Category: Profiles

  • An UpstateMetal look at Echo Hill

    The idea that anything you put out into the universe remains forever tangible, defines the collective awareness and dedication behind  Smithtown alternative band, Echo Hill.

    Speaking with the band’s 21-year-old guitarist, Alex Laudani, it’s apparent just how well he and his bandmates understand that it takes more than a dream to achieve the tangible.

    Echo Hill, out of Smithtown, NY, consists of Alex Laudani, Dylan Coates, Keith Miller and Monique Teichert.  (Photo Credit: Echo Hill/Facebook)
    Echo Hill, out of Smithtown, NY, consists of Alex Laudani, Dylan Coates, Keith Miller and Monique Teichert. (Photo Credit: Echo Hill/Facebook)

    It’s an early Sunday evening when Laudani sits down to talk.  It’s a busy time of year for everyone. Each member of the band is pursuing a college degree and semester finals are just around the corner.  On top of his studies, Laudani continues to add material to the band’s website, Twitter and Facebook accounts. “We put a lot of time in this,” he said. “We try to get a lot of information out there to our fans.”   And the effort is getting them noticed.  Echo Hill was named a featured artist on an independent radio station based out of California, and they’re garnering enough attention to land gigs off Long Island.  Just a few nights before, they performed a gig at the Lit Lounge in New York City. “We were actually scheduled to play in Webster Hall,” said Laudani, “but one of the promoters changed the venue so we played at the Lit Lounge.” The East Village venue is no stranger to big names, having the likes of Bauhaus, Dirty Vegas, White Stripes, and Rolling Stone magazine cross through their front door over the years.  “It was a cool, underground place… We’re hoping to get another opportunity to play Webster Hall.  But, that’s how the city goes.  We’re just trying to get our foot in the door.  You have to be grateful with any place that you get.”

    Laudani is approaching his final year at SUNY Farmingdale, where he studies business.  As if one needs to question his field of study, as every visible step the band makes appears orchestrated.  A well manicured image made in the absence of any guidance from a manager or record label.  “It’s all us,” he said.  “We’re trying to go as far as we can by ourselves. Once someone approaches us that we like, we’ll come to a decision. But at this point we’ll try to do as much as we can independently.

    [Independently, to an extent.]

    “My family is very supportive. They love me, obviously. I grew up on classic rock – Led Zeppelin and all those classic rock bands. I was always listening to that as a child. It’s part of the reason why we have that sound and that influence in our music. I definitely hand it to my parents for that.”

    Echo Hill was conceived in 2010, with Laudani and bassist Dylan Coates writing music jamming out in each other’s basements, but the present line-up has been together for less than a year.   Each member attributes different influences, from the aforementioned pioneers of hard rock to contemporary mixed-media artists like Linkin Park, melding a collective sound that has drawn comparisons to Paramore.  The band has taken upon itself to launch the resurgence of rock ‘n’ roll and identify closest to the alternative rock genre.  They had received favorable feedback after the release of their first EP in 2012.  However, the band parted ways from their original lead singer, leaving themselves without a front man.

    Then came, Monique.

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    “One day she emailed us,” recalled Laudani, of current front woman, Monique Teichert.

    Teichert has a contralto style of voice characteristic of jazz performer Diana Krall, only had Krall decided to go hard rock.  She’s a siren on the mic, possessing a voice that’s both sultry and haunting.  However, none of this was ever showcased outside of a few talent shows she won during junior high school.

    “We really didn’t want to reach out to her [at first],” said Laudani. “Because it would completely change the sound and image of the band, something that I was very reluctant to do. I always feared becoming one of those female-fronted bands where everything is about the singer.”

    Nonetheless, a persistent Teichert earned a tryout with the band.  Laudani described what changed his mind.

    “Something about her was special, I thought, so we decided to do a side part – an acoustic kind of thing,” he said. “So we brought her in, tried her out, and we liked her.  As far as “that moment” it was one of our first shows at this venue called Revolution. The place was packed, and Monique shined; leading the crowd and all. That showed me right then and there that she was an innate performer and that she was born to do that. It was really cool.”

