Category: Reviews

  • The Mars Volta End Decade-Long Hiatus With Inventive New Album

    On Friday, September 16th, The Mars Volta end their decade-long hiatus and release their self-titled seventh LP. The Mars Volta is the group’s first record under Clouds Hill Records, following the label’s reissue of the band’s back catalog in 2021; a vinyl box set dubbed “La Realidad De Los Sueños” (or “The Reality of Dreams”). This reissue was truly a dream come true to the many fans that have become familiar with The Mars Volta long after their records were available on the shelves.

    the mars volta
    Omar Rodríguez-López and Cedric Bixler-Zavala of The Mars Volta. Shot by Fat Bob on Leica M10.

    The set included all 6 previous LPs on 180g black vinyl, along with their 2002 debut EP Tremulant and the original demos from the Deloused In The Comatorium recording sessions called Landscape Tantrums. The demos were an intriguing part of the set, giving fans a look at the raw sound of the band before Rick Rubin put his finishing touches on. Limited to 5,000 copies the box set sold out nearly as fast as it was announced.

    Shortly after the release of their sixth LP Noctourniquet in 2012, the El Paso prog rock titans announced that the band was no more. Evolving from a rift in the friendship of band leads Omar Rodríguez-López and Cedric Bixler-Zavala, the feud spilled online and caused the band to announce their break up. The Mars Volta had just completed a European tour behind the new album and Rodríguez-López wanted to move on to new projects while Bixler-Zavala wanted to do a full tour of North America. The feud was short lived however, with Omar and Cedric reconciling after the birth of Bixler-Zavala’s children. The two became creative again, forming the new band Antemasque for a short lived self-titled release and even resurrected At The Drive In for that project’s fourth LP, in*ter*a*lia. All of this activity left fans longing for The Mars Volta, but hope that the band would one day reconvene was as strong as ever. 

    According to an updated bio, Rodríguez-López began composing fragments of songs that would become The Mars Volta around the time in*ter*a*lia was coming together. The reunion of At The Drive In was cathartic for Rodríguez-López and Cedric Bixler-Zavala’s relationship, albeit short lived. The group left it on good terms after a sizable tour behind the album, but the music of that project left Rodríguez-López feeling trapped in a style that was hard to be creative with. He knew that the time had come to resurrect The Mars Volta for the next chapter and Bixler-Zavala was on board.

    The Mars Volta Cover Art.

    Rodríguez-López wanted to make a “heavy pop” record. What could that possibly mean from a band that has alway made spastic and dense psychedelic prog rock with songs stretching well past the 10-minute mark? Ideas of a pop record floated around as early as 2008, but at that time, the band felt the urge to stay true to the frenetic prog rock sound they had pioneered up to that point and could not comprehend what pop sounded like for The Mars Volta. 

    After going through such a long hiatus from The Mars Volta and attempting to discover new things with old bands and new, Rodríguez-López and Bixler-Zavala knew it was time to evolve The Mars Volta into a brand new era. This meant isolating the musical elements that made The Mars Volta so unique, giving them more space in the mix to breathe, and shortening the songs into cohesive “pop” structures. This also meant giving Bixler-Zavala the freedom to write melodies based off his natural reaction to the instrumentals and treating them to a unique recording process. Rodríguez-López constructed a portable recording studio where Bixler-Zavala’s head was zipped inside of a box to create a level of intimacy to the vocal tracks. The vocals are as sharp and crisp as ever and without the dense layers of noise roaring behind them, we hear Bixler-Zavala in the most detail we ever have. 

    the mars volta
    Omar Rodríguez-López and Cedric Bixler-Zavala of The Mars Volta. Shot by Fat Bob on Leica M10.

    The “heaviness” also refers to the lyrical content itself. The songs focus on various tragedies and personal loss suffered by Bixler-Zavala. On previous records, Bixler-Zavala would write in deep riddles and invent his own lexicon for certain tracks. On The Mars Volta, the foreign riddles are traded for straight forward, yet poetic and haunting passages that are easier to decipher. “The most revolutionary thing for us to do was just be very simple and straight forward” Bixler-Zavala says about the lyrics. “Palm Full of Crux” was written as an ode to Jeremy Ward, who died shortly after recording Deloused In The Comatorium. “Flash Burns From Flashbacks” and “Collapsable Shoulders” are littered with courtroom and justice metaphors, referring to the impact Danny Masterson’s conduct has had on Bixler-Zavala’s family. It’s the “centrifugal ways” (sung on “Vigil”) always acting in opposition to our intentions that tear us apart – the one constant theme on The Mars Volta.

    I think I’m coming undone, he bought the gavel to run all the crooked little cities.

