Category: Canada

  • Reeperbahn Festival: Europe’s Biggest Club Festival and the Gateway to a World of Music

    It’s not every day you get the opportunity to be a part of Europe’s largest club festival, but over September 22-25, I traveled to Hamburg, Germany and experienced all that Reeperbahn Festival had to offer. Northern Europe’s version of South by Southwest, Reeperbahn has been going strong for 17 years, highlighting a wide variety of artists from across the European continent, and from around the world. Each year, the festival partners with another country, bringing artists from all over and press from the partner country, to see all that Hamburg has to offer. 

    Reeperbahn Festival

    Partnering with America in the post-pandemic era meant that the ability to travel overseas had more ease and certainty of flight status than anytime in the past three years. Hamburg reached out to NYS Music for coverage of the festival, and it was an opportunity impossible to pass up.

    With 24 combined hours of travel planned, and only 60 hours to spend in Hamburg seeing indie and punk bands in small club settings, the stage for the weekend was quickly set. Add in learning a bit about Hamburg and the role the city plays not just geographically, but also in music history, plus seeing performances at truly marvelous once-in-a-lifetime venues, and this whirlwind trip to a gem of a port on the North Sea made for the perfect return trip to Europe

    Roller Disco

    Reeperbahn is the area of Hamburg prime for entertainment and nightlife, with musicals, music venues, restaurants and a red light district that, all combined, offer a little something for everyone. ‘Ropewalk’ in English, the Reeperbahn was where rope was made, being just near the Elbe River that brings you well into the European continent or out to the North Sea, The British Isles and Scandinavia. This makes Hamburg “Das Tor zur Welt” – the Gateway to the World. 

    The Festival Village has its main grounds in the St. Pauli quarter of Hamburg, with a few stages, a Flatstock poster exhibit, roller skating disco, educational displays including water reclamation efforts and a few pop up band performances. Slightly underwhelming as it was – and intentionally so – the Festival Village is not a single-location music festival, but rather spread out across the Reeperbahn area at dozens of clubs and theaters, as well as outdoor stages in the median of the Reeperbahn. Flanked by the ‘dancing towers’ and the neon lights of the red light district, the nightlife was as vibrant as you’d find in Amsterdam. While not a city-wide festival, Reeperbahn gave a taste of what Hamburg has to offer, and left me wanting to return to see more of the city outside the entertainment center. 

    For comparison sake, take a psychedelic remix of St. Mark’s Place – multiple blocks worth – and with a paid wristband, you get to hop from club to club, seeing bands from across the country, all with the goal of finding their footing and making it to the next level. 

    This kind of festival of course does happen in America, with SXSW the inspiration, as co-founder and managing director Alexander Schulz shared during a dinner at Restaurant Nil with press from America, England, Denmark and Germany on Thursday evening. For an hour, Schulz entertained questions that got to the heart of why Reeperbahn is not just a notable festival for Europe, but a destination event that draws an international crowd.

    Reeperbahn Festival
    Co-founder and managing director of Reeperbahn Festival, Alexander Schulz, breaks bread with journalists at Restaurant NIL.

    Schulz sees Reeperbahn as a way to combine a consumer program with a professional program, with both audiences meeting in the evening. Add in the Reeperbahn ANCHOR awards show on Saturday, showcasing six international finalists, and a strong relationship with the city of Hamburg, and a recipe for success is served up each September.

    Navigating the pandemic by partnering in 2020 with Denmark (from which fans could drive) and in 2021 with South Korea (although the festival was mostly virtual), the first year fully back in person brought in the USA and the hope of rekindling the flame that was dimmed for a year or so.

    Dr. Carsten Brosda, Minister of Culture and Media for the city of Hamburg, proudly noted that the festival is much bigger than music, and with full capacity allowed and no restrictions, it didn’t take much to get the local and regional governments behind the Reeperbahn Festival. “Whenever something is possible, we do it,” said Brosda. With hundreds working the festival plus more pre and post, the feeling of doing things together has returned, as the culture, concerts and inspiration they provided were not something the city wanted to lose. In 2020, it was the first time seeing artists on a stage all year, following months of lockdown, and some bands didn’t want to leave the stage. Skip ahead to 2021 and a second period of lockdown made it more difficult to hold the 2021 event and was thus virtual. 

    While global inflation certainly impacted the 2022 event, and the German government maintained a public transportation mask mandate, Reeperbahn Festival served as the gateway to European music, and connected the rest of the world via the United States. This year’s lineup of bands was meant to appeal to the musical tastes of Americans: contemporary, classic rock, techno and electronic, plus German acts that have crossover (including Hamburg duo BOY

    Following dinner, I linked up with Justin and Sam from Aquarium Drunkard, based in Los Angeles. We headed to the Reeperbahn and to Drafthaus to see Afghan-Dutch artist Ferdous, who provided a taste of futuristic R&B, the first music of this 60 hour jaunt. Making the most of the club nature of the festival, we headed over to Molotow where four venues are contained under one roof, including an outdoor ‘Backyard’, the ‘Karatekeller’, the Club and the Skybar, the latter of which we caught the soundcheck and most of the performance of Montreal band Choses Sauvages. Watching the lead singer bust out Ric Ocasek vocals (and fit the look a bit when his sunglasses were on) gave a new wave of new wave, along with animated crowd interaction that commands a second viewing in the near future on this side of the pond.

    reeperbahn festival
    Choses Sauvages

    We headed to the Backyard for a brief taste of HighSchool, a post-punk trio from Melbourne, Australia. An 80s indie vibe resonated, along with a bassist who looked as though he had recently placed second in a Lou Reed look alike contest.

    reeperbahn festival

    Next stop was Gruenspan –  the largest stand-alone venue on the Reeperbahn with a capacity of 850 – for Vancouver-based Destroyer, one of the many recommendations provided to me by Parisian friend Benjo. When I first glanced at the lineup, not a single band was familiar, and this was not the ‘wow I am getting old if I don’t know any of these bands’ first takes. Dozens of unsigned bands and no true headliner of the festival made every band a new discovery, and thankfully some guidance helped line up acts that were well worth venturing to see. Notably, Gruenspan was the first venue that had any third party sponsorship with Rolling Stone banners around the second level, as corporate sponsorship was present at the festival, but not overwhelming as seen at large North American festivals.

