Category: Western NY

  • Westside Gunn Premieres Music Video for “Peppas”

    Westside Gunn the self-pronounced FlyGod continues to impress with his curation of albums and music videos.

    “Peppas” is the latest video off of Westside Gunn’s new album, 10 and features legendary hip hop duo, Black Star. Getting the seldom featured duo of Yaiin Bey and Talib Kweli on a track is a major coup for Westside. The legendary Brooklyn rhymers have made sure to not oversaturate their sound, going over two decades in-between albums. For the “Peppas” video, Westside bridges the gap between the “hood” and the glamors of the hip hop world. The visual of legendary hip hop figures returning to where it all began, just kicking it on the block adds a down-to-earth feel to the abstract sounding record. A juxtaposition that leans on the fact that most rappers earn their stripes in these communities, thus it’s all one big cycle.

    Visual Breakdown

    The record’s title itself is the name of a popular Jamaican restaurant in Bedford-Stuyvesant, one of Brooklyn’s more renowned neighborhoods. The Conducter Williams produced track features the typical ear catching soul samples that fans have come to expect from a Westside project. Additionally, Kweli, Bey, and their abstract and philosophical rhymes serve as the perfect foil to Westside Gunn’s in your face style.

    Furthermore, each rapper’s verse conveys a similar message in their own way: their view of the world while subsequently letting you know how great they are. Concurrently, they gather with their homies on the block, enjoying the food and mingling with the restaurant staff. The entire record and video plays on the theme of the varying personalities and minds in the hood. Although a group of black males hanging around the block may be stylized as one, there are various personalities, ideologies and general life ethos at play within that group dynamic.

    Best Lyrics

    Matte-black dynamite, blast radials, black radio
    Core capability, flaco facility
    Fly guy, do or die, Bed-Stuy energy

    – Yasiin Bey
    Embed from Getty Images

    Claimin’ La Costra Nostra, we in love with the coca
    They hit niggas with the R.I.C.O., white people put it in cola
    For generational wealth, they standin’ on they ancestor’s shoulders
    After burnin’ down Tulsa, Oklahoma

    – Talib Kweli
    Embed from Getty Images

    My favorite fiend went to rehab
    Two weeks later, he was back a addict again
    He was three dollars short, had to drag him from the Benz wagon again

    – Westside Gunn

    Lastly, FlyGod.

    Embed from Getty Images
  • Sweats Hit All Bases on “I End Where You Begin”

    Finger Lakes rock band Sweats has released their second studio album, I End Where You Begin, a 50-minute project showcasing strong musicianship and vulnerable lyricism. A multi-disciplinary record, incorporating elements of bluegrass, hard rock, and funk, the band also shows no mind to brevity, with most of the project’s 10 songs angling towards the five-minute mark with solos abound.

    sweats i end where you begin
    Cover art for I End Where You Begin by the Sweats.

    This approach is well introduced on “Indulgent Days,” a swinging opener with subtle, echoey verses contrasting the noisy, pounding chorus. It also sets the tone for the record’s lustful lyrical approach, with lines in the chorus such as “license to misbehave, you can’t take em to your grave, these indulgent days.”

    Relatively playful, the album’s opener contrasts a bit from what follows. The next track “Broken Life” features a dark lead riff, screechy rhythm guitars, and a menacing hook. “You and I pick up the pieces of a broken life, hold em together see they fit right if we hold each other tight,” the chorus articulates. “Broken Life” is also a great example of the record’s dynamics, with bendy soloing, cymbal crashing, and urgent vocals highlighting the track’s climax.

    This continues for the following two tracks. The guitar work on “Whiskey Thursday” is both urgent and dream-like, with an urgent keyboard riff on the verses setting the tone for a moody track that maybe shows off the best solo on the album. The album’s impressive drum work is on display for the funky grunge-like “Lose My Mind,” with moments of creepy, metal-esque vocal delivery, and forboding lines such as “he sleeps through days and is up all night, he said ‘it’s always dark before you see the light.’”

