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  • Landmark Albany Theater Building Up For Auction

    All Over Albany has reported that the 101-year-old EBA, short for Electric Body Arts, a landmark theater building, located on the corner of Lark and Hudson in Albany, is up for sale by online auctioneers Collar City Auctions.

    EBA founder Maude Baum, purchased the building in 1977, from the Daughters of the Eastern Star, and has been running dance classes out of the building ever since, making it one of the staples of the community. Although this era is coming to a close, Baum states that the company will continue.

    Baum talked about the current situation:

    There are lots of places to hold classes, there are lots of places to perform, there are lots of places to rehearse. I’m OK with it. I’m sort of at the point where it’s time for a change.

    The building was up for auction a while back, but developers only wanted the land, not the building. They discovered that their original plans of demolishing the building, wouldn’t be cost effective according to Baum. She stated:

    It’s built like a Mack truck. The beams are 15-inch metal studs so it’s structurally sound. It’s in excellent shape. We just finished shingling, there’s a new boiler, and a new tin ceiling in the theater.

    Before considering the online auction route, the company was turned down for a state Main Street grant, hoping to add apartments and offices to the building.

    EBA is still holding regular scheduled rehearsals, performances and classes until the bidding closes on March 2, with an assessed value of $518,400, according to city tax records. After that, Baum and her board of directors are up for any ideas, opportunities, and possibilities.

    Baum on the future of the building:

    Who knows, maybe someone will buy the building and want to lease the space back to us, or share it with us somehow. Anything could happen.

    Everything that has happened here is still in my heart — All the artwork and performances — They’re still inside of me. What’s the difference if you look at a photo here or you look at it someplace else.

  • Grateful Dead Announce Official Release of Legendary Cornell ’77 Show

    One of the Grateful Dead‘s most revered shows is finally seeing the light of day in an official release this spring to mark the show’s 40th anniversary.

    The band played its first of three shows (1977, 1980, and 1981) on May 7, 1977, booked by the Cornell Concert Commission after some troubles with booking live acts in the years prior. May ’77 wasn’t first live Cornell campus appearance from the Grateful Dead family however. The Jerry Garcia Band had performed at Cornell’s Bailey Hall less than two years prior on 10-27-1975. The May 1977 lineup for the Grateful Dead included the core of Jerry Garcia, Phil Lesh, Bob Weir, Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann, as well as Donna and Keith Godcheaux.

    Photo: dead.net

    The official release, in the form of a 5-LP box set and CD, will contain the entire Cornell ’77 show mastered from the Betty board tapes. Not only will this Barton Hall show be released, included in another 11-CD box set (May ’77: Get Shown The Light) will be 5/5/77 at Veterans Memorial Coliseum in New Haven, CT, 5/7 at Boston Garden, and 5/9 at Buffalo Memorial Auditorium.

    Cornell ’77 Poster designed by Cornell alumnus Jay Maybrey

    Many sources of the Barton Hall show have been circulated over the years, including unofficial soundboards (heard over on archive.org) which are of decent quality, though with some flaws inherent to the taping and matrix mixing process. Rolling Stone gave a sneak preview of “Morning Dew” from the upcoming release and after listening to the bootlegs of Barton Hall, the release promises to be a fantastic treat for Deadheads.

    The various release formats for the Cornell ’77 show and the other May 1977 shows debut on May 5 and pre-orders for it are available now over at dead.net. Only limited quantities of the 5-LP vinyl box set of the Cornell ’77 show are available.

    Peter Conners, author of “Growing Up Dead” and other works on the Grateful Dead is working on a book titled “Cornell ’77,” chronicling the Dead’s appearance at Cornell set to be published by Cornell University Press.

  • Hearing Aide: Overkill “The Grinding Wheel”

    It is already the second month of 2017 and it is already showing this year is the year of the thrash! With Kreator’s Gods Of Violence and Sepulutura’s Machine Messiah released in January, both are perfect examples why the genre will never go down without a fight. Now it is time for another thrash/speed heavyweight to show the spirit of cheap beer and denim is still alive. I am speaking of course of the mighty Overkill with their latest album, The Grinding Wheel, released via Nuclear Blast. Time to give this giant a well deserved review.

    Being the eighteenth studio album from Bobby “Blitz” and the boys, it is safe to say these veterans of the genre know what makes the name Overkill so great. A great follow up from White Devil Armory (released 2014 via Nuclear Blast), this album has their brand of metal written all over it. The groove aspects of D.D Verni (bass guitar) and Derek Tailer (rhythm guitar) gives the album many memorable tracks. The most dominant tracks on the album that showcase their type of approach are the tracks “Come Heavy” and “Red White and Blue.” With “Blitz” vocals, you will find yourself singing along while the general public just stares at you. Let them stare! You are a thrasher. These tracks just keep you bobbing your head more than a headbanger from “Brütal Legend”. It is called heavy metal.

