A weekend with two sell-out shows at the Palace Theater and interesting late nights that ensued made for a classic weekend of great music in Albany over the first weekend of March. Jane’s Addiction coupled with moe. to set up stellar weekend of music and revelry that ensued gave two bands that each started out more than 20 years ago but were far from nostalgia, instead rocking through marquee sets for hours each night.
The Black Box Revelation
With a late start time of 8:30 for the opening act, I got a listen the day before of Black Box Revelation, a scortching garage band duo from Brussels, Belgium featuring a duo of Jan Paternoster on guitar and vocals and Dries Van Dijck on drums. I was impressed with a few songs on first listen and eagerly awaited the opening act. Guitarist Jan has some Jimmy Page chops when seeing him live, with a dose of the Black Keys but not necessarily the same band – the powerful rock and blues mix created negates the need for a bassist, almost. There were moments when StrangeTimes could have burst out a guitar jam. Drums were tight, harsh and crispy. Percent accent to guitarwork. Two songs of note, Highon aWire, a little-Silverchair-ish with gritty vocals, a clear break out song for this duo.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uBA2vBFgCgc&
I thinkI LikeYou was notable in concert and felt a little more bluesy than the rest of the night, but the video for the song has a nice production value and was running through my head while the song played.
The final song of the 45 minute set, SealedwithThorns was sincerely jammed out, rocked out is more like it, for a solid 10 minutes, greeting the arriving crowd with a nice segue into the main act. By far, they were the best opening act I’ve seen in years. Jan spoke to the crowd towards the end, ‘This is one of the most beautiful venues we’ve ever seen.” Later, upon asking him what he felt about the venue, he shared, “It’s beautiful, we have never played many venues like this in Europe.” On their first tour in America and playing perhaps their 10th or so show here and to play the Palace – an honor many bands take years to build up to. As for the tour, the pair simply said that “Jane’s tour is amazing, they’re really cool guys,” an understatement likely.
Having played at Bonnaroo and The Hangout in 2011, Black Box returned for a full opening tour, withEuropegiving us a taste of what is in store for post-hipster musical imports. What a relief. Their sound right now is so strong and raw that their evolution will lead to a notable future. For now, the duo are always welcome in America.
Jane’sAddiction
A “Theatre of Escapists Tour” was the theme that Jane’s Addiction frontman Perry Farrell and his group of freaks conjured up for the evening’s visual performance taking place on the precipice of the crowd and all throughout the show on stage. Starting with an extended pre-show music of tracks from Pink Floyd’s Shine on Your Crazy Diamond (notably performed here not two weeks ago by The Pink Floyd Experience)
A cavalcade of freaks, including limber ladies in lingerie, pierced and adorned dancers and an Alex, ala Clockwork Orange leading the way before Perry broke out into Underground off the new release The Great Escape Artist. With an elaborate stage, drums on a riser and Perry, a soundtrack remnant in all black like a Brandon Lee from TheCrow. Two ladies swung in the air in big white dresses with a random dude in a peacock outfit off to the side and the band strutting around the stage , full on stage show with sick music.
MountainSong sprung some grunge era guitar from Dave Navarro who I had just noticed was playing on stage. In my defense, I sat far right orchestra and Dave played to a legion far left pit, but the sound was easily identifiable for one of Jane’s Addiction’s best known songs. Paired up with Been Caught Stealin’ started in typical fashion, Perry being friendly with the crowd, shaking the hands of everyone up against the rail, as he did all night long, spreading the rock but this time, taking a hat and wearing it in tribute to the song.
Ted, Just Admit it… the creepiest of Jane’s songs, and that is saying a lot, still brought the cheers and throngs to the stage, as the freak show going on behind the band was garnering the divided attention of everyone. While Perry sang ‘Nothings shocking…Sex is Violent’, the performance art with Siamese twins in white lingerie and now Alex hanging a baby doll then tearing it apart. Far above the band, where he then mocked suicide with a straight razor and fake blood; it was enjoyably fucked up. Perry then captured what was on stage and told the crowd a secret: “What you’re experiencing is the result of some broken people.” This is the understatement of the year. This wasn’t a GG Allin level of creepiness, but then a video of kids molesting dolls and abusing them, and the crowd was hushed. But is it art?
The stage was set under the dark of the video to bring out a chair or two and a light by which Navarro played a painful acoustic guitar for a slightly calypso Jane Says but it still shone thanks to the vocals. Chip Away got a light acoustic treatment before a stage shift with video interlude that brought three drums to the front of the stage for Navarro, Steven Perkins and bassist Chris Chaney took stage left to bang on the drums while Perry for the rest of the show that follows. Three Days got full Navarro shredding while Perry played the maracas and the Siamese twins danced one at a time on the stage. The level of rock guitar shredding that ensued to end the show was a combination of Van Halen and White Zombie for a huge number in Three Days followed by the equally enamoring Stop!, always a crowd pleaser.
