Category: Rochester

  • Our 10 Favorite Sets at the 2017 Xerox Rochester International Jazz Fest

    A successful 2017 Rochester International Jazz Fest is in the books. Sadly, the best week on the calendar for avid music fans in the area is now in the rear view mirror. Though the memories will live on forever. We traipsed up and down and in and around the East End neighborhood for 9 straight nights, visiting most of the nearly 20 different venues and outdoor stages to take in over 30 different acts.

    The Club Pass sold at the festival allows festival-goers to access the different venues on their own schedule. Each band plays two sets per night providing the opportunity to mix and match across the different venues to create one of a seemingly infinite number of different combinations per evening. It’s a format that gives fans the ability to take chances on something different, something out of their comfort zone, or something completely unknown, risk free. Don’t like it? Leave and catch something else. Love it? Tell all your friends and head back for the second set. It doesn’t just give the opportunity, it encourages it. The festival’s mantra in fact is, ‘It’s not who you know, it’s who you don’t know.”

    Every year, this strategy and philosophy pays dividends with some astounding discoveries, usually from somewhere across the pond. This year was no different, and reflected very clearly in our choices for the top ten sets from the 2017 Xerox International Jazz Festival, maybe more so even than usual. The list is littered with strange names and sounds from abroad. Indeed, America’s only native art form is being pushed in some interesting and exciting directions from places elsewhere.

    Without further ado, here is our list for the top ten most memorable artists we saw this year (though we found a way to sneak an extra in there). Obviously we can’t comment on the sets we missed. Until Elon Musk invents a machine that allows you to be in more than one place at the same time, we’ll just have to come to terms with that. Is one of your favorites missing from our list? Let us know, we’d love to hear about it.

    10. Dinosaur at the Christ Church
    “You’ve tried the ribs, now hear the band! “—@MadeintheUKJazz

    Combine an active leading groove bass style similar to Phil Lesh, a vibrant somewhat understated but no less invigorating trumpet frequently reminiscent of Miles Davis’ “electric” period, keys and electronics evoking an 80’s-esque quasi-futurism, with a drummer who can hold the entire groove in tact regardless of how “out” it goes, you get a monster of a band called Dinosaur. This British quartet could jump from fun and quirky melodies into spacey formless improvisations and back again without ever losing the underlying groove, or the audience. They mixed in Beatles-like pop melodies, wild carnival marches and hyper speed funk outs for a set that left us smiling and had us marching right back to the Christ Church for a second helping.

    9. Binker and Moses at the Christ Church
    “We hope you enjoy the journey.”—Moses Boyd

    Saxophonist Binker Golding and drummer Moses Boyd together create a fluid and astounding mass of sound. With just the two of them and their instruments, no help from effects, electronics, nor loops, there was nowhere for either to hide. It also allowed for an incredible connection, the drums would cede the lead to the sax and vice versa, seamlessly passing the baton back and forth, until both were soaring to unexpected heights simultaneously. This wasn’t a showy affair, there weren’t many moments for straight-up solos, but plenty of mystifying two-part improvisations. With the limited sound possibilities it still never got monotonous. The melodies ranged from free form soundscapes to Caribbean groove to highly accessible James Brown-style funk. They played selections from their brand new album, Journey to the Mountain of Forever, and what an interesting journey it was.

    8. Lera Lynn at Squeezers Stage at Anthology
    “The thing about jazz is you just keep reinventing it, so anything goes”—Lera Lynn

    Folk singer-songwriter Lera Lynn might not have understood completely what she was doing at a jazz festival, but she was happy to get into the spirit. Flanked by two additional guitarists, Jody Duke and Tony Lombardo, it was a three-guitar folk assault. The three guitars worked their way around each other in different ways all night, maximizing the combination of sounds and styles, keeping the audience on it’s toes. Similarly, the guitarists provided backing vocals and harmonies in two and three parts in varying combinations, providing a much more dynamic performance then was expected from the setup. She played from across her three albums, including some of the music she wrote for HBO’s True Detective, like her haunting hit “My Least Favorite Life,” which she wrote with Roseann Cash and T Bone Burnett. Later she would close her set with Roseann’s father’s “Ring of Fire,” reworked to nearly a standstill, allowing for it to build and burst with intensity. Not used to filling up two sets of music, she filled in the gaps with some as-yet recorded material, including a first time performance of “Easy That Way,” which in a bit of a rawer state gave a glimpse to her craft and process. If the new tunes are any indication, Lynn’s name is one we expect to be hearing much more of in the future.

    7. The Jerry Douglas Band at City of Rochester East Ave. & Chestnut St.
    “Don’t try to dance, it’ll hurt.”—Jerry Douglas

    Dobro-ist extraordinaire Jerry Douglas brought his new band, just ahead of their new album out in early August, to the crowd amassed at the big outdoor stage on Chestnut Street. The band at seven strong included fiddle, bass, guitar and even a trumpet and saxophone joining Douglas’ dobro. They played a good mix of originals like “Cave Bop,” a song about a dream involving Fred Flintstone and Charlie Parker riding together in a car pushed by Barney Rubble, “Gone to Fortingall,” about the location of Douglas’ musical web series, and “Battlestick,” a slow and slinky funk-up about fly fishing. But they also threw in some choice covers like “Hey Joe” and “Something You Got” that gave Douglas the chance to show off what was surprisingly a nice husky and bluesy voice. The highlight of the set though was a thematic and orchestral sounding instrumental which he introduced as “something wayyyyy different.” Throughout the evening Douglas was willing to cede the spotlight to his fantastic guitarist and fiddle player, showing restraint on his mastery of the dobro, but he still shined brightly when called upon.

    6. Yggdrasil/Eivor at Lutheran Church
    “This drumstick looks like it just woke up”—Eivor

    Yggdrasil was the very first set we caught at this year’s festival. They provided a very high bar for the remainder of the performances. A band from the Faroe Islands about halfway between Norway and Iceland, there was a mystical quality to the music before you even heard a single note. It is a sense that only grows stronger the longer you watch and listen. The brainchild of pianist and composer Kristian Blak, he presides over his much younger band like a shaman of the unusual ethos he has set out for the band. Eivor, the enchanting singer, could soar to the churches high ceilings in Norwegian, Faroese, English, or even nonsense syllables and noises. The music was often rooted in the past, a Faroese traditional folk song, a Shakespearean sonnet, a Native American chant, but the sounds were decidedly current, with wild guitar effects and electronic enhancements, At it’s most intense. The music mixed Radiohead and Portishead sensibilities with prog rock wildness. But there were great dynamics within the set, bringing it all the way down to a gentle folksy duet with just Kristian and Eivor.

