The Driftwoods Hit The Pier—1
Last year my neighbor from across the street Tom Guadagno
told me that he played in a band called "The Driftwoods." They are a
bunch of middle-aged guys specializing in songs of the Beach Boys era. This
year I finally got to attend one of their concerts, here in Narragansett, Rhode
Island. It was held at the gazebo in Narragansett Pier on Saturday, July 6,
2002. I decided to take some photos that they could link their web site to.
The weather was mild, dry, and beautiful. The crowd was
large. Everybody had a good time. The photos appear on three pages, two of the
the entire group and one with close-ups of each performer. I hope you enjoy
them. Brief comments are offered below some of the photos.
(Technically minded folks might like to know the nuts and
bolts. I used a Canon Eos Rebel equipped with a Promaster 28–200-mm zoom lens.
I shot two 24-exposure rolls of Fuji 400 film, then culled the prints down to
the 15 shown here. The film was developed at Kingstown Camera in Wakefield, RI,
and printed on 6x8-inch paper with their "KenRahn channel," which
reproduces the entire negative, including the irregular black edges, so that I
can use the entire image (which you never get with normal prints). I then scanned
the prints on an Epson Expression 800 controlled by PhotoShop and SilverFast Ai
v. 5.5 from LaserSoft Imaging and the IT-8 Calibration system. This photo show
was constructed for the web in MS FrontPage 2000.)
Right across from the gazebo is the Narragansett Town Beach. This is what it looked like at 7 p.m. during the concert.
The beginning of Narragansett's famous sea wall was occupied with people listening to the concert from across the street. You can see some of the audience on the far right. The gazebo is just beyond the right side of the picture.
The official announcement as the concert was beginning.
Some of the early audience. Narragansett's famed Towers is in the background.
A broader shot of the audience about halfway through the concert. The evening could not have been more beautiful.
Here they are, The Driftwoods! From left to right, they are Tony, Tom, and Sal Guadagno, Bill Lauro, Pete Flori behind "Del" Del Signore, and Ed Civito. Michael Guadagno (Tom's son) is watching carefully.
Del, Pete, and Ed. Ed seems particularly content with his work on bass guitar.
Sal Guadagno also plays trumpet in several of the numbers.