Category: Reviews

  • Nation of Language Pave The Way Forward At Webster Hall

    Brooklyn locals Nation of Language kicked off a six week North America tour earlier this week and on Thursday, March 3rd the band landed at Webster Hall for their fourth hometown show in the past 6 months. The trio has been rocketing in popularity ever since the release of their excellent sophomore album, A Way Forward, on PIAS Records.

    The band played the 2021 edition of Governor’s Ball back in September and NYS Music’s Steve Malinski caught up with the group during the festival. Check out the full interview and photos from their Gov Ball performance HERE.

    nation of language webster hall
    Nation of Language at Webster Hall, 3/3/22. Photo by Buscar Photo

    Webster Hall is the largest headlining show Nation of Language has played in NYC since forming. The band played the significantly smaller Market Hotel for a one-off show in November but this tour has them playing larger clubs all across North America. Blending bright synth-pop beats with passionate vocals and an enormous stage presence from frontman Ian Richard Devaney the band captivates the audience with an extremely minimal backline. Leaning on recorded drum samples, the stage only contained Aidan Noell’s synth table on the far left, two microphones, and a handful of pedals. Ian used every square inch of open stage to dance and just keep moving while singing and playing guitar.

    nation of language webster hall
    Nation of Language at Webster Hall, 3/3/22. Photo by Buscar Photo

    Nation of language fittingly began the show at Webster with A Way Forward opening track “In Manhattan.” The set was roughly split with tracks from both of their albums including their self-released debut Introduction, Presence. Head over to their website to find details on the tour and check out our photo gallery from the show below.

  • 25 Years Later: Phish perform “Character Zero” on the Late Show with David Letterman

    On Wednesday, March 5, 1997, Phish was the musical guest at The Ed Sullivan Theater on Broadway, performing “Character Zero” on the Late Show with David Letterman.

    The band had just returned from a tour of Europe a few days prior, with Trey Anastasio and Jon Fishman both sporting a post-international tour/vacation beard.

    Phish Character Zero

    Following the performance, Letterman came over to shake the band’s hands, saying “Nice to see you again” to which Anastasio replied, “Hope you got the ice cream,” referring to the new Ben and Jerry’s ice cream flavor, Phish Food, just released nationwide a month prior. A concert at the Flynn Theater in Burlington, VT on March 18, 1997, would officially release the flavor, including an appearance by Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield just before the show began.

    Guests on the show this evening included Chevy Chase and Mary McCormack from the ABC show Murder One.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F7frkMAW6-g

    One of the arena rock songs in the Phish repertoire, “Character Zero” typically is found as a set closer in recent years, putting an exclamation point on a show and extracting jubilation from fans in the song’s refrain.

    The band’s appearance on Letterman was their third overall, starting on December 30, 1994 with “Chalkdust Torture,” “Julius” on July 13, 1995, “Birds of a Feather” on October 27, 1998, “Heavy Things” on May 15, 2000, a multi-song performance on the Ed Sullivan Theater marquee on June 21, 2004, and “The Line” on June 25, 2014.

    I was taught a month ago
    To bide my time and take it slow
    But then I learned just yesterday
    To rush and never waste the day
    Well I’m convinced the whole day long
    That all I learn is always wrong
    And things are true that I forget
    But no one taught that to me yet

    I ought to see the man Mulcahey

    I was taught a month ago
    To bide my time and take it slow
    But then I learned just yesterday
    To rush and never waste the day
    Now I’m convinced the whole day long
    That all I learn is always wrong
    And things are true that I forget
    But no one taught that to me yet

    I ought to see the man Mulcahey

    “Character Zero” lyrics
  • Iron & Wine Happy to Play Sad Songs for Intimate Egg Crowd in Albany

    Critically acclaimed singer/songwriter Sam Beam, better known by the stage name Iron & Wine, made a long overdue visit to the Capital Region Sunday night, bringing the “Back to Basics Tour” to a mostly sold out Swyer Theatre crowd at The Egg.  Delivering a masterful set of original music while simultaneously putting on a clinic of “cool”, the thought provoking and soul-searching show was the kind of thing every fan of modern folk music dreams of.  Straddling the line, but always finding the balance between intensely personal pain and lighthearted laughter, the stripped-down performance was nothing short of mesmerizing.   