    The following night, Eivor would play with her own band in the same venue. Her incredible voice remained, but in this format, she played guitar and was joined by a drummer and keyboard player. The music was more accessible, focusing more on her singing and songs, hewing toward folk rock, on originals like “Bridges” and “The Right Shoes.” She still found space for some traditional tribal-esque Norwegian music that saw Eivor making guttural noises while banging a large drum head with a well-worn mallet. She told a great story about her first trip to Rochester 13 years ago, when she purchased the guitar she had been playing at the famous House of Guitars. She made her way back to the House of Guitars that afternoon and purchased another guitar, which she proceeded to play for the first time then and there, for a stunning cover of Leonard Cohen’s “Famous Blue Raincoat.” New and old, it all sounded great to our ears.

    5. Klabbesbank at Lutheran Church
    “You shouldn’t try to translate names I don’t think.” —Klas-Henrik “Klabbe” Horngren

    The Nordic Jazz Now series provides an endless well of strange and interesting music to the XRIJF lineup on a yearly basis. The chances of being familiar with bands booked in the series are slim to none, so there is usually an element of surprise, even when you’re fully expecting it to be different and wonderful by reputation from past bookings alone. This year Swedish band Klabbesbank scratched the discovery itch the hardest for a highly satisfying set of jazzy electronic madness. A three-horn front line consisting of clarinet/sax, trombone and trumpet were backed up by Horngren leading the way on keys, a drummer and bassist. All but the brass players were also equipped with extensive electronic pedals and effects. The drummer was the most heavily equipped, and at one point the music broke down to just him throwing around samples and alien squonks and screeches, before pulsing a literal heartbeat that woke the others into joining along for a bombastic finish to the tune. The horn players were rarely syncopated like a normal horn section, they weaved three-part textures that could provide a backing soundscape or blast into the fore. For much or the set the music could be described as instrumental post-rock, mixing elements of Tortoise with the electronic bent of Battles,. Other moments channeled avant-garde jazz, with a funky flair, not unlike The Lounge Lizards. Exhilarating through and through.

    4. Dakha Brakha at the Big Tent
    “Peace and love, thank you so much.”—Marko Halanevych

    From embattled Ukraine, Dakha Brakha, dressed quasi-traditionally with brightly colored silk dresses and tall furry black headdresses, were a stark reminder of the connection music can make across the cultural divide. Their banter was limited and it was clear they weren’t completely comfortable addressing the crowd in English, but the music immediately reached out and grabbed the audience in a way no words could anyway. It was almost a complete departure from anything anyone in the crowd had ever heard before, yet it didn’t take more than a minute or so for every single person who made their way into the tent to be completely rapt. The quartet sat in chairs in a row across the stage, with what appeared to be minimal instrumentation, but as the set went on and they played more and more interesting instruments that seemed to appear from out of nowhere, various drums and pieces of percussion, cello, piano, accordions, ukulele, harmonica and on. But perhaps most interesting of all was their voices, three gorgeous female vocalists singing together in harmony or in hypnotic round, and a singular no less enchanting male voice that was used at one point to mimic a trumpet and another to mimic a horn in a stunning bit of improvisation. In once piece they abandoned the beauty of their voices for more of a quick chanting that for all intents and purposes was a rap, complete with a funky groove and off beat “Heys.” As they put their instruments down for the final time, the male of the group, Marko Halanevych held up the Ukrainian flag and said, “Peace and love.” That message we got loud and clear.

    3. Bill Frisell and Thomas Morgan at Kilbourn Hall
    “Thomas!”—Bill Frisell

    Bill Frisell was back showcasing his guitar prowess at the festival for the sixth time. Each visit has been a different band and a different experience altogether. Frisell’s music is so entrenched in improvisation that even the early and late sets had distinguishable characteristics that set them apart. Frisell was playing in just a stripped down duo format with bassist Thomas Morgan. Morgan played a acoustic upright bass while Frisell made use of effects and looping to add some depth. Frisell and Morgan stood a few feet apart, facing each other, occasionally eyeing one another intently. They didn’t speak, rather communicating through the music. Frisell didn’t even address the crowd until just before the last number of the set, breaking the silence with a single exclamatory, “Thomas!” As one of them would run a line the other would closely follow, passing musical messages back and forth, letting the eureka moments find themselves. They were like two fish swimming in a stream, drifting along the current, sometimes fighting against it, then finding an eddy in which they could circle around for a little while, before getting pulled out by the current once again floating away. As a duo this process was greatly exposed for the audience to bear witness how these glorious bits of music emerged almost out of nowhere.In the early set, melodies took a back seat to experimentation. In the late set, the duo leaned into more recognizable melodies as they strung together a long non-stop improvisation that wound its way around tunes like “Epistrophy,” “When You Wish Upon a Star,” “Baba Drame,” “Goldfinger” and “What the World Needs Now.”

    2. Neil Cowley Trio at Christ Church
    “What ungodly music to play in a church!”—Neil Cowley Trio

    Neil Cowley is the most heard pianist in the world, which isn’t a joke. He has played on both of Adele’s albums. But the way he and his band mates, Rex Horan on bass and Evan Jenkins on drums, pounded their way through their set they made certain they were heard loud and clear in Rochester too. The stone walls of the Christ Church threatened to crumble from the decibel levels they achieved almost entirely acoustically. The wooden pews were struggling to contain the involuntarily bouncing bodies trying to stay respectfully seated, while some in attendance couldn’t resist releasing some rock-ready whoops and howls. There have been rock bands on the docket in years past at the Rochester Jazz Festival, but no band that has rocked as hard as this trio. They played as singular a unit, ratcheting up the intensity rather than straying too far from the composition. The British wit came out both in the banter, “Are you just here to get out of the rain? That’s when we’re most popular. Very much a get out of the rain kind of band,” and also in the songs, one about a chicken who witnesses a crime, another about a spider the size of a cat that lives on their street.

    1. Shabaka and the Ancestors at Harro East Ballroom
    “We need new hymns”—Siyabonga Mthembu

    We saw a lot of music in churches over the course of the festival, but no set was more of a religious experience than Shabaka and the Ancestors. Shabaka Hutchings is a London-based saxophonist with Caribbean roots. For The Ancestors album he recorded in South Africa with South African musicians. The result is a modern Afro-Caribbean masterpiece, with elements of Sun Ra and John Coltrane. Two saxes, bass, drums and percussion formed a mass of music that was almost impossible to comprehend in a single moment. There were solos and leads that were easier to follow, but when a solo doesn’t end and the other members add their bits into the mix, building and building in intensity, finally adding a singer above it all, it becomes a lot to take in. Vocalist Siyabonga Mthembu would use quiet moments within and between different pieces to chant mini sermons of a sort. “In the burning of the republic of the mind, we need new people, we need new hymns.” “We need to feminize our politics.” “How can the 99 percent be controlled by the one percent?” Spiritual, political, the music serving to enhance and inflate the messages. They had one foot in the past, one foot in the present, and one foot in the future. Their issues were simultaneously the issues of the past present and future. The music was as well. The themes from tracks off their album, Wisdom of Elders, “Mzwandile,” “The Observer,” and “Nguni” found their way into the set, but it felt more free-wheeling then distinct songs. More important was the message, which like those of religious hymns, was more effectively communicated through the power of song.

