Author: Mike Kohli

  • Annie in the Water Talks Band History, Influences and ‘Rumours’ as They Set Out on Most Ambitious Tour Yet

    Annie in the Water has just completed the most successful year in their career and is now embarking on the most ambitious tour of their career beginning this week. This tour has the band teaming up with Hayley Jane to perform Fleetwood Mac’s Rumours album in its entirety and will visit venues across the Northeast throughout the month of February.

    Annie in the Water’s second album Time to Play was released last summer. It’s an album comprised of songs the band has been playing live for years but hasn’t received the studio treatment until now. It’s an album that gives a snapshot of a band on the rise and a band ready to take on the live music scene with a vengeance.

    The ‘Spread Rumours’

    Tour kicks off during Saranac Lake’s Winter Carnival on Feb. 5 at the Waterhole and concludes Feb. 22 at the Higher Ground in Burlington. Stops along the way include Frog Alley Brewing in Schenectady on Feb. 7, the Disruption Network’s Third Anniversary Party at the Jewish Community Center in Utica on Feb. 8, the Buffalo Iron Works on Feb. 12, and Flour City Station in Rochester on Feb. 13. 

    While they call the North Country home, Annie in the Water has roots all over the map. Their origin story stems from a chance meeting between singer/guitarists Michael Lashomb and Bradley Hester at Hobart College in Geneva in 2007. The two hit it off immediately and began jamming together.  They would reconvene during summers off from college, jamming together and coaching at lacrosse camps. They recorded their first album Destination in 2011 while Hester was a graduate assistant coach at Jacksonville University. 

    Since forming, the band has undergone several lineup changes, with Hester and Lashomb the only constant over the years. The band is now a six-piece with the addition of former Formula 5 keyboardist Matt Richards last July. Brock Kuca (drums/percussion), Ryan Trumbull (drums) and Chris Meier (bass) complete the unit. 

    Annie in the Water and Hayley Jane have been rehearsing for this tour for the past several months and are set to kick it all off this Wednesday in Saranac Lake.

    annie in the water

    NYS Music recently sat down with the band to discuss their history, their influences and the upcoming Spread Rumours Tour with Hayley Jane.  

    NYS Music: First, I’d like to start by finding out more about each of you individually. Where is each of you from? What path brought you to where you are today? 

    Bradley Hester:  I grew up all over the place, born in Colorado. I also lived in Ohio, Japan, Virginia, and I came to Upstate New York by way of Hobart College. Since college, I’ve been in Upstate doing the Annie in the Water thing but also coaching lacrosse. I will probably always coach lacrosse because it’s one of the ways I am bringing my value to life and I have learned so many things from the game that continue to impact the way I live my life. 

    annie in the water
    Brad Hester (Photo: Brian Cornish)

    Michael Lashomb: I was born and raised in Cleveland, OH. My parents were originally from Ogdensburg, New York. We would go visit Upstate and work on my grandfather’s land whenever we had time off from school, so I was able to become familiar with the North Country landscape and inner-city life throughout my childhood. 

    While I was in Cleveland, I was exposed to a lot of diverse styles of music. There was always new music coming through mainstream radio when I was a kid, also a lot of hip-hop and funk influence in the city. In the North Country, I was exposed to more roots style and country. So I had a good blend that influenced me. When I was about 11 years old, I heard blink-182’s song “Dammit” on the radio and I immediately thought of ways to learn the song. That motivated me and I just started diving into all sorts of musical styles. I specifically started basing my early style of play on John Frusciante’s (Red Hot Chili Peppers) fretboard work. 

