Western New York alternative punk band Carpool has released their debut single “Idaho.” The track is from the band’s upcoming EP I Think Everyone’s A Cop, which is scheduled for release on Sept. 13. Drawing influence from elements of shoegaze and emo, Carpool crafts songs characterized by catchy hooks, insightful lyrics, mathy guitar riffs, and a plethora of pedal effects. Singer/guitarist Chris Colasanto has the following to say about this song:
‘Idaho’ is a song about a place I’ve never been. This past year has really been a turning point in my life and has made me realize how slow moving and pathetic I was… Everyone around me was steadily growing up and moving on. It made me really wish I could just get up and go to somewhere unknown. But like everything else in life the grass is never greener on the other side.
It’s about issues with your self image and self worth. It’s about wanting so badly to relapse into your old toxic self, but knowing that if you let it happen it’ll ruin you and possibly kill you. It’s about giving up on yourself and being who you need to be.
Digital copies of I Think Everyone’s A Cop will be available Sept. 13. Physical copies will be available in October via Syracuse label Nothing Feels Good Records.
I Think Everyone’s A Cop Track Listing:
1. Cigarette Cough
2. Another Song About Rachel
3. Beauty School Dropout
4. Local Joke
5. Idaho
6. Close Encounters
7. I Think Me And Drake Would B Friends
Hot on the heels of their EP Repeater, King Buffalo has announced their sophomore full-length Longing To Be The Mountain, which drops Oct.12. The Rochester psych rock trio has returned to the states after a second summer touring Europe and entrancing audiences at some of the continent’s most renown music festivals. They’re currently on a trek across North America, ending with a stop in Toronto on Sept. 15.
Digital and vinyl preorders are being taken now for Longing To Be The Mountain. (Tip: King Buffalo’s vinyl records tend to sell out quickly. The test presses and deluxe editions are already sold out. There are only 250 Standard Editions being pressed, so if you’re contemplating a purchase, just go ahead an smash that ‘buy’ button. You can thank me later.)
King Buffalo Tour Dates:
Aug. 22 – 5 Star Bar – Los Angeles, CA
Aug. 23 – Tower Records – Fresno, CA
Aug. 24 – Thee Parkside – San Francisco, CA
Aug. 25 – Holy Diver – Sacramento, CA
Aug. 27 – The Loading Docks – Salt Lake City, UT
Aug. 28 – The Shredder – Boise, ID
Aug. 29 – The Pin – Spokane, WA
Aug. 30 – High Water Mark Lounge – Portland, OR
Aug. 31 – Highline Bar – Seattle, WA
Sept. 1 – Astoria Hastings – Vancouver, Canada
Sept. 2 -The Grind House Café – Kamloops, Canada
Sept. 4 – The Palomino Smokehouse and Social Club – Calgary, Canada
Sept. 5 – Bohemia – Edmonton, AB, Canada
Sept. 6 – Capital Music Club – Saskatoon, Canada
Sept. 7 – Cloud 9 Live – Regina, Canada
Sept. 8 – The Handsome Daughter -Winnipeg, Canada
Sept. 9 – The Aquarium – Fargo, ND
Sept. 11 – 7th St Entry – Minneapolis, MN
Sept. 12 – Cactus Club – Milwaukee, WI
Sept. 13 -The Pyramid Scheme – Grand Rapids, MI
Sept. 15 -Bovine Sex Club -Toronto, Canada
Flooding this past weekend caused a state of emergency that left Curveball organizers to make the difficult decision to cancel the music festival in Watkins Glen. The cancellation was a disappointment to music fans who were en route to the festival, but the aftermath of last week’s storm has had an ongoing impact on lives and businesses throughout the region.
Details were revealed on Phish.com about refunds for ticket holders, and also the plan to open an online store for Curveball merchandise, with proceeds going to flood relief and recovery efforts.
Those who purchased official tickets will receive a full refund of ticket prices, service fees and shipping automatically to the credit card used for the purchase. It will be a laborious process, and the festival organizers are asking for patience during this process. Those who purchased from a secondary market will need to contact the resale agent.
Ticket holders will still be able to redeem the code on their wristbands to view the Dick’s Webcast of all three shows in Colorado over Labor Day Weekend via livephish.com/redeem.
Curveball merchandise including T-shirts, posters, and Nalgene water bottles will be available for purchase online. All profits will go to flood relief and recovery. Curveball ticket holders will be given early access to the online store once it is up and running.
Check in at Phish.com or follow Phish on social media for updates.