    We’d be remiss not to mention some of the other great music that caught our ear over the course of the festival. New York horn band Huntertones shined on their originals, but a gorgeous rendition of “God Only Knows” really stood out. The Billy Childs Quartet was as good a standard jazz outfit we witnessed, with the backing band of Dayna Stephens (sax), Ben Rhodes (bass) and especially Ari Hoenig (drums) really standing tall. John Paul White sounded great with his post-Civil Wars solo band on tunes like “Simple Song” and a surprising cover of ELO’s “Can’t Get It Out of My Head.” Dustbowl Revival, a string band with a horn section, used each of its eight pieces to their advantage, moving from swing to ska to folk to blues to funk to rock and everything in between. Jazz bands improvise. But when bands like the Eric Krasno Band or Electric Kif improvise, it’s called jamming. Krasno jammed on the bluesier side with quality covers of the Allman Brothers’ “Whipping Post” and Janis Joplin’s “Move Over,” while Miami’s Electric Kif took the fusion route covering half of Herbie Hancock’s “Thrust” before dropping a stunning version of Radiohead’s “Weird Fishes.” There were lots of great trios to be had at the festival. Phronesis returned to the festival for the third time, proving once again why they’re considered one of the best piano trios on the scene today, providing many jaw dropping moments. Austrians Mario Rom Interzone gave an impressive new look at the composition-focused trio with a trumpet replacing the usual piano. Charlie Hunter sounded great in his return to the trio format, back where it all began for him, but in a decidedly bluesier direction this time around. Ikonostasis provided heavy doses of Nordic weirdness, becoming the first Moog trio we’ve ever seen. We closed out our festival with the special 4 By Monk By 4 set, which gave us the opportunity to see four great pianists, Benny Green, George Cables, Kenny Baron and Cyrus Chestnut pay tribute to “the high priest of bebop.” We don’t need any more proof than that, music is a religion, and the Rochester Jazz Fest is a sacred holiday.

    Additional Jazzfest photos by Darren Kemp

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    Additional Jazzfest photos by Brian Ferguson

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  • Tedeschi Trucks Band Smokes the Highland Bowl

    The third edition of Tedeschi Trucks Band‘s summer bonanza known as the Wheels of Soul rolled through Rochester, a city that has been lucky enough to have hosted the tour all three years. This year, as last, Highland Bowl, the criminally underused natural amphitheater right in the city, served as the venue.

    tedeschi trucks highland bowl

    Classic blues rock trio, and Jefferson Airplane offshoot, Hot Tuna brought their “electric” version to kick things off. Running through a set of oldies but goodies, the band found plenty of room for rocking out. The crowd, near capacity at showtime, was raring to go from the start and these boys certainly satisfied. Guitarist Jorma Kaukonen played right to the local crowd’s hearts, “People say to me, Rochester? Isn’t it bleak up there? Not today it ain’t!” It was sunny and 72, quite literally, so he wasn’t lying. Kaukonen ground out some gritty guitar action on most every tune, but in the closing “Funky #7,” bassist Jack Casady took the reins blasting fuzzy bass bombs in a massive set sendoff. Legends in their own right, if they’re opening on a three-band bill it must be quite a bill. And, of course, it was!

    The Wood Brothers were up next. It started eerily with bassist Chris Wood bowing his upright while bending the strings with a stick, creating a cool Theremin-like sound. “You give me chills when you sing so sweet,” sang guitarist Oliver Wood on the opening “Stumbled In.” Their sweet tooth would continue to show throughout the set. “I just heard National Chocolate Day was yesterday. We have a song for that.” he exclaimed before kicking into “Chocolate On My Tongue.” Then later they were baking some “Shoofly Pie.” Then the band invited Susan Tedeschi to sing on “Never and Always.” Talk about sweet! It would  be the first of many sit-ins on the night. Chris Wood didn’t pick up his electric bass during their short set, but he did do some wild dancing, both with his acoustic bass, on “Snake Eyes,” and solo, all over the stage on the set closing “One More Day.” When Oliver introduced the band members, dancing was on his brother Chris’ list of instruments. Is dancing an instrument? One issue with such a fantastic lineup, the sets all felt too short. The Wood Brothers seemed to be leaving the stage just as they were getting going.

    tedeschi trucks highland bowl

    Tedeschi Trucks Band took the stage and immediately asked, “Are You Ready?” The crowd, fully up and dancing for the first time of the evening, answered with a resounding “Yes!” before the band quickly jumped into “Made Up Mind.” After two straight trios, the twelve-man rightly seemed enormous. They have amassed a monster of a band with enough talent to power multiple smaller bands. They are the Wall of Sound of bands. They are incredibly tight, stopping on a dime, morphing from song to song, jam to jam, following guitarist Derek Trucks through every masterful and adventurous solo, expanding and contracting through the setlist like a well-oiled machine.

    Somehow, in about 90 minutes time, they also managed to ensure every member got it’s day in the sun without it feeling like a round robin of solos. A free form fusion-y breakdown in “Don’t Know What It Means” featured incredible sax work by Kebbi Williams and low end wizardry by bassist Tim Lefebvre. Trumpeter Ephraim Owens got his turn in a funky jam during “I Wish I Knew,” which also featured Alecia Chakour and Mark Rivers trading vocal solos. Of course longtime Trucks vocalist Mike Mattison took the lead vocals from Susan Tedeschi on a few numbers, including a ripping take on the Derek and the Dominoes classic, “Anyday.”

    Toward the end of the show the band received even more players. All three Wood Brothers sat in for the band’s debut of the Rolling Stone’s “Sweet Virginia.” Oliver Wood and Tedeschi shared vocal duties while Chris Wood replaced Lefebvre on bass. Immediately following, Hot Tuna came on stage for their turn, this time to help on a cover of the blues classic “The Sky Is Crying.” Lefebvre and Casady shared bass duties, eyeing each other from across the stage, while Kaukonen and Trucks jawed with a tangle of blues licks.

    The set once again seemed to end way too early. But the final band had the advantage of coming out for an encore. And the Tedeschi Trucks Band saved the best for last. If you were there to see Derek Trucks play guitar, you got what you paid for in the encore alone, so hopefully you stayed until the end. Trucks fired off some impossibly quick notes and blazed onward and upward from there. Eventually he came back down to earth, only to arrive at heavy teases of the Allman Brothers “Les Brers,” which the rest of the band picked up for a short jam. A one-song near fifteen minute encore sated the excited crowd. As the show came to a close, a full moon emerged over the tree line to guide everyone home after a smoking night in the Highland Bowl.

