With live music having returned to New York, Warsaw Brooklyn finally reopened its doors to fully vaccinated crowds for Andy Shauf’s sold-out two night run on September 9 and 10, 2021. Tomberlin opened both nights with lighthearted stage banter and mellow acoustic tunes, lending to the venue’s naturally intimate atmosphere.
Andy Shauf at Warsaw Brooklyn, photographed by David Reichmann
After closing its doors during 2020 for the pandemic, Warsaw Brooklyn finally brought back their famous pierogis and reopened their stage for the starting leg of Andy Shauf’s North American tour. Shauf’s latest album, The Neon Skyline, had only come out in January of 2020 when their scheduled tour had to be postponed due to the pandemic.
Tomberlin Opening for Andy Shauf, photographed by David Reichmann
Tomberlin opened for Shauf on both nights at Warsaw, playing some of her hits, including the sorrowful but sweet song, “Seventeen.” She also invited the crowd to sing along during her performance, which went over well as she smiled and sang along with her captive audience.
Andy Shauf at Warsaw Brooklyn, photographed by David Reichmann
Shauf’s latest album gained some extra attention when the title track of his latest album, The Neon Skyline, was featured in Barack Obama’s Summer 2020 Playlist. Shauf’s setlist included several tracks from The Neon Skyline as well as highlights from the preceding album, The Party.
Andy Shauf at Warsaw Brooklyn, photographed by David Reichmann
Andy Shauf’s North American Tour continues through the Fall, and you can check out his music here.
In celebration of the upcoming religious holidays, FANS.live and The Friday Night Jam present High Holidays, a spiritual and musical celebration. Now in its tenth year, the website will present four services broadcasted live for free led by Rabbi Daniel Brenner and musical director Jeremiah Lockwood, featuring Antibalas‘ Jordan McLean, Yuli Beeri and a full live band.
Streams on September 6 and 7 are set for Rosh Hashanah and will take place at Brooklyn Bowl, with a limited number of tickets also available for those who wish to attend. Two more services on September 15 and 16 will be in celebration of Kol Nidre and Yom Kippur, streamed live from Relix Studios.
The services will feature a mix of live music and remote video contributions from a mix of musicians including Alex Bleeker (Real Estate), Eric Slick (Dr. Dog), Dan Lebowitz (ALO), and Eric Krasno (Soulive and Lettuce). CEO of Mindfulness Consulting, Yael Shy, will be leading guided meditations at each event streamed from the Brooklyn Bowl, while Jewish mindfulness teacher Michael Bilick will lead meditations at the events streamed from the Relix Studios.
Links for tickets and streams are below. For those wishing to attend services at Brooklyn Bowl, all guests ages 12 and over must show proof of at at least one vaccine shot prior to entry.
The BRIC Celebrate Brooklyn! summer festival continued on Friday, August 27th with a hometown show headlined by Brooklyn native and deep house producer & rapper Yaeji. Support for the night was curated by Yaeji herself, and featured sets by writer, rapper, and producer Nappy Nina followed by singer-songwriter KeiyaA. Celebrate Brooklyn! came back strong in 2021 with a stacked lineup of free concerts. Friday night was another celebration of the return to live music by many in attendance as well as Yaeji.
Yaeji at BRIC Celebrate Brooklyn! Photo by Buscar Photo
Thunderstorms threatened the show, even delaying the opening of doors by about 30 minutes while a quick shower passed by. After that, we lucked out the rest of the night without any rain but the delay unfortunately shortened the opening sets a bit. Nappy Nina was on first, delivering a high energy rap performance to an already large crowd at the bandshell. KeiyaA followed; backed by a full band she performed a set of soulful R&B. Walking around the crowd you can hear KeiyaA’s powerful voice echoing through the park.