    Teichert was officially made the band’s lead singer in early January.  And, since then, have released their second EP, Namaste, and organized a food drive by means of a multi-band concert event in Smithtown this past summer.  The event collected more than 900 pounds of food intended for those still impacted by the events of Hurricane Sandy.

    Echo Hill’s image – enhanced or maintained with the addition of Terichert – is nevertheless well cultivated, partly due to the use of social media:  A medium the band recognizes as a vital tool for success.  “We understand the importance of social media, how important image is in these times,” said Laudani.  The band’s Twitter feed is consistently peppered with links and updates.  And, the 12 videos available on their YouTube account include professional productions of live shows from various venues, and jam sessions recorded from Rogue Studios in Hicksville, NY.   One video in particular  is a cover of Zeppelin’s “Whole Lotta Love.”

    It’s a tall order to cover a legendary band, though most attempt it regardless of talent level.  Jimmy Page, Robert Plant, and the late John Bonham are considered all-time greats within their own rights.  But, Echo Hill’s tribute to the Brit rockers has less to do with mimicking a classic, as it is attempting to make something of their own.  Teichert’s come-hither vocals replace Plant’s more aggressive approach, while Laudani’s guitar work seems to show less Page and more Mike McCready, utilizing distortion pedals akin to the Pearl Jam guitarist’s repertoire.

    Drummer Keith Miller, who idolized Bonham, is a decorated artist, having received numerous accolades through New York State School Music Association (NYSSMA) throughout his academic career.  And, Coates brings on the talent of playing both guitar and bass, bypassing guitar so that he can fill out the band’s need for a bass player.

    Everyone holds his and her own on this tribute, and it’s worth a viewing.  Then, it’s recommended you listen to Namaste.  The talent within this group shines through with versatility and originality.

    “For some bands, image is even more important than music,” said Laudani, “and we don’t stand for that.”

    Fans in upstate New York need to take notice of Echo Hill now.  Laudani says the band is planning a tour of the local colleges that pepper the landscape.  Albany, Binghamton, Oneonta, and Cortland were all named. “We’re still planning that,” he said.  But, once these plans become tangible, you ought to go see them.

    For more information, go to www.EchoHillBand.com, @EchoHillBand on Twitter, or Echo Hill on Facebook.

  • A Look at One Last Shot

    As the frontman to Syracuse’s One Last Shot, the 23-year-old takes to those notebooks to find the words that will accompany the band’s music.  Together, it’s a matrimony between the ethereal world of his craft, and the driving force of the music.

    As a wordsmith, Jeremy Miller is a slave to every epiphany. At home, he has notebooks, napkins and spare scraps of paper, for each time he has been visited by his muse.

    “I have notebooks stacked with pages, and pages of lyrics and poems and random thoughts I quickly write down,” said Miller.

    “My notebook has turned into my cell phone notepad,” said Miller, “but if I have paper around and don’t think about my cell phone I’ll write down ideas quick.  (Laughs.)  If I don’t do that I could forget the idea as soon as I think of it.”

    One Last Shot carries the label of “local band”, one that calls Syracuse home as the band struggles to branch out farther.  They’ve played Buffalo and Rochester.  As one would expect, they aspire to do more.

    One Last Shot, out of Rochester, NY, includes Rikki Kemz, David Royal, Angelo Zinkovitch, Adam VVlassis and Jeremy Miller.  (Photo credit: One Last Shot)
    One Last Shot, out of Syracuse, NY, includes Rikki Kemz, David Royal, Angelo Zinkovitch, Adam Vlassis and Jeremy Miller. (Photo credit: One Last Shot)

    Calling them a local band would be misleading.  They avoid the mistake of relating their sound to Metallica – is that before And Justice for All or after the Black Album when they went grunge?  Nah.

    “Our influence (musically) is based off of a lot of music,” said Miller. “We’re very musically diverse people.”