    Set Lists

    Hot Tuna
    Living Just For You, Sea Child, I Can’t Be Satisfied, Come Back Baby, Water Song, Funky #7

    The Wood Brothers
    Stumbled In, Tried and Tempted, Chocolate On My Tongue, Snake Eyes, Keep Me Around, Shoofly Pie, Never and Always*, One More Day
    * with Susan Tedeschi on vocals

    Tedeschi Trucks Band
    Are You Ready > Made Up Mind, Don’t Know What It Means, Anyday, Midnight in Harlem, Get Outta My Life Woman, Let Me Get By, Sweet Virginia*, The Sky Is Crying**, I Wish I Knew E: I Want More
    *with Chris Wood on bass, Oliver Wood on guitar and vocals, Jano Rix on keys
    **with Jorma Kaukonen on guitar, Jack Casady on bass

  • King Buffalo Headlines Hometown Show on Eve of European Tour

    King Buffalo is taking off this week for their maiden European tour. Last year’s debut album Orion was well received both here and abroad, and they were booked to play with the Elder on across Europe and the North America. Before embarking on this adventure, they celebrated with a hometown show on Saturday, July 8 at The Bug Jar. Billed as the King Buffalo European Send Off, the show included support from Fuzzrod and Malarchuk.

    King Buffalo are no strangers to the Bug Jar. They’ve been playing at the quirky Monroe Avenue bar throughout the four years since the band formed. Show flyers are plastered on the windows below the groovy 60’s-inspired painted sign. King Buffalo’s merchandise table was set up near the front door, and included some new t-shirt designs, their album Orion on vinyl, and a variety of other products.

    I made my way past the bar and pool table to the other side of the bar, where I could hear the beginnings of a sound check. At first viewing, the room looks like any other venue, with a stage, a spot for the sound guy, and a bunch of band stickers on the walls. But look up, and there’s a fully-furnished apartment affixed upside down to the ceiling.

    Equally surprising was the first opening act. A supergroup recently formed from members of local bands, Fuzzrodd was a throwback to the antiestablishmentarian punk ethos. Their debut EP is called Fake News, and the political reference is a reminder of the rebellious origins of punk rock. Audience members chanted along to the catchy chorus “F— work, just give me the money.”

    Next up was the Buffalo band Malarchuk. They specialize in hard rock with a metal edge. The first song of their set was “Night Tear’r (Long Jammer),” which spanned an impressive 24 minutes. Lyrics are minimal on most of their songs, the emphasis mainly on rocking the guitar-bass-percussion triad. The audience at Bug Jar is known for participation. In between songs, one person yelled “Bawitdaba” and the lead singer completed the Kid Rock lyric “da bang a dang diggy.”

    Sean McVay

    The excitement in the air was palpable as King Buffalo took the stage. Without much ado, they launched into a jam that I quickly surmised was one of their new songs. Dan Reynolds laid down a thick bass line and Scott Donaldson produced a heavy beat which typify King Buffalo’s bluesy sound. Singer Sean McVay contributed reverberated melodic guitar riffs and vocalizations. They weren’t lyrics, but primordial sounds that resonated with the music and transcended the need for language.

    Everyone in the room was transfixed, caught up in the trance of psychedelic vibes, as the music flowed through songs from Orion, including “Sleeps on a Vine,” “Monolith,” and “Kerosene.” With the spotlight dimmed, they played within the glow of the LED-laced amps and drum kit. The music went on for a solid sixty minutes, with only a brief pause to thank the opening bands, but it hardly seemed enough.

    Scott Donaldson

    After the finale, “Drinking from the River Rising,” the crowd clamored for one more song. McVay conferred with Donaldson and Reynolds, then announced an encore. They chose “Orion,” the title and lead track from the LP, an epic soundscape infused with mythological lyrics. When it concluded, lights went up, and the guys beside me raised their cans of Genesee beer in salute.

    King Buffalo hung around to celebrate after their set. They perform in Germany on Friday, then make their way across the continent, from Austria to the Netherlands. After a break, they begin the North American tour, kicking off at St. Vitus in Brooklyn on October 28. For tour dates and tickets, visit their website.

    Dan Reynolds
  • TreadWater: Innovating Hardcore and Fostering the Underground Music Community

    TreadWater is an integral part of Rochester’s thriving underground music scene. As well as their own musical contribution, a member of the band is actively involved in fostering the growth of the DIY community by arranging shows for local and traveling up-and-coming indie artists.

    NYS Music met up with TreadWater members Steve Haramis, Caleb Barefoot, and Adam Kramer at Vineyard Community Space. This foursquare house owned by Monroe Park Vineyard Church sits beside a former church converted into an arcade. Like the place where they practice and perform, TreadWater is a study in contrast – their music is hardcore at heart, but full of surprising elements such as classic rock beats, crisp guitar riffs, tempo changes, and melodic segments.

    Photo by Corinne Cummings

    Paula Cummings: Tell me about the formation of the band. You guys got together last year, right?

    Steve Haramas: We were all in bands previously together. Adam and Caleb were in Rhema most recently, and before that Adam and I were in a band called Endangered Youth. I said “We should be in a hardcore band.” So that was it. It was that easy. I think when you’ve been friends for years, you don’t have to talk about it, you just do it. We practiced for a couple months, tried to find what kind of sound we wanted.

    Adam Kramer: I feel like things came together pretty quickly because we have a chemistry because we’ve all played together.

    Caleb Barefoot: My band before played with Endangered Youth quite a few times, so we knew each other from playing shows together since 2013.

    PC: How did you decide on a band name?

    AK: It was a long process.

    SH: It’s never been that hard to name a band. Every other band I’ve been in was it was like “That’s the band name, there it is.” (snaps fingers)

    CB: You usually have an idea of what the band’s going to sound like and you pick a name to fit the style. That’s easy. But with this, we talk about influences and what we’re good at playing. We went into it not knowing what to expect or what would come of it. We had been writing a lot. We had the EP written before we came up with a name. Once you have so much written it’s hard to come up with what the band means. It’s like working backwards, I guess. Trying to get the name to fit the band rather than the band fitting into the name.

    SH: I think that’s good because when you try to follow the footsteps of the name or a certain sound you’re restricted to that thing. We just let it go where it went and named it based on that.

    CB: We had a couple stand-in names, but then one practice Steve said, “I have a name, how about Treading Water.” And I said, “What about TreadWater, because Zao, a band we like, has an album called Treadwater. It fits our style.

    PC: You guys have a really interesting sound. Who are some of the bands who have influenced you?

