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Cassie's
has been the Cody hot spot since it opened in
1922. Founded by Cassie
Waters, young widow, sportin' lady, madam and
respected businesswoman with spirit of generosity and good heartedness .
Cassie's establishment has continued to flourish locally through the years as
"THE PLACE" to dine and dance. Steve Singer bought and
renovated Cassie's in 1995 which is now 20,000 square feet, with three levels
of dining area, a room for private parties, three bars, and a large dance
floor. Parts of the original building and decor remain and local folks continue
to donate items.
Steve Singer is also a member of WEST
the Band,who performs
at Cassie's on Friday and Saturday nights. Take three of the hottest musicians
in the area, put them together in a band called
WEST, and place them at the
forefront of the contemporary music scene for more than twenty years:
you will see why fans refer to them as "WEST IS BEST".
Come in and hear their hit song "Back To Wyoming". They have
three albums for sale at the gereral store.Check out our Entertainment
page.

Cassie's WILL
SERVE YOU A MEMORABLE MEAL, be it lunch or dinner. This is a top quality
steakhouse serving only the choicest cuts of beef. Steaks are cut to order just
before grilling and the prime rib can be cut to order as well. Seafood,
chicken, and pasta round out the menu. Cassie's was voted
"One of the Top 20 Steakhouses in the
West" from Cowboys & Indians magazine November
1999 issue. You can read more about it and also check out our menu. Just click
below.

Cassie's SUPPER CLUB IS LOCATED IN
CODY, WYOMING, just 50 miles from the east
gate of Yellowstone
National Park. Cody is home to the Buffalo Bill Historical
Center, the Cody Nite
Rodeo, numerous guest ranches, and many other local
attractions--a vacation spot for the entire family. For more information on
Cody and the surrounding area, visit:
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Pahaska
Tepee
Cody Chamber of Commerce
Park
County information
Destination
Northwest (lists accommodations, restaurants, etc.)
Blackwater Creek Ranch,
"A Day in Cody"
Western Design Conference

