Category: Features

  • Orange Corner Debut “Hippie Baby” Gets Out the Cradle

    Image a bastard-child bred from a strange co-mingling of iTunes libraries. A mash of genres and unforeseen turns have fused a free flowing debut single from Orange Corner, named “Hippie Baby.”

    Buffalo New Yorks’ five-piece multi-genre performance band, Orange Corner, has no filter. The band leans heavily on funk, obvious trips of psychedelic rock, metal, reggae, hip-hop and electronic genes are all dispersed. It is no suprise they get lost in improvised jams, which keeps their live sets in motion, fresh and new. If you like Red Hot Chili Peppers, Incubus, Pink Floyd, Jamiroquai or Talking Heads, Orange Corner and “Hippie Baby” will quickly gain your attention.

    orange corner
    Orange Corner “Hippie Baby” album art.

    “Hippie Baby” is not for the faint of ear. It’s the epitome of a toddler running rapid, musically challenging the norms of song structure. Orange Corner’s take it or leave it approach sucks you right in as Drummer Tj “Thor” Carson creates a dynamic ploy across the toms. Seemingly out of time, “Hippie Baby” lures with swaying bass and lots of texture.

    By the time the band kicks off, in the eight-plus minute track you get it, and sink into the groove. Yet, the band does play with you heart-rate as they sink back into a musical somber, filled with guitar overtones, cymbal textures, and electronic ‘spaceship’ synth.

    Orange Corner takes you for ride with “Hippie Baby.” filled with an unexpected pit-stops, like Randy Pawlak’s ‘out-your-mind’ bass lick as he and Thor quest the band onward.

    Upon attending an Orange Corner performance, be prepared to
    endure musical movements of vast magnitude. Once it’s showtime, a fresh sonic pallet is tastily presented, and the crowd quickly becomes enthralled in an upbeat mix of soaring solos, rhythmical nuances, and downright infectious vocals.Whether it’s through dancy improvised medium or tethering originality with appropriate covers, this band has a knack for cleverly stimulating the amygdala….

    Orange Corner Bio

    Orange Corner’s circle has been growing through WNY grass-roots festival, Tedfest. Last year the band had 700 people pass thru the day/night, across three stages, 20+ bands, and a load of vendors.

    Check out more WNY YOU NEED TO SEE BANDS Here

    Meet Orange Corner:
    Nathan Addenbrooke: Funk-n-soul driven vocals, rhythm guitar, percussion
    Randy Pawlak: In-the-pocket, out-your-mind bass & bubbly backseat banter
    Thomas Leaming: Lavish lead guitar love generator
    Tj “Thor” Carson: The groove-hacking, head-banging drummer
    Tommy McDonald: White keys, black keys, spaceships and synth leads

  • Hearing Aide: Joe Bonamassa ‘Royal Tea’

    Utica’s all grown up boy wonder guitar god, Joe Bonamassa, has just unleashed another fantastic solo album, Royal Tea. Recorded at London’s iconic Abbey Road Studios. Bonamassa’s latest is a tip of the hat to his British blues rock heroes, Jeff Beck, John Mayall & The Bluesbreakers, Led Zeppelin, Cream and more. It is also as much a showcase for his increasingly progressive and mature songwriting, as is his always sizzling six-stringery.

    The 10 originals here were co-written by Joe and Brit notables including former Whitesnake guitarist Bernie Marsden, ex-Cream lyricist Pete Brown and piano man Jools Holland of Squeeze fame. Bonamassa’s long-standing producer Kevin Shirley and his touring band, Anton Fig (drums), Michael Rhodes (bass) and Reese Wynans (keys), flew in for the sessions.

    Joe Bonamassa Royal Tea

    While Royal Tea is a nod to British blues masters, it is not at all about retreading the classics, or the simple but saintly joys of going round and round the 1-4-5 pattern. It’s an album full of songs that are firmly rooted in a blues feel, but with very progressive and surprising leanings. It’s all about the unexpected chordal turnarounds and multi-movements that span epic length, things that owe more than a bit to Brit prog acts of the ‘70s.

    Bonamassa sets the tone with the album opener, “When One Door Opens.” It kicks off with baroque strings and brass that could’ve been mustered up by another true Abbey Road legend, Beatles’ producer George Martin. It’s a mournful ballad that feels a bit like Guns N’ Roses “November Rain,” until it shift into a nasty Led Zep-styled groove and then a boogie for a screaming wah-fueled solo. It solo winds down with rhythmic quote from “Beck’s Bolero,” before returning to the mournful orchestral mood for the close.  A ballsy move, as this one clocks in at 7:34, making it the longest track on the album.

    The title track follows. It’s another hard blues with a thick slamming groove and unexpected descending chordal turnaround, and yet another Beck-era Yardbirds’ quote in the solo. Here and everywhere on the album Joe’s guitar tones are killer, honey thick and biting. And his solos here are kept brief, always in service of the song. And why not? Joe’s got one of the world’s best employed vintage guitar collections to make these varied sounds, a virtual museum that can be viewed here.     

    “Why Does It Take So Long to Say Goodbye” is another of the many slow grooves here. Joe wrenches every bit of emotion out of the melody, with his guitar playing and his vocals, the latter which gets better in each passing album. This is another blues in a few epic movements over its six and a half minutes, where he complements thick power chording with sweet flourishes on his acoustic.

    For a John Lee Hooker-styled boogie, with extra crunch, turn up “High Class Girl;” for a bit of Southern rock and slide, tap into “A Conversation with Alice.”  On “Lonely Boy,” Joe and company go for broke, with a sprightly big band jump blues with rocking’ horn parts. Some beautiful soloing from Jools Holland and what must be flashy chromatic runs on a vintage Telecaster from Joe. This is a track that would be totally at home on a Brian Setzer album.

    One of my favorites is the offbeat “Lookout Man!” This one combines another Jimmy Page-styled riff with Space Rock sound effects a la Gong/Steve Hillage, with a nasty blues harp and a chorus of female singers that sound like Ike and Tina Turner’s Ikettes. “Savannah” ends the album on an up tempo, with slamming’ country picking and a droney fiddle.

    This week Royal Tea made a big splash on the charts, earning Joe Bonamassa his 24th #1 album on the Blues Chart, an incredible feat, more than any other artist in the history of the chart!  More importantly, it’s gaining Joe fans beyond the narrow blues niche. He’s #5 on Current Albums, #6 on Indie Albums, #7 in Rock and #7 in Rock charts. 

    Bands like Cream and Zeppelin were successful because they took to the wonderful foundation of American electric blues and did something new and different with, with each album as their careers progressed.  Bonamassa deserves their level of success because he is following in their progressive and bold footsteps.

