Category: NYC Metro

  • Watch The Grateful Dead Haunt Radio City for Three Sets: October 31, 1980

    In September and October 1980, the Grateful Dead did a brief concert tour of shows with three sets each, one acoustic set followed by two electric sets. The acoustic sets were the first ones the band had performed since the early ’70s aside from a few rare one-offs. The final shows of this legendary Dead tour, which yielded both an audio and video release, took place at New York City’s Radio Music Hall with the last one taking place on none other than Halloween. NYS Music, along with a strong lending hand from YouTube, now presents a look back at this holiday gig at one of America’s premier musical venues. 

    Bob Weir greets a raucous Radio City Music Hall to start things off and also says hello to all the “folks who are filtering in to the various theaters around the country.” This show was both simulcasted across the country, apparently, and released to the public the following year on video as Dead Ahead. Things get off to a rocky start with Phil Lesh’s amp producing some decidedly spooky feedback. So he is whisked away and the rest of the band opens with a bass-less instrumental in “Heaven Help The Fool.”

    With Phil and his bass still on the sidelines, Jerry Garcia leads the ensemble through another rare instrumental. This time it’s “Sage and Spirit,” a song that appears on 1975’s Blues For Allah and was only ever played live twice, with this being the last one.

    The Dead keep the rare acoustic hits coming at Radio City with the cover of “Little Sadie” that appears next, with Jerry Garcia on lead vocals. It’s a song that hadn’t appeared live since a show at San Francisco’s Family Dog in 1970 – a dark tale of murder befit for a Halloween show.

    Weir then shifts the theme from “tragedy” to “tragedy narrowly averted” with “Monkey and the Engineer,” which finally sees Phil Lesh and his bass return to the fold.

    “Boy we’re really having fun now,” notes Weir afterwards. Up next, the Dead grace Radio City with “It Must Have Been The Roses.” A staple of Jerry Garcia solo shows in the ’70s, it would go on to be played for the rest of the Dead’s touring career. Garcia seems to visibly enjoy this one coming to life in the Dead setting.

    Up next are two Grateful Dead live staples, starting with a percussion-heavy and crisp “Cassidy.” WIth one small drum kit, Mickey Hart moves over to the congas, after previously utilizing the maracas on “Roses.” This “Cassidy,” which even elicits a bit of a jam, serves as an MTV’s Unplugged-type version of a Dead classic well before the program ever existed.

    This is followed up by “Bird Song,” by far the longest and most experimental of all the first set songs. Garcia leads the way once more with a blistering guitar run and the rest of the band now firing on all cylinders.

    A very enjoyable opening acoustic set of Grateful Dead music then comes to a close with “Ripple,” much to the delight of the Radio City crowd, with special attention paid to the “let there be songs to fill the air” lyric.

    With the acoustic setup gone and the traditional dual drum kits returned, the Dead then go on to play another two sets of electric music at Radio City Music Hall in their typical concert format. The second begins with a vibrant “Jack Straw” that sees Bob Weir bouncing up and down in earnest at one point.

    This is followed by a fairly standard run through of “Cold Rain and Snow” that gets a very warm reception from the New York city crowd at first.

    Bob Weir then takes lead once more and navigates the band through “Me And My Uncle.” With the drum beat never fully stopping, the Dead then slide seamlessly right into “Mexicali Blues,” completing a popular pairing of songs.

    The “first set” vibe of this second set carries right along with “Ramble On Rose.” As expected, Radio City greets the “Just like New York City” line with a massive roar of approval. Garcia graces this version with a pedal steel-esque guitar solo that’s rife with emotion.

    As is their custom, Bob Weir on slide guitar then tags in for lead on the next song, a cover of the blues song “Little Red Rooster.” Garcia is playing slide as well and drops another notable solo and Brent Mydland even gets into the action a little as well with some standout organ play.

    Afterwards, the Dead rip through a pristine take of “Brown Eyed Women,” with Garcia back on lead vocals and Weir and Mydland ably tending to the harmonies.

    From “Women” the music then shifts almost immediately into the ever poignant “Looks Like Rain.”

    The Dead then close out the second set of Halloween at Radio City with a rousing “Deal” that’s carried by the strength of two more powerful Garcia guitar solos.

    To start the third and final set at Radio City, the Dead kick things off with a short but sweet “Don’t Ease Me In.”

