Category: Features

  • Take Two: Beabadoobee and Lowertown take on Albany’s Empire Live

    Indie bedroom-pop musician beabadoobee marked her second-to-last US tour stop at Empire Live last Saturday, Dec. 3, with support from rising alternative duo Lowertown. 

    beabadoobee performing solo at the start of her set / Photo Credit: Sumaiya Nasir

    Empire Live, located on Pearl Street in downtown Albany, is a mid-sized room for bands with a mid-sized following. It boasts a spacious floor with standing-room-only, ideal for dancing. 

    Sandwiched between MVP Arena and the Palace Theatre, Empire Live offers locals a unique taste of both upcoming and well-established musical artists. The intimate venue was packed from the stage barricade to the bar with highschool to late-20s aged fans, plus a few hesitant parents here-and-there, with no shortage of energy.

    Beatrice Kristi Laus, stylistically known as “beabadoobee,” is a Filipino-British musician who came into popularity in 2017 with viral hit “Coffee.” Her most recent album, “Beatopia,” evokes childhood nostalgia with an MS-Paint or restaurant-tablecloth-crayon drawing looking album cover. Stuffed animals were scattered across the amps on stage, one fan even throwing a teddy bear to Bea halfway through the show.

    beabadoobee performing “Coffee” solo during the encore / Photo Credit: Danielle Modica

    Atlanta-based Lowertown started off the night strong with a spirited and punky set. In album sessions, the band has more of a soft, shoegaze sound. Live, they pull out all the stops and are nothing short of a high-energy garage band experience.

    Olivia Osby of Lowertown performing / Photo Credit: Sumaiya Nasir

    The songs were fast and loud with jam interludes by guitarist Avshalom “Avsha” Weinberg. Lead singer Olivia Osby encouraged the audience to go wild, opening a mosh pit, crowd surfing and spitting water into the crowd. Fans followed through, opening a large circle in the center of the already sardine-can-packed venue and going hog wild.

    Olivia Osby of Lowertown crowd surfing / Photo Credit: Danielle Modica

    Songs “No Way,” “All My Friends” and “Best Person You Know” stole the night with the most jumping and chanting.

    Lowertown performing / Photo Credit: Danielle Modica

    beabadoobee began her show after a quick stage reset and suspenseful audio introduction. After performing “10:36” solo, the band joined Bea and only added more flair to her soulful, soft and sweet singing style. Bea’s band kept up a late 90’s grunge/pop punk vibe. Bea’s guitarist and back-up singer, Jacob Bugden, complemented her baby-like pitch with a Billy Corgan-esque tone.

    beabadoobee & her band / Photo Credit: Danielle Modica

    “The Perfect Pair” and “She Plays Bass” stood out with the most energy and crowd engagement. The audience passionately shouted the lyrics back to Bea while she maintained control, coordinating group audience jumps.

    Bea frequently stood towards the back of the stage during instrumental portions, allowing for her band to receive all the attention. She shared her gratitude with the crowd various times, even joking about her inability to pronounce “Albany,” butchered with a subtle British accent.

    beabadoobee jamming on guitar / Photo Credit: Danielle Modica

    Both bands’ sets were thoughtfully planned out, seamlessly transitioned and well-executed, there was never a “when will it end” moment like other drawn out shows. The crowd stayed engaged with electric excitement, loudly chanting the lyrics to the songs they knew – even the venue playlist pre-and-post show. The good vibes seemed to encourage both sets to go a little harder with each song, giving fans a night to remember.

    After an hour-and-a-half-long performance, Bea and her band briskly exited the stage to ABBA’s “Dancing Queen” playing from the venue speakers. Audience members stayed behind to dance along.

    Lowertown Setlist: It’s It’s It’s, Debris, Scum, No Way, At the End, My Friends, Bucktooth, Best Person

    Beabadoobee Setlist: 10:36, Apple Cider, Care, Fairy Song; Yoshimi, Forest, Magdalene; Worth It, Together, Charlie Brown, The Perfect Pair, Sunny Day, Sorry, She Plays Bass, See You Soon, Don’t Get the Deal, Back to Mars, Last Day On Earth, Talk
    Encore: Coffee, Ripples Cologne

  • In Focus: Beabadoobee and Lowertown Stop at Empire Live in Albany

    Beabadoobee with opener Lowertown made a stop at Empire Live on Saturday, December 3rd for her second show in New York during her Beatopia tour. Beabadoobee, with her grungy outfit and electric green guitar, fully embodied the indie-rock age of the early-2000s through her stellar performance. 