    Another key element of this album are the 80s classic thrash riffs that makes you wanna toss your friend in the circle pit while you hold his beer. You totally got it dude! The single off the album, “Our Finest Hour,” is the powerhouse staple that drives the aggression from start to finish on this shred-tastic release. The machine gun style drumming of Eddy Garcia, always keeping up the groove and the pace of the song, is like a kick in the jaw. . Every snare and cymbal hit sounds as if a storm is coming over the horizon. You might as well get a mouth guard while listening to it. It is a a non-stop ride of pure danger, but we know you love the abuse.

    There are so many tracks on this work of art which which will keep you windmilling for days. It is safe to say this album will constantly be blasted by those who are thirsty for the glory days of American thrash. Prepare those neck muscles. This album gets a 4.5 out of 5 stars. Pick it up now via Nuclear Blast or at your local record store.

    Key Tracks: Come On Heavy, Our Finest Hour, Red White and Blue.

    Overkill is currently on a North American tour w/ Nile, Amorphis and Swallow The Sun.
    Overkil. Hitting up Clifton Park at Upstate Concert Hall on September 3rd, 2017.

    For all concert check the band’s page. http://wreckingcrew.com/Ironbound

  • Photo Gallery: LOCASH at Vapor Nightclub

    The Nashville-based Country/Pop duo LOCASH performed along with a full band on February 16 at Vapor Nightclub in Saratoga Springs, to a packed house.  The show was hosted by 100.9 The Cat.

    locashChris Lucas and Preston Brust, whose powers’ combined make up LOCASH, were in especially good spirits after receiving their first major Country Music Industry award nomination earlier in the day for New Vocal Duo or Group of the Year. Lucas and Brust, along with their band, were riding high throughout the show, taking the opportunity to celebrate this milestone in their careers with their fans who showed up for them in droves and packed the club out.

    The ACM Awards will air live from the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada on April 2nd.

  • Hearing Aide: Her Harbour “Go Gently Into the Night”

    The fifth track of the second album by Her Harbour, Go Gently Into the Night, is titled “Memento Mori,” Latin for “remember death.” Even without a track title such as that, it’s difficult to not have death on the mind as you listen to this album. Beyond the death-alluding album title and the frequent references to it in the lyrics, Go Gently Into the Night sounds like death personified. Every piano note played and every syllable voiced by Gabrielle Giguere feels like it’s possessed and able to possess you at moment’s notice.

    Her Harbour Album standout “Hewing Crowns” kicks things off. It wraps you into the murky environment, with Giguere sounding akin to a more gothic Angel Olsen. “Sheared skin and old fur/Sorcerer could conjure demon in anything” she sings against somber piano. If you cannot stand the piano on this track, then you are going to have difficulty with the rest of the album, as that one of the main things tying the songs together. Giguere is not a flashy performer. However, this works to her benefit, as she is able to summon the vitality out of every syllable she sings, making her one of the best female singer/songwriters making music right now.

    On “Hewing Crowns,” she makes a particular dark declaration with “you conjure demon in me” and goes on to say “your baths are drawn from my tears.” It is intensely immersive stuff that summons you to see what else drives Giguere. As the album progresses, her vocals get more and more naked. On “In Nude, In Fog and River,” her voice is particularly pained, sounding like she would need to bite her lip to keep it from quivering. “Below Breaths” mixes lower register hums with shimmering guitar strums as Giguere coyly asks “What’s killing you darling?” “Chim and Knell” is particularly teasing, with a two-note piano motif that seemingly serves to put the listener in Giguere’s obsessive headspace as she sings about a love diminished, if not quite lost.

    The death in the album doesn’t seem to be just that of a specific physical loss. With lyrics like “The spring is a cruel time/a thousand bodies become the soil again to feed new life,” it seems Giguere is most fascinated by the cycles that must exist. On the morbidly-titled “Death Mask,” she sings “In the time I’ve lived here, I’ve watched a tree grow.” It comes towards the end of the album, and it’s the kind of sentiment that gives you some hope. If everything must eventually die, then we should appreciate it for when it’s alive. An additionally intriguing aspect of the album is how Giguere appears to be commanding nature on the tracks. On “Memento Mori” she urges the “juniper and cypress tree” to “lay [someone] down and don’t be cruel,” and another track is titled “Come Half Moon.” She might know it’s futile, but she wants to try nonetheless.

    The somber nature of Go Gently Into the Night makes it simultaneously relaxing and unsettling. The ambient nature of Giguere’s arrangements and her soft vocals might help you drift off into sleep. However, there is a sense of urgency in how she presents everything. It’s an album that doesn’t bark at you to sit up and listen but beckons you with the sincerity of its message. If you have space in your music heart for a little existentialism, give Go Gently Into the Night a listen.

