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Justin & Camilla Panariello
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I’m a professional bass player.
Email [email protected] for inquiries!
I’m humbled to have had some really cool musical experiences including
– Writing and producing for Earth, Wind & Fire (2013 Sony release ‘Now Then & Forever’)
– Playing ‘Not Fade Away’ on stage with Bob Weir (of Grateful Dead) and Lukas Nelson (Promise of the Real)
– Playing with legendary drummer Gregg Bissonette (of Ringo Starr’s All Starr Band, David Lee Roth)
– Playing with Santana percussionist Karl Perazzo
– Opening for incredible artists including The Chainsmokers, Robin Thicke, G-Eazy, The Wailers, Snoop Dogg, Warren G, Tony Bennett, Dickey Betts (Allman Brothers), Kevin Hart (actor/comedian), Flo Rida, Daughtry
– Playing for International Pop artists Shadmehr Aghili (Persian Pop), Smiley (Romanian Pop)
– Playing ‘Knocking On Heaven’s Door’ on stage with PGA Legend John Daly
– Playing incredible events including PGA Masters, Phoenix Open, Farmers Insurance Open, NCAA Final Four Lacrosse, TELUS Ski & Snowboarding Festival, US Snow Boarding Open, WheelsUp SuperBowl50 PreGame Party, WheelsUp SuperBowl52 PreGame Party, WheelsUp SuperBowl53 PreGame Party
– Playing shows for companies including Facebook, RedBull, Oakley, DW Drums, Harley Davidson, Bose Corp, Northrup Grumman, Dunkin Donuts, Allstate, The Jimmy Fund, Make-A-Wish Foundation, The Boston Red Sox
– Playing incredible venues including TD Garden (Home of Boston Celtics & Boston Bruins), Lincoln Financial Field (Home of Philadelphia Eagles), Microsoft Theater (LA), Planet Hollywood LIVE (Las Vegas), The Music Center at Strathmore (MD), SMU McFarlin Auditorium (Dallas), Verizon Theater at Grand Prairie (Dallas), EPCOR Center for the Performing Arts (Calgary), Chan Centre for the Performing Arts (Vancouver), Theatre St Denis (Montreal), Tweeter Center (MA), LiveWire (Scottsdale)
– Played over 3000 live shows and counting….
REACTION! RUSH NEIL PEART 2015 Deep Tracks INTERVIEW PART 3
Neil Peart Reaction
Rush Reaction
source
Wow. I never knew Neil made the pre show mix tapes. I always assumed someone else affiliated with the show made those.
Renaissance man in the noblest sense. My friend met Neil when he (Neil) took his sad sabbatical and essentially took off on his motorcycle , (after the death of his daughter). Go figure, my friend had no idea who Neil was and Neil approached him because my friend was reading a book by Tom Robbins (kind of an iconic, postmodern satirist). Love that he conveys the reminiscent experience surrounding various songs. This is one element that I have tried to present to various reactors but it's really impossible. How does one convey what it was like to cruise Van Nuys Blvd. "lit up like a firefly to feel the living night," (Subdivisions) in a killer muscle car while "belles filles" heighten hopes for memorable encounters! Glad you did this reaction
Yeah I like looking back over my old tour books of Permanent Waves, Moving Pictures, Signals etc! Neil writes the forward to each of those and they are very informative and entertaining in addition to the list of equipment gear!
We met under our previous terms….I like that line! Basically the do’s/don’t of asking questions!!!
…and Dominick you win because Losing It was indeed played on the R40 tour with Ben Mink in Toronto and actor Peter Dinklage’s brother on other tour dates! I was lucky enough to see the final show in LA! Tears in my eyes!
…and Dominick you win because Losing It was indeed played on the R40 tour with Ben Mink in Toronto and actor Peter Dinklage’s brother on other tour dates! I was lucky enough to see the final show in LA! Tears in my eyes!
But ALAS CINDERELLA MAN DIDNT MAKE IT TO BOTH MINE AND JUSTIN’S CHAGRIN😎😎😎😜😜😜😝😝😝
Yep little known fact: Neil made the mix tapes that we the audience walked into starting with the Hemispheres tour in 78!
Yeah he made the pre show song list and that’s how I discovered Porcupine Tree! One tour he had several PT songs on the playlist. ❤
I have read one of Neil's books Far and Away and it was really interesting. Back in the 70's my friends and I would do road trips. We drove down to San Francisco one summer from Manitoba, Canada and on our back we decided to take a "shortcut" . I can't remember what state we were in but we got lost. In doing so we ended up on a gravel road and the gravel was pink. I had never seen gravel that colour before and the fields were full of golden wheat. The contrast of the colors was really cool. We ended up at a farmhouse and got directions to the main highway. It wasn't a shortcut but I got to see something I hadn't seen before.
