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Musician celebrates hometown

Staff photo by Allison Breiner
Local musician Chris Bellamy will make an
appearance at The Fisherman’s Wife on Saturday, Dec. 22.
Local Chris Bellamy produces three CDs celebrating our area
By Sarah Howell
Intern
At the wheel of a small
white skiff anchored among the salty marsh grasses and oyster shells of Pages
Creek, musician Chris Bellamy talks about his newest project — the production
and release of three brand new CDs, including the local tribute, “Time, Tide
and Tackle: Old Songs, New Favorites.”
“It’s kind of an anthology of my musical life in this area,” Bellamy said. “A
lot of people in my Wrightsville Beach/Wilmington listenership really like my
old stuff, so I took the best of my old songs and put them on “Time, Tide and
Tackle,” and then I wrote five new ones to go with them. It’s a tribute to this
area, and places I go that remind me of this area.”
Bellamy spends his summers in
Wilmington and his
winters in places like
Florida,
Texas and sometimes
Nashville.
His guitar has traveled and played across the South with musicians like
Clarence Clemons, Paul Case, Jimmy Buffett, Willie Nelson and Rita Coolidge.
“As an independent artist, I’ve done a lot,”
he said. “It’s a hard job, if you want to be successful, and I’ve got champagne
taste on a beer budget, so I work my butt off to keep this wheel rolling
forward.”
Percussionist Danny Dixon can confirm the hard work of his long-time friend.
The two musicians met in college, but it was not until five years ago that
Dixon started playing drums with Bellamy. He said, “Chris covers a lot of territory with what he does
on acoustic guitar.. He’s got a good work ethic, and he’s serious about what he
does.”
Bellamy’s hard work is paying off. At the end of his current project, he’ll
have released three CDs with worldwide distribution through Amazon.com, iTunes,
Rhapsody, CD Baby and Best Buy. Dave Meyer of Masonboro Sound Recording has
provided the studio for Bellamy and has helped him engineer the
albums. “I like what Chris has been writing lately,” he said. “After you write for a long time, you sort of get
down to who you really are and what things are important to you. I think he’s finding that out. I think it’s
going very well.”
The second CD in the trio
is a live recording that Bellamy, Dixon and UNCW jazz professor Bob Russell did
about two months ago at Wilmington’s Waterford of the Carolinas, and the third
is an album entitled “The Oyster Man,” which Bellamy refers to as his “pick of
the litter.”
‘The Oyster Man’ is about
people who I’ve grown up with right here,” Bellamy said. “Grainger is a gentleman who’s lived on this
sound for 80 years, and he’s the oyster man.” The album is a perfect example of something Bellamy finds vital to his
music - real-life experiences with real people. “That’s the trick,” he said. “What I do, there’s nothing contrived about
it.. I’m not a songwriter in
Nashville,
sitting in a cubicle trying to dream up something to write about. I’m out
here.”
Lumina News, December 20, 2007, Page B-3
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