Category: Regions

  • In Focus: Mac Saturn at Empire Live

    On Sunday, February 5th, 2023, Mac Saturn gave the young teens of Empire Live Underground a show worth missing the Grammys. Opening with rising star, Billy Tibbals, the show kicked off to a roaring start.

    Carson Macc of Mac Saturn at Empire Live Underground – Photo by Jarron Childs

    Coming from England, then moving to L.A. in his teens, Billy Tibbals has been chasing his dreams of being the next rockstar. Drawing inspiration from The Beatles, David Bowie, and The Damned; Billy and his band has a very vintage style of rock-n-roll that really electrifies the stage. His hopes are to get the youth off their phones and back to enjoying each other in person. He has 3 singles available currently on streaming services and plans to release in first album in April.

    The Billy Tibbals Band began the night strong and loud. With a style copied and pasted from a 70’s GQ magazine, Billy lead his sharply dressed band to an electric and energetic start. Things took a slow turn with a song titled “3am” about Tibbals’ younger sister. But it did not last for long as he really played his heart out for his potential new fan base. After the show, he was selling vinyls of his upcoming album, Stay Teenage, before it hits streaming services.

    Billy Tibbals of The Billy Tibbals Band at Empire Live Underground – Photo by Jarron Childs

    Mac Saturn, of Detroit, took the stage not soon after Billy’s 45 minute set. This was both their first national tour and their first time in Albany. They originally formed back in 2014 at a Christmas party and soon became a sextet of mixed instruments and vocals. They released a five song EP, Until the Money Runs Out, last August and plans to release a new single hopefully sometime later this year.

    Keeping on the trend of vintage, Mac Saturn’s lead vocalist, Carson Macc, came out ice cold in a blazer his grandfather probably wore and rough 70s mullet. Though the crowd was small, they had the amplitude of a thousand screaming teens at Govball. Macc had them singing the lyric’s of “Ain’t Like You” back to them with ease.

    Guitarist Mike Moody of Mac Saturn at Empire Live Underground – Photo by Jarron Childs

    Though Macc took frequent breaks off stage, it gave more time for guitarist, Mike Moody, to really rock the crowd with gut wrenching solos. They performed a cover of Charles Brown Mint Julep shortly before ending with their number one song, “Plain Clothes Gentleman.” They really held a powerful presence for their last song, really sucking the crowd in with phenomenal instrumentals and partying with the fans.

    They continue their tour with another New York stop at the Town Ballroom in Buffalo on February 9th. Their tour ends in their home state of Michigan with two shows in Ann Arbor on the weekend of April 1st.

    Mac Saturn Setlist: Diamonds, Paradiso, Persian Rugs, Boxcutter, Get on the Phone, Ain’t Like You, Sleep, Mint Julep, 5 Long Minutes, Mr. Cadillac, That’s Business, Plain Clothes Gentleman

  • SPAC Announces 2023 Classical Season Featuring NYC Ballet & The Philadelphia Orchestra

    Saratoga Performing Arts Center (SPAC) announced the return of the New York City Ballet and Philadelphia Orchestra, to their summer home in Saratoga Springs. This celebratory season is highlighted by a theme of earth and features masterpieces from classical cannon, SPAC premieres and debuts. 

    SPAC Classical

    From July 18-22, the New York City Ballet (NYCB) returns with the full company that encompasses a roster of 90 dancers. Under the direction of Artistic Director Jonathan Stafford, Associate Artistic Director Wendy Whelan, and led by Music Director Andrew Litton, the company will showcase four programs including “NYCB On and Off Stage”.

    Hosted by NYCB Principal Dancers Tiler Peck and Adrian Danchig-Waring, the programs illustrate a unique “behind the curtain” experience featuring excerpts from the week’s ballets. Contemporary works such as Play Time by Gianna Reisen, Love Letter by Kyle Abraham, Liturgy by Christopher Wheeldon, and music from Solange Knowles, James Blake, Arvo Pärt, etc will foreground the season. Also featured is a program dedicated to three story ballets including Balanchine’s Swan Lake, Robbins’ Fancy Free and Firebird by both choreographers.

     Kicking off our summer season is ‘NYCB On and Off Stage,’ which has become an important part of our efforts to bring new people to experience ballet in an inviting, accessible way. New for this year, the celebratory evening will culminate in a ‘dance party’ in the Hall of Springs.

    Elizabeth Sobol

    During August 2–19, The Philadelphia Orchestra will display two programs including a Rachmaninoff 150th birthday celebration, led by Music Director Yannick Nézet-Séguin. Additionally, The Philadelphia Orchestra will perform Patrick Doyle’s magical score, which won both the International Film Music Critics AWARD (IFMCA) and ASCAP Film and Television Music Award, live while the entire film plays in high-definition on a 40-foot screen.