The encore wrapped up the night, starting with Perry asking the crowd “Are you ready to come yet?” as the band moved into Words Right Out of My Mouth followed by Ocean Size, just a monstrous number, their best performed song of the night.
A nice look at the future of rock and the recent past of a rock era we continue to live in started the weekend right. Next up was moe., who brought it back home on Saturday night.
moe.
Having started out in the Albany area, a homecoming is always well-attended and received by a throng of fans who sell out the Palace for moe repeatedly, bringing with them a full day of musical energy. A great show with no holds barred rock, the crowd welcomed their local band to the big stage for three hours of blistering rock with extended jams that got deeper as the night went on.
Set 1: Runaway Overlude > Chromatic Nightmare > Seat Of My Pants, New York City > George > Four > Downward Facing Dog
Set 2: Money* > Billy Goat > Skrunk, Time Again, Big World> Ricky Marten > The Bones of Lazarus > Rebubula
Encore: Spine Of A Dog > Dr. Graffenberg
*with Marley Amico on sax
Starting with 17 minutes of two spooky, Zappa-esque songs, the tension was broken with Seat of My Pants, always a crowd favorite. George and Four, two of my favorite moe tunes of all time clocked in at a combined 38 minutes. The lack of a definitive starting or ending point is the hallmark of a great band; with only two breaks on stage all night and continuous segues nearly throughout both sets. A good jamband like moe. keeps you guessing, changing songs up without more than a guitar riff to play off of.
Money opened up set 2 and brought out Marley Amico, daughter of drummer Vinny, to tear up the sax solo for the epic Floyd song. Not a note was missed, just like New Years Eve when she performed the same number with moe in Portland, Maine. Truly, the talent is in the blood and was nothing short of a great performance. The second set moved through a half dozen numbers, rocking in an out of new tunes Billy Goat into established rotation numbers like Big World and Lazarus before ending with the epic love song, Rebubula, giving the same powerful build up it has hundreds of times before, each version still different than the last.
Some Al.nouncements preceded Spineof aDog, the encore equivalent to CharacterZero, able to be kept short or drawn out for a house shaking encore. The latter gave us a deep encore groove, extraordinary, spacing out into a fresh jam via a deep bass line groove via Rob. We were in the midst of Panty- melting 70s porn groove. An out of the blue smooth segue into Dr. Graffenberg was so exploratory that you had trouble remembering what song they were still tearing into. This was a great jam to lose yourself in, so the full 25 minutes of the encore.
Floodwood
With the show ending, the crowd dispersed, moving southward towards Pearl Street, local bars, watering holes, hotels and finally, Red Square, where Al and Vinny’s side-project Floodwood was performing latenight. A packed house sold out the show in advance (hint, get tickets early for these postshows) where moe. fans gathered to catch up with the extended moe.family that grows with each passing year. Rob Derhak stopped down to take in the show with friends, as did a nice chunk of the Palace crowd. Floodwood performed for two hours altogether, mixing Americana and bluegrass numbers, not unlike another side project of moe.’s, Al and the Transamericans. With Vinny behind the drums for both, this incarnation is more hill-country and less rocking than its predecessor, a nice cap to the evening. Featuring Zachary Fleitz, Nick Piccininni and Jason Barady from Woodenspoon on strings with Al on guitar and Vinny on drums, the group drove through originals, covers including an energetic Mollyn Tenbrook. Called back for multiple encores over the final half hour, including Al’s Blue Eyed Son, the swarmed crowd dipped into each extension of the night eagerly. As the band finally wrapped the night up, the crowd slowly trickled into the streets, ready to greet 330am.
These are the weekends that I look forward to months in advance, knowing how great the onslaught of music is over the course of two nights. Four great bands plus hundreds upon hundreds of live music fans makes for a great way to spend a weekend in Albany.
In April of 1992, Greg Bell promoted his first show in Albany, NY. Over the next few years, Greg Bell has brought to the Capital District the best up-and-coming bands and helped to develop Albany’s live music legacy. Next month, Greg Bell celebrates 20 years with two special shows at Valentine’s, combining the best of the past, present and future of live music in Albany.
NYS Music sat down with Greg Bell at his home and discussed his memories of the past 20 years, how he got started in promoting shows, the evolution of the live music scene in Albany and the musicians and bands that have come up through Albany with the help of Guthrie/Bell Productions.
Pete Mason: Where are you from?
Greg Bell: I grew up on Long Island, in a town on the south shore called Bohemia.
PM: What music did you listen to in high school?
GB: I started listening to Top 40, The Monkees, moved to Jefferson Airplane and Hendrix, Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath, a lot of different stuff.
PM: What was the first concert you went to?
GB: First concert I was to was Tommy James and the Shondells at the Ohio State Fair. They had several big hits – Mony Mony, Crimson and Clover, I Think We’re Alone Now…
PM : Where did you go to college? What was music like at the time?
