Author: Pete Mason

  • Premiere: Noon Fifteen “Time For Me,” from mini-rock opera “At The Festival”

    Ithaca’s progressive soul band, Noon Fifteen, today premieres “Time For Me,” off their upcoming album At the Festival. They’ll celebrate the album release at The Range in Ithaca on Friday, November 2.

    “Time for Me” introduces the suite’s protagonist, sung by bassist Harry Nichols, and sets up musical ideas which are revisited, twisted, and elaborated on throughout the piece. The song serves as the jumping off point for the album and was the first part written, having been inspired by a trip to festival during where Nichols witnessed a grieving friend experience renewal.

    A small town band with a big imagination, Noon Fifteen’s first release, Volume One, showcases the band’s vintage soul roots and hinted at its progressive tendencies. With At the Festival, the band dives head first into that prog propensity. The record is a seamless 22 minute suite, a mini rock opera that tells a tale of grief, and questions how far we should go to remember those we have lost. 

    Noon Fifteen Time For Me

    Based in Ithaca, the five-piece is influenced by 1960s California and Liverpool, 1970s Memphis and New Orleans, and the DIY ethos of the internet-powered independent music scene. Fronted by Mandy Goldman (vocals), Noon Fifteen is Samuel B. Lupowitz (keyboards & vocals), Joe Massa (guitars), Harry Nichols (bass, percussion, & vocals), Phil Shay (drums & vocals), and are joined by Chris Ploss for the album (percussion & vocals).

    At The Festival was recorded & mixed by Chris Ploss at Sunwood Recording in Trumansburg, NY, with additional recording by Samuel B. Lupowitz, and was mastered by Matt Saccuccimorano at Scaramanga Industries.

  • Reggae trio New Kingston will rock2roots at Music Hall of Williamsburg this Halloween

    Brooklyn-based family band New Kingston continues to be one of the most prolific and relatable bands in the U.S. reggae community. Their rock2roots showcases the many styles and vibrations New Kingston brings both on the road and in the studio. Their latest single, “Bring Your Rays,” released via Easy Star Records, gives listeners a taste of their trademark sound.

    Comprised of a trio of brothers – Tahir Panton (keys/vocals), Courtney Panton Jr. (drums/vocals), and Stephen Suckarie (guitar/vocals) – New Kingston first came together as a band performing for friends and neighbors under the watchful eye of their father (and bassist) Courtney Panton Sr. Dubbing themselves New Kingston to reflect upon both their Jamaican heritage and their home in New York City, the fusion of these two identities, both cultural roots and Brooklyn roots, guides their musical and stylistic direction.

    rock2roots

    They’ll perform at Music Hall of Williamsburg on Thursday, October 31, after a summer of putting a focus on singles for their rock2roots series. Tahir Panton states, “The rock2roots series will showcase the wide range of our musical styles that we’ve been crafting for over a decade.”

    According to the band, “Bring Your Rays” was inspired by humanity’s collective soul, adding, “In this changing world, love is something we need more of. It will solve more than we know. So be the sunlight in the darkness and “bring your rays”!” It’s the perfect follow up to their fiery last single release “Fyah Nuh Hot Like You,” which dropped in March.

  • 10th Nublu Jazz Fest to feature Sun Ra Arkestra, J.E.D.I. and dozens more over 10 days

    This November 7 to 17, New York City’s Nublu will host their 10th annual Jazz Fest at their classic and 151 locations. Performers featured at this year’s festival include Sun Ra Arkestra, Mark de Clive-Love, Shigeto, Melanie Charles, Brian Jackson, Stuart Bogie Trio, Shira Elias’ Goods and Services, and J.E.D.I. For a full schedule and more info click here.

    10th Nublu Jazz Fest
  • The Slaughterhouse Chorus will bid farewell at The Hollow on November 1

    After a decade of trucking their twangy rock ‘n’ roll from New York to New Orleans, Albany punk rock Americana quartet The Slaughterhouse Chorus will ride off into the sunset with a farewell show at The Hollow Bar + Kitchen on Friday, November 1. The Day of the Dead goodbye party will also feature performances from longtime friends and collaborators Henry’s Rifle and Charmboy (both emerging from semi-retirement for the festivities), and Boston’s Coffin Salesman.

