Friday, February 27, 2009

Colin Hay of Australia’s “Men at Work”


CONTACT: Michael Traum
(775) 356-3352
February 25, 2009
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Colin Hay of Australia’s “Men at Work”
Plays One Night at John Ascuaga's Nugget

Reno/Sparks, Nev. – As the singer, guitarist, and main songwriter of Australia's Men at Work, Colin Hay was responsible for penning several of the quirkiest pop hits of the early 1980s. See Hay one night, March 7, in the Celebrity Showroom at John Ascuaga's Nugget.
Although he and his former band will forever be associated with "the land down under," Hay originally hailed from Scotland, where he was born in the town of Kilwinning on June 29, 1953. Hay relocated to Australia in 1967, by which time he had begun playing guitar and singing. Although the country is probably best known for spawning hard rock bands (AC/DC, Rose Tattoo, Radio Birdman, etc.), Hay sought to form a band that was more in line with the burgeoning new wave style, but one that also embraced pop. Shortly after joining up with guitarist Ron Strykert in 1978, Hay's master plan was realized, as Men at Work was formed. Rounding out the band was saxophonist/flutist Greg Ham, bassist John Rees, and drummer Jerry Speiser, who in 1982 issued their debut full-length, Business as Usual. Earning quite a few comparisons to then-reigning chart kings the Police, Men at Work quickly became MTV favorites (during the station's early days). Since he was the group's main singer and songwriter, Hay quickly became the focal point of the band, as such humorous videos for "Who Can It Be Now" and "Down Under" pushed the debut album to the top of the U.S. charts - making Men at Work an overnight sensation. Perhaps sensing that they should strike again while they were still fresh in people's minds, Men at Work went directly back in the studio to work on another album. Issued in 1983, Cargo was another sizeable hit, but did not fare nearly as well as its predecessor - commercially or artistically. Taking an extended break, Hay and company did not resurface again until 1985's Two Hearts, an unfocused recording that saw almost half of the band replaced. With the album's disappointing showing, Men at Work split up shortly thereafter. Hay embarked on a solo career, debuting in 1987 with Looking for Jack (the title of which supposedly referred to a brief encounter Hay had with actor Jack Nicholson), which once more failed to match the success of his early work with Men at Work. Hay continued to release solo material with regularity throughout the '90s, including such titles as 1990's Wayfaring Sons, 1992's Peaks & Valleys, 1994's Topanga, and 1998's Transcendental Highway. The same decade, Hay also launched his own record label, Lazy Eye Records, and sporadically acted in cult movies (which he had began doing the previous decade) and TV shows, including parts on such series as JAG, The Larry Sanders Show, and The Mick Molloy Show, among others. Hay continues to release albums and tour, as the early 21st century saw the release of a pair of recordings - a new studio album in 2001, Going Somewhere, and a collection of re-recorded Men at Work and solo tracks in 2003 (Man at Work). Hay also toured with Ringo Starr in the summer of 2003, as part of the former Beatles drummer's annual All Starr Band. He released Are You Lookin' at Me? in 2007.
Colin Hay plays one night, Saturday, March 7, in the Celebrity Showroom at 8 p.m. Tickets are just $20 and are available by calling (800) 648-1177 or (775) 356-3300 or by visiting janugget.com. Dinner and show packages are available. “Do The Nugget Tonight!”
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Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Behind the Scenes Photos of the CBS Early Show in Sparks, Nevada

Log on to Facebook and become a "fan" of John Ascuaga's Nugget Casino Resort to see exclusive behind-the-scenes photos of the CBS Early Show shoot in Sparks, Nevada, on Monday morning. A family from Sparks was selected as a finalist in a national signing competition conducted by the CBS Early Show. The Nugget was asked to participate. So, we did! We brought a dealer, cards, dice, chips and an antique slot machine to the local neighborhood where the crew set up. The idea was to gives "clues" to the national audience as to where we were. Early Show weatherman Dave Price was good, as usual. It was a cold but fun morning!