    SPAC Classical

    There will also be appearances by cellist Yo-Yo Ma and violinist Gil Shaham, on the 16th and 17th of August. Shaham is returning for the first time in a decade for a special SPAC premiere leading Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons. SPAC’s 2023 debut will also contain performances by a diverse roster of artists including Emmy, Grammy, and Tony Award-winning icon Audra McDonald, and pianists Isata Kanneh-Mason and Bruce Liu. Furthermore, the 2023 season embraces a diverse line-up of conductors such as Fabio Luisi, Enrico Lopez-Yañez, Roderick Cox, and Xian Zhang. 

    The SPAC classical season for 2023 has a theme of Earth will be accentuated by “Earth: An HD Odyssey”. The production features ravishing images of the planet on a large LED screen accompanied by Richard Strauss’ epic tone poem, “A Space Odyssey and John ­Adams’ exhilarating Short Ride in a Fast Machine”. Additionally, Yannick Nézet-Séguin will lead the Orchestra in the SPAC premiere of Pulitzer-Prize winning composer John Luther Adams’ Vespers of the Blessed Earth, alongside Stravinsky’s famed, “The Rite of Spring”.

    Celebrating the 30th anniversary of the film, SPAC has resumed their popular film night for all ages. Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire™ in Concert and Jurassic Park in Concert will play in support of this celebration.

    Tickets will be available starting February 14th for members and February 23, for the general public here.

    SPAC Classical Season Schedule

    NEW YORK CITY BALLET: JULY 18 – 22

    NYCB On and Off Stage

    TUESDAY, JULY 18 @ 7:30PM

    SPAC Premieres

    WEDNESDAY, JULY 19 @ 7:30PM

    THURSDAY, JULY 20 @ 7:30PM

    Peck & Copland

    THURSDAY, JULY 20 @ 2PM

    SATURDAY, JULY 22 @ 7:30PM

    Swan Lake, Fancy Free & Firebird

    FRIDAY, JULY 21 @ 7:30PM

    SATURDAY, JULY 22 @ 2PM

    THE PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRA: AUGUST 2 – 19

    WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 2 @ 7:30PM: Festive Fireworks

    Fabio Luisi, conductor

    David Kim, violin

    THURSDAY, AUGUST 3 @ 7:30PM: Schubert’s “Great” Symphony

    Fabio Luisi, conductor

    Isata Kanneh-Mason, piano

    FRIDAY, AUGUST 4 @ 7:30PM: Pink Martini and The Philadelphia Orchestra, Featuring China Forbes

    Enrico Lopez-Yañez, conductor

    Pink Martini

    SATURDAY, AUGUST 5 @ 7:30PM: Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire™ in Concert  

    Justin Freer, conductor

    WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9 @ 7:30PM: Beethoven’s Seventh

    Roderick Cox, conductor

    Philippe Tondre, oboe

    THURSDAY, AUGUST 10 @ 7:30PM: An Evening with Audra McDonald

    Andy Einhorn, conductor

    Audra McDonald, vocalist

    FRIDAY, AUGUST 11 @ 7:30PM: Rachmaninoff at 150

    Yannick Nézet-Séguin, conductor

    Bruce Liu, piano

    SATURDAY, AUGUST 12 @ 7:30PM: Blessed Earth

    Yannick Nézet-Séguin, conductor

    The Crossing

    Donald Nally, artistic director

    WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16 @ 7:30PM: The Four Seasons with Gil Shaham 

    Gil Shaham, leader and violin

    THURSDAY, AUGUST 17 @ 7:30PM: Yo-Yo Ma Plays Dvořák

    Xian Zhang, conductor

    Yo-Yo Ma, cello

    FRIDAY, AUGUST 18 @ 7:30PM: Earth: An HD Odyssey

    SATURDAY, AUGUST 19 @ 7:30PM: Jurassic Park in Concert

    Constantine Kitsopoulos, conductor

  • Disturbed “Take Back Your Life” Tour Stops in Syracuse and Jones Beach this August

    Heavy Metal band Disturbed has announced their 36-date Take Back Your Life Tour for Summer 2023, supporting their eighth studio album, Divisive, and their first tour in five years.

    The tour kicks off on Thursday, April 27, and includes a stop at St. Joseph’s Health Amphitheater at Lakeview in Syracuse on Aug. 12, and Northwell Health Jones Beach Theater in Wantagh on Aug. 19.