    The Slaughterhouse Chorus

    The Slaughterhouse Chorus formed in 2009 from the ashes of long-running punk/ska band Public Access, reconnecting over old country records to work up a fast and loud sound somewhere between Sun, Stax, and SST. From the outset, the band took the DIY approach they’d honed over their years of touring with Public Access to its logical extreme; they recorded, mixed, burned, pressed, spraypainted and screenprinted their own albums and merchandise, booked their own shows and tours, and co-founded the local recording collective Built4BBQ as a means to help produce and distribute music by like-minded local artists like Henry’s Rifle, Kimono Dragons, Charmboy, and the Savage Randys.

    Over the course of the last decade, The Slaughterhouse Chorus embarked on weekenders and tours that stretched from Boston to Kansas City, released a full-length,a vinyl EP, and a handful of singles, landed on a couple of widely distributed compilation albums, and even racked up a few “best-of” nods in now-defunct local papers.

    In commemoration of their last round of shows, The Slaughterhouse Chorus released both their new EP … In the Name of Progress and their 2012 self-titled full-length album on limited edition 12″ vinyl earlier this year. The band will hold a “going out of business sale” at the November 1 show, with both records and all leftover merchandise out on the table for cheap.

    Doors open for 18+ show at 8:00 PM, with music starting at 8:30. Cover is $10

  • Glass Pony discuss their debut album, music video concepts, and seeing the 518 scene from crowd and stage

    The Capital District scene has produced great bands for decades – Blotto, Ominous Seapods, Mister F, Formula 5, Wild Adriatic, Annie in the Water, Candy Ambulance, just to name a few. Add Glass Pony to the list of bands with immense promise and potential that call the greater Albany area home. The quartet have risen over the past year with a psychedelic jam sound that has brought in a large swath of fans to shows across the region.

    glass pony

    They’ll have an album release show on November 2 at Parish Public House in Albany. Glass Pony recently premiered “Stardust” off the upcoming self-titled debut album, and spoke with NYS Music about the album, what it’s like seeing the local scene from both sides of the stage, and where they see themselves in a few years.

    Pete Mason: The first track on Glass Pony, Grover’s Mill 1938,” find’s its roots in Orson Welles’ ‘War of the Worlds’, with a spooky, creeping build throughout the song. How did interest in an 80 year old radio program lead to writing a song about this infamous New Jersey town?

    Greg Pittz: This is Eddie’s tune, and it was one of the first things we ever worked on.  I remember him showing me the demo on his phone while we were at Blue Sky one night.  It’s an interesting song, because at first we didn’t take the jam out too much beyond the chord structure, but now it’s one of my favorite vehicles.  It’s grown into a very strong show piece. 

    Eddie Hotaling: Honestly, I had just finished watching a documentary about the broadcast. It’s such an interesting story. Imagine what it felt like for those people who actually thought that Martians were invading Earth. It was Halloween eve and war was on the horizon… put yourself in their shoes and try to imagine the panic that people felt when they turned on their radios and heard what sounded like an actual news broadcast reporting an alien invasion. That’s where the song comes from, it’s from the perspective of somebody who lived through those few hours of terror that night with an image of that New Jersey town under attack burning into their mind.

    PM: What is the story behind the 10 minute odyssey of “Maximus”?