    Beabadoobee
    Beabadoobee performing The Perfect Pair

    Filipino-British artist Beabadoobee, also known as Beatrice Laus, previously played at the Brooklyn Steel with guitarist Jacob Bugden, bassist Eliana Sewell, and drummer Luca Caruso. She is having one last US show in Boston before beginning her European tour. Beabadoobee is set to return in 2023 to open for Taylor Swift’s upcoming The Eras Tour. 

    Lowertown, consisting of Atlanta duo Olivia Osby and Avsha Weinberg, has opened for Beabadoobee for the entirety of her Beatopia tour. Invoking music of the indie-rock, electronic, and lo-fi genre, the pair put on an incredible performance with many songs from their new album, I Love To Lie.

    Olivia Osby from Lowertown

    During her song “10:36,” Beabadoobee urged the crowd to “Get down, get down!” before jumping at the drop of the chorus. Guitarist Jacob Bugden dived into the sea of people rocking their “fairy-core grunge” outfits as hundreds of hands allowed him to surf the crowd. Beatrice, with her large collection of red panda stuffed animals on stage, threw one into the crowd for a lucky fan to take home. 

    Finally, Beatrice ended her set with an encore, singing “Coffee“—her first ever original and most-popular song—“Ripples,” and “Cologne.” Her immaculate vocals, incredible energy, and phenomenal guitar-playing with the rest of her band truly wowed the crowd.

    Lowertown Setlist: It’s It’s It’s, Debris, Scum, No Way, At the End, My Friends, Bucktooth, Best Person

    Beabadoobee Setlist: 10:36, Apple Cider, Care, Fairy Song; Yoshimi, Forest, Magdalene; Worth It, Together, Charlie Brown, The Perfect Pair, Sunny Day, Sorry, She Plays Bass, See You Soon, Don’t Get the Deal, Back to Mars, Last Day On Earth, Talk
    Encore: Coffee, Ripples Cologne

    Beabadoobee singing Coffee and Ripples during her encore
    Eliana Sewell on bass
    Jacob Bugden on guitar
    Avsha Weinberg from Lowertown
    Olivia Osby from Lowertown
  • Goodnight Moonshine Keeps the Spark Glowing at Caffe Lena

    Married couple Molly Venter and Eben Pariser brought their project Goodnight Moonshine to Caffe Lena on a Saturday in early December 2022. The duo plays acoustic guitars and sings into a solitary mic. This highlights the spark of their harmonies, both vocally and from their instruments. The audience enjoyed the couple’s banter and playing throughout the show, joining in impromptu with backup harmonizing and also when asked to join in by the band.

    Goodnight Moonshine
    Goodnight Moonshine at Caffe Lena. Photo by Derek Java.

    Earlier that day, Goodnight Moonshine had performed for a group of young children at Caffe Lena. Transitioning to the adult crowd, the couple was having fun realizing that their child-safe filters were still on. Someone from the crowd asked, “How many wheels on the bus?” Venter was quick to reply, “As many as it takes to get them to stop crying!” This was one of many enjoyable moments throughout the evening.

    Molly Venter of Goodnight Moonshine
    Molly Venter of Goodnight Moonshine. Photo by Derek Java.

    Venter dedicated a song called True North to her father. Lines such as “there went my peace of mind with you on the otherside” and “taught me to speak true” brought to light her love for her father. Venter’s soulful voice is a story-telling gem.

    Later in the long set, Pariser asked the audience for participation. He asked those with low voices to sing a low “drown in my own tears” and the higher voices to sing a harmony to the same line. This was fun, and as always the crowd at Caffe Lena did not disappoint the artist.

    Goodnight Moonshine at Caffe Lena
    Goodnight Moonshine basking in the spark of the crowd at Caffe Lena. Photo by Derek Java.