    The record’s tone doesn’t stay this way though, with playful moments such as “Strawberry Girl,” an upbeat funk rock cut with lyrics like “juices are on my chin, summer nights begin,” and the danceable piano rock of “Holding Hands” with a romantic mantra being repeated for the last minute of the song: “I know you’re getting tired of the way things have to be, you don’t ever get tired of dreaming away with me.”

    When I End Where You Begin isn’t angsty or cheery, it has its stretches of lust and melancholy. On “Witchoo,” the song’s jagged guitar solo adds expression to its slow, subdued approach, assisting wistful lines such as “thinking of the right things to say and do, as I dream away the night time just trying to be with you.”

    “Nicks,” the longest song on the album at nearly seven minutes, marks the record’s emotional point as its penultimate track. “I saw you with a friend of mine I hadn’t seen in years, you saw me with a soggy mind after a couple beers,” the opening line articulates. While also subdued, the song’s two solos and explosive outro make the emotional payoff of the song all the more visible.

    The album’s final track “Too Many Cooks” is much more playful and laid back than what comes before it, with sardonic lyrics that almost seem political. “Everything’s broke, no one needs fixin, everything’s a joke, nobody’s gigglin’, and if you see smoke don’t be surprised, it’s just the world on fire,” the chorus articulates. It’s a closer which doesn’t relate much to the rest of the record, but it still fits, covering a bit of extra musical ground.

    Overall, I End Where You Begin is a strong album with impressive showings of musicianship on each track. Its lyrics are personal, it covers plenty of stylistic territory, and finishes right where it feels right.

  • Parker McCollum To Close Summer 2023 Tour in Buffalo and Syracuse

    On Monday, Nov. 21, country’s beloved Parker McCollum announced the extension of his 2023 tour. Dates revealed for the second leg of his upcoming tour for this summer, which includes a performance at the ArtPark in Buffalo on August 17 and St. Joseph’s Health Amphitheatre at Lakeview in Syracuse on August 19.

    Parker McCollum
    Parker McCollum (Photo Credit: Chris Kleinmeier)

    The second part of the Texas native’s tour is to be co-produced through the collaboration of Live Nation and Emporium Presents and will feature support from rising country artists including Larry Fleet, Jackson Dean and the Randy Rogers Band. McCollum is scheduled to close off his tour in New York on August 19 in Syracuse.

    Parker McCollum 2023 Tour Dates

    May 18 2023 – Toledo, OH -Toledo Zoo Amphitheater *with Larry Fleet

    June 3 2023 – Wilmington, NC – Live Oak Bank Pavilion *with Jackson Dean

    June 9 2023 – Midland, TX – La Hacienda Event Center *with Larry Fleet

    June 10 2023 – Dallas, TX – Dos Equis Pavilion *with Larry Fleet

    June 24 2023 – Indianapolis, IN – TCU Amphitheatre at White River State Park *support TBD

    June 29 2023 – Saint Augustine, FL – The St. Augustine Amphitheatre *with Larry Fleet

    July 14 2023 – Huntsville AL – The Orion Amphitheatre *with Flatland Cavalry

    July 29 2023 – Nampa ID – Ford Idaho Center Amphitheater *with Jackson Dean

    August 10 2023 – Morrison CO – Red Rocks Amphitheatre *with Randy Rogers Band

    August 17 2023 – Buffalo NY – ARTPARK *with Larry Fleet

    August 19 2023 – Syracuse NY – St. Joseph’s Health Amphitheatre at Lakeview *with Larry Fleet

    Tickets can be bought here.

