Category: Genres

  • George Michael, Pop Icon, Dead at 53

    The year 2016 has been a particularly rough one in many respects. The music world has lost legends such as David Bowie, Prince, Leonard Cohen and Leon Russell. On Christmas Day, pop icon George Michael was found in his bed, a victim of heart failure at the age of 53.

    george michael

    Michael’s publicist, Connie Filipello issued a statement about his death Sunday:

    It is with great sadness that we can confirm our beloved son, brother and friend George passed away peacefully at home over the Christmas period. The family would ask that their privacy be respected at this difficult and emotional time. There will be no further comment at this stage.

    Michael was born Georgios Kyriacos Panayiotou in London in 1963. His rise to fame began in the mid-80s with the Brit-pop duo Wham!, formed with his school friend Andrew Ridgeley. Wham! had a hit in both England and the U.S. with “Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go.” The video was in heavy rotation on MTV and was influential not only in the music world but the fashion world as well. The over-sized shirts with slogans such as “Choose Life” became ubiquitous around U.S. high schools in 1984.

    Michael and Ridgeley split in 1986 following a farewell concert at Wembley Stadium. His first solo album Faith was released in 1987 and launched Michael into superstar status. The lead single from the album, “I Want Your Sex” featured risqué lyrics that radio made radio leery. Despite this, the single rose to No. 2 on the Billboard charts that year. Faith went on to sell 10 million copies in the U.S. and spawned three No. 1 hits in “Father Figure,” “Monkey” and “One More Try.”

    In later years, Michael faced legal battles with his label as well as with law enforcement. He was arrested in the men’s room in Beverly Hills in 1998 on a charge of lewd behavior. Following that arrest, he came out as gay. The struggles with his sexuality and the efforts in hiding it led to bouts of depression for Michael. He became a vocal advocate for AIDS causes and gay rights.

    While his musical output waned in the 2000s, he was still able to sell tickets to stadium shows. He performed with Paul McCartney at the Live 8 show in 2005 and released his final album, Symphonica, a set of standards and originals performed with an orchestra.

    Michael was an uncomfortable star. His public persona exuded a confident performer but his inner feelings were a complex mix of doubt and struggle. Through it all, his musicianship radiated among many.

    His friend, Elton John provided the following expression of sadness alongside a picture of the two together on Instagram:

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BOdVz_XFmD-/?hl=en

  • Run the Jewels Delivers a Christmas Miracle

    As Christmas Eve transitioned to Christmas Day, fans of Run the Jewels were treated to an early release of El-P and Killer Mike’s latest album. Run the Jewels announced the album drop through the help of Fred Armisen and Carrie Brownstein on their Facebook page just before midnight Christmas Day.

    Run the Jewels 3 is live now! ??
    #RTJ3 runthejewels.com

    Posted by Run The Jewels on Saturday, December 24, 2016

    Originally scheduled for release on Jan. 13, the rap duo decided to give listeners an early Christmas present instead. The album, RTJ3, contains four previously released singles alongside ten other new songs and can be heard right now on Spotify and iTunes.

    There are several collaborations on the album include Danny Brown, Boots, Kamasi Washington and TV on the Radio’s Tunde Adebimpe.

    RTJ was recently named as one of Summer Camp 2017’s headliners and they will embark on a massive U.S. tour in January, culminating with an appearance at NYC’s Terminal 5 on Feb. 25. Joining them on this tour are The Gaslamp Killer, Spark Master Tape, and CUZ.

    run the jewels christmasCheck out the new video for “A Christmas F**king Miracle” below the tour dates.

    Run the Jewels 2017 Tour Dates:
    Jan. 11 – Electric Factory – Philadelphia, PA
    Jan. 12 – Echostage – Washington, DC
    Jan. 13 – Stage AE – Pittsburgh, PA
    Jan. 14 – House of Blues – Cleveland, OH
    Jan. 16 – Express Live! – Columbus, OH
    Jan. 17 – Marathon Music Works – Nashville, TN
    Jan. 18 – The NorVa – Norfolk, VA
    Jan. 20 – The Ritz – Raleigh, NC
    Jan. 21 – The Tabernacle – Atlanta, GA
    Jan. 23 – The Beacham Theatre – Orlando, FL
    Jan. 24 – Jannus Live – St. Petersburg, FL
    Jan. 25 – The Fillmore – Miami, FL
    Jan. 29 – Marquee Theatre – Tempe, AZ
    Jan. 30 – The Observatory – San Diego, CA
    Feb. 1 – Shrine Expo Hall – Los Angeles, CA
    Feb. 2 – San Jose Civic Auditorium – San Jose, CA
    Feb. 3 – Fox Theater – Oakland, CA
    Feb. 5 – Van Duzer Theatre – Arcata, CA
    Feb. 6 – Crystal Ballroom – Portland, OR
    Feb. 7 – Showbox SoDo – Seattle, WA
    Feb. 8 – Vogue Theatre – Vancouver, BC
    Feb. 10 – The Complex – Salt Lake City, UT
    Feb. 11 – The Fillmore – Denver, CO
    Feb. 13 – The Midland – Kansas City, MO
    Feb. 14 – Myth – St. Paul, MN
    Feb. 15 – Orpheum Theater – Madison, WI
    Feb. 17 – Aragon Ballroom – Chicago, IL
    Feb. 18 – Royal Oak Music Theatre – Royal Oak, MI
    Feb. 19 – Danforth Music Hall – Toronto, ON
    Feb. 21 – Metropolis – Montreal, QC
    Feb. 22 – State Theatre – Portland, ME
    Feb. 24 – House of Blues – Boston, MA
    Feb. 25 – Terminal 5 – New York, NY

