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Frederick's News-Post
February 14, 2004

The Funk Box - Be there or be square there, or be square

By Karen Gardner
News-Post Staff
Staff photo by Sam Yu

BALTIMORE -- It may only be six months old, but the Funk Box already has the makings of a Baltimore landmark.

Sandwiched between funky shops and cute restaurants, the little nightclub in trendy Federal Hill has big ambitions of becoming Baltimore's premier live music venue.

It is housed in that very Baltimore-style of building, the row house. The night spot is actually two row houses opened into one, and the music is a mix of styles that the owners hope will draw listeners from all around Maryland, Pennsylvania, Washington and other surrounding states.

The music is blues, funk (of course), jazz, R&B, rock, bluegrass, reggae, alt-country, fusion, latin, folk and singer songwriter. Earlier this month, the singer-songwriter duo the Kennedys performed. A week or so later, a Pink Floyd wannabe band played to a far different audience.

Within a 45-minute drive from Frederick is a live music venue that will host the groove strains of Garaj Mahal on Sunday, Feb. 29, the bluegrass group Railroad Earth on Thursday, March 4, the Jarflys on Friday, March 12, Jordan Knight on Tuesday, March 23, and Jonatha Brooke on Sunday, March 28.

This variety is a little more cohesive than it might seem, according to Tim Walther, co-owner of the Funk Box and the talent promoter for the club. "I call it Baltimore blue-collar heritage music," he said. Some of the music is acoustic, while some bands use little amplification.

But the club is all about presenting the music in a cozy listening atmosphere with a high-tech sound system and a spring-loaded wooden dance floor.

The Funk Box fits its name. Its boxy appearance has a touch of the funk with its purple-painted brick exterior. Inside, the 30-foot by 80-foot building hardly looks big enough to hold up to 400 people, the capacity allowed in the building.

Listeners can surround the 16 by 18-foot stage on three sides, or watch from the balcony above as dancers shake on the spring-loaded dance floor, which sways when dancers fill the floor.

"We imported the dance floor from Oregon," said Dave Rather, who with Walther co-owns the nightclub. "It adds a little bounce to your step.

"We like funky music that makes you move and dance, although sometimes we have seated shows."

Mostly the Funk Box shows are for a standing audience, although there are bar stools scattered about for seating and there is seating at a bar in the front of the club.

The club's owners aim for an audience ages 25 to 35, but depending on the show, ages and cultural backgrounds vary widely. When Malian guitarist Habib Koite and his band Bamada played, many Africans living in the Washington area and embassy officials from the various African embassies attended.

The audience was very different for a Pink Floyd tribute band, Rather said. DaVinci's Notebook, the Nighthawks, Deanna Bogart, Sam Bush and the Seldom Scene have all appeared at the club since it opened in September.

The club actually re-opened. For the past 20 years, it had been known as the Eight by Ten Club, named after the club's address at 8-10 E. Cross St. Over the years, the Dave Matthews Band, Phish, Bo Diddley, Billy Joel, Widespread Panic, the Red Hot Chili Peppers, the String Cheese Incident and Robert Cray played at the tiny club. It closed in July 2002.

Walls and floors were taken out, and what was once a cramped concert venue now has a little more room for listeners to breathe and move. Rather said listeners can actually converse while most bands are playing. And, there is a smoke-eater.

The 8,000-square-foot space is bordered by the original brick wall on one side and by painted acoustic tiles on the other. In between is lots of black and mood lights that give the place a sophisticated urban feel.

Rather, 35, is the owner of Mother's Federal Hill Grille, a neighborhood tavern and seafood-style restaurant around the corner on South Charles Street. He had been a fan of the Eight by Ten for its last 10 years. The club had seen better days when he approached the former owner about buying it.

"We had a grand closing, and started renovating in September," Rather said. He brought in an architectural firm that specialized in refurbishing historic buildings into unique uses. The 19th-century building was gutted. "We only left the back wall, the side wall and part of the front wall," he said.

Workers dug a basement and installed large, airy, monochromatic bathrooms with colored tiles and mood lights. "The old bathrooms here were notorious," Rather said.

The walls are fire retardant, with the ability to resist fires for three hours, preventing the possibility of another night-club tragedy. "It's night and day compared to the old standards," Rather said. Pyrotechnics, responsible for two nightclub fires last year, will not be part of the club's special effects.

"Ours is more subdued lighting," he said.

Rather is most proud of the sound system. "It's made for a listening room where you can hear the vocal harmonies," he said. He hired an acoustic engineer for a state-of-the-art sound.

Rather has always been a fan of New Orleans jazz, and usually attends the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival. He met Tim Walther and his wife Junipa, who run Walther Productions, and began attracting the bands needed to make the venue work.

Tickets average $15, with a range of $5 to $25. Audiences range from 100 to 200 on a slow night, to sellout crowds of 400. A typical night will draw 200 people to the Funk Box.

He named it the Funk Box to showcase the club's variety. "It was a little box, and it just stuck in our head," he said. 'You don't want to pigeonhole yourself into one style of music."

Most shows start at 7 or 8 p.m. on weeknights, and 8 or 9 p.m. on weekends. Local bands with a younger following may play later, but singer-songwriter bands and bands that appeal to older people often start earlier.

 

Jefferson couple key to booking live music venues

JEFFERSON -- The key to survival as a live music night club is good music.

For the Funk Box, a night club that opened six months ago in the Federal Hill district of Baltimore, Tim Walther and his wife Junipa hold that key.

The couple co-owns the Funk Box with Dave Rather, who also owns Mother's Federal Hill Grille, a neighborhood tavern and seafood restaurant.

"Our primary focus is to bill it as the premier live music venue in Baltimore," Walther said.

Walther, 37, first spoke with Rather, 35, about opening a night club about eight years ago when Walther was handing out flyers for various bands.

"We built some really good relationships with the bands," he said.

Walther and Junipa, 36, who has a different last name but who goes by Junipa, met at a music festival, and they have been booking for and publicizing bands ever since.

They also book bands into the State Theatre in Falls Church, Va., the Recher Theatre in Towson, and other venues around Baltimore and D.C.

Their music festivals have attracted Bela Fleck, Leftover Salmon, the String Cheese Incident and Government Mule.

"We have a good ear for music and a good sense for who will attract a crowd," Walther said. Each May, the company hosts the All good Music Festival and Camp Out on a mountaintop near Morgantown, W.Va., and for several years running, sponsored Walther's Grassroots Music and Arts Festival at Oregon Ridge Park near Baltimore.

"It's up to us to make sure the band is of value, and it's up to us to make sure people come," Junipa said. "We have a reputation of fulfilling promises."

"It seems like it's a business of osmosis," Walther said.

Walther Productions specialized in bands on the way up. Two thirds of the bands signed to play at the Funk Box tour nationally. These bands may not fill the big arenas, but often have a following.

Some of these bands include the jazz-rock band Garaj Mahal, the roots band Railroad Earth, the Toasters, a ska band and the Edwin McCain Band, a roots pop band from South Carolina.

For more information, go to www.walther-productions.com. [email protected]

 

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