    For this listener, two songs highlight what connects this pair to their audience, and the rest of the world for that matter. One is about the couple’s twins called “Already Who You Are” and the other is called “Stars.” Both have lines about everything being “made of stars.” Speaking true indeed. Keep an eye out for Goodnight Moonshine next year and see them if you can. You can stream shows from Caffe Lena, as well. Information can be found here.

    Goodnight Moonshine at Caffe Lena
    Photo by Derek Java.
    Photo by Derek Java.
    Photo by Derek Java.
    Photo by Derek Java.
    Photo by Derek Java.
    Photo by Derek Java.
    Goodnight Moonshine at Caffe Lena
    Photo by Derek Java.
    Goodnight Moonshine at Caffe Lena
    Photo by Derek Java.
  • In Focus: Karina Rykman and Quiltro make Debut Appearances in Albany at Lark Hall

    Two bands – Karina Rykman and Quiltro – made their debut appearances in the Capital District on Thursday, December 1, performing at Albany’s Lark Hall

    karina rykman albany

    Karina Rykman is no stranger to Albany, having played with Marco Benevento numerous times at The Hollow and Cohoes Music Hall. Now touring with her own band, consisting of Adam November (guitar), Chris Corsico (drums), and Rykman on bass, made their first appearance in Albany with a strong crowd welcoming them to town.

    Quiltro also had their first performance in Albany, with bassist Mike McKinley returning home for a long overdue hometown show. Quiltro had initially been set to play Albany in May 2020, which was left unannounced as the music industry and world around us shut down for a then indeterminable amount of time. Finally arriving home, the early crowd’s rapt attention to the psychedelic rock put forth by Mark Taylor (guitar), JD Hoffmann (drums) and McKinley.

    quiltro

    During their 60 minute first set, Quiltro opened with a spacey jam that worked its way eventually into Hendrix’s “Third Stone From the Sun” amid “Pyxis,” the third track from their self-titled 2020 release. The set drew progressively heavier as the hour wound on, driving home the set with “Knight Riding” and “Field of Cities.” Played an introductory set to the uninitiated crowd, Quiltro warmed up the audience for Rykman, a perfect pairing this evening. McKinley and the crowd thanked all for coming to the show, particular his parents who were seated up front for the show.

    Quiltro Setlist: Jam-> Pyxis-> Third Stone From the Sun -> Pyxis, Dark Matter, Apollo -> The Crater, In Reverse, Antilla, Knight Riding, Field of Cities

    Rykman arrived to the stage around 930pm, flanked by November to her right and Corsico on her felt. Standing front and center, bass in hand, Rykman lit up the stage, singing “Joyride” to open the show in a soft dream-pop voice.

    This power rock trio doubles as a prog rock trio at times, deconstructing songs mid-jam and building them back up again. The far reaching instrumentation of the triumvirate were fully in sync on “Plants,” one of the studio tracks that when heard live helps you fully ‘get’ the band’s sound.

    November’s shredding and keys created dissonance while Karina bopped around the stage, establishing her presence as the frontwoman of this unique trio, one that brings more than just jams to the table.  

    Rykman channeled Tina Weymouth on the Talking Heads adjacent tune “City Kids,” which Mike Gordon would join her for two nights later at Nectar’s in Burlington. With a few shows left this tour, Rykman’s brief Northeast Tour is well worth catching, as she sets her sights on wider touring in 2023.

    Karina Setlist: Joyride > All That You Wanted > Plants > Arbitrary > Dirty South, Beacon, City Kids, Fever Dream, Atom Dance, No Occasion > Psycho Killer > The Hardest Button to Button, Elevator

    Quiltro and Karina Rykman photos by Zak Radick

  • East goes West: WonderFront Music and Arts Festival 2022 Day 3 Finale

    WonderFront Music Festival fulfilled a memorable weekend on Day 3, when the multi-genre event was brought back in action. On Sunday, November 20th, WonderFront pulled together an outstanding finale including headliners Cage The Elephant, GRAMMY-award winning artist Gwen Stefani and special guest SchoolBoy Q.

