European tour
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Claudia Figueroa
As a rock ‘n’ roll guitarist, Jesse Ballard has traveled far on his
talent. Last month, for instance, he toured the club circuit in Poland
and Czechoslovakia, where the crowds not only knew his name but the
lyrics to his songs too.
“Jesse is very popular all over Europe,” said Hans Hartmann, a record
executive in Berlin. “When Jesse and his band go on tour, their CDs sell
by the hundreds each night.”
That’s not surprising considering Ballard--who was born and grew up in
Corona del Mar--spent almost 20 years playing his brand of hard-knocking
blues and rock music across Europe, primarily in Berlin.
Ballard’s backup group, The Paradise Island Band, features Joe Kucera on
saxophone, Nick Jones on bass and Tommy Goldschmidt on percussion.
Together, they’ve built a loyal fan base in cities throughout Europe and
recorded several albums for Ordung and Hartmann, a Berlin-based recording
company.
Hartmann said the band’s first album, “Livin’ Like Fire,” sold out within
weeks of being released. The band’s second album, “Return to Paradise”
did the same.
In his senior year at Corona del Mar High School, Ballard, who now lives
in Santa Barbara, won an award as outstanding male vocalist. But friends
close to Ballard say he was just like any other normal teenager in the
mid-1960s: He liked surfing and he loved playing his guitar.
Schoolmate Bob Patterson, who played with Ballard in the bands The Del
Mars and The Newport Breeds, said his pal was always passionate about his
music.
“When Jesse went to Europe he discovered he could play in the clubs and
make enough money to support his travels. After he played in Berlin for a
few years, he woke up one morning and realized his band was a major part
of the club scene,” said Patterson, who visited Ballard regularly in
Germany throughout the 1970s and ‘80s.
Interestingly, Ballard said, for a short while he, like Jimi Hendrix,
bought into the idea that he would have to leave the states to get
recognition.
“European audiences aren’t as jaded as American audiences are. They’re
more open to different kinds of music,” Ballard said. “Another difference
between audiences in the U.S. and Europe is that American audiences don’t
stop to listen to bands play music. If they didn’t pay to hear it, then
why bother? But in Europe, it’s the opposite.”
The self-taught guitarist said writing music is his life. And he’s also
written a few dozen songs since he picked up the guitar at age 12. His
early influences came from listening to music his mother liked, including
Harry Belafonte, Ray Charles and Frank Sinatra.
Jesse’s mother, Jackie Ballard, is his No. 1 fan.
“His music isn’t hard rock, it’s rock ‘n’ roll,’ said the 74-year-old
Costa Mesa resident. “He’s not Mick Jagger, but he’s up there.
“Apparently people want to hear him play. He has the kind of charisma
people respond to, but I appreciate the poet in him,” she said.
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