    GP: This was the first thing I wrote for us, and in a way it sort of encapsulates everything about my musical tastes.  I grew up playing death metal, and this song has some very traditional metal “punches” that set up the fast, dancey verse grooves.  Those “punches” also come with some killer bass bombs and organ screams.  I love all of that.  You can hear a lot of organ slides like that in versions of “The Other One” from the 80’s – Brent was great about that.  The intro to the song comes from my love of post-rock – that music style is all about the build up.  You need some patience, but it can be so effective.  The dark, spacey middle section is an homage to my love of Pink Floyd, especially the song “Dogs.” Matt’s synth is killer here, and I’m really hoping listeners go to another place when they’re listening.  Eddie also did a great job on his lead work for this part. He had a clean slate – I just had the chords, and he came up with his parts on top.  This section gives way to a big, triumphant guitar melody that I absolutely love to play live; when it’s really working, it feels so good, especially with Jeff’s bombs underneath.  It might be my favorite thing for us to play live, and I like it too because the bar count is odd for this section – it’s a 7 bar phrase, which is kind of weird.  It gives a sense of tension and movement, and I love Chanda’s drum fills here, we’re all moving together as a unit.  I didn’t intentionally set out to write a song like this, a big thing with multiple sections, but it just came together that way.  I’m glad Matt (Richards, Formula 5, Annie in the Water) was able to play on this song too, because his keyboard work is exactly what I always envisioned it having when I wrote it.

    EH: This was the first song Greg wrote for the band. The prog and post-rock elements help establish the variety that makes this band unique.

    PM: “Bolly Golly” is easily your most catchy song and loved when performed live. Imagine this song as a music video. Where is it set and what is the tone of the video?

    GP: So, this is a funny story.  I go to a post-rock festival called Dunk! Festival every year in Belgium. Two summers ago, I came home from the festival and when I picked up my guitar, literally the first thing I played were the chords that became the verse and main rhythm for this song.  I must have been primed for creativity, because it was literally, literally the first thing that came out, and it was so different than all of the music I had heard at the festival.  The rhythm is sort of based around the Bo Diddly beat, and post-rock never uses that.  Lyrically, the song is about Eddie’s trip to Ireland and his discovery that there are, for some reason, palm trees in Ireland.  I don’t know if it was the first time we jammed on it, but Eddie came up with the guitar and vocal melody while we were jamming.  The chorus lyrics were written while I was on a bike ride – a lot of stuff comes to me when I ride my bike for some reason.  I was about to pass over Delaware Ave on the Rail Trail here in Delmar, and I immediately took my phone out and punched in the words.  As a music video, is it too on-the-nose for it to be set in Ireland? 

    Chanda Dewey: We start off at a beach party, drinking Corona’s with Kenny Chesney. We’re all hanging and Kenny introduces us to the Bolly Golly palm trees, they are cool little cartoon palm tree folk. Then the band ends up getting on a boat, but the boat is really a space ship and we’re kidnapped by the Grover’s Mills aliens. We are pretty concerned and try to escape but when we get to their home planet we find out that the Bolly Golly palm trees are there too so all is good. End scene would be us partying with the aliens and palm trees.

    EH: The music video, directed by Twinkie (his directing debut), follows a tasty treat trying to escape his death after being chosen from a Japanese vending machine by a hungry postman. It’s set on a breezy summer day in Japan. It’s warm inside the vending machine but nobody is melting, and it’s a pretty relaxing afternoon. The postman stops for a break and picks a snack. Panic fills the chocolate treat as it falls to what is sure to be it’s last moments of life. Just as the jam starts about half way through the song, the treat slides out of the postman’s hand and begins an escape. It is almost caught several times but as the jam comes to an end the treat takes a crucial turn and secures his freedom for another day. It’s not easy being a tasty snack and the ups and downs of that life is something that is brilliantly portrayed in the Bolly Golly music video.

    PM: “Hypnos” reminds me of Patti Smith, a little bit of Chris Robinson, and some spoken word mixed in. From what influences did this song originate, and how does the energy reflect on the band’s core sound?