KeiyaA at BRIC Celebrate Brooklyn! Photo by Buscar Photo
When Yaeji took the stage, she was visibly humbled by the enormous reception she received from the crowd. She was born in Flushing, Queens to a Korean family and spent much of her young life living in Korea. She moved back to the United States to attend Carnegie Mellon University where she learned to DJ as a hobby at after-hours parties. This culminating in Yaeji combining her love for music and collaboration with electronica to forge her distinct deep house (hip-house?) sound. Now a Brooklyn resident, her debut came in 2017 with a self-titled EP, but notoriety came flowing in 2020 after the release of the mixtape What We Drew. This mixtape includes the track “Waking Up Down” which features Yaeji’s subtle rap style over light and airy house beats.
Yaeji at BRIC Celebrate Brooklyn! Photo by Buscar Photo
Yaeji packed in the bandshell, even without having any ‘full length’ albums to her name. In the true nature of being an artist in today’s internet age, Yaeji has been steadily releasing music since her debut in 2020. This has been in the form of singles and collaborations, two EPs titled Yaeij and EP2, remixes, and most recently a single featuring DiAN called “PAC-TIVE.” You can see the music video for this single below, featuring an immersion into a modern day PAC-MAN universe. Other songs included in the set at Celebrate Brooklyn! were “Raingurl” from EP2 as well as “Guap” from the self-titled EP.
Yaeji has been prolific over the last few years, and this will most likely continue. After breaking the ice with a hometown show on Friday night, there is no doubt that more creative energy and live shows will be in the near future. A last minute, early Sunday morning DJ set has just been added at Nowadays in Ridgewood – more info for that show is HERE. There is no official tour on the books as of now, but you can see Yaeji on the festival stages in September with appearances at Bonnaroo, Pitchfork, and Life is Beautiful.
Yaeji at BRIC Celebrate Brooklyn! Photo by Buscar Photo
The BRIC Celebrate Brooklyn! festival continues on Saturday with San Fermin and Son Little, followed by Glass Animals on Tuesday. Find the full schedule HERE.
Guitarist/composer Ramiro Marziani is taking the NYC music scene by storm using his international style influenced by a love for culture. The Argentinian-born musician has recently released his newest EP, Sep ’20: From a Living Room in Brooklyn, on Friday, August 13.
Marziani is a young, worldly guitarist based in Brooklyn, New York City. He has previously performed at venues across New York and Europe, from NYC’s Sony Hall, to Le Bal Blomet in Paris and Prague’s Jazz Dock. He has also made appearances at Austin, Texas’ SXSW festival, California WorldFest, and was even featured in a Polynesian string-inspired NPRTiny Desk Concert with ukulele virtuoso Taimane.
Music played an important role in Marziani’s life since the beginning. Marziani notes that his family’s influence inspired him to take up guitar, due part from Argentinian musical culture. After gravitating towards the guitar from a young age, he began taking the instrument seriously at 11 years old.
Old Spanish guitars were always sitting around my family home growing up, I had an intense curiosity to pick it up and start playing.
Ramiro Marziani
Marziani’s earliest inspiration was 80’s rock band Asia, after attending a concert of theirs with his father. The revolutionary rockers opened a new door for Marziani to explore endless genres of music, fueling his passion for all forms of musical expression. He enrolled in professional lessons, studying traditional Spanish guitar as well as rock and other genres as he got into his mid-teens.
1980’s supergroup Asia
When you’re young, you have an aesthetic ferocity to try an instrument. How it sounds, how it looks, what it does. For me, it was the guitar, and the Asia concert made me think “yeah, I’m doing this.”
Ramiro Marziani
His musical training continued into attending Berklee College of Music which sealed his future as a professional guitarist. After graduating from Berklee, Marziani moved to Brooklyn in search of bigger and better things. He uses New York as a headquarters for music production and performance in-between travels while he continues on his journey as a blossoming international artist.
NYC as a culture capital is very romantic to me, it’s filled with amazing musical talent and has provided me with inspiration that I had not found anywhere else.
