Paid Advertisement

Feeling the magic power of Triumph of putting the band back on the road with drummer Gil Moore

8

Paid Advertisement

Podcast Audio Vault

8
8

Paid Advertisement

The Rock and Roll Machine that was Triumph the Canadian band of the 1980s has finally reunited and are back on the road together for the first time in 38 years. Dummer Gil Moore tells Nestor about the magic power to get back on stage and on a tour bus with Rik Emmett and see the fans respond to “Hold On” and “Lay It On The Line” in an arena setting. Go see ’em on May 28th at Camden, N.J. when the show gets local.

Nestor Aparicio interviews Gil Moore of Triumph about the band’s unexpected return to the road after a 34-year hiatus. The tour, initially sparked by a one-off gig at the Stanley Cup playoffs, has gained momentum due to positive fan reactions and the enthusiasm of the band members. Moore highlights the strong team spirit and the emotional impact on fans, including a fan from Australia. The band, now tight and refined, features Todd on bass and Phil X on guitar, with Rick Emmett leading the setlist. Moore also discusses the band’s innovative use of technology and lighting to enhance their performances.

  • [ ] @Nestor Aparicio – Locate the 1986 Baltimore Civic Center interview with Mike Levine, rip/convert the recording, and publish/make it available as an MP3 (as discussed on the show).

Outline

Maryland Crab Cake Tour and Initial Reactions

  • Nestor Aparicio introduces the Maryland Crab Cake Tour, sponsored by the Maryland Lottery, GBMC, and Farnan and Dermer.
  • Nestor mentions a big show at the Fishmonger’s Daughter in Catonsville and another in Philadelphia.
  • Nestor recalls interviewing Mike Levine and Rick Emmett in the 80s and expresses excitement about Triumph’s return.
  • Nestor requests Gil Moore for a fresh perspective on the tour, noting the band’s recent performances in Canada.

Unexpected Tour and Family Reactions

  • Gil Moore explains the unexpected nature of the tour, which came together through the NHL playoffs and a one-off gig at the Stanley Cup playoffs.
  • Gil mentions the positive reactions from Live Nation and their children, who were thrilled to see the band reunite.
  • Nestor asks about Gil’s children, who range from 26 to 41 years old, and their reactions to seeing their father perform again.
  • Gil shares that the tour started as a lark but gained momentum due to the positive reactions and enthusiasm from the band members.

Band Dynamics and Personal Reasons for Reunion

  • Gil discusses the different paths the band members took after Triumph disbanded, including Rick’s solo career and Gil’s desire to be at home for his family.
  • Gil emphasizes the strong team spirit in the dressing room, comparing it to a winning sports team.
  • Gil mentions that Rick is particularly happy and excited, which adds to the positive vibe in the band.
  • Nestor and Gil discuss the challenges of being in a band and being older, with Nestor mentioning his own experiences and friends in the music industry.

Canadian Tour and Fan Reactions

  • Gil describes the Canadian tour, which started with rehearsals in Florida and then moved to Sault Ste Marie, Ontario.
  • Gil notes that the first three Canadian shows were crucial for the band to get tight and comfortable on stage.
  • Nestor mentions seeing Todd and Phil on social media and the positive fan reactions on social media.
  • Gil expresses surprise at the strong fan reaction, including fans traveling from far away to see the shows.

Hockey Connection and Future Plans

  • Gil recounts the story of how the hockey connection led to the band’s reunion, including a lark of a gig for the Stanley Cup Finals.
  • Gil mentions the initial reluctance to tour but the eventual decision to give it a try.
  • Nestor and Gil discuss the band’s future plans, with Gil emphasizing that they will focus on the shows they are committed to and see where it goes from there.
  • Gil shares that the band is still refining the setlist and the transitions between songs, with Rick doing a great job weaving it all together.

Technological Advancements and Theatrical Elements

  • Nestor praises Gil’s vision for theatrical elements in Triumph’s performances, noting the use of lights, lasers, and other effects.
  • Gil discusses the advancements in technology that allow for more elaborate and immersive shows.
  • Gil mentions the importance of sound quality, noting that YouTube does not do justice to the band’s live performances.
  • Nestor expresses his excitement for the upcoming show in Camden and his appreciation for the band’s music and impact on his life.