  • NYS Music Interview: Ten Questions with Spafford

    Spafford is a four-piece act from Phoenix, Arizona that has been steadily gaining recognition in the southwestern states since 2012. Following a successful “Breakout Tour” this fall in the Midwest, including two sold-out shows in Chicago, these Arizona funk rockers are ready to spread their horizon even further and head East, as they continue to grow on a national scale. NYS Music took this opportunity to make sure that you’re familiar with the name Spafford and the sound in an interview with their drummer Nick Tkachyk.

    The group consists of Brian Moss (guitar), Jordan Fairless (bass), Andrew “Red” Johnson (keys) and Nick Tkachyk (drums). Their sound can be described as an electrofunk therapy, which combines deep sonic exploration and jam-heavy improvisation. With jams that stretch anywhere from 10 minutes to 30, their songs expand typical song structure, offering an original take on funk-dance-rock music.

    In the past, they’ve shared the stage with prominent acts like Widespread Panic, Particle, EOTO, the Motet, and they’ve performed festivals such as Arizona’s McDowell Mountain Music and Gem and Jam Music Festivals. For the summer of 2017, they have already been announced on the bill for the Electric Forest in Rothbury, MI and Resonance Festival in Thornville, OH.

    On New Years Eve, you can catch them on Dec. 30 & 31 for Phish after-parties with the Magic Beans, at the American Beauty Bar in NYC, and see for yourself why this four-piece is gaining momentum.

    This spring, the Arizona act will hit the road with Umphrey’s McGee for their 2017 tour. Spafford will be fitting in gigs in between their shows with Umphrey’s, including a date in Philadelphia on Jan. 24 and in New Jersey on Jan. 25. For a full list of tour dates, tickets and information, please visit here.

    Karina Verlan: Where did the name Spafford come from?

    Nick Tkachyk: The word “Spafford” is the middle name belonging to our Lighting Designer/Social Media Guru/General Awesome Dude, Chuck Spafford Johnson. The original name of our band, or should I say “the” band because myself and Red were not in the band yet, was “Officious Tort Feezer… or Freezer”. Apparently this is a legal term for a general wrong doer. Either way, the tort thing didnt work out, Brian and Jordan decided to name the band Spafford, and the rest is the future!

    KV: You’ve toured on the West Coast and central states for a while; how do you anticipate breaking through on the East coast?

    NT:We were meant for the East Coast. We were meant for West Coast. We were meant for people… and their ear hearts.

    KV:How excited are you to be joining Umphrey’s McGee on their tour this spring?

    NT:My scale of excitement for this upcoming occasion can be explained in two words… Cannot. Explain. (mostly due to excess excitement, and the inability to explain myself when excessively excited)

    KV:Who writes the music in your band and how do you decide on your setlists?

    NT:Music is a collaborative effort. Always. Every song is different. Our song writing process is extremely personal and sacred for me, and “us.” Honestly, as a drummer, I don’t “write” songs per-say, however when coming up with specific parts for a Spafford song, I love contributing to the greater good (for lack of a better word) that is Spafford! Setlists are whatever.

    KV:What has been the biggest challenge for you thus far as a band?

    NT:THE MUSIC. (and “challenging” in a very inspiring, creative, and GOOD way!)

    KV:Where would you like to see your band 5 years from now?

    NT:Sharing as much positive, emotional and RAW energy with people through music as possible.

    KV: Is there anyone alive or dead that you would do anything to have them sit in with you?

    NT:Bernard “Pretty” Purdie. Nuff said.

    KV:What was your favorite venue thus far? Favorite set that you’ve done?