    GP: This is kind of our goth/krautrock song, and it’s become a big crowd favorite and maybe our most potent jam vehicle.  I love The Cure and Kraftwerk, and the dancey 80’s motorik drum beat thing with spacey guitars over top could fuel me forever.  I can’t get enough. (If you like “Hypnos,” you need to listen to “Red Flags and Long Nights” by She Wants Revenge, “Hallogallo” by Neu! and “Entrada” by Barrows.)  I think this song works well because even though it’s darker, it’s still dancey, and jambands don’t really play dark music these days.  I wrote the song to be about all the nonsense we get bombarded with today – empty distractions that don’t really fulfill us.  Kids who get everything given to them, people who troll Tinder looking for meaningful connection, people who always have to have the new, shiny thing, etc.  It’s kind of a snarky condemnation, and I must have been feeling salty at the time.  I think its energy is really reflective of what we do well though – dancey grooves with explosive jams.  When we do it right, the climax is one of the most potent things we have in our arsenal.  I always feel like I’m surfing a tornado when we get there, it’s all chaos and a whirlwind, and then we slam back into the theme and it’s just a great, great feeling.  When we’re done, I feel like I’ve held my breath through the whole thing.

    EH: I remember Greg telling me he had a new song that had sort of a Talking Heads vibe. The song has a lot of energy and opens up for an upbeat jam. It’s also a song I get to scream in, which I think is another element that helps set us apart in the jam scene. The jam has a very high energy peak at the end and it’s a hell of a lot of fun to play live.

    PM: Arising from the Albany scene and playing in the greater 518, what are some things you have observed as musicians that you didn’t see as fans?

    Jeff Picarazzi: As a musician in the 518 music scene I have learned that anything is possible if you have the right people to work with. Meeting, playing and making friends with all these traveling musicians/ promoters/ bar owners/ sound engineers helps make it all possible. I used to think it was rocket science to play with a jam band and still maintain that level of interest and consistency. But it’s not, its very accepting and open to basically any direction we want to go, which I knew all along as listener but not as a musician. We can go anywhere we want with this jam and to me that’s the beauty of it, we can rely on the things we know and groove and it doesn’t need anything else. If I can recognize and acknowledge that the groove is happening and it is now, the opportunities are endless.

    GH: As far as playing Albany and local shows, the biggest thing for me is a feeling of “we belong.” When I was younger, I always saw the stages and venues as these lofty things that “professionals” had a right to be playing.  It didn’t seem like a thing that I could take part of – it was always outside of me.  Now, I realize they’re simply there for the taking if you’re willing to work hard and earn your spot. 

    CD: I think most fans have a sense of the awesome music community we have here in the Albany. For me as a fan, I only had a small idea of the relationships beyond the community of fans and musicians. As a musician I have seen how much further it extends than I fully realized. Between all of the other bands, the bar owners and staff, promoters, other artists, just everyone else involved that you don’t initially think of, there is an incredible amount of collaboration and support that makes all of this work. We’ve met so many amazing people since we have started this and are very lucky for that.

    EH: I’ve been part of the Albany scene for years not only as a fan but also professionally as a live sound and recording engineer. Even though I had been writing and recording my own music for years I saw myself more as a behind the scenes person. I think part of that was from the insecurities I felt from being surrounded by such great musicians all the time. Although I was confident in my writing I hadn’t done too much performing. The support and encouragement that this artistic community gives each other is incredible and that’s the biggest thing that has stuck out to me since we have started playing more. It makes me wonder why I waited so long; if you wait to start doing something until you’re perfect, you won’t ever start. This area has a lot of passionate artists doing some very creative things and I’m so grateful to be a part of it.  

    PM: Where do you see yourselves at the start of 2021?

    JP: At the start of 2021 I would like to have played a New Years Eve set or show to ring in the new year, and playing a lot more outside of the Capital Region and New York as a whole. I would like to have Colorado in our foresight and weekend/tours booked for the upcoming spring in states and territories we haven’t been. That being said, I am so happy to see how far we have come in this past year! It’s a lot to take in sometimes but at the rate we are going those aspirations of mine for 2021 seem more like a plan and less than a wish.

    GP: At the start of 2021, we’re looking to begin moving outside of Albany and take our weird thing to the people elsewhere.  We also have a ton of new material beyond this album that we’re looking to get recorded also, but I’m not sure when that will happen.  Just keep moving forward to grow and grow!

    CD: We’ve got a solid amount of material that came up around or after the time we recorded this album. Hopefully we can get some of those songs recorded and have another album ready by early 2021. Beyond that, we are hoping to start playing outside of Albany, we haven’t done too much of that yet.