    Throughout my late teens and early 20’s, I was always picking up different jobs to try to make it work. I moved down to Florida at one point and was recruited to be a lacrosse coach and teacher at a prep school in Jacksonville. After that, I went out to L.A. for a short time and worked on the TV show The Amazing Race. In my late 20’s, I decided to go full-time music. No Plan B for me. I couldn’t imagine not pursuing music as my life path. 

    annie in the water
    Michael Lashomb (Photo: Brian Cornish)

    Brock Kuca:  I was born and raised in a little town called Morristown on the St. Lawrence River (Thousand Islands). I started playing music at the age of 10, the saxophone. That didn’t really work out so well. I discovered the guitar at age 12. That’s when the sparks flew and music became the main priority in my life. Before joining Annie in the Water full-time, I cooked fancy food in a local restaurant. I was also a mail carrier for the U.S. Postal Service and worked production at music festivals. Although I have a deep passion for cooking, it’s hard to really imagine my life without some kind of musical influence in it. 

    I met Mike and Brad some eight or nine years ago. Wow, that’s hard to believe. They would invite me out to play gigs in Potsdam, Alexandria Bay, Clayton and Watertown. I’ve shared the stage with various, very credible and outstanding musicians since then but the present combination of the six of us is a special thing. We are all writers/composers and are just starting to explore that realm with one another. 

    Brock Kuca

    Chris Meier: I’m originally from Chatham, New York. My path to where I currently am heavily involved my time spent at SUNY Oneonta, where I met my bandmates from my first group, Space Carnival. We were lucky enough to have a great scene that eventually led to where I am now. 

    annie in the water
    Chris Meier

    Ryan Trumbull:  Well, I grew up in the Adirondacks. I was born in Saranac Lake. All of my family members had some sort of musical talent, especially my uncle who had played drums for a long time. 

    Ryan Trumbull (Photo: Brian Cornish)

    Matt Richards: I was born in Albany and reside just outside of the city in Delmar, NY. My life’s musical journey through multiple bands — my high school and SUNY New Paltz band, The Assortment of Crayons, followed by my three-plus years with Formula 5 immediately after college — is what brought me to Annie in the Water. If I weren’t making music, I’d likely be studying how birds make music. 

    Matt Richards, Brock Kuca and Michael Lashomb

    NYSM: The group has evolved over the years, adding new members as recently as this past summer. Have the six of you started to gel as a unit yet? 

    BH: I feel we gelled the first time we played with each other in a rehearsal. The first show we played together felt like the right thing. The music and the feelings that go with it all get tighter as we continue to push ourselves into unknown territory. As long as we allow ourselves the freedom to explore at shows, we can uncover parts of our potential that would never have happened if we limited ourselves. 

    ML: The band finally became a full unit when Matt Richards joined in July of 2019. The first rehearsal we had, I personally felt that he was the glue of the entire unit and the gelling started then. Chris and Rippy (drummer Ryan Trumbull) had already been in the mix for six months and they were really sinking in with the backbeat and Brock has made considerable strides as a percussion player. 

    Everyone in the band is open to trying new things. They are constructive and they are professional. I am extremely lucky to have such great people in this band. I believe all of our collective experiences and knowledge have come together well. All of our individual skills have made the growth quick. 

    MR: We certainly have. I find our unity became most evident in what is now known as “The Church Set.” We were supposed to perform outside in Potsdam on Sept. 7 last year but due to poor weather conditions, we performed inside the local Methodist Church. We were effortlessly one cohesive unit this set, and have remained so since. 

    RT:  I think we are just starting to mold our sound. 

    CM: Most definitely. We’ve really taken off as a unit and it feels like the sky’s the limit.

    NYSM: How does the songwriting process work for you guys? Is there one person doing all the writing or is everyone given free rein to submit material? 

    BH:  Songwriting works in a variety of ways. The album Time to Play is a collection of some of the songs Mike and I have been playing and performing for years, but I really enjoy opening up the floor for all ideas while we are creating. I feel like the best ideas can come into something with an open canvas, so even if one of us writes a song, everyone else can add ideas to it and add great elements. Everyone in the group is a creator, so I like to keep open the possibility of anyone bringing a song to the group and for the group to help develop. 