    Key Tracks: When One Door Opens, Why Does It Take So Long to Say Goodbye, Lookout Man!

  • Grateful Dead and the New Riders at The Capitol Theater, November 8, 1970

    If the Grateful Dead had an East Coast base outside of New York City, odds are it would be at The Capitol Theater in Port Chester. By November of 1970, the Dead had already done two previous runs at The Cap earlier in the year. This would be the third one and the show they would play here this year. This would be no typical show though. Tonight, they would be joined by fellow West Coast troubadours the New Riders of the Purple Sage. Along with a full acoustic opening set, the last Capitol Theater show of the year certainly leaves a mark.

    A knowledgeable crowd greets the show opening “Dire Wolf” with approval. The second verse seems to trip Garcia up a little but he makes up for it with a bit of an extended instrumental bridge. A true acoustic and relaxed version of “I Know You Rider” follows. This one is played on its own, with no “China Cat Sunflower” lead in, and at about half its typical speed, if not slower. Garcia takes the helm on vocals and leads the rest of the band through a really interesting take on this Dead staple that has the audience clapping along in time at parts.

    Grateful Dead Capitol Theater

    Bob Weir then takes the lead on vocals and leads the group through the relatively new-at-the-time “Dark Hollow,” which debuted earlier in the year at New York City’s Fillmore East. After some bizarre group banter about Godzilla, it’s Garcia’s turn once again for “Rosalie McFall.” This was another new number at the time, also debuted only months earlier at the Fillmore East. The band does their best to steer around some feedback issues for this little bluegrass jaunt that’s ideal for an acoustic set.

    The (new) hits keep coming, courtesy of Weir-led “El Paso,” only the seventh one ever. Performances number five and six took place the prior two evenings at The Capitol Theater. Afterwards, Pigpen finally gets a chance to lead and sings the last ever performance of the American Beauty gem “Operator.” Short harp solo – short time left with band? Another Beauty cut, “Ripple,” follows this, with the audience instantly engaged. And it would be a Beauty trilogy with the acoustic “Friend of the Devil” that followed. It certainly made sense from a promotional standpoint. The seminal Grateful Dead album was released exactly one week ago. It would later peak at No. 30 on Billboard’s Pop Albums chart.

    A boisterous cover of The Everly Brothers’ “Wake Up Little Susie” then follows, with even more additional audience “percussion.” It’s the last time the Dead would ever play this one in a live setting. The opening acoustic set then comes to a close with another Dead classic that was still a relatively new song at the time, “Uncle John’s Band.” This officially has the Capitol Theater crown whipped up into a frenzy before Garcia mentions they’ll be back shortly with the New Riders.

    For the second set, the New Riders of the Purple Sage delivered their unique brand of acid-washed country and rock tunes. At this point in time, Garcia and Mickey Hart are still involved in the band along with its co-founders David Nelson and John “Marmaduke” Dawson. Jerry plays the pedal steel guitar throughout and adds some beautiful interludes on “All I Ever Wanted.” “Fair Chance To Know” also has a “Teach The Children Well” feel to it, likely due to the aforementioned pedal steel and the same man playing it on each. “Cecilia,” though not the Simon & Garfunkel cover, features some legitimate yodeling. But the set does end with a cover, a rollicking take on The Rolling Stones’ “Honkey Tonk Women.” It’s a lively set that adds a totally different dimension to a Grateful Dead show and certainly worth a listen.

    Grateful Dead Capitol Theater

    Afterwards, the Dead come out swinging with a “Morning Dew” third set opener. They slowly glide through the composed section to an appreciative Cap crowd with Garcia’s dynamic vocals seeing it through. It’s a wonderfully patient and patiently evolving “Dew.” After things settled dow a bit, Weir takes over for a run through of “Me and My Uncle.”

    This is followed by the one and only live performance of “Mystery Train” with Garcia on vocals, resembling a NRPS song in nature. Then it’s right back to an early cover of Chuck Berry’s “Around and Around,” the first time the Dead would play this longtime crowd pleaser. More rarities would ensue with “New Orleans,” only the second of four ever played. Still led by Weir on vocals, this ambles into “Searchin’,” the first of the only two ever played, with Pigpen reassuming vocal lead duties.

    A Bob Dylan cover on the back end of this elicits yet another positive crowd reaction and the Northern California troubadours are off and running again with “It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue,” with Garcia, once again, re-establishing lead vocal duties. Dylan covers were certainly no stranger to the band at this point. But this would be the last “Baby Blue” performed in nearly 20 years.

    “Casey Jones” with yet another Cap Theater clap-a-long follows, another song tested earlier the last few nights. Speaking of “new” songs, the Dead would then roll out a song that would soon become synonymous with second sets, “Truckin’.” This Dead staple had only been debuted a few months earlier at the Fillmore West in San Francisco. This was another one the band decdided to “test run” the previous few nights at The Cap. It’s safe to say, by Sunday, they had this instant classic worked out.

    Grateful Dead Capitol Theater

    The instant the fledgling “Truckin’” comes to a close, the longtime Dead classic “Dark Star” wastes no time in starting up. It would also return at their next show at the fabled Port Chester venue, 2/18/71. This one gets way dark and spooky, rewarding the folks that have stuck around for this long for some visual and aural trickery.

    “The Main Ten,” is an incredible look at an instrumental version of the early renderings of a Grateful Dead classic. It’s a primordial and slower version of “Playin’ In The Band” before it ever came to fruition. This would be the last ever “beta” version of it before it would fully bloom into the first official PITB ever at this very same venue slightly more than three months later in February of 1971.

    Amazingly, this seems to trigger a particularly early closing sequence. An early drums fakeout segues into “Not Fade Away” and the Port Chester crowd is alive. After some impressive interplay, the jam soon lends itself to NFA’s running mate, “Goin’ Down The Road Feelin’ Bad,” another new song at the time that was just starting to develop as a show closer. Eventually, this steers itself back into “Not Fade Away,” and a close to this thunderous late second set sequence.

    One last abbreviated “Drums” sequence leads to the last song and de facto closer this evening, a rendition of The Rascals’ “Good Lovin’” that sees Pigpen get one last chance to lead an ecstatic Capitol Theater crowd through one last cover. Another “Drums” sequence serves as one last percussive explosion before “Good Lovin’” eventually rounds back into form, capping off the last Grateful Dead show in Port Chester for 1971.