Ramiro Marziani
Travel is apart of the magic for Marziani, allowing him to indulge in his love for discovering new forms of music. His style is self-described as “putting together techniques from everywhere” to create something truly unique; the exchange of knowledge and culture seems to make music so enticing for Marziani.
It’s the fact that I’m not a tourist, and I have immediate access to meeting and learning from the people of any place I visit, the people that come to your shows. This is the biggest prize for a musician like myself.
Ramiro Marziani
Marziani in the studio
Marziani’s professional studies have guided him to an intuitive way of music-making, comparable to an orchestral composer. His process of creating is much less focused on just throwing things out and seeing what sticks. Instead, he takes an intentional approach, focusing in on the conditions behind the creation of an album. This unique approach to musical artistry allows for a freeform fluidity between genres to properly fit the music’s intended role.
I strive to create an environment of composition with my music that leads into intentional improvisation and collaboration. I want to make things feel purposeful, no matter the genre.
Ramiro Marziani
Marziani released another EP, a meditation music guitar album titled Cielito Blue, in July 2020. Cielito Blue is a short 20-minute album of eight solo guitar songs, written with a service mindset rather than a purely artistic goal. Produced in the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, its purpose is to allow oneself to re-connect with the present, by quieting the mind through meditation, stretching, yoga or daily tasks.
Marziani’s newest EP, Sep ’20: From A Living Room in Brooklyn marks his return to the sound of high energy rock n’ roll guitar and extended jazz improvisation. The meditative period of Cielito Blue, is greatly juxtaposed by this new project, as Sep ’20 marks a return to normalcy.
Sep ’20: From a Living Room in Brooklyn, was recorded shortly after Cielito Blue, but was kept on the back burner while Marziani worked on other projects. It represents a fusion of cultures through collaborations with musicians from Brazil, Indonesia and Argentina. Best described as “jazz and American folk with a little rock n’ roll sugar,” be sure to expect some unique yet enchanting guitar rhythms.
Now is the right time to release Sep ’20, as it marks the moment in time when it was recorded, but allows us to celebrate that things are beginning to open up again.
Ramiro Marziani
Marziani looks to recreate a banjo-like sound through the electric guitar with first track, “Celtic Dreams.” “El Rio,” the second track, is a slower ballad where Argentine folk and country influence become present. The third and final song on the EP is titled “Oliver Oil”, which floats across dreamy Brazilian rhythms.
Other than creating and traveling, Marziani can be found teaching aspiring musicians of all ages as well as sharing various jam sessions and musical covers on Youtube. From just scrolling down his posts, ranging from Clapton to AC/DC and everything in-between, his musical ambiguity is clear.
Sep ’20: From A Living Room in Brooklyn is available now on all major streaming platforms. Stay up to date with all things Ramiro Marziani through his Instagram and website.
Self-described manipulator of light. DJ by night and day. Keyholder to the power of music and unknown grassroot secrets of our music and political history. A description of him will often times be brought up amongst select youth who attend his nights at clubs before they can think of his name. “ Who was that old guy DJing when we went to Union Pool?” “ He had played the techno music and was playing until we left at 3 am” “ Ah… Yes, DJ… DJ Preskool.”
Found halfway down on his website at the beginning of a paragraph, it transcribes the origin of his name is that “Before there was Old Skool or Nu Skool, there was PreSkool.” So, who is this DJ?
Larry Weissman, 71, who used to only be DJ PreSkool on weekends, quit the ill-fitting suit of corporate America in 2014 leaving his position as Vice President of IT at Wells Fargo. He then put himself through Dubspot (A DJ school in New York City) to do something that he seemed to have been manifested to do, DJ.
Larry Weissman outside his home. photograph by T. Sesselman, 2020 during quarantine in Heights, Jersey City, NJ
His “71 years around the sun” has been one that some envy and others look down upon. But frankly, he is just here to live the life that he wants to live.