    The comeback of WonderFront amped up the lineup since the covid outbreak in 2019 and overall executed a thrilling weekend, living up to high hopes and exceeding festival goer expectations. 

    Cage The Elephant – WonderFront Music and Arts Festival 2022 Perri Sage Photography

    Noah Cyrus, an American singer/songwriter began the first show of her 2022-2023 tour at the start of Day 3 of WonderFront. On this sunny Sunday afternoon, Noah, sister of well known Miley Cyrus, performed in San Diego’s very own Seaport Village. Glowing on stage, Cyrus sung from recent 2020 album release THE END OF EVERYTHING tracks “July,” “Lonely” and hit single “Again”(feat. XXXTENTACION).

    Noah Cyrus – WonderFront Music and Arts Festival 2022 Perri Sage Photography

    Electronic dance duo by the stage name of HippieSabotage put on an electric performance at the CoorsLight stage. Brothers Kevin and Jeff Saurer performed one of many shows they’ve done in the SoCal city of San Diego. Best known for appealing dance/electronic music and top releases “Devil Eyes” and featured song “Habits(Stay High)” by indie artist Tove Lo.

    Hippie Sabotage – WonderFront Music and Arts Festival 2022 Perri Sage Photography

    To carry through Day 3, ThunderCat took the stage. His groove says it all with his flashy red bass guitar, yellow dreads and sparkling pants suit. Fans went wild when “Funny Thing” was played, one of his many viral hits.

    Cheat Codes – WonderFront Music and Arts Festival 2022 Perri Sage Photography

    Another memorable show on Sunday was returning DJ trio Cheat Codes. After covering them previously at The Westcott Theatre in Syracuse, Cheat Codes continue to appeal to their crowd, engaging with fans as lead singer Trevor Dahl jumps up on the rail guard shaking hands with show goers. Cheat Codes is well notable for hit singles “Sex” released in 2016, and “No Promises” (feat. Demi Lavato).

    Cage The Elephant – WonderFront Music and Arts Festival 2022 Perri Sage Photography

    Headliner Cage The Elephant held a thrilling show on Sunday evening at the WonderFront Music and Arts Festival. Opening the show with their most well known releases from 2013 album Melophobia, “SpiderHead”. Lead singer of the rock band Matt Shultz makes the crowd go crazy for his erotic jumping, dancing and enthusiasm during his performance. Slamming down on stage with his guitarist, and coming out on stage wearing a memorable outfit of yellow striped pants, bedazzled shoes and leather coat.

    Cage The Elephant – WonderFront Music and Arts Festival 2022 Perri Sage Photography

    Matt Shultz lead the band on quite the wild ride of the show, making it clear he loves what he does and does an outstanding job as lead vocalist for the alternative rock band. As part of their Night Running Tour, Cage The Elephant plays features from the album Social Cues, including the title track and “Black Madonna.” The band left quite the imprint on their fans Sunday evening and an amazing show to remember.

    Perri Sage Photography

    The release of WonderFront’s special guest took show goers by surprise when announced that rapper ScHoolboy Q was taking the stage. As one of raps emerging voices, ScHoolBoy Q began his music career in 2007, his first album Setbacks leading him into the spotlight, gaining a huge rise of attention that launched him into the rap community.

    Gwen Stefani – WonderFront Music and Arts Festival 2022 Perri Sage Photography

    To wrap up the long weekend, Gwen Stefani went bananas for the fans and brought the crowd to a standing uproar, encouraging show goers to sing with her and chants “If I could escape” from fan favorite single “The Sweet Escape.” Stefani began her solo music career back in 2004 when releasing her first solo album “Love.Angel.Music.Baby.” Hit singles “Rich Girl,” “Hollaback Girl” and “The Sweet Escape” proved her to be a commercial success.

    Gwen expressed her excitement to perform in San Diego as a solo star, continuing her growth and fame of her music career. Stefani blows her show to full extremes with a team of background dancers, live instruments and a dramatic outfit change from black to a yellow-checkered two-piece set. The pop star carried the energy through her show and sang a well-remembered encore of “HollaBack Girl.” The fans went bananas as they screamed “This shit goes bananas!” to conclude a fulfilling, memorable Day 3 of the notoriously fun WonderFront Music and Arts Festival, leaving show goers ecstatic and in high hopes for what the 2023 lineup will bring to the table. 

