NEWSPAPER ARTICLES & RADIO BROADCASTS REGARDING THE DOCUMENTARY & SUBSEQUENT CONCERT/SHOW
Read the writeup in The Welland Tribune, Wednesday, May 5, 2010
Read the writeup in Niagara This Week, Wednesday, December 16, 2009
Read the writeup in The St. Catharines Standard, Thursday, December 17, 2009
Read the writeup in The Welland Tribune, Friday, April 30, 2010
Read the writeup in The Pelham News, Friday, May 7, 2010
Read the full writeup in The Pelham News, Friday, May 7, 2010
There are other articles that have since been lost to time for all but the microfiche crowd.
ARNIE DYKER WILL ALWAYS BE REMEMBERED.. GREAT HUMAN BEING.
Paul would like to thank everyone at CKTB who helped promote this documentary;
Laurie Walsh, Mike Saunders, Tim Dennis, Kevin Jack
Tom McConnell & Greg Campagna
Tim Dennis: Interview Wednesday November 18, 2009
Tom McConnell: Interview Monday November 23, 2009
Tom McConnell: Santa Swap Tuesday November 24, 2009
Tom McConnell: Santa Swap Wednesday November 25, 2009
Tom McConnell: Greg Campagna's Santa Swap Review of Doc Wednesday November 25, 2009
Tom McConnell: Santa Swap & another review by Greg Thursday November 26, 2009
Kevin Jack: Premiere Screening Plug Monday December 14, 2009
PRESS RELEASE
Friday November 13, 2009
The Big Story of Small Potatoes
Filmmaker digs up lost music scene of Niagara
Paul Miil has just released an enlightening documentary on the lost music scene of Niagara from the 60's and early 70's.
It is a portrait of the kids of the music scene, told from the perspective of those same teenagers 40 years later.
Paul says, "I grew up in the area in the 70's and 80's and I played in garage bands, but I never knew that there was such a thriving music industry in the streets of Niagara a decade before. These guys toured from the East coast to Thunderbay.. and they were sixteen years old. Everyone knew that Neil Peart came from here, but none of us knew about the scene that he came from."
Paul stumbled onto the lost Niagara music scene while researching a concept for a documentary on local musican Neil Peart. Upon discovering the scope of the scene, Paul changed the subject of his documentary from the one kid to the many kids who were involved.