Friday, February 13, 2009

Jack Ingram - February 27, 2009, Celebrity Showroom


CONTACT: Michael Traum
(775) 356-3352
February 12, 2009
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Jack Ingram, ACM New Male Vocalist of the Year Plays One Night at John Ascuaga's Nugget

Reno/Sparks, Nev. – A Texas-based modern-day honky tonker, Jack Ingram first carved out a niche for himself in the bars and roadhouses between Dallas and Houston. He stands now as the reigning Academy of Country Music top new male vocalist of the year. See Ingram one night, February 27, in the Celebrity Showroom at John Ascuaga's Nugget.
By the mid-'90s after extensive touring with his Beat Up Ford Band, Ingram had released two well-received independent albums and had opened for artists like Merle Haggard and Mark Chesnutt. The end of 1996 brought about a deal with Warner, which reissued his first two indie albums, and in 1997 issued his major-label debut, Livin' or Dyin'. Moving to Sony's Lucky Dog label in 1999, Ingram released his fifth roots rock album, Hey You. Three years later, he hooked up with Lee Ann Womack's producer, Frank Liddell, for Electric. Young Man, a compilation of recordings of many of his earliest songs, and Live at Gruene Hall: Happy Happy both arrived in 2004. Live Wherever You Are, a live recording featuring two studio singles, was released in 2006 and was his first for Big Machine Records, a label operated by record executive Scott Borchetta and fellow country crooner Toby Keith. “Wherever You Are,” from this debut album, went to #1 on country charts. He also sang the National Anthem at Game 1 of the NBA Finals in ’06. A second release from Big Machine, called This Is It, followed in 2007.
Jack Ingram plays one night, Friday, February 27, in the Celebrity Showroom at 8 p.m. Tickets are just $30 and are available by calling (800) 648-1177 or (775) 356-3300 or by visiting janugget.com. Dinner and show packages are available. “Do The Nugget Tonight!”

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Aaron Tippin - February 21, 2009, Celebrity Showroom

CONTACT: Michael Traum
(775) 356-3352
February 9, 2009
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Country Star Aaron Tippin Plays One Night at John Ascuaga's Nugget

Reno/Sparks, Nev. – A country star able to deliver both honky-tonk anthems and sentimental ballads, Aaron Tippin's hits include “Kiss This,” “There Ain’t Nothing Wrong with the Radio” and “You’ve Got to Stand for Something.” Catch Tippin one night, February 21, in the Celebrity Showroom at John Ascuaga's Nugget.
Tippin was part of the commercial explosion of new traditionalist country in the early '90s, making his name with a mixture of macho, rowdy honky tonkers, sentimental ballads, and patriotic working-man's anthems. He was born in Pensacola, FL, in 1958 and grew up mostly on a family farm near Greer, SC, where he first started singing to pass the time while doing chores. He started playing guitar at age ten but also inherited a love of flying from his father, who'd worked as a pilot prior to becoming a farmer. Tippin himself earned his pilot's license at 15 and began flying professionally before the age of 20. He was studying to become a commercial airline pilot when the industry took a major downturn, which convinced him to return to music. He played the local honky tonk circuit and worked on his songwriting while holding a series of blue-collar day jobs. Later he moved to Nashville and was “discovered” by RCA Records.
Tippin's debut album, You've Got to Stand for Something, was released in 1991; its title cut became a Top Ten smash in the wake of the Persian Gulf War, and Tippin was invited along on Bob Hope's USO tour. His second album, 1992's Read Between the Lines, was a million-selling Top Ten smash, producing three Top Ten singles in "I Wouldn't Have It Any Other Way," "My Blue Angel," and his first number one, "There Ain't Nothing Wrong With the Radio." 1993's The Call of the Wild underlined Tippin's penchant for rabble-rousing anthems like "Honky Tonk Superman," the Top Ten "Working Man's Ph.D.," and the Top 20 title cut. The following year's Lookin' Back at Myself was followed by 1995's Tool Box, which returned him to the top of the singles charts with "That's as Close as I'll Get to Loving You."
In 1998 that Tippin moved to Disney subsidiary Lyric Street Records. He co-produced his label debut, What This Country Needs, which was released later that year and returned him to the Top Ten via the single "For You I Will." The follow-up, 2000s People Like Us, became the first Tippin album to make the country Top Five, thanks to the number one smash "Kiss This," a song co-written by Tippin's wife Thea. The Christmas album A December to Remember followed in 2001, and Tippin returned with Stars & Stripes in 2002. The post-September 11 anthem "Where the Stars and Stripes and the Eagle Fly" was a crossover smash, not only reaching number two on the country charts but also climbing into the pop Top 20. An album of trucking songs, In Overdrive, appeared in 2009.
Aaron Tippin plays one night, Saturday, February 21, in the Celebrity Showroom at 8 p.m. Tickets are just $40 and are available by calling (800) 648-1177 or (775) 356-3300 or by visiting janugget.com. Dinner and show packages are available. “Do The Nugget Tonight!”

