Tom Gluewicki is the one-man force behind the Brooklyn based music project, Tender Glue. His debut EP, Wait For Steady Light, came out in September 2015 and now, one year later, after acquiring more live performance, song writing and recording experience, Tender Glue is set to release its anticipated follow up album, fittingly entitled, Steady Light.
Tender Glue is known for his acoustic, indie-rock style meshed with a post-punk stripped down sound, all of which comes across in Steady Light. “West” the first single, is a slow, guitar-driven ballad that evokes Gluewicki’s heart felt intentionality, pouring through his music. Each guitar chord seems to drag, emphasizing his clear emotion and meaningfulness, and right when the listener would expect the track to come to a close, a beautiful moment of clarity opens up with the freeing simplicity of Gluewicki’s airy guitar work. This sort of nifty composure is heard throughout much of Steady Light and it appears that Gluewicki’s knack for not only song structure but skill in both the acoustic and electric guitar world has significantly improved over the year. It’s heard elsewhere in his music too with “Hope Street,” where acoustic chords are contrasted by the eerie drone of electric rambling. With its moments of dismay this song can definitely come across as somber, and maybe a little too dreary at points, but this also seems to be a part of what Tender Glue strives for in his music. It’s the longing for something that might no longer be there. Or it’s leaving a place you’ve come to know well, as with “Goodbye Bushwick,” yet recognizing to always carry home. Whatever it is, Gluewicki is quick to transmit that emotion into music.
Tender Glue’s somber, acoustically spacious and slight 90s grunge influence is what makes this one-man band such an honest delight to dive into. Steady Light is sure to be a must-listen throughout the upcoming autumn nights and straight through into the winter. And be sure to look out for Tender Glue’s album release show set for August 26th at City Reliquary in Brooklyn.
There’s an old adage in baseball, “Get ’em on, get ’em over, get ’em in.” In other words, get the show going, keep it going and bring it on home. Washington work horses Melvins did just that on a sweaty summer Friday night at Syracuse’s Westcott Theater.
Melvins (Buzz Osborne – guitar/vocals, Dale Crover – drums/vocals, Steven Shane McDonald – bass/vocals) have been at it since 1983. When one draws the family tree of Seattle rock music, the Melvins would occupy several branches of said tree. Influential in their sound and the scene they helped forge, it is not a big leap to say that without the Melvins there would be no Nirvana.
Under the glare of red stage lights the entire show, there were no mincing words, no time wasted. The band took the stage and immediately stepped into the psychedelic wash of “Eye Flys.” The near capacity crowd entered the zone, swaying and head bobbing to the lengthy intro.
A quick segue into a hyped-up cover of KISS’ “Deuce” followed. Osborne, with his trademark mane a blur, created riffs that echoed those of Ace Frehley in his ’70s heyday.
The band ripped through a setlist from its vast catalog spanning 33 years. They are currently touring their new album Basses Loaded, an album recorded with a plethora of bassists that includes Krist Novoselic of Nirvana fame, Trevor Dunn of Mr. Bungle, Fantomas and Tomahawk and Jeff Pinkus from Butthole Surfers.
Current bassist Steven Shane McDonald, sporting a black shirt labeling his profession in KISS-style font, was front and center the majority of the show. He spent the night revving up the crowd with pure showmanship and a solid focus on the low end. If the band’s history is any indication, McDonald’s tenure in the band may be short-lived, as Melvins tend to employ more bassists than the fictional Spinal Tap did drummers. However, it would serve Osborne and Crover well to keep McDonald on board for the long haul. He brings a spirit of energy to the band that would be difficult to replace.
A chunky take on Alice Cooper’s “Halo of Flies” worked up the crowd as Osborne delivered superb riffs reminiscent of Tony Iommi. Crover’s tribal drums held the faithful captive throughout this take on the Cooper classic.
What truly captured fans’ attention however, was the appearance of “AMAZON” from The Maggot album. The song took on an epic feeling of a looming apocalypse. Osborne whirled around the stage during the instrumental parts as Crover mesmerized with more tribal beats. McDonald particularly shone during this performance. It was during “AMAZON” that the trio truly seemed to gel.
The show closed with the new dirgy bass-heavy jam “The Decay of Lying” and the equally sludgy Houdini classic “Night Goat” before giving way to the new album’s closer “Take Me Out to the Ballgame” (Yes, THAT “Take Me Out to the Ballgame.”).
As the satisfied crowd dispersed to the sounds of Ronnie James Dio singing his classic Sabbath tune “Neon Nights,” the steam rising from the worked-up crowd provided a visual metaphor for what this legendary band did to this little venue in the Syracuse art district.
Pete Pidgeon and Arcoda’s latest album All the Little Things, recorded at Applehead Studios in Woodstock, NY, is one of the most diverse albums to hit the record stores in some time. Covering styles ranging from ‘80s rock, to bluegrass, to jazz, to Broadway musical, to Bing Crosby/Frank Sinatra era music, listening to this album is a bit like listening to a playlist on shuffle. Able to switch effectively from its dreamy start with “I Stayed Home,” to the big band brass sounds on “Tonight I’ll Be Staying Here With You,” to the traditional folk style of “But It Don’t Worry Me,” the band showcases its brilliant versatility.
Made up of a core group of extremely talented and hard-working Colorado-based musicians, including Pete Pidgeon himself on lead vocals and guitar, Glenn Patcha on a variety of keyboards and the accordion, Justin Guip on drums, Catherine Popper on upright and electric bass, these musicians are brilliant enough to have been able to attract and collaborate with some pretty impressive guests on their latest effort. In fact, on the album’s third track “Tonight I’ll Be Staying Here With You,” none other than Levon Helm is featured during one of his last studio performances! (You have to be darn good to be able to put that on your resumé!) On the tracks featuring guest musicians, the band really allowed the influences from their guests’ respective bands to come through, with “Tonight I’ll Be Staying With You” sounding particularly reminiscent of The Band, “The Ways We Change” featuring a more twangy sound most likely influenced by Chris Pandolfi of The Infamous Stringdusters, and the funkier style present on “The Wind and the Lover” in great part due to the help of Ryan Zoidis from Lettuce.