The son of a third-generation baker, Larry Weissman’s story starts in Springfield, Massachusetts. Having been born in the ’50s there was “a lot of tension between, you know, people that were on the left and the right. Plus Springfield is a very old city and very segregated. So you know like many people of my age, I mean we experienced somewhat of a negative situation,” Weissman had said recalling his time growing up.
My dad as a person had pretty much always treated people right but was also very much a classic second-generation immigrant who had fought bravely in World War II, although he definitely mellowed out later. But me and him butted heads a lot in my teenage years with the pressure of the Vietnam War, which I was against. That kind of all made me wanna leave, and basically, I ended up running away going to Boston, living in Boston for a summer, then figuring out how to stay in Boston.
I was listening to The Beatles and the Stones and Jimi Hendrix, smoking pot and doing everything…I was a rock N’ roller.
Larry Weissman
Once in Boston, he did a year and a half of the College of Basic Studies program at Boston University before dropping out. Weissman explained, “the theory was that they were looking for people who were highly intelligent, but were not good academically, right up my alley, right? It was a good idea, except what they didn’t realize was that they were describing all these hippies.”
Weissman described Boston back then as to how “it was like San Francisco. It was like a very hip place to be. There was tons of great music, J. Geils. All sorts of really good stuff going on.” After dropping out, it wasn’t long until he left Boston and hitchhiked across the country a few times “ It’s hard to explain to people now but it was just kind of a thing where you’d meet certain people. Maybe you hang out with them for a couple of months.”
Before settling down in San Francisco in 1971, Weissman had lived on commune in Oregon. “We anticipated that there was going to be some sort of actual political civil war, it was even more against each other than it is even now, although it’s getting pretty bad now too.”
Left: Debbie Olcese, lead guitarist for the Lisa Kindrid band Right: Larry Weissman
But after a few years, Weissman realized that, “I was more interested in continuing to do community organizing and living in the city, so I moved down into the largest commune in San Francisco, which is called the Good Earth Commune” and living in the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood, known for its counterculture movements in the ’60s and 70’s.
While being a part of the White Panther Party A white people organization formed in support of the Black Panther Party) in San Francisco, Weissman had joined The Peoples Ballroom. He gives most of his credit to the Peoples Ballroom for starting his interest in producing music.
To me, part of being a hippie was all this new music going on.
The Peoples Ballroom was a coalition of community organizers and community people and bands and sound guys and all the different kind of stuff and the idea was to put on shows for the community that also combine music with, you know, information about different topics that were going on and to provide a certain amount of financial support for everybody by all of us, like passing the hat and sharing it.
We did it outdoors, that would range from block parties and small events in the Panhandle all the way up to very large events in Golden Gate Park, including many, many shows with thousands of people. I think the biggest show we did was the Grateful Dead and the Jefferson Starship in 1975, was 50,000 people in Lindley Meadow.
One of the jobs that I had was to come up with tapes to play in between the bands though I didn’t think of it at the time as DJing, but in fact, at night we would go to my friends recording studio and we were making these tapes to play about. Ironically even some of the music I played last night (referring to his DJing at Union Pool the night before the interview) is music that I played back then. Like. It’s funny how it all comes around in circles.
Larry Weissman
The organization had also sought out to make political changes as well. In 1969 when the city government put out a bunch of anti-music laws they grew a backing and were able to get laws changed. Weissman said that they had thought “capitalists [had] taken over the music industry and what we were looking for is to create something outside of that.”
An anti-nuke rally, in San Francisco in 1978. People’s Ballroom built stage did sound, and security Larry Weissman was event manager and Jackson Brown played
During this time Weissman and the organizations he was a part of “were constantly butting heads with the police.” He talked about his daily run-ins with the police and the general harassment from them.
Weissman then recalled to what he said was one of the worst arrests for him was:
The Gay Liberation Front and the gay community in the Castro had just started the Gay Freedom Day things and we had a stage and security for them. Sylvester played. It was super great.