Final Thoughts and Appreciation

  • Nestor shares his personal connection to Triumph’s music and his excitement about seeing the band live.
  • Gil promises that the band will deliver a great show in Camden.
  • Nestor thanks Gil for the conversation and expresses his appreciation for the band’s music and the opportunity to interview Gil.
  • The conversation ends with Nestor reiterating his excitement for the upcoming show and his admiration for Triumph’s music and legacy.

SUMMARY KEYWORDS

Triumph, Maryland Crab Cake Tour, Nestor Aparicio, Gil Moore, Rick Emmett, Canada tour, NHL playoffs, fan reaction, band reunion, Live Nation, documentary, virtual reality, rock concert, fan enthusiasm, tour planning.

8

SPEAKERS

Gil Moore, Nestor Aparicio

Nestor Aparicio  00:01

Welcome home. We are W, N, S, T am 1570 tasks in Baltimore. We are Baltimore, positive, positively, getting the Maryland crab cake tour back out on the road. Maryland lottery sends me out along with GBMC and our friends at Farnan and Dermer the comfort guys, to make it happen. We got a big show at the fishmonger’s daughter on the 21st of the month, and that’s in Catonsville, brand new place. Really looking forward to getting over there, getting the faid leafs crab cake and the fishmongers experience, and then one week later, I will be heading up the Philadelphia, not because I enjoy it, but I do like going across the bridge into New Jersey at the Camden shed, one of the great bands of my my youth, a band that I interviewed back in the day. I interviewed Mike Levine back in the day, in the 80s. I’ve had Rick Emmet on several times through his book journeys and poetry readings. And voila, Triumph back in business on the road. Ray Bachman and I are going to be getting together my former executive producer here, and we was thrilled that Gilmore has made himself available. This means that I have now triumph. Gil I’ve had all three of you on the show. So this is, this is truly a treat. And really for me, I requested you at sort of a soft time in this tour. You just finished Canada. You’re about to come to the States. I really wanted to get a fresh perspective on what you guys are seeing and feeling. This must be a lot of fun for you.

Gil Moore  01:25

Yeah, Nestor, it is. We’ve been, obviously, the whole thing was, you know, very odd how it came together, not planned. It was like people think that, oh, we were planning this tour. No, we weren’t planning this tour. It fell together in a funny way. You know, through the NHL playoffs. And, you know, getting, getting requested to go and play, you know, a one off gig at the Stanley Cup playoffs. And up here in Canada, they were playing our music like crazy during the playoffs. And Rick and I just did it for a lark. And, you know, reached out to Phil. Phil reached out to Brent and Todd. We went up and just, you know, like, let’s bring the our family out, but we’re not going on a tour. But the reaction, you know, from people and, yeah, from the Live Nation, themselves and our kids, mainly, I’m not my case, the kid, my kids are, well, they went ballistic when, when they saw it. So here we are. We played it to her. A lot of people doubted that we would pull it off, but they were wrong, and here we are. It’s actually doing great.

Nestor Aparicio  02:31

8

Well, how old are your kids?

Gil Moore  02:33

Well, the youngest ones now, 26 my son. 28 my middle daughter, and 41 my eldest daughter. These

Nestor Aparicio  02:42

are grown kids that were, like, inspired by seeing you. What would you say about what they saw, especially with you guys putting rehearsals together? Because, I mean, I watched this from the outside, because I I’ve had Rick on every two years. We talked some blue jays and Orioles and whatnot through all of it, but I was shocked when all of this happened. And, you know, just literally and watching the the hockey playoffs this time last year, I just thought it was one of the most unique things I’d ever seen to be able to put a band back together that I knew there was a reason you guys didn’t play together for a long time, I guess, right.