    This October, the band released Bastards of the Plague.  It’s a 12-song LP that clocks in a little over a half-an-hour.  No bombastic tracks on this one, as the longest track noses around the four-minute range.  The band’s musical diversity is most apparent as their sound transitions from metal to almost punk as one goes chronologically through the CD.

    “I was listening to a lot of Elvis, Smashing Pumpkins, Danzig and Every Time I Die,” said Miller. “[But}the band as a whole really is influenced by the post-hardcore of the early 2000’s. It’s when we really felt the scene was amazing.

    “Usually I close my eyes when listening to the guitars and drums and think of a story going on to the music. If it was a soundtrack to a movie, what would be going on in the scene? Then I see if I already have something I wrote forever ago that works… but usually I write new lyrics to the songs.”

    The soundtrack to Bastards of the Plague includes many action sequences.  “Hell’s Empty” is one of a few battle anthems that pits the protagonist against the forces of Hell itself.

     This is the moment to choose your sides

    Everyone’s got to pick

    If not you’re just born to die

    They’re coming

    We’re running

    But I refuse to feel the fire burn inside the Devil’s eyes

    Hell’s empty

    They walk among us tonight!

    “Bring Out the Dead” is another such anthem, one that showcases some of the precision of Rikki Kemz rapid drum play.  He brings the cadence to a feverish pace that accompanies the theme of the song nicely.

    The metal aspect of this LP ends with “A Lizard in Brenda.”  (Now, hardcore metal fans should not be concerned about this perceived shift in genres.  It’s subtle, if there at all.)  Matt Good of From First to Last contributes an eerily angelic voice to an otherwise graphic song describing vengeance in the most violent of ways.  Good’s addition provides depth and complexity that makes this track standout.  William Control (Aiden) also makes a noteworthy contribution on “Bury A Legend”, not only providing his pipes but his wordsmith talents as well.

    Brenda is followed by “Neon Gods” paying homage to the barroom brawlers of the world, and continues to impress from there.  Each of the remaining songs possess introductions that are reminiscent of The Offspring’s Smash.  The first few seconds of guitars , played by David Royal, Angelo Zinkovitch and Adam Vlassis (bass), play along with Kemz in a similar fashion to the legendary California punk rockers.

    Steve Sopchak, who has produced and mixed for larger acts like, The Venetia Fair, Ice Nine Kills, The Ataris, and Such Gold, adds a professional touch that does not allow the vocals or any one instrument overpower the rest.  Should you have the opportunity to see One Last Shot, take that opportunity.  A CD purchase would also not be regrettable. Bastards of the Plague is a well-polished showcase of a local band that is deserving of more attention.

    CDs can be purchased by visiting http://onelastshot.storenvy.com/.

  • Meet Your NYS Music Staff: Publisher Pete Mason

    Pete Mason is a teacher and writer living in Albany, NY. Pete started out as a Staff Writer, covering concerts and festivals in the Northeast, then became Online Editor and helped grow the staff from 10 to more than 40 as of today. As Publisher, Pete edits content, coordinates with staff for coverage of events, finds new staff from throughout New York State and the Northeast, and pushing forth the mission of NYS Music: to promote the music of up and coming artists from New York State and beyond.

    pete mason

    A graduate of three Upstate New York colleges – Syracuse University, Union Graduate College and The College of Saint Rose – Pete finds his home in Menands, halfway between Parish Public House in Albany and Dinosaur Bar-B-Que in Troy, living with his 5 year old pup Sky, and previously his dog Halley, both natives of Upstate New York. Pete is the author of PhanArt: The Art of the Fans of Phish, and runs PhanArt.net, which provides a marketplace for Phish fans to sell their art to a wide audience both on and off tour, with proceeds benefiting The Mockingbird Foundation.