But the city didn’t like the fact that the hippies and gay people were working together. So at the end of the show, 6 cops broke into the backstage and beat the shit out of me, and took me to jail. I was charged with four counts of assaulting a police officer.I had a jury trial. Mom was there, she came out for it and I represented myself and got acquitted on all charges because they were phony.
Larry Weissman
Sometime after being acquitted, Weissman had served a year in jail after representing himself to the Supreme Court of California and it was even noted how well and organized he had represented himself. Once out of jail “people had scattered everywhere. I personally had a son who was like, you know five or six years old,” and a lot of the groups faded out as well.
Lucky enough, however, Weissman said he got “on the ground floor [of] computing in ’78, ’79 and ’80 in the Bay Area. Which was in fact the ground floor, I mean we got an Apple from Steve Wozniak personally.”
For a while, he would go between Queens and San Francisco, computerizing companies until he decided to make the transition fully to New York City in ’98 now that his son was older. In order to stay in New York he “ended up taking the job at Wells Fargo Bank. I was a senior VP, I kept all their inner wholesale banking systems running. I had 160 people. I worked with a big budget, I was doing good but at the same time where I was spending all my time outside of work was always going to plays and dance recitals and seeing music and hanging with all these kids that were in their 20’s.”
I started meeting a lot of younger kids that would eventually become the Williamsburg music scene and the first people were mostly over in the Lower East Side and then gradually moved to Williamsburg and I moved to Williamsburg probably 2004.
In many ways [it was] very similar to Haight Ashbury, it was a ghetto. There was a lot of empty buildings and stuff and while there was never the political intensity that they had in Ashbury they had in terms of the culture and the quality of the music of the area were equally there. I was very fortunate to meet a lot of those people and obviously since you know it was the best place I’ve found since the Haight Asbury.
Larry Weissman
After getting involved in the community friends had started to suggest that he should start to DJ since he had such an intense music depth and with that, a much more interesting perspective. With the encouragement from friends, he started to “DJ in underground loft-type stuff and then very slowly a couple of different clubs started happening,” Weissman said for how he started his DJ career.
Then finally in 2014 ,“I finally said you know what? This is what I want to just do, so that’s when I retired from the bank and became a full-time DJ.”
Photo By Syra Sparkle Left Photo: Crowd at Union Pool Right: Larry Weissman Performing
The main reason that I DJ is that I’m trying to show kids that there’s no one way to be like, not everybody who’s 71 years old does what I do, but what I do is equally as valid as some 71-year-old grandfather. Most of the songs I play have very specific messages about fighting against oppression and being free and opening your mind and that’s where me and these kids communicate.
In the ’60s we were trying to figure out how to have a better community and a better life without any guidelines or rulebooks. Rather than make speeches, I just try to be as authentic as I can in what I’m doing and I get a lot of love from people for that.
If they (referring to kids in their 20’s) saw me on the street they wouldn’t look at me twice, but we’re there in the backroom together and we’re sharing this music, and I’m not sharing my music. I’m not playing old 60’s songs, I’m trying to show them that there’s something about their music that’s the same as mine.
Larry Weissman
Starting to become a DJ at 50, Larry Weissman now splits his time between DJing clubs and working with the owner of 20 Sided Games in Brooklyn, doing live DJing for Dungeons & Dragons games. Weissman is “not looking to become famous. I just like doing what I’m doing with it where I’m at and I don’t let anyone tell me that I shouldn’t do it. ’cause I’m too old or you know this or that. So yeah, I urge people, particularly people in their 60s. Out in the 70s is don’t limit yourself at all.”
A younger Larry Weissman
When asked if he would change anything in the past, Weissman said, “I wish I wouldn’t have made my mom so unhappy when I was a kid. But ultimately at every point in my life, I did what I thought was the right thing to do. I’m not saying it was all the right thing to do, but I can tell you that I did what I thought was the right thing. So no, I don’t regret those decisions.”