    NT:The word ‘Favorite’ when it comes to MUSIC, in my opinion, is poppycock. As an artist, I believe I don’t have the luxury of preference. All art IS. And all ART is GOOD. But okay… Favorite venue: Vinyl Las Vegas. Favorite set: First time we played there for a Further afterparty.

    KV:If you added an another instrument to your band, what would it be?

    NT:Another Brian Moss.

    KV: Have you surpassed any of your early goals as a band thus far?

    NT: Can I borrow your fingers and toes. Yes.

  • Hearing Aide: Chicago Farmer “Midwest Side Stories”

    Chicago Farmer recently released his seventh studio album, Midwest Side Stories, which debuted on September 30, 2016 on his Chicago Farmer record label. It’s the follow-up to 2013’s Backenforth, IL. Chicago Farmer is the nom de plume of Illinois-based folk artist Cody Diekhoff, who has spent the last decade barnstorming bars and theatres across his native Midwest, traveling far and wide, through dim towns and bright cities alike, to perform for a growing legion of appreciative fans. Diekhoff was born in tiny Delevan, IL, has spent significant time in Chicago, and currently calls Bloomington, IL home. It’s these localities, which are largely defined by the sordid power dynamics surrounding them, that make up the backdrop for his blue-collar ballads.

    Distilled to its essence, Midwest Side Stories is a concept album, one centered around the workingclass struggles of the people of Tazewell County, Illinois. The concept, while in league with Sufjan Stevens’ Illinois, is less sprawling, more localized, and reads sort of like Sherwood Anderson’s short-story collection Winesburg, Ohio, yet its themes are more aligned with those of another famous Illinoisian, the poet and folk singer, Carl Sandburg.

    The opening track, “Umbrella,” a seemingly autobiographical take on the life of a folksinger with a rainy day plight and a ticket to ride, acts as an overture, setting the stage for the strugglers that Chicago Farmer will routinely call into the limelight over the course of the album. The track takes its name from a simile built into the first verse, which provides an inside look at the inspiration behind the songs, while also detailing the apparent relationship between the folksinger and his subject. The first-person narrator sings:

    I went searching for some kind of meaning
    Like words looking for a page
    Came up empty and full of worry
    That nothing could cover the pain
    And these songs and stories
    Began unfolding like an umbrella in the rain.

    I want to write you a sad, sad song
    That I hope will make you smile
    And we could pass it along
    We’re only here for a little while.

    The track also sets in motion the album’s most resonant message: that storytelling is important, and that it’s equally important how one goes about it. Here, Chicago Farmer delivers a well-constructed acoustic guitar tune that’s tinged with electric honky-tonk guitar fills, and hinges on his shaky and crisp, rich as honey vocal performance, complete with emotional tension, brief yodeling, and a crafted message. And while there’s some slick lines in “Umbrella,” such as “we’ve been trying to find our way through the darkness of our minds,” we also see the traces of Chicago Farmer’s major weakness as a songwriter, that there’s a disturbing lack of particularity, personality, and local detail in these folk tales, while there’s an abundance of flat lines and forced rhymes that advance the story by length alone.

    One song in and I’m totally going for Chicago Farmer’s voice, as it’s reminiscent of Ryan Adams during the Cardinals era, while the song itself sounds more like something from Kentuckian Stoll Vaughan’s catalogue, but I’m definitely not sold on the lyrics.

    When the second song, “The Revolving Door,” hits, it’s high drama from the jump. Shrill, Neil Young inspired harmonica tears through the song like a factory whistle, while the ominous bass and drums lugs a gurney of carnage out of what seems a folk music netherland, some gruesome place from which the Byrds’ “Lover of the Bayou” once emerged, and from whence Chicago Farmer’s authoritarian boss figure comes, wielding a trembling falsetto warble like a razor, his voice haunted with the spirit of Will Oldham and bent on corporate enforcement.

    After the first verse, the song breaks suddenly into a bewitched surf-hued anthem that takes up the point of view of a worker caught in this exchange, who’s prideful in repeating “I’m a worker / Not a number,” yet fully aware that the boss dictates he always get “back in line.” Finally, the song increases in tempo and intensity, building up to the climactic moment, in which the blazing harmonica returns, as does the voice of the boss figure, who informs the worker, “saddened to tell you, sir / you don’t work here anymore / pack your things and your feelings / and head on towards the door.” And while the title seems to allude to “revolving door” politics, the song is essentially about the binary bind of incorporated power and its grip on a vulnerable labor force.

    Two songs in and Chicago Farmer has me captivated by his voice, impressed by the careful structures inherent in his songwriting, and excited about the range so far displayed.

