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  • Floodwood Keeps Their Fans Warm on a Frigid Winter Night in Oneonta

    On a typical snowy blustery January night in Upstate NY, those who were brave enough to venture out into the elements were in for a real treat at the Oneonta Theatre this past Friday with an evening of ‘new grass’ and Americana music to get people dancing and keep their souls warm despite the frigidness outside. Floodwood, featuring Al Schnier and Vinnie Amico of moe., seemed excited to be back in Oneonta playing in a small familiar venue, having recently returned from a jaunt to Jamaica where they performed at the Tropical Throe.down festival. The increasingly popular Oneonta based The Spectacular Average Boys opened the show, laying the groundwork for the spectacle that was Floodwood.

    The Spectacular Average Boys, a hometown favorite clearly thrilled to be there and opening up for Floodwood, paved the way for an altogether splendid evening. Performing a mix of hipster and Americana styles of music, the band appealed to a wide range of interests. At times sounding a bit like the Avett Brothers, and at other times offering some hints of Ween, this band can play it all. Bassist Joel Shue was particularly impressive, with his ability to simultaneously take care of both the melody and rhythm sections, plus he sang beautiful harmonies to boot. Lead singer, the famously bearded Ned Brower (who has organized the annual “Beard-Off” competition in Oneonta in the past), has a surprisingly powerful voice, not to be overshadowed by his mastery of the banjo. What made his banjo playing even more striking was his ability to morph the sound coming through his instrument through his foot pedal in such an effective way, giving the banjo a more distant and otherworldly sound. On the more country side of things, guitarist/vocalist Justin Ploutz was sporting a flannel and cowboy hat, and he rocked out the entire set! Drummer Joe Pfeiffer provided steady yet creative beats throughout, with an incredible energy level to back up his obvious skills. Mixing a bunch of clever originals, with many songs seemingly related to relationship troubles, but put in a funny light; with a variety of covers ranging from Stone Temple Pilot’s “Plush” – introduced by Ned describing the band as being ‘a product of the ‘90s’ –  to the traditional tune “The Ballad of Jesse James” the crowd was more than adequately warmed up for the evening’s main event. Amy Lieberman - The Spectacular Average Boys (1)Amy Lieberman - The Spectacular Average Boys (2)

    Right from the get-go, one could tell that Floodwood is a force to be reckoned with. It quickly became evident from their unique ability to communicate musically that this band is tight, as they took off running with “Mother”, which is particularly difficult to keep together rhythmically, featuring an unusual time signature and interesting placement of pauses. Watching the band members interact with each other was like watching them have a veritable conversation using their instruments. The music seemed to flow through the group like a wave, with each musician able to sense when they were about to be passed a solo through visual cues and body language.

    Amy Lieberman - Floodwood (2)

    It was clear that mandolinist Jason Barady is the attention hog of the group, but I mean that in the best way possible. Constantly dancing around the stage, and often jumping off stage to come play in the crowd, even dancing right in front of a lucky fan’s cell phone camera at one point, Jason helped to blur the line between band and audience. You could tell that Jason was truly enjoying being up there to share his musical talents with the world. And boy, did he have talent. He really wailed on that mandolin.

    Amy Lieberman - Floodwood (3)

    Almost equally as eager to connect with the crowd was Nick Piccininni, Floodwood’s fiddler and banjo player and the youngest member of the band at the tender age of 25. When you weren’t too consumed with feeling totally envious of his incredible talent rivaling that of musicians many decades his senior, or basking in his infectious smile, you realized you were exceedingly fortunate to be in the presence of such a musical genius. On top of everything else, Nick made it look easy to do what he was doing, which it clearly is not.