    Reeperbahn Festival hamburg germany
    Destroyer

    Starting promptly at 11:30 pm with strong bass and drums, the groove was no doubt excellent and the performance quite lively, but the catch was the lead singer Dan Bejar. Destroyer itself was a unique offering, with Bejar adding the flair that made this show well worth the recommendation. Performing in the vein of a freak poet, Bejar would take a knee after his portion of the song was complete, the band behind him carrying the tune to completion. Odd for the uninitiated (myself included), the music was at times feedback and a slow grinding for the audience, but they delighted in it nonetheless. Perhaps there is a Western Canadian appeal to the European crowd, or what this westerner presumes to be European influence on a Vancouver export, yet this remained a fantastic band to catch live and an otherwise great discovery. 

    Friday of Reeperbahn began a little late, as jetlag and exhaustion had finally caught up with me, and the beds at Premier Inn certainly not helping by being so inviting following a long day at school, followed by 12 hours of planes, trains and automobiles, then 6 hours of club-hopping. The German saying ‘Es ist nicht der Alkohol, der den Káter verursacht, sein Aufwachen” (it’s not the alcohol that causes the hangover, its waking up) never rang truer, and one that has always stuck with me since a trip to Bavaria and Austria in 2011. While no one pursues a hangover, travel, time change and revelry were quite the combo to contend with.

    Venturing out into the bustling Spielbudenplatz, I found excellent Vietnamese at Com Nieu 21. While pho would have been a good option, a noodle salad and summer rolls with a Vietnamese iced coffee worked nicely to push through the aforementioned Káter. Taking a walk just a few minutes off the main drag, I found the city to be immediately quieter and residential, with kids playing, riding scooters and enjoying the day.

    Reeperbahn Festival hamburg germany vietnamese
    Cold noodle salad at Com Nieu 21

    I walked down towards the Elbe River for a boat cruise and tour of the port area along with bloggers from Lithuania, Brazil and England. Drinking Astra beers and eating fried fish sandwiches fresh from the Elbe that day, the boat cruise was accentuated with great music and company amid canals reminiscent of Amsterdam, with twists and turns as we navigated the port. Spectacular views of the city and the Elbphilharmonie, where we would see a live performance that evening, gave a full scope view of the city to all. 

    reeperbahn festival
    The Louisiana Star riverboat and the Elbphilharmonie

    Disembarking at the Elbphilharmonie in HafenCity, and part of the Speicherstadt warehouse district (a UNESCO World Heritage site), we could see theaters for Der König Der Löwen (The Lion King) and Eiskönigin (Frozen) across the river, each of which had their own ferry for patrons. Hamburg is, after all, the third largest city in the world for musicals, with Hamilton having opened on October 6. 

    Reeperbahn Festival hamburg germany

    Located in the Kontorhaus business district with the Chilehaus, the Elbphilharmonie opened on January 11, 2017 and serves as a symbol of the city’s past, present and future. With an old warehouse serving as the foundation, when the Elbphilharmonie was constructed, supports were built into the river to ensure stability for this landmark on the Elbe River.

    Reeperbahn Festival hamburg germany elbphilharmonie
    Mine

    More than a concert venue, the building houses a Westin hotel, apartments, restaurants, conference rooms and a spa, plus the original cranes, all at a 866 Million Euro cost; while that price tag was controversial, the venue is a boon to the city and a must visit for anyone seeking acoustically perfect performance spaces. With the full concert hall having seating for 2100 created in a terraced manner so that no seat was more than 30 meters from the stage, the venue itself is decoupled from the rest of the building, ensuring that the sound is pristine with no outside interference. 

    Acoustics are so acute thanks to 10,000 individually shaped gypsum fiber panels, with a design for classical music in mind that ensures sound is distributed to each and every corner. What’s more, an organ was built inside the walls, and the stage location gives nearly a theater-in-the-round perspective to all in attendance.

    Reeperbahn Festival Hamburg Germany

    Taking a closeup look at the stage before a performance by Mine (Mee-na), I marveled at the arrangement of the seating, the proximity to the stage, and the music that we would be experiencing shortly. Taking a seat alongside Erik, a music critic from Copenhagen, this 75 minute performance, while entirely in German, stands out as one of the most spectacular of the festival, and the calendar year. 

    Reeperbahn Festival hamburg germany mine
    Mine

    Entering the stage were a 13-piece band, including five strings, three backup singers and Mine, the lead singer who describes her music as “German-language folk with hip hop, jazz and electronic elements” arrived on stage and began a most symphonic performance. Joined by three additional drummers for the second song, not knowing German didn’t help, as Mine spoke to the audience between songs, with laughs and applause at times in a show that got more upbeat as it progressed. 

    Projections on the stage from overhead were mixed with lighting, with a South Asian flair added to each song via percussion, guitar and theremin. Joined by a New York letter jacket sporting Fatoni, whom Mine dueted with on “ROMCOM” in 2017, this James Corden lookalike (and thankfully not Corden) stayed for a few tunes to freestyle rap, eliciting approval from the audience. 

    Then the bagpipes began, with a piper coming in from the wings to crush the one song he was there to play. Mine continued into the performance, alternating between melodic solo songs and heavier full band engagements, bringing out a pink-haired vocalist for a song that drew huge applause, and establishing herself as the perfect artist to perform tonight in this monumental venue. A total of 21 musicians performed with Mine over the course of the show, and the audience gave a standing ovation the likes of which are rarely seen at American live music performances. Mine was a highlight of the weekend in a venue that is just as incredible as photos and videos show.

    Pages: 1 2 3

  • POWERWOLF to bring German Heavy Metal to Times Square in 2023

    Powerwolf, the most successful German heavy metal band are headed west for their first North American shows in February 2023. Two once in a lifetime shows at The Palladium in Times Square and M Teles in Montreal will give North American fans a chance to see the ‘Wolf and their internationally renowned breathtaking world-class stage shows.

    powerwolf

    The band said in a statement, “North America, your calls over the years have not gone unheard! The holy heavy metal mass will finally be celebrated next year for the very first time in New York City and Montreal! Let’s make sure that it will be an experience that neither you, nor we as Powerwolf will ever forget!”

    powerwolf

    Powerwolf – Attila Dorn (vocals), Falk Maria Schlegel (organ), Charles Greywolf (guitar), Matthew Greywolf (guitar) and Roel van Helden (drums) – began in 2004, the result of the efforts of one of the most hard-working and entertaining live band on the heavy metal planet. Powerwolf have secured a collection of gold and platinum awards, starting in 2015, when they reached Gold status for the first time in the Czech Republic with their album, Blessed & Possessed. Additionally, both Preachers Of The Night (2013) and the subsequent masterpiece The Sacrament Of Sin (2018), as well as the groundbreaking streaming event The Monumental Mass: A Cinematic Metal Event (2022), entered the German album and DVD charts at #1 (a massive achievement for an audio-visual release).