    EH: I’m very proud of how far we’ve come in the last year and I think the next year is going to be even better. By the end of this year we’ll have our first album out and hopefully by the end of 2020 we’ll release our second. We already have a batch of songs that are ready for the next release and we’re excited to get those recorded. In 2020 we’re also planning on getting outside of Albany and starting to establish some connections in other cities so hopefully by 2021 we’ll have made some friends and new fans in places across the Northeast and we’ll be working on growing those audiences and setting our sights even further out.

  • The Stanley to host Lettuce with special guest Ghost-Note on November 20

    Premiere psychedelic funk band Lettuce will find their way to Central New York on November 20, with a performance at Utica’s Stanley Theater. No strangers to playing shows across New York State, this marks Lettuce’s first ever performance in Utica.

    For more than two decades, Lettuce have brought a new vitality to classic funk, matching their smooth and soulful grooves with a hip-hop-inspired urgency.

    Comprised of a stellar group of musicians – Drummer Adam Deitch, guitarists Adam Smirnoff, bassist Erick “Jesus” Coomes, keyboardist and vocalist Nigel Hall, saxophonist Ryan Zoidis, and trumpet player Eric Bloom—the band consistently displays an applauded mastery of their respective crafts. The group of high caliber musicians blend their talents together in a sound that is distinctly their own.

    From their latest album Elevate, acclaimed single “The Love You Left Behind” is a funky take on the classic tune. Featuring the gritty vocals of blues siren Alecia Chakour, the track was included in NPR’s All Songs Considered and is a crowd favorite at their live shows.

    Formed in 1992, when several band members attended a summer program at Boston’s Berklee College of Music as teenagers, Lettuce was founded on a shared love of legendary funk artists like Earth, Wind & Fire and Tower of Power. After returning to Berklee as undergrads in 1994, Lettuce started playing in local clubs and steadily built up a following that soon extended to cities across the country and then throughout the world.

    Opening the night will be Ghost-Note. Having formed in 2015, the group’s two studio albums – 2018’s Swagism and 2015’s Fortified – have earned critical acclaim and popular success around the globe, with both albums hitting the #1 spot on the iTunes jazz charts. Pushing funk music into the future, Ghost-Note builds on the uplifting, pioneering foundations laid out by the likes of James Brown and Sly & The Family Stone and infuse their fresh take with tastes of afrobeat, hip-hop, psychedelia, world folklore, and more.

    For more information and tickets, visit The Stanley Theater website.

    stanley lettuce
  • Vernon Reid to perform Hendrix’s ‘Band of Gypsys Live at The Fillmore East’ at The Egg

    On Friday, November 1, Vernon Reid and his “Band of Gypsys Revisited Band” will perform at The Egg in Albany, as part of the American Roots & Branches concert series.

    In the spirit of revisiting, refreshing and further exploring the soul, funk & roll of the Jimi Hendrix album Band of Gypsys Live at The Fillmore East, guitarist extraordinaire Vernon Reid of Living Colour, guitarist André ‘Dré Glo’ Lassalle, drummer James “Biscuit” Rouse, and bassist Jared Michael Nickerson will celebrate the 50th anniversary of the recording of this iconic and influential album.

    Tickets available at The Egg Box Office at the Empire State Plaza, by telephone 518-473-1845 or online.

  • ‘I Can’t Drive 55’ was Inspired by The Northway

    According to a clip from a recently shared interview, former Van Halen frontman Sammy Hagar tells the interviewer that a drive on I-87 North was the inspiration behind “I Can’t Drive 55.” What many New Yorkers know as ‘The Northway,‘ Hagar was inspired to write the song after he was pulled over for speeding on a drive from Albany to Lake Placid.

    In the clip above, Hagar said he had returned from a family safari vacation and was headed north when a cop pulled him over. Hagar thought he was driving under the speed limit.

    “You get tickets for 62 around here. I’m like wait a minute, the speed limit is 65 and he’s like, ‘No, it’s 55.’ I didn’t know they changed it and I wrote the story right on the spot. This guy’s writing the ticket and I’m writing the lyrics.”

