Overachievers in overalls

Big Smith plays authentic and intellectual hillbilly music … No, really.

By Shea Stewart
Sync Weekly

The Springfield, Mo.-based band Big Smith is familiar to metro music fans. They’re those five family members — either brothers or cousins — and one non-relative who play “hillbilly” music. (Certainly not bluegrass. At least not in the traditional sense of the genre. There are no drums in “real” bluegrass.)

They are a familiar sight because they play a Little Rock club two to three times a year, packing fans in and shaking them on down with their high-spirited hillbilly music.

The band — brothers Mark (guitar) and Jody Bilyeu (mandolin), and Rik Thomas (ukulele, mandolin and banjo) and Bill Thomas (upright bass), and cousin Jay Williamson (washboard and trap set) along with Molly Healey (fiddle and cello) — mix a little old-time mountain, gospel, rock ‘n’ roll, country and blues in their powder keg and set it on fire. The resulting musical explosion is raucous acoustic music, a hillbilly hoedown as craggy as the Ozarks but still quite charming due to the group’s harmonies, with each member singing. It’s music that is joyous and unconstrained. Authentic, but highly literary and slightly academic, but not in a boring, stuffy way. It’s just … intellectual hillbilly music. Most of the members of Big Smith either are academics (Jody Bilyeu has a doctor of English) or come from an academic background. And the band’s lyrics can be poetic. Tunes such as “John Elvis” could stand alone as a short story, with its tale of the dead man writing “a fair line when his wits were around.”

So yeah, it’s hillbilly music. It possesses all the rugged passion of the mountains it escapes from, and it’s as quick-witted as it is quickly moving, with an added dose of Ozarks mojo.

But the band’s music is not bluegrass music. It’s an entirely different creature.

“We used to allow people to think we were a bluegrass band so we could get hired at bluegrass festivals,” said a laughing Jody Bilyeu. “And occasionally a bluegrass festival still likes our stuff, and knows what it is. But we have percussion, and we don’t write about driving mules and living in the Blue Mountains of Kentucky because we didn’t do any of that. We don’t have the repertoire and we don’t sort of have the bluegrass attitude, and we certainly … well, not certainly but it’s close — don’t have the bluegrass instrumentation. We got percussion.

“We’re not a bluegrass band so the hillbilly label was sort of available as a term that applied to the music we make and the region so it was sort of easy. In terms of radio genre, I’m sure you could stick us anywhere from Americana to singer/songwriter or wherever.”

Whatever label it’s saddled with, the music of Big Smith has discovered a fanbase. Formed in the fall of 1996, the band grew out of Mark Bilyeu’s weekly gig as a solo performer, and Big Smith has slowly branched out from its Springfield base, touring as far as the West Coast and Europe, and transforming into a Midwest or Midsouth institution (depending on what region the Missouri Ozarks belong to).

“Mark started as a solo act playing hillbilly music, which was crazy at the time because no one was doing that, and he just started adding [members],” Jody Bilyeu said. “They had run out of instruments by the time I’d joined which is why I’m playing mandolin.

“The way our family works is we had a mandolin lying around the house so that’s how that happened.”

But what the band hasn’t done a lot of is recording its sound in the studio. Beyond the 1998 self-titled debut, the 2000 release Big Rock and their newest, Roots, Shoots, and Wings, the band only has two other albums, both live; Gig and Live at Lonestar (a gospel set paying tribute to Big Smith’s musical roots). Ten years passed between Big Rock and last year’s Roots, Shoots, and Wings. (The band did record the two-disc children’s album Hay to Zzzzzz: Hillbilly Songs for Kids in the interim.)

That’s slowly changing, though. With the addition of Bill Thomas in 2007 and Healey in 2008, Big Smith has become a “full-time” band, touring usually Thursdays through Sundays, which affords members time with their families. And the band is finishing up a follow-up to Roots, Shoots, and Wings.

“We’re on the verge of having a new, studio CD,” Jody Bilyeu said. “All the tracking and stuff is done. We’re just at the mastering stage, and we’re pretty excited about it.”

No release date has been offered, and the band hasn’t “set a deadline or anything like that,” Jody Bilyeu said.

“We’re just making sure everything is done, and we’re happy with it,” he said. “That’s our schedule.

“We had the doldrums … not producing an adult CD for a long time, and we sort of did some things to address that and get the creative juices flowing again. We’re ready to hit the ground running and keep the creative output up.”

SEE THE SHOW:
Saturday’s Bringing Back the Ballroom benefit at the Dreamland Ballroom in downtown Little Rock is headlined by Big Smith. Doors open at 7 p.m. with the music at 7:30 p.m. with opener Johnson’s Crossroad, an Asheville, N.C., band that plays self-described “Appalachian soul,” a collection of bluegrass, old country and Appalachian old time. Big Smith takes the stage at 9 p.m. Following the two bands there will be an Old School Soul Dance Party with Seth Baldy. Tickets are $10 in advance and $14 day of show.

Dreamland Ballroom: 1930s Love Affair

From – Arkansas Free Press
Written by Tracy Crain
Mar 16, 2011 at 07:45 PM

“You will fall in love with it,” Kerry McCoy, owner of Arkansas Flag and Banner, says lightheartedly. “The Dreamland Ballroom is the smallest performing theatre on the Chitlin Circuit. The heyday for this type of event was back in the 30s, with performers like Bebe King, Jordan, and Red Fox. The list is incredible.”