    iron & wine

    The evening began with a brief opening set from female singer/songwriter Hannah Cohen who was marvelous in her own right.   Quickly making mention of how nice and clean the venue was, for whatever reason, it made her want to be dirty and curse out loud.   “Fuckitdy fuck fuck fuck,” she blurted out, breaking the ice as the audience doubled over in laughter. After playing her first song, she told the crowd “This is not working for me, you guys are just way too quiet.  You always hope for an attentive audience, but what do you do when you actually get one?” she pondered.  Her beautiful and delicate voice juxtaposed with her raw sense of humor, foul language and a “tongue in cheek” invitation to pass one of her smelly shoes around for the room for anyone who wants a whiff all made for a memorable opening act for an artist worth keeping an eye on.   

    iron & wine
    Hannah Cohen gets a leg up at The Egg

    After a brief intermission and the customary dimming of the lights five minute prior to showtime, just a stool, a glass of water and a rack full of Taylor acoustic guitars set the stage for the evening’s headliner. No flashy lights, no fog machines, no video projections.  Just a soft-spoken man named Sam and his signature “Rick Rubin-like” beard.  Taking the stage to a hearty applause, Iron & Wine surveyed the audience while tuning up, asking where everyone was from and essentially letting them know it was ok to let their hair down a bit and interact. “They say I’m a folk singer, which isn’t exactly true.  But I don’t give a shit, if it fits, it fits.”

    iron & wine
    Papa died Sunday and I understood; All dead white boys say, “God is good” -Sodom South Georgia

    After a bit of noodling on the nylon, Iron & Wine opened the set with some heavy subject matter in the form of “Sodom South Georgia,” likely in acknowledgment that it was a Sunday evening during the coldest month of winter. The well-mannered crowd hanging on every word in total silence from the get-go, then unanimously erupting in approval upon the song’s final note, an ovation so loud even Sam seemed surprised. “Oh, it’s gonna be that kind of night.  Ok Albany, I see you. As a performer, you have no idea how strong that kind of applause makes us feel,” Beam said.  “But no matter how many times I’ve played this next one, all the clapping in the world won’t stop me from messing up.”  

    Alone and vulnerable on darkened stage Sam did screw up, even stopping mid song at one point and telling us there were just so many chords to remember. “I probably should have practiced.”  Charming in his honesty, it’s part of what makes Iron & Wine so endearing and relatable to both new fans and old.  “It’s ok Sam, we still love you!” shouted a female voice near the front.  “Thanks for coming, Mom” Beam immediately responded with razor-sharp wit. “I’m so glad you could make it out tonight.”  A joke that had everyone laughing and one he’d play up for the remainder of the show.  Beam’s personality always showing through, despite a set made of mostly melancholy material. “Now I don’t know about you,” he joked, “but when I think about uplifting feel good albums, ones you can throw on at the gym, I think we know who’s right at the top. These little rooms are fun though, yeah? For some people.”

    iron & wine

    Some call it talking blues (talking blues)
    Some call it bitter truth
    Some call it getting even in a song 

    I can’t read it, didn’t mean it
    As you would rage how I was wrong
    Life is too short, and you’d stay too long
    Let’s be honest, we were strongest till I let you drag me down
    I was sorry then, I’m not now 

    You’d better love yourself, ’cause I tried 

    -Bitter Truth

    “What a weird job. You can say bullshit and people will clap.  It’s amazing, you guys should try it.  Just go to your job and like totally fuck up everything that you try to do, curse, and see what happens.  You never know, you might be rewarded like me? It’s fucking crazy.” And with that confession, came perhaps the standout song of the night and also the biggest hit in the brilliant Iron & Wine catalog; a hauntingly unique, vocal only rendition of “Flightless Bird, American Mouth.” Prominently featured in Hollywood’s ultra-successful Twilight saga, the song currently has over 162 million streams on Spotify alone.   Claiming vampires have long been a great muse for songwriters, he is very aware of just how pretentious some people view his music.  “It’s pretty crazy to write these songs and put them out.  You don’t know who it lands on.  Sometimes it lands pretty hard though and you have no idea.    I just want to say ‘thanks.’” 

    Watch Iron & Wine perform “Flightless Bird, American Mouth” live at The Egg!

    All tallied up, Iron & Wine played a total of 16 songs spanning across 10 albums. Fans were also treated to an as-of-yet unreleased song called “Why Hate Winter.” Other notable highlights included “Grace for Saints and Ramblers,” Each Coming Night, ”Autumn Town Leaves,” “Call it Dreaming,” and the set closing “Waitin’ for a Superman.” 

