Beaver County Memories – Musicians, Part 2

Welcome to Beaver County Memories, a look back at the people, places and events that have made Beaver County a special place, presented by St. Barnabas.  In this second segment about Beaver County musicians, you might feel the need to sing along as we highlight some of the musical groups and performers that have called Beaver County Home

In part one of  our look back on Beaver County musicians, we took a look at, or maybe we should say, a listen to, several great artists and groups to have started their careers in this area including Henry Mancini, Melvin and Mervin Steals, The Jaggerz and The Stringfield Family band, who also performed as the El Pooks.  In part two, the timeline moves closer to present day as the spotlight shines on local performers whose music was made here, but heard by people everywhere.

There must have been something in the water in Aliquippa because many of the musicians profiled in part one had their roots in the town and this next gentleman also spent his formative years in “The Quip”, as it is affectionately known. William  Edward Taylor, or more commonly known as, B.E. Taylor, began performing while still in high school with a band he formed called B.E. Taylor and the Establishment. The obvious talent of the group’s lead singer didn’t go unnoticed and soon the band was playing in night clubs all over the Pittsburgh area in the 1970’s covering popular tunes already recorded by others.  In the 1980’s B.E. Taylor formed the B.E. Taylor Group and decided to sing and record his own music. This lead to several nationally released songs, and a billboard top 100 hit, “Vitamin L”, in 1984. In recent years and prior to his passing in 2016, B.E. Taylor had reinvented himself again. At that point in time Taylor began focusing on producing popular annual Christmas concerts, accompanied by the release of several Christmas and Contemporary Christian albums.

One of the members of B.E. Taylor’s entourage that would pack auditoriums for the beloved Christmas concerts was, and continues to be one of the area’s most accomplished piano players, Hermie Granati.  Hermie, and his brothers, Ricky, Joey, and David, along with cousin Tony Bonomo, made up Beaver County’s version of a cross between the Ramones and The who or The Rolling Stones. The hard rocking band of brothers, who appropriately  referred to themselves as “The Granati Brothers”, were all adorned with long flowing locks of jet black hair, and looked much like the punk rockers of the 1960’s, but had an edgy, modern, hard rock sound. The “Granati Ranch” as it was called by those close to the family, otherwise know as the family home where they grew up, was in Patterson township and it was there that the boys began playing together as a band.  Success was quick for the Granati brothers, who in 1979 found their music receiving airplay on radio Pittsburgh after the release of their album “G-Force”. A national tour as the opening act for Van Halen followed, and a national recording contract was signed. The Granati brothers still perform together today, and are all still in the Beaver County area. Hermie Granati also serves as the current piano and keyboard player for the Jaggerz.

One of the places that the Granati Brothers would perform at was known as Arthur’s  Lounge, and before that, it was known as Morry’s Speak Easy. The place was a vintage night club designed for large scale performances which were much more common thirty or forty years ago.  The venue, which was closed down many years ago, was located along Junction Stretch, route 65 in Rochester. That brings us to the next Beaver County musician, Christina Aguilera, who spent many of  her early childhood years in the town. Aguilera, who has gone on to sell over thirty seven million songs, recorded eight albums, and appeared in numerous television and movie projects, was first heard in Beaver County as a little girl attending school in Rochester.  One of her earlier performances as a young child protege was reportedly the singing of The National Anthem prior to a Geneva College basketball game at Metheny Field house in the late 1980’s. Bruce Frey was a color analyst for WBVP, that evening, and he was amid the pregame show for the upcoming Geneva College basketball game broadcast when he remembered hearing the talented young girl from Rochester.  Though it can’t be verified, Frey wonders even to this day if that might have been the first time that Aguilera’s powerful voice was heard on the radio. Christina Aguilera also began to sing The Star Spangled Banner prior to Pittsburgh sporting events and appeared on local TV stations before her talents eventually led to her on to bigger cities and brighter lights. In 1996, she recorded a song used in the movie, “Mulan”,  and shortly there afterwards, she signed a national recording contract.