GB: Siena; There were a lot of post-Woodstock bands who were touring. The bands we listened to most our senior year were The Grateful Dead, Commander Cody and the Lost Planet Airmen and Jerry Jeff Walker were the three biggest ones my friends and I were into. We listened to everything: Ten Years After, Jefferson Airplane, Loggins and Messina, whatever was hot at the time. There were a lot of singer/songwriters: Neil Young, James Taylor, and Carole King were all big, that were coming out at that time.
PM: Do you have a favorite concert memory from college years?
GB: Nothing offhand, I think of high school more for concerts, when Stony Brook University was having a ton of concerts when I was a junior/senior, so I saw Miles Davis open up for Santana, The Allman Brothers Band on their first tour opening up for Mountain, The Dead with Jerry Garcia playing pedal steel with the New Riders of the Purple Sage in the opening set, playing two shows in one night and I got to see both shows. Those are big memories; at the Summer Festival for Peace (at Shea Stadium) I saw Janis Joplin, one of her last live performances before she died.
PM: How did you first get started promoting shows?
GB: Throughout college my friends and I would throw big parties and we always had music. After college whenever we had big outdoor parties we’d always have a lot of friends who were playing in bands. In terms of doing it professionally to make money, that would be April 3rd, 1992 when a friend of mine rented us the Black Masons Hall in downtown Albany (kitty-corner from Lombardo’s) and let us use the liquor license to serve beer. The lineup included The Sharks, Hard Times, Mother Judge and Bryan Kenny and Friends. The cost was $10 for four bands and all the beer you can drink and went extremely well. It was pretty much sold out and seemed like a pretty easy way to make money. I think that’s one of the downfalls promoters have is that the first couple of shows they do are successful and they think it’s always going to be like that. Then reality kicks in they find out that’s not true.
PM: Who were these bands? All local acts?
GB: The Sharks had been big in the 80s and they were just making a resurgence at the time; Hard Times was made up of Todd Nelson (Fear of Strangers) Kevin McKrell (McKrells), Rick Bedrosian (Hair of the Dog), it was sort of like a supergroup of Albany musicians who had been around for years. Mother Judge still runs the open mic night down at McGeary’s. Friends of ours were musicians at the time so we did it just for fun, see what it was like to put on a show. This is before Guthrie/Bell Productions. That company was called Two Fools Presents; that was me and my friend Dale Metzger, he was my first partner in the music business before Jeff Guthrie and Guthrie/Bell Productions.
Greg Bell and Keller Williams
PM: How did you go from Two Fools to Guthrie/Bell?
GB: With Two Fools we did a few events, we did an outdoor festival in Rensselaerville at one point called ‘Summer Fool Fest’. When The Dead came to town we rented out the Black Masons Hall, put on afternoon shows and some aftershow parties there. Dale and I started getting into different musical things; I started managing a few bands in the area. We parted ways amicably. My friend Jeff Guthrie was also managing a couple bands, including The Sharks trying to get them to do a comeback. One day he called me and said “Hey, I found this room that would be really good for shows that they don’t use for anything. Do you want to start doing shows together?” We managed to find this upstairs room at Valentines that no one was using for anything and we convinced the owner to let us start putting on shows up there. We started renting out the upstairs at Valentines on a weekly basis doing shows. Each week we’d lose a little bit more money, so we kept doing more shows trying to make our money back. After a few months of doing shows together he said we should form a company together. That was the start of Guthrie/Bell Productions, around the spring of 1993. That’s how it started.
PM: How long were you two promoting shows together?
GB: Probably six years or so, maybe longer. He just got tired of doing it and I kind of liked the name, it had a nice ring to it, so instead of changing it I kept it.
PM: When did you start teaching?
GB: 1979
PM: How did teaching and promoting shows conflict?
GB: I just gave up sleep. I went from having one full time job and a family to having two full time jobs and a family. It gave me an excuse to be out, ‘Gotta go to work honey.’ (laughs)
PM: When did promoting shows seem like it going to be a consistent thing?