Gil Moore  03:18

Yeah. I mean, we went in different directions. You know, Rick wanted to do a solo thing. I wanted to be at home for two reasons. I was my father had passed on. I wanted to be there to look after my mother, because I’m an only child. And I also wanted to be there to raise my kids. And, you know, be a husband and not, you know, be some guy that lives out of a hotel. And I guess enough times gone by. You know, my kids are adults. You know, my wife’s completely supportive of all this stuff. And this started as a kind of a lark with the with the hockey thing, and I still didn’t think we were going to be doing a tour anytime soon. But, yeah, I can’t explain it other than to say, the enthusiasm in the dressing room. You know, I’ll go back to sports there, and I’ll say, you know, if you have a dressing room with great team spirit, you have a winning team and triumphs a winning team right now, like, we have tremendous vibe, you know, with Brent and Todd and Phil and I and Rick. Rick’s like a little kid. Now, I’ve never seen him this happy. He’s like, he’s 17 years old or something, you know. And you know what I like about the you know, our expanded roster? Well, a couple things like one, I’m I’m, I don’t get that excited. Like I’m more. I get my tell my my friends, and they say, are you excited? I said, No, I’m not excited. It’s like a game is on. You don’t get excited. You decided when you win, or you get excited when you lose. At the end, when it’s over, that’s when you kind of can go, wow. That’s what happened, whether it’s excitement or it’s misery or whatever it is. So I said, so far, we’re winning the game. So it’s, but it’s, I’m not going to start getting excited. No, I’m going to start, like, digging deeper, right? It’s like, you know, keep your foot on the gas, you know, you’ve got to do that so. But like I said, the dressing room, the vibe in the dressing room, if you could be there, and they the law komo’s, we’re doing a second documentary, and you’ll see it. You can’t make this stuff up. I mean, this is like the high five dressing room. When we go on stage, it’s just, it’s really, they’re that exuberance, I’ll call it, of musicians, when they’re having fun playing music with each other, you can’t fake it. You know, these bands that are out where guys hate each other’s guts and they’re like, Oh, I’m just, you know, mailing it in because I want to get a paycheck or so. I don’t know how they do it. You know, that’s

8

Nestor Aparicio  05:38

especially for years at a time, right? Like, it’s hard being in a band. It’s hard being on the road. It’s, I’m 57 you’re a few years older than me. I’ve Googled you, Gil both you. It’s hard being older in general. It’s hard, you know, I have friends that are rock stars that are my age, that are out trying to do it. When’s the last time you literally went on a tour that was 90 days

Gil Moore  06:00

88

Nestor Aparicio  06:01

oh, man, I think anybody didn’t know, by the way, Gilmore’s here from triumph. Can I just fanboy for like, a minute, because I want to Timeline this out. Okay, so, you know, unlike every other MTV kid, 1981 I’m a huge rush fan. I’m seeing you on May 28 and then, you know, God willing, I’ll be flying out to Inglewood for the first night of the rush tour on the seventh of June. I got my tickets. I’m excited about all of this. It’s just for the awakening of both of these bands in my childhood and exit stage left and allied forces. And I was with you, and I told Rick this at the Towson center the night that Saxon opened, and you were videotaped for really, what became the videos of magic, power fight, the good fight, the videos they showed forever, where Mike was in the Maple Leafs gear and you were in the back doing your thing. But I saw all of those shows. I saw the growth of your band and coming to see the lighting rigs and what you guys would bring in, 82 3456, Allied forces thunder like you know, all of those albums, and I interviewed Mike back in the day. I was a music critic at the Baltimore Sun in late 80s. But when you guys fell away, Rick would come in and play on the guitar down at Rams Head. And for whatever reason, I never went down there. As much as I love Rick and the music and magic, power and those songs, hold on. I never did it. And I had a producer of mine who used to go, we take his mom all the time because she loved Rick, and he would come back. He’s like, Dude, you got to see it the next time he comes. He’s so great. And I’m like, this is before the internet, even, like, 20 years ago or whatever. And I’m like, Well, I there’s such there’s such a great band on my iPod. Triumph. You guys play in rotation with me all the time, and it you disappeared. And then a couple of four or five years ago, the documentary popped up on axis, and I missed the first 30 minutes of it, but I caught like the last hour, and I tried to tape it and watch it and whatever. And then rich doing poetry. And I went online and found this publicist in Toronto, and he was magnanimous. Came on, turns out, baseball, his brother, Cal Ripken, all of this stuff going on. And I had no thought that there would ever I would have bet any excuse me. I’m not a betting guy. I would have been anything that I would never see you guys do this the way you’re going to do it for me. I almost flew down to Florida a couple weeks ago to fanboy out with you guys. But how was the Canada thing for you? Because you’re a Canadian band, and you did it interesting. You went to Florida for a couple got nice and warm, and then you just rolled east to west across Canada the last three weeks. This had to have been just marvelous for you guys,