    Tickets for both dates go on sale Friday, October 7 at 10:00 AM local time. For tickets and more information, make sure to check local venue listings and www.powerwolf.net/tickets

    Powerwolf Tour Dates

    European Wolfsnächte Tour, November/December 2022:

    w/ Dragonforce, Warkings

    11/11/2022: Berlin, DE @ Velodrom

    11/12/2022: Munich, DE @ Zenith

    11/13/2022: Prague, CZ @ Tipsport Arena

    11/14/2022: Katowice, PL @ MCK

    11/16/2022: Budapest, HU @ Barba Negra

    11/17/2022: Vienna, AT @ Gasometer

    11/18/2022: Stuttgart, DE @ Schleyerhalle

    11/19/2022: Zurich, CH @ Samsung Hall

    11/21/2022: Barcelona, ES @ Razzmatazz

    11/22/2022: Madrid, ES @ Riviera

    11/24/2022: Milan, IT @ Alcatraz

    11/25/2022: Frankfurt, DE @ Jahrhunderthalle

    11/26/2022: Oberhausen, DE @ Rudolf-Weber-Arena

    11/27/2022: Paris, FR @ Zenith

    11/29/2022: London, UK @ Roundhouse*

    12/1/2022: Amsterdam, NL @ Afas Live

    12/2/2022: Hamburg, DE @ Sporthalle

    12/3/2022: Saarbrücken, DE @ Saarlandhalle

    12/4/2022: Antwerp, BE @ Lotto Arena

    *without Dragonforce

    Live in North America 2023:

    2/23/2023: New York, NY @ The Palladium

    2/24/2023: Montreal, QC @ M TELUS

    Confirmed Festivals 2023:

    6/7-10/2023: Austria @ Nova Rock Festival

    8/17-19/2023: Germany @ Reload Festival

  • Depeche Mode Embark on 2023 “Memento Mori” World Tour with a Stops at MSG, Barclays Arena Date Added

    Depeche Mode, the influential English electronic duo of Martin Gore and Dave Gahan, will embark on their first tour in over five years, in support of the band’s forthcoming studio album, Memento Mori, due in Spring 2023. They’ll make one stop in the Empire State at Madison Square Garden on April 14, before heading over the Europe for four months of shows across the continent. Stella Rose & The Dead Language will join as support. Just announced – they’ll play later this year at MSG on October 28, with an additional performance at Barclays Arena on October 21.

    Depeche Mode memento mori

    Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Class of 2020 inductees, Depeche Mode remains an ever-evolving and singularly influential musical force. An indelible inspiration to fans, critics and artists alike, Depeche Mode continues to press on as the Memento Mori album and tour represents the opening of the newest chapter of a peerless and ongoing legacy.

    We started work on this project early in the pandemic, and its themes were directly inspired by that time. After Fletch’s passing, we decided to continue as we’re sure this is what he would have wanted, and that has really given the project an extra level of meaning.

    Martin Gore

    Fletch would have loved this album. We’re really looking forward to sharing it with you soon, and we can’t wait to present it to you live at the shows next year.

    Dave Gahan

    Memento Mori (Latin for “remember that you must die”) will be Depeche Mode’s 15th studio album and the follow-up to 2017’s critically acclaimed SpiritMemento Mori will be released worldwide in Spring 2023 via Columbia Records.

    Opening Acts for Depeche Mode

    Darkly poetic and industrial leaning, Stella Rose and her band The Dead Language have graced venues all over their native New York City and Brooklyn. With a confidence that belies the band’s relative newness, The Dead Language has quickly built a distinctive sonic and visual identity on the foundation of Stella Rose’s lyricism and stage presence. Myles Mullen completes The Dead Language’s assault on the senses, painting the stage with imagery that meshes with and reacts to the music, creating a visceral story for the audience. The result is utterly unique and new—while paying homage to the downtown NYC golden age(s) that gave us the Velvet Underground, Patti Smith, Blondie, and Warhol’s Factory. Stella Rose’s first two singles, “Muddled Man” and “Angel” were released in Fall 2022.

    Wales-born London-bred musician and producer Kelly Lee Owens’ unique melding of electronic music’s coolness and warmth has built her an eclectic following of fans, critics, and fellow musicians including St. Vincent, Bjork, John Cale, and of course Depeche Mode. With vocals as confident and captivating as her beats, Owens has built a formidable solo discography that includes the albums Kelly Lee Owens, Inner Song, and her latest record LP.8, released in spring 2022 to unanimous critical praise, including Clash magazine’s lauding its “giant leap in her evolution as an artist, continuing to build on an ever-growing discography of limitless promise”

    For further information on the tour routing and ticket on-sale dates, please go to depechemode.com.

