Category: Features

  • The Legacy of J.B. Scott’s: An Interview with Vinnie Birbiglia

    In Albany’s storied music history, the short tenure of J.B. Scott’s has lasted for decades as a Central Avenue music venue of legend. With a capacity of ~600, J.B. Scott’s opened in 1979 and closed in 1982 after it was damaged by a fire.

    J B Scott's vinnie birbiglia

    But if you were alive and around in the Albany environs in the turn of the eighties, you might have gone to a sonic bunker of a place called J.B. Scott’s. Owned by Douglas Jacobs and Vinnie Birbiglia, this nightclub had a list of bands – including In those three years, bands including U2, John Mellencamp, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Bryan Adams, Judas Priest, Thin Lizzy, Pat Benatar, Meat Loaf, Iggy Pop, The Go-Go’s, Count Basie and Buddy Rich – that would, at the same time, be chewing through the Billboard Top 40.

    I reached out to owner Vinnie Birbiglia, and I learned quite a bit.

    RadioRadioX: J.B. Scott’s, ‘J’ and ‘B’ are yours and Douglas Jacobs’s last names. So you two started this in 1979. I’ve been around a ton of scenes, seen them start and fade away. What was it like in the weeks before you opened? Was it just to make a couple of bucks, or was it something more?

    Vinnie Birbiglia: I was working at the time at Record Town. I was the general manager for Upstate Music. We had the store on New Karner Road and Albany Street, I believe. And Doug came in one time, and we were talking, and we hit it off. We then started doing shows at the Madison Theater. And that’s how we started J.B. Scott’s.

    J B Scott's vinnie birbiglia
    Vinnie Birbiglia with James Brown at The Colonie Theater. Photo by Dave Suarez

    RRX: Madison Theater is doing some pretty cool stuff now.

    VB: It was a great theater as far as acoustics went. And the only problem that the place had was parking, because it’s a residential area.

    RRX: The only experience I had with J.B.’s was J. B,’s Theater, which was across from Westgate Plaza. I’ve never been to J.B. Scott’s, the original place. What was the space like; what was the venue like when you first went in it?

    VB: It was a rectangular building that – we put the stage on the opposite wall to the bar. Therefore, everybody was right on top of the stage, which, when the bands came in, they loved it.

    RRX: That’s cool, because the way a lot of clubs are set up, if you’re in the back, you’re in the nosebleeds.

    VB: Yeah, exactly.

    RRX: What was the place before you guys had it?

    VB: It was the S&H Green Stamp building. When you went shopping, they would give you little stamps that you put into a book, and then you use the book to buy stuff. It was a very plain building. It was a concrete floor, cinderblock walls and a wood roof.

    RRX: How long did it take you to build it up into the club itself?

    VB: Honestly, I don’t remember. It wasn’t that long. The only thing we had to do was build the bar and build the stage.

    RRX: One thing everybody remembers about J.B, Scott’s is that you had everyone there. U2, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, Pat Benatar, Rick Derringer, Buddy Rich to name a few. In fact, Al Quaglieri, in the Facebook group, Albany: The Way it Was, compiled a list that looked to be two feet long. How did you get those people to show up?

    VB: I was pretty well-known in the music industry. So I had lots of contacts at the labels. Since we had starting doing shows at the Madison Theater and at the Palace Theater, we did a show or two at Proctor’s Theater, the agents saw that we knew what we were doing. We got along with the bands, and like I said, I had my contacts at the labels, with the promotion departments at the record companies. That helped us decide who we were going to book, and that also showed the industry, again, that we knew what we were doing. That’s how we basically started, and word got out and bands wanted to play for us.

    RRX: When you were doing a different national act every day practically, what were some of the challenges you faced? Were there any challenges that weren’t just the basic challenges of running a club?

    VB: Back then, at that timeframe, it was getting the customers to come in. For every band that we did, it was one winner, three losers, financially. And then, because of politics, we were getting screwed by the agencies, even though the name of the game was ‘you book the band the first time they come to an area, that band is your band going forward.’ Yet when we had acts that we broke in the Albany market, some agencies would give the band to a different promoter when they were big enough to play the Palace Theater.

    RRX: Yeah, that sucks.

    VB: Tell me about it.

    J B Scott's vinnie birbiglia

    RRX: The J.B. Scott’s was, aside from the mechanical aspects, thinking the whole scene: do you think it could be done today, with the way the industry is?

    VB: I don’t think so. I think that the cost factor is too prohibitive. If we were to think of opening up a club in this environment, it would be a very expensive proposition.

    RRX: I had a practice space in J.B.’s Theater, when New Music was in there, and a friend told me I was playing where Stevie Ray Vaughan once drank a fifth of Crown Royal. I doubt that’s true, but it actually references one of the saddest moment for the area music scene; the fire that closed J.B, Scott’s. What can you tell me about that?

    VB: Some kids tried to rob us, and they set a fire, and thy got caught a year later. Actually, we made the front page of the Times Union for the fire, and made the back page of the first section when the kids got caught because when they got caught, it was the same day as Erastus Corning, the Albany mayor, died.

    And the place didn’t actually burn down. Like I said, it was concrete floor, concrete walls. The only real damage was the roof. The worst part about it was the fact that the fire voided our lease. While we had insurance and paid the bills that we had outstanding, the landlord still voided the lease that we had. So that’s what became the end of J.B. Scott’s.

    RRX: Okay, so J.B.’s Theater, as I brought up before. How much time between J.B. Scott’s and J.B.’s Theater?

    VB: Over a year. And it lasted about a year or so. It was too big for the area. Also, the drinking age went to twenty-one, so that became a problem. And we were the first place in the state, I believe, that had underage patrons in a place that had a bar. We actually closed off the bar and used the roller skating section for where we built the stage and did a majority of shows.

    RRX: So we cover a lot of smaller venues, and there are a lot of interesting local scenes. What advice would you give to the owner of a smaller venue to get near to where J.B. Scott’s was in its time?

    VB: I don’t think anybody can. We had the balls, so-to-speak, to do all different types of genres in the music industry. Now, unless you have a big bankroll, you’re really locked in to doing local bands. The cost factor is just too prohibitive.

    RRX: This is where you answer the question I didn’t ask.

    VB: Had it not been for the fire, it’d be very interesting to see where we would’ve been today. We had some competition, but the competition we had tried to only stick with certain types of artists coming in. We tried to broaden the horizon.

    This article was originally featured in RadioRadioX

  • In Focus: The Wailers at The Strand Theater in Hudson Falls

    The Wailers from Jamaica brought classic roots reggae to The Strand Theater in Hudson Falls on Saturday, April 22. Playing to a packed theater, the band got the crowd to their feet for a night of reggae dancing after much enticing and cajoling. In the end, as it always is with roots reggae, it was the music that brought them to their feet. Roots infects the soul with a groove, and when it is the classics from The Wailers, there is no resisting the dance. New Yorkers that caught The Wailers at the Brooklyn Bowl back in 2019 know this so well!

    Mitchell Brunings, lead singer of The Wailers. Photo by Derek Java.

    Lead by the son of famed bassist and founder Aston “Familyman” Barrett, the band brought love and light to The Strand. Aston Barrett, Jr. sat tight on the drums all evening, keeping a groovy rhythm with bassist Owen “Dreadie” Reid. On lead guitar was Wendel “Junior Jazz” Ferraro, and on keys was Andres “Ipez” Lopez. Backup singers Alecia Marie and Teena “Tamara” Barnes were amazing and held the crowd in love. Lead singer Mitchell Brunings is perfect singing Bob Marley’s parts on the classics. Reggae is good for the soul, and this night proved to be a refreshing experience for a thirsty crowd. This concert-goer can not wait for them to return!