Gil Moore  08:41

8

yeah, it was, we were going to rehearse in Canada and then make a wish, which is just an incredible organization. They approached us to come down and support what they’re doing down there, which is this massive thing called the celebration car show. And they raise a ton of money for kids that really need help, helping hand, you know, kids with with serious illnesses and so on, so and we needed in rehearsing down there was actually good because they, one of the casinos was available for a whole week. So it all came together when we went down there, and that’s where we were really kind of blowing the rust off. But we still rehearsed in Canada. Because when we left there, of all places, we went to Sault Ste Marie in northern Ontario. So, you know, going from Florida to Saint Marie is like quite the jolt to your system. And we, you know, set everything up in the arena up there in GFL gardens, really nice arena, and rehearsed a couple times, and then we started the Canadian Tour. And I think that’s it was really that first three Canadian shows where we actually the band started to get really tight, and we could, we could come in the dressing room, and instead of counting mistakes, we were counting Vic. Trees, you know, and it’s just it’s progressed since then. Fan reaction has been incredible. The social media thing has been like 99.9% you know, ecstatic reactions. I don’t know if you’ve seen any, well, no

Nestor Aparicio  10:13

Todd and Phil keep showing up on my Facebook. And there was the point, like in Halifax, where Phil, I think, went off with Bonjour, like there was a night that so, I mean, you guys have stayed in my timeline from the very beginning of all of this to the point where you’re now on a zoom with me, and I’m getting to talk to you a little bit about it, but I haven’t talked to Rick, and I’ve emailed, I’ve thrown through, and I’ll see you guys in Philly in a couple of weeks. But I just, I think I worry about rush, who’s got all these dates out into next year, and they’re playing in Finland, and they’re and I’m just thinking, man, you know, all of you guys, especially you in the band, from what I see in the documentary, more the go getter guy and the guy that was always here, you know, maybe wanting to to do this and have this be a part of your life for your children, if nothing else, this has felt like magic For me to watch it, and I literally haven’t watched the videos. I don’t want to be that guy. I don’t want to watch you guys make mistakes in Florida for weeks. I don’t want to see the show when you guys come to town. You and April wine. And I had those guys on a couple of weeks ago as well to talk to them about their music and impact in Canada, and my love of driving on the QE, QE, W and listening to Canadian radio stations, where they always play you guys and lover boy and all the good stuff. You know what I mean. But so for you, in putting this together, I want to go back to a year ago. You watch hockey, you’re in Toronto, you’re Mississauga. You hear your songs. I mean they they pop up in Canadian culture. Every time I’m up there, I hear your songs. What was the hockey thing and the germ of all of that that happened 52 weeks ago to make this happen?

Gil Moore  11:50

It’s just a crazy story. Like I said, you know, most bands that are out there playing that are, you know, from the, you know, our era, there’s some story behind it, like they either it’s about the money or it’s, you know, you’ve got people that aren’t talking to each other. There’s a lot of bad stories. There’s some good stories too, whereas ours, the story is just this, this. It never was intended, never planned. It just kind of fell together because of the circumstances. Like, I had been working on an idea to create a virtual version, like a mixed reality version of triumph. I’ve been working on that with our lighting director, and that was going on in the background, but there was never any intent to physically go back out and play and like

Nestor Aparicio  12:34

a hologram thing. Or is that what you’re thinking?