    Amy Lieberman - Floodwood (4)

    Bassist Zach Fleitz was much more subdued in manner than Jason and Nick, but he could still bring it on the bass. Alternating seamlessly between stand-up and electric, Zach provided a steady backdrop for the band. He really shined through during one of their more traditional tunes, “Nine Pound Hammer”, so much so that Jason had to take a moment to pay homage to the bass by literally petting it in the middle of the song! Zach’s silliness did shine through at one point: during an extended drum solo at the end of one of their songs, he was doing push-ups in rhythm with the drums right there on stage! Towards the end of their set, Zach and guitarist Al Schnier ended their song “Caught” with a duet featuring an awe-inspiring use of harmonics by both players, with Zach sounding particularly Victor Wooten-esque. I didn’t realize how many notes it was possible to get from just two instruments.

    Amy Lieberman - Floodwood (5)

    Acoustic guitarist Al Schnier and drummer Vinnie Amico of none other than moe. fame rounded out the band. The fact that they have been playing together for 25 years really came through in their subtle methods of communication. They seemed very comfortable playing with each other, and thrilled that they have found three other such talented musicians who work together with them so effortlessly. Vinnie was one of the quieter members of the band as far as stage antics go, but his presence was definitely felt on a profound level. Even though new grass music has bluegrass at its core, and drums are not a typical instrument one would find in a bluegrass band’s line-up, it seemed to work. Al drove home that point with a joke about when they were forming Floodwood: “We told him we were playing bluegrass and he couldn’t come, but he came anyway!” From that joke, the band went into “Stomp It” one of their more complicated tunes both rhythmically and melodically, on which the drums played a crucial role, and while they were playing, everyone kind of moved around on stage looking at each other in awe of the music they were creating.

    Amy Lieberman - Floodwood (6)

    Al Schnier added his distinctive style of acoustic guitar to the mix, which provided a consistent drive throughout the band’s set, and with his incredible and unique voice that you would recognize anywhere, this guy is the whole package. Towards the end of the show, Al revealed to the audience that he was a graduate of SUNY Oneonta, where he spent the best five years of his life, during which he occasionally went to classes in between catching Grateful Dead shows. This little tidbit served as the perfect lead-in to a rousing rendition of “Cumberland Blues”.

    Amy Lieberman - Floodwood (7)

    Altogether a remarkable show, Floodwood definitely gained some loyal fans who will surely make it a habit to check out lots more of their shows in the future. Early on in the set, Nick asked the obligatory “How’s everybody feeling?”, to which he received only a handful of cheers, but when he asked the same question later on, it was a whole different story. You could tell the audience was hooked, and rightfully so.

    [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pTjMo7ymkzY]

  • Fans React to the moe.down Hiatus

    Reactions ranging from hope for the future to anger for the decision were felt from moe.rons early last week when the band-centric festival called off the 16th installment slated for late August/early September 2015. As one of the few festivals that focus on one band and their curated lineup, making it 15 years is no small feat and is likely the longest stretch for a music festival to run with one band serving as host. Here’s hoping after the dust settles, moe.down 16 is on the calendar in 2016.

    moe.down hiatus

    moe.rons on Facebook took it especially hard, with reactions ranging from sad, (“It’s not just a band and a crowd. It’s a way of life. It’s community and famoe.ly. It’s music, love, and laughter. It is my favorite time of the year.”), to hopeful (“I hope they’ve got a monster summer tour in store for us at least.”) , to ways to remedy the lack of three days of moe. in Upstate New York (“moe. should play three nights with the Disco Biscuits at a festival in Upstate New York (revamped Camp Bisco??)”). While fans are settling in with the news, we’ll see what moe. has in store when they share summer plans in the coming months.