    The story the setlist doesn’t show, however, is what the audience brought to the table.  While it may have been a one man show mostly consisting of slow and sad songs, the crowd was fully invested and lively the entire night. A mutual back-and-forth- feeding of energy through off the cuff banter, a little beatboxing, and lots of mutual laughter, this was the variable that truly made the show something special.  Combined with a carefully crafted setlist chosen specifically for Albany, you won’t get this same show the next time, or in the next city.  While Beam’s playing wasn’t aways perfect, he’s a perfect example of personality going a long way and that it’s somehow possible to turn sorrow into success.  A special kind of artist capable of changing the way you think and how you feel.  I dare say anyone who was at Swyer Theatre on Sunday night left The Egg as a different, more complete person.  

    iron & wine

    Up next for Iron & Wine, a few weeks of rest before returning to the road for the remainder of the Back-to-Basics tour.  After that, Beam will join up with his ultra-talented buddy Andrew Bird for the recently announced Outside Problems Tour. The co-headlining jaunt is set to bring the two acclaimed artists to more than 25 cities later this summer, including stops at both Pier 17 in New York as well as Beak & Skiff Apple Orchard in LaFayette, New York.   The smart money says you’re not going to want to sleep on this one.

    Iron & Wine / February 27, 2022 / Swyer Theatre at The Egg, Albany, NY 

    Setlist: Sodom South Georgia, Follow the Water, Lion’s Mane, Bitter Truth, Lover’s Revolution, Each Coming Night, Flightless Bird, American Mouth, Autumn town Leaves, Woman King, Resurrection Fern, Rabbit Will Run, Grace for Saints and Ramblers, Why Hate Winter, Call It Dreaming, Waitin’ for a Superman. 

    Encore: Cinder and Smoke

  • Hearing Aide: Annie in the Water’s “Sun at Dawn” Tells A Beautiful and Intoxicating Story

    Annie in the Water has released their third studio album, Sun at Dawn. After Michael Lashomb and Bradley Hester met at Hobart College in Geneva, the band has gone through a plethora of changes. Since its nascency in 2007, founders Michael Lashomb and Bradley Hester have led the band, and their newest album, Sun At Dawn, shows the band in a new light.

    Annie in the Water, Sun at Dawn

    Beautiful & Figurative Storytelling

    Sun At Dawn is a story that takes place in a tropical setting, yet it provokes much deeper thought than the sound that it embellishes. It tells a story of love and loss, and lust and gluttony, all over surf jam-rock instrumentation. An oxymoronic approach to a concept album is nothing particularly new or innovative to music at all, but it takes a certain level of mastery to execute it in a mature manner. Additionally, over what is essentially a beach playlist, this approach may be hard to execute. One can go the easy route and make an entire album over summer beach jams. However, with only a few minor criticisms to the album, Annie in the Water does an excellent job creating an invigorating piece of art. 

    The album starts with “Bloom,” leading with an intoxicating synthesizer and warm guitar progression that immediately hypnotize the listener. In a way, the song feels kaleidoscopic. The instruments work off of each other beautifully and transport you to a tropical setting. This is a skill that Annie in the Water demonstrates throughout the whole album, including “In The Sand,” a song about being lost in the desert.

    Lyrics read “I’ve arrived it seems, but nothing here is green, no rain just shine, no roads in sight, to lead me to the land, I’ve yet to find.” They continue: “I’m lost in my plan, burning up in the desert sunset, pull the map out of the sand, although there’s nothing written there.” While these lyrics articulate and describe the situation our protagonist is in, the feeling extracted from the song would be nothing without the instrumentation’s ability to complete the story. The key the instruments work in completes the deserted feeling the protagonist feels. The guitar feels sandy and the sporadicalness of the keys adds a layer of confusion. On the other hand, the percussion and bass add the perfect amount of bounce to maintain an oxymoronic element of stoke in such a depressing song. “In The Sand” is a song about feeling lost after losing a partner you care deeply for, and it is a beautiful way to articulate this emotion.

    Annie in the Water, Sun at Dawn

    Another song that transports the listener and contemplates an oxymoron is “Water.” Like the previous song, this song is also about losing a partner. The lead singer feels that their ex-partner is omnipresent and they feel an incredible, insatiable lust for them. They know, however, that they can never go back to them, and while this fact is never explicitly stated in the lyrics, the instrumentation communicates an entirely different story.

    This song, a step away from the tropic jams on this album, also makes beautiful use of the mark tree. In every verse, the lyrics start off incredibly abstract, drawing metaphors to the rain and the moon when speaking about this person. As the verse progresses though, the lyrics get more and more real, at which point the singer eventually breaks and confesses that their former lover moved to California, a far detour from the Upstate New York-based band. At the end of each verse, however, the mark tree melodically transports both the listener and the protagonist back to a dream-like state, where they can feel free to live in the fantasy with this partner. Sounds of pouring water also play at the end of the song, suggesting this person will always be a part of this person.