    CB: Other than Rhianna?

    SH: Some are unconscious. You start playing, then you go back and you hear things. But nothing is consciously in my head like, “I want this to sound like that.” The influence is unconscious.

    CB: We listen to a lot of the same bands: Solid State, Tooth and Nail Records, mid-2000’s.

    AK: Early metalcore.

    CB: Early hardcore crossover into metalcore.

    SH: Zao, obviously.

    CB: Norma Jean, Chariot.

    AK: Early Underoath.

    SH: I listen to a lot of 90’s screamo, too.

    PC: So how do you get your sound? What gear are you using?

    CB: You push it as loud as it can go.

    SH: You can make something sound clean and distort it at the same time. I want something that still has some character to it. It’s dirty and has some grunge to it, but it’s not indiscernible. You can still pick apart the different tones in there. It’s the reason why I use a Stratacaster to play is because I feel it’s a guitar not used for metal, so it’s interesting to try to use it to make that sound. It still has a lot of character to it.

    CB: I guess Nirvana and The Melvins are a couple more influences, my big influences as far as drums. My mindset in recording was more classic rock. I use a vintage 1970’s drum set.

    AK: I’ve been playing though a Thunderbird bass. I’m not much of a gear-head, but the Thunderbird sounds great.

    CB: Just loud and open is what our band tries to achieve.

    SH: It’s loud and you can feel it when you listen to it. You let it break apart and lose it’s intricacy when you play live, but it’s more about the feel of the set. You push the volume and feeling.

    treadwater
    Photo by Corinne Cummings

    PC: You recently put out your first release, Arrows In The Sun. Tell me about the songs on it.

    AK: As far as the lyrics for the songs, the lyrics were put together at the last minute. We didn’t intend on Steve and I being the main vocalists. We had other people who had come to practice, but it didn’t work out.

    SH: A few weeks before our first show, we still didn’t have anyone, so we sat here in this room and wrote the lyrics and rehearsed it quick.

    AK: That’s why this first stuff is minimalist as far as lyrics. It’s more about the music. We were going for catchiness.

    SH: It’s not about how much you say. You can say a couple lines and you can make it punchy and have an impact.

    CB: I think the band in general is continuing that with the new songs to be more minimalist with vocals and lyrics, and focusing more on making decent songs musically.

    SH: I wrote three songs and Caleb wrote two. “Burning Bark” is about family, distance from family, and the process of going through that. “Backwards” is about frustrations with your own limitations and behavior. Hence, “Backwards,” not wanting to regress and wanting to move forward. “Speak” is about life and death and what’s important, which is love.

    CB: I wrote “Shattered” and “Pretender.” Well, “Pretender” Steve and I co-wrote the lyrics. They’re more about frustration with hypocrisy and the judgmental.

    SH: It’s funny because when we were in Endangered Youth, generally we were angsty about something all the time. And now it was like, “I don’t know what to write about.” I had to actually think about what I wanted to write about that means something. We’re not as angsty as we used to be.

    CB: I think that’s a good thing. It’s about love and death.

    SH: And “Signals” is just a transition track. It was one of the original names of the band that we threw out. So we threw it on there as a recognition of that name.

    treadwater
    Photo by Corinne Cummings

    PC: We’re here at Vineyard Community Space, where you rehearse and play sometimes. Who are some of the bands you’ve met through being here?

    AK: Mostly it’s people we’ve known since before being in this band. This next weekend we’re going to do two shows with this band called Condition Oakland from Pennsylvania. And Tyler, the main songwriter in that band, he and I have been friends since we were 17. And we’ve always played different music genre-wise. When he plays solo it’s folk punk, and sometimes he plays with a full band and it’s hot water music, that style of punk rock. And we are what we are. But they’re some of our best friends.

    SH: And California Cousins.

    AK: We play with them at The Bug Jar. I appreciate those guys so much. They are the backbone of the DIY scene in Rochester. Almost every show that happens in this space, there’s a member of California Cousins here. So it’s been cool to get to know those guys and work together with them. And the guys from Druse, they’ve been really cool as well.

    SH: Tim Avery is always part of the shows, too.

    CB: We played with a band called Mother Moon from Baltimore. It was one of the only bands we’ve played with so far that we’ve sounded similar to. We didn’t feel like the odd band out on the show.

    PC: Does having such an eclectic sound make you more versatile and able to jump onto shows with different sounds?

    SH: The bands we’re playing with tonight, I imagine it would be hard for them to jump on certain shows because it’s straight death metal. It wouldn’t work. But if you’re more punk rock you can slip onto other shows. Our set has a lot of diversity, too. We have different songs – new and the EP. Tonight, we’ll play more of the heavy stuff but next week, we’ll play more of the melodic stuff. We tailor to the show we’re playing and morph a bit.

    AK: Steve and I come from a scene that’s really small in central Pennsylvania. The first shows I played, I was in this really crappy emo band. We were playing shows with death metal bands. That’s what I grew up around, this diverse scene, because there’s not enough people in each individual subgenre. It’s part of where I come from, so I like to continue that in the booking and the shows we play.

    SH: And those people who come will stay throughout the shows from across genres. They don’t just see one thing and leave. They participate in anything.

    CB: We haven’t played with any hip hop bands yet. I wish we would. That would be awesome.

    PC: So Adam, you book some of the shows here.

    AK: Myself and Tim Avery book the shows here.

    PC: Do you have a philosophy behind who you look for?

    AK: If a band asks me for help – I get a lot of messages just because of the network of DIY booking and touring – I try to help them out. If it’s a young band, even if I don’t think they’re that good, but they’re touring and putting themselves out there, I want this to be a place where we’re supportive of young artists.

    SH: It’s not about the musicality, it’s about the attitude. You have to be supportive, open-minded and laid back.

    AK: Generally, good attitudes. Most people play in bad bands before they play in bands that are less bad. So hopefully this can be that for locals and for bands coming through on their first tours. That’s it – just foster a community, more than just a spot to put on shows.

    TreadWater has a weekend show swap with Condition Oakland coming up. They’re both part of a show on July 7 at The Drunken Monkey in Ashland, PA and July 8 at Vineyard Community Space in RochesterVineyard Community Space is an all-ages alcohol/drug-free environment committed to being a safe space to foster the arts and music.

    Arrows In The Sun was recorded at 1809 studios in Macedon, NY with the help of Dave Drago. It is available to stream or purchase on Bandcamp.

    Follow TreadWater on Facebook for updates.

  • Concerts By the Shore Series Brings Bands to the Beach in Rochester

    Rochester’s Concerts By the Shore series returns this season with free shows on Wednesdays from 7-9 p.m. at Ontario Beach Park. The park features access to the beach and pier, a playground, and a vintage carousel. Performances take place at the gazebo, and include the return of local favorites: Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra, the Skycoasters, Brass Taxi, Ruby Shooz, and more.

