Time to Reflect

May has arrived and summer is knocking at our door. This is the time the Rushmore Plaza Civic Center staff look back and reflect on our busy winter months and the great successes we have made and the exciting events we have coming.
The 2009-2010 season gave us yet another successful Broadway Play Series, a Central Hockey League Championship, a Nationally televised Olympic Skating performance, the King of Comedy, a show that sold out in 38 minutes, 3 High School State tournament events, and numerous other events.

As we take just a few seconds to pause and enjoy the successful season, we quickly change focus to make the 2010-2011 season even better. There are a couple concerts playing in the next month – Skillet and Korn will light up the stages and provide some great entertainment, Graduations will bring in over 10,000 people in one day to the “Center of It All” and see almost 1,000 Rapid City youth close one chapter and begin another. Hills Alive will keep us hopping in July as they celebrate their 25th Anniversary. The Broadway Play Series will feature “A Chorus Line”, “Grease”, “The Wizard of Oz” and “Spamalot”. Carrie Underwood will perform in front of a sold out crowd in December. All of that plus Tradeshows, Auctions, Luncheons, Conferences, and Meetings remind us that though we can look back and reflect on our successes, we need to always look forward and keep the Civic Center at the Center of It All!

What a season! Way to go RUSH

As we prepare this week to remove the ice from the Ice Arena next week, we want to take a minute to reflect on a fabulous hockey season.

The season began in October and ended with a CHL championship May 4th. The Rapid City RUSH fans were voted the best in the league and attendance was among the highest in the CHL. The Rushmore Plaza Civic Center is honored to see how Rapid City has embraced the team and its’ players and welcomed them into our community. The season gave us some very good games and not so good games, but the fans never gave up.

The Rapid City RUSH became only the 4th team in CHL history to win the President’s Cup in their second season and lifted the Ray Miron’s Presidents Cup over their heads as they skated their victory laps around the ice.

The Rushmore Plaza Civic Center staff and Board of Directors congratulate our partners, the Rapid City RUSH, on their fantastic season and eagerly awaiting the start of the 2010-2011 season.

GO RUSH!

Carrie Underwood comes to Rapid City

Carrie Underwood’s career is the stuff of dreams. Possessed of that rarest of combination–undeniable talent, an extraordinary work ethic, and girl-next-door likeability–she blossomed as a national phenomenon before tens of millions of viewers by winning American Idol, captivated by both her vocal talent and personality. The artistic growth that has accompanied her subsequent rise into the upper reaches of the entertainment world has placed her among the foremost artists of her generation.

Hers is superstardom with a human face. Press, fans and peers alike have recognized that beneath the fairy tale gowns there still beats the heart of a dreamer, and her grace amid the extraordinary demands of such a public rise has given each accomplishment added luster.

Those accomplishments have been myriad. With just two albums behind her, Carrie has built a career that would be the treasured work of a lifetime for most artists. The breadth and depth of her work speaks for itself–songs like “Jesus, Take The Wheel,” “Before He Cheats,” “So Small,” “All-American Girl,” “Last Name” and “Just A Dream,” among others, have been a rich part of the new millennium’s musical soundscape. She has passed the ten million mark in CD sales and become the first country artist in history to achieve ten #1 singles from her first two albums. She is reigning ACM Entertainer of the Year, just the seventh woman in the show’s 42-year history to take that crown, and has been both ACM and CMA Female Vocalist of the Year for three consecutive years. Her list of awards includes five CMAs and eight ACMs, as well as four Grammys and a host of others from People’s Choice, Billboard, the American Music Awards, Teen Choice, CMT and many others. She has twice been chosen co-host of the CMA Awards, and she was the top-selling country female touring artist of 2008, as her headlining “Carnival Ride Tour” played to more than 1.2 million people.

Among Carrie’s most treasured milestones is her induction into the Grand Ole Opry. Despite all her accolades, travels from New York to Los Angeles, all the entertainment shows and magazine covers, she remains firmly rooted in country music. She was invited to join by one of her idols, Randy Travis, whose “I Told You So” she took to the top of the charts in 2009, and inducted by another, Garth Brooks.

“The induction award they gave me says, ‘Hey, you’re a part of the family,’” she says. “It means a lot to me because it’s the heart of country music, the church, the sacred place, the super-elite club that says you love this music.”

Her love for music is evident throughout her third album, Play On, as is her arrival as a mature artist, confident, fully in command of her extraordinary vocal skills, and tackling a wider artistic range both lyrically and musically. Equally important, in co-writing seven of the CD’s thirteen songs, she emerges as a songwriter of real depth, opening a wider window into her creativity and allowing her fans their most intimate look at Carrie the artist and person.

