Category: Rochester

  • 2015 Rochester Xerox International Jazz Fest Headliners

    Rochester music loving denizens know that the ultimate week in town is the annual Xerox Rochester International Jazz Fest. With hundreds of musicians expected every year playing street, theater and outdoor shows ranging from free to black tie affairs – the fest typically attracts in the 100’s of thousands over the course of 9 days. While the 2015 full schedule for Rochester’s Jazz Fest has yet to be announced – including the street held free concert series – some of the Kodak Hall headliner schedule has been announced.

    Canadian jazz legend Diana Krall will be performing a matinee 4PM show June 19. Multiple Grammy winning trumpet player Herb Alpert will toot your socks off on Jun 20. Herb will be joined by the brilliant and well known singer Lani Hall.

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    Hendrix scribe Gary Clarke Jr. will bring his screaming blues licks into town on Jun 23 with vocalist Beth Hart. Another Grammy winner – also well known as the winner of American Idol season three – Jennifer Hudson is up June 24. The Trucks/Tedeschi band along with Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings will be a part of this years festival on June 25.

    Finishing things off June 27 is the return of the Steep Canyon Rangers. The ever popular bluegrass band will be on their own this year – last year they performed alongside legendary comedian and banjo player Steve Martin.

    Select tickets have already gone on sale and it’s likely that all of these shows will sell out, if you want in – visit the website now for purchase. The ever popular nine day club passes are also available now for $194 – no club shows have been announced thus far.

    Stay tuned for all things Jazz Fest as more is announced!

  • Photo Review: Wild Adriatic and Conehead Buddha at Montage

    Saratoga Spring’s Wild Adriatic enjoyed a 2014 chock full of press and band milestones. Their blues-funk-rock jams are full of pop potential without being emblematic of anything today’s pop scene contains. While shades of The Black Keys and The Strokes may exhibit themselves to a casual listeners ears – what we truly have here is an original sounding trio full of fire, emotion and quite possibly eternal hell fire. Wild Adriatic rocked the Montage on Saturday night with Conehead Buddha and will continue to rock Upstate with upcoming shows April 16 at Buffalo’s Ironworks and a hometown gig April 18 at Vapor.

    moe. fans have come to know the horn section of Coxsackie NY’s Conehead Buddha well over the past year with the two collaborating on multiple occasions. Those fans should get their butts down to see the full experience of the ska/world music based band who has toured for years. If the moe. connection isn’t enough, consider they also recently added Suke Cerulo, former guitarist for the down right epic defunct jazz/psych/funk trio Schleigho. Upstate will have another chances to run Buddha’s belly Feb 13 at Syracuse’s Funk n Waffles.

  • The Lawn Boys at Lovin’ Cup: What a Beautiful Buzz

    Tribute bands come and go and many jam fans – especially those of the Phish-y variety, tend to turn their noses up at them. But like most of life every rule has its exceptions. Band’s such as Dark Star Orchestra (Grateful Dead) and Start Making Sense (Talking Heads) have generated ample buzz and following, dedicating their lives representing musical heroes with great respect and talent. The Lawn Boys seem perfectly poised to join this upper tier with their spot-on recreations of composition-based Phish pieces and their own fiery originality within improvisational jam sections that scream “Phish 1.0”.

    The Lawn Boys Lovin Cup Rochester 2015-02-05 (9)

    After a nicely executed sound check “Possum” and a short break, the Boys took the stage and wasted no time getting into the fan favorite and relative rarity “Curtain With”. Featuring shreddy lead passages from TLB’s resident “Trey” Darren Rodney  – this rendition could easily stand up among the tops of those of the phab phour themselves. After a fan requested a well done Funky Bitch, came one of the best duo’s of the night: “46 Day’s” into Robert Palmer’s “Sneakin’ Sally Through the Alley”.  The filled venue with fans of all ages did their part, bouncing all around the room dancing. The jam itself contained many hints at an impending “2001” funk-fest but ended up back into the main Sally theme. At least for this night, the band seemed completely focused on pre-hiatus material with the set ending on a peaktastic goose bump inducing “Slave to the Traffic Light”.