  • Five Must-See Shows in Rochester This December

    We’ve got five must-see music suggestions to end your year this December here in Rochester. From the 1st to the 31st, we’ve got you covered. So work off that holiday meal, take a load off your holiday shopping stress, and get down and groovy with these great shows coming to town. Get out and celebrate a full (relatively) unimpeded year of live music!

    rochester shows december
    Rochester

    December 1 – Charlie Parr at Arbor Loft

    Right off the bat we’ve got an incredible musician coming to town on the first of the month. You can’t really go wrong with an Honest Folk show, really you shouldn’t miss anyone they’re bringing in, but this show in particular is a bit extra as the kids say. As far as folk music goes, you’re not going to get much better than Charlie Parr these days. A scraggly looking Minnesotan, he’ll finger pick some blues tunes that’ll pierce your soul, up above the lit-up East End streets.

    Show starts at 8pm and tickets are $30.

    December 3 – The Sadies at Skylark Lounge

    Rochester has been fortunate to be a longtime regular stop for Toronto’s The Sadies. Tragically they lost their founding member Dallas Good earlier this year. Though they are persevering, getting the band back on the road just recently with a tour of Europe. They’re blowing through town with a stop at the hole-in-the-wall Skylark Lounge, where they last played mere days before the pandemic shutdown. This will both rock and roll.

    Show starts at 10pm and tickets are $15/$20dos.

    December 15 – Angela Perley at Abilene Bar and Lounge

    You gotta love a venue with a well-curated show schedule. Danny Deutsch, who both owns and books Abilene, knows good music. So when he books a band multiple times, you should take notice. When he books a band multiple times in the same year, you better go see why. He’s got Angela Perley back at the joint after she played back this August. Time then to get out to see what her “cosmic swirl of alt-country, psychedelic rock, and amplified Americana” is all about.

    Show starts at 7:30 and tickets are $12/$15dos

    December 30 – Giant Panda Guerrilla Dub Squad at Water Street Music Hall

    Water Street Music Hall is closing out the year with an excellent one-two punch of live music. Rochester’s favorite roots rock reggae band Giant Panda Guerilla Dub Squad opens up the festive weekend with their homecoming blast. They’re bringing Notorious B.I.G. cover band The Frank White Experience and local groovers The Sideways along for the ride as well as other surprise guests. Both sides of the club will be open and rocking so don’t miss out on this night of music and revelry.

    Show starts at 8 and tickets are $25 presale.

    December 31 – Aqueous at Water Street Music Hall

    One night later, Buffalo jam mavens Aqueous return to Rochester for some more heady goodness. Aqueous has long found a second home here and never let us down. If you’re looking for a New Year’s Eve that stretches and elongates and parties on until 2022 is no longer visible in the rear view, Water Street is the place to be. The Funky Dawgz and The Pickle Mafia round out the evening but as with Giant Panda, there are sure to be more “friends” popping up on stage.

    Show starts at 7pm and tickets are $25.

    That’s it for this month, see you out at the shows and see you back here next year!

  • Duke Ellington Visits Buffalo During Wartime – November 27, 1943

    On Saturday, November 27, 1943, Duke Ellington and his Orchestra performed in Buffalo at the Trico Products Factory, for a performance that was broadcast on the NBC Blue Network. The show was recorded for the Coca-Cola Spotlight Parade of Bands #372, part of the Victory Parade of Spotlight Bands. The recording was preserved through Special Services and the Internet Archive.

    The Trico Factory made windshield wipers and was located at 817 Washington Street, before closing in 2002 after 85 years of operating on the edge of Downtown Buffalo. Where in the building – one that used electroplating, smelting, die-casting, rubber extrusion and metal fabrication – this show took place is as mystery, but all indications point to Trico Products Factory as the venue for this performance.

    Most recently, construction on the Trico Building began in September 2022 to convert the factory into loft apartments, a modern repurposing of a building that had been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 2001.

    With the Second World War having been on the front pages of newspapers and forefront of American minds for nearly two years, various military bases and defense plants across the country hosted shows like this one. As a method of paying for the venue space, the promoter and/or artist would simply provide the recordings to Special Services who would repackage them as “Victory Parade” for the Air Force Recruiting Service.