She continued, “You come out to Dreamland and you are going to find it exactly like it was in the 1930s. We have not done one thing to destroy its character.”

If seeing is believing, a good chance to find out more about the Dreamland Ballroom is this weekend, March 19, during the “Bringing Back the Ballroom” Concert and Dance Party, Big Smith & Johnson’s Crossroad Event.

“It’s a great place to come if you like good music, a great atmosphere, and cool people,” McCoy said. “I first fell in love with the Taborian Hall from its outside appearance, a stately, three story, red brick building, standing alone on I-630, abandoned, with a huge hole in the roof, letting in the sun and rain. I always envisioned, my company, Arkansas Flag and Banner, housed in a building of such grandeur.”

The FlagandBanner.com headquarters and storefront now reside in the same building as the historic Taborian Hall and Dreamland Ballroom, which has since been placed on the National Register of Historic Places by the United States Department of the Interior and Arkansas Historic Preservation Society.

Doors for the “Bringing Back the Ballroom” Concert open at 7p.m.. Show starts at 7:30p.m. Tickets are available at the door or can be purchased online at http://www.dreamlandballroom.com/

Located at 800 West Ninth Street in the historic district of Little Rock, individuals can get additional information by phoning (501) 255-5700.

In the Ballroom – The Calendar is Filling up Fast!

Now that we have a solid foundation (New Floor) the calendar is filling up with great events. There is something for everyone.

If you have an event you would like to have in the Dreamland ballroom give Amber Jones, our Executive Director a call at 501-255-5700 or email friends@dreamlandballroom.org.

UPCOMING EVENTS! –

Sandwiching In History Tour by Arkansas Historic Preservation Program
Friday, February 18th, Noon
Bring your Lunch!

101 Runners Mardi Gras Indian Funk Band Party
Saturday, February 26 · 7:00pm – 11:00pm
In the Ballroom!
Buy Tickets Now!

“Bringing Back The Ballroom”
Concert and Dance Party
Big Smith and Johnson’s Crossroad
Saturday March 19th 2011
Doors at 7:00pm Show at 7:30pm
Tickets: $10.00 presale, $14.00 day of show
Buy Tickets Now!

Runaway Planet
Saturday March 26th 2011
Doors open at 2pm Show 3-5pm
All ages, $5 Cover
Tickets sold at the door!

Nat Baldwin Music and Multimedia Event
Tuesday, April 19th
All ages, $5 Cover
Doors open at 6pm
Tickets sold at the door!

A musical taste of New Orleans in Little Rock

FROM: SYNC Weekly

101 Runners play Mardi Gras celebration at Dreamland.

By Shea Stewart
“We’re going to bring a little New Orleans up your way.”

This is how Chris “BTO” Jones begins the interview. The percussionist — more specifically conga player — for 101 Runners is speaking via telephone from the Crescent City. His statement is not a boast. Just fact.

At the time of the call, Fat Tuesday is still three weeks off, and Jones is tying up loose ends. The 101 Runners are leaving the city shortly for a touring jaunt before returning to New Orleans and the maddening carnival season leading up to March 8: the actual Mardi Gras day. But Jones is “trying to get it all together” because he knows he’ll return to New Orleans “smack dab in the middle of Mardi Gras,” he says.

“What you don’t get done now you pretty much put off until after Mardi Gras.”

101 Runners is a band that sounds like it’s been around for ages but in reality was only formed in early 2006. It’s a mix of sounds: Heavy on the titanic punch of New Orleans funk but combined with mesmeric Mardi Gras Indian chants. It’s a group of musicians led by Mardi Gras Indian Big Chief Monk Boudreaux, a former member of the Wild Magnolias tribe.

“I’ve known Monk forever,” Jones says. “He’s kind of a one-shot guy that does a lot of other stuff with a lot of other people. … But he’s never had a steady band to work with. He’s been with us since day one. He’s been fully committed to helping us out. He’s like a thousand-year-old man who’s younger than anyone else.

“He’s like a shaman. The man’s really a spiritual leader in a lot of ways.”

Beyond Boudreaux, the group also includes such New Orleans music luminaries as Lionel Batiste Jr. (the original drummer for the Dirty Dozen Brass Band) and AJ Mallory of the Rebirth Brass Band.

Jones calls 101 Runners’ music “Mardi Gras Indian funk.”

“That’s enough for people to hear it in New Orleans and understand what it is, and enough for people from out of town to hear and wonder what the hell are we talking about,” he says.

The band’s tunes are Indian classics such as “Injuns Here Dey Come” and “Let’s Go Get ‘Em,” Boudreaux signatures such as “Shotgun Joe” and “Shallow Water,” and other New Orleans traditional tunes. The music possesses a spiritual rhythm to it, sounds moving the soul and feet. Jones says 101 Runners’ music is “chant-and-response music with funk undercurrents.” “Dance-and-trance folk” and “really groove oriented.”

“We take a song, and we bring it full term. A lot of the Indian songs are very linear. You can really get the hypnotic effect of the music if you hold on to it for 10 or 15 minutes.”

