Toast-ing music of then and now
January 11, 2007
By ROBERT LOERZEL Contributor
Some of the musicians in the
But the guys in Toast also dig new music. "One of the comments we get from people who come up after a gig is the extreme range of what we play," drummer Howie Winestock says. "Here's a band playing everything from 'White Rabbit' to the White Stripes."
Toast also plays a fair share of original songs, and the band will celebrate the release of its first CD, "Ekstreemleeburnt," with a concert Jan. 20 at Gabe's Backstage Lounge in Highwood.
The group's kid
While most of the musicians are middle-aged, one of them is a college kid. Guitarist Drew Hosfield joined Toast when he was a student at
As singer-guitarist Jim O'Connell tells it, Hosfield joined after one of his parents asked: "Could you do me a favor and let him step up and do a tune with you guys?" Once the band heard Hosfield play, they wanted him in the band. "He blew the roof off," O'Connell said. "I like just about every style of music, from bluegrass to jazz to rock," said Hosfield, who's hoping to switch from his undeclared major to DePaul's
Toast's members are north suburban residents who have played in various bands over the years and still love doing it, balancing the pursuit of musical fun with their professional day jobs.
Winestock, O'Connell and Hosfield live in
Scrambled success
Toast came together a couple of years ago, when O'Connell had planned to play with another group of musicians one night at C.J. Arthur's in
"There I was with a gig and no band," O'Connell said. "So I scrambled around."
O'Connell assembled some of his musician friends for the concert, and it went so well that the group became a going concern.
In 2004, Toast opened for Collective Soul at the Rave Club in