    Hagar, Pulled Over on I-87 N

    Even though Hagar does not mention the Northway or Interstate 87 by name, the only road you could go 55mph, let alone 65mph in the area would be The Northway.

    I can't drive 55

    So, if you’re ever had to drive north between 4 and 6pm during the week, you know what it’s like to not be able to drive 55. Plus, you and Sammy Hagar now have something in common.

  • Halloween Jerry Dance Party offers Immersive, Psychedelic, Audio/Visual experience

    Following Dead and Company’s Halloween performances at Madison Square Garden on October 31 and November 1, Jerry Dance Party will take place at ZeroSpace, giving Deadheads a chance to keep the dancin late into the night.

    “This is a rare opportunity to bring one of the most inspiring musicians of all-time into New York’s newest, visionary venue on the most creative holiday of year,” said event creator DJ JerrBrother. “Past will meet future when the music of Jerry Garcia plays at ZeroSpace!”

    Inspired by psychedelic late-nights at the LOCKN’, The Jerry Dance Party will take place at New York’s Burning Man-inspired art-tech space ZeroSpace and include thousands of square feet of multi-sensory video mapping, projection and lasers.

    Each Jerry Party room at ZeroSpace will be dedicated to a specific decade of The Dead, providing unique experiences that stretch into the early morning hours. For those Rhythm Devil fans, there will also be a 3D mapped, 30-foot geodesic dome synchronized to “Drums & Space” all night long.

    ZeroSpace is located at 136 W. 33rd St, just steps away from Madison Square Garden. It features custom projections, interactive LED screens, projection mapped floors, synchronized illuminations, the largest augmented reality sandbox in the world and more, all tuned to the magical sounds of The Dead for this exclusive two-night event.

    Tickets for the post-Dead & Company Halloween Jerry Dance Party are $25 and on sale now. This event is 18+. Visit Relix for more information.

  • The Who’s ‘Tommy’ will return to Broadway in 2021

    Pete Townshend and Tony Award-winner Des McAnuff will bring The Who’s Tommy back to Broadway in 2021. 2019 marks the 50th anniversary of The Who’s Tommy, which tells the story of a young boy traumatized into deafness and blindness, yet has an unexpected gift for pinball that puts him on the path towards becoming the leader of a messianic movement.

    Inspired by the groundbreaking 1969 LP and the 1975 film adaptation, the staged musical version of The Who’s Tommy first appeared in the summer of 1992 at San Diego’s La Jolla Playhouse. It later opened on Broadway in 1993, winning a Grammy and five Tony Awards, including Best Original Score and Best Direction of a Musical.

    With McAnuff and Townshend at the helm, the show won five Tonys that year. Now, with a return to the stage, McAnuff says it is more relevant that ever.

    “Our new production of Tommy will be a reinvention aimed directly at today,” he said of the new production, for which he’ll act as director. “Tommy combines myth and spectacle in a way that truly soars. The key question with any musical is ‘Does the story sing?’ and this one most certainly does. Tommy is the anti-hero ground zero. He is the boy who not only rejects adulthood like Holden Caulfield in The Catcher in the Rye, but existence itself. He becomes lost in the universe as he stares endlessly and obsessively into the mirror at his own image. This gives our story a powerful resonance today as it seems like the whole world is staring into the black mirror. The story of Tommy exists all too comfortably in the 21st Century. In fact, time may finally have caught up to Tommy Walker.”

    “In every producer’s career a show comes along that feels like a perfect fit,” says producer Hal Luftig. “To have Des and Pete look at Tommy again is extremely exciting and feels just right. I’m thrilled to bring Tommy back home to Broadway where it belongs!” Producer Patrick Catullo adds, “My parents took me to see Des’ original Broadway production for my 16th birthday. It completely blew my mind and is the singular reason I pursued a career in theater. The story is timeless and it’s one of the best scores ever written. I am beyond excited to present The Who’s Tommy not only for its existing fans, but to introduce it to a new audience as well.”