    The Mars Volta

    The Mars Volta sees the band successfully exploring many different musical genres, and stringing them together in surprising and exciting ways. Bixler-Zavala cites David Bowie specifically as inspiration,“noting that [Bowie] had mastered both challenging, experimental music and the pop format, often on the same song.” The dense overlapping of musical layers  of the band’s past works is absent here, in favor of concise song writing focusing on groove and melody while allowing Bixler-Zavala’s vocals to seamlessly glaze over and come through cleanly. A prime example is on the second single, “Graveyard Love” where a sputtering drum beat plays behind a distinct bass line and swirling synths as Bixler-Zavala sings a delicate and haunting melody. Similarly, on “Tourmaline” Bixler-Zavala duets with a sparse acoustic arpeggio before a haunting array of psychedelic guitar and synths drop in, reminiscent of Radiohead’s darkest, jazzy moments. 

    A dominant presence on the album are funk-rock and Caribbean infused latin-jazz elements. “Qué Dios Te Maldiga Mí Corazón” might be the shortest song in the band’s catalog, but it‘s furious with a driving bongo rhythm and Bixler-Zavala’s Spanish vocal melodies (thinking “L’Via L’Viaquez” here). “The Requisition” and “No Case Gain” fuse funky rhythms, anthemic rock & roll vocals, and groovy guitar riffs that scream early Red Hot Chili Peppers (and even At The Drive In on “No Case Gain”). “Flash Burns From Flashbacks” is another psychedelic mix of guitar and synth arpeggios backed by a punchy and complex drum beat. Much of the drumming from new member Willy Rodriguez Quiñones seems influenced by a combination of Mahavishnu Orchestra and latin-jazz great Steve Berrios. 

    The album is “heavy” in many ways, but gets the most experimental on the slower ballads. “Palm Full of Crux” is a classic 70s folk/prog sound, floating somewhere between Fleetwood Mac and Led Zeppelin III. “Collapsable Shoulders” again features Bixler-Zavala’s croon, but over a genre-defying slow-paced trap beat while he sings “a truancy of wasps begin trying to make us their home as we pull their wings off one by one.” 

    All of these varying musical genres and song structures are woven together in a meticulous way that never allows there to be any dead space on the album. When a band like The Mars Volta tune it back the way they do on The Mars Volta, the album can easily become disjointed and drag on in sections. Here, the album goes back and forth consistently between slower ballads and upbeat bangers, constantly peaking the listener’s attention as if on a roller coaster. Album closer “The Requisition” bottles this up in and of itself, kicking off with an uplifting and light keyboard driven ballad before dropping off into an evil Red Hot Chili Peppers style groove. 

    https://twitter.com/themarsvolta/status/1568649354839265280?s=20&t=4M7lEjZTwlgDdSuK1iR0Xg

    The menagerie of prog displayed on this album is only pulled off with the incredible production and engineering provided by Johann Scheerer of Clouds Hill Records, in collaboration with Rodríguez-López. While intentional in style, previous Mars Volta records were so dense that many of the layers blended into indiscernible psychedelic arrays. Here, every individual track is given so much space to ring out which somehow amplifies their presence. Every bass note, drum hit, and guitar pluck shine through in extreme detail, and the vocals have a level of depth that we have not heard from Bixler-Zavala before. 

    The three singles that were chosen to preview the album eclipsed the new direction perfectly. “Blacklight Shine” and “Graveyard Love” came off as different yet familiar, but then “Vigil” solidified the evolution, and shocked fans. The song kicks off with a R&B vocal ballad that swells into a shimmering, 70s era folk rock song with an anthemic chorus one might hear on Rumours or a number of other folk albums from that time period. Towards the end, the song dissolves into a sputtering and complex drum pattern while Bixler-Zavala’s vocal loops dissolve into the background. It is truly a remarkable change of pace for the band, and admittedly, shocking on first listen. The more you listen, the more the subtle elements fill in the perceived empty space, and you really appreciate the complexity they are able to achieve in the subtle instrumentals, while still discussing hauntingly tragic themes Volta fans are accustomed to. 

    “Vigil” by The Mars Volta. Via YouTube

    First listen of The Mars Volta is admittedly a jarring, but an incredibly rewarding experience. The suspense that is created on the slower and more deliberate songs culminates into funky grooves, psychedelic arrays, and Latin jazz fusion around every corner. I could not help but to think back to the last time I saw the band live – Roseland Ballroom, 10/8/2009 – almost 13 years to the day the album will be released. I still have the poster from that night hanging in my apartment and will argue it is the best show I have ever seen. But hearing The Mars Volta in 2022, those shows are going to evolve into something even more special and beyond comprehension. The band loves to jam and mix songs live, and we are all on the edge of our seats waiting for our chance to experience it. 