    The Wailers band leader Aston Barrett Jr. Photo by Derek Java.

    Set 1: Trenchtown Rock, Is This Love, Concrete Jungle, Chant Down Babylon, Satisfy My Soul, Destiny, Get Up Stand Up, Stir It Up, Three Little Birds, One Love.

    Set 2: No More Trouble, Rat Race, Rebel Music, No Woman No Cry, Crazy Baldhead, One World, Coming in From the Cold, Lively Up Yourself.

    Encore: Redemption Song, Buffalo Soldier, Could You Be Loved.

    Catch The Wailers on tour now across the US and back again.

  • Dopapod and Baked Shrimp Light Up Saratoga Springs with Help from Members of Moe and Twiddle

    It was a hazy, high-energy night of other worldly soundscapes, prog-inspired improv, funky dance grooves, and surprise sit-ins in Saratoga Springs on April 19th, as revered indie jam rockers Dopapod and charismatic up-and-comers Baked Shrimp joined forces for a wild time at Putnum Place, a show presented by Hartstone Productions.

    Kicking off the festivities was red-hot Long Island crustation sensation Baked Shrimp. The fiery trio wasted no time getting the party going, launching into mythical beast mode early with “Chimera.” “Is this all a dream or am I awake?” crooned guitarist Jared Cowen, as the band magnetically pulled you into an exploratory and surreal type-two realm before the opening 16-minute number would reach its impressive peak.

    Drummer Jager Soss would take over on vocal duties during the up-tempo swing of “Molly Ann” and then trade them off to bassist Scott Reill on the equally energetic “Pig Hearts and Mechanical Parts.” Playing this particular show using Dopapod drummer Neal Evans massive kit, Soss was like a kid in a candy store here, clearly having a blast while utilizing all the bells, blocks and cymbals that were at his disposal.

    The prog-heavy technical chops of the band were on full display once again during “Missing Midnight,” which by now, everyone that had been standing in the back, had collectively moved forward to get a better look at the young sorcery taking shape before their eyes. Celebrating the one-year anniversary of his custom Forshage guitar, Cowen and his trusty new ax known as “The Wrench” sounded particularly potent during the set closing “Wannabe,” which also included an “I Am The Slime” tease by Frank Zappa for good measure. Despite the time constraints, it was another impressive set by this talented young band from New York. As early believers, tracking Baked Shrimp’s continued growth over the last few years has been an absolute joy and it seems like their hard work is beginning to pay off.  With a massive summer ahead that includes making their Peach Festival debut, along with high profile slots at Northlands and The Rye Bread Music Festival, it’s safe to say these talented nice guys are right on the cusp of busting out of their proverbial shells.   

    After a brief intermission followed by several minutes of sci-fi ambiance, it was finally time for our headliners Dopapod to take over.  No stranger to the Putnum Place, the band has played several memorable shows here, including joint gigs with Pigeons Playing Ping Pong, a “Grateful Sabbath” themed Halloween show, and just last year playing a single-song set covering Pink Floyd’s “Echoes.” On the eve of April 20th, it felt like anything was fair game.

    Kicking things into high gear off the rip was “Numbers Need Humans” from the bands 2019 album Emit Time. Consisting of Eli Winderman on keys, Rob Compa on guitar, Chuck Jones on bass and Neal “Fro” Evans on drums, Dopapod had the whole room vibing right from the start. The dank grooves continued as the band seamlessly transitioned into the always coveted “New James,” which took on a far more sentimental feel here as Dopapod worked in a significant “Wax” tease, paying tribute to their peers and friends in Lotus. Still fresh in everyone’s mind, fans of both bands continue to grieve the suddenly loss of Lotus’ percussionist Chuck Morris and his son Charley who tragically lost their lives on a recent kayaking trip.

    “Wheazy” and “Test of Time” would then follow suit before segueing nicely into “Imaginary Friend.” From there, Dopapod would get some help from a real-life friend in moe. drummer Vinny Amico, who would trade seats with Neal Evans to sink his teeth into “Dracula’s Monk” and bring the hour long first set to a pummeling close.

    Following a 25 minute intermission, Putnum Place popped off once again when Dopapod returned with a dynamic “Sonic” > “My Elephant vs. Your Elephant” combo to get the second frame rolling. The band would then invite another longtime friend, Adrian Tramontano of Twiddle/Kung Fu/ The Breakfast fame out to play drums on the popular old-school track “Indian Grits.” The heavy hands of Tramontano both brought the thunder and the house down during his extended solo, wowing the crowd to rowdy new heights.

    Accompanied by a spectacular light show, the energy level would go through the roof on the next song “Vol. 3 #86” which would flow through  “Man or Machine” and finally land on “Black Holes”; the only song from the band’s latest self-titled studio album to be played on this night.  

    With just 5 minutes to go before the stroke of midnight, the band opted to go with the appropriate “Nuggy Jawson” to officially ring in the 4/20 holidaze and put a bow on yet another memorable performance at the Putnum. 

    A jam packed show from start to finish, in a room full of longtime fans and friends, complete with surprise sit-ins from members of moe. and Twiddle, it was everything you could have hoped for on this mid-week throwdown in Saratoga Springs.  Up next for Dopapod, the band will take a few weeks off before returning to the road for a lengthy run of shows that will see them through the end of May.  Their only confirmed summer festival appearance thus far is set for the last weekend in June at the annual High Sierra Music Fest in Quincy, California.

    Dopapod | 04/19/2023 | Putnam Place | Saratoga Springs, NY

    Set I: Numbers Need Humans >New James * ->Wheazy, Test of Time ^ > Imaginary Friend.  Dracula’s Monk +

    Set 2: Sonic ^ -> My Elephant vs. Your Elephant, Indian Grits %, Vol. 3 #86 > Man or Machine ->  Black Holes

    Encore:  Nuggy Jawson

    * Wax (Lotus) tease

    ^ Unfinished

    + with Vinnie Amico of moe. on drums

    % with Adrian Tramontano of Twiddle, The Breakfast, and Kung Fu on drums

    Baked Shrimp | 04/19/2023 | Putnam Place | Saratoga Springs, NY

    Setlist: Chimera, Molly Ann -> Pig Hearts and Mechanical Parts, Missing Midnight, Wannabe*

    *”I am the Slime (Frank Zappa) tease

  • Citrus Maxima Releases Energetic Single “I Don’t Wanna Die” 

    Brooklyn-based alt-band Citrus Maxima has dived headfirst into the indie-rock genre with their newest release “I Don’t Wanna Die,” the first single from their upcoming record. With hundreds of thousands of Spotify streams and years of local gigging experience around New York, the band is looking forward to releasing their upcoming debut album this spring. 

    Citrus Maxima Releases Energetic Single “I Don’t Wanna Die” 

    The new single “I Don’t Wanna Die” is a song that cuts through the dirge of washed-out, lazy indie rock and instantly jolts the listener with its infectious chorus. The band captures this by combining wailing feedback, crunchy guitars, and driving drums with instantly catchy vocals and heartfelt melodies.  