Pete Pidgeon has an amazing vocal range, both in terms of notes he can hit and styles he covers. His voice sounds like a cross between Ryan Adams, Jackie Greene, and Toy Caldwell, lead singer of Marshall Tucker Band, if you can imagine that. Joined by his bandmates’ singing on several of the tunes, as well as guest female vocalist Sarah Perrotta (who hails from right here in the Hudson Valley), the harmonies are uncomplicated yet gorgeous. Glenn Patcha deserves a round of applause for the incredible range of sounds and styles that come out of his keyboards, taking the listener on a musical journey effectively changing the mood from song to song during its constant changes of style, providing a solid foundation for the rest of the band to build upon. To top it all off, Pete Pidgeon and Arcoda were joined by the incredible brass sounds of The Two Dolla Crack Horns.
On Pete Pidgeon and Arcoda’s latest album All the Little Things, no two songs sounded at all the same, yet they all seemed to fit together extremely well. It will appeal to people from across the musical spectrum, and give listeners the chance to effortlessly give other genres a chance. And you wouldn’t want to miss out on the opportunity to hear Levon Helm during one of his last studio performances now, would you?!
Key Tracks: Tonight I’ll Be Staying Here With You, But It Don’t Worry Me, Wasted Child
Last week the world’s greatest athletes wrapped up their quadrennial competition competing on the world stage in Rio de Janeiro. The Olympics showcased the greatest talent humans have to offer in achievements of physical performance.
This weekend, on a farm in the middle of the Blue Ridge Mountains in central Virginia, the most talented musicians in rock are gathering to showcase the greatest talent humans have to offer in achievements of aural performances – it truly is like the Olympics of jam, or in LOCKN’ parlance, the Jam ‘Lympics.
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LOCKN’ pushed the festival into late August this year, up from early-mid September previously. If the move was made to ensure better weather, it is paying off, with hot and dry conditions that allowed for efficient entry to the festival grounds for the 25,000 fans arriving from Wednesday through Thursday.
Who better than Umphrey’s McGee, back for their third straight LOCKN’ appearance, to carry the torch in to kick off this year’s festivities. Like any good opening ceremonies, Umphrey’s set provided a feast for the eyes, with sprays and splashes of lights constantly bathing the stage in a kaleidoscope of color. This year LOCKN’ is featuring a rotating main stage. So, as opening act Vulfpeck played the last notes of their set, Umphrey’s two guitar attack blasted immediately before the band was even visible. The stage fully rotated, and just like that, Vulfpeck had transitioned seamlessly into Umphrey’s McGee, without a wasted second of silence.
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Between the opening notes of “Nipple Trix” and the closing sounds of “All In Time,” Umphrey’s set featured explosive guitar work and bombastic full band improvisations, a relentless assault of over-the-top rock theatrics. Like a DJ scratching on the turntable, the next band to turn around the table, Ween, got remixed into Umphrey’s set, as Gene Ween sat in for a cover of Billy Joel’s “The Stranger.”
The opening ceremonies provided by Umphrey’s McGee was sandwiched between qualifying rounds by Vulfpeck and Ween. Both bands advanced to the medal rounds, and continued with sets Friday.
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Relative newcomers to the scene, and riding high over a year that has seen their popularity skyrocket, Vulfpeck properly opened up the performances for the 2016 edition of LOCKN’ with their infectious and slinky funk. At a festival that is sure to feature many sit-ins and a good share of covers, they delivered on both counts, with Antwain Stanley sitting in for a few tunes and secondly with their nifty cover of Steely Dan’s “Peg.” Bassist Joe Dart showed off his gymnastic skills quite literally as he cartwheeled across the stage while getting the crowd involved in a “Christmas in LA” singalong.
Ween closed the main stage Thursday with a career spanning set that in typical Ween fashion completely disregarded rock convention. When at the Jam ‘Lympics, its best to show off your jamming chops, and Ween delivered with a whacked out free form romp through “Poopship Destroyer” that had the band completely bathed in red, with some perfect trippy echoed images being displayed on the big screens and Gene Ween’s voice getting spookily modulated. They segued right into a more spritely “Zoloft” before ending after midnight unceremoniously with “Pandy Fackler.” But as Ween reminded the crowd, “Tomorrow is game day.” Even after the over two hour set, it felt like the show wouldn’t be complete without their impending Friday night set.
The day’s competition may have concluded, but back at the ‘Lympic village the party was just getting started. In the secluded Woods stage EOTO was digging into their electronic groove while the forest flashed hypnotically in reds, greens and blues. Behind a wood door that bore Jerry Garcia’s unique hand print, Garcia’s Forest featured an endless stream of historic Grateful Dead jams. While at the Blue Ridge Bowl, Joe Russo’s Almost Dead reinterpreted the very same music to a packed audience of blissed-out groovers. The music never stops.
Like a two-sport wonder, Dave Dreiwitz, who had just performed with Ween on the main stage, pulled off the magnificient multi-band feat as he immediately appeared on stage with JRAD,the first on stage in fact. JRAD’s set opened with a spacey jam that dissolved into a long drawn out take on “Truckin’,” and then the set just spiraled into a tie-dyed blend of Grateful Dead colors, mixing and remixing the Dead catalog to thrilling effect, with takes on “St. Stephen,” “The Eleven,” “The Wheel” and “Estimated Prophet” peppering the set before a night closing “Terrpain Station.” The band served as the bridge between the ancient Gods of jam and the more modern styles and techniques of today. A perfect summary of what the celebration continuing at LOCKN’ is all about; the perfect way to end the first night and a look forward to the next three jam packed days.
Progressive rock band Coheed and Cambria launched their newest album, The Color Before the Sun, on October 16th, 2015; but recently released a deluxe edition of the album, Deconstructed on August 19.
The Color Before the Sun Deconstructed is a companion deluxe edition to Coheed and Cambria’s newest album, under the same title (minus Deconstructed). The new title is ironic, because Deconstructed puts on bleeding display a thirty track mausoleum that gives sinew and muscle to an already great skeleton. Nothing about this edition is deconstructive.
The first part is The Color Before the Sun as it was originally released. If you haven’t yet heard the album, I recommend starting here as it gives context to everything else. “Island,” the first song kicks off the whole album with the sounds of a New York City subway fading into a simple pop rock song, yet effective allegory for not wanting to be stuck in one place. Following suit, songs like “Atlas,” “Eraser,” and “Colors,” hold ground as a thematic, and strong foundation for the rest of the album.