That was cool
In his books, Peart referred to the Walmart parking lots at which his bus would park for everyone to sleep as the "Château Walmart."
Never ever apologize for parentjng. It’s our most important job.
I knew Neil did the pre-show mix tapes – that was one of the benefits of getting to the venue nice and early whenever possible. It's interesting how open-ended he was about the future at this point given he and Alex both had physical difficulties playing on R40. You couldn't really tell from how well they played though.
He’s 100% right about motorcycle senses, as he calls them. One might also label it intuition. And it does carry over to car driving as well, especially if one drives a performance car. To be clear, my performance cars have been an old Camaro with a transplanted pickup truck motor and shift kit, followed by a JCW Mini suped up after I bought out the lease, and most recently a BMW 440i with turbocharged inline 6. By contrast, Peart drove six figure super cars, but I think the insight’s transferable nonetheless.
It’s also worth noting that Peart rode the BMW R1100GS, which had no faring (i.e. the fibreglass that typically covers the front and first half of a bike. It was meant for Motorsport, including off-road. And Neil really gravitated towards trails through the mountains, not even just logging roads. By contrast, I used to ride a BMW K1200GT, which was both faster and better for long distance touring. The big difference between the bikes would have been suspension, tires, and the fact that my bike had a full faring. So, for riders like me, the stats showing that interstate travel would safest would remain true.
Sadly, as an older father of a primary school kid, I’m stuck with an SUV for the foreseeable future…
PS – I agree with you about avoiding superhighways when time permits. I also make it a habit of walking for at least a couple of hours a day around the cities I visit. I only finally tried one of those rental scooters on my last trip to DC. Fun, but no helmet seems unnecessarily dangerous and, of course, no calories burned either.
Here's a road hazard you may not have experienced, inch thick sheets of ice coming off the roofs of tractor-trailers. Fun.
Sorry Neil , but classical music is never " sober " .
They didn’t pay for the windshield? Jesus. “Sorry, dude, sucks for you.”
Neil said in the books about motorcycling and traveling, it’s not a matter of if, it’s a matter of when, something happens.
Never say I’m sorry when you have to do the “daddy” thing! We will always understand and he comes before us, always!! I had a tire come bouncing out the back of a truck on the mixmaster in downtown Dallas one time! I thought it was going to bounce straight thru my windshield, but it hit in front of me and went right over the roof of my car!! From what I could tell, it didn’t take out anyone behind me, but all I could think of was how we could have all had a big wreck!! Be well and God bless… from Texas!!
Vinyl. Nothing sounds better than Vinyl played on a good system. I was lucky enough about 7 years ago when a woman I worked with was moving and throwing all her stuff out. She gave me a set of speakers from a company called Snell Acoustics out of Massachusetts. . They were like $1500 back in the 80’s when she bought them so I guess were considered higher end. Something about that being frequency matched or something like that. No clue. But they sound AMAZING. Warm, clear and really separates the instruments to give a great soundstage.
I’ve been building my Rush Vinyl collection since then. Trying to find earlier prints when I visit record stores but happy to buy new presses when I can’t find older ones. Even found the remix version of Vapor Trail recently.
Anyone who is a real music fan, I encourage them to get into vinyl.
Always loved his interviews I have all of his books great reads!
Scranton?
Best drive I've ever took was cabo San Lucas to la paz along the sea of cortez in an open top jeep 4×4 that you needed to make the drive.
Great reaction! I can relate to a couple things. First, Neil’s comment about music bringing you back to a certain memory. I tried to convey those in my comments from time to time. Second, subbing is how I started being a “professional“ musician. My Canadian cousin’s neighbor had a drummer, who got mad and punched a brick wall. Breaking his hand. He suggested me and I auditioned. I’ve never played in a band before this. I also didn’t know any of the songs. I was hired and he said we have a gig this weekend. I had to learn 45 songs in a week. I can only imagine how difficult it has been for you to learn 80 songs as a bass player in three days. 🤯. Also, I can’t stand when you have to follow somebody and they speed. What a bunch of jerks!
As a Dutch guy I travelled to New York to see them in Madison Square Garden in 2015 (r40 tour). So happy I did that
Holy crap! Flying wheelbarrows! Mom had one come at her off an oncoming truck did $7,000 in damage to her car but she was ok. I rode motorcycle only for a short time before discovering it wasn't for me. You need a different kind of brain than I have.
The most damage I get here is from deer. And rocks that come off trucks in front of you or trailers hauling excavating equipment or stones grabbed by tires and flung into the air – chipped, racked or broken windshields…
LOL about "total dicks", yeah I had that with a few trips too from up north to down here…
Road stories are always interesting. It gives us more history of you that we don't see easily in other ways. 🙂