    Citrus Maxima Releases Energetic Single “I Don’t Wanna Die” 

    Formed in Albany, but now based in Brooklyn, Citrus Maxima offers up a fresh take on indie rock, anchored by strong songwriting, raw energetic rhythms, and melodic guitars. Citrus Maxima was originally formed in 2014 with Shawn Majeed on drums and Lucas Rinaldi on guitar and vocals. The band added members Wyatt Kirschner on lead guitar in 2018, and Max Gucinski on bass and backup vocals in 2021. 

    Citrus Maxima has built up a strong online presence with a string of successful releases. In December 2020, the band released “1970”, their most played song with over 250k Spotify streams, and followed up with “Sprouts” a small collection of songs including “Seeds Don’t Bleed”, which incorporates a 90s alternative rock influence.  

    Their “live session” videos uploaded to YouTube further solidified their online buzz, as their cover of Pavement song “Harness Your Hopes” even grabbed the attention of Pavement member Bob Nastanovich, who praised the cover on social media. Devotees of the DIY ethos, all releases, social media growth, and touring was planned and executed by the band alone without the assistance of a label or management. 

    Listen to “I Don’t Wanna Die” by clicking the link here

    For more by Citrus Maxima, click the link here

  • Syracuse University, Lou Reed’s Lonely Woman

    While she was pregnant with me, my mom saw Lou Reed perform his Edgar Allan Poe concept album, The Raven. After the show, she bought a little red baby tee, with an outline of Reed’s face, his name printed below it. She got the smallest one they had — despite the fact that she was the biggest she’d ever been — because she planned to give the shirt to her future daughter, when I was old enough. 

    Lou Reed died nearly 10 years ago, in October 2013. I didn’t start listening to him until around two years later. My parents were the kind that didn’t let me watch the movie until I’d read the book, so before I could don my vintage tee I listened to a couple of records. I was instantly in love with the Velvet Underground and veritably obsessed with the casually confident Brooklyn drawl of their lead singer.

    That voice was ringing in my head as I browsed Syracuse University’s study abroad program listings last year. I’d been studying French, so that was the obvious choice, but my eyes lingered over Berlin as I hummed Lou Reed’s “Lady Day.”

    “I had never been to Berlin when I wrote Berlin. It was an imaginary journey,” said Reed, talking about the song, “The Kids.” “I couldn’t even go coach.” 

    So I made a decision worth thousands of dollars and five months of my life based on an album Lou Reed recorded without having been to the city for which it’s named. Germany was wunderbar!

    Lou Reed's Berlin Album Art

    Reed said he called the album Berlin because he liked the idea of a “divided city.” He said he could have called the album Brooklyn just as easily. But the music has the perverted cabaret, the purposefully out-of-tune instruments, the choppy underground scene that creeps up like a riptide in a capital city, a seat of government — much like my hometown of Washington, D.C. — after it’s been halved, quartered, chopped, and diced. So much drama and romance exists in that tension, the sneaking and smuggling, the people caught in the space between, the lovers trapped on either side. 

    Lou Reed lived in that in-between place. Born in Brooklyn, he moved to Long Island when he was nine. Reed was always separate from Manhattan, where the real action was, despite living only a subway ride away. In his numerous songs and albums that chronicle New York City, he sees the city from the inside and outside at once — terrible and glamorous and mysterious, his ultimate femme fatale. 

    His first shot at the city, in 1958 — a freshman year at New York University — flamed out. A mental breakdown sent him back home before his first year was over. His parents, unsure how to deal with their unresponsive 19 year old, turned to electroconvulsive therapy.

    “I watched my brother as my parents assisted him coming back into our home afterwards, unable to walk, stupor-like. It damaged his short-term memory horribly and throughout his life he struggled with memory retention, probably directly as a result of those treatments,” his sister Merrill Reed Weiner wrote on Medium, in a self-published article detailing their childhood.

    He recovered — ostensibly — and he dipped, upstate. To Syracuse University.

    The Lonely Woman

    It wasn’t until 2021 that I discovered Lou Reed had also been a student at SU. I was working at The Daily Orange, the student newspaper, scrolling through its archives, when I came across the paper’s Reed obituary. That is when I first heard about The Lonely Woman Quarterly

    The Special Collections of SU’s Bird Library holds every copy of The Daily Orange, every student zine, thesis and dissertation. In this archive are two original issues of The Lonely Woman Quarterly.

    The cover of The Lonely Woman Quarterly, illustrated by Karl Stoecker.
    The cover of The Lonely Woman Quarterly, illustrated by Karl Stoecker.

    With contributions from “Luis” Reed — as he was then calling himself — “liberal arts student and sometime singer with a campus rock n’ roll band,” Joseph McDonald, James T. Tucker, Karl R. Stoeker and Lincoln Swados, The Lonely Woman Quarterly sold out in one day, according to a May 1962 Daily Orange article documenting the magazine’s premiere. 

    “The magazine doesn’t contain great literature, but it has material in it that couldn’t be printed elsewhere on campus,” Swados told The D.O.

    In the 19-page first edition and 23-page second edition, the five sophomores offer poetry and egotism, bleed superiority with a sort of forced nonchalance.. Themes emerged that would later become commonplace in his work: the “Femme Fatale,” “the Beast,” “the Underground.” Paralleling “Luis” Reed’s lyricism in The Lonely Woman, is the music he made during his college years —  heard in the resurfaced recordings released last year, Reed’s Gee Whiz, 1958-1964, and Words & Music, May 1965. Looking at The Lonely Woman, it’s easier to understand why this troubled college student, this bridge-and-tunnel-beatnik with a taste for drugs, chose to study “the liberal arts” at a fratty, private university in a small town, an awkward six hours away from home, where he would be reduced to a “sometimes singer” by the campus paper.

    https://youtu.be/JJ_EOzHzLjU

    Syracuse, the city, has its own draw. It’s here, in the pallid winter and gorgeous summer and frat houses and projects and farmland and undeveloped land. It’s a city built on industry: salt, concrete and ceramics; but the bottom fell out of it all. It’s a city with a highway running right down the middle. A divided city. Something about Syracuse makes you want to prove something to it. Makes you want to provoke. But it’s hard; Syracuse is used to being poked and prodded and it doesn’t scare easy. 

    The first story in The Lonely Woman Quarterly, written by Reed — of course — is horrifying: it details the abuse of a young boy by his mother. It’s three paragraphs with no title, just “Luis Reed” at the bottom. It starts with the image of a boy looking in the mirror:

    “His reflection, ah yes, that was what it was, and he’d remove it to a more shadowy place, where his illumination gained a new fierceness, his countenance new intensity, teeth glistening, hair gleaming. He stared back with love.”

    Eventually turning a corner:

    “‘Oh no mommy no.’ he found his body undulating, ‘oh no mommy.’ She pulled him closer, her hands pressing him tighter. ‘That’s a good little man, that’s a good little man.’ She was breathing harder now. ‘That’s a good little man,’ she said. ‘That’s a good little man.’”

    People still bought the magazine. It was still written about in the highly reputable, independent student paper. This story that shocked in Syracuse might have been overlooked in Manhattan, at NYU. Reed’s calculated tone delivers its sickening punch. Did the waves of electric shock therapy that Lou Reed endured before his arrival in Upstate New York — treatment enabled and encouraged by his mother — feel, to him, like abuse?

    Peacocks hide their feathers
in raisens near the sun,
while bushytailed scallawags
gain entrance to the moon
You, my friend
may dip your finger
in the purple ink
and carve rainbows on
my doorstep
But the threshold
holds the peanut moon
and the boundaries set
the standards for the night.
Hush.
The baby sleeps
and silhouettes can
only scare him.
    Poem credited to Lou “Luis” Reed in the first issue of The Lonely Woman Quarterly.