    Grateful Dead w/ New Riders of the Purple Sage Capitol Theater – Port Chester, NY 11/8/70

    Set 1: Dire Wolf, I Know You Rider, Dark Hollow, Rosalie McFall, El Paso, Operator, Ripple, Friend Of The Devil, Wake Up Little Susie, Uncle John’s Band

    Set 2: Six Days On The Road, Superman, Whatcha Gonna Do, Glendale Train, All I Ever Wanted, Fair Chance To Know, Portland Woman, Cecilia, Truck Drivin’ Man, Last Lonely Eagle, Louisiana Lady, Honky Tonk Women

    Set 3: Morning Dew, Me And My Uncle, Mystery Train > My Babe, Around And Around, New Orleans > Searchin’, It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue, Casey Jones, Truckin’ > Dark Star > Dancing In The Street, Drums > Not Fade Away > Goin’ Down The Road Feelin’ Bad > Not Fade Away > Drums > Good Lovin’ > Drums > Good Lovin’

  • Foo Fighters perform new single “Shame, Shame” on SNL

    Foo Fighters were the musical guest for the first post-election Saturday Night Live last night, which was also the record sixth consecutive show for the NBC late night institution.

    With comedian Dave Chappelle returning for the second time, the first since November 12, 2016, which was also a post-election show but one that had a much more somber tone to it. The tone for the election results this past week would be set by the master comedian, who offered up a lengthy, thought provoking, and hilarious intro monologue.

    Foo Fighters have performed seven times prior on Saturday Night Live, and just before the show announced via Pitchfork that they are releasing a new album, Medicine at Midnight, due out February 5, 2021. They performed “Shame, Shame,” a slow rocker that stands out as different than past Foo Fighters songs. Guitarist Chris Shiflett told The Brag, “It’s definitely a little different than anything we’ve ever done before and it’s a little bit different than anything else on the record, although the record has a lot of songs that are, you know, groove-based like this one is.”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dh_vJ-E337g

    For their second song of the night, Foo Fighters went back to their 2002 release One by One for a fitting “Times Like These.” The true-to-the-moment version, with lyrics that are nearly two decades old hold true in the wake of a monumental election, with Dave Grohl notably repeating with increasing emotion, “It’s times like these you learn to live again.”

    I—I’m a one-way motorway
    I’m the road that drives away
    Follows you back home

    I—I’m a street light shining
    I’m a white light blinding bright
    Burning off and on

    It’s times like these you learn to live again
    It’s times like these you give and give again
    It’s times like these you learn to love again
    It’s times like these time and time again

    I—I’m a new day rising
    I’m a brand new sky
    To hang the stars upon tonight

    But I—I’m a little divided
    Do I stay or run away
    And leave it all behind?

    The first musical moment of the show, however, came in the cold open, featuring Alec Baldwin’s President Trump, finding the lame duck sitting down at a piano to sing a sad version of The Village People’s “Y.M.C.A.” The musical moment was a nod to the first post-election show in November 2016 that had Kate McKinnon’s Hillary Clinton singing an emotional version of Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah,” with Baldwin even saying a line similar to McKinnon’s, “I will never give up, and neither should you.” However, this time the performance by the losing candidate was met with laughs from the audience, and not a somber reception followed by ecstatic applause as was the case in 2016. Jim Carrey’s Joe Biden and Maya Rudolph’s Kamala Harris also closed out their celebration dancing to “Lose Yo Job” as the open wrapped up.

    https://youtu.be/vJYL4Osyipc?t=367
  • On this day in 1997, Phish debut “Farmhouse” on Late Night with Conan O’Brien

    Phish had not yet started their Fall 1997 tour, one that would be dubbed “Phish Destroys America,” yet they were already debuting new tunes for fans. On November 7, 1997, Phish performed on Late Night with Conan O’Brien, giving fans a first taste of “Farmhouse,” despite being there to promote the just-released live compilation Slip Stitch and Pass, before heading west a week later to kick off their Fall Tour in Las Vegas, NV.

    As Glide Magazine points out, Phish was not prone giving names to their tours, but Fall 1997 quickly earned the “Phish Destroys America” moniker by fans, thanks to a controversial Ames Design tour poster used to advertise the tour opener at Thomas and Mack Center, althought the title fits the tour perfectly.

    Phish Farmhouse

    The performance on Late Night featured a stand alone version of “Farmhouse,” a song that lent its name to their May 2000 studio album. The mild reggae vibe brings to mind Bob Marley’s “No Woman, No Cry” and could be found in Phish’s regular rotation beginning in the summer of 1999. Guitarist Trey Anastasio can be seen enjoying the guitar solo thoroughly during the more than four and a half minute version of the song.

    Following the performance of “Farmhouse” and Conan coming over to introduce and thank the band, O’Brien said “Take it away guys,” and Phish quickly moved into the intro to “Mike’s Song,” as they might do in live performances, much to the glee of lucky fans in the audience.

    Impressively, bassist Mike Gordon flew back to Burlington after the show, joining Max Creek at Club Toast for the second half of their show that same evening. Gordon sat in for “Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin),” “Wild Side,” “Outside of Home,” and “Just a Rose,” as well as the encore of Warren Zevon’s “Lawyers, Guns and Money” and “What I Like About You.”

    Phish would return to Late Night with Conan O’Brien once more on June 27, 2000 to perform “Get Back on the Train,” which would also be featured on the band’s ninth studio album, Farmhouse.

  • Slaughterhouse Chorus, Trampoline Jetstream and more Featured on this week’s EQXposure

    Each Sunday evening from 7-9pm you’ll find EQXposure on WEQX, featuring two hours of local music from up and coming artists. Tune into WEQX.com this Sunday night to hear the latest EP from Slaughterhouse Chorus, Trampoline Jetstream and more!

    Slaughterhouse Chorus

    WEQX has long been the preeminent independent station in the Capital Region of New York, broadcasting from Southern VT to an ever-expanding listening audience. NYS Music brings you a preview of artists to discover each week, just a taste of the talent waiting to be discovered by fans like you.

    The Slaughterhouse Chorus – ...In the Name of Progress

    … In the Name of Progress is the first Slaughterhouse Chorus recording to a music collective, Built4BBQ. Albany audio extraordinaire Ryan Slowey tracked the band live in vocalist Chris Jordan’s rural Rensselear County cabin, resulting in a lean and mean collection that fully represents their on-stage energy and lyric-driven songwriting. While the band’s previous recordings occasionally incorporated an “Honorary Chorus” of auxiliary instrumentation ranging from banjos to horn sections, … In the Name of Progress relies entirely on two electric guitars, bass, drums, and vocals – with the notable exception of one high-lonesome bluegrass harmony section provided by John “Henry’s Rifle” Pipino and Dan Wilson of Kimono Dragons and the Rechorduroys.

    slaughterhouse chorus

    From the opening garage-punk ripper “Greenplates” to the ZZ Top thump of “Used Tombstones”, from the signature country-punk barnburning of “Hambone” and “Pedestrians” to the cathartic dirge of closing track “Wellsville”, … In the Name of Progress finds The Slaughterhouse Chorus stretching their sound into narrative songs that unfold like short stories set to boot-stomping sing-alongs. Simultaneously pared down to basics and more expansive than anything else they’ve recorded, it’s a fitting swan song for a band that’s spent ten years doing things their own weird way.”

