Category: Regions

  • We Are Scientists Get A Contact High On Seventh LP “Huffy”

    We Are Scientists have just released their seventh studio LP, Huffy, via Masterswan Records. Their first effort in three years shows the NYC based band continuing to hone their distinct brand of catchy, guitar driven indie rock. Soaked with anthemic hooks and dance floor guitar grooves, the album is an extraordinary consistent addition to the band’s catalog that will instantly win over the hearts of their long held fanbase.

    We Are Scientists Huffy
    Huffy Cover Art Variations

    Listening through the album is meant to evoke feelings of pure fun. Much needed in our lives these days, an approach to an album like this is a welcomed change of pace. While some of the songs detail crazy scenarios (and gory endings), the delivery and presentation is all about joy and individuality. Fans who ordered physical copies of the album receive a bare cover complete with sheets of stickers featuring We Are Scientists and Huffy, plus an assortment of characters and shapes to arrange on the cover however they please. Not to mention, the vinyl edition comes in your choice of 10 colors including “earth scoop,” “seafoam spritz,” or “dog tongue.”

    “You’ve Lost Your Shit” by We Are Scientists, via YouTube

    The fourth (and last) single previewed from the record is lead track “You’ve Lost Your Shit.” Accompanying the song is a music video showing lead singer Keith Murray waking up in a bathtub after having some organs stolen from his body. The song opens with a driving punk guitar riff surrounded by Keith’s soaring hooks and punchy vocal style. Much of the album continues in the same fashion, including personal highlight “Fault Lines,” which consists of an infectious guitar track and easily the catchiest hook on the record. “Bought Myself a Grave” features a somewhat country vibe both in guitar style and storytelling. The records closes with another indie sing along “Behavior Unbecoming,” solidifying the record’s prominent place in the catalog.

    We Are Scientists Huffy
    We Are Scientists at Elsewhere, 8/10/21. Photo by Buscar Photo

    We Are Scientists ended a tour back in December of 2019, right before the world would abruptly change due to the pandemic. It turns out, that the songs for Huffy were already largely written and the guys would use the time in quarantine to focus on all the other aspects of producing a final product.

    All of the songs for our new album, Huffy, had been written and production for the record had begun just before COVID brought the world to a quarantined standstill. Fortunately for us, that little head start meant that the record largely avoided manifesting any of the sense of gloom or claustrophobia that might have infused the music, had it been fully written and recorded under lockdown. If anything, the fact that there was nothing else we could possibly be doing beside watching full seasons of old TV shows meant that we were able to pour even more attention into the making of the record. It became a refuge, for the first few months of lockdown — escaping to our little studio sanctuary became a relief, rather than a chore. We tend to hate the tedium of the recording process — messing with microphone placement, testing out every possible snare drum tuning, etc. — but that kind of thing became somewhat more appealing in quarantine. I think it made us a little more playful in our production approach, and the result, to me, is perhaps our liveliest, most exuberant record, to date.

    We Are Scientists

    Once concerts started to make a comeback in New York City, We Are Scientists announced a warmup show on Elsewhere’s rooftop. Unfortunately, the show never took place as a severe thunderstorm right as doors were opening forced the show to be postponed to September. However, fans that night were treated to an excellent surprise; never allowed on the roof to begin with, the people who showed up early were told to shuffle into the empty main hall and await an appearance from the guys. A bartender came in to open the bar, and shortly after We Are Scientists came out onto an empty stage armed with an acoustic guitar, a snare drum, and three voices.

    We Are Scientists Huffy
    We Are Scientists at Elsewhere, 8/10/21. Photo by Buscar Photo

    Neither the audience, or We Are Scientists for that matter, knew what to expect from this moment, but the guys performed acoustic versions (with a chorus of backup vocalists from the half-filled room) of several of their hits as well as a couple tracks of the yet to be released Huffy. For a last-minute, impromptu performance, the fans who were there that night witnessed a truly memorable show from one of their favorite artists. The rooftop concert would eventually be made up in September, with a full blown performance, but the 20 minute show inside the empty Elsewhere Hall will stick in those fan’s minds for a long time.