8

Gil Moore  12:37

Well, it’s it. It’s hard to explain because it doesn’t exist. You know, so

Nestor Aparicio  12:42

fair enough,

Gil Moore  12:43

it’s not along the lines of what Abba’s doing and what kiss is about to do. But, you know, it was Paul and I, Paul Dexter at masterworks, lighting and I were working on a plan to create a sort of immersive experience that would be able to we wouldn’t have the original musicians at all, but it didn’t really matter, because it it was going, it was going along and had its own trajectory. And, you know, Live Nation was always in the background, kind of going, we think, put the, put the band together and go out and we’ll tour. And we kind of said, We just said no to that. Never thought that would happen. Then the hockey thing was just, it was a lark, you know, where I called Rick, and I said, Hey, man, do you want to take our kids and our wives and go and do this? Because I was, like, always wanted to be in the NHL. That was when I was a kid. It was not about playing drums or singing songs. It was about being a hockey player. And, you know, realized when I was about 15 that, you know, only thing I’d ever do is probably drive a Zamboni like all the other kids. No one was good enough, you know me, and back then there were six teams in the NHL. You very hard. Anyhow, this was a lot of fun to go out there and do that. Rick said, yeah, yeah, let’s go do it like how are we? We got to put a band together. Mike can’t come, so we need a bass player. Anyway, I called Phil x1. Thing led to another, and we got the guys together, you know, Brent and Todd and Phil. And of course, then the magic is, we get in the dressing room and we hit it off like Jack the bear. We get in the rehearsal hall, we start jamming, and everything goes really well. And then we play the gig for the Stanley Cup Finals. And it was a blast. I mean, we had a lot of fun. So we came out of that, and, of course, Live Nation. Then we’re like, all over us, and you know, then our kids start to get the pickup time. They’re like, Come on, Dad, let’s go. Let’s go. So it just became kind of like, well, I don’t know, you only live once. What the heck? But there was no intent to ever have a tour, or there’s no intent to do this. It was kind of like, you know, I like, I liken it to like a laundry hamper that fell down a flight of stairs, and all the clothes went everywhere, and then you had to pick them all up again. It was, whether it’s the documentary, the tribute album, The NHL, any of these things, the kids, it was just here we are. Well, the documentary five years

Nestor Aparicio  14:59

8

ago. I think, spurred on, like there’s a great story with this band, and the features of your fans that were a part of that, and then your reunion, that was a surprise thing that I was jelly. I was like, Man, I wish I could have been there that day, because they’ll never do that again. And the fact that you’re doing this before the leafs win the Stanley Cup probably is also, you know, against all odds, right? Like, anything’s possible now, right?

Gil Moore  15:24

Exactly, yeah, I don’t know where we’re going to take it. I mean, people said, no, like, Okay, well, now that this is the band’s together, things are going well, you know, what are you going to do? Like, where are you going to go? Are you going to do this and do that? I said it’s really simple. We’re going to do the shows we’re committed to, which is, you know, going to wind up in in Boston, and then Montreal, and then we’ll see, you know, it’s that simple. Like, no, no, no, no, plan to really, you know, like, like I said right now Live Nation is like, Oh, we want to really extend the tour. We’re going to go here, we’re going to go there. And it’s like, well, just wait. Like, hold on.

Nestor Aparicio  15:59

What has surprised you about this, when you’ve come back out that if I would have talked to you six weeks ago and there was some movement of foot, and I’m like, No, I’ve already had Rick on, like, back in January, when all this was just getting into the works, after the dates were announced, I said, I really want to talk to, you know, somebody in the band when this is going On, hopefully Gil, and I’m very appreciative of your time as you guys get ready to get back out and do this every other day for a few weeks. But like, what is surprised you the most about this, and especially the fact that you haven’t been on a tour bus in 40 years, which is its own thing,

