An important subgroup of the Music Club was initiated by David Durham in 2015. The concept of the Acoustic Instruments Group (AIG) was to allow acoustic instrument players/singers to get together and “jam” a couple of times a month. All were welcomed regardless of experience or talent level in a no-pressure environment. In addition to providing members with fun, bi-monthly jam sessions, the AIG has been an important source of new Music Club members and several sub-group bands have also been formed by AIG members, including the “Salty Dawgs”, “The CBD Project”, “Gold Rush”, and “Silver Linings” bands.
In 2016 the Music Club revived the “Hootenanny” sing alongs of years past. These audience participation events were very popular; one was held in the spring with a largely 60’s folk music flavor while the December show concentrated on Holiday songs. The Hootenanny shows have since been expanded in musical scope to the most recent sing alongs labeled “The International Pop Festival” and “Singing With Santa”.
The Music Club continued to increase the number of shows and, in 2017, also expanded the performance areas to include the beautiful outdoor Amphitheater as a venue. These outdoor shows were appropriately named “Music al Fresco”.
The series of shows named “Manly Love Songs” was conceived by Dale Buhl in 2007. The basic theme centered around a bunch of slightly “ne’r do well” guys who gathered at “Morrie’s Tap” to let off some steam and share some great (well, maybe…) music. 2018 saw the 6th and last in this ever-popular series.
Two local Music Club members approached the Music Club board in 2019 with proposals to produce and direct musical shows they had written. One was written by Joyce Greenberg and the other by David Durham. These shows were titled “Committee of Eight” by Greenberg and “The Cruise” by Durham. These were departures from the normal shows sponsored by the Music Club since everything was original, but received great response from Music Club audiences.
And then came the pandemic in 2020! On March 13, 2020, all rehearsals and performances in our community were shut down by COVID-19 concerns. The remainder of 2020 and well into 2021 were spent writing plans for rehearsals and performances which would comply with the current government guidelines. Musicians are naturally creative and want to perform. Pamela Weir and some of the Grand Singers initiated remote video recordings and blended the voices to make a choral audio. They also held “drive-by” concerts, conducted outdoor rehearsals and rehearsed in areas other than the Sonoran Plaza and Cimarron Center, where social distancing requirements could be met. The idea was not only to entertain but also to help preserve interest and unity in the Grand Singers as an entity. The Salty Dawgs held outdoor “driveway concerts” to benefit local businesses through this difficult time. A new band, “Gold Rush” entertained at the outdoor amphitheater in Grand. So, the bands and vocal groups in the Music Club found ways to comply with social distancing and other requirements and entered 2022 with much pent-up audience demand and an eagerness to get back to playing and singing in a normal environment.
That almost worked, but an unfortunate outbreak of the virus occurred in January leading to rescheduling several shows from spring to fall in 2022. However, the Music Club patiently did the necessary things, and the first actual show of 2022 was the May Showcase -- a tribute to blues music -- “Out Of The Blues”. The remainder of 2022 was hectic, because the shows in the fall which were already on the normal schedule were joined by the shows that fell prey to spring cancellations.
Finally! 2023 arrived with a more normal schedule. The Music Club increased the level of activity by introducing Live at Cimarron as a local band replacement for the former Cimarron Nightclub shows. The Live at Cimarron monthly shows feature Music Club bands as well as special guest performers from the Music Club. Membership is nearly back to pre-pandemic levels, and as we closed out 2023, all was well!