  • This Week’s EQXposure Features Holiday Themed Jams

    Each Sunday evening from 7-9 p.m. 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 holiday music from Doctor Baker, The Rough Shapes, and Watch Reggie Run.

    Doctor Baker, The Rough Shapes, and Watch Reggie Run.

    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.

    Doctor Baker – “Holiday Lights”

    Consisting of Ed Schwarzschild (guitar, vocals), Iggy Calabria (guitar, vocals), Chris Gockley (bass), and Danny Goodwin (drums, percussion), Doctor Baker originally started as an acoustic duo before expanding. The complete band brings a strong sound to audiences within the Capitol Region and beyond. Their single “Holiday Lights” off of their album Trespassers will be played on EQXposure.

    The Rough Shapes – “Last Christmas” cover

    The Rough Shapes are an instrumental trio based in the mid-Hudson Valley. Their sound is shaped by their shared hometown of Saugerties. The group’s sound is underground electric guitar music – the darker side of rockabilly, surf, spy, early rock and roll, and the cinematic mood music of Morricone. 

    Watch Reggie Run – “Unwrap them all”

    Watch Reggie Run is a father-son duo founded in 2017 by Dave and Luke Graham. They started performing as a way to connect with one another, as Luke has autism and his communication skills are limited. Their holiday song “Unwrap them all” will be played on EQXposure.

  • Charlie Parr Gets Right Down To It in Rochester

    Charlie Parr walked onto the Arbor Loft stage, bundled up in a made-for-Minnesota-winters cardigan, minutes after opener Al Olender finished up her set. He sat down, settled in with his Mule resonator guitar and started to tune it. Or was he just playing?

    The Rochester crowd milled about, conversing, getting a set break drink. Parr kept picking away, and it became more and more evident this was some mighty fine playing that deserves an attentive ear. And after a little while he leaned into the mic and started singing, “Can you remember what it’s like / When all the world’s filled with light / Now do you have that in your sight / Then spread it around, do.”

    And Parr’s set started just like that, no welcome, no pretense, he just got right to it with “817 Oakland Avenue” off his excellent 2022 release Last of the Better Days Ahead. The crowd quickly quieted, the lights went down, and the show on Thursday, December 1st, had begun.

    charlie parr rochester

    About 90 minutes later, after the peppy “Jubilee,” he flatly announced that was the end of his set, “Do you mind if I do the encore now?” With that he left the crowd with a stirring a capella rendition of the gospel, “Ain’t No Grave Gonna a Hold My Body Down.” He opened unceremoniously with a long guitar exploration and closed with just his voice. In between those bookends, the set was filled with the lush combination of his deft finger picking and rich voice.

    Sometimes seeing an artist perform solo, even the great ones, you are left wondering what could be gained with a band or even just an accompanist. Not so with Charlie Parr. He sounded perfect all on his own. Through finger picks, slides, foot stomps and that ragged voice with unexpected range, there wasn’t empty space wanting for anything more. And modifications, like an “aggressive capo” on the mostly instrumental “Jaybird” got even more sound from that guitar.

    “You know you’re at a folk show when a guy talks awkwardly while tuning his guitars.” Parr said, while tuning his guitar. He tuned quickly though, and like the way he opened his show, his tuning turned to playing without pause or hesitation. The show kept moving, with engaging upbeat songs, even if they were depressing in nature. He provided “palette cleansers” with some traditional folk blues tunes, like Brownie McGhee’s “Sportin’ Life” and Blind Willie McTell‘s “Delia,” the closest he was getting to playing a seasonal holiday song (not very close at all.) His original “On Stealing a Sailboat” referenced Arlo Guthrie in style, a romping spoken word story. No, there was no question or doubt about this being a folk show, or an Honest Folk show for that matter, the promoter closing out the year in grand fashion. We look forward to what’s in store for 2023.