    Cover of Distubed’s latest album, Divisive

    Additionally, Disturbed’s latest tour will feature performances by metalcore band Jinjer and rock band Breaking Benjamin. Disturbed will be joined by both groups in Syracuse on Aug. 12, and Jinjer will perform with them at Jones Beach on Aug. 19 as well. On the collaboration, Jinjer said, We are really looking forward to hitting the road in the US again, alongside Disturbed and Breaking Benjamin. We can not wait to see some old fans and welcome some new ones as well!”

    Originally from Chicago, Disturbed first emerged on the music scene in 2000, with the release of their debut album, The Sickness, through Giant and Reprise Records. Nominated for two Grammy Awards Disturbed has achieved five consecutive #1 debuts on the Billboard Top 200. Significantly, they are the only rock group other than Metalica to accomplish this feat. Their catalog of hit songs includes the platinum “Stupify,” “Inside The Fire,” and “Land of Confusion, just to name a few. At the 2017 iHeart Radio Music Awards, the band significantly earned the award for Best Rock Artist.

    Divisive is out now via reprise records. Its 10 tracks were composed with the help of producer Drew Fulk in Nashville over the last year. The album’s first single, “Hey You”, proceeded its release, emerging as their 15th #1 single on Rock Radio. Its newest single, “Bad Man” is in Rock Radio’s top 10.

    Tickets for Disturbed’s Take Back Your Life Tour will go on sale Friday, Feb. 10 starting at 10 a.m. Listen to Divisive on all formats here.

    Disturbed Take Back Your Life Tour

    Apr 27 | Montreal, QC | Bell Centre +

    Apr 29 | Quebec City, QC | Videotron Centre +

    May 01 | Toronto, ON | Scotiabank Arena +

    May 08 | Winnipeg, MB | Canada Life Centre +

    May 10 | Edmonton, AB | Rogers Place +

    May 12 | Abbotsford, BC | Abbotsford Centre +

    Jul 11 | Denver, CO | Ball Arena # ~

    Jul 13 | Salt Lake City, UT | USANA Amphitheatre # ~

    Jul 15 | Ridgefield, WA | RV Inn Style Resorts Amphitheater # ~

    Jul 16 | Auburn, WA | White River Amphitheatre # ~

    Jul 18 | Wheatland, CA | Toyota Amphitheatre # ~

    Jul 20 | Irvine, CA | FivePoint Amphitheatre # ~

    Jul 22 | Phoenix, AZ | Talking Stick Resort Amphitheatre # ~

    Jul 23 | Albuquerque, NM | Isleta Amphitheater # ~

    Jul 25 | Dallas, TX | Dos Equis Pavilion # ~

    Jul 27 | Houston, TX | Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion # ~

    Jul 29 | Rogers, AR | Walmart AMP # ~

    Jul 31 | Charlotte, NC | PNC Music Pavilion # ~

    Aug 01 | Alpharetta, GA | Ameris Bank Amphitheatre # ~

    Aug 03 | West Palm Beach, FL | iTHINK Financial Amphitheatre # ~

    Aug 05 | Tampa, FL | MIDFLORIDA Credit Union Amphitheatre

    Aug 07 | Raleigh, NC | Coastal Credit Union Music Park at Walnut Creek # ~

    Aug 09 | Bristow, VA | Jiffy Lube Live # ~

    Aug 11 | Holmdel, NJ | PNC Bank Arts Center ~

    Aug 12 | Syracuse, NY | St. Joseph’s Health Amphitheater at Lakeview # ~

    Aug 15 | Cincinnati, OH | Riverbend Music Center # ~

    Aug 18 | Mansfield, MA | Xfinity Center ~

    Aug 19 | Wantagh, NY | Northwell Health at Jones Beach Theater # ~

    Aug 21 | Camden, NJ | Freedom Mortgage Pavilion # ~

    Aug 23 | Gilford, NH | Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion # ~

    Aug 26 | Burgettstown, PA | The Pavilion at Star Lake # ~

    Aug 27 | Cuyahoga Falls, OH | Blossom Music Center # ~

    Aug 29 | Maryland Heights, MO | Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre # ~

    Aug 30 | Tinley Park, IL | Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre # ~