    We Are Scientists Huffy
    We Are Scientists at Elsewhere, 8/10/21. Photo by Buscar Photo

    We Are Scientists is about to kick off a lengthy European tour, beginning this Saturday in the UK. The first leg runs through early December with a second leg throughout April 2022. Check out all the tour dates HERE, along with links to order the highly customizable record as well as a slew of colorful merch. More photos from the impromptu acoustic show in the gallery below.

    Key Tracks: “Fault Lines,” “Contact High,” “You’ve Lost Your Shit”

  • Soulive return to Brooklyn Bowl this New Years Eve

    After more than two years, Soulive will return to Brooklyn Bowl for their much-loved Bowlive concert series this December, From December 29-31, Soulive will be joined by bassist for The Meters, George Porter Jr. on the first night, and hold a special New Year’s Eve performance on Saturday, December 31.

    soulive

    Marking the ninth mini-residency for Soulive at Brooklyn Bowl, the trio of Eric Krasno, Neal Evans, and Alan Evans are fresh off a three-night run opening up the brand new Brooklyn Bowl Philadelphia. Bowlive has a storied history at Brooklyn Bowl Williamsburg, dating back to 2010.

    Doors open at 6 with show starting at 830pm. Tickets are $50 each and on sale now here.

  • Yo La Tengo Closes Out Central Park’s 2021 Summerstage Free Concert Series, Announce Hanukkah Celebration at Bowery Ballroom

    Yo La Tengo helped bring Central Park’s 2021 Summerstage Free Concert Series to a close on Friday October 1st. Despite having to reschedule this performance from one month prior due to sever weather, fans were treated to perfect weather this time around. Fans enjoyed the first night of Autumn with plenty of fleece sweaters and a great lineup of performances.

    yo la tengo summerstage

    The show opened up with three short films as a part of Rooftop Films’ Summer 2021 Summer Series. Next up, Amanda Nazario played a brief but energetic DJ set just as the sun began to set over Manhattan. And then Mountain Movers pumped up the crowd with their unique blend of drone and noise rock.

    As Yo La Tengo took the stage, applause and cheers became screams when they opened with a cover of Velvet Underground’s “Who Loves the Sun.”

    yo la tengo summer stage

    Their 90 minute set included several fan favorites such as “Autumn Sweater” (a natural inclusion) and “I’ll Be Around,” which they dedicated to Yoko Ono. Frontman Ira Kaplan brought his mother onstage to close out the concert with their cover of Anita Bryant’s “My Little Corner of the World.” The crowd ate it up, and the show ended on a high note.

    Ira also announced at Summerstage that Yo La Tengo would once again be playing a series of eight Hanukkah shows at Bowery Ballroom from November 28 through December 5, coinciding with the eight nights of Hanukkah, which starts on November 28 and runs through the evening of December 6. Tickets will be available October 8th. You can find out more on Yo La Tengo’s website.

    Ira Kaplan shared this note with fans on the Yo La Tengo Facebook page:

    Shammash-ing Time!

    Hi everybody, here to tell you that Hanukkah is just around the corner. (No kidding–it’s early this year!) And that we are going to return to the Bowery Ballroom and play all eight nights, just like we did before life got in the way. Comics, opening acts, whatever other nonsense we can cobble together, and the money will be given away. I’d consider writing more, but it still feels a little unreal to be contemplating this. And yet here we are.

    Hanukkah starts on Sunday, November 28 and continues through Sunday, December 5. You must be fully vaccinated to enter the Bowery Ballroom. Tickets are $50 each and will go on sale on Friday, October 8 at 12 pm (noon) EDT. OK, gotta start practicing!

  • The R Train Band Pull into Arlene’s Grocery on October 9

    On October 9, the rock sounds of The R Train Band will perform at Arlene’s Grocery in Brooklyn. Guitarist Jeffery Black splits time between Brooklyn and Florida, with Mike Annese (drums) and Denny-Lee (bass) rounding out the power trio.

