He’s taught that lovin’ feelin’
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Alex Coolman
When Bill Medley was first making a name for himself as one of The
Righteous Brothers, he proved that music had a power to surprise people,
shaking up their expectations about what was normal and acceptable. In
his case, that meant singing rhythm and blues tunes in a style that, at
first, seemed too “black” for white radio.
More than three decades later, it’s Medley’s daughter who is a budding
player, and Medley’s learning all over again about the power of music to
take people in unexpected directions.
The 59-year-old Newport Beach crooner and his offspring, 34-year-old
Darrin and 12-year-old daughter McKenna, will perform Wednesday at the
Balboa Pavilion in a benefit for the Ensign Fund of the Newport Harbor
Educational Foundation.
As concert-goers will get a chance to see, the younger Medleys share
their father’s enthusiasm for performing, but their act is no more
predictable than Bill’s was back in the ‘60s.
McKenna, a seventh-grader at Ensign Intermediate School, has a beautiful
voice, Bill says, but she’s more interested in “alternative” rock than
the kind of soulful crooning Bill is known for. To her ears, the best
sounds today come from Limp Bizkit, the hammering rock/rap crossover
darlings of alternative radio, rather than the composers like Barry Mann
and Carole King who were behind The Righteous Brothers’ hits.
Bill says he has urged McKenna to take up an instrument to complement her
vocal talent.
“She’s starting to play the drums, and it’s really not what I had in
mind,” he joked.
The drumming enthusiasm is one shared by Darrin, who played all through
his youth and still occasionally lays down a few beats, though he has
pursued a career as a businessman rather than as a musician.
Bill said the threesome will perform a variety of material at Wednesday’s
show, including some tunes from Bonnie Raitt, Bryan Adams and The Everly
Brothers. Bill will do a few numbers from his solo career, and McKenna
will sit in for one song with the local teenage rock band Disturbing The
Peace.
Funds from the program will be used to enhance educational opportunities
for Ensign’s students. A small percentage of the proceeds also will
benefit the school’s music department.
Supporting Ensign is a priority for Bill not only because his daughter
attends the school, but also because he got his musical start in similar
organizations.
“When I was young, I was in all the junior high choirs,” he said.
The smooth tone Bill developed as a choir singer took a turn toward the
soulful side when he began to collaborate with Bobby Hatfield in 1961.
The Righteous Brothers’ initial success, Bill said, had a lot to do with
the fact that radio disc jockeys assumed, based on the vocal quality of
their music, they were black artists.
When The Righteous Brothers would go to meet with radio station
officials, they were frequently greeted with wide eyes and sudden
coolness from people who used to be fans: the disc jockeys for black
stations didn’t want to play music by a pair of white guys, and the disc
jockeys for white stations hadn’t got used to the gritty Righteous
Brothers sound.
“We were like Limp Bizkit in our day,” Bill said, only half joking. “We
kind of opened up a lot of doors for other white acts and for white
stations to play other black acts.”
In the wake of The Righteous Brothers’ twin mega-hits “You’ve Lost That
Lovin Feelin” and “Unchained Melody,” the racial borders for R&B; artists
became considerably more flexible, he said.
These days, Bill and Hatfield, also a Newport Beach resident, take their
act on the road as Righteous Brothers for a few months out of the year,
and each has his own solo career.
Bill, who lives on the Balboa Peninsula with his wife and daughter, says
he spends a lot of his nonperforming time “playing a little golf with the
guys at the Peninsula Point Racquet Club” and trying to take it easy.
“I’m on the road so much that when I do get home, my first priority is to
spend time with my family,” he said.
The singer finds it difficult to feel completely at ease when he’s not
traveling, simply because he’s continually looking forward to the next
gig.
“When you come home off the road, you find yourself trying to rest up to
go back out,” Bill said. “Half the time is trying to get your sanity
back, and half the time is enjoying yourself.”
Newport Beach is therapeutic for the performer for its low key vibe,
which Bill says is an antidote to the hype of the music business.
“[On tour] you have to be a like a politician. You have to be pleasant,”
he said. But around Newport “you can let your guard down. ... Around
here, I’m just Bill. I’m not even Bill the singer. And it’s terrific.”
But if Bill is aware of the music industry’s foibles, that’s not to say
that he’s lost his affection for it. He speaks with confidence of
McKenna’s prospects as a developing performer.
“It’s kind of McKenna’s world,” he said. “And if anybody had a future in
the industry it would probably be McKenna.”
* WHO: Righteous Brother Bill Medley with McKenna and Darrin Medley
* WHAT: Benefit concert for the Ensign fund
* WHERE: Balboa Pavilion, 400 Main St., Balboa
* WHEN: 7:30 p.m. Wednesday
* HOW MUCH: General seating $50, VIP seating $100
* PHONE: (949) 675-1187
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