    Sep 01 | Clarkston, MI | Pine Knob Music Theatre # ~

    Sep 02 | Noblesville, IN | Ruoff Music Center # ~

    + Special guest: Theory Of A Deadman 

    # Special guest: Breaking Benjamin

    ~ Special guest: JINJER

    Previously Announced Disturbed Tour Dates

    May 04 | Milwaukee, WI | Fiserv Forum (102.9 The Hog’s HOG FEST) %

    May 06 | St. Paul, MN | Xcel Energy Center (93X’s Twin City Takeover) %

    Jun 07 | Nickelsdorf, Austria | Nova Rock

    Jun 8-11 | Castle Donington, United Kingdom | Download Festival 

    Jun 12 | Hamburg, Germany | Sporthalle *

    Jun 14 | Stockholm, Sweden | Grona Lund

    Jun 16 | Dessel, Belgium | Graspop Metal Meeting

    Jun 17 | Landgraaf, Netherlands | Pinkpop Festival 

    Jun 19 | Esch-sur-Alzette, Luxembourg | Rockhal ^

    Jun 21 | Wetzikon, Switzerland | Heavy Load Festival 

    Jun 28 | Tel Aviv, Israel | Bitan 1

    % Support = Falling In Reverse, Beartooth, Dorothy

    ^ Special Guest: I Prevail 

    * Special Guest: Asking Alexandria 

  • Angel Olsen and Erin Rae Warm Hearts at Asbury Hall in Chilly Buffalo

    On a frigid Buffalo February, fabulous female folkies fed off frantic fans for fantastic fun. F yeah! Angel Olsen and the Big Band were in town at Babeville’s Asbury Hall, and they had Erin Rae along to open the show.

    angel olsen

    Rae, a Nashville-based singer/songwriter, was back in Buffalo for only the second time, waiting about 10 years for her return. Her last visit was a house show in front of just 7 people. Asbury Hall, an old converted church with seemingly endless height, and an attentive full house, was quite the jump up. One woman, one guitar and a ton of space to fill with a lot of ears and minds to reach. But Rae was able to command the crowd like they were just a handful in a living room. Maybe it was the spirit of her great grandmother who won woman of the year in Buffalo some 50-odd years ago lifting her up, but more likely it was Rae’s stellar skills put into practice.

    And there was more to celebrate then just a long-awaited return to Buffalo. It was the one-year anniversary of her latest album, Lighten Up. She of course played liberally from it, opening with “Cosmic Sigh,” working a nice bit of mouth trumpeting in “Candy & Curry,” and closing up with “Lighten Up and Try.” She also tucked a couple older ones in, like “Can’t Cut Loose” and the enchanting “June Bug” from Putting on Airs.

    angel olsen

    Headliner Angel Olsen was also coming through with a nearly year-old album, having put out Big Time back in June. An album called “Big Time” warrants a big band, and Olsen had it covered with a seven-piece that included violin, cello, bass, drums, guitar, keys and herself on vocals, guitars ,and keys.

    The story behind this latest release is Olsen’s turn toward classic country. Olsen delivered on that in spades, showing range on acoustic and electric guitars, her voice soaring and punctuated, soft and gentle, whatever it need be to drive home songs like “Dream Thing” and “Ghost On.” During both “Right Now” and “Go Home” the energy swelled and crashed multiple times like incoming waves, Olsen steered her crew deftly through voice and guitar.

    The makeup of the band allowed for a flexible sound, and they flexed that muscle powering through some older material. They showed a poppier edge on “Shut Up and Kiss Me,” immediately flipped into grunge on “Give It Up,” then teetered into new wave on “All Mirrors.” Later in set, “Lark” provided fireworks. The fiddle, cello and bass opened in a humming drone, which led into more undulating ebbs and flows which strengthened with each passing chorus, until a final explosion left the same starting drone in its wake.

    Olsen felt comfortable toying with her audience. She promised a premiere of a new song she wrote earlier that day, only to reveal it as a joke. Then she offered to play a request only to rebuff them all and play what she wanted instead. Though it may have only endeared her even more to the crowd. And really, what wasn’t to love?

    After the final frame finished, fans filed from the festive fling, feeling fabulous. F yeah indeed.

    Setlists

    Erin Rae: Cosmic Sigh, Gonna Be Strange, California Belongs to You, Can’t Cut Loose, June Bug, Candy & Curry, Bad Mind, True Love’s Face, Modern Woman, Lighten Up and Try

    Angel Olsen: Dream Thing, Big Time, Ghost On, Right Now, Shut Up and Kiss Me, Give It Up, All Mirrors, Go Home, Through the Fires, Lark, Sister, Those Were the Days, All the Good Time, Chance E: Without You (Harry Nilsson)

  • Geneva Music Festival Announces 2023 Theme, Dates

    Known as the Finger Lakes premiere summer kick-off event, the Geneva Music Festival has announced their 2023 season theme and dates.