    Their latest release, “Rock On” has elements of hard rock an an anthem for rock music lovers everywhere, with a message borrowed from Hendrix to simply to live your life the way you want to, go for the big brass ring, and never give up on having fun.

    An Ozzy Osbourne-like lead vocalist is supported by a Led Zeppelin-infused guitar, bass and drum style making the ingredients for “Rock On.” The pulse and groove has a modern bullet train feel. The vocal clearly tells us to be ourselves and love who we are. Do it your way and go for it.

    The R Train Band will celebrate John Lennon’s birthday on Saturday, October 9 as they make their way to Arlene’s Grocery in Brooklyn. The show will be hosted by Ace Annese of “Ace’s Space Radio & Reality Check TV.” Tickets and more info can be found here.

  • Acclaimed Guitarist Marc Ribot Unleashes Another Power Solo in his Literary Debut

    Throughout his 40-year career, guitarist Marc Ribot has defied expectations and genre boundaries at every turn. He’s been the go-to guy serving up a singular fusion of rootsy Americana meets outré noise jazz meets Cubano swing with everyone from Tom Waits, Elvis Costello, Robert Plant, Nora Jones and Diana Krall to John Lurie’s Lounge Lizards, the Black Keys and the inexhaustibly productive John Zorn.  Now with Unstrung: Rants and Stories of A Noise Guitarist (Akashic Books), Marc Ribot is stepping into the spotlight with his literary debut.  And it is one as fresh, fiercely focused, unpredictable and delightfully disorienting as his masterfully knotty guitar work.

    First off, this is not a musical memoir per se. It is a collection of darkly funny stories and essays that, in good part, touch upon his thoughts on guitars, amps, touring, composer’s rights and iconic musical partners like punk guitar icon Robert Quine, free jazz legends Derek Bailey and Henry Grimes and producer extraordinaire Hal Willner. But this is a collection that spreads its wings far beyond the world of music. It is a razor-sharp playlist of far-reaching modernist literature, one that puts a Dadaist spin on everything from iPhone failures to treatments for absurdist films that will only ever exist in Ribot’s fevered imagination.

    In the first section of the book, “Lies and Distortions,” the guitarist turns his attention to his instrument. “My relation to the guitar is one of struggle,” he writes. “I’m constantly forcing it to be something else:  a saxophone, a scream, a car rolling down a hill… I bend them and they bend me.” Marc Ribot also pens a great ode to amps and distortion. In it, he claims his need to play amps at peak volume, to a breaking point that risks both his hearing and livelihood, provides to a guitarist “what makeup is to a drag queen.”  His love of distortion is also compared to the appeal of “vocal chords eroded by whiskey and screaming” and “the junked-out weakness of certain horn players” like Dexter Gordon or Lester Young. Ribot also pens a moving tribute to his first teacher, the renowned classical guitar master from Haiti, Frantz Casseus. Ribot’s distinct style may have been informed by his early lessons and lifelong friendship with this man, who like Bela Bartok, merged the folk of his native land with European classical tradition.  Ribot’s fierce defense of creators’ rights is illustrated in his discussions of Casseus’ hand-to-mouth existence, due to being cheated out of his composer royalties for decades until the literal last months of his life.  He also passionately tackles this issue in “The Attack on Artist’s Rights…and Me,” a much socially-shared 2014 essay first published in Talkhouse Magazine.