Modest Mouse wrapped up a four night stay at Bushwick’s Brooklyn Steel on Saturday, August 14th in celebration of their seventh LP The Golden Casket. Providing a different setlist each night, Modest Mouse played a significant portion of the new record along with songs from their entire catalog.
Modest Mouse at Brooklyn Steel, 8/13/2021. Photo by Buscar Photo
The Golden Casket was released this past June, six years since the band’s previous record Strangers to Ourselves came out back in 2015. For nearly a quarter century, Modest Mouse have been making pop-infused indie rock and amassing a devout following. That was on clear display at Brooklyn Steel last week; arguably a smaller venue for the group, but four nights quickly sold out and the audience would have stayed there all night had they kept playing. Even after a 2 hour show with a 6-song encore, barely anyone left the floor until security began ushering the crowd out.
Isaac Brock of Modest Mouse. Photo by Buscar Photo
The new record draws on Modest Mouse’s signature sound, with a more psychedelic edge. Songs like “Leave a Light On” and “We’re Lucky” showcase shimmering guitar and horn loops while “Wooden Soldiers” and “The Sun Hasn’t Left” are reminiscent of Magical Mystery Tour era Beatles. These songs combined with quintessential Modest Mouse indie rock tunes and an artistic theme filled with rainbows and bright colors give The Golden Casket it’s own distinct place in the band’s discography.
Modest Mouse at Brooklyn Steel, 8/13/2021. Photo by Buscar Photo
The lengthy ‘MMXXI’ tour continues with a dense schedule all the way through the end of October. You can find the full list of dates and ticket links on the band’s website HERE. Check out the music video for The Golden Casket lead single, “We Are Between” as well as the full photo gallery from night 3 at Brooklyn Steel below.
As of Monday, August 16th, New York City is requiring proof of vaccination for most indoor activities including concerts, indoor dining and gyms. Depending on the show in question, negative COVID tests may be required in addition to vaccination. Make sure to check the policy of the show and venue in question. You can find Bowery Presents policies HERE.
The Districts wrapped up a four night run at Brooklyn Steel Saturday August 14th in support of Modest Mouse’s MMXXI Tour. We were there for night three; you can see the full photo gallery below.
The Districts at Brooklyn Steel, 8/13/21. Photo by Buscar Photo
For so many bands today, these tours mark the return to the stage after nearly a year and a half pause due to the pandemic. Vaccine and testing requirements are constantly changing, but while this remains in flux, these early concerts have shown that both the fans and artists are eager to get back on tour. Brooklyn Steel was nearly at capacity for The Districts’ opening sets, drawing their own fans out early who were more than ready to get back to live music.
The Districts at Brooklyn Steel, 8/13/21. Photo by Buscar Photo
The Districts released their fourth LP ‘You Know I’m Not Going Anywhere’ back in March 2020, right before COVID-19 would cause mass lockdowns around the world and in the US. These shows, more than 500 days later, are the first time the band has been able to perform the new songs live since their 2020 tour was cut short. Even with the hiatus, the band performed a tight set and did not show any sign of rust.
The Districts at Brooklyn Steel, 8/13/21. Photo by Buscar Photo
The band’s last pre-COVID show ironically was a hometown gig at Union Transfer in Philadelphia. The tour has the band making their return to Philadelphia in December for a show at The Fillmore with Dr. Dog. Check out all of their upcoming tour dates HERE.
As of this week in NYC, proof of vaccination will be required for most shows, including all of Bowery Presents’ venues. Visit their site for more information on acceptable proof of vaccination and individual venue policies.
Brooklyn’s Creek and Kills will put out their new EP “Unstitching” on Friday, August 20, 2021. Recorded in their homes from May 2020 to April 2021, with mixing and mastering from Danielle DePalma, “Unstitching” includes remixed, rerecorded, and/or remastered versions of the band’s pandemic singles plus three new tracks. These are wild siren songs from far reaches of an urban estuary. Creek and Kills rock out like a mermaid party in a Superfund site…a little dirty, a little dangerous, a little sexy, luring you to sink in the dark water.