    After a “we’ll be back in 10 minutes” break we all took a journey through the “Maze” before the second set got a phabulous anchor with a “Mike’s->Reba->Weekapaug” sequence with bassist Miguel Lantigua dropping soul shaking bombs all over the place and keys man David Kaufman making Page proud. Mid set the band showed their appreciation for Phish’s humorous side with the resident Fishman – drummer Andrew Mega – whipping out the vacuum for a hilarious take on “I Didn’t Know”. A well oiled “Harry Hood” would finish the set, but the packed Lovin’ Cup floor wouldn’t let them end quite yet so they came back out for a triple encore of “Chalk Dust,” “Fuego” (The only new era song for the night) and the obligatory “YEM” to finish it off. Boy Man God Awesome! Keep an eye on The Lawn Boys tour – and don’t miss your next chance to see them.

    Set 1
    Curtain With, Funky Bitch, 46 Days->Sneaking Sally, Split Open and Melt, Axilla, Wolfmans Brother, Slave to the Traffic Light
    Set 2
    Maze, Mikes->Reba->Weekapaug (unfinished)->Cities->I Didn’t Know, Theme from the bottom->Weekapaug, Harry Hood
    Encore
    Chalkdust Torture, Fuego, YEM
  • When Planets Collide: One Saturday in ROCKchester

    The duel galactic bodies of Rochester’s Planet Assassin and Inner Planets joined forces Saturday Jan 31 at The Firehouse Saloon downtown for ROCKchester. Despite the Hoth-like chill in the outside air the music room at Firehouse filled up nicely and was ready to get their groove on.

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    The Firehouse Saloon is relatively new to the Rochester scene but has been a great friend to the music community. Non genre focused bar hoppers and music fans alike can enjoy a variety of acts on any given night.  The bar showcases an excellent beer selection, free popcorn, a nice outdoor patio, and if you’re game, a free to play ping pong table.

    Planet Assassin was up first after some technical amp difficulties. Playing in only their third public facing show, the stoner-groove-rock focused 4-piece features Daren Johnson and Josh Cooke sharing guitar hero and vocal duties, Frank Ashcraft on bass, and Nick Pryor (Also in Hot Mayonnaise and formerly of Abandoned Buildings Club) smacking the skins. Citing their influences as Dead Meadow, Rush, Hawkwind, and Hall & Oates (Seriously guys?) – the bands hard droning rock sound maintained a uniqueness and surprising tightness for such a new band.

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    Inner Planets – not nearly as new to the scene having formed in 2009 – took the stage next for duel sets of songs featuring a solid rock base with a generous side heaping of jamming. The Rush influence continued along interspersed with shades of Phish, moe. and more.

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    This weekend Firehouse will continue to showcase it’s diverse schedule with a burlesque Mardi-Gras celebration on Friday ($7 at 9PM) and local cover band Trapper Keeper on Saturday ($5 at 9PM). All shows are 21+

  • Conehead Buddha/Wild Adriatic Coming to Rochester’s Montage Saturday

    Born from the depths of the admittedly hilariously named Coxsackie, NY, Upstate’s Conehead Buddha have been on the scene a long time. Presenting a blended genre jam based sound containing hints of ska, reggae, world music, and good old rock and roll – the Conehead Buddha will hit Rochester’s Montage Music Hall this Saturday night with Saratoga based rockers Wild Adriatic.

    Wild Adriatic have been featured in such publications as Huffington Post, Rolling Stone, Relix and more. Fan’s of The Strokes, Black Keys, and London Soul should not miss this rare area appearance. Ticket’s are available online for only 6$ (7$ at the door). Show starts at 9PM. 18+ Let’s get wild ROCKchester!

  • Country Music Top Tours Making Stops at Darien Lake Performing Arts Center This Summer

    The 2015 summer tour announcements continue to flood the airwaves with two more huge country music artists announcing that they will be making their way through the New York area. Luke Bryan announced his 2015 Kick Up The Dust tour, while Rascal Flatts announced their 2015 Riot tour.  Both will make their way across the nation, stopping this summer at Darien Lake Performing Arts Center with a good deal of country music to join their dedicated fans who reside north of the Mason-Dixon Line.