    Twitter handled it a little differently…

    Wow, no #moedown this year. I am so grateful that I was able to enjoy 10 incredible moe.downs with my music family. It was my first festival (’02), along with Liz + Adelina (thanks P!) and we had no idea what we were getting ourselves into. We had canned food but no can opener, a tent without all the proper poles and no flashlights (!!!), but we had wigs, hats, iron on tanks we designed, and glow sticks. It was the same weekend that I accidentally bought tickets to see Aerosmith at the Boston Tweeter Center instead of the one in NJ, so we road tripped to MA, stayed with a friend of a friend that we never met, Addy got cut off at a Boston Red Socks game, saw Aerosmith, and then it was off to our first music festival. Even after I moved to Florida, I flew black north and made it to 10 in a row. I missed the last 3 working at Catskill Chill but it will always have a special place in my heart. So many memories from Labor Day weekend and so many friends I would have never met….it’s hard to even begin to put how special it was into words. Thank you, Moe! @moetheband @moechukg @alschnier #moe

    A photo posted by Destiny Beck (Spang) (@destinyspang) on

  • Kenny Chesney Brings Spring/Summer Tour to N.Y.

    ChesneyLadies and the rest of the No Shoes Nation get ready. Mega Country Super Star Kenny Chesney and Corona Light present “The Big Revival Tour.”

    New York state will see two stops on the tour. The “No Shoes, No Shirt, No Problems” singer will grace stages in Albany and Canandaigua.

    The Big Revival Tour will see two different sides of the tour. The arena shows will see support by Jake Owen and Chase Rice. The Stadium Shows will see support by Jason Aldean, Brantley Gilbert, Eric Church and Cole Swindell.

    The Big Revival is also the name of Chesney’s impressive 15th studio album. Fourteen of those albums are certified gold or higher by the RIAA. The first two singles off the new album “American Kids” and “Til It’s Gone” have quickly became fan favorites.

    Chesney’s birthday will start party tour off on Thursday March 26 in Nashville, Tennessee at the Bridgestone Arena. Chesney say’s,

    “Just like making this record, we had time to really get creative about the show. Some of the most creative people I know were thinking about stage design, lights, video screens – even what the set list is going to be! After all this time, when we hit the stage, we’re gonna be all out. And I’m so glad we can kick it off in Nashville where so many of my friends are.”

    The candles will get blown out on Saturday August 29 at Gillette Stadium in Foxboro, Massachusetts.

    Chesney has sold over 30 million albums worldwide and has 30 top ten hits on the Billboard U.S. Hot Country Songs chart. His first platinum-selling album Everywhere We Go, churned out #1 hits “How Forever Feels” and “You Had Me From Hello.”

    Kenny’s sixth studio album No Shoes, No Shirts, No Problems, saw the lead single “Young,” win CMT awards for Video and Male Video of the Year in 2002. Second single “The Good Stuff,” was Billboards #1 Country Song of the Year in 2002.

    In 2004/2005, Kenny won CMT’s Male Video of the Year for the hit’s “There Goes My Life” and “I Go Back.” In 2005, The Academy of Country Music honored Chesney with the prestigious Triple-Crown Award. 2005 also saw Chesney release two studio albums that calendar year with Be As You Are (Songs from an Old Blue Chair) and The Road and the Radio.

    Arena Tour supporting act Jake Owen’s current and fourth studio album Days of Gold was released in 2013. Rolling Stone voted his current single “What We Ain’t Got” one of the top 25 country songs of 2014. Owen’s third studio album Barefoot Blue Jean Night, included many hits. Those hits include his first #1 single the title track of the album “Barefoot Blue Jean Night,” “Alone With You” and “The One That Got Away.”

    Chase Rice will also support the arena part of the tour. His third studio album Ignite the Night, debuted at #1 on the Billboard Top Country Albums in August 2014. From the album you can hear RIAA certified gold hit “Ready Set Roll” and “Gonna Wanna Tonight.

    Fans tickets will sell out fast for this Spring and “Summertime” extravaganza.  Lucky fans who be able to score tickets will feel like they are “Living in Fast Forward.” Those who miss out will have to settle for a  “Beer in Mexico.”
                                                                                                                                                                            The Big Revival Tour Dates:

    04-23-2015  Albany, NY  Times Union Center | Tickets prices still TBA.

    07-08-2015  Canandaigua, NY  CMAC | $85.00 – $35.00 before fees.