    Musicians including Benny Goodman, Charlie Barnet, Les Brown, Guy Lombardo, Ted Fio Rito, Jack Teagarden, Louis Armstrong, Lawrence Welk, as well as the Duke Ellington performance in Buffalo, and many others, would be featured on the program, with broadcasts beginning with a bugle call. A roll call would then start with the band leader, the band members and then the workers at the facility the show was visiting, all giving a military accent to the performance. Old Time Radio Catalog notes that Victory Parade recordings are some of the best of the Swing Era.

    duke ellington buffalo

    Coca-Cola Spotlight Bands was a notable, if not important and influential music radio series that debuted just days before the attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. The series initially had various popular bands, instead of just one specific band, and was aired on Mutual Broadcasting System stations six nights a week. From Monday through Friday, a 15-minute program would be broadcast nationally at 10:15-10:30 p.m ET. On Saturday evenings, a 30-minute program would be broadcast at 10:15-10:45 p.m. ET, which would feature the artists with the largest national record sales for the previous week. The identity of the band was kept secret from the national audience until the program went on the air, in order to attract a larger audience.

    In August, 1942, Coca-Cola entered into agreement with the Blue Network (formerly the NBC Blue Network) launching the revised “Spotlight Bands” series. The Blue Network was the former NBC Blue Network. In 1945, Blue would become the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) after being purchased by Edward J. Noble. Music historian Wayne Knight notes “Not only did Coca Cola send the bands to these locations at their expense, but, each time, the bands were booked and paid to play a three hour engagement.”

    NBC Blue Network logo

    With Blue having a wider audience than Mutual Broadcasting System, Coca-Cola and the Blue Network entered into a new 26-week agreement and the name of the program was changed to “The Victory Parade of Spotlight Bands.” The weeknight programs were extended from 15 minutes to 25 minutes, airing at 9:30-9:55 p.m ET, with the last five minutes of the half-hour devoted to news.

    Listeners directly influenced the bands which would appear, with two polls – one by civilians and one by service personnel and workers at defense plants – replacing record sales as the criteria. The second series launched on September 21, 1942, with Harry James performing at the Marine Barracks, Parris Island, South Carolina. Click here to read more about Victory Parade Of Spotlight Bands.

    An advertising segment of this Duke Ellington performance in Buffalo begins halfway through the recording, with the announcer saying, “From an American soldier somewhere a few thousand miles away, comes a letter with these words.” A second voice says “I’ll tell you another thing I would sure go for right now and that’s a Coca-Cola. My mouth is absolutely watering for one.” While it is doubtful a GI would write an ode to Coca-Cola in a letter home, brands of all sizes showed their support for the war effort, building war propaganda into advertising. The announcer ends the ad spot, saying “For many Americans overseas, that Coke is not so far away, because Coca-Cola is bottled in 35 allied and neutral countries ’round the globe, and there, our soldiers, by the thousands, enjoy the goodness of its cheery refreshment, just as you do at home.”

    Giving the listening audience a sense of normalcy among soldiers stationed abroad is punctuated by connecting the listener at home to the soldiers, uniting the war effort to the sugary goodness of this all-American beverage. A commercial from 1944 or 1945 can be seen below, hammering home the Americanness of Coca-Cola, something that German soldier were not unfamiliar with and unable to enjoy. Watch until the end for a surprise bottle opener.

    Meanwhile on that day in World War 2, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Prime Minister of England, Winston Churchill, and President Chiang Kai-shek of the Republic of China were meeting at the Cairo Conference in agreeing to the Cairo Declaration, which said that “all the territories Japan has stolen from the Chinese, such as Manchuria, Formosa, and The Pescadores, shall be restored to the Republic of China” and that U.S., the U.K. and China “covet no gain for themselves and have no thought of territorial expansion”, setting instead the goal that “Japan will also be expelled from all other territories which she has taken by violence and greed” and “that in due course Korea shall become free and independent.”