    Jam Bands Jam

    As stated earlier, a major feat of the band is the ability to bounce their instruments off of each other. “Lights Up,” for instance, begins with a feeling of slight dissonance between the instruments. This is totally intentional; the instruments follow the same time signature, there is just a slight air in between them. Without even realizing it though, the instruments were jamming together in perfect unison. Notably, the instrumentalists seem like they are enjoying themselves and that joy is contagious for the listener.

    Similarly, “In The Sand” ends in a beautiful cacophony of jam rock. The guitar solo reeks of swagger, sludge, and beautiful vibes. Accompanying it is a beautiful percussive beat and the two instrumentalists work off of each other in an infinitely excellent and masterful way. It is impossible to finish this song without bobbing your head.

    Annie in the Water, Sun at Dawn

    Sun at Dawn definitely has a unique sound to it, however, this does not stop the listener from hearing some obvious influences, including the whammy guitar from “Seeds.” It sounds exactly like something Hendrix would have played, but Hendrix would have played better. The guitar of “Bloom,” on the other hand, doesn’t feel like a carbon copy. Instead, it more so pays a nod to Jimmy Page. In the same essence, “Water” draws a striking similarity to Guns N’ Roses’ “November Rain.”

    Now, every artist wears their influence on their sleeves from time to time. My only concern for Annie in the Water is that, even though this album displays incredible personality, whether or not that personality is distinct to the album only and not the band. Additionally, throughout the album, the presence of synthesizers, for the most part, at the very least add something of value, although on a song like “Water,” an incredibly introspective song about long-lost love, can be heavy at times.

    Overall, Sun At Dawn is an excellent album with some minor flaws. The band’s contagious and figurative instrumentation alongside introspective lyricism makes for an enjoyable seven-track run. Sun At Dawn is available on Spotify and Apple Music now. For more information, check out their Facebook or Instagram.

    Key Tracks: Turnaround, Water, Pleasure in Sin

  • Hippo Campus Stretch out ‘LP3’ at Brooklyn Steel

    Indie rockers and St. Paul, Minnesota natives Hippo Campus stopped at Brooklyn Steel Tuesday, March 1st, for their first of two concerts in the city. The tour is fresh off the release of the band’s new album LP3, featuring the popular singles “Ride or Die” and “Semi Pro.” The band harnesses a classic indie rock base and adds embellished horns and a cheeky vocal and lyric style.

    hippo campus brooklyn steel
    Hippo Campus at Brooklyn Steel, 3/1/22. Photo by Buscar Photo

    Hippo Campus made the long trip across the East River for a second gig at Webster Hall on Wednesday night. Support is being provided by San Diego native and rising indie-pop sensation Jelani Aryeh. Providing a perfect complement to Hippo Campus, Jelani Aryeh mixes a breezy R&B vocal style with electro-pop instrumentals. Despite playing with a new band, they perform with the chemistry of a longstanding group. The band is gaining momentum so quickly that Jelani joked on stage that they are “trying out a different band name every night” until they find one that sticks. While unfamiliar with the group prior to the show, the hard hitting jams and outros left a stinging impression on us and the rest of the crowd. Many fans made sure to grab a shirt and record from the surging young artist.

    Hippo Campus released their first two LPs back in 2017 and 2018. After a short turned extended break due to the pandemic, the band returned in February with their third effort. LP3 is the band’s first album on Grand Jury Records and sees the group making strides in their production and album development. The 10-track album spans a concise 33 minutes but packs in indie rock bangers, soulful ballads, and crowd pleasing sing alongs. Fans filled out two sold-out NYC shows and most of the remaining tour is sold out.

    hippo campus brooklyn steel
    Hippo Campus at Brooklyn Steel, 3/1/22. Photo by Buscar Photo

    The Hippo Campus tour is in the final phase. Beginning in early February around the release of LP3, shows are scheduled through the middle of March. There is one more New York stop on the run, over at Buffalo’s Town Ballroom with support coming from Boyish. Tickets are still available for this show. Head over to the band’s website for the tour itinerary and see our full photo gallery from the Brooklyn Steel show below.

  • Elton John Performs His Final Madison Square Garden Shows

    “You can’t move atmosphere and you can’t move history.” That is what Elton John said about Madison Square Garden on Tuesday, February 22, when referring to the Garden possibly being moved a few years ago. He has said many times that the Garden is his “most favorite stage on Earth”. John has performed there over 70 times spanning his 60 year career, but it is still sad to think that no future generations will get to experience an Elton concert at MSG ever again.

