Category: Electronic

  • RAQ Ends Comebaq Run: Makes a Splash at Thunder Road with Swimmer

    A double header of Vermont jammers treated a Massachusetts crowd to a night of improvisational grooves, saxophone sit-ins and Christmas carol teases in true holiday fashion at Thunder Road Music Club & Rock n’ Roll Bistro. Vermont’s own RAQ, restocked with a reputable drummer in the scene, teamed with an up and coming group, Swimmer, who share roots in the same town of Burlington. Both drew an impressive gathering of fans both local and branching across the Northeast, making it safe to say many left the MA venue newly admitted “swimmers.”

    The progressive rock-fusion quintet based out of Burlington, took the reigns early in the night, kicking things off with a kinetic performance that displayed a melting pot of genres over a six-song set list. Carefully crafted, it brought forward original compositions intertwined with covers of some of their largest musical influences, Frank Zappa and Phish. The night found mesmerizing flair from keys player Matt Dolliver, bassist Jack Vignone, guitarists Paul Klein and Joe Agnello, who swapped vocals with man behind the drum kit, Cotter Ellis. Original and innovatively named tracks “5 Seed and Feeble,” “Godmeat” and “Sea Cerebral” truly portrayed the unique sound Swimmer bears to those who have never been introduced to their music–seemingly effortless tight grooves, progressive journeys and charismatic originality.

    Highlights of the set instantly point towards Matt Dolliver as he delighted the audience with smooth saxophone performances and Swimmer’s conquering of Frank Zappa’s “Pound for a Brown” > Phish’s “F*ck Your Face” > “The Impossible Engineer,” an original track that ended the set with high-energy and roars of approval.

    RAQ certainly came baq and kept the crowd fully captivated throughout a two-set performance. The audience and RAQ members alike were elated with the fact that former Dopapod drummer Scotty Zwang, has completed the final piece in their lineup puzzle–one that has proven to be tossed up in the past and especially interwoven with Kung Fu. Todd Stoops was nothing short of vocal, proudly admitting from behind the keys that Zwang is the “best drummer they’ve ever had” as he corralled multiple rounds of applause throughout the first set, which included “Bootch Magoo,” “Clamslide,” “Bobs Your Uncle,” “Crazy Tonie” and “Gabvonie.” Before heading offstage for a 15 minute reprieve, RAQ incited a sing-a-long on fan-favorite “Walking in Circles.”

    Also displayed on two TV’s hanging above head at a full-stocked bar, the second set of the performance found a few dressed in Christmas colored velour and blazers in the holiday spirit as their atmosphere quickly turned into a reggae sound-tracked snowglobe. RAQ dove into Peter Tosh’s “Legalize It” before taking on a string of Christmas classics from “The Little Drummer Boy” and “Joy to the World,” to “Rudolph the Red-nosed Reindeer,” which paired nicely with the “Deck the Halls” ornament and garland decor at Thunder Road. Newly confirmed “swimmer,” Stoops, re-introduced Matt Dolliver to the stage after approaching him in the crowd between set changes. An impromptu sit-in on Men at Work’s “Who Can it Be Now?”ultimately brought down the house.

    Swimmer will resume gigs after the holidays with their first 2017 appearances across Clear River Tavern, Showcase Lounge and The Snow Barn in Vermont before heading to Stella Blues in CT. RAQ ended their trifecta of North East comebaq performances, with stops through The Westcott Theatre in Syracuse, a penultimate gig with Twiddle at Port Chester’s Capitol Theatre and last night’s Thunder Road wrap up. Saturday night alone determined that both groups have big moves on the horizon for the upcoming new year.