    Meanwhile, the Battle of Wareo began between Australian and Japanese troops in New Guinea, and the Army–Navy Game was played at West Point, with No. 6 Navy defeating No. 7 Army by a score of 13–0. Only 15,000 spectators were on hand due to wartime travel restriction that only allowed residents from within 10 miles of the game site to attend. Thus, the surrounding towns near West Point – Fishkill, Cortlandt Manor, Mahopac, Newburgh, Woodbury and Beacon – would make up the entire crowd that afternoon.

    As for the music in Buffalo this evening, Ellington was already well established by this point, having been a staple of the Harlem Renaissance. Ellington had held long engagements at the Hollywood Club (later known as the Kentucky Club) and the Cotton Club, signed with agent/publisher Irving Mills who brought Duke and his recordings to multiple record labels. In 1927, Ellington began a weekly radio broadcast, which increased his name recognition, especially to the white and wealthy clients of the Cotton Club. And Ellington was no stranger to the Queen City, having performed at The Colored Musicians Club in the 1930s.

    The variety of music performed in those broadcast – of which only 22 minutes was aired and preserved for audiences today – gives a taste of Ellington’s broad appeal and range. Shrill horns, dance numbers, both male and female vocalists joining in the fun, plus jitterbugs and light comedy that was appropriate for the times. Great thanks to Jazz LIVES for bringing this performance to light.

    duke ellington buffalo
    photo courtesy of JAZZ Lives

    Joining Ellington this evening were Rex Stewart (cornet), Wallace Jones and Harold “Shorty” Baker (trumpet), Ray Nance (trumpet, violin, vocals), Joe Nanton and Lawrence Brown (trombone), Juan Tizol (valve-trombone), Jimmy Hamilton (clarinet, tenor saxophone), Johnny Hodges (alto saxophone), Otto Hardwick (alto saxophone, clarinet), Skippy Williams (tenor saxophone, clarinet), Harry Carney (baritone saxophone, clarinet, bass clarinet), Fred Guy (guitar), Junior Raglin (string bass), Sonny Greer (drums) Betty Roche and Al Hibbler (vocals) and of course, Duke Ellington on piano.

    Listen below to the preserved recording of Duke Ellington and his Orchestra, performed to a wartime audience at an atypical venue for musical performance.

    Duke Ellington – Trico Products Factory, Buffalo – November 27, 1943

    Set: Blue Skies, Do Nothing Till you Hear From Me, A Slip Of The Lip, Sentimental Baby, I Wonder Why, Rockin’ In Rhythm

  • Alan Doyle U.S. Tour to Include Four NY Dates

    Canadian singer/songwriter Alan Doyle is headed to the U.S. for 2023 on a month-long tour which includes four New York concert dates.

    Opening on February 15 Buffalo’s Town Ballroom and closing March 11 in Bonita Springs, FL, Doyle’s U.S. run also features stops at the Clayton Opera House on February 16, Sony Hall in Manhattan on the 24th, and Port Washington’s Landmark on Main Street on the 25th.

    alan doyle tour
    Cover art for ‘Here, Tonight.’ (photo credit: Michelle Spice Photography)

    The tour is in promotion of Doyle’s recent live album, Here Tonight, released in March. It’s his first appearance on the road since the COVID-19 pandemic halted his 2020 Canadian national tour.

    A Newfoundland native, Doyle is a 12-time JUNO Award nominee for his solo material and work with his band, Great Big Sea. Also an author, his 2020 book All Together Now: A Newfoundlander’s Light Tales for Heavy Times was his third national bestseller.

    Tickets for Alan Doyle’s U.S. tour can be found here.