    That being said, his farewell shows at The Garden were nothing less than extraordinary. The setlist was filled with his greatest hits from the 70’s and 80’s with the exception of “Cold Heart”, his recent duet with Dua Lipa from his “Lockdown Sessions” album which came out in October of last year.

    elton john madison square garden

    He kicked off the show with “Bennie and the Jets” and “Philadelphia Freedom.” Other songs on the setlist included “Rocket Man”, “Levon” and “The Bitch is Back”. He played for 2 and a half hours and only took two small breaks for costume changes. While addressing the crowd for the final time, Elton said “After this tour is finished, I’m going to spend time with my family, my children, and enjoy the rest of my life. Thank you for understanding. I love you so much.” It was a bittersweet moment. The crowd gave him a standing ovation as he transitioned into “Goodbye Yellow Brick Road.”

    elton john madison square garden

    On the way to NYC, Elton’s private jet was forced to make an emergency landing after it suffered hydraulic failure at 10,000 feet. Luckily he was able to get on another plane and make it to NYC and perform the final two Garden shows. These shows were already rescheduled from last year because of the rise in Covid cases. This tour does not end until 2023 with the last show being scheduled in Sweden. You can see all the remaining tour dates here

    Elton John – Madison Square Garden, NYC – Tuesday, February 22, 2022

    Setlist: Bennie and the Jets, Philadelphia Freedom, I Guess That’s Why They Call It the Blues, Border Song, TIny Dancer, Have Mercy on the Criminal, Rocket Man, Take Me to the Pilot, Someone Saved My Life Tonight, Levon, Candle in the Wind, Funeral for a Friend/Love Lies Bleeding, Burn Down the Mission, Sad Songs (Say So Much), Don’t Let the Sun Go Down on Me, The Bitch is Back, I’m Still Standing, Crocodile Rock, Saturday Night’s Alright for Fighting, Cold Heart, Your Song, Goodbye Yellow Brick Road

  • Goose Make Arena Debut at Mohegan Sun for Goosemas VIII

    February 26, 2022 is a day I will remember for the rest of my life. The last time I was this excited to see a band for the first time was for Phish in June 2012. Just over two years since the 1/25/20 “Hot Tea” earwormed me and I dove into the Goose rabbit hole, I was finally able to see them live – and not just any show. The eighth annual Goosemas celebration at and their first ever show in an arena, at Mohegan Sun.

    Mohegan Sun was absolutely bursting at the seams from the beginning of the day. I spent most of the afternoon at the PhanArt “The Hometown Flodown” show (shoutout to the El Goose Times and GrooveSafe crew) before heading into the venue a little before showtime. I was stationed with one of my Always Almost There co-hosts Neal on the floor Peter side.

    Goosemas VIII was not about massive jams. It was about a single statement: this band is built for arena rock.

    Three sets with nary a ballad, two debuts, and a distinct shift away from the expected songs (I hit just two of my Fantasy Goose picks that were largely comprised of longtime setlist staples). Percussionist Jeff Arevalo even remarked how he was glad they had to reschedule Goosemas from December – this gave the band the opportunity to incorporate many of their more recent songwriting efforts that had yet to be debuted in 2021.

    The lights dropped around 8:15 and thousands of people simultaneously yelled “GOOOOOOOSE!”. The band walked on stage and started into holiday classic “Linus and Lucy,” Peter’s special grand piano shining from the get-go. Ripping a hot “Yeti” next, the energy in the venue seemed to grow with each note as I basked in finally hearing one of my favourite bands live for the first time.

    After “Yeti” came a fantastic “Atlas Dogs,” one of the best songs debuted by the band in 2022, Peter yet again shining on piano. The sound in the room was crystal-clear, and Spuds’ tom work especially cut right through and sent vibrations through the room.

    The uptempo “Echo of a Rose” arrangement came next and got my feet grooving through another fantastic jam. The big musical focal point of the night, as mentioned earlier, was Peter’s grand piano. Dominating almost every jam with its incredibly deep sound, the ivories were sounding phenomenal.

    The first set came to a close with an always-fiery “So Ready” and a new, reworked “Silver Rising.”

    Goose came out swinging in set two with a “Rockdale” that built to FIVE peaks and rivals the 11/21/21 version for G.O.A.T. status (note: this is a #HastyRank and is subject to change). A song that has become special to me recently, “Red Bird” (written about Peter’s mother), began with soft “Vintage Vibe” work as we all were #StraightBirdn. Continuing the theme of the night, the jam was relatively short, packed some serious energy, and faded nicely into “Rosewood Heart.” The band made the long-awaited live debut of Nina Simone’s “Sinnerman” before blasting into “The Empress of Organos” to close the set.