  • Long Island Synth Rockers Shiffley are Back with “Sleepless Night”

    Buckle up, New York. Long Island synth rockers Shiffley are back with a new single. Drawing from the great omnisexual songwriting tradition that brought us “Electric Barbarella” and “The Sexy Data Tango,” “Sleepless Night” delivers the utterly touching story of a robot who falls in love with a human.cv4g9hnwgakgp3w

    Unlike Duran Duran and Voltaire, however, Shiffley resist the urge to sing about ultra-chrome, latex, and android anti-freeze. The single instead focuses on the emotional spectrum of the machine as it comes to identify and reciprocate emotions, realizing that “Cruel is how it has to be for now.” When asked about the songwriting process, singer Alex Ganes revealed, “Instrumentally this single was birthed in the studio and is very much so a collaboration with our producer, Will Rosati. It is adventurous for us in that the synths heavily drive the song’s percussion.”

    This is not the first time the foursome have written about, um, mechanical sentiments. “Systems,” which premiered on New York State Music earlier this year, follows a lovesick robot who learns to feel “and then instantly regrets the decision.” Check out the quantum-singularity-contesting “Sleepless Night” below:

  • THE PORTAL Opens at the Minetta Lane Theatre

    Off-Broadway “modern Shamanic journey,” THE PORTAL, opened this weekend to a spiritually minded audience at The Minetta Lane Theatre. Before stepping foot inside the half-filled preview, I was informed that this groundbreaking concept incorporated elements of a live concert, choreographed dance performance, and movie all in one. THE PORTAL soundtrack is now available and I feel that the show flows even better by pre-listening to the mythological themes presented in the lyrics and compositions by Tierro Lee and Luke Comer with Charles Newman and David Sisko.

    Frontman Billy Lewis Jr., most recently credited on Fox’s “Glee,” appears on stage and sonically narrates the dreamlike adventure of Dante, through inspirational and symbolic landscapes, Alex Grey-influenced imagery and psychedelic desserts that I assume were once visited by Jim Morrison.  The audience is introduced to the voyage with songs like “Eclipse” and “Greeting,” sung by Lewis as the film, starring Dante (Christopher Soren Kelly), is projected on the large screen behind him. The eclectic mix of tribal and electronic beats, modern dance music and monstrous rock riffs are brought to life by percussionist Gilly Gonzalez and guitarist Paul Casanova who also appear on and off stage from scene to scene.

    Dante’s inner-demons appear to be haunting him in the film as actors portraying the same characters can be found roaming the theatre floor to terrorize and intrigue the audience.Fans of electronic giants like EOTO, The Disco Biscuits, and Beats Antique will appreciate the deep and transformational grooves during songs like “Trance,” “Synth” and “Space Weaver” while Jessica Aronoff and Nicole Spencer interpretively dance their way on and off the stage in between songs and themes. While there is not much live acting of any kind, there is a ritualistic Burning Man-influenced dance routine in nearly every song bringing the art forms together in a very unique fashion.

    The only way to truly understand THE PORTAL is to expect the unexpected and dive right in. Creative Director, Luke Comer, has developed a new way to present a rock opera story off-Broadway. As an audience member, each person can relate to many of the human experiences presented on screen and on stage while still enjoying live music, dance and film. Tickets can be purchased for Wednesday-Friday performances at 8PM and for Saturday performances at 5PM and 9PM.

    https://soundcloud.com/theportalnyc

  • Lotus Fans Eat the Light at Playstation Theater

    On the night of November 25 at PlayStation Theater, an electronic jam band by the name of Lotus, set out to lift the hearts of many through musical madness. This five piece group has a way of capturing the attention of their soundwave-thirsty audience. A concert is one thing, but this was a performance.

    lotus playstationIt was quite refreshing to see this band live again. When you see a really good show live, you automatically wonder when you are ever going to get the chance to see them again. In that hiatus and chunk of time that you have not seen them, they have grown in many ways. Bands fashion and master fresh new tracks and work with each other to create something revitalizing and beautiful.

    Lotus commenced their musical power right at Playstation Theater before the turn of the 21st century. Since then, they have fabricated a style of unique instrumental post-rock and electronic dance, which makes their fans groove to the max.

