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Redondo Union High School Redondo Beach, CA October 16 , 2014 Vol. XCV Edition 4
TIDE
Inside pg. 2, 4, 5 Unless it is saved, SoCal ROC will be cut at the end of this year
pg. 14 Maddie Bright won the Legion of Valor award in MCJROTC
pg. 18 The girls tennis team beat Palos Verdes last week for the first time in a decade
Just doing what they love Andrew Blanchet and his rockabilly, rhythm and swing band Naked Blonde don’t necessarily want to make it big as long as they keep their current passion for music by Allegra Peelor and Chris Paludi It all started in a small coffee shop that didn’t even have a real stage. Senior Andrew Blanchet, his brother and his friends formed a rockabilly, rhythm and swing band called Naked Blonde four years ago. “Once the first notes hit, it’s like no feeling you’ve ever experienced. I have never replaced that feeling of being on stage. It’s just something so surreal as if you’re in a dream,” Blanchet said. Blanchet’s first show was in a small coffee shop next to a Von’s. “We moved all the furniture and set up. It was just starting to get dark, and you could hear us all the way from Vons, and people started running in,” Blanchet said. “It was low budget, local, and wasn’t even advertised except for on the day. And everyone came right then. It’s a memory I would never trade the world for.” But even before their first gig, the Blanchets’ band had one challenge: picking a name. Eventually, they settled upon Naked Blonde . “It took us weeks if not months to identify a name, because you have five band members and they need one name -- that takes a while,” Blanchet said. “We ended up with this because, if you go back to the fifties, you imagine this really attractive girl with big blonde hair. It’s definitely a name that draws people in, and gets people to check us out.” Naked Blonde is a rockabilly band -- a combination of the words rock ‘n roll and hillbilly, a fusion of blues, country, and rock ‘n roll. “In that first gig, the music was so starkly offset from whatever the crowd had ever heard that they were just staring at us— at first we thought it was be-
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PHOTO BY MASHA PESCHERYAKOVA