    Key Tracks: Below Breaths, Memento Mori, Death Mask

  • Phish to Release ‘St. Louis ’93’

    Phish has announced the release of St. Louis ’93, an archival collection of two shows from consecutive tours recorded at St. Louis’ American Theatre, as a 6-CD boxed set.

    In 1993, Phish went on tour in support of their fourth studio album, Rift, and, at the same time were, hitting up larger venues, like theaters and colleges. The first part of St. Louis ’93 finds the band on April 14, 1993 in the midst of an extensive winter and spring tour. The show is dubbed the “Roger’s Proposal” show as Trey Anastasio’s childhood friend, Roger Holloway proposed to his girlfriend on stage at the start of the second set. The show features a memorable “AC/DC Bag” > “My Sweet One” for Holloway and his fiancée, a creative “Stash” > “Kung” > “The Horse” mashup and a fantastic “Harpua” > “Runaway Jim.”

    The second half of St. Louis ’93 sees the band’s return to the American Theatre on August 16, 1993 in the middle of their summer tour. The tour saw the band taking greater risks and digging deep into their repertoire. From the press release:

    Unique interstitial jams connected many of the songs, adding an extra element of mystery to the proceedings. Highlights include a non-stop opening sequence of “Axilla” > “Possum” > “Horn” > “Reba” > “Sparkle” and the only “Mike’s Song” > “Faht” > “Weekapaug Groove” combination ever played. The show finished with an unexpected quartet of classic Phish covers, including Duke Ellington’s “Take The ‘A’ Train,” Led Zeppelin’s “Good Times Bad Times,” “Amazing Grace,” and Felice & Boudleaux Bryant’s country standard, “Rocky Top.”

    St. Louis ’93 will be released on March 31. Several pre-order packages are available through the Phish website.

    Phish will play a 13-night run at New York City’s Madison Square Garden starting July 21 and concluding Aug. 6. Tickets for those shows go on sale today at noon.

    St. Louis ’93 Tracklist:

    CD 1/6
    April 14, 1993 Set I:
    1. Buried Alive >
    2. Poor Heart
    3. Maze
    4. Bouncing Around The Room
    5. It’s Ice >
    6. Stash >
    7. Kung >
    8. Stash
    9. Kung >
    10. The Horse >
    11. Silent In The Morning >
    12. Divided Sky
    13. I Didn’t Know
    14. Golgi Apparatus

    CD 2/6
    April 14, 1993 Set II:
    1. Roger’s Proposal
    2. AC/DC Bag >
    3. My Sweet One >
    4. Tweezer
    5. Mound
    6. Big Ball Jam
    7. You Enjoy Myself >
    8. Spooky >
    9. You Enjoy Myself

    CD 3/6
    April 14, 1993 Set II, cont’d:
    1. Harpua >
    2. Runaway Jim
    Encore:
    3. Lengthwise >
    4. Contact >
    5. Tweezer Reprise

    CD 4/6
    August 16, 1993 Set I:
    1. Axilla >
    2. Possum >
    3. Horn >
    4. Reba >
    5. Sparkle

    CD 5/6
    August 16, 1993 Set I, cont’d:
    1. Foam
    2. I Didn’t Know
    3. Split Open And Melt
    4. The Squirming Coil

    CD 6/6
    August 16, 1993 Set II:
    1. Mike’s Song >
    2. Faht >
    3. Weekapaug Groove
    4. Mound >
    5. It’s Ice >
    6. My Friend, My Friend
    7. Poor Heart >
    8. Big Ball Jam >
    9. Take The ‘A’ Train >
    10. Good Times Bad Times
    Encore:
    11. Amazing Grace
    12. Rocky Top

  • Funk n Waffles is Coming to Rochester, Closing Original SU Hill Location

    Update: The original location of Funk ‘N Waffles, located on the SU Hill in the original home of Hungry Charlie’s, will be closing on Wednesday, February 22. The downtown location will remain open. In a statement on the venue’s Facebook page, owner Adam Gold said:

    It is with a heavy heart that after 10 years of great food, delicious coffees, wonderful people, fun times, hard work, ups and downs, (and a few open mic nights thrown into the mix), Funk ‘n Waffles owner Adam Gold announces the closing of the restaurant’s original location on the SU Hill (727 S Crouse Ave). This has been difficult for us as a staff, however we are left with no choice as the building block is being torn down.

    Original article follows below:

    Funk ‘N Waffles is heading west on I-90 this spring. The Syracuse business has leased the former Water Street Music Hall, bringing their delicious menu and concert calendar with them.

