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Entertainment Corner
Innerman
Productions
Where?
1st Turn Bar And Grill [formerly known
as the
Coconuts Comedy Club]
2950 Gulf To Bay Blvd.
[0.3 Mi. West of Route 611],
Clearwater, FL 33759

Located between
Clearwater Inn and Days Inn
In front of the Clearwater Travel Resort
Phone: 727-791-2222         
www.1stturnbarandgrill.com
The Sun Drummers and Dancers
Ask people what they remember most about Dave Hagerty, and chances are they won't mention
his genre-bending guitar playing or the bizarre obsessions he sang about in his band, Fattback.
What friends recall is Hagerty's smile - a genuine, kind-eyed grin that rarely left his face.

"Dave had the perma-grin," recalls his Fattback bandmate, John Joern. "He looked like he was
enjoying life every day no matter what."

Adds Steve Pohlman, co-owner of Off Broadway, where Fattback frequently performed: "If you
look at photographs of Dave on stage, that smile was always there. That was consistent - that
wasn't an on-stage thing. When you saw the guy, you were gonna see that smile."

According to Hagerty's parents, that sunny disposition revealed itself early. "From birth on, he
always had a smile on his face," remembers his father, Brian Hagerty. His mother Diane concurs:
"He did. He was always a real happy kid."

Hagerty, 28, passed away on Monday, August 2, from injuries he sustained in a car accident the
previous weekend.

The gregarious Hagerty was best known as a member of Fattback, but he played many roles
within the local music community. He co-hosted the weekly open mic night at Venice Café,
played in the reggae group Ashaka & Ram Jam Reggae, ran trivia nights and taught guitar
lessons in Off Broadway's building. Most nights of the week, he could be found engaged in some
musical pursuit.

The middle of three boys, Hagerty began taking guitar lessons just like his older brother Jim, who
has played with local math-rock whizzes Yowie. "He was interested early on," says Brian
Hagerty. "His older brother took lessons and everything, and I remember us taking him to
lessons at Music Folk in Webster. A lot of it, he progressed on his own. Musically he [drew from]
so many sources. He could play any instrument.

"He got interested in music and never wavered. He liked to experiment and expand, like you
know from his songs. He likes humor, and his songs are usually pretty 'up,'"

His band mates saw a similar drive kick in a few years ago, after Hagerty returned to St. Louis
from a four year stint in Texas. "He kinda followed his dream a couple years ago," Joern says.
"He worked for 1-800-GOT-JUNK for a long time and just got sick of that whole thing, and all he
wanted to do was play music. So he started teaching lessons and until he passed, that's what he
did for a living. He had something like 30 students and taught guitar and did trivia and hosted
open mics. That's what he loved to do."

Hagerty and Joern began playing music together when the two were students at Webster Groves
High School. The pair formed Fattback in 2005 along with Sean Dallmeyer, Mike Apperson and
Grady Breidanbach. The band put out two full-lengths and released its last CD, the five-song EEE
PEE, on July 24. Fattback excelled at blurring the lines between rock, country, folk and jam-band
music, and the band's songs featured nonsensical, off-the-wall lyrics that nonetheless became
audience sing-alongs at Fattback's raucous, participatory live shows.

"As far as songwriting, I would say that 75 percent or more was Dave's, lyrically," Joern says.
"He was the main driving force of Fattback, really, just because him being who he is, it made it so
easy and perfect. We just took anything that came out of his brain, put it on the paper and turned
it into music."

According to his parents, Hagerty remained humble and vague about his contributions to the
band - and always highlighted the contributions of the other band members instead of himself. "I
would always ask David, 'Did you write this song? Who wrote this song?' - like a typical Mom,"
recalls Diane Hagerty. "He always called me 'Mama,' and he would say 'Mama, I'm not gonna tell
you who wrote what 'cause then you're gonna be prejudiced and like that song better.' So I don't
know which songs he wrote."
See the rest of this on RFT
http://blogs.riverfronttimes.com/atoz/2010/08/obituary_dave_hagerty_fattback_rip.php
Life is but a vapor , It's all what you make of it while you are here.
Dave Hagerty
1981-2010
Come enjoy a night
of spoken word,
song, & dance

Destiny House of
Prayer
2953 MLK BLVD.

Friday March 18
Doors open  7:30pm.
Show Time: 8:00 pm

See you there!

Admission $5.00