101 Runners’ current stretch of dates is three late-February dates in Arkansas before two weekend-before-Fat-Tuesday dates, including a Friday before Mardi Gras day date at the legendary Maple Leaf. (Technically, one of the shows is a Thursday night show, but the weekend starts on Thursday in New Orleans, if it ever ends.)

A return to Maple Leaf is a true visit back home for 101 Runners. The fabled, Oak Street music venue in the Carrollton neighborhood of Uptown New Orleans was where the 101 Runners started. The band first played Maple Leaf in January 2006.

The club owner wanted Jones to form a band to play the Krewe of Oak ball at Maple Leaf for the neighborhood New Orleans Mardi Gras krewe. Jones, who had returned to New Orleans in 2005 following Hurricane Katrina, agreed, but he wanted a little more. He wanted the band’s first gig to be for Twelfth Night before playing the ball.

“I wanted them to realize it was more than just a one-off gig,” he says.

Naming the group the 101 Runners after the unaffiliated Indians who form an ad hoc group for Mardi Gras celebrations, the group played that first gig. Then things exploded.

“I didn’t realize what I was doing at the time as far as putting a band together; I was just putting a band together for a party,” he says. “What I did was put together the best band I could.

“It was only by the second show where I looked around and said, ‘Geez, how did this happen? I just put together a band.’ By that time it was a 14-piece band. How the hell did I put together this band? I suckered myself into it without even knowing it. It’s like I played a trick on myself.”

The band played the 2006 New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, and Jones and the rest of the Runners knew they had stumbled onto something special.

“We played Jazz Fest, and it was really combustible,” Jones says. “The music was really hot right from the beginning. It was really amazing.”

Five years gone, 101 Runners is a fixture of the New Orleans music scene. And in the past few months, the band has slowly started to branch out. A European tour was undertaken in 2010, and now the band is playing Arkansas for the first time.

“I think five years later we are starting to realize what we did was what we were supposed to do at the time,” Jones says. “We realized that this was born from the storm in a strange way. It is uniquely different than what was going on beforehand. It kind of happened by accident.”

SEE THE SHOW:

Arkansas Convention & Events Marketing presents a Mardi Gras Celebration with the music of 101 Runners at the Dreamland Ballroom on Saturday with the show starting at 7 p.m. Tickets are $35 with $5 from every ticket going to the Friends of Dreamland. Costume attire is encouraged — but not required — with the most decorated contest winner receiving a 101 Runners gift assortment and an opportunity to dance onstage.

The Big Cats – Saturday, January 22nd @ 3pm

big2.jpg

The Big Cats
Saturday, January 22 at 3pm
In the Ballroom, $5 Cover
800 W 9th St, Little Rock, AR

“When the Big Cats make rock and roll, they cut one hell of a figure.” – Dry Ink

The new year is upon us and what better way to kick it off than a brand new floor!

The new floor is down and it looks great. A special thanks to Cone construction for all their hard work in getting it done.

With the new floor comes new opportunities to hold events in the actual Ballroom and we have our first one planned for next Saturday! The Big Cats (Guitarist from Green Day) will be playing a short set Saturday, January 22 at 3pm. This intimate show (with and awesome band!) is what we are calling a soft launch and will give us and some of the local promoters an idea of what we can do in the Ballroom.

So… WE NEED YOUR HELP!

Come out next Saturday afternoon and hear some great live music and help us with our “practice run” in the ballroom!

Sync Weekly Photo

Amber Jones (Executive Director) and Ryk St. Vincent (Board Member) were pictured in Sync Weekly while attending a reception at the Mosaic Templars for the end of the “Fine Art of Jazz” exhibit.

Dreamland on Arkansas Ties Website

January 20, 2011

Here’s your invitation to see Dreamland Ballroom this Saturday! Local band, The Big Cats, will be performing LIVE at DREAMLAND this Saturday, January 22, at 3pm, $5 cover, all ages show. Take the opportunity to invite your friends, family, anyone, to see historic Dreamland Ballroom, the new floor and hear a great band performing on our stage – we’ll add their names to a long list of Dreamland performers that include Cab Calloway, Duke Ellington, Count Basie, Louis Armstrong, Redd Foxx, Sammy Davis, Louis Jordan, Ray Charles…join us as we celebrate nearly a century of performing arts at Dreamland.

Dreamland Ballroom is located on the top floor of Taborian Hall, 800 West Ninth Street, home of Arkansas Flag and Banner. 501-375-7633

http://www.arkansasties.com/WhatsNew/2011/01/the-big-cats-live-at-dreamland/

Saturday To-Do: The Big Cats

As seen on – ROCK CANDY, The Arkansas Entertainment Blog (Arkansas Times)

THE BIG CATS
3 p.m., Dreamland Ballroom. $5

You’ve gotta hand it to The Big Cats. Not many old punks keep their guitars strapped on long enough through their adulthood to get a chance to turn their all-ages shows — a staple of punk ethos that’s usually aimed at giving underage teens a place at concerts — into a big, handmade “welcome” sign for families with small children (i.e. their friends).