    The next three songs, “Rocco and Susie,” “Skateboard Song,” and “Two Sides of the Story” provide the album’s most on-the-nose references to Tazewell County. “Rocco and Susie” is a stripped down, bluegrass-tinted ballad featuring acoustic guitar, tambourine, and backing vocals. There’s a slow setup as the song unfolds. The couple described, at first, “seem like your typical neighbors / [whose] children were somewhat behaved,” but, ultimately, the family succumbs to the sordid afflictions facing Tazewell County: the stock market crash, factory job loss fallout, crystal meth addiction and production, police intervention, and the dissolution of their family. While Rocco and Susie at least have names to which one can connect, they serve merely as stock pieces, with all evidence of their personalities and the sweat of their struggle erased, in what reads as basically a reductive critique of a changing economy, from which the only thesis adduced from the ordeal is simply that one should “stick to smoking grass and drinking beer.”

    “Skateboard Song” gives another passing glance at some of the participants in the local goings-on in Tazewell County, this time from the view of a first person skater riding through town; however, the characters involved in the story are warped by the lighthearted, uptempo, musical-theater style satire Chicago Farmer employs in critiquing smalltown social ills and the misguided laws meant to curb them. Every authority in town, from the signs to the cops to the judge, has only this to say, “skateboarding is bad,” which is always followed with why don’t you “take up guns” or “do some harder drugs,” or some other such miscreant behavior, and only a pop-punkish jingle by which to convey it. While the idea of making a powerful metaphor out of the skateboard has great promise, the execution is tepid, and listeners are left with a less than revolutionary assault on the powers that be.

    “Two Sides of the Story” is a John Prine-esque portrait of the small town heartbreak and struggle that seems to typify the experience Chicago Farmer presents to his audience. It’s another stripped down acoustic guitar tune, with piano and harmonica accompaniment, and featuring Chicago Farmer’s twangy vocals. From his point of view, middle America is a place divided exponentially in twos, where the politicians are feckless liars and misinformation abounds, where the media is a gluttonous machine and working-class reality its fodder, where living’s dying and dying living.

    And here Chicago Farmer uses his highly developed sense of songcraft to portray a growing chasm dividing Americans along intangible lines. In the chorus, he sings “there’s two sides to every story, there’s two sides of every town / the side of town that tells the story and the side where the story went down,” which calls attention to the gap between product and producer that outlines the larger conflict at stake. He adds depth to this stance throughout the song, stringing together artful, impactful lyrics that diagnose the worsening situation while adding some political punch. Take for example this stanza that highlights the gulf between the words and actions of politicians:

    There was a lawmaker whose laws never made any sense
    So he started making promises on both sides of the fence
    Double-crossed his fingers every other time he smiled
    Shook hands across the country, couldn’t reach across the aisle.

    Whereas, Chicago Farmer’s other story songs do well to elicit many concerning issues, they mostly fall in short driving home a moral lesson, however, “Two Sides of the Story” succeeds in convincing the audience that storytelling is important and that it’s even more important to “get your story straight.”

    Halfway through and Midwest Side Stories has proven Chicago Farmer’s obvious talents, namely songcraft and singing, but, in comparison with one another, the songs are quite uneven. In fact, “Two Sides of the Story” marks the high point of Midwest Side Stories, but it also marks the point at which the album takes a turn for the worst.

    “New Used Car” is an easy listening diddy with an attractive pedal steel part, but the trite subject matter and blithe singing give it the taste of Diet Springsteen in a can, while the feathery lyrics secure this tune’s place as the Americana version of those riding-around-town-in-a-pickup-truck revelries celebrated on pop country radio.

    The next tune, “9PM to 5,” is a straightforward country-tinged rock song in the manner of Los Lobos, which describes the life of a graveyard shift worker, but nothing ever develops regarding his situation and it’s difficult to know what Chicago Farmer is trying to invoke here.

    An uptempo fiddle-number follows with the Carter Family styled singalong “Farm and Factory,” which details the working backgrounds of the narrator’s family. Chicago Farmer’s aim here seems directed once more at a changing economy, one that used to provide satisfactory jobs for Midwesterners, either on farms or in factories, but has since rendered these institutions defunct, leaving the people in search of opportunity. He sings “thank God for the farm and the factories / thank the devil for the factory farm.” In retelling this brief, mostly detail-less history, however, it appears that Chicago Farmer’s concern is not truly complex economic despair and worn down, hardworking individuals who need a voice lifted on their behalf, but something more aligned with joining his voice in a nostalgic rank and file of troubadours singing work songs.

    The album’s penultimate song, “Homework,” continues in making rather obvious social observations, partly in reference to environmental destruction and denial, while placing the blame on a wide, vague swath of the citizenry, for which a cloudily aware, altruistic, and populist “we” becomes “the kid who does everyone else’s homework,” which precludes his half-hearted rallying cry, “we have a chance if we can enhance the number of us who’ll stand.”