    The full house lent an attentive ear to opener Al Olender, a young singer-songwriter from the Hudson Valley making her third return trip through Rochester this year. She immediately connected with the crowd on catchy and clever “All I Do Is Watch TV,” finger picking and strumming her vintage electric guitar and emoting with her silky smooth vocals. Her friend Amanda Brooklyn came out to aid with sparse but well-placed harmonies. She cut through sad subject matter with engaging and humble humor, in her lyrics, with in-song jokes, and witty banter. She was admittedly nervous performing a cover of Roy Orbison’s “Blue Bayou,” (you wouldn’t have guessed it from her delivery) but had no hesitation baring all about her own experiences in a bad breakup on “Liar Liar.” Olender is a new voice to keep an eye out for.

    Charlie Parr – Arbor Loft, Rochester – December 1, 2022

    Setlist: 817 Oakland Avenue, Last of the Better Days Ahead, Everyday Opus, Sportin’ Life (Brownie McGhee), Don’t Send Your Child to War, Cheap Wine, 1922 Blues, Dog, Jaybird, Over the Red Cedar, On Stealing a Sailboat, Delia (Blind Willie McTell), Jubilee
    Encore: Ain’t No Grave Gonna Hold My Body Down

  • Ryan Luce Releases New Illuminating Record “Country House”

    Brooklyn Americana artist Ryan Luce has just released his newest illuminating record titled “Country House.” Ryan Luce explores the subtle nuance of everyday life and studies the inner dramas of fathers, sons, and daughters.

    Brooklyn Americana artist Ryan Luce

    This Americana record was written throughout the pandemic where Ryan found love, lost his backing back, and honed his songwriting abilities. “I had to get back to writing, to what I know is the only thing I’m good at. Those songs became Country House,” stated Luce. 

    “Offers a blend of country-western Americana and Pacific Rock à la Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers to paint energetic narratives with lasting visual effect.” 

    -Rhythm & Boots NYC 
    Brooklyn Americana artist Ryan Luce

    Country House is a ten-song collection filled with heartbreaking lyrics and timeless melodies; Luce certainly pulled from classic country to modern day Americana throughout these releases. 

    “Before the pandemic I was pigeonholing myself in the themes I wrote about. I think I used songwriting as a projection on my own feelings of longing and escape and that limited my abilities,” says Luce. “Writing these songs allowed me to throw away the old ghosts and achieve a caliber of songwriting and production I’d been searching for.”

    Unlike Luce’s 2019 debut EP California Gold, a loose collection of songs from hustling the New York scene, Country House is rather an artifact from his life frozen in time. “I always dreamed of making a record where the songs are from a distinct period, as a time capsule, I could dig up in 20 years and look back on someday.”  

    The world had taken a toll throughout the time of the pandemic, but lots of musicians found a muse throughout being stuck inside. “I think a collective forcefield was blocking artists from creating during the early days of the pandemic including myself.” His band had scattered to the wind as the pandemic began and now, stuck in his apartment, recording plans scrapped, he fought off Covid.  

    The album came together out of the motivation that Luce hadn’t written anything in months. “Something switched on, I had to get back on the horse and start writing songs again. I started playing in different keys and the first song I wrote was the title track.” 

    Listen to more of Country House and to check out more of Ryan Luce, click here.

  • Mortal Prophets Release Five Singles Ahead of Album Release

    NYC’s Mortal Prophets have released five singles ahead of their album, Me and The Devil, which is set for release on December 9. The songs – all covers – teeter between Leonard Cohen and Nick Cave, and bring something completely new to the table.

    mortal prophets

    “Pretty Girl In The Pines” is an adaptation of the folk classic by Lead Belly and a famous performance of “Where Did You Sleep Last Night,” was covered during Nirvana’s MTV Unplugged concert. In the Mortal Prophet’s version, it starts as an eerier version of Lead Belly’s, but drops into German electronica house, then introduces searing electric guitar. This amalgamation of genre electrifies, aptly, some of the oldest songs in our American folk canon. 

    The stirring bluesy sound in these singles feels alive, because it is. In making this debut EP, Mortal Prophets’ lead John Beckmann sent his rough tracks to William Declan Lucey, an Irish producer and multi-instrumentalist and member of Rubyhorse. Beckmann entrusted Lucey with the task of adding or subtracting tracks from Beckmann’s raw files to the album, and this collaboration between the two artists led to some of the more surprising and exciting moments — Dana Colley’s saxophone on “Baby Please Don’t Go,” for one, gives the song transformative capacity.

