Rock this town
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Mike Sciacca
They packed the joint Sunday at Taco Surf -- the young and
not-so-young, and nearly every age in between.
All had come to the restaurant and bar in Surfside to have a good
time and enjoy the food and surf sounds on this cool and crisp late
winter afternoon.
And while the age range of the crowd wasn’t a factor in the
dancing and singing that overtook the small building on the beach
side of Pacific Coast Highway, a Mid Life Crisis was taking place
center stage.
It was quite the happening, too.
Mid Life Crisis,a Huntington Beach-based band consisting of four
men between the ages of 47 and 52, rocked Taco Surf. Sunday’s
performance was the band’s final show of a busy 2002 schedule.
The foursome, who banded together in 1998, have played local
restaurants and bars in Huntington Beach and such well-known
establishments as The Coach House in San Juan Capistrano, Studio Cafe
in Newport Beach and Belmont Station and The Upper Circle in Long
Beach.
The group has opened for the likes of The Little River Band and a
band consisting of members from The Doobie Brothers and The Marshall
Tucker Band.
The group was asked to open for the ‘60s group Eric Burden and the
Animals on New Year’s Eve at The Coach House, but declined because of
the short notice and because it had recently performed there in
mid-December.
They did not want to stage the same show twice, said the band’s
mainstay, Bram van Steenbergen.
Van Steenbergen, a professional drummer who left his native
Holland in 1985 and settled in Huntington Beach, plays bass guitar,
lead surf guitar and vocals. The band also includes Eric Matheson on
guitar and vocals, Kenny Gale on guitar and Blair James on drums.
The band, which encourages audience participation, revels in the
revelers who come to listen and watch them play.
“The secret is that we love what we do and are serious about it,”
said van Steenbergen, who began playing the drums in 1963 and took
lessons from famous Dutch drummer John Engels Sr., a guest drummer
with Duke Ellington’s big band. “We are having so much fun and we
never tire of it. We involve the audience and literally take them
back on a musical trip in time. We range from harmony songs to a surf
set and a little dance show.”
Playing classic songs from the ‘60s and early ‘70s, Mid Life
Crisis seems to gain fans wherever they play.
They began playing at The Longboard Restaurant and Bar in
Huntington Beach in 1998, a favorite restaurant of van Steenbergen’s.
The band headlined Saturday nights on the restaurant patio for two
years. Their reputation for putting on a good show packed the place,
said Dave Lautner, principal owner of The Longboard.
“They were very popular, especially with our clientele,” said
Lautner, who was on hand for the band’s performance Sunday at Taco
Surf. “Our patio was packed to capacity. Their music appealed to
everybody.”
Just last week, the band had its first appearance at Perqs on Main
Street, where they played for a packed house.
The band will perform again at Taco Surf on Jan. 3, and is
scheduled to play for the first time at The Huntington Beach Brewery
on Jan. 25.
As is customary at each of its shows, the band concluded Sunday’s
set with The Doobie Brothers’ hit song, “Listen to the Music.”
“It’s our signature ending to our performances,” van Steenbergen
said. “The people who come out to see us are just great. They bring
their kids and they really seem to enjoy our shows.
“The older people love it because it takes them back on a trip to
their childhood; the younger kids love it, too, because they finally
hear live the music their parents have talked about. For a bunch of
middle-aged men, we’re having a blast.”
* MIKE SCIACCA covers sports and features. Reach him at
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