    900 Ackerman

    I live in Syracuse’s Eastside neighborhood. My living room window looks across the driveway into my neighbor’s kitchen, a kitchen that was once Lou Reed’s. He lived at 900 Ackerman, in the attic apartment. On the porch, hanging from the peeling wood, there’s a plaque. It reads “Here lived Legendary Musician, Lou Reed. Take a walk on the Wild Side.” 

    Now Linus and Thomas, two juniors who could also be referred to as sometime singers in campus bands, live in Reed’s house. I sit in their living room under a poster of Television’s Marquee Moon, with an espresso machine and amp sharing an outlet on the floor beside me. They relay Syracuse’s favorite Lou Reed urban legend; that he was in ROTC but got kicked out for pulling a gun on his commanding officer. Their attic apartment doesn’t look like it’s been updated much since Reed lived here. Thomas said he thought they were hearing Reed’s ghost at one point, but it was just squirrels that had burrowed through the walls.

    “I really want us to feel his ghost,” Thomas says. “I feel like I was expecting it during the winter.”

    I ask if they hear Syracuse in any Lou Reed songs like I do.

    “There’s one song from the banana album,” Linus says, referring to the Velvet Underground’s 1967 debut, The Velvet Underground & Nico. “’The Black Angel’s Death Song.’ That’s very much a song about a cold Syracuse day, walking Upstate.” 

    The song’s psychedelic sound is augmented by John Cale on electric viola. The lyrics: “So you fly / To the cozy brown snow of the East / Gonna choose, choose again.” In the creaking strings of “Black Angel’s Death Song” lies a familiar Syracuse scene: the cold that blows in through the cracks in my apartment windows, the snow pushed up to the side of the street in a gray-brown mass; white snow meeting white sky at the horizon line looks like death, how some nights alone with my meager space heater feels like it. 

    Slouching Towards Syracuse

    David Yaffe, music writer and English professor at SU since 2005, interviewed — or attempted to interview, as Reed had a stockpile of choice words he reserved for journalists —  Reed for Rolling Stone in 2007. Yaffe had nominated Reed for an honorary doctorate. Instead, Reed was awarded SU’s most prestigious alumni recognition, the George Arentz Pioneer Medal. Yaffe was set to have a lunch interview with Reed in advance of the reception event in NYC, but the lunch was demoted to a phone call at the last minute. 

    “We must have talked for half an hour,” Yaffe said. “But it felt like a few months.”

    It’s harder to connect in phone interviews; Yaffe said Reed was completely dissociated and closed off for much of the call, until Yaffe mentioned Delmore Schwartz. 

    In the 1960s, Schwartz was teaching English at SU. The once sharp poetic wit and acclaimed writer was somewhat washed up, paranoid, bipolar. When their paths crossed, Schwartz and Reed formed a deep bond. Schwartz became Reed’s mentor and confidante. In Lou’s words: “Delmore Schwartz is Everything.” Capital E. You can hear it in Lou’s trembling and taxed, yet firm voice when he reads aloud Schwartz’s chef d’œvre, “In Dreams Begin Responsibilities.” 

    When Yaffe asked about Reed’s Syracuse graduation: “I don’t know what you’re talking about.” But when Yaffe asked about Schwartz, Lou opened up, memory jogged, light streaming through, conversations recalled: “We talked about Yeats.” And you can tell, from the first page of The Lonely Woman Quarterly, Issue I. The letter from the editor reads just like the second coming; an Upstate New York version.

    “As the sun sinks slowly in the west,” The Quarterly’s editors begin, “The air clears, the pungent odor of the Syracuse Arts Festival plops solemnly on its rump, and the militant, vociferous underground raises its shaggy head, gnashes its rabid molars in rhythm, and squats –– in one of its infrequent appearances –– in front of its collective mirror and bellows, a trifle off key perhaps as miller says, but raise its voice it does, cause boy its SPRING, and the world IS mudluscious, just as the various conglomerate herds echo in their certitude, the sundry members of Oz come forth bearing flutes and trumpets.” 

    The kids are pulling straight from their lit classes; “blood-dimmed tides,” “slow thighs,” and “rough beast.” Still, something about Syracuse weather provokes Yeats; it’s ominous, “mudlucious.” It’s in the spring that comes on so fast, while there’s still snow on the ground, so everything’s slippery and mud dries on the hems of your jeans. It’s a hesitant spring, the memory of freezing weather so fresh in your mind — a 19-degree day and white-gray sky hovering just over the horizon, threatening to fall over the sunny city at any moment. Spring in Syracuse is miraculous, ephemeral. 

    The letter continues, “The time has come the walrus said and assuming the price of paper doesn’t go up too strenuously, and the mad-man in the cellar can keep stamping out ink, this forlorn, dogearredperiodical will occasionally make its showing, nay take its place, out among the fields of its fellow man.”

    But the mad-man in the cellar, according to The D.O., is really the Savoy Restaurant’s owner Gus Joseph, doing the kids a favor and lending his printer. It’s a familiar sarcastic grandeur, misplaced apostrophes and made-up words, not exactly self-deprecating or self-aggrandizing — it’s just fun, you see them imagining themselves as that looming lion, the Underground, threatening the world as we know it, as the Velvets soon would.

    Letter from the editor in the first edition of The Lonely Woman Quarterly. lou reed syracuse
    Letter from the editor in the first edition of The Lonely Woman Quarterly.

    The Lonely Woman’s editors weren’t the only beasts on the horizon. It was the sixties. Joan Didion was reporting the essays that would become “Slouching Towards Bethlehem,” The sky was on fire with napalm in Vietnam. In Syracuse, a beast by the name of Urban Renewal was tearing down homes and businesses, to be replaced by a bunch of empty lots and Interstate 81. Reed captures this beast in his stories, in his songs. It’s in the Lonely Woman herself. In the magazine’s credits: “The Lonely Woman has a big nose and satin sheets.” She’s horrible and ugly, yet soft, shiny and disguised. Like a halloween ghost, a mysterious shape floating under the sheet, a vampire’s cape, holes for eyes. Reed’s stories are peppered with these duplicitous monsters. His second story, for example: it has no title, is three pages long, including a prologue and epilogue. It starts:

    “Daylight and windy cities and Saturday morning is a beast of legendary tenure.” … “the sun came in through an unobserved crack and shone brightly on my angelic face as I twitched and scratched my early hunger, growling, rumbling down below (although actually not quite awake, just contemplating my inner-most thoughts that buss in a deep fog in waking hours). The beast moved beside me, rolled and signed and hissed through painted lips parted with a now decadent look of sensuousness, lips that had seen things, now parted and twitching, giving forth early morning breath. We had talked of the soul and its death, and my death, the last of my supplanting lives, spent and completely wasted, except for the constant hurt. And she asked me if I had captured my soul and I (having seen nothing but my visions, death I embrace you) had of course replied why no, it has escaped my every turn. “

    This is also Yeats, and “Sunday Morning,” and much more. “Sunday morning, brings the dawning / It’s just a restless feeling by my side.” The beast is him, it’s the day, it’s the girl, it’s everywhere. But the beast that moves beside him, that girl he wakes up with, is half beast, half something else. A femme fatale — at once a beast, an angel, your deliverance, your salvation, your dire infatuation. 