    Kenny Chesney | Facebook | Twitter | InstagramYoutube | Spotify |

    Jake Owen          | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Youtube | Spotify |

    Chase Rice          | Facebook | TwitterInstagram| Youtube | Spotify |

    Check Out Kenny Chesney’s No Shoes Radio. Listen to songs by Chesney and your other favorite recoding artist.

  • Members of Anthrax and more to form Motor Sister, Play First Show February 12 in Brooklyn

    Anthrax guitarist Scott Ian with his wife Pearl Aday, have teamed up with The Cult drummer John Tempesta, Armored Saint bassist Joey Vera, and Mother Superior vocalist Jim Wilson have formed Motor Sister.

    Scott Ian spoke of the formation of Motor Sister via Blabbermouth:

    “I wanted to cherry-pick a set list of my favorite Mother Superior songs and get these guys together and have the concert at my house.” Which lead them making an album together. Then Ian emailed producer Jay Ruston and asked if he thought it was possible to recapture the same spontaneous energy Motor Sister generated at their makeshift gig, and if an album could be recorded quickly. “He said, ‘Yeah, we can make the record in two days and we can make it sound really good.’ So that’s what we did…A week and a half later, we made the record in L.A. over a two-day period. We recorded the whole thing live in the studio and the set-up was at my house.”  He continues: “Jim was totally into the idea. Pearl was a huge Mother Superior fan from way back and was in. I asked my good friends Joey Vera and John Tempesta to be a part of it because I knew they were both big fans as well and with no hesitation they said, ‘We’re in.’”

    Motor Sister Band Photo

    Their debut album entitled Ride will be released March 10 via Metal Blade Records.

    The song “This Song Reminds Me Of You” can be streamed below.

    [soundcloud url=”https://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/185859027″ params=”color=ff550

    0&auto_play=false&hide_related=false&show_comments=true&show_user=true&show_reposts=false” width=”100%” height=”166″ iframe=”true” /]

    The track listing for Ride:

    1. A-Hole
    2.  This Song Reminds Me Of You
    3.  Beg Borrow Steal
    4.  Fool Around
    5.  Get That Girl
    6.  Head Hanging Low
    7.  Fork in the Road
    8.   Little Motor Sister
    9.   Pretty in the Morning
    10.  Whore
    11.  Doghouse
    12.  Devil Wind

    Motor Sister "Ride" Album Cover

    Motor Sister is also set to make their debut live appearance at Saint Vitus Bar in Brooklyn, NY on February 12. No further live dates announced, but you can purchase tickets for the show here.

    In other related news, Anthrax is also hard at work on their follow up to 2011’s Worship Music tentatively slated for a 2015 release.

  • Hearing Aide: Mick Fury “Nobody Knows My Name”

    Syracuse native, Mick Fury, who received a Sammy Award in 2014 for Country Album of the year with Sunday Funday is currently touring with my friends Phoenix Eleven. He recently played at Toby Keith’s and Turning Stone’s Tin Rooster while home for the holidays. Mick Fury and his band Midnight Moonshine recently released a new album Nobody Knows My Name.

    Mick Fury Nobody Knows My NameJust like his last album, it keeps your foot tapping with a few light hearted fun tracks while still showing you a softer side with “Kick Down My Door”.

    “Boys Knight Out” The first single off the album came about with Mick and his boys hanging out at a house party in Minoa, NY one night. It’s how they’d get down on summer nights when they weren’t playing, and it seemed like a song other Northern country fans who liked to party could get into. I fully agree. This song gets you into the mood to party with the upbeat rhythm that is kind of reminiscent of something Luke Bryan would release.

    “Couple a Beers” Another light hearted track that shows the world that these guys enjoy a good time. Again a nice tempo that makes you want to get up and shake it!!

    “Kick Down My Door” A heartfelt melancholy song with a nice soft tone. I’m sure a lot of fans will be able to relate to the heartbreak and longing for someone they once loved. I like that this middle of the album is broken up with this soft melody that showcases his range.