    Depeche Mode Memento Mori World Tour 2023

    Memento Mori World Tour 2023 – Leg One

    March 23          Sacramento, CA            Golden 1 Center 

    March 25          San Jose, CA                  SAP Center 

    March 28          Los Angeles, CA            Kia Forum 

    March 30          Las Vegas, NV                T-Mobile Arena 

    April 2               San Antonio, TX            AT&T Center 

    April 5               Chicago, IL                     United Center 

    April 7               Toronto, ON                  Scotiabank Arena 

    April 9               Quebec City, QC           Videotron Centre 

    April 12             Montreal, QC                Centre Bell 

    April 14             New York, NY                Madison Square Garden 

    May 16             Amsterdam, NL             Ziggo Dome 

    May 18             Amsterdam, NL             Ziggo Dome 

    May 20             Antwerp, BE                  Sportpaleis Antwerpen 

    May 23             Stockholm, SE               Friends Arena 

    May 26             Leipzig, DE                     Leipziger Festwiese 

    May 28             Bratislava, SK                 Národný Futbalový Štadión 

    May 31             Lyon, FR                               Groupama Stadium

    June 2               Barcelona, ES                Primavera Sound Festival 

    June 4               Dusseldorf, DE              Merkur Spiel-Arena 

    June 6               Dusseldorf, DE              Merkur Spiel-Arena 

    June 9               Madrid, ES                     Primavera Sound Festival 

    June 11             Bern, CH                        Stadion Wankdorf 

    June 14             Dublin, IE                      Malahide Castle 

    June 17             London, UK                   Twickenham Stadium 

    June 20             Munich, DE                   Olympiastadion

    June 22             Lille, FR                          Stade Pierre Mauroy 

    June 24             Paris, FR                         Stade de France 

    June 27             Copenhagen, DK          Parken 

    June 29             Frankfurt, DE                Deutsche Bank Park 

    July 1                Frankfurt, DE               Deutsche Bank Park 

    July 4                Bordeaux, FR               Matmut Atlantique

    July 7                Berlin, DE                     Olympiastadion 

    July 9                Berlin, DE                     Olympiastadion 

    July 12              Rome, IT                       Stadio Olympico 

    July 14              Milan, IT                       San Siro 

    July 16              Bologna, IT                   Stadio Renato Dall’Ara 

    July 21              Klagenfurt, AT              Wörthersee Stadion 

    July 23              Zagreb, HR                    Arena Zagreb 

    July 26              Bucharest, RO              Arena Națională 

    July 28              Budapest, HU               Puskás Aréna 

    July 30              Prague, CZ                     Letňany Airport 

    August 2           Warsaw, PL                   PGE Narodowy 

    August 4           Krakow, PL                    Tauron Arena

    August 6           Tallinn, EE                     Tallinna Lauluväljak 

    August 8           Helsinki, FI                    Kaisaniemen Puisto 

    August 11         Oslo, NO                       Telenor Arena 

    – New dates just added – 

    September 21        Mexico City, MX          Foro Sol 

    September 29        Austin, TX                   Moody Center

    October 1   Dallas, TX                   American Airlines Center

    October 4   Houston, TX               Toyota Center 

    October 7   New Orleans, LA        Smoothie King Center

    October 10 Orlando, FL                Amway Center 

    October 12 Miami, FL                   Miami-Dade Arena

    October 19 Nashville, TN              Bridgestone Arena 

    October 21 Brooklyn, NY              Barclays Center

    October 23 Washington, DC         Capital One Arena 

    October 25 Philadelphia, PA         Wells Fargo Center 

    October 28 New York, NY             Madison Square Garden 

    October 31 Boston, MA                TD Garden

    November 3           Montreal, QC             Centre Bell 

    November 5           Toronto, ON               Scotiabank Arena

    November 8           Detroit, MI                Little Caesars Arena

    November 10         Cleveland, OH           Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse 

    November 13         Chicago, IL                 United Center

    November 16         Denver, CO                Ball Arena

    November 18         Salt Lake City, UT       Vivint Arena

    November 21         Edmonton, AB            Rogers Place 

    November 24         Vancouver, BC          Rogers Arena 

    November 26         Seattle, WA               Climate Pledge Arena

    November 28         Portland, OR              MODA Center

    December 1           Las Vegas, NV             T-Mobile Arena 

    December 3           San Francisco, CA       Chase Center 

    December 6           San Diego, CA            Pechanga Arena

    December 10         Los Angeles, CA          Kia Forum 

    December 15         Los Angeles, CA          Crypto.com Arena 

    Kelly Lee Owens supports on all dates except * Stella Rose & The Dead Language

  • NYC’s Melt takes Toronto

    New York-based band Melt played their first ever international show in Toronto at Adelaide Hall on Thursday, September 15, dropping a powerful performance that showcased each of the seven band members’ talents in a perfectly locked-in way.

    Opening their 10-song set with “Waves” off their 2021 EP West Side Highway, the group played with dynamics from the start, a powerful opening section leading into a beautiful quiet area that featured lead vocalist Veronica Stewart-Frommer sitting down at the front of the stage and crooning to the audience.

    Shy” came next, a 2020 single, featured beautiful melodic guitar lines from guitarist Marlo Shankweiler and staccato horn stabs from the saxophone/trumpet duo of Nick Sare and Evan Lane.

    One of the best-kept secrets of Melt was revealed to be keyboardist Eric Gabriel and his incredible vocals – taking the lead on West Side Highway cut “Hours”, his gentle tones contrasted perfectly with Stewart-Frommer’s powerful harmonies.

    At this point in the show, I was becoming increasingly honed in on the rhythm section of bassist Lucas Saur and drummer Andres Valbuena, whose rock-solid grooves were a perfect foundation to all of the music. Saur in particular (as I’ll mention again later) absolutely blew me away with some gorgeous melodic solos.

    Melt toronto

    “Inside”, a single from Melt’s early days, started with a gentle intro on electric piano but quickly built to a frenzy, Stewart-Frommer unleashing vocal power and Shankweiler delivering an absolutely SEARING guitar solo in a style that blends classic rock favourites with clear Trey Anastasio influence.

    The next track, “Brown Eyes”, was the first true slow song of the night, and acted as a perfect breather and let Sare shine on a fantastic saxophone solo.

    Stewart-Frommer took a second before the next song to announce that Melt is recording their debut album on the road this fall, incorporating segments from some concerts into the recording.

    A slightly mysterious vibe began “Walk to Midnight”, a song that just calls to mind a classic pop song. Shankweiler and Stewart-Frommer gave another stellar performance here, both whipping the crowd into a frenzy once again. The next unreleased song, titled “The Door” began with an extended and VERY psychedelic guitar/bass duet. As the jam band fan I am, I would have loved to see it extended for 5-10 more minutes, but the song absolutely killed and I eagerly await its translation to the studio when it (hopefully) is on the upcoming LP.

    Now let’s talk about “Fade Into You”.

    Melt’s latest single, just released today, began with strong guitar melodies and is another instant-classic Melt tune, but the real treat came in the middle with the performance of the band’s instrumental jam vehicle “Duh-Duh”. I honestly couldn’t tell you when the transition happened, but suddenly punchy horn melodies and an absolutely DOMINATING groove developed as Shankweiler took yet ANOTHER incredible solo. The rest of the band then dropped to the floor as Valbuena lit up the stage with a thrashing solo section, his stoic drum-face breaking briefly to express his glee. Bassist Saur then jumped up for a shot in the spotlight and built upon the drums with an expressive solo of his own. With some cool delayed-guitar lines thrown overtop by Shankweiler and Gabriel’s use of a Supertramp-like sound in the closing part of the song, the sandwich of “Fade Into You” -> “Duh Duh” -> “Fade Into You” was absolutely my highlight of the night.