    Some of my favorite pieces in the book are Ribot’s generally observational ones. In “Animal Sounds,” his astute ears dissect a rooster scream, which is not a single scream at all, but a mindlessly repetitive three-part pattern, a sonic cage which is the “opposite of being free as a bird” to the author.  He also shares how a poetry exercise in 2nd grade taught him a lesson about both unconscious plagiarism and life losses.  There are also flights of fancy about a rocket scientist who dies because he can’t seem to learn how to tie his shoelaces properly and a boy, named Woody, who tries homespun horticulture to graft himself to a tree. There’s also a story where Botox leads to murder. This is all because a husband can’t detect the increasingly aggravated expressions on his wife’s newly treated and immobile face.  Like his ofttimes sensibly brief guitar solos, a good deal of the stories here are rendered in a single page or two. They have a darkly humorous, almost haiku style slapstick that brings to mind the work of the great Italo Calvino in works like Italian Folktales and Marcovaldo.

    photo by Ebru Ylidiz

    The fantasies continue in the third section entitled “Film (Mis)Treatments.”  In one, a past-its-prime avant-garde band on tour is not concerned with their performances, only where they are going to eat in each city.  When the tour is cancelled after a single disastrous performance, their manager wants to pull the travel and hotel accommodations.  So, the band kills him… and continues to eat its way across the Europe!  In “The Club Date Musician (Or Saturday Night Nausea),” he lays out the agonizing travails of the wedding band industry, for both the players and the people who hire them. He also observes how all society band leaders seems to take new names that are two first names, and waspy ones at that, like the fictional Nathaniel (Nat) Alexander in his story.

    There are also shades of what I assume is Ribot’s personal life outside music, and as a longtime New Yorker, in this brief but enjoyable book.  In one story, we learn how a 10-year rent battle with his landlord in the Lower East Side unexpectedly ends in his favor, earning him $170,000 from an escrow account and a move to leafy Cobble Hill, Brooklyn.  In “Kaddish for Joan,” we see how the slightly older artist cousin he so admired in his teens succumbs to pressures from her Jewish family – giving up art, the hippie life and going slowly mad in suburbia. A story that especially touched me was “Today I Did Something Remarkable.”  In this, Ribot stroll down memory lane and comes to the realization he is entering a new stage of life, as he slowly takes apart the Ikea loft bed his now-adult daughter used throughout her youth.

    For some musicians, talent is not limited to the world of sound and lyric.  Joni Mitchell, Tony Bennett, Bob Dylan and David Bowie are among the many musos who are pretty good painters.  Rob Zombie, George Harrison and David Bryne are among those who have produced or directed acclaimed films.  With Unstrung, Ribot is joining this boundary crossing crew, with a collection of diverse, wonderful stories that sing even when they are not about music.

    Check out Marc Ribot, as sideman and sideman, on this playlist. 

  • Leo Kottke and Mike Gordon to Play Tarrytown, Troy and Plattsburgh this December

    For the first time in 16 years, guitarist Leo Kottke and bassist Mike Gordon will tour together, in an eagerly awaited series of dates in December.

    leo kottke mike gordon

    Acoustic guitar legend Leo Kottke and Phish bassist Mike Gordon first linked up in 2002 for Clone, and followed by 2005’s Sixty Six Steps. The upcoming tour will celebrate last year’s release of the first new Kottke/Gordon album in 15 years, Noon, hailed by Rolling Stone as “full of lilting grooves that go on wild musical tangents.”

    Read past interviews with Mike Gordon from 2013 and 2016.

    The pair also today premiered a 4-song mini set, including performances of the Kottke song “Sheets” and “How Many People Are You,” which has found a spot in the rotation both with Phish and Mike Gordon Band. Both tracks are found on Noon, with Phish drummer Jon Fishman appearing on “How Many People Are You.” The set is rounded out with the Kottke classic “Rings,” and “Disco” from the duo’s 2002 release, Clone.

    Leo Kottke and Mike Gordon December 2021 Tour Dates

    December 8 – Munhall, PA – Carnegie of Homestead Music Hall
    December 9 – Washington, DC – Sixth & I
    December 10 – Tarrytown, NY – Tarrytown Music Hall
    December 12 – Beverly, MA – The Cabot
    December 13 – Lebanon, NH – Lebanon Opera House *
    December 15 – Troy, NY – Troy Savings Bank Music Hall
    December 16 – Norwalk, CT – Wall Street Theater
    December 17 – York, PA – Appell Center for the Performing Arts
    December 19 – Plattsburgh, NY – Strand Center for the Arts

    All Dates go on sale Friday, October 8 at 10 am ET, except for Lebanon Opera House, which goes on sale at 12pm on Friday. More info can be found here.