    As for what’s happening now, even with The Slaughterhouse Chorus coming to an end, the band never really stopped getting together to write and record new music. Weekly basement practices due to COVID precautions were put on hold, and later moved to Chris’ socially distanced garage and started working on fleshing out a batch of Chet Atkins/Jerry Reed style acoustic guitar ideas he’d been kicking around for years that never really fit in with Slaughterhouse. This evolved into a project they’re calling Timing. It has a lot of the country/Americana side of Slaughterhouse, but much more weirdness and much less punk rock.

    Trampoline Jetstream – “Jerry”

    Utica’s Trampoline Jetstream will also be featured on this week’s EQXposure, with Pearson spinning their song “Jerry.”

    The four person indie rock band began to record “Jerry” in Utica two years ago. Before they could finish, vocalist Nick Vanderwood suffered an injury that left him unable to sing. The band put the project on hold until February 2020, just before the COVID epidemic put everything on pause. Trampoline Jetstream had finished recording, but had to delay production and gigs further. Read more on Trampoline Jetstream here.

  • Trey Anastasio Resurrects His ‘Ghosts of the Forest’ On Fifth Night of Beacon Jams

    The fifth performance of Trey Anastasio‘s eight-week residency at New York City’s Beacon Theatre took the exact form of one of his many recent side projects. From the opening zoom to the stage that soon showed backup singers and a different looking drummer, it was clear early on that tonight would finally be a variation of the core lineup from the first four weeks of The Beacon Jams. Tonight, Trey took his Ghosts of the Forest side project out for its first run in well over a year. If there was any rust on it, it was minimal.

    Expectations for this evening started getting a little hyped up early on Friday, thanks to a nondescript Twitter post from Don Hart, Trey’s longtime orchestral and arrangement collaborator. A warning shot like this will rarely go unnoticed within the Phish community.

    Ghosts of the Forest

    Immediately, hopes ran high with some sort of orchestral configuration of a Phish song or multiple songs. Perhaps an updated version of “Times Turns Elastic” or an elaborate run through of “You Enjoy Myself”? Apparently, per Trey, Mr. Hart was was still composing arrangements for this evening right up until 20 minutes before showtime, so anything was fair game.

    Instead of traditional Phish canon, tonight’s orchestration was directed to one of the more recent Anastasio solo efforts, his Ghosts of the Forest album that was performed a handful of times in early 2019. It’s a complete album with more than 20 songs in all, written by Anastasio in the emotional wake stemming from the death of one his longtime friends, Chris Cottrell.

    Ghosts of the Forest

    The opening zoom in to the stage immediately revealed a different lineup tonight. There were three backup singers visibly present: Celisse Henderson and Jennifer Hartswick, both from the original GOTF format, as well as “newcomer” Jo Lampert. The other distinct difference was a scruffy-haired Jon Fishman behind the drum kit this evening instead of Russ Lawton who manned it the first four nights. Together, with other Beacon Jam mainstays like Tony Markelis on bass and Ray Paczkowski on keys, this completed tonight’s GOTF ensemble.

    With the “new” Ghosts of the Forest lineup established, they wasted no time in going into the outfit’s namesake song. Even though this was only the band and camera crew onstage, the fog and echo effects that accompanied this one were crowd-ready. “Drift While You’re Sleeping” followed, with the backup singers directing the the bulk of the vocal effects this time. Another sophisticated reverb effect introduced the reggae-ish breakdown sequence and it was clear early on nothing was being held back production-wise.

    After this impressive opening sequence, Trey took the time for a quick round of band introductions, including one for Fishman, aka “some guy he picked up hitchhiking,” as well as new backup singer Jo Lampert. Trey made sure to remind folks that Lampert not only served as a clone in Phish’s New Year’s show at MSG last year, but also as one of the backup singers for their Ziggy Stardust musical costume from Halloween 2016. So she was certainly no stranger.

    It wouldn’t be a “Beacon Jam” without some sort of spatchcock reference and that’s exactly what led into into the next GOTF song, “Friend.” Instead of the traditional four-piece Rescue Squad Strings that had accompanied Trey the previous weeks, this one would be “spatchcocked” into a fuller and doubly richer eight-piece ensemble Trey’s lead solo sounded even richer with the backing of the additional strings on this one.

    ghosts of the forest
    photo by Jake Silco

    After a quick shoutout to the Phish Chicks Facebook group, the backup signers returned and then it was right into “Sightless Escape,” complete with a “No Men In No Man’s Land” tease and a monstrous vocal breakdown from Celisse at the end. Afterwards, Anastasio honestly confided they were “having too much fun” tonight. “Halfway Home” featured a slowly building and ascending jam topped off with another Trey solo and sterling backup vocal harmony. After this, it was a quick switch to the acoustic guitar for “If Again” which sounds like it could be the uptempo cousin of “The Inlaw Josie Wales.”

    Trey then took the time to give personal introductions to all eight members of tonight’s Rescue Squad Strings, including one whose friend formerly dated Jon Fishman. The strings added a wonderfully delicate touch to “In Long Lines” as well as “There’s A Path Above.” Afterwards, Trey thanked and mentioned Don Hart’s involvement, confirming arrangements were being completed right up to the last minute. Naturally, this somehow digressed to another spatchcock reference that ended with Trey telling Fish he plays a song quite regularly about this, “Split Open and Melt.” This led into one of the few GOTF numbers that’s seeped into the Phish repertoire, an electric “About To Run” with no strings or singes, just another ferocious Anastasio solo, capped off with an election and a “running for office” pun.

    “The Green Truth” saw the backup singers return in a big way as they seemed to dominate the tail end of this one. “Beneath a Sea of Stars Parts 1 & 2” followed and featured a nice, drawn out opening sequence with Fishman taking lead on drums for a while. “The lights are flashing” line seemed to nod to the simple yet highly effective combination of flashing house lights and the minimal light rig used onstage. The Rescue Squad Strings then re-entered before “Mint Siren Dream.” This delicate little number saw Trey in full crooner mode, using only the microphone to sing while being supported by the strings and timely fills from Ray on keys.

    “Stumble Into Flight” featured more lively play from Paczkowski, that meshed with a distinct echo effect from Trey and powerful backing vocals to produce a notable jam that contained a “Pigtail” quote at one point. Immediately afterwards, with no hesitation, “Ruby Waves” started up, giving this two-song section of the evening a distinct Phish taste. Although no Alpine Valley version, this “Ruby Wavs” got plenty deep and developed another intriguing jam that grew organically, sounding by far the closest to anything purely Phish from “The Beacon James” so far, including the still impressive lighting display.