GB: One of the reasons I started doing this was because there were a ton of local bands who I felt were not getting treated fairly at other clubs, not getting paid what they were worth or not as much time to play. So I started out doing a lot of alternative rock in the area and then, doing shows with Dr. Jah and the Love Prophets and they introduced me to (Peter Prince and) MoonBoot Lover and those two bands were probably the reason I took off promoting the jamband scene. moe. opened up for Dr. Jah, The Disco Biscuits opened up for Dr. Jah, Yolk opened up for Dr. Jah – almost everyone opened up for Dr. Jah their first time because they had the hippie crowd. When I stopped working with Valentines and became more independent and booked more shows in different rooms, I stayed with the jamband scene. That’s kind of how I got pigeonholed with the jamband scene even though over the years I’ve done tons of other shows. I’ve booked Alejandro Escovedo, Dave Alvin, Jeff Buckley, Los Straightjackets and a lot of shows that aren’t jamband related at all but I’ve always sort of been pigeonholed as the jamband promoter, but being a Deadhead I think its been pretty exciting because since I’ve started promoting shows I’ve done a show with every living member of the Grateful Dead at one point or another; I’ve done a show with every member of Phish except for Mike Gordon; I’ve met Jorma Kaukonen, Roger McGuinn, I’ve met many of the people who I listened to in my youth, a lot of my heroes. I’ve become fairly well known in the jamband scene, most bands like working with me, I like working with them. It’s been a fairly successful career, if not financially successful, it’s been fun. I think I’ve helped a lot of bands out. I think I was instrumental in getting that 2nd or 3rd wave of jambands going. At one point, Albany was one of the biggest jamband towns at least in New York and the Northeast. Everyone came through and played at Valentines at one time or another, or Bogie’s.
PM: What was the worst night promoting music?
GB: That’s easy, Bellstock 3 when we had 18 inches of rain in 24 hours and something like 18 bands showed up to play and 18 bands were sent home because there was just no way anyone could play in the amount of rain we were getting. That might be the worst.
PM: How have you seen music evolve over the past 20 years in the Capital District?
GB: I see it pretty much exactly the same: tons and tons of talent in Albany and a limited audience. You can listen to bands that say all the time ‘I remember when it was great and people were coming out’, but it’s been pretty much the same. Albany has always had a lot of talented musicians; there has just never been a central scene. You could never get the San Francisco sound or the Seattle sound because Albany is too eclectic, which is a good thing because you have a wide variety of stuff to see but you can never interest a wider audience that just what you have in Albany. There are bands from Albany who go outside the area and do well and spread the word. There are a select number of music fans in Albany who want to see new stuff. But even then, they don’t show up or pay attention to the opening act because they’re only there for the headliner. I think people need to broaden there horizons; when I put shows on I will put two bands together than seemingly don’t fit together purposefully so people can see bands they might not have ever seen, because a lot of music crosses over genres. Right now electronica and techno are really hot so musicians who play instruments and sing and harmonize are struggling and having a tough time because the young kids want to see the DJs and electronica shows. But I think Albany has always had a great music scene, its just always been separated into groups. You have the indie rock scene, the hard core scene, the jamband scene, something else over here. Albany has always needed one room that was doing everything, so you would have one place where people could go and see all different kinds of music and try and get a scene going better instead of having it spread out all over the city.
PM: Do you think we ever had a place like that? The QE2?
GB: They were pretty eclectic, they were seen as an all punk club; Bogie’s at one point was doing a lot of shows, as was JB Scott’s when it was open years ago, but nothing has stayed open throughout the years; Valentines has had its time when it was one of the top clubs in the area. In Albany right now, on any given night, you can see ten different bands play at different places, which splits the audience. When there are ten shows going on, it’s hard to get one of those shows to go really well. It’s just the nature of the business here.
PM: How could that change?
GB: I’ve been trying to make that change for a number of years; I just haven’t found a way to do it. When Revolution Hall closed, I felt that was a room that could do that and be the centralized spot for music, but it was in Troy and people in Albany didn’t want to go to Troy among other reasons. I think if Albany had a room like Rev Hall it would be successful. There’s a lot of good clubs in Albany, I don’t think there’s a great club in Albany. Red Square is good for some things, Jillian’s is good for some things, Valentines is good for some things, and Savannah’s is good for some things.
Matt Abts, Vinnie Amico, and Greg Bell
PM: What about venues like the Palace, The Armory and The Egg?
GB: They are great places to see shows. At the Palace I’ve had Disco Biscuits, moe., Jimmy Cliff, Medeski, Martin and Wood, Gov’t Mule, Michael Franti, Black Crowes, Dark Star Orchestra, it’s a wonderful room to see shows in. It’s a theater and you need bands that can draw at least a couple thousand people. At The Armory I’ve had moe. a couple of times, Phil Lesh and Friends, Bassnectar, Pretty Lights, Matisyahu, The Roots. But it’s a tough room because you only have a few bands that can do 3-4,000 to fill the room. Bands that do less than 1,000 or more than 5,000 won’t cut it there, so it’s a tough room for that middle area of bands that draw 3-4,000 in a general admission room. For techno shows and DJs it’s a perfect room, like for Deadmau5 and Rusko. I love The Egg, it’s a sit down room, so a lot of the stuff that I do is tough there. I’ve had success there with Dark Star Orchestra and Keller Williams and Medeski, Martin and Wood. You have to have a certain kind of show on in a good room like that. People are easy to work with, the sound is great. All the places in the area that provide music are good for certain things; there’s no one place that’s good for everything.
PM: What do you think of the past five years of music in the Albany area?
