Sometimes, a song comes on the radio, and it takes me back to a time in my life when I heard it frequently. When I was in high school, I loved the tight harmonies and soft melodies of Firefall and Orleans. Both bands entertained the audience on Sunday evening at St. Charles's Arcada Theatre.
Orleans took the stage first. Brothers Larry and Lance Happen co-founded this band in Woodstock, NY, in 1972, along with John Hall and Wells Kelly. Larry and Lance's brother Lane joined the group a few years later, and the membership has shuffled numerous times over the past five decades, including the death of Larry Hoppen. Today, Tony Hooper (guitar), Brady Spencer (drums), and Tom Lane (guitar) join the Happen brothers, who play bass and keyboards.
Orleans launched into their 1975 hit "Dance With Me" in the second song of their set. They drew primarily from their early, but celebrated their move to southern California with a medley of songs by songs recorded by their Elektra labelmates in the 1970s (Jackson Brown's "Somebody's Baby," Joni Mitchell's "Big Yellow Taxi," Linda Ronstadt's "When Will I Be Loved?," Andrew Gold's "Lonely Boy," and The Eagles' "Take It Easy.")
They closed with the upbeat hits "Love Takes Time" and "Still the One" - two of their biggest hits, before surrendering the stage to Firefall.
Like Orleans, Firefall retains only a single member from its original incarnation. In this case, it was guitarist Jock Hartley. And like Orleans, Firefall experienced its greatest success in the 1970s. Hartley declared that there would never be another musical decade like the 70s. Hartley was joined onstage by Sandy Ficca (drums), Steven Weinmeister (guitar), John Bisaha (bass), and Jim Waddell, who played keyboards, flute, and saxophone.
Firefall played the hits from their glory days, including "You Are the Woman," "Strange Way," "Mexico," "Cinderella," and (my personal favorite) "Just Remember I Love You." Their recent albums featured covers of classic rock hits, so tonight they admirably performed their interpretations of The Beatles ("You're Going to Lose That Girl") and The Doobie Brothers ("Long Train Runnin'")
As with Orleans, Firefall band members alternated singing lead vocals.
Highlights of the set included Waddell stepping to the front for sax and flute solos.
Firefall and Orleans are a part of musical history that defined my formative years. Their soft rock and tight harmonies would later be defined as "Yacht Rock." But for me, they are a memory of a simpler time.