    The Mars Volta is out on Clouds Hill Records this Friday, September 16th. You can still pre-order the standard and gold foil “Kinetic Editions” on vinyl from the band’s store, and copies of the limited box set La Realidad De Los Sueños have appeared online as well. The tour kicks off in Dallas, TX at The Factory In Deep Ellum on 9/22 and the New York shows happen on 9/29 and 9/30 at Terminal 5 in NYC. Tickets are still available for both nights on AXS. 

    If the catatonic walls close in on the hem again, pull the tether down for me. I’ve been hemorrhaging the sins of these lesser men.

    The Mars Volta

    Key Tracks – Tourmaline, EQUUS 3, Flash Burns From Flashbacks

  • Mike Campbell & The Dirty Knobs Rock The Paramount

    On Friday, September 9th, Mike Campbell & The Dirty Knobs rocked The Paramount In Huntington, Long Island. They played for two and a half hours mixing some Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers classics with songs from both of their albums. Their most recent album, External Combustion, which is also the name of this tour, came out in March.

    Mike Campbell paramount huntington
    Mike Campbell at The Paramount 9.9.22

    Mike Campbell was the guitarist for Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers for over 50 years. He is responsible for some of the most famous guitar riffs in music history. Campbell co-wrote many of the band’s hits including “Refugee,” “Runnin’ Down a Dream,” “Here Comes My Girl” and “You Got Lucky.” He was inducted into the Rock Hall of Fame with the Heartbreakers in 2022.

    Campbell started The Dirty Knobs in 2001. The original lineup included guitarist Jason Sinay, bassist Ron Blair, and drummer Steve Ferrone. Lance Morrison, Matt Laug and Chris Holt joined when Blair, Ferrone and Sinay dropped out of the group. The band became Campbell’s main priority after the death of Tom Petty in 2017. Their first album, Wreckless Abandon, was released in 2020. Until then they were just a live band that played when The Heartbreakers weren’t on tour.

    Mike Campbell paramount huntington

    They were on fire Friday night at The Paramount. Their set started with “Wicked Mind,” the first single off the most recent album. Other songs featured from Wreckless Abandon included “Dirty Job,” “In This Lifetime,” and “Electric Gypsy.” Many times during the set, Campbell went off into intricate psychedelic guitar solos. The rest of the band also sounded great as they backed Campbell on Tom Petty covers like “Even the Losers,” and “Runnin’ Down a Dream.”

    Country Blues guitarist Alvin Youngblood Hart opened the show on Friday night. Bluesman Taj Mahal once said about Hart: “The boy has got thunder in his hands.” His debut album, Big Mama’s Door, came out in 1996. Hart received a Grammy Award in 2005 for his contribution to the album Beautiful Dreamer – The Songs of Stephen Foster.

    They will be playing The Capitol Theatre in Port Chester on Friday, September 16th. Visit their website here for additional tour dates.

    Setlist: Wicked Mind, Lightning Boogie, External Combustion, Even the Losers, State of Mind, Dirty Job, Fuck That Guy, Wreckless, Somewhere in London, I Still Love You, In This Lifetime, Electric Gypsy, Sugar, Southern Accents, Southern Boy, Runnin’ Down a Dream

  • Bluegrass Among the Damn Tall Buildings

    Bluegrass grows among the Damn Tall Buildings in Brooklyn. Music discovery is quite an expedition; you never know what you’re going to find. Brooklyn is a melting pot, with its cacophony of beautiful genre influences, which can be heard moment by moment as you walk down its litered city streets. Discovering the band, Damn Tall Buildings is an absolute joy. 

    Assembled now as a trio, this Americana-Bluegrass band hails from various points around America, from Montana, Pennsylvania and New Hampshire. Max Capistran is the main lyricist, playing guitar and banjo while contributing vocals. Avery Ballotta, plays the fiddle and banjo and vocal harmonies. Sasha Dubyk completes the vocal trifecta with her beautiful voice while playing the Upright Bass. 

    damn tall buildings

    On September ninth, they released their latest album, Sleeping Dogs. Playing their album and getting to know the band, I interviewed two members on the The Long Island Sound podcast. Max Capistran, and Avery Ballotta recounted their beginnings and their decade -long relationship which resulted in a friendship that is clearly exposed in their newly released album. Starting out as buskers on Newbury Street in Boston, they began touring nationally, and then moved the band to Brooklyn in 2017. They connect in the day to day interactions and hope their music brings joy to be spread around.

    “Our innate desire is to connect with people on a level that’s beyond day-to-day interaction. Our hope is that the joy that making this music brings us will somehow get passed along to the people listening, which they can then take with them to pass along to someone else. It’s a shared celebration of positive energy, and that’s what keeps us cooking.”

    Damn Tall Buildings

    Popping their album, Sleeping Dogs into my car CD player, yes I still have a CD player, I was able to digest the essence of their music into my subconscious. The result brought a smile to my face and a hop in my step.It may do the same for you. 