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Susan Tedeschi, with guest - February 19, 2009, Celebrity Showroom

CONTACT: Michael Traum
(775) 356-3352
February 6, 2009
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Bluesy Songstress Susan Tedeschi Plays the Celebrity Showroom with James Hunter in Special Thursday Show at John Ascuaga's Nugget

Reno/Sparks, Nev. – A guitarist, singer and songwriter with an expressive-blues sound, Susan Tedeschi has been nominated twice for Grammy awards and has achieved a loyal following with her Lilith Fair appearances and breakthrough album, “Just Won’t Burn.” See Tedeschi, with opener James Hunter, on Thursday, February 19, in the Celebrity Showroom at John Ascuaga’s Nugget.
Tedeschi is part of the new generation of blues musicians looking for ways to keep the form exciting, vital and evolving. Her live shows are by no means straight-ahead urban blues. Instead, she freely mixes classic R&B, blues and her own gospel and blues-flavored original songs into her sets. She's a young, sexy, sassy blues belter with musical sensibilities that belie her years.
Tedeschi began singing when she was four and was active in local choir and theater in Norwell, a southern suburb of Boston. She began singing at 13 with local bands and continued her music studies at Berklee, honing her guitar skills and also joining the Reverence Gospel Ensemble. She started the first incarnation of her blues band upon graduating in 1991. Bonnie Raitt, Janis Joplin and Boston-area singer Toni Lynn Washington were Tedeschi's most important influences; in starting her band, in fact, she used Washington's backing band and hustled up gigs on nights when Washington and her band were not already booked. Since they began performing around Boston's fertile blues scene, Tedeschi and her band developed into a tightly knit, road-ready group, and have played several major blues festivals.
British singer James Hunter's musical style harkens back to the days of classic 50's and early 60's R&B. What's remarkable is that the same timeless quality can exist in music that is being written, performed and recorded today. Hunter's voice is smooth, brilliantly controlled and unapologetic. Through his infectious vocal and guitar performances, clever songwriting and tight horn arrangements, Hunter proves to be a man of impeccable taste who has learned from his influences rather than simply imitating them.
Susan Tedeschi, with James Hunter, plays one night, Thursday, February 19, in the Celebrity Showroom at 8 p.m. Tickets are just $45 and are available by calling (800) 648-1177 or (775) 356-3300 or by visiting janugget.com. Dinner and show packages are available. “Do The Nugget Tonight!”

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Wayne Newton - February 15, 2009, Rose Ballroom


CONTACT: Michael Traum
(775) 356-3352
January 23, 2009
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

'Mr. Las Vegas' Wayne Newton Plays the Rose Ballroom at John Ascuaga's Nugget

Reno/Sparks, Nev. – Legendary the world over, Wayne Newton's performances are as elegant and graceful as his intimately electric personality. "Mr. Las Vegas" returns Valentine’s Day Weekend for one very special night, Sunday, February 15, to the Rose Ballroom at John Ascuaga’s Nugget.
Newton and show business have become synonymous, especially when thinking about the talent-rich history of Las Vegas, where he began five decades ago. He recorded for the 1960s album market and scored several hits during that time, but has become most renowned for his connections to Las Vegas, where he commanded up to $1 million per month at his peak and invested heavily into the city's real estate.
Born in 1942 in Roanoke, Virginia, Newton began singing professionally at the age of six, and formed a rockabilly duo with his brother Jerry after the family moved to Phoenix in the mid-'50s. The pair was featured on a local TV show while still in their pre-teens, and moved to Las Vegas in the early '60s for a five-year engagement (recording as well, for both Capitol and George Records). By 1963, Jerry had dropped out of the act, and Wayne returned to Capitol to begin recording as a solo act, under the tutelage of Bobby Darin. Newton's first three singles charted well, led by 1963's Top 20 hit "Danke Schoen" (a staple of Newton's act for the rest of his life), but the rest of the '60s saw only one upper-reaches chart entry, "Red Roses for a Blue Lady" (the corresponding album was his only Top 20 entry).
The beginning of the '70s saw Newton recording for a new label, Chelsea, and though it provided him with the biggest hit of his life, the number four "Daddy Don't You Walk So Fast," Newton began focusing more and more on his Las Vegas show after his voice began to lower. Remaking his image into a slick Mr. Entertainment instead of the wide-eyed innocent of his "Danke Schoen" days, Newton became the king of Las Vegas by the 1980s; he won the Entertainer of the Year award more than any other performer, played more than 30,000 shows, set a record as the highest-paid nightclub performer in history, bought the Aladdin casino, and managed enough spare time to win an international award for his most active hobby, the breeding of Arabian stallions. Newton has also been cameo-featured in several films, including The Adventures of Ford Fairlane and Vegas Vacation.
Wayne Newton performs Valentine’s Day Weekend - Sunday, February 15, in the Rose Ballroom at 8 p.m. Tickets are just $49 and $55 and are available by calling (800) 648-1177 or (775) 356-3300 or by visiting janugget.com. Dinner and show packages are available. “Do The Nugget Tonight!”