    Pete is also the co-author of PhanFood: From the Kitchen Pot to the Tour Lota cookbook compiling recipes for Phish fans, by Phish fans, with proceeds going to food banks in New York and Burlington. His latest book. The Evolution of the War Film: From Westerns and World War Two to Vietnam is available as an e-book and details the shift in war films throughout the 20th Century. When not teaching, editing or writing, Pete travels throughout the country, having visited all 50 states, and seeks out music festivals. He has written three children’s books, which can be found here. He has written for Huffington Post and Jambands.com. Pale ales, chicken wings and locally sourced produce are known to gain not only his curiosity, but his attention as well.

    pete mason

    Pete has been to over 200 Phish shows, 50+ music festivals and countless shows over the course of the past 20 years. His first concert was Huey Lewis and the News at SPAC in 1989, who he met at his third News show in May 2013 in Tarrytown. Some of his favorite musical experiences include Northwest String Summit at Hornings Hideout in 2011, Bonnaroo, Jamcruise, Big Cypress, seeing Patti Smith in Rome, Bloc Party at Paradiso in Amsterdam, Pearl Jam at The Gorge, Rock n Roll Resorts and any hometown show.

    Pete has seen a great deal of musicians in his life, but some acts still elude him. His musical bucketlist includes Stevie Wonder, Daft Punk, among others. Among venues to see musical performances in, concerts at Lincoln Center, Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles, The Sydney Opera House in Australia, and Royal Albert Hall in London are at the top of his list.

    Email: Pete@NYSMusic.com

  • Meet Your NYS Music Staff: Writer Christopher McMullen

    Raised in the foothills of the Catskill mountains in Oneonta, New York Christopher McMullen was exposed to music at a young age. Dabbling in trombone and percussion, he also was a member of the school choir through high school. While in College at SUNY Oneonta, he traveled often around the country to see his favorite artists perform.

    Christopher McMullenAttending concerts and festivals while still in high school, Christopher’s first solo show was Marilyn Manson opening for Nine Inch Nails at the Knickerbocker Arena in 1994. The very next summer he saw Phish for the first time at Saratoga Performing Arts Center in Saratoga, NY on the 25th of June, 1995. He have seen Phish approximately 84 more times since then, along with a plethora of other artists at various festivals and venues. Included in the list of these festivals are Outside Lands in San Francisco, Spin Summit in Colorado Springs, Electric Forest in Michigan, Bear Creek in Florida, All Good in West Virginia, Gnarnia in North Carolina and Wakarusa in Arkansas, just to name a few. Having recently attended Burning Man in Nevada, it’s safe to say that he will travel as far as it takes to go back again. An avid juggler, Christopher performs with an Upstate NY Fire performance troupe Cosmic Karma Fire at festivals all over the country.

    He is hoping to travel the world as much as possible before its not an available option. He hopes to catch as many international festivals as possible while traveling. He would like to see some of the greats before they are no longer performing, including Paul McCartney, Eric Clapton, BB King, Weird Al Yankovic, Daft Punk, Roger Waters, Tom Petty & the Heart Breakers and Radiohead to name a few. Oh and Caravan Palace, Alt-J, De La Soul, and the Punch Brothers, yeah, them too.

  • The Veer Union – Alive & Kickin’

    Canada’s own, The Veer Union, recently announced to fans over Facebook they will be releasing the first single off their upcoming EP Life Support on December 3rd.

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    Life Support will be a double-EP, which appears to have two separate release dates; of which, Part One will launch on Dec 10th, and Part Two will hit shelves on an undisclosed date in 2014. The release of Part Two is to be followed by a North American tour.

    This will be the first release since Divide the Blackened Sky in March 2012. And with that comes an apparent effort to experiment with their sound. According to the band’s announcement Part One will carry a “brighter” and more “rock” characteristic in comparison to Part Two’s “darker” and “metal” sound.

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    TVU made a lasting impression on metal heads here in the Capital Region when they played to an Upstate Concert Hall audience in 2009. Despite sharing the bill with Hinder and Theory of a Dead Man, TVU rocked the set and stood out on their own. What was certainly a help was having “Seasons” in their playlist. Their Top Ten track had already been exposed to WWE wrestling fans and later served as a theme song for hockey’s Pittsburgh Penguins.