GB: It’s hard to say, I’ve seen Rev Hall which was really starting to take off, go under. I’ve seen Jillian’s move from a disco-y place to a viable venue in the area; Red Square is doing a lot of shows and Valentines is starting to pick up again. The music scene in Albany is vibrant and things are picking up thanks to young enthusiastic bands that bring out people. One thing that I’m trying to do, especially since Rev Hall closed, is get back into going out and checking out a lot of younger bands that I’ve been missing for a while. One of my fortes has always been finding young bands and then building them up to the point where they have an audience.
PM: Like Timbre Coup?
GB: Timbre Coup, Formula 5, Eastbound Jesus, Dirty Paris are all great bands, The Sunny Side of the Street Band… there’s tons of bands out there right now that are starting to pick up some steam. I have a couple bands I’m checking out in the next few weeks that I’m interested in seeing how they are, The Greys and Digital Dharma, both seem to be pretty interesting. There are always great up and coming bands but its hard for them to keep it together because bands are making less money now than bands made in the 70s and 80s because there’s no money out there, the drinking age was raised from 18 to 21 over that time. I see opening acts that have to drive 300 miles to make $100 which barely covers gas. You have to really be dedicated and really want to be in a band and be with the right people who have the same dreams and what you want to do. You see too many bands that are really talented that break up because it’s too much of a commitment to be a touring band anymore. You really have to be OK not making any money to get by till you start picking up a fan base. With gas prices now, I can’t really see how bands can open a show for $100. Unfortunately for promoters, expenses go up every year – club expenses, advertising expenses, national and regional touring bands with dwindling fanbases still expect to get paid like when they were drawing bigger numbers. People need to do a lot more cooperation between clubs, bands and promoters and work together so that no one gets hurt and at the least survive. I think that’s one of the things that I don’t see as much among bands; some genres have bands working together to get the scene going but certain genres of music have bands that are more cut-throat and expect more money and more fans to show up. If bands start cooperating and working together, that can make a difference. When I first did shows at Valentines, the audience would include band-members from bands that weren’t even playing and they would get up and jam with the bands on stage. I really don’t see that happening as much anymore, one band getting done at one venue and going to another to see a couple of tunes and maybe sit in, at least as much as I used to. Back when I first started doing Valentines, there were nights when we had to drag people off the stage at four in the morning while there were members of three different bands on the stage playing together. Back then, after midnight was the point where you would worry about breaking even. Now that’s around 11 or so. Part of it is due to DWI laws being enforced; part of it has to do with money. The economy being the toilet doesn’t help either, people aren’t going to be able to spend money on a Wednesday than on a weekend. They have to pick and choose more now.
Soulive and Greg Bell
PM: What is Albany’s role in the past 20 years in terms of live music in the greater Northeast?
GB: When the 3rd wave of jambands were coming up, when moe, The (Disco) Biscuits, Deep Banana Blackout, Strangefolk and that whole group of bands were all starting out when I was starting out promoting shows, at some point I would get them. Albany was a major stop on jamband tours. In any given month I would have at least one night with Ominous Seapods, one night with moe., one night with Conehead Buddha and one night with Yolk; I mean those are four bands right there that are selling good numbers of tickets and anyone who is coming through would come to me. Max Creek when they started touring again, Schleigho and a lot of bands that were coming up at that time. Some of them didn’t go much further although I think some of them should have, such as Peter Prince from MoonBoot Lover should have been famous, I think he’s a talented man, I think Schliegho should have been famous; there’s a lot of talented bands that I’ve seen over the years that got beaten down by the road and record companies and everything else, and once they started getting older, having families and settling down, they couldn’t be on the road making no money. I met tons of great musicians; some of my closest friends are the ones I started promoting shows with in the 90s, I’m still in contact with a lot of them. Bands like moe. who could have stopped doing shows with me years ago and gone to Live Nation and bigger promoters have always stuck with me and remain loyal to me and that means a lot to me. That’s a great honor for a band that’s gone as far as moe. has gone to keep a local promoter involved with them. There’s not a lot of that loyalty going on right now.
PM: What do you think the next five years of music is in the Albany area?
