A veritable whoβs who of Tucson music legends will share the Club Congress stage on Saturday, Nov. 18, to celebrate the release of a CD that will benefit Casa Maria.
βGlimmers of Hope: Songs for Casa Maria,β produced by Rich Hopkins, features contributions from some of Tucsonβs most celebrated musicians, including Howe Gelb, Billy Sedlmayr, Hopkins and his band Luminarios, Lisa Morales, River Roses, Tom Walbank, Mark Insley and Joe PeΓ±a. The album also includes a song from Tucson-born, Tempe-based indie rocker Roger Clyne.
βIt just all turned out so magical because all the songs just fell together in some cosmic kind of way,β Hopkins said. βThe songs sound tailored for Casa Maria, dealing with issues of homelessness, struggles, forgiveness, loss and glimmers of hope.β
The album features a dozen songs that the artists have previously recorded, including Pakulisβs βAllβs Forgiven,β Moralesβs βHermana,β βDark End of the Streetβ from Sedlmayr and Gabriel Sullivan, Insleyβs βTen Cent Redemption,β βRunninβ Down a Trainβ from Peter Dalton Ronstadt and Liz Cerepanya, and Walbankβs βTamp it Down.β
Hopkins said Howe Gelbβs βTurn Down the Dayβ was the only new song on the album, which also features βCominβ Down Againβ from Hopkins and Luminarios, βRunning Around the Sunβ from Joe PeΓ±a, βPeachβ by River Roses, βLook My Wayβ by Stephen Edward Lee and βMariaβ by Roger Clyne and the Peacemakers.
βGlimmers of Hopeβ is a follow-up to βThe Whole Enchilada: The History of Desert Rock, Tucson, Arizona, 1978-1994,β which Hopkins curated and released in summer 2022. That album, which also benefitted Casa Maria, is an anthology of Tucson desert rock, featuring profiles and photos of 28 Tucson bands and 31 songs that provided the soundtrack for Hopkins and the generation coming out of that era.
Hopkins said he didnβt have time to do anything on the scale of βThe Whole Enchiladaβ for the annual Casa Maria Thanksgiving Benefit Concert, which Hopkins launched around 25 years ago.
βThis was really easy and fun,β Hopkins said of the new album. βIt just sounds like it was all kind of meant to be. It wasnβt 12 people sending me strangely random songs and it sounds kind of odd. It sounds like it was meant to be.β
Tucson native Morales, who has lived in Austin, Texas, for years, will headline Saturdayβs concert at Club Congress, 311 E. Congress St. Doors open at 5 p.m. and the show starts at 5:30 with artists performing short sets. Admission is a suggested $10 donation and donations of canned food and clothing also will be accepted.
Also on the lineup: Peter Ronstadt and Liz Cerepanya, Walbank, River Roses, Rich Hopkins and Luminarios, Sedlmayr, Pakulis, Lee and Insley.
Longtime Casa Maria worker and activist Brian Flagg will be the master of ceremonies.
Copies of the CD will be available for sale at the show or at Hurricane Records, 636 N. Fourth Ave. Proceeds from the sale will benefit Casa Maria.Β
Tucson Landmarks: Hotel Congress, 311 E. Congress St., opened in 1919 as a luxurious mainstay for visitors arriving in the Old Pueblo.
The downtown landmark has kept much of its history alive in the past century, while also bringing modern amenities to Tucson natives and tourists.
Video by Riley Brown / For the Arizona Daily Star