    The curiosity lies in wondering why three people from diverse parts of our country would decide to settle Brooklyn? I have been to Montana. Fearing an extended stay would keep me in that heavenly place, my vacation soon ended and I was back to the  familiarity of taxes and traffic on Long Island. Why anyone, with roots in paradise, would transplant themselves to Brooklyn is still a mystery. No disrespect to the “forgetta-bout-it” borough, but I wonder why?   Maybe this new resignation from a rural existence is a lesson on how to immerse yourself into a metropolitan culture to get your creative juices flowing.

    A Band Built on a Solid Foundation

    New Album “Sleeping dogs”

    Damn Tall Buildings has been around as a group for the past ten years,  Max, Avery (a.k.a. Montana) and Sasha  met in college at the Berkelee School of Music in Massachusetts. They honed their craft by literally playing on the street.  What a great incubator for this Bluegrass-Americana band to grow. You’ll find that the album, Sleeping Dogs, is much more than a toe-tapping exercise in Bluegrass-Swing style music.The band invites us into their living room to experience their music. Their style is stripped down to the essentials, a standup bass plucked by Sasha, Banjo, a guitar fenesed by Max  and Montana’s fiddle bringing it all together. Add some select harmonies, the twang of Max’s voice and you’ve got something special.

    Their sound fits like an old coat, that’s weather worn, yet comfortable. A cloth that carries you through the seasons of your musical journey. The band makes you feel at home, warmed by the fires of a hearth, alongside your sleeping dog.   

    Discovering a well-spring of talent in New York is a worthwhile endeavor. The streams of creativity in Brooklyn and the rest of Long Island may have many flavors and are drawn from distant sources, but the satisfaction comes from drinking it all in. 

    Until next time, be generous with your joy, and let the music take you on a journey!

    The Long Island Sound Podcast can be found at GigDestiny.com or wherever you listen to your podcasts. We feature original singer/songwriters and showcase some of their songs, as you get to know the artist behind the music.

  • A Look Back at Farm Aid 2007: A Homegrown Festival on Randalls Island

    On this day in 2007, the first ever Farm Aid was held in New York State, with the annual benefit concert for farmers held on Randalls Island.

    farm aid 2007

    The official announcement came on June 11 with Willie Nelson and John Mellencamp making the official announcement in New York City alongside then-NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg and farmers and food buyers at Union Square’s Greenmarket.

    Mayor Bloomberg welcomed the Farm Aid co-founders, saying “The City strongly supports sustainable family farming through our Greenmarket program — which has nearly doubled its locations over the past five years — and it’s an honor to be hosting Willie Nelson, John Mellencamp and Farm Aid for their 2007 concert.”

    Willie Nelson shared “Farm Aid is coming to New York because your enthusiasm for family farm food is keeping family farmers on the land. We are thankful to Mayor Bloomberg, the City Council and the many activists here who are leading efforts so that every New Yorker has access to more food from family farms” while John Mellencamp said of the importance of the event, “Things change when we all take personal responsibility for our food and where it comes from. Farm Aid is a force for change that works hard to keep farmers on the land so that we’ll have good food on our tables.

    Photo By Greg Allen/Shutterstock

    Why did Farm Aid take so long to get to New York? Nearly the first two decades of Farm Aid (1985-2003) brought the festival to states whose economies are strongly based in agriculture – Texas, Indiana, Nebraska, Iowa, Illinois, Virginia, and South Carolina. In 2004 the festival moved to Washington State and headed east for New Jersey in 2006. Given the quintessential urban setting of New York City, bringing a festival promoting support for local farms and farmers doesn’t seem like the right fit at first, but five boroughs of 8 million people need to eat.

    It took being invited to The Big Apple, per executive director Carolyn Mugar, by environmentalists, politicians, Mayor Bloomberg’s office as well as chefs, that finally brought Farm Aid to the Empire State. “Farmers are never going to survive if they don’t have as allies the people who want this good food,” Ms. Mugar told the New York Times. “New York has a huge density of eaters and a density of people who are doing excellent things. There are restaurants, farmers’ markets, community-supported agriculture programs, even people who are growing food in the city and teaching people how to grow it.”

    farm aid 2007
    photo via @ceefar74

    The lineup for the day included Farm Aid staples in New York, Willie Nelson, John Mellencamp, Neil Young and Dave Matthews, the latter of whom was joined by Merle Haggard. Also on the day long festival-style lineup were the Allman Brothers Band (along with Derek Trucks Band and Gregg Allman performing solo), Counting Crows, Matisyahu, Ray Price, Guster, Billy Joe Shaver, Tim Reynolds, Montgomery Gentry, Supersuckers, Pauline Reese, Danielle Evin, The Ditty Bops, Jimmy Sturr, Paula Nelson, 40 Points, and Jesse Lenat.