  • Flushing Town Hall Monthly Jazz Jam Celebrates 10th Anniversary on October 13

    The Louis Armstrong Legacy Monthly Jazz Jam at Flushing Town Hall will celebrate its 10th Anniversary on October 13, 2021. In celebration of the occasion Flushing Town Hall’s current house jazz band will be joined by members of Queens Jazz OverGround on Wednesday, October 13, 2021 at 7 PM EST.

    flushing town hall jazz jam

    The monthly jam started back in October of 2011 as an educational program in collaboration with the Aaron Copeland School of Music at Queens College. The program existed in order to provide a platform for young jazz musicians to play music together. Three years into the program’s formation the monthly jam transformed into a program for amateur and professional musicians and public audiences under the lead of Queens Jazz OverGround. 

    Flushing Town Hall’s Director of Education & Public Programs, Gabrielle M. Hamilton spoke on the creation of the monthly Jazz Jam saying, “Shortly after I joined Flushing Town Hall, we were able to launch our first Jazz Jam and Clinic in October 2011. Our partnership with Queens College provided graduate music students with an opportunity to jam together locally and educate young musicians in Jazz. A few years later, the jam expanded to reach more musicians under the leadership of Brian Woodruff and Queens Jazz OverGround (QJOG).” 

    Hamilton also announced that some of the QJOG original members will be joining the stage with Carol Sudhalter, Joe Vincent Tranchina, Eric Lemmon, and Scott Neumann — our current house band, to acknowledge ten years of great Jazz right here in Flushing for the 10th anniversary.  

    The band at the 10th anniversary celebration  will feature Josh Deutsch on trumpet (founding member, Queens Jazz OverGround), Hashem Assadullahi on alto saxophone (current member, Queens Jazz OverGround), Amanda Monaco on guitar (founding member, Queens Jazz OverGround), Eugenia Choe on piano (current member, Queens Jazz OverGround), Richard Mikel on bass and Brian Woodruff on drums (founding and current member, Queens Jazz OverGround).

    The celebration will take place in person at the historic building in Queens on Wednesday, October 13 at 7 PM EST. Admission is $10 or free to members. In adherence with Mayor De Blasio’s Covid policy for performance venues, Flushing Town Hall will require all visitors, performers, and staff to show proof of vaccination against COVID-19. A form of identification that matches the proof of vaccine is required, and masks must be worn at all times. For more details on Flushing Town Hall’s general Covid-safety measures and vaccine requirements, please visit here.

    For more information on the Flushing Town Hall’s Louis Armstrong Legacy Monthly Jazz Jam 10th Anniversary event visit their website.

  • Flashback: Phish play the Gymnasium at Skidmore College on this day in 1990

    On October 5, 1990, Phish performed at Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, an overlooked show that was part of the group’s formative years as they hit college markets across the Northeast. The Skidmore Gymnasium, today a part of the Williamson Sports Center, served as the venue for this all-ages show, which was part of Skidmore’s Oktoberfest Weekend.

    The numbered tickets for the show read “Oktoberfest Weekend 1990 Continues!! The Class of 1991 Presents: Phish In Concert with Conjunction Junction,” and cost $10. For $15, you could also see NRBQ perform the next day, along with Projectile of Love, all part of the same week-long event. The fall Friday afternoon brought college students and their friends to Upstate New York for the show.

    phish skidmore

    Phish was slowly making their way out of Vermont and into New York State, stopping in Saratoga Springs for the first time in March of 1990 to play at Aikos, then located on Caroline Street. For those in the know, and perhaps those who caught Phish at Pauly’s Hotel in May 1989, it was becoming obvious that Phish was a band whose reputation was building fast. By the fall, they had begun to play college gyms around the Northeast. And for the crowd of 300 or so fans, they had plenty of room to move around, but still had to deal with the gym getting warm due to to heaters in gym being on – you can hear calls for air conditioning that can be heard after “Stash.”