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    Luke Bryan and Rascal Flatts To Headline at Darien Center

    Luke Bryan held a press conference in conjunction with LiveNation Tours to announce his Kick Up The Dust Tour.  Beginning in May, and taking the tour across the world, Luke will be joined on tour by Dustin Lynch and Randy Houser, as well as Florida Georgia Line at seven of the stadium shows.  The reigning CMA Award Winner for Entertainer of The Year will make his way through New York where we look forward to seeing the country music tour perform at the Darien Lake Performing Arts Center.

    Luke Bryan 2015 Kick the Dust Up Tour Dates:
    5/08 – Grand Forks, N.D.
    5/09 – Sioux Falls, S.D.
    5/14 – Boise, Idaho
    5/15 – Spokane, Wash.
    5/16 – Tacoma, Wash.
    6/04 – Albuquerque, N.M.
    6/06 – Denver, Colo. (Stadium show with Florida Georgia Line)
    6/18 – Tulsa, Okla.
    6/19 – Bonner Springs, Kan.
    6/20 – St. Paul, Minn. (Stadium show with Florida Georgia Line)
    6/25 – Virginia Beach, Va.
    6/26 – Washington D.C.
    6/27 – Washington D.C.
    7/11 – Nashville, Tenn. (Stadium show with Florida Georgia Line)
    7/16 – St. Louis, Mo.
    7/17 – St. Louis, Mo.
    7/18 – Cincinnati, Ohio (Stadium show with Florida Georgia Line)
    7/24 – Indianapolis, Ind.
    7/25 – Indianapolis, Ind.
    7/30 – Scranton, Pa.
    8/26 -Salt Lake City, Utah
    8/27 – Salt Lake City, Utah
    8/29 – San Francisco, Calif. (Stadium show with Florida Georgia Line)
    9/4 – Darien Center, N.Y.
    9/5 – Cleveland, Ohio (Stadium show with Florida Georgia Line)
    9/12 – Philadelphia, Pa.
    9/18 – Tampa, Fla.
    9/19 – West Palm Beach, Fla.
    9/20 – West Palm Beach, Fla.
    9/24 – Charlotte, N.C.
    9/25 – Raleigh, N.C.
    9/26 – Raleigh, N.C.
    10/15 – Sacramento, Calif.
    10/16 – San Diego, Calif.
    10/22 – San Antonio, Texas
    10/23 – Dallas, Texas
    10/30 – Detroit, Mich.

    Tickets for the show, meet and greets, and other giveaways can be found at lukebryanlive.com where you can enter for your chance to win.  Stay tuned for more information as we learn when and how tickets can be purchased for upcoming shows.


    Also announcing their 2015 Riot tour was Rascal Flatts.  Rascal Flatts, will be joined on tour this summer as they make their way across country by Scotty McCreery.   Rascal Flatts have continued to collect admiring fans over the course of their successful reign as one of the most loved and decorated groups in Nashville, while Scotty continues to collect fans from the moment he stepped on the stage for American Idol, to his continued success in Nashville.  

    RIOT TOUR 2015 Cities:
    Cozumel, MX*
    Atlanta, GA*
    Forest City, IA*
    St. Louis, MO
    Indianapolis, IN
    Hershey, PA
    Virginia Beach, VA
    Washington, DC
    Hartford, CT
    Columbus, OH*
    Cadott, WI*
    Dallas, TX
    Pittsburgh, PA
    Charlotte, NC
    Raleigh, NC
    Holmdel, NJ
    Philadelphia, PA
    Boston, MA
    Detroit, MI*
    Brownsville, OR*
    Toronto, ON
    Cleveland, OH
    Darien Center, NY
    Jones Beach, NY
    Cincinnati, OH
    Chicago, IL
    Albuquerque, NM
    Phoenix, AZ
    Irvine, CA
    Mtn. View, CA
    W. Palm Beach, FL
    Tampa, FL
    *Denotes Festival

    Anxiously awaiting more information on this particular tour and how to purchase tickets, please keep an eye on Rascal Flatts Tour Page in the  next few weeks for details.