    poster by Leigh Kosloski

farm aid 2007
    poster by Leigh Kosloski

    The day was hot and quite dusty, part of the unkept nature of Randalls Island (which was prone to flooding at the time) prior to more events being held on the grounds. Thus, there was straw/hay laid down to keep the dust to a minimum. Much has changed over the past 15 years, as Randalls Island has become a destination for concerts and music festivals, among them Governors Ball, Panorama and Electric Zoo.

    farm aid 2007
    photo via @ceefar74

    Farm Aid 2007 was “A Homegrown Festival,” was the first major music event that served local, organic and family farm food at concessions stands around the venue. The Homegrown Village featured interactive exhibits to educate concert-goers on soil, water, energy, food and farmers. On the heels of the 2007 Farm Aid, the next year Homegrown.org was launched, creating an online community for those interested in growing, cooking, crafting, brewing, preserving, or making anything Homegrown.

    The announcement for Farm Aid was momentus, being the first time the traveling single-day multi-band event would make its way to the Empire State.

    Can you believe it?!?! Farm Aid in NYC! I have been working on a pun that references the movie “Babe: Pig in the City” but I haven’t quite figured it out yet. We are so pumped about Farm Aid 2007: A HOMEGROWN Festival at Randal’s Island. 100% delicious family farm food, good tunes and a summer of events in a huge urban food and farm hub. On the DL, this show has been in the works for a few years and we are just thrilled that the time has come to bring Farm Aid into the lives of New Yorkers, to work with upstate farmers and urban growers and to show all of our concert growers that even after 22 years we have a few surprises up our sleeves!

    Farm Aid Blog

    The idea for Farm Aid originally grew out of a remark that Bob Dylan made at Live Aid in 1985. The Bard said, “Wouldn’t it be great if we did something for our own farmers right here in America?” This inspired Willie Nelson to contact Neil Young and John Mellencamp, who was about to release Scarecrow, which includes a song about a farmer losing his land to a foreclosure.

    Press Conference – photo by Paul Natkin/Photo Reserve Inc.

    Six weeks after those calls, the trio put together what became the first Farm Aid, on September 22, 1985 in Champaign, Ill. While they expected the event to be a one-off, the inspiration that came from raising money for family farmers to preserve their land and push for laws that support family farms over Big Ag.

    Dave Matthews joined the Farm Aid Board of Directors in 2001, and Margo Price joined in 2021. To date, Farm Aid has raised more than $64 million to promote a strong and resilient family farm system of agriculture. A nonprofit organization, Farm Aid holds dear their mission to keep family farmers on their lands.

    While the Randalls Island Farm Aid was the first held in New York State, it was only six years later that the event headed Upstate to Saratoga Springs with a performance at Saratoga Performing Arts Center (SPAC). The day was highlighted with the unexpected arrival of Pete Seeger, who sang “This Land is Your Land” with the audience, in addition to some new lyrics referencing fracking. The 2022 edition of Farm Aid will take place on September 24 in Raleigh, NC at Coastal Credit Union Music Park at Walnut Creek.

    While there was no live broadcast of Farm Aid, video from the concert was available on-demand on September 19, 2007, via Farmaid.org. A good deal of video from the day exists, as seen below. Setlists via ConcertArchives.org

    Montgomery Gentry setlist: Hillbilly Shoes, Daddy Won’t Sell the Farm, What Do Ya Think About That

    farm aid 2007
    photo via @ceefar74

    Supersuckers setlist: Paid, Breaking Honey’s Heart, Roadworn and Weary

    Warren Haynes setlist: Indian Sunset, Fallen Down, One, Soulshine

    The Derek Trucks Band setlist: Soul Serenade, Sailing On, Key to the Highway

    Guster setlist: The Captain, Manifest Destiny, Satellite, Amsterdam, Airport Song

    Matisyahu setlist: Tzama L’Chol Nafshi (Psalm 63:2-3), Beat Box, Indestructible

    Counting Crows setlist: Rain King, Thunder Road, Recovering the Satellites, Washington Square, A Murder of One, A Long December

    Gregg Allman setlist: Midnight Rider, Melissa

    Allman Brothers Band setlist: Trouble No More, Revival, Who’s Been Talking, Black Hearted Woman, Statesboro Blues, One Way Out

    Billy Joe Shaver setlist: I Been to Georgia on a Fast Train, Live Forever, Try and Try Again

    Dave Matthews & Tim Reynolds setlist: Lie in Our Graves, Gravedigger, Crush, The Maker, The Dreaming Tree, Ants Marching

    Neil Young setlist: Human Highway, Silver and Gold, Beautiful Bluebird, Too Far Gone, Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere, Heart of Gold, Homegrown, Four Strong Winds