Another reason to give it up for The Big Cats: They’re simply one of the greatest bands ever to spring out of the local musical fountain. During last summer’s Arkansas Music Poll, they cracked the top 10 list dedicated to local acts; they’re all-but-unanimously beloved throughout town. Their last album, “On Tomorrow,” is as beloved a release as any to come out of Pulaski County in recent memory and a defining moment of our local sound. Now, the Cats are in the studio, working on their follow-up album, and offering Little Rock a number of rare shows, an uncharacteristic move for the band whose live appearances have been scarce for years. We’re not complaining. And we’re certainly not complaining about this one: a family-friendly matinee at the rustic Dreamland Ballroom at Arkansas Flag & Banner Co. We look for any excuse to check out the Dreamland ruins. And we take any chance we can to check out The Big Cats. Which makes this show a no-brainer.

Original Article is HERE

The Governor’s Mansion Host Dancing into Dreamland Gala this Thursday

Monday, November 15, 2010
The governor’s mansion will host Dancing into Dreamland, a Gala Event Dance Contest presented by the Stella Boyle Smith Trust, November 18, from 6-9pm, tickets $75, followed by the After Party at the Capital Hotel Ballroom, 9 pm – 12 am, and tickets are $40. Proceeds from this event will go to the music education and cultural outreach programs of the Dreamland Ballroom.

The event will be emceed by Lawrence Hamilton with special guest Mercedes Ellington. The event, Dancing into Dreamland, is a dance contest of 8 dance teams, listed below, performing all styles of dance.

Dance Dynamics Junior Duo – Ashton Jones and Marina Redlich
Ms. Karen’s Dance Studio – Sterling Warren, Kennedy Sample, Raygan Sylvester, Hannah Bakalekos
David Carter and Melissa Napier
Beyond Ballroom – Wesley Crocker and Lawrie Rash
Roger McCoy and Kay Ford
Sankofa Performing Arts Dance Theater – Angela Burt, Gena Harless, Clarice Kinchen, America Jones

Kerry McCoy, founder of Friends of Dreamland Ballroom said, “It is somewhat of a mix between ‘Dancing with the Stars’ and ‘So you think you can dance?’” The Grand Prize is a trip for four to New Orleans.

There will be a silent auction, food, cocktails, text voting, open dancing, and a performance by Lawrence Hamilton and Mercedes Ellington. Dress is party attire’

The following companies are sponsors of this Event – Stella Boyle Smith Trust, Capital Hotel, Robbi Davis Agency, Oxford American Magazine, MainStream Technologies, and Ken Rash Casual Furniture.

For more information and to purchase tickets to the event visit www.dreamlandballroom.org and click on events.

Amber Jones
Executive Director
Friends of Dreamland
www.dreamlandballroom.org
amber@dreamlandballroom.org
501-607-0954 cell

A DREAMY NIGHT Dance teams step up Competitors, celebrity judges aid Friends of Dreamland Ballroom

From Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Sunday, November 28, 2010

By Cary Jenkins

LITTLE ROCK — Eight dance teams twirled, shimmied, leapt and spun their way across the dance floor Nov. 18 at Dancing Into Dreamland at the Governor’s Mansion.

The fundraiser for Friends of the Dreamland Ballroom featured a dance competition, celebrity judges and audience participation with guests texting their vote for a favorite dance team.

Amber Jones, the nonprofit’s executive director, explained that Dancing Into Dreamland was an evening about sharing the universal language of music and dance just as it was celebrated almost a century ago in the Dreamland Ballroom.

The program began with Lawrence Hamilton serenading his friend Mercedes Ellington, who was one of the judges. The pair have worked together on Broadway.

Ellington is the granddaughter of Duke Ellington, one of many stars who performed at the Dreamland Ballroom in the 1930s. A graduate of the Juilliard School of music, Mercedes Ellington was a June Taylor Dancer and the first black woman on The Jackie Gleason Show. She serves on the Tony awards nominating committee.

Other celebrity guests were David Miller, who has a weekly big band radio program Swingin’ Down the Lane, which is broadcast on more than 40 national public radio stations including KUAR; Leslie Harper, a former professional dancer and singer at Opryland and musical director for the Summer Musical Theater Intensive at theArkansas Repertory Theatre; and Arkansas native Steve Buckley, who was vice president of artist and repertoire at Motown and served as a talent judge on Star Search.

When votes were tabulated, dancers Allison Stodola Wilson and Jonathan Bostick won for their disco dancing routine. Wesley Crocker and Lawrie Rash received the people’s choice award.

The Friends of Dreamland Ballroom focuses on sharing the musical, cultural and architectural history of the Dreamland Ballroom and historic Taborian Hall on West Ninth Street. The building was constructed in 1918 by a black fraternal organization, the Knights and Daughters of Tabor, in what was then a thriving black business district, according to the group’s website.

This article was published November 28, 2010 at 4:29 a.m.
High Profile, Pages 46 on 11/28/2010

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The Dreamland Ballroom

Historic preservation is rarely quick or easy.

Just ask Little Rock’s Kerry McCoy. She fell in love with Taborian Hall in 1991. Bill Clinton wasn’t even the president yet.

Almost two decades later, she’s still trying to restore the old place.

Here’s how she describes it at the website www.dreamlandballroom.com: “I first fell in love with Taborian Hall from its outside appearance, a stately, three-story, red brick building, standing alone on Interstate 630, abandoned, with a huge hole in the roof letting in the sun and rain. I always envisioned my company, Arkansas Flag & Banner, housed in a building of such grandeur.