It is the first album that Coheed has put out to not feature a storyline related to the Amory Wars, the collection of a book and four graphic novels on which Coheed and Cambria’s concept is based.
Instead, the lyrics represent a sense of quiet introversion, personal responsibility, fatherhood, and growth. While Sanchez, in the past, has said that his lyrics are metaphors for things that go on in his own life, mostly having to do with relationships, this album’s lyrics are to be taken literally.
As for musical bravery, I cite that while every other Coheed album features what I can really only describe as “progressive rock weirdness,” this one has has few true complexities attached. Instead, TCBTSD features a very stripped down, bar chord, standard tuning, Dad rock feel, but they manage to make it work. At first listen, I must admit my aversion to this. How dare my favorite band change their sound to something so simple? But I can’t fault someone for wanting to write what they want to write. Through this mindset, I’ve come to admire this album as much as the rest. So maybe it is not as layered or as weird as Good Apollo I, but that is exactly the point. TCBTSD was meant to sound stripped down, straight-forward, and unencumbered by the weight of somewhat of an overload, just like its literal lyrics.
If, at this point, you’re thinking that this is a lot of information at once, you’re right. Coheed has always left on the table enough material to give the party something to talk about all night. This brings me to another thing I loved about TCBTSD: you don’t have to be familiar with anything Coheed related to enjoy it. TCBTS stands alone in its own lane; anyone is safe here.
So what else stood out? A whole lot, such as “Here to Mars,” a sappy, but cute love song released as a single. That last chorus/bridge, in which Sanchez and co. scream “…and we’ll never let you go…” on repeat gave me chills and is most assuredly to be a crowd pleaser, as the live aspect of Deconstructed shows.
Further notable, the use of more acoustic guitars on this album than the last ones. “Ghost,” and “Peace to the Mountain,” are almost creepy in sound and may remind one of Good Apollo I‘s “Wake Up,” one of my personal favorite songs by Coheed. Likewise, both of these songs particularly showcase Sanchez and guitarist Travis Stever’s compatibility as co – musicians and guitarists. Both songs feature a “weaving” guitar pattern and solidify the musical relationship. The ballad of Sanchez and Stever has always inspired me as a musician. In said terms, I think in previous albums they’ve made a great couple whose company you enjoy, so to speak, but by this one, they’ve gone from dating to married. “Ghost” is the best example of this.
And let’s not overlook the rest of the group. Zachary Cooper joins the ranks on bass once again (this is his third effort with Coheed, the other two being The Afterman: Ascension and Descension). Similar to the last two, Cooper brings technically refined precision to his position while giving the listener heart. I’ve always admired Coheed’s use of bass guitar. While many rock bands keep their bassist on a leash, it’s almost as if they told Cooper before recording, “Hey, buddy, go fucking crazy.” Good. But that’s not all.
You know how a lot of people think there is always that member that any given band would not be the band without? Take, for example, an image of the Rolling Stones without Keith Richards, would they still be The Stones? Maybe not.
I admire that this is really not the case for Coheed. Save Cooper, the band has a longstanding lineup, and even Cooper meshes so well with the rest of the group that he might as well be a veteran.
But Coheed has a secret weapon. Perhaps the most unique member is Josh Eppard, or Weerd Science as he appears in each hip hop solo album he’s made.What can I say about a hip hop musician playing drums in a rock band? A whole lot. He’s also contributed to keyboards and backing vocals in the past.
At first glance, Eppard’s drumming style is true to hip hop: minimalistic, but groovy and effective, matching perfectly with Cooper’s bass playing.
To the dismay of many fans, Eppard departed from Coheed and Cambria after Good Apollo I to Afterman, meaning that he was absent for two albums: they were Good Apollo, I’m Burning Star IV, Vol. 2: No World for Tomorrow (usually referred to as No World for Tomorrow to avoid confusion with From Fear Through the Eyes of Madness). During No World for Tomorrow, Coheed was joined by Foo Fighters’ drummer Taylor Hawkins, and then Chris Pennie (ex – The Dillinger Escape Plan) for its subsequent tours and next album, Year of the Black Rainbow. Josh Eppard returned for the Afterman.
Although both Eppard-absent albums were great (even considered classic to some fans), the void of Eppard could not be filled by other drummers, no matter how great (come on, The Dillinger Escape Plan is ridiculous), but Eppard’s reunion with the band solidified a lot of diehard fans’ feelings about their favorite band. I think this is because Eppard adds that simple factor that makes The Color Before the Sun/Deconstructed non – facade. It’s kind of like what the Edge adds to U2, or Keith Richards to the Rolling Stones. None of these guys play anything overly complicated, but for some reason, the position cannot be held by anyone else. An X – factor, maybe. Or maybe Eppard is what gives Coheed it’s soul, where Sanchez gives it body.
I emphasize so much the rest of the band (besides Claudio Sanchez) because although Sanchez is the primary writer, Coheed has a specialty in the department of live shows, a concept of live shows are kind of lost these days in a world of streaming, especially amongst Millennials and Gen Y. I have no data to back this up, it’s just what I’ve unfortunately noticed, and I doubt many would argue. However, bands that actually perform – I mean with real, or mostly real, instruments and few samples – know that it can take years before the live show is perfected.
For this reason, the second part of Deconstructed stands out as another form of bravery to me: it’s a set of live soundboard recordings. To my knowledge, it’s all unedited, containing no autotune or deep effects. I admire the bravery it takes for a band to release something to the open world with its mistakes still nailed, naked, to their crosses, especially in the modern day of digital perfection. There is anything wrong with digital perfection, but a true live performance can send chills down the listener’s spine in a way that a studio recording usually cannot. They loaded a number of old classics onto this part, such as fan favorite “In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth: 3,” the title track of their second album.
The real twists come in the live interpretation of songs off their newest album, such as “The Audience,” or “Atlas.” This is why I emphasize the rest of the line up besides Sanchez. The band works together in the live setting so perfectly. It’s almost unfair, and as someone who loves playing in live bands, I’m jealous.
