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Always on Stage A note of confidence

Chris Budhan and Ian Toms, still playing jazz at Always on Stage (photo: Stephen Pate 2010)

After 10 years, the City Stages Youth Festival in downtown Charlottetown is going stronger than ever

Chris Budhan and Ian Toms, still playing jazz at Always on Stage (photo: Stephen Pate 2010)

By Sally Cole, Charlottetown Guardian

Chris Budhan gets excited when he talks about the first time he performed on Victoria Row.

In 1998, he and some musical friends from Colonel Gray High School in Charlottetown formed a seven-piece band called Los Guapachosos, won a Battle of the Bands contest and busked that summer on the popular pedestrian street where people sit at outdoor cafes.

“It was my first experience performing in front of a large audience outside the school system. And I got hooked.”

“That summer I became interested in becoming a professional musician. I also became interested in my own artistic development. And I started a summer tradition,” says Budhan, now a doctoral student in music education at the University of Texas.

Everything about that summer seemed to strike a chord with him. 

It was the high of playing in front of a live attentive audience who gave feedback in their comments and their gratuities.

It was also mentoring with drummer Guillermo Valle from El Salvador who taught us how to play Latin jazz, he says.

Budhan also made some amazing friends.

“Through the band I met musicians Ian Toms and Ross MacDonald. Later, all of us would go to McGill University to study music together,” says Budhan.

By the time that summer was over, he wanted to share his experience with others.

So in 1999, he founded City Stages Youth Festival, which has been providing student participants with gigs on Victoria Row, as well as instruction and mentorship from professional artists ever since. Its part of the Always on Stage program, which includes shows a couple of blocks away at the Visitors Information Centre at Founders Hall, as well as at nearby Fishbones restaurant.

The festival has also become a summer tradition for drummer Matt MacEachern.

“Each summer I look forward to playing on Victoria Row. This program has inspired me to keep playing and get deeper into jazz music,” says the Colonel Gray graduate who is entering the music program at McGill University this fall.

Last Thursday night, he was playing with artist-in-residence David Restivo.

The jazz legend was thrilled when he heard MacEacherns news about his education plans.

“It doesn’t surprise me that Matt has been picked up by a major university. When I hear the level that someone like Matt is playing at, it doesn’t surprise me at all,” says Restivo.

The award-winning jazz pianist has made it a tradition to teach and mentor at this summer festival.

The way that artistic disciplines perpetuate themselves is through modelling passing on the information from one generation to the next.

“I can remember being a young musician and seeing people whom were a bit older than me performing at a very high level. The inspiration and the education that provided for me was wonderful.”

“Now I’m in a position to give that back. And P.E.I. is a wonderful place to come in the summer to do that,” says the Toronto resident.

See the 2nd part of this story – Singer songwriters perform at Always on Stage

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