“After driving by many times, I finally got up the courage to come inside. Stepping over debris and skirting the homeless people, I worked my way to the third floor and … it was beyond love at first sight. Because the roof was missing, birds were flying around and the sun was illuminating the room. Staring across the open hole in the floor to the Dreamland stage and box seats, I had a feeling that was indescribable, a kind of euphoria. It could have been because I was pregnant with my third child and my nesting instincts were heightened, but whatever it was, it sent me on a chain reaction that I have never regretted.

“I love this old building and have had many offers from people wanting to purchase it, renovate it, make a club of it or some apartments and even a school. But I keep to my original vision. Maybe it’s not the best business decision, but it’s a decision of the heart — to renovate the Dreamland Ballroom into an event center to be shared with the whole community. If you are ever lucky enough to go upstairs and see the Dreamland, I think you will feel its magic too.”

McCoy created the Friends of Dreamland, a nonprofit organization to raise money for the restoration. Additional information can be found at the website. Those wishing to donate also can call (501) 255-5700 or send an e-mail to friends@dreamlandballroom.com.

Taborian Hall, at the corner of Ninth and State streets in downtown Little Rock, was part of the Ninth Street business corridor. For years that corridor was, in essence, the Main Street for blacks in Arkansas. Earlier known as Taborian Temple, it was built for the fraternal insurance organization known as the Knights and Daughters of the Tabor. A black contractor named Simeon Johnson went to work on the building in 1916 and completed construction two years later.

More than 1,500 people were in attendance for the 1918 dedication of Taborian Temple.

In August 1918, the Negro Soldiers Club opened on the first floor to provide a recreational outlet for black soldiers stationed at Camp Pike. The building also would house the offices of black doctors and dentists, along with a pharmacy, through the years.

The website picks up the story in the 1930s: “By 1937, the Dreamland Ballroom was firmly established on Taborian’s third floor. The popular dance hall with its famous ’swing floor’ was a hotbed for big bands, jazz and blues and the scene for dances, socials and basketball games. It was a regular stop for the Chittlin’ Circuit, a national touring company of professional black entertainers, revues and stage shows.

“With the advent of World War II, the USO bought the building and turned the first to the third floors into a club that served thousands of black soldiers from Camp Robinson and the Stuttgart Air Base. The Dreamland ripped and rollicked during those war years and beyond with legendary musical artists including ‘Fatha’ Earl Hines, Louis Armstrong, Count Basie and Ella Fitzgerald, and comedians Redd Foxx and Sammie Davis. Local stars cut their musical teeth in the Dreamland too.”

The Taborian Temple became known as Taborian Hall in the early 1950s and soon housed the Twin City Club in the basement, the Waiters Club on the second floor and the Club Morocco where the Dreamland had been. B.B. King and Ray Charles were among those who performed on Ninth Street in those days.

By the early 1970s, though, what was known as urban renewal (but was actually the massive destruction of city neighborhoods across the country) had laid waste to the Ninth Street corridor. Taborian Hall stood empty until McCoy purchased it in 1991.

She estimates the cost of fully restoring the upstairs ballroom to be $1 million. She had hoped to finish the third-floor restoration work in 2012, though the Great Recession has slowed fundraising efforts considerably.

The Friends of Dreamland’s new executive director is Amber Jones. The native Arkansan is an Arkansas Tech graduate who earlier had worked at Curran Hall. An initial $50,000 will be used to install hardwood flooring on the third floor so fundraising events can be held there.

Ann McCoy, Kerry’s mother-in-law, told the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette earlier this year: “My favorite thing now is the view from the big windows. You can see the Capitol building, Philander Smith. It just has a beautiful view.”

A recent story by Becca Bona in The Daily Record described Kerry McCoy this way: “It’s important to note that McCoy is one dynamic individual. She has always been a go-getter, apparent from her hard work of starting a business when she was 20 years old with a mere $400. When the lively entrepreneur fell in love with the crumbling building, she knew that a project would ensue. She didn’t know about the inside of the building until later. … She said she had planned to restore the third-floor ballroom and make it open to the public by 2000. Unfortunately, the price range for renovation was always a hair out of her reach.”

McCoy told Bona: “I love this project, but it’s overwhelming. I can’t stand lost opportunities.”

Let’s hope Little Rock’s business leadership, which has failed to capitalize on so many opportunities through the years (note the impending destruction of historic Ray Winder Field by UAMS), will step up to help Kerry McCoy achieve her dream while preserving an important part of this state’s largest city.

Restoring Dreamland One Memory at a Time

The Daily Record

Daily.jpg

Amber Jones (left), executive director of the Friends of Dreamland Ballroom and Kerry McCoy, owner of Arkansas Flag and Banner, stand in what used to be premier balcony seating of the Ballroom. McCoy bought the building around 1991 and has plans to renovate the ballroom and open the space for community events. - Rebecca Brockman

Becca Bona


On the corner of State and Ninth St. visible from I-630 stands a historic Taborian Hall in full grandeur. Historic Ninth St. was home to the segregation line in Little Rock back when discrimination was law. In 1916, The Knights and Daughters of Tabor, which is a benevolent religious group, added onto the original building built in the 1800s. This group operated somewhat like the Freemasons, and made burial insurance available to the black community members, which (at that time) was against the law. The building’s location opened up many possibilities for the black business community.