“Because of my songwriting,” she says, “I feel like somebody can listen to this album and get more of a sense of who I am. They can listen to certain things and think, ‘This is really sincere. This is really emotional. She was a writer on it, so this comes from something that was deep inside of her heart.’ I do feel like people can get to know me a lot better from Play On.”

Carrie’s songwriting had already brought her two awards from BMI, the performing rights organization, for “All-American Girl” and “So Small,” and Play On brings that side of her work to fruition. The public’s first glimpse came with Play On’s first single, “Cowboy Casanova,” which Carrie co-wrote with Mike Elizondo and Brett James. The song, with its high-energy look at “a snake with blue eyes” roared into the Top 10 in just four weeks.

Much of the album is in fact concerned with the ups and downs of love, the good and bad among the world’s men. Songs range from “This Time” and “Mama’s Song,” two takes on the best that love has to offer, to “Undo It” and “Songs Like This,” which lay it on the line for the men in relationships gone wrong, and from “Look At Me,” which features vocal help from Vince Gill and deals with the pure exhilaration of falling in love, to “What Can I Say,” a song of regret featuring Sons of Sylvia. One of the true vocal highlights is “Someday When I Stop Loving You,” an exquisitely sung exploration of sadness in the wake of a failed relationship.

Carrie’s own experiences let her infuse both ends of the spectrum with the sting of truth. “I’ve seen a lot in the dating world,” she says, “and it’s not one-dimensional, where I’m in love all the time or hate men all the time. I’ve been everywhere in between, and through my own experience or that of friends, I’ve seen every kind of guy, and I think some of these songs capture the everywhereness of being a woman.”

But there is much more to be found on Play On. The title cut is an exhortation to persistence in the midst of obstacles, sung with the fire that has marked so much of Carrie’s work. “Temporary Home,” penned by Carrie with Zac Maloy and Luke Laird, is one of the strongest representations of hope ever committed to CD, as Carrie tells the story of a boy in foster care, a young mother in crisis, and a man facing his own mortality.

Given Carrie’s emergence as a force for social good in terms of charitable work and humanitarian causes, “Change” is in a very real sense the album’s cornerstone.

“This is a world so big it can break your heart,” she says. “It just seems like there are so many problems. What do you do? Where do you start? Well, there are opportunities every day, so many things around you where you can make a difference. Sometimes it’s the smallest thing–the person in this song had just 36 cents, you know?–and I’m really anticipating being able to do some good with this song.”

For all the variety in its subject matter, for all the musical avenues it explores, Play On is an album that will resonate for its energy, its celebration of life, and its reflection of Carrie as an artist hitting stride.

“There’s a little more mature subject matter on certain songs for sure,” Carrie says, “but I like to think I’m still young enough to keep the fun and the sass and things like that. I’m also in a good place where I do feel a lot more grown-up, more confident in my writing and in my ability to open myself up a little bit more.”

By now the particulars of Carrie’s early years are well known. She grew up in Checotah, Oklahoma, “playing on dirt roads, climbing trees, and, of course, singing,” something she did in church, and in grade school musicals and talent shows. She attended Northeastern State University in Tahlequah, OK, majoring in broadcast journalism with an eye to a practical career. Her sorority sisters at Sigma Sigma Sigma, though, urged her to sing publicly, and she overcame her shyness enough to sing at a Branson-style show that included singing, dancing and comedy. “It was mainly there,” she says, “that I learned what it was like to be in front of a crowd.” During her senior year, she heard about auditions for American Idol, and the magic that accompanied her tryout has been unfolding before the eyes of the American public ever since.

Carrie still treasures the upbringing that has helped her keep her feet on the ground while her life and career have soared. She visits family and friends in Checotah when she can, and she has established a foundation called C.A.T.S. – Checotah Animal, Town, and School Foundation to focus charitable efforts on her hometown community.

“I felt like it was a really good time to start something that could do good for others,” she says, “because I’ve had so much good fortune just poured on me over the past five years that it’s definitely time to give back.”

Giving back has become a big part of her life, from traveling to Africa with American Idol’s Idol Gives Back, to visiting troops in the Middle East, it is her giving spirit that she sees as the cornerstone of her legacy. While she is working to make meaningful and lasting art, she is working to keep that quest within a larger context.

“Everybody has the power to do something, to be a contributing force,” she says, “and I would rather people look back on my life and say, ‘She made the world a better place.’ We can all do things like that, and I believe that when opportunities arise for you to do good, you should do good.”