On The Cinder hits the road again this fall with stops as far as Canada. The run starts off Sept. 5 in Buffalo, where the trio formed the band in 2012. They head west to Detroit on Sept. 6, then have a run of five shows north of the border, including Toronto, Ottawa, and Montreal before circling back to the states for a Sept.13.
The fun-loving crew recently released a music video for their song “Soap Box,” in which drummer Tyler Rzemek gets fed up with being in the background and kidnaps bandmates Jason Wright and Mike Jacobs. Hilarity ensues as the antics and props grow more and more incredulous.
On The Cinder Great Lakes, Eh? Tour
Sept. 5 – Hotel Dalmatia – Buffalo, NY
Sept. 6 – The Sanctuary – Detroit, MI
Sept. 7 – Probably House – London, ON
Sept. 9 – Doors Pub – Hamilton, ON
Sept. 10 – Bovine Sex Club – Toronto, ON
Sept. 11 – Black Squirrel Books – Ottawa, ON
Sept. 12 – L’Esco – Montreal, QC Sept. 13 – The Town Shop – Syracuse, NY
Big Mean Sound Machine is throwing their fourth annual music festival in Trumansburg. This year, they’re making The Big Mean BBQ a weekend-long event spanning Friday Aug. 24 and Saturday Aug. 25. Tasty musical morsels on the lineup include Giant Panda Guerilla Dub Squad, Driftwood, Black Castle (Elliot Martin of John Brown’s Body), Danielle Ponder, The Blind Spots’ Prince Tribute, Marco Benevento, Kat Wright, Blind Owl Band, Tenzin Chopak, Viva Mayhem, Rose & the Bros, Grey Gary and Honey Cave. Big Mean Sound Machine will jam with their friends on Friday night, and play a full set on Saturday. DJ Gourd will host a dance party both nights.
In addition, they will host their first ever Big Mean Music Camp. Members of Big Mean Sound Machine are scheduled to be on hand for interactive workshops with festival-goers on Saturday morning.
Listen to The Big Mean BBQ IV playlist, and see the schedules below. Tickets are available for each day or the entire weekend.
Warped Tour made its last stop at Darien Lake Performing Arts Center on Wednesday, July 25. Despite the heat and humidity, fans came out in droves from all over Central and Western New York for one last Warped Tour experience.
Ice Nine Kills
NYS Music Photographer Meredith Snow and I started the day off catching Warped alums Ice Nine Kills. Even in 79 degree heat, the horror-core band from Boston played the entire set dressed as horror movie icons like Freddy and Jason, with full costume and makeup. The highlight of the set was hearing their new song “The American Nightmare,” from their upcoming album The Silver Scream.
Ice Nine Kills
The next stage over featured As It Is. The British band doesn’t make it stateside often. I first heard band leader Patty Walters when he was a teenager doing solo cover songs on YouTube. Now he’s backed by a full band and performing original songs. Gone is the wholesome “boy next door” persona. In its place is an edgier look and sound. After singing “Hey Rachel,” from last year’s debut album, Walters introduced the band as My Chemical Romance and welcomed everyone to 2005 Warped Tour. They launched into a couple new songs, “The Stigma” and “The Wounded World,” off their new album The Great Depression which comes out in a couple weeks.
As It Is
It’s impossible to catch everything at a festival with eight stages, and sometimes we just caught snippets as we raced from stage to stage. We saw the tail end of Tonight Alive’s set, as front woman Jenna McDougall told us in her Australian accent, “You have the right to lose your minds,” before launching into one of their new songs. I took a much needed break from the heat at the Reverse Daycare tent while my photographer snapped a few pics of Buffalo’s Every Time I Die.
Every Time I Die
Then we were off to see The Maine. A whooshing sound filled the air as they filed on stage in their signature matching outfits. They started with a cover of Blur’s “Song 2” which got the crowd singing along. The rest of their set was all originals from their eleven years as a band. On “Girls Do What They Want,” they called a random audience member up on stage to help sing the song. This guy Brian came up in his tank top and shorts and made the most of his five minutes of fame, nailing the lyrics and vocals.
The Maine
It wouldn’t be Warped Tour without ska bands. Reel Big Fish was crushing it on the main stage with their signature sound and antics, and the sun had dried out the muddy ground enough to make it possible for fans to dance in the fields. Over on the Korner Stage which featured regional acts, Buffalo band The Toy Box Brigade was putting on a fantastic performance. Their set included a ska rendition of The Bloodhound Gang’s “The Bad Touch.”