The building housed a USO meeting hall at one point as well as Gem’s Pharmacy that was a big name on Ninth St. and in operation until 1971. The second floor housed black lawyers and doctors, who were not allowed to practice on Main St.

The 8,000-square foot space on the third floor was its own world – housing the Dreamland Ballroom, which during its heyday in the 60s, was the place to be for music. The stage is visible from box seating both flanking the left and right leaving plenty of space for dancing beneath the house lights.

The Ballroom is a piece of history in itself hosting famous artists such as Dizzie Gillespie, Ray Charles, B.B. King, and Arkansas’ own Louis Jordan. There was a sort of culture that spanned the very floor of the ballroom. Old photographs prove the space was reserved for everything: basketball games, bands, dances, and receptions.

Nearly twenty years ago, Kerry McCoy, the building’s current owner, knew even though the roof was collapsed, that the building was special. McCoy was looking to move her business, Arkansas Flag and Banner into a larger space. In case you haven’t had the pleasure of meeting her, it’s important to note that McCoy is one dynamic individual. She has always been a go-getter, apparent from her hard work of starting a business when she was 20-years old with a mere $400. When the lively entrepreneur fell in love with the crumbling building, she knew that a project would ensue. She didn’t know about the inside of the building until later, when she nearly excavated her way to the top through the fallen debris. Upon seeing the ballroom for the first time she said, “It was like birds were flying around and the sky was open and you could look across the chasm to this unbelievable stage over there and box seats. We just stood there. There was no stopping me after that!”

McCoy thought back to1992, she said she had planned to restore the third floor ballroom and make it open to the public by the year 2000. Unfortunately, the price range for renovation was always a “hair out of her reach.” Her business employees helped her out by laying flooring and carpet down on the first and second floors. In fact, McCoy and her crew have slowly been putting the building back together ever since her business moved
there. McCoy has dedicated herself fully and completely to this historic building. “I love this project but it’s overwhelming. I can’t stand lost opportunities. Some people buy a dress and they’re bummed out because they bought the dress and it was too expensive. If I don’t buy the dress, I spend two weeks wishing I had bought the dress.”

However, McCoy decided about a year ago to make the Dreamland Ballroom a nonprofit organization, Friends of Dreamland, in hopes to raise enough money to finish the project that she has long planned for. McCoy said that the nonprofit group had recently hired Executive Director, Amber Jones, as well as Robyn Madden, as chairman to the board. These women also share McCoy’s drive and mission: to bring the architecture, music, and history of the building to the community.

Jones was available to comment on her work on the project so far, saying, “It really is a full-time job, just learning the history of it and talking to the person that’s writing the book, talking to the person that wants to do a documentary and then developing our own programs.

And then for us, being a nonprofit, figuring out what we need to do to raise money. It is just so much, it’s like a 24 hour a day job.” Jones’ philosophy on the huge project is reassuring, “The key is not to get overwhelmed and take it in little bites. We hope to expose this to the public.”

This past summer was the beginning of many fundraising events that will continue to come from the Dreamland Ballroom group. Drive-in movies were scheduled twice a month all summer long benefitting the renovation project. The movies may become a series in the fall as well, during the cooler months because the event was so well liked by the community.

McCoy learned a lot from her first bout of fundraising. “What I have learned is you don’t raise money through ticket sales you raise money through sponsors. So this year our goal is to focus on an annual plan of events and trying to get sponsors whose names will be on those events and who believe in our mission.”

When the ballroom is renovated, the Dreamland group hopes to open it up for public use. The driving mission is to get the public involved in the history of the building, perhaps by visiting a museum that the group hopes to incorporate into the ballroom itself. McCoy and Jones have been saving artifacts that have significance to the building including many photographs. The photos show the building was versatile in its events and today;
the space would still be well suited for a prom, wedding reception, or music series. Jones said, “It’d be great to get it to be essentially what it was. That’s what we want to do … share every aspect of it.”

Dreamland Ballroom Mention in the Arkansas Democrat - Gazette

The AR Democrat Gazette mentioned us in the paper this morning. It can be found on the front page of the Arkansas section –

PAPER TRAILS:
By Linda Caillouet

LIVIN’ THE DREAM:

Seems like a lifetime ago when, back in 1992, I wrote a feature on Kerry McCoy buying the historic Taborian Hall to house her business, Arkansas Flag and Banner.

She’s since dreamed of completely restoring it, especially the third-floor Dreamland Ballroom.

Renovation on the ballroom is set to begin Sept. 13. First on the list?

Leveling and securing the ballroom’s floor.

THANKS FOR SPREADING THE WORD!

See it here

Drive-In Movies are Back in Little Rock

Drive-In Movies are Back in Little Rock
May 5, 2010 12:00 AM
Kerry Kraus
NaturalStateBlogger@gmail.com
http://www.visitmyarkansas.com/kerry-kraus/default.aspx?id=573

How long has it been since you’ve been to a drive-in movie? For some people, the question is, have you ever been to a drive-in movie? Experience the nostalgia of the drive-in movie while helping a good cause this Saturday as the Friends of Dreamland Ballroom hosts the first of six showings.


