Personal Improvement
Music can call at any age. These NEO musicians started playing when the muse was ready; some early, some later.
CHAD PENGAL
Chad Pengal, 61, has been interested in bluegrass music since he was in seventh grade, but he didn’t get serious about playing it until his mid-50s.
“I always wanted to learn,” says the homebuilder and owner of Chadwick Homes in Mentor. To that end, 15 years ago, he bought a banjo and started experimenting. “I started plucking away but didn’t get anywhere. I wasn’t able to concentrate until my kids grew up and moved out. I was involved with them and their activities. Once my kids grew up, I found I had a lot more spare time to work on learning to play the instruments.”
In his 50s, he started taking lessons on a five-string banjo and was soon jamming with local musicians at one of their homes. That led to a band that played small, local venues for a year before members went their separate ways.
When Pengal met his now-girlfriend, Gloria Severino, he took his playing to a new level. Severino had recently left a popular Northeast Ohio club band after a 23-year career as a singer and musician. She saw talent in Pengal’s playing and talked him into starting a duo.
Today that duo – Pickin Rocks – plays bluegrass, country and Americana songs at bars, restaurants and wineries in Northeast Ohio. Pengal plays banjo and standup bass, while Severino plays acoustic guitar. Both do power vocals.
“I’ve always loved music,” says Pengal. “I like live music and going to small places and seeing talented musicians. All my family is musical. My dad plays button box with the Fairport Harbor Jammers. My sister has a band that plays around town. And my son is a full-time, professional musician in Nashville.”
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Come See Our CIFF Movie
Well, it’s Not Ours Exactly…
Northeast Ohio Boomer and Beyond is in the movie business.
Full disclosure: we don’t know any movie stars and we’ve not actually made any movies. But we like movies and to prove it, we’re media partners for the 43rd Cleveland International Film Festival, which runs March 27-April 7.
Our film is “Very Senior – Attitude is Everything.” Showtimes are Thursday, April 4 at 4:25 p.m., (Tower City), Friday, April 5 at 11:40 a.m. (Tower City) and Saturday, April 6 at 12:40 p.m. (Cleveland Museum of Art).
The film is one of 212 feature films and 237 shorts that will be screened throughout the festival at Tower City Cinemas downtown and at satellite locations.
“Very Senior – Attitude is Everything” is a documentary film about Sun City, Ariz., a 55+ community and the residents who live there. Directed by Susan Gluth, the film is described as “a bright look at the process of aging gracefully and honestly while making one’s own choices.”
See you at the movies – see you at our movie.
Pentameter Envy
A Month Made for Poetry
If it’s been decades since you’ve worked on your iambic pentameters, or you ’ve forgotten what the heck that is, you’re in luck. April is National Poetry Month and Northeast Ohio is crazy full of poets.
One of them is nationally recognized poet George Bilgere, who describes himself as the poet of aging. Several of his poems have been broadcast on Garrison Keillor’s “The Writer’s Almanac.” His latest poetry collection, “Blood Pages,” was published last year.
We figured he’d be the perfect person to ask about poetry, specifically some of his favorites, for Boomer readers.
“(Some) I’d highly recommend to older readers are, of course, the great Billy Collin, a wonderful poet named Tony Hoagland, (and) everybody loves Mary Oliver.
Tee McBee will help you avoid a “Clothes Call” with your wardrobe. How to edit what you’ve got, how to stand out in a crowd, how to look and feel your best – Tee covers it all. teemcbee.com/blog/
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