    The festival was founded in 2011 by Geneva native and violinist Geoffrey Herd with fellow Genevans violinist Eliot Heaton and cellist Hannah Collins. Originally a weekend of chamber music for their hometown, the festival has grown over the years. Now in its 13th season, the festival attracts audiences of all regions to hear outstanding musicians from the world’s stages. 

    While still rooted in the chamber music repertoire, performances now include jazz, contemporary, and bluegrass music. Festival musicians include leading classical soloists, multiple Grammy Award-winning artists, members of the Lincoln Center Chamber Music Society, and faculty from Yale, Juilliard, the Colburn School, and the Cleveland Institute of Music.

    This years theme will be “Gods, Myths and the Divine” from May 21 to June 11. GMF artists-in-residence and visiting artists will explore the connection between music and experiences of uplifting our spirit, seeking something larger in the universe, or contemplating anew our place here on earth. This 8-concert series explores composers throughout history who have been inspired by their religious beliefs or by the universal themes embedded in cultural myths to create music of rich meaning and beauty.

    “I’m excited to share our 2023 theme, Gods, Myths, and the Divine, through which we will explore musical masterpieces inspired by composers’ religious and spiritual beliefs. Walking through Milan last summer, I was struck by the inimitable architecture of the Duomo di Milano and found myself pondering how many of the world’s greatest pieces of art grow naturally out of their creator’s religious beliefs.

    Festival Director Geoffrey Herd

    The Geneva Music Festival’s mission is to entertain, inspire, and nurture a lifelong appreciation of chamber and other musical genres in Finger Lakes communities. They strive to present world-class artists that engage audiences of all ages, including populations with little exposure to music of this caliber.  Purposeful engagement with young people is an integral part of the Festival’s programming and children 18 years and younger are admitted free to all public concerts.  

    A full lineup and schedule will be availible in the coming weeks. Please visit the festivals website for more information.

  • The 2023 Grammy Awards saw New York Artists Win Big

    The 2023 Grammy awards were an eventful night full of catchy performances and some of the biggest stars in music. This year multiple artists from New York State won prestigious awards, including Best New Artist, and many more.

    2023 Grammy Awards
    Beyoncé became the record holder for most Grammy award wins, photo by Francis Specker.

    Beyoncé won four Grammys, making her total number of awards 32, the most that have ever been one (previously held by Georg Solti). She won Best R&B Song for “Cuff It,” Best Dance/Electronic Recording for “Break My Soul,” Best Traditional R&B Performance for “Plastic Off the Sofa,” and Best Dance/Electronic Music Album for Renaissance. Viola Davis made history by achieving EGOT status by winning the award for “Best Audio Book, Narration, and Storytelling Recording.”

    Lizzo won Record of the Year for “About Damn Time,” as well as Best Remixed Recording for “About Damn Time (Purple Disco Machine Remix).” Harry Styles, who has been a part of the music industry for a long time since his days in the boy band One Direction, won the prestigious Album of the Year award for Harry’s House, Best Pop Vocal Album, and Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical. Wet Leg, who sparked to fame after their debut, won Best Alternative Music Album for Wet Leg, and Best Alternative Music Performance for “Chaise Longue.”

    To the surprise of many fans online, blues singer Bonnie Raitt won Song of the Year for “Just Like That.” She beat the likes of Adele, Beyoncé, Harry Styles, and more in that category. Best Rap Album saw Kendrick Lamar winning for Mr. Morale & the Big Steppers, and Lamar also won Best Rap Song and Best Rap Performance for “The Heart Part 5.” Kim Petras made history last night as the first transgender Grammy winner for her collaboration with Sam Smith for Unholy, winning in the Best Pop Duo/Group Performance category.

    2023 Grammy Awards
    Samara Joy

    Many artists from New York State won awards last night, including Bronx native Samara Joy, who won Best New Artist and Best Jazz Vocal Album for Linger Awhile. The Grateful Dead and art directors Lisa Glines, Doran Tyson, and Dave Van Patten won Best Boxed or Special Limited Edition Package for In and Out of the Garden: Madison Square Garden ’81 ’82 ’83. Stephanie Economou from Long Island made history as the first winner of the Grammy for Best Score Soundtrack for Video Games and Other Interactive Media for Assassin’s Creed Valhalla: Dawn of Ragnarök.

    Lin-Manuel Miranda, from Inwood, won Best Song Written for Visual Media for “We Don’t Talk About Bruno (from Encanto).” The New York Youth Symphony made Grammy history last night, becoming the first youth orchestra to win Best Orchestral Performance. The Metropolitan Opera Orchestra & The Metropolitan Opera Chorus won a Grammy for Best Opera Recording. Finally, Attacca Quartet from Buffalo won Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance for Caroline Shaw: Evergreen.