    Next, it’s time for another signature pairing of songs, with the Bob Weir-helmed “Lost Sailor” that flows seamlessly right into “Saint Of Circumstance.”

    With the third set energy peaking, Garcia initiates the familiar opening chords of “Franklin’s Tower” and the band is off and running once more. Playing his legendary “Tiger” guitar, Garcia obliterates another run up and down its fret board, spearheading a brief jam that reaches a quick peak before mellowing out and devolving into the “Drums” only portion of the evening.

    Unfortunately, there doesn’t seem to be video of the “Drums” > “Space” sequence for this evening, but emerging from the psychedelic mist are the opening notes to “Fire On The Mountain.” While not necessarily jammed out, it’s a clean and pure take of a Dead classic, with Phil Lesh coming in loud and clear now, his bass issues a thing of the past.

    The band takes a nice, relaxed approach to the introduction of the “Not Fade Away” that follows. The Grateful Dead deliver their own bluesy take of this Buddy Holly cover, with Radio City singing along in earnest.

    Instead of keeping up the pace and stretching it out, however, the tempo slows to a crawl. This sets the stage for Garcia to take lead once more for “Stella Blue” and to unleash one last gorgeous guitar solo.

    As the last notes of “Stella” drop, the Dead immediately steer back into the show’s closing sequence with a blistering cover of “Goin’ Down The Road Feeling Bad.”

    Instead of ending the set right then and there, the Dead throw in one last cover for the Radio City faithful. This time it’s The Young Rascals’ “Good Lovin’,” sung by a spirited Bob Weir in the only way he knows how. He even throws in some Pigpen-esque vocal riffing at the end for good measure as the crowd eats every bit of it up.

    Weir then wishes both the audience at Radio City and everyone else around the country “good night” and the Grateful Dead encore with “Uncle John’s Band,” closing out quite a memorable three-set show in the heart of the city.

    View this and more Grateful Dead shows from across the years in New York State with our interactive map below

    Grateful Dead – Radio City Music Hall – New York, NY 10/31/80

    Set 1: Heaven Help The Fool, Sage And Spirit, Little Sadie, Monkey And The Engineer, It Must Have Been The Roses, Cassidy, Bird Song > Ripple

    Set 2: Jack Straw , Cold Rain And Snow, Me And My Uncle > Mexicali Blues, Ramble On Rose > Little Red Rooster, Brown Eyed Women > Looks Like Rain > Deal

    Set 3: Don’t Ease Me In > Lost Sailor > Saint Of Circumstance > Franklin’s Tower > Drums > Space > Fire On The Mountain > Not Fade Away > Stella Blue > Goin’ Down The Road Feeling Bad > Good Lovin’

    E: Uncle John’s Band

  • Shania Twain Announces Global Tour, July Dates at Lakeview and MSG, and Second Leg in Buffalo

    Country music fixture Shania Twain has released dates for her 2023 Queen of Me Tour, a five month, 49-date run stretching across Canada, the US, and the UK.

    Starting April 28 in Spokane, WA and wrapping up September 26 in Birmingham, England, the tour includes stops in NY on July 8 at St. Joseph’s Health Amphitheater at Lakeview in Syracuse and on the 11th at Madison Square Garden. New Jersey singer-songwriter Breland will feature as a guest performer.

    Due to huge demand, she added a second leg of her tour, stopping in Buffalo on Oct. 20.

    shania twain tour
    Poster for the ‘Queen of Me’ Tour.

    Twain’s tour is in promotion of her upcoming album titled Queen of Me, slated for February 3 release. It’s the sixth studio record from the five-time Grammy Award winner, who owns the title of best-selling female country artist ever.

    Ticket sales for the run begin this Friday, November 4 at 10 a.m.

    SHANIA TWAIN ‘QUEEN OF ME’ 2023 TOUR DATES, LEG 1

    4/28     Spokane, WA             Spokane Arena

    4/29     Seattle, WA                Climate Pledge Arena

    5/02     Vancouver, BC           Rogers Arena

    5/03     Vancouver, BC           Rogers Arena

    5/05     Edmonton, AB            Rogers Place

    5/06     Edmonton, AB            Rogers Place

    5/09     Calgary, AB                Scotiabank Saddledome

    5/10     Calgary, AB                Scotiabank Saddledome

    5/12     Saskatoon, SK            SaskTel Centre

    5/14     Winnipeg, MB             Canada Life Centre

    5/16     Madison, WI               Kohl Center

    5/17     St Paul, MN                Xcel Energy Center

    5/19     Lincoln, NE                 Pinnacle Bank Arena

    5/21     Denver, CO                Ball Arena

    5/24     Salt Lake City, UT      USANA Amphitheatre

    5/26     Mountain View, CA     Shoreline Amphitheatre

    5/28     Los Angeles, CA         Hollywood Bowl

    5/30     Phoenix, AZ                Ak-Chin Pavilion

    5/31     Thousand Palms, CA Acrisure Arena

    6/03     Tulsa, OK                   BOK Center

    6/04     St. Louis, MO              Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre STL