    They dropped their newest album this past summer, Eat The Light. You better believe they killed it with a few fresh tunes off this energetic composition, such as “Sodium Vapor,” “I’ve Been a Fool,” as well as hits from the past including “Tip of the Tongue,” “Slow Cookin,’” “Basin to Benin,” “Juggernaut,” “Shimmer ‘n Out,” “Suitcases,” and many more. They also covered an awesome hit by Ratatat called “Cream on Chrome.”

    Lotus’ band members keep things alive and current all while adding flare to the mix to remain original. We must give thanks to Mike Rempel on guitar, Chuck Morris on percussion, Jesse Miller on bass, Luke Miller on guitar and keys, and Mike Greenfield on drums. These loyal members opened up the hearts of many like a blossoming lotus flower.

    This show made a grand impact on those who were destined to be there at that very moment in time. Each song mastered a journey of transcendence, telling a story unique to its own. The soothing lighting and delicate but strong jams of the evening had everyone feeling jovial, friendly, and dedicated – a true reflection of this amazing band’s powerful yet gentle nature.

  • ‘Deep Listening’ Pioneer and Experimental Music Composer Pauline Oliveros Passes Away at 84

    Pauline Oliveros, experimental composer, electronic music innovator, accordionist, pioneer of the Deep Listening philosophy and Distinguished Research Professor of Music at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, passed away Thanksgiving Day at the age of 84.

    Pauline Oliveros composerDuring my own time as a student at RPI studying soil mechanics and structural analysis of steel and concrete I somehow found the time to add an electronic arts minor to my transcript. I had heard of a class called ‘Deep Listening’ and it seemed to this then-junior engineering student like a curious subject to help round out the arts minor. It wasn’t until my senior year – when it was too late to reconfigure course schedules – that I had a taste of this subject when my advanced computer music class sat in on a session happening two floors above in West Hall.

    Near one side of the room a dozen or so students was Pauline Oliveros, deeply immersed in the multi-channel surround soundscape created with her cherry red accordion and numerous effects processing. Seeing the focus of those students in a music setting unfamiliar to me was incredible and proved an importance to her course.

    Oliveros was interested in music from a young age, learning accordion from her mother in Texas at age nine and learning the French horn and tuba later on. Her education took her through music programs at the University of Houston and San Francisco State College where she obtained a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in composition. She remained in academia for several years, teaching at Mills College and UCSD. In 1981 she left UCSD to come to the Hudson Valley, where a less restrictive creative environment allowed her to further explore performance and composition where she later founded the Deep Listening Institute.

    She introduced herself to the idea of deep listening in the early 1950s when she got her first tape recorder. “I immediately recorded from my apartment window in San Francisco,” she recalls in a 2012 interview on WRPI in Troy, NY. “I listened as I recorded but when I listened back to the tape I heard things that I hadn’t heard when I recorded. So, I realized that I hadn’t really been listening. Since then my mantra has been listen to everything all the time and remind yourself when you’re not.”

    The term “Deep Listening” hadn’t been coined for many years after her early experiments with tape recordings and work with the San Francisco Tape Music Center, though the ideas and teachings were there in Oliveros’ early academic career in experimental music and composition. “Deep Listening” as a term was a coincidence of pun associated with recordings made in the Dan Harpole underground cistern in Washington State in 1988 with two of her musical partners Stuart Dempster and Panaiotis who then donned the name for the group of Deep Listening Band.

    Deep listening, in brief, is about treating listening as an active rather than passive process, a process that takes some effort. “Deep Listening is listening in every possible way to everything possible to hear no matter what you are doing,” Oliveros described. “Such intense listening includes the sounds of daily life, of nature, or one’s own thoughts as well as musical sounds. Deep Listening represents a heightened state of awareness and connects to all that there is.” That philosophy has led her to have a profound influence on music through improvisation, meditation, and use of electronic music.

    Oliveros’ extensive fifty-year career as a leader in avante-garde and experimental music included numerous recordings under her own name and with the Deep Listening Band. Along with these recordings, Oliveros has many publications, videos and has given many lectures and workshops out of the classroom setting. She received several awards in her career, including the most recent biennial John Cage Award in 2012, given by the Foundation for Contemporary Arts in New York City to individuals who have made outstanding achievements in contemporary performing arts.