    Concerts By the Shore Schedule

    July 5 – Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra (Classical)
    July 12 – The Invictas (Rock & Roll)
    July 19 – The Skycoasters (Party Band)
    July 26 – Krazy Firemen (German & Big Band)
    Aug. 2 – Brass Taxi (Pop & Dance)
    Aug. 9 – Atlas (Party Band)
    Aug. 16 – Greece Jazz Band
    Aug. 23 – Allegro (Jazz, 60’s to 90’s)
    Aug. 30 – Ruby Shooz (50’s & 60’s Rock & Roll)

    Refreshments are available for purchase. For more information, call the Ontario Beach Park Information Line (585) 865-3320 or visit the Ontario Beach website here.

  • Hearing Aide: A Fitting Revenge ‘Tempus Fugit’

    Ever since my first local show experience in my hometown of Syracuse, N.Y, I was addicted to finding local bands. The one thing us New Yorkers know best is how to make our own brand of metal. Look around in the Central New York area and you will find some of the most talented bands you can find from Ire Clad, which has some of the best mixture of Black Sabbath’s doom approach mix with some of the hard rock vibrations of Soundgarden, and Vile Tyrant who continues to liberate the black metal underground with their melodic approach to the genre. New York bleeds metal! To present my case, I give you this album review of A Fitting Revenge’s album, Tempus Fugit. I now have the floor!

    a fitting revengeA Fitting Revenge is based out of Rochester, N.Y. We have Ledwing Hernandez on both guitars and vocals to bring the battlecry, Chris Xu on guitar to help bring the groove back to the mosh floor, Chandler Moran on bass to make your skin vibrate with excitement, and Aaron Smith on drums fueling the fire with his sonic attack behind the kit! Tempus Fugit is a deadly cocktail of groove and melody. The track “Cured of Faith” has some of the best groove induced execution I have seen in recent years. The band’s influences really show here. From the vocal approach much in the style of Randy Blythe, from Lamb of God, to the very catchy riff playing similar to Dimebag Darrell, the band still gives this track some NY style flavor. Hernandez’s vocals are just murderous and carries very well with the intricate drumming of Smith; by far my favorite track from the group. Moran’s bass playing will make you pick up your feet as Smith’s sounds the battle drums! Prepare for a moshpit for this one!

    Even with the intense amount of aggression, you can still find some of the best melodic material from A Fitting Revenge. The track for me that screams out to in this manner is the beautifully constructed ‘Quiverfull’. The guitars harmonize very well on this song. Xu and Hernandez really have that chemistry to make this song hit hard. It is like taking a punch from Tyaon; yes including the ear biting! The fingering and precision is remarkable. Not even once when I was this demon did they lose my attention on this track; superb. Extremely catchy and melodic, it will have you begging for more as Hernandez’s guitar soars and compounds the solos with no struggle. The bass playing of Moran is spot on as it helps propel the emphasis of the bottom end of the song with the help of Smith’s very technical playing to keep that neck of yours breaking!

    These musicians are extremely talented in what they do. With the aggressive tracks, like “Cured of Faith” and “Quiverfull,” and the melodic tracks, like the instrumental “Neuromancer” and “Wintermute,” the band no doubt has mastered their craft. In my opinion you should check out this band if you need a groove fix for your collection. I give this album 5 out of 5 horns. Go to the band’s links below to show your support!

    Key Tracks: Cured of Faith, Quiverfull, The Noose

  • Interview: The Dirty Pennies on Developing Their Own Style of Blues

    The Dirty Pennies play a mean twelve bar blues. However, they don’t box themselves into the genre. They use the blues as a springboard to launch into other musical directions.

    Their debut album Kick Out The Rocks demonstrates this versatility – from the boogie-woogie title track to the alt rock “Explosions” and the folk ballad “Man on a Wire.” The Dirty Pennies started as a duo five years ago, with Ryan Klem on vocals and lead guitar and Lucas Howe on drums. Last year, bassist Joe Mungo joined the group. NYS Music sat down with the trio at Boulder Coffee Co. in their hometown of Rochester to discuss the evolution of the band and their sound.

    Lucas Howe, Joe Mungo, Ryan Klem

    Paula Cummings: Ryan and Lucas, you started as a duo about 5 years ago. How did you meet & decide to start a band?

    Lucas Howe: We played in another band before that wasn’t really our cup of tea, you could say, and then we both decided to jam and start our own thing.

    Ryan Klem: I remember when we were playing in the band, but we both had different writing styles. I came from the singer-songwriter style. We came up with a happy medium of sound, bringing in that twelve-bar blues like The White Stripes, The Black Keys.

    PC: Tell me about how you became a trio.

    Joe Mungo: When I moved out here three years ago, I started working with Ryan. The first weekend out here I saw them play a show. So I approached him a couple days later at work and said, “Hey, man, if you ever want to jam or anything sometime, I’d be interested in playing with you guys.” The first time we played collectively, after practice they were like, “Okay, you’re in. Let’s do this.”

    RK: We had someone working with us from Cleveland for a while who said, “You guys should get a bassist.” We also had enough people coming up to us after shows saying “You guys sound like the Black Keys” or “You guys sound like the White Stripes.” I don’t want to sound just like The Black Keys and The White Stripes, so bringing in another element has been able to…

    LH: It opens up a lot more.

    RK: What we were doing was straightforward, what we were able to do. There was a big margin where we could write what we wanted, but there was only so much we could do with a guitar and drums. With a bass now, we can touch indie rock, we can touch country… we can touch lots of different things.

    PC: You’ve been a live band for so long, what was it like when you finally got into the studio?

    RK: It’s strange because people think of us as a live band, but we did an EP that took the course of three years. I was up at school, living in the Adirondacks, and I would come back and just play a show every once in a while, not really knowing where all of this was going. But what I will say is Kick Out The Rocks was the first time I’ve felt like going into the studio and hammering something out.

    JM: For me it was return-to-my-roots. When I lived in Geneva, my hometown, I was in another band, my friend and I, and we were setting up a studio. It was a very grassroots thing in a basement. I think we played four shows total, so all the time we were playing it was in the studio setting. So it was nice to go back to that. But it was a completely different experience because Blue Brick Recordings is a legitimate studio with different rooms and things set up. It was really fun to have the professional setting.

    LH: I still think I like that people look at us as a live band. You hear the songs on the record, but I think you don’t get the same experience… I like to go nuts.

    RK: Right, live is different.

    JM: Recording in the studio, one thing that trips me up a bit is “Okay, I need to nail it this time.”

    LH: It’s really stressful.