    6/07     Nashville, TN              GEODIS Park

    6/09     Camden, NJ               Freedom Mortgage Pavilion

    6/12     Halifax, NS                 Scotiabank Centre

    6/14     Moncton, NB               Avenir Centre

    6/17     Quebec City, QC        Videotron Centre

    6/18     Montreal, QC              Bell Centre

    6/20     Hamilton, ON              FirstOntario Centre

    6/21     London, ON                Budweiser Gardens

    6/23     Toronto, ON                Budweiser Stage

    6/24     Toronto, ON                Budweiser Stage

    6/27     Columbia, MD             Merriweather Post Pavilion

    6/28     Charlotte, NC              PNC Music Pavilion

    6/30     Cuyahoga Falls, OH   Blossom Music Center

    7/01     Tinley Park, IL            Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre

    7/06     Ottawa, ON                 Ottawa Bluesfest

    7/08     Syracuse, NY             St Joseph’s Health Amphitheater at Lakeview

    7/09     Mansfield, MA             Xfinity Center

    7/11     New York, NY             Madison Square Garden

    7/13     Burgettstown, PA        The Pavilion at Star Lake

    7/15     Noblesville, IN            Ruoff Music Center

    7/19     Kansas City, MO        T-Mobile Center

    7/21     Dallas, TX                   Dos Equis Pavilion

    7/22     Houston, TX               Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion

    9/16​     London, UK                 The O2

    9/19     ​Dublin, IRE                 3Arena

    9/22 ​    Glasgow, UK               OVO Hydro

    9/25 ​    Manchester, UK          AO Arena

    9/26 ​    Birmingham, UK         ​ Utilita Arena Birmingham

    SHANIA TWAIN ‘QUEEN OF ME’ 2023 TOUR DATES, LEG 2

    10/12   San Antonio, TX         AT&T Center

    10/13   Fort Worth, TX            Dickies Arena

    10/16   Knoxville, TN              Thompson Boling Arena

    10/18   Raleigh, NC                PNC Arena

    10/20   Buffalo, NY                  KeyBank Center

    10/22   Toronto, ON                Scotiabank Arena

    10/24   Quebec City, QC        Videotron Centre

    10/25   Montreal, QC              Bell Centre

    10/27   Columbus, OH            Schottenstein Center

    10/28   Louisville, KY              KFC Yum! Center

    10/31   Milwaukee, WI            Fiserv Forum

    11/02   Omaha, NE                 CHI Health Center

    11/03   Des Moines, IA           Wells Fargo Arena

    11/05   Fargo, ND                   FARGODOME

    11/07   Winnipeg, MB             Canada Life Centre

    11/09   Saskatoon, SK            Sasktel Centre

    11/11   Calgary, AB                 Scotiabank Saddledome

    11/12   Edmonton, AB             Rogers Place

    11/14   Vancouver, BC           Rogers Arena

  • Flushing Town Hall to Host QWANQWA & NEA Jazz Masters

    In the next three weeks, Flushing Town Hall will welcome new and old, hosting Ethiopian experimental band QWANQWA and their 16th Annual NEA Jazz Masters concert.

    QWANQWA, who are on their debut U.S. tour, are the Flushing Town Hall’s next performers on Saturday. October 29. Based in Ethiopia’s capital city of Addis Ababa, the five-piece was formed in 2012 by violinist Kaethe Hostetter.

    Qwanqwa
    QWANQWA members from left to right: Bubu Teklamariam, Endriss Hansen, Selamnesh Zemene, Misale Leggese, and Kaethe Hostetter.

    QWANQWA also consists of percussionist Misale Legesse, vocalist Selamnesh Zemene Taye, Endres Hassan, player of the masingo, a one-stringed traditional Ethiopian instrument, and Anteneh “Bubu” Teklemariam Barago, player of the bass krar, a five-stringed traditional Ethiopian instrument.