Other great moments included their performances of “Sentry the Defiant” (from Descension), and “Here to Mars,” (from The Color Before the Sun). These songs both reinforce the band’s live prowess.
In the next part, “Big Beige/4th Street Demos,” we hear a more intimate side of the band. I love the way that this section shows an honest look into Coheed’s writing process. I especially enjoyed the way that they included bonus tracks that did not make it onto the album, such as “Bridge and Tunnel,” a Simon and Garfunkel – type spot that I wish had made the main album.
Thirty songs deep, Coheed and Cambria has really outdone themselves, bar chords and all.
I’m not exactly sure how to rate this one. It has a hopeful air to it, it’s a fun listen, and it’s different from other releases. Other reviewers have even called it “a bold step.” I concur, and I add that it is definitely worth a few listens of all thirty tracks.
Key Tracks: Colors, Ghost (main album), Peace to the Mountain, (4th Street / Big Beige Demos), Everything Evil (Live Soundboard Bootlegs)
Stockport, England quintet Blossoms has an eponymous debut delivers a windfall of sunny synthpop anthems with as much chart-topping potential as dancefloor appeal. The album’s sparkle lies in radio-friendly song structures, cordial vocals, danceable grooves, edgy guitar fills, and dynamic synth leads, but all that glitters is not gold. While these tunes make the perfect soundtrack for a rush hour commute or hurrying across campus, they lose their lustre with repeated listening, as the lyrics mostly fail to provide either memorable hooks or the substance to sustain the emotions they project.
The opening track, “Charlemagne,” establishes the band’s signature vibe, one reminiscent of 80s disco laced with 90s indie rock, and contains fodder for the entire range expressed on the album. “At Most a Kiss” follows suit in forging a blended style of disparate influences, bridging a driving synth sound reminiscent of The Music with a melodic impulse similar to that of The Smiths. Surprisingly, the most idiosyncratic song on the album, “Onto Her Bed,” is also the best song on the album. The stripped bare piano ballad concentrates Tom Ogden’s vocal and lyrical energies within a gently rising storm of atmospheric synths. While these tracks highlight the unique sound that has brought about the quintet’s sugary emergence, an album can only be as good as its lowpoint, and, unfortunately, the bottom drops out on the depthless bubblegum tracks “Getaway,” “Honey Sweet,” and “My Favourite Room,” which work only as exercises in formula pop, but not as genuinely inspired songwriting.
The saving grace, and perhaps a glimpse of a more mature Blossoms, is a pair of Portishead-esque tunes on the latter half of the album, “Smashed Pianos” and the closing track “Deep Grass.” “Smashed Pianos” is sacked by the mechanical lilt of the chorus, but the spooky interplay between bass, synth, and guitar makes for exciting listening, while also allowing the musicians opportunity to stretch their creative legs. Despite the trite rhyming, “Deep Grass” ends the album on a high note, offering listeners a blissful, yet dark, song featuring a raw, emotive guitar lead, cut with futuristic synth tones, and a vocal performance geared less toward pop perfection, but perfectly in touch with the rhythm and melody.
The album MVP is Charlie Salt, the bassist, whose playing is the consistent and lyrical foundation that provides the soloists opportunities to shine. He delves into multiple styles and his always fresh effort is enjoyable across the album, even when the song on the whole is not.
Key Tracks: Charlemagne, Onto Her Bed, Smashed Pianos
North Adams Mass sits in the nook of the Berkshires, a quaint college town known for its art, culture and its museums. Mass MOCA, (MOCA being short for Museum of Contemporary Art) hosts hundreds of displays as well as musical events. On June 11, The National was one of these and they made the museum theirs for the day.
Known for a melodic somber sound, The National, found a way to take this feel and turn it into a rock show with emotions and waves of feeling – a rare find with bands of this genre. By digging deep into their whole catalog, the audience never knew what to expect, a tactic that left us with a phenomenal feeling. Opening up with the Trouble Will Find Me hit, “Don’t Swallow the Cap,’” the band knew they had the audience in their hands from the get go. After a few more rocking tunes the band slowed things down with the Grateful Dead classic, “Peggy-O,” citing that even though the dead didn’t write the song they still played it a lot so this is their homage to the Dead. This comes off the heels of the highly anticipated Day of the Dead – an album, four years in the making, featuring 59 tracks of Dead covers and over sixty artist.
They kept things slow for the next two songs and then they treated the crowd by playing three new songs in a row. This is most likely a preview for an album that may see light sometime next year. If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again… and again. This was the case when the band dug into their catalog again to bust out “Slow Show.” When they finally got it down, it was one of the highlights of the show. The passion that singer Matt Berninger sang with was second to none. These guys are rock stars.
“About Today,” from the Cherry Tree EP, was a song that many wouldn’t anticipate would be good live. It’s a slow song which Berninger sings, slowly, almost a whisper “ How close am I, to losing you?” What made the song that much more enjoyable was their ability to captivate an audience with a song that rightfully so can put you to sleep. They kept the energy going and closed out the set with “Fake Empire” off the Boxer LP this song left the crowd wanting more, and more is what they received. The National came out with a four song encore ending with High Violets “Vanderlye Crybaby Geeks,” a sing along song during which the band played acoustic which was totally genius.
In a show rife with slow and sad songs, the band was able to keep the crowd at attention and not drifting off into oblivion.
The night was dirty, loud, revolutionary, beer-soaked and pleasantly dark. I’m not only describing the inside of indie Brooklyn’s sacred sanctuary, Shea Stadium, but also the band behind the interior madness, Evolfo. As the band entered the stage, their UFO style of music was introduced to the crowd with a thunderous instrumental intro highlighting everything from the keyboard and bass to the drums and horn section.
One of their newer installments, “Bloody, Bloody Knife,” had a familiar, almost White Stripes meets 60’s punk sound and included a guitar solo by Matt Gibbs. During the solo, his hair completely covered his face while he melted our faces. The crowd favorite, “Mechanicals,” created an infectious dance party with a late night lounge feel. The whirling keyboard effect used by Rafferty Swink sounded like something Dr. Dre may steal for his next album while Matt Gibbs’ creative lyrics were politely screamed in a Shakespearean manner. As soon as it feels like the song couldn’t get anymore genre blending, the bursting horns march their way into the room like an impromptu parade down Bourbon Street. Gibbs gave the crowd a minute to catch our breath as he highlighted how ecstatic the group was to play in such an iconic, underground sonic space.