    As the announcements continue to pour in for our summer events, please stay tuned to NYS Music.com for all the up to date information on all your favorite venues.

  • The Buddhahood and Friends 7th Annual January Thaw Concert Celebrates the life of Tony Cavagnaro

    In just a week the music Gods will be bestowed upon us when music lovers in Rochester will descend upon the Historic German House for the Buddhahood’s 7th annual January Thaw tribute concert on January 24. The event is held in celebration of the life and music of local music legend, Tony Cavagnaro, who was tragically lost in a car accident in 2007. The proceeds from this event go towards the Tony Cavagnaro Young Musician’s Scholarship Fund, which benefits the Hochstein School of Music and Dance.

    Keeping Tony in our hearts and minds and at the forefront of our spirit as a group has helped keep The Buddhahood alive. Celebrating his musical legacy — and his January birthday — has become an annual tradition.”

    Buddhahood bassist Rick Whitney

    The Buddhahood, a band founded by Cavagnaro, has hosted this event annually during the month of January  in celebration of Cavagnaro’s birthday. The show features a variety of special guests and friends to share in the celebration. This year the Buddhahood will be joined by special guests, Teressa Wilcox & Nate Coffey. Also set to appear at January Thaw are friends, Frank Boehm, Chris English, Suzi Willpower, Opal Rose, Chrissy Beth Apples and so many more. The doors open at 7PM. Advance tickets are still available for $10 at Aaron’s Alley, the venue box office and any member of the band. Tickets will be $15 the day of the show so get them now and don’t be left out in the cold when you should be getting toasty inside.

    I had an opportunity to sit in on a band practice and talk to the Buddhahood about what this event means to them and why they keep it going year after year. What I encountered was a casual conversation with a band I have been listening to since the good old days, when Park Ave. Fest meant two full days of music with the Buddhahood behind Hogan’s Hideaway. What I learned was what sustains the ever evolving love and light harnessed by Cavagnaro, that was and still is, The Buddhahood.

    The studio where the band practices and records is a visual history of the band and all its incarnations. With concert posters from shows past, recording equipment, instruments, photos of Cavagnaro, photos of the band members and their families, and statues of Buddha. Simple symbols that represented the presence of the Buddhahood, an eclectic grouping of cherished memories.

    Kristen Mack-Perry: Let’s talk about January Thaw, Tony, and how you got to where you are now. What is it that you all want to create in having January Thaw?

    Pete Mugnolo: We want to give back to the community, and do it in a way that benefited young musicians. Because When we originally thought of this idea, Tony was always do that; he was always teaching, but he would do much more than teach. He would kind of take young musicians under his wing and not only show them how to play guitar but how to function in a band. Like with the Panda guys, he really helped them get started.

    KMP: One really fun thing about January Thaw is how many guests you have come in, how do they all connect with this event?

    Gabe Costanzo: Well a lot of them used to be in the band, and a lot of them used to be in Tony’s bands

    KMP: Well it does seem that the members of the band are always changing and evolving, do you think that’s what the structure of the Buddhahood is? a band that doesn’t need to be a certain set-up, you’re just constantly evolving?

    Pete: Well Tony would always say, “I’m the only member of this band that has to show up.” Because we got substitutes for everybody! But we never got a substitute for Tony. We always played with Tony, if he couldn’t play the gig then we didn’t do it. With every single lineup, Tony was the one constant. He would say, “I am the only one that can’t be substituted”… and then he died. As a band we were like, well do we keep playing? So we had Grape Fest booked and we cancelled everything else, and we played the Naples Grape Fest because that was a drum march. It wasn’t supposed to be but we did it anyway.

    Gabe: We asked if we could just show up and do the all acoustic drum march, ya know the drum and horn march that was all acoustic, and we did, because we just couldn’t do the whole stage show.