    As the band introduced a cover of Neil Young’s “Harvest Moon” (featuring opening act Joel McLeod on vocals) to close out the main set, I was a little bit apprehensive about a ballad closer. However, the septet struck into their unique arrangement of the song, a driving, powerful take on the classic tune with a guitar line chunky and reminiscent of the Home Depot theme song (in the best way).

    Melt toronto

    The encore began with a performance of “Communion”, an unreleased ballad in the form of a beautiful duet between Gabriel and Stewart-Frommer, the former’s gentle keyboard playing on full display.

    A powerful cover of Bill Withers’ “Ain’t No Sunshine” with more incredibly powerful vocals continued the encore before Melt’s first-ever release, “Sour Candy” closed out the night on a high note.

    Melt is on tour this fall across the USA – do NOT miss them if they are playing near you! A sound built on a tight band with audible influences across the musical spectrum, each member contributes to the overall sound that fills every corner of the venue with its exuberant energy. I eagerly look forward to seeing what heights Melt will reach in the coming years!

    Melt next plays in New York on October 20 at Webster Hall.

    originally posted on https://ryanstorm.substack.com/p/show-review-melt-91522

  • Cowbell King Corky Laing’s Climb to the Top of the Rock Mountain Told in New Memoir

    What’s the most eardrum pummeling cowbell moment in rock? Thanks to that famous Saturday Night Live sketch, you might think it’s Blue Oyster Cult’s “(Don’t Fear) The Reaper.” But for my money, it’s the cowbell count-off pounded out by Corky Laing in the rock classic whose saucy lyrics he also penned: Mountain’s “Mississippi Queen.” The tale of how that song came to be and many more hilarious and harrowing anecdotes from his long and winding career are told in his eminently readable memoir, Letters to Sarah.

    Corky Laing provides hilarious and harrowing anecdotes from his long and winding career

    Co-written with longtime manager and partner Tuija Takala, Letters to Sarah is a rock autobiography with a difference. In addition to Corky’s exceptionally honest recollections of his highs and lows, there are excerpts from the dozens of letters that he wrote to his mom, Sarah, between 1963 and her death in 1998. These were a way for Corky to keep in touch with his family and try to make sense of his life, while he was away furiously touring and recording for years on end.

    Raised with triplet brothers and a sister in Montreal, the sports-loving Laing would first become enamored with the drums when he saw the hyperbolic jazz great Gene Krupa, on TV. Laing would then forsake his and every Canadian’s first love, hockey, for music because, as he quips, “the drums don’t hit back!” His first public performance was an impromptu one backing the famous vocal group, The Ink Spots. In short order, he would be engaged in regular gigs and drum battles, just like his idol Krupa.

    Embed from Getty Images

    In 1965 at age 17, he and his band, B+3, would be in New York playing at the famed Peppermint Lounge. At another gig around that time in the Hamptons, he became acquainted with his guitar partner-to-be in Mountain, Leslie West, then playing in The Vagrants. Summer residencies in Nantucket over the next couple of years brought him into contact with a crew of writers who would inspire his interest in literature. Nantucket is where he would come up with the gem, “Mississippi Queen.” Forced to take a long drum-solo during a power outage at a gig and witnessed the seductive dancing of a friend’s Southern-bred girlfriend. Laing’s passion made him start singing what would become the opening lines of his most famous tune – “Mississippi Queen, you know what I mean?”

    When he returned to Canada, he got to know luminaries like The Rolling Stones, Jimi Hendrix, Cream and The Who since his band opened for them at venues like the Montreal Forum. By 1969, his band evolved to a more progressive sound and was renamed, Energy. During another opening slot, he got to know Miles Davis’ great drummer Tony Williams, someone who would later refer him to Jack Bruce that
    would put another milestone band on his resume.

    Embed from Getty Images

    Corky and Energy came into the orbit of Felix Pappalardi (the producer of Cream and bassist, founder and producer of Mountain) while playing at the World’s Fair, Expo ‘67 in Montreal. Felix was interested in producing the band and especially intrigued by Corky’s drumming and lyrical input. After Mountain’s debut at Woodstock, Pappalardi lured Laing away from Energy to join what was to become one of the hardest working (and partying) proto-metal bands.

    As for “Mississippi Queen,” Laing says he copped the groove from Levon Helm’s playing on The Band’s “Up on Cripple Creek,” a man he would become very close to during many visits to Woodstock to record at Levon’s legendary farm studio. When Laing was trying to come up with a good Southern town to name check in the lyrics, a friend suggested “Vicksburg” and Corky awarded him 10% of the publishing for the two syllables. The first person to hear “The Queen” outside of the band was Jimi Hendrix, who was working in an adjacent room at The Record Plant at the time of its recording. Interestingly, Laing would go on to earn a Gold Record for his contributions to the Woodstock ‘69 soundtrack, not with Mountain (N.D. Smart was Mountain’s drummer at that gig), but for Ten Years After’s “I’m Going Home.” It seems Laing was enlisted to overdub drums while at the Record Plant with Mountain because the drum mics were not working during the live recording of that particular song during TYA’s Woodstock set.


    The book has plenty of sex and drugs along with the rock-n-roll, something that, along with bad management, spelled the end to Mountain’s initial frenzied three-year run. After much promise, his next band, the super group West, Bruce & Laing, would also collapse after a brief two-album run, due largely to overindulgence. Laing also spends a good deal of time speaking of the brilliance and flaws of Pappalardi and his creative partnership with his wife, Gail Collins. Collins would contribute lyrics and album art to Mountain, but ultimately go on to shot and kill the bass player with a gun he bought her in the early 1980s.