    ML: AITW music is a collective of material. Everyone in the band writes, which is terrific. Now that we have had some time to develop, we are more focused on writing as a unit. Sometimes a song can be written collectively but also one person may have a vision for a song, and as a group, it’s important for us to all do our best to help facilitate that creation. Songwriting will always be an evolutionary process for this band. 

    MR: We all have so many songs from our past that we want to work in this group. Perhaps everyone in this band is a terrific songwriter. There is a strong desire to work as one to create music in the future. Additionally, Bradley and I have performed a number of duo shos and write at least one song each time, live, in front of an audience. That is a process that is new to me but I love very much. Songwriting can be improvisation slowed down and improvisation can be songwriting sped up. 

    CM: This has been the most open format for writing I’ve ever been a part of. Everything is on the table. 

    annie in the water
    Hayley in the Water Rehearsal at The Bank, Frankfort

    NYSM: Who are some of your biggest musical influences? 

    BH:  When I was young, I grew up on Top 40 hits and was influenced by country music through my parents. Garth Brooks was a go-to of mine when I was in elementary school and, strangely enough, because of my older sister, the Backstreet Boys had an impact on me before I became a teenager. Throughout middle and high school I got into bands like Styx, 311, 30 Seconds to Mars, Finch, Our Lady Peace, blink-182. From the hip hop angle, Eminem is someone I paid a lot of attention to in terms of diction and delivery of language, Kid Cudi for breaking out of norms, B.O.B., Andre 3000, Sammy Adams for their unique approaches. Bob Marley is a huge influence on me as well. Mike introduced me to Phish back in 2008 and I had such an uplifting experience that I knew I was going to achieve similar things with our band with time and patience. 

    I’m always influenced a little by the other bands in our scene, especially the bands we have the pleasure of playing with. Michael Franti and Spearhead, Andy Frasco, Nahko and Medicine for the People, Swamp Kids, Wild Adriatic, John Brown’s Body, Goose, Turkuaz, Big Something, moe., Twiddle, Nina’s Brew, among others. There are too many to name but I am slightly influenced by everyone I am lucky enough to experience!

    ML: When I was eight years old, I was obsessed with the Grateful Dead. Not so much their music, but their artwork. I had t-shirts and patches on my backpack and everything. What is interesting is how their music has been woven into my style almost naturally. But besides them as an overall musical influence, I grew up on folk music — Bob Dylan, Cat Stevens, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. I’m also a big fan of The Band. I love Pink Floyd, Daft Punk, LCD Soundsystem and Sigur Ros. Those are my ethereal outlets. I also loved punk in high school: Ten Foot Pole, MxPx, Pennywise, blink-182, Less Than Jake, 311, NoFX, but also heavy stuff like GWAR, Korn and Rammstein.

    I got into jamband/bluegrass style stuff in high school. Stuff like String Cheese, Bela Fleck, Dispatch, moe., Umphrey’s McGee. Phish was a discovery that changed the whole game. But recently I have been getting more into traditional Celtic music like The Dubliners and different modern composition styles like Bon Iver and Hans Zimmer. Very grateful for all the music I have been exposed to.

    MR: Steely Dan, Animal Collective, Ween, Yes, MGMT, Circa Survive, Phish, Vince Guaraldi, McCoy Tyner, The New Deal, RAQ, nature (like actual nature, not a band), Wilco, Dave Brubeck, Talking Heads. Okay, I gotta stop myself somewhere but I know I am missing at least 50 artists and will kick myself for not including them.

    RT: Stewart Copeland, Brain (Primus), Anika Nilles, Benny Greb.

    CM: Sly Stone, Beck, Motown, Steely Dan.

    NYSM: When did you first develop a relationship with Hayley Jane? This tour sounds like it will be a fun collaboration. What was the genesis of the idea to do a Rumours tour together?

    Hayley Jane

    BH: I first developed a relationship with Hayley Jane back in 2016 when I posted myself doing a vocal exercise for the first time in eight months. She contacted me and was curious about what happened to me because she wanted to offer her experience going through vocal issues. We’ve been friends ever since, sitting in and co-creating whenever possible.