After boogieing through “Love Like a Freak,” Evolfo kept the most recent songs coming with “Rat City.” Imagine David Bowie’s “Suffragette City” played with a faster tempo by a psychedelic garage band like The 13th Floor Elevators, but with just the perfect amount of brass to shackle it to the ground. Next up was “Let’s Carry On” which saw bass player Ronnie Lanzilotta stomping back and forth like an air guitarist on Red Bull. His energy was so intense he cosmically summoned one of the members from the opening act, Mobile Steam Unit, to jump on stage and rage with him equally as hard. The momentum spread like the Zika virus and before you knew the entire crowd was infected; one of the highlights of the hour long set.
Judging by the “Herbie and the Headhunters” t-shirt worn by their bearded saxophonist, Jared Yee, this gnarly crew were no strangers to the realm of funk. They have no shame in fronting as a “funk band” even though they consider themselves “garage-soul.” One of the best tunes that display their thrilling, chilling funk talent is “Wild Man” which Evolfo played with delightfully terrifying precision. I had a moment to speak about the visually freaky yet addicting music video for “Wild Man” with Gibbs before the set, inquiring about the first music video regarding any correlation to the imagery in the video compared to what he thinks about while on stage. He replied:
“Well some things in the video do quite literally have a place in our show. Some of the outfits and the demon mask and other small things have made their way onto the stage over the years. And then, of course, I hope that we portray some of that raw animal magnetism. I would love for real life to be as crazy as “Wild Man.” If we’re in the zone and we’re getting the energy from the audience I believe we can really live up to that fun with reckless abandon. As far as what’s on my mind while I play, I pretty much always wish I could pour some ambrosia on the audience and make them turn into animals. That would be ideal.”
After the “Wild Man” lit up the room with aerobic weirdness, they were ready to give us what we wanted, the title track to the newly announced EP, Last of the Acid Cowboys. The lyrics are coming from a place of pure spacey madness. Swink’s keyboard is projecting a surfin’ synthesizer sound while he sings in an eerily familiar Jim Morrison tone. If this song doesn’t wind up on the next Quentin Tarantino soundtrack, someone isn’t doing enough research.
Gibbs shed some details about the new EP and it was time for one more classic Evolfo tune for the brass-aholics in the crowd. Loaded with sexual innuendos, tantalizing bass lines and mod soul-funk, the climax during “You Light Me Up” is definitely the horn (or horny, sorry, I had to) section. Their time on stage was short and sweet, but the memory of that performance will last a long time, even for the fans in the booziest of states.
Musical evolution has been as much a staple of New York City as pizza, or more recently, Pokemon Go. Much like the global sensation of walking around with a smart phone and searching for rare creatures from a different dimension, a new species of music is evolving right before us. Label it whatever you want, but for those of us lucky enough to discover the rare Evolfo at Shea Stadium on a Wednesday night, we have a new band that is about to morph. After the release of their new EP, a tour is sure to follow and if they continue to put on shows with that sort of allure and creativity, I gotta catch em’ all.
As the crowd eagerly anticipates tonight’s concert at the Lakeview Amphitheater for the Counting Crows and Rob Thomas, lead singer, Adam Duritz took a few moments while getting ready for the tour this spring to speak with NYS Music on fame, music, his band, and Woodstock 99.
Kathy Stockbridge: Hi Adam, how are you?
Adam Duritz: Hi Kathy, I’m great, it’s a beautiful day today.
KS: Yes, it absolutely is. I want to thank you for taking the time to talk with our readers today, I know you are a very busy man. Most know that you are a musician, but you are also a film and music producer as well. You wear a lot of hats. Is there any one particular hat you prefer over the others?
AD: I just really like playing with the band. I’ve done a lot of different things, and mostly because it was necessary at that moment. Honestly I don’t think I would ever do another movie again, that was exhausting. I just did it because my friends had written a script and I wanted to help them get it made. Mostly, I just play in a band, that’s what I like.
KS: Well that’s good because you are good at it, and we enjoy it so it’s a win/win for everyone here. In past interviews I’ve seen and heard, many people think that “Mr. Jones” was your breakout song as it it went up the charts so fast. But it actually was your performance on Saturday Night Live of “Round Here” that actually catapulted you into the limelight. Talk to us a little about that take off, and was it everything you expected when it happened?
AD: No, but it never is. Because there is no way for you to ever conceive what that’s going to be like. Whatever picture you might have or imagination about fame or fortune of that sort of thing, where guys are suddenly listening to your music and you are the center of culture for that second, yeah there’s no way. In fact whatever ideas you ever have about what’s that’s like, are nothing like what it’s actually like. It’s so weird.
KS: It’s almost like the first time you ever hear your song on the radio, you never forget where you were. I’m sure it really a cool experience though.
AD: Yah, that’s a really cool experience. I very vividly remember that. It was just very clean, very simple, and FUN. Like the first time I heard us on the radio I was like “that’s just really cool”. But becoming famous all of a sudden having a sudden wash of success is nothing like anything you’ve ever experienced before in life. Like hearing your song on the radio is like really cool, but it’s like feeling appreciation from someone in some other way. And that’s happened before (feeling appreciation), people have told you something was good and you’ve gotten a compliment so it’s like a bigger.. better version of something you’ve experienced before. Getting famous and having that mass cultural thing is like nothing else in life. There is no way to understand before you hit that, how weird that is. It’s just really strange and bizarre. We had been touring for awhile at that point. People had made a mistake thinking that “Mr. Jones” was new, but it had been out for awhile. “Mr. Jones” had been on the radio, the record wasn’t even in the top 200. The video came out and we were touring, and we had not been doing our first headline shows yet. We had been opening for Kracker. We really hadn’t toured as a headliner at all. Then we played Saturday Night Live, and played “Round Here” and the whole world changed. Our record jumped forty spots a week for five weeks. We were at like 213, then we were at 170 something, 130, 90 something, 50 something, 12, 6, 2, and then stayed at 2 for like the next two years. It was just weird. It happened so suddenly, and it was such a weird surprise.