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Todd Snider - February 13-14, 2009, Celebrity Showroom


CONTACT: Michael Traum
(775) 356-3352
January 23, 2009
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Todd Snider, with his band the Nervous Wrecks, Returns to John Ascuaga’s Nugget

Reno/Sparks, Nev. – Iconoclastic hero of alternative country, Americana, college radio and modern folk, Todd Snider returns on February 13-14, to the Celebrity Showroom at John Ascuaga’s Nugget. He’ll be joined on stage with his band, the Nervous Wrecks.
If you’ve never heard of Todd Snider, then That Was Me: Todd Snider 1994-1998, released August 30, 2005, is an introduction. If you’re already a fan, then his first compilation, following seven critically acclaimed albums, is a tribute to his wry, honest, brutal and yet funny body of work. Featuring 17 tracks culled from his first three albums, plus a previously unreleased cover of Jimmy Buffett’s “Margaritaville,“ That Was Me was created with Snider’s full participation and includes his own liner notes and detailed song-ography.
Snider’s influences are the likes of Randy Newman, Bob Dylan and Neil Young. Born in Portland, OR, he moved to Santa Rosa, CA, after high school and learned to play the harmonica. His brother, living in Austin, TX, figured Todd might find a job in a band there, so he sent him a plane ticket. After seeing Jerry Jeff play in a local bar, Snider indeed decided that was what he wanted to do with his life.
During a mid-‘80s stint in Memphis, where he established residency at the Daily Planet club, he was discovered by Keith Sykes, a member of Jimmy Buffett’s Coral Reefer Band. John Prine then hired Snider as an assistant and eventually had him open shows. When Buffett heard Snider’s demos, he signed him to his MCA imprint Margaritaville Records. His debut album, 1994’s Songs For The Daily Planet, starred “Talking Seattle Grunge Rock Blues” as well as “Alright Guy,” “Trouble,” “You Think You Know Somebody,” “Easy Money” and “That Was Me.”
For 1996’s Step Right Up, Snider and his band, the Nervous Wrecks, continued blending bluegrass, blues, folk-rock and country-rock to forge their own distinctive sound. That Was Me reprises its “Enough,” “Hey Hey,” “Moon Dawg’s Tavern,” “Horseshoe Lake,” “Tension,” “Better Than Ever Blues (Part Two),” “Late Last Night” and “Side Show Blues.” 1998’s Viva Satellite contributes “Can’t Complain,” “Guaranteed” and “Doublewide Blues.”
Snider has since issued four albums on Prine’s indie Oh Boy Records, including 2004’s East Nashville Skyline. His latest studio album, The Devil You Know, was released in August of 2006. It marked Snider's return to a major label, as he is now recording for Universal Records. The Devil You Know was named to several critics' year-end "best" lists, including a No. 33 ranking in Rolling Stone magazine's top 50 albums of 2006. Snider's new album, Peace Queer, was released on October 14, 2008. Peace Queer reached #1 on the Americana Airplay Chart on October 27, 2008.
Todd Snider performs Friday and Saturday, February 13-14, in the Celebrity Showroom at 8 p.m. Tickets are just $32 and are available by calling (800) 648-1177 or (775) 356-3300 or by visiting janugget.com. Dinner and show packages are available. “Do The Nugget Tonight!”

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