    The 2023 Grammy awards were full of historic moments, showcasing talent from all over New York State and beyond. From dazzling fashion on the red carpet to over-the-top performances, the Grammys are one of the best nights in the music industry.

  • Le Tigre Announce North American Tour With Final Stop in Brooklyn

    Rock trio Le Tigre (Kathleen Hanna, JD Samson, and Johanna Fateman) have announced they will bring their joyous, experimental post-riot girl antics and conceptual multimedia performance to stages across the globe this summer.

    le tigre

    For the first time in 18 years, the trio have reunited and will kick off their North American leg at the Mosswood Meltdown Festival followed by appearances in Seattle, Los Angeles, Portland, NYC, Chicago, Boston and more. Tickets are now on sale.

    Bringing Y2K Back

    Forming in New York City in 1999, the band abandoned traditional punk instrumentation, pairing drum-machine beats and looped 8-bit samples with the simplest, serrated guitar riffs and call-and-response vocals. The members of Le Tigre shared a vision for multimedia performance, touring with a slide projector in their early days with video later becoming a key component of their live show which fans can still look forward to on the upcoming tour.

    The band’s final show—until their reunion performance for the This Ain’t No Picnic festival at the Rose Bowl in August 2022—was on September 24, 2005, at the Operation Ceasefire concert at Washington Monument in Washington DC, where they joined a coalition of artists calling for an end to the U.S. war in Iraq.

    Recently, Kathleen has been touring with Bikini Kill, running Tees 4 Togo (which sells artist-designed T-shirts to fund the non-profit organization Peace Sisters), and writing a book. JD has a full-time teaching position as Assistant Arts Professor and Area Head of Performance at The Clive Davis Institute at NYU/Tisch , performs with CRICKETS, and tours with the original live score for the film 32 Sounds, directed by Sam Green. Johanna is an author and art critic who writes regularly for the “Goings on About Town” section of the New Yorker and for 4Columns; she is a contributing editor of Artforum.

    For more information, and to purchase tickets, visit www.letigre.world/tour

    Le Tigre Tour Dates

    5/27: Philadelphia, PA @ Union Transfer
    6/1: Barcelona, Spain @ Primavera Sound Barcelona 2023
    6/3: London, UK @ Troxy
    6/5: Manchester, UK @ Albert Hall
    6/6: Glasgow, Scotland @ Barrowland Ballroom
    6/8: Madrid, Spain @ Primavera Sound Madrid 2023
    6/9: Porto, Portugal @ Nos Primavera Sound Porto 2023
    6/11: Paris, France @ Le Trianon
    6/14: Amsterdam, Netherlands @ Paradiso
    6/16: Berlin, Germany @ Huxleys Neue Welt
    6/17: Hamburg, Germany @ Markthalle
    7/1: Oakland, CA @ Mosswood Meltdown Festival
    7/3: Vancouver, BC @ Commodore Ballroom
    7/6: Seattle, WA @ Paramount Theatre
    7/7: Portland, OR @ Roseland Theater
    7/9: Los Angeles, CA @ The Greek Theatre
    7/15: Chicago, IL @ The Salt Shed
    7/17: Cleveland, OH @ Agora Theatre
    7/18: Millvale, PA @ Mr. Smalls Theatre
    7/19: Baltimore, MD @ Baltimore Soundstage
    7/21: Toronto, ON @ History
    7/22: Montreal, QC @ L’Olympia
    7/24: Boston, MA @ Royale
    7/28: Brooklyn, NY @ Brooklyn Steel

  • Mmeadows share “When We Are Together We Are Really Free” off debut album

    NYC‘s mmeadows have shared “When We Are Together We Are Really Free,” the final single from their debut album Light Moves Around You, which was released on Friday, February 3rd. The prog-pop duo will also be performing an album release show May 6th at Baby’s All Right. 

    Mmeadows Share Single "When We Are Together We Are Really Free" 

    Vocalist Kristin Slipp’s (Dirty Projectors) vocals weave seamlessly through Cole Kamen-Green’s production (walls of horns, synths, and piano) for a sound that’s mysterious, mercurial, and fearless. The track cements their trademark style, a permeable mix of sounds both fluid and rhythmic, organic and electronic. 

    The song is accompanied by a video filmed in an abandoned church, lending a visual atmosphere at once carefree and ominous, a perfect match for the track and the album as a whole. 