    “Nobody Knows My Name” In Mick’s own words “Nobody” feels great to me because there’s definitely those times when I’m bombarded with phone calls and texts and emails, and all I wanna do is hit Oneida or Ontario lake, grab a cold beer, and do some grilling, and get away from it all where no one can hassle me”. This track really stuck with me because I know a lot of us find ourselves feeling this same way.

    Fans can keep up with Mick’s journeys from Nashville on their website or on Facebook. Also, their songs are available at most Upstate New York radio stations, so please if you love country give a call and ask to hear em.

    Key Tracks: Boys Night Out, Kick Down My Door, Nobody Knows My Name

  • Dr. Dog Dresses the Part in Buffalo

    The members of Dr. Dog waltzed onto Buffalo’s Town Ballroom stage all in varying levels of “disheveled-ness,” each with their own unique style.

    But one thing was uniform across the board. Saddle shoes. They all wore those dapper looking black and white saddle shoes. Now I only mention this bizarre detail because their dress informed their music perfectly. Each member brings their unique somewhat off-kilter sound, together hanging on the precipice of a complete cacophonous collapse. Yet they remain grounded in a fantastic one-ness. It’s gotta be the shoes. (Or perhaps Eric Slick’s stellar drumming?) All that is to say, there aren’t many bands that play this tight, while keeping it so wild and loose at all times. They didn’t even miss a beat when, upon hearing some people in the front row beat him to the opening lines of “Shadow People”, guitarist Scott McMicken handed the mic into the crowd to let them sing the first verse.

    dr dog

    Dr. Dog brings a raucous energy to everything they do, even their down-tempo songs are rife with energy. Throughout the night it spread like an airborne virus into the crowd. The nodding-head foot-tapping audience became a rabid mass of dancing fools by nights end. The show didn’t ride any highs or lows and didn’t depend on any showstoppers to bring the set to a head or take it to the next level. They started high, ended high, and kept it up in between. The best song they played was the last one they played before you quickly forgot what it was because they were kicking your ass with the next one. Most of the tunes just flowed right into each other, there was no time to catch your breath and appreciate what was happening. Everything was in the moment.

    Dr. Dog is touring behind their just released live album Live at a Flamingo Hotel. And it is great. Yet, if a band does it right, no recording, not even a live one, can completely capture their live experience. And as Dr. Dog proved once again in Buffalo, they are an incredible live band.

  • Photo Gallery: Normal Instruments and Solaris at The Hollow, January 23

    Normal Instruments, a supergroup consisting of Jeff Bujak, Michael Carter from The Indobox, Jules Jenssen of Higher Organix, and Matt Beckett from Cosmic Dust Bunnies, are currently touring the Northeast on their fourth ever tour and pulled into Albany’s The Hollow Bar this past Friday night.

    A great two set show had a good crowd dancing all evening. Ithaca’s Solaris opened the show with an hour long set of instrumental electric fusion for their first area appearance in a long time. The whole evening gave Albany about three and a half hours to forget about the work week and start the weekend off right.

  • Looking at 25: An Interview with moe.’s Chuck Garvey on the Band’s Early Years

    moe. turns 25 this winter and continue to be one of the biggest acts to come out of Upstate New York and have a strong legacy and influence on bands following in their footsteps a generation later. Chuck Garvey, guitarist for moe., took some time to reminisce on the formative years of moe. in Buffalo and Albany, discuss relationships with 90s jam bands and the struggles the band had early on, something bands getting their start today can identify with.

    chuck garvey
    Photo by Tom Sgroi

    Pete Mason: Take us back to the first show you played as ‘Five Guys Named Moe’. What memories linger 25 years later?

    Chuck Garvey: For the first proper bar gig, we opened for a Buffalo band called Monkey Wrench at the dive-y bar called Broadway Joe’s that all the SUNY Buffalo area bands played. The guys in ‘Wrench are awesome dudes and even though we were different styles, neither of us cared. It was a bunch of their friends and a couple of ours in the “audience”, drinking cheep beer and soaking up the ambiance. We played a mix of covers and a couple of our own fledgling compositions and it was a lot of fun. After that, we just wanted to do more.