    John Mellencamp setlist: Troubled Land, Rain on the Scarecrow, If I Die Sudden, Paper in Fire, Our Country, To Washington, Small Town, Pink Houses

    Willie Nelson setlist: One Day at a Time, Jackson, A Peaceful Solution, Whiskey River, Stormy Weather, I Saw the Light, Superman, You Don’t Think I’m Funny Anymore, I’ll Fly Away, On the Road Again

  • Rising Artist Lizzy McAlpine performs at The 2022 New York State Fair

    Rising star Lizzy McAlpine made an appearance this past Friday at The Great New York State Fair 2022. The 22-year-old McAlpine enjoyed a significant rise of attention once her music went viral on TikTok. Her debut album Give me a Minute was released in August 2020 and has since garnered her a following.

    Perri Sage Photography

    McAlpine was born and raised in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and started getting into music in middle school. She began studying music and songwriting in college at Berklee College of Music in Boston, Massachusetts. After graduating from Berklee College she continued to pursue her music career, leading to her internet fame.

    “I think [Berklee] did shape my music, but not because of the classes. The main thing I got out of Berklee was the people that I met, and the people I surrounded myself with who definitely influenced my music. I don’t think you need to necessarily understand music theory to be a good musician. If you have a good ear, you don’t need to know all the harmonies to write a good song.”

    Perri Sage Photography

    Syracuse was one of many stops for McAlpine, as part of her first official tour. Lizzy’s raw and stunning voice had her fans singing along to every song. The audience was visibly enthralled by the performance as they swayed and danced with friends. Some of her top hits such as “ceilings” and “hate to be lame” her latest album Five Seconds Flat drew the best reactions. McAlpine also performed songs from her breakthrough project, Give Me A Minute. Songs like “Pancakes for Dinner,” “Means Something” and “To the Mountains.” all made the setlist.

    Perri Sage Photography

    Overall Lizzy McAlpine has become a leading figure at a young age. Inspiring young girls and other young artists to pursue their dreams.

    Lizzy’s next show takes place on September 11, 2022 in Minneapolis, Minnesota at the Fine Line Music Cafe. We look forward to seeing what’s next for McAlpine and what the future holds for her.

  • Albany’s Doctor Baker to Release Album “Trespassers”

    On Sept. 9, Albany-based rock band Doctor Baker will release their album, Trespassers, produced by Don Fury at Don Fury Studios in Troy. 

    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. 

    An award-winning short story writer and novelist, Schwarzchild’s lyricism on Trespassers is evocative and compelling. The band’s sound on the album spans various emotions with the first single and lyric video, “Exhausted,” released on Aug. 30.

    The album is like a story collection, but they’re stories that fit in with what’s going on in the world at the moment … the songs on the album acknowledge that there are some real problems, but we’re trying to stay lit up, we’re still trying to love, still trying to figure out what love is, still trying to maintain relationships with the people we’re close to.

    – Ed Schwarzschild

    The title of the album, Trespassers, came to Gockley and Schwarzchild after a performance by Wilco frontman Jeff Tweedy. The duo got lost on the way back to Albany and found themselves in a remote spot with “NO TRESPASSING” signs and the name of the album came to them. Of the title, Schwarzchild shares, “‘Hey we’re all trespassers now, let’s try to do things together, see each other clearly, see ourselves clearly.’”

    Legendary producer Don Fury propelled the band’s sound forward, with the 11 songs ranging in instrumentation and tone. Backing vocals from Zan Strumfeld (Zan and the Winter Folk) and Melissa Thorne (Fol Chen) also strengthen the songs on the record. 

    Doctor Baker’s Trespassers includes heavily distorted tracks such as the title track and slows to pieces such as “Holiday Lights” as a change of pace. The instrumentation of the album at times sounds light and cheerful but after closer inspection of the lyrics, the band adds depth to each of the tracks including vivid descriptions and reflections of politics, climate change, and the human condition. There is a relatable song for every listener on this album.

    In celebration of Trespasser’s release, Doctor Baker will be performing at The Linda on Sept. 10, and Albany Distilling Company on Sept. 23. Fans of the band can keep up with them on Instagram, here.

  • Hearing Aide: Wren Cove’s Debut EP “Trees”

    Wren Cove released its debut EP entitled Trees by Basement Factory Music on Aug. 1. Wren Cove is an instrumental band consists of multi-instrumentalist Andrew Cloninger,a former member of Daniel Bennett Group, and cellist Melissa Davies of the band Cottage Street.

    Wren Cove “Trees”

    They met in a record studio when Cloninger was recording his first EP in 10 years while Davies came to record the cello parts. This session was the beginning of an interesting musical journey. They hope to bring one-of-a-kind instrumental performances to the Rochester and Finger Lakes region.