    Owner Adam Gold, also of Sophistafunk, posted the following message on Facebook this morning:

    Hello Rochester! If you haven’t already heard, I’m really proud to announce that we are opening Funk ‘n Waffles 3 in Rochester very soon at the old Water Street Music Hall!!! We’ll be open all day every day serving up the same funky menu, and there will be live music 7 days a week! We are really excited to be a part of Rochester’s growing St. Paul Quarter!

    Rochester has a few venues for up and coming bands – 3 Heads Brewing, Flour City Station and Montage Music Hall – but the closing of Water Street Music Hall in the past few years last left a void in the Rochester scene, as local bands cannot move directly into the 900 capacity Anthology without stepping up into a mid-sized venue the size of the Funk ‘N Waffles at the old Water Street Music Hall. The musical history of the building and central location would serve the area well as a future Funk ‘N Waffles.

    Update: this article reflects updated time frame for opening and clarification on leasing of building.

  • PWR BTTM Announces New Album, Release ‘Big Beautiful Day’ Music Video

    New York’s PWR BTTM announced their sophomore album will be released on May 12 on Polyvinyl Records. Pageant is the follow-up to 2015’s acclaimed Ugly Cherries. The punk duo plans to tour extensively in 2017. The North American summer tour kicks off Friday May 26 at Toronto’s Velvet Underground, and comes to New York’s Webster Hall on June 21. Tickets are available starting noon on Friday, February 17.

    PWR BTTMCoinciding with the album announcement, PWR BTTM also released the video for “Big Beautiful Day,” the final song on Pageant. The music video, directed by Christopher Good, is chock full of deliciously decadent glam. The day-in-the-life concept starts with band members Ben Hopkins and Liv Bruce having waffles for breakfast and builds up to an extravagant dance party.

    Pageant is available for preorder as a digital download, compact disc, metallic gold cassette, and maroon vinyl.

    PWR BTTMTracklist:

    1 Silly
    2 Answer My Text
    3 LOL
    4 Won’t
    5 Now, Now
    6 Sissy
    7 Pageant
    8 Oh Boy
    9 New Trick
    10 Wash
    11 Kids’ Table
    12 Big Beautiful Day
    13 Styrofoam

  • The Heavy Pets and Backup Planet to Co-Headline Spring Tour

    The Heavy Pets and Backup Planet will co-headline their spring 2017 tour, which will kick off March 17 at High Dive in Gainesville, Florida, and run until the end of April, right before festival season kicks off.Heavy Pets Backup Planet

    The tour will have a few N.Y. dates, including March 15, at Funk ‘n’ Waffles Downtown in Syracuse, March 19, at the Brooklyn Bowl, presented by Relix, and March 21, at the Hollow in Albany.

    Other dates include an Atlanta date at Aisle 5 on March 31, Gypsy Sally’s in Washington, D.C. on March 13 and Milkboy Philly on March 14, right before their N.Y. run, which is then followed by more dates in the South at the Raleigh Pourhouse on March 26, and Revelry Room in Chattanooga, TN on March 28.

    Florida quintet, the Heavy Pets, are Jeff Lloyd (guitar/vocals), Mike Garulli (guitar/harmonica/vocals), Jim Wuest (keyboard/vocals), Jamie Newitt (drums/vocals) and Tony D’Amato (bass). While they are described as an American rock band, their sound is made unique through a blend of reggae and funk. Their vocals are addicting and soothing, with an exemplary song craft that pulls it all together. Their double-disc debut album was an instant sensation on Sirius XM radio back in 2007, and they have continued to expand their fan base over the years through extensive touring.

    Backup Planet is Ben Cooper (keys/vocals), Chris Potocik (drums/vocals), Gavin Donati (guitar/vocals), and Blake Gallant (bass/vocals). Hailing from Nashville, Tennessee, this quartet’s sound is a progressive funk-rock jam that mixes in other special elements like jazz, roots, electronic, and blues. Their performances are a live experimentation for how to improvise those elements into an unforgettable show, which has kept fans coming back for more and more, as their repertoire grows.

    For more information and tickets, visit here.

  • White Denim Hits Brooklyn Bowl for 2 Night Blast

    Austin indie rock band White Denim swung through NYC for a quick two night stop at the beloved Brooklyn Bowl on Thursday and Friday, February 9 and 10. The band of James Petralli on vocals and guitar, Jordan Richardson on drums, Steven Terebecki on vocals and bass, and Mike St. Clair on trumpet and synthesizer performed a variety of their studio albums, but leaned heavily towards their most recent release Stiff, the 7th in their catalog.

    white denim brooklyn bowlThe band only has a handful of tour dates posted for the rest of 2017 at them moment, with their next return to New York this summer at Mountain Jam. Be sure to catch them if you can.