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Paul E. Coats
1/6/1945 - 8/3/2024
CELEBRATION OF LIFE
Bellevue Christian Church
734 W. Capital Ave., Bellevue, MI 49021
September 7, 2024
at 12:00 pm
BY JOHN HENDLER
View Newspaper Group
Jim Cummings began taking guitar
lessons two weeks after seeing The
Beatles perform on the “Ed Sullivan
Show” in 1964.
Within three months, he put his
first band together named The
Elements.
“I was 12 years old,” said
Cummings. “I went to Harper Creek
Schools and from then on, played
nearly every school dance or event
until I graduated. I was on the road
within two weeks after graduation
and have never stopped.”
On Saturday, Sept. 14, Cummings
and his band will be performing at
the Franke Center for the Arts in
Marshall, kicking off the Franke’s
2024-25 concert season.
Joining the Jim Cummings Band
on that night will be local band
Chameleon.
The Jim Cummings Band is made
up of Cummings, along with Jim
Klein, Jesse Cornwell, Yeshwua and
Chris Moberley.
Cummings last performed in
Marshall a decade ago while headlin-
ing the Marshall Blues Festival.
From 1970-85, Cummings toured
the U.S. and other countries with his
own groups, and many other national
acts, such as Edgar Winter, Leon
Russell, Dick Wagner, Odyssey, The
Tubes, The Coasters, The Four Tops,
The Classics IV, Gregg Allman and
others.
He has played in hundreds of
shows and venues in his career and
has earned a reputation as a guy who
can be counted on to be prepared and
put out 100 percent whenever per-
forming.
Jim Cummings and his band will be kicking off The Franke Center for the
Arts’ 2024-25 concert series on Sept. 14 in Marshall.
Musician-singer Jim Cummings reflects on career, Marshall show
Cummings’ grandfather was a pro-
fessional musician who performed
during the Big Band era and also
worked for the movie studios.
At an early age, Cummings’
mother made him take piano lessons,
which he says he just hated.
“Once I convinced her to let me
quit that, she handed me a clari-
net and I hated that worse than the
piano,” he said.
Being drawn to the guitar,
Cummings also thought that would
be a clever way to meet girls.
“I took guitar lessons until I decid-
ed didn’t want to learn the theory,”
he said. “I just wanted to play Paul
Revere and The Raiders songs and
Beatles songs. I kind of went on my
own.”
Cummings, who then switched to
bass, said he “got lucky” after land-
ing a job with MCA, which pub-
lished music, booked acts and ran the
MCA Records music label.
“A lot of those jobs, I was hired
to fill in for different people,” said
Cummings. “But the real reason I got
those jobs is because I worked harder
than anybody else and I was better
prepared. And I could sing really
high. Most of the music business
comes down to working harder and
lasting longer.”
Cummings has lived all over the
country, including New York, City,
Hollywood, Tampa and Key West
twice.
“You live where you need to be,”
he said. “The number one thing is
that I had to leave my hometown.
You have to get out and you need
to have the guts to just go. It’s hard;
there’s nothing easy about it.”
Cummings said he had wonder-
ful parents, who instilled in him the
attitude to do his best and not to get
involved in drugs, which was quite
common in the music scene in the
1960s and 1970s.
He said he has taken his music and
the music industry quite seriously.
“Very quickly it became my job
and a business,” said Cummings.
“When this is your job and this is
how you make a living, and this is
how you pay your bills, you need to
go full tilt. You have to focus. I have
always been like that. I have always
been the leader of the bands. I’ve
always been tough. ... It’s about get-
ting this job done, and getting it to a
level where it’s really, really good.”
In 1985, Cummings returned to the
Battle Creek area and started his pro-
duction company, Soundstage.
“That turned out to be the biggest
thing for me,” said Cummings. “I
never stopped playing and I became
well known. But Soundstage was the
number one or number two produc-
tion house for commercial music in
the United States for a long time.
Cummings has worked with
big name businesses, such as
McDonald’s, Ford, Toyota and
Pepsi.
“The list is endless,” said
Cummings. “We were top of the line.
...Today, I still do things, but I’ve
gone from 80 clients to six, which is