    Femme Fatale 

    Candy, Lisa, Sally, Jane, Matilda, Caroline, Stephanie, Bonnie Brown, … who’d I miss? Lou Reed’s femme fatale is the beast in disguise, the dark horse, the temptress, the siren, the Lonely Woman. 

    Syracuse isn’t a natural home to a femme fatale. The town lacks the fantasy and mystery and sense of darkness. Her cave, her cavern, her isolated rock on the shore, her long dark hair she peeks out from under. New York City, though, is brimming with the creatures: the tragic aspiring star, the smoking provocateur in Washington Square Park, the unreachable party girl walking barefoot down the subway steps as the sun rises. In The Lonely Woman Quarterly, the boys are just figuring out how to wrestle these complicated beings onto the page.

    Letter from the editors and table of contents in the second issue of The Lonely Woman Quarterly. lou reed syracuse
    Letter from the editors and table of contents in the second issue of The Lonely Woman Quarterly.

    A femme fatale finds her power in anonymity, something easier to attain in NYC than in a town like Syracuse, a college campus like SU. The boys of The Lonely Woman find that like a Rumplestiltskin, they can find power in the naming of their girls. Throughout The Lonely Woman are poems by the magazine’s other editors that emulate the “___ Says” styles of later Lou Reed — “Christina’s World,” and “When Karen Walks.” But Reed has a special sense for femme fatale, and he fleshes her out in the second issue of The Lonely Woman, in a story he titled “Mr. Lockwood’s Pool.” 

    The narrator, walking through a wood — a place that sounds somewhat like Syrcuse’s Thornden Park — happens upon a clearing and finds a gorgeous pool filled with swans and ducks. A woman suddenly appears, like a nymph, and dives into the water.

    “I rubbed my eyes with astonishment. It was a girl, thoroughly nude, and in the form of a perfect C, her hands thrust rhythmically in and out of the water, cupped, her face receiving the splash ecstatically and her white teeth glistening…  She had long blond hair that now lay in collective sections on her back, the strands coming to spontaneous points” 

    He becomes infatuated with her, she brings him into the water, she whispers secrets in his ear, says things he’d never heard before. She’s unreal, her beauty celestial, her words magic. Her hair, with its points and sections, alludes to Medusa, suggesting a danger in that beauty, the beast that is just below.

    “As I watched it suddenly struck me that she had the long tail of a horse proceeding directly from the tip of her spine, arching and then the fine silky hairs losing themselves in the propitiously slight breeze which presented itself occasionally. She, herself seemed unaware of the appendage, and for all of that was an exquisite creature, with all the attributes that the male species dreamily bestows on members of the feminine gender.”

    Now, she walks the line between beauty and beast, joining the leagues of femme fatales Reed created throughout his discography. She’s more than a girl, she’s New York City, she’s an ocean, she’s light, she’s heat, when she talks it sounds like Sister Ray, when she cries it sounds like Venus in Furs. “Strike, dear mistress, and cure his heart.”

    At the end of “Mr. Lockwood’s Pool,” the girl with a horse tail tries to lead the narrator through vines and trees, into a clearing with a strange whirlpool black hole, in the sky and in the ground. He’s lost in it, he hears the girl’s voice, sees her face but can’t touch her. The femme fatale isn’t tangible. This girl isn’t within Reed’s reach while he’s in Syracuse, she’s not of this place, she’ll disappear any second, and she does, and the narrator is left alone, missing something he didn’t know he had.

    “Yes lochy, that’s it, she yelled, clasped my forehead in her hands, kissed it, and just as quickly she’d appeared, disappeared into the clear, clear water.”

    Like only a femme fatale can. 

    The Underground

    SU during the early-60s was a place of conflicting morals and ideals, converse scenes pushing up against each other like tectonic plates. Martin Luther King spoke on campus and Ernie Davis won the Heisman all while Urban Renewal and I-81 destroyed Syracuse’s Black neighborhoods on the Southside. Contradiction was on all sides, but suffocation squeezed out great art. 

    Contradiction is reflected all over the work Lou Reed recorded while at SU. In 2022, Laurie Anderson released Gee Whiz, an EP containing six songs Lou performed from 1958 to 1964. This small, choice selection, contains “Michael, Row The Boat Ashore,” dated 1963-1964. Originally sung by formerly enslaved African Americans living on South Carolina’s Sea Islands, it was later indoctrinated into American folk tradition, it was re-released in 1961 by The Highwaymen, a band built of white Harvard and Yale business majors, and became a No. 1 hit. At the same time, it was being recited by those protesting in favor of greater civil rights. There’s a contradiction there, of appropriation; of affinity? Lou’s version is quiet, delicate. He was listening to what was popular, then transforming it into the very antithesis of whatever it once was. Know thy enemy. Here emerges the underground.

    In Issue One of The Lonely Woman Quarterly, there’s another untitled story by Reed that seems to conflate New York City and Syracuse, like he spent the morning in the city then came home for supper. It opens: “Have you ever sat in the Square trying to look angry?” 

    The story chronicles a day in the life, like a diary, through Lou’s eyes, as our knowingly pretentious, rambling narrator. Lou ends up with a group of friends at an apartment, where the phone rings, voices half-heartedly debate Dostoevsky, incense burns and his head aches. Then a paragraph breaks free from all of these characters and dialogues and setting. Reed speaks for a second, just long enough to define the Underground of the Velvet Underground like it’s a dissertation:

    “Things assumed their normal order, the syntax obscuring the atypical, the falsified dichotomy leaving no room for the incoherent melancholy which is present even in the Hebrais Vision where it was not covered up, parabolic myths in conjecture without relatedness to order. But we had order, and this was purposeful, functional, for what else do we crave if not rules and regulations. How can you deviate if there’s no norm and that’s half the fun so be victorian dear friend and attack the boxlike structure, metamorphisize in extenuating circumstances and feel the joy of guilt, which you actually feel anyway but not correctly, break with the tintinnabulary logic of your mind and enter the chaos, but be strong and truthful without pretensions, and THEN disbelieve, but not before, or alas, alack you are but one of us and worse yet, me, for I’m the worst of the worst, the phoniest of the phony, the weakest of the weak, the strongest of the strong, setting up new settings for the old, new mores for the sacrosanct, typification of any for non-existent disillusionment in endless streams of group discussion, exchangement of neurosis, boastful, dearheart, and a more stringent benefactor you’ve never seen.”

    With the Velvet Underground, Lou Reed social climbs from behind the ladder, he’s real and fake, he’s playing truth and he’s a terrible liar. The game’s not to make sense, it’s to keep up. Manifesto-like, Reed defends his four-year sentence in Upstate New York: “to be strong and truthful without pretensions, and THEN disbelieve.” Underground, inside of contradiction, is where Lou felt most at home — a beatnik that joined ROTC, a rock star playing for the fraternities, a gay city kid at a preppy, private university. He wants to play football for the coach.

  • Jim Jones Makes Loyalties Clear with Pusha T Stance

    Jim Jones continues to make the airwaves with his unfiltered take on Vibe and Billboard’s list of the 50 Greatest Ever Rappers. The list — which was part of a collaborative effort to celebrate Hip Hop’s 50th anniversary — named Jay – Z as the genre’s greatest ever MC. However, it was Pusha T’s ranking that raised ire of the “We Fly High” rapper. Coming in at number 29, Pusha T’s career as a member of the Clipse (alongside his brother Malice) and his solo work on GOOD Music has made him a staple of hip hop lore. Yet, Jim Jones doesn’t see it as such and on an episode of The RapCaviar Podcast, the Dipset member aired out his true feelings.