The May 8 showing of Charade begins at sundown, approximately 8:30 p.m. The 1963 romantic thriller stars Cary Grant and Audrey Hepburn. Concessions selling hot dogs, soft drinks, bottled water, Yarnell’s ice cream and Diamond Bear Brewery beer are on-site.

The screenings are projected on the back of the historic Arkansas Flag and Banner building, also known as Taborian Hall, with the audio broadcast through your car radio, courtesy of AV Arkansas. Viewers should find their spot in the rear parking lot behind Arkansas Flag and Banner.

The subsequent movies are going to be shown every second and fourth Saturday from May through September. According to Friends of Dreamland Ballroom, the movies to be shown cover a broad spectrum in hopes of having something for everyone.

Taborian Hall is one of Little Rock’s most important historic structures. During its heyday, the ballroom played host to Ray Charles, Louis Armstrong and his Orchestra, B.B. King, Duke Ellington, Arkansas-native Al Hibbler, Nat King Cole and his Trio, Ella Fitzgerald and Dizzie Gillespie, and Arkansas’s-own Louis Jordan.

Admission is $20 per car or $5 for walk-ups, who should bring their own lawn chairs. Arkansas Flag and Banner is located at 800 West 9th Street in downtown Little Rock. More information on the ongoing work on the ballroom, visit www.dreamlandballroom.org/.

Proceeds from the movie series go toward restoration of the ballroom. Other scheduled showings are:

May 22: Reefer Madness/Sex Madness (1936/1938 – two exploitation films)

June 12: Night of the Living Dead (George A. Romero’s 1968 cult favorite)

June 26: The Outlaw (1943 Howard Hughes-directed film starring Jane Russell)

July 10: The Little Princess (1939 classic starring Shirley Temple)

July 24: The Fast and The Furious (1955 starring John Ireland)

A Night of Blues with the Unseen Eye

Little Rock, AR-May 11th, 2010– Want to hear some blues from local musicians and an old timer that actually played the Dreamland Ballroom? The Friends of Dreamland Ballroom (a non-profit working to restore the ballroom at the top of Taborian Hall) presents “A Night of Blues” on Thursday, May 13 in Doc’s Pool Hall at 800 W Ninth St. (Arkansas Flag and Banner building).

The featured performers include: blues singer Gil Franklin; the Unseen Eye, with band members Chad Carter, Jobe Kara, and “Chicken” James Dorris, who performed in the Dreamland Ballroom during its glory days.

“Not only will this event be fun,” says Dreamland Chairman Kerry McCoy, “but we’re also hoping that we can educate people about the musical significance that Dreamland once played in Little Rock’s Jazz and Blues community.”

Doors open at 8pm and bands will go on at 9pm. It’s $7 at the door (and maybe bring a little extra cash for the donation bar!). All proceeds will go toward the Dreamland Ballroom renovation efforts.

Take a look at our Facebook Event

For information: http://www.dreamlandballroom.org or
Contact: friends@dreamlandballroom.org
Phone: 501-255-5700

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PAPER TRAILS: Retro fun rolling into Little Rock

BY LINDA CAILLOUET – Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

LITTLE ROCK — DATE WITH A DRIVE-IN: Back in the late ’80s, this columnist, then a young reporter, embarked on a quest to find a mystic relic from the past her generation had missed – the then-nearly extinct drive-in theater. Success was found at the Galaxy Drive-In in Hammond, La. Pity the younger generations who’ve never experienced one!

But the folks at Arkansas Flag and Banner and nonprofit preservation group Friends of Dreamland Ballroom, in their thinking-outsidethe-box quest to restore the historic ballroom atop the business’ downtown building, Taborian Hall, are reviving this American icon.

Beginning last Saturday and running through July 24, at 8:30 p.m. every other Saturday night, the parking lot behind the building at 800 W. Ninth St. will be transformed into an oldtime drive-in. Gates open at 7:30 p.m. and concessions of beer, soft drinks, hot dogs and more will be sold.

$20 a car or $5 a person for walk-ups. May 22, Reefer Madness/Sex Madness; June 12, Night of the Living Dead; June 26, The Outlaw; July 10, The Little Princess (Family Night); and July 24, The Fast and the Furious.

Paper Trails appears Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Contact Linda Caillouet at (501) 399-3636 or at lcaillouet@arkansasonline.com.

This article was published May 12, 2010 at 4:28 a.m.
Arkansas, Pages 9 on 05/12/2010

LR Fundraiser Among Steps to Revive Historic Ballroom

By L. Lamor Williams, Arkansas Democrat Gazette

LITTLE ROCK — A fundraiser for the Dreamland Ballroom didn’t go so well Saturday, but that didn’t dampen the spirit of a group working to raise $50,000 to restore the historic venue that’s hosted such icons as Duke Ellington, Etta James, Cab Calloway and Ella Fitzgerald.

“I forgot about the Razorbacks game,” Kerry McCoy said, laughing and slapping her forehead with her palm. “We’re going to swap out our PowerPoint presentation on Dreamland for the game.”