    JM: It gets really frustrating if you can’t get it after a few tries. You get frustrated and you just want to move on for the day. But live, it doesn’t have to be the same every time.

    PC: The album has strong blues overtones, but also blends a wide range of sounds. Who are some of the bands that inspire you?

    RK: I like Wilco.

    LH: Deer Tick is pretty sweet.

    JM: If I had to name a band that’s currently out, I’d say Houndmouth has a similar sound to us.

    RK: I feel like we’re always listening. It’s harder now to find your style. If you’re someone who really grasps onto music – you want to listen to music, you want to play music – there’s just so much of it out there.

    JM: The more cool stuff you hear, it’s like, “Let’s do something like that.”

    RK: And then it will change and I’ll be like, “Why do I like so much reggae stuff now?”

    PC: What is your favorite comment by someone who reviewed your album?

    JM: Frank DeBlase (City Newspaper) gave me my best one. He said my bass was “sassy and precarious.” I really liked that comment, sassy and precarious.

    LH: I mainly liked that it seems like everyone that wrote about us said you can’t find one song that’s not catchy, that you can’t tap your foot to. We always hear that it’s catchy music.

    RK: The thing is that you get a little of everything. That’s what we’re trying to do, a little of everything.

    LH: That’s important to do, to split up the album – not just have it all grunge garage blues the whole time.

    RK: I think we touch on all of our strengths on the album, which is nice. We all have different backgrounds in music. In the twelve songs we have, I can name one song in particular in each of our styles where we really honed in on that track specifically. And it’s very cool we all got to do that. We compromise in a sense but we also stay unique through it, which is really hard to do sometimes.

    PC: What’s on the horizon for The Dirty Pennies?

    LH: We’re touring in mid-August.

    RK: Other than that, we’re writing new stuff.

    JM: I think that’s the focus right now – new music.

    RK: I love our record, but I’m ready for new stuff already.

    LH: We have been playing some new songs in practice that we haven’t really played live or are obviously not on the record.

    JM: We’ve got three or four new ones that are almost there.

    LH: It’s always nice to write new stuff. It’s nice to go in other directions.

    PC: What else would you like our readers to know about you?

    RK: We’re high-energy. We like to put on a fun live performance.

    Their next show on July 15 is at the BASIC BRAND (skate board / apparel company) Launch Party at Kashong Creek Craft Cider in Geneva, NY. For updates on shows and events, check their website or follow them on Facebook.

    Kick Out The Rocks is available through SpotifyBandcamp and  iTunes.

    Photos of interview by Corinne Cummings

  • Dopapod’s Chuck Jones, Rob Compa Dish Upcoming Album News, Fan Antics

    A weekend spent in Stephentown, NY meant a finely curated lineup over four days at Gardner’s Farm. Having headlined every single year since the festival’s conception in 2011, this year was no different as progressive jam outfit Dopapod prepped for their Friday night set ahead. With a recent spring tour in the rear view mirror, the quartet offered fans a live compilation album, II Saw Live Dopapod, Evil Was II, to curb the anticipation ahead of their impending studio album, which they’ve been placing the finishing touches on. The strings of the group, bassist Chuck Jones and guitarist Rob Compa were kind enough to chat with NYS Music just ahead of their 9:30pm headlining set.  Jones, adorned in a mock, heavy metal Celine Dion tee started off by noting their progression as a group over the years as we dove into fun tidbits about the upcoming album and the band as a whole.

    rob compa chuck jones

    Alyssa Ladzinski: Your most recent release was a live album of fan-favorites, what can you tell us about your upcoming release?

    Chuck Jones:  We just finished our new studio album, we’ve been working on it a lot this last month when we haven’t had any shows. I think we’re trying to release that in the fall before touring.

    Rob Compa: We just finished all the recording and tracking for the studio album. There’s gonna be some songs nobodies heard yet, there’s gonna be a lot of instrumentation that a lot of people probably aren’t expecting. I.E. people can expect lots of strings, violins and cellos in certain songs. It’s the first time I recorded guitar parts at home with my amp in my closet, trying not to piss off my neighbors too much. It was a lot of fun to make. It was the most fun I’ve had in a while actually.

    AL: Your auxiliary chord breaks while touring in the van. What’s one album the four of you can agree on listening to, front to back?

    CJ: I don’t know if we could, our tastes are so diverse there’s no one album we can all agree on. We would get to a point where we could settle. Probably Pink Floyd we can all agree on. That’s what makes this group so enjoyable to play in, everyone has such eclectic tastes from all over.

    RC: Uberjam by John Scofield or Wish You Were Here by Pink Floyd.

    AL: Now you’re all alone on a road trip, what’s one album you’re singing along and playing air instruments to?

    RC: Lately I’m not listening to that much music. I could always go for Ben Folds Rock in the Suburbs all the way through or Dire Straits first album.

    CJ: Silence. I enjoy the time to think. There’s a lot of saturation in listening, at this point I’ll have to think about putting on music.

    rob compa chuck jonesAL: Create your own super group you’d want to play in.

    CJ: Mike from Aqueous, Beau from Kung Fu,  I’m not sure. I like to let other people handle these things and I go to my safe spot.

    RC: Well I love James Searl from Giant Panda, Tim Palmieri on guitar, Scotty Zwang on drums, Caden from the Jauntee. I’ll leave it at that, no keys.

    AL: Favorite show you’ve seen lately?

    CJ: I just moved to Colorado a month ago and quickly I went to see two nights of Primus. Once in a smaller room and then at Red Rocks.

    RC: Main Squeeze at Brooklyn Bowl for their CD release.  Lyle Brewer of Ryan Montbleau Band played a solo guitar set at Rockwood Music Hall in NY.

    AL: If the guys were going to surprise Rob and Becky with an impromptu performance at the wedding, what would it be and who would fill in for Rob on guitar?

    CJ: Probably a Phish song, I think he would love that. I can only play “Cars, Trucks and Busses.” He would love if we played a Phish song and had Luke play guitar. Or Pink Floyd.

    RC: “Kick N’ Bach” by Frogwings but they’d have to get the real guitarists on the track, Herring and Trucks. Becky would scream with glee.

    rob compa chuck jonesAL: Being with NYS Music, I have to ask, who’ your favorite NY native artist?

    RC: The Niche in Rochester, my heroes when i was 18. They’d sneak me backstage and they were the first band in the scene to let me sit in with them.

    CJ: Giant panda, Aqueous, NY Jazz Trio. NY is saturated with good music.

    AL: If you could switch bodies with anyone in Dopapod, who would it be and why?

    CJ: I’d stay with myself. Maybe Neal cause it would be really fun to be that good at drums.

    AL: Weirdest thing a fan has done for you?

    CJ: A fan once made a T-shirt with my face on it. My mom has it. It’s weird and flattering and my mom loves it. She was wearing it the other day.