    U.S. TOUR DATES

    FEB 15 / BUFFALO, NY @ Town Ballroom
    FEB 16 / CLAYTON, NY @ Clayton Opera House
    FEB 17 / BARRE, VT @ Barre Opera House
    FEB 18 / BOSTON, MA @ City Winery
    FEB 19 / BOSTON, MA @ City Winery
    FEB 21 / PORTLAND, ME @ Aura
    FEB 22 / AMHERST, MA @ The Drake
    FEB 23 / CONCORD, NH @ Capitol Center for the Arts
    FEB 24 / NEW YORK, NY @ SONY Hall
    FEB 25 / PORT WASHINGTON, NY @ Landmark on Main
    FEB 26 / PHILADELPHIA, PA @ City Winery
    FEB 28 / ANNAPOLIS, MD @ Rams Head On Stage
    MAR 1 / WASHINGTON, DC @ City Winery
    MAR 2 / CHARLOTTE, NC @ Neighborhood Theatre
    MAR 3 / RICHMOND, VA @  Tin Pan
    MAR 4 / RALEIGH, NC @ Lincoln Theatre
    MAR 5 / ASHEVILLE, NC @ Grey Eagle
    MAR 7 / PONTE VEDRA, FL @ Ponte Vedra Music Hall
    MAR 8 / OCALA, FL @ Reilly Arts Center
    MAR 9 / CLEARWATER, FL @ Bilheimer Capitol Theatre at Ruth Eckerd Hall
    MAR 10 / BOCA RATON, FL @ The Funky Biscuit
    MAR 11 / BONITA SPRINGS, FL @ Centers for Arts Bonita Springs

  • Alyssa Trahan treats Hometown to a Country Show at Iron Smoke Distillery

    Born and raised in Rochester, Alyssa has taken the country music scene by storm. Returning home from Nashville, she treated hometown fans to quite the mix of original tunes and covers at Iron Smoke Distillery in nearby Fairport.

     Iron Smoke Distillery  Alyssa Trahan
    Alyssa Trahan @Iron Smoke

    Prior to making the move to the country music capital, Alyssa was writing and performing her own work locally, all while learning to play a dozen instruments along way. Quite the Jill of all trades, as she has been often called.

    In 2020, during the COVID shutdown, Alyssa never slowed, as she wrote, produced, and played nearly all the instruments on a new album. Released in early 2021, it debuted in the top 10 on iTunes Country Music Album Charts with over 300k downloads. Pretty remarkable for an independently produced album! In addition to writing and producing, Alyssa has managed to be able to share a stage with young and old talents alike, including Lee Greenwood, Maddie & Tae, Sara Evans, and Molly Hatchet. Again, for a budding country artist, this is remarkable.

    If you like Carrie Underwood, Taylor Swift, Miranda Lambert, and Lee Ann Womack, or any combination of these artists, you need to check out Alyssa Trahan as she is quite the blend of them and then some. Trahan’s new album Baby Blues & Stilettos is out now

  • Judy Collins Earns Best Folk Grammy Nomination, Announces Tour with 4 NY Dates

    Folk singer Judy Collins has received a Grammy nomination for Best Folk Album for her record Spellbound, which is a remarkable album for Collins as it is her first album with all original songs.

    Judy Collins
    Photo credit: Shervin Lainez

    Judy Collins began her musical career in the 60s playing folk music in Colorado and Connecticut. She made her break in Greenwich Village and released her first album A Maid of Constant Sorrow in 1961. Over her life, she has played with icons like Stephen Stills, Randy Newman, and Joni Mitchell.

    Her record Spellbound explores her experiences with substance abuse, the Greenwich Village scene in the early ’60s, her love for nature, and the vast open spaces of Colorado, where she was born and raised. This record was the 29 album she released in her career.

    The Grammy nomination for Judy Collins is the first one she has had in six years and her seventh nomination overall. She previously won Best Folk Performance in 1969 for her recording of Joni Mitchell’s “Both Sides Now.”

    Judy Collins has been averaging nearly 100 shows every year and has announced a new tour. Six of these concerts are dedicated to Wildflowers, her 1967 album. She’ll be performing the album front to back, with a full orchestra. Some of the tour will be stopping in Port Washington, Tarrytown, North Tonawanda, and New York City. Tickets for her tour are on sale here.