    While the show doesn’t spark much discussion or replay, there are a few notable aspects to the show. The opener “I Didn’t Know” jumps out as a random opener, but the song would open sets as early as 1988, sometims with Fishman on trombone instead of vacuum. If you were ever looking for the lyrics to “I Am Hydrogen”, the line “I walk awakening on the misty fields of forever” is included in the intro, while both “Ya Mar” and “Alumni Blues” each have extended guitar intros. One lucky fan who was calling the Phish hotline all summer, asking them to play “The Curtain” at Skidmore was rewarded for their persistence.

    Mike Hogan attended the show, and shares his recollections of the night:

    It was a beautiful fall afternoon and some of my friends traveled from various parts of New England to come see the show with me in Saratoga at Skidmore college. The show opened with an oddly placed “I Didn’t Know,” followed by a lively “Mike’s Song/Weekapaug” with the additional lyrics as I always thought they were, ”I walk awakening in the misty fields of Rather,” although the show notes say otherwise. Other highlights included “Fee” and “The Asse Festival” and “Possum.”

    Looking back on the setlist, a very solid show that I’ve always enjoyed listening to. A few years back, Kevin Shapiro (Phish archivist) had asked me about this show. He had Trey’s date book and all that was written in it was Saratoga. It had no sense of the venue or setlist. I was able to provide him a bootleg copy.

    One final thought on the ticket stub above. They took everyone’s ticket upon entry. After the show they had simply dropped them on the floor next to the door and I reached down and grabbed one. I wish I had grabbed a handful.

    Matt Hogan

    Just three years later, Phish would be playing their first show at Red Rocks in Colorado.

    Phish – Skidmore Gymnasium, Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, NY – Friday, October 5, 1990

    Set 1: I Didn’t Know, Mike’s Song > I Am Hydrogen[1] > Weekapaug Groove, My Sweet One, The Landlady, Tela > The Oh Kee Pa Ceremony > Suzy Greenberg, Stash, The Asse Festival, Bouncing Around the Room > Run Like an Antelope

    Set 2: Golgi Apparatus > The Curtain > Ya Mar, Alumni Blues > Letter to Jimmy Page > Alumni Blues, Uncle Pen, Split Open and Melt, Fee > Possum[2]

    Encore: Good Times Bad Times

    [1] “I walk awakening on the misty fields of forever” lyrics.
    [2] Charlie Chan and Popeye signals.

    The beginning of Hydrogen included the lyrics “I walk awakening on the misty fields of forever.” Possum contained Charlie Chan and Popeye signals.

    Phish Skidmore
    An interview with Trey (Tray) and Mike from Phish in the Skidmore News, 10/10/90. Courtesy of Mike Greenhaus.

    Listen below or on PhishTracks.com

  • Pimienta Breaks Records with Her World Premiere at New York City Ballet Fall Fashion Gala

    The world premiere at the New York City Ballet Fall Fashion Gala has broken records and barriers. Lido Pimienta, one of the few female composers in the Company as well as the first-ever composer of color and made her world debut on stage on September 30th.

    Contemporary choreographer Andrea Miller (GALLIM) had Pimienta perform the piece live on stage with the company complete with five additional presentations run through October 12 at Lincoln Center in Manhattan. Thanks to this year’s Gala co-chairs like Sarah Jessica Parker, Georgina Bloomberg, Laverne Cox, Claire Danes and Hugh Dancy, Diane Kruger, Mazdack and Zanna Rassi, Deborah Roberts and Al Roker, and Jordan Roth we can expect to break more barriers as time passes.