    From 2001 until her passing, Oliveros had been teaching Deep Listening and conducting research at RPI in Troy. Her collaborative research at the university included the Adaptive Use Musical Instrument (AUMI) – a development of adaptive musical instruments through computer interfaces for those with mobility restrictions – and others including artificial intelligence programming for improvised music and data science research with the university’s School of Science.

    In 2012 a celebration of Oliveros’ 80th birthday was held at the university’s Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center (EMPAC). Oliveros, along with the Deep Listening Band, gave a performance utilizing computer simulations, developed by architecture acoustics professor Jonas Braasch, of the acoustics of the cistern in which the band recorded in 1988, implemented using technology within the theater.

    While Oliveros had an extensive career as a composer and performer, many people who have worked with her have been remembering her as a compassionate mentor, brilliant until her passing. Former student Blair Neal recalls of her impact, “Technology was never at the core of [class] discussions though, it was always the power of the human and how we communicated and listened to each other. That kind of teaching is something I try to carry with me always.” Another former student, Alex Bulazel shares simple words of gratitude, “Pauline was always an inspiration to her students, reminding them of the importance of creativity, artistic self-expression, humor, and most importantly, listening.”

  • Nitro Fest, featuring Beats Antique, Ignites Longmont, CO

    In retrospect, I am a bit surprised there was no carnival barker in candy cane-striped pants with a handlebar mustache shouting, “Step Right Up, Ladies and Gentlemen!” There was the obvious, the circus tent. And the carnie stilt walkers, acrobats and aerialists. But it wasn’t a circus. It was a beer festival. Or was it?

    Last week, local Colorado brewers, Left Hand Brewing Company, sponsored their annual Nitro Beer festival on the lawn of an open park in Longmont. There were long lines of people holding shot glasses of nitrogen infused craft beers from several craft brewers around the country. But that is where the resemblance to typical beer fests ended. Left Hand instead threw a vaudevillesque party in which every participant was in formal masquerade/steampunk attire. There were fire performers, jugglers, hoopers, and acrobats hanging from fabric attached to the high tent ceiling. And there was Beats Antique.  Their unique blend of Old World gypsy electronica, along with the dizzying visuals from fire and acrobat performances by Lunar Fire and Fractal Tribe, transformed a beer promotional event into a bewitching evening of stylish costumes, art and music.

    Beats Antique closed out the evening on an intimately-sized stage while celebrating the birthday of their percussionist, Tommy Cappel.

    Punctuated with a belly dancing stage show and throbbing gypsy beats, the stage shuddered with gale-force energy from inspired performers and rabid fans, jumping and clawing at the stage. Needless to say, I didn’t spend much time in beer lines for refills. The circus was in town, and I sure didn’t want to miss any of the razzle and dazzle. The Nitro Fest last week was the greatest show on earth of beer festivals.

  • Hearing Aide: A Tribe Called Quest “We got it from Here… Thank You 4 Your Service

    Nostalgia has taken over modern pop culture. Star Wars and Ghostbusters are back in theaters, Dave Chappelle guest starring on SNL, and now one of the most influential  American rap groups rises again for the first time in 18 years to release their sixth and final album. It’s a product of the exact recipe of what makes a Tribe album so revolutionary,  but with a slight variation of every ingredient.

    The production value of A Tribe Called Quest We got it from Here… Thank You 4 Your Service is immaculate. It feels like listening to a remastered, never released album, because Tribe led the public to believe their fifth album was their last breaking up in 1998. And even without all of the original members, their sound is still effortless and always moving. The passing of  Malik “Phife Dawg” Taylor was an inspiration for the production of the album that includes a variety of unpredictable, unique jazzy grooves and heavy drum and bass beats, placed under quick and witty lyrics. Putting aside the negative feelings and thoughts was the best thing the members could have done for themselves because once again, the group has created something one of a kind a revolutionary, that listeners can only hope will inspire other artists to follow in Tribe’s footsteps.

