 Back when I was fronting the Mystery Band, I walked into Duke's Bar in Chicago's Rogers Park neighborhood, hoping to get a gig.  I met Neil Lifton, who had taken over Duke's around 2004 or so.  Neil turned a true skanky dive bar into a marvelous neighborhood music tavern.  He was a passionate roots music fan and a passable guitarist.  Neil and his wife, Mary, became pillars of the east Rogers park neighborhood and had a lot to do with the revival of the Morse Avenue/Glenwood Avenue music/arts district.  The Mystery Band played Duke's many times until I shut the band down in 2010.
Back when I was fronting the Mystery Band, I walked into Duke's Bar in Chicago's Rogers Park neighborhood, hoping to get a gig.  I met Neil Lifton, who had taken over Duke's around 2004 or so.  Neil turned a true skanky dive bar into a marvelous neighborhood music tavern.  He was a passionate roots music fan and a passable guitarist.  Neil and his wife, Mary, became pillars of the east Rogers park neighborhood and had a lot to do with the revival of the Morse Avenue/Glenwood Avenue music/arts district.  The Mystery Band played Duke's many times until I shut the band down in 2010.Neil died on January 3, 2012.  He was 60 years old.  He was an exuberant, fun-loving, hard-working guy.  He did his best to help musicians.  His tiny music room was the venue of choice for many up-and-comers, blues/roots/jazz players and the occasional star.  Neil decided that his bar would be dog friendly; I remember a pooch howling along with my vocals during a gig one night. And always, Neil was a genial presence, setting the tone and keeping the patrons under control, mostly.
It is jarring when a friend dies suddenly.  There will be a memorial  for Neil at 5PM on January 2211 at the Lifeline Theater, 6912 W. Glenwood Avenue in Chicago.  Duke's Bar is right next door....
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