    Sometimes it’s hard to remember how fragile our vocal cords can be if they do not get proper attention and strength training, but they are also very resilient and can come back from injury stronger than ever, which is how I feel now. I was able to dissolve the cyst that formed on my right vocal cord by taking many months of pure rest and also learning how to properly warm-up. Staying away from alcohol and drugs and remembering to stay healthy and hydrated is key to my intention to make my vocal cords last as long as I can stay alive.

    ML: Brad and I first met Hayley Jane about four years ago in Vermont and that’s when a relationship started. The Vermont music scene has a tendency to bring like-minded people together. The project idea started when we were all at Grassroots in Shakori Hills, NC. Our band had been on a pretty solid Fleetwood Mac kick for a while so when we were in North Carolina, Chris was talking with Hayley about playing a Fleetwood Mac song. I’m not exactly sure how the conversation went because I wasn’t there, but now there’s a tour put together and I’m playing in it.

    CM: I’ve been aware of Hayley for a number of years but we formally met last fall at Shakori Hills Grassroots Music Festival. The idea was developed there over the conversations we had in our RV on tour.

    MR: I first met Hayley through Formula 5. She would perform with us in Burlington at Nectar’s when we would get up there. I think since we all love Rumours it just felt natural we reach out to Hayley and see if she would be interested in doing this with us. It all fell into place seemingly well.

    NYSM: Thanks to all the members of Annie in the Water for your participation. Best of luck with this most ambitious tour.

    The upcoming tour will have Hayley Jane opening each show with a set of original material, followed by a complete run-through of Fleetwood Mac’s storied Rumours album featuring Hayley Jane alongside Annie in the Water and concluding with a full Annie in the Water set.

    Tickets are available now for all shows on the Spread Rumours Tour. For more information on the tour and where to purchase tickets check out the Annie in the Water website here. Check out the band’s latest album Time to Play below.

  • 2020 SAMMYs Nominees and Hall of Fame Class Revealed

    Nominees for the 2020 Syracuse Area Music Awards, affectionately known as the SAMMYS, were announced Tuesday morning at the Palace Theater in Syracuse. Also announced Tuesday was the 2020 SAMMYS Hall of Fame class.

    The two-day event takes place on March 5 and 6 with the SAMMY Hall of Fame induction ceremony taking place Thursday, March 5 Upstairs at the Dinosaur Bar-B-Que on Willow Street. The awards ceremony takes place Friday, March 6 at the Palace Theater on James Street. Tickets for the event are available starting Tuesday at the SAMMYS website.

    This year’s Hall of Fame inductees include the Camden-based Mossback Mule Band, Syracuse television journalist Tim Fox, Syracuse hip hop artist Seth Marcel and Syracuse musician and sound engineer Judy Mareiniss.

    Music Educator of the Year is Casey Vanderstouw, director of the Baldwinsville Marching Band and Plan Bee; and singer-songwriter Garland Jeffreys was named the Lifetime Achievement Award recipient.

    Below is the list of nominees in the 16 categories that will be awarded on March 6 at Syracuse’s Palace Theater.

    Best Pop:

    Stephen Phillips – Big Eyes & Rosy Cheeks

    Jenna Cunningham – Seizing Self

    Best Hip-Hop or Rap:

    Slick Fashion 2 – Purple

    315 CA$H – A Rough Start#RELOADED

    Coughlin – #TheHeat

    The Real Raw Breed – No Excuse

    MBK Richy – RSZ

    Best Americana:

    Mike Powell – The Full Nelson: Live at the Odeon

    The Ripcords – Last Dance

    Coffee & Beer – Leap

    Off the Ground – Cleared for Takeoff

    Ghost Town Ramblers – Outlaw Highway

    Best Alternative:

    Late Earth – Eleventh Hour

    Keep Up – Up In Flames

    The Action! – 20 Years Alive

    Mandate of Heaven – Least Concern

    Devinne Meyers – Silver Line

    Best Rock:

    Atkins Riot – Too Much Whisky

    Underwater Bosses – Aqua La Vista

    Chris Eves and the New Normal – One Spark

    Slow Train – In Between

    Mike Powell & The Black River – Gypsy Winnebago

    Ronnie Dark – Sky

    Best Hard Rock:

    Kris Wiechmann – The Heaviest Tenderness

    Cry to the Blind – Deliver Me

    Ecliptic Vision – Ecliptic Vision

    Murder in Rue Morgue – Endless Cycles

    Killaton – My Abyss

    Best Other Style:

    Mark Nanni – Towns & Spaces In Between

    Josh Dekaney – All the Americas

    Leo Crandall & Hymie Withthoft – Unknowable & Studding Thing

    Spotlight Studios – A Holiday Spotlight

    O’Connor & Dunn – Which Way to Neverland?

    Best Jam Band:

    Big Sexy & The Scrambled Eggs – Road Less Traveled

    Vaporeyes – Vaporeyes

    Best Singer/Songwriter:

    Dale Randall – All the Love I Know

    Andrew VanNorstrand – That We Could Find a Way to Be

    Cam Caruso – Up Above & Down Below

    Sydney Irving – The Greene EP

    Jeffrey Pepper Rodgers – Live and Listening

    Best Blues:

    Sean McLeod – Harriet Tubman Freedom Music Festival-Live! Vol. 4

    King Kool and His Royal Blues – Train Wreck

    Diana Jacobs – What She Needs

    Chris Terra Band – Lady Luck

    Earl Slick & The West Side Social Club – The West Side Social Club

    Best R&B:

    Gary Carpentier – LUCID

    Barroom Philosophers – Digital Demise

    Jaquiel – Changes

    Alani Skye – Alani Skye

    Best Country:

    The Cadleys – Duets & Ballards

    Whiskey Hollow Rush – True Stories

    Jon Rogalia – A Little Too Country

    Emalee Herrington – Plans Change

    D. Dusk Rogers – Pounded Down By Christmas

    Best Jazz:

    London McDaniel – Masterpieces

    Melissa Gardiner – Empowered

    Best Electronica:

    Ruby C. – Ruby C.

    Empires in Orbit – Doom City Limits & Singles

    Founder’s Award:

    U A D
    James ‘Saul’ Brown
    Rick Linzy
    Hollis ‘Larry’ Mathis
    Isaac Wynn

    Jack O Bocchino Spirit of the SAMMYS Award:

    Marge Nolan

  • NYC Hardcore Vets Agnostic Front and Sick Of It All Announce Co-headlining Tour

    After a successful December tour of New York City venues, legendary New York hardcore acts Agnostic Front and Sick Of It All have announced they will embark on a 19-date tour.

    The tour kicks off in Boston on April 23 and has the co-headliners visiting two festivals — Epicenter in Charlotte and Rockville in Daytona — wrapping with a show at Syracuse’s venerable Lost Horizon on May 15.

    Tickets for all dates go on sale Friday, Jan. 31 at 10:00 a.m.

    Agnostic Front

    Agnostic Front / Sick Of It All — 2020 Tour Dates:
    April 23 – The Middle East – Boston, MA
    April 24 – Le D’Auteull – Quebec City, QUE
    April 25 – Foufounes Electrique – Montreal, QUE
    April 26 – Lee’s Place – Toronto, ONT
    April 27 – The Shelter – Detroit, MI
    April 28 – Crafthouse – Pittsburgh, PA
    April 29 – Elevation 27 – Virginia Beach, VA
    May 1 – Epicenter Festival – Charlotte, NC
    May 2 – Diamond Pub – Louisville, KY
    May 3 – Subterranean – Chicago, IL
    May 4 – Blueberry Hill – St. Louis, MO
    May 6 – Barracuda – Austin, TX
    May 7 – Trees – Dallas, TX
    May 8 – White Oak Upstairs – Houston, TX
    May 10 – Rockville Festival – Daytona, FL
    May 11 – The Loft – Atlanta, GA
    May 13 – Ottobar – Baltimore, MD
    May 14 – Underground Arts – Philadelphia, PA
    May 15 – The Lost Horizon – Syracuse, NY

  • RIP Neil Peart, a Drummer’s Drummer

    Neil Peart, the pioneering drummer and primary lyricist for Canadian progressive rock icons Rush died Tuesday, January 7 following a nearly three-year-long battle with brain cancer. He was 67 years old.