    “What has he done that puts him in the greatest rappers of all time besides talk about coke that he probably didn’t get himself?” Jones asked. “He’s nice as shit. He could rap his ass off, but what has he done?

    “Nobody has dressed like him. Nobody wants to be like Pusha T. I don’t remember nothing. And let’s not be evil, but we don’t talk about rap where the n-gga that’s popping the bitches wanna fuck and the n-ggas wanna be like.”

    He continued: “I don’t know too many n-ggas in this game that was leaning towards being like Pusha T. Pusha T don’t hold no weight out here. He not pushing no shit out here.”

    Jim Jones Doubles Down on The Breakfast Club

    Jim Jones then rehashed the sentiments during an appearance on The Breakfast Club. Confronted by DJ Envy and Charlemagne Tha God about the controversial stance, the Harlem MC colorfully reiterated himself. For the purpose of his argument, Capo focused solely on radio play and club records.

    “Could you name five Pusha T records?” Jones asked The Breakfast Club staff. “Could you name five Pusha T records? No. Could you rap to five Pusha T records?” After Charlemagne named several standout Pusha T records, Jones dismissed Charlemagne as a Pusha T fan and joked about him listening to the records in his basement.

    While Jim Jones acknowledged Pusha T’s talent as a lyricist, he said he hasn’t made enough of a cultural impact to be considered an all-time rap great.

    “Shoutout to Pusha T, I love your soul,” Jones continued. “You my dawg, you not in my top 50. You might be in Charlamagne’s top 50 and things like that, but you haven’t done that much for me in my life.”

    “I never wanted to be like Pusha, I never had a Pusha moment in my life. Where I’m from, n-ggas wanted to be like you if you was really that dude as a rapper.”

    Jim Jones Makes his Loyalties Clear

    Jim Jones is an accomplished rapper himself and is certainly entitled to his opinion. However, his conviction is not without bias. Along with his controversial opinion on Pusha T, Jones has made the rounds for declaring Drake as hip hop’s greatest ever rapper. During appearances on the RapCaviar Podcast and an interview on Complex, Jones asserted his controversial take.

    “Drake is the only one that gets played anyplace on this Earth, and they’re gonna know it in English. If you’re not putting Drake in the Top 2 of all time, like, what are we gonna do? We gonna keep putting shade on his name? He has broke every single statistic, period. You heard?”

    Drake of course, famously brought out Jim Jones and the entire Diplomats crew during his performance at the Apollo Theater and celebrated the veteran rapper and his cohorts with a heartfelt tribute. “These guys right here, from Harlem, made us dress different, talk different, walk different, rap different. All the way in Canada.”

    Verdict

    Thus, it could be that after that moment Jim Jones’ view of what makes an all-time great rapper was altered and he only saw things through a Drake lens. Or, the one they call Capo could just be aligning with his good buddy who also happens to be the most popular rapper in the world. After all, Pusha T and Drake’ s longstanding beef ended without a reply from the Canadian crooner. Consequently, many declared Pusha T the winner as he was one of the few to land a crack in Drake’s pop-star armor.

    What Jim Jones might have looked over is that Drake himself counts Pusha T amongst his many influences. During an episode of the short-lived MTV show When I Was 17, Drake shared a story from his formative years revealing his fandom of the “Dreaming of the Past” rapper. While scouring eBay in search of Clipse memorabilia, Drake stumbled upon and purchased a microphone that was allegedly autographed and used by Pusha T.

    “I used to pretend I was doing interviews on the red carpet and perform all the Clipse songs in my basement with the mic,” he says. “I’m a full-sized teen at this point, so this is in private. And I performed with it so much that I rubbed the autograph off. I don’t even know if he really signed it, but that was my big thing. At the time it meant the world to me.”

    Furthermore, Pusha T remains one of the very few that can get Jay – Z on a record. For rap fans, that may be influence enough.

  • An Interview with Jazz Drummer Matt Niedbalski

    I’ve been hearing about Matt Niedbalski for nearly 30 years. From the day he was born, it seems that he was destined to become a great drummer. I’ve been fortunate to hear all about his accomplishments and achievements, including his earliest lessons, gigs, even equipment from his uncle.

    You see, Matt is no ordinary drummer. His musical tutelage began with his uncle; The Drummer of Love, Mr. Gene Sennes. Gene and I have been friends, bandmates and fellow percussionists for years, and one of his favorite topics of conversation is his nephew, Matt Niedbalski.

    photo by Derek Java

    My first real conversation with Matt took place at Parkway Music, where I was scheduled to interview another drummer, who couldn’t make it. Fortunately, I spent a couple of hours talking drums, jazz, and life with Matt. I found Matt to be a very engaging, knowledgeable, humble individual, with a very “old soul” vibe. I was impressed with his humility, and lack of ego. He is very complimentary of other local players and quick to give credit to his colleagues, teachers and friends.

    Matt’s playing is both relaxed and restrained; with an easy going, smooth use of polyrhythms, and exceptional dynamics. He’s a phenomenal player, and a terrific human being. Gene Sennes told me, “He’s my favorite drummer. He is technically sound, plays with great feel, has great time and an excellent sense of dynamics and color. The kid is world class, man!” So please welcome, Matt Niedbalski!

    RRX: How old were you when you started playing drums? How did you get started?

    MN: I got my first kit when I was two years old. I saw my uncle Gene playing drums as a toddler (either with the Royals, or Rabb for context. I know you remember!) and thought it was the coolest thing I’d ever seen and wanted to do that. It started with beating up on random objects around my grandmother’s house with a pair of sticks he gave me and after I started putting dents in the end table my uncle and grandmother realized I had the bug and got me a junior CB drum-kit which I believe the family still possesses to this day. I know they say you don’t start forming memories until later than two but I still see them pulling the sheet off the kit. I started taking formal lessons at age eight with Ted Mackenzie.

    RRX: Who were some of your influences early on?

    MN: My grandmother had a cassette of the compilation “Past Masters Vol 2” by the Beatles and the first track on that is “Day Tripper”. Ringo was definitely my first drumming influence, followed by Joey Kramer in Aerosmith and then John Bonham. After getting involved in drum lessons and being introduced to jazz Elvin Jones made me start to focus on what I actually wanted out of the drums.

    RRX: What are some of your earliest gigging experiences?

    MN: I got involved in this small jazz group of older students when I was around 13 and we had a coffee shop gig every Sunday at this spot called Virgil’s Coffee House in Saratoga, which is now the hardest place to get a beer in town, Henry Street Taproom. Around the same time or slightly after I started sitting in with guitarist Tony Jenkins who was based around the Glens Falls area and had a Friday night gig at Wallabee’s Jazz Bar which is now the Bourbon Room. He’d have me sit in with the band and my parents would have to sit at the bar to make sure I didn’t drink or smoke and eventually I got the gig with him.

    RRX: Who are some of your influences now?