    Ghosts of the Forest trey anastasio palace theatre albany

    The strings ambled back on stage for “Shadows Thrown By Fire,” a brief instrumental number with the backup singers adding airy vocals atop. “Wider” was another highlight of the evening, with heavy bass play from Markelis early on bass and a catchy “Gonna get wider when I die” lyric. More strong play on the clav and organ from Ray added to a bit of an extended jam.

    Trey then gave the chat room one more nod, and noted that up to $400K in donations have been made to date towards The Divided Sky Fund. This elicited more heartfelt thanks with Anastasio advising a site for the proposed rehabilitation house has been found, and it’s on track to open in late 2021.

    ghosts of the forest
    photo by Jake Silco

    The strings returned once more for “Life Beyond The Dream,” an appropriate song to follow talk of a rehab house with its “don’t give up hope” lyrics. As expected, the string ensemble took this song to another level in a dazzling display of orchestration towards the end. “In This Bubble” followed, with its wishful “going home” lyrics and a melody once again driven by the backup singers who were all in great form all night. This immediately transitioned to the end of the “Sea of Stars” suite with “Beneath a Sea of Stars Part 3 (blue)” that was appropriately heavy on all available shades of blue house lights.

    This effectively ended the set. The encore began with another spooky, echoey effect that bled into the beginning of the hauntingly somber “Brief Time,” with Trey again on acoustic. “Pieces of the Machine” with more “Ghosts of the Forest” vocal teases finished things for the evening – a complete performance of Ghosts of the Forest exactly as it had been played in its handful of performances earlier last year. Or, in other words, just another Friday night at The Beacon for Trey.

    ghosts of the forest
    photo by Jake Silco

    Trey Anastasio “Beacon Jams” Beacon Theatre – New York City, NY 11/6/20

    Setlist via Phish.net

    Set: Ghosts of the Forest > Drift While You’re Sleeping, Friend [1], Sightless Escape, Halfway Home > If Again, In Long Lines [1], There’s a Path Above [1], About to Run, The Green Truth, Beneath a Sea of Stars Parts 1 & 2 [1] > Mint Siren Dream [1], Stumble Into Flight > Ruby Waves, Shadows Thrown By Fire [1], Wider, A Life Beyond The Dream [1], In This Bubble > Beneath a Sea of Stars Part 3 (blue)

    Encore: Brief Time [1], Pieces in the Machine

    Notes: [1] With The Rescue Squad Strings : Katie Kresek, Maxim Moston, Phil Payton, and Mary Jo Stilp on violin, Monica Davis and Rachel Golub on viola, and Eleanor Norton and Anja Wood on cello

    All photos by Jake Silco

  • Garcia Peoples Serve Up Psychedelic Studio Effort “Nightcap At Wits’ End”

    Nightcap at Wits’ End has been out for a month, and the buzz behind Garcia Peoples latest release is well justified. Named one of the fall’s most anticipated albums by Uproxx, and “their most focused and engaging work to date” by AllMusic has put the New Jersey band on the radar of Rolling Stone and live music afficianados in New York City. The group’s grand psychedelic sound and penchant for improv when live carries through on Nightcap at Wits’ End, an ambitious effort that delivers from start to finish.

    garcia peoples nightcap
    Artwork by D.Norsen

    There is an actual Wits End Tavern on the NY/NJ border in Unionville, NY near Black Dirt Studios where Garcia Peoples recorded their last two albums, Cosmic Cash and One Step Behind. The nightcap offered on their new release is more than a pre-bedtime listen – the experimental weirdness of “Fire of the Now” and the early Genesis mixed with psychedelia of “Gliding Through” are meant to provoke the listener early on into continuing the journey of Nightcap at Wits’ End.

    Tom Malach and Danny Arakaki formed the band in New Jersey, slowly solidifying the lineup with Danny’s brother Cesar (drums) and Derek Spaldo (bass) joining the two guitarists in mid-2016. Having since relocated to New York, they have added Pat Gubler (keys) and Andy Cush (bass) with Spaldo shifting to vocals and guitar, making a trio of guitarists at the center of Garcia Peoples‘ sound. Nightcap is the first time the six have recorded together in the studio, the result being a transference of the live experience to the studio album.

    In discussing Nightcap with NYS Music, Spaldo revisited One Step Behind, with its 30-minute title track making for a one of a kind album.

    One Step Behind is certainly a unique type of record – primarily one long piece of music with multiple movements. We’ve played that entire piece live, even drawing it out to about 50 minutes of non-stop music. But Nightcap at Wits’ End feels like a solid snapshot of “here’s what you might get at a Garcia Peoples show”: high energy, hard-rocking tunes, with a tempting taste of our improvisational flair.

    I like to think of Nightcap as the record where all six of us let our musicianship really soar in a “balls to the wall” kind of way. When we were recording it, there was a strong sense of being in the groove. There was even an improvisational nature in the way that the songs were created. We really put a lot of ourselves into the making of it.

    Derek Spaldo, Garcia Peoples

    Nightcap is indeed a full album where the musicianship shines, particularly on the second side, where one finds songs interconnected as they flow from one to the next. This effort mirrors the live experience of seeing Garcia Peoples, while offering early Pink Floyd influences heard on “Crown of Thought” and the seamless segue into the 1:36 of “Sound Controls Time.”

    Drawing on 1960s era psychedelic music frames Nightcap, and influences the band without emulating them outright.

    Blossom Toes, Jefferson Airplane, The Turtles, and Mighty Baby are some bands that come to mind. Our whole ethos of having super open-ended jamming, taking things way out sonically, is certainly inspired by the late 60s psychedelic movement.

    Though from a songwriting POV, I feel that our collective inspiration works more as an accumulation of influences that seep into our creativity through osmosis. I wouldn’t necessarily say that we deliberately set out to imitate our influences. Though having a common frame of reference is always useful in the development stage when trying to convey what the vibe of a song should feel like, what the arrangements should be like, etc.

    Derek Spaldo, Garcia Peoples

    A majority of Nightcap at Wits’ End was recorded earlier in 2019, just after finishing a tour, adding to the comfort in switching from the road to the studio.

    Most of the basic tracks were recorded with the six of us playing live in the room together, so there is that kinetic interplay that one can hear on the record. I think recording as live as possible is the best way to go for us; the way we play off each other is so in-the-moment and essential.