Her commitment to that goal, like her incredible accomplishments as an artist, has made Carrie synonymous with all that is best in modern music. With Play On, she takes both her life and her art another big step forward.

-Taken from CarrieUnderwoodoffical.com

Meet Brian Regan

Meet Brian Regan.

Critics and peers agree, Brian Regan has distinguished himself as one of the premier comedians in the country. The perfect balance of sophisticated writing and physicality, Brian fills theaters nationwide with fervent fans that span generations.

Releasing two critically acclaimed hour Comedy Central specials and DVD’s in as many years – 2008’s “The Epitome of Hyperbole,” and 2007’s “Brian Regan Standing Up” – Brian has set a standard of excellence that others continually try to follow.

Brian’s non-stop theater tour has visited more than 80 cities each year since 2005 and continues into 2009. It is the quality of his material, relatable to a wide audience and revered by his peers, which continues to grow Brian’s fan base.

With his first appearance on “The Late Show with David Letterman” in 1995, Brian solidified his place on the show and recently made his 20th appearance. He also includes regular visits to “Late Night with Conan O’Brien” on his schedule.

A dorm room favorite, Brian’s 1997 CD, “Brian Regan Live,” has sold over 150,000 copies and consistently charts in iTunes Top Ten Comedy Albums. Brian’s 2000 “Comedy Central Presents” special continues to be a top viewer choice and Brian’s independently released 2004 DVD, “I Walked on the Moon,” is available at www.BrianRegan.com.

- taken from the Brian Regan website. www.BrianRegan.com

Click on the link above to check out some of Brian’s “Artwork”, photos and slide shows. You WILL be entertained. Then come check him out at the Rushmore Plaza Civic Center… because we all know a good show is way better when it’s LIVE!

One Suite Deal

You ever been the person who really should throw a party? You know you are, you feel like you should, or want to, but when it comes to the planning… all creativity drops through the floor. “Well, we could just go to another restaurant…”

I’ve had this conversation with myself many a time and when I am NOT the one throwing the party – and I don’t know anyone that IS throwing a party, and I can’t think of a good REASON to throw a party… ideas are just building up. I am inspired by the slightest thing. But of course, when my turn comes, a wide swath of “blank” fills my mind. Nothing.

All of that has changed, though. For a limited time, during the end of the Rapid City RUSH hockey season, the public has the chance to rent one of the reserved suites at an incredible rate. (I can’t publish it here, sorry, you’ll have to call for those details.) Imagine taking all your friends to the RUSH Championship games and hanging out in a SUITE all night. Some gourmet appetizers – which can be provided by the Rushmore Plaza Civic Center, some drinks – which can also be provided by the Rushmore Plaza Civic Center… and you have a swank party for you and your friends. It is easy – all you have to do is call.

The Suites are available in the off-season as well; complete with giant televisions, food, drinks, a fridge, a couch… all kinds of luxurious amenities.

Just in case you like to party.

Give us a call. 605.394.4115

One Kind Favor

Favors are one of those things people always begin asking for with an “I hate to ask, but…”. I don’t think they really hate to ask, but I listen anyway and invariably oblige them with carrying out said favor. It’s a favor, after all, and the hope, of course, is that if I fulfill your favor, you will someday fulfill mine.

Granted, there is some special accommodation made for people who are particularly important to me. Or people whom I particularly admire or love whom themselves, actually have no knowledge of me. BB King is one of those people.

I remember I had the blessed opportunity once to receive a hug, a photo, and some conversation from BB King’s some-times base player and I felt as though I had reached through time and touched the King of Blues himself.

There is a swagger, a sultry, sad and yet powerful feel about the blues. It is not depressing, as much as acknowledging the state and strife of our lives as human beings. It also quietly celebrates these as blessed gifts and takes a lazy elation from the joys of life.

BB King embodies the spirit of that music. His demeanor is sweet and yet powerful, his voice rolls over the lyrics with feeling and emotion, but none dramatic and elaborate – more simple, honest. If BB King were to ask me a favor, I would drop whatever I had in my hands and stand at the ready.

He does, actually, ask a favor, in the title track of his new album, One Kind Favor. The favor he asks, though is not one I would expect and when it comes to it we see his favor is ambiguous.

I cannot literally honor his favor request. At least not now. But, I can honor him and enjoy doing so very much indeed. This, I shall do, as a favor to him, and a treat for myself. BB King will be playing at the Rushmore Plaza Civic Center in Rapid City, and like the young people in the video, standing at the front of the stage with my arms in the air, I will be at the show at the Civic Center, letting the sound of the legend fill my ears. That will be my favor to him.