    QWANQWA describes their music as “intersectional,” combining elements of rock, psychedelic, and regional beats from Addis Ababa.

    Qwanqwa
    NEA Jazz Masters from left to right: Wycliffe Gordon, Danny Mixon, Terri Lyne Carrington, Jimmy Owens, Camille Thurman, Kenny Davis.

    The NEA Jazz Masters, led by trumpeter Jimmy Owen, will perform at the town hall on Saturday, November 12 at 8 p.m. With over 45 years experience as a jazz trumpeter, composer, arranger, lecturer, and music education consultant, he’ll be joined on stage by five musicians.

    Drummer Terri Lyne Carrington is a three-time Grammy Award winner, and the newest member of the group. Camille Thurman is a composer, multi-instrumentalist, and vocalist who has performed on the same stage as Wynton Marsalis, Janelle Monae, Erykah Badu.

    Wycliffe Gordon has been named “Trombonist of the Year” by The Jazz Journalists Association a record 13 times and has topped the Downbeat Critics Poll for “Best Trombone” an unprecedented six times. Daniel Asbury Mixon’s 50+ year piano career has taken him to the White House. Bassist Kenny Davis has toured with artists such as Herbie Hancock and led “The Tonight Show” band from 1999 to 2002.

  • Sub Lights Release New EP ‘Half-Life’

    NYC’s Sub Lights have just released their newest EP Half-Life, an album that describes how if you only live in the past or for the future, you miss the present. Thus, marking the duo’s second release following last year’s Medicine EP and a pair of successful debut shows in Manhattan.

    Sub Lights Announce New EP Half-Life

    The band has also released a new video for another track from this project, titled “Hell’s Kitchen Sink.”

    To the artists, the challenge of making music as a duo has inspired them to put together a small studio in their new home in New York City, an effort that went into overdrive during the 2020 lockdowns. Their new Half-Life EP marks the duo’s second release, following last year’s Medicine.

    “Big and brash electropop from this NY duo that centers blazing hooks amidst spiraling guitars and sizzling synths.”

    Bandcamp New and Notable 

    “Music should be fun, it’s entertainment after all,” states Stephen. “But it’s also art and part of the purpose of art is to allow listeners to explore different ways of being. That’s our goal: to offer the chance to explore a bit of social consciousness along with fun.” 

    “Sub lights has a distinct electronic sound . . . sure to get you in your feels. . . . an incredible atmosphere. . . . creative and fun. More music from Sub lights is on the way; be on the lookout.”

    Road Trips & Playlists 

    “The idea was to transform traditionally-written songs, mostly played on piano or acoustic guitar, into our indie-electronic style,” says the Stephen. “Lyrically, we wanted to try to capture the kind of social melancholy coming out of the pandemic and the Trump years, but then express that in a hopeful way. Like, life is tough and can be really sad, but even then people are amazing and able to find joy by connecting with each other. We also wanted to take our music seriously without taking ourselves too seriously—it’s a fine line, but I admire artists who can pull that off. But also I’m a college history professor and fairly politically active, so there’s always an element of the big picture mixed in there too, grand themes of what it means to be human and all that.”  

    Sub Lights Announce New EP Half-Life


    Half-Life has multiple meanings as it relates to the album,” continues Meredith. “It is one of the key lines in ‘Strange New Breed,’ and it is a way to describe how if you only live in the past or for the future, you miss the present, so essentially it feels like you are only experiencing half of your life at any given moment… It’s also my word for what deep depression feels like. All these missed opportunities, just watching life go by from your bed.  ‘Black & White’ and ‘Rockville’ are songs about the past. ‘Traffic’ and ‘Hell’s Kitchen Sink’ are about living in the moment which is the only time we can experience the full interconnectedness of life, that we are all the same.”                            

    Sub Lights Announce New EP Half-Life

    “I think some of our songs conceptually resemble protest music,” says Merideth. “Common themes are anti-religion, anti-patriarchy, anti-unfettered capitalism, anti-fascism. Think for yourself, question things, wake up, be kind.” 

  • Ladies Love Cool Jazz: LL Cool J Reimagined

    Following his collaborative album with the legendary Eric B. & Rakim, Jonathan Hay and company have decided to tackle another iconic artist from the golden era of New York hip-hop and reimagine it as jazz. This time around, the billboard charting Hay and co. will look to channel hip hop’s first superstar, LL Cool J, into a 14-track jazz album of quintessential LL songs. Slated for a January 13-14 release (LL’s birthday), LL Cool Jazz, will look to repeat the success of Follow the Leader (Reimagined As Jazz), which spent 11-consecutive weeks at the top of the Billboard Jazz charts.