One of the bands on my must-see list is Las Vegas’ Palaye Royale. These darlings of the Vegas art rock scene are originally from Toronto. The three brothers named the band after the dance hall where their grandparents met. Their last album payed homage to the bands who played The Boom Boom Room and they are set to release a Part B soon. They played the song they just released this week called “You’ll Be Fine” as well as a gritty cover of My Chemical Romance’s “Teenagers.” The high-energy set included singer Remington Leith climbing up to hang upside down from the stage rafters during the song “Get Higher” and crowd surfing on a coffin-shaped raft.
Palaye Royale
Asking Alexandria was a band I’d never seen before, but the consensus from the faithful fans around me was that this was not their best performance. We then headed over to catch Simple Plan’s set. It was late afternoon and attendance had peaked; I could barely see the stage as the audience sprawled around behind tents and trailers. Despite the poor visibility, the sound was cranked to full volume and people young and old were singing along to hits like “Addicted.”
Asking Alexandria
I popped back over to catch some more locals. On The Cinder made their return for a second year at the Korner Stage. The three-piece punk rock outfit drew a lively crowd which danced and moshed throughout the entire set. Some locals were on the Full Sail Stage, too. Lucky33 from Syracuse was upgraded to the larger stage for the day. They put on an energetic set that included a version of CCR’s “Bad Moon Rising.” Between songs, bass player Red talked about attending his first Warped Tour in ’96 and being inspired to start playing music himself.
Following Lucky33 was Rochester’s Kaiser Solzie. Rochester native James Jackson has been performing under the moniker Kaiser Solzie for years, and has recently built a full band. Jackson was the driving force behind the creation of the local Korner Stage last year. And all local band members and their fans had migrated to Full Sail to rock out to Kaiser Solzie’s set. Donning his pink guitar, Jackson belted out song after song, from one about actor Bill Murray to “Punk Pop Hip Hop” and “Ordinary Average Day,” the songs paired a raw punk energy with catchy feel-good messages.
Kaiser Solzie
On the way to see 3OH!3, I ran across With Confidence. The Australian pop punk band was finishing their set with hits from their last album, “Voldemort” and “Keeper.” They signed off with a promise to return to the states by the end of the year. Over the hill, 3OH!3 was in full swing. The massive dance party spilled out from under the amphitheater tent and into the expansive lawn. For their grand finale, they brought the members of Simple Plan onto stage to join in on their hit song “Don’t Trust Me.”
We ended the day at the amphitheater tent with a performance by Waterparks, a Texas trio who are more on the pop side of the pop/punk spectrum. When I saw them at Warped Tour a couple years ago, they were playing songs from their EP Cluster. They’ve since released two full-length albums.Their set list included songs from both, including the acoustic “Lucky People.” They ended with the the catchy little love song “Stupid For You.”
Waterparks
Photographer Meredith Snow caught a few sets that I didn’t, including Motionless In White, Digital Afterlife, Doll Skin, Great American Ghost, Of Night and Light, Pros & Icons, and Every Time I Die. See the full photo gallery below for these pics and more.
All in all it was a memorable day, although tinged with sadness about the end of the Warped Tour era. Throughout the day, I spent time with friends from as far flung as Syracuse and Buffalo. I saw people I met at Warped Tour in previous years,and I met some new people. We swapped stories while making new memories. This touring festival successfully brought together some of the greatest alternative musicians from around the world and made them accessible to millions. But it also brought people together and built communal experiences that defined an entire generation.
One of the acts playing the entire run of Warped Tour this year was Rochester’s Kaiser Solzie. At the heart of this band is James Jackson, who took on the moniker Kaiser Solzie when he was a solo performer. He has since been joined by Lenny Palmieri on drums, Brian Lorenzo on guitar, and Jamie McMann on bass. NYS Music caught up with the band’s frontman at the Western NY Warped Tour date to talk about his music and involvement with Warped Tour over the years.
PHOTO BY RUBY STETTNER – James Jackson (second from right) recently rounded out his band, Kaiser Solzie, with (from left to right) Lenny Palmieri, Brian Lorenzo, and Jamie McMann.
Paula Cummings: How does this Warped Tour differ from your first time going?
Kaiser Solzie: We get to play. And I get to bring a lot of friends along, which is awesome. And I’m sober on this tour. I’m learning a lot, meeting a lot of new people. It’s been a full circle for me.
PC: How long have you been involved with Warped Tour?
KS: 2001 was my first. I was supposed to work with Phoenix TX and that fell through. I just went anyways. I ended up meeting Kevin and a bunch of the bands like Pennywise and Newfound Glory. Lots of people were like “Oh, there’s this kid on the greyhound bus just traveling around helping us out when he could.”