McCoy owns Arkansas Flag and Banner, which takes up the first two floors of 800 W. Ninth St. in Little Rock. She bought the historic building in 1992 and has been trying to restore the Dreamland Ballroom on the building’s third and top floor.

The ballroom was a social hub in segregated Little Rock when Ninth Street was home to a thriving black business district. Then, McCoy’s building was known as Taborian Hall.

McCoy said she’d hoped to have the ballroom reopened by 2000 but realized that she’d never be able to afford it on her own. Now, the nonprofit Friends of Dreamland board is working to raise money and restore the facility.

She said the $50,000 is to install sturdy hardwood flooring so that fund raising events can be held in the space. Saturday’s event was to feature paid tours of the historic venue, but only a handful of people stopped by between 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. when the tours were offered.

“The reason I love the Dreamland Ballroom is because it’s the only building like it in Little Rock. I’ve had offers to turn it into apartments, a club, a school, but it really needs to stay an event center open to the public. There’s been times when I thought ‘boy I wish I’d gone ahead and turned it into apartments’ because I know events centers aren’t real profitable. But I’ve got a lot of energy, and I’m willing to put all that energy into making it work.”

Ann McCoy, Kerry’s mother-in-law said, while standing in the front hallway near the store, that the building has already come a long way.

“There used to be a big hole all the way through,” she said, noting that a person could see from the third floor down to the first through the opening. “My favorite thing now is the views from the big windows. You can see the Capitol building, Philander Smith [College], it just has a beautiful view.”

Today, the floor is covered with plywood panels, some not completely secured. The walls have peeling paint and exposed brick, and some of the 1930s-style architecture is still evident along the box seats and molding above the stage in the 8,000-square-foot space.

Kerry McCoy said she mailed 1,000 invitations to the event and invited another 400people via the online networking Web site Facebook. She said several people pledged donations but didn’t attend.

Information on how to donate or schedule a tour, and receive a history of the facility, is available at dreamlandballroom.com. Among the opportunities is purchasing a brick for $100 that will be engraved with the donor’s name and used to pave the walkway to the ballroom.

“We just need 500 people” to buy bricks, Kerry McCoy said. “But, hey, we’ll take what we can get. There’s not a single person that doesn’t come up here and see the Dreamland and fall in love with it. And I hope we can get some really community-minded people behind it. I love to tour it. I never get tired of showing the Dreamland Ballroom to people.”

This article was published February 28, 2010 at 6:04 a.m.
Arkansas, Pages 1 & 5 on 02/28/2010

Here is a link to the video that accompanied the story on Arkansasonline.com – VIDEO HERE

Old Ballroom to get New Life

By: Melissa Dunbar-Gates, Today’s THV

A famous old ballroom on top of the Arkansas Flag and Banner building in downtown Little Rock will soon be renovated.

THV’s Melissa Dunbar-Gates took a tour and spoke with building owner Kerry McCoy.

A non-profit group has been established to revive the facility; but they have a long way to go.

The room has incredible history. Can’t you just see a packed house, a full dance floor, and hear the trumpets of Luis Armstrong blaring. This room has been all kinds of things.

Originally built in the late 1800’s, it served as an African American USO club in both world wars; according to building owner McCoy a black fraternity used it to house women and children here in the great depression.

McCoy says, “I’ve had offers to turn it into a restaurant, turn it into apartments, to make a school out of it, but I’ve refused them all because I think it needs to stay exactly like it is be an event center for the community to use.”

According to McCoy the whole 9th Street corridor, where her building sits, used to be known as Little Rock’s “Little Harlem.” she said the street was lined with African America owned businesses on one side, and homes on the other side; and it is inside that old ballroom that African America entertainers came to play.

McCoy says, “A lot of the entertainers would perform at Robinson hall for the white people then stay in the hotel right next door and come up here to the ballroom and jam all night long.”

McCoy says, “I don’t want to do one single thing to it except make it safe and get an elevator up here. I want it to look exactly how it does.”

McCoy’s non-profit group needs more than a million dollars for the renovation. For a price you can have your name put on one of the box seats above the stage, or can have your name put on the stage, or the balcony in the back; and be a part of bringing the music and dancing back to the dreamland ballroom.

You can help make the Dreamland Ballroom renovation a reality by logging onto its website. There you can buy a brick for the new front sidewalk. Your name will be engraved in your brick.

Click Here to see the Video!

Buying into the Dream

KARK4 did a nice piece on the Dreamland Ballroom’s book fair last Sunday at Barnes and Noble. Here is the article and click on the link below to see the TV footage!

A group of Arkansans, set on restoring an old performance hall to its former glory, got a big boost over the weekend.

The Barnes and Noble on Financial Center donated 10% of its proceeds today to “Friends of Dreamland Ballroom.”

The Dreamland Ballroom was a premier venue in Little Rock for soul, R and B, and jazz musicians.

This group wants to rehab it and preserve it as a place to hold events and performances.

“I’ve had offers to turn it into a restaurant, a school, apartments. But it just needs to stay what it is, an events center which is not necessarily a real prosperous business, it almost has to be a non-profit,” says Kerry McCoy with Friends of Dreamland Ballroom.

The group hopes to fund raise this year, start construction next year and re-open the venue in 2012.

For more information on how you can get involved, click here.

KARK VIDEO LINK