    LL Cool J
    LL Cool Jazz will reimagine hip hop’s first superstar

    Ladies Love Cool Jazz

    Jazz music and hip hop have long been distant cousins, with both genres rooted in similar strife. Despite the generational gap, rap music’s edginess was built on the back of Jazz’s more controlled chaos. In light, hip hop’s rhythms could not exist without the Jazz Symphonies to inspire it.

    Similarly, Jazz runs deep in LL Cool J’s blood. His grandfather was a saxophonist and helped jumpstart a young LL. “They embraced me, they built me up. They made me believe in myself,” LL said of his grandparents, with his trademark bravado leading him all the way to a Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction.

    Like all of our music, when Rakim and I first sat down to write and record Follow the Leader, we took inspiration from our Jazz icons in creating its signature sound,

    – Eric B revealed in promotion for their collaboration with Hay.

    Moreover, LL is no stranger to hip hop and jazz working synonymously. The Rick Rubin produced single “Going Back to Cali” — released over 34 years ago on Def Jam Records — showed the versatility of a young LL. The song opens with a memorable jazz and horn intro, along with a saxophone solo, something completely different for hip-hop at the time. 

     Recording sessions for LL Cool Jazz will take place in Brooklyn, with some of the final step mixing at Quad Studios in Manhattan. Additionally, the album will be distributed through Fat Beats Records.

    LL Cool J is a true pioneer who changed the sound of modern music as we know it. I can’t wait for the world to hear LL Cool Jazz. Now that the pandemic is in our rearview, our team is back on the road with its aggressive mission of bringing back jazz music to pop cultural relevance. What I’ve learned so far on this journey is that ladies love cool jazz, so it’s appropriate that we are reimagiing hip-hop’s first sex symbol.

    – Jonathan Hay
  • World Music Institute Presents Habib Koité at City Winery on November 13

    Considered by Rolling Stone to be the biggest pop star from Mali, guitarist and composer Habib Koité has been called the biggest pop star in West Africa. He’ll perform at City Winery in Manhattan on Sunday, November 13, presented by World Music Institute.

    Habib Koité

    Hailing from the musically prolific West African nation of Mali, Habib Koité is a modern-day troubadour descended from a noble line of griots, from whom he inherited his passion for music. His grandfather played the kamele n’goni – a traditional string instrument associated with the legendary hunters from the Wassoulou region of Mali.

    Koité is perhaps best known for his danssa doso, a unique blend of local rhythms with traditional hunter’s music, and often plays his guitar on open strings in the style of a n’goni. His latest studio album Kharifa, released in 2019, was recorded in Bamako and is rich with the musical traditions and instruments of his country.

    Founded in 1985 as a not-for-profit, World Music Institute (WMI) has served as one of the leading presenters of world music and dance within the United States. WMI is committed to presenting the best in traditional and contemporary music and dance from around the world with the goal of inspiring wonder for the world’s rich cultural traditions, promoting awareness and appreciation and encouraging cross-cultural dialog and exchange. WMI presents at venues throughout the city and depends on both public and private funding to accomplish its mission. 

    The show on November 13 starts at 8pm, with doors at 6pm. Tickets are $30-45, available here.

  • Fake Dad Release Alt-pop Single “New Machines”

    Brooklyn alt-pop duo Fake Dad have just announced their newest aesthetic release “New Machines” out on November 10th. The single is dreamy yet electrifying, overall capturing the nostalgic experience of younger generations who have grown up in a world characterized by tragedy and fear. 

    Fake Dad Release Alt-pop Single "New Machines"

    This particular single reflects on global stressors like climate crisis, “New Machines” channels a care-free sound reflective of the consistent lack of seriousness society seems to meet very real issues with. “New Machines” is also a powerful follow-up to their most recent single, “Painkiller,” that caught the attention of esteemed indie music tastemakers like Ones to Watch and A1234, who premiered the single.  

    “We hope that the upbeat sound on New Machines is motivating and empowering to anyone feeling dejected, anxious, and emotionally burdened. Most of all, we hope this makes every listener feel a little less alone in this scary mess of a world.”