    PM: What did you enjoy the most from your time as a band in Buffalo? The least?

    CG: The good: Cheap beer, live music, unhealthy but yummy fried food with blue cheese, art, social fun and the summers.
    The bad: Lake effect snow and high wind without the possibility anything closing, crime, rodents, shifty landlords and their crappy properties.

    Photo by Tom Sgroi

    PM: How did playing the I-90 circuit as you were starting out contribute to the growth of the fan base and lead to larger gigs?

    CG: There are many small and large college towns that a band can play, helping to spread the word while honing a live set of music that people might actually like. We also traded gigs with other bands, slept on friend’s and stranger’s floors, generally making connections and trying to convert fans, one set at a time. Playing shows with bands like Monkey Wrench and Scary Chicken in Buffalo, as well as FreeBeerAndChicken and The Ominous Seapods from Albany was fun and we shared growing fan bases.

    PM: Why move to Albany after Buffalo? Why not look west or go right to New York City or Boston?

    CG: We planned on moving to the Greater New York Area, but only made it as far as Western Avenue in Albany. We knew people there and it was far less expensive, so we stayed for a while! This was also a time when we were beginning to tour all over the damn country, relentlessly, ruthlessly, so paying rent in NYC while living in a van and truck stops would have been a waste. Maybe that’s one thing we did correctly!

    chuck garvey
    Photo by Tom Sgroi

    PM: What were some of the biggest struggles and obstacles the band faced in the early years?

    CG: Poverty, cleanliness, good health, booking, keeping gas in the van, trying to not get ripped off – all the stuff that touring bands struggle with if they are paying dues.

    PM: How important was promoter Greg Bell when you came to Albany?

    CG: He was one of those guys that loved the music, loved to promote and hang out – a true music fan who helped us by being as interested as we were in the whole thing. He still does it for the right reasons. That kind of involvement is always the best. When you are a true fan and not just a businessman, people will listen a little more intently. That goes a long way whether you’re blogging, promoting, chatting with friends. Unsolicited advertising from a source that is trustworthy goes very far. Greg is like any good music fan: he wants to tell you about what he likes and get you into his new band, the new find, etc.

    chuck garvey
    Photo by Tom Sgroi

    S21PM: What did you enjoy the most from your time in Albany? The least?

    CG: Personally, I enjoyed it because I was near family. We had friends in town when we were not touring and we wrote & rehearsed a lot of music there. We were broke, but everything was simple and we were working really hard, so it felt good, regardless. The only thing I didn’t totally love was our house that the band, FOH engineer and Manager lived in. Parts of it were charming, then there was the waterfall of mold that came into the living room over a built in bookcase in the corner. It was so dark and weird that no one got into the house, even when we left the front door wide open for weeks while on the road.

    PM: How has the relationship you formed with Conehead Buddha in the 90s stayed strong over 20 years?

    CG: CB was a band that we knew – along with Yolk, Lynch and others – and kept contact with through Jim and Vinnie. Jim has played in bands with different assemblages of musicians, sometimes playing drums or bass, as he did with Lynch. Shannon and Terry have played with us for years. Greg Bell is also instrumental in keeping all of us musicians in touch by putting together great shows, as well as having laid the groundwork for our scene in the Albany area.

    PM: Was there any time early on that you wanted to call it quits?

    CG: Only when all our guitars were stolen in Columbus, Ohio. And when our van died on the way to a show at the Wetlands. And when we ran out of money trying to get home, stranded on the Thruway. And when some drunk whacko came into Broadway Joe’s with a gun. And when we almost wrecked and died in our camper trying to get to Chicago in the snow.

    Oh, wait. None of those things made me want to quit! Never!

    PM: Is there a chance we could see Ha Ha the Moose perform at Bellstock?