GB: I think we’re on the verge of is, due to economic and social situations, I think Americana is going to get a lot bigger than it is, at some point, when things are typically going like this and things are getting stagnant… I respect what the DJs are doing with techno/electronica, but I think there’s going to be a lot of people who don’t want to see a DJ pushing buttons on a laptop on stage. I think that what’s going to happen at some point is like in the 70s and 80s all of a sudden you had Springsteen and then punk rock coming out to go against disco and arena rock. Then you had Nirvana come out against hair bands and glitter bands… I think we’re at a point now where you’ll see something in the next few years that will be totally different and save rock n roll again. But I think because of the economic situation right now and more people protesting I think you’re going to see more Americana type music where people are singing about what’s going on in the world and in people’s lives. You had Woody Guthrie during the Great Depression, Bob Dylan and Joan Baez and people like that when we were on the verge of/in the middle of the cold war, people coming out during the Vietnam War and protesting. I think you’ll see a lot more of that coming out, I think people tend to go towards that kind of music when things are down. All great music has come from people being down in poor economic situations; you’ve got blues, jazz, folk, all that came out of poor people basically; rap came out of the ghetto where people were economically disadvantaged. I think you’re going to see more of that music coming out and a mix of electronica and rock with The Disco Biscuits and The New Deal and even that’s starting to fade away and it’s getting more and more electronic equipment based more than people based. I think you’re gonna start seeing people start breaking away from that for something new, at least that’s what I’m hoping. I think that the jamband scene has been struggling recently because I don’t see a lot of young hippies coming up now; I see a lot of techno kids coming up. But in the past year or so, I’ve seen a lot more bands, young bands, that are more jamband based, more songs and more jamming, people who can really play their instruments, so I think there’s gonna be a little resurgence of that kind of music too.
Greg Bell celebrates the 20th anniversary of his first show as a promoter celebration of the first weekend of April at Valentines on New Scotland Ave in Albany. On April 6, Conehead Buddha will reunite with The Sunny Side of the Street Band opening, while on April 7, Timbre Coup performs with Formula 5 opening. Come out and celebrate 20 years of great music and toast to 20 more.
All good things must come to an end but all great things deserve an encore. Thursday night, Timbre Coup’s February residency at Jillians of Albany came to an end with their most powerful performance of the month, reeling in dozens of new fans to their rock/techno fusion. The crowd danced and writhed to the jams that developed from songs both new and old, leaving no doubt to the legacy the band is creating through their shows in the Capital District. Guitarist/bassist Dan Gerken said “The residency showed me that not only does acoustic Timbre Coup work, it was one of our strongest sets! You will be seeing more of this completely organic sound of ours very soon. We were happy to be able to experiment with the 4 show run we had.”
For their CD release party ‘Knuckles and Valleys’, the show featured a tracks including March, June, October and a stellar rendition of July to close the show. A sandwich of Arnold Schwarzenegger->Give it to me baby (Rick James)->Arnold Schwarzenegger was unexpected but they nailed it and an appreciative crowd asked for more. Jams out of Watching You and Radio were met with a packed dance floor for both young and old in attendance. This could wind up being a yearly or possibly bi-annual residency and would continue to foster the positive response the band had received in the past two years.
Timbre Coup heads to Syracuse next to play the Westcott Theater on Saturday March 10th with Dirty Paris and Higher Organix, bringing the best of Albany to the Salt City. Dirty Paris and Timbre Coup return the next weekend to co-headline St. Patrick’s Day at Red Square in Albany making for a great Saturday night and continuing their notably worthy presence in their hometown of Albany.
The third album from Timbre Coup, Knuckles and Valleys, following the release of 2010’s Check Out This, will be released on Thursday, February 23rd on the final night of their month-long residency at Jillian’s of Albany.
Twelve tracks for the twelve months of the year, written over the course of 2009, one song each month and gaining the appropriate monthly title as the year progressed. The writing process, as shared by drummer Matt Pickering, “Some songs we tried to capture the mood or feeling of the month in lyrics of music, a couple we just wrote what we were feeling at the time. The mixing on the album reflects how we think the months sound.” The songs have all been played live but for those new to Timbre Coup, they can see how the music portrays the month while existing fans will hear different versions of songs they are already familiar with.
With tracks as easy as these to name in order, a brief description of what to expect from this impressive junior effort:
January – There’s some Tool in here, along with a Middle Eastern jazz infusion and dark vocals, inspired by gritty 90s grunge. Great start to the album/year.
February – A great bass line opens up into a groovy beat, followed by a refrain “This has only just begun” with a mellow sax not unlike “Careless Whisperer.”
March – Instrumental prog-rock goodness; this could be a soundtrack for a boat adrift at sea, encountering storms and finally placid at the end.
April – A musical thunderstorm, great lyrics and wonderful guitar work on a hallmark track.
May – Bass n drums foundation with building guitar licks before a break in the song; the song starts again with more intensity in the second half, growing to great heights. Solid.
June – A homemade electronic feast without missing a beat, strongest track so far, makes for great dancing; lyrics include ‘Keep it pumpin’ till the night is through, it’s a summer rhythm…’
July – Spastic guitar propels the tune forward, the arching solos create the melting rhythms.
August – Another Middle Eastern infusion at the outset, lyrics are celebratory “The day is mine!” as the quartet turn to Mexican influences for an end of summer jam.
September – An airy trance starts off the ninth track, a purely electronic track from four musicians who create a spooky techno song without needing a laptop; pure musical talent in the month of September.
October – Harsh and gritty, machine-gun guitar vs. sweep solo guitar.
November – Indie rock at first, but quickly supplanted by the come-to-expect deep grooves that accent the lyrics and harmony vocals.
