PEORIA MAGAZINE June 2023
Jennings and Hauser are friends who share a passion for the causes of military veterans such as Tunnels for Towers. Van Meter, a big fan of Yellowstone , found out the two were going to be in Sun Valley, Idaho, last fall and asked Jennings if he wanted music. Sure enough, Jennings did. While the road crew set up, Hauser sat next to Van Meter by a roaring campfire. ‘WHERE I GO, I WANT KURT, BECAUSE THEY BRING IT’ — Actor Cole Hauser “We just clicked,” Van Meter said. “He grew up in southern Oregon, just like I did. His dad” — the actor Wings Hauser – “had played football at Oregon State, which is where I played. So we just connected.
Hauser told his fundraising promoter, Brad Keltner: “Where I go, I want Kurt, because they bring it.” Among the shows Keltner booked were a couple in Florida, in December 2022. That’s where Lesley Matuszak, publisher of Peoria Magazine and president/CEO of WTVP, found herself seated at a table with Hauser and heard Van Meter and his band for the first time. “When Kurt got up there and per formed, I loved his style,” Matuszak said. “Then I heard his story and thought, ‘Wow, this is great!’ But what really hooked me was when I found out he was into Tunnel for Towers and veterans’ issues along with Cole. I thought, ‘We gotta get this guy to Peoria.’” A UNIQUE SOUND Van Meter’s sound mixes classic country with a touch of pop country, influenced by the best of Southern rock. He bills himself as “outlaw country” and certainly delivers on that promise. While the band performs mostly covers, they work in originals, too. Echoes of the Outlaws was ranked by Blue Rhymez Entertainment among the best new country songs of 2022. And you can’t get much more outlaw than Van Meter’s unapologetic Go (Expletive) Yourself . The band includes his longtime drummer, Ed Mesa, lead guitarist Logan Kalsch, bassist Zach Stevens and two time national fiddle champion Aarun Carter. Van Meter is the engine that drives this production, but Carter sets the stage on fire. “I’ve never seen another instrument do what a fiddle does to the crowd,” Van Meter said. Within the serendipity of Van Meter’s music journey, his 2014 cover of the Bob Seger classic Turn the Page might have been most important. To give the song a country flavor, Van Meter recorded it with a fiddle doing the saxophone parts. He bought a license to make 1,000 copies and stream it online. The song was getting about 20 streams per month when country star
Eric Church heard it and added it to his own Spotify channel. Within a few months, the song had been streamed more than 4 million times and Van Meter had to take it down for violating terms of the license. THE BAND INCLUDES NATIONAL FIDDLE CHAMPION AARUN CARTER. ‘I’VE NEVER SEEN ANOTHER INSTRUMENT DO WHAT A FIDDLE DOES TO A CROWD,’ VAN METER SAID But now he had a name and a sound, and his music career began to grow. Carter said she has been fiddling with the band “for seven or eight years now. It started with just one gig, then kind of off and on and eventually more full time. Honestly, the reason I’ve stayed so long is Kurt himself. He’s a really hard worker and a great guy.” MAKING A PEORIA CONNECTION Matuszak is convinced Peorians will pick up on that when they hear the band. She wants to showcase the Peoria area for Hauser and Van Meter. “If Cole Hauser and Kurt Van Meter get back on their plane and tell all the people they see about the good they saw here, that’s good for us,” Matuszak said. “That helps move the region forward.” Free tickets to the June 24 State & Water show, featuring Kurt Van Meter and the Band, are available on a first-come/first-served basis. Call 309-677-4747 to reserve a ticket. The Hauser fundraising event on June 23 is by invitation only.
Kurt Van Meter and Actor Cole Hauser
“He hadn’t heard us play yet. But we opened that show with our foot on the gas, doing Folsom Prison and Orange Blossom Special . As soon as we started, the crowd was into it and I looked down, and right there, front and center, Cole was slapping the stage, taking off his cowboy hat and fanning the flames off our fiddle player. “The cops ended up shutting us down that night.”
Kirk Wessler is a former newspaper sports editor who has turned his attention in semi retirement to a new passion as a singer/ songwriter
JUNE 2023 PEORIA MAGAZINE 67
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