    Midwest Side Stories concludes with a cover of John Hartford’s “I’m Still Here.” The approach to the song is reminiscent of Houser-era Widespread Panic, with whetted guitar leads, a solo section, a marching drumbeat, and savory vocals. It’s also refreshing to hear lyrics matching the high-stakes political matter at which the originals often obscure or only gesture toward, rather than point at, and it goes a long way in fleshing out the album’s narrator and vision to hear Chicago Farmer howling:

    My cigarettes are gone and so’s my money
    So are all my nerves and all my teeth
    My hair’s falling out, I’m looking funny
    My friends are either dead or on relief.

    When the last note ceases and the dust settles over Midwest Side Stories, what’s left is a readily accessible and highly entertaining volume of country-fried ballads in the Americana tradition, and while the songwriting is polished and the playing refined, the final product lands somewhere shy of the ambitious summit it sets for itself in the early going. Listeners get merely a glimpse of the broke-and-busted life and times of the folks of Tazewell County, Illinois, as the gritty detail and sludgy realism is mostly omitted, and the characters who appear in these weary tales are not granted the shape of their struggles or the use of their authentic voices, as Chicago Farmer flattens them to fit the contours of his traditional songwriting and the bent of his buttery vocals.

    Key Tracks 

    The Revolving Door

    Two Sides of the Story

    I’m Still Here

  • Interview with Within Shadows: Canadian Metal Band Launches Debut Album and Music Video

    Within Shadows - P. Cummings (5)Within Shadows released their debut album Mind = Enemy on December 21.  In conjunction with the release, they premiered the music video for “Get Up,” the first track on the album. And if that weren’t enough excitement for one week, the band also announced a show on January 14th at Lucky’s Roudhouse in Windsor, Ontario.

    This metal band from Ontario, Canada features Sean Farias (vocals/guitar), Jordan Heffernan (drums), Brad Tiessen (guitar), and Jacob Bailey (bass). NYS Music spoke with frontman Sean Farias about their ambitious 15-track album, the passion they poured into the making of the video, and their plans for 2017 and beyond.

    Paula Cummings: Your album is called Mind=Enemy. How did you choose the title?

    Sean Farias: We chose the title Mind=Enemy because it relates to the song themes that we portray lyrically. The majority of our songs relate to inner battles, struggles that we’ve had and about conquering those. This also helps bring a positive outlook to the listener and help them with the same problems.

    PC: Tell me about the tracks on the album.

    SF: The album is going to consist of 15 tracks, four of them being remakes of older Within Shadows tunes and 11 brand new songs. The songs will range from different metal genres like hardcore, easycore, djent, heavy metal and more. We have a new instrumental track called “Captive” where we try to recreate the concept of our EP song “Regrets” and have guitar solos through the whole song. “Demons” is a remake from an EP released a year ago. We have a song called “Djust Kill Me Now,” which was written during one the darkest times in my life. It is a collaboration with Derek Petricka of Discord Curse and Lucas Mann of Rings of Saturn. We also wanted to showcase that we like to play different genres by including a pop punk song called “On My Mind.” There are many more tracks to this album, and I promise there are many bumpin’ riffs to mosh to.Within Shadows - P. Cummings (3)

    PC: Which bands inspire you?

    SF: Our band is greatly influenced by other bands, such as Slipknot, Lamb of God, Beartooth, Tool, Billy Talent, Rings of Saturn and more. We are influenced by their musicianship and writing styles which we infuse into our own. Also we have seen the majority of these bands perform live, which in its own powerful way leaves us with extreme levels of motivation and the urge to write our own music.

    PC: What was it like to record your first music video together?

    SF: It was incredible! We had the honor of working with Ryan Brough of Zeebrah Media. He is a great guy, easy to work with, and made what was envisioned in our mind come to life. We are just as excited as our fan base to see the finished product. We wanted our first video to be the perfect representation of what we will be like live to anyone who would want to come see us. So it is literally us going buck wild in front of a camera playing our song “Get Up!” We had so much fun shooting this video. Jumping around for three hours was certainly tiring, but we brought the crazy throughout the whole shoot. Jacob Bailey even bled all over his bass from going so full out!

    PC: Jordan got to break out his new drum kit for the video, right?

    SF: Oh yes! He was most certainly excited about that. We all were. This new kit is magical!!!

    PC: You guys also help local charities.