PC: You’ve come a long way. This is the second year organizing the local Korner stage?
KS: It just felt like the local scenes need to come together a bit more and Warped Tour was a good platform to teach that. I could have been like, “Oh, I’ll just pick a couple bands and get them on Warped Tour,” but I was like, “No, we gotta do a little bit more, show community and how we roll.” That’s been pretty cool. We have a lot of rad bands this year. Last year we had a lot of rad bands. And they built the stage. They worked together as a community and a scene, which you don’t see a lot of in other cities, you know.
PC: You have a song “Punk Pop Hip Hop” that speaks to bringing scenes together.
KS: We do. We wrote it in Washington Square Park. It was about playing music with everybody else no matter which genre you are. Just everything coming together. I try to bring that out here. We’re going to be playing that today. We’re going to be getting a bunch of people on stage. On the tour we’ve had the rapper Kosha Dillz come up and do a verse, which has been really rad. Other times we’ve had our friend Josh Kramer do a bunch of stuff. It’s been a really exciting experience.
PC: What’s next after Warped Tour?
KS: We’re going home. The rest of my band is going to rest. I’m scheming all these other different things. We’ve got a couple tour offers we’re working on. And we were only able to record seven songs for this record. We were rushed to get everything done. So we’re going to record another record when we get back.
PC: Want to put in a plug for the latest album?
KS: The new record is called Back Again. It’s an awesome record. It’s got “Bill Murray” on it. It’s got a song called “ADHD.” Lots of gnarly songs. It’s an up and down record, not just a punk rock record.
Color Me Badd lead singer Bryan Abrams allegedly pushed longtime bandmate Mark Calderon during a performance at Del Lago Casino on July 22. According to Seneca County Sheriff’s Office, the call came in at 9:15 and responding officers arrested Abrams for attempted assault in the third degree. Footage caught by fans show Calderon on stage with two dancers, singing the ’90s hit “I Wanna Sex You Up.” In the video, Calderon was thanking the crowd when Abrams entered from offstage and made contact with Calderon, who then fell to the floor of the stage. The Sheriff’s Office said that Calderon was transported to the local hospital for neck and back pain, where he was treated and released. Abrams is due to reappear in court on August 28 on this charge.
Seedstock is back for its tenth annual event. The art and music festival started with a house show featuring a stage on the lawn and acoustic acts on the back porch of the farmhouse. Over the past decade, it has grown into three-day-long music festival in a natural amphitheater nestled between the rolling hills of Cortland. Among the 24 acts slated to play on the weekend of Aug. 3 are Sophistafunk, Root Shock and NYS Music 87/90 artist, Space Carnival.
The Tenth Annual Seedstock X includes two nights of camping, a late-night silent disco, art vendors, children’s activities, and organically grown fresh local food. Single day and weekend passes can be purchased on the festival’s website at www.SeedstockFest.com.
Tenth Annual Seedstock
Friday, Aug. 3
Sophistafunk
Root Shock
Skunk City
Molly and the Badly Bent Bluegrass Boys
Space Carnival
Ridgeline Duo
DJ Shannon M
Saturday, Aug. 4
The Unknown Jones
Digger Jones
The Unknown Woodsmen
The Blind Spots
Gunpoets
Thousands of One
Mike Powell and Black River
Small Town Shade
Gnosis
Charley Orlando
Denton Rex
Vintage Pretty
Von Barnes Band
Drums vs. DJs with Eman
Sunday, Aug. 5
The Neighbors
Dirty Blanket
Kitestring
Zachary Rowland
Colleen Kattau
Bess Greenberg
Not ones to rest on their laurels, Intrepid Travelers are following up their successful Solstice Festival with the second leg of their summer tour. IT heads out to Ohio and Michigan next week, then double back to New York, hitting Jamestown, Geneva and Buffalo. Summer tour rounds out with performances at Night Lights Music Festival in Sherman on Aug. 23 and Beau Fleuve Music Festival in Buffalo on Aug. 26.
Intrepid Travelers Summer Tour 2018 Leg II:
July 25 – Woodlands Tavern – Columbus, OH **Ween Preparty & Afterparty
July 26 – The Knickerbocker – Grand Rapids, MI
July 28 – George’s – Canton, OH Aug. 3 – Mojo’s – Jamestown, NY
Aug. 4 – FLX – Geneva, NY
Aug. 7 – Larkin Square – Buffalo, NY
Aug. 23 – Night Lights Music Festival – Sherman, NY
Aug. 26 – Beau Fleuve Music Festival – Buffalo, NY