Jim Belushi and the Sacred Hearts Band are available for personal appearances and concerts at your next corporate event or conference.
The first thing
you need to know about Jim Belushi is that he’s a performer. Not an
actor, not a comedian, not a singer, but a performer. Which is pretty much
all those
things put together and multiplied by two or five or something. The second
thing you need to know- and this is in some ways more important than the
first thing- is that Belushi has absolutely no shame. None. Zip. Zero.
Add those two things together and you have a pretty good working definition of that most indescribable of qualities known as presence. And, as anyone who’s spent two minutes with the guy knows, Jim Belushi's got it. Big time!
So here’s Jim Belushi, this presence, disregarding any and all warning signs and diving into life headfirst. From the live stages of Second City and Saturday Night Live, to the soundstages of "About Last Night", "K-9", "Mr. Destiny", "Return to Me," and, most recently, starring in ABC TV's breakout comedy series of 2002 "According to Jim", he has taken everything life’s thrown at him and hit it out of the park. And, by the way, he's been having a blast.
Speaking of "According
to Jim", the hit series happens to be very heavily influenced by the Sacred
Hearts. Jim and the boys wrote and recorded the music for the show, and John
and Tony are regular members of the cast. Who the hell are John and Tony?
We'll get to that later.
So anyway, one day Dan Aykroyd asks him to join the Blues Brothers Band as Brother Zee- a possibly daunting proposition, even for Jim Belushi. Sure, he’d been on stage for years, but comedy and theatre are one thing (well, two things) but it’s not like he’d ever fronted a blues band before.
However, in order to be completely shameless, one is required to be completely fearless, which Jim Belushi, of course, is, so he takes a beat, looks at Aykroyd and says the same thing he’s been saying all his life. "Yeah, what the hell…why not? Sounds like a whole lotta fun!"
So, to get ready to play with the Blues Brothers, Jim Belushi crashes rehearsals of the House of Blues’ own band, The Sacred Hearts. He sits in with the band, laughing, acting, singing, dancing, in a word - performing. As it turns out, Jim was right because those rehearsals were "a whole lotta fun." So much fun, in fact, that for the last seven years the band has been Jim Belushi and the Sacred Hearts.
Jim Belushi and the Sacred Hearts Band have played for Al Gore, Governor Gray Davis and many other politicos. President Clinton is a really big fan and since he is now out of a day job, he’ll probably want to sit in (Jim says he’ll consider it). They play all the House of Blues venues, all the casinos, many benefits and hundreds of corporate events for the Fortune 500 companies. Word on the street is if it’s going to be a tough audience, get Jim Belushi and the Sacred Hearts . . . a butt hasn’t been born that can stay in a chair through their first set.
For those who like their Rhythm & Blues seasoned with a lot ‘o soul with a Memphis sound, but who aren’t on the White House guest list, the music is now available on the band’s first CD, "36 x 22 x 36" (Platinum Records).
Jim Belushi sings, talks, flirts (again, completely shameless), dances on table tops and does at least one back flip every show.