    RC: One time at a show in Syracuse my 96 year old grandma was there in a wheelchair and people kept offering to buy her shots. She didn’t have them, but I thought that was pretty funny.

    AL: What’s your biggest challenge as a band as of late?

    CJ: Having more responsibilities. I’m about to be 30 in August and you look around at festivals and realize the age group ranges from 18-24. This is a young person’s sport!

    RC: Half of us are on the East Coast while the other half is in Colorado. Trying to make that work is a thing. Today is the first time we’ve played together in a month and a half. Financially, it’s a challenge too. There’s always the ebb and flow of your band being a hot ticket or not. If you haven’t put out a new album in a couple years, you don’t have any fuel or anything to hand people. So dealing with that.

    AL: Rob, you offer guitar lessons to prospective students. How has that worked out for you?

    RC: I get a lot of bite and about half of the work. With teaching, I like that I’m directly helping somebody. I don’t really feel that so much when I’m playing on stage. Maybe it happens accidentally, but it doesn’t happen intentionally for that reason.

    AL: You seem active on Facebook enough to notice the day in and day out analysis of your music in Dopafam. Is it weird to see your music that deeply dissected on a regular basis?

    CJ: They notice the small details. The fact that there’s one person, let alone a handful of people spending that much time listening to our music is all you can ask for.

    AL: Can you pinpoint one Dopapod show that stands out as a favorite?

    RC: I really liked the last Richmond show we played. It was just a lot of fun and my favorite part was Neal, our drummer has a mic, so he talks to us while we’re playing and during a song I was soloing, he told me how to solo the whole time. You can only solo on this string, now you can only solo on this string and the first five frets of the guitar, now only on A flat. It was just goofy. If I had a favorite one five years ago it would probably be bad because you just keep getting better.

    Setlist: 8 Years Ended, Present Ghosts, Mucho, Indian Grits > Freight Train Filled With Dynamite, Priorities, Trickery, Cloud World

  • Folkfaces Announce Extensive 2017 Summer Tour

    Buffalo’s Folkfaces are gearing up for 2017 and their biggest summer tour yet. The extensive tour focus primarily on New York, giving those in the state plenty of opportunities to check them out.

    Buffalo-based Americana quintet Folkfaces has had a busy 2017 and the year is only half over. They released their debut album How Long? back in April while also completing two spring tours. The band consists of Tyler Westcott (guitar, vocals), Dan Borodzik (slide guitar, vocals), Ellen Pieroni (saxophones), Patrick Jackson (upright bass) and Dan Schwach (drums, washboard).

    Folkfaces’ summer tour features over 30 dates throughout New York with stops in five other states and Toronto. The tour kicks off this Wednesday, June 21 at Al’s Wine & Whiskey in Syracuse and closes out at the Night Lights Music Festival in Sherman. The tour primarily brings the band throughout New York with a heavy focus on the western portion of the state for their hometown fans.

    In addition to their own shows, they’ll be sharing the stage with a handful of other bands. They play with Dustbowl Revival on June 28 at Babeville in Buffalo. They’ll join The Tenants on July 14 for a house show in Akron, Ohio on July 14. On July 22, they play the Putnam Den in Saratoga Springs with The North and South Dakotas. The Fredtown Stompers and the Buffalo Brass Machine join them on Aug. 2 at the Tralf in Buffalo. As part of the Buffalo Infringement Festival, they play alongside Swimmer, Minor Racket, Dark Matter Trio and The Funk Theory Extravaganza on Aug. 4 at Nietzsche’s in Buffalo. Nietzsche’s sees them again on Aug. 23 along with Minor Moon and Pine Fever.

    Folkfaces is one of NYS Music’s 87/90 up and coming featured artists.

    Folkfaces Summer Tour Dates
    June 21 – Al’s Wine & Whiskey, Syracuse, NY
    June 23 – 42 North, East Aurora, NY
    June 28 – Babeville, Buffalo, NY *
    July 6 – The Waterhole, Saranac Lake, NY
    July 7 – The Monopole, Plattsburgh, NY
    July 8 – Light Club Lamp Shop, Burlington, VT
    July 9 – The Pizza Stone, Chester, VT
    July 12 – Temple Bar and Grille, Rochester, NY
    July 13 – The Crittenden Tavern, Coudersport, PA
    July 14 – House Show, Akron, OH **
    July 15 – Cobblestone Festival, Buffalo, NY
    July 16 – 10th Ave. Burrito Co., Belmar, NJ
    July 17 – Shrine World Music Venue, New York, NY
    July 17 – Silvana, New York, NY
    July 18 – Arlene’s Grocery, Brooklyn, NY
    July 19 – Salt Gastropub, Stanhope, NJ
    July 20 – Cabaret at Germano’s, Baltimore, MD
    July 21 – TBA
    July 22 – Putnam Den, Saratoga Springs, NY #
    July 28 – Fiddler’s Picnic, Marion, NY
    July 31 – Buffalo Infringement Festival, Lafayette Square, Buffalo, NY
    Aug. 2 – The Tralf, Buffalo, NY ##
    Aug. 3 – Funk ‘n Waffles, Rochester, NY
    Aug. 4 – 189 Public House, East Aurora, NY
    Aug. 4 – Buffalo Infringement Festival, Nietzsche’s, Buffalo, NY ^
    Aug. 5 – The Riverboat Bar, Alexandria Bay, NY
    Aug. 6 – Junction City Music Hall, Toronto, ON
    Aug. 11 – Slyfest, Sherman, NY
    Aug. 20 – Nights of Fire Festival, Franklinville, NY
    Aug. 23 – Nietzsche’s, Buffalo, NY ^^
    Aug. 25 – Night Lights Music Festival, Sherman, NY

    * w/ Dustbowl Revival
    ** w/ The Tenants
    # w/ The North and South Dakotas
    ## w/ The Fredtown Stompers, Buffalo Brass Machine
    ^ w/ Swimmer, Minor Racket, Dark Matter Trio, The Funk Theory Extravaganza
    ^^ w/ Minor Moon, Pine Fever

  • A Vintage Year Release Video for “Lousy Soul” from Upcoming Album

    A Vintage Year, a progressive alt-rock group out of Rochester have released the video for “Lousy Soul” off their upcoming album Picture Perfect. The video finds the band heading into the club for a show for a live performance reminiscent of early Alice in Chains, with shadowy images of the band interspersed.

    A Vintage Year has been performing since 2014 and released their debut EP in early 2015, and follow up EP, Beautiful Disease, in January 2017. After touring Texas in February 2017, the band returned to the studio to wrap up their first full album Picture Perfect, slated for a July release. A Vintage Year features Joe Williams (vocals), Jordan Barney (guitar, bass) and Nick Manka (drums, vocals).