KS: That song has a special meaning to you I’m sure, but then even more so as it was the one that helped you get your music out there to everyone.
AD: Yeah, and not just for me too, but for our fans in a way. Because “Mr. Jones” is a really great pop song, I love that song, but “Round Here” it shows the breathe of what we really do. Like what we do live and how its kinda the scope of our music. “Mr. Jones” doesn’t, so when we played it on TV, that’s why it blew us up because a single is one thing, but a band that moves you, a band that makes you feel something, expansive and big and moving like “Round Here” does, apparently knocked people out that day because our lives all changed after that.
KS: Did you know automatically this would be the one you would sing?
AD: On Saturday Night Live? Yeah we knew. But it was a huge fight. It was a mess. Like we had been getting offers for months. The Letterman show had been offering for us to come play on there. But they kept making all these caveats like it had to be Adam with the Late Night Band; okay it can be Adam with guitar player and our band, it can be Counting Crows, but with Paul, and we were just waiting for someone to offer us an opportunity so that we could just play. And then SNL came along and they were through more months of arguments about what we were going to play, and came to an agreement that we would play “Round Here” first, then “Mr. Jones” later, and then we wouldn’t have to cut anything. Then we got there that week and started rehearsals for the show and they sprung on us that they had changed their mind and that we were going to play “Mr. Jones” first and that we were going to have to edit both songs. So it was just a huge fight all week. It was kinda a nightmare. Like I was sure that “Round Here” was the song to play for our first big exposure. They didn’t want it any more and it was a mess, and it was a huge fight all week. Then they finally caved about an hour before the show.
KS: Good thing you stood your ground there.
AD: I think they were so pissed that they never had us back again.
KS: Their loss. “Round Here” was written off the top of your head, from what I understand. You were able to write it in one sitting. In an interview I with Charlie Gillingham, he said that “(Durwitz) has a way of coming up the amazing complex literary lyrics off the top of your head. And that there are lines in these songs, hundreds of them where he says something that really matters that is just so well said.” That’s amazing to me. When writing songs do you find that these songs take on a life of their own or does it write itself in a way with you?
AD: No, its a little of both. It’s not like I wrote the song off the top of my head, it’s a Himalayan song, my band before Counting Crows. “Round Here” is from that band. We were playing along and we were recording, on a cassette tape, our rehearsal. So it was probably 20 minutes of us singing on there and a lot of the song was already in there, so I edited it down. I used to do that a lot. Where I would say things off the top of my head, listen to it, then go back and pull things off it, and edit it down into a song. That I used to do an awful lot of. But I don’t write as much that way anymore. Probably because we don’t rehearse as much any more, as we all live in different places now. So I tend to write more by myself or with the other guys. Yeah, I used to write a lot that way. But it wasn’t like I would play for five minutes and then there’s “Round Here.” It’s more like there’s 20 to 30 minutes of music on a tape and I pull from it and then craft it into a song. A lot of it was there, but it was heavily edited down.
KS: Has writing been something you’ve always done? Was it a creative outlet for you?
AD: I didn’t really start writing songs till I was about, well the first song I wrote music and lyrics was the fall term of my freshman year in college. Before that, I hadn’t really done it. But after that, I did nothing else. For years at a time. I just used to write all day, every day.
KS: Well you are very talented and it comes out in your lyrics and music. You once described the difficulties you experienced when you guys were recording August and Everything After. You were developing your roles within the band and the sound and brand during those sessions. You knew in your mind what you wanted to achieve in the finished product and took charge. If you had a chance to go back would you do anything differently while recording that first album?
AD: I’d be less of an asshole. The thing of it is, it’s hard to like…I have skill sets now for being a band leader that I didn’t have then. I had no idea how to do that. It wasn’t a brand, I just knew there was something better than what we were doing. We were playing a kind of music that sounded like a sort of style of the time. It kinda sounded like late model Roxy, which is cool. We sounded like a bunch of sounds that were big at the time, that we were trying to sound like. And I just wanted us to sound like us! I was like, strip it down and find out what we were. I felt like that was what it was necessary, and in order to do that I had to take away to just play simple instruments for a bit. We ended up using lots and lots of weird sounds over the years. But at that moment I just wanted us to stop trying to sound like something and just figure out what we sounded like when we stood in a circle and played together. I felt like there was something much more long term, much more rewarding, and much like a deeper vein to mind, than what we were doing. But the thing is, I was brand new to doing this. And brand new being a band leader, and not very good at it. People always talk about how they love playing music, or anything you do in life that you enjoy like a hobby, then talk about it becoming work it’s a negative. Because all of a sudden you’re fighting over things that you used to enjoy. But that’s what work is. Work is when you take something you used to do for fun and you turn it into something you really really good at. And a lot of people can’t get past that point because they don’t like when their hobby starts to be work. Because it’s a big transition to get from one to the other, ya know. And you have to fight about things, where you used to just have fun. I just wasn’t very good at that so there was a point on that first album where we were having a lot of pressure of making a first record and I’m making everybody ditch the instruments and the effects they are using that they are comfortable with and stripping them all away and saying just play. That made it hard on everybody. I was pretty sure of what I was doing, but not very good at doing it. I was hard on everybody. I was harsher than I needed to be and I was so insecure about it. Everyone in the band tried to quit during that album. At some point during it, every single one of us decided to quit the band. It was really hard. The one thing I would change, is the one thing you can’t really change. I would like to know what I know now, then. I could be better at it, but you only get that knowledge doing it. In life the one thing you can’t go back and change, is the shit you learned, because that’s how you learn it.
KS: Exactly. I’m with you on that. As you wrote more albums, of course it got easier for you and as you grew as a band in the business you developed a reputation as an amazing live band. Your band mates are one of the most cohesive groups that I’ve ever heard. And nothing is more apparent than as you play live and improvise on stage. Which is amazing to me. You once said that “playing is really important but listening is more important.” Do you think this is why you all meld so well on stage because you listen to each other and pick up these cues?