    MN: I still listen to my earlier influences and drummers I started checking out in college so from a jazz perspective it’s the ones everyone always lists in an interview situation to make sure they’re viewed as a credible jazz drummer…so Elvin, Philly Joe Jones, Papa Jo Jones, Billy Higgins, Art Blakey, Max Roach etc. But I really gravitated towards two drummers specifically during my time at college. I went to school at William Paterson University which has a great jazz program and is located about 40 minutes outside of NYC. I would go to the city and check out drummers, but my two favorites were Eric McPherson and Nasheet Waits. Oddly enough they were best friends growing up in Greenwich Village and Nasheet’s dad is the legendary jazz drummer Freddie Waits. I saw them and quite literally went, “Oh shit!”! I ended up hanging out with them after gigs, pestering them with questions and took a lesson with Nasheet. I still keep in touch with him. They are both super gracious and all about music. I’m known as a jazz drummer by most people, but my first love is rock and I fucking LOVE Soundgarden and Matt Cameron is a huge idol of mine. And he has a great first name. Finally, Bill Goodwin was a professor of mine at WPU, and happens to be a legend in his own right but also is like an uncle to me. One of the coolest people ever, a great record producer and all around amazing human being.

    Matt Niedbalski
    Photo by Derek Java

    RRX: Tell me about your first kit.

    MN: After the CB kit I mentioned, my first full size kit was a Pacifi c 5pc. Kit, the cheaper DW because Uncle Gene is a DW guy. He snuck into my parents’ basement on my 8th birthday and set it up, complete with your classic Sabian B8’s.

    RRX: How about your current set-up?

    MN: I feel like there are two kinds of drummers, and I further confirmed this working at Parkway. There’s the drummers that have 18 kits and a few cymbals or the drummer that has one or two kits and a million cymbals. I’m the latter. I switch between a Yamaha Maple Custom absolute kit in bop sizes that my parents got me as a graduation present and a 1967 Rogers Holiday kit in black onyx. That one is 12 14 20 so I can either tune that kick up higher and wide open for a more “jazz” sound or throw a super kick II or some muffl ing in it to get a more punchy rock sound. Some bigger drums are in my future… My go to snare as of late is a Pearl Masterworks Mahogany drum which is 6.5×14. Very warm and has a lot of depth but can bark if you need it to. When I used a metal snare it’s a 1960s Ludwig Supraphonic

    Ted Mackenzie gave me which he took all the chrome off of because it was flaking off and cutting his hands. My setup for cymbals is changing at the moment. I was playing a 1960s 20” Zildjian A with 3 rivets given to me by Bill Goodwin and a 15” 60s A Crash that once belonged to Sarge Blotto. It had a bunch of cracks in it that I drilled holes in so they didn’t get worse. That cymbal has a lot of vibe. As for hats 1960s pre serial Paiste 602s. I recently just signed an endorsement deal with Bosphorus after playing a few models of cymbals recently. I really dug them.. I liked them since they are still handmade. Some of the modern cymbals I’ve played in recent years felt very stiff to me which is why I always would go back to my vintage Zildjians. The Bosphorus stuff plays pretty soft and you can really dig into them. I have a fear of those cymbals cracking, and the guys at Bosphorus did an incredible job capturing the vibe of my old cymbals and modernizing them. I currently play
    s 20” Bosphorus 20th Anniversary ride with 2 rivets, 18” Bosphorus 1600 crash and 14” Master Series Hi Hats. I currently endorse Vater drumsticks.

    RRX: Do you play any other instruments?

    MN: I do, my father plays guitar and I wanted to learn when I saw him playing with his buddies on the weekend so he gave me a book of chords around age 12. Around 14 I bought a bass and in college I had to take piano lessons as part of the general curriculum. When I’m not practicing drums or working on a mix (I also do some recording engineering) I’m usually making demos for fun in my home studio to shed recording and or just playing the guitar. I use the piano as a compositional tool for some of the jazz projects I’m involved in.

    Matt Niedbalski

    RRX: Tell me about your current projects.

    MN: I currently play with Charles Cornell. I’ve been playing trio with him and Steven Kirsty since we were in high school, and I love them like brothers. Charles has been developing a successful YouTube page in the last few years and lives in Colorado. Steve and I jump on a plane and fl y out that way to record and film for his channel so that will be a big focus of 2023. I co-lead a trio with Tyler Giroux and Dylan Perrillo called GNP, a rather clever acronym, yes? We released an album called “Codes” on a small label called Ears & Eyes and are currently working on a follow up album. I’ve been playing with my friend Rob Fleming for his project Rhoseway, which features his great original music. Other than that, freelancing with various musicians usually playing jazz.

    RRX: Now for some fun; tell us about your dream kit, dream gig, and who is in your dream band?

    MN: Either Elvin Jones’s 70s Yellow Stop Sign Gretsch kit or the Bonham Green Sparkle Ludwigs. Dream gig is being in the touring band for Chris Cornell’s Euphoria Morning tour. That first solo album is pure gold. Dream band for rock, definitely Chris Cornell on vocals/guitar, Ken Andrews on guitar and John Paul
    Jones.

    RRX: Any drumming horror stories or good drummer jokes?

    MN: Oh, plenty of horror stories. It all started with me playing the finger cymbal part in concert band 4th grade and the rope broke and rolled under the clarinet section. I was mortified. Then there was the time I played two crash cymbals and ride without wingnuts on the stands during this concert up at the Strand Theater. We hit an intense section and I play with my eyes closed otherwise I get distracted. I went to hit the crash and “missed” and thought hmm that’s strange, so I tried again and hit the stand, opened my eyes and realized I sent two cymbals flying and all I had left was the ride. Finally, I was playing at this biker bar, the Great Notch Inn in North Jersey for my buddy Vin’s CD release party. Everyone was hammered and wouldn’t you know it was the only time I ever brought my own drums. The owner was a drummer and had an old set of Ludwigs as a house kit but on a CD release party, a special occasion, I brought my Rogers. Second to last song there’s a couple doing the do se do and the bar is kinda tight and another patron connects with the couple and flies through my drums sending the rack tom flying and knocking the ride over. Luckily, my pal Steve Kirsty was playing bass and managed to catch the ride with his knee and told me he couldn’t feel his leg from knee down but was pretty proud of saving the cymbal. As for drummer jokes, I don’t think mine are appropriate for an interview…

    RRX: Fair enough! OK: Tommy Lee, or Travis Barker?

    MN: This is a tough question. I would say Travis Barker. I’m not really a fan of either Motley Crue or Blink however I can tell Travis truly loves the drums and always has a practice pad with him. We all know what Tommy Lee loves.

    RRX: Wrong! The answer is Buddy Rich. Do you know Buddy Rich’s real name? No cheating!!!

    MN: Ted would be really disappointed in me, but I blanked. So, no. But I had to look it up otherwise I wouldn’t be able to sleep tonight. Bernard… take away my music degree.

    RRX: Your secret is safe with me. Finally, how has your drumming changed over the years?

    MN: This is a great question. I would answer by saying I am now at a point where I try to balance technical ability and musicality, and that balance was WAY off in my early 20s. I would see some of my heroes play some pretty impressive shit and then get up on the bandstand and try to insert that into the music where it wasn’t appropriate. I try to be more patient and listen to what the other people are playing more now and wait for space in the music to make a statement. Yes, there are times when I want to push someone and make the earth under them move a little bit, but I try to be tasteful. I heard a saying once, “the drummer is the mother of the band” It’s kind of our job to make everyone sound as good as they can while also bringing some energy and excitement to the situation so I try to keep that in mind when I play. I could go further into some philosophies but I already feel myself becoming long winded so I will leave it there.

    RRX: You were great! Thank you for your time. Matt Niedbalski is a name you won’t forget; just go see him play and you’ll see what I mean.

    This article was originally publisher by RadioRadioX

  • Django A Gogo Music Festival Comes to Town Hall in New York City for 20th Anniversary

    The 20th Anniversary of the Django A Gogo Music Festival begins early this May and culminates with the main event: an intensive “Guitar and Violin Camp” at The Town Hall in New York City on May 6 at 8:00 p.m.