    SF: That is one of our passions. We love to help out those in our community, and also contribute to local charities. When we raise enough money or make enough sales on our music and merchandise, we love to give a chunk of that to charity. For our EP Release the Disease, we ended up donating $500 to our local food bank, because of all the support our fan base gave us. We hope one day we can grow our band to a bigger level where we can help impact more people in a positive way and more on a global scale.

    PC: 2016 has been an eventful year for Within Shadows. What are your band goals for 2017?

    SF: Shows. Lots and lots of shows. Trying to get our band more exposure. Sending our new songs out to record labels and work with many people in the industry and other musicians. Also we want to record a lot more music videos for our tracks.

    Pre-orders for CD’s are being taken at their website. Digital downloads and streaming are available through Bandcamp, iTunes, and Google Play. 

    Photos by Ryan Brough of Zeebrah Media

    Within Shadows - P. Cummings (4)

  • NYS Music in Motion: An Interview with Dopapod

    Dopapod just wrapped up their Fall Tour with Pigeons Playing Ping Pong, performing more than 30 shows across the eastern half of the U.S. The guys sat down with NYS Music publisher Pete Mason prior to their Putnam Den show on October 26 to discuss collaborative sets with Turkuaz and The Werks, performing at Red Rocks and the return of Neal ‘Fro’ Evans to the lineup.

  • Hearing Aide: Azure Hiptronics ‘Ignacio’

    Ignacio, the fourteen-track, third studio album recorded by Netherlands band, Azure Hiptronics, never leaves a moment for boredom. Jam band style – yes, although generic jam band – not even close. Mixed with large synth, bass, guitar, piano, and drum parts, each track is completely different than the last, incorporating different elements than those expected.

    azure hiptronicsIgnacio combines genres and sounds that distinguish Azure Hiptronics from the rest. When listening to the fast paced introduction track, “Thgie Neves,” listeners already know that they have something great in store. Even though it does not take up much time, at nine-seconds, the introduction makes the story start by creating the image of a backwards time-lapse – starting the story from the beginning.

    The album tends to roll at a fast pace and then slows down with its various interlude tracks, “Anise Code” and “Interlude.” These pauses create sort of bookmarks that indicate when a new chapter of the story is to begin.

    “Airing” and “Saraswati Mantra” split up the story entirely and take listeners to a new place. They separate the past from the future, which allows for a refreshing break in tone from the first half of the album and adds a completely different element to the equation.

    Although the chapters that are separated by interludes and pace changes represent different stories, within each section there is not much variation of sound. Yes, there are many levels to this album, however at times it is hard to distinguish one track from the one preceding it. Nevertheless, Ignacio is a must listen for music fans looking for a jam band style with a twist. In any case, this album is sure to take listeners on a journey.

    Key Tracks: Work Out Something, Airing, Saraswati Mantra

  • 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.

  • Interview with Fossil Youth: Rising Indie Band Talks about Their Billboard Ranking, Debut Album and Upcoming Tour

    Indie Rock band Fossil Youth has risen from relative obscurity to become one of Billboard’s Top New Artists of 2016 – ranking at number 16. No one was more surprised than the band members themselves – Scottie Noonan (vocals/guitar), Hesston Sween (vocals/guitar), Derek Neef (bass) and Zack Jones (drums). From their hometown in the heartland, they spent a good part of the year crisscrossing the U.S., including a stop in Syracuse last summer.

    Just last month, Fossil Youth released their debut album, A Glimpse of Self Joy, through Take This To Heart Records. This poignant concept album is a meandering journey through a heartbreakingly painful relationship and its inevitable dissolution. However, some of the songs, like “Forest Eyes” and “Watercolor Daydream,” have stood on their own as singles. At times soft and lamenting,  and at other times heavy with angst, the music is always genuine and authentic.Fossil Youth - P. Cumming(1)

    Fossil Youth is embarking on the East Coast leg of their headlining national tour in January, with plans to play The Vault in Syracuse on January 27th.

    Frontman Scottie Noonan spoke with NYS Music about their music, the response to their album, their humble reaction to ranking on the Billboard Top New Artists List, and plans for 2017.

    Paula Cummings: Tell me a little about how you formed as a band.

    Scottie Noonan: The first release is 2014. But we started getting this all figured out in 2013. We all happen to live in the same small city of Oklahoma. We consider our home shows and home town Oklahoma City. We’re actually from a small city called Enid, which is an hour and a half north. In a way having to travel to other cities to play prepared us for touring. Having to drive two hours just to play local shows is helpful for the rest of the year, when we basically do that every day.

    PC: You put out an EP in 2015, Intertwined with You.

    SN: Yeah, and in 2014 we had the split. It was such a small thing. It’s also kind of cool to look back on. One of the songs from the split we actually rewrote and put on our new full-length. If you look it up online, you might actually see that.