AD: Yes, I think so. And also I think we’re not afraid to get it wrong. We have a confidence that there is no “wrong.” What you are suppose to do up there on stage, is try stuff. To play, feel it, and try stuff. I think it’s a live experience. I think when you are so worried about being perfect all the time it makes you really stiff in those moments and I think we’ve kinda gotten over, and not so worried about being perfect. We try to be really good, but we’re willing to experiment and if something goes wrong, it goes wrong and it’s not the end of the day. If we have a train wreck, I don’t mind stopping the song, pointing out the guy that screwed up, laughing at him and then starting it over again. It happens sometimes, things go wrong. It’s real life. The other night we were playing a show at a festival outside of Austin, like last Friday. I went back to the piano to play “Long December,” I sit down and was talking with the audience, and I start playing and right before I played the song I changed the cap on my mic. So when I do that, I signal my monitor guy and he turns off the mic so that when I’m unscrewing the cap, it won’t make a bunch of noise. You have to do that (change the cap) because you sweat and it soaks into it and you have to change them every now and then. So I changed it and he turns the sound off, screwed it back in, and then go back to the piano to play “Long December.” So when I go to sing he had forgotten to turn the mic back on. So I just stopped the song, laughed at him, he turned it back on, we joked round for a second, then we counted it back in. Truth is, that stuff happens. It’s just human stuff. He’s just doing 90 things at once, he’s setting up someones else’s monitors, flicks my thing off, and then forgets to flick it back on. You can get uptight about stuff like that, or you can realize it just happens. So you just keep playing.
KS: When audiences see that stuff happen, it helps them relate to you I think. They have you up on a pedestal, then when life happens, and they see your human side, they can relate more with you as you are just like them. Mistakes happen.
AD: I think that’s true. It’s an interesting by product of it. Fact of the matter is, it is all real. We’re a bunch of guys on stage playing, and we’re trying to not do the same thing every night exactly the same way. And so, stuff happens. It’s just real life. It just happens to be on stage, and we just happen to have microphones. It’s the same as the rest of our day in a way and everyone’s real life.
KS: In 1999 you came to my hometown and played the Woodstock here. Can you share thoughts of that eventful concert there?
AD: They are not really good remembrances.
KS: I know. At times I wonder if we should get a do over or should we just cut our losses and just call it a day? SMH over here.
AD: I think that was one of the worst ways of honoring one of the best places in the history of rock and roll that I can ever possibly imagine. Woodstock is deservedly one of the most important place names in the history of music. It really is, and totally deservedly so. But those guys, that year, ended up charging like $7 for waters, on a concrete pad, on a day that was 100 degrees outside. Having the port-a-potties not properly maintained, and the poor fans that are dehydrating like crazy can’t buy water because it’s so expensive, and there was a 40 yard pool of urine and shit. People rioted. Let me tell you something about that. And they blamed the bands. Not the people, the promoters blamed the bands. But we wanted to play a night slot at Woodstock, I know this is true because they came back and said we want you to play before sundown because all the night slots we want to have as many aggro bands as possible. They wanted to have it as wild and as intense as possible at night. So we are only putting the loudest bands on at night. They put Limp Bizkit on, the Red Hot Chili Peppers and who ever else. After a certain hour, they were only really aggro bands. Which meant that’s exactly what you are going to get at the end every day. So when they set that up that way, all the bands did was be themselves. I saw the Limp Bizkit show, they played a great show that day. But they are an inciting band. So if you want to have people out in the sun all day and not give them water, and then put Limp Bizkit on, it’s going to become a mosh pit.
KS: Our town is quite embarrassed by the whole thing. It’s one thing to be famous, another to be notorious. So sorry you had bad memories of Rome.
AD: I don’t think that’s peoples memory of Woodstock. Many have probably forgotten that part. When you think of Woodstock, you think of the original, just not that year. Some stages were like triage. There were people like on stretchers. People were getting like so hurt. We saw like women getting their clothes torn off them in the audience. It was just so chaotic and so much anger in the crowd. It just wasn’t well run.
KS: Well we hope to welcome you back to Central NY this August at the Lakeview, and hope to change that bitter taste you have in your memory with some good ones. You will be touring this summer with Rob Thomas. Have you ever played together before?
AD: Yeah, but we’ve never toured together before. We’ve known each other for such a long time. There were times we would be in the same city and get up on stage and sign “Momma Don’t Let Your Babies Grow Up to Be Cowboys” together. One time I had a European tour and they had a European Tour that started a couple weeks before mine, so I just went over early to be with Rob and the guys in Italy. I just spent a week getting drunk and hanging out with them in Italy going on interviews with them before my tour started. Just because it was fun. I’m really looking forward to this because I haven’t seen Rob much the last ten years. So it will be nice to see each other again.
KS: It will be an epic tour and we can’t wait to have you guys come through. Final question for ya. If I had never heard a Counting Crows song before, which one would you tell me to listen to to get a feel and encompass what you guys are all about?
AD: “Pallasides Park.”
KS: Okay. That’s a very interesting choice. That is a great video too. Where did the concept for that come from?
AD: It was all Bill Fishman. I asked him to change a few things, but basically it was his concept from hearing the song and wanting to do it. There were a lot of submissions for who wanted to direct that, but it was clear to me the moment he sent his in. He was the guy. He just had the grasp on it.
KS: So his visual concept met yours?
AD: His visual concept met my emotional concept. I didn’t have a visual concept. I knew how I wanted it to feel, and I felt like he really captured that.
KS: Well thank you again Adam for taking the time to talk to our readers and we look forward to welcoming both you and Rob Thomas back to Central New York once again.
As the interview ended, the old proverbial ‘don’t’ ask a question you’re not certain of the answer’ came to mind. Not quite sure how I expected Adam to answer the Woodstock 99 question, however his insight from a stage view was enlightening to this journalist. Was actually embarrassed all over again for my community wishing there was a way one could rectify this catastrophic event in the minds of all that participated and attended. Perhaps some things are best left alone. Note to self, do not ask about Woodstock 99.
I found the lead singer extremely easy mannered as our conversation began. Although I sensed a reservation in his tone in the beginning of the interview, I felt his guard come down as I kept my questions on topic. I know readers want a personal insight into stars and their lives, however some things that personal are just that, personal. Perhaps I should be that type of journalist, delving into topics that readers want answers to but are encroaching, but then again, I want to know about his music, how it makes him feel, how he wants to grow and share with his fan base, not his past dating history. So I left that line of questioning to those other rags you can read in the line at the grocery checkout as I was preparing to talk with him. If he wanted to speak of those topics, I would gladly be an outlet, but we were there to discuss his music.