    Additionally, Django A Gogo includes an enhanced “Guitar and Violin Camp” from May 2-May 7 at The Woodland in New Jersey. The concerts will follow the Django canon and veer into reinterpretation, improvisation, and interplay between artists.

    Poster for the Django a Gogo Music Festival. Credit: Stephane Wrembel Presents.

    Wrembel has produced Django a Gogo since 2003, bringing together some of the finest musicians to celebrate the constant evolution of the Sinti guitar style, commonly referred to as “gypsy jazz.”

    The 3 concerts at The Woodland are as follows:

    On May 3, Stephane Wrembel Band (Stephane Wrembel on guitar, Josh Kaye on guitar, Ari Folman-Cohen on bass, and Nick Anderson on drums) presents The Art of the Guitar with special guests Simba Baumgartner (Django Reinhardt’s great-grandson), Paulus Schaefer and more!

    The Art of the Violin follows on May 4, featuring violinist Jason Anick and Trio Dinicu featuring Tommy Davy on guitar and Luann Homzy on violin as well as guitarists Stephane Wrembel, Debi Botos and, and Sam Farthing.

    The Woodland concerts conclude May 5, celebrating the release of Wremble’s new album, Django New Orleans, recorded with his NYC-based supergroup of musicians. Django New Orleans features Stephane Wrembel and Josh Kaye on guitar, Adrien Chevalier on violin, Joe Correia on Tuba, Scott Kettner on drums, David Langlois on percussion, Nick Driscoll on sax/clarinet, Joe Boga on trumpet and Sarah King on vocals.

    The main event on May 6 at The Town Hall opens with Stephane Wrembel Band, Simba Baumgartner (France), Paulus Schaefer (Holland), Debi Botos (Canada), Samy Daussat (France), and Sam Farthing (U.S.) on guitar; and Aurore Voilqué (France) on violin. The second set follows with a short performance by Trio Dinicu featuring Tommy Davy on guitar and Luann Homzy on violin, followed by a set from Django New Orleans. The concert concludes with a grand finale with all performers on stage.

    The concerts for the Django a Gogo Music Festival, both at The Woodland and The Town Hall, are open to patrons of all ages. Tickets for The Woodland Concerts start at $35/show and a limited number of three-day passes for $90 are available. Tickets for The Django A Gogo Music Festival at The Town Hall start at 49.50.

  • PEAK Jam in Brooklyn With Hometown Show At The Sultan Room

    Brooklyn locals PEAK stopped by The Sultan Room in Bushwick on Thursday, April 20th for a hometown gig packed with friends and family. The show was in support of fellow jam band Magic Beans, but the room filled in early with PEAK fans who danced and sang along to the entire set. Frontman Jeremy Hilliard and crew cranked up the energy of the room for nearly an hour, playing older songs as well as unreleased material.

    peak brooklyn
    PEAK at The Sultan Room, 4/20/23. Photo by Joseph Buscarello

    PEAK began as Hilliard writing and performing music outside of his time as guitarist and vocalist for the band Turbine. This work culminated into PEAK’s 2018 debut album, Electric Bouquet. The album garnered critical acclaim in the jam scene, attracting an accomplished array of musicians to join Hilliard. Today, the band rounds out with Kito Bovenschulte on drums, Josh T. Carter on bass, and Johnny Young on keys and vocals. In 2021, the boys from Brooklyn released their sophomore record, Choppy Water.

    peak brooklyn
    PEAK at The Sultan Room, 4/20/23. Photo by Joseph Buscarello

    At The Sultan Room in Brooklyn, PEAK proved they were here to stay. Hilliard and company seamlessly feed off of each other on the live stage, going in and out of extended jams without skipping a beat or ever allowing the music to become stale. Their fans bring great energy as well, dancing and grooving along to whatever PEAK was willing to feed them. One of the standout moments of the set, was when PEAK began playing new song “Summer”, but transitioned into “Merry Go Round” with a “Summer” reprise in the back end. Another example of the group being able to make sharp turns within the live performance of a song, and doing so with finesse.

    peak brooklyn
    PEAK at The Sultan Room, 4/20/23. Photo by Joseph Buscarello

    PEAK continue on with shows and festival stops in the coming months. They will be at Wescott in Syracuse on April 29th, and return to New York later this summer with shows at Snug Harbor in New Paltz on June 9th, and Yasgur’s Road Reunion in Bethel on August 12th. Head over to the PEAK’s website for their full tour details, and check out the photo gallery from The Sultan Room below.

  • A New York City Night with Fruit Bats at Webster Hall

    On Thursday, April 20th the Fruit Bats returned to New York City, having not played on the island of Manhattan in three years. The East Village’s beloved Webster Hall slowly filled with an eclectic crowd.

    Photograph by Emma Dowd

    People of all ages mingled and spoke about their relationships to the band, as they sipped wine and other elixirs. The energy was timid and sweet, emulating the same experience the Fruit Bats create with their sound.

    Photograph by Emma Dowd

    Hums of conversation and the movement on the floor fell to a still hush when the openers, H.C. McEntire took to the stage. The lights glowed golden and a light fog rolled onto the crowd, as the lead singer transitioned the night into an experience. Slowly, each instrument organically introduced itself into the song. Multiple guitars, a bass guitar, and a percussion set melded together to create a culmination of bluegrass and folk. The audience was entranced as they drank in the band’s filling guitar riffs, and weighty vocals.

    Photograph by Emma Dowd

    When H.C. McEntire humbly exited the stage, they were rewarded with hoot and holler applause. After a half an hour set change, the Fruit Bats made their way onto stage. Each band member made themselves comfortable behind their instruments. The keyboardist, Frank LoCastro, even poured himself a tall glass of red wine. Multi-instrumentalist Josh Mease, bassist David Dawda, and drummer Josh Adams situated themselves as their lead singer, Eric Johnson, approached the mic. He greeted New York City warmly, expressing his gratitude for having returned to “the big island.”

    The show commenced with Johnson’s raw voice dueting with the melody pulled by the guitar. The first lyric to be sung was from their song, “The Pet Parade”: Hello from me to all you out there. The crowd waved back to Johnson, their swaying hands casted a moving pattern of shadows across the notorious Webster velvet drapes that frame the stage.

    The Fruit Bats’ sound felt like a location. It held a midwestern kindness that could not be missed, as they performed songs tributing their roots in Chicago, Illinois. Though, the music was transient. As Johnson told stories through his lyrics, the audience was brought along with him to his muses. The journey was a long one, given that the setlist expanded over a vast culmination of records dating back to 1997.

    Photograph by Emma Dowd
    Photograph by Emma Dowd

    The band performed songs from Johnson’s early career all through their newest record, “A River Running To Your Heart,” that was released last week. The record’s first debut to the world happened in New York City. Johnson asked if the crowd minded if they played something new. The audience welcomed the proposition with open arms and open minds, as they listened to the fresh record. He sang of “proverbial shame,” “chosen family,” and the thread of most albums “love.”

    Photograph by Emma Dowd

    The show concluded peacefully, the audience fulfilled and the Fruit Bats doused in gratification. Claps and utters of “thank you’s” vibrated in the crowd. Their goodbye was swift as they stilled their instruments and waved to their listeners as they made their way backstage. The stage emptied and the lights came on, but the crowd stayed awhile. Ushered to the bar, they stayed carrying on the story of the music they just heard.