    “Empress” is one of my favourite songs and I was OVER THE MOON to see it live at my first show. From Trevor’s bass solo to the blistering peak, I was dancing my ASS off until the end and was just about to head to the bathroom when Spuds grabbed the mic and called his girlfriend Sam on stage.

    What followed was an incredibly heartfelt proposal (somehow not involving potatoes) as the whole arena cheered the two of them on.

    Set three consisted of three songs, all 2022 debuts and the first three songs on the upcoming Dripfield album.

    “Borne” opened the final frame, and while it lacked the extended groove-based jam of its L.A. and Seattle counterparts, Rick and Peter’s guitar/synth build seemed to stretch out forever as Andrew Goedde’s expanded arena-size light rig washed colours and patterns over the audience.

    Moving next into the debut performance of “Hungersite,” the band established it quickly as a top-notch jam vehicle as the energy in the venue continued to climb higher and higher.

    The jamming highlight of the show, however, would come in the live debut of “Dripfield.” The title track to the band’s upcoming album and most recent single release, this song showcases the dual-drummer attack of the band in a Peter Gabriel-esque vibe (Thank you Becky Chinman for that fantastic parallel!) that came close to shaking the walls. A jam like the San Francisco “Wysteria” but without some of the evil, Spuds’ incredible tom work pushed Rick and Peter’s dueling guitars into a churning and rhythmic groove that stretched for minutes (#HastyRanking as a top jam of the year so far).

    There was only one song that the band could encore with, despite the setlist saying “Tumble.” Mohegan ERUPTED as Rick strummed the familiar opening chords to “Arcadia” and thousands of people sang along to the lyrics of what is arguably the quintessential Goose song. The band drove this jam into a piano-led and bright space before the second-ever “slow ending” (LTP 6/18/21) to the song built into the typical scorching final “Arcadia” solo to end the third set.

    Mark my words: this was Goose’s first arena show, but it is far from the last. The band’s sound will continue to evolve and grow, and so too will its fanbase. We are incredibly lucky to witness this growth firsthand and I can’t wait to continue listening to and enjoying every note they play for decades to come.

    There was a moment during “Arcadia” where I realized that decades from now, I’ll be taking my children to Goose concerts and passing on the live music gift that my dad has given me my whole life. Thank you to this incredible band for welcoming me (second set “American Woman” and all) and cultivating an environment of positivity and love while producing some truly mind-blowing music.

    Shoutout to everybody who came up and said hello at Mohegan as well – such an honour and a pleasure to meet all of you!!

    And an extra-HUGE thank you to Jake Silco for bringing me on Goose tour as assistant/driver – having the opportunity to travel and see this band is amazing!!

    Tune into a special Always Almost There Goosemas recap episode here.

    Goose – Mohegan Sun, Uncasville, CT – Goosemas VIII – February 26, 2022

    Set 1: Linus and Lucy, Yeti, Atlas Dogs > Echo of a Rose, So Ready, Silver Rising
    Set 2: Rockdale, Red Bird > Rosewood Heart, Sinnerman*, Empress of Organos
    Set 3: Borne, Hungersite* > Dripfield*
    Encore: Arcadia

    * First time played

  • Illuminati Hotties Pool Hop at Bowery Ballroom

    Los Angeles based rockers Illuminati Hotties made their way to Manhattan’s Bowery Ballroom on Thursday, February 24th as part of their co-headline tour with Fenne Lily. The band is touring behind their excellent sophomore LP, Let Me Do One More, released last October on Hopeless Records. The show on Thursday was opened by Texas native Katy Kirby, with Illuminati Hotties in the middle spot followed by Fenne Lily. Check out our full photo gallery below.

    illuminati hotties bowery ballroom
    Photo by Buscar Photo

    Illuminati Hotties is the brainchild of singer, producer, and guitarist Sarah Tudzin. Getting her start as a recording and mixing engineer, the music of became an extension of her work into more creative areas. Presenting a fun, upbeat, and incredibly catchy pop-punk, the band has made a huge splash with this latest record. Let Me Do One More highlight “Pool Hopping” is an essential jam for any summer playlist, reminiscing about hot summer days spent floating in the pool.

    illuminati hotties bowery ballroom
    Sara Tudzin. Photo by Buscar Photo

    The co-headline tour with Fenne Lily began at the beginning of February and continues through mid-March with stops to be made in Chicago, Canada, and Portland. After this run of shows, Illuminati Hotties head over to Europe for a lengthy headlining tour into May. Head over to the band’s Bandcamp page for the full tour schedule.

  • Silenced Jazz Bass Icon Eberhard Weber Pens An Autobiography

    The 1970s were heady times when it came to bass innovators.