    Pete: But we put together the first tribute concert November 18, after Tony died. It was at Water Street Music Hall; which was kinda like the wake we all needed to have. We just got everybody together because we wanted to raise money for Jan and Calvin. So we did the tribute and we realized that the band is not just any particular person, it’s not any one personality, its kind of its own entity. It’s an energy that people gravitate to, and that’s what the band is. We thought, it couldn’t be the Buddhahood without Tony, but apparently it can be. It’s different, but ya know.

    KMP: At last year’s January Thaw I remember Calvin coming up on stage to play with you, what does that mean to all of you to be able to share that? Do you think that’s something that would have happened if Tony was here, would he have just naturally brought Calvin on stage?

    Gabe: It’s organic in a weird sort of way

    Pete: It’s just the right, umm… of course!

    Gabe: Well we weren’t the ones to suggest it, Jan came to us and said, “Ya know, Calvin is getting really good at the clarinet, and he wants to play.” Before he played on stage, he used to go up and tell jokes, he was our MC.

    Pete: He sang Happy Birthday one year

    Gabe: So it was just a continuation of that. He’s doing something again this year.

    Pete: Having Calvin on stage with us, is like an assurance that the music will live on [through Tony] its like the next generation continuing to play Tony’s music ya know. I’m hoping there’s a Buddhahood when I’m like 100 years old and I’m just the old guy who shows up every now and then and plays a shaker.

    KMP: So this is the 7th annual January Thaw?

    Gabe: yup, the first one was in 2009

    KMP: This is a benefit show, where does your donation go to? do you know who it benefits specifically each year?

    Pete: We donate the proceeds from the show to the Tony Cavagnaro Young Musicians Scholarship Fund at the Hochstein School of Music and Dance

    Gabe: And they are always keen to tell us, “your donation went to help a young guitar player” or you know, they don’t tell us who it is but, they do let us know how it helps, so that’s nice.

    KMP: Is teaching music something Tony was always passionate about?

    Gabe: Well I don’t know many people who have made a living at only playing music, and Tony was certainly no exception. One of the things he did do was teaching; he owned a music shop once too, he’s done a lot of things in the music business. But teaching was always there, it was one of the things he always did.

    Jim Schwartz: Teaching young musicians, guitar players and mentoring other bands, like the Giant Panda Dub Squad.

    KMP: That’s just so awesome, it’s like a family of music to be a part of the Buddhahood.

    Gabe: I think it is a family, and ya know, different aspects of the show, like having Calvin and having all of our guests, and the scholarship donation, it really is in a way, closing a lot of circles and keeping the whole thing going.

    KMP: [to Matthew] You’re the newest member of the band, the youngest, what is it like to come into a band like this?

    Matthew Sieber-Ford: Yeah, the band has such a history and its like, the band is like a family and the history of the band is like a culture. I mean you could take a class and you know, you get to graduate on the history of the Buddhahood. Every time i sit down with somebody, and not the people in the band, I hear all about how “oh I saw them play this” or “I saw them do this once,” – so there is this whole history behind it. When I first started playing [saxophone] I was playing Jazz. Then I was just hanging out and playing music with the Buddhahood, not playing with the band, but just hanging out, and that just completely just opened up my ears and my mind to like a whole new world. Playing with them is a whole other thing, I mean I’m playing with people who are old enough to be my parents as opposed to my peers, its nice to play with people who have done it before and have been doing it a long time. It has totally changed my attitude about things. The family of the Buddhahood reaches far beyond just being in the band, and so many other bands support this band.

    KMP: That explains all your fantastic guests at the show, they all seem so excited to be a part of the show, and doing something with all of you in celebration of Tony. With the show now in its seventh year, what has it become for you as a whole?

    Gabe: It’s a reunion of sorts

    Jim: It gives us the opportunity to rekindle our memories of Tony in a community setting when we have all of the people who are not a part of the band on a regular basis, all come together, for the purpose of playing Tony’s music and keeping it alive and keeping it vibrant. A lot of it is timeless, ya know, you can play it today or twenty years from now and it would still be valid.

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