    There’s anger that’s jutting out behind gritted teeth in “Grinning In Your Face.” Beckmann gets to the core of the legendary Son House original. “It’s really a song of betrayal, and back stabbing, yet the musician rises above it all, and laughs in their faces, and continues his life undeterred. I think we can all relate to that on some level,” Beckmann said about his cover. 

    Crossroad Blues” feels most like a Nick Cave song, gothic and earnest. Music writers say things like, “John Beckmann’s vocals shine on this record,” but Beckmann’s voice doesn’t “shine.” It’s totally matte, deep and dark, but with low opacity, like he’s singing through fangs bared — a voice that can be brutal, ravenous, in “Grinning In Your Face,” but here it is ultimately deeply mournful, loathing, that masculine kind of somber, you know, blue.

  • Conductor David Alan Miller Discusses ASO Holiday Performances in Albany and Troy

    Two fan favorite festive orchestral performances arrive in the Capital Region in the coming weeks. The Albany Symphony Orchestra (ASO) appearing at Albany’s Palace Theatre for the The Magic of Christmas series on Sunday, December 4th and at Troy Savings Bank Music Hall for the Holiday Classics on Saturday, December 10 and Sunday, December 11.

    ASO holiday
    Albany Symphony Orchestra

    Groups of young, talented performers are being featured in the musical performance at the Palace Theater on Sunday, December 4, including The Music Studio and Capital District Youth Chorale, as well as the Boland School Dance, Ghanaian drumming group Gballoi and special guest narrator Walter Throne of the Albany Business Review.

    ASO holiday
    Capital District Youth Chorale Featured in Magic of Christmas Poster

    GRAMMY Award-winning Albany Symphony Orchestra conductor David Alan Miller is leading the orchestra in both concert series, which includes directing classical musical pieces by J.S. Bach, W.A. Mozart, and Coleridge-Taylor Perkinson included in Holiday Classics. “It’s always such a treat for us to present beautiful Baroque and Classical music in the glorious Troy Savings Bank Music Hall during the holiday season,” said David Alan Miller.

    Albany Symphony Orchestra David Alan Miller

    Mr. Miller went in further depth about his experience leading the ASO during the holiday season and music highlighted in prior and upcoming performance.

    Heather Occhino: The Magic of Christmas and Holiday Classic show events are premiering at Albany’s Palace Theater and Troy Savings Bank. How long have you been the director of the Albany Symphony Orchestra?

    David Alan Miller: 31 years 

    HO: Music by Mozart and Bach are going to be included in Holiday Classics. Do you think sharing classics, such as Mozart’s Symphony No. 39, on stage affects the audience size for each year Holiday Classics is premiered?

    DAM: Yes, there are different pieces we play at different times of year. People love Baroque and Classical music, we tend to play them during the month of December. Hearing these pieces is a wonderful treat. The shows on the weekend of 12/10 includes music by Black American multi-genre music composer, Coleridge Taylor Perkinson. 

    HO: Is Holiday Classics the first performance where musicians belonging to your ensemble are highlighting historically known performances part of the concert series?

    DAM: No, we feature musicians during every season. 

    HO: Do other musical troupes other than the Albany Symphony Orchestra typically join shows you direct?

    DAM: Yes, particularly in Magic of Christmas; 8-9 groups are joining this performance-an African drumming group, a children’s chorus, which are important particularly for Holiday programs. Young opera singers from Bard College are joining on the shows Dec. 10-11.

    HO: A special appearance by Santa is featured in the Magic of Christmas. What do you think this will mean for the children of your audience?

    DAM: We want to make it as much fun as possible for kids. We pick kids’ names out of a hat and conduct “Jingle Bells” on stage and do big sing alongs with the whole audience-we want to make the performance as engaging as possible. 

    Buy Magic of Christmas and Holiday Classic tickets here.

    Watch Albany Symphony Orchestra Perform at AHA! A House for Arts