    Melissa Davies lives in Rochester, NY, with her husband and two children. She is the cellist in the indie rock group Cottage Street Band and enjoys creating art installations and murals. Andrew Cloninger resides in Canandaigua, NY, with his wife and son. He was the primary singer/songwriter in various Americana roots bands as well as the founding guitarist in the Daniel Bennett Group. Over the years Andrew has shared the stage with such acts as Father John Misty, Unwed Sailor, Joy Electric, and jazz great Charlie Hunter.

    Opening with cello solo, then transitioned to the combination of cello and drums through a series of electronic static, synth, and guitar melody, the first song of the EP “Wheeler” brought out a powerful energy.

    The next song “Douglas” is more tender. Davies’s cello flew out like a continuous running river, and Cloninger’s guitar is adding drops on the river like rain.

    Overall, the pieces in the EP conveys a sence of nature. Referring back to its name Trees, the cello is the steady main stream while the guitar and other instruments injected modern enegery into the songs. Their further performances on Sept. 10 at Pollot Gallery in NYC and Oct. 9 at Big aLICe Brewery in Geneva worth expectations.

  • In Focus: City Girls at The New York State Fair

    City Girls headlined at The Great New York State Fair on Sept. 4. The bold rap duo and hip-hop stars debuted on the Chevy Park stage within the New York Experience Festival Grounds, sponsored by Chevrolet. Despite the light rain throughout the set, City Girls presented a remarkable show to a large-scale audience. 

    Miami-based rap duo, City Girls, consists of JT and Yung Miami. They made an abrupt entry into the music industry by making a guest appearance on Drake’s top charting single “In My Feelings,” in 2018. Currently, City Girls are touring with Jack Harlow for the Come Home The Kids Miss You Tour.

    The City Girls DJ, Fat Boy Rhymer warmed up the crowd to popular rap songs including, “Mo Bamba,” by Sheck Wes, “F.N.F. (Let’s Go),” by Hitkidd and GloRilla, and “Super Gremlin,” by Kodak Black. The crowd went absolutely wild when Rhymer asked, “are you ready for City Girls?!”

    DJ Fat Boy Rhymer kept the beats rolling as City Girls ran out on stage to “Take Your Man.” Those in the crowd sitting, stood up recording on their cell phones with the flash on, and cheered for the duo. While rapping and dancing, Yung Miami and JT alternated working each side of the stage. The audience remained excited and danced throughout the act.

    Near the end of the set, the duo brought a few fans on the stage to dance with them. Don’t miss City Girls when they stop at Barclays Center in Brooklyn on October 7. Check out their full tour dates below!

    City Girls Tour Dates

    Sep. 05 – Andrew J Brady Icon Music Center – Cincinnati, OH

    Sep. 06 – Nashville Municipal Auditorium – Nashville, TN

    Sep. 08 – The Pavilion at Toyota Music Factory – Irving, TX

    Sep. 10 – 713 Music Hall – Houston, TX

    Sep. 11 – Moody Center – Austin, TX

    Sep. 13 – Arizona Federal Theatre – Phoenix, AZ

    Sep.16 – Bill Graham Civic Auditorium – San Francisco, CA

    Sep. 17 – Viejas Arena – San Diego, CA

    Sep. 20 – Kia Forum – Los Angeles, CA

    Sep. 23 – Wamu Theater – Seattle, WA

    Sep. 24 – Rogers Arena – Vancouver, BC

    Sep. 25 – Veterans Memorial Coliseum – Portland, OR

    Sep. 27 – Maverik Center – Salt Lake City, UT

    Sep. 28 – 1stBank Center – Broomfield, CO

    Sep. 30 – The Armory – Minneapolis, MN

    Oct. 01 – Credit Union 1 Arena – Chicago, IL

    Oct. 02 – Fox Theatre – Detroit, MI

    Oct. 05 – Coca-Cola Coliseum – Toronto, ON

    Oct. 07 – Barclays Center – Brooklyn, NY 

    Oct. 08 – The Liacouras Center – Philadelphia, PA

    Oct. 10 – MGM Music Hall at Fenway – Boston, MA

    Oct. 11 – The Anthem – Washington, DC

    Oct. 14 – FPL Amphitheatre at at Bayfront Park – Miami, FL

    Oct. 15 – Yuengling Center – Tampa, FL

    Oct. 16 – State Farm Arena – Atlanta, GA

  • Made in America 2022: Philly’s Largest Music Festival Returns

    It may have been Philly, but the vibe was all “New York State of Mind” thanks to Jay-Z’s all-star lineup of the most influential acts for this year’s “Made in America” (MIA) festival. The festival took place on Benjamin Franklin Parkway on the 3rd and 4th of September. This year marked the 10th year of the festivals running and it was extraordinary. The Brooklyn rapper enlisted a hip-hop-heavy lineup, including Tyler, the Creator, Lil Uzi Vert, Don Toliver, and Bronx-born Pusha T. Although named “Made in America,” the festival featured acts from around the globe, including Nigeria, Sweden, Canada, Spain, Mexico, Colombia and The Dominican Republic.

