2013 has been a great year. We have expanded our staff and coverage to bring more bands and live acts to the attention of fans and readers, and are looking forward to 2014 with great anticipation as we focus on the music coming out of all corners of New York State. The best of 2013 Music festivals and incredible tours and jams pepper the Upstate New York music calendar, giving broad musical choices for the 8 million New Yorkers who call Upstate their home.
Our staff writers and photographers were asked to look back at the full year of music in Upstate New York and beyond, and weigh in with their best of 2013. We looked at 10 categories – Best Upstate Show, Best Show, Best Upstate Album, Best Album, Best Upstate Festival, Best Festival, Best Upstate Venue, Best Venue, Best Band on the Rise and Jam of the Year – and came up with the best music we have seen and heard this year. Here’s part 5 of 5, looking at the Bands on the Rise and our Jams of the Year
Best Band on the Rise
Top Picks
Aqueous
Eastbound Jesus
Rest of the Best
Conehead Buddha
Driftwood
Lucid
The Blind Owl Band
Mister F
Solaris
Floodwood
Gusto
MaryLeigh Roohan
Sarah Jarosz
Lucius
GOASTT
Tame Impala
The Acid
RY X
Bad Cello
Aminal
Did we miss a band on the rise that should know about and you think is great? Sound off in the comments!
Best Jams of the Year
Phish, “Crosseyed & Painless > Harry Hood”, Holmdel, NJ, 7/10
Phish, “Tweezer”, Lake Tahoe, 7/31
The Kollectiv and The Heavy Pets, The Hollow, Albany, 4/23
Aqueous, “Shine on You Crazy Diamond”, Buffalo, 6/21
Rich Robinson and Jackie Greene dueling guitars with The Black Crowes at Lockn’ Music Festival, 9/7
Disco Biscuits, “Basis for a Day”, City Bisco, Mann Music Center, Philadelphia, PA 9/27
Vampire Weekend, “Hannah Hunt”
23 ft. Miley Cyrus, Wiz Khalifa, Juicy J “Mike Will Made-It”
Disco Biscuits, “Tom Sawyer” City Bisco, Mann Music Center, Philadelphia, PA 9/28
Keller Williams and Floodwood, Putnam Den 10/10
Aqueous – “Uncle Phils Parachute”, The Dubland Underground, Rochester, 11/15
Brewery Ommegang, Cooperstown
Solaris Neon
Pearl Jam at First Niagara Center, Buffalo 10/2
Phish at Glens Falls Civic Center, 10/23
Rest of the Best
i am. it is. you should be. never gets too loud but is bold in the direction of some songs and the ambitious length of the 11 tracks on the album showcase Colby’s range. “Two” starts the album with soft ’70s rock, ala Jim Croce and Don McLean, with a long and paced acoustic melody binding the music to the lyrics. A little country grit is exhibited on “Forget This”, but not too much; there’s even a hint of Bon Jovi in this track.
A two hour set of crowd favorites including an upbeat “Rachel”, an always beautiful and welcome “Speculator”, and a lengthy “Faces” and “Alaska” made for an excellent start to the weekend. Strangefolk played patiently and effortlessly, focused on taking these songs casually out into improvisation. The incredibly vibrant projections pleasantly distracted the audience from the view on the stage. Peter Shapiro, owner of The Cap, initially wanted Strangefolk to play the re-opening weekend back in November 2011,
Pete Mason: With your upcoming solo show at the MassryCenter on December 7th, what can fans expect from seeing you perform without Billy Martin, Chris Wood, or any other collaborators? Perhaps songs from your new solo piano album A Different Time?
“Rollin ‘n Tumblin”, best interpreted by Muddy Waters, kicks off with gritty guitar work from Luther, both plucked acoustic and shredded electric, and primal drums from Cody, leading to a fresh take on the early blues number. “Snake Drive”, the RL Burnside original the trio has performed for years has the vocals strained through a megaphone that makes for a distant, stripped down juke joint vibe. “Meet me in the City”, one of the more upbeat songs on the album (as close to a ballad as NMA gets, via Junior Kimbrough) drifts off into “Turn Up Satan”, where Luther Dickinson sings with a love-scorned blues infusion at its core.