The band’s first full-length eponymous album (released 2019) was praised for its “unadulterated filthy Rock rhythms,” “artful alchemy,” and the “striking strength” of vocals from singer-bassist, Kate Bell (A&R Factory). Bell comes from a background in jazz. Her octet, the Poma-swank, was hailed as “one of the best offerings from the New York jazz underground” by music writer Mark Kirby, and All About Jazz described Bell as “oozing sass . . . her instrument is not only her voice, but her total self . . . and the person who is singing is someone you’d most definitely want to meet.” Since Bell’s switch to rock, she’s worked on projects with members of the Julie Ruin, Bush Tetras, and Groovy Ghoulies. Guitarist Marc Montgomery began collaborating with Bell in late 2017, and “Unstitching” features his heartbreaking song, “Sunshine Hotel.” Drummer and vocalist Erin Harney joined Creek in Kills in late 2019, previously of the bands The Shook Ones and Femmepire.
Creek and Kills’s music has been heard on the “I Art NY” podcast, in the short film Skin the Wire (NY Shorts Festival), on WPRB (Princeton, NJ), BVEW (Brattleboro, VT), and on the greatest freeform radio station in the world, Jersey City’s WFMU. Creek and Kills will celebrate the release of the “Unstitching” EP with special guests, Groupie and Rest Ashore, at 18th Ward in Brooklyn on Friday, August 20, 2021, open to all, music starting at 8 p.m.
Spencer Barnett, rising indie-pop genius from Brooklyn, has just released a new music video for his catchy single, “Dancing.” The video features groovy moves from Spencer and a unique color palette that makes it delightful to both the eyes and the ears.
“Dancing” is written and produced by Spencer Barnett alongside Jon Hill and Alessandro and Gianluca Buccellati [Arlo Parks, Tei Shi] and follows the release of Spencer’s dynamic Welcome To My Mind EP. Welcome To My Mind is the final part of Spencer’s three-part EP trilogy which came directly after debut EPs I’m Fine (“Waste My Time”) and Reckless (“17”). His first EPs gained him lots of attention from influential tastemakers such as Paper, V MAN, Ones to Watch, and Flaunt. They also led him to be included on the most coveted playlists on Spotify and Apple Music.
Welcome To My Mind blends soulful melodies, indie rock leads, and bedroom-inspired guitar riffs while keeping his youthful side through majestic lyrics. “Dancing” encapsulates the fun feeling of youth while incorporating mature musical and production skills. The video is a perfect next step for the up and coming indie artist that has an exciting future ahead of him.
The Seventh Annual Brooklyn Americana Music Festival takes place September 16th -19th, 2021. Fifty live music events at seven iconic locations including the DUMBO Archway Plaza under the Manhattan Bridge and Pier 6 Plaza in Brooklyn Bridge Park on September 17th, 18th, and 19th. Nightly concerts will be held at Jalopy Theatre and Sunny’s Bar in Red Hook; and Superfine and 68 Jay St Bar in Dumbo.
The annual festival is a beloved celebration of folk, roots, country blues, bluegrass, and jazz and attendees of all ages can enjoy banjo, fiddle, mandolin, and three part harmony renditions of original and traditional songs performed by a majority of women-identified artists. Ticketed concerts include the festival kickoff on September 16th at Jalopy Theatre, and September 17th in the Dumbo Archway Plaza, and are followed by thirty free live music events for all ages.
The 7th Annual Brooklyn Americana Music Festivalis made possible by public funds from the Greater New York Arts Development Fund of the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, and from the Decentralization Program of the New York State Council on the Arts, both administered in Kings County by Brooklyn Arts Council (BAC). The Festival is made possible in part by generous sponsors and the office of Councilman Stephen Levin.