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About Us:

Panman Dave, Rudy Bowen, and Mike Delcioppo are still together - having met in New York City's Central Park in 1968. Panman Dave and Rudy now perform in the Las Vegas and California areas accompanied by Mike Delcioppo on state-of-the-art backing tracks. Formed in 1968, in NYC, the Sound Of Central Park currently serves Las Vegas, Nevada and the Southern California regions. Take 1 Brooklyn American Steel Drummer, mix in a genuine Trinidadian percussionist, and combine it with modern backing technology, and you get the sound of an eight piece ensemble. We are available as a single or duet. Whether it is traditional calypso, soca, reggae, rock, latin, standards, disco, or jazz, we've got you covered! Steel Drums manufactured by world-renowned steel drum pioneer, Ellie Mannette and his disciples - the one-of-a-kind pattern of notes results in a truly unique sound. Major Appearances ? 2005 Eli Mannette Festival Of Steel - Morgantown WV ? Caribbean Summerfest 2003 San Fransicso ? Take A Giant Step ? National TV NBC ? The Merv Griffin Show ? National TV Fox ? Dave Marash Reporting ? WCBS TV ? Who Is Harry Kellerman ? Motion Picture Starring Dustin Hoffman ? Citicorp Building NYC ? Grand Opening ? Alexanders and Ohbach?s Department Stores ? Fashion Shows ? Bud Freedman?s ? The Improv Comedy Club ? Concerts at Columbia University and Bennington College Read about their early days below. A particularly infectious calypso rhythm gathers a crowd in Central Park. The drifting, airy melodies from a single set of steel drums are punctuated by an accompanying conga, timbale drums, and pedal cymbal. The crowd is enthusiastic, devoted. Listeners stand in a perfect half-moon circle around the five instrumentalists and wait for the music to make a sudden, uninhibited dancer out of one of them When it happens, the sounds pull an on-looker into the circle, the music swells. The clattering and hiss of the cymbal rise. The conga and timbale players hammer a little harder and the steel melody reaches a more dynamic harmony. The musicians grin and cry out to the dancers who, in turn, may respond shamelessly. Others will join from the crowd which grows in number and ardor; clapping, whistling. On and on, with only brief pauses between tunes, the band plays until nearly dusk. The band is The Sound Of Central Park. The five men perform Saturday and Sunday afternoons under a majestic oak tree on the side of a hill overlooking the southwest side of the Conservatory Pond. Among the dozens of itinerant acts that dot the park and vie for an audience, The Sound Of Central Park has acquired unusual prominence. This season, they have been featured in television news reports, offered jobs playing at private parties and even approached by a professional music producer. All of this attention hardly startles the band whose members say they are used to it. To many, the band is regarded as one of the park?s permanent fixtures. One person in a position to know is park security officer Lou Romano. He helps keep track of the variety of musicians, mimes, jugglers, comedians, magicians, and other unlicensed acts in the park. According to Romano, The Sound Of Central Park is one of the few that returns week after week, season after season. Band members count as many as ten seasons. They have returned this year after a two-year hiatus. Before that, however, they played from the late 1960?s, throughout the 1970?s. The group has weathered a variety of personnel and name changes, common to many musical ensembles. But the group?s character has remained the same, and the band has found it?s way into television ads, guest appearances on talk shows, and even into the background of a nationally distributed film. ?I don?t remember the name of the band?, said Fred Caruso who helped recruit The Sound Of Central Park in 1970 for sequences shot in the film Who is Harry Kellerman. Shots of Dustin Hoffman walking through the park included the band playing in the background. ?We went out and got the best band performing in the city at that time,? said Caruso. Part Of New York ?We just became part of the New York scene,? said steel drummer Panman Dave. As one of the original members of the band, Panman Dave performed in the park since he was a teenager. ?We?ve been part of New York for a long time and some of the people who come to watch us have seen me grow up. We must have entertained millions and millions over the years.? he added. Current band members include Panman Dave, Wellington Murray, who plays timbale drums and calls himself Lord Wellington; Rudolph Bowen, who plays the cymbals; conga player Ralph Wakefield, and Michael ?Angelo? Delcioppo, cymbals. While others joined the band during the early and mid-Seventies, Panman Dave and Murray formed The Sound?s original core. They met when Panman Dave was barely a high school student and Murray was playing washtub bass in another steel bank [The Upper Edge]. Panman Dave remembers walking through the park with his father, one afternoon, hearing the band for the first time and becoming captivated with the steel drums. After following the band from spot to spot in the park each weekend, sometimes carrying the big metal bowls and occasionally playing a cowbell during a number, Panman Dave was given a small steel drum by his father. He taught himself a modest repertoire and in 1969, when Wellington?s steel drummer [Victor Brady went on to cut a record deal with Polydor Records and released the album ?Brown Rain?. Victor subsequently released a classical album called ?Classical Soul? and later appeared in Las Vegas with Charo, on PBS?s Sesame Street, wrote a book about the steel drum, and performed and lectured at the Smithsonian Institute] quit, 14 year old Panman Dave stepped in. It was lucrative work, according to Murray. He, Panman Dave, and the variety of percussionists who accompanied them, made their livelihoods in a Pied Piper fashion. Out of the performances grew offers for other work. They regularly worked private parties. In addition, they provided music at fashion shows and local store openings, high school dances and college concerts. In July, 1979, they appeared on the Merv Griffin show. Between shots in the limelight, they continued to return to Central Park, where they promoted themselves and collected steady income. The band members? faces are a curious contrast to their music. They include two West Indian natives: Rudolph Bowen, a native of Trinidad, where the [steel drum] music was born just after World War II, and Murray, a native of the Bahamas. Wakefield is black, and Panman Dave and Delcioppo are white. It?s a profile that Panmnan Dave says help to set them apart. Already this season, television crews have filmed The Sound Of Central Park for broadcasts and, according to WCBS TV News, Channel 2 reporter Dave Marish will film a feature on the band later this month. But the band?s warmest reception comes from the people in the park. On a recent Saturday, Claudio Azevedo shed his shirt and danced all afternoon to the music. As the band packed it drums, the 33 year-old Brazilian native waxed poetic about The Sound Of Central Park. ?You feel nature in your body,? he said in slightly broken English. ?The music makes such a good vibe. You can feel it in your body. You feel like dancing.? Just moments earlier, Azevedo could hardly hold onto his bicycle beside him as he pranced, twisted and shook to the beat. In front of him, Panman Dave, wearing a Yankees t-shirt, stood before the steel drums furiously dabbing at the dimpled insides with his mallets, like a painter gone wild. Beside Panman Dave, conga player Wakefield sat, a large figure filling out the yellow t-shirt that is inscribed in black letters with the name of the band. Angelo Delcioppo, in heavy aviator glasses, and Bowen, his grey flecked hair in pigtails ? an Afro version of Willie Nelson ? hardly watch their stampeding hands. Murray passed the hat with the experience of a one-man medicine showman. He reaches out for dancers. His arms outstretched, a grin on his face, he pleads with a few hesitant girls and moves on with no luck. Soon he finds one who is less cautious. She steps out bare-footed and Murray crackles with delight, she raises her arms and spins under the oak limbs. She comes face to face with a tall man who suddenly jumps in and takes over for Murray. The two move barely inches apart.