    Mmeadows Share Single "When We Are Together We Are Really Free" 

    “[“King of the Castle”] It’s a catchy, unpredictable dose of art pop…”

    – BrooklynVegan 

    The track is accompanied by a bold video directed by Haoyan of America, in which the duo performs the song in an abandoned church. Complete with glow stick dance parties and colorful tarot cards, it creates an atmosphere at once carefree and ominous, a perfect match for the track and the album as a whole: mysterious, mercurial, and fearless. 

    Mmeadows Share Single "When We Are Together We Are Really Free" 

    Their singular alt-pop songcraft is ultimately the synthesis of complementary talents, mutual trust, and years of partnership. Light Moves Around You reflects this connection; a dynamic and deeply-honed collection of pop songs that silence chaos and celebrate the tender acts of making space. 

    “With community heavy on my mind during early days of the pandemic, but not within physical reach, I set out to write a song that I might play during one of a handful of virtual dance parties we hosted,” Slipp says. “The catharsis of sharing digital space with my friends during such a surreal time was powerful and lasting, and that energy motivated us to make this track super danceable, brimming with feeling, and short enough to demand an immediate repeat listen.” 

    Upcoming mmeadows Live Dates: 

    April 26th – Los Angeles, CA @ Gold Diggers                
    May 6thBrooklyn, NY @ Baby’s All Right  
    Tickets go on sale Friday, February 3rd at 10am Local Time. To purchase tickets, click the link here.  

  • Fifth Class of the Capital Region Music Hall of Fame Announced

    The newest class of the Capital Region Music Hall of Fame has been announced, with an induction ceremony to take place Monday, March 27th.

    Eight individuals will be inducted into the fifth class of the Capital Region Music Hall Of Fame at Universal Preservation Hall. The group includes two members of a pioneering late 1960s and early 70s alt-country band; a nun who helped launch the careers of hundreds of music industry professionals around the globe; one of the region’s most active and best-known bluegrass musicians over the past eight decades; a woman who has promoted bluegrass music through the local airwaves for over 40 years; a legendary rock music photographer; and two guitarist virtuosos who forged careers that have generated international recognition.

    “It is inspiring to think about the accomplishments of these men and women and what they represent. Weaved together, their stories represent an amassing cross-section of the American music scene. And collectively they reflect an amazing, vital music scene in the Capital Region.”

    Jim Murphy, founder and producer of the Eddies Music Hall of Fame

    The class will be inducted with musical performances, short videos about their careers, speeches and more in a public celebration at UPH. The evening kicks off 6 p.m. with a social gathering; the Capital Region Music Hall Of Fame induction ceremony begins 7 p.m. All inductees are represented with plaques at Universal Preservation Hall in Saratoga Springs, as well as brief videos highlighting their careers.

    Eddies Music Hall of Fame Class of 2023

    Hall Of Fame Inductee
    Martin Benjamin

    If an artist is a Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductee, chances are better than even that Martin Benjamin has photographed them at some point in their career. His first published photo was of Bruce Springsteen at the Palace Theatre in Albany in 1979. Since then, the Union College visual arts professor’s lenses have captured everyone from AC/DC to Frank Zappa, and his work has been exhibited across the U.S. and in Europe and Asia, as well as published as part of 18 TV productions and in The New York Times, The Mirror, People, Rolling Stone, American Photographer and elsewhere.

    Mike Campese

    Albany native Mike Campese has released 11 solo albums featuring his fusion guitar mastery and is a former member of the Trans-Siberian Orchestra. He has been featured in Guitar One, Guitar World and Guitar Player, among other magazines, and is a columnist for several publications. A graduate of the Musicians Institute in Hollywood, he has also taught throughout his career. When not on the road, Campese splits his time between the Capital Region and California.

    Hall Of Fame Inductee
    Felicia Collins (Lori Van Buren / Times Union)

    Felicia Collins grew up in Albany’s Arbor Hill, acquiring her first guitar at the age of 12 from a pawn shop and teaching herself to play. She is best known for her role as guitarist and vocalist in Paul Schaffer’s celebrated “Late Night with David Letterman” band for the show’s entire run (1993-2015) on CBS. She has toured and recorded with artists such as George Clinton, Aretha Franklin, Cindy Lauper, Madonna and the Thompson Twins, among many others. And she has led her own bands and recorded three solo albums.

    Hall Of Fame Inductee
    Wanda Fischer

    Wanda Fischer has hosted WAMC-FM/Northeast Public Radio’s weekly “The Hudson River Sampler” show – dedicated to folk music, bluegrass, and blues music – since 1982. Prior to joining WAMC, Fischer hosted a similar show in Worcester, Mass. for four years. She was inducted into the Folk Alliance International’s Folk DJ Hall of Fame in 2019. This Tennessee native, also a singer/songwriter, relocated to Schenectady in 1979.