    Fans climbing light post at Made in America, Photo by: Lucas Kurzweil

    Named after Jay-Z, Kanye West, and Frank Ocean’s hit record “Made in America,” this festival “sums up the superstars’ feelings about black history, America, Jesus, and revisiting their respective rises to fame.” With their dedication to social action, MIA featured a “Cause Village” giving various charitable organizations a platform for their various causes. With free swag, fun games, and music, Cause Village was a lively part of the festival.

    Cause Village, Photo by: Lucas Kurzweil

    Day-one headliner Tyler The Creator, fresh off his 2021 Grammy-winning album, Call Me If You Get Lost, performed songs new and old. Including fan favorites “WUSYANAME,” “Boredom,” and “Yonkers.” The West coast rapper felt at home on the East, as he exchanged his usual witty, dry humor with the crowd. Before departing, he made sure to state that this was the “last show for this era.” Marking the conclusion of his extravagant Call Me If You Get Lost run.

    Tyler, The Creator at Made in America, Photo by: Lucas Kurzweil

    Day-two headliner Bad Bunny stopped at MIA amid his World’s Hottest Tour. Bad Bunny’s tour has already visited Yankee Stadium on August 27, where the demand for tickets was so high that they added a second show the next day. During the second Yankee Stadium performance Bad Bunny was presented with the MTV Video Music Award for Artist of the Year.

    Bad Bunny at Made in America, Photo by: Lucas Kurzweil

    Bronx-born rapper Pusha T made an appearance this weekend. He recently released an album titled It’s Almost Dry, which featured production almost exclusively from Pharrell and Kanye West. The album also included a feature from festival curator, Jay-Z. Pusha performed many songs from the album, including the scratchy “Diet Coke”, which includes production from West and New York’s own 88-keys. Pusha played hits records throughout his discography, crowd favorites included his verses on “Runaway” and “I Don’t Like.”

    Pusha T at Made in America, Photo by: Lucas Kurzweil

    Jay-Z called upon Lil Uzi Vert, Jazmine Sullivan, Zah Sosaa, and many others to represent Philadelphia at MIA. Uzi himself has been on a festival run as of late, having performed at Something in the Water, Rolling Loud Miami, and Outside Lands within the past few months. Uzi is also slated to appear in New York later this month at Rolling Loud NY. 

    Lil Uzi Vert at Made in America, Photo by: Lucas Kurzweil

    Full Festival Lineup: Bad Bunny, Tyler, the Creator, Lil Uzi Vert, Jazmine Sullivan, Burna Boy, Snoh Aalegra, Pusha T, Don Toliver, Tate McRae, Fuerza Regida, Toro Y Moi, Larry June, Babyface Ray, Rels B, Victoria Monét, Chimbala, Ryan Castro, Young Nudy, Kenny Mason, Coast Contra, GloRilla, Jeleel!, Jenevieve, Zah Sosaa, Ambré, Armani White, Kur, Kalan Fr.Fr.,Dixson, and Becca Hannah.

  • Locations Drop Bouncy Single “Moves”

    Brooklyn alt-rock duo Locations has dropped “Moves,” a jovial dance rock track which is the band’s first release in over two years.

    The track is centered around a bright, melodic guitar rhythm and the band’s falsetto vocal harmonies in this ode to optimism and getting up to dance. “Dance if you wanna dance, move if you wanna move, you have got to do it for you,” they sing on the chorus.

    (left to right) Niko Rummell (lead guitarist/vocalist) and Thomas Whidden (drummer/vocalist) of Locations. (photo by Hannah Turner Harts)

    While simple, the hook is catchy and succinctly expresses the song’s straightforward ideas. It provides a solid contrast from the track’s verses, which build towards something a little more hyper in the chorus. This is especially the case in the song’s final minute, as muted guitar creates a light tension which is released in satisfying fashion for the outro.

    The song is also part of an impassioned campaign from the band, with them using the single to promote universal healthcare. Looking to raise funds for Campaign for NY Health, Locations is selling limited edition t-shirts to support the organization which seeks to pass a single payer healthcare system in New York State.

    Also as part of this campaign, the group will be performing at the Mercury Lounge in Manhattan on Monday, September 5 along with ALIENS, Witch Slap, Nuclear Family Fantasy, and Lumberob. Tickets can be found here.

    Not only is “Moves” the band’s first single in over two years, but it was also the first written after a “major medical event” involving one of the members put activities on hold for several months.

    “Moves” by Locations is a vibrantly optimistic song that looks to build optimism for a cause of passion, and it does so in an easily listenable way.