    Their choice in name for their latest EP is aptly so, because despite their initial success, the band has fallen on tougher times. Universal Motown dropped them from their label immediately after their 2009 tour, ironically after charting two, Top 25 hits in “Seasons” and “Youth of Yesterday.” Though they were subsequently picked up by Rocket Science, they failed to chart with one LP and another EP, both released in 2012. Further adding to the band’s woes was the departure of bassist Marc Roots and guitarist James Fiddler. For the moment only Crispin Earl, the band’s lead singer, is listed among active members on the band’s Wikipedia page. Nevertheless, Earl and crew are pressing forward thanks to a Kickstarter venture to raise enough funding for Life Support.

    Go to the band’s website www.theveerunion.com to learn more.

  • Meet Your NYS Music Staff: Writer Susan Rice

    Susan Rice has been a staff writer for for a little over a year. Her love for music started at a young age from her parents who filled her childhood home with song, dance and love. They always encouraged her exploration of all things music, signing her up for chorus, piano/drum lessons, and attending many of her school musicals. Her first concert was with her family at Madison Square Garden to see Billy Joel and Elton John in 2002 on their “Face to Face” Tour, bringing to life all the classic hits she had loved on her many family road trips.

    susan riceBefore catching the bus to high school each morning, Susan had the morning ritual of enjoying breakfast in front of the television and watching the top 20 music videos of the week on VH1 or MTV. It was one morning when she saw/heard “No Such Thing” by John Mayer and became intrigued by the acoustic guitar. She quickly took up guitar lessons afterwards and joined the AV Club, where she learned about the history of music starting in the 60’s and 70s. Susan went through a diverse phase, as does everyone growing up, with a heavy influence from her peers in school and in college. Throughout the years, she attended a handful of Dave Matthews Band shows as well as John Mayer, Maroon 5 and O.A.R.

    After graduating college, Susan began working in a bakery with a kitchen staff that had a love for the jamband scene. A lifelong friend took her to her first Phish show on June 19th, 2010 at Saratoga Performing Arts Center and a co-worker took to her first moe. show that December at the Washington Armory, introducing her to a massive network of dance crazed, thrill seeking friends. 2011 was a monumental year for Susan as she experienced a great love and an even greater loss of a dear loved one, who passed suddenly in late August. Desperate to “feel” again, she started attending local shows in the capital area more often, where lucky enough, you can find live music every night of the week. Since joining in 2012, Susan has covered everything from small shows to big name festivals all over the East Coast. It has given her a greater sense of self, redirecting Susan to the pursuit of happiness, which in her case turns out to be music.

    Susan’s Musical Bucketlist includes Huey Lewis and the News, Talking Heads, The Black Keys, Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band, Pork Tornado, Eric Clapton, Dragonforce, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, Alabama Shakes, Old Crow Medicine Show, U-Melt, Mumford & Sons, and Phil Lesh & Friends with Trey Anastasio.

  • Upstate’s Maria Brink of In This Moment headlining Hell Pop tour

    Maria Brink fronts In This Moment, and she’s a howler.

    That’s okay, man, ’cause what she and the boys are doing, they’re doing well.  And, they’re taking it home here in the next few days; home, being, Brink’s home. Yes, she’s a native of the Capital Region.  But, she high-tailed it out of “Smallbany” to go after her dreams in Los Angeles. (And, you so had a picture of Axl Rose walking off the bus ala Welcome to the Jungle.) But, that’s so nine years ago.

    This Saturday, November 9th, In This Moment will be rocking the set at Clifton Park’s Upstate Concert Hall, as they continue on their leg of the Hell Pop Tour. They’ll only wake up to do it all again down in New York City’s Best Buy Theater on Sunday, November 10th.

    The band is still riding the high from the 2012 release of their fourth studio album, Blood, which reached No 1 on the Billboard Hard Rock Albums chart, and No. 15 on the overall Top 200, back in February.  It’s the band’s biggest success, which came shortly after the band nearly fell apart, which Upstate Metal’s Kate Drexel asked Brink in her June interview.