    PC: And you did the Little Elephant recording. Tell me a little about that.

    SN: That was actually extremely cool. They’re a few guys out in Toledo, Ohio. And honestly, how it looks in the video is almost actually how it is. We showed up at their house. They already have experience recording bands, so they decided “Let’s put all this in our living room.” I think there was like 30 minutes of prep time and they say “Hey, go.” They set up a few cameras standing in places where they won’t actually get shots of each other and do these live sessions in their home. It’s honestly a whole lot of fun. Very, very nice people. I think that’s what helps make them unique, too, is the general experience.

    PC: It looks really cool. And they said they give half of the money from vinyl sales back to the bands.

    SN: I’m so excited about that because we’re trying to get back in there and do another session for our new songs. And it would be so cool to have a second vinyl release through them.

    [embedyt] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P7WKYHlbo_Q[/embedyt]

    PC: You know what else just came out was the Billboard Top New Artists of 2016 – you’re in at #16.

    SN: Out of 150. So to be that high up is truly insane, the most surreal feeling.

    PC: That must be validating as an artist to be recognized.

    SN: It was weird. It’s going to sound so lame, but never would I have ever guessed that maybe this early in our career would we hit that. So many friends are in bands a little bit larger, on larger labels, doing other things that scored really well, and we surpassed them. To have that high of a number was never expected, by any stretch. We were excited, like “Did we get number 150? Did we even just crack in there?” And being told we were number 16 is truly insane.

    PC: That is incredible. So who were some of the bands who influenced you? Who were you listening to ten years ago in your formative years?

    SN: Me, personally, I think some of my biggest influences were definitely some of the big pioneers like Fall Out Boy, My Chemical Romance. I think some that we’re getting compared to that were also a big influence for me were Cartel (I was extremely into the band Cartel), This Providence (a very, very cool band), and Cute is What We Aim For. I feel like that’s one that I don’t hear enough of, but was actually a really big deal for me in junior high.

    PC: Let’s talk about the album, A Glimpse of Self Joy. How was it different writing for the album than for the EP?

    Fossil Youth - P. Cummings (3)

    SN: When we were writing the EP we were excited we were writing songs. It was like “Yo, these are the best things we’ve put together.” And we were excited for that. But when it came time to actually sit and write the full length, we actually had the chance to truly as a group work on it. It was a lot more cohesive and I feel like everyone really put their piece into it. There’s a very light concept going on in the album. So it really felt good to preemptively know exactly how we wanted the story to play out and come across and I think that made it a little bit easier. It also made it very cool to be able to throw a large handful of very personal metaphors within it as well. It took a lot longer. Not only because there were more songs, obviously, but I think being able to actually work as a group made it so much cooler and I think that came with the comfort of being a band for a year and a half after the EP.

    PC: So how do you feel about the response to your album?

    SN: Honestly, it’s going to sound so monotonous, because I’ve said it so many times in this interview. It’s unreal. We knew it was better. I feel like, even from the inside while working on it we were like “Wow, I think we have a really cool thing going here.” But again, to score Billboard, to have our songs on larger Spotify playlists despite not having a large team behind us, having this many listeners putting us on their end of the year list, and this many people tweeting us every day is truly surreal. And on the tour we just did in November, we went to the west coast and we had four sold-out shows. We weren’t on a package, it was just us headlining. To have kids singing along to multiple songs on a set to an album that we just put out was like the craziest and most unreal feeling. And it still just feels like a dream. It’s crazy. And now we’re seeing how many kids are posting the fact that we’re going to the East Coast on this January tour and it’s just insane.Fossil Youth - P. Cummings (2)

    PC: You will be playing The Vault in Syracuse again. Do you remember playing there last summer?

    SN: In August. It was with Bonfires. Very cool show. Everyone was extremely nice. I really like its location. Maybe it’s a lame Oklahoma thing that I paid attention to that, but I love how many other places there were for me to go nearby. That was really cool.

    PC: Who are you playing with in Syracuse?

    SN: There’s a band called Everyone Leaves, from Ohio, and a band called Pine. They’re from Canada. It will actually be our first time meeting them.

    PC: Who are some of your favorite bands to tour with so far?

    SN: That is such a rough question. I think it’s going to be fair to say that there hasn’t been a band so far that we’ve dreaded touring with. But I have to give Bonfires so many props. I haven’t felt like there’s been a full band where like every single member just got us on every aspect. So even on small shows where morale might actually be low, we always had each other. And it felt like there was never a bad day, even when financially it would be a terrible night. Just always fun. Loved it so much.

    PC: What are your plans for 2017?