    Derek Spaldo, Garcia Peoples
    garcia peoples

    Whether you catch the Doors vibe of “Altered Place,” find yourself lost in the seven-minute acoustic-prog journey “Painting a Vision that Carries,” or fall into “(Our Life Could be your Van)” – harboring a long spacey beginning that picks up steam, traveling through valleys on an instrumental vision quest – Nightcap at Wits’ End is an album that puts Garcia Peoples in the spotlight and on a pedestal as we patiently look forward to what comes next.

  • Interview with Keith McQuirter on EPIX’s New Music Docu-series “By Whatever Means Necessary: The Times of Godfather of Harlem”

    With the May premiere of Laurel Canyon, its two-part series dedicated to the California rock of the ‘60s and ‘70s, EPIX proved it might just be TV’s best new source for music documentaries.  With its latest effort,  By Whatever Means Necessary: The Times of Godfather of Harlem, EPIX is heading East and uptown. The mission here is to spotlight the many musicians and the musical genres they birthed, from soul, funk and jazz to boogaloo and proto-rap, that helped inspire social change during the turbulent 60s, in New York City’s most culturally percolating neighborhood.

    The Times of Godfather of Harlem

    This four-part series is the counterpart to Godfather of Harlem, the acclaimed period drama featuring  Forest Whitaker and Giancarlo Esposito. This Emmy Award-winning series follows the story of Bumpy Johnson, the notorious Harlem gangster who sought his own version of economic empowerment against the Italian mob, in an era when Black men and women had little power or choices for upward mobility.  The action of the series spans the decade and is fueled by a soundtrack featuring the best of this very best era of Black music.

    The fascinating story of this golden era is told in interviews with musicians like Martha Reeves, Gladys Knight, Herbie Hancock, Carlos Alomar, Nile Rogers, A$AP Ferg, Chika, Gary Bartz and Joe Bataan, along with the activists who were there pushing forward the drive for civil rights like Al Sharpton.  It also contains a remarkable bounty of rarely-seen archival footage, of interviews and live performances by giants like John Coltrane, James Brown, Gil Scott-Heron and many more.

    The Times of Godfather of Harlem

    NYS Music speaks here with Keith McQuirter, the series’ Executive Producer and Director about what viewers can expect with the premiere of this series, November 8 at 10 pm ET/PT.

    Sal Cataldi:   The EPIX dramatic series for which your documentaries are a companion, Godfather of Harlem, is set in the ‘60s in NYC, a time and place of incredible change and musical innovation.  Why was music so interweaved with and reflective of the currents of that particular time and place, the civil rights movement and the like?

    Keith McQuirter:  What drew me to do this series was to examine how music was used as a force for good in the fight for civil rights.  There is a long history of Black protest and empowerment music and our series looks at the years, from 1960 – 1969, from the point-of-view of Harlem residents.  The scripted series, Godfather of Harlem, is really a civil rights story, told in the criminal underworld.  Our series focuses on an entirely different palate – how music impacted culture and politics, and how culture and politics impacted the music.  It allows audiences to see the national story of the Black freedom struggle through the personalities, music and activism coming out of Harlem.  

    Harlem was a very political place in the ‘60s.  Many black families fled the south due to racial terrorism and sought better economic opportunities, only to be face racism, discrimination, limited opportunity and segregated schools in the New York City.  You had dueling philosophies of Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr. and the megawatt influence of Adam Clayton Powell Jr, who was both a Baptist minister and congressman representing the neighborhood. You had the Garveyites, the Black Panthers, the Young Lords and some many others in the fight for civil rights.  Not everyone agreed on the approach, but they all agreed that it was time for a change.  The freedom songs coming out of the Black church, the jazz of John Coltrane, Charlie Mingus, Max Roach and even Chubby Checker’s Twist spoke to power and change.  Our series brings it all together through interviews with eyewitnesses, luminaries and archival that gives a unique look at this part of Black history and culture that is rarely ever told. 

    SC:  The first episode spotlights The Apollo Theater, with comments from performers like Martha Reeves of Martha and the Vandellas and Gladys Knight, and even actor Giancarlo Esposito, one the stars of Godfather of Harlem who saw performances there as a child.  What are some of the more interesting things you uncovered about the Apollo in your interviews and research?

    KM:  The Apollo Theater has been a cultural bedrock in Harlem and America for decades.  If you wanted to be a star on the national stage, performing at the Apollo was a rite of passage for many artists.  So all the greats performed on the Apollo stage.  We spoke with Martha Reeves and Gladys Knight,  who told us about her first time performing at the Apollo at a very young age.  Both she and Martha talked about how nervous they were because the Apollo audience is known to be a tough crowd.  If you get booed off, you might get a tomato thrown at you or other unpleasant things.  It was interesting to learn the origin stories of these two legends.

    But there is a lesser known story that I appreciated.  In the late 1960’s, the Apollo Theater had a mentorship program, where they developed and groomed underprivileged, musically talented teens to be professional entertainers.  The teens formed a band under the direction of the theater called Listen My Brother, in which 17-year-old Luther Vandross was a member.  We interviewed Carlos Alomar of David Bowie Band fame and Robin Clark, both members of the band.  They met as teens during the Apollo program and married before their 20th birthdays.  Fifty years later, they are still married!  It’s a truly musical love story.  Their homework was to go upstairs and watch the Supremes and the Temptations — study their grooming, choreography, stage presence and incorporate it into their rehearsals and their own performances.  Can you imagine that type of education?  Robin Clark shared about how one day Aretha Franklin came down to the basement where they were rehearsing and talked to the teens about the music business.  Robin said she couldn’t believe her idol casually made a surprise visit to their rehearsal.  Its apparent that the education and mentorship paid off because both Robin Clark and Carlos Alomar have had illustrious careers in the music business for decades.     

    SC: The series illustrates how jazz, and especially the new breed of free jazz musicians, were reflecting the civil rights movement.  How did the works like John Coltrane’s “Alabama” and Max Roach’s “Freedom Now Suite” energize the drive for equality?

    KM:  John Coltrane’s “Alabama” is a haunting elegy for the four little girls who died in the Birmingham church bombing in 1963, that was recorded just two months after the tragedy, when grief still weighed heavily on people’s hearts. Coltrane modeled the piece after Martin Luther King’s eulogy to the four girls that was delivered three days after the bombing. The saxophone begins in a tone and cadence of profound mourning, and gradually gains complexity and intensity, expressing the steady resolve to continue the struggle against racist brutality.  The message in Coltrane’s piece remains relevant today, with racially-motivated violence still threatening the lives of Black people.

    I also interviewed Warren Smith the legendary percussionist, who played with so many greats like Miles David, Aretha Franklin, Janis Joplin, Nina Simone and Max Roach. He says that Coltrane was unafraid to express his emotions in ways that were new at that time.  He inspired Smith and others to fully lay into their instruments to express their anger and to say something meaningful.