    “We (Brink and Chris Howorth) really just rallied together,” she said.  “We cannot let other people’s disbeliefs in our band and everything we’ve created, everything we’ve worked for, we’ve strived for, we’ve sacrificed for, hinder us from moving forward.”

    It was after the release of their third album in 2012 that founding members Jeff Fabb and Blake Bunzel quit the band. The nation was just taking notice.  Just the previous summer they had played alongside Korn, Rob Zombie, Five Finder Death Punch, and Hatebreed at the annual Mayhem Festival. This was followed up by the Hell Hath No Fury Tour.  Brink had also received personal recognition as she was named the Hottest Chick in metal by Revolver magazine.

    “This is our moment. (Pause).  No pun intended.  And we’re going to take everything and we’re going to take it into the next level, we’re going to take our live show, our songs, every single thing that has to do with us, we’re bringing it to the next level and we’re going to do this hard.”

    Despite their confidence, they ran into tough times.  With Fabb and Buzel gone, few managers wanted to give them the time of day, said Brink.  But, their producer, Kevin Churko, kept his patience and Brink said his commitment helped the band survive.

    “We went into the studio and we wrote the song Blood,” she said. “And right when we heard it back, we knew that everything was going to change right when we heard that song. We felt it, we knew it and we started setting it up with managers and we started having managers fly out from everywhere and everything shifted from then.” The band now consists of Tom Hane on drums, Travis Johnson on bass and Randy Weitzel on rhythm guitar, in addition to Brink’s vocals and Howorth’s lead guitar.

    The hardship inspired their song material, Brink said. And, In This Moment has been a soaring Phoenix ever since.

    “So kind of everything falling apart and then building it brand new, and all of these beautiful new things, is where all the inspirations from the album came from.”

    Oh, one more thing. You’d be doing yourself a disservice if you don’t check out the acoustic version of Blood on YouTube. Just listen to Brink’s soulful vocals and you’ll see why, among other things, we like these guys.

  • Featured Band: In This Moment

    Maria Brink fronts In This Moment, and she’s a howler.

    That’s okay, man, ’cause what she and the boys are doing, they’re doing well.  And, they’re taking it home here in the next few days; home, being, Brink’s home. Yes, she’s a native of the Capital Region.  But, she high-tailed it out of “Smallbany” to go after her dreams in Los Angeles. (And, you so had a picture of Axl Rose walking off the bus ala Welcome to the Jungle.) But, that’s so nine years ago.

    This Saturday, November 9th, In This Moment will be rocking the set at Clifton Park’s Upstate Concert Hall, as they continue on their leg of the Hell Pop Tour. They’ll only wake up to do it all again down in New York City’s Best Buy Theater on Sunday, November 10th.

    The band is still riding the high from the 2012 release of their fourth studio album, Blood, which reached No 1 on the Billboard Hard Rock Albums chart, and No. 15 on the overall Top 200, back in February.  It’s the band’s biggest success, which came shortly after the band nearly fell apart, which Upstatemetal’s Kate Drexel asked Brink in her June interview.

    “We (Brink and Chris Howorth) really just rallied together,” she said.  “We cannot let other people’s disbeliefs in our band and everything we’ve created, everything we’ve worked for, we’ve strived for, we’ve sacrificed for, hinder us from moving forward.”

    It was after the release of their third album in 2012 that founding members Jeff Fabb and Blake Bunzel quit the band. The nation was just taking notice.  Just the previous summer they had played alongside Korn, Rob Zombie, Five Finder Death Punch, and Hatebreed at the annual Mayhem Festival. This was followed up by the Hell Hath No Fury Tour.  Brink had also received personal recognition as she was named the Hottest Chick in metal by Revolver magazine.

    “This is our moment. (Pause).  No pun intended.  And we’re going to take everything and we’re going to take it into the next level, we’re going to take our live show, our songs, every single thing that has to do with us, we’re bringing it to the next level and we’re going to do this hard.”

    Despite their confidence, they ran into tough times.  With Fabb and Buzel gone, few managers wanted to give them the time of day, said Brink.  But, their producer, Kevin Churko, kept his patience and Brink said his commitment helped the band survive.