    Corky would next hook up with the likes of Ian Hunter, Mick Ronson, Lee Michaels and Todd Rundgren to make a couple of albums in the singer-songwriter vein, music that was “very Springsteen” in his words, with only the first earning a release. He would go on to be a part of the legendary Lone Star Café scene in New York City backing the hilarious Texas bad boy singer turned novelist Kinky Friedman, who contributed the introduction to Laing’s memoir. For a while, Corky would cut his hair and join a promising new wave band, “The Mix.” Through a chance encounter on the beach near his Connecticut home with jazz guitarist Larry Coryell, he would be introduced to Buddhism. This would go a long way towards vanishing his demons. Laing’s up and down life would settle for a time when he accepted a job in music publishing with Warner-Chappell Music. He would then move on to even more success, and a “six figure salary,” as Vice President of A&R for Polygram Canada during the MTV era, until a merger put him back in the playing business.

    Embed from Getty Images


    Laing would finally get to play Woodstock in 1994. This was at the smaller Woodstock Reunion Concert at the original concert site, versus the grander Michael Laing-produced affair in Saugerties. At this gig, the Mountain lineup was West and former Hendrix bassist Noel Redding. This book and this chapter of Laing’s life comes to close with the passing of his mother in 1998, when he is back making music with Redding and a new guitarist, the Spin Doctors’ Eric Schenkman.


    As a musician, Laing was an indispensable ingredient in the success of Mountain, a band that paved the way for the metal we know today. He had a uniquely powerful style that drove the straight-ahead rock numbers like “Never in My Life” and “You Can’t Get Away.” It was one that matched the fuzz-leaden bass of Pappalardi and Leslie West’s searing blues run and thick power chording. He also had an unflagging stamina and an improviser’s heart. It was Corky’s pulse and dynamics which led the band through long extrapolations on classics like “Dreams of Milk & Honey,” from their album Flowers of Evil, and their unique version of “Stormy Monday,” captured on live album from the 1970 Isle of Wight Festival.

    I saw Mountain several times during their early ‘70s glory days and my ribs are still quaking from Pappalardi’s sub-atomic bass and Laing’s double bass drum and cowbell combo. The last time I saw them was on August 11, 2001. It was at a free lunchtime concert in the plaza at World Trade Center so I couldn’t pass it up. My taste in music had certainly changed since the early ‘70s but, damn the hipsters
    and those who worship at the altar of Pitchfork, I still kind of loved Mountain. It was a beautiful day and band played energetically to a happy crowd of old and new fans. I even caught one of the drumsticks hurled by Laing into the crowd. Thirty days later, that stage would be the site of something very different – the smoldering wreckage from 9/11
    terror attack.

  • Peter Hook & The Light Announce ‘Joy Division: A Celebration’ North America Tour

    Peter Hook & The Light embark on a cross-continental journey that takes them across the United States and Canada in August and September 2022 for their biggest and most extensive trek to date, “Joy Division: A Celebration.” The North American tour launches August 11th in Toronto

    Since announcing the tour last summer both Chicago shows at Metro are sold-out and joining as special guests will be El Ten Eleven in Chicago (both shows), Boston, Silver Springs, MD, Philadelphia, New York, San Diego, Los Angeles and San Francisco.   

    “So yeah, from that point of view, it’s actually nice to bring the two albums together [live]: you can see the contrast quite vividly when we play them. I do get some very almost teary moments. It has been quite interesting because Closer really does have a big effect on people, from an emotional point of view. Unknown Pleasures is very aggressive, it’s very punky, so live, it really rocks. Whereas Closer is almost the exact opposite: it’s very melancholic. It draws you in, and I must admit not only does it get a very emotional response from us while playing it, but you get an emotional response from the audience.”  

    – Peter Hook, in an interview with Big Takeover 

    Around twenty-six dates overall, the tour takes place across five weeks. The band returns to some venues and debuts at others to perform Joy Division’s seminal two albums Unknown Pleasures and Closer in full.  

    Peter Hook & The Light's Announce 'Joy Division: A Celebration' North America Tour
    The Light Live At 02 Academy Leeds July 1, 2022 | Cr: Neil Chapman / Unholy Racket

    Additionally, the tour will feature Joy Division rarities and an opening set of New Order material. The tour follows the debut UK dates for “Joy Division: A Celebration” which commemorates the 40th anniversary of Joy Division and Ian Curtis’ continuing influence. 

    “’Love Will Tear Us Apart’ is a masterpiece that has stood the test of decades, and is the perfect ending to a superb event…”

     – Yorkshire Post

    Returning for his ninth tour of the States with Peter Hook & The Light, Hooky comments: “Definitely one of the highlights/lowlights of my profession is the travelling. It was amazing what a blessing it was not to have to do it over lockdown but amazing again how soon you missed seeing all these wonderful places the world has to offer. You lot in America are so lucky to have such a varied and wonderful country. I can’t wait to get back there, and my mouth is watering at the thought of going to my first ‘Coffee Shop’ breakfast. I am easily pleased.”

    Peter Hook & The Light's Announce 'Joy Division: A Celebration' North America Tour
    The Light Live At O2 Academy Brixton July 10, 2022 | Cr: Richard Gray

    The first few dates were originally scheduled for May 2020, but due to the pandemic have only just taken place in the UK and across France to great reviews and reactions from fans and critics alike to The Light’s dedication to and passion for the catalogue across what is a near three-hour show. 

    About the reaction on returning to live concerts, Hooky added; “The gigs so far have all been wonderful and the fans and the band have been wonderful too! It does nothing for my imposter syndrome; I am very grateful that we have all risen back to this after what we have been through these past few years. Thank you all. We have a lot to be thankful for. Ian Curtis R.I.P.” 

    Because of the Ian Curtis death, Joy Division had to cancel their US Tour. Thus, also resulting in the death of Joy Division itself. But, later on as a new trio, create with Bernard Sumner, Peter Hook, and Stephen Morris played as New Order and stopped through New York in 1981.  