    Pimienta

    Pimienta’s rise to fame with Miller was featured in the NY Times this week for their historic partnership with New York City Ballet. Want to see more of her? Her fall tour will take place at the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles on October 15 with performances with Sylvan Esso including two nights at Terminal 5 in NYC on November 15 and 16. If you won’t be in the city you can find her making her debut at Big Ears Festival in Knoxville, TN this February.  

    Limienta earned her first GRAMMY and Latin GRAMMY nomination with her 2020 release of Miss Colombia (ANTI-). This multi talented star has heads turning from the NY Times, Pitchfork, Rolling Stone, NPR and far beyond. Her debut album, La Papessa, also won Canada’s prestigious Polaris Prize and performed at the 2021 GRAMMY Awards Premiere Ceremony. Pimienta talent is limitless dipping from a composer, prolific visual artist, and electrifying live performer earning her collabs with Bomba Estereo and Ricky Reed.

    The New Miller work featuring Pimienta’s composition is part of the NYC Ballet Innovators & Icons series. More information and tickets here: https://www.nycballet.com/season-and-tickets/calendar 

    Performance schedule:

    David H. Koch Theater, at the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts 

    October 1 – 8PM

    October 2 – 2PM

    October 3 – 3PM

    October 6 – 7:30PM 

    October 12 – 7:30PM 

    *Choreographer: Andrea Miller – Choreographer, Artist Director & Founder of Brooklyn-based company GALLIM

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-SdgsLeaVkU
  • Wu-Tang Is For (Teaching) The Children

    An old saying — part marketing tool, part observation based on the group’s lyrical content — “Wu Tang is for the Children” is proving itself to be true after all. Throughout their decorated history, the Wu Tang Clan has impacted music, culture, television, fashion and now — nearly 30 years after their debut — the Clan is still impacting today’s school-children.

    Wu Tang is for the children

    As first reported in NYSUT UNITED, the Wu have developed a new legion of followers and they refer to themselves as the “Depew-Tang Clan.” Amidst the pandemic, Depew Middle School teacher, Joe Cena, noticed that less than half of his eight grade students were completing their independent reading requirements. As remote learning conditions prevented teachers from having a hands-on connection with their students, Cena acted desperately. 

    To motivate students, Cena created a prestigious “Wu Wall” where students would earn a spot whenever they completed an assignment or quiz. Cena didn’t stop there, he also ordered a bunch of Wu Tang themed stickers and magnets, took pictures of the children and used an online name generator to give them their official Wu Tang Clan names. 

    As silly as it is, it definitely increased their motivation to read books.

    Joe Cena

    The Wu’s impact on Depew Middle School didn’t end there, as Cena began to explain the art of rhyming to the children using verses from the Clan. As part of the poetry unit, he presented the song “Triumph” with color-coded lyrics to explain the intricacies of rhyme patterns. 

    Although Depew operates inconspicuously as part of the Buffalo-Niagara Falls metropolis, Cena’s innovate and creative efforts to motivate his students did not go unnoticed. 

    As part of an effort to have Cena recognized, student, Aleigha Sharpe, secretly reached out to several members of the Clan. Writing,

     

    As everyone knows, due to COVID-19 school hasn’t been the same. But my English teacher has put so much effort to make this year for his students the best and memorable.

    Aleigha Sharpe

    Unsure if she would get a reply, Sharpe was shocked to receive a personalized message from Method Man himself, shouting out the Depew Middle School and Joe Cena. The Ticallian Stallion even bestowed Cena with his own personalized Wu nickname, labeling him, “Excessive Gallant,” as he congratulated the teacher for his continued efforts towards educating the children. 

    I want to shout out Depew-Tang Clan… and also especially Joe Cena. AKA Excessive Gallant. I love what you are doing over there. You’re keeping learning fun and you’re including Wu – Tang. Salute to you, brother. Hats off!

    Method Man

    Cena’s students presented him with the Method Man response video and the English teacher was visibly touched from the gesture. Holding back a smile and plenty of emotions, Cena was in disbelief to hear Method Man say his name.