    George Frayne

    According to The New York Times, George Frayne, “as the frontman for the band Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen melded Western swing, jump blues, rockabilly and boogie-woogie with a freewheeling 1960s ethos to pave the way for generations of roots-rock, Americana and alt-country musicians.” The band scored one Top 10 hit and a live album was ranked by Rolling Stone as one of the top 100 albums of all time. Frayne, Idaho born, moved to Saratoga Springs in the 1990s, where he was active as a musician and visual artist and lived until his death in 2021.

    Hall Of Fame Inductee
    Smokey Greene

    Smokey Greene remained active in the country and bluegrass music scene for nearly eight decades as a banjo, guitar, mandolin and fiddle player, as well as a vocalist. He owned his own music club in Thompson, N.Y., toured with his band the Green Mountain Boys in the 1970s, worked as a country radio DJ for two decades in Glens Falls and founded a bluegrass festival in Corinth which enjoyed a 16-year run. Born into a musical family in Tinmouth, Vt., Greene often played late in his career with sons Arlin and Scott.

    Sister Mary Anne Nelson, CSJ

    Sister Mary Anne Nelson, CSJ, founded and led The College of St. Rose’s Music Industry program for 49 years, retiring in 2021. She was responsible for steering the program towards a greater focus on popular music. During her tenure, music students ran their own record label, worked on live music television productions, studied music law and entrepreneurship, and ran lights and sound and performed at a bar-like venue on campus. Her vision put Saint Rose on the map as one of the top U.S. music industry programs as recognized multiple times by Billboard magazine.

    Hall Of Fame Inductee
    John Tichy (Will Waldron/Times Union)

    Guitarist and vocalist John Tichy is an original member of Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen, formed in 1967 in Ann Arbor, Mich. After playing for two years in local bars, the core members migrated to Berkeley, Calif. The group disbanded in 1976 after five studio and two live albums, and one Top 10 hit, “Hot Rod Lincoln.” Tichy, born in St. Louis, who previously earned a Ph.D. from the University of Michigan, soon joined the faculty of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, where he became head of the Department of Mechanical, Aerospace and Nuclear Engineering.

    The Eddies Music Hall of Fame ceremony will be followed by the Eddies Music Award Show at Proctors on Sunday, April 30. About 200 nominees will be acknowledged in roughly 35 categories. More information is available at theeddiesawards.com.

    Tickets are on sale at universalpreservationhall.org

  • Spafford Bring the Jams to Buffalo Iron Works 

    Jam rock band Spafford made a stop in Buffalo for their winter tour on Tuesday, January 31st. The group has traveled all over the country in honor of their latest album release Simple Mysteries. This 4th studio album of theirs was recorded throughout the course of the pandemic and now gets to be played for fans everywhere. 

    Photo credit: Maddie McCafferty

    Firstly Litz opened up the funk filled night at Buffalo Iron Works. Their use of various musical influences allows listeners to sonically transport. The group utilizes funky horn riffs, pounding bass, and progressive rhythms that just make people easily drawn to their energy. 

    Photo credit: Maddie McCafferty

    Spafford then later took the stage and gave the crowd an awe-inspiring performance. The members include Brian Moss (guitar/vocals), Jordan Fairless (bass/vocals), Cory Schechtman (keys/vocals), Nick Tkachyk (drums/vocals). They first played “Funkadelic” followed by “The Remedy.” 

    Photo credit: Maddie McCafferty

    Watching Spafford’s improvisational abilities and ways they create rhythms on stage is astonishing. These festival regulars know exactly how to put on a show and use their extended musical palette to create off-the-cuff extended jams. Their cover of Primitive Radio Gods song, “Standing Outside a Broken Phone Booth With Money in My Hand,” exhibited exactly how each of these musicians communicate with one another through a single note to create a journey through their music. 

    Photo credit: Maddie McCafferty

    The quartet played late into the night and ended their set with their song, “The Reprise.” It fully encapsulated the night of groovy tunes and the range of influences that this band uses. Spafford left the venue full of fans impressed and ready for more.  

    Photo credit: Maddie McCafferty

    This February is stacked for shows at Buffalo Iron Works! On Febuary 10 Savage Society Takeover comes and also Dirty Work performs February 11. Tickets can be found here, don’t miss out!

    Set 1: Funkadelic, The Remedy, Standing Outside a Broken Phone Booth With Money in My Hand, Funkenseven

    Set 2: Pursuit of Madness, Windmill, Lovesick Melody, Soil, America 

    Encore: The Reprise