As our interview quickly exceeded our allotted time, we were interrupted and asked to wrap up questions to keep him on schedule by his publicist. It felt like this conversation could continue another day. I had so many other questions I wanted to ask him. Questions about acts he’s toured with, artists he’s recorded with, and then so many other topics that come from those conversations. I got a sense that Adam could be a person’s best of friends. His concern with having to take charge as band leader in the beginning, and his recognition on how he handled it was endearing to me. His willingness to work on projects to help out friends, even when it’s not his cup of tea. Then the shear compassion of the audience at Woodstock 99 left me with an insight to his character and peak under that cloak of mystery these interviews often leave you with. Sometimes not asking questions, gives you more of an insight I think into the character of person than asking them and having a wall come up. Adam was so likable, so real, so intelligent. His first answer to my hello, pointing out the beautiful sunny day he (and I) were experiencing here in NY state, immediately made him real to me. As our conversation went along it truly appeared that he was happily reliving the moments with me as he shared his story with our readers. His simplistic answer said it all. “Mostly, I just play in a band, that’s what I like.”
Being a live band, this photo-journalist looks forward to covering his show and experiencing these improvisational moments on stage with those he considers friends; his band mates and audience. The live experience is what drew us in from that initial emotional rendition of “Round Here.” This heart is what I want to see tonight.
Tour Dates Fri Aug 12 Syracuse, NY Lakeview Amphitheatre Sat Aug 13 Niagara Falls, NY Seneca Niagara Casino* Mon Aug 15 Saratoga Springs, NY Saratoga Performing Arts Center Tue Aug 16 Brooklyn, NY The Amphitheater at Coney Island Boardwalk
Thu Aug 18 Bethlehem, PA Sands Bethlehem Events Center
Sat Aug 20 Cincinnati, OH Riverbend Music Center
Sun Aug 21 Indianapolis, IN Klipsch Music Center*
Tue Aug 23 Detroit, MI DTE Energy Music Theatre*
Wed Aug 24 Chicago, IL FirstMerit Bank Pavilion at Northerly Island
Fri Aug 26 Toronto, ON Molson Canadian Amphitheatre
Sat Sep 3 Woodinville, WA Chateau Ste. Michelle
Sun Sep 4 Ridgefield, WA Sunlight Supply Amphitheater
Thu Sep 8 Los Angeles, CA Greek Theatre
Sat Sep 10 Mountain View, CA Shoreline Amphitheatre
Sun Sep 11 Reno, NV Grand Theatre at Grand Sierra Resort
Tue Sep 13 Phoenix, AZ Ak-Chin Pavilion*
Wed Sep 14 San Diego, CA Cal Coast Credit Union Open Air Theatre at SDSU
Fri Sep 16 Indio, CA Fantasy Springs Resort Casino
Sat Sep 17 Las Vegas, NV Downtown Las Vegas Events Center*
Mon Sep 19 Denver, CO Red Rocks Amphitheatre*
Thu Sep 22 Albuquerque, NM Sands Casino Amphitheater
Sat Sep 24 Allen, TX Allen Event Center
Sun Sep 25 Houston, TX Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion presented by Huntsman
Tue Sep 27 Kansas City, MO Starlight Theatre
Wed Sep 28 St. Louis, MO Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre*
Fri Sep 30 Nashville, TN Ascend Amphitheater
AWOLNATION ‘sailed’ into Upstate Concert Hall on Wednesday, July 13, energizing the audience despite the imposing heat.
Kicking off the evening were L.A. natives Irontom. With flamboyant gestures and high energy, the band quickly engaged the audience and became the highlight of the three sets of the evening. Irontom consists of guitarist Zach Irons, singer Harry Hayes, bassist Dane Sandborg, drummer Dylan Williams, and Daniel Saslow on keys. Lead singer Hayes was fascinating to watch as he gestured and mimed his way through the band’s set, almost reminiscent of Cage the Elephant’s Matt Shultz.
Unfortunately for the audience, Irontom’s set was over too soon, as time constraints forced them to end before their last song. Irontom has released a compilation album of their 2012-2014 recordings. Check out their upcoming tour dates.
Following Irontom was San Francisco’s Finish Ticket, who just recently opened for Fitz and The Tantrums at UCH on June 23. While less energetic than Irontom (lead singer Brendan Hoye frequently cited the heat), Finish Ticket is reminiscent of Walk the Moon. The highlight of their set was a cover of the Killer’s “When You Were Young,” sounding perhaps better than the original.
Finally, AWOLNATION took the stage around 10pm. Consisting of front man Aaron Bruno, Kenny Carkeet on keyboards and guitar, Isaac Carpenter on drums, and bassist Marc Walloch, AWOLNATION combines electronica and rock to create a unique sound. Their second album, Run, was released in March 2015.
Opening with “Run,” the band covered the majority of the tracks from their sophomore album, while also throwing in highlights from their debut. The crowd covered all of the floor at UCH, with little room left to spare. As the night went on, the temperature rose as condensation dripped from the ceiling.
AWOLNATION didn’t let the heat slow them down, powering through “Hollow Moon,” “Not Your Fault” and “Jail Break,” joined by Irontom’s guitarist Zach Irons (replacing AWOLNATION’s Drew Stewart who left the band in September 2015), and with Irontom’s drummer Dylan Williams on one song.
The band was thankful to be there and appreciative of their audience, frequently checking in with the crowd, telling people to look out for each other, and often remarking that their music “is for everyone.”
Highlights of their set include a drum solo, the appearance of inflatable shark pool toys in the audience (which one crowd surfer climbed atop), and “Dreamers” during the encore.
The band closed the evening with a medley of “Now I Can See You” and crowd favorite “Sail.”
Setlist: Run, Hollow Moon, People, Not Your Fault, Jailbreak, Soul Wars, Windows, Kill Your Heroes, Woman Woman, All I Need, Like People, Like Plastic, Drum Solo / Burn It Down, I’m on Fire, I Am, Dreamers, Sail
Tune in below for an interview with AWOLNATION’s Aaron Bruno and Keller of WEQX, prior to their UCH appearance