    Peter Hook & The Light’s ‘Joy Division: A Celebration’ Tour Dates:

    August 11 – The Danforth Music Hall – Toronto, ONT

    August 12 – The Danforth Music Hall – Toronto, ONT

    August 13 – Club Soda – Montreal, QC

    August 15 – Royal Oak Music Theatre – Royal Oak, MI

    August 16 – Variety Playhouse – Atlanta, GA

    August 18 – First Avenue – Minneapolis, MN

    August 19 – Metro – Chicago *SOLD OUT

    August 20 – Metro – Chicago *SOLD OUT

    August 22 – The Pabst Theatre – Milwaukee, WI

    August 23 – Paradise Rock Club – Boston, MA

    August 25 – The Fillmore Silver Spring – Silver Spring, MD

    August 26 – Union Transfer – Philadelphia, PA

    August 27 – Terminal 5 – New York, NY

    August 29 – The Van Buren – Phoenix, AZ

    August 30 – Mohawk – Austin, TX

    August 31 – Mohawk – Austin, TX

    September 2 – House Of Blues Houston – Houston, TX

    September 3 – House Of Blues Dallas – Dallas, TX

    September 5 – Ogden Theatre – Denver, CO

    September 6 – Humphreys Concerts by the Bay – San Diego, CA

    September 8 – The Theatre At Ace Hotel – Los Angeles, CA

    September 9 – The Theatre At Ace Hotel – Los Angeles, CA

    September 10 – The Warfield – San Francisco, CA

    September 12 – Crystal Ballroom – Portland, OR

    September 13 – The Showbox – Seattle, WA

    September 14 – Commodore Ballroom – Vancouver, BC

    For more details and to purchase tickets, click the link here

  • Arcade Fire Join the Five-Timers Club on SNL

    Arcade Fire returned to Saturday Night Live for the fifth time, and first since 2018, alongside host and Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness star Benedict Cumberbatch.

    arcade fire SNL

    With their fifth performance, Arcade Fire joins a Five-Timers Club of their own, alongside Miley Cyrus, James Taylor, Kanye West, Rihanna, and Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers. (Arcade Fire had also served as backing band for Mick Jagger’s performance on SNL in 2012)

    Following their memorable 2013 appearance, Arcade Fire aired a 30-minute concert special directed by Roman Coppola, and featuring cameos from Bono, Ben Stiller, James Franco, Michael Cera, Zach Galifianakis, and more. During the special, the band performed new songs “Here Comes the Night Time,” “Normal Person” and “We Exist.” Watch the unique performance below.

    The band released their latest album WE on Friday, May 6, as well as announcing a world tour that finds them back in the Big Apple in November.

    For tonight’s Saturday Night Live, the show stayed in step with the week’s news as the cold open mocked the root centuries-old argument Justice Alito references in his leaked Dobbs v. Jackson draft. This is SNL at its best, mocking the establishment and bringing to light the modern morality of social issues.

    Cumberbatch celebrated mothers in his monologue, including his mom as well as his wife, but no overt Dr. Strange references were found tonight. Although, Cumberbatch was joined later in the show with a surprise appearance by Multiverse of Madness co-star Elizabeth Olson in “The Understudy.

    Noting two of his favorite words are “Arcade Fire”, Cumberbatch introduced the musical guest, who dove into “Unconditional I (Lookout Kid)” off WE. With wacky waving inflatable tube men in front of the stage, Win Butler and Régine Chassagne led the band through the enchanting number, ending with Butler saying “I Love you Mom.”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ownPVvCY5Us

    On Weekend Update, Kate McKinnon made an appearance as Justice Amy Coney Barrett to discuss the apparent intention to overturn Roe v. Wade (against public opinion) citing laws from the 1600s.

    Arcade Fire’s second songs, “The Lightning I,” and its album counterpart “The Lightning II,” were accommpanied by a purple backdrop projecting shadows of the 9-piece band. The uptempo “The Lightning II” raised the vibe on a dime, building a froth while pouring everything into “A day a week a month a year, every second brings me here,” cresting with repitition, and closing with “Waiting on the lightning, waiting on the light, what will the light bring?”

    In keeping with the Mother’s Day episode theme, Butler had “Call Your Mom” written onto his guitar during these songs, saying at the end ““A woman’s right to choose forever and ever and ever. Amen.”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XEHTTp20gz0

    To close the show, Cumberbatch and a half dozen cast members wore shirts bearing 1973, a nod to the year of Roe v. Wade. Arcade Fire then took the SNL stage for a third and final song, “End of the Empire I-IV,” as the credits rolled.

    Saturday Night Live returns on May 14 with host Selena Gomez and musical guest Post Malone.

  • Harry Styles To Perform 15 Nights At Madison Square Garden

    Harry Styles has announced his upcoming tour, “Love On Tour 2022” will include 15 performances at Madison Square Garden while showcasing his third studio album, Harry’s House.

    Styles’ fans will have the chance to see him in concert multiple times within each city he visits. In addition to Madison Square Garden, he will stop at the Scotiabank Arena in Toronto, ON for two nights, Moody Center in Austin, TX for five nights, United Center in Chicago, IL for five nights, and lastly Kia Forum in Los Angeles, CA for ten nights.

    Harry is known to be one of the most influential performers and artists of this generation. He has sold out shows a multitude of times, especially within the last year during his tour in 2021. With such a great reputation, Styles’ fans will be in for a treat.

    harry styles Madison Square Garden

    Registration for Ticketmaster’s Verified Fan pre sale tickets are available until May 19 at 10 P.M. ET. After receiving the code, fans will have access to purchase tickets in advance on May 25 at 12 P.M. Meanwhile, for the general public, tickets will drop May 26 at 12 P.M.  

    HARRY STYLES LOVE ON TOUR 2022 DATES:

    Mon Aug 15 –Toronto, ON – Scotiabank Arena is Harry’s House^ 

    Tue Aug 16 – Toronto, ON – Scotiabank Arena is Harry’s House^ 

    Sat Aug 20 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden is Harry’s House*!

    Sun Aug 21 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden is Harry’s House*! 

    Mon Aug 22 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden is Harry’s House*! 

    Fri Aug 26 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden is Harry’s House*! 

    Sat Aug 27 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden is Harry’s House*! 