    This was in contrast to when most pop music at that time still avoided addressing political and racial issues, in an explicit way.  Many jazz artists were fearless about expressing Black rage and resistance through their music.  Jazz was the perfect vehicle for conveying the message of resistance, since the genre is deeply rooted in the historical Black experience.  So, Max Roach’s “Freedom Now Suite” was a celebration of emancipation and the years of struggle that followed the end of slavery.

    The incredible vocalist Abbey Lincoln expressed the anxiety and anticipation of emancipation against a frenetic avant-garde rhythm section. Roach said in an archival interview we found that, “We could never finish the song because we don’t really know how it feels to be free.” We also interviewed jazz saxophonist Gary Bartz, who played with Roach on the “Freedom Now Suite” and he remembers when he found out that the record was banned in South Africa – clear evidence that music could be a weapon for change.

    SC: Curtis Mayfield was especially important, as a musical messenger, a sort of pop music poet of the struggle.  What was it about him that connected so strongly with the movement and which resonates today?

    KM:  Curtis Mayfield had come up in doo wop music, collaborating with his old friends from Chicago’s Cabrini Green housing projects.  As an artist, he understood the power of music to uplift and empower.  He focused on building a viable music career and began to write songs that sent an implicit message of hope to young Black people hungry for change. His song, “It’s All Right,” speaks directly to the young people:

    When you wake up early in the morning, feeling sad like so many of us do, Hold a little soul, and make life your goal, and surely something’s got to come to you. And you’ve got to say, It’s all right…” 

    The song launched Mayfield’s career and his band, The Impressions, and it captured the spirit of resistance and hope that characterized the beginning of the decade.  He later released “Keep on Pushing” capturing the civil rights movement determination for change.  There were many artists providing the soundtrack to the civil rights era, but Mayfield is prominent because his music always deliver the message of empowerment. 

    By the end of the decade, his music had come a long, long way. His lyrics had become explicitly political, and his sound was funkier and more soulful.  He released “(Don’t Worry) If There’s Hell Below, We’re All Going To Go” where he calls out the courts and the police as political actors, talks about the drug epidemic and pollution and how all of this decay and corruption is going to bring us all to our downfall.  This message juxtaposed to Richard Nixon’s who was just elected president by an overwhelming white conversative calling for law and order and a return to the old America. It all sounds incredibly familiar.   

    SC:  James Brown is another giant highlight in the series, especially the role he played in black pride, in actually changing the racial terminology from “Negro” to “Black” with his anthem “Say It Loud, I’m Black and I’m Proud.”  How powerful an impact did this song have in the community?

    KM: In the late 60’s, James Brown released an unexpected anthem, “Say it Loud (I’m Black and Proud).”  This song made James Brown one of the most prominent performers to celebrate Black identity. Ever since his historic live album recorded at Harlem’s Apollo Theater in the early 60’s, Brown had personified unadulterated, unapologetic blackness. But his lyrics had always avoided politics, and his personal style still reflected an earlier time – especially his hair, which he kept in a carefully-maintained pompadour. By the time this came out, Brown cut his hair and sported an Afro in message with the changing time.

    Brown later complained that “Say It Loud” ultimately cost him record sales, radio play and bookings at white clubs; but, at the moment it came out, it was an instant hit. Brown’s words were also taken up by activists across the country, who were marching in a never-ending series of protests – against the war in Vietnam, inferior schools, irresponsible landlords, unfair practices, and all the other problems the community still faced.  His music fueled Black resistance and allowed Black folks to freely celebrate themselves and their culture with pride.

    SC:  How did The Last Poets and Gil Scott-Heron, the pioneers of the fusion of poetry into music, impact their times and ours today? 

    KM:  In our series, we interview Felipe Luciano who talks about his trajectory into revolutionary culture.  He was a kid who grew up in Spanish Harlem of Puerto Rican origin, but he consider East Harlem his homeland – not just his birthplace, but the place that made him who is today. 

    Luciano says that he felt lost when he got out of prison in 1966, but he found his purpose when he met other young Nuyoricans who were developing a radical new political consciousness, inspired by their Black friends engaged in the freedom struggle. He had studied Puerto Rican history while in prison, read the writings of Pedro Albizu Campos, trying to understand why his parents’ generation gave up on statehood and accepted the humiliation of being ‘colonized’ by the U.S. 

    Activism gave him hope.  He was excited by the emergence of the Black Panther Party for Self Defense on the West Coast, and the bold call for Black Power from Stokely Carmichael, a New York-raised activist of Trinidadian origin. He decided it was time for Latin people to work for radical change too.  When he heard about the opening of a New York chapter of the Young Lords, a Puerto Rican organization modeled on the Black Panthers, he got involved immediately. 

    So by the time Luciano became a member of The Last Poets in the late 60’s, he was already a leader in the Young Lords and was a revolutionary.  When you hear the music of The Last Poets, accompanied by African-inspired Congo drums, it make sense they were so incredibly free to express themselves, in ways most people just didn’t at that time.  They spoke truth to power, but also they just spoke truth, often in incendiary ways, but it freed people to be able to express themselves without barriers or shame. 

    In an interview, the jazz saxophonist Gary Bartz said it was like a secret language that he and others understood deeply, but not everyone could relate.  Hip Hop can be that way too, in that it is specific to a group or even a neighborhood and is not always inclusionary.  Luciano believed poetry was just as important as marching in the streets.  You see this same reverence for lyrics in young artists today – Kendrick Lamar, CHIKA, Janelle Monae and so many others — they are reflecting the times, giving empowerment and allowing us to be free to be ourselves.  The Last Poets showed us freedom of expression in words, and its fitting that they have the designation as being called “The Fathers of Hip Hop.” 

    SC: The series doesn’t just focus on Black artists but the Latinos of Harlem who forged their own kind of music of celebration and liberation.  Tell us about some of them, especially the pioneers of boogaloo?

    KM:  East Harlem, nicknamed ‘El Barrio,’ became the capital of Puerto Rican culture in the mainland U.S.  And although Puerto Ricans became American citizens in 1917, in the U.S. they were still seen as foreigners.

    In the ‘60s Spanish-speaking migrants were the majority of the neighborhood’s population, but many of them struggled with poverty, unemployment, and racial discrimination. The language barrier made it difficult to find decent, well-paid jobs, or navigate government agencies. This generation found comfort in the music from back home, and bandleaders like Tito Puente and Tito Rodriguez reigned supreme at the city’s biggest Latin club, the Palladium Ballroom in midtown.