December – Industrial beats mark the beginning, rocking and jamming all the way through. A perfect way to cap off a magnificent album.
Good cover bands are hard to come by, as seen by the local acts that fill bars and clubs around the country each weekend, singing the songs of the past. The bigger names – Dark Star Orchestra and The Fab Faux are notable because they accurately recreate the music of the Grateful Dead and The Beatles, respectively, without donning costumes or trying to make the music their own. They have simply learned the music and play it as close to the original as possible and in doing so, fill a void left by the absence of the bands they cover. Some would call them tribute bands, but that distinction is reserved for the groups that take on the style and exact lineup of the original band (i.e. The Fab Faux has five members) and leaves little room for error or interpretation.
For a band as complicated as Pink Floyd, both in terms of music and history, the number of cover bands is akin to The Beatles; there’s The Machine, Australian Pink Floyd, Brit Floyd and the band I was fortunate to see, The Pink Floyd Experience from San Diego, California. Opening up on February 16, 2012 with the entire album ‘Wish You Were Here‘ and nailing all five epic songs (Shine on Your Crazy Diamond I-V, Welcome to the Machine, Have a Cigar, Wish You Were Here, Shine on You Crazy Diamond VI-IX) without skipping a beat. For my favorite album of them all by Floyd, I was impressed.
Then a brief intermission where the lights revealed family night at The Palace Theater. Many fans are older now and brought their kids, mostly teenagers but a few tweens as well. Families were milling about, grabbing concessions and ignoring merchandise with mellow aplomb; surely this is the exact opposite of Floyd when they played Wish You Were Here at venues like this back in the 1970s. But a mixed crowd leads to a new generation or two with the ability to enjoy some of the greatest music ever written. Ranging from the psychedelia of the 60s to the rock anthems of the 70s to the rock opera of The Wall in the 80s and the scraps left over in the 90s when David Gilmour toured and Roger Waters didn’t, Pink Floyd spans 6 decades of music and returns to stadiums this summer (and The Times Union Center June 28th) with The Wall once again. The light show isn’t the same with The Pink Floyd Experience, but they make a great effort to recreate the entire experience, nailing the music and sound but lacking with the lighting.
Set 2 started out with On the Run->Time from Dark Side of the Moon before mellowing out into the spooky vibrations of Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun. An extended sax solo front stage recreated the ‘Careless Whisper’ feeling from 1984, forgetting that the extended sax solo should remain in the 80s. Learning to Fly, the lone 1990s Floyd offering was anthemic and ensured that all eras were covered tonight. The group announced that they would play a song for Syd Barrett but sadly, no Bike but Interstellar Overdrive instead. Money and a short version of Echoes (minus the spaciness) followed, along with another sax solo before a random guy in a jacket adorned with light bulb took the stage for the stormy intro to HeyYou. The surround sound effects were at their best here, getting fans to turn their heads as the sound traversed throughout the audience and segued into ComfortablyNumb. A packed sandwich of Run Like Hell -> Another Brick in the Wall Part Two -> Run Like Hell got the audience singing along with the band while the giant pig took to the space between the audience and the stage, drifting up and down until fans had left the show shortly before 10pm.
The members of The Pink Floyd Experience lauded Albany for providing a great turnout once again. This was a show that is very worth seeing, although I would have liked another 45-60 minutes of some more obscure songs. But I can’t complain, good cover bands are hard to come by.
Dopapod with special guest Timbre Coup
Jillians
Following The Pink Floyd Experience, I headed over the Jillians, where Timbre Coup continued their residency for February, opening up for funk/electronica group Dopapod, another regular in the Capital District. Coup’s electric set for a packed house continues to be one of the highlights of music in the area, cornering the electro/prog-rock market and garnering new fans throughout the month of February. Dopapod followed with strong set of songs from their new album ‘Drawn Onward’ and random and funky dance numbers. Dopapod will be back in a couple short months, potentially opening up for a bigger name in the electronica genre. It’s a big week next week for Timbre Coup, with their CD release party of ‘Knuckles and Valleys’ on 2/23 at Jillians with Higher Organix opening. Don’t miss the final night of their Jillian’s residency!
Hailing from Binghamton, trance/fusion band Solaris greets 2012 with their first EP, a stellar preview of whats to come when they enter the studio later this year. Forming in the summer of 2010, the trio made up of Jared Raphel on keyboards, Dan Lyons on drums and Vince Naro on Bass play a Disco Biscuits/STS9 style of electronica that many fans will appreciate for their high energy dance rhythms. Solaris bundles the best of these groups along with a little Pink Floyd and jazz influence into a writhing EP, Beyond 3D that makes an solid statement from a band on the rise in New York.
