovers, light and digestible.”
The new owners had just completed a major renovation of the circa
1879 hotel/restaurant. The Virginia Hotel and the Ebbitt Room opened in the
summer of 1989 with a pianist, but when Steve walked into the hotel in the
winter of 1990, the desk clerk showed Steve’s business card to the hotel owner
who was so impressed with it that he asked Steve to play a bit. He played for
two hours and was hired for the Wednesday night spot starting in February. Then
he was put on Fridays for the Happy Hour crowd, and by the summer of 1992 he was
the sole soloist entertaining hotel guests and diners for the 5-start restaurant
for the next 17 years.
“The manager [of hotel],” said Steve, “asked me to establish a
following. I set my heart to the task and to develop a repertoire to accommodate
that venue. I knew I needed a huge repertoire.”
Steve’s goal was to be able to play 24 hours of “solid” music. No,
he didn’t play 24 hours a day; he wanted to be able to play non-stop, without a
break and without repeating a single tune.
“It was sort of an adventure,” he said of the initial experience.
“Someone would say, ‘Hey, do you know?’ and I’d say, ‘No, can you tell me who
wrote it, or who sang it?’ Then I’d go home and learn the song and play it
the
next week.”
It wasn’t very long before he accomplished his goal. The body of
work which has evolved is enough to fill five CDs, with the promise of another
one – Lady Fair II – in the near future. Steve and Lila, his recording engineer,
are also planning an album of Leonard Cohen music.
But we wondered how the concept of Lady Fair came to be?
“Actually, my wife Lila and I were talking about the next
recording, [It has been ten years since Ivory Moon was released] and she sort of
jokingly suggested calling it Lady Fair because I have so many ladies who like
to hear me play, and I have a large repertoire of songs with the word lady in
them.”
Case in point: Lay, lady, lay; Winter Lady; Lady; Lady Jane – well,
you get the idea.
Steve had so many “Lady” songs ready for recording that Lila said,
“You have to stop.” And stop they did at 13.
Lady Fair also marks the first time the couple recorded at their
South Dennis
home. Steve said they used to rent studio time in Philadelphia, but the
recording of his second album; Measure Softness Measured Light, done in Ireland
amidst a quiet, bucolic background, made them start to consider their home as an
ambience more suited to the nature of Steve’s music. Their home also comes
with the added bonus of Steve’s having his beloved Steinway B at his finger
tips.
Steve’s most ardent fan, Lila couldn’t resist getting on the phone.
“I’ve been listening to this interview and this man is just too
modest,” she said. Steve has so many stories about playing at the Virginia Hotel
that he’s thinking about compiling them.”
Tales from the Piano, maybe?
“He has such a devoted following,” she goes on to say. “And he, in
turn, is equally devoted. Did you know he never took a break while playing? He’d
play straight through.
Steve
tell her the story about Michael Laird’s dog.”
It seems the late Mr. Laird, founder of Cape May Stage, now the
Robert Shackelton Playhouse, went on vacation and left his devoted Cairn
terrier, Buddy with Angel to puppy sit. Angel brought Buddy into the hotel to
hear Steve play one night and sat behind the piano with him on he lap. Steve
turned away from the piano and to say hello to Buddy and the adorable pup bit
Steve on the nose. Without a moment of hesitation, Steve turned back to the
piano and stated playing, blood running down his nose.
“And you know,” he says of the incident, “your fingers have muscle
memory so they kept playing and I kept saying to myself; ‘What if the bleeding
doesn’t stop? What if I have to go to the hospital?' ” All this we imagine to
the tune of what? Lara’s Theme?
One of his ladies’ fair came to his rescue and ran for a towel and
some ice and eventually the bleeding did stop.
The next night when Steve arrived at work there was a vase of
flowers on the piano and little note which read:
I’m really sorry about my behavior last night. Signed Buddy
So, it’s just not the ladies that fall into line when Steve sits
down to the piano.
You can purchase Lady Fair on Steve’s website at
http://stevelamanna.com. Or, if you are a local or visiting Cape May stop in
at The Whales Tale on the Washington Street Mall, Tommy’s Folly in Congress
Hall, or Mariah’s on Jackson Street and pick up a copy. |