    SN: Relentless touring. So, so much touring. We’re looking at festivals, tours, short runs, and doing our absolute best to play Oklahoma more. I feel like because Oklahoma’s a smaller market, people may not recognize it. We’re just doing everything we can to hit everywhere and doing anything we want to do.

    [embedyt] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pH68cLi-Hs0[/embedyt]

  • Hearing Aide: Childish Gambino ‘Awaken, My Love!’

    Hearing Aide: Childish Gambino 'Awaken, My Love!'
    Hearing Aide: Childish Gambino ‘Awaken, My Love!’

    It’s a cultivation of everything interesting about music. There’s no other way to describe it because there are so many influences, some that the majority of his followers probably don’t know exist. But if it were to be described in a genre, it’d be something along the lines of this tongue twister: Psychedelic funk, rock and R&B with hints of new-age rap and electronic undertones. Unfortunately, he hasn’t created something revolutionary, he’s recreated the sound of the most beloved musicians of all time, and missed the mark on a track or two, but nonetheless has brought back one of the great forgotten sounds of music.

    It’s nothing like his older works which were heavily influenced by modern rap. But it makes for the perfect platform on which to build a fun, but very familiar sound. This is not to say his prior albums were simple, but they lacked instrumental color and were driven lyrically. Before the song-by-song analysis begins, some background knowledge is needed to understand how talented Donald Glover really is.

    He is not a stranger to the arts: He had two full albums and a few single releases prior to this one, he appears as Troy Barnes on Community as well as a starring role in Atlanta, a series which he created. He will also soon star as a young Lando Calrissian in an upcoming Star Wars movie. Point is, the guy knows what he’s doing and he does it pretty well. But of course, such a drastic change in his falsetto will result in a few quirks, because as stated before, this album is nothing close to what he released in 2013-14.

    Almost every track has the funky hooks of the classic 70’s funk bands but with the unpredictable musical direction of Zappa and even the ones that lack a little bit of complexity can still have some value to them.

    The first track is a bit misleading, especially if a listener reads this review first. It’s called “Me and Your Mama” and it can be interpreted as a transition into this genre. It starts with a simple, spacey trap modern rap beat, similar to his former albums, that suddenly drops into a completely different genre. It’s dramatic enough that it may sound like the next song on a shuffled Spotify playlist. The second part of the song is synonymous to that of Pink Floyd, with a slow, swaying groove, a female chorus ringing out in the background and some wailing guitar, that all fades out into something like Funkadelic’s “Maggot Brain” with echoing drums, and droning keys in the back. It’s an intense and perfect introduction to this album.

    “Have Some Love” and “Boogieman” have strong funk influences, with some tricky drumming, catchy breakdowns and that angelic chorus, all garnished with the perfect amount of spaciness. As stated before though, the sound is eerily similar to the funk Gods of the 70’s. This is not to say that he’s not a creative person, he just hasn’t created anything revolutionary here, but his mind is in the right place.

    “Zombies” is one of the tracks that may have “missed the mark.” It’s just weird. There isn’t a lot of musical complexity to it making the lyrics stand out more. But they’re not about anything deep or inspirational. It’s about zombies. “All I see is zombies, feeding all around us, all they eat are people… We’re eating you for profit… there is no safe place to hide.” He’s most likely not talking about The Walking Dead type of creature, but the lack of lyrical eloquence kind of ruins this song. That and it sound like he has a stuffy nose when he’s singing. But they can’t all be winners, as the saying goes.

    “Riot” comes next and brings back the technical funk heard at the beginning of the album, but isn’t necessarily a rioting song. It is still fantastic and fun to listen to though. “Redbone” was one of the singles released before the full album and was the most listened to track on the album according to Spotify. This is a fairly unique one, a little low on energy but it is also a love song, and pretty good one at that. It builds up nicely and has very colorful instrumentation making this a key track.

    As if there weren’t enough hard left turns, “California” pops up next and again gives the impression that the listener hit the shuffle button by accident. It’s a pretty adorable track that sounds like Jason Mraz, Sublime and Glover had a kid…. A really weird kid. It’s a tight sound with a strange association of instruments, including what sounds like glass bottles being blown into. It’s a key track not because everyone will love it, but it just further shows how Glover is taking a totally new direction with his music.

    Glover has got the nail into the board, but he isn’t striking it on the head just yet. At least he’s on the right board though. This must have been a fun project for him, and it’s very obvious that he’s not through with rap, but he’s moving onto more complex projects. Unfortunately, his old audience may not follow him, but he will undoubtedly gain some more attention with this collection.
    Key Tracks: Me and Your Mama, Have Some Love, RedBone, The Night Me and Your Mama Met

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kp7eSUU9oy8