This has been part two of Beaver County Musicians, part of Beaver County Memories, presented by St. Barnabas.  Tune in everyday for a another memory on Beaver County Radio, or visit beavercountyradio.com for a complete transcript of this and other archived editions of Beaver County Memories.

Snow Shovels & Bridges Among Topics At Lively Commissioner’s Session

(Matt Drzik/Beaver County Radio)

Last week’s Commissioners’ work session went for roughly ten minutes.

This week’s session beat that mark by an hour, and then some.

A relatively larger crowd of people showed up for the Wednesday work session for February 13, and it also marked the return of Commissioner Sandie Egley, who was out of the February 6 session due to personal matters.

Egley didn’t waste time voicing her opinion either, as she called out Tim Ishman, who is the Parks & Recreation department head, about the repeated cancellations and postponing of the Beaver County Snow Shovel Riding Championship:

 

The event was first scheduled for January 12, but a lack of snow or proper conditions has continued to set the date back.

Another major issue that cropped up during the meeting was that of the two historic bridges in the county: Watts Mills & Fallston. Juile Bowers of Workin’ Bridges, the non-profit organization looking to restore both bridges before returning them to the county, make her thoughts on the possibility of another non-profit (St. Barnabas, to be exact) showing interest in the Fallston Bridge quite clear:

 

Also at the Wednesday work session:

  • Parks & Recreation director Tim Ishman spoke about the current repairs being
    David Weaver speaks on behalf of the Orton Foundation.

    done to the Beaver County Ice Arena ice surface.

  • David Weaver spoke on behalf of the PA Humanities Council and the Orton Foundation, speaking about the possibility of bridging the gap between the public’s interest and the goings-on at the government level.
  • The issue surrounding the current time-clock system was brought to attention by Commissioner Sandie Egley and echoed by Chairman Dan Camp.

The public meeting for tomorrow has been moved to 6:00pm at the Vanport Municipal Building, instead of 10:00am at the Courthouse.

 

 

Duquesne Light Announces Electricity Restored To Hopewell Customers; Landslide Closes Section Of Aliquippa Road

DUQUESNE LIGHT ANNOUNCES ELECTRICITY HAS BEEN RESTORED TO HOPEWELL CUSTOMERS…WHILE A LANDSLIDE CLOSES A SECTION OF ROAD IN ALIQUIPPA. BEAVER COUNTY RADIO NEWS CORRESPONDENT SANDY GIORDANO HAS THE UPDATE. Click on ‘play’ to hear Sandy’s report….

AccuWeather Employees Accused Of Sexual Assault

AccuWeather, whose former CEO is President Donald Trump’s nominee to oversee the government weather forecasting and ocean science agency, agreed to pay $290,000 after female employees complained of sexual harassment. The family-run weather company’s conciliation agreement was published in June after an investigation by the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs and first reported Monday by The Centre Daily Times. AccuWeather denies the allegations but said it will make changes.

Hopewell Commissioners Hire New Engineer

THE HOPEWELL COMMISSIONERS HAVE HIRED A NEW ENGINEER. BEAVER COUNTY RADIO NEWS CORRESPONDENT SANDY GIORDANO HAS DETAILS. Click on ‘play’ to hear Sandy’s report…

 :

Ambridge Residents Speak Out: They Want Their Suspended Police Chief Fired

Ambridge residents want their suspended police chief to get the boot. Dozens of people packed last night’s Borough Council meeting to demand the firing of James Mann. Beaver County Radio News Correspondent Sandy Giordano reports. Click on ‘play’ to hear Sandy’s report…

:

Flu-Related Deaths Going Up In Pennsylvania

The state is reporting that the flu-related death count in Pennsylvania has risen by six since last week. According to the numbers released yesterday, the fatality count in Pennsylvania due to the flu has risen to 37 for the current season, 24 of whom are age 65 and older. There have been 30-thousand, 592 reported cases total state-wide, more than 57-hundred more than a week ago.