    – Fake Dad

    Fake dad fans still obsess over their anthemic June single“How Do I Cry?,” which landed itself on eight major Spotify editorial playlists like All New Indie and Indie Arrivals. Fake dad release some of the most aesthetic songs and share their conceptual ideas with their listeners. Thus, their newest single “New Machines,” which is dreamy yet electrifying with a nostalgic taste, will surely do that.

    Fake Dad Release Alt-pop Single "New Machines"

    Fake dad, also known as Andrea de Varona and Josh Ford, have made music together in their studio apartment since 2018. The duo had designated their roles within the band and have worked with a variety of up and coming artists. Both artists come from different musical backgrounds, but they do share one common goal. And that goal is to create something that understands the listener. Both Andrea and Josh wanted to create music that comforted people, especially if the listener had a rough day in life, stated in a previous article from NYS Music.

    To listen to Fake dad’s newest release “New Machines,” click the link to Soundcloud here.

    And to read more about Fake dad from NYS Music, click the link here.

  • Rock and Roll Playhouse Announces Halloween Concert Run, Several NY Dates

    The Rock and Roll Playhouse, a family concert series, has announced a nationwide run of shows for Halloween weekend, with four happening in NY.

    Running from Saturday, October 29 to Sunday, October 30, the classic rock-themed series will feature 18 shows cross country.

    As for NY’s concerts, day one will include a Tom Petty tribute show at Garcia’s at the Capitol Theatre in Port Chester, and a “New Orleans Funk & Soul” themed Halloween party at Brooklyn’s Industry City featuring Black Tie Brass. The doors of Garcia’s will open at 1:30 p.m. before music begins at 2, while Industry City’s show will run from 1 to 2.

    On day two for the Playhouse, Brooklyn Bowl will open its doors for a “Halloween Spectacular” show at 11 a.m. before music starts at noon, and City Winery Hudson Valley in Montgomery will open its doors for its own Halloween-themed concert at 10:30 a.m. before music also starts at noon.

    The Rock and Roll Playhouse was founded in 2013 at the Brooklyn Bowl by Amy Striem, a NJ-based youth educator, and Peter Shapiro, co-owner of the Brooklyn Bowl and owner of the Capitol Theatre. Since its beginning, the program has held performances in over 42 venues across 30 cities for its core audience of children under 10.

    List of Weekend Shows:

    October 29:

    Bluebird Theater – Phish (Denver, CO)

    Pour House – Phish (Charleston, SC)

    Garcia’s – Tom Petty (Port Chester, NY)

    Sevier Park – David Bowie (Nashville, TN)

    Industry City – New Orleans Funk & Soul (Brooklyn, NY)

    October 30:

    Brooklyn Bowl New York – Halloween Spooktacular (Brooklyn, NY)

    Brooklyn Bowl Philadelphia – Prince (Philadelphia, PA) 

    Last Concert Cafe – Grateful Dead (Houston, TX)

    Portland House of Music – Phish (Portland, ME)

    The Espee – Grateful Dead (San Antonio,TX)

    The Grey Eagle – Grateful Dead (Asheville, NC)

    Thalia Hall – Phish (Chicago, IL)

    Mission Theater (AM Show) – Grateful Dead (Portland, OR)

    Mission Theater (PM Show) – Grateful Dead (Portland, OR)

    City Winery Hudson Valley – Halloween Spooktacular (Hudson Valley, NY)

    The Spanish Ballroom – Grateful Dead (Tacoma, WA)

    Woodlands Tavern – Grateful Dead (Columbus, OH)

    Space Ballroom – Grateful Dead (Hamden, CT)

  • DM Stith Releases Spiritual Cover of “Man on the Moon” by R.E.M.

    There are song covers, and then there’s what DM Stith did to R.E.M.’s “Man on the Moon.” Stith’s remake is transformative, turning the hazy guitar pop tune into an ethereal 13-minute drone piece.

    Having dropped on October 14th, this remake is the upstate NY-based graphic artist and musician’s first release since his 2020 EP Waving 1-4. It’s also the first release on new NYC label Historical Fiction Records.

    Man on the Moon DM Stith
    DM Stith.

    In terms of soundscape, this cover is oriented around a fluttering piano melody and an ambient assembly of synths in the background with ghastly vocals which enter and exit throughout the track. Stith slows down the tempo to a crawl, allowing each lyric plenty of time to sink in. His whisper-like vocal performance doesn’t stray far from Michael Stipe’s original take, emphasizing the subtlety which Stith aims for.