    TOUR DATES:

    *Wildflowers performances 

    11/25 – Wilson Theater at Vogel Hall – Milwaukee, WI

    11/29 – Bing Crosby Theater – Spokane, WA

    12/02 – South Orange Performing Arts Center (SOPAC) – South Orange, NJ

    12/03 – Landmark on Main Street – Port Washington, NY

    12/04 – Greenwich Odeum – East Greenwich, RI

    12/09 – Tarrytown Music Hall – Tarrytown, NY

    12/10 – Sacred Heart University Community Theatre – Fairfield, CT

    12/11 – The Jay and Linda Grunin Center for the Arts – Toms River, NJ

    12/16 – Jonathan’s – Ogunquit, ME

    12/17 – Jonathan’s – Ogunquit, ME

    12/18 – Tupelo Music Hall – Derry, NH

    12/23 – Riviera Theater – North Tonawanda, NY

    01/05 – Byham Theatre – Pittsburgh, PA

    01/06 – Avalon Theatre – Easton, MD

    01/08 – Birchmere – Alexandria, VA

    01/11 – Rio Theatre – Santa Cruz, CA

    01/13 – Old Town School of Folk Music – Chicago, IL

    01/15 – Old Town School of Folk Music – Chicago, IL

    01/18 – Van Wezel Performing Arts Center – Sarasota, FL*

    01/19 – The Emerson Center – Vero Beach,  FL*

    01/21 – The Peabody Daytona Beach – Daytona Beach, FL*

    01/24 – Mackintosh Church, Queen’s Cross – Glasgow, UK

    01/31 – Florida Theatre Jacksonville – Jacksonville, FL

    02/01 – Bilheimer Capitol Theatre – Clearwater, FL*

    02/03 – Lillian S. Wells Hall at The Parker – Fort Lauderdale, FL*

    02/08 – Avalon Theatre – Grand Junction, CO

    02/09 – Sheridan Opera House – Telluride, CO

    02/12 – Fargo Theater – Fargo, ND

    02/14 – Washington’s The Armory – Ft. Collins, CO

    02/16 – Brauntex Performing Arts Theatre – New Braunfels, TX

    02/18 – Main Street Crossing – Tomball, TX

    02/25 – Town Hall – New York, NY*

    03/03 – SOKA – Aliso Viejo, CA

    03/05 – Hawaii Theatre Center – Honolulu, HI

    05/06 – Lancaster Performing Arts Center – Lancaster, CA

    05/07 – Haugh Center for the Performing Arts – Glendora, CA

    05/09 – The Tower Theater Lounge – Fresno, CA

    05/10 – Heritage Theater – San Jose, CA

    05/12 – The Colonial Theater – Idaho Falls, ID

    05/13 – Egyptian Theatre – Boise, ID

    06/02 – Saban Theatre – Beverly Hills, CA

    06/22 – Dimitriou’s Jazz Alley – Seattle, WA

    06/23 – Dimitriou’s Jazz Alley – Seattle, WA

    06/24 – Dimitriou’s Jazz Alley – Seattle, WA

    06/25 – Dimitriou’s Jazz Alley – Seattle, WA

    08/20 – The Libbey Bowl – Ojai, CA

    08/28 – Barbican Centre – London, UK

    10/01 – Birmingham Town Hall – Birmingham, UK

    10/06 – Queens Hall Edinburgh – Edinburgh, UK

    10/07 – RNCM Concert Hall – Manchester, UK

    10/09 – Apex – Bury Saint Edmunds, UK

    10/10 – City Varieties – Leeds, UK

    10/16 – TivoliVredenburg – Utrecht, Netherlands

  • Rochester’s Bop Shop Records Wraps up 40th Anniversary Concerts over Nov. 25-28

    Bop Shop Records, an independently owned record store in Rochester, will celebrate 40 years this weekend, with four evening performances you won’t want to miss.

    bop shop records

    Tom Kohn opened Bop Shop Records in 1982, having spent his formative years in the 1970s working for MXR and Rounder Records, while collecting and listening to as much recorded and live music as he could. He has turned Bop Shop Records into special record show, well worth visiting as music collectors from all over the world frequently spend entire days there.