About Us:

If you are looking for the ultimate entertainment to be the life of your club or special event, then a live performance with the band Loveshack is just what you've been waiting for! Introducing the premiere nostalgia band of Las Vegas, the 70's and 80's extravaganza that's guaranteed to be the life of the party. This captivating revue sets the ambiance by taking the stage in full wardrobe, with each member dressing to impersonate your favorite Rock, Pop and New Wave bands from the 80's. The band has multiple costumes including Devo, Billy Idol, Stray Cats, Flea, Martin Gore from Depeche Mode, Madonna, George Michael, Prince, Blondie, Kate Pearson from the B-52's, Terri Nunn from Berlin, Adam Ant, and Humpty Hump from the Digital. Loveshack performs all of the hits from the 80's, and our song list is constantly increasing. Located in the entertainment capital of the world, Loveshack carries the proud reputation of being the first known 80's tribute group in the country. The band also takes great pride in being voted "Best of Las Vegas" in the Las Vegas Review Journal reader's poll for 1997, 1998, and 1999, "Best Band" in the Las Vegas City Life 2000 reader's poll, and "Favorite Band" in the What's On 2001 reader's poll. Loveshack is a six-member group that was created in 1995, and since that time it has earned a superior reputation among fans spread all over the country. The band focuses on high-energy sets with audience participation, and takes pride in their musicianship and their ability to recreate hit songs exactly the way you remember them. The band currently performs regularly on Fridays and Saturdays at the Texas Station Hotel in Las Vegas, where they have been performing for over five years. Loveshack has years of experience with large special events and conventions, covering everything from class reunion parties to packed 18,000 seat arenas. They have played regularly in premiere Las Vegas nightclubs such as Seven, the Palms, Club Madrid, The Drink, Club Rio, The Beach, The Harley Davidson Cafe', and clubs in Scottsdale, Phoenix, Tucson, San Diego, and Los Angeles. Loveshack has also performed special appearances at the Bellagio, the Venetian, the Aladdin, the MGM, the Hard Rock Hotel, the New York New York Hotel, the Motown Cafe, the Monte Carlo, Mandalay Bay, Caesar's Palace, the Mirage, Treasure Island, the Hilton, the Desert Inn, Palace Station, Sunset Station and at the Fremont Street Experience.

About Us:

Brian Evans is a headliner in Las Vegas. He in considered by many to be the next great crooner in the style of Sinatra.