    Reinforcing this approach, he eschews R.E.M.’s upbeat chorus and zones in on its wistful verses. He adds lyrics of his own, complementing lines such as “Mr. Andy Kaufman’s gone wrestling” with other abstract musings such as “D’Angelo’s Voodoo over first person shooters” and “Mom is sinking deeper into CNN.”

    Stith’s atmospheric take on the song also gives new power to lines from Stipe such as “Newton got beaned by the apple, good” and “Mr. Charles Darwin had the gall to ask” which admire two people who changed the boundaries of conventional thought.

    While drawn out, this cover’s sound is powerful, getting louder and slowly adding layers as it progresses. Eight minutes of buildup is rewarded in the song’s instrumental outro, which for several minutes repeats the same idea found throughout the track but with waves of distorted, torrential noise.

    Stith repeats the lyric “let’s play Twister, let’s play risk” numerous times in his cover, and fittingly so, because he most surely took risks. He abandoned a revered R.E.M. track’s song structure, instrumentation, and didn’t remotely adhere to its pacing, but still made a powerful and successful cover that earned the acclaim of Michael Stipe himself, who said “DM Stith whispers with hypnotic, bone-deep authenticity, somewhere between Nina Simone, Perfume Genius, PJ Harvey and Leonard Cohen.”

    DM Stith’s remake of “Man on the Moon” is a shocking and moving rendition that masters the art of the cover track.

  • NNAMDÏ to play Baby’s All Right on US Tour

    NNAMDÏ, the genre bending rapper, singer and producer from Chicago will be coming to the East coast on Friday, October 28 to play Baby’s All Right in Brooklyn. The rapper has been releasing music since 2013, but his latest record is some of his most technical yet.

    NNAMDÏ

    “Dedication,” track nine on NNAMDÏ’s newest album Please Have A Seat, contains a myriad of influence and originality. The song starts out with squeaky sounds, like two balloons rubbing against each other, in a “Thug Tears” by JPEGMAFIA type of avant garde, deconstructed beat. Then it breaks down into a Tierra Whack-esque perky r&b beat, which NNAMDÏ sing-raps over in a simple monotonous sound. But not even a minute later the song explodes, with layered melodies that evoke Kanye’s gospel choirs. By the time the song ends, with sparkly electric ad-libs and harmonious voices chanting, “It’s dedication,” I can barely remember how it started.

    These hops from genre to genre are performed absolutely seamlessly; you don’t even realize it has happened by the time it is over. It’s that consistent inconsistency that defines NNAMDÏ himself; in his songs, performances and personality.

    NNAMDÏ came up in the Chicago DIY scene but he broke into the mainstream in 2020 with his eclectic album BRAT. His previous albums had a rep for being weird and inaccessible, so in this album NNAMDÏ set out to make a “hummable” album, hoping to reach a wider audience. 

    I consciously wanted to make more communal things, some things that bring people together rather than alienate them — even though I love music that is dissonant and jarring and sometimes off in different ways.

    NNAMDÏ, as told to FADER.

    In the next months, NNAMDÏ is heading on a tour across the US that will finish in London and Berlin. He’ll be at Baby’s All Right in Brooklyn on October 29, click here for tickets. On October 30, he’ll be doing a Q&A and record signing at Rough Trade NYC. 

    NNAMDÏ Tour Dates

    October 18 –  Davenport, IA – The Raccoon Motel 

    October 19 –  Minneapolis, MN –  7th St. Entry 

    October 20 –  Milwaukee, WI – Cactus Club

    October 22 –  Chicago, IL – Metro 

    October 24 –  Cleveland, OH – Mahall’s 

    October 25 – Toronto, ON –  The Garrison 

    October 26 – Montreal, QC – Diving Bell Social Club 

    October 27 – Johnson, VT –  Northern Vermont University 

    October 28 – Boston, MA – Crystal Ballroom 

    October 29 – Brooklyn, NY – Baby’s All Right 

    November 1 – Philadelphia, PA – PhilaMOCA 

    November 2 – Washington, DC – Comet Ping Pong 

    November 3 – Durham, NC – Pinhook 

    November 4 –  Atlanta, GA – 529

    November 5 – Nashville, TN – DRKMTTR

    November 11 –  London, UK – Pitchfork London

    November 14 – Berlin, Germany – Sooper Secretly Slang @ Marie-Antoinette