    The influential drummer joined Rush, replacing John Rutsy, in 1974 for the band’s second album Fly By Night and immediately changed the musical direction of the band with his Ayn Rand and SciFi-inspired lyrics and technical drumming skills.

    Neil Peart

    Peart was an unassuming and deeply private man with an extraordinary talent for drumming, the man who inspired legions of air-drummers throughout the world. He rarely did interviews, leaving those duties for bandmates Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson, where he spoke most directly was through his lyrics.

    Drawing from science fiction, fantasy and the works of Ayn Rand (which he would later renounce), Peart wrote lyrics that could be fantastical, could be direct but they made the listener think.

    The 1982 single “Subdivisions” spoke directly to a generation of young disaffected high schoolers, addressing the loneliness and separation of one trying to fit in.

    Subdivisions

    In the high school halls

    In the shopping malls

    Conform or be cast out

    Subdivisions

    In the basement bars

    In the backs of cars

    Be cool or be cast out

    Rush – “Subdivisions” (1982)

    Those lyrics spoke directly to this writer trying to find his way around the halls of Staley Junior High School. It let the disaffected know they weren’t alone in their feelings. And it struck home.

    A truly lasting memory associated with Rush is from the winter following the release of the band’s breakthrough 1981 album Moving Pictures. This album was inescapable that year but nowhere more than at the outdoor hockey rink at Franklyn’s Field in my hometown.

    My friends and I made the short trek to the park every day, sticks over tiny shoulders, skates dangling behind us. We knew we were in the right place once we heard the lone tinny speaker attached to a light pole overlooking the rink cranking “Limelight,” “Tom Sawyer,” “YYZ.” This was my first real exposure to Rush and the most lasting memory I have of the band. The songs were technical, yet accessible. And the drums. I’d never paid much attention to individual instrumentation as a 12-year-old finding his way in the music world. Peart demanded your attention. And he did just that, for 40 years. A virtuoso in a band of virtuosos.

    Neil Peart

    Peart retired completely from drumming following Rush’s final tour in 2015. The demand put on his body over years of constant performing left Peart unsure of his ability to maintain his precision. The demands of the profession lost out over the desire to spend more time with his family and with his other writing and producing projects.

    He leaves behind his wife Carrie Nuttal and a daughter, Olivia along with a legacy few humans can claim.

  • Bonnaroo 2020 Lineup Announced – Tool, Lizzo, Tame Impala Named as Headliners

    The 2020 Bonnaroo lineup was revealed Tuesday morning. The June 11-14 festival returns to Manchester, TN for its 19th year with headliners Tool, Lizzo and Tame Impala.

    Other acts slated to appear this year include the newly reformed Oysterhead (featuring Trey Anastasio of Phish, Stewart Copeland of the Police and Les Claypool of Primus — which will also be performing), Lana Del Ray, Vampire Weekend, Miley Cyrus, King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard, Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit and Tenacious D.

    Brooklyn’s Turkuaz, which released its latest EP Kuadochrome in November of last year, is performing with former Talking Heads members Jerry Harrison and Adrian Belew as part of a 40th-anniversary tribute to the Heads’ Remain in Light album. Also Nelly will be performing a 20th-anniversary tribute to his Country Grammar album.

    Tickets for Bonnaroo 2020 go on sale Thursday, Jan. 9 at Noon ET at several different price levels. Details can be found here.

    Check out Lizzo’s NPR Tiny Desk Concert below.