Black Hills Home Show

The birds are singing, the sky is light well after 5pm, the grass is beginning to green, and the Black Hills Home Show is moving into the Rushmore Plaza Civic Center. It must be Spring.

Spring in the Black Hills is a beautiful time of year. It seems we all suddenly have a little extra energy, a little extra life. Winter has gone and we are nearly wiggling out of our skin with anticipation for all the wonderful things we’ll do this Spring and Summer.

Our homes, it seems, are ready for spring time too. At least in my house, it is as if the windows are begging to be opened and the walls painted. Even the empty flower pots appear to be turning their dirt laden faces up at me, suddenly filled with hope.

This is why we love the annual Black Hills Home Show; it just adds to our spring! Businesses and Exhibitors pack the civic center with the latest and greatest in home improvement and crafts, equipment and ideas. We, the citizens of the Black Hills will flock, and wander the isles, rooms and hallways, eyes wide like small children in toy stores. We will sit on tractors and buy home improvement products, we will play, and plan, and dream. Our homes and yards will smile broadly at us as we pull into the driveway full of ideas and materials to breathe life back into our lives.

Add to your Spring. Visit the Black Hills Home Show!

Strings in Concert

Music is one of the beautiful, incredible gifts that allow us to connect to the creative sides of ourselves. According to a variety of sources, making music can also make you smarter. Something about use of your mind in a creative way while incorporating the translation functions of reading music… I don’t know. What I do know is that music stirs life, it inspires us, connects us and elicits emotion. Music, is powerful.

Of course, when you are sitting in your car and listening to the radio, the power is somewhat diminished. In an auditorium or theater, with the lights down low and comfortably seated in a cushy chair, you can create your own little sphere in which to take in the experience.

This Saturday night, March 20th, you will have a chance to do just that as you take in the sight, and sound of 800 stringed instrument artists taking the stage. Imagine that kind of power washing over you in the form of music. Truly, it is, an incredible experience. There are very few events like this – even across the country. Rapid City has a strong musical community led by instructors who have garnered a sort of legendary status, locally and beyond. We are lucky to have the ability to offer this kind of musical experience.

Come, and let yourself be washed away with the art of music.

The concert will be held in our Rushmore Plaza Civic Center theater at both 6pm and 8pm Saturday evening.

Black Hills Regional Job Fair

Need a job? The Rushmore Plaza Civic Center has been hosting the Black Hills regional job fair for years. The goal, of course, is to match job seekers with companies who are looking to deepen their staff or simply fill vacant positions.

The Black Hills Regional Job Fair supports the community in other ways as well. By allowing companies to set up booths at the Rushmore Plaza Civic Center it allows young people to have a chance to see what kinds of jobs are out there, and speak to potential employers about what kind of education and/or experience is required for the kinds of positions they may be interested in.

The Exhibitors list is long, and some of the businesses listed I must admit, I had not heard of. Black Hills Moulding, for instance… I think I would like to attend the fair just to see what they do. Major employers such as the City of Rapid City and Custer State Park will also be there, as will some companies from smaller, more specialized fields such as Midwest Mercantile.

Bottom line is whether you are looking for a summer gig at a Black Hills Resort, or you are interested in discovering a whole new career possibility, the Black Hills Career fair is a great place to start.

Come prepared to interview; dress nicely and have current resumes ready to hand out to any potential employers. Good luck! We’ll see you tomorrow.

For more information on the exhibitors, check out http://webpages.sdsmt.edu/~dsawyer/bhjf/

Cars, cars, cars

Cars have been a big part of our lives since we were 16. Well before then, really. At least for me… I remember sitting in the passenger’s seat of my mother’s minivan imagining I was driving at the ripe old age of 6.

Even if you aren’t necessarily an “automobile enthusiast”, I think almost all of us can appreciate a nice car. That, my friends, is the central force in the Counts of the Cobblestones car club.

These guys have been coming together around their common interest in cars for more than 50 years. The Counts have also been hosting car shows and rod runs all that time. For awhile, indoor car shows were held at the Rapid City Auditorium where, as their website states, “the Batmobile wowed the crowds in 1967″.

50+ years later, the Counts are still going strong, bringing people together who have a love for cars. The car shows have been great events for the community and this year will be no different. Held here, at the Rushmore Plaza Civic Center, these events will showcase incredible cars and raise money for charity.

Whether you live and breathe cars, like these guys do, or just remember the plastic-steering-wheel days of your youth, a walk through the Rushmore Plaza Civic Center this weekend will stir something in you.