    Specializing in fine-condition vinyl records and CDs (as well as buying records too), patrons can quickly learn that Kohn is passionate about sharing the music that moves him with people who are excited and curious about it, too.

    Since 1988, Bop Shop has hosted jazz, folk and blues concerts at the store, including internationally renowned and up-and-coming artists. For 2022, the shop planned 40 Concerts Celebrating 40 Years, with the final four taking place over Friday, November 25 through Monday, November 28.

    Those of you who’ve joined us for our first 36 concerts know that 2022 has been a great year of amazing performances at the Bop Shop. We’ve made new friends and rekindled old friendships, and definitely heard music that gave us the comfort and inspiration we’ve needed this year.

    Tom Kohn

    Kohn has also recently revived Bop Arts Inc., a not-for-profit that exists for the soul purpose of supporting the music the shop brings to town. All the funds generated from the concerts, along with donations, help Bop Shop Records bring the best in new forward-thinking jazz to Rochester.

    A special four-night pass is available for $55, with single day tickets available for $20.

    Bop Shop Records 40th Concerts Celebrating 40 Years – Final Shows – All start at 8 pm

    Friday, 11/25 – Three Shamans – Ken Filiano, Phil Haynes and Herb Robertson.

    Saturday, 11/26 – Joe Fiedler’s Open Sesame with Kirk Knuffke, Jeff Lederer, Chris Lightcap, Michael Sarin and Fiedler.

    Sunday, 11/27 – Joe Fonda and Bass of Operation with Lederer again, playing clarinet, flute and piccolo; Michael Rabinowitz playing bassoon; Harvey Sorgen playing drums; and Fonda playing bass.

    Monday, 11/28 – Michael Musillami Trio with guitarist/composer Musillami, bassist Fonda and drummer George Schuller.

    For directions to Bop Shop Records, click here.

  • Watch moe.queous Animal-Themed Halloween Show

    On October 29, two bands who got their start in Buffalo, moe. and Aqueous combined forces for only the second time. Watch the rare below moe.queous performance below.

    Watch moe.queous
    photo by Matt ShotwellStrawberry Island Dweller

    The Town Ballroom show found the two bands donning a musical costume with a theme of ‘animals’ leading to covers of Phish, The Beatles and Pink Floyd, as well as songs from the moe. and Aqueous catalogs that centered around various creatures and critters.

    photo by Matt ShotwellStrawberry Island Dweller

    The lineups for the two band combo included Al Schnier and Vinnie Amico from moe., and Mike Gantzer, Evan McPhaden and Rob Houk from Aqueous. David Loss of Aqueous would also make a surprise appearance on vocals of “I Am The Walrus.”

    Gantzer said of the collaboration, “It’s a cool full circle thing to intertwine the AQ and moe. worlds so directly-Both bands have history at Town Ballroom and share strong roots being from Buffalo, too. There’s something really connective about that, and I’ve always felt a unique kinship and chemistry when making music or even just hanging with those guys. Much of AQ’s early inspiration came from seeing moe. too, so that should tell you just how truly special this will be!”

    Schnier agreed, saying “We love our boys in AQ almost as much as we love Buffalo! Last time we all got together for a moe.queous throw down, it was such an awesome amalgamation of our two bands, and we knew it was something we should definitely do more often.”

    photo by Curtis Kruetter

    Check out the moe.queous setlist and watch videos from across the evening below.

    Set 1: Bearsong > Strange Times > Bearsong, Birds of a Feather > Kitty Chaser > Downward Facing Dog, Marty, I Am The Walrus*

    Set 2: Moth > Pigs > Moth, Warren in the Window, Terrapin Station > Four#, Buster#

    * Dave Loss on vocals
    # Mike on vocals