Gil Moore  16:36

I think what surprised me the most is just how strong the fan reaction is, you know, and you know, I don’t see them as well as, you know, the guys on the front line downstage see them, but I sing a couple songs down front so when I get closer to the audience, I actually look in their eyes and stuff, and I see like there’s a lot of them crying. It kind of blows me away to see that the amount of emotion also, you know, just the fans that you meet in the hotel lobbies, and you know that have traveled, you know, we, we had a gal last week that flew all the way from Australia to see us, and it’s not that unusual, like the people that have, you know, they can. They came to one show in the early part of the tour, and they liked it so much, they booked airline tickets and hotels, and they’re following us. They’re coming to like, three shows or four shows. I’m like, Wow,

8

Nestor Aparicio  17:29

dude, you’re talking to a guy that’s getting on a bus in an hour and going to the garden to see Springsteen tonight, and it’s the third time I’ve seen him in a month. I’m that guy. So, like, I, you know, I traveled around South America with Brian Adams to Montevideo in Santiago, because gave me a chance to see it, and him and a band of Canadians as well another Canadian band there. But in the case of you guys, like I wanted to come up and dot Canada, it didn’t work out for me. The Camden shows here. What are people going to see when they come and see your show? Because I’m sure, with you and Rick putting this thing back together the first time there were, hey, I want it to go this way. I want it. Let’s put this song in and Mike’s health and where he is as well. I definitely don’t want to have you on without talking a little, at least a little bit about that, because this is, um, this is just something I didn’t think I’d ever be talking to you or this about this, and to be in the middle of it. It’s exciting for me as a fan. I’m I am really excited about getting some cheesesteaks and coming up the Philly and seeing you guys in Camden on the 28th Yeah, we, we the set just kind of fell together. I mean, it was just pretty easy, you know, I think we started out with like, three or four more songs than we ended up with, and everyone just sort of agreed in the rehearsals phase, you know, which ones would fit together. Rick did a very good job weaving the set together the he spent more, much more time on it, and got what, much more into the minutia of the transitions between songs and stuff. Did a great job, you know, sort of, and he’s

Gil Moore  19:00

continuing to do a great job on that, you know. So the set is still gets tighter and a little more refined, little the little nuances, little slippery parts, you know. And I think both Rick and I, we can’t get over, I mean, we wish, wish Mike was there, wish Mike was healthy, and that was the plan. We thought, you know, even in the early stages, we thought that, you know, he’ll be with us, you know, or with us the majority of the time, or whatever it’s turned out that isn’t possible. So, you know, Todd’s done a phenomenal job holding down the base role, and he’s fantastic singer as well. Anybody that’s ever heard Tom Kurd sing. I mean, the guys sings like an angel, so and Phil on guitar, I don’t know, in the early interviews we did before knowing whether we were going to do well with the fans or not, and we were just promoting the tour, you know, I said, Well, one thing’s for sure, like, you’ve got a double barreled shotgun in front of the drums, because. I’m looking at the back of Rick Emmett and Phil X and there aren’t two better rock guitar players anywhere in the world, and those two guys on stage at one time, unbelievable. And that has turned out to be accurate, like those guys are a powerhouse. And when you have the two of them and they they’re playing off each other, playing harmonies with each other, the it’s quite phenomenal to see. I think

Nestor Aparicio  20:24

I haven’t done any spoiler stuff out on YouTube at all. I’m gonna come see the show. Old school Gilmore is here from triumph, drummer, founding member. Last thing for you, um, the documentary. Your family, your father, your business, you’ve been in the putting shows on. I call it sort of band camp and lighting and rigging and tours and all of that. That’s the way I think you’ve made your living and staging forever and putting triumph back together almost 50 years later from where the lights were and lasers and all of the things that you did. I would think that the most modern part of this, and I get into this with all my friends that are in bands, that they can do things on a stage, even small little stages, that they can put lights in theatrics and AI and video together that really creates a theatrical production above and beyond a rock concert or a bar band or just white lights, you know. And you were always the guy that had a vision. I mean, when you came and saw triumph back in the day, there were trucks just bringing in your rigs. That was very unusual. And I know, I think even Getty Lee in his book talked about the one up in of all the rock bands after kiss to put on a show, and you were always behind that, I think, with the band, right?