    Sun Aug 28 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden is Harry’s House* 

    Thu Sep 01 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden is Harry’s House* 

    Fri Sep 02 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden is Harry’s House* 

    Sat Sep 03 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden is Harry’s House* 

    Wed Sep 07 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden is Harry’s House* 

    Thu Sep 08 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden is Harry’s House* 

    Sat Sep 10 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden is Harry’s House* 

    Wed Sep 14 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden is Harry’s House* 

    Thu Sep 15 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden is Harry’s House* 

    Wed Sep 21 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden is Harry’s House* 

    Sun Sep 25 – Austin, TX – Moody Center is Harry’s House~

    Mon Sep 26 – Austin, TX – Moody Center is Harry’s House~

    Wed Sep 28 – Austin, TX – Moody Center is Harry’s House~

    Thu Sep 29 – Austin, TX – Moody Center is Harry’s House~

    Sun Oct 02 – Austin, TX – Moody Center is Harry’s House~

    Thu Oct 06 – Chicago, IL – United Center is Harry’s House#

    Sat Oct 08 – Chicago, IL – United Center is Harry’s House#

    Sun Oct 09 – Chicago, IL – United Center is Harry’s House#

    Thu Oct 13 – Chicago, IL – United Center is Harry’s House#

    Fri Oct 14 – Chicago, IL – United Center is Harry’s House#

    Mon Oct 31 – Los Angeles, CA – Kia Forum is Harry’s House+

    Wed Nov 02 – Los Angeles, CA – Kia Forum is Harry’s House+

    Fri Nov 04 – Los Angeles, CA – Kia Forum is Harry’s House+

    Sat Nov 05 – Los Angeles, CA – Kia Forum is Harry’s House+

    Mon Nov 07 – Los Angeles, CA – Kia Forum is Harry’s House+

    Wed Nov 09 – Los Angeles, CA – Kia Forum is Harry’s House+

    Fri Nov 11 – Los Angeles, CA – Kia Forum is Harry’s House+

    Sat Nov 12 – Los Angeles, CA – Kia Forum is Harry’s House+

    Mon Nov 14 – Los Angeles, CA – Kia Forum is Harry’s House+

    Tue Nov 15 – Los Angeles, CA – Kia Forum is Harry’s House+

    ^Madi Diaz
    *Blood Orange
    ~Gabriels
    #Jessie Ware
    +Ben Harper 

  • Arcade Fire Announce World Tour, Barclays Center Show in November

    On the day they released their sixth album WE, Arcade Fire has announced an extensive tour that features European and North American legs. Arcade Fire makes their way to New York on Friday, November 4th with a stop at Barclays Center in Brooklyn.

    arcade fire tour

    The tour starts in late August at Dublin, Ireland’s 3Arena, and ends in Toronto, Ontario on December 1st at Scotiabank Arena.

    The WE world tour will bring the full production of Arcade Fire’s “must-see live act” (Variety) experience to global stages. For all European dates, Feist will be the special guest, while the North American leg will include Beck performing an acoustic set each night.

    Revisit Arcade Fire’s surprise performance at Bowery Ballroom in March

    Arcade Fire – Bowery Ballroom – photo by Michael David Reichmann

    Tickets for all dates will be on sale to the public beginning Friday, May 13th at 10 am. Arcade Fire has partnered with PLUS1 with $1/£1/€1 per ticket going to KANPE and their work bringing support to the most vulnerable communities in Haiti. Tickets are on sale here.

    Arcade Fire WE Tour 2022

    European Tour

    08/30/22 – Dublin, IE – 3Arena *

    09/02/22 – Birmingham, UK – Utilita Arena Birmingham *

    09/03/22 – Manchester, UK – AO Arena *

    09/05/22 – Glasgow, UK – OVO Hydro *

    09/08/22 – London, UK – The O2 *

    09/11/22 – Lille, FR – Zenith *

    09/12/22 – Antwerp, BE – Sportpaleis *

    09/14/22 – Cologne, DE – Lanxess Arena *

    09/15/22 – Paris, FR – Accor Arena *

    09/17/22 – Milan, IT – Mediolanum Forum *

    09/18/22 – Munich, DE – Olympiahalle *

    09/21/22 – Madrid, ES – WiZink Center *

    09/22/22 – Lisbon, PT – Campo Pequeno *

    09/23/22 – Lisbon, PT – Campo Pequeno *

    09/25/22 – Bordeaux, FR – Arkea Arena *

    09/26/22 – Nantes, FR – Zenith de Nantes *

    09/28/22 – Amsterdam, NL – Ziggo Dome *

    09/29/22 – Berlin, DE – Mercedes Benz Arena *

    10/01/22 – Warsaw, PL – COS Torwar *

    North American Tour

    10/28/22 – Washington, DC – The Anthem ^

    11/01/22 – Camden, NJ – Waterfront Music Pavilion ^

    11/04/22 – Brooklyn, NY – Barclays Center ^

    11/08/22 – Boston, MA – MGM Fenway Music Hall ^

    11/10/22 – Uncasville, CT – Mohegan Sun Arena ^

    11/12/22 – Chicago, IL – United Center ^

    11/13/22 – Minneapolis, MN – The Armory ^

    11/16/22 – Los Angeles, CA – The Kia Forum ^

    11/19/22 – San Francisco, CA – Bill Graham Civic Auditorium ^

    11/22/22 – Seattle, WA – Climate Pledge Arena ^

    11/25/22 – Vancouver, BC – Rogers Arena ^

    11/27/22 – Edmonton, AB – Rogers Place ^

    12/01/22 – Toronto, ON – Scotiabank Arena ^

    * with special guest Feist

    ^ with special guest Beck (acoustic)

  • The Town Pants Announce Final Tour, Buffalo Iron Works show on March 18

    The Canadian Celtic-Folk Rock Band, The Town Pants have announced their final tour as a band with their 25th Anniversary Tour. In March, the band will perform a pair of St. Patrick’s Day shows – on March 17 in Ottawa, Ontario at the Hard Rock Casino on March 17th, and in Buffalo at Buffalo Iron Works on March 18th.

    Town Pants

    The Town Pants were created in 1997 in Vancouver by brothers Duane and Dave Keogh. For the last 25 years the Celtic-Rock Band released eight full length albums, toured Europe five times, headlined major music festivals throughout North America, led three tours of Ireland and Scotland with fans along and now finishing with their 25th Anniversary Celebration Tour for 2022.

    Throughout 2022, the band will return to the regions that have shown tremendous support to the band over the years with their final shows. The band will finish their Anniversary Celebration with a bus tour of Scotland which fans are welcomed to join them on.

    The Town Pants are hosting their online event of the month on March 13th through the platform Side Door Access. Event tickets for all March shows are available by visiting thetownpants.com

    The Town Pants 25th Anniversary Tour Dates:

    3/12: Geneva NY – Smith Opera House

    3/17: Ottawa ON – Hard Rock Casino

    3/18: Buffalo NY – Buffalo Iron Works