    Miguel “Mickey” Melendez, an East Harlem resident, and a member of the Young Lords who we interviewed in the series, spoke about the American-born children of Puerto Rican migrants were growing up as Harlem teenagers, and their day-to-day experiences – and the music they loved – were completely different from those of their parents. These kids went to school with African-American classmates, hung out with African-American friends and neighbors, and danced to doo-wop, soul, and R & B.  They would create a new genre of music that gave voice to the intersection of Black and Latin culture — boogaloo, the soul of El Barrio.

    Denise Oliver-Velez, another member of the Young Lords, talks about Joe Cuba’s “Bang Bang,” a song, composed spontaneously at a ‘Black dance’ night at the Palm Gardens Ballroom, was one of the first boogaloo songs to launch the craze that swept New York, and then the world of Latin music. It combined English and Spanglish lyrics with an R & B rhythm on timbales and melodic piano, and immediately inspired a wave-style dance. Within weeks, the Joe Cuba Sextet recorded and released “Bang Bang” as a single, and it became one of the most successful Latin recordings to cross over to mixed audiences, selling over a million copies.

    When Joe Bataan got out of prison, he tells the story about how desperate he was to achieve his dream of becoming a musician.  He had the reputation of being a gangster at that time and would sneak into a local school to play the piano. One day, he discovered a group of musicians using ‘his’ practice space, so he stuck a knife in the piano and told them that from then on, they would be his band. He wanted to make a name for himself and hoped that music would save him from the cycle of gang violence and incarceration.

    After a debut recording that went nowhere, Bataan’s first hit was a boogaloo cover of the Curtis Mayfield ballad “Gypsy Woman,” spiced up with Latin percussion and an irresistible hook.  All the band members were shouting “She smokes!”.  Bataan remembers how, in 1966 and 1967, you could hear boogaloo echoing throughout the neighborhood – and how proud he was, coming from the streets, to representing his neighborhood in a way everyone could celebrate. 

    For Felipe Luciano, Boogaloo was more than just party music. It was an expression of Nuyorican identity, giving voice to their generation’s rage against the discrimination their parents had faced, and demonstrating their deep connection to the Black struggle. In its own way, boogaloo was a music of defiance against ghetto life and the elusiveness of the American dream.

    SC:  The series contains so much remarkable archival footage that is largely unseen.  What are some of your own favorite moments of the musicians on film that you unearthed?

    KM:  For a nerd like myself, archival research is a fascinating, deep dive exploration that can take you on many adventures.  Finding archival of Max Roach and Abbey Lincoln performing “Driva’ Man” and “Triptyh: Prayer / Protest / Peace” from the “Freedom Now Suite” is like finding gold.  I could not stop watching it over and over again. 

    I also enjoyed unearthing Apollo performances from Martha and Vandellas and other Motown acts.  To see these entertainers as teenagers in archival footage, who I’ve known my whole life to be legends and then getting to interview them too, it was just incredible.  Artists like Herbie Hancock and Gladys Knight are of my parent’s generation, so their music was always a part of the soundtrack of my life.

    I really love the archival we found of the Last Poets performing “Hey Now” and “Jibero, My Pretty N****. “ New York indie filmmaker Herbert Danska filmed them on a Harlem rooftop for his film Right On!  A film that screened at the Director Fortnight in the 1970 at the Cannes Film Festival.  It shows three Black men on a rooftop – Felipe Luciano, David Nelson and Gylan Kain – with a percussive accompaniment performing poetry.  It’s rough, raw, and a bit strange.  It’s truly great stuff.

    SC:  The ‘60s were a pretty special time, an era where music really helped, as Giancarlo Esposito says in the series, becoming “the force that gave the people strength.”  Do you think music has the same impact today?

    KM:  Every time I visit a Baptist church and sing those old songs that my grandparents and great grandparent sang, I feel uplifted, and some of those songs have been around for hundreds of years. 

    Music is healing, empowering and motivating.  It reenforces the stories of our lives and reflects our dreams, hopes and ambitions.  Music is culture.  And, culture is inherently political.  This year has seen a proliferation of protest music by known and unknown artists.  It’s a tradition that has been passed down generationally and young people are making it their own, especially through the use of social media. Most of the musicians I spoke to for this series have expressed how inspired they are by activism happening today in music.  The work from the ‘60’s civil rights movement never ended because we still are facing police brutality in our communities, disparities in healthcare, massive incarceration and gun violence – we have so much work to do.  The musicians have a role in providing us and generations of activist to follow soundtracks that empowers, uplift, affirms our identity and our humanity. 

  • Crash the Calm,”Devils” sets the tone for Upcoming LP

    Long Island group, Crash the Calm, have released their debut single, “Devils,” from their upcoming sophomore album, A Town Named Nowhere.

    crash the calm

    Crash the Calm entered the scene in December 2014, and released their debut single “Holes.” It was considered their demo at the time, and was followed by the band signing to indie label, Downport Records. They eventually recorded their debut album, How’ve You Been?, at VuDu Studios with Nick Starrantino, Dom Nastasi & Mike Watts. They also released an EP in 2018, titled Split. It was recorded with Anthony Lopardo and Ray Marte at Westfall Studios.

    The band have played in many shows locally and across the East Coast. They have opened up for and shared the stage with bands such as Pianos Become the Teeth, Save Face, Capstan, Elder Brother, Belmont, Bay Faction, Head North, Heart Attack Man, Kayak Jones, The Republic of Wolves, bloom., Gatherers, Stories Untold, and the Sparrows. Crash Calm have also had stadium experience in Queens and opened up at the Citi Field in Flushing, NY.

    Following the EP, a third of the five members left for personal reasons. Remaining members, Brian Dowling and Patrick Smith, had almost lost hope for the band. However, an idea blossomed from the moment, and the concept for their second album, A Town Named Nowhere was soon in the works.

    The album is centered on the fictional town of “Nowhere,” which captures the different perspectives of the townspeople. Each perspective must resolve and contain their own inner struggle, in addition to the rampant dust storms and destined economic ruin they inevitably face. The record wants people to find their way through life-altering experiences and restore situations that seem beyond repair.

    The concept of “Nowhere” came to guitarists Brian Dowling (also a singer) and Patrick Smith when they felt at a place where their only option was to rebuild from nothing. They went to the studio to record the album in 2019 with new members Dan LeBrun (Guitar), Johnny Pots (Drums) and Dave Van Nostrand (Bass). They recorded their 2nd LP with Anthony Lopardo and Ray Marte of Westfall Studios, which was a familiar ground for the band.

    Their first single, “Devils,” is also accompanied by a dark lyric video, visualising the experiences of the Dust Bowl era. Crash the Calm have been juvenated for their upcoming release, and will tour once health conditions permit. In the meantime, the band plans for a number of music videos and digital performances to support the album. Their new single is available on Spotify, Apple Music, and Bandcamp.