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D'Emic stopped regularly playing guitar after he became a lawyer and would only pick it up occasionally. But when he went to a graduation party for a former bandmate's son a week after the ethics ruling, the two played and sang songs by the Beatles, the Byrds and the Eagles. After their impromptu jam session, they called the final member of their band and decided to play together again. The trio had an unpaid gig at the BallyBunion Bar in Brooklyn for a crowd of a few dozen friends and relatives. The audience cheered and sang along to a set list of songs including Bob Dylan's "Mr. Tambourine Man," Van Morrison's "Brown Eyed Girl" and Chuck Berry's "Johnny B. Goode." D'Emic's brother was proud of his performance. "I was surprised. I wasn't sure what was gonna come out of him," Pat D'Emic said. "He sounded like I remember him when I was a kid." Though visibly nervous at first, D'Emic loosened up after a few songs. He tapped his left foot to the beat and closely watched his hand find the correct frets of his bass guitar as he sang the lead vocal line of the Beatles' "Act Naturally," with a big grin on his face. When the song's final chord ended, the crowd erupted into applause, and the band's lead singer, John Lepore, 59, wiped the sweat from D'Emic's forehead. Paul Cassone, who plays lead guitar for the band, said he hopes they play more frequently and expand their repertoire. "We had a ball," said Cassone, 56. "It was like no time passed at all. I feel like I'm 18 again." The band's next scheduled gig, also unpaid, is at Brooklyn Law School, D'Emic's alma mater, in the fall. And where will the tour bus go next? "Madison Square Garden," D'Emic says.
[Associated
Press;
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