    Key Tracks: Whateva Will Be, Lost Somebody, Solid Wall of Sound

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_PdW50Vt4x4

  • STS9 Rewinds Time at Terminal 5

    Picture your mind and body being taken on an intergalactic journey through time and space where imagination is limitless. On November 12, Sound Tribe Sector 9 (STS9) truly made every soul in Terminal 5 rock their bodies to the charm of sweet sound waves. This galactic adventure transported and tickled the tummies of many with tasteful sounds and groovy jam produced by this very unique tribe.

    STS9 Terminal 5STS9 has the power to elevate sensations of happiness and fulfillment. This group brings instrumental electronic rock music to the next level – incorporating a bit of jazz, funk, hip hop, drum and some badass bass. Fans at Terminal 5 were truly astounded at the immense rhythm that filled the atmosphere. Many were ecstatic to hear songs from their latest album, The Universe Inside, recently released in September. They kicked off the night with one of their newest tracks “World Go Round”, and played various brand new songs including “Worry No More,” “Light Years,” and threw it back with a classic called “When the Dust Settles” released in 2011.

    Not to mention the light show was fantastic, which ultimately brought a sense of cosmic waves shooting through the air and lifted everyone’s spirits. The crowd gave thanks to this dynamic group. Hunter Brown expressed himself on guitar/keys, Jeffree Lerner gave into the groove on percussion, David Phipps smiled to the punch of his keyboard, Zach Velmer went crazy on drums, and Alana Rocklin simply rocked the bass to the max.

    STS9 Terminal 5Reflecting the stardust of the universe and everything within it, this band knows how to become one with its audience and its surroundings. Being at a show like this makes you reflect on living in the moment and how everything circles in a glorious manner. Their tunes wrap around you with warmth and a comfort that is lacking in this world. STS9 is an identity of the planet and beyond, reaching and rewinding a sense of timeless nature.

  • Papadosio at Brooklyn Bowl, Friday November 11

    Papadosio kicked off their two night run at Brooklyn Bowl on Friday, November 11 with Consider The Source performing an opening Radiohead tribute set, followed by two sets of Papadosio.
    Set 1: By The Light > Advocate XL, Each and Every Wave > Dream Estate XL, Vactrollio
    Set 2: Euclidean Lights, Giving You Up 1/2 > New Love, Mr Turtles, Smile Nod XL, Giving You Up 2/2
    Encore: Cue
    papadosio brooklyn bowl
  • Madeon & Porter Robinson at Orpheum Theater Boston

    Wednesday November 9 saw the arrival of the much anticipated Madeon & Porter Robinson Shelter Tour, as the two brought their newly worked duo act to the Orpheum Theatre. Both of these artists pulled their musical minds together to effectively create one back and forth, on your toes concert experience. Alternating between songs, the electronic gurus formulated a set together that was rambunctious, artistically detailed and had the audience fully engaged.

    Madeon Porter RobinsonOne thing that was immediately catching of the performance was the brilliant lighting and backdrop display. Madeon and Porter Robinson set up on two different stations, surrounded by their computers, keyboards and microphones (singing is something that both have grown to get more comfortable within the live concert setting, although neither were traditionally trained). Behind each artist was a massive screen that alternated between animations to match the intensity of the songs. An additional larger screen displayed the entirety of the backdrop, adding to the immense experience.

    Madeon Porter RobinsonTheir duo song recorded and inspired for the tour, “Shelter,” proved to be a crowd favorite. Full of surprises the band shot off confetti midway through the set, just to ensure no one in the crowd would be getting the least bit bored. Very loud, fully of energy and not likely to let up on the tempo for long is the way these two make their music. Although at times one could say somewhat overboard on the frequency of bass drops used throughout their set, the act was overall a powerful and all around fun outing for the midweek concert goers.  They prove to go above and beyond to perfect their live experience as a fully immersive one, and for their young age it’s exciting to see what’s to come in the future.

    Madeon on Facebook  Soundcloud  Twitter

    Porter Robinson on Facebook  Soundcloud  Twitter