The
Powell Tribune
Thursday, October 2, 2003
West The Band
25 years of attitute
by K. T. Roes
“We just play some of our favorite songs.”
That’s Steve Singer’s prescription
for West the Band and for 25 years, it’s worked like
magic. Audiences in Wyoming have enthusiastically embraced
the skilful playing and energy of the versatile band.
Singer, the band’s bass player, had occasion to reflect
during the band’s 25th reunion at Cassie’s last
weekend.
West began in Powell in 1978. During its long history, thirteen
members have joined. Two of them, Singer and drummer/guitarist/vocalist
Jim Krubeck, have endured. The pair were the smiling hosts
Friday and Saturday night when Cassie’s audiences were
treated to some of the best rock and roll to be heard in that
venue in years.
Alternately sharing the stage with Singer and Krubeck were
drummers John Stewart, Bob Raver, Kevin Dunn and Jeff Shrin;
lead guitarists Ed Cook, Jeff Troxel, Chris Lefevre, and Jacob
Singer; harp player Lee Moran, and keyboardist Bob Britten.
At one point Saturday evening, all eleven living West alumni
were on the stage together.
Rock and roll brought the players together but they arrived
in Park County from a variety of directions. Singer, Raver
and Troxel are Cody natives. John Stewart is a native of Powell.
Krubeck and Lefevre played together in North Dakota. Cook
and Shrin found their way to Cody, via the West band, from
San Diego. Britten came to the band from New Jersey by way
of Montana.
Nearly every member of West has been obsessed by music from
early childhood. Singer remembers playing country music with
a family who were tenants of his grandmother.
“I found music enjoyable and as a child, I was always
looking for things that made me happy,” Singer recalls.
He climbed onto a piano bench as a six-year-old, playing by
ear, and then went on to the trombone. He started with country
music on the guitar and made the natural progression to rock
and roll guitar with the arrival of the Beatles on the North
American continent.
By seventh grade, he was in a small rock band with Bob Raver.
“There were guys who were better guitar players than
I was, so started hanging out on the bass and I’ve been
there ever since,” Singer says.
In 1971, Singer joined the band Aragon with Neil Tweedy of
Cody, and James Calkins and Jim Krubeck, both of San Diego.
They played in Cody and Powell halls, including a brief gig
at The Blue Coffin in Ralston.
“We packed that place,” recalls Jim Krubeck, explaining
that the club owner closed it down shortly thereafter because
of the rowdy crowds, which were “too intense.”
The drinking age was 19 in Wyoming at the time.
Singer was still in Cody High School and the other Aragon
members returned to San Diego. In 1973, the band’s “terrible
bass player” left the band and they sent for Singer,
Krubeck says. They worked three or four nights a week in military
clubs, even though they were all too young to drink. The band
was a success, appearing on sampler albums produced by a local
radio station and making a good living.
In 1975, when Krubeck sold everything he
owned and went to Europe for seven months, Singer returned
to Cody with then-band members Kim Sturdivant and Richard
Augustine, now both deceased. After Europe, Krubeck returned
to San Diego, playing in bands during the disco era, and enjoying
it. Steve Singer returned to Powell, went to meat cutter’s
school and worked for his stepfather Max Garner at Max’s
grocery store.
Krubeck eventually came to Powell from San Diego, not to make
music, but to work at Max’s. “We were all done
with music,” he recalled, but requests to play parties
and weddings continued and in 1978, West was born.
At the time, Steve Singer, Jeff Troxel, John Stewart and Randy
Keller were performing as The Earl Durand Band. John Stewart
recalls an urgent need for a name change, when the band was
booked to play a party for First National Bank of Powell.
The bank had been robbed by Earl Durand in the 1930s and he
was killed outside the bank. The band was known as West thereafter.
John Stewart grew up in Powell and got his start in music
when band director Chick Peyton put him in front of a drum
set at what is now Hedge Music. He took to it immediately
and played in a rock and roll trio with Jim Linton for dances
and parties.
“Our parents had to drive us to the gigs,” he
recalls.
When Stewart’s family left Wyoming, he gave up music
until his last semester in college when he abruptly decided
to pursue a career as a drummer.
“My parents went through the ceiling but I went back
to it,” he says. He drifted back to Powell, and joined
West. The band was booked every weekend and Singer decided
he should leave the grocery business.
The band spent years on the road, with Singer always pushing
for excellence, Jim Krubeck recalls. “He would go into
a place and tell them, ‘Hire us and we’ll pack
the joint. They’d say, ‘We’ve never heard
of you’ and he’d say, ‘Just hire us.”
Krubeck recalls. “Then he’d come back and tell
us he had promised we would pack the joint. We’d have
to go out and put up a zillion posters and get radio ads.”
“We said we were the hottest band going and our bus
said we were, too. We had attitude and we would pack the place,”
he says.
Singer says it’s love of music that’s essential
to the band’s success.
“I am just fortunate to have played with the very best
musicians around,” he says. “I don’t know
what it is about Cody, but we’ve always had great rock
and roll bands.”
“We started because it was fun and it was cool and we
could get girls,” he laughs. “But we do it because
it makes us happy. Lucky for us that it was always music that
made us happy.”
After John Stewart left the band, Bob Raver joined on percussion,
Bob Brittain followed on keyboards, and the band recruited
Ed Cook from San Diego. Cook was a “San Diego guitar
legend” according to Krubeck. Cook also developed his
guitar chops in military clubs and concert stages in San Diego.
As San Diego became less safe, Cook jumped at the chance to
bring his family to Cody in 1992. Now, he manages Cassie’s
website, teaches guitar at Northwest College, has written
a book on programming drum machines and writes commercials
and television scores.
Jeff Shrin eventually replaced Raver on drums. He had played
with Krubeck years earlier in San Diego. As a vocalist, the
outgoing Shrin fronted West with novelty songs, continuing
a tradition of humor that’s been a trademark of the
band for years.
Now, with Singer’s purchase of Cassie’s, the band
has left the road for good, preserving the band for the future,
according to Krubeck says.
“If we were still on the road, there would be no West,”
he says flatly, adding that it’s still a commitment.
“You
can’t take your wife out for dinner,” he says.
“We are the people other folks take their wives out
to.”
Krubeck and Singer have no plans to stop.
“I don’t have any plans to quit but I don’t
plan to do it from a wheelchair either. I’ll know when
it’s over.”
West’s rabid and faithful fans hope it won’t be
any time soon.

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From
left to right: Lee Moran, Kevin Dunn, Bob Britten, Jim Krubeck,
Steve Singer, Jon Stewart, Ed Cook, Jeff Troxel, Jeff Shrin, Bob
Raver and Chris LeFevre. Photo by Dewey Vanderhoff.
Check
out more pictures.
West
reunion photos by Pat Honstain.
 
 
The West albums and the Wyoming Centenial album have
lots of original music. Available at the general store. Come on
in.
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West plays with
Vince Gill Photos
Cassie's Gallery Photos (download & sent to a
friend.)
Cassie's Wyoming Buffalo Guitar
To obtain further information about
Cassie's,
E-mail us at cassies@cassies.com or call 307-527-5500.
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