    In America, Jaco Pastorius and Stanley Clarke not only reinvented how the electric bass was played but pushed it front and center on stage and in recordings with their respective jazz fusion juggernauts, Weather Report and Return to Forever.

    Over in Europe, a German named Eberhard Weber was doing much the same, just sans Jaco’s rock star posturing.  The quietly intense, uber cool Weber’s instrument of revolution was a 5-string, electrified upright bass of his own design. His lush chordal-flavored accompaniments and fleet high-register soloing were the centerpiece of legions of albums with greats like Jan Garbarek, Gary Burton, Pat Metheny, Ralph Towner and his own quartet Colours, all emanating from Manfred Eicher’s masterfully curated ECM Records. Like Jaco, Weber’s singular sound would find a home beyond the jazz world. It would be deployed by the edge-pushing Kate Bush of four acclaimed albums made during her 1980s heyday.

    Eberhard Weber

    But all that came to a halt in April 2007.  That was when the always furiously busy Weber suffered a stroke on the way to a gig that put an end to his 40-year playing career.

    But now the maestro is back with Eberhard Weber: A German Jazz Story (Equinox Publications UK).  At a little over 170 pages, it is a deceptively slim memoir containing more wisdom about creativity and the life of a working musician than many cinder block-thick music bios. There are probing discussions of what jazz really is and the arts of composition and collaboration, as well as a dressing down of the jazz conservatory complex, drummers who keep pling their cymbals after the last chord and his own “inadequate twisted finger technique.” He also addresses why there is no such thing as “the perfect instrument” and how one fiddles forever to try and work around it.

    Weber begins his story at the end: with the saga of the stroke that has robbed him of his ability to play.  It is a true clusterf*ck of a tale. There are the on- and off-again symptoms that he didn’t recognize as a cause for concern until it was too late. There’s a power outage that meant they couldn’t survey the full damage with an MRI until the morning after he checked into the hospital, when he awoke in a much more serious state with his left side now completely paralyzed.  And like in the U.S., there is insurance industry sleight of hand which means his rehab is delayed, perhaps posing a terminal blow to his recovery.

    Weber discusses his birth in Stuttgart during WW II, his childhood under the subsequent American occupation and hustling candy bars from friendly GIs. He was the son of a professional cellist, pianist and educator who played with orchestras but also banjo in dance bands to make ends meet.  An influential memory shared listening to his father and his friends rehearsing string quartets and playing piano while lying under the instrument, something he is sure helped to shape his own love of deep sounds. At eight, he began playing the cello himself.  By 15, he discovered Bill Haley, boogie-woogie and Dave Brubeck and switched to the upright bass. After his callouses hardened, he began working steadily at society gigs and playing that uniquely German brand of sentimental pop called Schlager.

    In his late teens, Weber joined together with pianist Wolfgang Dauner. It was a partnership that would last 10 years, through infatuations with the piano trio music of Bill Evans and bassist Scott LaFaro through to the “Free Jazz” experiments inspired by the political upheaval of the late 1960s. The latter featured some pretty outlandish “happenings.” In one, the band played with a completely naked drummer. In another, Dauner had the bright idea of slaughtering a chicken on stage, for the sound and spectacle, something that Weber nixed.  The bassist also recalls an incident where Joachim Ernst Berendt, the so-called “Pope of German Jazz,” stopped a recording session “just because someone was playing harmonies.”  With his reputation spreading,  Weber became a “telephone bass player” for the MPS, Germany’s first important jazz label.  He is summoned with last-minute calls to do sessions with world class artists like Joe Pass and Baden Powell.  Around this time, he also makes a big impact in the emerging world of jazz rock on numerous recordings with guitarist Volker Kreigel.

    Eberhard Weber
    ECM/Roberto Masotti.

    Throughout these years, Weber held down a day job as a photographer and commercial producer for various ad agencies and, ultimately, IBM.  It is not until he met and married his wife Maja in 1968 that he gave up his day job, learned piano, set up a small home studio and began to compose the harmonious chamber jazz that will cement his reputation.

    No discussion of Weber would be complete without a deep dive into the world of ECM Records.  The brainchild of Manfred Eicher, ECM began as a “counter movement to Free Jazz,” a label dedicated to producing records that are “the most beautiful sound next to silence” per its motto. Weber was one of the foundational artists in the ECM fold. It’s an illustrious roster of creators all practicing harmonious, classically-inspired, coolly minimalist jazz, names like pianist Keith Jarrett, saxman Jan Garbarek and Norwegian Avant guitar god Terje Rydal, who have remained with the label for five decades and counting.  One signature of ECM and Weber’s production is the crystalline sound quality conjured by engineer Jan Erik Konghaug at the label’s home base of its early years, Talent Studios in Oslo (Note: Sorry for stealing the mailbox label for my electric mandolin case during a visit/pilgrimage to Talent in 1981!).  Another is the minimalist and very beautiful cover art.  Many showcase the wonderful photography of masters like Joel Meyerwitz and paintings of artists like Maya Weber, whose work adorns many discs by her husband and other ECM stars.