    CG: Is that an invitation? If they do come, they won’t leave till the cops come and the liquor’s gone.

    Chuck has previously written about the early history of moe., including lineup changes and events in the first decade of the band’s existence. Read more here and check out the rest of ‘s coverage on moe.’s 25th anniversary including reviews of Town Ballroom shows and Tropical Throe.down.

    Special thanks to Schultzy, AFF and Kyle for contributions to this interview.

    https://youtu.be/YIwLkvOZ-qA
  • Taste of Country Festival 2015 Announces Final Lineup

    It’s here – it’s finally happened; the lineup has been announced for The Taste of Country 2015 Music Festival. Last year the crowd on Day Three were treated to a preview of the first headliner announcement of Tim McGraw. Ever since that day, this top stellar lineup has only gotten better and better.  Shortly after the first announcement the fans were given the next two stars, Keith Urban and Toby Keith.  Fans hurriedly purchased their three-day passes without even knowing the final lineup just knowing that the Taste of Country Music Festival is going to the be “the” event to be at this year. However, since that time, show announcers have kept us on the edge of our seats to see who else will round out this event.

    This morning I, like so many others, waited patiently as the announcement was made.  NYS Music is happy to bring to you the final lineup for this years 2015 Taste of Country Music Festival.  Added to the already major names of Tim McGraw, Keith Urban, and Toby Keith will be the following: Billy Currington, Eli Young Band, Jerrod Niemann, Sara Evans, Easton Corbin, Chase Bryant, Colt Ford, Josh Abbott Band, Tracy Lawrence, LOCASH.  Attendees will also be treated to their favorites of Logan Mize, Western Underground, Rachel Lipsky, Sasha McVeigh, Jackson Michelson and Annie Bosko.

    Eli Young Band
    Eli Young Band

    The 3rd Annual Taste of Country Music Festival, the Northeast’s first and only 3-day country music camping festival, will be held June 12-14, 2015 at Hunter Mountain Resort (Hunter, NY) in the Great Northern Catskills of Greene County.  Tickets are on sale and we highly suggest you make this purchase as soon as possible to secure your seat to the greatest shows this year.

  • Hearing Aide: Charley Orlando, “Starseed”

    charley orlando starseedHailing from our eastern neighbor region of Glenville, singer-songwriter Charley Orlando has earned quite a live performance reputation here in the Upstate region, playing upwards of 3,000 shows. Though he has decided to take a break from music for this upcoming year, he has ended 2014 with a bang, and it’s name is Starseed.

    Orlando released this eight-track album on December 9th, where it has since been released on Spotify, Facebook, and of course, his own website. He has established himself as a pioneer for an “Organica Groove” genre, that stems from the Acid Folk he grew up listening to. Through most of the album, I agree that the ever-present bright timbre of the acoustic guitar brings me back to Bob Dylan’s Blonde On Blonde days, but Charley’s voice in particular sings to the tune of a more recent ensemble to me: The Decemberists. Though they are more in the indie rock sphere, the Decemberists maintain a high folk sensibility through their lead vocals, which Orlando also embodies, whether it was his intention or not. In songs like “Drop,” “Think It Over,” and “Rise,” the throbbing rhythmic pulse is supported by a multitude of fresh drum patterns that aren’t familiar to the traditional pop-trained ear. Other songs, like “Positive Fire” have very intricate pre-chorus sections, with attention to his abilities as a guitarist. My favorite, however, is the 80’s New Wave style synth that accompanies “If You’re Down.”

    Along with his choices of instrumentation, Charley Orlando has an interesting strategy to his songwriting. Along with the constant major chords that ring throughout his album, he is trying to adapt a new recording style through use of his Ableton software. Before ever adding vocal and instrument lines, he is working on recording and creating based primarily on rhythmic pulses, allowing the music to find itself. While I’m not sure when he’ll return to the music sphere, I can guarantee that Starseed is only a preview for what is about to come from Charley Orlando.

    Key Tracks: Think It Over, If You’re Down, Rise