Beyond 3D opens with Must Be Heard, which provides a trancey cymbal rattling intro to the five-track EP with spoken word samples in the background providing the title to the track. Polar continues with lines from the movie Solaris, moving rapidly into a well formed psychotropic composition. Not Waiting Long is airy and orchestral, with nice deep beats and percussion change up of the beat over eight minutes, morphing into a sci-fi movie soundtrack at 78 RPMS. Them starts out with a synthesizer intro then moves into a slap bass and drum pad led section, incorporating the melodies of the keys into the electronic landscape and growing into a fury that explodes with the band fully in step together. The Person I Remember ends the EP with a soft outro and a few final samples.
Solaris’ next show is The Binghamtronica Music and Arts Festival at Binghamton University on March 24th. Tickets are $20 and will be available at http://www.facebook.com/Binghamtronica3
Who Knows, the third album from jamband prodigies The McLovinswas released early this month as a ‘name your price’ digital download, showcasing the maturing sound of this trio turned quartet. With guitarist Jeff Howard’s departure and the arrival of guitarists Justin Berger and Atticus Kelly, the band’s sound may change in the coming year but with this well produced album (by Tom Marshall & Anthony Krizan at Sonic Boom Studios) that provides the best recordings yet from the group.
Leading off with Hesitate, drummer Jake Huffman’s matured voice provides a balanced and strong lead in track on the album. Close to the Line features Howard’s soaring guitar as the meat between the bread of the lyrics accompanied by a jazzy section full of thick bass from Jason Ott. Cohesive, the first of three Tom Marshall penned tracks (Hesitate and Subdivision 2 are the others) is a light reggae-ish summertime tune, well-rounded by the band and lyrics such as “And when the dark invades my mood, that’s when I start to come unglued, and when my bases get releasive, I need to feel cohesive.”Mon Ami has a soft melody, quite mild compared to the rest of the album, so much so that most of the song could be heard on a ukulele before loud crescendos give a 5-hour energy shot to the placidity. The band returns to the composition, whistling ‘their favorite tune’. Tetop (short for ‘to each his own path’) is a highlight in concern, with funky drums and bass with guitar riffs in the studio take; subtract the lyrics and you could have a song from The Meters, but the lyrics have a mid-70s soul-explosion feel from Huffman and a falsetto chorus. On the Way Up has great potential in concert, and the wah-wah guitar sound will be impressive with two guitarists when this is played live. Subdivision 2 is very much like a mid 90s Phish song, and Tom Marshall’s writing has helped the band blossom as his writing was part of Phish’s burst 20 years ago. “Ready or not we’ll go through this together, you know I’d rather be touched than seen, we’ve gotta get through this screen” The album is capped off with Love is Purple, and much like the first album, ends with on a soft and uplifting note, this time with Jake on guitar singing a poetic love letter, captured fully in the line, “Love is why I clean up after you.”This is yet another impressive album from The McLovins, adding to their already impressive resume. For those who listen and have yet to see them live, in concert is where the group shines, and with a wide open 2012, they will be making stops at a number of festivals and venues throughout the Northeast.Key Tracks:Close to the Line, Cohesive, Subdivision 2
Dopapod’s second album Drawn Onward was released on Christmas Day for free on their website as a present to their fans who wanted a little something funky while they opened up their presents. The album is a gift to the fans and represents a shift in their sound from electronic to slightly funkier sound with a strong dance groove carrying throughout the album. The quartet is touring the Northeast in February, then down to Florida and working their way up the coast before returning for more shows up north as well as the upcoming festival season.
Produced by Eli Walker, Dave Brandwein (Galaxy Smith), and Dopapod and recorded at The Bunker Studio Brooklyn, NY, Drawn Onward retains the live Dopapod sound but presents a more danceable album than their last release I saw live Dopapod evil was I. Throughout the album you may find yourself grooving to the music, moving to the beat in your car or during your workout, all while absorbing a fluid collection of their latest road-tested recording.
The album starts off with Turnin Knobs, a dancey, 70s style funk number straight out of Boogie Nights followed by Black and White with its climactic keys and drums. Nuggy Jawson has a sense of Umphrey’s McGee and Billy Joel grandeur as the song builds into an early 80s prog rock crescendo. FrenchBowling is woven with an underlying classical composition, akin to a Beethoven theme throughout with a fierce bass line punctuating the track. Onionhead is a highlight, centering on house music in the vein of Bisco with strong keys, drums and bass accentuated by a ripping guitar leading the melody. Roid Rage bring a few horns into the mix, a welcome addition to the band’s sound and results in a very involving and layered number which requires a second listen to catch all that they put into this track. Bats in the Cave has a jazzy, 70s style funkability, providing a full album of dance tracks that will assuredly be played with great improvisation in the coming tour.
You can download the album for free at dopapod.comand pick up a hard copy of the CD for $10.
Catch them at Jillians in Albany on Thursday, February 16th.
Key tracks: Turnin knobs, French Bowling, Onionhead
Watch the video for French Bowling.
[vimeo http://www.vimeo.com/34205718 w=400&h=225]