    “We went into the studio and we wrote the song Blood,” she said. “And right when we heard it back, we knew that everything was going to change right when we heard that song. We felt it, we knew it and we started setting it up with managers and we started having managers fly out from everywhere and everything shifted from then.” The band now consists of Tom Hane on drums, Travis Johnson on bass and Randy Weitzel on rhythm guitar, in addition to Brink’s vocals and Howorth’s lead guitar.

    The hardship inspired their song material, Brink said. And, In This Moment has been a soaring Phoenix ever since.

    “So kind of everything falling apart and then building it brand new, and all of these beautiful new things, is where all the inspirations from the album came from.”

  • Featured Band: GHOST B.C.

    Happy New Year, or Happy Halloween – which ever you choose. Today, Upstate Metal turns it’s focus on a band whose flamboyant theatrics for making a mockery out of the Catholic Church turns every day into Halloween. When Ghost B.C. takes to the stage, people notice.

    “What the hell is this?” recalls Upstate Metal photographer and editor, Jim Gilbert, who captured this Swedish heavy metal band earlier this year in at Rock on the Range in Columbus, Ohio. “It was Latin Catholic Church gone bad or gone good. It made me take notice.” Ghost B.C. are easily recognizable due to their unique on-stage presence. A six-piece band comprised of five musicians donned in hooded robes, while the vocalist appears in skull make-up, dressed as a Roman Catholic Cardinal. The nature of their identities is highly secretive and their names have not been publicly disclosed; the vocalist calls himself Papa Emeritus and the musicians are referred to only as Nameless Ghouls. Musically, the band is often compared to groups such as The Doors, Black Sabbath, Blue Öyster Cult, Mercyful Fate and Kyuss.

    Off stage, they continue to shock. Should you dare visit their Facebook page, they describe themselves as a group who “performs pop hymns that glorify and glamorize the disgusting and sacrilegious. “Ghost is the name of a devil worshiping ministry, that in order to spread its unholy gospels and, furthermore, trick mankind into believing the end is ultimately a good thing, have decided to use the ever so popular rock music medium as a way to achieve their ends.”

    Gulp.

    The act hasn’t been off-putting. In 2010, they were nominated for a Grammis, which is the Swedish equivalent to our Grammy, for their debut album, Opus Eponymous.  Nonetheless, the subject matter by which the group sings is a bone of contention for many who worship Christianity, which has a following of 2.2 billion strong.

    Ghost-4

    “If Not For Those Satanic Lyrics, Ghost B.C. Could Be Superstars,” read a headline out of New York City’s The Village Voice in July. Though it appears that most critics recognize this as just an act.  The Voice likened Ghost B.C. to something familiar to KISS from the ’70s and early ’80s. Nonetheless, one of the nameless ghouls agreed how some perceive the band to be, and does not argue, “From a ‘Bible Belt’ point of view, yes we are [Satanics]. Because if you’re talking to someone who is a very God-fearing devout Christian with all that comes with it, obviously that person would deem us being complete blasphemy and an abomination to everything they considered dear and holy.”

    Perfect material to rebel against your parents.

    Infantissumam, their follow-up to their debut album, came out this April.

  • Meet Your NYSMusic Staff: Editor Tim O’Shea

    Tim “T-Bone” O’Shea currently resides in Westfield, NJ where he was also raised. He attended St. Joseph’s High School in Metuchen before studying Broadcast Journalism at the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications of Syracuse University, where he earned a Bachelor’s degree in 2002. During his college years, he attended and reviewed many live shows in the Syracuse area at such venues like Armory High and Planet 505 amongst others.

    tim o'sheaHe currently works as a Paralegal at a large collections law firm in Morris County, NJ. Hobbies include reading, visiting the Jersey Shore and, of course, live music. This summer he celebrated his 100th Phish show at Saratoga Performing Arts Center and has also seen acts like moe., The Disco Biscuits and Donna the Buffalo multiple times.

    Tim’s musical bucketlist includes Pearl Jam, The Allman Brothers Band and Furthur