Gil Moore  21:45

8

I always liked, and I still do like the theater that’s associated with it. I was never impressed with the tendency that developed where bands were like, Oh no, we’re not, we’re not going to, you know, be a grand spectacle. Well, I always thought the opposite. I thought, you know, when you go into these big buildings, you know, stadiums and hockey arenas and things like that, you need to, you need to do something that creates some drama around the music and enhances, you know, what’s going on musically. So that was always part of the Triumph ethos, and it still is. And as you said, we got a bigger toy box. Now we have more tools. So it’s really amazing to see, you know, what we’re able to put up, you know now that we couldn’t have done back in the day because of the changes in technology, and I’ve always loved sound like, we have a fantastic sound system on the road that just like, will hit you right in the chest. YouTube. That’s the one problem with YouTube. People look at YouTube, you can see a little bit of what’s going on, but you can’t hear anything like YouTube sounds horrid. So that’s

Nestor Aparicio  22:52

why, that’s what I

Gil Moore  22:54

get. That’s I’m gonna go

Nestor Aparicio  22:55

up, I’m gonna park. We’re gonna drink some beer in a park. I’m gonna get some big fat cheese steaks. Me and Ray Bachman, we’re coming to rock our asses off with you guys in April. Wine on the 28th Gilmore is here. I have now completed the trifecta of all three triumph members on my show and in interviews, and I am appreciating, I say this to all of you who made that music that has been the soundtrack of my life. I’m very appreciative. And we we’ve always had a good time in and around your band. We’ve missed you out on the road, and we wouldn’t be any other place but up in Camden that night. I mean, I’m coming up to Jersey for this. This better be good. You know what? I mean, Gil

8

Gil Moore  23:30

we’ll deliver, I promise you.

Nestor Aparicio  23:32

I know you will. I know. Thanks for the time today, and thanks for the conversation. Keep up the great work.

Gil Moore  23:36

Yeah, thanks for having me on Nestor. Stay

Nestor Aparicio  23:39

8

Healthy out on the road. Bang ’em straight, Gilmore, drummer, founding member of triumph. You want to find Rick Emmett. There’s two or three pieces out in the in the vault at YouTube, as well as a Baltimore positive. And maybe I can grab the old mike Levine. And if you’ve back in like 86 at the Baltimore Civic Center, we’ll rip that one out, and I’ll get that one out on the mp three as well. I am Nestor. We are W NST am 1570 Towson, Baltimore, we never stopped talking Baltimore positive and rock and roll. Stay with us.

Gil Moore  24:06

You.

Share the Post:
8

Paid Advertisement

Right Now in Baltimore

Feeling the magic power of Triumph of putting the band back on the road with drummer Gil Moore

Feeling the magic power of Triumph of putting the band back on the road with drummer Gil Moore

The Rock and Roll Machine that was Triumph the Canadian band of the 1980s has finally reunited and are back on the road together for the first time in 38 years. Dummer Gil Moore tells Nestor about the magic power to get back on stage and on a tour bus with Rik Emmett and see the fans respond to "Hold On" and "Lay It On The Line" in an arena setting. Go see 'em on May 28th at Camden, N.J. when the show gets local.
Wanderlust and seeing the world through a different lens

Wanderlust and seeing the world through a different lens

Our musician pal and local photographer Jason Siemer returns from Borneo with tales and photos that are spectacular while Nestor shares some travelogue tales from South America and previous international trips of exploration, culture and personal growth on the Maryland Crab Cake Tour at Faidley's at Lexington Market. Just two kids from Dundalk and Pasadena who loved baseball going places others only dream about...
Orioles infielder Jordan Westburg undergoes season-ending Tommy John surgery

Orioles infielder Jordan Westburg undergoes season-ending Tommy John surgery

Westburg had hoped to avoid surgery for a torn ulnar collateral ligament in his throwing elbow.
8
8
8

Paid Advertisement

Scroll to Top
Verified by MonsterInsights