    After guesting on tour and records with ECM artists like Gary Burton and Ralph Towner, Weber would make his debut as a bandleader and composer with Colours of Chloe.  The 1974 album helped to define the ECM sound — picturesque, romantic, at times rhythmically involved, at others minimalistic and harmonically abstruse. It was awarded the Great German Record Prize, record of the year for all genres of music. It inspired Weber to form his classic Colours quartet with veteran saxophonist Charlie Mariano, pianist Rainer Bruninghaus and British drummer John Marshall of Soft Machine fame.

    Weber’s quartet produced some remarkable work through its dissolution in 1981, including the albums Yellow Fields, Silent Feet (my personal favorite with the side-long epic “Seriously Deep) and Fluid Rustle, which helped introduce the world to guitarist Bill Frisell.  Due to ECM’s marketing success in America,  Weber and band would tour the U.S. twice a year in this time, on bills with other label stars like Keith Jarrett and Terje Rypdal.

    Feeling that his need to compose was somewhat satisfied, Weber disbands Colours and joins up with Jan Garbarek for a run of remarkable recordings and world touring that will last for 25 years, until Weber is felled by his stroke. Weber will still have time to tour and record on his own, in settings with small bands, orchestras and solo bass albums.  A person has not truly lived until they have been bathed in the sublime textures of Weber’s solo album, Pendulum, a masterpiece showcasing his subtle use of delays and intricate overdubbing.

    Weber’s book then detours into discussions of many things that impact the life of touring musicians, e.g., how drugs and jet lag can effect performance and literally kill you, the high and lows of hotels, concert catering, sound checks, amp malfunctions and the like.

    Weber concludes his story by updating fans on his present condition. He feels lucky to have retained his memory and speech post-stroke and tells how it can sometimes trigger bouts of uncontrollable laughter in victims.  He shares how he considered going on with limited ability but gave it up, especially after he inadvertently backed his wheelchair into and toppled over the 5-string upright bass he has played for decades, causing its next to snap (Note: It was ultimately repaired).

    In the end, he talks about learning how to enjoy silence now that the pressure to perform at a world class level is off. ”Music isn’t relaxation to me. It’s tension and concentration.”  Weber also talks about coming to terms with old age and a quandary common among musicians – focusing too much on playing and not thinking about the practicalities of securing a retirement when the music is over by perhaps teaching like his father.    

    “There is another reason, an entirely profane reason, why I never wanted to take on a professorship,” concludes Weber. “I have always been of the following opinion (in a mysterious way, it has taken on a new meaning today):  “I can’t play the bass. But I know how it’s done!”

  • Hearing Aide : Christian Linsey ‘New English’

    Christian Linsey has returned with his second LP, New English, released on February 22. Linsey is also the drummer for indie rock group, FRANK.

    New English is a lo-fi, slacker pop dream, full of mellow vocals and sentimental lyrics. In contrast to Linsey’s 2016 LP After All, which focused on his personal loss, his newest project situates itself as a spiritual rebound. With themes of love, depression and mortality it’s easy to see that Linsey has learned how to accept the good with the bad. The record seems to be a reflection of the changes that have occurred in his life.

    ‘Hello’ MV preview

    ‘Lunchroom’ gives the LP a soothing start with strong guitars welcoming you in before Linsey’s gentle vocals croon about high school memories. While the song is only two minutes and forty seconds, it doesn’t waste any time setting up the vibe for the rest of the project.

    ‘In the Park’ dives deeper with its’ melancholic tone and low key instrumental. The drums maintain a steady base for the rest of the song to flourish on. The calming track is perfect for a rainy, late night listen.

    ‘Kids’ tackles the moment in time where you ruminate on an old childhood memory and finally move on from it. The surprise appearance of female backing vocals adds an extra layer of texture that brings everything together.

    In addition to Linsey’s own unique sound, he also had guest artists appear on the project, including his trusted collaborators Joe Rogers, Pat Malone and Billy Ziff. Fresh faces like J57, Elenor Norton and Tory Giardina also make appearances within the instrumentals and vocals. 

    Linsey’s music is available on all streaming platforms, including Spotify and Apple Music.

    Key Tracks : Lunchroom, In the Park, Kids